Part of the problem with this is that the role of bishop here seems to be conflated with that of presbyter. The Apostles appointed episkopos, and charged them with appointing presybeters and deacons.
as indicated, the book is available for preview at google books…If you search in the book for “Jones” one result should be page 219. You could start reading there where Sullivan deals with “episkopos”.
Do you honestly believe that a group of elders, if visited by an Apostle or one an Apostle sent, would not yield to their authority?
I believe that they would yield…maybe Paul would have to remind them of his position, before they would do so. I don’t see how this establishes anything for your position. I don’t think any congregation would have thought that they had the authority to remove an apostle, but the congregation at Corinth most certainly thought it had the authority to remove its leaders (see 1st Clement). Clement never argues that a congregation can’t toss out its leaders, but argues that the leaders at Corinth were wrongly tossed out (b/c they had preformed well).
I agree that the structure of the leadership did develop, including the role of the bishop. However, I can’t imagine any college of presbyters (unless they are heretics and schizmatics) not yielding to an Apostle when he was present. To apply this model to Rome would necessitate Peter and Paul NEVER being in Rome, much less laboring there together until they were martyred.
You seem to be equating the position of “apostle” with that of “bishop”. Why?
Do you not see apostolic succession in the NT and the early church?
Not as presented by the Vatican…not in the NT, nor in the Apostolic fathers
Two questions. One, what is the “problem” perceived here.
I am at work now, don’t have my book here, but IIRC it would be justifying the authority claimed by the CC for its bishops.
Second, in what way is an unbroken successon of bishops a “simplistic approach”?
b/c the idea that Peter presided as a bishop in Rome and that he then appointed Linus to succeed him etc. is not the way the majority of scholars think it actually happened (after having examined the evidence)…it is simplistic and inaccurate.
I find this the most surprising statement in all of your quote. I just am totally flummoxed that anyone can read the NT and not see that the installation of bishops as successors to the Apostles is a divine institution. Is he saying it is not there, or that it is there, but did not come from God?
Flummoxed? Are you flabbergasted as well? Perhaps you need to listen more to those who don’t share your point of view…b/c that is exactly what Sullivan is saying; namely that the NT and Apostolic fathers (the evidence) do not establish the “installation of bishops as successors to the Apostles”…let alone that it was a divine institution…and please keep in mind Sullivan is describing the general consensus of the scholars.
It seems odd to say this and then not follow it…
I am not sure what you think Sullivan said and didn’t follow.
Was anyone here claiming this?
I believe so, but if it isn’t what you would claim, please note that Sullivan would not endorse this claim: the NT demonstrates that the Apostles installed bishops as their successors …which seems to be your claim and he would add that the scholarly consensus is in agreement with him. Please also keep in mind that Sullivan believes (for theological reasons, but not for historical reasons) in the Catholic form of governance. Talk to protestant scholars and they will be even less sympathetic to your claims.
Jesus is the one who chose Peter, and installed him with certain gifts and responsibilities. Jesus is the one who gave him the responsibility to feed and care for the sheep. It happened a couple decades before Peter ever got to Rome!
And? The apostles were subordinate to Jesus. The first leaders appointed by the apostles were subordinate to them. If you want to use the first two links in the chain as a precedent you are stuck with ever diminishing authority…or, said another way, the apostles were of a different class from Jesus and the first leaders were of a still different class from the apostles. How, in your opinion, does Jesus choosing Peter establish apostloic succession?
All the Apostles appointed successors. There is a Petrine succession of bishops from Antioch that is older than the one in Rome.
is there any good proof of this claim? By “good proof” I mean proof that would satisfy scholars and not proof that would satisfy those who want to justify the Catholic claims.
I am going to wait until I hear from you on succession in scripture so I don’t make assumptions that you agree with these “scholars”.
I agree with them
For most of us, it is both.
that is Sullivan’s point…it has to be both, b/c the historical evidence simply isn’t good enough to make the case by itself…you have to buy into Catholic theological arguments in order to arrive at the Vatican’s position WRT apostolic succession.