of
the ancients concur with.
• Welbore
St. Clair Baddeley, Lina Duff Gordon, “Rome
and its story:”
The
sixth century found Rome sunk too low by war and pestilence for many
churches to be built; but at this time took place the transformation
of ancient buildings into Christian shrines. Instead of despising the
relics of paganism, the Roman priesthood prudently gathered to
themselves all that could be adopted from the old world. Gregorovius
remarks that the Christian religion had grown up side by side with
the empire, which this new power was ready to replace when the
Emperor withdrew to the East. The Bishop of Rome assumed the position
of Ponlifex Maximus, priest and temporal ruler in one, and the
workings of this so-called spiritual kingdom, with bishops as
senators, and priests as leaders of the army, followed on much the
same lines as the empire. The analogy was more complete when
monasteries were founded and provinces were won and governed by the
Church. - p. 176)
• Jaroslav Pelikan (Lutheran, later Eastern Orhodox), The Riddle of Roman Catholicism (New
York: Abingdon Press, 1959), also finds:
"Recent research on the Reformation
entitles us to sharpen it and say that the Reformation began because
the reformers were too catholic in the midst of a church that had
forgotten its catholicity..."
“The reformers were catholic because they
were spokesmen for an evangelical tradition in medieval catholicism,
what Luther called "the succession of the faithful." The
fountainhead of that tradition was Augustine (d. 430). His complex
and far-reaching system of thought incorporated the catholic ideal of
identity plus universality, and by its emphasis upon sin and grace it
became the ancestor of Reformation theology. … All the reformers
relied heavily upon Augustine. They pitted his evangelical theology
against the authority of later church fathers and scholastics, and
they used him to prove that they were not introducing novelties into
the church, but defending the true faith of the church.”
“...To prepare books like the Magdeburg
Centuries they combed the libraries and came up with a remarkable
catalogue of protesting catholics and evangelical catholics, all to
lend support to the insistence that the Protestant position was, in
the best sense, a catholic position.
Additional support for this insistence comes
from the attitude of the reformers toward the creeds and dogmas of
the ancient catholic church. The reformers retained and cherished the
doctrine of the Trinity and the doctrine of the two natures in Christ
which had developed in the first five centuries of the church….”
“If we keep in mind how variegated
medieval catholicism was, the legitimacy of the reformers' claim to
catholicity becomes clear. (Pelikan, pp. 46-47).
"Substantiation for this understanding
of the gospel came principally from the Scriptures, but whenever they
could, the reformers also quoted the fathers of the catholic church.
There was more to quote than their Roman opponents found comfortable"
(Pelikan 48-49).
• Joseph Lortz, German Roman
Catholic theologian:
The real
significance of the Western Schism rests in the fact that for decades
there was an almost universal uncertainty about where the true pope
and the true Church were to be found. For several decades, both popes
had excommunicated each other and his followers; thus all Christendom
found itself under sentence of excommunication by at least one of the
contenders. Both popes referred to their rival claimant as the
Antichrist, and to the Masses celebrated by them as idolatry. It
seemed impossible to do anything about this scandalous situation,
despite sharp protests from all sides, and despite the radical
impossibility of having two valid popes at the same time. Time and
time again, the petty selfishness of the contenders blocked any
solution...
The
significance of the break-up of medieval unity in the thirteenth
century, but even more during the Avignon period, is evident in the
most distinctive historical consequence of the Avignon Papacy: the
Great Western Schism. The real meaning of this event may not be
immediately apparent. It can be somewhat superficially described as a
period when there were two popes, each with his own Curia, one
residing in Rome, the other in Avignon
When Luther
asserted that the pope of Rome was not the true successor of Saint
Peter and that the Church could do without the Papacy, in his mind
and in their essence these were new doctrines, but the distinctive
element in them was not new and thus they struck a sympathetic
resonance in the minds of many. Long before the Reformation itself,
the unity of the Christian Church in the West had been severely
undermined
• The Avignon Papacy
(1309-76) relocated the throne to France and was followed by the
Western Schism (1378-1417), with three rival popes excommunicating
each other and their sees. Referring to the schism of the 14th and
15th centuries, Cardinal Ratzinger observed,
"For
nearly half a century, the Church was split into two or three
obediences that excommunicated one another, so that every Catholic
lived under excommunication by one pope or another, and, in the last
analysis, no one could say with certainty which of the contenders had
right on his side. The Church no longer offered certainty of
salvation; she had become questionable in her whole objective
form--the true Church, the true pledge of salvation, had to be sought
outside the institution. It is against this background of a
profoundly shaken ecclesial consciousness that we are to understand
that Luther, in the conflict between his search for salvation and the
tradition of the Church, ultimately came to experience the Church,
not as the guarantor, but as the adversary of salvation.
