But by the same logic I could claim the lack of any stance by Rome against these issues is evidence they’re a “dead church”.
I think you may have missed my point. I am not requiring that the Church act on all issues and with immediacy; I am trying to argue that, thanks to practice, we can be sure that the Catholic Church has the potency to act on these matters, while it is far less clear the East has this same potency, however conceivable it may be that they should. You say there is no disagreement, that only modernists who probably reject other parts of tradition affirm the morality of contraception - but from this it sounds like you are saying that the only way to trust in the authority of the East's position on such contemporary matters is to see what they say on other matters that are settled within the tradition, and basically infer from that that what they say on contemporary matters is wrong. But this is far beneath the level of clarity the faithful ought to have and for which the Church was instituted to provide, and so my point is that the Church ought to have, at least in potency, the ability to readily and clearly settle any such matters, but I just don't see that in the East.
Furthermore, I doubt any in the Orthodox community who support such false contemporary moral positions are so ubiquitous in their denial of tradition. Maybe a point here or there, but not the majority, and certainly not the whole thing. So to have to judge the truth of a moral pronouncement, which has not been formally addressed in the East that I know of, and does not seem to be readily addressable, given history, based on whether or not those pronouncing one way or another disagree or attempt to corrupt some points of the Tradition - this is just not an acceptable level of clarity befitting the Church's teaching authority. It must, in potency at least, be better than this. And if the East no longer acknowledge Rome as a recourse to settling disputes or discarding canons from councils once called, then I don't see that the argument that the East clearly possesses this potency actually stands, especially given that in a thousand years since the schism they have not, to my knowledge, effectively done so.
The following is a list of post-schism Councils considered authoritative in the Orthodox Church:
Thank you, this is the kind of list I was looking before. But note that I have just been asking about a list of councils that have been called - my question is to what extent have they succeeded at solving problems. Disputes almost inevitably arise in such councils, and my fear is that, absent a Pope with the highest temporal authority necessary to settle disputes, my suspicion is that councils would really just serve as a means to causing further schism in the East, the kind of schisms we still see today. Maybe I'm wrong about this hunch, but I intend to look into what is said of these councils and get back to you. Maybe schisms did not result - but were any disputed points universally accepted, or accepted by some here, rejected by others there? It is these kinds of issues that would lead me to suggest that the East does not actually possess the potency it claims.
One final point: you dodged my argument by claiming that only modernists who "probably reject" earlier tradition would take off-stances (let us say, unorthodox positions) on contemporary moral matters. I've provided my response to this already, but fine, let's take this as it is. There is still the matter about the teachings of the faith (since Church teaching authority is required to rule on matters of faith and morals) being disputed within the East. I already cited a former Orthodox, Timothy Flanders, on this point, who cites the wide range of views held within the East on matters pertaining to the dispersement of baptism. This does pertain to the faith and could readily affect one's salvation if mistaken. So which of the Orthodox churches is right about the sacraments? Could a council event solve this in theory / potency? If Russia has been teaching something for however-so-many years, and a Council were called today, to which Russia was invited, and basically decided that Russia is totally wrong about how they have approached this issue- then is Russia just going to walk away from that believing the outcome? Or is it going to dispute it? And will not this dispute lead to the very schism between Russia and Constantinople that exists today, and exists today for this very unsettled reason (among others)?
This is my point. It's messy when you look at contemporary morals, it's even messier when you look at the faith and the sacraments, and even if the East arguably has the potency to call councils, in theory and practice it seems that this potency is merely one to call, not one also to definitively resolve.
I will see what consequences and ckarity, or lack thereof, seem to have fallen out of the councils you cited.
Oh! But I wanted to mention first, w.r.t. the Fourth Council of Constantinople, that it is highly disputed the nature of the alleged papal ratification of that council - whether the Pope received accurate information, or even confirmed the entire council, versus certain points, etc.
Fourth Constantinople, 879 - the Photian Council (not technically post-schism, ratified by Rome for 200 years, then reneged post-schism)
I already commented on this one, but I will add that this council's belief that it could excommunicate a pope does already reveal the pre-schism lack of unity in understanding of what the papacy actually constituted, and I will reiterate that saying Rome's ratification was "reneged" assumes it was ever fully given in the first place, for which the evidence is simply too controversial. The confusion is magnified by the fact that there was another "Fourth Council of Constantinople" ten years previous, with contradictory actions to the council in 879. Which, then, and to what extent did the respective popes lend their support, is obviously a matter of debate. As we have already seen when discussing the Council of Chalcedon, there is certainly precedent for a pope confirming a council generally but rejecting specific acts or canons:
"After the passage of the Canon 28, Rome filed a protest against the reduction of honor given to Antioch and Alexandria. However, fearing that withholding Rome's approval would be interpreted as a rejection of the entire council, in 453 the pope confirmed the council's canons while declaring the 28th null and void."
