
|
The
Church Fathers’ Interpretation of the Rock of Matthew 16:18 An
Historical Refutation of the Claims of Roman Catholicism(Includes
a Critique of Jesus, Peter and the Keys)
By
William Webster
Matthew 16:18 is the critical
passage of Scripture for the establishment of the authority claims
of the Roman Catholic Church. It is upon the interpretation of
the rock and keys that the entire structure of the Church of Rome
rests. And Vatican I plainly states that its interpretation of
Matthew 16 is that which has been held by the Church from the
very beginning and is therefore not a doctrinal development. The
Council asserted that its interpretation was grounded upon the
unanimous consent of the fathers. In saying this Vatican I is
claiming a two thousand year consensus for its interpretation
and teaching. It specifically states that the Roman Catholic Church
alone has authority to interpret scripture and that it is unlawful
to interpret it in any way contrary to what it calls the 'unanimous
consent of the fathers.' This principle does not mean that every
single father agrees on a particular interpretation of scripture,
but it does mean that there is a general consensus of interpretation,
and Vatican I claims to be consistent with that consensus. This
is very important to establish because it has direct bearing on
the Roman Church’s claim, that of being the one true Church
established by Christ, unchanged from the very beginning.
Roman Catholic apologists, in an effort to substantiate the claims
of Vatican I, make appeals to certain statements of Church fathers
which they claim give unequivocal and unambiguous evidence of
a belief in papal primacy in the early Church. Briefly, the arguments
can be summarized as follows:
- The fathers often speak in lofty
language when referring to the apostle Peter implying a personal
primacy.
- Numerous fathers interpret the rock of Matthew 16 as the
person of Peter.
- While some of the fathers interpret the rock to be Peter’s
confession of faith, they do not separate Peter’s confession
from his person.
- The fathers refer to the bishops of Rome as successors
of Peter.
Roman apologists historically have often
resorted to the use of selected statements of major Church fathers,
interpreting them as supportive of papal primacy. An example of
this type of argumentation can be seen in the following references
to the writings of Cyprian, Ambrose and Augustine by a Roman Catholic
apologist:
St. Cyprian of Carthage (d. 258 A.D.)
in his letter to Cornelius of Rome (c. 251 A.D.) speaks of the
Church of Rome as the ‘chair of Peter (cathedra Petri)’
and ‘the principle Church in which sacerdotal unity has
its source’ (Ep. 59, 14). St Ambrose (d. 397 A.D.) states
that ‘where Peter is, there is the Church’ (Commen..
on the Psalms 40, 30)...St. Augustine’s recognition of the
authority of the Pope is manifested by the famous words with
which he welcomes the decision made by the Pope: Roma locuta
est; causa finita est—Rome has spoken the case is concluded
(Sermon 131, 6:10). Why does Augustine believe the Bishop of
Rome has the final word? The answer is because the Pope is the
successor of St. Peter—a fact clearly recognized by Augustine
in his Letter to Generosus (c. 400 A.D.) in which he names all
34 of the bishops of Rome from Peter to Anastasius (Letter 53,
1,2).
The above arguments are very common.
They are precisely the same citations found in The Faith of
the Early Fathers by the Roman Catholic patristics scholar
William Jurgens as proof for the purported belief in papal primacy
in the early Church. And Karl Keating uses the same reference
to Augustine in his book Catholicism and Fundamentalism.
But do the statements of these fathers actually support the claims
of papal primacy? Is this what they meant by these statements?
The facts do not support this contention. These statements are
given completely out of context of the rest of the writings of
these fathers thereby distorting the true meaning of their words.
And in the case of Augustine, as we will see, his words are actually
misquoted. All too frequently statements from the fathers are
isolated and quoted without any proper interpretation, often giving
the impression that a father taught a particular point of view
when, in fact, he did not. But for those unfamiliar with the writings
of the Church fathers such arguments can seem fairly convincing.
An example of this kind of methodology is seen in a recent Roman
Catholic work entitled Jesus, Peter and the Keys. This
work is being touted by Roman Catholics as providing definitive
evidence of the teaching of the Church fathers on the meaning
of the rock of Matthew 16 and of Peter’s role. But the actual
references from the fathers cited in this work are very selective,
often omitting important citations of their overall works that
demonstrate a view contrary to that which is being proposed. What
we will discover, if we give the statements of the fathers in
context and in correlation with their overall writings, is that
their actual perspective is often the opposite of that claimed
by Vatican I and these Roman apologists.
In his book, Catholicism and Fundamentalism, Karl Keating
states that the reformers had invented a novel exegesis of Matthew
16 in order to aid them in their rebellion against the papacy.
This is a complete misrepresentation. As historian Oscar Cullmann
points out, the view of the Reformers was not a novel interpretation
invented by them but hearkened back to the patristic tradition:
‘We thus see that the exegesis that the Reformers gave...was
not first invented for their struggle against the papacy; it rests
upon an older patristic tradition’ (Oscar Cullmann, Peter:Disciple–Apostle–Martyr
(Philadelphia: Westminster, 1953), p. 162).
An examination of the writings of the
fathers does reveal the expression of a consistent viewpoint,
but it is not that of the Roman Catholic Church, as the documentation
of the major fathers of the East and West in this article will
demonstrate. This particular article is strictly historical in
nature. Its purpose is to document the patristic interpretation
of the rock of Matthew 16:18. And the evidence will demonstrate
that the Protestant and Orthodox understanding of the text is
rooted in this patristic consensus. From a strictly scriptural
point of view, the Roman Catholic interpretation of Matthew 16:18
is divorced from its proper biblical context. The Roman Church
states that Matthew 16 teaches that the Church is built upon
Peter and therefore upon the bishops of Rome in an exclusive sense.
What is seldom ever mentioned is the fact that Ephesians 2:20
uses precisely the same language as that found in Matthew 16 when
it says the Church is built upon the apostles and prophets
with Christ as the cornerstone. The same greek word for build
upon in Matthew 16 is employed in Ephesians 2:20. This demonstrates
that from a biblical perspective, even if we were to interpret
the rock of Matthew 16 to be the person of Peter, the New Testament
does not view the apostle Peter to be unique in this role. Christ
is the foundation and the Church is built upon all the
apostles and prophets in the sense of being built upon their teaching.
And in addition, the Roman Catholic interpretation imports a meaning
into the Matthew 16 text that is completely absent. This text
says absolutely nothing about infallibility or about successors.
The fathers of the Church did not isolate
particular verses from their overall biblical context and consequently
they have a biblical perspective of the foundation of the Church,
not that which is Roman. The documentation of the interpretation
of the fathers will also be supplemented by the comments of major
Roman Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox historians in order to
provide a scholarly consensus on the true understanding of the
church fathers cited. In particular we will examine the comments
of Tertullian, Origen, Cyprian, Eusebius, Augustine, Ambrose,
John Chrysostom, Theodoret, Cyril of Alexandria, Hilary of Poitiers,
Jerome, Epiphanius, Basil of Seleucia, Paul of Emesa and John
of Damascus.
TERTULLIAN (A.D. 155/160—240/250)
Tertullian was born in Carthage in North
Africa and practiced law before his conversion to Christianity
ca. A.D. 193. As a Christian he was a prolific writer and has
been called the ‘Father of Latin Christianity’. He was
most likely a layman and his writings were widely read. He had
a great influence upon the Church fathers of subsequent generations,
especially Cyprian. He is the first of the Western fathers to
comment on Matthew 16. In one of his writings Tertullian identifies
the rock with the person of Peter on which the Church would be
built:
Was anything withheld from the knowledge
of Peter, who is called the ‘rock on which the church should
be built’ who also obtained ‘the keys of the kingdom
of heaven,’ with the power of ‘loosing and binding
in heaven and earth? (Alexander
Roberts and James Donaldson, Ante-Nicene Fathers (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1951), Volume III, Tertullian, Prescription
Against Heretics 22).
Though Tertullian states that Peter
is the rock he does not mean it in a pro–papal sense. We
know this because of other comments he has made. But if we isolate
this one passage it would be easy to read a pro–Roman interpretation
into it. However, in other comments on Matthew 16:18–19,
Tertullian explains what he means when he says that Peter is the
rock on which the Church would be built:
If, because the Lord has said to Peter,
‘Upon this rock I will build My Church,’ ‘to thee
have I given the keys of the heavenly kingdom;’ or, ‘Whatsoever
thou shalt have bound or loosed in earth, shall be bound or loosed
in the heavens,’ you therefore presume that the power of
binding and loosing has derived to you, that is, to every Church
akin to Peter, what sort of man are you, subverting and wholly
changing the manifest intention of the Lord, conferring (as that
intention did) this (gift) personally upon Peter? ‘On thee,’
He says, ‘will I build My church;’ and, ‘I will
give thee the keys’...and, ‘Whatsoever thou shalt have
loosed or bound’...In (Peter) himself the Church was reared;
that is, through (Peter) himself; (Peter) himself essayed the
key; you see what key: ‘Men of Israel, let what I say sink
into your ears: Jesus the Nazarene, a man destined by God for
you,’ and so forth. (Peter) himself, therefore, was the
first to unbar, in Christ’s baptism, the entrance to the
heavenly kingdom, in which kingdom are ‘loosed’ the
sins that were beforetime ‘bound;’ and those which
have not been ‘loosed’ are ‘bound,’ in accordance
with true salvation...(Alexander
Roberts and James Donaldson, The Ante-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1951), Volume IV, Tertullian, On Modesty 21, p. 99).
When Tertullian says that Peter is the
rock and the Church is built upon him he means that the Church
is built through him as he preaches the gospel. This preaching
is how Tertullian explains the meaning of the keys. They are the
declarative authority for the offer of forgiveness of sins through
the preaching of the gospel. If men respond to the message they
are loosed from their sins. If they reject it they remain bound
in their sins. In the words just preceding this quote Tertullian
explicitly denies that this promise can apply to anyone but Peter
and therefore he does not in any way see a Petrine primacy in
this verse with successors in the bishops of Rome. The patristic
scholar, Karlfried Froehlich, states that even though Tertullian
teaches that Peter is the rock he does not mean this in the same
sense as the Roman Catholic Church:
‘Tertullian regarded the Peter
of Matthew 16:18–19 as the representative of the entire
church or at least its ‘spiritual’ members.’ (Karlfried Froehlich, Saint Peter,
Papal Primacy, and Exegetical Tradition, 1150-1300, pp. 13. Taken
from The Religious Roles of the Papacy: Ideals and Realities,
1150-1300, ed. Christopher Ryan, Papers in Medieval Studies 8
(Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 1989)
It is a common practice of Roman Catholic
apologists to omit part of the quotation given above by Tertullian
in order to make it appear that he is a proponent of papal primacy.
A prime example off this is found in a recently released Roman
Catholic defense of the papacy entitled Jesus, Peter and the
Keys. The authors give the following partial citation from
Tertullian:
I now inquire into your opinion, to
see whence you usurp this right for the Church. Do you presume,
because the Lord said to Peter, ‘On this rock I will build
my Church, I have given you the keys of the kingdom of heaven’
[Matt. 16:1819a] or ‘whatever you shall have bound or loosed
on earth will be bound or loosed in heaven’ [Matt. 16:19b]
that the power of binding and loosing has thereby been handed
on to you, that is, to every church akin to Peter? What kind
of man are you, subverting and changing what was the manifest
intent of the Lord when he conferred this personally upon Peter?
On you, he says, I will build my Church; and I will give to you
the keys, not to the Church; and whatever you shall have bound
or you shall have loosed, not what they shall have bound or they
shall have loosed (Scott
Butler, Norman Dahlgren, David Hess, Jesus, Peter and the
Keys (Santa Barbara: Queenship, 1996), pp. 216-217).
When comparing this citation with the
one given above it is clear that these authors have left out the
last half of the quotation. The part of the quotation that is
omitted defines what Tertullian means by the statement that Christ
built his Church on Peter and invested him with authroity. Again,
what he means by these words is that Christ built his church on
Peter by building it through him as he preached the gospel.
This is a meaning that is clearly contrary to the Roman Catholic
perspective. To omit this is to distort the teaching of Tertullian
and to give the impression that he taught something he did not
teach. So, though Tertullian states that Peter is the rock, he
does not mean this in the same way the Roman Catholic Church does.
Peter is the rock because he is the one given the privilege of
being the first to open the kingdom of God to men. This is similar
to the view expressed by Maximus of Tours when he says: ‘For
he is called a rock because he was the first to lay the foundations
of the faith among the nations' (Ancient
Christian Writers (New York: Newman, 1989), The Sermons
of St. Maximus of Turin, Sermon 77.1, p. 187).
Not only do we see a clear denial of
any belief in a papal primacy in Tertullian’s exegesis of
Matthew 16, but such a denial is also seen from his practice.
In his later years Tertullian separated himself from the Catholic
Church to become a Montanist. He clearly did not hold to the view
espoused by Vatican I that communion with the Bishop of Rome was
the ultimate criterion of orthodoxy and of inclusiveness in the
Church of God.
ORIGEN (A.D.
185—253/254)
Origen was head of the catechetical
school at Alexandria during the first half of the third century.
He was an individual of enormous intellect and was by far the
most prolific writer of the patristic age. Eusebius states that
his writings numbered in the neighborhood of six thousand. He
has been called the greatest scholar of Christian antiquity. He
had immense influence upon fathers in both the East and West in
subsequent centuries. Origen is the first father to give a detailed
exposition of the meaning of the rock of Matthew 16:18. His interpretation
became normative for the Eastern fathers and for many in the West.
Apart from the specific passage of Matthew 16 he states that Peter
is the rock:
Look at the great foundation of that
Church and at the very solid rock upon which Christ has founded
the Church. Wherefore the Lord says: ‘Ye of little faith,
why have you doubted?' (Exodus,
Homily 5.4. Cited by Karlfried Froehlich, Formen der Auslegung
von Matthaus 16,13-18 im lateinischen Mittelaiter, Dissertation
(Tubingen, 1963), p. 100).
But, like Tertullian, he does not mean
this in the Roman Catholic sense. Often, Origen is cited as a
proponent of papal primacy because he says that Peter is the rock.
Quotes such as the one given above are isolated from his other
statements about Peter and his actual interpretation of Matthew
16:18 thereby inferring that he taught something which he did
not teach. In his mind Peter is simply representative of all true
believers and what was promised to Peter is given to all believers
who truly follow Christ. They all become what Peter is. This is
the view expressed in the following comments:
And if we too have said like Peter,
‘Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God,’ not
as if flesh and blood had revealed it unto us, but by the light
from the Father in heaven having shone in our heart, we become
a Peter, and to us there might be said by the Word, ‘Thou
art Peter,’ etc. For a rock is every disciple of Christ
of whom those drank who drank of the spiritual rock which followed
them, and upon every such rock is built every word of the Church,
and the polity in accordance with it; for in each of the perfect,
who have the combination of words and deeds and thoughts which
fill up the blessedness, is the church built by God.
But if you suppose that upon the one Peter only the whole church
is built by God, what would you say about John the son of thunder
or each one of the Apostles? Shall we otherwise dare to say,
that against Peter in particular the gates of Hades shall not
prevail, but that they shall prevail against the other Apostles
and the perfect? Does not the saying previously made, ‘The
gates of Hades shall not prevail against it,’ hold in regard
to all and in the case of each of them? And also the saying,
‘Upon this rock I will build My Church?’ Are the keys
of the kingdom of heaven given by the Lord to Peter only, and
will no other of the blessed receive them? But if this promise,
‘I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven,’
be common to others, how shall not all things previously spoken
of, and the things which are subjoined as having been addressed
to Peter, be common to them?
‘Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God.’ If
any one says this to Him...he will obtain the things that were
spoken according to the letter of the Gospel to that Peter, but,
as the spirit of the Gospel teaches to every one who becomes
such as that Peter was. For all bear the surname ‘rock’
who are the imitators of Christ, that is, of the spiritual rock
which followed those who are being saved, that they may drink
from it the spiritual draught. But these bear the surname of
rock just as Christ does. But also as members of Christ deriving
their surname from Him they are called Christians, and from the
rock, Peters...And to all such the saying of the Savior might
be spoken, ‘Thou art Peter’ etc., down to the words,
‘prevail against it.’ But what is the it? Is it the
rock upon which Christ builds the Church, or is it the Church?
For the phrase is ambiguous. Or is it as if the rock and the
Church were one and the same? This I think to be true; for neither
against the rock on which Christ builds His Church, nor against
the Church will the gates of Hades prevail. Now, if the gates
of Hades prevail against any one, such an one cannot be a rock
upon which the Christ builds the Church, nor the Church built
by Jesus upon the rock (Allan
Menzies, Ante–Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
1951), Origen, Commentary on Matthew, Chapters 10-11).
This is one of the most important passages
in all the writings of Origen for an understanding of his view
of the rock of Matthew 16. Yet this passage is is not included
in those referenced by the authors of Jesus, Peter and the
Keys. This is a glaring omission given the importance of the
passage and the fact that it is easily accessible in the work
the Ante-Nicene Fathers. One can only conclude that the
authors purposefully omitted the passage because it is antithetical
to the position they are seeking establish.
John Meyendorff was a world renowned
and highly respected Orthodox theologian, historian and patristics
scholar. He was dean of St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological
Seminary and Professor of Church History and Patristics. He gives
the following explanation of Origen’s interpretation and
of his influence on subsequent fathers in the East and West:
Origen, the common source of patristic
exegetical tradition, commenting on Matthew 16:18, interprets
the famous logion as Jesus’ answer to Peter’s confession:
Simon became the ‘rock’ on which the Church is founded
because he expressed the true belief in the divinity of Christ.