—
Joseph
Cardinal Ratzinger, head of the Sacred Congregation of the Doctrine
of the Faith for the Church of Rome, “Principles of Catholic
Theology,” trans. by Sister Mary Frances McCarthy, S.N.D. (San
Francisco: Ignatius, 1989) p.196).
http://www.whitehorseinn.org/blog/2012/06/13/whos-in-charge-here-the-illusions-of-church-infallibility/
• Catholic Encyclopedia>Council of Constance:
The
Western Schism was thus at an end, after nearly forty years of
disastrous life; one pope (Gregory XII) had voluntarily abdicated;
another (John XXIII) had been suspended and then deposed, but had
submitted in canonical form; the third claimant (Benedict XIII) was
cut off from the body of the Church, "a pope without a Church, a
shepherd without a flock" (Hergenröther-Kirsch). It had come
about that, whichever of the three claimants of the papacy was the
legitimate successor of Peter, there reigned throughout the Church a
universal uncertainty and an intolerable confusion, so that saints
and scholars and upright souls were to be found in all three
obediences. On the principle that a doubtful pope is no pope, the
Apostolic See appeared really vacant, and under the circumstances
could not possibly be otherwise filled than by the action of a
general council. —
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04288a.htm
• Cardinal
Bellarmine:
"
Some years before the rise of
the Lutheran and Calvinistic heresy, according to the testimony of
those who were then alive, there was almost an entire abandonment of
equity in ecclesiastical judgments; in morals, no discipline; in
sacred literature, no erudition; in divine things, no reverence;
religion was almost extinct. —
Concio XXVIII. Opp. Vi. 296- Colon
1617, in “A
History of the Articles of Religion,” by Charles Hardwick, Cp.
1, p. 10,
• Erasmus, in his new edition of the “Enchiridion,”
“What man of real piety does not perceive with sighs that this is
far the most corrupt of all ages? When did iniquity abound with more
licentiousness? When was charity so cold?” — “The
Evolution of the English Bible: A Historical Sketch of the
Successive,” p. 132 by Henry William Hamilton-Hoare
• At
the time of the Reformation, the Catholic historian Paul Johnson
described the existing social situation among the clergy:
“Probably
as many as half the men in orders had ‘wives’ and families.
Behind all the New Learning and the theological debates, clerical
celibacy was, in its own way, the biggest single issue at the
Reformation. It was a great social problem and, other factors being
equal, it tended to tip the balance in favour of reform. As a rule,
the only hope for a child of a priest was to go into the Church
himself, thus unwillingly or with no great enthusiasm, taking vows
which he might subsequently regret: the evil tended to perpetuate
itself.” (History of Christianity, pgs 269-270)
• In the summer of 1536, Pope Paul III appointed Cardinals Contarini
and Cafara and a commission to study church Reform. The report of
this commission, the Consilium de emendanda ecclesiae, was completed
in March 1537. The final paragraphs deal with the
corruptions of Renaissance Rome itself:
“the
swarm of sordid and ignorant priests in the city, the harlots who are
followed around by clerics and by the noble members of the cardinals’
households …”
“The
immediate effects of the Consilium fell far below the hopes of its
authors and its very frankness hampered its public use. … the more
noticeably pious prelates [note: this the “noticeably pious”
clergy] had no longer to tolerate the open cynicism of the Medicean
period, and when moral lapses by clerics came to light, pains were
now taken to hush them up as matters of grievous scandal.”
— .G.
Dickens, “The Counter Reformation,” pp. 100,102)
In the
same candid spirit is the following statement of de Mézeray, the
historiographer of France: [Abrege’ Chronol. VIII. 691, seqq. a
Paris, 1681.]
“As the heads of the Church
paid no regard to the maintenance of discipline, the vices and
excesses of the ecclesiastics grew up to the highest pitch, and were
so public and universally exposed as to excite against them the
hatred and contempt of the people. We cannot repeat without a blush
the usury, the avarice, the gluttony, the universal dissoluteness of
the priests of this period, the licence and debauchery of the monks,
the pride and extravagance of the prelates, and the shameful
indolence, ignorance and superstition pervading the whole body ....
