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Yes, the apostles and prophets are the foundation built upon the Bedrock which is Christ. I fail to see any dichotomy in that. The Church was built upon the testimony and witness of the apostles and prophets, but they would have no testimony without their belief in Jesus Christ. That is not going 'round and round'. I cannot escape the fact that all spiritual truth rests upon Jesus and no other.
I think your theology is a little bit askew, Pure. Jesus is the Cornerstone. that is the stone against which all the others are lined up to keep the foundation straight. You are right, there is no dichotomy between the Cornerstone, and the foundation stones that are grafted into it. But then you depart from Scripture. Scripture does not say that the Church is built upon “testimony”, but upon the PERSONS - the Aposltes and Prophets themselves. You are right that they would have no testimony apart from their faith, but equally, their faith cannot be separated from there personhood.
Jesus chose to build His Church upon PEOPLE. He chose to have “others” upon which He rested His One Flock. To say “and no other” is to deny the Truth in the Scriptures, that He founded a Church, and that this Church is the pillar and foundation of the Truth. He did not build on a book, but upon people – “others”.
Jesus Christ is The Living Stone, we are living stones. Of course, you see the difference. Similarly, He is the Vine and I am in Him but that does not make me the Vine; I am still a branch. And, He is the Potter, I am the clay.
Yes, but all these illustrations demonstrate that we, as people, are grounded and formed by Him to do His work in the world. He has chosen to manifest HImself to the world through the Church.
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My only difficulty with Peter as The Rock is that by giving him that honor and acclaim, it diminishes Jesus and all that He is. The dichotomy I see is that both Peter and Jesus cannot simultaneously be THE ROCK. (emphasis only - not shouting) I guess I am rising to the defense of Jesus (Who needs no defense from little ole me) but, nevertheless, it disturbs me to think that His honor, sovereignty, and incomparable worth are threatened by another - especially one of His own followers. You will probably say, "No, that is not what we are doing." So I am left scratching my head trying to figure out where exactly you are coming from on this issue.
God is not diminished when He manifests Himself through people. In making Moses the deliverer for the Israelites, He was not diminished. Jesus would not have renamed Simon bar Jonah “Cephas” if it was somehow diminishing. Anyone God grafts into HImself becomes a glory to Him, as He works through their lives to manifest Himself. Peter writes about this:
1 Peter 2:9-10
9 But
you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s own people, that you may declare the wonderful deeds of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light. 10 Once you were no people but now you are God’s people; once you had not received mercy but now you have received mercy.
We are (because of the work of God in us) that we may declare His glory. God made Peter a Rock, first in name, then in character, so that he could become part of the foundation of His One Church.
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I believe that Peter would agree with John the Baptist when he said, "I must decrease that He may increase." So, you see, when I read the posts on this thread, and saw that Peter was promoted as pre-eminent, and it was all about his authority, rule, and power, well, red flags went up for me. Maybe you can rationalize how Peter and Jesus both can be The Rock; I simply cannot. Notice I did not say 'a rock' but rather 'The Rock' which is the way, I believe, the Catholic Church regards him. Finally, Jesus Christ is the same, yesterday, today, and forever. There is no substitute for Him, nor any need for one.
Yes, absolutely we see in Peter’s letters this humility. Peter was made pre-eminient, give authority, rule and the responsibility to care and feed the flock. He exercised these gifts and responsibiliities with the utmost humility, just as Jesus taught:
**Mark 10:42-45
42 And Jesus called them to him and said to them, “You know that those who are supposed to rule over the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great men exercise authority over them. 43 But it shall not be so among you; but whoever would be great among you must be your servant, 44 and whoever would be first among you must be slave of all. 45 For the Son of man also came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.”
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At the end of his life, when he learned he was to be crucified, he did not believe himself worthy to die as his Lord, so asked to be crucified upside down.