Origen continues: ‘If we also say “Thou art the Christ,
the Son of the living God,” then we also become Peter...for
whoever assimilates to Christ, becomes rock. Does Christ give
the keys of the kingdom to Peter alone, whereas other blessed
people cannot receive them?’ According to Origen, therefore,
Peter is no more than the first ‘believer,’ and the
keys he received opened the gates of heaven to him alone: if
others want to follow, they can ‘imitate’ Peter and
receive the same keys. Thus the words of Christ have a soteriological,
but not an institutional, significance. They only affirm that
the Christian faith is the faith expressed by Peter on the road
to Caesarea Philippi. In the whole body of patristic exegesis,
this is the prevailing understanding of the ‘Petrie’
logia, and it remains valid in Byzantine literature...Thus, when
he spoke to Peter, Jesus was underlining the meaning of the faith
as the foundation of the Church, rather than organizing the Church
as guardian of the faith (John
Meyendorff, Byzantine Theology (New York: Fordham, 1974),
pp. 97-98).
James McCue in Lutherans and Catholics
in Dialogue affirms these views of Origen in these statements:
When Origen is commenting directly
on Matthew 16:18f, he carefully puts aside any interpretation
of the passage that would make Peter anything other than what
every Christian should be...(His) is the earliest extant detailed
commentary on Matthew 16:18f. and interestingly sees the event
described as a lesson about the life to be lived by every Christian,
and not information about office or hierarchy or authority in
the Church (Paul Empie
and Austin Murphy, Ed., Papal Primacy in the Universal Church (Minneapolis:
Augsburg, 1974), Lutherans and Catholics in Dialogue V,
pp. 60-61).
Origen and Tertullian are the first
fathers, from the East and West respectively, to give an exposition
on the meaning of the rock of Matthew 16 and the role and position
of Peter. Their views are foundational for the interpretation
of this important passage for the centuries following. Strands
of their teaching will appear in the views of the fathers throughout
the East and West. It is important to point out that the first
Eastern and Western fathers to give an exegesis of Matthew 16
do not interpret the passage in a pro–Roman sense.
CYPRIAN (A.D.
200–210—ca. 258)
Cyprian was a bishop of Carthage in
North Africa in the mid–third century. He was one of the
most influential theologians and bishops of the Church of his
day and gave his life in martydom for his faith. He was greatly
influenced by the writings of Tertullian, the North African father
who preceded him. He is often cited by Roman Catholic apologists
as a witness for papal primacy. In his treatise On the Unity
of the Church Cyprian gives the following interpretation of
the rock of Matthew 16:
The Lord saith unto Peter, I say unto
thee, (saith He,) that thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will
build My Church, and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against
it. And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven,
and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth, shall be bound in heaven,
and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth, shall be loosed in
heaven (Matt. 16:18–19). To him again, after His resurrection,
He says, Feed My sheep. Upon him being one He builds His Church;
and although He gives to all the Apostles an equal power, and
says, As My Father sent Me, even so I send you; receive ye the
Holy Ghost: whosoever sins ye remit, they shall be remitted to
him, and whosoever sins ye shall retain, they shall be retained
(John 20:21);—yet in order to manifest unity, He has by
His own authority so placed the source of the same unity, as
to begin from one (A
Library of the Fathers of the Holy Catholic Church (Oxford:
Parker, 1844), Cyprian, On The Unity of the Church 3-4,
pp. 133-135).
Cyprian clearly says that Peter is the
rock. If his comments were restricted to the above citation it
would lend credence to the idea that he was a proponent of papal
primacy. However Cyprian’s comments continue on from the
statements given above. His additional statements prove conclusively
that although he states that Peter is the rock he does not mean
this in a pro–Roman sense. His view is that Peter is a symbol
of unity, a figurative representative of the bishops of the Church.
Cyprian viewed all the apostles as being equal with one another.
He believed the words to Peter in Matthew 16 to be representative
of the ordination of all Bishops so that the Church is founded,
not upon one Bishop in one see, but upon all equally in collegiality.
Peter, then, is a representative figure of the episcopate as a
whole. His view is clearly stated in these words:
Certainly the other Apostles also were
what Peter was, endued with an equal fellowship both of honour
and power; but a commencement is made from unity, that the Church
may be set before as one; which one Church, in the Song of Songs,
doth the Holy Spirit design and name in the Person of our Lord:
My dove, My spotless one, is but one; she is the only one of
her mother, elect of her that bare her (Cant. 9:6) (A Library of the Fathers of the
Holy Catholic Church (Oxford: Parker, 1844), Cyprian, On
The Unity of the Church 3, p. 133).
Our Lord whose precepts and warnings
we ought to observe, determining the honour of a Bishop and the
ordering of His own Church, speaks in the Gospel and says to
Peter, I say unto thee, that thou art Peter, and on this rock
I will build My Church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it. And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom
of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound
in heaven. Thence the ordination of Bishops, and the ordering
of the Church, runs down along the course of time and line of
succession, so that the Church is settled upon her Bishops; and
every act of the Church is regulated by these same Prelates (A Library of the Fathers of the
Holy Catholic Church (Oxford: Parker, 1844), The Epistles
of S. Cyprian, Ep. 33.1).
Cyprian, like Tertullian, states that
Peter is the rock. But such a statement must be qualified. He
definitely does not mean this in the same way the Church of Rome
does. In his treatise, On the Unity of the Church, Cyprian teaches
that Peter alone is not the rock or foundation on which the Church
is built, but rather, he is an example of the principle of unity.
He is representative of the Church as a whole. The entire episcopate,
according to Cyprian, is the foundation, though Christ is himself
the true Rock. The bishops of Rome are not endowed with divine
authority to rule the Church. All of the bishops together constitute
the Church and rule over their individual areas of responsibility
as co–equals. If Cyprian meant to say that the Church was
built upon Peter and he who resists the bishop of Rome resists
the Church (cutting himself off from the Church), then he completely
contradicts himself, for, as we will see in Part II, he opposed
Stephen, the bishop of Rome in his interpretation of Matthew 16
as well as on theological and jurisdictional issues. His actions
prove that his comments about Peter could not coincide with the
Roman Catholic interpretation of his words. To do so is a distortion
of his true meaning.
Historically there has been some confusion
on the interpretation of Cyprian’s teaching because there
are two versions of his treatise, The Unity of the Church. In
the first Cyprian speaks of the chair of Peter in which he equates
the true Church with that chair. He states that there is only
one Church and one chair and a primacy given to Peter. In the
second, the references to a Petrine primacy are softened to give
greater emphasis to the theme of unity and co–equality of
bishops. Most Roman Catholic and Protestant scholars now agree
that Cyprian is the author of both versions. He wrote the second
in order to offset a pro–Roman interpretation which was being
attached to his words which he never intended. The episcopate
is to him the principle of unity within the Church and representative
of it. The ‘chair of Peter’ is a figurative expression
which applies to every bishop in his own see, not just the bishops
of Rome. The bishop of Rome holds a primacy of honor but he does
not have universal jurisdiction over the entire Church for Cyprian
expressly states that all the apostles received the same authority
and status as Peter and the Church is built upon all the bishops
and not just Peter alone. Some object to these conclusions about
Cyprian citing his statements about the chair of Peter. Roman
Catholic apologists would lead us to believe that Cyprian’s
comments refer exclusively to the bishops of Rome and that they
therefore possess special authority as the successors of Peter.
The Roman Catholic historian, Robert
Eno, repudiates this point of view as a misrepresentation of Cyprian’s
view. As he points out Cyprian did not believe that the bishop
of Rome possessed a higher authority than he or the other African
bishops. They were all equals::
Cyprian makes considerable use of the
image of Peter’s cathedra or chair. Note however that it
is important in his theology of the local church: ‘God is
one and Christ is one: there is one Church and one chair founded,
by the Lord’s authority, upon Peter. It is not possible
that another altar can be set up, or that a new priesthood can
be appointed, over and above this one altar and this one priesthood’
(Ep. 43.5).
The cathedri Petri symbolism has been the source of much misunderstanding
and dispute. Perhaps it can be understood more easily by looking
at the special treatise he wrote to defend both his own position
as sole lawful bishop of Carthage and that of Cornelius against
Novatian, namely, the De unitate ecclesiae, or, as it was known
in the Middle Ages, On the Simplicity of Prelates. The chapter
of most interest is the fourth. Controversy has dogged this work
because two versions of this chapter exist. Since the Reformation,
acceptance of one version or the other has usually followed denominational
lines.
Much of this has subsided in recent decades especially with the
work of Fr. Maurice Bevenot, an English Jesuit, who devoted most
of his scholarly life to this text. He championed the suggestion
of the English Benedictine, John Chapman, that what we are dealing
with here are two versions of a text, both of which were authored
by Cyprian. This view has gained wide acceptance in recent decades.
Not only did Cyprian write both but his theology of the Church
is unchanged from the first to the second. He made textual changes
because his earlier version was being misused.
The theology of the controverted passage sees in Peter the symbol
of unity, not from his being given greater authority by Christ
for, as he says in both versions, ‘...a like power is given
to all the Apostles’ and ‘...No doubt the others were
all that Peter was.’ Yet Peter was given the power first:
‘Thus it is made clear that there is but one Church and
one chair.’ The Chair of Peter then belongs to each lawful
bishop in his own see. Cyprian holds the Chair of Peter in Carthage
and Cornelius in Rome over against Novatian the would–be
usurper. You must hold to this unity if you are to remain in
the Church. Cyprian wants unity in the local church around the
lawful bishop and unity among the bishops of the world who are
‘glued together’ (Ep. 66.8).
Apart from his good relations and harmony with Bishop Cornelius
over the matter of the lapsed, what was Cyprian’s basic
view of the role, not of Peter as symbol of unity, but of Rome
in the contemporary Church? Given what we have said above, it
is clear that he did not see the bishop of Rome as his superior,
except by way of honor, even though the lawful bishop of Rome
also held the chair of Peter in an historical sense (Ep. 52.2).
Another term frequently used by the Africans in speaking of the
Church was ‘the root’ (radix). Cyprian sometimes used
the term in connection with Rome, leading some to assert that
he regarded the Roman church as the ‘root.’ But in
fact, in Cyprian’s teaching, the Catholic Church as a whole
is the root. So when he bade farewell to some Catholics travelling
to Rome, he instructed them to be very careful about which group
of Christians they contacted after their arrival in Rome. They
must avoid schismatic groups like that of Novation. They should
contact and join the Church presided over by Cornelius because
it alone is the Catholic Church in Rome. In other words, Cyprian
exhorted ‘...them to discern the womb and root...of the
Catholic Church and to cleave to it’ (Ep. 48.3).
It is clear that in Cyprian’s mind...one theological conclusion
he does not draw is that the bishop of Rome has authority which
is superior to that of the African bishops (Robert Eno, The Rise of the Papacy
(Wilmington: Michael Glazier, 1990), pp. 57-60).
As Charles Gore has pointed out, Cyprian
used the phrase, the Chair of Peter’ in his Epistle 43, which
Roman apologists often cite in defense of an exclusive Roman primacy,
to refer to his own see of Carthage, not the see of Rome. This
is confirmed as a general consensus of Protestant, Orthodox and
Roman Catholic historians. James McCue, writing for Lutherans
and Catholics in Dialogue, in the work Papal Primacy and the Universal
Church, affirms this interpretation of Cyprian’s view in
the following comments:
According to Cyprian’s interpretation
of Matthew 16:18, Jesus first conferred upon Peter the authority
with which he subsequently endowed all the apostles. This, according
to Cyprian, was to make clear the unity of the power that was
being conferred and of the church that was being established.
Cyprian frequently speaks of Peter as the foundation of the church,
and his meaning seems to be that it was in Peter that Jesus first
established all the church–building powers and responsibilities
that would subsequently also be given to the other apostles and
to the bishops.
Peter is the source of the church’s unity only in an exemplary
or symbolic way...Peter himself seems, in Cyprian’s thought,
to have had no authority over the other apostles, and consequently
the church of Peter cannot reasonably claim to have any authority
over the other churches (Papal
Primacy and the Universal Church, Edited by Paul Empie and
Austin Murphy (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1974), Lutherans and
Catholics in Dialogue V, pp. 68-69).
This judgment is further affirmed by
the Roman Catholic historian, Michael Winter:
Cyprian used the Petrine text of Matthew
to defend episcopal authority, but many later theologians, influenced
by the papal connexions of the text, have interpreted Cyprian
in a propapal sense which was alien to his thought...Cyprian
would have used Matthew 16 to defend the authority of any bishop,
but since he happened to employ it for the sake of the Bishop
of Rome, it created the impression that he understood it as referring
to papal authority...Catholics as well as Protestants are now
generally agreed that Cyprian did not attribute a superior authority
to Peter (Michael Winter,
St. Peter and the Popes (Baltimore: Helikon, 1960), pp.
47-48).
This Roman Catholic historian insists
that it is a misrepresentation of Cyprian’s true teaching
to assert that he is a father who supports the Roman Catholic
interpretation of Matthew 16. And he says that both Protestant
and Roman Catholic scholars are now agreed on this. Once again,
Roman Catholic historians specifically repudiate what some Roman
apologists often teach about Cyprian and his comments on the ‘Chair
of Peter’. Karlfried Froehlich states:
Cyprian understood the biblical Peter
as representative of the unified episcopate, not of the bishop
of Rome...He understood him as symbolizing the unity of all bishops,
the privileged officers of penance...For (Cyprian), the one Peter,
the first to receive the penitential keys which all other bishops
also exercise, was the biblical type of the one episcopate, which
in turn guaranteed the unity of the church. The one Peter equaled
the one body of bishops (Karlfried
Froehlich, Saint Peter, Papal Primacy, and the Exegetical
Tradition, 1150-1300, p. 36, 13, n. 28 p. 13. Taken from
The Religious Roles of the Papacy: Ideals and Realities, 1150-1300,
ed. Christopher Ryan, Papers in Medieval Studies 8 (Toronto:
Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 1989).
John Meyendorff explains the meaning
of Cyprian’s use of the phrase ‘chair of Peter’
and sums up the Cyprianic ecclesiology which was normative for
the East as a whole:
The early Christian concept, best expressed
in the third century by Cyprian of Carthage, according to which
the ‘see of Peter’ belongs, in each local church, to
the bishop, remains the longstanding and obvious pattern for
the Byzantines. Gregory of Nyssa, for example, can write that
Jesus ‘through Peter gave to the bishops the keys of heavenly
honors.’ Pseudo–Dionysius when he mentions the ‘hierarchs’—i.e.,
the bishops of the early Church—refers immediately to the
image of Peter....Peter succession is seen wherever the right
faith is preserved, and, as such, it cannot be localized geographically
or monopolized by a single church or individual (John Meyendorff, Byzantine Theology
(New York: Fordham University, 1974), p. 98).
Cyprian’s view of Peter’s
‘chair’ (cathedri Petri) was that it belonged not only
to the bishop of Rome but to every bishop within each community.
Thus Cyprian used not the argument of Roman primacy but that
of his own authority as ‘successor of Peter’ in Carthage...For
Cyprian, the ‘chair of Peter’, was a sacramental concept,
necessarily present in each local church: Peter was the example
and model of each local bishop, who, within his community, presides
over the Eucharist and possesses ‘the power of the keys’
to remit sins. And since the model is unique, unique also is
the episcopate (episcopatus unus est) shared, in equal fullness
(in solidum) by all bishops (John
Meyendorff, Imperial Unity and Christian Divisions (Crestwood:
St. Vladimir’s, 1989), pp. 61, 152).
And finally, Reinhold Seeberg explains
Cyprian’s interpretation of Matthew 16 and his ecclesiology
in these words:
According to Matt. 16:18f., the church
is founded upon the bishop and its direction devolves upon him:
‘Hence through the changes of times and dynasties the ordination
of bishops and the order of the church moves on, so that the
church is constituted of bishops, and every act of the church
is controlled by these leaders’ (Epistle 33.1)...The bishops
constitute a college (collegium), the episcopate (episcopatus).
The councils developed this conception. In them the bishops practically
represented the unity of the church, as Cyprian now theoretically
formulated it. Upon their unity rests the unity of the church...This
unity is manifest in the fact that the Lord in the first instance
bestowed apostolic authority upon Peter: ‘Hence the other
apostles were also, to a certain extent, what Peter was, endowed
with an equal share of both honor and power; but the beginning
proceeds from unity, in order that the church of Christ may be
shown to be one’ (de un. eccl. 4)...In reality all the bishops—regarded
dogmatically—stand upon the same level, and hence he maintained,
in opposition to Stephanus of Rome, his right of independent
opinion and action...(Reinhold
Seeberg, Text-Book of the History of Doctrines (Grand
Rapids: Baker, 1952), Volume I, p. 182-183).
The above quotations from world renowned
Roman Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox historians reveal a consensus
of scholarly opinion on Cyprian’s teaching effectively demonstrating
the incompatibility of Cyprian’s views with those espoused
by Vatican I. This consensus also reveals the danger of taking
the statements of Church fathers at face value without regard
for the context of those statements or for seeking a proper interpretation
of the meaning of the terms they use. It is easy to import preconceived
meanings into their statements resulting in misrepresentation
of their teaching.
The authors of Jesus Peter and the
Keys are guilty of this very thing. They list quotations from
Cyprian in total disregard of the true facts as they have been
enumerated by the above historians giving the impression that
Cyprian believed in papal primacy when in fact he did not. Their
point of view and that of many of the Roman apologists of our
day is thoroughly repudiated even by conservative Roman Catholic
historians. Cyprian is an excellent example of a father who states
that Peter is the rock but who does not mean this in a Roman Catholic
sense. But without giving the proper historical context and understanding
of his writings it would be quite easy to mislead the unintiated
by investing Cyprian’s words with the doctrinal development
of a later age thereby misrepresenting his actual position.
EUSEBIUS
Eusebius was born in Caesarea in Palestine
around the year 263 A.D. He took the name Eusebius Pamphilus after
his mentor and teacher Pamphilus. He was consecrated bishop of
Caesarea in 313 A.D. and was a participant at the Council of Nicaea.
