Is This What Protestantism Is Really About??

  • Thread starter Thread starter OneTrueCathApos
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Not in an organized way. Luther was the first to create both a nation and a religion out of his belief system. Those who came before him were just individuals acting on their own, without very many followers.
Are you suggesting that Luther was not aware of those who taught this? You have just gone to great lengths to suggest that people are influenced by their environment and Luther would have been aware of these people and influenced. Yes or no.
 
If you are referring to the verse I think you are, it is abundantly clear that everything is built upon Faith. Claiming it refers to Peter, is adding something that simply is not present in the original text. (This becomes even clearer when one reads the text in the original language.)

jonathon

yup Jesus sure is a real card;;calls a guy named Simon,Peter(rock) and every since every one whom refers to him(Simon) always calls him Peter(rock),clarify,:rolleyes: now why would Jesus do such a thing?:shrug:seriously what was Jesus’s purpose calling Simon, Peter?
 
Name changes are common in Scripture when the person comes to a new way of relating to God. Think of Jacob whom God renamed Israel, or Saul whom God renamed Paul. This occurred at crisis points in the lives of these men of God.

This is similar. Simon receives the name Peter after answering the question, “But who do you say that I am?” The renaming indicates the inception of a new covenant in not only Peter’s life but that of the whole world.

Peter’s confession, “You are the Messiah, the Son of God.” is the foundation upon which Christ will build His church. Peter, as the articulator of this fundamental truth, is given the name by extension.
 
Name changes are common in Scripture when the person comes to a new way of relating to God. Think of Jacob whom God renamed Israel, or Saul whom God renamed Paul. This occurred at crisis points in the lives of these men of God.

This is similar. Simon receives the name Peter after answering the question, “But who do you say that I am?” The renaming indicates the inception of a new covenant in not only Peter’s life but that of the whole world.

Peter’s confession, “You are the Messiah, the Son of God.” is the foundation upon which Christ will build His church. Peter, as the articulator of this fundamental truth, is given the name by extension.
In John 21:15-19, after Jesus forgives Peter for denying Him three times, Jesus reinstates him into the position of Chief Shepherd of the Church.

This helps us to interpret Matthew 16:18-19 more accurately - Peter is, indeed, being made the “rock” of the Church, and is actually being given the keys to the Kingdom of Heaven.
 
I am not denying that Peter had general oversight of the young church after Jesus ascension.
 
I am not denying that Peter had general oversight of the young church after Jesus ascension.
Good. 🙂

Do you believe that the Church stopped having someone overseeing it at the time of his death (and if so, why would Jesus have appointed an overseer for only one generation?), or do you believe that he had a successor? And if you believe he had a successor, then why don’t you believe that he continues to have successors, as appointed by God (Jesus) until such time as He will return again?
 
Good. 🙂

Do you believe that the Church stopped having someone overseeing it at the time of his death (and if so, why would Jesus have appointed an overseer for only one generation?), or do you believe that he had a successor? And if you believe he had a successor, then why don’t you believe that he continues to have successors, as appointed by God (Jesus) until such time as He will return again?
I believe he has successors. I just don’t believe they are specific to the office of the Bishop of Rome.

Peter’s successors, (or James’, or Philip’s or any of the Apostles’) are all those men called and ordained to be pastors in the house of God.
 
I believe he has successors. I just don’t believe they are specific to the office of the Bishop of Rome.
We know that Peter died in Rome; why would his successor not be the Bishop of Rome?
Peter’s successors, (or James’, or Philip’s or any of the Apostles’) are all those men called and ordained to be pastors in the house of God.
They were all Bishops, ordained with the laying on of hands. None of them were ever self-appointed or self-anointed - all of them took their God-given calling to the Church and were ordained in the proper manner before setting forth to establish their local church communites - they were always in full communion with the other successors of the Apostles, especially Peter’s successor.
 
We know that Peter died in Rome; why would his successor not be the Bishop of Rome?
Why would he have to be?
They were all Bishops, ordained with the laying on of hands. None of them were ever self-appointed or self-anointed - all of them took their God-given calling to the Church and were ordained in the proper manner before setting forth to establish their local church communites - they were always in full communion with the other successors of the Apostles, especially Peter’s successor.
I guess there probably are people who have appointed themselves pastor over given congregations, but I am not talking about them.

Everything you just said can be said about the men I am talking about.
 
