Quote:
Originally Posted by cottice
In Acts 1:15 Peter quotes the psalms and calls for someone to fill the office that Judas vacated. He is not calling for someone to be the twelfth Apostle as the Greek word that is used is episkope not apostolos.
Peter probably did not use the word episkope But that is the word that Luke wrote under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. So where are you going with this? Seems like a dead end to me. Unless, of course the Holy Spirit was wrong… Do you really want to go there?
You logic would be more believable if it were supported by other instances where an Apostle was elected to fill a vacancy caused by the death of another Apostle. But as you know full well that never happened. The Apostles are succeeded, not by other Apostles, but by bishops which is exactly what Peter called for.
So why are there eleven Apostles before Matthiass was elected and still eleven afterwards? Should not Luke have said twelve Apostles. Why not? What is so wrong about outrightly calling Matthias an Apostle? I believe there is a reason and that reason is that Luke is constrained by the Holy Spirit from doing so.
Randy, I presented my evidence from scripture. I did not read anything into it that was not there. Begin with Peter’s call for someone to fill the office vacated by Judas. Again the Greek word used is episkope. A word which is translated elsewhere in the NT as overseer or bishop and never once as apostle. Peter does not call for another apostle. He does not use that word (apostolos). Imagine the consequences if he did. Apostles would not be succeeded by bishops but by apostles. But since no one in christianity, to include the Catholic Church, believes there were additional apostles then Apostolic Succession , as maintained by the Catholic Church is a myth. For if an apostle can succeed Judas then an apostle can succceed Peter or James, John, Matthew Thomas and the others. But the church doesn’t teach that and never has. Peter called for a bishop and Matthias was that bishop and thus the Apostolic Succession of bishops was instituted and manifested in the scriptures (to the chagrin of protestants everywhere). Please open your eyes and see that scripture calls Paul an Apostle over ten times while scripture, the Book of Revelation, places a limit on the number of apostles at twelve (Rev 21:14)? So how can you say that Matthias not Paul is that twelfth apostle? You have created a contradiction in scripture by doing so. In my position there is no contradiction in scripture. Jesus replaced Judas with Paul. Scripture records that God called Paul and God sent Paul. God alone could do that because they were His Apostles and His alone, not Peter’s nor anyone elses.
It is clear that Acts 1:24-25 definitely addressed the apostleship issue. The appropriate Greek word was used too: ἀποστολῆς apostolēs. You have no way of denying the substance and weight that these 2 verses carries. Remember that Jesus already gave these Apostles the binding and loosing authority. These 11 Apostles bound this decision on Earth as in Heaven. To deny their authority is to deny the authority that Jesus vested in them. And God chose Matthias.
“And praying, they said: Thou, Lord, who knowest the hearts of all men, shew whether of these two thou hast chosen, **To take the place of this ministry and apostleship, from which Judas **hath by transgression fallen, that he might go to his own place.”
You asked Randy to open his eyes( subtle inference that his were shut) and in return I am asking you to open your mind. No one is disputing Paul apostleship. Somehow you are inferring that we deny his apostleship. But his apostleship is not of the Twelve. He was never one of them. Saul never walked with Jesus, or the Twelve or the Seventy. Paul came into the picture much later. At the time of Matthias election to Judas apostleship, Paul/Saul was still out there destroying the Church. The Twelve was made whole again upon Matthias election, way before Saul became Paul. For you to claim that Paul became the Twelve apostle, you need to show that :
a) Paul either was selected by Jesus to replace the seat vacated by Judas
b) or by those He vested with proper authority i.e. the Twelve Apostles
which you can’t. Because God has chosen Matthias already.
I have shown you previously that Paul does not include himself as one of the Twelve in 1 Cor 15:5. Matthias is already in the Twelve and Luke writes it as Twelve , not Eleven.
** “and that he appeared to Cephas,and then to the Twelve”**. So you have Luke acknowledging the Twelve. And in verse 8 , lastly appearing to Paul. You have no way to argue Paul is in the Twelve. If Luke intends for Paul to be in the Twelve, verse 8 would not fit in the scheme of things.
You asked why are there eleven Apostles before Matthias was elected and still eleven afterwards? The only time Eleven was mentioned after Matthias election is in Acts 2:14. Simple maths shows “Peter standing with the Eleven” makes twelve is it not? If Peter is standing among the Eleven, then you have a case. But it is not. He is standing with eleven others.
In addition to Paul, Barnabas is also called an apostle. Acts 14:14. why is he not considered as well?
Your persistence in promoting Paul to the Twelve is honorable but unfortunately not supported by Scriptures, Paul or the Church. I sincerely urge you to reconsider your objective to pursue this line of thinking. The question I have to asked of you is why the need to promote Paul to the Twelve? He doesn’t need it, he didn’t asked for it. But why do you think he ought to be there?
Apologies to Randy for butting in.