He is known as the father of ecclesiastical history for his work
on the history of the Church. He has very clearly expressed his
views on the meaning of the rock of Matthew 16:
‘And he sent out arrows, and scattered
them; he flashed forth lightnings, and routed them. Then the
channels of the sea were seen, and the foundations of the world
were laid bear, at thy rebuke, O Lord, at the blast of thy nostrils’
(Ps. 18.14)...By ‘the foundations of the world,’ we
shall understand the strength of God’s wisdom, by which,
first, the order of the universe was established, and then, the
world itself was founded—a world which will not be shaken.
Yet you will not in any way err from the scope of the truth if
you suppose that ‘the world’ is actually the Church
of God, and that its ‘foundation’ is in the first place,
that unspeakably solid rock on which it is founded, as Scripture
says: ‘Upon this rock I will build my Church, and the gates
of hell shall not prevail against it’; and elsewhere: ‘The
rock, moreover, was Christ.’ For, as the Apostle indicates
with these words: ‘No other foundation can anyone lay than
that which is laid, which is Christ Jesus.’ Then, too, after
the Savior himself, you may rightly judge the foundations of
the Church to be the words of the prophets and apostles, in accordance
with the statement of the Apostle: ‘Built upon the foundation
of the apostles and the prophets, Christ Jesus himself being
the cornerstone.’ These foundations of the world have been
laid bare because the enemies of God, who once darkened the eyes
of our mind, lest we gaze upon divine things, have been routed
and put to flight—scattered by the arrows sent from God
and put to flight by the rebuke of the Lord and by the blast
from his nostrils. As a result, having been saved from these
enemies and having received the use of our eyes, we have seen
the channels of the sea and have looked upon the foundations
of the world. This has happened in our lifetime in many parts
of the world (Commentary
on the Psalms, M.P.G., Vol. 23, Col. 173, 176).
Eusebius unambiguously teaches that
the rock is Christ. He correlates this interpretation with the
parallel rock and foundation statements of 1 Corinthians 10:4
and 3:11. He goes on to say that there is a subsidiary foundation,
from Ephesians 2:20, of the apostles and prophets, the Church
also built upon them, but the cornerstone is Christ. However he
interprets this to mean that the Church is to be built upon the
words or teachings of the apostles and prophets as opposed to
their persons. It is in this sense that it can be said that the
Church is built upon Peter and the other apostles. It is clear
that Christ alone is the true foundation and rock of the Church
and that Eusebius sees no peculiar Petrine primacy associated
with Christ’s statements in Matthew 16. Peter is simply one
of a number of the apostles who is a foundation of the Church.
This has nothing to do with his person, but everything to do with
his words—his confession. This helps us to properly understand
other references of Eusebius to Peter. For example, when he says:
‘But Peter, upon whom the Church of Christ is built, against
which the gates of hell shall not prevail, has left one epistle
undisputed,’ (Ecclesiastical
History II.XXV (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1977), p. 246), he does not mean that Christ established a papal
office in Peter and that the Church is built upon him in a personal
sense and through him upon his supposed successors. The Church
is built upon Peter by being built upon his confession of faith.
In light of his comments from his Commentary on the Psalms we
can conclude that Eusebius did not interpret Matthew 16:18 in
agreement with the Roman Catholic Church. It is Christ and Christ
alone that fills Eusebius’ vision from this passage. However,
one will search in vain for the above quotation from Eusebius
in the Roman Catholic work Jesus, Peter and the Keys. This
work purports to give a definitive patristic perspective on the
rock of Matthew 16. But the failure to give a full documentation
of what this father has actually written on the subject once again
leaves the authors open to the charge of a biased and manipulative
presentation of the facts.
The interpretation of Eusebius, along
with that of Origen, had an immense influence upon the Eastern
and Western fathers. Over and over again, as we will see, we find
the fathers of subsequent generations interpreting this rock passage
with the focus on the person of Christ. The corresponding passages
of 1 Corinthians 3:11 and 10:4 are used as justification for the
interpretation. Michael Winter describes Eusebius’ point
of view and influence:
In the Ecclesiastical History he says
without any explanation or qualification: ‘Peter upon whom
the church of Christ is built, against which the gates of hell
shall not prevail...’ Elsewhere he speaks of Christ as the
foundation of the church in such a way as to exclude St. Peter.
For instance in his commentary on the Psalms the reference to
the foundation of the earth in Psalm 17 leads him to consider
the foundation of the church. Using Matthew 16, he declares that
this foundation is a rock, which is then identified as Christ
on authority of 1 Cor. 10:4. This interpretation of the text
of Matthew which seems so strange to the modern reader indicates
a problem which perplexed quite a number of the early fathers.
Their theology of the church was, thanks to Paul, so thoroughly
Christocentric that it was difficult for them to envisage a foundation
other than Christ...The third opinion which Eusebius put forward
was an interpretation of Matthew 16 which envisaged the rock
of the church neither as Christ nor precisely Peter himself,
but as the faith which he manifested in his acknowledgment of
Christ. This latter view of Eusebius, together with his other
innovation, namely that the rock was Christ, had considerable
influence on the later exegesis of the text in question, both
in the Eastern and Western church (Michael
Winter, St. Peter and the Popes (Baltimore: Helikon, 1960),
p. 53).
AUGUSTINE
Augustine is considered by many the
most important theologian in the history of the Church for the
first twelve hundred years. No other Church father has had such
far reaching influence upon the theology of the Church. His authority
throughout the patristic and middle ages is unsurpassed. He was
the bishop of Hippo in North Africa from the end of the fourth
century and on into the first quarter of the fifth, until his
death in 430. William Jurgens makes these comments about his importance:
If we were faced with the unlikely
proposition of having to destroy completely either the works
of Augustine or the works of all the other Fathers and Writers,
I have little doubt that all the others would have to be sacrificed.
Augustine must remain. Of all the Fathers it is Augustine who
is the most erudite, who has the most remarkable theological
insights, and who is effectively most prolific (William Jurgens, The Faith of the Early
Fathers (Collegeville: Liturgical, 1979), Vol. 3, p. 1).
He was a prolific writer and he has
made numerous comments which relate directly to the issue of the
interpretation of the rock of Matthew 16:18. In fact, Augustine
made more comments upon this passage than any other Church father.
At the end of his life, Augustine wrote his Retractations where
he corrects statements in his earlier writings which he says were
erroneous. One of these had to do with the interpretation of the
rock in Matthew 16. At the beginning of his ministry Augustine
had written that the rock was Peter. However, very early on he
later changed his position and throughout the remainder of his
ministry he adopted the view that the rock was not Peter but Christ
or Peter’s confession which pointed to the person of Christ.
The following are statements from his Retractations which refer
to his interpretation of the rock of Matthew 16:
In a passage in this book, I said about
the Apostle Peter: ‘On him as on a rock the Church was built’...But
I know that very frequently at a later time, I so explained what
the Lord said: ‘Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will
build my Church,’ that it be understood as built upon Him
whom Peter confessed saying: ‘Thou art the Christ, the Son
of the living God,’ and so Peter, called after this rock,
represented the person of the Church which is built upon this
rock, and has received ‘the keys of the kingdom of heaven.’
For, ‘Thou art Peter’ and not ‘Thou art the rock’
was said to him. But ‘the rock was Christ,’ in confessing
whom, as also the whole Church confesses, Simon was called Peter.
But let the reader decide which of these two opinions is the
more probable (The
Fathers of the Church (Washington D.C., Catholic University,
1968), Saint Augustine, The Retractations Chapter 20.1).
Clearly Augustine is repudiating a previously
held position, adopting the view that the rock was Christ and
not Peter. This became his consistent position. He does leave
the interpretation open for individual readers to decide which
was the more probable interpretation but it is clear what he has
concluded the interpretation should be and that he believes the
view that the rock is Christ is the correct one. The fact that
he would even suggest that individual readers could take a different
position is evidence of the fact that after four hundred years
of church history there was no official authoritative Church interpretation
of this passage as Vatican One has stated. Can the reader imagine
a bishop of the Roman Catholic Church today suggesting that it
would be appropriate for individuals to use private interpretation
and come to their own conclusion as to the proper meaning of the
rock of Matthew 16? But that is precisely what Augustine does,
although he leaves us in no doubt as to what he, as a leading
bishop and theologian of the Church, personally believes. And
his view was not a novel interpretation, come to at the end of
his life, but his consistent teaching throughout his ministry.
Nor was it an interpretation that ran counter to the prevailing
opinion of his day. The following quotation is representative
of the overall view espoused by this great teacher and theologian:
And I tell you...‘You are Peter,
Rocky, and on this rock I shall build my Church, and the gates
of the underworld will not conquer her. To you shall I give the
keys of the kingdom. Whatever you bind on earth shall also be
bound in heaven; whatever you loose on earth shall also be loosed
in heaven’ (Mt 16:15-19). In Peter, Rocky, we see our attention
drawn to the rock. Now the apostle Paul says about the former
people, ‘They drank from the spiritual rock that was following
them; but the rock was Christ’ (1 Cor 10:4). So this disciple
is called Rocky from the rock, like Christian from Christ...Why
have I wanted to make this little introduction? In order to suggest
to you that in Peter the Church is to be recognized. Christ,
you see, built his Church not on a man but on Peter’s confession.
What is Peter’s confession? ‘You are the Christ, the
Son of the living God.’ There’s the rock for you, there’s
the foundation, there’s where the Church has been built,
which the gates of the underworld cannot conquer (John Rotelle, Ed., The Works
of Saint Augustine (New Rochelle: New City Press, 1993),
Sermons, Vol. 6, Sermon 229P.1, p. 327).
Augustine could not be clearer in his
interpretation of the rock of Matthew 16. In his view, Peter is
representative of the whole Church. The rock is not the person
of Peter but Christ himself. In fact, in the above statements,
in exegeting Matthew 16, he explicitly says that Christ did not
build his Church on a man, referring specifically to Peter. If
Christ did not build his Church on a man then he did not establish
a papal office with successors to Peter in the bishops of Rome.
Again, if one examines the documentation from the writings of
Augustine that are provided in Jesus, Peter and the Keys, this
particular reference will not be found. Clearly, the authors neglected
to provide such documentation because it completely undermines
their position. The following extensive documentation reveals
that Augustine taught that Peter was simply a figurative representative
of the Church, not its ruler—a view reminiscent of Cyprian:
But whom say ye that I am? Peter answered,
‘Thou art the Christ, The Son of the living God.’ One
for many gave the answer, Unity in many. Then said the Lord to
him, ‘Blessed art thou, Simon Barjonas: for flesh and blood
hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father which is in heaven.’
Then He added, ‘and I say unto thee.’ As if He had
said, ‘Because thou hast said unto Me, “Thou art the
Christ the Son of the living God;” I also say unto thee,
“Thou art Peter.” ’ For before he was called Simon.
Now this name of Peter was given him by the Lord, and in a figure,
that he should signify the Church. For seeing that Christ is
the rock (Petra), Peter is the Christian people. For the rock
(Petra) is the original name. Therefore Peter is so called from
the rock; not the rock from Peter; as Christ is not called Christ
from the Christian, but the Christian from Christ. ‘Therefore,’
he saith, ‘Thou art Peter; and upon this Rock’ which
Thou hast confessed, upon this rock which Thou hast acknowledged,
saying, ‘Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God,
will I build My Church;’ that is upon Myself, the Son of
the living God, ‘will I build My Church.’ I will build
thee upon Myself, not Myself upon Thee.
For men who wished to be built upon men, said, ‘I am of
Paul; and I of Apollos; and I of Cephas,’ who is Peter.
But others who did not wish to built upon Peter, but upon the
Rock, said, ‘But I am of Christ.’ And when the Apostle
Paul ascertained that he was chosen, and Christ despised, he
said, ‘Is Christ divided? was Paul crucified for you? or
were ye baptized in the name of Paul?’ And, as not in the
name of Paul, so neither in the name of Peter; but in the name
of Christ: that Peter might be built upon the Rock, not the Rock
upon Peter. This same Peter therefore who had been by the Rock
pronounced ‘blessed,’ bearing the figure of the Church
(Philip Schaff, Nicene
and Post-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume
VI, St. Augustin, Sermon XXVI.1-4, pp. 340-341).
And this Church, symbolized in its
generality, was personified in the Apostle Peter, on account
of the primacy of his apostleship. For, as regards his proper
personality, he was by nature one man, by grace one Christian,
by still more abounding grace one, and yet also, the first apostle;
but when it was said to him, ‘I will give unto thee the
keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt bind
on earth, shall be bound in heaven; and whatsoever thou shalt
loose on earth, shall be loosed in heaven,’ he represented
the universal Church, which in this world is shaken by divers
temptations, that come upon it like torrents of rain, floods
and tempests, and falleth not, because it is founded upon a rock
(petra), from which Peter received his name. For petra (rock)
is not derived from Peter, but Peter from petra; just as Christ
is not called so from the Christian, but the Christian from Christ.
For on this very account the Lord said, ‘On this rock will
I build my Church,’ because Peter had said, ‘Thou art
the Christ, the Son of the living God.’ On this rock, therefore,
He said, which thou hast confessed, I will build my Church. For
the Rock (Petra) was Christ; and on this foundation was Peter
himself built. For other foundation can no man lay than that
is laid, which is Christ Jesus. The Church, therefore, which
is founded in Christ received from Him the keys of the kingdom
of heaven in the person of Peter, that is to say, the power of
binding and loosing sins. For what the Church is essentially
in Christ, such representatively is Peter in the rock (petra);
and in this representation Christ is to be understood as the
Rock, Peter as the Church (Philip
Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1956), Volume VII, St. Augustin, On the Gospel of
John, Tractate 124.5).
Before his passion the Lord Jesus,
as you know, chose those disciples of his, whom he called apostles.
Among these it was only Peter who almost everywhere was given
the privilege of representing the whole Church. It was in the
person of the whole Church, which he alone represented, that
he was privileged to hear, ‘To you will I give the keys
of the kingdom of heaven’ (Mt 16:19). After all, it isn’t
just one man that received these keys, but the Church in its
unity. So this is the reason for Peter’s acknowledged pre–eminence,
that he stood for the Church’s universality and unity, when
he was told, ‘To you I am entrusting,’ what has in
fact been entrusted to all.
I mean, to show you that it is the Church which has received
the keys of the kingdom of heaven, listen to what the Lord says
in another place to all his apostles: ‘Receive the Holy
Spirit;’ and straightway, ‘Whose sins you forgive,
they will be forgiven them; whose sins you retain, they will
be retained’ (Jn 20:22-23). This refers to the keys, about
which it is said, ‘whatever you loose on earth shall be
loosed in heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound
in heaven’ (Mt 16:19). But that was said to Peter. To show
you that Peter at that time stood for the universal Church, listen
to what is said to him, what is said to all the faithful, the
saints: ‘If your brother sins against you, correct him between
you and himself alone’ (John
Rotelle, Ed., The Works of Saint Augustine (Hyde Park:
New City, 1994), Sermons, III/8 (273-305A), On the Saints,
Sermon 295.1-3, pp. 197-198).
According to Augustine the Apostles
are equal in all respects. Each receives the authority of the
keys, not Peter alone. But some object, doesn’t Augustine
accord a primacy to the apostle Peter? Does he not call Peter
the first of the apostles, holding the chief place in the Apostleship?
Don’t such statements prove papal primacy? While it is true
that Augustine has some very exalted things to say about Peter,
as do many of the fathers, it does not follow that either he or
they held to the Roman Catholic view of papal primacy. This is
because their comments apply to Peter alone. They have absolutely
nothing to do with the bishops of Rome. How do we know this? Because
Augustine and the fathers do not make that application in their
comments. They do not state that their descriptions of Peter apply
to the bishops of Rome. The common mistake made by Roman Catholic
apologists is the assumption that because some of the fathers
make certain comments about Peter—for example, that he is
chief of the apostles or head of the apostolic choir—that
they also have in mind the bishop of Rome in an exclusive sense.
But they do not state this in their writings. This is a preconceived
theology that is read into their writings. Did they view the bishops
of Rome as being successors of Peter? Yes. Did they view the bishops
of Rome as being the exclusive successors of Peter? No.
In the view of Augustine and the early fathers all the bishops
of the Church in the East and West were the successors of Peter.
They all possess the chair of Peter. So when they speak
in exalted terms about Peter they do not apply those terms to
the bishops of Rome. Therefore, when a father refers to Peter
as the rock, the coryphaeus, the first of the disciples,
or something similar, this does not mean that he is expressing
agreement with the current Roman Catholic interpretation. This
view is clearly validated from the following statements of Augustine:
This same Peter therefore who had been
by the Rock pronounced ‘blessed,’ bearing the figure
of the Church, holding the chief place in the Apostleship (Sermon
26).
The blessed Peter, the first of the
apostles (Sermon 295)
Before his passion the Lord Jesus,
as you know, chose those disciples of his, whom he called apostles.
Among these it was only Peter who almost everywhere was given
the privilege of representing the whole Church. It was in the
person of the whole Church, which he alone represented, that
he was privileged to hear, ‘To you will I give the keys
of the kingdom of heaven’ (Mt 16:19). After all, it isn’t
just one man that received these keys, but the Church in its
unity. So this is the reason for Peter’s acknowledged preeminence,
that he stood for the Church’s universality and unity, when
he was told, ‘To you I am entrusting,’ what has in
fact been entrusted to all (Sermon 295).
Previously, of course, he was called
Simon; this name of Peter was bestowed on him by the Lord, and
that with the symbolic intention of his representing the Church.
Because Christ, you see, is the petra or rock; Peter, or Rocky,
is the Christian people (Sermon 76).
So then, this self–same Peter,
blessed by being surnamed Rocky from the rock, representing the
person of the Church, holding chief place in the apostolic ranks
(Sermon 76).
