One of the reasons for rejecting the papacy is the lack of justification for it. There are apparent contradictions of the concept of the papacy in some New Testament documents and other early sources, but the lack of evidence for the office would be enough reason to not accept it, even if such contradictions didn't exist.
However, Protestants often focus on too narrow a range of contexts in which the papacy is absent in the early sources. A lot of attention is given to passages about Peter in the gospels and Acts and material about church government in the early sources, for example, but we ought to think more broadly about where a papacy could have been mentioned if it existed. A papacy wouldn't have to be mentioned at every conceivable opportunity. But the larger the number and variety of contexts in which a papacy could have been mentioned, but wasn't, the more likely it is that the office didn't exist. What I want to do in this post is provide a few examples of contexts that are often neglected.
The apostles sometimes discussed their upcoming death, what was being done to preserve their teachings, and how Christians should conduct themselves going forward (e.g., Acts 20:17-38, 2 Timothy 3:10-4:8, 2 Peter 1:12-21). If the papacy was considered the foundation of the church, the infallible center of Christian unity throughout church history, the absence of any mention of such a resource in passages like these is significant.
Another group of relevant contexts is the imagery used to refer to relevant entities, such as what imagery is used to refer to the apostles or the church. We get twelve thrones without Peter's throne being differentiated (Matthew 19:28), three pillars without Peter's being differentiated (Galatians 2:9), twelve foundation stones without Peter's being differentiated (Ephesians 2:20, Revelation 21:14), etc.
The early Christians often interact with the objections of their opponents. The gospels respond to the charge that Jesus performed miracles by the power of Satan, Paul responds to his critics in his letters, Justin Martyr wrote a response to Jewish arguments against Christianity, Origen wrote a response to Celsus' anti-Christian treatise, and so on. See here regarding the lack of reference to a papacy in such contexts.
It's important for Protestants (and other opponents of the papacy) to bring up considerations like these, since the absence of early references to a papacy becomes more significant when the absence occurs across a broader range of contexts. If only two pages of early Christian literature were extant, the absence of a papacy (or whatever other concept) would be much less significant than its absence across two million pages. The number of pages matters (assuming the usual diversity of topics you'd get with an increase in such a page number).
One of the reasons why it's become so popular for Catholics to argue for the papacy by an appeal to something like typology or Old Testament precedent is that there's such a lack of evidence in the New Testament and the early patristic literature. So, there's a turn to other sources to try to find what isn't present where we'd most expect to see it.
Good points. I would also add there is no office of a papacy mentioned in any lists for church leadership roles.
ReplyDeleteAnd those lists and the mentioning of roles without the form of a list occur in many places. That quantity of contexts is important.
DeleteOne mistake Protestants often make is to let Catholics have too much of an influence in framing these discussions. Acts 15:6-21 will be cited, with Catholics claiming that Peter acted as a Pope in verses 7-12 and Protestants countering by arguing against that interpretation of those verses and pointing out that similar arguments could be used to allege that James acted as a Pope in verses 13-21. That's a good Protestant response as far as it goes, but we should go on to cite verses 22-29. There's no mention of papal authority, even though citing it would be so relevant, especially if Peter had the papal role Catholics often suggest he had in verses 7-12. Instead, the passage repeatedly refers to "the apostles and the elders, with the whole church", "the apostles and the brethren who are elders", "it seemed good to us", etc. Protestants shouldn't stop at Acts 15:21. They should go on to discuss what's said just after that.
I ran into a catholic who thought that the below was compelling proof of an early papacy, but it largely begs the question and doesn't give any reason for a non-catholic to find it compelling. Jason, do you think there's anything else that you would add?
Delete""The Council is the Magisterium of the Church. There is 21 Ecumenical Councils. A council is recognized as ecumenical once its works are approved by a pope." In other word, the Church practice Magisterium through the councils.
The i give you the list of the early Church Ecumenical Councils that been approved by the Bishop of Rome (The Pope), because he has a power to oversee the Catholic Church across the world, acting as the representative of Jesus Christ on earth, as His prime minister on earth (The Church is the oeo-Levitic Kingdom, theologically and spiritually; there is king and prime minister):
1. Council of Nicaea I (325 AD), approved by Pope Sylvester I.
2. Council of Constantinople I (381 AD), approved by Pope Damasus I.
3. Council of Ephesus (431 AD), approved by Pope Celestine I.
4. Council of Chalcedon (451 AD), approved by Pope Leo the Great.
5. Council of Constantinople II (553 AD), approved by Pope Vigilius."
If his reference to "king and prime minister" is an appeal to Isaiah 22, see the comments section of the thread here for my comments on the alleged papal implications of that passage (in more than one post there). Regarding ecumenical councils, see here and here. If you want the whole series those posts are taken from, all six parts are linked here.
DeleteThanks!
DeletePeter De Rosa in "the dark side of the papacy" mentions an important early book dealing with heresies (was it "against heresies"). That deals with every kind of heresy.
ReplyDeleteBut it never mentions failure to recognise the primacy of Rome as a heresy. Because no-one had heard of it.