Blachernae Council, 1285
It appears this council was mainly called to condemn the Roman Catholic Council of Lyons eleven years prior, in 1274, specifically the part where the Catholic Church tried to re-unify east and west. Admittedly this attempt consisted mainly in appeals to Latin "despots" in the east to "curb their ambitions", and other than that it seems doctrinally no compromise was made (rightly so), and so I do understand why the East would unite to reject the attempts of Lyons, even though by this time (1274 being the year of Aquinas' death) a rigorous proof of the truth of the filioque had already been provided by Aquinas himself (which I went through once before with ). This also includes part of Thomas' writings from the Summa Contra Gentiles that I referenced wanting to quote the other day.
Fifth Constantinople, 1341 (Palamite Councils)
It looks like this council was addressing Hesychasm, and in line with my original suspicion, one of the main actors the council sought to condemn, Gregory Palamas, just didn't accept the result:
"Gregoras refused to submit to the dictates of the synod and was effectively imprisoned in a monastery until the Palaeologi triumphed in 1354 and deposed Cantacuzenus."
Seems like it was force, not the binding authority of the council, that resolved this one. And recall, my argument here is just that the East lacks the potency it claims to actually resolve important disputes in a conciliar manner, lacking a temporal viceregent with authority above all others to aid with such dispute-resolutions.
Moldova Council, 1642 (Council of Jassy)
This one seems to have basically been the East's "counter-reformation" council, so an analog to the Catholic Church's Council of Trent. It sounds like some Catholic points were addressed in this council also. Interestingly, the Wiki article lists the major contribution as being:
the reinforced sense of unity in the Orthodox Church through the promulgation of an authoritative statement agreed upon by all the major sees.
Of course, if the council is called to defend the Orthodox against claims that contradict the Orthodox, it is not surprising that agreement on a non-controversial matter can be attained. It is with respect to issues on which the Orthodox disagree that this potency I am discussing becomes crucial.
Jerusalem Council, 1672
Looks like this one addressed Calvinism, and also reasserted the Orthodox rejection of the filioque. My comments match that of the previous council.
pan-Orthodox Council in Constantinople, 1872 (the Phyletism Council).
This council better accents the concerns I've expressed. This was an internal conflict, and right off the bat we have lack of attendance from a number of churches. The Bulgarian Church is question does not recant and enters into a schism. I will summarize my thoughts on this in the reflection on the final council on this list, since they are somewhat similar.
The recent Pan-Orthodox Council in Crete (2016) has largely been rejected, but it shows every once in a while big groups from the traditionally Orthodox World still, to this day, hold shindigs.
This council perfectly exemplifies the point I am trying to make. See Ybarra's (2 minutes) to it from the debate I referenced the other day. Some of the Eastern churches accept this council, others don't. So, is it authoritative or not? That is an important issue that shouldn't be unclear to the faithful. Without an ecclesiastical head capable of ratifying, and in so doing working with the other bishops, the teachings of a council, it ultimately has no binding authority - as the Orthodox churches themselves demonstrate.
Also noteworthy is the point about even calling a council in the first place. The Orthodox often point to secular leaders (like emperors) as prime candidates for calling councils and thereby compelling all the various bishops to actually attend in the first place. This is fine when Christendom actually has an emperor...but when it doesn't? Why should the Church of God depend on anything worldly like a secular leader to even be able to reliably go about its essential business? The Roman Catholic Church does not have this problem, since even as history moved beyond the era of Christian emperors, there is still the Pope with the authority to call all the bishops together and hold a council. And, as Ybarra notes, more than just being a better model, it also is contained within the Apostolic Tradition.