Why would he have to be?
Because the present Bishop of Rome is who succeeds to the previous Bishop of Rome; that’s why. Peter was the highest authority in Rome at the time of his death, so the successor to his chair (Cathedral of Rome) would receive both his Papacy and his Bishopric.
I guess there probably are people who have appointed themselves pastor over given congregations, but I am not talking about them.
You’re aware, I trust, that all of the original Protestant leaders were self-appointed. Nobody from the Catholic Church ever ordained them to be Protestant leaders - they were all self-appointed. Their modern day successors trace only back TO them; not THROUGH them, because the Protestant lineage stops/starts with them. (They also had no authority from the Church to ordain themselves, nor anyone else, but that’s a whole other can of worms.)
Everything you just said can be said about the men I am talking about.
Everything I said can only apply to Catholic Bishops with Apostolic Succession - it can’t apply to those who trace back to the original Protestants.
 
Because the present Bishop of Rome is who succeeds to the previous Bishop of Rome; that’s why. Peter was the highest authority in Rome at the time of his death, so the successor to his chair (Cathedral of Rome) would receive both his Papacy and his Bishopric.
This presupposes a direct succession related to a geographic location and an attitude about the office of pastor that I do not see in Scripture.

I do not believe there is any reason to assume that the current Bishop of Rome is any more a successor to Peter than my own pastor.
You’re aware, I trust, that all of the original Protestant leaders were self-appointed. Nobody from the Catholic Church ever ordained them to be Protestant leaders - they were all self-appointed. Their modern day successors trace only back TO them; not THROUGH them, because the Protestant lineage stops/starts with them. (They also had no authority from the Church to ordain themselves, nor anyone else, but that’s a whole other can of worms.)
You’re assuming a ceremonial succession as well as the idea that pastoral authority is bestowed by the institutional church rather than by God through the voice of the calling assembly. In every case the Reformers were ministers called by God in the voices of their various congregations. In many cases they were ordained ministers of the old church as well though that matters very little.

This is sufficient for pedigree.
Everything I said can only apply to Catholic Bishops with Apostolic Succession - it can’t apply to those who trace back to the original Protestants.
Presupposition: That “Apostolic Succession” must be ordinal, ceremonial and “sacramental”.

Of course, I do not share this assumption.
 
This presupposes a direct succession related to a geographic location and an attitude about the office of pastor that I do not see in Scripture.
This is Biblical. It is prefigured in the Old Testament with the successors of Moses and the successors of David. There is clear, organizational lineal succession. God doesn’t call them out of the blue: they are born into or formally and ceremonially accepted into the roles that God places them into. Even with the Prophets, they are appointed by the Kings; there is none of this idea of wandering in the wilderness and suddenly hearing a voice from Heaven; they were already appointed and known to the whole world before God began to speak to and through them. That’s how the people knew to listen to them, and not to others - because they were lawfully appointed through God’s ordinary chain of command.
I do not believe there is any reason to assume that the current Bishop of Rome is any more a successor to Peter than my own pastor.
The Bishop of Rome has a much more credible claim, based on historical documents that show his lineage.
You’re assuming a ceremonial succession as well as the idea that pastoral authority is bestowed by the institutional church rather than by God through the voice of the calling assembly.
it’s not “rather than.” God’s mode of calling is through the institutions that He has set up for us.

Why was Moses called by God to lead the people out of Egypt? Because he was the Prince of Egypt - he had been placed by God into the government of Egypt, for that very purpose.
Presupposition: That “Apostolic Succession” must be ordinal, ceremonial and “sacramental”.
Based on Biblical precedent. There is nothing in the New Testament to suggest that men can appoint themselves leaders of Churches - they must be appointed by the Apostles. There is no indication anywhere in the New Testament of any change in that system, or that there was to be such a radical change in the structure of the authority of the Church after the death of the Apostles.
 
This is Biblical. It is prefigured in the Old Testament with the successors of Moses and the successors of David. There is clear, organizational lineal succession. God doesn’t call them out of the blue: they are born into or formally and ceremonially accepted into the roles that God places them into. Even with the Prophets, they are appointed by the Kings; there is none of this idea of wandering in the wilderness and suddenly hearing a voice from Heaven; they were already appointed and known to the whole world before God began to speak to and through them. That’s how the people knew to listen to them, and not to others - because they were lawfully appointed through God’s ordinary chain of command.
In the case of David we are speaking of monarchical succession. David was not a priest nor was he the representative of God to Israel.

Moses had no successors until Jesus. The priesthood in the Old Covenant was biological and devolved upon men whose lineage could be traced to Aaron.

These examples are not analogous.

Prophets were not ordinarily “appointed by kings” at least not the true ones. These were called directly by God.
The Bishop of Rome has a much more credible claim, based on historical documents that show his lineage.
Again, only if you assume that this matters.
Why was Moses called by God to lead the people out of Egypt? Because he was the Prince of Egypt - he had been placed by God into the government of Egypt, for that very purpose.
No doubt and how did Israel get to Egypt? They came there when Joseph called his brothers.

