Go now, write it on a tablet for them,
inscribe it on a scroll,
that for the days to come
it may be an everlasting witness. (Isaiah 30:8)
inscribe it on a scroll,
that for the days to come
it may be an everlasting witness. (Isaiah 30:8)
Michael
Kruger notes, “the movement toward a written text” (in the shift from authority
in “oral tradition” to authority in written texts “would have been driven by
the very function of the apostolic office as the foundation for the ongoing
ministry of the church (Eph. 2:20)” (Canon
Revisited, 180).
I’ll have
more of this in a future blog post, Lord willing. But this is precisely the
opposite of what the Roman Catholic Church teaches. Referring to my
previous article, which provided the CCC’s treatment on the topic of the transmission
of Divine Revelation, (Scripture, Tradition, “Apostolic tradition” and “ecclesial
tradition”, etc), I’d like to break some of these out further, because in
conversations I’ve seen about these with Roman Catholics, there is a general
lack of understanding on both sides.
In that
section, I reproduced, to some degree, what the Roman Catholic official
teaching is regarding the relationship between Scripture and Tradition:
The Tradition here in question comes
from the apostles and hands on what they received from Jesus’ teaching and
example and what they learned from the Holy Spirit. The first generation of Christians did not yet have a written
New Testament, and the New Testament itself demonstrates the process of living
Tradition [emphasis added].
What we’ll
see below, however, is that, while “the content” of “the teaching” (the
Apostolic teaching) was paramount in the mind of Paul and the Apostles, in the
second century, what became more important was the “who” of the persons doing
the transmission of the teaching. And further, this concept was not an
Apostolic concept; rather, it was a wholesale adoption of a Gnostic practice by
“the church” which set the concept of “apostolic succession” in place.
For Roman Catholicism,
the interactions among “apostolic tradition”, “ecclesial tradition”, “apostolic
succession”, and the New Testament writings, are detailed by [none other than] Joseph
Ratzinger, in a 1961 essay entitled “Primacy, Episcopacy, and Successio
Apostolica”. This essay was reproduced in the recent publication of the work “God’s
Word: Scripture-Tradition-Office” (San Francisco: Ignatius Press ©2008;
Libreria Editrice Vaticana edition ©2005).
In it,
Ratzinger notes the following:
The concept of succession was clearly
formulated, as von Campenhausen has impressively demonstrated, in the
anti-Gnostic polemics of the second century; its purpose was to contrast the
true apostolic tradition of the Church with the pseudo-apostolic traditions of
Gnosis. It is therefore, from the outset, closely connected with the question
of what is truly apostolic; in particular, it is clear that successio and traditio were originally neighboring terms; the two concepts were
at first practically synonymous (Ratzinger, 22-23).
I’ve already
noted this much. At this point, Ratzinger speaks of the word διαδοχἡ, which
signified both “tradition” and “succession”. And he builds his case upon this
word.
“Tradition” is indeed never a simple
and anonymous handing on of teaching, but is linked to a person, is a living
word, that has its concrete reality in faith (Ratzinger, 23).
This is the
introduction of the concept of the “who” of the persons doing the transmission
of the teaching. Von Campenhausen discusses this word at some length. He
describes the very first known usage of this word in a technical theological
sense:
The
decisive step on the development of the concept of tradition was taken … about
the middle of the second century. It is about this time that the ideas of “transmitting”
and “receiving” tradition acquire new theological importance and a markedly
technical meaning. The origins of
this phenomenon are, however, not to be sought in the circles which elaborated
the ecclesiology of the Great Church [a common name given to the orthodox
Roman church of the second century]; instead
they take us into the world of the gnosis and its cult of the free individual
teacher. At any rate, within the Christian world it is the Gnostic Ptolemaeus
who provides the earliest evidence known to us of this new, theologically
oriented usage. In the Letter to Flora
he speaks explicitly of the secret and apostolic tradition (παράδοσεις) which
supplements the canonical collection of Jesus’s words, and which by being
handed on through a succession (διαδοχἡ) of teachers and instructors has now
come to “us”, that is, to him or to his community. Here the concept of “tradition”
is plainly used in a technical sense, as is shown particularly by the collocation
with the corresponding concept of “succession” (158).
Note this
well. The first and only usage of the concept of “a succession (διαδοχἡ) of
teachers and instructors” [within the context of Christianity] prior to
Irenaeus is found in the Gnostic Letter
to Flora of the Gnostic teacher Ptolemaeus (c. AD 90 – c. AD 168). Von
Campenhausen notes in a footnote, “this is the only pre-Irenaean attestation of
that conception of παράδοσεις [tradition being handed on] which from now on is
the determinative one” (von Campenhausen, 158).
Von
Campenhausen elaborates the concept within Gnostic writers of the second
century:
To name the original witnesses, and
even the intermediaries, by whom such secret traditions were disseminated,
presents no problem. Basilides appeals to Glaucias, Peter’s interpreter, and
through him to Peter himself; Valentinus is supposed to have been instructed by
Theodas, a disciple of Paul; the Carpocratians appeal to Mariamne, Salome, or
Martha, the Naasenians to Mariamne, to whom James, the Lord’s brother, “handed
on” the teaching. All these inventions exhibit the same method, and have the
same end in view: they justify the unfamiliar and exceptional features, which
might make a particular teaching suspect as “innovation”, by deriving them from
a definite tradition, and they validate the tradition itself by identifying
witnesses and chains—at first still fairly short—of witnesses by name.
