Simon Peter ( ,
Pétros “Stone, Rock”,
Kephas in Hellenized
Aramaic)
(c.1–AD 64) was a leader of the early
Christian Church, who features prominently in
the
New Testament Gospels and the
Acts
of the Apostles.
Peter was the son of John, and was from the
village of Bethsaida
in the province of Galilee. His brother
Andrew was also an
apostle.
After
having been the Bishop of Antioch
and having
preached to the ones who were scattered (i.e., Hebrews and Hebrew
Christians), in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia,
Asia and Bithynia, Peter went to Rome. In the second year of
Claudius he overthrew
Simon Magus, and
held the
Sacerdotal Chair for 25 years.
At the hand of
Nero he is said to have been put
to death. He wrote two epistles which are called
Catholic, the second of which, (on account of its
difference style from the first), is considered by many not to be
his work. The
Gospel of Mark, is
ascribed to him (as Mark was his disciple and interpreter). On the
other hand, the following books: his Acts, another his Gospel, a
third his Preaching, a fourth his Revelation, a fifth his Judgment
are rejected as
Apocryphal. (See
Jerome and the
Early
Church Fathers)
According to Biblical accounts, he was one of
Twelve Apostles, chosen by
Jesus from his first
disciples. He was a
fisherman assigned a leadership role by Jesus and
was with Jesus during events witnessed by only a few apostles, such
as the
Transfiguration.
Peter is revered by all Christians to this very day.
Names and etymologies
Peter is also known as
Ben-Yonah/Bar-Yonah,
Simon Peter,
Cephas ( ), and
Kepha (
Kepha and
Cephas
כיפא also mean rock)—original name
Shimon or
Simeon.
New Testament account
Peter's life story relies on the
New
Testament, since there are few other first-century accounts of
his life and death. In the New Testament, he is the first of the
disciples called during Jesus' ministry. It was during his first
meeting with Jesus that Jesus named him Peter. Peter was to become
the first apostle ordained by Jesus in the early church.
Peter ran
a fishing business in Bethsaida
. He was named Simon, son of Jonah or John.
The
synoptic gospels all recount how
Peter's mother-in-law was
healed by Jesus at their home in Capernaum
which, coupled with , clearly depict Peter as
married or a widower.
In the
Synoptic Gospels, Peter
(then Simon) was a fisherman along with his brother
Andrew and the sons of Zebedee, James and John.
The
Gospel of John also depicts Peter
fishing, even after the resurrection of Jesus, in the story of the
Catch of 153 fish.
In Matthew and Mark, Jesus called Simon and his brother
Andrew to be "fishers of men."
In Luke,
Simon Peter owns the boat that Jesus uses to preach to the
multitudes who were pressing on him at the shore of Lake Gennesaret
. Jesus then amazes Simon and his companions
James and John (Andrew is not mentioned) by telling them to lower
their nets, whereupon they catch a huge number of fish. Immediately
after this, they follow him.
The Gospel of John gives a somewhat different account of "The First
Disciples." In John, we are told that it was two disciples of
John the Baptist (Andrew and an
unnamed disciple) who heard John the Baptist announce Jesus as the
"
Lamb of God," and then followed Jesus.
Andrew then went and fetched his brother Simon, saying, "We have
found the
Messiah," and then brought Simon
to Jesus.
The "Rock" dialogue
In a dialogue between Jesus and his disciples, Jesus asks, “Who do
people say that the Son of Man is?” The disciples give various
answers. When he asks, "Who do you say that I am?" Simon Peter
answers, "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God." In turn,
Jesus declares Peter to be "blessed" for having recognized Jesus'
true identity and attributes this recognition to a divine
revelation. Then Jesus addresses Simon by what seems to have been
the nickname "Peter" (
Cephas in Aramaic,
Petros
[rock] in Greek) and says, "On this rock (also
cephas in
Aramaic,
petra in Greek) I will build my church, which
will overcome all the evil forces arrayed against it."
A common exegetical interpretation of Peter is provided by Daniel
Harrington who suggests that Peter was an unlikely symbol of
stability. While he was one of the first disciples called and
served as the spokesman for the group, Peter is also the exemplar
of "little faith" in , will soon be called "Satan" by Jesus and
will eventually deny Jesus three times. In light of the Easter
event, then, Peter became an exemplar of the forgiven sinner. A
great variance of opinions exists as to the interpretation of this
passage with respect to what authority and responsibility, if any,
Jesus was giving to Peter.
Petros had not previously been used as a name, but in the
Greek-speaking world it became a popular Christian name, after the
tradition of Peter's prominence in the early Christian church had
been established.
The great majority of scholars concur with the traditional
interpretation, that the "rock" was Peter, not Jesus himself or
Peter's faith.
