THE PAPACY IN LIGHT OF THE EARLY CHURCH FATHERS
THE ORIGINS
In this paper I plan to examine
the historical development of the Papacy but also to challenge its foundations
according to the Scriptures and the Early Church Fathers. In the classic,
Reformation tradition, I subscribe to the teaching that the Pope is, “. . . the man of lawlessness . . . the son of destruction,
who opposes and exalts himself against every
so-called god or object of worship, so that he takes his seat in the temple of
God, proclaiming himself to be God.”[1]
The 1st so-called foundational
proof for the Papacy usually given is Matthew 16:18-19:
And I say to thee:
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 to thee the keys of the
kingdom of heaven. And whatsoever thou shalt bind upon earth, it shall be bound
also in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth, it shall be loosed
also in heaven. [2]
The problem is
that the key words ‘Peter’ and ‘rock’ do not agree in case, declension or
gender in the original Greek text:
κἀγὼ δέ σοι λέγω ὅτι σὺ εἶ Πέτρος, καὶ ἐπὶ ταύτῃ τῇ πέτρᾳ
οἰκοδομήσω μου τὴν ἐκκλησίαν, καὶ πύλαι ᾅδου οὐ κατισχύσουσιν αὐτῆς· [3]
Peter = Πέτρος, is a 2nd
declension, nominative, masculine, singular noun. Pέτρᾳ,
by contrast is a 1st declension, dative, singular feminine noun.[4]
You have to jump ahead about two centuries after Christ in the Church Fathers
to the time of Tertullian (160-225 A.D.) before Matthew 16:18 becomes the basis
for Petrine doctrine:
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,”[5]
If, because the Lord
has said to Peter, “Upon this rock will I 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 to thee
the keys,” not to the Church; and,
“Whatsoever thou shalt have loosed or
bound,” not what they shall have
loosed or bound. For so withal the result teaches. 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.[6]
At the same approximate time in history
there is some commentary on this passage by Hippolytus of Rome (170 – 235 A.D.)
but it is used to talk about the role of the Holy Spirit, not the basis for the
Papacy:
This is the Spirit that at the beginning “moved upon
the face of the waters;” by whom the world moves; by whom creation consists,
and all things have life; who also wrought mightily in the prophets, (Acts 28:25) and descended in
flight upon Christ. This is the Spirit that was given to the apostles in the
form of fiery tongues (Matt. 3:16).
This is the Spirit that David sought when he said, “Create in me a clean heart,
O God, and renew a right spirit within me.” Of this Spirit Gabriel also spoke
to the Virgin, “The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the
Highest shall overshadow thee.”(Luke
1:35) By this Spirit Peter spake that blessed word, “Thou art the
Christ, the Son of the living God.” By this Spirit the rock of the Church was
stablished (Matt. 16:18).
This is the Spirit, the Comforter, that is sent because of thee (John 16:26), that He may show
thee to be the Son (τέκνον) of God.[7]
Cyprian of Carthage (Early 3rd Century-
258 A.D.) had a different take of Matthew
16:18 as well:
Our Lord, whose precepts and admonitions we ought to
observe, describing the honour of a bishop and the order of His Church, speaks
in the Gospel, and says to Peter: “I say unto thee, That thou art Peter, and
upon this rock will I 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) Thence, through the changes
of times and successions, the ordering of bishops and the plan of the Church
flow onwards; so that the Church is founded upon the bishops, and
every act of the Church is controlled by these same rulers.[8] - Emphasis mine.
So Cyprian viewed the Bishops as the plural
rulers of the Church, not Peter as the singular head of all Christendom.
Cyprian underlines his doctrine of a Church lead by an egalitarian school of
bishops in De unit. eccl. = On The Unity Of The Church:
If any one consider and examine these things, there is
no need for lengthened discussion and arguments. There is easy proof for faith
in a short summary of the truth. The Lord speaks to Peter, saying, “I say unto
thee, 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 also in heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed
in heaven.”4 And again to the same He says, after His resurrection,
“Feed my sheep.” And although to all the apostles, after His resurrection,
He gives an equal power, and says, “As the Father hath sent me, even so
send I you: Receive ye the Holy Ghost: Whose soever sins ye remit, they shall
be remitted unto him; and whose soever sins ye retain, they shall be retained;”6
yet, that He might set forth unity, He arranged by His authority the origin of
that unity, as beginning from one. Assuredly the rest of the apostles were also
the same as was Peter,
endowed with a like partnership both of honour and power; but the beginning proceeds from unity.[9] – Emphasis
mine.