These were not, I confess, new scandals: I should rather say that the
barbarism and ignorance of preceding centuries, in some sort,
concealed such vices; but,, on the subsequent revival of the light of
learning, the spots which I have pointed out became more manifest,
and as the unlearned who were corrupt could not endure the light
through the pain which it caused to their eyes, so neither did the
learned spare them, turning them to ridicule and delighting to expose
their turpitude and to decry their superstitions.”
Bossuet*
in the opening statements of his “Histoire des Variations,”
admits the frightful corruptions of the Church for centuries before
the Reformation; and he has been followed in our own times by
Frederic von Schlegel [Philosophy of History, 400, 401, 410, Engl.
Transl. 1847.] and Möhler. [Symbolik, II. 31, 32, Engl. Transl.]
While all of them are most anxious to prove
that the Lutheran movement was revolutionary and subversive of the
ancient faith, they are constrained to admit the universality of the
abuses, which, in the language of Schlegel, “lay deep, and were
ulcerated in their very roots.” —
Charles Hardwick A History of
the Articles of Religion;
http://www.anglicanbooksrevitalized.us/Oldies/Thirty-Nine/hardwick39.htm
► As regards the oft-quoted Mt.
16:18, note the bishops promise in the profession of faith of
Vatican 1,
Likewise I accept Sacred Scripture according
to that sense which Holy mother Church held and holds, since it is
her right to judge of the true sense and interpretation of the holy
scriptures; nor will I ever receive
and interpret them except according to the unanimous consent of the
fathers. —
http://mb-soft.com/believe/txs/firstvc.htm
Yet as the Dominican cardinal and Catholic theologian Yves Congar
O.P. states,
Unanimous patristic consent as a reliable
locus theologicus is classical in Catholic theology; it has often
been declared such by the magisterium and its value in scriptural
interpretation has been especially stressed. Application of the
principle is difficult, at least at a certain level. In regard to
individual texts of Scripture total patristic consensus is rare...One
example: the interpretation of Peter’s confession in Matthew
16:16-18. Except
at Rome, this passage was not applied by the Fathers to the papal
primacy; they worked out an exegesis
at the level of their own ecclesiological thought, more
anthropological and spiritual than juridical. — Yves
M.-J. Congar, O.P., p.
71
• And Catholic archbishop Peter Richard Kenrick (1806-1896), while
yet seeking to support Peter as the rock, stated that,
“If we are bound to follow the majority of
the fathers in this thing, then we are bound to hold for certain that
by the rock should be understood the
faith professed by Peter, not
Peter professing the faith.” —
Speech of archbishop
Kenrick, p.
109; An inside view of the
vatican council, edited by Leonard Woolsey Bacon.
The CCC itself allows the interpretation that, “On
the rock of this faith confessed by St Peter, Christ build his
Church,” (pt. 1, sec. 2, cp. 2, para. 424), for some of the
ancients (for what their opinion is worth) provided for this or other
interpretations.
• Ambrosiaster [who elsewhere upholds Peter as being the
chief apostle to whom the Lord had entrusted the care of the Church,
but not superior to Paul as an apostle except in time], Eph.
2:20:
Wherefore the Lord says to Peter: 'Upon
this rock I shall build my Church,'
that is, upon this
confession
of the catholic faith I shall establish the faithful in life. —
Ambrosiaster,
Commentaries on Galatians—Philemon, Eph.
2:20; Gerald L. Bray, p.
42
• Augustine, sermon:
"Christ, you see, built
his Church not on
a man but on Peter's confession.
What is Peter's confession? 'You are the Christ, the Son of the
living God.' There's the rock
for you, there's the
foundation, there's where the Church has been built, which the gates
of the underworld cannot conquer.
— John Rotelle,
O.S.A., Ed., The Works of Saint Augustine , © 1993 New City Press,
Sermons, Vol III/6, Sermon 229P.1,
p. 327
Upon this rock, said the Lord, I will build
my Church. Upon this confession,
upon this that you said, 'You are the
Christ, the Son of the living God,' I will build my Church,
and the gates of hell shall not conquer her (Mt.
16:18). — John
Rotelle, Ed., The Works of Saint Augustine (New Rochelle: New City,
1993) Sermons, Volume III/7, Sermon 236A.3, p.
48.
