No the Orthodox and even most Anglicans at least tacitly acknowledge that something special was not only granted to Saint Peter but also to his successors, resulting at least in an honorary headship or a sort of first among equals status.
they don’t recognize the level of authority that is claimed by the Papacy….if they did, they would be Catholic. Like me, they reject the claim of divinely appointed supremacy
Furthermore, how many of said Christians who only know Christ through the Bible could deny the enormous historical evidence of the important role played by the Bishop of Rome not only in Western but even in universal Christianity for most of the history of Christianity?
I wouldn’t deny a considerable importance, but importance does not establish a divine appointment. No clear teaching in scripture establishes a divine appointment of supremacy. No clear teaching in scripture establishes a continuation, through succession, of any divine office given to Peter. Nothing in scripture gives any indication that the appointment would have anything to do with Rome. So we are left with the claim of supremacy for the bishop of Rome and no express scriptural backing for that claim of supreme leadership. IMHO one could fairly expect that, if such a supreme office was actually instituted and continued by God, then it would be characterized by an adherence to the style of leadership required by God. Christ (in the verses that I previously provided on this thread) made it clear that it was not to be a “lord it over others” style of leadership. You mentioned that one mustn’t ignore history, so please tell me, how many Popes in the last 15 centuries were not “lord it over” types? For the record, signing a document under the title “servant” does not determine the style of leadership…it is a question of how the style compares to the king next door. Titus and 1 Timothy make it clear as to what God required as the qualifications of an overseer…and again, since you mentioned that one mustn’t ignore history, please tell me how many Popes in the last 15 centuries did not meet those qualifications? It seems to me that there are great periods of time in the history of the Papacy where it would not be characterized by an adherence to the style of leadership required by God. That, to me, speaks volumes. Also, for the record, I am also well aware that the standard response (around here at least) is to employ the slogan “God promised infallibility/supremacy not impeccability”. No protestant expects a sinless Pope…it is that we expect that the office (of the true Vicar of Christ) if it existed, would be characterized by an adherence to the style of leadership required by God
Ignorance is not an excuse of the law.
there are exceptions to that rule….but I do prefer the fully informed decision, so please get back to me on the above questions about the Popes of the last 15 centuries.
Why would the location of Christ’s death have any role to play?
why wouldn’t it?..why wouldn’t the location of where he established the Church and where he died and rose again trump anything to do with Peter?
The logic of Saint Peter’s successor’s being in Rome draws from the fact that Saint Peter himself established…
does any serious scholar think Peter established the church at Rome?
…. and lead the Roman Church there.
what? When he showed up at Rome the overseers that had been leading that church all resigned?..It seems more likely that the existing leadership remained in place as Peter was an apostle who tended to move around.
As head of that Church as well as the universal Church, when Saint Peter died, there was a vacancy in both the Roman Church as also the whole universal Church as touching upon her common head and leader on earth.
there wasn’t a vacancy in Rome. The Roman leadership that existed before Peter arrived continued while he was there and then continued further upon Peter’s death. As to a vacancy in the universal church, most Christians then had little exposure to that alleged leadership….or the lack thereof. When would the Church at Jerusalem have learned of Peter’s death?..and upon learning of that death, how did anything actually change for them?
A scholarly consensus hardly matters.
it certainly does if you want to claim that “to be steeped in history is to become Catholic”….or that the Catholic understanding is the most reasonable one.
There is arguably a scholarly consensus that Christ was a very wise man…
not amongst Christian scholars (as is the case with the consensus that I mentioned) will you find a consensus that Jesus was only a very wise man
You mean sort of like a college of Cardinals?
no, I mean like a group of presbyters….if Peter’s authority, whatever it was, passed to the leadership of the church located at the place of his death, then it passed to a group of presbyters ….and if it could pass to a group, then why not a group that included the presbyters of the churches that Peter actually founded?
Christ also isn’t recorded as giving a lengthy sermon on the nature of the Most Holy Trinity as we formally understand that quintessentially important doctrine today.
I am happy to stay with the words contained in the NT and ditch the explanations added by the ECFs.