So by the time of the Third Century A.D.,
there were at least two, possibly three opinions on the meaning of Matthew 16:18ff in the
Church. I next investigated the various titles of the Papacy such as the ‘Vicar
of Christ’. What In found in the Fathers was little:
Grant, then, that all
have erred; that the apostle was mistaken in giving his testimony; that the
Holy Ghost had no such respect to any one (church) as to lead it into truth,
although sent with this view by Christ (John 14:26), and for this asked of the Father that He
might be the teacher of truth (John
15:26); grant, also, that He, the Steward of God, the
Vicar of Christ,§ neglected His office, permitting the churches for
a time to understand differently, (and) to believe differently, what He Himself
was preaching by the apostles,—is it likely that so many churches, and they so
great, should have gone astray into one and the same faith? [10]
One passing
mention by Tertullian – that’s it until you get to the last volume where it is
brought up as an item of controversy between the churches of the East and the
West:
Canon XXXIX
Of
the care and power which a Patriarch has over the bishops and archbishops of
his patriarchate; and of the primacy of the Bishop of Rome over all.
Let
the patriarch consider what things are done by the archbishops and bishops in
their provinces; and if he shall find anything done by them otherwise than it
should be, let him change it, and order it, as seemeth him fit: for he is the
father of all, and they are his sons. And although the archbishop be among the
bishops as an elder brother, who hath the care of his brethren, and to whom
they owe obedience because he is over them; yet the patriarch is to all those
who are under his power, just as he who holds the seat of Rome, is the head and
prince of all patriarchs; in-asmuch as he is first, as was Peter, to whom power
is given over all Christian princes, and over all their peoples, as he who is
the Vicar of Christ our Lord over all peoples and over the whole Christian
Church, and whoever shall contradict this, is excommunicated by the Synod.[11]
It is worth
noting that the translator comments, “I have translated the whole canon
literally; the reader will judge of its antiquity.”[12]Apparently,
he didn’t trust the authenticity of the quote and in the Elucidations section following his work on Cyprian, he also wonders
how much that is in the text regarding the authority of the Pope has been
interpolated or “forced” into the text we now have:
How
differently our Lord must have settled this inquiry had He given the supremacy
to one of the Apostles, or had He designed the supremacy of any single pastor
to be perpetual in His Church! “Who should be greatest?” ask this question of
any Romanist theologian, and he answers, in the words of the Creed of Plus IV.,
“the Bishop of Rome, successor to St. Peter, Prince of the Apostles, and Vicar
of Christ.” But why was no such answer given by our Lord? And why does St.
Peter know nothing of it when he says, “The elders who are among you I exhort,
who am also an eider … feed the flock of God, taking the oversight … not as
being lords over God’s heritage,” etc. So also in the Council of Jerusalem, how
humbly he sits under the presidency of James, and again how cheerfully he
permits the apostles to send him forth, and “give him mission” to Samaria!2
St. Paul, moreover, who was “not a whit behind the chiefest of the Apostles,”
overrules him, and reforms his judgment.4
If
I have forborne in these notes to refer frequently to the Treatise of Bishop
Sage, who often elucidates our author in a very learned manner, it is because
he is almost wholly a controvertist, and therefore not to my purpose in this
work. For his Cyprian, however, I
entertain a sincere respect; and, as it might seem otherwise should I omit all
reference to that work, I place its title in the footnote. Profoundly do I feel
what another Scottish Doctor6 has beautifully said, “It is a loss,
even to those that oppose errors and divisions, that they are forced to be
busied that way.”[13]
This got me
intrigued about some of the other titles like Pontifex Maximus, the material just got worse. The 1st
reference to the title is in regards to the old Roman pagan religion and its
priestly class:
To idols, at all events,
both monogamy and widowhood serve as apparitors. On Fortuna Muliebris, as on
