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Peter and the Papacy
Catholic Answers ^

Posted on 05/01/2015 2:36:22 PM PDT by NYer

There is ample evidence in the New Testament that Peter was first in authority among the apostles. Whenever they were named, Peter headed the list (Matt. 10:1-4, Mark 3:16-19, Luke 6:14-16, Acts 1:13); sometimes the apostles were referred to as "Peter and those who were with him" (Luke 9:32). Peter was the one who generally spoke for the apostles (Matt. 18:21, Mark 8:29, Luke 12:41, John 6:68-69), and he figured in many of the most dramatic scenes (Matt. 14:28-32, Matt. 17:24-27, Mark 10:23-28). On Pentecost it was Peter who first preached to the crowds (Acts 2:14-40), and he worked the first healing in the Church age (Acts 3:6-7). It is Peter’s faith that will strengthen his brethren (Luke 22:32) and Peter is given Christ’s flock to shepherd (John 21:17). An angel was sent to announce the resurrection to Peter (Mark 16:7), and the risen Christ first appeared to Peter (Luke 24:34). He headed the meeting that elected Matthias to replace Judas (Acts 1:13-26), and he received the first converts (Acts 2:41). He inflicted the first punishment (Acts 5:1-11), and excommunicated the first heretic (Acts 8:18-23). He led the first council in Jerusalem (Acts 15), and announced the first dogmatic decision (Acts 15:7-11). It was to Peter that the revelation came that Gentiles were to be baptized and accepted as Christians (Acts 10:46-48). 

 

Peter the Rock

Peter’s preeminent position among the apostles was symbolized at the very beginning of his relationship with Christ. At their first meeting, Christ told Simon that his name would thereafter be Peter, which translates as "Rock" (John 1:42). The startling thing was that—aside from the single time that Abraham is called a "rock" (Hebrew: Tsur; Aramaic: Kepha) in Isaiah 51:1-2—in the Old Testament only God was called a rock. The word rock was not used as a proper name in the ancient world. If you were to turn to a companion and say, "From now on your name is Asparagus," people would wonder: Why Asparagus? What is the meaning of it? What does it signify? Indeed, why call Simon the fisherman "Rock"? Christ was not given to meaningless gestures, and neither were the Jews as a whole when it came to names. Giving a new name meant that the status of the person was changed, as when Abram’s name was changed to Abraham (Gen.17:5), Jacob’s to Israel (Gen. 32:28), Eliakim’s to Joakim (2 Kgs. 23:34), or the names of the four Hebrew youths—Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah to Belteshazzar, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego (Dan. 1:6-7). But no Jew had ever been called "Rock." The Jews would give other names taken from nature, such as Deborah ("bee," Gen. 35:8), and Rachel ("ewe," Gen. 29:16), but never "Rock." In the New Testament James and John were nicknamed Boanerges, meaning "Sons of Thunder," by Christ, but that was never regularly used in place of their original names, and it certainly was not given as a new name. But in the case of Simon-bar-Jonah, his new name Kephas (Greek: Petros) definitely replaced the old. 

 

Look at the scene

Not only was there significance in Simon being given a new and unusual name, but the place where Jesus solemnly conferred it upon Peter was also important. It happened when "Jesus came into the district of Caesarea Philippi" (Matt. 16:13), a city that Philip the Tetrarch built and named in honor of Caesar Augustus, who had died in A.D. 14. The city lay near cascades in the Jordan River and near a gigantic wall of rock, a wall about 200 feet high and 500 feet long, which is part of the southern foothills of Mount Hermon. The city no longer exists, but its ruins are near the small Arab town of Banias; and at the base of the rock wall may be found what is left of one of the springs that fed the Jordan. It was here that Jesus pointed to Simon and said, "You are Peter" (Matt. 16:18). 

The significance of the event must have been clear to the other apostles. As devout Jews they knew at once that the location was meant to emphasize the importance of what was being done. None complained of Simon being singled out for this honor; and in the rest of the New Testament he is called by his new name, while James and John remain just James and John, not Boanerges. 

 

Promises to Peter

When he first saw Simon, "Jesus looked at him, and said, ‘So you are Simon the son of John? You shall be called Cephas (which means Peter)’" (John 1:42). The word Cephas is merely the transliteration of the Aramaic Kepha into Greek. Later, after Peter and the other disciples had been with Christ for some time, they went to Caesarea Philippi, where Peter made his profession of faith: "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God" (Matt. 16:16). Jesus told him that this truth was specially revealed to him, and then he solemnly reiterated: "And I tell you, you are Peter" (Matt. 16:18). To this was added the promise that the Church would be founded, in some way, on Peter (Matt. 16:18). 

