=Eufrosnia;10267994]So what and who is the Church?
Note that the answer to the above question would have had to be known before you accepted the Bible as the word of God (otherwise you wouldn’t know it is an authority you should trust regarding the claim that the Bible is the word of God). So without a definition from the Bible, who or what do you (or can you) identify as the Church?
The Congregation of saints, where the word is preached and the sacraments administered.
The leaders of the early Church were/are the bishops/ sees.
The issue with respect to the Papacy is interesting. If you have read the Roman Catholic case for the Papacy from Scripture, it is a consistent case. No Lutheran ever claims that is inconsistent. Rather, the tendency seems to be to state that it is not the consistent interpretation I would like to embrace regarding those passages. In other words, I as a Lutheran interpret passage x that you quoted differently, Yes?
It is inconsistent (in its current understanding) with the early Church’s understanding. The Treatise on the Power and Primacy speaks specifically about the Council of Nicea, canon 6. ISTM the primacy of the papacy, properly understood, would be that currently held by the EO.
Then the problem here is that given that there are two possible contradicting interpretations, which one must the faithful choose?
That’s true, hence the Great Schism.
The other issue with respect to the Papacy is the following. The claim is that the early Church did not have such a rigorously defined role of the Bishop of Rome. But history does tell us (writings of Church fathers) that Bishop of Rome did indeed enjoy a certain unique primacy. Still, Lutherans will say that its not clear if its the same concept/office it ended up being defined as later on.
I would accept an understanding of the primacy of the Bishop of Rome from the early Church, certainly. The Bishop of Rome is the patriarch of the west, there is no questioning that. He is also, in many respects, the central bishop of the Church on earth.
Now the error here is that Lutherans seem to think that whichever existed in the early church must be the only thing they must accept. The simplest obstacle here is what do you accept as the early church? Is it the time of the first Apostles? If that were the case, there was no such text known as the Bible. When St. Paul wrote a letter to the Corinthians, it didn’t say “this letter too is the word of God”.
We accept the 7 ecumenical councils of the early Church. And we accept as the leaders of the early Church those that held the councils.
But as I am sure you are aware, you accept the Bible from the Canon defined in Council of Hippo. That happened at least 300 years after the death of the last Apostles. Is that still the early Church? Where do you draw the line that THIS is the early Church and NOW is the new/false Church?
The Council of Hipp was not an ecumenical council, but a local synod. Same with Carthage, etc. But I do accept, for the purposes of those involved in that synod, that it stated a canon of scripture, no doubt. But that canon, like that synod, was not universally accepted in the Church, but by part of it. I’m not one who says that the deuterocanon is to be rejected, but only that it should be received as disputed, as by St. Jerome and many others.
Also, what happened to the authority of the Church after pronouncing the Canon of Scripture? How did it suddenly disappear? Here you have an authority equal* to Scripture but if the Lutheran claim is true, it didn’t survive. How can that be?
Not that it didn’t survive, but that it is broken by schism.
(Note:* I used the word equal because a lesser authority cannot make a claim that something is of greater authority than itself (specifically in the case where the object/person the greater authority is claimed for, in this case the Bible, cannot provide evidence from itself for the claim.).
You keep using authority in a way that I didn’t. Of course the Church has authority to set the canon of scripture, but also other canons (rules) too.
Also, if this authority was capable of pronouncing a text (the Bible) as equal in authority to itself, why is it problematic that it can pronounce papal infallibility in a more rigorous manner?
If there is a truly ecumenical council that pronounces papal infallibility, I will accept it. No such council has happened, not since the 7th.
It is well worth noting that the objection of Lutherans that Papacy does not exist in the early Church is not one of contradiction but rather an argument from absence. Just as the Bible as an entire collection we know today was absent in the Early Church, yet we have come to accept it based on the authority of the Church, why is it problematic to accept the Papacy as it has now been rigorously defined by that same authority, the Church?
Please read the Treatise on the Power andPrimacy of the Pope. Note that it does have polemics in it, that are more in tune with the Reformation era. Focus, instead on what it says without the polemics.
bookofconcord.org/treatise.php
Jon