This, then,
is where the concept of “apostolic succession” was developed. At the time of
these writers, we are well within the middle of the second century. “The
concept of tradition, of ‘handing on’ and ‘receiving’ a teaching from the
distant past, was not of course something new invented by the Gnostics. It was
not, however, Judaism which they took as their model, nor did they, at a
century’s distance, resume the connection with Paul, who in any case used
different terminology to refer to the concept.
This, too,
is another Roman Catholic bait-and-switch. Paul’s teaching on “tradition” (“παράδοσιν”,
2 Thess 3:6, for example), is frequently lumped in with the same concept. But
as von Campenhausen notes, Paul (like the rest of the New Testament) never
speaks of διαδοχἡ (“diadoche” and “successio”)
but rather of παρέλαβον (as in, the “content” of the teaching). Rather, it is
this Hellenistic, Gnostic usage that makes its way into the early church’s
concept of authority.
For centuries the concepts of paradosis and diadoche had figured in the philosophical education of antiquity in
order to explain the, as it were, genealogical reproduction of traditional
teaching from the original master in his disciples and the later heads of the
school. For no more than the Church did ancient philosophy know of a
communication of teaching without the idea of a community within which this
could take place, or at least a personal contact between the earliest figure
and his successors. Exactly in the later lists of bishops these philosophical diadochoi are, when the occasion
requires, numbered by their “generations” from the founder of the school, and
the term diadoche no longer signifies
(as paradosis does) the content of
the teaching, but instead the link created by the process of handing on and
receiving, and so the philosophical school itself … (von Campenhausen, 160).
So, whereas
for Paul, the “tradition” referred to “the content” of the teaching, by the
middle of the second century, the concept of “who was handing along the content”
rather came to the forefront.
Let’s just
let this sink in for a while.
This is something I've wanted to clarify for a long time. But it's not an easy concept to put into context. The history of the second century church is not well known, much less, well understood. But when "liberal" Roman Catholic writers such as Francis Sullivan and Raymond Brown say things like "most Catholic scholars agree that the episcopate is the fruit of a post-New Testament development", this is a core component of that notion. The notion is further expanded into the sense that "this development was so evidently guided by the Holy Spirit that it must be recognized as corresponding to God’s plan for the structure of his Church". But there is no such thing, as Trent taught, a succession (and a teaching of succession) from the hand of Christ to the hands of the apostles to the hands of "successors", etc.
ReplyDeleteIn other words, the notion that the Roman Catholic Church is "the Church that Christ founded" owes far more to the world of fantasy and imagination than it does to the world of actual history.
Seems like Rome has elevated the genetic fallacy to doctrine.
DeleteSomething like that :-)
DeleteVery interesting, John. It's been clear to me for years, from Irenaeus especially, that tracking orthodoxy through a succession of official teachers was an anti-Gnostic apologetic tactic and bears little resemblance to the concept of "succession" in the Pastoral epistles. But I was not aware that the concept was also used by the Gnostics. Thanks for this post!
DeleteThanks Tim. There is more along these lines. I.H. Marshall and (I believe) Leon Morris both have very good articles on "early catholicism", and its lack thereof in both Acts and the letters to Timothy and Titus. Von Campenhausen has much more about this, which I hope to bring in, and also, Oscar Cullmann in his article "The Tradition" actually talks about what "the content" of "the paradosis" is. I'm going to try to bring all of this to bear, plus what Kruger says about the early development of the "canonical core". The result is that, the true "tradition" is heavily Scripture-based, whereas "succession" is a later development.
DeleteI believe this makes it very possible to say that Luther, Zwingli and Calvin were very much justified for tossing out what was not a part of "the structure of the church that Christ founded" but rather, a later development.
The key to this, I think, is that for someone like Irenaeus, "succession" was an evidence that the church had been faithful up to that point. It was not a promise of some structural protection that the church would never err doctrinally. I think this perspective is the key to understanding all of this.
Yes, the concept certainly was "reified" at some point after Irenaeus, turned into an indispensable and infallible marker of the Church. But even aside from what you're arguing here, that's a difficult concept to square with history. The succession has been broken too many times in too many different places for it to be a universally valid indicator of where the truth is. The ultimate example is surely the Western Schism, the "correct" papal line of which has only been "solved" by Rome dogmatically declaring where the true pope "always" was. It's just circular.
ReplyDeleteTim, I know that "the succession" was broken many times over the centuries, but the thing that impresses Roman Catholics is "the beginning", and what will impress them most, in an apologetic setting, I think, is the fact that it simply wasn't there. Someone like Mark Shea may continue to say something about "adopting what's good in pagan culture", but the key thing is, it wasn't there in the beginning.
DeleteBut one of the really strong counter-arguments is provided by Kruger (contra Ratzinger and the CCC) to the effect that the New Testament writings really were more important (and authoritative) during that first century than RC's are willing to admit.
It really does weaken the case for "authority", which is where the main battle lines had been drawn in the 16th century.
Of course, John, you realize that the elementary error you are making is trusting in "scholarship" instead of just having "faith."
ReplyDelete:P
Heh, I am trusting faithful scholarship ;-)
DeleteAs Reagan said, "trust but verify".
Whatever the evidence for apostolic succession, there's solid evidence for apostolic recession:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.cbc.ca/news/business/story/2012/06/11/italy-economy-contraction.html
They're tumbling like dominoes over there.
Delete