This doesn’t really establish anything beyond the providential care of God for His people in bringing about agency for their salvation.
Based on Biblical precedent. There is nothing in the New Testament to suggest that men can appoint themselves leaders of Churches - they must be appointed by the Apostles. There is no indication anywhere in the New Testament of any change in that system, or that there was to be such a radical change in the structure of the authority of the Church after the death of the Apostles.
Again, these men did not appoint themselves. In Scripture they heard the voice of God and they obeyed it. In the voice of the community of the church they heard sheep without a shepherd and in that they heard the call to lead them.

In the case of most of them they even had benefit of institutional church appointment. You can argue that they left that appointment when they assumed leadership in a different manner than that to which they had been called and ordained but again you assume the necessity of institutional, top-down hierarchical appointment.

Jesus and the Apostles took some pains to show that the new covenant is different than the old. Where the old was governed by laws and men appointed by physical pedigree, in the new every man could come before God by himself with no intercessor other than Christ Who now dwells with him and with no guide other than the Word of God, unfiltered by any human authority.
 
In the case of David we are speaking of monarchical succession. David was not a priest nor was he the representative of God to Israel.
David and his successors appointed the Prophets - Jeremiah, Isaiah, Daniel, etc…
Moses had no successors until Jesus.
The successor of Moses was the High Priest of the Temple. In the years when there was no Temple, the succession was held by the Cohenim, just as it is today among the Jews.
The priesthood in the Old Covenant was biological and devolved upon men whose lineage could be traced to Aaron.
Yes, that’s how it was done back then. Christ’s priesthood is passed down by the laying on of hands in the Sacrament of Ordination.
Prophets were not ordinarily “appointed by kings” at least not the true ones. These were called directly by God.
To appear before the King and receive the anointing of a Prophet. After which they then served as Prophet of Israel.

They didn’t have the appearance of wandering homeless lunatics - they were Court officials, duly appointed.
Again, these men did not appoint themselves. In Scripture they heard the voice of God and they obeyed it.
And God always told them to go to the King to receive their appointments.
In the case of most of them they even had benefit of institutional church appointment.
There were no Bishops among the early Protestant leaders - the majority were lay men and women, with one or two simple priests.
You can argue that they left that appointment when they assumed leadership in a different manner than that to which they had been called and ordained but again you assume the necessity of institutional, top-down hierarchical appointment.
I assume that, because it’s God’s known method of operation, as we see throughout Scripture.
Jesus and the Apostles took some pains to show that the new covenant is different than the old. Where the old was governed by laws and men appointed by physical pedigree, in the new every man could come before God by himself with no intercessor other than Christ Who now dwells with him and with no guide other than the Word of God, unfiltered by any human authority.
There is nothing even remotely like this in the New Testament. It is a new Church, but it has a human government - the Apostles and their successors - and it is open to all the world - for membership in it. Read I Corinthians 12, the whole chapter.
 
David and his successors appointed the Prophets - Jeremiah, Isaiah, Daniel, etc…
You’re mistaken.
The successor of Moses was the High Priest of the Temple. In the years when there was no Temple, the succession was held by the Cohenim, just as it is today among the Jews.
No, the high priest was a descendent of Aaron as were all the priests. Moses was a Levite, not a Qohen and although every Qohen is a Levite, not every Levite is a Qohen and Moses never performed any priestly functions at least not ceremonially or ecclesially, and that, after all is what we’re talking about.
Yes, that’s how it was done back then. Christ’s priesthood is passed down by the laying on of hands in the Sacrament of Ordination.
Christ’s priesthood is unique and final and is neither shared in by another nor does it succeed to anyone else. And yet, in another sense, every Christian is a priest as we share in His priesthood and present Him to the world and as we are peculiar and unique out of all the family of man.
To appear before the King and receive the anointing of a Prophet. After which they then served as Prophet of Israel.
Ironically enough, the prophets who received this royal anointing were the false ones.

Jeremiah was called directly by God (Jer. 1:4ff).

The first mention of Jeremiah is in 2 Kings 19 there is no indication that he was “appointed by the king”. And in the book bearing his name he encounters God directly and without any royal appointment.

The same is true for all of the prophets.

Samuel is an interesting example since he was a prophet before there even was a king and he was also called directly by God (see 1 Sam. 3).

Elijah was a prophet called directly by God as well and one who operated in direct contradiction to the will and desire of Ahab the king whom he opposed (see 1 kings 18ff)

So, no, prophets were not appointed by kings but received direct, unmediated calls.
They didn’t have the appearance of wandering homeless lunatics - they were Court officials, duly appointed.
The wicked kings of Israel did appoint “prophets” but these men were those false prophets Elijah, Balaam and others came against.

