If there apostolic succession why is it not mentioned in the scriptures?

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JoyToBeCatholic said:
I don’t see the promise of authority necessarily extending past the Apostles anyway, so for the most part, the ECF writings don’t hold as much weight in testimony as Scripture does in determining Apostolic teaching.
Why do you think Jesus gave authority to the Apostles that would expire on their deaths?

Why did the Apostles think that they should pass their authority on to others? Do you think they misunderstood what Jesus said?
 
Why do you think Jesus gave authority to the Apostles that would expire on their deaths?
I don’t presume to have the mind of God. Why do you think He gave authority to the Apostles that would continue past their deaths? What is insufficient about Scripture that we need ongoing revelation or authority? What truths are contained in the Catholic teachings that are essential to our faith that are not already contained in the most original Apostolic teachings preserved in Scripture? And if simpletons were capable of grasping and submitting to Jesus’ good news as it fell from His lips, why does anyone think that something additional is needed today in order to gain salvation?
Why did the Apostles think that they should pass their authority on to others? Do you think they misunderstood what Jesus said?
Like with parents instructing their children in the hopes to pass on family tradition, the children sometimes go astray. They were hopeful. Jesus prophesied that there would be error amongst the church.
 
I don’t presume to have the mind of God. Why do you think He gave authority to the Apostles that would continue past their deaths? What is insufficient about Scripture that we need ongoing revelation or authority? What truths are contained in the Catholic teachings that are essential to our faith that are not already contained in the most original Apostolic teachings preserved in Scripture? And if simpletons were capable of grasping and submitting to Jesus’ good news as it fell from His lips, why does anyone think that something additional is needed today in order to gain salvation?
Like with parents instructing their children in the hopes to pass on family tradition, the children sometimes go astray. They were hopeful. Jesus prophesied that there would be error amongst the church.
Three things.

a) Jesus told the Apostles to go forth and preach the Gospel to all the nations. The Apostles were unable to do that. They had to pass on their authority in order to reach the entire civilized world.

b) We see Paul ordaining Timothy, who was to teach others in order that they can teach others. That’s a lot of Apostolic Succession going on.

c) We also see Peter realizing that Judas “office” (or Episcopate or Bishopric, which all mean office) needs to be filled. Note, with an office, the position is still there even after the person holding the position has moved on (by death or other means).

It’s all Scriptural, Joy!!!
What is insufficient about Scripture that we need ongoing revelation or authority?
Jesus Himself shows scripture to be insufficient. He tells the Apostles to take irresolvable issues “to the Church”.

You see? It’s all Scriptural, Joy!!!
 
I don’t presume to have the mind of God.
Dear, I was not asking for some infallible pronouncement, only your opinion!
Why do you think He gave authority to the Apostles that would continue past their deaths?
I will give you my opinion on this. I think He did this because He established a Church, which He intended to be His Body on earth. He intended that all members of His Body be nourished and guided by that Church, of which He is the Head. He knows the hearts of people, and knew that they needed people in authority to guide them.
Code:
What is insufficient about Scripture that we need ongoing revelation or authority?
We do not need ongoing Revelation and Authority because Scripture is insufficient, we need it because humans are insufficient. The Revelation is to lead us into all truth. We are falling and finite creatures, and cannot find the Truth without divine intervention.

2 Peter 3:16
There are some things in them hard to understand, which the ignorant and unstable twist to their own destruction, as they do the other scriptures.

The Revelation and Authority prevent us from distortion as we read them.
What truths are contained in the Catholic teachings that are essential to our faith that are not already contained in the most original Apostolic teachings preserved in Scripture?
The manner in which the writings are to be understood. You can easily see this with the plethora of interpretations. For example, I am in dialogue with a forum member who believes that baptism has nothing to do with water. When I imagine him in the room with the 12, I see them all appalled that he should even propose such a preposterous notion. However, he has been trained in a very anti-Catholic, anti-Sacramental tradition, so he cannot possibly accept any “rituals” as valid.
And if simpletons were capable of grasping and submitting to Jesus’ good news as it fell from His lips, why does anyone think that something additional is needed today in order to gain salvation?
Sacred Tradition is not “additional” to the Words of Christ, but part of them, they proceed from the same Source, the written and the unwritten Word. Those that reject the Sacred Tradition reject part of Jesus good news, and that is where the revelation begins to become diluted.
Like with parents instructing their children in the hopes to pass on family tradition, the children sometimes go astray. They were hopeful. Jesus prophesied that there would be error amongst the church.
Yes, and He also prophesied that He Himself would prevent that error from destroying the Church.
 
