J
jinc1019
Guest
To be honest, I am not sure where a lot of this is coming from.Firstly - the Apostles did NOT agree on whether Gentiles should be bound to the Jewish law. That is why they needed a council. Peter spoke, and even those who disagreed with him listened and obeyed.
Not all the bishops agreed on Christ’s nature during the Arian controversy. So a council was called, again. The majority of attendees concurred with the then Pope that bishop Arius was wrong. Some, including Arius of course, didn’t. The disagreement of some of the successors of the Apostles didn’t mean that the issue was unresolved, it was resolved. It meant that those who disagreed with the Pope and those bishops who were in communion with him were wrong.
By the way, Jesus didn’t walk up to you and say ‘Matthew, Mark, Luke and John are
inspired scripture. In particular Matthew 18 reports my words exactly, so believe in them implicitly. The Gospel of Thomas, the Protoevangelion of James, the letters of Clement … well, some in the early church will consider them scripture, but they’re not, so feel free to ignore them.’
No. He said to the Apostles ‘what you bind on earth will be bound in heaven’, and more
significantly ‘he who hears you hears Me, he who rejects you rejects me.’ He gave them full authority to determine the Canon of that scripture you love so much.
Why on earth do you think that we can have a functioning church with a bunch of Appstles or bishops all holding equal sway and equal weight? Even if there were only two, they would be bound to disagree on something important. Result? Chaos. The split between Orthodoxy and Catholicism was chaos, as was the Reformation and everything that has happened outside of Catholicism since.
Jesus told Peter - no-one else - that Satan especially wanted his soul, that Perer had been specially prayed for, and that it was Peter’s role, no-one else’s, to ‘strengthen your brethren’. This clearly shows a very special leadership role for Peter and his successors that none of the other Apostles had - one where he was the final go-to person intimes of doubt or trouble, including disputes about the faith.
But to address your points one at a time…The apostles did not agree on whether the gentiles should be bound to the Jewish law…Peter didn’t just speak and the rest obeyed. That is TOTALLY false. Peter had a dream where God essentially told him to allow the gentiles to be apart of his Church. When the rest of the apostles learned of this, they listened. They weren’t listening to Peter, they were listening to Peter’s vision.
Second, I don’t even know why you brought up the Arian issue and the bishops not agreeing on that point. Because I don’t believe infallibility applied to anyone after the apostles, this is pretty meaningless to me. I have no doubt many bishops did not agree!
Third, your argument about scripture is completely illogical and has nothing to do with what I am saying. I never said scripture is perfect, I am not a Protestant who needs scripture for authority. Further, the CATHOLIC CHURCH, not me, but the Catholic Church agrees with me that Mathew 18 grants infallibility to the apostles. The difference between my view and the Church’s view is that the Church also says the apostles must be in communion with Peter to be infallible and I say that there is nowhere in Mathew 18 that says that, thus I think the Church is in error on that.
Fourth, shouldn’t you love the scripture? Your arrogant attitude toward my focus on it implies that I shouldn’t focus on it…But under what authority are you doing that? Certainly not the Church’s authority, who says the Bible is the inspired Word of God.
Fifth, Jesus, NOT ME, said that the other apostles have infallibility and that he would be with them WHENEVER TWO OR THREE OF THEM SPOKE IN HIS NAME. I am not making that up…the Catholic Church agrees that He said that! If you have a problem with the statement, take it up with Jesus…because HE is the one who said it, not me.