Solution: There
are different ways to understand this passage, but none of them
support the Roman Catholic view that the church is built on St.
Peter
Funny. That is not
how the Historic Church understood this passage. It is
Protestants who want to disobey the Popes who have to deny the
LITERAL meaning of the text.
I would also refer
you to "A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Gospel
According to Saint Matthew" (The International Critical
Commentary by Protestant scholars Dale C. Allison & W. D.
Davies). After looking at 10 different proposed ways of
interpreting the text, they agree that the PAPAL understanding as
applying to St. Peter's authority is the most correct one.
First of all,
Peter was married (Matt.8: 14), and Popes do not marry. If the
first Pope could marry, why later pronounce that no priest (or
Pope) can marry.
Marriage is not a
qualification for this job, especially in light of Jesus' telling
the Apostles that they must leave behind "mother, father,
wife, and children" for His sake. Also read MATT 19, 9ff and
1Cor 7.
Second, Peter was
not infallible in his views on the Christian life. Even Paul had
to rebuke him for his hypocrisy, because he was not
"straightforward about the truth of the Gospel."
No one ever
claimed that St. Peter was infallible "in his views on the
Christian life." He was infallible when "no man on
Earth has taught you this but my Father in heaven." This is
limited to teaching the universal Church on matters of faith and
morals. St. Peter and his successors are entitled to be
personally wrong about their "views" on the Christian
life.
As to the conflict
between St. Paul and St. Peter in Galatians (NOT in 1 Cor as
Geisler asserts) , I believe that St. Peter was right in his
pastoral decision while St. Paul was correctly (but irrelevantly)
arguing about principles. While there were no DOCTRINAL reasons
for not eating with the Gentiles in Antioch, there were many
PASTORAL ones. St. Paul just didn't get it.
Third, the Bible
clearly declares that Christ is the foundation of the Christian
church, insisting that "no other foundation can anyone lay
than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ" (1 Cor.3:
11).
Geisler then
contradicts himself in the very next objection saying that ALL of
the Apostles have foundational roles:
Fourth, the
only sense in which Peter had foundational role in the
church, all the other apostles shared in the same way. Peter
was not unique in this respect. For Paul declared that in
this sense the church is "built on the foundation of the
apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief
cornerstone" (Eph.2: 20). Indeed, the early church
continued steadfastly in the apostles' doctrine [not just
Peter's]" (Acts 2: 42).
Now if Jesus is
the ONLY foundation, then Scripture has contradicted itself
because St. Paul says that ALL of the Apostles are foundations
too. Geisler can't have it both ways.
Besides, if Jesus
says that St. Peter is the Rock upon which the Church is built
and the Gates of Hell will never prevail against IT (NOT
"against you, Peter, alone") it implies that the
ministry given to St. Peter is meant to last forever and not to
stop with him. There is no mention of foundation here. There is
mention of solid grounding upon which the Church will be
steadfastly established. To interject the 'foundation' analogy
here is to mix metaphors.
Even "keys of
the kingdom" given to Peter (Matt. 16:19) were also given to
all the apostles (cf. Matt. 18:18).
You know, I don't
believe that Protestants actually read their Bibles. Matthew 18,18 says
nothing about keys. Those are give ONLY to St. Peter in Matthew
16,18. Matthew 18,18 does extend the power of binding and loosing
to the Apostles as a whole, but it does so AFTER it had been give
to St. Peter alone. In biblical idiom, this is an indication that
St. Peter has primacy over the other Apostles.
Fifth, there is no
indication that Peter was the head of the early church.
St. Peter is
always named first in the lists of all the Apostles (with the
exception of Galatians when St. Paul is trying to belittle him).
St. Peter is allowed by St. John to enter the tomb first in
John's Gospel as a sign of his authority. St. Peter commands that
it is time to replace Judas among the 12. He is the first to have
table fellowship with the Gentiles. When Paul comes to Jerusalem,
St. Barnabas arranges for him to see St. Peter first before the
other Apostles
When the first
council was held at Jerusalem, Peter played only an introductory
role (Acts 15:6-11). James seems to have a more significant
position, summing up the conference and making the final
pronouncement (cf. Acts 15:13-21).
NO, Normy, St.
Peter is the one who sums up the position taken by the Church.
After he speaks everyone is silent and then St. James as the
leader of the opposition party capitulates and sets his terms.
In any event,
Peter is never referred to as the "pillar" in the
church. Rather, Paul speaks of "pillars" (plural), such
as, "James, Cephas, and John" (Gal. 2:9). Peter
(Cephas) is not even listed first among the pillars.
This is done as a
deliberate slight to St. Peter since Paul is trying to belittle
him. Besides, the terms "pillars" are irrelevant to our
discussion about authority. These three were the Apostles closest
to Christ in the Gospels and that is probably what is being
referred to. Nevertheless, John submits to Peter at the Tomb.
Sixth, many
Protestant interpreters believe that Jesus' reference to
"this rock" (Matt. 16:18) upon which His church would
be built was to Peter's solid (rock-like) testimony that Jesus
was "the Christ, the son of the living God" (Matt.
16:16).
Yeah, and many
Nazis insisted that Christ wasn't Jewish too. So what?
Protestants have a vested interest in denying the authority of
the Popes. Consequently, their opinions opposing the clear
literal meaning of the text are irrelevant.
In this passage,
St. Peter is the Rock, not Christ.
But even if this
rock has reference to Peter (Petros, rock), which is certainly a
possible interpretation, he was only a rock in the apostolic
foundation of the church (Matt. 16:18), not the rock. Nor is he
the only apostolic rock. Even Peter himself admitted that Christ
is the chief rock ("cornerstone," 1 Peter 2:7). And
Paul notes that the other apostles are all part of the
"foundation" (Eph. 2:20).
A "chief
rock" still leaves room for other rocks, doesn't it? In John
10, Jesus says that he is the Good Shepherd and that there will
be one fold and ONE shepherd. In John 21, he then tells St. Peter
3 times to care for His sheep. While Jesus may be our divine
shepherd, when He left the earth He left St. Peter as his
vicarious shepherd to the ONE flock.