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FrDavid96
Guest
In that case, we’re saying the same thing. Christ Himself gave the Keys to Peter. Saying that they pass through Peter to the other Apostles (and, yes, their successors) doesn’t negate that they were given only to Peter—on the contrary, saying that they pass “through” Peter simply means that they go “from” Peter “to” the others.Dearest Father David, bless,
I agree with everything you’ve written, but I have heavy reservations about this:
Is it not more correct to say that Christ gave the keys to PRIMARILY to St. Peter, and THROUGH Peter to the other Apostles (i.e., Peter shared the keys, as Christ intended)? And, naturally, that the keys could not be used by the other Apostles apart from St. Peter.
If you write me a letter and mail it to me,
I can say that the letter came “through” the postal service
or I can say that the letter went from you, to the PO, then to me.
It’s all the same.
Without a doubt. Sure, they possess them, but ultimately they always come from/through Peter.That the other Apostles and bishops also possessed/possess the keys is a sure Tradition of the Church. This was the teaching of Pope St. Leo the Great, and explicitly affirmed by Lateran IV. Even the Traditional Rite of consecration for a bishop had an explicit request for the bishop to be granted the keys.
By no means. First, they do possess the Power of the Keys (though ultimately from Peter). Secondly, remember that we’re only discussing one very narrow topic here.My concern (coming from an Orthodox background) is that if the bishops also do not possess the keys (albeit through Peter and always in communion with his successor), then their relationship to the Pope is nothing more than the relationship of a priest to his bishop.
Also, realize that the same thing can be said about any pope. No pope (save Peter) received the Keys directly from Christ. All popes only have the Keys because they passed from Christ through Peter down to the current pope (whoever he might be, in AD 500 or AD 5000).
What if I were to say that the only reason why the current Pope Francis can absolve from sins is because Christ gave the Power of the Keys to St. Peter? Would everyone agree with that? I would venture to guess that even HH Francis himself would agree.
If we look at that sentence all by itself:
The reason why the current Pope Francis can absolve from sins is because Christ gave the Power of the Keys to St. Peter.
I hardly think anyone would disagree. Now, that doesn’t diminish Pope Francis in any way. It doesn’t make his ministry any less legitimate—not by one iota. So, if saying that does not reduce the ministry of Pope Francis, why would it diminish the ministry of the Orthodox bishops or priests?
Thoughts?