D
dzheremi
Guest
Here it is again, from post #88. It is not my statement, however, but from St. Cyprian:I don’t recall dzheremi’s quote so I can’t respond to your statement.
Certainly the other Apostles also were what Peter was, endued with an equal fellowship both of honour and power; but a commencement is made from unity, that the Church may be set before as one; which one Church, in the Song of Songs, doth the Holy Spirit design and name in the Person of our Lord: My dove, My spotless one, is but one; she is the only one of her mother, elect of her that bare her (Cant. 9:6) (A Library of the Fathers of the Holy Catholic Church (Oxford: Parker, 1844), Cyprian, On The Unity of the Church 3, p. 133)
This was quoted in the context of refuting the use of quotes from the same saint (and others, as well) to advance modern Roman claims to universal jurisdiction of their Pope. Such an understanding was advanced by certain Roman popes themselves even while in unity with the East (one might recall Pope Leo’s infamous letter to Pope St. Dioscoros of Alexandria, for instance, attempted to tell St. Dioscoros that Alexandria should follow Rome), but importantly they were roundly rejected/ignored. So merely finding a bunch of old quotes from saints of the East and presenting them within the context of the modern RC argument (as you’ve done in your replies) is insufficient to say the least.
You appear to have quoted a large chunk of text from some Roman Catholic source (everything under the heading “CONCLUSION ON “KEYS” OF ISAIAH 22 AS PARALLEL TO MATTHEW 16” in yesterday’s post #93 appears to be unsourced, despite containing a large number of quotes, including from an ex-CoE bishop who Yawsep has reminded you is no longer functioning in that role…this does not strike me as a terribly honest way of presenting an argument; if these are your original thoughts, you could at least ). There is, however, no accounting for your understanding of it, because subsequent posts have amounted to “I wrote what I wrote, it is clear, we’re done here”. Rather odd. Generally it is best to provide some sort of reason for your understanding, rather than counting on all of us who are not you to understand exactly what you mean by “it’s clear as a bell”…it’s really not.Why are the keys to Heaven important? A very revealing question. Read the citation from Isaiah. It’s explained there. That’s why I cited it.
This is an interesting idea. If the keys are given from Roman Pope to Roman Pope, what happens during events like the Western Schism of 1378-1417? There were multiple Popes at that time, so which one gets the keys, if they are indeed given to “one man only”, as you’ve claimed in other posts? It is quite interesting indeed that this situation was eventually solved not by appeal to the Pope to be the final arbiter (there was no “the” Pope to appeal to), but by a council – the Council of Constance.Apostolic succession has been a doctrine of the Catholic Church for a very long time. You will find a ‘history’ for this belief in Paul’s letters to Timothy and in other places in Scripture.