Regardless of the reasons, I’d say any movement in that direction is a positive step. The rest can come with prayer and contemplation.
This is a very even-handed and thoughtful post, and I imagine that most mainstream Protestants will agree with most of it, disagreeing only with regard to some of the nuance and detail.
Theologically, look to the origins from Holy Scripture, regardless of the fallacies inherent in Sola Scriptura. The roots of our faith is in the origin. Even the staunchest Protestant acknowledges that Jesus had Apostles. Humility must recognize as a conceit that they could know Him better than those He broke bread with.
Completely agreed. This is, in fact, the criticism of the traditional Protestant Churches
against Rome! There are those of us who confess 99% of what Rome confesses, with the exception of one or two things that Rome considers binding dogma, such as Papal Infallibility and the Immaculate Conception, which it seems would have been unknown to the Apostles. This is obviously not the place to dispute those particular issues; I just mean to point out that the Lutherans, Anglicans, Calvinists (who’ve actually read Calvin as opposed to 20th century pseudo-Calvinists) share the same basic assumption you make here.
Those Apostles had disciples of their own and performed miracles in His name and fostered The Church in the face of persecution. This is in Scripture, of course.
Laus deo!
Then turn to secular history… To reject Apostolic Succession is to require a contortion in turning the Bible from being the literal truth to being symbolic with even a rudimentary grasp of early history.
Again, agreed, although we might want to revisit exactly what Apostolic Succession consists of. I’d probably go so far as to say that the Apostolic Succession is primarily about the Apostolic Faith being passed on, although sacramental ministry is clearly a part of that.
Look at how early the graduated hierarchy of bishops and Metropolitans and Patriarchs appeared. The Protestant has to claim apostasy but if it was apostasy it happened so early on, certainly no sooner than the 2nd or 3rd generation of disciples. How could Christ have failed to create the Church as He said so early? Back to symbolism instead of literal truth?
Which is why Protestants tend not to claim apostasy. Just that the Church is full of humans, some of whom are tares. Catholics, of course, acknowledge the presence of heresy in the church from the 1st century onwards; hence all those letters in the Bible! Mainstream Protestants don’t see ourselves as a replacement for the ancient Church, or a pure group separated from a corrupt mediaeval Rome; we’re just part of the ancient Church which has tried (with varying degrees of success) to dispose of the heterodoxies that accumulate in the Church over the centuries.
Look at the date when each Protestant sect sprouted. How they cherry picked and equivocated and often reversed themselves. To really bring it home, you can spot each of the early heresies and how very similar to many/most of the Protestant sects came and went before… often multiple times. You can spot the Apologetics of the early Fathers speaking against those heresies.
That’s true in some ways, particularly with regard to sectarian Protestants; perhaps analogous are groups like the SSPX or sedevacantists, who have something of the Donatists about them?
At some point, with the basics of the history of Christian theology, you can realize that the Church is not the Church of the Bible… the Bible is the book of the Church that Our Lord himself created on His Apostles.
Agreed, as long as we acknowledge that the Church
(1) ALWAYS had authoritative Scripture, in the form of the LXX.
(2) RECOGNISED the agency of the Holy Ghost in the writing and compilation of the New Testament, such that the NT really is a binding authority on the Church, and not the Church’s creature.
It was there in the early days when Pagan Rome still strode over Europe and western Asia. It was there when Rome fell. It was there when Islam sprouted and spread. It was there when the Mongols overran much of the known world…and when they faded away. It was there when Europeans discovered the New World… and it’s still here today.
Then the former Protestant can realize that Holy Scripture itself is only half of the big picture. The other half is the enduring Apostolic traditions passed on from the Church Fathers that endure still in the Sacraments we practice and that Holy Mother Church offers still.
I think we can probably agree in part here, we’d just differ with regard to which traditions are apostolic.