If not explicit apostolic succession was implicit- after Jesus’s death ,resurrection and ascension it was the apostles- not the rank and file believers that controlled the Church- A sucessor to judas was appointed by lot- if a replacement for an apostle was not necessary why was he appointed and why was he called an apostle also? Apostolic sucession- modern term- would not be a term they would use.there are plenty of terms and doctrines we take for granted that would not be familiar at all to those who composed the NT. Trinity ,Hypostatic union,redemptive suffering…all terms that evolved in the course of time-implied? certainly but not written out.🙂
 
If not explicit apostolic succession was implicit- after Jesus’s death ,resurrection and ascension it was the apostles- not the rank and file believers that controlled the Church- A sucessor to judas was appointed by lot- if a replacement for an apostle was not necessary why was he appointed and why was he called an apostle also? Apostolic sucession- modern term- would not be a term they would use.there are plenty of terms and doctrines we take for granted that would not be familiar at all to those who composed the NT. Trinity ,Hypostatic union,redemptive suffering…all terms that evolved in the course of time-implied? certainly but not written out.🙂
Indeed. One of the things I have always been curious about…why didn’t Jesus appoint another Apostle to replace Judas when He was with the Apostles for 40 days prior to His ascension? Why have Peter do it later?
 
Indeed. One of the things I have always been curious about…why didn’t Jesus appoint another Apostle to replace Judas when He was with the Apostles for 40 days prior to His ascension? Why have Peter do it later?
Because Pete was in charge and the Lord wanted everyone to know it!!😃
 
Why do you think He gave authority to the Apostles that would continue past their deaths? What is insufficient about Scripture that we need ongoing revelation or authority? What truths are contained in the Catholic teachings that are essential to our faith that are not already contained in the most original Apostolic teachings preserved in Scripture?
Scripture itself reveals, in at least two places, (John 21:25 and Luke 3:18) that it is incomplete. Scripture, or any written document for that matter, requires proper interpretation so that the mind of the author who inspired it may be known. Otherwise, individual (or private) interpretation leads to error and false conclusions. How many times have you been confused by the directions in an owner’s manual? However, if the writer of that manual is there to explain, the confusion passes away.

So it is with scripture. Unless there is One to interpret for all, confusion reigns. So it was that Christ put one in charge of all (Matthew 16:18). The Traditions that Christ taught, some of which were recorded in scripture (John 21:25), were intended to be handed on to succeeding generations. Christ did not command the writing of even one word. God Himself knew that a live teacher was superior to the written word, because the written word confuses, but a live teacher can correct the errant thought so as to lead the faithful along the narrow path.

Christ’s peace.
 
