Dear brother Jimmy,
Thank you for letting me know your point of view.
No one denies that all three are true interpretations.
EVERY SINGLE EO polemicist who has come on this board has denied that Peter refers to the rock.
The problem is that the west has dogmatitzed the one interpretation and made it the primary sense even though most of the fathers would not agree. The idea that the faith is the rock is now only a subsequent spiritual interpretation. The order is consequently switched. Peter is the rock and his faith is therefore his faith is a rock. And this is how papal infallibility is; Rome is the rock and their profession is a rock because they are the rock.
Please cite a Catholic document that supports this impression that you have about the Catholic teaching. Permit me to quote Vatican I for you:
THEN ,AFTER Simon had acknowledged Christ with the confession…it was to Simon alone that the solemn words were spoken by the Lord…"Thou are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my Church."
Here we see that the Church dogmatically understands that gift that the Lord gave to Peter to be the rock WAS A RESULT of his confession. I don’t see any room for the caricature you have given.
Whereever you have gotten your impression, it cannot have been from the teaching of the Catholic Church. In all seriousness, I must ask if your sources are anti-Catholic polemics. If you claim otherwise, I request once again that you demonstrate the impression you have given above with Catholic documents.
If you cannot, are you willing to let go of your impression?
It was revealed to Peter that Jesus was the Christ. It was also revealed to the others though as well.
Yes, thank you for pointing that out. It was indeed revealed to the others that Jesus was the Christ, BUT IT WAS REVEALED TO THEM THROUGH PETER’S ADMISSION OF IT, and Jesus’ subsequent confirmation that what Peter stated was indeed from God himself.
Once again, the principle of one as the mouthpiece for the others, the principle of one to confirm the faith of and to the others. Where in this occasion do the Orthodox find support for their ecclesiology? Can you please point out where it states that Peter’s confession was revealed to the other Apostles DIRECTLY and NOT through the mouth of their coryphaeus? I hope you can respond.
They were all filled with the Holy Spirit at pentecost to a far greater degree than Peter was in Matt.16.
Actually, it was not the Holy Spirit who gave Peter his words, but the Father himself. True enough, after Pentecost, all the Apostles would be invested with inspiration,
Can you tell me then, why even AFTER all the Apostles were gifted with inspiration, it was, ONCE AGAIN, THROUGH PETER’S MOUTH that it was revealed that the Gentiles should be let into the Church? You’d think this was the perfect opportunity for God to establish Orthodox ecclesiology. Instead, we have the Catholic ecclesiology supported by the actions of God Himself after the coming of the Holy Spirit.
The Church wasn’t always a monarchy. St. Cyprian didn’t think so when he denied what Pope Stephen said and went and called a council that said heretical baptisms were invalid.
I never stated the Church was a monarchy. I stated that heaven is a monarchy. And that the Church follows an imperfect monarchical model. Can you reassess my question and answer it accordingly?
It doesn’t matter waht St. Cyprian thought. The First Ecumenical Council vindicated Pope St. Stephen’s teaching, not Cyprian’s. In fact, the very heretics that Cyprian stated had invalid baptism (the Novatians/Cathari), the Nicene Council countered that they did!!
The situation with the apostles was different than it is with the bishops. Neither east nor west would deny that.
Yes, it was different. The difference is that the Apostles had even MUCH GREATER charisms than the bishops of today.
Yet even despite their greater spiritual gifts, JESUS CHRIST HIMSELF asserted that they would need one among them who would confirm them in the faith, and to this one He said he would give a special prayer. Now, with the bishops who have lesser charisms than the Apostles, are we now to believe that Jesus Christ’s own concern for the Apostles is no longer applicable? That is a very strange way of thinking. I guess that is why I could never be EO.
Someone has stated, “The Orthodox DO have an entity that confirms them in the faith, and that is the ecumenical council.” To this I replied, “show me where Jesus stated that a council would confirm the Apostles in the faith?” No reply from that person. Perhaps you can give a response to my question?
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