Position among the apostles
Peter is always mentioned first in the lists of the Twelve given in
the canonical gospels. He is also frequently mentioned in the
Gospels as forming with
James the
Elder and
John a special group
within the Twelve Apostles, present at incidents at which the
others were not present, such as at the
Transfiguration of Jesus. He often
confesses his faith in Jesus as the Messiah.
Peter is often depicted in the Gospels as spokesman of all the
apostles. Catholics refer to him as chief of the Apostles, as do
the
Eastern Orthodox and the
Oriental Orthodox. Some believe
this is not the same as saying that the other Apostles were under
Peter's orders. In contrast,
Jewish
Christians are said to have argued that
James the Just was the leader of the group.
Some argue James was the Patriarch of Jerusalem and that this
position at times gave him privilege in some (but not all)
situations. The early Church historian
Eusebius (c AD 325) records
Clement of Alexandria (c AD 190) as
saying, "For they say that Peter and
James and
John after the ascension of our Saviour, as
if also preferred by our Lord, strove not after honor, but chose
James the Just bishop of Jerusalem."
Paul affirms that Peter had the special charge of being apostle to
the Jews, just as he, Paul, was apostle to the Gentiles.
Walking on water
Three of the four canonical Gospels—Matthew, Mark and John—recount
the story of Jesus walking on water. Matthew additionally describes
Peter walking on water for a moment, but sinking when his faith
wavered.
Washing of feet
At the beginning of the
Last Supper,
Jesus washed his disciples' feet. Peter initially refused to let
Jesus wash his feet, but when Jesus responded: "If I wash thee not,
thou hast no part with me", Peter replied: "Lord, not my feet only,
but also my hands and my head". The
washing
of feet is often repeated in the
service of worship on
Maundy Thursday by some
Christian denominations.
Arrest of Jesus

Apostle Peter striking Malchus
The three
synoptic Gospels all mention
that, when Jesus was arrested, one of his companions cut off the
ear of a servant of the High Priest. The Gospel of John also
includes this event, and names Peter as the swordsman and Malchus
as the victim. Luke adds that Jesus touched the ear and
miraculously healed it.
Denial of Jesus
All four canonical gospels recount that, during the
Last Supper, Jesus foretold that Peter would
deny him three times before the following cockcrow ("before the
cock crows twice" in Mark's account).
The three Synoptics and John describe the three denials as
follows:
- A denial when a female servant of the high priest spots Simon
Peter, saying that he had been with Jesus. According to Mark (but
not in all manuscripts), "the rooster crowed". Only Luke and John
mention a fire by which Peter was warming himself among other
people: according to Luke Peter was "sitting"; according to John,
he was "standing".
- A denial when Simon Peter had gone out to the gateway, away
from the firelight, but the same servant girl (Mark) or another
servant girl (Matthew) or a man (Luke and also John, for whom,
though, this is the third denial) told the bystanders he was a
follower of Jesus. According to John, "the rooster crowed".
- A denial came when Peter's Galilean accent was taken as proof
that he was indeed a disciple of Jesus. According to Matthew, Mark
and Luke, "the rooster crowed". For John, though, this is the
second denial, and he does not mention the Galilean accent.
Matthew adds that it was his
accent that gave him away as
coming from Galilee. Luke deviates slightly from this by stating
that, rather than a crowd accusing Simon Peter, it was a third
individual.
The Gospel
of John places the second denial while Peter was still warming
himself at the fire, and gives as the occasion of the third denial
a claim by someone to have seen him in the garden of Gethsemane
when Jesus was
arrested.
In the Gospel of Luke, Jesus' prediction of Peter's denial is
coupled with a prediction that all the apostles ("you," plural)
would be "sifted like wheat," but that it would be Peter's task
("you," singular), when he had turned again, to strengthen his
brethren.
In a reminiscent scene in John's epilogue, Peter affirms three
times that he loves Jesus.
Empty tomb
In John's gospel, Peter is the first person to enter the
empty tomb, although the women and the
beloved disciple see it before him. In
Luke's account, the women's report of the empty tomb is dismissed
by the apostles and Peter is the only one who goes to check for
himself. In fact, he runs to the tomb. After seeing the
graveclothes he goes home, apparently without informing the other
disciples.
Resurrection appearances
Paul's
First Epistle to
the Corinthians contains a list of
resurrection appearances of
Jesus, the first of which is an appearance to "Cephas" (Peter).
Here Paul follows a very early tradition that Peter was the first
to see the risen Christ. also mentions an appearance to "Simon" as
the first in Jerusalem, more or less contemporaneous with the
appearance to the two disciples on their way to
Emmaus.
In the
final chapter of the Gospel of John,
Peter, in one of the
resurrection appearances of
Jesus, three times affirmed his love for Jesus, balancing his
threefold denial, and Jesus reconfirmed Peter's position. Some
scholars hypothesize that it was added later to bolster Peter's
status.
