Interesting you would choose that passage.
Let’s place the emphasis on that passage where it should be
What “you say” must be in context of who “I am”.
And please note the setting of this question. This question is posed to the community, not to individuals in an exclusively personal sense. He is not asking Peter for his individualist expression of who Jesus is. When Jesus asks for “your” affirmation of faith, he is addressing the small community of disciples. This becomes the setting for Christ’s appeal to authoritative expression of truth.
Hi Clem . Yes and no . He asks “men” not the Pharisees, not the Saduccees, not the Sanhedrin, not the high priest but “men”. Now of course all those I listed are comprised of men, and all are in the community, God’s community, counterpart of our Church, Israel/Judaism, and He came to and for and thru that community…
I really see it as an individual question/ response besides community. The apostles answer with “some say”. I am sure one rabbi says this and another that . Maybe even one Pharisee this and another that etc etc.
The question is the posed to the apostles and of course they were apostles , but men first, individuals first, and also apostles of Jesus in the Judeo community, each to answer as he saw fit.
When Peter takes Christ aside to rebuke him with his private understanding, Christ rebukes him while gazing on the community!
I understand what you mean by private, as apart from God. But I also see his non-private correct response as apart from the magisterium, apart from the Sanhedrin, and many Pharisees.
Private is apart from God, not apart from what others may say or not say.
The community and its institutions as a whole were apart from God, had it wrong, had private answers,fleshly, on this issue of who Christ was. But certainly individuals within that community and institutions had it right, though very few at first.
Who is the “I Am” of Jesus’ question?
He is the way, the truth, the life. He is the source of a community. Christ asks Peter to give truthful expression to His person, but only in the context of His community, not his personal ramblings.
Do not follow. The question was to Peter, as he was, as he felt, as he thought, as he believed, as a man, as an apostle, as a Jew, etc…
We cannot know who Christ is outside his Mystical Body. (this is not a mandate to be explicitly Catholic, but an observation that Christ acts through His Body, by definition of his Incarnation).
Just remember that the OT “body”/Israel was not on target, and divine revelation, individual divine revelation was the key, for the individual as well as the community as a whole as it always has been.
Christ reveals himself incarnate, in the flesh. To become flesh is to become part of the human community. Christ becoming part of the human community propels us toward unity even while we are scattered.
don’t get the third sentence . Christ draws, calls out (ecclesia) men to His Body, but also others stumble away.,
Authority is exercised in the context of His Body which accepts this unique charism as his grace, not the yoke of slavery.
Amen