Part VII
It is a pagan apostate religion.
By what consistent and objective principle do you determine those criteria by which you might come to recognize and affirm Christian orthodoxy? How do you determine who is and who is not “apostate”? If your answer has to do with whether or not the group or individual in question agrees with your interpretation of the Bible, there are a few problems we should address:
- Just how out of agreement with your interpretation of the Bible must a person be in order to be apostate? Was, for example, Martin Luther apostate? John Calvin? For they held to views which do not align with yours
- How might you determine whether or not it is you who’s mistaken concerning key doctrines? (Such as the nature and institution of the Sacraments, Ecclesiology, the role and nature of Scripture)
- Your assessment speaks to the question of authority. For how can one determine what does and what does not constitute “apostasy” without the authority to make such determinations? So by what authority do you make your determinations?
- How do you distinguish between your own personal obedience to Christian authority and your own being the very Christian authority to which you claim obedience? In other words, as it was stated by another former Protestant: “When I submit only when I agree, the one to whom I submit is me.”
- When you read the Christology outlined in the Catechism of the Catholic Church (paragraphs 456-478), how do you reconcile the presence of such a profound articulation of Christian orthodoxy with the claim that the Catholic Church is “pagan”?
It can easily be proved through Biblical references alone can prove beyond any shadow of a doubt that Peter was never in Rome as a leader of a church.
You’ve mentioned this before. On one hand, the point is moot. For Christians are nowhere directed by God or the Holy Spirit to consult the Scriptures for the travel itinerary of the Apostles. To look to the Scriptures as a travel itinerary or an encyclopedia of Christian travel history is to demonstrate
ipso facto a misunderstanding of the role and nature of Scripture. Further, the question of the time and geography of Christ’s establishment of the Papacy and Peter’s geographical relationship to Rome are quite separate issues. You say Peter went there to be martyred and not as a leader of a Church. But if Christ identified him as playing a unique leadership role in the church at all (which can be demonstrated from Scripture, by the way: "Feed my sheep," Christ said to Peter. "And the Lord said, 'Simon, Simon, behold, Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat: But I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not: and when thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren.'"), then Peter was a “leader of a church” indeed. This is the same Peter whose pen, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit wrote Holy Scripture. This is the same Peter upon whom Christ breathed, saying “Receive the Holy Spirit” in John 20 (which is why I made a reference to the Apostles literally being God-breathed men, which you denied despite the fact that the event is right there recorded in Scripture). My broader point, though, is to say that wherever St. Peter was among the early christians, he was indeed a “leader.” So as far as I’m concerned even if he just ended up in Rome to be martyred (A point I am not ceding, btw), the succession of the Petrine office could have carried on from St. Peter’s place of martyrdom. Afterall, at this point it is quite safe to say that history, tradition, and archeology have all converged on one point that is important to this conversation: The Tomb of St. Peter lies under the Altar at St. Peter’s Basilica. For God proved many things in Christ, one of those things was the fact that circumstances, geography, and the confusion of historical situations couldn’t thwart His will.
It is only tradition that says that he went there as a prisoner to die. And that is the only reason that Peter was in Rome. That alone should shake the confidence of any Catholics trust in the RCC, for it stands on a shaky foundation.
As I said above, you’re clinging to a moot point as far as Christ’s establishment of the Papacy is concerned. The geographical question is, as I said, not something we must look to the Bible to discover. For the Bible never instructs us to consult its pages to settle matters of travel and geography. Again, the fact that any belief is not explicitly presented in the Scriptures is not alone grounds for its denial and that is the fundamental Biblical problem which your Biblicism cannot account for. It is what's patently unBiblical about Biblicism. And tradition is not “the only reason” Peter was believed to be in Rome. A consideration of the political and social power structure of the time itself might provide some basis according to which a leader of a countercultural movement might go there to Rome, to the very heart of the beast, as it were, to provide leadership to the “resistance” movement growing there.
It is not the true "Church."
I realize that you do not believe that Christ’s Church “constituted and organized as a society in this present world subsists in the Catholic Church governed by the Successor of Peter and by the Bishops in communion with him” (Lumen Gentium).
Secondly, there is no true "Church," for there is no "church" whatsoever.
After all Christ said “Upon this rock I will build my church.” That was a “singular” reference. He also prayed that “they” his followers “may be one.” St. Paul wrote to numerous local churches while exercising his “catholic” authority as an Apostle. The principle of subsidiarity was a work in the Church then as it is now at work in the Church today. Just as this discussion's title is supposed to be a consideration of the Pope as "Vicar of Jesus Christ," and not the Pope as Christ Himself, so it is that according to the Church's divine institution, certain persons may act as representatives, stewards, pastors, etc. And it is those people who'll be held to account for the management of their responsibilities. For all of them are accountable to Christ, the Head of the Church. And among them, it might be said that the Pope will be held most accountable, for he stands as the representative of Christ to the world in some sense and as the Pastor of pastors. St. Paul's letters are themselves a demonstration of this principle for though regionalized, the churches to whom he wrote recognized his “universal” or “catholic” authority. Further, the Church is described in the New Testament as a “body.” All bodies have a principle of unity by which their numerous parts serve on purpose. Further, the image of a bride and a bridegroom are evoked in Scripture to reveal the union between Christ and His Church. And Christ, in the words of Peter Kreeft, is not a polygamist. And when Christ struck Saul of Tarsus down on the road to Damascus, Christ said aloud “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?” Well, we should be careful to recognize the Scriptural principle at work here by which we ought to form our ecclesiology. For even Christ saw Saul’s persecution of Christians as direct persecutions of Him. That is to say that the Catholic Church (singular) derives its unity from its Head, Christ, who had one physical body on Earth and who still has one physical body in Heaven which, as Scripture records here, Christ understands to be persecuted when his followers on Earth are persecuted. And as a husband becomes one with his wife, so Christ is one with His Bride the Church (Ephesians 5). There is, therefore, in just this one chapter of Scripture (Acts 9) a revelation of a principle according to which Bible-believing Christians should come to recognize the unified and singular nature of Christ’s Catholic Church (and according to whose unity we are able to recognize the legitimacy of a local Church’s claim to orthodoxy). This catholic Church is the Church whose organic unity was present there in acorn form in the first century and which has now grown to a large oak. Even local Baptist churches implicitly and practically recognize a universal authority in their recognition of 27 New Testament books. That universal recognition, though, derives from the organic, institutional, conciliar, ecclesial unity therepresent at the First Council of Nicaea (as I mentioned before). Unfortunately for the Biblicist position, though, apart from at the very least an implied appeal to Catholic Tradition, there is no consistent and objective principle by which independent “Bible churches” might come to recognize the books they hold to be Scripture. A friend of a Baptist friend of mine, for example, after attending a Baptist college, came to become skeptical of St. Paul. He now holds to the entire Canon of the New Testament except for anything St. Paul wrote. And this guy is a Baptist who sees himself as being faithful to the Scriptures. Incidentally, he sees himself as more faithful to them than other Baptists who are “clinging to their received traditions.” The thing that I find refreshing about his position (as lamentable as it is) is the fact that he’s at least being consistent. He believes, like you, that the early Church became corrupted very rapidly, so rapidly in fact, that St. Paul’s letters got in the official Canon of Scripture when they shouldn’t have been included. You, on the other hand, seem to believe that an utterly corrupt early pagan Church (Post-Constantine) was perfectly capable of identifying the rightful texts of the New Testament Canon. Whose position is more consistent with its presuppositions, I wonder- yours or his?