I will conclude by raising this point: it seems to me that the very existence of a schism itself suggests something like a temporal Head is necessary; for both the East and the West are looking to the same Tradition, and yet coming to different conclusions. Therefore, lest schism be an unavoidable thing when various bishops come to view the same Tradition in a different light, it seems fitting that Christ would ensure a temporal Head (viceregent) be ever appointed such that these kinds of disputes can be clarified once and for all. This does not deny the rights and authority of local bishops over their dioceses; indeed, "all are equal during times of peace". But when disputes arise, when we are not in a time of peace or "universal concord", there must be a Head, in time to judge on such matters, lest schism be unavoidable. And it is my belief that Christ did not fail to provide for this contingency when He said to Peter that he is the rock on which the Church will be built, and he is the one to whom is given the keys to the kingdom of heaven.
- conflation of principle of the papacy as a legitimate supreme teaching authority with actions taken by popes
I've addressed this more recently, but I will reiterate that it is not the teaching of the Catholic Church that the popes are infallible in all things, and therefore are indeed still capable of sin and error (and Peter's three-fold denial also served to forewarn us they would be). The many and diverse temporal / political actions of the popes, or the Catholic Church in general, does not equate to the legitimacy of what the Church actually teaches Magisterially. Temporal actions of popes can readily be condemned. For example, Pope Leo X was a Medici, was accused, if I recall correctly, of squandering Church wealth on his own interests (infamously he said: "God has given us the papacy, let us enjoy it"), and he totally dropped the ball on addressing Luther and evading the Protestant heresy. Instead of actually offering a Catholic response to Luther's questions (which has since been done perfectly adequately by men like Bellarmine in the counter-reformation), he took basically no action at all, and this, combined with the invention of the printing press and Luther's bribing of German princes, led to the widespread effect of his heresy. Do the sins and inaction of Pope Leo X by necessity diminish the reality of his office and teaching authority? Not at all; it is a principle, recall, that "act necessitates potency, but potency does not necessitate act (within a subject)".
- pope has no right to Christ's claim as Head
I believe I have addressed this by recently explaining what is really meant by temporal Head / viceregent / vicar.
- vicar of Christ usage; pontiff usage
I believe I have also addressed this. I am a Thomist, not a nominalist (and I'm not accusing either of you of nominalism), so there is no need for me to view the name applied to an essence as somehow constituting or defining that essence. However words were used elsewhere, or whatever usage they had before being baptized into the Church, what matters is the essence of the office itself, and it is a primacy of teaching authority a la a vicarious office, not a statement of absolute equality with God - and that is the Magisterial teaching.
- lack of definitive / unambiguous presence of the doctrine in Scripture, like can be said of Commandments etc
This isn't an argument that would be accepted by Catholic or Eastern Orthodox Christians. A similar was asked in the debate I recently referenced, except it concerned the Nicene Creed rather than Scripture itself. I recommend listening to the response, but he points out that the same logic applies to many other essential Christian teachings - like the Eucharist - and absence from the Creed should not be considered proof of non-truth. And the Orthodox priest basically agrees fully with his answer.
In fact, extending this Eucharist example, one could say that it is not contained in Scripture with the same degree of explicitness or lack of ambiguity as the Ten Commandments, but nonetheless it is affirmed by both East and West, and it is contained I would say clearly in Scripture, but not undeniably in Scripture - just like the primacy of Peter. That's why protestants reject that also; it is just a Protestant way of thinking to say "Well, if it isn't totally and undeniably contained in Scripture, I won't believe it!" because they just don't have the understanding of the essential relationship between Scripture and Tradition (which is affirmed both by Scripture and Tradition, as I've pointed out).
- 4th / 5th / 6th century authorities espousing a Catholic view is unsurprising if the real fork or schism with true tradition took place earlier in history
I think my )
- typological interpretation of Peter as the rock is sufficient without supposing something special is granted to Peter specifically with respect to teaching authority
Maybe this isn't exactly the argument that's being made, since elsewhere you've denied reducing this Scripture to the typological view, but as far as I'm concerned, if we aren't reducing it to this higher level / more general application of the verse, then we have to affirm the significance of Peter the Apostle, and how that significance, logically, would be transferred to his successors.
- Paul visiting Peter is not compelling evidence
Maybe it isn't compelling even from an objective point of view, but I originally cited it because a Saint (Chrysostom) in the Church found it compelling.
- Paul didn't write explicitly about Peter either
I think one of my paragraphs above addresses this. Once we understand both 1) the development of doctrine (which I described in another reply) and 2) the non-necessity for clear statement about legitimate Christian doctrines within Scripture ( a la what I said about the Eucharist above), then I just don't see how this line of argument is at all problematic to the teaching on the papacy (let alone unthinkable).
