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In our search for authority we have seen that the Scriptures neither define nor interpret themselves The obvious place to go is the Pope. There is a good analysis of the claims made by the Church for Matthew 16:18 at the ‘Lonely Pilgrim’ blog (follow the link). Now either we believe Jesus meant what he said, or we need to explain it away. The Protestant view has been to find ingenious reasons why it doesn’t mean what the Catholic Church says it does, but before Catholics get too triumphalist, they might want to note that the Orthodox do not accept the Catholic view, even whilst fully acknowledging that the Bishop of Rome has an honoured historic position. Those with a taste for esoteric controversy might follow up this argument on various Catholic and Orthodox fora.
I probably ought to say up front that to me both the Catholic and the Orthodox views of the Papacy smack of special pleading: both selectively report Church history to justify their existing position. That does not mean that I don’t think they both have something in them, but it does mean that there is a good amount of tares in with the wheat.
The Orthodox are happy to accept a primacy of honour. That phrase would do a politician proud, since it can mean whatever its users want it to mean. It is said that that is what the early Church gave to the Bishop of Rome, but what does that mean?
Of course we can go back to Clement’s letters, and we can argue about who Clement was, and whether he was Pope, but let us not forget that the last person sending letters to advice and admonition to Corinth was St. Paul, and no one said he was Pope. But before we get carried away in the other direction, let us not try to make great claims for the so-called Pentarchy either. Jerusalem lost its important very early and never recovered its authority; Antioch’s first bishop was St. Peter, but no one there ever based any claims to general authority on it; Alexandria, which housed a famous theological school, never claimed authority outside of North Africa; and Constantinople was a late-comer which owed its authority solely to the Emperor.
If our understanding of anything has developed, it is the understanding of the position of the Pope. A recent scholarly book by Susan Wessel shows how Leo the Great (Pope 440-41) was the first Pope to make systematic use of the Petrine verses to show that Rome did, indeed, have authority over other Sees. St. Leo the Great made two main contributions to the developing understanding of what ‘primacy’ mean. The first amounts to an assertion that the past existed in the present, not just because he was Peter’s successor, but in the form of a direct and present link between the Apostle and the Pope. As he put it in his sermon on 19 September 443 (Sermon 3.4)
Regard him [Peter] as present in the lowliness of my person. Honour him. In him continues to reside the responsibility for all shepherds, along with the protection of the sheep entrusted to them. His dignity does not fade even in an unworthy heir.’
This is what Leo understood by the saying of the Chalcedonian Fathers: ‘Peter has spoken through Leo. (See here also W. Ullmann, ‘Leo I and the Theme of Papal Primacy’, Journal of Theological Studies 1960, pp. 26-28).
Under Roman jurisprudence, a person was supposed to be present in his legal representative, even as the deceased was in his heir. The same jurisprudence was present in the eastern empire, so to argue that anyone in Constantinople would have been ignorant of this conception of what it meant for Leo to have said what he had said seems to strain credulity. Indeed, as K. Shatz puts it in Papal Primacy From Its Origins to the Present (1996), Leo made ‘the “church of tradition … into the church of the capital city that extends its laws to the whole world.’ (pp. 33-36 for the argument).
On this understanding the Pope was not simply Peter’s representative but his living successor – Peter spoke through him. Thus, Rome’s judgments and decrees were rendered universal because the Holy Apostle was understood to be present in Leo and in the system of justice he administered. As Leo put in in that same sermon on 19 September 443 (3.3):
Persevering in the fortitude he received, blessed Peter does not relinquish his government of the Church. He was ordained before the others so that, when he is called rock, declared foundation, installed as doorkeeper for the kingdom of heaven, appointed arbiter of binding and loosing (with his definitive judgments retaining forces even in heaven), we might know through the very mysteries of these appellations what sort of fellowship he had with Christ. He now manages the things entrusted to him more completely and effectively. He carries out every aspect of his duties and responsibilities in him and through him whom he has been glorified.
So, if we do anything correctly or judge anything correctly, if we obtain anything at all from the mercy of God through daily supplications, it comes about as the result of his works and merits. In this see his power lives on and his authority reigns supreme. This, dearly beloved, is what the confession has obtained [Matthew 16:18]. Since it was inspired by God the Father in the apostle’s heart, it has risen above all the uncertainties of human thinking and has received the strength of a rock that cannot be shaken by any pounding.