Then two important things were told the apostle. "Whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven" (Matt. 16:19). Here Peter was singled out for the authority that provides for the forgiveness of sins and the making of disciplinary rules. Later the apostles as a whole would be given similar power [Matt.18:18], but here Peter received it in a special sense. 

Peter alone was promised something else also: "I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven" (Matt. 16:19). In ancient times, keys were the hallmark of authority. A walled city might have one great gate; and that gate had one great lock, worked by one great key. To be given the key to the city—an honor that exists even today, though its import is lost—meant to be given free access to and authority over the city. The city to which Peter was given the keys was the heavenly city itself. This symbolism for authority is used elsewhere in the Bible (Is. 22:22, Rev. 1:18). 

Finally, after the resurrection, Jesus appeared to his disciples and asked Peter three times, "Do you love me?" (John 21:15-17). In repentance for his threefold denial, Peter gave a threefold affirmation of love. Then Christ, the Good Shepherd (John 10:11, 14), gave Peter the authority he earlier had promised: "Feed my sheep" (John 21:17). This specifically included the other apostles, since Jesus asked Peter, "Do you love me more than these?" (John 21:15), the word "these" referring to the other apostles who were present (John 21:2). Thus was completed the prediction made just before Jesus and his followers went for the last time to the Mount of Olives. 

Immediately before his denials were predicted, Peter was told, "Simon, Simon, behold, Satan demanded to have you, that he might sift you like wheat, but I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail; and when you have turned again [after the denials], strengthen your brethren" (Luke 22:31-32). It was Peter who Christ prayed would have faith that would not fail and that would be a guide for the others; and his prayer, being perfectly efficacious, was sure to be fulfilled. 

 

Who is the rock?

Now take a closer look at the key verse: "You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my Church" (Matt. 16:18). Disputes about this passage have always been related to the meaning of the term "rock." To whom, or to what, does it refer? Since Simon’s new name of Peter itself means rock, the sentence could be rewritten as: "You are Rock and upon this rock I will build my Church." The play on words seems obvious, but commentators wishing to avoid what follows from this—namely the establishment of the papacy—have suggested that the word rock could not refer to Peter but must refer to his profession of faith or to Christ. 

From the grammatical point of view, the phrase "this rock" must relate back to the closest noun. Peter’s profession of faith ("You are the Christ, the Son of the living God") is two verses earlier, while his name, a proper noun, is in the immediately preceding clause. 

As an analogy, consider this artificial sentence: "I have a car and a truck, and it is blue." Which is blue? The truck, because that is the noun closest to the pronoun "it." This is all the more clear if the reference to the car is two sentences earlier, as the reference to Peter’s profession is two sentences earlier than the term rock. 

 

Another alternative

The previous argument also settles the question of whether the word refers to Christ himself, since he is mentioned within the profession of faith. The fact that he is elsewhere, by a different metaphor, called the cornerstone (Eph. 2:20, 1 Pet. 2:4-8) does not disprove that here Peter is the foundation. Christ is naturally the principal and, since he will be returning to heaven, the invisible foundation of the Church that he will establish; but Peter is named by him as the secondary and, because he and his successors will remain on earth, the visible foundation. Peter can be a foundation only because Christ is the cornerstone. 

In fact, the New Testament contains five different metaphors for the foundation of the Church (Matt. 16:18, 1 Cor. 3:11, Eph. 2:20, 1 Pet. 2:5-6, Rev. 21:14). One cannot take a single metaphor from a single passage and use it to twist the plain meaning of other passages. Rather, one must respect and harmonize the different passages, for the Church can be described as having different foundations since the word foundation can be used in different senses. 

 

Look at the Aramaic

Opponents of the Catholic interpretation of Matthew 16:18 sometimes argue that in the Greek text the name of the apostle is Petros, while "rock" is rendered as petra. They claim that the former refers to a small stone, while the latter refers to a massive rock; so, if Peter was meant to be the massive rock, why isn’t his name Petra? 

Note that Christ did not speak to the disciples in Greek. He spoke Aramaic, the common language of Palestine at that time. In that language the word for rock is kepha, which is what Jesus called him in everyday speech (note that in John 1:42 he was told, "You will be called Cephas"). What Jesus said in Matthew 16:18 was: "You are Kepha, and upon this kepha I will build my Church." 