For as some things are said which seem
peculiarly to apply to the Apostle Peter, and yet are not clear
in their meaning, unless when referred to the Church, whom he
is acknowledged to have figuratively represented, on account
of the primacy which he bore among the Disciples; as it is written,
‘I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven,’
and other passages of like purport: so Judas doth represent those
Jews who were enemies of Christ (Exposition on the Book of Psalms,
Psalm 119).
You will remember that the apostle
Peter, the first of all the apostles, was thrown completely of
balance during the Lord’s passion (Sermon 147).
Christ, you see, built his Church not
on a man but on Peter’s confession. What is Peter’s
confession? ‘You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.’
There’s the rock for you, there’s the foundation, there’s
where the Church has been built, which the gates of the underworld
cannot conquer. (Sermon 229).
And this Church, symbolized in its
generality, was personified in the Apostle Peter, on account
of the primacy of his apostleship. For, as regards his proper
personality, he was by nature one man, by grace one Christian,
by still more abounding grace one, and yet also, the first apostle;
but when it was said to him, I will give unto thee the keys of
the kingdom of heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth,
shall be bound in heaven; and whatsoever thou shalt loose on
earth, shall be loosed in heaven,’ he represented the universal
Church, which in this world is shaken by divers temptations,
that come upon it like torrents of rain, floods and tempests,
and falleth not, because it is founded upon a rock (petra), from
which Peter received his name. For petra (rock) is not derived
from Peter, but Peter from petra; just as Christ is not called
so from the Christian, but the Christian from Christ. For on
this very account the Lord said, ‘On this rock will I build
my Church,’ because Peter had said, ‘Thou art the Christ,
the Son of the living God.’ On this rock, therefore, He
said, which thou hast confessed, I will build my Church. For
the Rock (Petra) was Christ; and on this foundation was Peter
himself built. For other foundation can no man lay than that
is laid, which is Christ Jesus. The Church, therefore, which
is founded in Christ received from Him the keys of the kingdom
of heaven in the person of Peter, that is to say, the power of
binding and loosing sins. For what the Church is essentially
in Christ, such representatively is Peter in the rock (petra);
and in this representation Christ is to be understood as the
Rock, Peter as the Church (Commentary on the Gospel of John,
Tractate 124.5).
Augustine states that Peter is the first
and head of the apostles and that he holds a primacy. However
he does not interpret that primacy in a Roman Catholic sense.
He believes that Peter’s primacy is figurative in that he
represents the universal Church. Again, he explicitly states that
Christ did not build his Church upon a man but on Peter’s
confession of faith. Peter is built on Christ the rock and as
a figurative representative of the Church he shows how each believer
is built on Christ. In Augustine’s view, Peter holds a primacy
or preeminence, but none of this applies to him in a jurisdictional
sense, because he says that ‘Christ did not build his Church
upon a man.’ We can not get a clearer illustration that the
fathers did indeed separate Peter’s confession of faith from
Peter’s person. In commenting on one of Augustine’s
references to Peter and the rock, John Rotelle, the editor of
the Roman Catholic series on the Sermons of Augustine, makes these
observations:
‘There was Peter, and he hadn’t
yet been confirmed in the rock’: That is, in Christ, as
participating in his ‘rockiness’ by faith. It does
not mean confirmed as the rock, because Augustine never
thinks of Peter as the rock. Jesus, after all, did not
in fact call him the rock...but ‘Rocky.’ The rock on
which he would build his Church was, for Augustine, both Christ
himself and Peter’s faith, representing the faith of the
Church (emphasis mine) (John
Rotelle, Ed., The Works of Saint Augustine (New Rochelle:
New City, 1993), Sermons, Sermon 265D.6, p. 258-259, n.
9)
Augustine does not endorse the Roman
Catholic interpretation. Again and again he states that the rock
is Christ, not Peter. Augustine claims no exclusive Petrine succession
in the Roman bishops and no papal office. Karlfried Froehlich
sums up Augustine’s views on Peter and the rock of Matthew
16 in these comments:
Augustine’s formulation (of Matthew
16:18-19), informed by a traditional North African concern for
the unity of the church, that in Peter unus pro omnibus (one
for all) had answered and received the reward, did not suggest
more than a figurative reading of Peter as an image of the true
church. In light of Peter’s subsequent fall and denial,
the name itself was regularly declared to be derived from Christ,
the true rock. Augustine, who followed Origen in this assumption,
was fascinated by the dialectic of the ‘blessed’ Peter
(Matt. 16:17) being addressed as ‘Satan’ a few verses
later (v. 23). In Peter, weak in himself and strong only in his
connection with Christ, the church could see the image of its
own total dependence on God’s grace.
Augustine rigorously separated the name-giving from its explanation:
Christ did not say to Peter: ‘you are the rock,’ but
‘you are Peter.’ The church is not built upon Peter
but upon the only true rock, Christ. Augustine and the medieval
exegetes after him found the warrant for this interpretation
in 1 Cor. 10:4. The allegorical key of this verse had already
been applied to numerous biblical rock passages in the earlier
African testimonia tradition. Matt. 16:18 was no exception. If
the metaphor of the rock did not refer to a negative category
of ‘hard’ rocks, it had to be read christologically
(Karlfried Froehlich,
Saint Peter, Papal Primacy, and Exegetical Tradition, 1150-1300,
pp. 3, 8-14. Taken from The Religious Roles of the Papacy:
Ideals and Realities, 1150-1300, ed. Christopher Ryan, Papers
in Medieval Studies 8 (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Medieval
Studies, 1989).
Karl Morrison sums up Augustine’s
views of ecclesiology in these words:
Peter was said to have received the
power of the keys, not in his own right, but as the representative
of the entire Church. Without contesting Rome’s primacy
of honor, St. Augustine held that all the Apostles, and all their
successors, the bishops, shared equally in the powers which Christ
granted St. Peter (Karl
Morrison, Tradition and Authority in the Western Church 300-1140
(Princeton: Princeton University, 1969), p. 162).
Reinhold Seeberg, the Protestant Church
historian, makes these comments on Augustine’s interpretation
of Peter pointing out that it reflects the view of Cyprian:
The idea of the Roman Primacy likewise
receives no special elucidation at the hands of Augustine. We
find a general acknowledgment of the ‘primacy of the apostolic
chair,’ but Augustine knows nothing of any special authority
vested in Peter or his successors. Peter is a ‘figure of
the church’ or of ‘good pastors,’ and represents
the unity of the church (serm. 295.2; 147.2). In this consists
the significance of his position and that of his successors...As
all bishops (in contradistinction from the Scriptures) may err
(unit. eccl. II.28), so also the Roman bishop. This view is plainly
manifest from the bearing of Augustine and his colleagues in
the Pelagian controversy...Dogmatically, there had been no advance
from the position of Cyprian. The Africans, in their relations
with Rome, played somewhat the role of the Gallicanism of a later
period (Reinhold Seeberg,
Text-Book of the History of Doctrines (Grand Rapids: Baker,
1952), Volume I, p. 318-319).
W.H.C. Frend affirms the above consensus
of Augustine’s ecclesiology and his interpretation of Peter’s
commission:
Augustine...rejected the idea that
‘the power of the keys’ had been entrusted to Peter
alone. His primacy was simply a matter of personal privilege
and not an office. Similarly, he never reproached the Donatists
for not being in communion with Rome, but with lack of communion
with the apostolic Sees as a whole. His view of Church government
was that less important questions should be settled by provincial
councils, greater matters at general councils (W.H.C. Frend, The Early Church (Philadelphia:
Fortress, 1965), p. 222).
Augustine is the greatest Church father
and theologian of the patristic age writing after 400 years of
Church history. The constitution of the Church should have been
a firmly settled issue, especially since Vatican I claims that
its papal teachings and interpretation of Matthew 16 upon which
they rest have been the belief and teaching of the Church from
the very beginning. Yet Augustine interprets Matthew 16 in a Protestant
and Orthodox way, explicitly repudiating the Roman Catholic interpretation
of Vatican I. How are we to explain this? Vatican I states the
rock of Matthew 16 is the person of Peter and has been the unanimous
opinion of the Church fathers. Then why did Augustine hold a contrary
view to that which was supposedly the universal opinion of the
Church of his day and in all preceding Church history? According
to Rome, this passage holds the key to the constitution of the
Church given by Christ himself which was fully recognized from
the very beginning. If this was so, why would Augustine purposefully
contradict the universal interpretation of so fundamental and
important a passage? The answer, quite simply, is that the fathers
did not interpret the rock of Matthew 16 the way Vatican I does.
Augustine is merely a prominent representative of the opinion
of the Church as a whole.
The authors of Jesus, Peter and the
Keys suggest that Augustine invented a novel interpretation
of the rock of Matthew 16 in stating that the rock is Christ.
Specifically they state: ‘St. Augustine invented a new exegesis
(of Matthew 16:18-19)—that the rock is Christ' (Scott Butler, Norman Dahlgren, David
Hess, Jesus, Peter and the Keys (Santa Barbara: Queenship,
1996), p. 252). This is a completely
misinformed statement. As we have seen this interpretation was
utilized by Eusebius in the fourth century, many years before
Augustine.
AMBROSE (ca. A.D. 333—397)
Ambrose was bishop of the see of Milan
in the latter part of the fourth century. He was one of the greatest
fathers of the Western Church, the mentor of St. Augustine, and
universally recognized as one of the greatest theologians of the
patristic age. He is one of a handful of Western fathers who would
be recognized theologically by the Roman Catholic Church as a
doctor of the Church. He was the leading theologian and outstanding
bishop of the Western Church. He is a father who is often cited
in support of the present day Roman Catholic interpretation of
Matthew 16:18. The following quotation is the one that is most
often given in support of this view:
It is to Peter himself that He says:
‘You are Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church.’
Where Peter is, there is the Church (W.A.
Jurgens, The Faith of the Early Fathers (Collegeville:
Liturgical, 1979), Volume 2, St. Ambrose, On Twelve Psalms
440, 30, p. 150).
The impression given by Roman Catholic
apologists is that in these comments Ambrose supports the Roman
Catholic interpretation of Matthew 16. They apply the following
logic to his statement: The above quote seems to suggest that
Peter’s person is the rock. And since the bishops of Rome
are the successors to Peter they are, therefore, by succession,
the rocks of the Church. Therefore, according to Ambrose, the
Church is founded upon the universal rule of the bishops of Rome.
To be in communion with Rome is to be in the Church. To be out
of communion with Rome is to be out of the Church for where Peter
(that is, the bishop of Rome) is, there is the Church. Is this
what Ambrose meant? If we divorce this one sentence from its context
and from the rest of his comments on Peter in other writings,
we could certainly lean towards that interpretation. However,
Ambrose made other comments on Peter and Matthew 16 which explain
exactly what he meant when he said that Peter is the rock. Unfortunately,
these other comments are often neglected in discussions by Roman
Catholic apologists. Often a quote like this is given out of the
context. The result is that an interpretation is given the words
of Ambrose that is completely foreign to his true meaning. This
becomes clear upon examination of his other statements:
He, then, who before was silent, to
teach us that we ought not to repeat the words of the impious,
this one, I say, when he heard, ‘But who do you say I am,’
immediately, not unmindful of his station, exercised his primacy,
that is, the primacy of confession, not of honor; the primacy
of belief, not of rank. This, then, is Peter, who has replied
for the rest of the Apostles; rather, before the rest of men.
And so he is called the foundation, because he knows how to preserve
not only his own but the common foundation...Faith, then, is
the foundation of the Church, for it was not said of Peter’s
flesh, but of his faith, that ‘the gates of hell shall not
prevail against it.’ But his confession of faith conquered
hell. And this confession did not shut out one heresy, for, since
the Church like a good ship is often buffeted by many waves,
the foundation of the Church should prevail against all heresies
(The Fathers of the
Church (Washington D.C., Catholic University, 1963), Saint
Ambrose, Theological and Dogmatic Works, The Sacrament of
the Incarnation of Our Lord IV.32-V.34, pp. 230-231).
Jesus said to them: Who do men say
that I am? Simon Peter answering said, The Christ of God (Lk.
ix.20). If it is enough for Paul ‘to know nothing but Christ
Jesus and Him crucified,’ (1 Cor. ii.2), what more is to
be desired by me than to know Christ? For in this one name is
the expression of His Divinity and Incarnation, and faith in
His Passion. And accordingly though the other apostles knew,
yet Peter answers before the rest, ‘Thou art the Christ
the Son of God’...Believe, therefore, as Peter believed,
that thou also mayest be blessed, and that thou also mayest deserve
to hear, ‘Because flesh and blood hath not revealed it to
thee, but My Father who is in heaven’...Peter therefore
did not wait for the opinion of the people, but produced his
own, saying, ‘Thou art the Christ the Son of the living
God’: Who ever is, began not to be, nor ceases to be. Great
is the grace of Christ, who has imparted almost all His own names
to His disciples. ‘I am,’ said He, ‘the light
of the world,’ and yet with that very name in which He glories,
He favored His disciples, saying, ‘Ye are the light of the
world.’ ‘I am the living bread’; and ‘we
all are one bread’ (1 Cor. x.17)...Christ is the rock, for
‘they drank of the same spiritual rock that followed them,
and the rock was Christ’ (1 Cor. x.4); also He denied not
to His disciple the grace of this name; that he should be Peter,
because he has from the rock (petra) the solidity of constancy,
the firmness of faith. Make an effort, therefore, to be a rock!
Do not seek the rock outside of yourself, but within yourself!
Your rock is your deed, your rock is your mind. Upon this rock
your house is built. Your rock is your faith, and faith is the
foundation of the Church. If you are a rock, you will be in the
Church, because the Church is on a rock. If you are in the Church
the gates of hell will not prevail against you...He who has conquered
the flesh is a foundation of the Church; and if he cannot equal
Peter, he can imitate him (Commentary
in Luke VI.98, CSEL 32.4).
What does Ambrose mean when he says
that Peter is the foundation? In the sense that he was the first
to openly confess faith in Christ as the Messiah and Son of God.
The rock is not Peter himself but Peter’s confession of faith!
It is this faith which is the foundation of the Church. Peter
possesses a primacy, but he explains that primacy as one of confession
and faith and not of rank in the sense of ruling over the other
apostles. Thus, when Ambrose says that ‘where Peter is there
is the Church,’ he means that where Peter’s confession
is, there is the Church. He does not mean the bishop of Rome at
all. He goes on to give an exposition of the rock reminiscent
of the interpretation of Origen who says that all believers are
rocks. As Robert Eno points out, when the overall context of Ambrose’s
statement is taken into account, it demonstrates that the interpretation
given by Fastiggi and others is a complete misrepresentation of
Ambrose’s statement since his statement has nothing to do
with ecclesiology and papal authority. Robert Eno gives the following
explanation:
There is no question then that Ambrose
honored the Roman see, but there are other texts which seem to
establish a certain distance and independence as well. He commented,
for example, that Peter’s primacy was a primacy of confession,
not of honor; a primacy of faith, not rank...Finally, one further
text should be mentioned in connection with Ambrose since it
is a text which like Roma locuta est has become something of
a shibboleth or slogan. This is the brief phrase from his commentary
on the fortieth Psalm: Ubi Petrus, ibi ecclesia (where Peter
is, there is the Church)...As Roger Gryson has shown, in his
study on Ambrose and the priesthood, the context of such a statement
has nothing to do with any treatise on ecclesiology. It is but
one statement in a long chain of allegorical exegesis starting
with the line from Ps. 41:9: ‘Even my bosom friend in whom
I trusted...has lifted his heel against me.’ This is not
to deny the fairly common association of Peter as the symbol
of the Church, the figura ecclesiae we have seen in Augustine.
But it says little that is new and nothing at all about papal
authority (Robert Eno,
The Rise of the Papacy (Wilmington: Michael Glazier, 1990),
pp. 83-84).
In the view of the fathers, as seen
in the examples of Cyprian, Ambrose and Augustine, the Church
is not embodied in one individual but in a confession of right
faith. Where you have that right confession you have Peter. This
is explicitly stated for example by Chrysostom. Like Ambrose,
he says that where Peter is there is the Church in the sense of
Peter’s confession and he applies it not to Rome but to Antioch:
‘Though we do not retain the body of Peter, we do retain
the faith of Peter, and retaining the faith of Peter we have Peter’
(On the Inscription
of Acts, II. Taken from E. Giles, Documents Illustrating Papal
Authority (London: SPCK, 1952), p.168).
It is important to note also that Ambrose,
like Augustine, separates Peter’s confession of faith from
the person of Peter himself: ‘Faith, then, is the foundation
of the Church, for it was not said of Peter’s flesh, but
of his faith, that “the gates of hell shall not prevail against
it”.’ This conclusively demonstrates the spuriousness
of some Roman apologists’ claims that the fathers did not
separate the confession of Peter from the person of Peter. Ambrose
did this as did Augustine, and other fathers as well, as we will
see. These fathers did not believe that the Church was built on
the person of Peter but on Christ alone or on Peter’s confession
of faith in a secondary sense. And generally speaking, when the
fathers state that the Church is built on Peter, they mean it
is built upon his faith. Karlfried Froehlich makes this very point
in his comments on the patristic exegesis of the rock of Matthew
16:18:
Most of the Eastern exegetes, especially
after the doctrinal controversies of the fourth century, read
v. 18 as the culmination of vv. 16-17: ‘upon this rock’
meant ‘upon the orthodox faith which you have just confessed.’
Introduced in the West by Ambrose and the translation of the
Antiochene exegetes, this Petra=fides equation maintained an
important place alongside the christological alternative, or
as its more precise explanation: the rock of the church was Christ
who was the content of Peter’s confession (Karlfried Froehlich, Saint Peter, Papal
Primacy, and Exegetical Tradition, 1150-1300, p. 12. Taken
from The Religious Roles of the Papacy: Ideals and Realities,
1150-1300, ed. Christopher Ryan, Papers in Medieval Studies
8 (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 1989).