Mother Matuta, none but a once wedded woman hangs the wreath. Once for all do
the Pontifex Maximus and the wife of a Flamen marry. The priestesses of Ceres,
even during the lifetime and with the consent of their husbands, are widowed by
amicable separation.[14]
There is a rich
irony in the fact that Rome
would have us believe that Tertullian gives us support for the Petrine doctrine
they find in Matthew 16:18ff
but Tertullian was critical of the idolatrous Pontifex Maximus of his time! Tertullian (in another work of his)
also goes after the ‘Christian’ Pontifex Maximus:
In opposition to this
(modesty), could I not have acted the dissembler? I hear that there has even
been an edict set forth, and a peremptory one too. The Pontifex Maximus—that is, the bishop of bishops§—issues an edict:
“I remit, to such as have discharged (the requirements of) repentance, the sins
both of adultery and of fornication.” O edict, on which cannot be inscribed,
“Good deed!” And where shall this liberality be posted up? On the very spot, I
suppose, on the very gates of the sensual appetites, beneath the very titles of
the sensual appetites. [15]
Where someone
came down on these issues (at least you would think) may have been colored by
where they came down on controversies facing the Church – but that doesn’t seem
to be a completely reliable indicator. Cyprian was part of the accepted
Catholic Church and his view was that Bishops were equals (see above page 3). The
strongest statement supporting the authority of the Papacy was by Tertullian (a
Montanist, never canonized as a ‘Saint’ by Rome[16]).
The writings of Cyprian do seem to leave the impression that the Novatianists
valued the office of the Papacy though:
To these also it was
not sufficient that they had withdrawn from the Gospel, that they had taken
away from the lapsed the hope of satisfaction and repentance, that they had
taken away those involved in frauds or stained with adulteries, or polluted
with the deadly contagion of sacrifices, lest they should entreat God, or make
confession of their crimes in the Church, from all feeling and fruit of
repentance; that they had set up outside for themselves—outside the Church, and
opposed to the Church, a conventicle of their abandoned faction, when there had
flowed together a band of creatures with evil consciences, and unwilling to
entreat and to satisfy God. After such things as these, moreover, they still
dare—a false bishop having been appointed for them by heretics—to set sail and
to bear letters from schismatic and profane persons to the throne of Peter, and to
the chief church whence priestly unity takes its source; § and not to consider that these were the Romans whose
faith was praised in the preaching of the apostle, to whom faithlessness could
have no access.[17] – Emphasis
mine.
At the time
Cyprian was being elected as the Catholic Bishop of Carthage, he was opposed by Fortunatus, a
Presbyter of Carthage who was of the Novatianist party and who supported a
rival candidate named Felicissimus.[18]
I think it is here worthwhile
to make a brief excursus and bring to mind the warnings regarding the
Anti-Christ in Scripture:
1) 36 “Then
the king shall do according to his own will: he shall exalt and magnify himself
above every god, shall speak blasphemies against the God of gods, and shall
prosper till the wrath has been accomplished; for what has been determined
shall be done. 37 He shall regard neither the God of his fathers nor
the desire of women, nor regard any god; for he shall exalt himself
above them all.[19]
– Emphasis
mine.
2) 20 If with Christ you
died to the elemental spirits of the world, why, as if you were still alive in
the world, do you submit to regulations— 21 “Do not handle, Do not taste, Do not touch”
22 (referring to
things that all perish as they are used)—according to human precepts and
teachings? 23 These have indeed an appearance of wisdom in
promoting self-made religion and asceticism and severity to the body,
but they are of no value in stopping the indulgence of the flesh. [20] – Emphasis
mine.
3) 1Now
the Spirit expressly says that in later times some will depart from the faith
by devoting themselves to deceitful spirits and teachings of demons, 2 through the insincerity
of liars whose consciences are seared, 3 who forbid marriage and require abstinence
from foods that God created to be received with thanksgiving by those
who believe and know the truth.[21] – Emphasis
mine.