When Matthew’s Gospel was translated from the original Aramaic to Greek, there arose a problem which did not confront the evangelist when he first composed his account of Christ’s life. In Aramaic the word kepha has the same ending whether it refers to a rock or is used as a man’s name. In Greek, though, the word for rock, petra, is feminine in gender. The translator could use it for the second appearance of kepha in the sentence, but not for the first because it would be inappropriate to give a man a feminine name. So he put a masculine ending on it, and hence Peter became Petros. 

Furthermore, the premise of the argument against Peter being the rock is simply false. In first century Greek the words petros and petra were synonyms. They had previously possessed the meanings of "small stone" and "large rock" in some early Greek poetry, but by the first century this distinction was gone, as Protestant Bible scholars admit (see D. A. Carson’s remarks on this passage in the Expositor’s Bible Commentary, [Grand Rapids: Zondervan Books]). 

Some of the effect of Christ’s play on words was lost when his statement was translated from the Aramaic into Greek, but that was the best that could be done in Greek. In English, like Aramaic, there is no problem with endings; so an English rendition could read: "You are Rock, and upon this rock I will build my church." 

Consider another point: If the rock really did refer to Christ (as some claim, based on 1 Cor. 10:4, "and the Rock was Christ" though the rock there was a literal, physical rock), why did Matthew leave the passage as it was? In the original Aramaic, and in the English which is a closer parallel to it than is the Greek, the passage is clear enough. Matthew must have realized that his readers would conclude the obvious from "Rock . . . rock." 

If he meant Christ to be understood as the rock, why didn’t he say so? Why did he take a chance and leave it up to Paul to write a clarifying text? This presumes, of course, that 1 Corinthians was written after Matthew’s Gospel; if it came first, it could not have been written to clarify it. 

The reason, of course, is that Matthew knew full well that what the sentence seemed to say was just what it really was saying. It was Simon, weak as he was, who was chosen to become the rock and thus the first link in the chain of the papacy. 


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; History
KEYWORDS: catholic; kephas; keystothekingdom; petros; pope; stpeter; thepapacy; thepope; therock; vicarofchrist
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To: ebb tide
Tobit, Judith, 1st & 2nd Maccabees, Wisdom, Sirach & Baruch.

I'll bet none of y'all have heard of them. You can thank Luther for that.

Have read 1 Maccabees for the history. I recommend it for that.

Guess you have a problem with Jerome also.

Really, come back when you have something factual to report.

BTW....still waiting on the verses you claim have been changed by non-catholics.

81 posted on 05/01/2015 7:31:15 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: BipolarBob

If you meet Luther in the afterlife, I feel sorry for you.


82 posted on 05/01/2015 7:31:27 PM PDT by ebb tide
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To: ebb tide

From my research and from some research shows, they were fake so why should they have been included? In my research, I came across a very odd statement from a Catholic site. I did not bookmark it and can not find it again but it stated that Catholics beleve they wrote the NT. Just wow..


83 posted on 05/01/2015 7:33:41 PM PDT by MamaB
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To: ealgeone
Have read 1 Maccabees for the history. I recommend it for that.

If you recommend it, why did Luther remove it?

84 posted on 05/01/2015 7:34:20 PM PDT by ebb tide
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To: FourtySeven
With all due respect to Jewish people, do we Christians want the Jews deciding what should be in our Bible

The first Christians were Jews. The authors of the NT were Jews. Jesus was a Jew. Gods chosen people is Israel (Jews again). Gods focus on earth appears centered on Jerusalem. So who do you propose to lead us in Bible origins?

85 posted on 05/01/2015 7:36:35 PM PDT by BipolarBob (My God can kick your Allahs arse.)
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To: MamaB

I don’t give a hoot about hocus anti-Catholic websites that you can’t even find.

I thought you just read your protestant bible?


86 posted on 05/01/2015 7:36:38 PM PDT by ebb tide
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To: ebb tide
Have read 1 Maccabees for the history. I recommend it for that. If you recommend it, why did Luther remove it?

You apparently are blinded by your catholic teachings. Go read about Jerome. The apocrypha was never considered as canon well before Luther.

Notice I said I recommend it for the history. Reading is fundamental.

Still waiting on those verses......remember the playground.

87 posted on 05/01/2015 7:41:15 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: BipolarBob

After the Ascension of Christ into heaven, the apostles would meet together in what we call “home churches.” They celebrated an Agape meal and then the Eucharist on Sunday in memory of Christ’s Resurrection.

