R
Randy_Carson
Guest
Given the history of the Eastern Patriarchs, I wouldn’t be so quick to bring up the subject of heresy if I were you.Actually it’s fairly easy.
“A man that is an heretic after the first and second admonition reject” - Titus 3:10
Agreed.Well Google works wonders.![]()
Not if you don’t know where to look. Or if you are willing to ignore what you see.Holy Scriptures make not one single mention of the Bishop of Rome or personal infallibility or anything of the like.
In a courtroom, Protestant scholars would be known as “hostile witnesses”. And they testify against you in support of the Catholic position that Peter is the rock. This is a fact that is beyond question.I wouldn’t expect anything different from Catholics and their progeny.
Thank you for this concession. Many Orthodox with whom I had much discussion a few months ago in another forum need to hear this truth.The fact is the ECF’s had several prevailing ideas about the question of the rock. Some said Peter,
And some might have said, “both/and” instead of “either/or”?even more said Peter’s confession.
Let’s see how this conversation might go:And even when teaching Peter was the rock many of them taught all bishops were Peter when they confessed the faith of Peter.
“Okay, James, Andrew, Matthew…can one of you guys show me the keys to the kingdom?”
“But Peter has them.”
“But you each have a copy, right?”
Not if you admit that the office of the royal steward is a perpetual office.And moreover it takes quite a few colossal leaps of logic to go from Peter - Peter alone is the rock - Peter was monach of the Apostles - Peter passed on this monarchy - Peter passed it to only the Roman bishop - All Roman bishops posses this monarchy - This monarchy means he is a bishop of bishops and infallible.
Which is why you must deny it at all costs. The implications for the Orthodox are devastating. :yup:
Knowing this, I have been honing my arguments in discussions with Lutherans as a sort of pre-season contest.