This can be seen from the example of
Ambrose himself. In other passages he refers to Christ as the
rock:
‘They sucked honey out of the
firm rock,’ (Deut. xxxii.13): for the flesh of Christ is
a rock, which redeemed heaven and the whole world (1 Cor. x.4)
(Epistle 43.9.
Cited by J. Waterworth S.J., A Commentary (London: Thomas
Richardson, 1871), p. 76).
When the cock crew, the very rock of
the Church did away with his guilt (Hymn.
Aeterne rerum conditor. Cited by J. Waterworth S.J., A
Commentary (London: Thomas Richardson, 1871), p. 76).
For Ambrose, then, the rock is not Peter
but his confession of faith. It points to the person of Christ
as the ultimate rock. So it is possible to make it appear that
Ambrose holds a particular view when in fact he does not, by not
presenting his complete teaching on this subject.
JOHN CHRYSOSTOM
John Chrysostom was an Eastern father
who lived during the second half of the fourth century. He was
a priest of Antioch, bishop of Constantinople and contemporary
of some of the greatest Church fathers in the history of the Church
(such as Epiphanius, Ambrose, Augustine and Jerome). He was the
most prolific writer of the Eastern fathers and is considered
by many to be the greatest preacher, commentator and theologian
to grace the Eastern Church. He was known as the golden–mouthed
preacher for his eloquence. He died in exile in 407 A.D. William
Jurgens makes these comments about him:
Some will say that John Chrysostom
is unparalleled anywhere, while others will say that he is matched
only by Augustine...No one else among the Greek Fathers has so
large a body of extant writings as has Chrysostom (William Jurgens, The Faith of
the Early Fathers (Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1979),
Volume 2, pp. 84-86).
What was Chrysostom’s view of Peter
and his interpretation of the rock of Matthew 16? Does it coincide
with the teaching of papal primacy espoused by the Church of Rome?
The answer is no. Chrysostom’s views are very similar to
those of Augustine. As we have seen Augustine held a very high
view of Peter. He called him the chief and first of the apostles
and yet stated that the rock was not Peter but Christ. A very
similar picture presents itself in the writings of Chrysostom.
In his book Studies in the Early Papacy, the Roman Catholic apologist
Dom Chapman has referenced approximately ninety citations from
Chrysostom’s writings which he claims as proof of a clear
and unambiguous affirmation of a Petrine and thereby a papal primacy.
But Dom Chapman has committed a primary error of historiography—that
of reading back into the writings of a previous age the presuppositions
and conclusions of a later age. He assumes that because a particular
father makes certain statements about Peter that he must have
a primacy of jurisdiction in mind and that this applies in his
thinking to the bishop of Rome in an exclusive sense as well.
But as we have seen with Augustine this is not the case. A close
examination of the comments of Chrysostom demonstrates this to
be true in his case as well. Like Augustine, Chrysostom makes
some very exalted statements about Peter:
Peter, that chief of the apostles,
first in the Church, the friend of Christ who did not receive
revelation from man but from the Father, as the Lord bore witness
to him saying: ‘Blessed are you, Simon Bar–Jonah, for
flesh and blood has not revealed this to you but my Father who
is in heaven’: this same Peter (when I say ‘Peter,’
I name an unbreakable rock, an immovable ridge, a great apostle,
the first of the disciples, the first called and the first obeying),
this same Peter, I say, did not perpetrate a minor misdeed but
a very great one. He denied the Lord. I say this, not accusing
a just man, but offering to you the opportunity of repentance.
Peter denied the Lord and governor of the world himself, the
savior of all...(De
Eleemos III.4, M.P.G., Vol. 49, Col. 298)
Peter, the coryphaeus of the
choir of apostles, the mouth of the disciples, the foundation
of the faith, the base of the confession, the fisherman of the
world, who brought back our race from the depth of error to heaven,
he who is everywhere fervent and full of boldness, or rather
of love than boldness (Hom.
de decem mille talentis 3, PG III, 20. Cited by Dom Chapman,
Studies in the Early Papacy (London: Sheed & Ward, 1928),
p. 74.).
These are exalted titles but in using
them Chrysostom does not mean that Peter possesses a primacy of
jurisdiction in the Church or that he is the rock upon which the
Church is built. Again, we have already seen this in Augustine.
He uses similar language in describing Peter but without its having
a Roman Catholic meaning. We know this is also true for Chrysostom
because he applies similar titles to the other apostles and did
not interpret the rock of Matthew 16 to be Peter. The term coryphaeus,
for example, was a general title applied by Chrysostom to several
of the apostles, not to Peter exclusively. It carries the idea
of leadership but implies no jurisdiction. Chrysostom uses this
term to describe Peter, James, John, Andrew and Paul. He states
that just as Peter received the charge of the world, so did the
apostles Paul and John. Just as Peter was appointed teacher of
the world, so was Paul. Just as Peter was a holder of the keys
of heaven, so was the apostle John. He places the apostles on
an equal footing relative to authority:
He took the coryphaei and led
them up into a high mountain apart...Why does He take these three
alone? Because they excelled the others. Peter showed his excellence
by his great love of Him, John by being greatly loved, James
by the answer...'We are able to drink the chalice' (Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene
Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume X, Saint Chrysostom,
Homilies on the Gospel of Saint Matthew, Homily 56.2;
p. 345).
Do you not see that the headship was
in the hands of these three, especially of Peter and James? This
was the chief cause of their condemnation by Herod (Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene
Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume XI, Saint
Chrysostom, Homilies on the Acts of the Apostles, Homily
XXVI, p. 169)
The coryphaei, Peter the foundation
of the Church, Paul the vessel of election (Contra ludos et theatra 1, PG VI, 265.
Cited by Chapman, Studies on the Early Papacy (London:
Sheed & Ward, 1928), p. 76)
And if any should say ‘How then
did James receive the chair at Jerusalem?’ I would make
this reply, that He appointed Peter teacher not of the chair,
but of the world...And this He did to withdraw them (Peter and
John) from their unseasonable sympathy for each other; for since
they were about to receive the charge of the world, it was necessary
that they should no longer be closely associated together (Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene
Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume XIV, Saint
Chrysostom, Homilies on the Gospel of John, Homily 88.1-2,
pp. 331-332).
For the Son of thunder, the beloved
of Christ, the pillar of the Churches throughout the world, who
holds the keys of heaven, who drank the cup of Christ, and was
baptized with His baptism, who lay upon his Master’s bosom,
with much confidence, this man now comes forward to us now (Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene
Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume XIV, Saint
Chrysostom, Homilies on the Gospel of John, Homily 1.1,
p. 1).
The merciful God is wont to give this
honor to his servants, that by their grace others may acquire
salvation; as was agreed by the blessed Paul, that teacher of
the world who emitted the rays of his teaching everywhere (Homily 24, On Genesis..Cited
by E. Giles, Documents Illustrating Papal Authority (London:
SPCK, 1952), p. 165).
It is clear from these statements that
Chrysostom, while certainly granting a large leadership role to
Peter, does not consider him to have been made the supreme ruler
of the Church. These passages demonstrate that the exalted titles
applied to Peter were not exclusively applied to Peter. But these
passages are completely absent from the work Jesus, Peter and
the Keys. The passage in which Chrysostom exegetes the rock of
Matthew 16 explaining that it is Peter’s confession of faith
is also not included. How can the authors of this work claim to
give a truthful and balanced presentation of Chrysostom’s
perspective when they are guilty of such blatant and purposeful
disregard of his writings? There is one passage in which Chrysostom
does state that Peter received authority over the Church:
For he who then did not dare to question
Jesus, but committed the office to another, was even entrusted
with the chief authority over the brethren (Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume XIV, Saint Chrysostom,
Homilies on the Gospel of John, Homily 88.1-2, pp. 331-332).
This would seem to indicate that Chrysostom
taught that Peter was the supreme ruler of the Church. However
in the passage cited above Chrysostom speaks of the apostle John
as also receiving the charge of the whole world and the keys equally
with Peter:
And this He did to withdraw them (Peter
and John) from their unseasonable sympathy for each other; for
since they were about to receive the charge of the world, it
was necessary that they should no longer be closely associated
together (Philip Schaff,
Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
1956), Volume XIV, Saint Chrysostom, Homilies on the Gospel
of John, Homily 88.1-2, pp. 331-332).
For the Son of thunder, the beloved
of Christ, the pillar of the Churches throughout the world, who
holds the keys of heaven...(Philip
Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1956), Volume XIV, Saint Chrysostom, Homilies on
the Gospel of John, Homily 1.1, p. 1).
He goes on to speak of Paul as being
on an equal footing with Peter:
Where the Cherubim sing the glory,
where the Seraphim are flying, there shall we see Paul, with
Peter, and as chief and leader of the choir of the saints, and
shall enjoy his generous love....I love Rome even for this, although
indeed one has other grounds for praising it...Not so bright
is the heaven, when the sun sends forth his rays, as is the city
of Rome, sending out these two lights into all parts of the world.
From thence will Paul be caught up, thence Peter. Just bethink
you, and shudder, at the thought of what a sight Rome will see,
when Paul ariseth suddenly from that deposit, together with Peter,
and is lifted up to meet the Lord. What a rose will Rome send
up to Christ!...what two crowns will the city have about it!
what golden chains will she be girded with! what fountains possess!
Therefore I admire the city, not for the much gold, nor for the
columns, not for the other display there, but for these pillars
of the Church (1 Cor. 15:38) (Philip
Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1956), Volume XI, Saint Chrysostom, Homilies on
the Epistle to the Romans, Homily 32, Ver. 24, pp. 561-562.).
Further, Chrysostom speaks of James,
and not Peter, as possessing the chief rule and authority in Jerusalem
and over the Jerusalem Council:
This (James) was bishop, as they say,
and therefore he speaks last..There was no arrogance in the Church.
After Peter Paul speaks, and none silences him: James waits patiently;
not starts up (for the next word). No word speaks John here,
no word the other Apostles, but held their peace, for James was
invested with the chief rule, and think it no hardship. So clean
was their soul from love of glory. Peter indeed spoke more strongly,
but James here more mildly: for thus it behooves one in high
authority, to leave what is unpleasant for others to say, while
he himself appears in the milder part (Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume XI, Saint Chrysostom,
Homilies on the Acts of the Apostles, Homily 33, pp. 205,
207).
Dom Chapman interprets these statements
in a limited sense this way:
Obviously, it is James who has the
‘rule’ and the ‘great power’ as bishop of
those believing Pharisees who had initiated the discussion. But
the idea that he had (rule) over Peter is, of course, ludicrous,
and the notion that he could possibly be the president of the
council certainly never occurred to Chrysostom’s mind (Dom John Chapman, Studies on
the Early Papacy (London: Sheed & Ward, 1928), p. 90).
The problem with what Chapman says is
that this is not what Chrysostom says. Chrysostom says nothing
about the chief rule of James being limited to that of the believing
Pharisees. There is not one word said about Pharisees. His reference
to the chief rule is of the overall Council over which James presided.
When all of his statements about Peter, Paul, James and John are
taken together, it becomes clear that in the mind of Chrysostom,
all the apostles together held the care of the world and headship
of the Church universally. Peter did not hold a primacy of jurisdiction
but of teaching, which he says is equally true of John and Paul:
And if anyone would say ‘How did
James receive the chair of Jerusalem?’ I would reply that
he appointed Peter a teacher not of the chair, but of the world
(Philip Schaff, Nicene
and Post-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume
XIV, Saint Chrysostom, Homilies on the Gospel of John,
Homily 88.1-2, pp. 331-332).
Chrysostom interprets the keys given
to Peter as a declarative authority to teach and preach the gospel
and to extend the kingdom of God, not a primacy of jurisdiction
over the other apostles:
For the Father gave to Peter the revelation
of the Son; but the Son gave him to sow that of the Father and
that of Himself in every part of the world; and to mortal man
He entrusted the authority over all things in Heaven, giving
him the keys; who extended the Church to every part of the world,
and declared it to be stronger than heaven (A Library of Fathers of the Holy Catholic Church (Oxford, Parker, 1844), Homilies
of S. John Chrysostom on the Gospel of St. Matthew, Homily
54.3).
This authority was shared equally by
all the apostles. Chrysostom states, for example, that John also
held the authority of the keys and, like Peter, he held a universal
teaching authority over the Churches throughout the world:
For the Son of thunder, the beloved
of Christ, the pillar of the Churches throughout the world, who
holds the keys of heaven...(Philip
Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1956), Volume XIV, Saint Chrysostom, Homilies on
the Gospel of John, Homily 1.1, p. 1).
It is also evident from Chrysostom’s
exegesis of Matthew 16 that he did not teach that Peter was made
supreme ruler of the Church. He did not interpret the rock of
Matthew 16 to be the person of Peter, but his confession of faith,
pointing to Christ himself as the rock and only foundation of
the Church:
‘And I say unto thee, Thou art
Peter, and upon this rock I will build my Church’; that
is, on the faith of his confession. Hereby He signifies that
many were on the point of believing, and raises his spirit, and
makes him a shepherd...For the Father gave to Peter the revelation
of the Son; but the Son gave him to sow that of the Father and
that of Himself in every part of the world; and to mortal man
He entrusted the authority over all things in Heaven, giving
him the keys; who extended the church to every part of the world,
and declared it to be stronger than heaven (Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume X, Saint Chrysostom,
Homilies on the Gospel of Saint Matthew, Homily 54.2-3;
pp. 332-334).
He speaks from this time lowly things,
on his way to His passion, that He might show His humanity. For
He that hath built His church upon Peter’s confession, and
has so fortified it, that ten thousand dangers and deaths are
not to prevail over it...(Philip
Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1956), Volume X, Chrysostom, On Matthew, Homily
82.3, p. 494).
‘For other foundation can no man
lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ.’ I say, no
man can lay it so long as he is a master–builder; but if
he lay it...he ceases to be a master–builder. See how even
from men’s common notions he proves the whole of his proposition.
His meaning is this: ‘I have preached Christ, I have delivered
unto you the foundation. Take heed how you build thereon, lest
haply it be in vainglory, lest haply so as to draw away the disciples
unto men.’ Let us not then give heed unto the heresies.
‘For other foundation can no man lay than that which is
laid.’ Upon this then let us build, and as a foundation
let let us cleave to it, as a branch to a vine; and let there
be no interval between us and Christ...For the branch by its
adherence draws in the fatness, and the building stands because
it is cemented together. Since, if it stand apart it perishes,
having nothing whereon to support itself. Let us not then merely
keep hold of Christ, but let us be cemented to Him, for if we
stand apart, we perish...And accordingly, there are many images
whereby He brings us into union. Thus, if you mark it, He is
the ‘Head’, we are ‘the body’: can there
be any empty interval between the head and the body? He is a
‘Foundation’, we are a ‘building’: He a ‘Vine’,
we ‘branches’: He the ‘Bridegroom’, we the
‘bride’: He is the ‘Shepherd’, we the ‘sheep’:
He is the ‘Way’, we ‘they who walk therein.’
Again, we are a ‘temple,’ He the ‘Indweller’:
He the ‘First–Begotten,’ we the ‘brethren’:
He the ‘Heir,’ we the ‘heirs together with Him’:
He the ‘Life,’ we the ‘living’: He the ‘Resurrection,’
we ‘those who rise again’: He the ‘Light,’
we the ‘enlightened.’ All these things indicate unity;
and they allow no void interval, not even the smallest (Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene
Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume XII, Saint
Chrysostom, Homilies on the Epistles of Paul to the Corinthians,
Homily VIII.7, p. 47).
Chrysostom argues that the rock is not
Peter but Peter’s confession of faith in Christ as the Son
of God. Even Dom Chapman is forced to admit that Chrysostom consistently
interpreted the rock to be Peter’s confession of faith:
‘The rock on which the Church
is to be built is regularly taken by St. Chrysostom to be the
confession of Peter, or the faith which prompted this confession'
(Dom John Chapman, Studies
on the Early Papacy (London: Sheed & Ward, 1928), p.
77).
It is Peter’s confession that is
the foundation of the Church. Peter is not the foundation. According
to Chrysostom that position belongs to Christ alone. Dom Chapman
objects to this claiming that in Chrysostom’s mind, the rock
is not only Peter’s faith but also Peter’s person. He
cites a quote where Chrysostom speaks of Peter as being strengthened
by Christ to stand as a rock against a hostile world:
For those things which are peculiar
to God alone, (both to absolve from sins, and to make the church
incapable of overthrow in such assailing waves, and to exhibit
a man that is a fisher more solid than any rock, while all the
world is at war with him), these He promises Himself to give;
as the Father, speaking to Jeremiah, said, He would make him
as ‘a brazen pillar, and as a wall;’ but him to one
nation only, this man in every part of the world (A Library of Fathers of the Holy
Catholic Church (Oxford,
Parker, 1844), Homilies of S. John Chrysostom on the Gospel
of St. Matthew, Homily 54.3).
In light of these statements Chapman
says:
I think this statement alone would
have made it clear that the Rock is Peter, in St. Chrysostom’s
view, as well as, and because of, the firmness of his confession.
He has no idea of the two notions, ‘Peter is the Rock’
and ‘his faith is the Rock’ being mutually exclusive,
as, in fact, they are not (Dom
John Chapman, Studies on the Early Papacy (London: Sheed
& Ward, 1928), p. 79).
But this statement is a complete misrepresentation.
In exegeting the rock of Matthew 16, just prior to the above statements,
Chrysostom states that Peter is not the rock. In the quotes given
by Chapman, what Chrysostom is saying is that just as the Lord
strengthened Jeremiah for his calling so he would strengthen Peter.