They had no right. They were not even prophets and the real prophets rightly condemned them as men-pleasers and liars.
And God always told them to go to the King to receive their appointments.
An example please? I looked and couldn’t find any.
There were no Bishops among the early Protestant leaders - the majority were lay men and women, with one or two simple priests.
The bible knows no difference between a Bishop and a Presbyter (see Titus 1:5-9 where Paul makes no distinction, using the terms to describe the same office).
I assume that, because it’s God’s known method of operation, as we see throughout Scripture.
And by now you should know that I see a completely different dynamic.
There is nothing even remotely like this in the New Testament. It is a new Church, but it has a human government - the Apostles and their successors - and it is open to all the world - for membership in it. Read I Corinthians 12, the whole chapter.
As I’ve already pointed out, put baldly, as you have it here I won’t even bother to disagree, the church is a treasure held in earthen vessels with human successors to the apostles, all of us who repent, believe and are baptized but in an institutional sense those men God calls to guide and lead us.
 
David and his successors appointed the Prophets - Jeremiah, Isaiah, Daniel, etc…

To appear before the King and receive the anointing of a Prophet. After which they then served as Prophet of Israel.

They didn’t have the appearance of wandering homeless lunatics - they were Court officials, duly appointed.

And God always told them to go to the King to receive their appointments.
This makes no sense in terms of the Biblical evidence. When Catholics engage in this kind of extreme revisionism and special pleading, it seriously weakens your case.

I think most Catholic scholars and theologians would agree that the prophetic office in the OT was usually a check on the established authorities of king and priest, and that the Church needs a similar prophetic tradition, alongside ordered patterns of government and liturgy.

By denying the clear witness of the Scriptures to such a “charismatic” prophetic tradition, you are radically distorting the nature of Biblical faith by making it a purely authoritarian, established, power-centered business.

Edwin
 
And if I actually read the Bible, and actually read the things that it leads to, including the writings of the Early Church, then I still end up with the guy who’s wearing the first century Roman robes. 😉

There is nothing in the Bible itself that points to any Protestant denomination - and if he is reading the Gospel of Matthew with a pure mind and no preconceptions, then he already knows to look for Peter’s successor for his leadership - since he would have read where Moses had successors, and David had successors, and Elijah had successors, so why on earth wouldn’t Peter? 😃
The above is an interesting point.
I had actually started a thread a while back asking our Protestant Bretheren to demonstrate from the Bible some precedent for the Protestant Reformation - Something biblical to show that it is OK to completely reject the Ancient Church and start over.
Very little was ever offered. 🤷

In fact the only thing I could come up with, and this points away from such a split, is the splitting of Isreal into the Nations of Isreal and Judea. In this case, the Northern kingdom, which split from the ancient seat of Jerusalem and attempted to set up another temple elsewhere fell into chaos and was lost to history even to this day.
The Southern Kingdom, who stayed loyal to Jerusalem, even though they were sinful, and were defeated and taken into captivity, they were preserved by God and returned to the Promised Land. Jesus then Came to them, fulfilled the promises of the Old Covenant and established the New. This New Covenant (Church) He founded upon the Twelve Apostles led by Peter and upon their successors.

Thus it is that the one major example in the Bible of the Splitting of God’s People shows that those who Leave His Historically established and divinely guarded Church Authority perish.
Those who remain faithful, even through trouble, scandal and persecution both inside and outside the Church maintain the Promise of God to protect and defend them.

Peace
James
 
Could it not be argued that Christianity as a whole represents a reform and overhaul of second temple Judaism?

And the Old Testament is rife with stories of Prophets and Judges calling Israel back to pure worship and faith.
 
Could it not be argued that Christianity as a whole represents a reform and overhaul of second temple Judaism?

And the Old Testament is rife with stories of Prophets and Judges calling Israel back to pure worship and faith.
Quite correct.
Just as Christianity (pre-luther) is rife with calls to a return to pure worship. St. Francis is but one example of such a call.
Reform within the Church was and is an ongoing project.
The Protestant position is another thing entirely. It is not a reform of the existing church but rather an attempt to remake it. It is a seperation, not unlike the split kingdoms in the OT.

Peace
James
 
Quite correct.
Just as Christianity (pre-luther) is rife with calls to a return to pure worship. St. Francis is but one example of such a call.
Reform within the Church was and is an ongoing project.
The Protestant position is another thing entirely. It is not a reform of the existing church but rather an attempt to remake it. It is a seperation, not unlike the split kingdoms in the OT.

Peace
James
This has been argued already but the departure of Luther had every bit as much and probably more to do with the entrenched attitudes of the Catholic hierarchy and politics than it did with any desire on his part to leave.

You may reject the idea that some flexibility and temperance on the part of Catholic leaders would have gone a long way toward keeping him in the fold but it certainly seems to have been the case.

Pole and Contarini certainly thought so. Would that there had been more like them.

In this sense it is exactly analogous to Christ who was killed by the very institution he came to correct.

“O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you would not!” - Matt. 23:37
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top