- Rome as Highest See / Peter as prince of apostles / Pope as having supreme teaching authority in the Church - being separate essentially from the material-temporal-political relations of the Church, or even the actions of Popes, is a "cover story" and sidesteps the simple fact that the Catholic Church became a "political organization" and conflicted with secular states
This was originally one of KOWA's objections. I feel as if I've said everything that needs to be said in this point, including what I've reiterated in this very message (a la Leo X). It just isn't essential to the doctrine itself that popes, or the Church, be infallible in their temporal actions. What matters is the doctrines themselves, not how well (or poorly) the prelates adhere to them. Sure, we can cite Scripture and say "you will know them by their fruits", but KOWA himself has indicated that, indeed, the fruits are the saints, and the Church has no shortage of saints, even post-schism, who have attained unfathomable degrees of holiness by faithfully following the teachings of the Church, including the papacy itself. Countless Catholic saints, pre- and post-schism, have affirmed the papacy - St. Catherine of Siena, St. Padre Pio, St. Thomas Aquinas. I would be curious - genuinely - to see what post-schism eastern saints are known to have specifically attacked the papacy in their teachings, words, or writings.
- Obedience to the teaching authority of the papacy constitutes affirming the supremacy of a secular state (presumably in political matters)
Again, these have to be separated. It is on matters of faith and morals only to which the Magisterium pertains and for which the papal charism of infallibility can apply. Submission to temporal / secular matters is just not the teaching of the Church - that a Catholic American citizen would be compelled to have "dual-loyalty" a la the kind our circles criticize as applying to politicians who are loyal to Israel, in the same respect to Rome, is just not Catholic teaching. In secular matters, our loyalty is to our own state; in religious matters, to our Church. And, indeed, the Church teaches that the Church's divine right and calling is to inform every state as its soul, but this does not mean the Church has divinely ordained temporal authority over the world - she has spiritual authority, which it goes without saying is an entirely different thing.
- "the majesty of the Bible is that it is self-justifying"
You've said my argument is circular. That Tradition is considered prior to Scripture, and yet cites Scripture to justify this, or something. Fine, I get where you're coming from, but Catholics generally refer to it as a spiral, rather than something circular. We have to begin with Scripture by taking it at face value: as describing real world events, including various publicly witnessed miracles. This, combined with the history of the Church itself, lends the Bible its initial (face-value) credence. If there was no Church, were no Christian relics, no remains of cathedrals, no portraits of saints, no fallen down monasteries, no mark whatsoever of this Christian faith on history, then people would be far more compelled to dismiss it as myth. Like with Homer, many people dismissed it entirely as mythic, questioning the existence of Troy itself, until the remains of Troy were purported to be found, thus lending more credence to the notion that the substance of the matter of that text (namely, the war described) was true.
We have such an abundance of historical situating of the Christian faith, and dating so far back, that it just is not reasonable to dismiss the Scriptures, especially the New Testament, as mere myth, at least when looking at it only at face value. Of course when looking at them more closely it is revealed that the Old Testament in fact typified and pointed to the New with just about every word. The point is, without noticing the hyperlinks, without noticing the fulfilled prophecies (such as the , or Daniel 9 setting a for the Messiah's coming, lining up perfectly with the coming of Christ, etc.), Scripture is given its credence by history. And in fact, even the hyperlinks and prophecies depend on being situated in history, lest they be explained away as retro-active writing or Jewish cleverness. So insofar as Church history is Tradition, I affirm and maintain that the two are not separable.
So back to my spiral point, we can take Scripture (in conjunction with the history of the Church, inclusive of the martyrs who died to bear witness to the truth of the claims in Scripture - which The Iliad lacks) as a legitimate documentation of events. Given this, we can then treat the Church's spiritual authority as legitimate, and on this basis we can then return to Scripture and rightly treat it as an infallible revelation from God. You could reach this conclusion by other means, but I maintain that those means would not be entirely separate from the history surrounding the events described, and thus the history of the Church itself, and thus the Tradition in some sense. Whereas, contrariwise, the Protestants claim sola Scriptura, as if the infallibility of Scripture can be deduced without any reference to non-Scriptural entities, such as history itself. But without situating certain books of the Bible in certain periods of history, "prophecy" suddenly becomes back-dating or just narrative-construction. Do you see what I mean? If anything it is the Protestant view that is circular, since they affirm Scripture as infallible because it speaks of Jesus as God, and Jesus quotes from the Scriptures, so it must be infallible - but they have assumed their conclusion in order to prove it. That is the true fallacy.