Role in the early church
The author of the
Acts of the
Apostles portrays Peter as an extremely important figure within
the early Christian community, with Peter delivering a significant
open-air sermon during
Pentecost. According to the same book, Peter took
the lead in selecting a replacement for
Judas Iscariot. He was twice arraigned, with
John, before the
Sanhedrin and directly
defied them.
He undertook a missionary journey to Lydda, Joppa
and Caesarea
, becoming
instrumental in the decision to evangelise the Gentiles.
About halfway through, the
Acts of
the Apostles turns its attention away from Peter and to the
activities of Paul, and the Bible is fairly silent on what occurred
to Peter afterwards.
John Vidmar writes:
"Both Catholic and Protestant scholars agree that Peter
had an authority that superseded that of the other apostles. Peter
is their spokesman at several events, he conducts the election of
Matthias, his opinion in the debate over converting Gentiles was
crucial, etc.
Council of Jerusalem
At the council of Jerusalem (
c 50), the early Church, Paul
and the leaders of the Jerusalem church met and decided to embrace
Gentile converts. Acts portrays Peter as successfully opposing the
Christian Pharisees who insisted on circumcision and the rest of
the Mosaic law.
Epistles
Peter is
mentioned briefly in Paul's Epistle to the Galatians, which
mentions a trip by Paul to Jerusalem
where he meets Peter, and a trip by Peter to
Antioch
where Paul rebuked him for treating Gentile
converts as inferior to Jewish Christians. (See
The Incident at Antioch.) Galatians
is accepted as authentic by almost all scholars, so these are the
earliest mentions of Peter to be written.
Church tradition ascribes the epistles
First and
Second Peter to Apostle Peter, as
does the text of 2 Peter itself. First Peter implies the
author is in "Babylon", which has been held to be a coded reference
to Rome. Some scholars regard First Peter as not authored by him,
and there is still considerable debate about the Petrine authorship
of Second Peter. However the Greek in both books are similar, and
the early Church was adamantly opposed to
pseudographical authorship.
Accounts outside the New Testament
In Catholic tradition, Peter is said to have founded the church in
Rome with Paul, served as its bishop, authored two epistles, and
then met martyrdom there along with Paul.
Antioch and Corinth
Later
accounts expand on the brief Biblical mention of his visit to
Antioch
. The
Liber
Pontificalis (9th century) mentions Peter as having served as
bishop of Antioch before his journey to Rome. Historians have
furnished other evidence of Peter's sojourn in Antioch. Subsequent
tradition held that Peter had been the first
Patriarch of Antioch.
He might
have visited Corinth
, as a party
of "Cephas" existed there.
Death
In the epilogue of the Gospel of John, Jesus hints at the death by
which Peter would glorify God, saying "'…when you are old you will
stretch out your hands, and another will dress you and take you
where you do not want to go.'" This is understood as a reference to
Peter's crucifixion.
According to the 1911 Catholic Encyclopedia, St. Peter labored in
Rome during the last portion of his life, and there ended his
earthly course by martyrdom. The death of St. Peter is attested to
by
Tertullian at the end of the second
century, and by
Origen in
Eusebius,
Church History II.1. Origen says: "Peter was crucified at Rome with
his head downwards, as he himself had desired to suffer".
Status
St. Clement of Rome identifies Peter and
Paul as the outstanding heroes of the faith. Papias reported that
the Gospel of Mark was based on Peter's memoirs, a tradition still
accepted by some scholars today.
Martyrdom
The mention in the
New Testament of
the death of Peter says that Jesus indicated its form by saying:
"You will stretch out your hands, and someone else will dress you
and lead you where you do not want to go." Early church tradition
(as indicated below) says Peter probably died by
crucifixion (with arms outstretched) at the time
of the
Great Fire of Rome of the
year 64.
Margherita Guarducci,
who led the research leading to the rediscovery of Peter’s tomb in
its last stages (1963-1968), concludes Peter died on October 13
A.D. 64 during the festivities on the occasion of the “dies
imperii” of Emperor Nero. This took place three months after the
disastrous fire that destroyed Rome for which the emperor wished to
blame the Christians. This “dies imperii” (regnal day anniversary)
was an important one, exactly ten years after Nero ascended to the
throne, and it was ‘as usual’ accompanied by much bloodshed.
Traditionally,
Roman authorities
sentenced him to death by
crucifixion.
According to the
apocryphal Acts of Peter, he was crucified head down.
Tradition
also locates his burial place where the Basilica of
Saint Peter
was later built, directly beneath the Basilica's
high altar.
Clement of Rome, in his
Letter
to the Corinthians (Chapter 5), written
c. 80-98,
speaks of Peter's martyrdom in the following terms: "Let us take
the noble examples of our own generation. Through jealousy and envy
the greatest and most just pillars of the Church were persecuted,
and came even unto death… Peter, through unjust envy, endured not
one or two but many labours, and at last, having delivered his
testimony, departed unto the place of glory due to him."
