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About Pope Victor I’s declaration by edict, about the year 200, that any local Church that failed to conform with Rome was excluded from the union with the one Church by heresy, none other than the radical protestant scholar Adolph von Harnack admitted that Victor I was “recognised, in his capacity of bishop of Rome, as the special guardian of the ‘common unity’… " (See And On This Rock, p 118, 1987, Trinity Communications, Fr Stanley L Jaki).
Already, Peter had exercised his supreme authority in the upper room before Pentecost to have Judas’ place filled. At the first Apostolic Council of Jerusalem Peter settled the heated discussion over circumcising the gentiles and “the whole assembly fell silent” (Acts 15:7-12). Paul made sure that his ministry to the gentiles was recognised by, Peter (Gal 1:I8).
Harnack asked: “How would Victor have ventured on such an edict – though indeed he had not the power of enforcing it in every case – unless the special prerogative of Rome to determine the conditions of the ‘common unity’ in the vital questions of faith had been an acknowledged and well-established fact?”
It is precisely because Adolph von Harnack is such a radical that his admittance – using facts and reason as an “outsider” – is so valuable. With the evidence from the Sacred Scriptures that Peter was chosen by Christ, on whom He built His Church, von Harnack’s reference to “the special guardian of the common unity” is very apt – Peter holds the primacy, and his successors likewise as Christ had instituted His Church until the end of time, so the primacy on earth must exist until the end of time in Peter’s legitimate successors – in the bishops of Rome who succeeded Peter – claimed and exercised.
Already, Peter had exercised his supreme authority in the upper room before Pentecost to have Judas’ place filled. At the first Apostolic Council of Jerusalem Peter settled the heated discussion over circumcising the gentiles and “the whole assembly fell silent” (Acts 15:7-12). Paul made sure that his ministry to the gentiles was recognised by, Peter (Gal 1:I8).
Harnack asked: “How would Victor have ventured on such an edict – though indeed he had not the power of enforcing it in every case – unless the special prerogative of Rome to determine the conditions of the ‘common unity’ in the vital questions of faith had been an acknowledged and well-established fact?”
It is precisely because Adolph von Harnack is such a radical that his admittance – using facts and reason as an “outsider” – is so valuable. With the evidence from the Sacred Scriptures that Peter was chosen by Christ, on whom He built His Church, von Harnack’s reference to “the special guardian of the common unity” is very apt – Peter holds the primacy, and his successors likewise as Christ had instituted His Church until the end of time, so the primacy on earth must exist until the end of time in Peter’s legitimate successors – in the bishops of Rome who succeeded Peter – claimed and exercised.