It is well worth
while to remember that the Novatianist sect was a rigorist sect while the
Catholic Church at this time was more tolerant of human failings.[22]So
Cyprian who has a more democratic (equality among Bishops) ideal of Church
polity found himself at odds with a rigorist sect which wanted to install both
an alternative Bishop (to Cyprian) and assume the “throne of Peter” to use
Cyprian’s words. An interesting development here is that while Cyprian was more
forgiving of the lapsed than the Novatianists were, Stephen, the present Bishop
of Rome was more tolerant in regard to the Baptism received from heretics, etc.[23]It
is also noteworthy that Stephen was the 1st Bishop of Rome to lay
claim to Matthew 16;18ff.[24]Cyprian
did not like Stephen’s authoritarian view of his own importance and made no
bones about his feelings:
And in this respect I
am justly indignant at this so open and manifest folly of Stephen, that he who
so boasts of the place of his episcopate, and contends that he holds the
succession from Peter §, on whom the foundations of the
Church were laid, should introduce many other rocks and establish new buildings
of many churches; maintaining that there is baptism in them by his
authority. For they who are baptized, doubtless, fill up the number of the
Church. But he who approves their baptism maintains, of those baptized, that
the Church is also with them. Nor does he understand that the truth of the
Christian Rock is overshadowed, and in some measure abolished, by him when he
thus betrays and deserts unity§§. The apostle acknowledges
that the Jews, although blinded by ignorance, and bound by the grossest
wickedness, have yet a zeal for God. Stephen, who announces that he holds by
succession the throne of Peter, is stirred with no zeal against
heretics, when he concedes to them, not a moderate, but the very greatest power
of grace: so far as to say and assert that, by the sacrament of baptism, the
filth of the old man is washed away by them, that they pardon the former mortal
sins, that they make sons of God by heavenly regeneration, and renew to eternal
life by the sanctification of the divine laver. He who concedes and gives up to
heretics in this way the great and heavenly gifts of the Church, what else does
he do but communicate with them for whom he maintains and claims so much grace?
And now he hesitates in vain to consent to them, and to be a partaker with them
in other matters also, to meet together with them, and equally with them to
mingle their prayers, and appoint a common altar and sacrifice.[25] – Emphasis
mine.
Cyprian probably saw Stephen as a
power-hungry compromiser. The same schismatics who didn’t think Cyprian was
strict enough over his tolerance of the lapsed had a positive view of Stephen
because he accepted their baptisms as valid (they were Trinitarian after all
and Stephen was opposed to rebaptism on principle) while Cyprian believed that
only baptisms done by the true Church were valid. So Cyprian believed in a
democratic polity of bishops within an authoritarian Church while Stephen
believed in a single, authoritarian Bishop and democratic sacraments. Cyprian
thought he was watching the rise of the Anti-Christ when Stephen was Bishop of
Rome:
It remains, that upon
this same matter each of us should bring forward what we think, judging no man,
nor rejecting any one from the right of communion, if he should think
differently from us. For neither does any of us set himself up as
a bishop of bishops, nor by tyrannical terror does any compel his colleague to
the necessity of obedience; since every bishop, according to the allowance of
his liberty and power, has his own proper right of judgment, and can no more be
judged by another than he himself can judge another.4 But
let us all wait for the judgment of our Lord Jesus Christ, who is the only one
that has the power both of preferring us in the government of His Church, and
of judging us in our conduct there.
Cæcilius
of Bilta said: I know only one baptism in the Church, and none out of the
Church. This one will be here, where there is the true hope and the certain faith.
For thus it is written: “One faith, one hope, one baptism;”6 not
among heretics, where there is no hope, and the faith is false, where all
things are carried on by lying; where a demoniac exorcises; where one whose
mouth and words send forth a cancer puts the sacramental interrogation;8
the faithless gives faith; the wicked bestows pardon of sins; and Antichrist
baptizes in the name of Christ; he who is cursed of God blesses; he who
is dead promises life; he who is unpeaceful gives peace; the blasphemer calls
upon God; the profane person administers the office of the priesthood; the
sacrilegious person establishes an altar. In addition to all these things,
there is also this evil, that the priests of the devil dare to celebrate the
Eucharist; or else let those who stand by them say that all these things
concerning heretics are false. [26] - Emphasis
mine.
Was Cyprian correct in asserting that
Stephen was an Anti-Christ? There are some things to be considered:
- Stephen made himself the ‘rock’ of the Church when Scripture says that Christ is the Rock (Ps. 118:22, Isa. 28:16,1 Cor. 10:4, Eph. 2:20, 1 Peter 2:4-6).
