Thursday, July 15, 2010

The See of Peter

I've been out of touch for a few days -- I took my family camping, and though there was wi-fi at the camp, I ended up having less time and access than I thought I would. We had a wonderful time, and I'm looking forward to getting back into the daily routine here. Over the coming weeks, my hope is to re-focus on the early papacy, which I had been writing about some time ago.

Here are some other links that fall under the heading of "the nonexistent early papacy."

Papacy built on pious fiction and forgery, part 1

Papacy bult on pious fiction and forgery 2

The Integrity of the New Testament Canon

How the fictional early papacy became real

Papacy built on pious fictions and forgery 5

One of the works I'll be consulting is a 1927 work by James Shotwell and Louise Ropes Loomis, "The See of Peter," (New York: Columbia University Press, © 1927, 1955, and 1991).

Not all of this work is provided at Google Books, but I believe it was very important in helping other scholars of the past century to sort out and understand just where the papal claims came from. This work has collected "all the texts, as far as the editors have been able to collect them, which form the basis for the Roman belief in Peter's primacy. They are broken down as follows:
  1. "Those in the New Testament which throw light upon the extent of Peter's preeminence among the apostles and the scope of his later labors." These, of course, can be checked easily enough against the commentaries that are available.

  2. "All the historical references to Peter's sojourn and death at Rome that can be found in the Greek and Latin Fathers, down to the opening of the fifth century, when the Petrine tradition assumed its final shape. These references are, in a few instances, from very early writers, and in every case represent the opinions of sober and conscientious men, derived by them from older authorities now lost or from traditions regarded in their day as genuine." These, in 1927, included "little inherently incredible"

  3. The third group is made up of a curious and less respectable set of documents, the popular apocryphal literature, which grew up around the figure of Peter almost as soon as reliable records began, literature spring from misconceptions and confusions or else frankly fictitious.
These are texts about Peter himself. We've looked at a few of these -- instances of Peter's mention in the New Testament, and his mentions in some of the literature that came afterward. Of course, some, though not all, of the mentions in item #2 above have, through further study, been re-classified into that third category. That's what Eamon Duffy was talking about when he said, "These stories were to be accepted as sober history by some of the greatest minds of the early Church -- Origen, Ambrose, Augustine. But they are pious romance, not history, and the fact is that we have no reliable accounts either of Peter's later life or the manner or place of his death."

After this, Shotwell and Loomis then look at "those which show step by step the development of the institution which he was believed to have founded, texts depicting both the awakening of the popes themselves to a consciousness of their unique position and the gradual recognition by others of their peculiar prerogatives, exegetical arguments drawn from the New Testament, instances of authority actually exercised, instances of authority actually exercised, disputed or admitted through the first three hundred years after Peter's death."

This second group of texts also break out into three parts:
  1. "A collection in the main of random sentences and incidental allusions" that "comprises every contemporary record that we have of the bishops of Rome to the end of the second century."

  2. A second group of texts carries the chronicle on to the reign of Constantine, at the opening of the fourth century."

  3. This last group of texts, far exceeding the other two in volume and diversity, portrays the popes of the fourth century, enriched and assisted, save for one short interval, by the friendly emperors, fully accepted as heads and leaders by their colleagues in the west and slowly, by dint of favoring circumstances, convincing even the reluctant East of their right to spiritual predominance.
Again, as I've mentioned, Rome has shifted its stance on the early papacy from "immediately given" (see Vatican I and Leo XIII's "Satis Cognitum" for details); over the last 100 years, though, even as modern scholarship confirms historical details about the life of Christ and the early church, this same genre of modern scholarship has whittled away at the "foundations" of the papacy, to the point that Ratzinger will only admit that the early church "faithfully developed" the papacy, and John Paul II, in his 1995 encyclical, Ut Unum Sint, invited scholars to propose "a new situation" for the papacy.

My recommendation would be to scrap the entire thing as a boastful and fraudulent development that has only harmed the church. True, some may suggest that the administrative capabilities of the Roman church helped carry civilization through the "dark ages" of history. But that's a completely different thing from saying that it was "divinely instituted from the beginning."

Somewhere, I don't remember where (I'll look it up), someone characterized the the papacy as "the ghost of the Roman emperor, sitting upon the grave of the Roman empire." Or words to that effect. That is, I think, a very kind characterization. The details are much more sinister.

11 comments:

Truth Unites... and Divides said...

Hi John,

Do you have any interactions with the "Called to Communion" guys on this topic?

John Bugay said...

Hi Truth -- yes, some time ago on Jason Stellman's blog. While I put some of these same ideas out there, I didn't do it with nearly the detail that it could be done. There's really an incredible amount of information on the topic of the history of the early papacy -- what's really difficult is to summarize it in a way that makes it meaningful.

Jennie said...

Hi John,
Have you heard these quotesabout the papacy from Lord Acton, as 19th century Catholic historian who opposed the papacy?

"Absolute power corrupts absolutely."

"The papacy is the fiend skulking behind the crucifix."

John Bugay said...

Hi Jennie - I have heard both of those. I also remember J.R. Neuhaus sort of boasting that whatever Acton said, he never left the RCC. Which sort of takes some of the sting out of those quotations.

One of the more descriptive that I've seen (and this is just a paraphrase) is that the papacy is the ghost of the Roman emperor, sitting on the grave of the Roman empire.

I quoted the exact citation somewhere, but I can't remember where it is :-)

Jennie said...

True, some may suggest that the administrative capabilities of the Roman church helped carry civilization through the "dark ages" of history.

Maybe so, but only after they first caused the dark ages by their consolidation of power which encouraged ignorance to maintain itself.

John Bugay said...

Maybe so, but only after they first caused the dark ages by their consolidation of power which encouraged ignorance to maintain itself.

I wouldn't say they "caused" the dark ages. There were a lot of factors, including the barbarian invasions, that pretty much wrecked things.

Jennie said...

To me, Acton's being Catholic makes his comments more stinging and more damning. But I wish I could understand why some men remained in it even while criticizing it so harshly. Maybe they considered the papacy separately from the church itself.

Jennie said...

I wouldn't say they "caused" the dark ages. There were a lot of factors, including the barbarian invasions, that pretty much wrecked things.

You're right of course; sometimes I simplify things too much; just too lazy to look up or explain all the details, I guess :)

John Bugay said...

I don't know how any Roman Catholic could separate the papacy like that, especially not in that era. Remember, the pope said, "I am tradition." Maybe in more recent times, in the era of "cafeteria Catholicism," people are doing that.

But I couldn't do that. I left because (a) it's a whole cloth, and so I took the logical step of rejecting the whole thing when I rejected part of it (rather than be a "cafeteria" Catholic), and (b) I would not teach my kids to "wink and nod" or "pick and choose" or anything at all like that.

John Bugay said...

just too lazy to look up or explain all the details, I guess :)

Well, there are zillions of details, and so it's understandable that you might not have all the facts top-of-mind.

Jennie said...

One of the more descriptive that I've seen (and this is just a paraphrase) is that the papacy is the ghost of the Roman emperor, sitting on the grave of the Roman empire.

That's a very good description. I remember when I was younger thinking that the Church (in which I indescriminately included both Catholic and Protestant) had defeated the Roman Empire with the gospel and rightfully taken its place. Now I have come to see this in the negative sense, in that the Roman Catholic Church has replaced the Roman empire as the ruler of the world and the persecutor of the saints.