S
steve_b
Guest
No proof. You keep talking about proof. It’s hard to prove anything in NT scholarship–that’s one reason Ferde’s claim that “the passage doesn’t need interpretation” is particularly absurd.
- Since some NT scholarship speculates Matthew copied from Mark, and we agree that speculation can’t be proven, let’s not introduce it
- Why say it’s hard to prove anything in NT scholarship? There’s lots of things we can prove. I don’t accept your premise.
We just agreed it’s speculation. Let’s just ignore speculations .But there are good reasons to believe that Mark was written first and that Matthew used Mark as a source.
On matters of faith and morals, the CC doesn’t expect Catholics to believe or embrace speculation,
C:
Again, Let’s just forget the speculation. It’s not helpfulIndeed. That’s why I don’t find this a particularly important point. I mentioned it to be thorough, and because it’s something that Catholic scholars (such as Raymond Brown) typically see the need to address in their discussions of this passage.
C:
I disagree.No, it isn’t. If it were, then it wouldn’t be so controversial among Protestants. Protestantism exists because Scripture is not clear, and it exists in many different forms because Scripture is not clear.
Protestantism exists not because scripture is unclear, but because Satan is sifting.
C:
I didn’t say all of scripture is clear and neither did Ferde. And as you know, Peter said some things ARE difficult to understand in scripture. But that doesn’t mean EVERYTHING is difficult to understand. But as Peter concludes, the ignorant and unstable step in and make a mess out of the scriptures, the difficult parts as well as the easy/clear parts…That is a strong point in favor of Catholicism–usually the first weapon in the Catholic apologist’s arsenal–and hence I find it odd that you and Ferde are arguing for the perspicuity of Scripture. If Scripture were perspicuous, then either Protestantism would not exist or we would all be Protestants, and Protestants of more or less the same sort. (Or, as some silly Protestants think, the people who really believe the Bible would be Protestants of the “right kind” and the ones who follow human traditions wouldn’t! You and Ferde appear to hold the mirror image of that absurd and demeaning view.)
C:
Let’s look at a most perfect example. When many disciples of Jesus left Him at the bread of life discourse, was Jesus not teaching clearly with them?I do believe that apostolic succession is found in Scripture–most clearly in the Pastoral Epistles. But obviously it’s not perfectly clear, or so many Protestants would not fail to see it.
Who’s then at fault for those disciples leaving?
- Jesus?
- or the desciples who left?
In this case it was his (Judas) office (bishoprick) another would take. Matthias took Judas office (bishoprick) and he was also chosen because he saw JesusSo Matthias was the successor of Judas specifically?
C:
If you consider an apostle having the office of bishop, and Peter’s office is the head bishop of all, what’s the problem?What signals this? What characterizes a successor of Judas as distinct from a successor of Andrew or John? If nothing does, plainly Acts 1 is no evidence for Peter having specific successors.
C:
Matthias saw Jesus. But at some point in the future, everyone who saw Jesus would dwindle to zero. THAT particular requirement (seeing Jesus) would no longer be there. But everyone they ordain bishop in apostolic succession are valid bishops in apostolic succession. .And you did not answer my point about the number twelve. Since there are far more than twelve bishops, and since all bishops are successors of the Apostles, it follows that what was going on in Acts 1 was something rather different from the succession of apostles by bishops.