The
apocryphal Acts of Peter is also thought to be the source
for the tradition about the famous phrase "
Quo
vadis, Domine?" (or "Pou Hupageis, Kurie?" which means,
"Whither goest Thou, Master?"). According to the story, Peter,
fleeing Rome to avoid execution, asked the question of a vision of
Jesus, to which Jesus allegedly responded that he was "going to
Rome to be crucified again." On hearing this, Peter to decide to
return to the city to accept martyrdom. This story is commemorated
in an
Annibale Carracci painting.
The
Church of
Quo Vadis
, near the Catacombs of
Saint Callistus, contains a stone
in which Jesus' footprints from this event are supposedly
preserved, though this was apparently an ex-voto from a pilgrim,
and indeed a copy of the original, housed in the Basilica of
St Sebastian
.
The ancient historian
Josephus describes
how Roman soldiers would amuse themselves by crucifying criminals
in different positions, and it is likely that this would have been
known to the author of the
Acts of Peter. The position
attributed to Peter's crucifixion is thus plausible, either as
having happened historically or as being an invention by the author
of the
Acts of Peter. Death, after crucifixion head down,
is unlikely to be caused by
suffocation,
the usual cause of death in ordinary crucifixion.
A
medieval tradition was that the
Mamertine
Prison
in Rome is the place where Peter was imprisoned
before his execution.
In 1950, human bones were found buried underneath the altar of St.
Peter's Basilica. The bones have been claimed by many to have been
those of Peter. An attempt to contradict these claims was made in
1953 by the excavation of what some believe to be
St Peter's tomb in Jerusalem. However along
with supposed tomb of Peter bearing his previous name Simon, tombs
bearing the names of Jesus, Mary, James, John, and the rest of the
apostles were also found at the same excavation - though all these
names were very common among Jews at the time.
In the 1960s, some previously discarded debris from the excavations
beneath St Peters Basilica were re-examined, and the bones of a
male person were identified. A forensic examination found them to
be a male of about 61 years of age from the first century. This
caused Pope Paul VI in 1968 to announce them most likely to be the
relics of Apostle Peter. .
Connection to Rome
- See also: First phase of
papal supremacy
The See of Rome is traditionally said to be founded by Peter and
Paul, see also
Primacy of Simon
Peter, who had invested it with
apostolic authority. The New Testament
says nothing directly about Peter's connection to Rome, but an
early Catholic tradition supports such a connection. St.
Ignatius of Antioch implies that Peter
and Paul had special authority over the Roman church. In his
Letter to the Romans (Ch. 4) of
c. 105-110, he
tells the Roman Christians: "I do not command you, as Peter and
Paul did."
Irenaeus of Lyons believed in
the,
second century
that
Peter and
Paul had been the founders of the Church in
Rome and had appointed
Linus as
succeeding
bishop.In
Against
Heresies (Book III, Chapter III, paragraphs 2–3), Irenaeus
wrote:
Since, however, it would be too long to enumerate in
such a volume as this the succession of all the churches, we shall
confound all those who, in whatever manner, whether through
self-satisfaction or vainglory, or through blindness and wicked
opinion, assemble other than where it is proper, by pointing out
here the successions of the bishops of the greatest and most
ancient church known to all, founded and organized at Rome by the
two most glorious apostles, Peter and Paul, that church which has
the tradition and the faith which comes down to us after having
been announced to men by the apostles.
With that church, because of its superior origin, all
the churches must agree, that is, all the faithful in the whole
world, and it is in her that the faithful everywhere have
maintained the apostolic tradition.
The blessed apostles, then, having founded and built up
the Church, committed into the hands of Linus the office of the
episcopate.
Of this Linus, Paul makes mention in the Epistles to
Timothy.
To him succeeded Anacletus; and after him, in the third
place from the apostles, Clement was allotted the
bishopric.
This man, as he had seen the blessed apostles, and had
been conversant with them, might be said to have the preaching of
the apostles still echoing [in his ears], and their traditions
before his eyes.
Nor was he alone [in this], for there were many still
remaining who had received instructions from the
apostles.
In the time of this Clement, no small dissension having
occurred among the brethren at Corinth, the Church in Rome
dispatched a most powerful letter to the Corinthians, exhorting
them to peace, renewing their faith, and declaring the tradition
which it had lately received from the apostles…
Tertullian also writes: "But if you are near Italy, you have Rome,
where authority is at hand for us too. What a happy church that is,
on which the apostles poured out their whole doctrine with their
blood; where Peter had a passion like that of the Lord, where Paul
was crowned with the death of John (the Baptist, by being
beheaded)." Dionysius of
Corinth also serves as a witness to the tradition. He wrote:
"You (Pope Soter) have also, by your very admonition, brought
together the planting that was made by Peter and Paul at Rome and
at Corinth; for both of them alike planted in our Corinth and
taught us; and both alike, teaching similarly in Italy, suffered
martyrdom at the same time". Later tradition, first found in Saint
Jerome, attributes to Peter a 25-year episcopate (or apostolate) in
Rome.