He says he will be like a rock, not that he is the rock of Matthew
16. This is very similar to Augustine’s position on Peter:
So is it the case that Peter is now
true, or that Christ is true in Peter? When the Lord Jesus Christ
wished, he left Peter to himself, and Peter was found to be a
man; and when it so pleased the Lord Jesus Christ, he filled
Peter, and Peter was found to be true. The Rock had made Rocky
Peter true, for the Rock was Christ (John
Rotelle, The Works of Saint Augustine (Brooklyn: New City,
1992), Sermons, Sermon 147.3, p. 449).
According to Augustine, the rock is
Christ and Christ made Peter a rock of strength in his faith.
But Peter is not the rock of Matthew 16. He simply derives strength
to be a rock from the rock, Christ Jesus himself. And what is
true for Peter becomes true for all Christians because Peter is
a figurative representative of the Church. In contradistinction
to Chapman’s assertions the fathers do in fact separate Peter’s
faith from Peter’s confession, making them mutually exclusive,
as we have seen with Augustine and Ambrose. While it is true that
it is the person of Peter who makes the confession, the focus
of Chrysostom is not on Peter’s person but on Peter’s
faith. Chrysostom holds a similar view to that of Ambrose which
we referenced earlier. Ambrose says that where Peter is (his confession),
there is the Church. Chrysostom affirms the same point when he
says:
‘For though we do not retain the
body of Peter, we do retain the faith of Peter, and retaining
the faith of Peter we have Peter’ (On the Inscription of the Acts, II. Cited by E. Giles, Documents
Illustrating Papal Authority (London: SPCK, 1952), p. 168.
Cf. Chapman, Studies on the Early Papacy, p. 96).
While holding a very high view of the
status of the apostle Peter, Chrysostom, like Augustine, did not
transfer this status to the bishops of Rome. In his thinking,
along with Cyprian, Augustine, Jerome and Ambrose, all bishops
are successors of Peter. There is no supreme authority of one
bishop over another. In all his remarks about Peter, where does
Chrysostom apply them to the bishops of Rome in an exclusive sense?
He never does that. He never personally makes that application
in his statements and it is historically dishonest to assert that
that is what he meant when he personally never said it. In similar
fashion to Cyprian, Chrysostom refers to the chair of Peter, stating
that the bishop of Antioch possesses that chair, demonstrating
that in his mind all legitimate bishops are successors of Peter
and not just the bishop of Rome:
In speaking of S. Peter, the recollection
of another Peter has come to me, the common father and teacher,
who has inherited his prowess, and also obtained his chair. For
this is the one great privilege of our city, Antioch, that it
received the leader of the apostles as its teacher in the beginning.
For it was right that she who was first adorned with the name
of Christians, before the whole world, should receive the first
of the apostles as her pastor. But though we received him as
teacher, we did not retain him to the end, but gave him up to
royal Rome. Or rather we did retain him to the end, for though
we do not retain the body of Peter, we do retain the faith of
Peter, and retaining the faith of Peter we have Peter (On the Inscription of the Acts, II. Cited by E. Giles, Documents
Illustrating Papal Authority (London: SPCK, 1952), p. 168.
Cf. Chapman, Studies on the Early Papacy, p. 96).
In his book, The Eastern Churches
and the Papacy, Herbert Scott makes the assertion that John
Chrysostom held to the view of papal primacy because he expressed
exalted views about the apostle Peter. He makes the assumption
that because Chrysostom speaks of Peter in exalted terms that
such statements apply to the bishops of Rome in an exclusive sense.
But when pressed by the question as to whether Chrysostom actually
makes this application himself, Scott is forced to this significant
admission:
Granted that Chrysostom reiterates
that Peter is the coryphaeus, ‘the universal shepherd,’
etc., what evidence is there, it is asked, that he recognised
these claims in the Bishop of Rome? Is there anything in his
writings to that effect?...If it be held that all this labouring
by Chrysostom of the honour and powers of Peter does not of itself
demand the exalted position of his successors as its explanation,
it must be conceded that there is little or nothing in his writings
which explicitly and incontestably affirms that the Bishop of
Rome is the successor of S. Peter in his primacy (S. Herbert Scott, The Eastern
Churches and the Papacy (London: Sheed & Ward, 1928),
p. 133).
In other words, there is no evidence
in any of the writings of Chrysostom that he applied his statements
about Peter to the bishops of Rome. Nevertheless, Scott goes on
to suggest that Chrysostom’s statements imply a papal interpretation
to his words. As Scott puts it:
Surely, however, if Peter is the foundation
of the Church as Chrysostom constantly affirms, and if the Church
is eternal as the Founder made it, he must last as long as the
building, the Church, which is erected upon him (S. Herbert Scott, The Eastern
Churches and the Papacy (London: Sheed & Ward, 1928),
p. 133).
The logic employed here by Scott is
flawed. Chrysostom never makes such a statement. He has in fact
explained what he means when he says that Peter is the foundation.
There is no reason to suppose that Chrysostom envisioned a papal
office when he speaks of Peter as the foundation of the Church.
We have seen quite clearly from Chrysostom’s statements that
he taught that the Church was built on Peter’s confession
of faith. It can be said to be built on Peter only in the sense
that it is built on his confession. Chrysostom’s comments
given above on Antioch demonstrate that he teaches that the Church’s
foundation is preserved throughout history as Peter’s confession
of faith is preserved. It is not preserved by being built upon
the bishops of Rome as supposed exclusive successors of Peter,
but upon Peter’s confession. As Chrysostom put it, ‘Where
you have Peter’s confession there you have Peter: ‘for
though we do not retain the body of Peter, we do retain the faith
of Peter, and retaining the faith of Peter we have Peter’
(On the Inscription
of the Acts, II. Cited
by E. Giles, Documents Illustrating Papal Authority (London:
SPCK, 1952), p. 168. Cf. Chapman, Studies on the Early Papacy,
p. 96).
Nevertheless, Scott goes on to offer
what he considers incontrovertible proof of the expression of
papal primacy from Chrysostom’s writings:
There is indeed one passage which may
be a categorical affirmation of the primacy of the pope: De Sacerdotio
53: ‘Why did Christ shed His Blood? To purchase the sheep
which He confided to Peter and those who came after him.’
It may be urged that S. Chrysostom means no more by this than
all those who have the care of souls. On the other hand, there
may be a reference to Peter only and to his personal commission:
‘Feed my sheep’; and Chrysostom soon afterwards actually
quotes these words. And when one recalls his comments on them
given above, as meaning Peter’s ‘government’ and
‘ruling the brethren,’ it is at least likely that here
is a reference to Peter’s successors in the see of Rome
(S. Herbert Scott, The
Eastern Churches and the Papacy (London: Sheed & Ward,
1928), p. 133).
These assertions are refuted by Dom
Chrysostom Baur, the Roman Catholic biographer on the life of
John Chrysostom. He points out that Chrysostom’s writings
contain no allusion to a papal primacy and that the supposed evidence
as that appealed to by Scott twists his writings to say what one
wants them to say. It is to read a preconceived theology into
his writings that Chrysostom himself never expressed. Baur comments:
A more important question is whether
Chrysostom considered the primacy of Peter as only personal,
or as an official primacy, hence a permanent arrangement of the
Church, and whether he correspondingly attributed the primacy
of jurisdiction in the Church also to the Bishops of Rome...Chrysostom
never made in his works any questionable deductions, never passed
sentence with clear words on the jurisdiction of the Pope. Even
P. Jugie admits this frankly. N. Marini, who later became a Cardinal,
published a book on this question. In this he seeks, with the
help...of a number of quotations from Chrysostom, to prove that
this must pass for unqualified evidence of the jurisdictional
primacy of the successors of Peter in Rome. His first argument
is borrowed from the Treatise on the Priesthood. In Book 2.1
Chrysostom asks: ‘Why did Christ shed His blood? In order
to ransom His sheep, which He entrusted to Peter and to those
after him.’ Marioni translates here ‘Peter and his
successors,’ which naturally facilitates his proof. But
Chrysostom actually expressed himself in a more general way,
and means by ‘those after him’ all the pastors generally,
to whom the sheep of Christ had been entrusted after Peter.
So it is not practicable to interpret this passage so narrowly
as Marini has done. Still less convincing is Marini’s second
piece of evidence. In a letter which Chrysostom addressed to
Pope Innocent from his exile, he says that he would gladly assist
in putting an end to the great evil, ‘for the strife has
spread over almost the entire world.’ So then, one concludes,
Chrysostom ascribes to the Pope authority over the whole world.
Then Chrysostom writes once more, to the Bishop of Thessalomki:
‘Do not grow weary of doing that which contributes to the
general improvement of the Church,’ and he praises Bishop
Aurelius of Carthage, because he put forth so much effort and
struggle for the churches of the whole world. It would not occur
to anyone to wish to construe from this a possible proof of the
primacy of the bishops of Saloniki or of Carthage (Dom Chrysostumus Baur, O.S.B., John
Chrysostom and His Time (Westminster: Newman, 1959), Vol.
I, pp. 348-349).
Clearly, Chrysostom cannot be cited
as a proponent of a Petrine or papal primacy in the Roman Catholic
sense any more than Augustine. Michael Winter candidly admits
that Chrysostom’s views, especially his interpretation of
the rock of Matthew 16, were antithetical to those of Rome and
greatly influenced the Eastern fathers who followed him. He states
that such Eastern fathers as Theodore of Mopsuestia, Palladius
of Helenopolis, Theodore of Ancyra, Basil of Seleucia and Nilus
of Ancyra held to an opinion that was unfavourable to the superiority
of Peter, an opinion that was widespread in the East in the first
half of the fifth century:
The antipathy to Rome which finds its
echo even in the works of St. John Chrysostom became more pronounced
as the Eastern Church came more and more under the control of
the emperor and effected eventually their estimate of St. Peter.
Although they were not influenced by the Eusebian idea that the
‘rock’ of the church was Christ, the lesser Antiocheans
betray an unwillingness to admit that Peter was the rock. Theodore
of Mopsuestia, who died a quarter of a century after Chrysostom,
declared that the rock on which the church was built was Peter’s
confession of faith. The same opinion is repeated by Palladius
of Helenopolis in his Dialogues on the life of St. John Chrysostom.
Without any elaboration he states that the rock in Matthew 16
is Peter’s confession. The complete absence of reasons or
arguments in support of the contention is an indication of how
widely the view was accepted at that date. Such an opinion was,
in fact, held also by Theodore of Ancyra, Basil of Seleucia,
and Nilus of Ancyra, in the first half of the fifth century...The
opinion unfavourable to the superiority of St. Peter gained a
considerable following in the East under the influence of the
school of Antioch...(Michael
Winter, St. Peter and the Popes (Baltimore: Helikon, 1960),
p. 73).
THEODORET OF CYR
(A.D. 393—466)
Theodoret was the leading theologian
of Antioch in the fifth century. In interpreting the rock passage
of Matthew 16 he shares the opinion of the Eastern fathers, especially
that of Chrysostom. The ‘opinion unfavourable to the superiority
of St. Peter’ in the school of Antioch mentioned by Winter
in the above quote finds representative expression in the following
comments of Theodoret:
Let no one then foolishly suppose that
the Christ is any other than the only begotten Son. Let us not
imagine ourselves wiser than the gift of the Spirit. Let us hear
the words of the great Peter, ‘Thou art the Christ, the
Son of the living God.’ Let us hear the Lord Christ confirming
this confession, for ‘On this rock,’ He says, ‘I
will build my church and the gates of Hell shall not prevail
against it.’ Wherefore too the wise Paul, most excellent
master builder of the churches, fixed no other foundation than
this. ‘I,’ he says, ‘as a wise master builder
have laid the foundation, and another buildeth thereon. But let
every man take heed how he buildeth thereon. For other foundation
can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ.’
How then can they think of any other foundation, when they are
bidden not to fix a foundation, but to build on that which is
laid? The divine writer recognises Christ as the foundation,
and glories in this title (Philip
Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1953), Volume III, Theodoret, Epistle 146, To John
the Economus, p. 318).
Other foundation no man can lay but
that which is laid, which is Christ Jesus (1 Cor. iii.11). It
is necessary to build upon, not to lay foundations. For it is
impossible for him who wishes to build wisely to lay another
foundation. The blessed Peter also laid this foundation, or rather
the Lord Himself. For Peter having said, ‘Thou art the Christ,
the Son of the living God;’ the Lord said, ‘Upon this
rock I will build My Church.’ Therefore call not yourselves
after men’s names, for Christ is the foundation (117Commentary on 1 Corinthians
1,12. Cited by J. Waterworth S.J., A Commentary (London:
Thomas Richardson, 1871), p. 149).
Surely he is calling pious faith and
true confession a ‘rock.’ For when the Lord asked his
disciples who the people said he was, blessed Peter spoke up,
saying ‘You are Christ, the Son of the living God.’
To which the Lord answered: ‘Truly, truly I say to you,
you are Peter and upon this rock I shall build my Church, and
the gates of hell shall not prevail against it’ (Commentary on Canticle of Canticles II.14, M.P.G., Vol. 81, Col. 108).
‘Its foundations are on the holy
mountains.’ The ‘foundations’ of piety are divine
precepts, while the ‘holy mountains’ upon which these
foundations are laid are the apostles of our Saviour. Blessed
Paul says concerning these foundations: ‘You have been built
upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets whose cornerstone
is Christ Jesus.’ And again he says: ‘Peter, James
and John who are perceived to be pillars.’ And after Peter
had made that true and divine confession, Christ said to him:
‘You are Peter, and upon this rock I shall build my Church;
and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.’ And
elsewhere Christ says: ‘You are the light of the world,
and a city set on a hill cannot be hid.’ Upon these holy
mountains Christ the Lord laid the foundations of piety (Commentary on Psalms 86.1, M.P.G., Vol. 80, Col. 1561).
Wherefore our Lord Jesus Christ permitted
the first of the apostles, whose confession He had fixed as a
kind of groundwork and foundation of the Church, to waver to
and fro, and to deny Him, and then raised him up again (Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene
Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume III, Theodoret,
Epistle 77, To Eulalius, p. 273).
According to Theodoret the rock is Peter’s
confession of faith in Christ which points to Christ as the foundation
of the Church. The main cornerstone is Jesus Christ and the subsidiary
foundation includes all the apostles equally in their teachings
and faith. He does refer to Peter personally as the foundation:
For if they say that these things happened
before baptism, let them learn that the great foundation of the
Church was shaken, and confirmed by divine grace. For the great
Peter, having denied thrice, remained first; cured by his own
tears. And the Lord commanded him to apply the same cure to the
brethren, ‘And thou,’ He says, ‘converted, confirm
thy brethren’ (Luke xxii.32) (Haeret. Fab.
Book 5, Chapter 28. Cited by J. Waterworth S.J., A Commentary
(London: Thomas Richardson, 1871), p. 152).
Peter is called the foundation because
of his confession of faith. It is his confession which is the
rock of the Church. The rock and foundation is Jesus Christ alone.
Theodoret does state that Peter is first among the apostles and
the coryphaeus but, like Chrysostom and Augustine, these titles
carry no unique jurisdictional primacy in a Roman Catholic sense.
All the apostles are equal in authority and all bishops are successors
of Peter. In a statement reminiscent of Cyprian and Chrysostom,
Theodoret speaks of the bishop of Antioch as possessing the throne
and authority of Peter demonstrating that this was not something
unique to the see of Rome:
Dioscurus, however, refuses to abide
by these decisions; he is turning the see of the blessed Mark
upside down; and these things he does though he perfectly well
knows that the Antiochean metropolis possesses the throne of
the great Peter, who was the teacher of the blessed Mark, and
first and coryphaeus of the apostles (Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1956), Volume III, Theodoret, Epistle
86, To Flavianus, bishop of Constantinople, p. 281).
In Jesus, Peter and the Keys, the
authors list only one very short passage from Theodoret omitting
completely all the others that have been listed here. That passage
is the one referred to above where Peter is spoken of as ‘the
great foundation of the Church.’ As we have seen Theodoret’s
understanding of Peter as a foundation must be interpreted in
the light of his other comments about Peter and his confession
of faith. This is consistent with the prevailing patristic view
of the East in that day as we have seen represented by Chrysostom
and in the West by Ambrose and Augustine. But one can easily mislead
people if one chooses to disregard the other references and to
cite only that one which superficially seems to support one’s
position because it speaks of Peter as a foundation. Without a
proper reading of this one passage in the context of Theodoret’s
other writings one cannot possibly fairly and objectively represent
what he actually taught. By citing only this one passage, in isolation
from the others, the authors of Jesus, Peter and the Keys impose
a preconceived papal theology onto Theodoret’s words which
was not true to his own thought. They have misrepresented the
writings of this Church father and they are at odds with their
own historians. The Roman Catholic historian, Michael Winter,
demonstrates this to be the case when he sums up Theodoret’s
views this way:
He declared at one time that the rock
foundation of the church was faith, and at another that it was
Christ. Elsewhere he applies the notion to all the Apostles...It
is evident that he did not acknowledge the primacy of St. Peter
(Michael Winter, St.
Peter and the Popes (Baltimore: Helikon, 1960), p. 74).
CYRIL OF ALEXANDRIA (Died A.D. 444)
Cyril is one of the most important and
influential theologians of the Eastern Church. He was bishop of
Alexandria in the first half of the fifth century from 412 A.D
to 444 A.D. He presided over the Council of Ephesus and is considered
the great defender of the orthodox faith against Nestorius. His
views on the rock of Matthew 16 and the foundation of the Church
are unambiguously presented in his writings:
For that reason divine Scripture says
that Peter, that exceptional figure among the apostles, was called
blessed. For when the Savior was in that part of Caesarea which
is called Philippi, he asked who the people thought he was, or
what rumor about him had been spread throughout Judea and the
town bordering Judea. And in response Peter, having abandoned
the childish and abused opinions of the people, wisely and expertly
exclaimed: ‘You are Christ, Son of the living God.’
