G
Graehame
Guest
Incidentally, Radical, I omitted to mention the strongest argument that 1 Clement wasn’t a mere “exhortation of 1 co-equal church to another”, & that is the manner in which it was received by the Corinthians.
The automatic human reaction to being “exhorted” by someone with no authority to do so is to say, possibly just to oneself, "Who is this clown & why should he think I’m gonna answer to him?" But the Corinthians didn’t receive it that way.
Instead, they immediately obeyed. Eusebius records that they read 1 Clement from their pulpits for the next 200 years, & it was proposed & seriously considered for inclusion in the canon of the NT. Strong evidence that the Corinthians regarded the letter as possessing considerable authority.
The automatic human reaction to being “exhorted” by someone with no authority to do so is to say, possibly just to oneself, "Who is this clown & why should he think I’m gonna answer to him?" But the Corinthians didn’t receive it that way.
Instead, they immediately obeyed. Eusebius records that they read 1 Clement from their pulpits for the next 200 years, & it was proposed & seriously considered for inclusion in the canon of the NT. Strong evidence that the Corinthians regarded the letter as possessing considerable authority.