• Augustine, sermon:
For petra (rock) is not derived from Peter,
but Peter from petra; just as Christ is not called so from the
Christian, but the Christian from Christ. For on this very account
the Lord said, 'On this rock will I build my Church,' because Peter
had said, 'Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God.' On this
rock, therefore, He said, which thou hast confessed, I will build my
Church. For the
Rock (Petra) was Christ; and on this
foundation was Peter himself built.
For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is
Christ Jesus. The Church, therefore, which is founded in Christ
received from Him the keys of the kingdom of heaven in the person of
Peter, that is to say, the power of binding and loosing sins. For
what the Church is essentially in Christ, such representatively is
Peter in the rock (petra); and in
this representation Christ is to be understood as the Rock, Peter as
the Church. — Augustine
Tractate CXXIV; Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers: First
Series, Volume VII Tractate CXXIV
(http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf107.iii.cxxv.html)
• Augustine, sermon:
And Peter, one speaking for the rest of
them, one for all, said, You are the Christ, the Son of the living
God (Mt
16:15-16)...And I tell you: you are
Peter; because I am the rock, you are Rocky, Peter-I mean, rock
doesn't come from Rocky, but Rocky from rock, just as Christ doesn't
come from Christian, but Christian from Christ; and upon
this rock I will build my Church (Mt
16:17-18); not upon Peter, or
Rocky, which is what you are, but upon the rock which you have
confessed. I will build my Church
though; I will build you, because in this answer of yours you
represent the Church. — John
Rotelle, O.S.A. Ed., The Works of Saint Augustine (New Rochelle: New
City Press, 1993), Sermons, Volume III/7, Sermon 270.2, p.
289
• Augustine, sermon:
Peter had already said to him, 'You are the
Christ, the Son of the living God.' He had already heard, 'Blessed
are you, Simon Bar-Jona, because flesh and blood did not reveal it to
you, but my Father who is in heaven. And I tell you, that you are
Peter, and upon this rock I will build my Church, and the gates of
the underworld shall not conquer her' (Mt
16:16-18)...Christ
himself was the rock, while Peter, Rocky, was only named from the
rock. That's why the rock rose
again, to make Peter solid and strong; because Peter would have
perished, if the rock hadn't lived. — John
Rotelle, Ed., The Works of Saint Augustine (New Rochelle: New City,
1993) Sermons, Volume III/7, Sermon 244.1, p.
95
• Augustine, sermon:
...because
on this rock, he said, I will build my Church,
and the gates of the underworld shall not overcome it (Mt.
16:18). Now
the rock was Christ (1
Cor. 10:4). Was it Paul that was
crucified for you? Hold on to these texts, love these texts, repeat
them in a fraternal and peaceful manner. — John
Rotelle, Ed., The Works of Saint Augustine (New Rochelle: New City
Press, 1995), Sermons, Volume III/10, Sermon
358.5, p. 193
• Augustine, Psalm LXI:
Let us call to mind the Gospel: 'Upon
this Rock I will build My Church.'
Therefore She crieth from the ends of the earth, whom He hath willed
to build upon a Rock. But in order that the Church might be builded
upon the Rock, who was made the Rock?
Hear Paul saying: 'But the Rock was Christ.'
On Him therefore builded we have been. — Philip
Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
1956), Volume VIII, Saint Augustin, Exposition on the Book of Psalms,
Psalm LXI.3, p. 249.
(http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf108.ii.LXI.html)
• Augustine, in “Retractions,”
In a passage in this book, I said about the
Apostle Peter: 'On him as on a rock the Church was built.'...But I
know that very frequently at a later time, I so explained what the
Lord said: 'Thou art Peter, and upon
this rock I will build my Church,' that it be understood as built
upon Him whom Peter confessed saying:
'Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God,' and so Peter,
called after this rock, represented the person of the Church which is
built upon this rock, and has received 'the keys of the kingdom of
heaven.' For, 'Thou art Peter' and not 'Thou art the rock' was said
to him. But 'the rock was Christ,'
in confessing whom, as also the whole Church confesses, Simon was
called Peter. But let the reader decide which of these two opinions
is the more probable. — The
Fathers of the Church (Washington D.C., Catholic University, 1968),
Saint Augustine, The Retractations Chapter
20.1:.