Now when Christ heard this true opinion of him, he repaid Peter
by saying: ‘Blessed are you Simon Bar–Jonah, for flesh
and blood have not revealed this to you but my Father who is
in heaven. And I tell you, you are Peter, and upon this rock
I will build my Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it.’ The surname, I believe, calls nothing other
than the unshakable and very firm faith of the disciple ‘a
rock,’ upon which the Church was founded and made firm and
remains continually impregnable even with respect to the very
gates of Hell. But Peter’s faith in the Son was not easily
attained, nor did it flow from human apprehension; rather it
was derived from the ineffable instruction from above; since
God the Father clearly shows his own Son and causes a sure persuasion
of him in the minds of his people. For Christ was in no way deceptive
when he said, ‘Flesh and blood has not revealed this to
you, but my Father in heaven.’ If, therefore, blessed Peter,
having confessed Christ to be the Son of the living God, are
those not very wretched and abandoned who rashly rail at the
will and undoubtedly true teaching of God, who drag down the
one who proceeds from God’s own substance and make him a
creature, who foolishly reckon the coeternal author of life to
be among those things which have derived their life from another
source? Are such people not at any rate very ignorant? (Dialogue on the Trinity IV,
M.P.G., Vol. 75, Col. 866).
But why do we say that they are ‘foundations
of the earth’? For Christ is the foundation and unshakable
base of all things—Christ who restrains and holds together
all things, that they may be very firm. Upon him also we all
are built, a spiritual household, put together by the Holy Spirit
into a holy temple in which he himself dwells; for by our faith
he lives in our hearts. But the next foundations, those nearer
to us, can be understood to be the apostles and evangelists,
those eyewitnesses and ministers of the word who have arisen
for the strengthening of the faith. For when we recognize that
their own traditions must be followed, we serve a faith which
is true and does not deviate from Christ. For when he wisely
and blamelessly confessed his faith to Jesus saying, ‘You
are Christ, Son of the living God,’ Jesus said to divine
Peter: ‘You are Peter and upon this rock I will build my
Church.’ Now by the word ‘rock’, Jesus indicated,
I think, the immoveable faith of the disciple. Likewise, the
psalmist says: ‘Its foundations are the holy mountains.’
Very truly should the holy apostles and evangelists be compared
to holy mountains for their understanding was laid down like
a foundation for posterity, so that those who had been caught
in their nets would not fall into a false faith (Commentary on Isaiah IV.2, M.P.G., Vol. 70, Col. 940).
The Church is unshaken, and ‘the
gates of hell shall not prevail against it,’ according to
the voice of the Saviour, for it has Him for a foundation (Commentary on Zacharias. Cited by J. Waterworth S.J., A
Commentary (London: Thomas Richardson, 1871), p. 143).
It is likely that by these words (Is.
33:16) our Lord Jesus Christ is called a rock, in Whom, as some
cave or sheepfold, the Church is conceived as having a safe and
unshaken abiding place for its well-being; ‘For thou art
Peter,’ the Saviour says, ‘and upon this rock I will
build My Church’ (Commentary
on Isaiah 3.iii,
on Isaiah 28:16. Cited by J. Waterworth S.J., A Commentary
(London: Thomas Richardson, 1871), p. 142).
Cyril’s views are very similar
to those of Chrysostom. He identifies the rock of the Church to
be Peter’s confession of faith and not the person of Peter
himself. He separates Peter’s faith from Peter’s person,
just as Augustine, Chrysostom and Ambrose did. All of the apostles
according to Cyril are Shepherds and foundations. It is their
teaching on Christ which is foundational and points to Christ
as the true rock and only foundation upon which the Church is
built. He interprets the rock of Matthew 16 to be Christ as well
as Peter’s confession of faith. This amounts to the same
thing as Peter’s confession points to the person of Christ.
Cyril’s views are completely antithetical to those of the
Roman Catholic Church. He is no proponent of the teaching of papal
primacy. Michael Winter summarizes Cyril’s views in the following
statements:
Cyril of Alexandria’s theology
on the question of St. Peter resembles closely that of the Antiochean
fathers. The life work of St. Cyril, for which he is renowned
in the church, was his upholding of the orthodox faith against
Nestorius, principally at the Council of Ephesus in 431. This
preoccupation with Christological questions influenced his exegesis
of the text of Matthew 16 in a manner which is reminiscent of
the earliest fathers who were writing against Gnosticism. Although
he alludes frequently to the text, it is the Christological application
which interests him and the resultant picture of St. Peter is
inconclusive. For instance when, commenting on the passage he
writes: ‘Then he also names another honour: “Upon this
rock I will build my church; and to thee will I give the keys
of the kingdom of heaven.” Observe how he summarily manifests
Himself Lord of heaven and earth for. . . He promises to found
the church, assigning immovableness to it, as He is the Lord
of strength, and over this He sets Peter as shepherd. Then He
says, “And I will give thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven.”
Neither an angel nor any other spiritual being is able to speak
thus.’
The application to Peter of the title ‘shepherd’ is
deceptive, since he applies it elsewhere to all the Apostles
and it cannot therefore indicate a peculiar authority for Peter.
It seems to have been his consistent opinion that the ‘rock–foundation’
of the church was Peter’s immovable faith. Although it seems
a small matter to distinguish Peter’s faith from his person
in the function of being the foundation of the church, it does
appear that Cyril did, in fact, isolate St. Peter himself for
that role and in this respect he is at one with the later Antiocheans...The
school of Antioch (and those who were influenced by it) presents
a conflicting set of opinions. St Chrysostom and some followers
uphold the primacy of St. Peter, while St. Cyril of Alexandria
and others deny it (Michael
Winter, St. Peter and the Popes (Baltimore: Helikon, 1960),
pp. 74-76).
It is significant that this Roman Catholic
historian is forced by the evidence of Cyril’s writings to
conclude that his use of the word shepherd as applied to Peter
did not imply any peculiar authority to him and that he was not
a proponent of Petrine primacy. In fact, that he actually denied
it. He deals honestly with the facts. This cannot be said of the
authors of Jesus, Peter and the Keys. They give selective
quotations from this father, purposefully omitting those that
are unfavorable to their position. There is no attempt at an honest
assessment of what Cyril actually meant by the words that he used
leading the reader to conclude that Cyril taught that Peter was
the rock and was a supporter of a primacy of Peter in a pro-Roman,
papal sense, neither of which is true. Cyril’s views are
consistent with those of the other major fathers of the East and
West which we have examined. Peter’s faith is the rock and
foundation of the Church. It points to the person of Christ as
the true rock and only foundation.
The views of the fathers that have been
cited are representative of the fathers as a whole. This can be
demonstrated by the examples of other major fathers such as the
following:
HILARY OF POITIERS
Hilary was consecrated bishop of Poitiers
in 350 A.D. He is known as the Athanasius of the West due to his
staunch stand for Nicene orthodoxy in opposition to Arianism.
He died in 367–368 A.D. and was declared a doctor of the
Church by pope Pius IX. His views on the rock of Matthew 16 are
consistent with those of Augustine and Ambrose:
A belief that the Son of God is Son
in name only, and not in nature, is not the faith of the Gospels
and of the Apostles...whence I ask, was it that the blessed Simon
Bar–Jona confessed to Him, Thou art the Christ, the Son
of the living God?...And this is the rock of confession whereon
the Church is built...that Christ must be not only named, but
believed, the Son of God.
This faith is that which is the foundation of the Church; through
this faith the gates of hell cannot prevail against her. This
is the faith which has the keys of the kingdom of heaven. Whatsoever
this faith shall have loosed or bound on earth shall be loosed
or bound in heaven...The very reason why he is blessed is that
he confessed the Son of God. This is the Father’s revelation,
this the foundation of the Church, this the assurance of her
permanence. Hence has she the keys of the kingdom of heaven,
hence judgment in heaven and judgment on earth....Thus our one
immovable foundation, our one blissful rock of faith, is the
confession from Peter’s mouth, Thou art the Son of the living
God (Philip Schaff and
Henry Wace, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1955), On The Trinity, Book VI.36,37; Book II.23;
Book VI.20.
JEROME
Jerome is the great biblical scholar
of the Western Church of the patristics age. He spent time in
both the East and West and was a master of three languages: Latin,
Greek and Hebrew. Along with Origen, he is considered the only
true biblical scholar of the entire patristic age:
The one foundation which the apostolic
architect laid is our Lord Jesus Christ. Upon this stable and
firm foundation, which has itself been laid on solid ground,
the Church of Christ is built...For the Church was founded upon
a rock...upon this rock the Lord established his Church; and
the apostle Peter received his name from this rock (Mt. 16.18)
(Commentary on Matthew
7.25, M.P.L., Vol. 26, Col. 51. Cited by Karlfried Froehlich,
Formen der Auslegung von Matthaus 16,13-18 im lateinischen
Mittelalter, Dissertation (Tubingen, 1963), Footnote #200,
p. 49).
EPIPHANIUS
Epiphanius was born in Palestine and
was bishop of Salamis on Cyprus. He was an ardent defender of
Nicene orthodoxy. He gives an interpretation of the rock of Matthew
16 that is consistent with the overall Eastern exegesis:
He confessed that ‘Christ’
is ‘the Son of the living God,’ and was told, ‘On
this rock of sure faith will I build my church’—for
he plainly confessed that Christ is true Son (The Panarion of Epiphanius of Salamis
(Leiden: Brill, 1994), Books II and III, Haer. 59.7, 6-8,3, pp.
108-109).
BASIL OF
SELEUCIA
Basil was a fifth century Eastern bishop
of Seleucia in Isauria. He took part in the Council of Chalcedon
in 451:
Now Christ called this confession a
rock, and he named the one who confessed it ‘Peter,’
perceiving the appellation which was suitable to the author of
this confession. For this is the solemn rock of religion, this
the basis of salvation, this the wall of faith and the foundation
of truth: ‘For no other foundation can anyone lay than that
which is laid, which is Christ Jesus.’ To whom be glory
and power forever (Oratio
XXV.4, M.P.G., Vol. 85, Col. 296-297).
PAUL OF
EMESA (Died—ca. A.D. 444)
Paul was consecrated bishop of Emesa
just after 410 A.D. He took part in the Council of Ephesus:
Whom do you say that I am?’ Instantly,
the Coryphaeus of the apostles, the mouth of the disciples, Peter,
‘Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God...Upon this
faith the Church of God has been founded. With this expectation,
upon this rock the Lord God placed the foundations of the Church
(Homily of the Nativity.
Cited by J. Waterworth S.J., A Commentary (London: Thomas
Richardson, 1871), p. 148).
JOHN OF DAMASCUS
The death of John of Damascus (around
749 A.D.) is considered to be the close of the patristic age.
He was an Eastern father with a reputation as a great preacher
and prolific writer. In his writings he clearly identifies the
rock of the Church as the person of Christ or Peter’s faith
which points to Christ:
This is that firm and immovable faith
upon which, as upon the rock whose surname you bear, the Church
is founded. Against this the gates of hell, the mouths of heretics,
the machines of demons—for they will attack—will not
prevail. They will take up arms but they will not conquer (Homily on the Transfiguration,
M.P.G., Vol. 96, Col. 554-555).
This rock was Christ, the incarnate
Word of God, the Lord, for Paul clearly teaches us: ‘The
rock was Christ’ (1 Cor. 10:4) (Homily
on the Transfiguration, M.P.G., Vol. 96, Col. 548).
The evidence presented on the history
of the patristic exegesis of Matthew 16 is similar for Luke 22:32
and John 21:15–17. This evidence reveals that the fathers
did not interpret these passages in favor of an exclusive Roman
primacy or papal infallibility. There is no patristic exegesis
of Matthew 16:18 or Luke 22:32 which even implies that the bishops
of Rome are infallible.
Summary
Statements of Historians
The following comments from the writings
of major Roman Catholic, Orthodox and Protestant historians which
summarize the patristic understanding of the person of Peter and
the rock of Matthew 16 affirm the above assertions.
Brian Tierney
Brian Tierney is a world renowned medieval
scholar. He gives the following analysis of the medieval interpretation
of Luke 22 which was grounded in the patristic interpretation
as documented by Froehlich. He demonstrates that the doctrine
of papal infallibility was unknown in the patristic and medieval
ages:
The scriptural text most commonly cited
in favor of papal infallibility is Luke 22.32. There is no lack
of patristic commentary on the text. None of the Fathers interpreted
it as meaning that Peter’s successors were infallible. No
convincing argument has ever been put forward explaining why
they should not have stated that the text implied a doctrine
of papal infallibility if that is what they understood it to
mean. Again, it is difficult for us to know exactly what men
of the sixth and seventh centuries understood by formulas like
those of Hormisdas and Agatho. But we do know that the general
council which accepted Agatho’s formula also anathematized
Agatho’s predecessor, Pope Honorius, on the ground that
he ‘followed the views of the heretic Sergius and confirmed
his impious dogmas.’ Agatho’s successor, Pope Leo II,
in confirming the decrees of the council, added that Honorius
‘did not illuminate the apostolic see by teaching the apostolic
tradition but, by an act of treachery strove to subvert its immaculate
faith.’ Whatever the council fathers may have meant by the
formula they accepted concerning the unfailing faith of the apostolic
see, their meaning can have had little connection with the modern
doctrine of papal infallibility (Brian
Tierney, Origins of Papal Infallibility (Leiden: Brill,
1972), pp. 11-13).
Luis Bermejo is a Spanish Jesuit who
has taught theology at the Pontifical Athenaeum at Puna, India
for the last thirty years. In a recently published book (1992),
he makes the following compelling argument in confirmation of
Brian Tierney’s historical research:
To my knowledge, nobody seems to have
challenged Tierney’s contention that the entire first millennium
is entirely silent on papal infallibility and that, therefore,
Vatican I’s contention concerning the early roots of the
doctrine is difficult to maintain. Practically the only objection
of some substance raised against Tierney seems to be his interpretation
of the twelfth century decretists: is the future dogma of Vatican
I implicitly contained in them? Even after granting for the sake
of argument that it is—something that Tierney does not concede
in any way—the formidable obstacle of the first millennium
remains untouched. In my opinion his critics have fired their
guns on a secondary target (the medieval decretists and theologians)leaving
the disturbing silence of the first millennium out of consideration.
Nobody seems to have been able to adduce any documentary proof
to show that this long silence was illusory, that the doctrine
was—at least implicitly—already known and held in the
early centuries. It is not easy to see how a given doctrine can
be maintained to be of apostolic origin when a thousand years
of tradition do not echo it in any way (Luis Bermejo, Infallibility on Trial (Westminster:
Christian Classics, 1992), pp. 164-165).
Jaroslav
Pelikan
Pelikan provides this overview of the
Eastern Church’s understanding of the rock and Peter in Matthew
16:16–19:
The identification of the gates of
hell with the great heresies of the second, third, and fourth
centuries was generally accepted. Against these gates of hell
not only the apostle Peter, but all the apostles, especially
John, had successfully contended with the authority of the word
of God. Indeed, the power of the keys conferred upon Peter by
Christ in Matthew 16:19 was not restricted either to him or to
his successors on the throne of Old Rome; all the faithful bishops
of the church were imitators and successors of Peter. They had
this status as orthodox adherents of the confession of Peter
in Matthew 16:16: ‘You are the Christ, the Son of the living
God.’ By attaching the promise in the following verses to
that confession it was possible to admonish orthodox believers
to ‘run to the faith...of this immovable rock...and let
us believe that Christ is both God and man.’ The unshakable
foundation of the church was the rock that was Christ, but at
the same time Peter could be called ‘the foundation and
support of our faith.’ He was this, however, principally
because of his confession, which was repeated by all true believers.
It was a polemical extension of this general Greek tendency when
a later treatise, falsely ascribed to Photius, stated flatly
that the rock in Christ’s promise was the confession of
Peter rather than his person.
Thus Peter was the foundation of the church, so that whoever
believed as he believed would not go astray. But for most Greek
theologians Peter was above all ‘the chief of the theologians’
because of his confession. All the titles of primacy, such as
foundation and basis and ‘president of the disciples,’
pertained to him as trinitarian theologian. The church was to
be built on the rock, on Christ the cornerstone, on which Peter,
as coryphaeus of the disciples of the Logos, had also been built—‘built
that is by the Holy and divine dogmas.’ Primacy belonged
to Peter on account of his confession, and those who confessed
Christ to be the Son of the living God, as he had, were the beneficiaries
of the promise that the gates of hell would not prevail against
the church built on the rock (Jaroslav
Pelikan, The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development
of Doctrine (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1974), Volume
Two, pp. 160-161).
Johann
Joseph Ignaz von Dollinger
Dollinger taught Church history as a
Roman Catholic for 47 years in the 19th century and was one of
the greatest and most influential historians in the Church of
his day. He sums up the Eastern and Western understanding of Matthew
16 in the patristic period:
In the first three centuries, St. Irenaeus
is the only writer who connects the superiority of the Roman
Church with doctrine; but he places this superiority, rightly
understood, only in its antiquity, its double apostolical origin,
and in the circumstance of the pure tradition being guarded and
maintained there through the constant concourse of the faithful
from all countries. Tertullian, Cyprian, Lactantius, know nothing
of special Papal prerogative, or of any higher or supreme right
of deciding in matter of doctrine. In the writings of the Greek
doctors, Eusebius, St. Athanasius, St. Basil the Great, the two
Gregories, and St. Epiphanius, there is not one word of any prerogatives
of the Roman bishop. The most copious of the Greek Fathers, St.
Chrysostom, is wholly silent on the subject, and so are the two
Cyrils; equally silent are the Latins, Hilary, Pacian, Zeno,
Lucifer, Sulpicius, and St. Ambrose.
St. Augustine has written more on the Church, its unity and authority,
than all the other Fathers put together. Yet, from all his numerous
works, filling ten folios, only one sentence, in one letter,
can be quoted, where he says that the principality of the Apostolic
Chair has always been in Rome—which could, of course, be
said then with equal truth of Antioch, Jerusalem, and Alexandria.
