Where’s that from? Your exegesis of the old testament prophets is incorrect. The promise is to Israel and as yet unfulfilled. Christ Himself when the age of the Gentiles is over will rule over Israel.
Your little fiction is what is believed at Rome and is a blueprint designed and being followed by the Jesuits on behalf of putting the entire world in subjection to the pope, who will reign from the third Temple in Jerusalem AS the Antichrist of Daniel and Revelation.
You should heed the words of Revelation 18:4 “And I heard another voice from heaven, saying, Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues.”
JL: You should read some Protestant theologians.
Is 22:22 not 21. The following snips I have taken from the book Jesus, Peter & The Keys A Scriptural Handbook on the Papacy, by Scott Butler, Norman Dahlgree and David Hess, Queenship Publishing Company
FF Bruce who taught NT Biblical Exegesis a the University of Manchester in The Hard Saying of Jesus, (Downers Grove, IL: Intervarsity, 1983), 143-144 (Isaiah 22:22). so in the new community which Jesus was about to build, Peter would be, so to speak, chief steward. (Pg 41 Jesus, Peter & The Keys)
W.F. Albright and C.S. Mann, the Anchor Bible: Matthew, (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1971), 196: Isaih xxii 15 ff. Undoubtetly lies behind this [Mathew 16:19] saying… (Pg 41 Jesus, Peter & The Keys)
Intervarsity Press produced a commentary analyzing Isaiah 22:22 and its relationship to Matthew 16:19, “The image of keys (plural) perhaps suggests not so much the porter, who controls admission to the house, as the steward, who regulates its administration (Is 22:22, in conjunction with 22:15. The issue then is not that of admission to the church (which is not what the kingdom of heaven means; see pp. 45-47) but an authority derived from a delegation of God’s sovereignty.” Craig S. Keener, the IVP Bible Background Commentary New Testament, Intervarsity Press, 1993), 256. (Pg 43 Jesus, Peter & The Keys)
The keeper of the keys his authority within the house as administrator and teacher (cf. Isa. 22:20-25, which may have influenced Matthew here). M. Eugene Boring, “Matthew,” in Pheme Perkins and others, eds., The New Interpretter’s Bible. Vol. 8, (Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press, 1995), 346. (Pg 43 Jesus, Peter & The Keys)
The keys of the kingdom of heaven: the phrase [from Matthew 16:19] is almost certainly based on Is. 22:22… D. Guthrie and others, The New Bible Commentary, (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1953 [reprinted by Inter-Varsity Press], 837. (Pg 44 Jesus, Peter & The Keys)