- "My “own” Saints certainly do not affirm the sort of Papal Supremacy current today" - presumably a la Unam Sanctum "all humans must submit to Roman pontiff"
Again from KOWA; I referenced this above, asking what post-schism Eastern saints oppose the papacy, and in what ways specifically. As I cited from the Catechism, the Church still recognizes the "means to salvation" that, say, the Orthodox Church provides for people, and therefore the ability to sanctify - but this is not and cannot be fully separated from the Catholic Church as the Body of Christ, and of course the East would not disagree; they would just disagree with the association. But for the sake of argument, if the Roman Catholic Church, as constituted by its structure and teachings, does correspond to Christ's intention for His Church, also known as the Mystical Body of Christ, then it goes without saying that no one who is saved is saved outside of the Catholic Church, which includes all its teachings, including the papacy properly understood.
The submission required of all men to the Roman Pontiff is equivalent to the submission required of all men to the Catholic Church, not insofar as the Pontiff is concerned as a man, but only insofar as he concerned as Vicar of Christ, as authoritative representative and safeguard of all the teachings of the Church - and this is a spiritual submission only, not a temporal-political one.
- Orthodox Church is a body of "right-believing" Churches
From KOWA. I commented already on the difficulty I see there being in the East with properly establishing "right belief" insofar as the churches in the East are in disagreement, and I elaborate on this further in my response to the list of post-schism Orthodox councils.
- By giving the keys to St. Peter, Christ gave the power to bind-and-loose to The Church. The idea that Rome somehow interprets this to mean that the Pope has this power, is absurd to us.
As I touched on elsewhere, while the typological view of this verse has truth, not every element can be applied to all the Church in the same degree. Yes, Peter was given the ability to bind and loose, and this was given also to the Apostles generally. But the keys were only given to Peter, and so what happens when all the bishops, with the ability to bind and loose together, are in disagreement? Peter comes along, jingles the keys, and asserts his Divinely-instituted authority to bind and loose universally, and clarifies the dispute.
- The core of the idea is that Peter, in contradistinction with each of the other apostles, is the first to come to faith in Christ (true gnosis of Christ as the Son of God) by way of the Father solely. Each of the others required seeing with their eyes, a reason why Peter is able to answer Christ's question: "Who do you think I am?"
Of course, Peter was given the keys for a non-arbitrary reason, and this first-born angle plays into that. But that doesn't diminish the nature of the vicarious office he was given, nor the need for such an office.
- The thoroughgoing case you are making is that only Tradition could have decided this. But this deposit, the words of Christ, was had by the apostles, and so whatever MC is, it did not include the office of pope in {X, Y, Z...N}. If it were the case that it had, there would be no schism.
But you would say the schism could have occurred in theory at the time of the apostles themselves?
And further, the impossibility of schism is not Scriptural, because Christ beseeches that the Apostles allow no schism among them ().
In fact, those above verses beautifully articulate the very thing the Orthodox think that the Catholic Church denies, namely, the maintained significance of the non-papal bishops. "And the eye cannot say to the hand: I need not thy help; nor again the head to the feet: I have no need of you." It is not as if the Pope declares himself bishop of the world, as if all the world is one dioceses, and other bishops become superfluous. It strikes me that there are many in the Orthodox community who think this is what the Catholic Church teaches, and thus rightly object to it. But this is not the case. The Church simply teaches that the Pope has universal jurisdiction, universal authority, not that he therefore has the right (even if he has the power) to contradict a bishop's true teaching in his own dioceses. Think of it this way; say we have a knight, and that knight has a sword. If the knight claims that he has the ability (the potens) to unsheath his sword and slay an innocent maiden, does this equate to asserting his right to do so? He maintains the ability to do so at any time, but because he operates according to the Divine law, he will only unsheath his sword when "duty calls"; when someone attacks the maiden, for instance. This is what Jordan Peterson has defined "meek" (from "the meek shall inherit the earth") as meaning; not weakness, but power tempered by virtue; to have a sword, but only draw it when one ought to. Likewise, the Pope has total and absolute authority in the Church, as vicar of Christ; he can ordain priests in another bishop's dioceses, he can toss out bad canons from a Council; but it is understood that these powers will only be used when needed - during times of dispute, rather than times of peace (see my reply about the post-schism councils). This power, if legitimate, and if it is to be trusted when used, must always exist, rather than being contingent upon "the right conditions", lest those involved deny that the context really constitutes a time of dispute. The teaching of the papacy is solid and does not deny the right and powers and significance of the college of bishops; it simply affirms what must be affirmed if the final authority and dispute-clarifying ability to the key-holder is to be exercised at all; and this extraordinary authority is, like infallible pronouncements, understood to be guided by the Holy Spirit itself.