- The Papacy usurps the Trinity, Pope = Father, but we are to call no man ‘Father’ in the spiritual sense but God,[27] as Pontifex Maximus[28] and Vicar of Christ the Papacy puts itself between God and man, usurping the role of mediator[29] that the Son serves and the Pope’s role of ‘teacher of the whole Christian Church’ usurps the role of the Holy Spirit:
I write these things
to you about those who are trying to deceive you. But the anointing that you
received from him abides in you, and you have no need that anyone should teach
you. But as his anointing teaches you about everything, and is true, and is no
lie—just as it has taught you, abide in him. [30]
EPILOGUE
It would be to go after low hanging fruit
to delve into the Avignon Popes, the crusades, the Spanish Inquisition, the
growth of the cult of the saints and Mariolatry especially but I decided going
into this I was going to write a paper, not a tome. It is enough for me for the
purposes of this paper to show that men of faith and good character saw that
men who cared more about power than truth and who abused the Word of God in order
to secure that power did so:
. . . There are some things in them that are hard to
understand, which the ignorant and unstable twist to their own destruction, as
they do the other Scriptures. 17 You therefore, beloved, knowing this beforehand, take
care that you are not carried away with the error of lawless people and lose
your own stability. [31]
[1] The Holy Bible: English Standard Version.
2001 (2 Th 2:3–4). Wheaton: Standard Bible
Society.
[2] The Holy Bible,
Translated from the Latin Vulgate. 2009 (Mt 16:18–19). Bellingham, WA:
Logos Bible Software.
[3] Holmes, M. W. (2010). The Greek New Testament: SBL Edition (Mt 16:18). Logos Bible
Software.
[4]
Bauer, Walter, William F. Arndt, F. Wilbur Gingrich and Frederick W. Danker. A Greek-English Lexicon oh the New Testament
and Other Early Christian Literature, 2nd Ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979, 654-655.
[5] Tertullian. (1885). The Prescription against Heretics
P. Holmes, Trans.). In A. Roberts, J. Donaldson & A. C. Coxe (Eds.), The Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume III: Latin
Christianity: Its Founder, Tertullian (A. Roberts, J. Donaldson & A. C.
Coxe, Ed.) (253). Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature Company.
[6] Tertullian. (1885). On Modesty S. Thelwall, Trans.).
In A. Roberts, J. Donaldson & A. C. Coxe (Eds.), The Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume IV: Fathers of the Third Century:
Tertullian, Part Fourth; Minucius Felix; Commodian; Origen, Parts First and
Second (A. Roberts, J. Donaldson & A. C. Coxe, Ed.) (99). Buffalo, NY:
Christian Literature Company.
[7] Hippolytus of Rome.
(1886). The Discourse on the Holy Theophany S. D. F. Salmond, Trans.). In A.
Roberts, J. Donaldson & A. C. Coxe (Eds.), The Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume V: Fathers of the Third Century:
Hippolytus, Cyprian, Novatian, Appendix (A. Roberts, J. Donaldson & A.
C. Coxe, Ed.) (237). Buffalo,
NY: Christian Literature Company.
[8] Cyprian of Carthage.
The Epistles of Cyprian, ANF, Vol. V (305).
[9] Cyprian of Carthage.
On the Unity of the Church, ANF, Vol. V (422).
[10] Tertullian. The Prescription against Heretics, ANF, Vol. III: 256.
§ [Tertullian knows no other Vicar of Christ than the
Holy Spirit. They who attribute infallibility to any mortal man become
Montanists; they attribute the Paraclete’s voice to their oracle.]
[11] The Captions of the Arabic Canons Attributed to the
Council of Nice H. R. Percival, Trans.). (1900). In P. Schaff & H. Wace
(Eds.), A Select Library of the Nicene
and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, Second Series, Volume XIV: The
Seven Ecumenical Councils. 1900 (P. Schaff & H. Wace, Ed.) (48). New York: Charles
Scribner’s Sons.
[12] Ibid.
[13] ANF, Vol. V: 561–562.
[14] Tertullian. On Monogamy, ANF, Vol. IV: 72.
[15] Tertullian. On Modesty. ANF, Vol. IV, 74.
