Are you ready for some football? Apparently not… or else you are ignoring me.
If Super Bowls already existed when the championship game was played they would not have later called it a Super Bowl. That would have been very confusing. But you are telling me that apostles were really bishops even though they were never addressed as such, and they appointed bishops, who were addressed as such, to oversee the churches they established. That is strange.
So, if I understand you correctly, you consider all the apostles to be the first bishop of whatever churches they founded. This means Peter was simultaneously the bishop of every church he was involved in establishing. It would be impossible for any apostle to oversee all the churches they established. Furthermore, the concept tends to diminish the roles of the bishops they appointed, or rather, the Holy Spirit appointed.
It was not an apostle’s job to oversee local churches; it was their job to preach the Gospel and lay the foundation of the churches they established through their preaching. There is a difference between apostles and bishops, and you Catholics are trying to blur the distinction to bolster your ideology.
Here is a good example of how that ideology plays out in the Catholic Encyclopedia. I looked up two well known bishops of the late first century, Clement of Rome and Ignatius of Antioch, to see how they were viewed with respect to their succession from the apostles. I found exactly what I expected to find, an unfair bias towards Clement’s relationship to Peter from that of Ignatius’.
In view of Clement’s succession, the Catholic Encyclopedia asserts, by virtue of the following quote, that Peter was the first bishop of Rome.
St. Jerome himself in several other places follows this opinion, but here he **correctly states **that Clement was the fourth pope. . (C.E. Clement of Rome)
In view of Ignatius’ succession, the Catholic Encyclopedia, by virtue of the following quote, inserts doubt as to whether or not Peter had anything to do with Antioch’s founding. And even if one supposed he did establish that church, they are led to believe the importance of it is not significant.
If we include St. Peter, Ignatius was the third Bishop of Antioch and the immediate successor of Evodius. (C.E. Ignatius of Antioch)
An objective view of these two successions, using the same sources of tradition, would conclude that there is no difference in importance or authority between the two bishops. But the Catholic Encyclopedia, which does not attempt to be objective, elevates the importance of Peter in the Roman succession and diminishes his importance in the Antioch succession.
To you that might not be a big deal, but to me it is. The bias I see in the Catholic Encyclopedia is the same bias I see in your comments. Irenaeus says nothing about Peter being a bishop in Rome, yet you think he does because that is what you believe. When he says, “Peter and Paul founded the church,” you see, “Peter was the first bishop of Rome.” It’s not fact it’s ideology.