It is Peter’s presence that brings about the Christian universalism that Leo envisoned himself exercising. If we look at his letter to the bishops of Illyricium, 12 January 444, placing them under Anastasius, the bishop of Thessalonica, and telling them that serious disputes must be referred to Rome, we see him exercising that power of which his sermons spoke.
The primacy of Rome was not simply the result of Apostolic succession, or of inhertance from St. Peter, but of this very special relationship which ensured that Peter spoke through the Pope. As Leo says in a sermon given on 29 September: [Sermons 5.4]
our solemnity is not merely the apostolic dignity of the most blessed Peter. He does not cease to preside over his see but unfailingly maintains that fellowship which he has with the eternal Priest. That stability which he received from Christ the rock (by having himself been made ‘rock’) has poured over onto his heirs as well. Whenever there is any show of firmness, it is undoubtedly the shepherd’s fortitude that appears.
Leo’s views are set out in fuller form in a sermon preached on 29 June 443 (Sermon 83.1) in which he makes it clear that since Peter exercises the Lord’s power on His behalf, so too does the Pope exercise the powers of Christ Himself, as Peter speaks through him.
This is not a claim made by any other Bishop. It was made in public by Leo in his sermons and letters, and it was based firmly upon Scripture, patristic testimony and the common law of the Empire. Before examining how it was exercised in a situation where there was a dispute, we must turn to Leo’s second contribution to the delineation of the Petrine primacy.
For my part, I do not think Matt. 16 is the best foundation for the Petrine claims; Jn. 21 and Acts 2 and Gal. 2 are better candidates.
Matt. 16 in its original context at Caesarea Philippi/Panias is better understood as a military assault, as flag-planting. When He says, “the Gates of Hell shall not prevail against it”, He is speaking of the Church’s invasion of Hell.
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I think changing Simon’s name to rock and then saying ‘on this rock’ is a bit of a clue 🙂
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I grant you, reading it off the page, that is the conclusion most would come to. But that’s not the only way it can be read. If we imagine the disciples sitting or standing out in the open, perhaps it went like this.
Jesus: [pointing at Simon] You are Rocky and [pointing at the mountain behind them] on that rock I will build My Church. We shall overwhelm their defences; they will not stop us. Charge!
This reading of the text is perfectly possible and is consistent with Old Testament and intertestamental themes and cosmic geography. Once we reach people like Cyprian or Jerome, that context has disappeared.
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I think that sounds a bit of a strain. Wh involve Peter, let alone change his name?
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I agree, it is an unusual reading, one most Christians are not used to, but I think it actually has the best explanatory power for what is going on in the overall scene, and it fits well with the broader themes and concerns of Matthew. In general I am shocked by the New Testament’s lack of detail regarding Church polity – it is very different from the Old Testament. For this reason, I favour a much looser approach. I am tempted to call my view “anarchy”, but that would misrepresent my position.
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But why change Peter’s name? Remember, in Aramaic, Kefas means rock. It seems designed to avoid the obvious reading.
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I think it’s the case that He changed Peter’s name and then took the opportunity to make a mission statement. Changing names is, of course, a common theme in the Bible and signifies a change in status. E.g. Jacob becoming Israel signifies God confirming his place in the line of salvation. But does the change in Peter’s name signify the Papacy? Maybe, but there is a lot doctrinally that is mounted on that. I am concerned that the truth of the Papacy sends Christians who dissent to Hell. I know you don’t read it that way, but that does seem to be the inference from traditional Catholic statements.
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It does, but the Church at its best has always known that God alone decides these matters.
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Indeed. Please forgive my sharpness. Of late I have felt all sorts of promptings and I am struggling to discern God’s will. People are so adamant about shifting to Rome, but I don’t have it in me – I wish to God I could. I would love to be able to kneel at the altar rail along with everyone else.
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No problem Nicholas. Don’t trouble yourself with what others say. If it is for you, it will Crome, if not, not, the best thing is to pray and worship God as you find it possible to.
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