John it was you who said that James always appears before Cephas- In another post you capitalized it- ALWAYS. You’re claiming a pattern- I’m asking where else? Surely you can’t say “always” while speaking of a single incidence? I just asked you to show me where else that happened for it to be always. It’s not fair for you to ask me to disprove an assertion you’ve put forward when I ask for proof

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You are right, and I am wrong on this one. I concede that there is only this one listing where James is before Peter, because in no other place is James listed with Peter at all, either before or after.
In my memory I thought there were other such listings but I remembered wrong. I did say “ALWAYS”, but in a way I was right still because if there is only one listing where James is listed with apostles that that one time is still “always”.
I think the reason is that this was not a listing of apostles, but rather a list of those whom St Paul said were “pillars”, or rather
seemed to be pillars. James was never called an apostle so the listing contains two apostles and a bishop. The bishop is listed first, I still maintain, because this bishop was overseer of the whole Church, including the apostles.
Give us just one or two fathers who recognized his rule over the whole church-even from his own see. Surely the fathers must have something to say about the ruler of the whole church if it was indeed St. James?
No, I can’t give you any such quote from any Church Father because none of them taught that anyone other than St Peter had universal jurisdiction. This is not a East vs West issue. When we were all one Church all churches acknowledged Rome as the Chief and believed that it was because of St Peter that Rome was Chief. I believe that St James’s leadership of the whole Church was indeed taught by those in the Jewish party of the Church and also most likely the Samaritan party of the Church too. But they are not around any more to tell us of such things and I believe that most of what their “Church Fathers” had to say were destroyed. So all I have in support of this is from scripture plus one verse from the so-called Gospel of Thomas. (BTW, it is said that the Gospel of Thomas was Gnostic, but what advantage would the Gnostic’s have by saying that James was head of the Church? How would such a claim help them advance Gnosticism?)
If you wish to discredit me on this matter because I cannot use any Church Father to support this matter feel free to do so. But realize too that really the teaching that St Peter is head of the Church because of the Keys is likewise really a scripture-only teaching. Yes Church Fathers speak of it but they do so only the way we can, that is by quoting the same scripture verses that we can quote and telling us what those verses mean. None of the Church Fathers ever say that this was the tradition of the Church form the beginning that was passed down to us from the Apostles.
As I said before I think that the story of St Peter coming to Rome etc. was all made up! I don’t think any Church leader made the stories up, but rather others made them up and the leaders just didn’t correct the stories because they helped Rome become established in the minds of many as the greatest pillar of orthodoxy in the world. Do the ends justify the means? Not for me to say.
Come on, John- headship of the universal church, rule over the brethren, ruler of the whole world, to him the flock is entrusted, the whole world is entrusted…Doesn’t look like St. Chrysostom has any confusion at all about Peter ruling the whole church.
I disagree because there’s just no evidence for it. Y’all are always accusing us of exaggerating Rome’s place in the early church- yet you do it here with St. James. If not, just reference some fathers who held to this idea.
Can’t do it, so may I just advise you to continue to believe as you do. I’m sure that what you believe helps motivate you to be a better Christian, so don’t let the likes of me be a distraction for you.
I’m sorry I employed the word insane- but let me clarify that I didn’t mean you are insane.
That’s ok. Maybe I am insane, when I see that there can no good come of this should I convince anybody.
Sometimes these debates get your blood boiling and you hurry to reply w/out taking a breath!
Seeing that this is how what what I said effects you I should say I’m sorry.
I don’t believe this is as wide a belief as that, at least not among apostolic churches.
Why then is the Epistle of St James so often referred to as a “catholic” epistle if at least a great many Christian think that this bishop had universal authority?
Grace & Peace!