• Basil of Seleucia, Oratio 25:
'You are Christ, Son of the living
God.'...Now Christ called this
confession a rock, and he named the
one who confessed it 'Peter,' perceiving the appellation which was
suitable to the author of this confession. For this is the solemn
rock of religion, this the basis of salvation, this the wall of faith
and the foundation of truth: 'For no other foundation can anyone lay
than that which is laid, which is Christ Jesus.' To whom be glory and
power forever. — Oratio
XXV.4, M.P.G., Vol. 85, Col. 296-297.
• Bede, Matthaei Evangelium Expositio, 3:
You are Peter and on this rock from which
you have taken your name, that is, on myself, I will build my Church,
upon that perfection of faith which you confessed I will build my
Church by whose society of confession should anyone deviate although
in himself he seems to do great things he does not belong to the
building of my Church...Metaphorically it is said to him on this
rock, that is, the Saviour which you confessed, the Church is to be
built, who granted participation to the faithful confessor of his
name. — 80Homily 23,
M.P.L., Vol. 94, Col. 260. Cited by Karlfried Froehlich, Formen,
Footnote #204, p. 156 [unable to verify by me].
• Cassiodorus, Psalm
45.5:
'It will not be moved' is said about the
Church to which alone that promise has been given: 'You
are Peter and upon this rock I shall build my Church
and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it.' For the Church
cannot be moved because it is known to have been founded
on that most solid rock, namely, Christ the Lord.
— Expositions in the
Psalms, Volume 1; Volume 51, Psalm
45.5, p.
455
• Chrysostom (John) [who affirmed Peter was a rock, but
here not the rock in Mt. 16:18]:
Therefore He added this, 'And I say unto
thee, Thou art Peter, and upon this
rock I will build my Church; that
is, on the faith of his confession.
— Chrysostom, Homilies
on the Gospel of Saint Matthew, Homily LIIl; Philip Schaff, Nicene
and Post-Nicene Fathers
(http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf110.iii.LII.html)
• Cyril of Alexandria:
When [Peter] wisely and blamelessly
confessed his faith to Jesus saying, 'You are Christ, Son of the
living God,' Jesus said to divine Peter: 'You
are Peter and upon this rock I will build my Church.' Now by the word
'rock', Jesus indicated, I think, the immoveable faith of the
disciple.”. — Cyril
Commentary on Isaiah 4.2.
• Origen, Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew (Book XII):
“For a rock
is every disciple of Christ of whom
those drank who drank of the spiritual rock which followed them,
1 Corinthians 10:4
and upon every such rock is built
every word of the church, and the polity
in accordance with it; for in each of the perfect, who have the
combination of words and deeds and thoughts which fill up the
blessedness, is the church built by God.'
“For all
bear the surname ‘rock’ who are the imitators of Christ,
that is, of the spiritual rock which followed those who are being
saved, that they may drink from it the spiritual draught. But these
bear the surname of rock just as Christ does. But also as members of
Christ deriving their surname from Him they are called Christians,
and from the rock, Peters.” — Commentary
on the Gospel of Matthew (Book XII), sect. 10,11
• Hilary
of Potier, On the Trinity (Book II): Thus our
one immovable foundation, our one blissful rock of faith, is the
confession from Peter's mouth, Thou art the Son of the living God.
On it we can base an answer to every objection with which perverted
ingenuity or embittered treachery may assail the truth."--
(Hilary of Potier, On the Trinity (Book II), para
23; Philip Schaff, editor,
The Nicene & Post Nicene Fathers Series
2, Vol 9.
Finally, while the historical evidence against the Roman Catholic papacy being part of the New Testment church is substantial, and is unsupported in Scripture, the fact is that history,Tradition and Scripture only authoritatively mean what Rome says they mean. Thus faced with historical challenge from Reformers, no less a weighty RC scholar as Manning states,
It was the
charge of the Reformers that the Catholic doctrines were not
primitive, and their pretension was to revert to antiquity. But the
appeal to antiquity is both a treason and a heresy. It is a treason
because it rejects the Divine voice of the Church at this hour, and a
heresy because it denies that voice to be Divine...
I may say
in strict truth that the Church has no antiquity. It rests upon its
own supernatural and perpetual consciousness. Its past is present
with it, for both are one to a mind which is immutable. Primitive and
modern are predicates, not of truth, but of ourselves.
— Most Rev. Dr. Henry Edward Cardinal Manning,
Lord Archbishop of Westminster, The Temporal Mission of the Holy
Ghost: Or Reason and Revelation (New York: J.P. Kenedy & Sons,
originally written 1865, pp. 227,28