well, for starters we aren’t agreed that there was any successor…
You may not agree, but this is the unbroken faith of all Christians until the Reformation. At that time, the Apostolic Succession was thrown out, in an effort to throw out the corruption into which some of them had fallen…
.but, in any event, what you see as legitimate growth, I see as man-made innovation…
You would have to see it that way. If God did not do what He said He would do, and the testimony of the NT is bogus, then you can conclude no other.
Code:
and it isn't the only bit of man-made innovation, hence the need to label the founders of the CC as Mr. Inovation, Mrs. Development and Father Time
This is just a statement of calumny and disparagement.
Do you think that the first Roman Christians were primarily Jews? Were Jewish communities of that day led by elders?
Yes, I think that the community in Rome started with Jews who were pilgrims in Jerusalem on Pentecost. Yes, I think the Jewish communities were led by elders.
Code:
The Didache instructs the congregation to appoint leaders for themselves.
The Didache is written for pastors.
now there’s a bit of pure speculation
The Jewish community was trained to defer to elders. However, in the Church, the role of Presbyter was passed through the laying on of hands.
an apostle: a) was sent out to preach the gospel, b) a witness to the resurrection and c) had his ministry confirmed by signs and wonders. An apostle provided pastoral care to a church (a temporary reality) and then moved on (thereafter providing pastoral care infrequently by letter, if at all). An overseer may have lacked (a), (b) and (c), would have been a local resident and it was intended that his provision of pastoral care would have been rather permanent
Some of the Aposltes settled and remained. When Peter and Paul went to Rome, they remained there until their deaths.
scripture doesn’t actually say that, does it? Where are the terms “succeed” and “office” used exactly? I suspect that you are referring to the replacement of Judas…which was necessary b/c the Twelve were to sit on 12 thrones and judge the 12 tribes (Matt 19, Luke 22) Judas needed to be replaced b/c he wasn’t going to serve as a judge after betraying Christ.
Yes, Jesus chose the 12 and intended for them to sit on the 12 thrones, but before that, they had an earthly ministry to teach and shepherd the flock. They appointed bishops and elders in the communities, and instructed the bishops to follow this same pattern not to lay hands on anyone hastily, and to guard what had been entrusted to them, teaching it to faithful men who were able to instruct others also. Primarily the duty of the Bishop is to teach and shepherd the flock.
There was no succession for the role of judge of the 12 tribes.
I am not sure how this relates…
The role of the Apostles in this regard is eternal. Why would they need a successor?
Code:
b/c that is what you want to see history affirm....others, like me don't see that affirmation
Actually, I didn’t. I fought tooth and nail for decades.
The Truth will out.
I thought that the CC wanted to claim that Peter was the first Pope and that a bishop of Rome "stepped into his sandals"and that the CC possesses an unbroken line of Popes going back all the way to Christ’s appointment of Peter and that the Roman bishop has served as the Vicar of Peter/Vicar of Christ ever since Peter passed on the torch.
Yes.
Radical;7593960 Instead said:
No, Radical. We don’t see this. We see that the Apostles came to Rome for the first time (after there was a thriving Christian community) and built up the foundation of the Church there, shepherding her and guiding her until they were martryrd. If you think that any of those “elders” that may have existed in Rome did not defer to the episcopal oversight of the Apostles then you are mistaken.
Radical;7593960 This “unbroken line” actually never reaches Christ…it only starts a hundred years later and then still has problems
[/quote said:
Seems like one would have to throw out a lot of history and scripture to maintain such a position.
there wasn’t a whole lot of deferring goin’ on when Paul confronted Peter to his face
No one should defer to hypocrisy.
I don’t suppose that all Christendom had that understanding…yes, you can provide a number of ECFs who held that opinion (or something similar), but a number of ECFs don’t equal all of Christendom.
The writings only testify to what all Christendom beleived. You see, there is one great flaw in your arguement. You have not dispatched the fact that the Eastern Christians have also maintained the Apostolic Succession. They have no love lost on Rome, either.
Continuing the work of, ministry of, task assigned to an apostle is the succession of a function/role and not the succesion of an office.
There is no difference. Scripture records that the “office” Matthias took was a “bishopric”.