- Regarding the need for today's deliberation by Church authority to contextualize Church teachings to modern circumstances, there is simply no convincing case that this could not be accomplished by a council absent a Pope
See the case I make in my reply to the list of councils. I simply do not see that the Orthodox Church has the potency here that it claims.
- So why didn't any of the disciples act as if Christ explained Peter's official supremacy to them?
I think this question supposes that it was appropriate or required that this be demonstrated within Scripture, at the time the New Testament epistles were being written, but with what I've said above, I don't see that this is the case.
- As far as we’ve seen, there’s no “objective, absolute proof” either way, and no existing evidences outside of our specific Traditional rejections of said Claims, are free from being subject to inescapable confirmation bias
I comment on this in my reply to the council list; that the very fact that there is a schism, when East and West are looking at the same Tradition, suggests to me that just getting all the bishops together to hash it out cannot possibly (i.e. in potency) manage to resolve this; without a key-holding dispute-settler, there is no solution. That there may be no "objective, definitive proof" in the Tradition, therefore, is not relevant; given that two halves of the episcopate can look at the same evidence and come to different conclusions suggests that there must be a temporal Head (vicar) among them with the authority to say "it is this way, not that".
Do the sins and inaction of Pope Leo X by necessity diminish the reality of his office and teaching authority? Not at all; it is a principle, recall, that "act necessitates potency, but potency does not necessitate act (within a subject)".
If you get the time and inclination, I'd like you to elaborate a bit more on this connection you're establishing between the pope as office and these metaphysical principles. Honestly, the more reading that I'm doing on the subject of the New Testament gospels the more I am realizing that a historicist interpretation applied to them must fail miserably. But following on this realization comes confusion, because whereas some of the crucial 'events' of the gospels are not to be taken historically, we are to apply their symbols as a hermeneutic for interpreting the papacy (for example, the Last Supper or the Keys).
I see parallels here which exist between the Eucharist and the pope, for this reason, but whereas the Eucharist is merely liturgical and ritualistic, the high office of pontiff is consequential in a way beyond the spiritual. Where the Eucharist is something like a correspondence in sympathy to something taking place at a spiritual level (in Heaven), the papal office can influence the very 'magisterium' which was thought to have entered the physical world but originated in Heaven. I'm not sure I am making this clear, but imagine that you say, "The pope cannot alter the core of the magisterium." There appears to be a bit of convenient back-and-forth here, i.e. between the less substantive position of a viceregency alone and the literal Vicar of Christ on earth.
Where it suits, one can point to the pope's lack of authority, but at the same time it removes the 'teeth' from the arguments that support his position on theological grounds. So what happens is a kind of wavering between a power-level which would honor the theological justification, and the more mundane human side of things. If the man can say things which even bridge the unholy, then where are the distinctions drawn? Is it merely in what he chooses to label a given utterance or piece of writing? If it is called X it is binding, but if it occurs as a Y, then it is just a man talking. When and where do these powers 'kick in', at will? It's hard to conceive of a Vicar of Christ on earth which can be such a thing and exist in such a way that at one moment, he is speaking blasphemy, and in another he is speaking with Christlike authority.
When it comes to the Pope, when do these correspondences between earth-Heaven (as in what is bound here is bound there, and what is loosed here is loosed there) cease and then resume again?
In fact, extending this Eucharist example, one could say that it is not contained in Scripture with the same degree of explicitness or lack of ambiguity as the Ten Commandments, but nonetheless it is affirmed by both East and West, and it is contained I would say clearly in Scripture, but not undeniably in Scripture - just like the primacy of Peter.