Dear, I was not asking for some infallible pronouncement, only your opinion!
Sorry, I knew I shouldn’t have posted so late!
I will give you my opinion on this. I think He did this because He established a Church, which He intended to be His Body on earth. He intended that all members of His Body be nourished and guided by that Church, of which He is the Head. He knows the hearts of people, and knew that they needed people in authority to guide them.
Does Apostolic authority cease after the death of the Apostles if their teachings have been preserved?
We do not need ongoing Revelation and Authority because Scripture is insufficient, we need it because humans are insufficient. The Revelation is to lead us into all truth. We are falling and finite creatures, and cannot find the Truth without divine intervention.
2 Peter 3:16
There are some things in them hard to understand, which the ignorant and unstable twist to their own destruction, as they do the other scriptures.
The Revelation and Authority prevent us from distortion as we read them.
I don’t think they do. I see a lot of distortion amongst Catholic beliefs. Again, I don’t think an infallible church solves the problem of fallen humanity. I think conversion is the answer - and I don’t think we need 2000 years worth of evolving and complicated teachings and guidance to bring one to it.
The manner in which the writings are to be understood. You can easily see this with the plethora of interpretations. For example, I am in dialogue with a forum member who believes that baptism has nothing to do with water. When I imagine him in the room with the 12, I see them all appalled that he should even propose such a preposterous notion. However, he has been trained in a very anti-Catholic, anti-Sacramental tradition, so he cannot possibly accept any “rituals” as valid.
THere are also many interpretations (accepted teachings and discarded church teachings) amongst Catholics. It isn’t b/c the truth hasn’t been revealed but rather b/c not everyone is willing to understand it or obey it. I believe God enables us to understand what is necessary, according that what we are able - when we are properly disposed for it. Not everyone was able or willing to understand Jesus in His own time either, and not for lack of a church to interpret.
Sacred Tradition is not “additional” to the Words of Christ, but part of them, they proceed from the same Source, the written and the unwritten Word. Those that reject the Sacred Tradition reject part of Jesus good news, and that is where the revelation begins to become diluted.
But how do we know this? How does the average person determine those high claims of the CC to be true? Many believe the purpose of Scripture was to be that rule of measure. Yet Catholics say Scripture is too complicated to be that rule of measure, or at least, we can’t know how to measure with it - that is the job of the church. So, that means there is no way to measure the church. This is problematic.
Yes, and He also prophesied that He Himself would prevent that error from destroying the Church.
But it depends on how you define church.
 
Scripture itself reveals, in at least two places, (John 21:25 and Luke 3:18) that it is incomplete.
It may not contain absolutely everything that Jesus did or said, but Scripture also reveals that what is contained therein is sufficient. And I have yet to have heard of any extra-biblical teachings of Christ that the church has revealed.
Scripture, or any written document for that matter, requires proper interpretation so that the mind of the author who inspired it may be known. Otherwise, individual (or private) interpretation leads to error and false conclusions. How many times have you been confused by the directions in an owner’s manual? However, if the writer of that manual is there to explain, the confusion passes away.

So it is with scripture. Unless there is One to interpret for all, confusion reigns. So it was that Christ put one in charge of all (Matthew 16:18). The Traditions that Christ taught, some of which were recorded in scripture (John 21:25), were intended to be handed on to succeeding generations. Christ did not command the writing of even one word. God Himself knew that a live teacher was superior to the written word, because the written word confuses, but a live teacher can correct the errant thought so as to lead the faithful along the narrow path.
Really? Do you think the written word confuses, or could it be that sinful man distorts it? What do you think God prefers: for man to lay aside his ego and love for sin so he can embrace God’s Word, or for man to just follow what he is being taught in the hopes that it will save him?

~Peace.
 
If not explicit apostolic succession was implicit- after Jesus’s death ,resurrection and ascension it was the apostles- not the rank and file believers that controlled the Church- A sucessor to judas was appointed by lot- if a replacement for an apostle was not necessary why was he appointed and why was he called an apostle also? Apostolic sucession- modern term- would not be a term they would use.there are plenty of terms and doctrines we take for granted that would not be familiar at all to those who composed the NT. Trinity ,Hypostatic union,redemptive suffering…all terms that evolved in the course of time-implied? certainly but not written out.🙂
My problem with the claims of the church regarding Apostolic Succession have nothing to do with extra-biblical terminology. I don’t have a problem with the appointment of religious leaders or any such thing - I just don’t believe that it guarantees faithfulness.
 
Does Apostolic authority cease after the death of the Apostles if their teachings have been preserved?
I don’t think the two can be separated from one another. In fact, I think it is the Apostolic Authority that is responsible for the Teachings being preserved. If this were not the case, I don’t think they would have been able to close the canon. Whenever there was a question about the doctrine, it was settled as Jesus directed (take it to the Church). It was the bishops/teaching authority appointed by the Apostles that settled the disputes over doctrine.