That Peter was bishop of Rome is corroborated by both positive and
negative evidence.
However, some historians have challenged this traditional view of
Peter's role in the early Roman Church. Still, most Catholic and
Protestant scholars, and many scholars in general, conclude that
Peter was indeed martyred in Rome under Nero.
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, there was a Christian
community at Rome before either Peter or Paul arrived there:
- "Even on the Day of Pentecost, "Roman strangers" (advenœ
Romani, Acts 2:10) were present at Jerusalem, and they surely must
have carried the good news to their fellow-citizens at Rome ...
according to the pseudo-Clementine Epistles, St. Barnabas was the
first to preach the Gospel in the Eternal City."
Paul's Epistle to the Romans
(c 58) attests to a large Christian community already
there, although he does not mention Peter.
The notion that Peter was the first bishop of Rome and founded the
Christian church there can be traced back no earlier than the third
century.
The study of the New Testament offers no proof that Jesus
established the papacy nor even that he established Peter as the
first bishop of Rome.
Noncanonical sayings of Peter
Two sayings are attributed to Peter in the apocryphal
Gospel of Thomas. In the first, Peter
compares Jesus to a "just messenger." In the second, Peter asks
Jesus to "make Mary leave us, for females don't deserve life,"
although the verse containing the latter is regarded by most
scholars as a dubious, later addition.
In the
Apocalypse of Peter,
Peter holds a dialogue with Jesus about the
parable of the fig tree and the fate
of
sinners.
In the
Gospel of Mary, whose text is
largely fragmented, Peter appears to be jealous of "Mary" (probably
Mary Magdalene). He says to the other
disciples, "Did He really speak privately with a woman and not
openly to us? Are we to turn about and all listen to her? Did He
prefer her to us?" In reply to this,
Levi says "Peter, you have always been hot
tempered."
Other noncanonical texts that attribute sayings to Peter include
the
Secret Book of James and
the
Acts of Peter.
Denial of Jesus
In the
Fayyum Fragment of the end of
the third century, Jesus predicts that Peter will deny him three
times before a cock crows twice (on the following morning). The
account is similar to that of the canonical gospels, especially the
Gospel of Mark, either an
abbreviation of the account in the Synoptics or a source text on
which they were based.
After the death of Jesus
The fragmentary
Gospel of Peter,
attributed to Peter, contains an account of the death of Jesus
differing significantly from the canonical gospels. It contains
little information about Peter himself, except that after the
discovery of the
empty tomb, "I, Simon
Peter, and Andrew my brother, took our fishing nets and went to the
sea."
Modern times
Joseph Smith, the founder of
Mormonism, recorded in multiple
revelations that Peter appeared to him and
Oliver Cowdery in 1829 in order to bestow the
apostleship and keys of the kingdom as part of a
restoration of priesthood
authority.
Religious interpretations
Catholic Church
According to Catholic belief, Peter was the first
Bishop of Rome, who, by virtue of his
position as successor of St. Peter, is the chief pastor of the
whole Church, the Vicar of Christ upon earth. Although Peter never
bore the title of "Pope", the Catholic Church recognizes him as the
first Pope. Therefore, they consider every
pope
to be Peter's successor and the rightful superior of all other
bishops. They recognize him as head of the
Catholic Church on Earth, Christ being its
Heavenly head. They base this claim on the words of Jesus from two
famous Petrine texts, which concludes with “Feed my sheep” and is
seen by Catholics as promising the spiritual supremacy to Simon
Peter and “by charging him with the superintendency of all his
sheep, without exception; and consequently of his whole flock, that
is, of his own church,” and :
NIV footnotes
a through
e (above):
- aMatthew 16:18 Peter means rock.
- bMatthew 16:18 Or hell
- cMatthew 16:18 Or not prove stronger than it
- dMatthew 16:19 Or have been
- eMatthew 16:19 Or have been
In reference to Peter's occupation before becoming an Apostle, the
popes wear the
Fisherman's Ring,
which bears an image of the saint casting his nets from a fishing
boat. The keys used as a symbol of the pope's authority refer to
the "keys of the kingdom of Heaven" promised to Peter. The
terminology of this "commission" of Peter is unmistakably parallel
to the commissioning of Eliakim ben Hilkiah in . Peter is often
depicted in both Western and Eastern Christian art holding a key or
a set of keys.
Though the authenticity of this account has been challenged, the
general consensus is that these are Jesus' words.
Feast days
The
Roman Martyrology assigns
29 June as the
feast day of both Peter and
Paul, without thereby declaring that to be
the day of their deaths. St.
Augustine of Hippo says in his Sermon
295: "One day is assigned for the celebration of the martyrdom of
the two apostles. But those two were one. Although their martyrdom
occurred on different days, they were one."