§ Zephyrinus or (his predecessor).
[16]
He is not included in The Book Of Saints,
a popular and very complete devotional reference compiled by the Benedictine
Monks of St. Augustine’s Abbey.
[17] Cyprian of Carthage.
(1886). The Epistles of Cyprian, ANF,
Vol. V: 344.
§ [The Apostolic See of the
West was necessarily all this in the eyes of an unambitious faithful Western
co-bishop; but the letter itself proves that it was not the See of one who had
any authority over or apart from his co-bishops. Let us not read into his
expressions ideas which are an after-thought, and which conflict with the life
and all the testimony of Cyprian.]
[18] Smith, William and Henry Wace. A Dictionary of Christian Biography, Literature, Sects and Doctrines A
to D Vol. 2. London:
William Clowes and Sons, 1877, 555. Some authors used Novatianist and Donatist
interchangeably or anachronistically.
[19] The New King
James Version. 1982 (Daniel
11:36–37). Nashville:
Thomas Nelson.
[20] ESV, Colossians 2:20–23.
[21] ESV (1 Ti 4:1–3).
[22]
Schaff, Philip, and David Schley Schaff. History of the Christian Church: Nicene
And Post-Nicene, Volume III. New
York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1910, 187.
[23]
Kelly, J. N. D. and M. J. Walsh, Oxford Dictionary of Popes. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1986, 16-17.
[24]
Ibid.
[25] Cyprian of Carthage.
(1886). The Epistles of Cyprian R. E. Wallis, Trans.). In A. Roberts, J.
Donaldson & A. C. Coxe (Eds.), The
Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume V: Fathers of the Third Century: Hippolytus,
Cyprian, Novatian, Appendix (A. Roberts, J. Donaldson & A. C. Coxe,
Ed.) (394–395). Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature Company.
§ [This place and succession are conceded in the
argument; but Stephen himself does not appear to have claimed to be the Rock or
to exercise the authority of Peter. Vol. iii. p. 266.]
§§ [Stephen abolishes the
Rock, and “deserts unity;” here, then, is evidence that he was not the one, nor
the criterion of the other.]
[26] The Seventh Council of Carthage under Cyprian R. E. Wallis, Trans.).
(1886). In A. Roberts, J. Donaldson & A. C. Coxe (Eds.), The Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume V: Fathers
of the Third Century: Hippolytus, Cyprian, Novatian, Appendix. 1886 (A. Roberts,
J. Donaldson & A. C. Coxe, Ed.) (565–566). Buffalo, NY:
Christian Literature Company.
[27] ESV, Matthew 23:8–10.
[28] Walvoord,
J. F., Zuck, R. B., & Dallas
Theological Seminary. (1985). The Bible
Knowledge Commentary: An Exposition of the Scriptures (Re 17:3–5). Wheaton, IL:
Victor Books. This handle was adopted by the Roman emperors, who used the Latin
title Pontifex Maximus, which means
“Major Keeper of the Bridge.” And the same title was later used by the bishop
of Rome. The
pope today is often called the pontiff, which
comes from pontifex.
[29] ESV, 1 Timothy 2:5, Hebrews 9:15 & Hebrews 12:24.
[30] ESV, 1 John 2:26–27.
[31] ESV, 2 Peter 3:16–17.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bauer,
Walter, William F. Arndt, F. Wilbur Gingrich and Frederick W. Danker. A Greek-English Lexicon oh the New Testament
and Other Early Christian Literature, 2nd Ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979.
Holmes,
M. W. The Greek New Testament: SBL
Edition. Logos Bible Software. 2010.
Kelly,
J. N. D. and M. J. Walsh, Oxford Dictionary of Popes. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1986.
Schaff,
Phillip & Henry Wace (Eds.), A Select
Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, Second
Series, Volume XIV: The Seven Ecumenical Councils. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1900.
Schaff,
Philip, and David Schley Schaff. History of the Christian Church:
Nicene And Post-Nicene, Volume III. New York:
Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1910.
Smith,
William and Henry Wace. A Dictionary of
Christian Biography, Literature, Sects and Doctrines A to D Vol. 2. London: William Clowes
and Sons, 1877.
The Ante-Nicene Fathers, Volume III:
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