R
rcwitness
Guest
I am not having two “options”. I believe, in harmony with the Church, that Peter was commanded by God, to offer the Sacrament of Baptism, which forgives sins and accepts the person wholly into the New Covenant salvation specifically before the Church came to agree in a Council. He rhetorically asked who can deny them an equal grace from God as they themselves received. No one agreed, or disagreed, but said nothing. Later, Peter explains to the circumcision party why he “ate with them” (I dont know if this strickly means Communion, as in Eucharist, but it shows a communion nevertheless). Still a little later, more men from Judea were teaching “unless you are circumcised according to the custom of Moses, you cannot be saved.” Here is where Peter has to explain a third time that God has made no distinction between Jews and Gentiles, but offers us all salvation apart from Moses and cleases our hearts by faith. This is interesting because Peter distinctly teaches that “God made choice among them” so that by his own mouth that they should hear and believe. This sets Peter himself in the new and higher authority than Moses, of which leaders succeeded Moses’ authority by heritage and sat on the ‘seat of Moses’ while successors of Peter are appointed through selection and sit on the ‘chair of Peter’. And for the third time, all who criticised, and debated were silent. Then the whole Church leadership was able to act as a whole entity and James was able to convey his acceptance, of what ‘Symeon’ just related, to those who “came from him”.Are those your only two options ? Yes but he didn’t say it your way,and it was much more than rhetorical. It is like saying , “here is what i believe, are you on board also ?” or at most, “here is my example, please follow”.
Those who question Peter’s authority as Chief leader in the Church, must answer as to why God “made choice among them” to fisrt deliver the Gospel so that Gentiles too may inherit the Grace of the New Covenant.