I don’t think they do. I see a lot of distortion amongst Catholic beliefs. ]/quote] I think this is the reason that we need Apostolic Authority. Each one has a tendency to turn unto his own way, and humans seem to get lost so easy!
Nick_Jones said:
Again, I don’t think an infallible church solves the problem of fallen humanity.
Perhaps not, but it does provide an immuntable standard to which that fallen humanity can confidently look for guidance.
Nick_Jones said:
I think conversion is the answer - and I don’t think we need 2000 years worth of evolving and complicated teachings and guidance to bring one to it. THere are also many interpretations (accepted teachings and discarded church teachings) amongst Catholics.
I agree, but how shall we be converted without hearing, and how shall we hear without a preacher? And how will conversion be authentic if the word being preached is not authentic? Yes, there are as many different individual understandings as there are belly buttons. But the Doctrine delivered “once for all” through Jesus Christ to the Apostles does not change.
Nick_Jones said:
It isn’t b/c the truth hasn’t been revealed but rather b/c not everyone is willing to understand it or obey it.
I cant argue with that! 😉
Nick_Jones said:
I believe God enables us to understand what is necessary, according that what we are able - when we are properly disposed for it. Not everyone was able or willing to understand Jesus in His own time either, and not for lack of a church to interpret.
Yes.
Nick_Jones said:
But how do we know this? How does the average person determine those high claims of the CC to be true?
I suppose this as individual as the belly buttons too. For myself, it was the study of historical theology and the early fathers. For another, I am sure otherwise.
Nick_Jones said:
Code:
Many believe the purpose of Scripture was to be that rule of measure. Yet Catholics say Scripture is too complicated to be that rule of measure, or at least, we can't know how to measure with it - that is the job of the church.
It is not too complicated, but neither was it meant to be separated from the communion by which, and for which it was written. The authors would be appalled to see what has happened by the separation.
Nick_Jones said:
So, that means there is no way to measure the church. This is problematic.But it depends on how you define church.
Yes, I think this is right on. For Catholics, it is the bishops together in union with the Successor of Peter.
 
Well, duh, jusasking4!

You wanted ‘scriptural proof’ and when confronted with the cold, hard evidence, you act like there are other verses which change the obvious meanings!

Timothy trains others (laying on of hands after extensive prayer, discernment and teaching) who then train others who then train others…apostolic succession!

Their job is to witness to the early Church (no BIBLE yet) what the Good News and God’s economy of salvation is all about.

They were to teach and tell of the same things. No room for justasking4-type personal interpretations.

Really, I am beginning to think that with you off the wall interpretations and refusing to answer direct questions, you are here to hit and run the threads!

Say it ain’t so joe

Robert
 
Indeed. One of the things I have always been curious about…why didn’t Jesus appoint another Apostle to replace Judas when He was with the Apostles for 40 days prior to His ascension? Why have Peter do it later?
I think this is the beginning of the New Covenant Church authority.

We all know that God chose Matthias to replace Judas, but He chose to work through the Church to implement this transfer of office.
 
It may not contain absolutely everything that Jesus did or said, but Scripture also reveals that what is contained therein is sufficient.
No, it doesn’t. It says, when all else doesn’t work, take your issues to the Church to be resolved. It doesn’t say, look it up in Scriptures. It specifically says, take it to the Church.

How much clearer can this be?
 
Ok, I feel like I am repeating myself continually between the issues you all raise here and in the other threads I have going. I don’t feel like this is getting anywhere.
It may not contain absolutely everything that Jesus did or said, but Scripture also reveals that what is contained therein is sufficient.
No, it doesn’t. It says, when all else doesn’t work, take your issues to the Church to be resolved. It doesn’t say, look it up in Scriptures. It specifically says, take it to the Church.

How much clearer can this be?
This is what I mean. You believe what the CC teaches about this and that is why it is clear to you, but it is clear to me that this is not what it means.

The bottom line is that I don’t agree it is clear and if something doesn’t make sense to me, I cannot just give up and submit.

I’ve no problem with taking an issue to the church, so long as the church I take it to is in line with Apostolic teaching, which we have preserved for us - in its most original form - in Scripture.

