Hello Fred!
I understand that you have high-tailed it out of the realm of debating of Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition. . .And gauging from your responses to Awful’s questions, I think I can surmise your reasons. . .Good choice.
However, though you may desire to ignore it, the issues of papal succession and Roman primacy are directly related to the issue of Tradition which you have chosen to forfeit (for the time being, at least). Again, just as Awful’s thread intended to produce, there is no escaping Tradition. It is foundational.
I do believe by 250 CE that people held this view in some corners. I sure do. Obviously at sometime, this view developed. I contend it is a later developing view and 200 to 250 CE would be about it.
You have observed, quite rightly, here that “this view” of papal succession (and contingently, Roman primacy) was a certain “view” by 250. Much like Sacred Scripture, there was some degree of development in understanding issues regarding papal succession and Roman primacy. This is undeniable. However, just like the canon of Sacred Scripture, the degree of development (and I would even add, the degree of contention—which you have yet to prove, in any case) does not affect the viability of a given Tradition.
In fact, given a comprehensive assessment of the early Church patristic documents, it is much easier to disprove the canon of Sacred Scripture on the basis of development and contention than the issue of papal succession.
So, it would seem that if the crux of your argument is that papal succession is bunk because it underwent some degree of development or was contentious, you have thereby (albeit, unwittingly) also set up the canon of Scripture for equal scrutiny and, arguably, it stands on shakier ground.
To be direct, how many others, other than the Roman Bishop, are even contenders for papal succession and primacy prior to 200?
I do not want to get too hung up on Cyprian
Indubitably. Of course, not. . .but getting hung up on the years 50 to 200 is no problem, right?
my understanding is that it was pretty controversial.
Again. . .weak argument. By all accounts, the canon of the New Testament, the dual natures of Christ, and even the inclusion of Gentiles in the Church were “pretty controversial,” yet hardly rejected on those terms.
If I have not grasped that situatin fully, I accept any correction. Anything from 50 CE to 200 CE that said that Peter had a spefic successor that was in charge of the whole church?
You are very good at narrowing the argument to force a response that nullifies the opposing position by concentrating on the particularity rather than the objective. Unfortunately (for you), we are not bound by your narrow demands precisely because you yourself can not adhere to such terms in other aspects of your chosen debate topics.
Even if one were to produce a quotation “from 50 CE to 200 CE that said that Peter had a specific successor that was in charge of the whole church,” it would be of no avail because you would reject it based solely on your presuppositions—which you have already proven to do in the case of Sacred Tradition. To you, it would be a fluke or a misinterpreted idea which you would ignore because you don’t agree with it.
Now, having said that. . .St. Irenaeus’ well known quotation (Jurgens, 211) would be a prime example of such a quotation.
In it, he recognizes the immediate successors of the Roman episcopate as having prime authority in the Church.
But, in true Fredricks fashion, it is forgettable and deniable because you simply don’t see it that way. . . OR because your chorus of “conservative” scholars haven’t affirmed it. . . OR because it isn’t expressly Biblical by your interpretation, so it isn’t essential. . . OR because your audience agrees with your postion, whereby it must be true. . . OR because the patristic testimony supporting the Catholic position are inadmissable after the year span 50 through 200. . .
This is an interesting thread. . .I look forward to following it.