Yes, they attended the synagogue on Saturday for awhile, but then they were expelled from the synagogue.


88 posted on 05/01/2015 7:42:18 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: ebb tide; MamaB
I don’t give a hoot about hocus anti-Catholic websites that you can’t even find.

There have been posters on FR make the same claim. They say it's a Catholic Bible. Catholics wrote it. And the RCC has never erred and never will err. If I wasn't so lazy (Protestant trait), I'd go look it up and post it for you but I know you've been on these threads long enough to see the same stuff I see.

89 posted on 05/01/2015 7:45:01 PM PDT by BipolarBob (My God can kick your Allahs arse.)
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To: Salvation
They celebrated an Agape meal and then the Eucharist on Sunday in memory of Christ’s Resurrection. Yes, they attended the synagogue on Saturday for awhile, but then they were expelled from the synagogue.

So I guess they just gave up on that Sabbath thing because it was too hard?? Wasn't that like one of the Ten Commandments? The one that says Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it holy? I guess Jesus was just fooling with them when He said "If ye love Me, keep my Commandments"? Funny how that eucharist thing every Sunday wasn't really specified in the Bible.

90 posted on 05/01/2015 7:51:15 PM PDT by BipolarBob (My God can kick your Allahs arse.)
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To: ebb tide

**Do you deny Jesus Christ is God?**

Jesus Christ defined himself as the ‘Son of God’. Peter and the rest of the apostles taught that as well.

Neither Jesus Christ, nor his apostles (including PETER) EVER called him ‘God the Son’.


91 posted on 05/01/2015 7:52:18 PM PDT by Zuriel (Acts 2:38,39....Do you believe it?)
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To: BipolarBob

If you will read Acts, you will find that they were expelled from the temple


92 posted on 05/01/2015 7:55:06 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: ebb tide

It was a Catholic site. I read more than you will ever know. If I see something I find interesting I will type whatever it is and read. I have the Bible plus over 200 books on my iPad and have read everyone and some numerous times. I do not have to work so I read a lot. Three nieces and my daughter got together when one niece lived in DC. They were comparing childhoods and what their parents were like way back when they were young. The only thing they could find wrong with me as a teenager was that I always had a book in my hands. When I helped with the college students at church years ago, our youth minister asked me why I always had a book with me. I am so handful I love to read especially after my younger daughter died in 04 and my brother, husband and bil all died 2 years later and then my mom died in 1/2007. God is the answer!


93 posted on 05/01/2015 7:56:21 PM PDT by MamaB
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To: Salvation; BipolarBob

.
If you will read Acts, you will find that they kept the true Sabbath perfectly, and continually.

“Coming together on the first day of the week” was the gathering at the close of the Sabbath, as the sun set on what you call saturday evening. It was an ancient tradition called Havdalah.
.


94 posted on 05/01/2015 8:00:27 PM PDT by editor-surveyor (Freepers: Not as smart as I'd hoped they'd be)
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To: ebb tide
You can't split Christ into two persons. That's nonsense.

Nonsense??? If you can turn the mother of Jesus into a sinless women, we can turn Christ into 8 persons...

95 posted on 05/01/2015 8:01:07 PM PDT by Iscool
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To: MamaB

Spell check! Should be thankful instead of handful. Duh!


96 posted on 05/01/2015 8:02:04 PM PDT by MamaB
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To: BipolarBob
Gods chosen people is Israel (Jews again).

So if you aren't a Jew, do you plan to convert to Judaism?

97 posted on 05/01/2015 8:02:11 PM PDT by ebb tide
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To: BipolarBob

ACTS, CHAPTER 2

46Every day they devoted themselves to meeting together in the temple area and to breaking bread in their homes. They ate their meals with exultation and sincerity of heart,
47praising God and enjoying favor with all the people. And every day the Lord added to their number those who were being saved.


98 posted on 05/01/2015 8:04:08 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Iscool
If you can turn the mother of Jesus into a sinless women, we can turn Christ into 8 persons...

I wouldn't be surprised. You guys are good are turning all types of things into your own imaginations.

99 posted on 05/01/2015 8:04:58 PM PDT by ebb tide
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To: ebb tide
And both of them certainly encouraged men to sin, and sin freely. Satan is still at it, by the way.

That's right...If it wasn't for that nasty Luther, your religion would still be collecting cash for indulgences...Many people in purgatory could have been out by now, for enough cash...

100 posted on 05/01/2015 8:05:26 PM PDT by Iscool
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