I’m sorry I’m getting frustrated, but I think I need to back off a while - even if just for a day or two. At this point, the problem is too big for me to be looking for all my answers here. I need to back off and give it more prayer and reflection.

Thanks, everyone, for your help, and God Bless!
 
It may not contain absolutely everything that Jesus did or said, but Scripture also reveals that what is contained therein is sufficient. And I have yet to have heard of any extra-biblical teachings of Christ that the church has revealed.
You are curently in the church which exhibits the ultimate expression of Christian faith. The only church that traces directly back to Christ. Please pray about the situation, and I know you are. Ple3ase tell us what specific part of the CC you have trouble with.
Really? Do you think the written word confuses, or could it be that sinful man distorts it? What do you think God prefers: for man to lay aside his ego and love for sin so he can embrace God’s Word, or for man to just follow what he is being taught in the hopes that it will save him?
The written word needs proper interpretation to be correctly understood. Such private interpretation of scripture has lead to thousands of fractures in Christianity. They ALL can’t be right! So, Christ left Peter in charge, and we have the Pope, who is the rock of stabillity. Sola Scriptura churches are built on sand, as they have no teaching authority, no roots back to Christ.

~Peace.
 
I took this post from another thread where Old Scholar seemed intent upon derailing the topic.
Old_Scholar said:
You see, you keep saying “the church” but in reality you mean “your” church. The Orthodox and Protestant churches also had the same origination as “your” church and in fact it was the Catholic Reformation that separated the RCC from the Luthran beliefs—not Martin Luther.

Many of you are too quick to brag about apostolic succession but that doesn’t exist. There is no unbroken line dirctly back to the apostles for you any more than for me.
This is a very interesting perception of history. Apostolic succession is nothing to be “bragged about” any more than any of the other graces of God. However, I am curious, all those bishops that can trace their lineage back to the Apostles, do you think they are caught up in some sort of group hallucination?
Mannyfit75 said:
The reason why I didn’t put my church. It is not my Church. I did not founded this Church. Jesus Christ did. He build his church upon St. Peter.

I believe the Eastern Orthodox have valid Apostolic Succession. As for Protestants, they have their beginnings in Catholicism. They lost Apostolic Succession since they break from the Church.

Apostolic Succesion does exist. The testimony of the four Apostolic Fathers attest to this. St. Ignatius of Antioch, St. Clement of Rome, St. Polycarp, and St. Papias. St. Ignatius and St. Polycarp were disciples of St. John, the Apostle. St. Clement of Rome is mention Philippians 4:3 which said:

3 And I entreat thee also, my sincere companion, help those women who have laboured with me in the gospel, with Clement and the rest of my fellow labourers, whose names are in the book of life.

Papias was “a hearer of John, and companion of Polycarp, a man of old time.”

Your claim that Apostolic Succession as being non-existence is a false statement. There are only two Churches that continue this tradition, and they are the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church.
Yes, Orthodox have valid apostolic succession, as do the 22 other Rites of the Catholic Church that are not Roman.
 
I took this post from another thread where Old Scholar seemed intent upon derailing the topic.

This is a very interesting perception of history. Apostolic succession is nothing to be “bragged about” any more than any of the other graces of God. However, I am curious, all those bishops that can trace their lineage back to the Apostles, do you think they are caught up in some sort of group hallucination?

Yes, Orthodox have valid apostolic succession, as do the 22 other Rites of the Catholic Church that are not Roman.
Amen. History shows Apostolic Succession
 
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  			Originally Posted by **Old Scholar** 					[forums.catholic-questions.org/images/buttons_cad/viewpost.gif](http://forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?p=3329905#post3329905) 				
  		*Many of you are too quick to brag about apostolic succession but that doesn't exist. There is no unbroken line dirctly back to the apostles for you any more than for me.**Doesn't Scripture condemn those that are self-appointed pastors?  Doesn't this condemn a majority of the religions out there - Orthodox, Episcopal, and Anglican excepted (maybe a couple more)?*
 
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