C
Cavaradossi
Guest
It is way beyond the scope of this forum. The question of textual variations is something that needs to be dealt with in a scholarly fashion, and frankly, there is almost nothing that goes on here which could qualify as scholarly. Instead, you take this matter and make insinuations which are both unfair and almost impossible to dispel because of the amount of research that would be necessary. if you want to insinuate that the compilers and translators of the Orthodox Study Bible deliberately omitted the part of Isaiah 22:22 that shows up in some manuscripts regarding the keys as an attempt to suppress the papacy or some nonsense, then you would have to prove it by researching textual variations of Isaiah 22:22 in the Septuagint, and demonstrate that compilers and translators should have used the variant with the keys but suppressed it without reason. Your claim is quite a stretch.No, this question is not beyond the scope of this forum. Do you always call things that you don’t want to deal with as red herrings or beyond the scope of this forum? I guess that’s one way to try to shut the other person down.
Nonsensical. The Septuagint is the traditional set of Scriptures not only for Greek-Speaking Orthodoxy but also for the Greek-speaking Jews in the time of Christ, like Philo of Alexandria. The Masoretic text has never been used by the Greek-speaking East because they already had access to a translation of the Old Testament scriptures which was widely used by Greek-speaking Jews and Christians alike.I think it is highly relevant that most Orthodox bibles do not use the translation that the Jewish Bibles use.
Can you find any fathers who interpret Isaiah 22:22 that way? I’ve never even seen one. In apologetics, it is not enough simply to quote the bible like Protestants do, you have to support your interpretation with patristic sources.The latter would be the translation that Christ would have known and therefore lends credence that He gave Peter special authority when He said Peter had the keys (and never gave them to any of the other apostles). It lends credence that “keys” denote something more than “professed faith” or some such other interpretation. Couple that with the fact that the Orthodox refuse to believe that there was a special authority given to Peter, one does have the right to go![]()