It is interesting that you bring up the Eucharist, again because most of the evidence shows that the concepts contained in this particular ritual preceded Christ, and certainly preceded the gospels. Take the Didache from the 1st century:
Concerning the eucharist, give thanks thus:
First, concerning the cup: We give thanks to you, our Father, for the holy vine of David your servant, which you have revealed to us through Jesus your servant. To you be glory forever.
And concerning the broken bread: We give thanks to you, our Father, for the life and knowledge which you have revealed to us through Jesus your servant. To you be glory forever.
As this broken bread was scattered upon the hills and has been gathered to become one, so gather your church from the ends of the earth into your kingdom.
The Didache predates the gospels, and we see a quite different focus of the eucharistic rite here, with no mention of the blood or body of Christ, but of the wine as symbol for the Vine (or branch cf. Jeremiah XXIII 5) of David's House and the bread as a reunification of its crumbs in one body of followers. As I think about this ritual, it is so obviously a mixture of Greek and Hebraic components. The bread and wine are a perennial component of rites of theophagy, going back to the most ancient proto-Greeks (contemporary with the Hebrews of Deuteronomy) who consumed them to worship Bacchus. The signature Hebraic component of this early Eucharist evidenced in the Didache is precisely that it does not celebrate either the death or resurrection of Christ, but instead worships the lineage of David through Christ as a revealed holy 'branch'. They praise this branch, or vine, symbolically via the fruits of the vine - as Christ is The Fruit of the Davidic branch, King of kings.
So what are we to think of the Eucharist as supposedly issuing from the Last Supper of the gospels? It's really impossible to think of this in historical terms. For one, Christ was a Jew and the ethnoreligion of His apostles was deeply Jewish. It is unthinkable they would have espoused the consumption of blood or of the body.
No, the far likelier origin of the Eucharist is not from Christ himself or from the gospels. Instead, the gospels adapted an existing and widely respected ritual into the gospels, including the highly non-Jewish (I really can't stress enough how much Jews themselves would have anathematized theophagy, especially involving blood consumption symbolism) aspect of theophagy, at once uniting the narrative of the Jewish messiah together with a would-be priestly liturgical rite. (I don't rule out the possibility that Christ himself could have known of the Greek tradition though and possibly introduced it to the apostles in a Judaized manner).
The point is that what we find in the Catholic Church as Eucharist today is not strictly scriptural, but no doubt relies on certain commentaries and oral traditions arising throughout and after the time of Christ. You have said as much about the papacy itself, and I am inclined to agree that although the papal office is not laid out concretely by scripture, it is a Christian tradition which is not unique to Christians, but is something featuring an admixture of Jewish and Roman influence.
I don't think these facts diminish much in the case of the Eucharist. In fact, I'm not at all convinced that it does. If as Plato told us (after many others had) in philosophical terms that what happens on earth corresponds with what happens in Heaven, and Christ conferred by way of knowledge to His apostles the first powers to govern how that transmission from earth-to-Heaven would go, it almost seems as if Christ might have been conferring some power to decide what way is best to facilitate the binding of people to the earthly church so as to bind them to the Kingdom of Heaven (in the spirit). Therefore, would we not expect some of these extra-scriptural rituals - many of which had already been proven, despite their roles in pagan traditions - to be claimed and modified for the Christian Church?
I truly believe my difficulty is coming from the way I interpret both Jesus Christ and the pope. If I take a historical view of the Christ (but not merely a historical version of him), it's hard to see how Christ did not establish an eternal kingship in the Spirit, and abolish any and all need for priestly offices. At the same time, there are the practical and earthly matters that attend what PS has called the temporal church. If Christ gave the crucial news to the apostles and expected from them to 'fan out' this good news, then something of an institution is implied (even if not laid out explicitly). The latitude given to these men in terms of their ability to best build on earth that which would bind in Heaven, may leave room for considerations in praxis that Christ did not simply hand them.
So there is one aspect in which we could choose to view the Catholic system as a 'paganized Christianity', and another where we could choose to view the Catholic system as 'Christianity that took for itself the useful, but errant (in object) rituals of the pagans and adapted them to direct their power to binding in Heaven by the authority of Christ.'
It's interesting because to view things the former way is almost to give more power to paganism, i.e. if paganism 'paganized' Christianity, we see it as an interloper on Christianity that was able to alter Christ's church. But if we view things from the latter perspective, why wouldn't Christianity have the power to say, 'Yeah, that ritual you have there? Christ is the one way, the one truth, the one life. That ritual literally belongs to us now.'
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