Any reader of his Pastoral Letter to the separated Donatists
on the Unity of the Church, must find it inexplicable...that
in these seventy–five chapters there is not a single word
on the necessity of communion with Rome as the centre of unity.
He urges all sorts of arguments to show that the Donatists are
bound to return to the Church, but of the Papal Chair, as one
of them, he says not a word.
We have a copious literature on the Christian sects and heresies
of the first six centuries—Irenaeus, Hippolytus, Epiphanius,
Philastrius, St. Augustine, and, later, Leontius and Timotheus—have
left us accounts of them to the number of eighty, but not a single
one is reproached with rejecting the Pope’s authority in
matters of faith.
All this is intelligible enough, if we look at the patristic
interpretation of the words of Christ to St. Peter. Of all the
Fathers who interpret these passages in the Gospels (Matt. xvi.18,
John xxi.17), not a single one applies them to the Roman bishops
as Peter’s successors. How many Fathers have busied themselves
with these texts, yet not one of them whose commentaries we possess—Origen,
Chrysostom, Hilary, Augustine, Cyril, Theodoret, and those whose
interpretations are collected in catenas—has dropped the
faintest hint that the primacy of Rome is the consequence of
the commission and promise to Peter! Not one of them has explained
the rock or foundation on which Christ would build His Church
of the office given to Peter to be transmitted to his successors,
but they understood by it either Christ Himself, or Peter’s
confession of faith in Christ; often both together. Or else they
thought Peter was the foundation equally with all the other Apostles,
the twelve being together the foundation–stones of the Church
(Apoc. xxi.14). The Fathers could the less recognize in the power
of the keys, and the power of binding and loosing, any special
prerogative or lordship of the Roman bishop, inasmuch as—what
is obvious to any one at first sight—they did not regard
a power first given to Peter, and afterwards conferred in precisely
the same words on all the Apostles, as anything peculiar to him,
or hereditary in the line of Roman bishops, and they held the
symbol of the keys as meaning just the same as the figurative
expression of binding and loosing (Janus
(Johann Joseph Ignaz von Dollinger), The Pope and the Council
(Boston: Roberts, 1869), pp. 70-74).
Karlfried
Froehlich
Karlfried Froehlich, one of the foremost
medieval and patristic scholars living today, wrote his Ph.D.
dissertation on the history of the patristic and medieval exegesis
of Matthew 16. He affirms the above facts in discussing the history
of the exegesis of the Petrine texts, demonstrating how the medieval
theologians interpreted Matthew 16 in harmony with a clear patristic
tradition contrary to the Roman Catholic point of view:
Three biblical texts have traditionally
been cited as the religious foundation of papal primacy: Matt.
16:18–19; Luke 22:32; and John 21:15–17...The combination
of the three passages in support of the primatial argument reaches
far back in the history of the Roman papacy. Leo I and Gelasius
I seem to have been the first to use it...However, it would be
a mistake to assume that the papal interpretation was the standard
exegesis everywhere...Quite on the contrary, the understanding
of these Petrine texts by biblical exegetes in the mainstream
of the tradition was universally nonprimatial before Innocent
III.
Perhaps the most instructive case is that of Matt. 16:18–19.
It is quite clear to modern exegetes that all three parts of
the passage, the name–giving, its interpretation by Jesus’
word about the founding of the church on the rock, and the promise
of the keys, speak about the person of Peter, even if the nature
of his prerogative and the application to any successors is set
aside. The medieval interpretation shows a very different picture.
The name–giving (v. 18a) was generally regarded as Jesus’
answer to Peter’s confession which, as the context suggested
to medieval exegetes, Peter had uttered pro omnibus (for all).
Following Origen, Chrysostom, and Jerome, exegetes widely assumed
that in Peter the reward for the correct confession of Christ,
the Son of God was given to all true believers; all Christians
deserved to be called petrae. Even Augustine’s formulation,
informed by a traditional North African concern for the unity
of the church, that in Peter unus pro omnibus (one for all) had
answered and received the reward, did not suggest more than a
figurative reading of Peter as an image of the true church. In
light of Peter’s subsequent fall and denial, the name itself
was regularly declared to be derived from Christ, the true rock.
Augustine, who followed Origen in this assumption, was fascinated
by the dialectic of the ‘blessed’ Peter (Matt. 16:17)
being addressed as ‘Satan’ a few verses later (v. 23).
In Peter, weak in himself and strong only in his connection with
Christ, the church could see the image of its own total dependence
on God’s grace.
Augustine rigorously separated the name-giving from its explanation:
Christ did not say to Peter: ‘you are the rock,’ but
‘you are Peter.’ The church is not built upon Peter
but upon the only true rock, Christ. Augustine and the medieval
exegetes after him found the warrant for this interpretation
in 1 Cor. 10:4. The allegorical key of this verse had already
been applied to numerous biblical rock passages in the earlier
African testimonial tradition. Matt. 16:18 was no exception. If
the metaphor of the rock did not refer to a negative category
of ‘hard’ rocks, it had to be read christologically.
The same result was obtained when exegetes focused on the image
of ‘the building of the church.’ The rock metaphor
in Matt. 16:18 stressed the firmness of the church’s foundation.
But the foundation image itself, fundamentum ecclesiae, was clearly
explained in another key passage of the New Testament: ‘Another
foundation can no one lay except the one that is laid, which
is Christ Jesus’ (1 Cor. 3:11). The same interpretation
of the ‘firm foundation’ being Christ seemed inevitable
when exegetes associated Matt. 16:18 with Jesus’ parable
of Matt. 7:24 which spoke of the building of a house on firm
ground. The exegetical tradition since Origen and the Opus imperfectum
in Matthaeum identified the house with the church so that the
wise master builder had to be Christ who builds the church upon
the firm rock, himself. Even in a secondary moral interpretation
which explained the master builder as the virtuous Christian,
the image of the strong foundation was invariably christologized,
often with direct reference to 1 Cor. 3:11 and 10:4, or even
Matt. 16:18. A good Christian must build the house of his life
on Christ. Applied to the imagery of Matt. 16:18, the final scope
of Jesus’ parable again reinforced a christological reading:
the house of the wise master builder, Jesus taught, stands firm
against all assaults of wind, flood, and weather. The parallel
to Matt. 16:18c was very obvious to the interpreter: if the portae
inferi (gates of hell) cannot prevail against it, the church
must indeed be built on the one rock that cannot be moved, Christ.
The logic of these parallel texts must have seemed inevitable
to medieval exegetes. In none of the biblical building and foundation
passages which were understood as referring to the church was
Matt. 16:18 used as a hermeneutical key that would suggest Peter
as the foundation. On the contrary, the clear Petrine meaning
of the verse was silenced by the weight of the christological
parallels. In medieval exegesis these keys governed not only
all references to the building of the church in the New Testament
but also its Old Testament prefigurations: Christ was the foundation
of the church prefigured in Solomon’s temple (1 Kings 5ff),
in the house which Wisdom built for herself (Prov. 9), and in
the cosmological foundation images of the Psalms (Ps. 76:69;
86:1; 101:26; 103:5 etc.).
Most of the Eastern exegetes, especially after the doctrinal
controversies of the fourth century, read v. 18 as the culmination
of vv. 16–17: ‘upon this rock’ meant ‘upon
the orthodox faith which you have just confessed.’ Introduced
in the West by Ambrose and the translation of the Antiochene
exegetes, this petra=fides equation maintained an important place
alongside the christological alternative, or as its more precise
explanation: the rock of the church was Christ who was the content
of Peter’s confession.
The North African catechetical tradition, on the other hand,
understood the word about Peter, the rock of the church, as the
preface to v. 19: Peter was the rock, because he received the
keys of the kingdom, which signified the church’s exercise
of penitential discipline. Tertullian, nevertheless, regarded
the Peter of Matt. 16:18-19 as the representative of the entire
church or at least its ‘spiritual’ members. Cyprian
understood him as symbolizing the unity of all bishops, the priveleged
officers of penance.
A basic lack of the primatial context also characterizes the
exegetical tradition about the ‘keys of the kingdom of heaven’
(Matt. 16:19). Again, the major reason may have to be sought
in the influence of biblical parallels. In the patristic commentaries,
the keys were understood as penetential authority, primarily
the priestly power of excommunication and reconciliation. This
understanding was nourished by the parallel passages of Matt.
18:18...and especially John 20:23, where binding and loosing
seemed to be explained as the retaining and forgiving of sins.
Both texts, however, extended this power beyond the one Peter
to all apostles. Thus, the exegetes were faced with the fact
that ‘what was bestowed on Peter, was also given to all
apostles.’
We can now summarize our findings. The earlier exegetical history
of Matt. 16:18–19, Luke 22:32, and John 21:15–17 was
largely out of step with the primatial interpretation of these
passages which had itself a long history among papal writers
since the fifth, perhaps even the third century. The mainstream
of exegesis followed an agenda set by patristic precedent, especially
Augustine, but also other Western fathers. In the case of Matt.
16:18-19, the tradition was dominated by the christological interpretation
of the ‘rock’ of the church, nourished by powerful
biblical parallels such as 1 Cor. 10:4, Matt. 7:24–25, and
1 Cor. 3:11. For Luke 22:32, the tradition focused on the context
of Jesus’ passion and Peter’s denial, applying the
verse in tropological way to the theme of the ‘humble prelate.’
In the case of John 21:15–17, the traditional interpretation
drew on the biblical imagery of flock and shepherds as a metaphor
of the cura pastoralis in the church and saw in the text a lesson
about the qualities of a ‘good prelate’ (Karlfried Froehlich, Saint Peter,
Papal Primacy, and Exegetical Tradition, 1150-1300, pp. 3,
8-14, 42. Taken from The Religious Roles of the Papacy: Ideals
and Realities, 1150-1300, ed. Christopher Ryan, Papers in
Medieval Studies 8 (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Medieval
Studies, 1989).
John Meyendorff
John Meyendorff documents the overall
Eastern exegesis of Matthew 16 and its view of ecclesiology:
The reformed papacy of the eleventh
century used a long-standing Western tradition of exegesis when
it applied systematically and legalistically the passages on
the role of Peter (especially Mt. 16:18, Lk. 22:32, and Jn. 21:15-17)
to the bishop of Rome. This tradition was not shared by the East.226
(After) the schism between East and West...Greek scholars and
prelates continued the tradition of the Fathers without the slightest
alteration...Origen is the common teacher of the Greek fathers
in the field of biblical commentary. Origen gives an extensive
explanation on Mt. 16:18. He rightly interprets the famous words
of Christ as a consequence of the confession of Peter on the
road of Caesarea Philippi: Simon became the Rock on which the
Church is founded, because he expressed the true belief in the
divinity of Christ. Thus, according to Origen, all those saved
by faith in Jesus Christ receive also the keys of the Kingdom:
in other words, the successors of Peter are all believers. ‘If
we also say,’ he writes, ‘Thou art the Christ, the
Son of the living God, then we also become Peter...for whoever
assimilates to Christ, becomes the Rock. Does Christ give the
keys of the kingdom to Peter alone, whereas other blessed people
cannot receive them?’
This same interpretation implicitly prevails in all the patristic
texts dealing with Peter: the great Cappadocians, St. John Chrysostom
and St. Augustine all concur in affirming that the faith of Simon
made it possible for him to become the Rock on which the Church
is founded and that in a certain sense all those who share the
same faith are his successors. This same idea is to be found
in later Byzantine writers. ‘The Lord gives the keys to
Peter,’ says Theophanes Kerameus, a preacher of the twelfth
century, ‘and to all those who resemble him, so that the
gates of the Kingdom of heaven remain closed for heretics, yet
are easily accessible to the faithful.’
On the other hand, a very clear patristic tradition sees the
succession of Peter in the episcopal ministry. The doctrine of
St. Cyprian of Carthage on the ‘See of Peter’ as being
present in every local church, and not only in Rome, is well
known. It is also found in the East, among people who certainly
never read De unitate ecclesiae of Cyprian, but who share its
main idea, thus witnessing to it as a part of the catholic tradition
of the Church...A careful analysis of Byzantine ecclesiastical
literature...would certainly show that this tradition is a persistent
one, and indeed it belongs to the essence of Orthodox ecclesiology
to consider any local bishop to be the teacher of his flock and
therefore to fulfil sacramentally, through the apostolic succession,
the office of the first true believer, Peter (John Meyendorff, St. Peter in Byzantine
Theology. Taken from The Primacy of Peter (London:
Faith, 1963), pp. 7-29).
Yves Congar
Yves Congar is one of the most influential
Roman Catholic historians and theologians of this century. He
makes the following statements on the Eastern Church’s ecclesiology
and of the patristic understanding of the rock of Matthwe 16:
Many of the Eastern Fathers who are
rightly acknowledged to be the greatest and most representative
and are, moreover, so considered by the universal Church, do
not offer us any more evidence of the primacy. Their writings
show that they recognized the primacy of the Apostle Peter, that
they regarded the See of Rome as the prima sedes playing a major
part in the Catholic communion—we are recalling, for example,
the writings of St. John Chrysostom and of St. Basil who addressed
himself to Rome in the midst of the difficulties of the schism
of Antioch—but they provide us with no theological statement
on the universal primacy of Rome by divine right. The same can
be said of St. Gregory Nazianzen, St. Gregory of Nyssa, St. Basil,
St. John Chrysostom, St. John Damascene (Yves Congar, After Nine Hundred Years (New
York: Fordham University, 1959), pp. 61-62).
It does sometimes happen that some
Fathers understood a passage in a way which does not agree with
later Church teaching. One example: the interpretation of Peter’s
confession in Matthew 16:16–19. Except at Rome, this passage
was not applied by the Fathers to the papal primacy; they worked
out an exegesis at the level of their own ecclesiological thought,
more anthropological and spiritual than juridical (Yves Congar, Tradition and Traditions
(New York: Macmillan, 1966), p. 398).
Pierre
Batiffol
Batiffol likewise affirms the fact that
the Eastern Church, historically, has never embraced the ecclesiology
of Roman primacy:
I believe that the East had a very
poor conception of the Roman primacy. The East did not see in
it what Rome herself saw and what the West saw in Rome, that
is to say, a continuation of the primacy of St. Peter. The bishop
of Rome was more than the successor of Peter on his cathedra,
he was Peter perpetuated, invested with Peter’s responsibility
and power. The East has never understood this perpetuity. St.
Basil ignored it, as did St. Gregory Nazianzen and St. John Chrysostom.
In the writings of the great Eastern Fathers, the authority of
the Bishop of Rome is an authority of singular grandeur, but
in these writings it is not considered so by divine right (Cited by Yves Congar, After Nine
Hundred Years (New York: Fordham University, 1959), pp. 61-62).
Conclusion
From the primary documentation of the
writings of the fathers and the comments of Church historians
we can summarize the patristic understanding of Peter and the
rock from Matthew 16. Generally speaking, the fathers viewed the
rock and foundation of the Church as the person of Christ, or
Peter’s confession of faith which pointed to Christ. Sometimes
they speak of Peter as the rock or foundation in the sense that
he is the example of true faith—that he exemplified faith.
But they do not teach that he is representative of a papal office
or that the Church was built upon him in a legalistic sense. They
also viewed Peter figuratively as representative of the unity
of the entire Church. What Christ spoke to Peter he spoke to the
Church as a whole and what was given to Peter was given to all
the apostles and through them to the entire Church. The keys are
a declarative authority to teach truth, preach the gospel and
exercise discipline in the Church.
Though the fathers spoke in very exalted
terms about the apostle Peter, their comments were not applied
in an exclusive sense to the bishop of Rome, nor did they view
the Roman bishops as given universal jurisdiction over the Church.
Although they saw the bishops of Rome as successors of Peter,
they did not see them as the exclusive successors of Peter, nor
as the universal rulers of the Church, nor the see of Rome as
the only apostolic see. Roman Catholics assume that when a Church
father speaks of Peter he is also talking about the bishops of
Rome but this is not the case. That is to read a preconceived
theology into their writings. The fathers teach that all bishops
are successors of Peter. In their interpretation of Matthew 16,
Luke 22 and John 21 we do not find any affirmation of the teaching
of Vatican I on papal jurisdiction and infallibility.
This reveals two important points from
both a theological and historical perspective. Theologically,
there is no evidence of patristic consensus to support the Vatican
I papal interpretation of Matthew 16:18–19 equating the rock
with the person of Peter, assigning to him and the Roman bishops
the place of preeminence of rule in the Church through the authority
of the keys. The Roman Catholic Church’s appeal to the ‘universal
consent of the fathers’ to support its exegesis of Matthew
16 is fallacious. Such a consensus does not exist. The interpretation
of Matthew 16:18 by the major fathers of the patristic age from
both the East and West demonstrates that the overwhelming majority
view of the Church historically is not that of the Roman Catholic
Church today. The fact is, apart from the popes themselves—beginning
in the late fourth century—and with those who have an interest
in promoting the papacy, the Roman interpretation of Matthew 16:18–19
has historically been universally rejected by the Church in both
East and West. And what is true in the exegetical history is true
also in historical practice. It is clear from the history of the
Church, in the attitudes and actions of the general Councils and
with individual fathers in their dealings with the bishops of
Rome, that in the patristic age, the Church never operated on
the basis of a universal Roman primacy or in the belief in papal
infallibility.
Author
William A. Webster is a business man, living
with his wife and children in Battle Ground, Washington. He has
already authored The Christian Following Christ as Lord and
Salvation, The Bible, and Roman Catholicism, and is a founder
of Christian Resources,
Inc., a tape and book ministry dedicated to teaching and evangelism.
You can visit his website at: http://www.christiantruth.com/
Return to the Main
Highway
Return to Roman
Catholicism

:-) <——
|