This is also the feast of both
Apostles in the calendar of the
Eastern Orthodox Church.
In the
Roman Rite, the feast of the Chair of Saint Peter is celebrated on
22 February, and the anniversary of the
dedication of the two papal basilicas of
Saint
Peter's
and Saint
Paul's outside the Walls
is held on 18
November.
Before
Pope John XXIII's revision in
1960, the Roman Calendar also included on
16
January another feast of the Chair of Saint Peter (denominated
the Chair of Saint Peter in Rome, while the February feast was then
called that of the Chair of Saint Peter at Antioch), and on
1 August the feast of Saint Peter in
Chains.
St. Peter's Basilica
When, in the early fourth century, the
Emperor Constantine I decided to
honour Peter with a large
basilica, the
precise location of Peter's burial was so firmly fixed in the
belief of the Christians of Rome that the building had to be
erected on a site that involved considerable difficulties, both
physical (excavating the slope of the Vatican Hill, while the great
church could much more easily have been built on level ground only
slightly to the south) and moral and legal (demolishing a
cemetery). The focal point of the Basilica, both in its original
form and in its later complete reconstruction, is the altar placed
over what is held to be the exact place where Peter was
buried.
Protestants and other views
A major debate between Catholics and Protestants centers on Matthew
16:19 where Jesus tells Peter: "You are
Peter, and on this
rock I will build my Church...." Catholics interpret the
verse as saying that Jesus would build his church on Peter, the
apostle. The traditional Catholic interpretation has been that
Jesus told Peter (Rock) that he would build his Church on this Rock
(Peter), and that Peter was made the shepherd of the apostolic
flock —hence their assertion of the Primacy of the Roman
Pontiff.
Meaning of "Rock"
In the original
Greek the word
translated as "Peter" is
Πέτρος (Petros) and that
translated as "rock" is
πέτρα (petra), two words that,
while not identical, give an impression of one of many times when
Jesus used a play on words. Furthermore, since Jesus presumably
spoke to Peter in their native
Aramaic
language, he would have used
kepha in both instances.
The Peshitta Text and the Old Syriac text use the word "kepha" for
both "Peter" and "rock" in . says Jesus called Simon "Cephas", as
does Paul in some letters. He was instructed by Christ to
strengthen his brethren, i.e., the apostles. Peter also had a
leadership role in the early Christian church at Jerusalem
according to The Acts of the Apostles chapters 1-2, 10-11, and
15.
Early Catholic Latin and Greek writers (such as St.
John Chrysostom) considered the "foundation
rock" as applying to both Peter personally and his confession of
faith (or the faith of his confession) symbolically, as well as
seeing Christ's promise to apply more generally to his twelve
apostles and the Church at large. This "double meaning"
interpretation is present in the current
Catechism of the Catholic
Church.
Protestant counterclaims to the Catholic interpretation are largely
based on the difference between the Greek words translated "Rock"
in the Matthean passage. In classical Attic Greek
petros
generally meant "pebble," while
petra meant "boulder" or
"cliff." Accordingly, taking Peter's name to mean "pebble," they
argue that the "rock" in question cannot have been Peter, but
something else, either Jesus himself, or the faith in Jesus that
Peter had just professed. However, the New Testament was written in
Koiné Greek, not Attic Greek, and some authorities say no
significant difference existed between the meanings of
petros and
petra.
However, even though the feminine noun
petra is translated
as
rock in the phrase "on this rock I will build my
church," the word
petra (πέτρα in Greek) is also used at
in describing Jesus Christ, which reads: "They all ate the same
spiritual food and drank the same spiritual drink; for they drank
from the spiritual rock that accompanied them, and that rock was
Christ."
Although is used as a primary proof-text for the Catholic doctrine
of Papal supremacy, Protestant scholars say that prior to the
Reformation of the sixteenth century, Matthew 16 was very rarely
used to support papal claims. Their position is that most of the
early and medieval Church interpreted the 'rock' as being a
reference either to Christ or to Peter's faith, not Peter himself.
They understand Jesus' remark to have been his affirmation of
Peter's testimony that Jesus was the Son of God.
Another rebuttal of the Catholic position is that if
Peter
really means
the Rock which makes him the chief of
Apostles, it would contradict Bible's teaching in which says that
the church's foundation is the apostles and prophets, not Peter
alone. They posit that the meaning of is that Jesus uses a play on
words with Peter's name to say that the confession he had just made
is the rock on which the church is built.
Other theologically conservative Christians, including Confessional
Lutherans, also rebut comments made by Karl Keating and D.A. Carson
who claim that there is no distinction between the words
petros and
petra in Koine Greek. The Lutheran
theologians state that the dictionaries of
Koine/NT Greek, including the authoritative
Bauer-Danker-Arndt-Gingrich Lexicon,
indeed list both words and the passages that give different
meanings for each. The Lutheran theologians further note
that:
Partial Protestant support
Partial support for the Catholic position comes from one of
Protestantism's most distinguished Church historians, Oscar
Cullmann, a Lutheran theologian. He disagrees with Luther and the
Protestant reformers who held that by "rock" Christ did not mean
Peter, but meant either himself or the faith of His followers. He
believes the meaning of the original Aramaic is very clear: that
"Kepha" was the Aramaic word for "rock", and that it was also the
name by which Christ called Peter.
Yet, Cullmann sharply rejects the Catholic claim that Peter began
the papal succession. He writes: "In the life of Peter there is no
starting point for a chain of succession to the leadership of the
church at large." While he believes the Matthew text is entirely
valid and is in no way spurious, he says it cannot be used as
"warrant of the papal succession."
Cullmann concludes that while Peter
was the original head
of the apostles, Peter was not the founder of any visible church
succession.
There are other Protestant scholars who also partially defend the
historical Catholic position about "Rock." Taking a somewhat
different approach from Cullman, they point out that the Gospel of
Matthew was not written in the classical Attic form of Greek, but
in the Hellenistic
Koine dialect in
which there is no distinction in meaning between
petros
and
petra. Moreover, even in Attic Greek, in which the
regular meaning of
petros was a smallish "stone," there
are instances of its use to refer to larger rocks, as in
Sophocles,
Oedipus at Colonus v. 1595, where
petros refers to a boulder used as a landmark, obviously
something more than a pebble. In any case, a
petros/
petra distinction is irrelevant
considering the Aramaic language in which the phrase might well
have been spoken. In Greek, of any period, the feminine noun
petra could not be used as the given name of a male, which
may explain the use of
Petros as the Greek word with which
to translate Aramaic
Kepha.
Yet, still other Protestant scholars believe that Jesus in fact
did mean to single out Peter as the very rock which he
will build upon, but that the passage does nothing to indicate a
continued succession of Peter's implied position. They assert that
Matthew uses the demonstrative pronoun
taute, which
allegedly means "this very" or
this same, when he refers
to the rock on which Jesus' church will be built. He also uses the
Greek word for "and",
kai. It is alleged that when a
demonstrative pronoun is used with
kai, the pronoun refers
back to the preceding noun. The second rock Jesus refers to must
then be the same rock as the first one; and if Peter is the first
rock he must also be the second.
Eastern Orthodox
The
Eastern Orthodox Church
regards Apostle Peter, together with Apostle Paul, as "Preeminent
Apostles". Another title used for Peter is
Coryphaeus,
which could be translated as "Choir-director", or lead singer. The
church recognizes Apostle Peter's leadership role in the
early church, especially in the very early days
at Jerusalem, but does not consider him to have had any "princely"
role over his fellow Apostles.
The New Testament is not seen by the Orthodox as supporting any
extraordinary authority for Peter with regard to faith or morals.
The Orthodox also hold that Peter did not act as leader at the
Council of Jerusalem, but as
merely one of a number who spoke. The final decision regarding the
non-necessity of
circumcision (and
certain prohibitions) was spelled out by
James, the Brother of the
Lord (though Catholics hold James merely reiterated and fleshed
out what Peter had said, regarding the latter's earlier divine
revelation regarding the inclusion of Gentiles).
Eastern and Oriental Orthodox do not recognize the Bishop of Rome
as the successor of St. Peter but the
Ecumenical Patriarch of
Constantinople sends a delegation each year to Rome to
participate in the celebration of the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul.
In the
Ravenna Document of 13
October 2007, the representatives of the
Eastern Orthodox Church agreed that
"Rome, as the Church that 'presides in love' according to the
phrase of St. Ignatius of Antioch (To the Romans, Prologue),
occupied the first place in the
taxis, and that the bishop
of Rome was therefore the
protos among the patriarchs, if
the Papacy unites with the Orthodox Church. They disagree, however,
on the interpretation of the historical evidence from this era
regarding the prerogatives of the bishop of Rome as
protos, a matter that was already understood in different
ways in the first millennium."
With regard to Jesus' words to Peter, "Thou art Peter and upon this
rock I will build my church", the Orthodox hold Christ is referring
to the confession of faith,
not the person of Peter as
that upon which he will build the church. This is allegedly shown
by the fact that the original Greek uses the feminine demonstrative
pronoun when he says "upon this rock" (ταύτῃ τῇ πέτρᾳ); whereas,
grammatically, if he had been referring to Peter, he would
allegedly have used the masculine. This "gender distinction"
argument is also held by some Protestants.
The Orthodox also consider that
St.
Linus, not Peter, was the first
Bishop of Rome, , as do Catholics who define
"pope" as "successor of Saint Peter".
Feast days
In the Orthodox
Daily Office every
Thursday throughout the year is dedicated to the Holy Apostles,
including St. Peter. There are also two
feast
days in the year which are dedicated to him:
Syriac Orthodox Church
The Fathers of the Syriac Orthodox Church tried to give a
theological interpretation to the primacy of Apostle Peter. They
were fully convinced of the unique office of Peter in the primitive
Christian community.
Ephrem, Aphrahat and Marutha
who were supposed to be the best exponents of the
early Syriac tradition
unequivocally acknowledge the office of Peter.
The Syriac Fathers following the rabbinic tradition call Jesus
“
Kepha” for they see “rock” in the Old
Testament as a messianic Symbol. When Christ gave his own name
“Kepha” to Simon he was giving him participation in the person and
office of Christ. Christ who is the Kepha and shepherd made Simon
the chief shepherd in his place and gave him the very name Kepha
and said that on Kepha he would build the Church.
Aphrahat shared the common Syriac tradition. For
him Kepha is in fact another name of Jesus, and Simon was given the
right to share the name. The person who receives somebody else’s
name also obtains the rights of the person who bestows the name.
Aphrahat makes the stone taken from Jordan a type of Peter. He says
Jesus son of Nun set up the stones for a witness in Israel; Jesus
our Saviour called Simon Kepha Sarirto and set him as the faithful
witness among nations.
Again he says in his commentary on
Deuteronomy that
Moses
brought forth water from “rock” (Kepha) for the people and Jesus
sent Simon Kepha to carry his teachings among nations. Our Lord
accepted him and made him the foundation of the Church and called
him
Kepha. When he speaks about
transfiguration of Christ he calls him
Simon
Peter, the foundation of the Church. Ephrem also shared the
same view. In Armenian version of
De
Virginitate records Peter the Rock shunned honour Who was the
head of the Apostles. In a
mimro of Efrem found in Holy
Week Liturgy points to the importance of Peter.
Both
Aphrahat and
Ephrem represent the authentic tradition of the
Syrian Church. The different orders of liturgies used for
sanctification of Church building, marriage, ordination etc. reveal
that the primacy of Peter is a part of living faith of the
Church.
Seventh Day Adventist understanding
When Christ on the eve of His betrayal forewarned His
disciples, "All ye shall be offended because of Me this night,"
Peter confidently declared, "Although all shall be offended, yet
will not I." Self-confidence misled him, but in a few short hours
the test came, and with cursing and swearing he denied his Lord,
then the crowing of the cock reminded him of the words of Christ.
Now his self-confidence was gone. Never again were the old boastful
assertions repeated.
Christ after His resurrection thrice tested Peter. "Simon, son of
Jonas," He said, "lovest thou Me more than these?" Peter did not
now exalt himself above his brethren. He appealed to the One who
could read His heart. "Lord," he said, "Thou knowest all things;
Thou knowest that I love Thee." Then he received his commission.
Christ bade him feed the sheep and the lambs. Christ gave to Peter
the strongest proof of confidence in his restoration. Though Peter
had grievously sinned, he was not forsaken. The words of Christ
were written upon his soul, "I have prayed for thee, that thy faith
fail not."
When Jesus asked, "Whom do men say that I the Son of man am?" Sadly
the disciples were forced to acknowledge that Israel had failed to
recognize their Messiah.
“But whom say ye that I am?" Peter answered, "Thou art the Christ,
the Son of the living God." Peter had expressed the faith of the
twelve. Jesus answered Peter, saying, "Blessed art thou, Simon
Bar-jona Bar-jona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto
thee, but My Father which is in heaven." The truth which Peter had
confessed is the foundation of the believer's faith. “The secret of
the Lord is with them that fear Him;" and the fact that Peter
discerned the glory of Christ was evidence that he had been "taught
of God."
Jesus continued: "I say also 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." Peter was not the rock upon which the
church was founded. The gates of hell did prevail against him when
he denied his Lord with cursing and swearing. Peter himself,
writing by inspiration, applies this prophecy to Jesus. He says,
"If ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious: unto whom coming, a
living stone, rejected indeed of men, but with God elect, precious,
ye also, as living stones, are built up a spiritual house." "Other
foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus
Christ.
"The keys of the kingdom of heaven" are the words of Christ. All
the words of Holy Scripture are His, and are here included. These
words have power to open and to shut heaven.
Christ had accepted Peter's acknowledgment of Him as the Son of
God; and now His words pointing to His suffering and death seemed
incomprehensible. Peter could not keep silent. He laid hold upon
his Master, as if to draw Him back from His impending doom,
exclaiming, "Be it far from Thee, Lord: this shall not be unto
Thee."
Peter did not desire to see the cross in the work of Christ. The
impression which his words would make was directly opposed to that
which Christ desired to make on the minds of His followers, and the
Saviour was moved to utter one of the sternest rebuke that ever
fell from His lips: "Get thee behind Me, Satan: thou art an offense
unto Me: for thou savorest not the things that be of God, but those
that be of men."
Satan was trying to discourage Jesus, and turn Him from His
mission; But the Savior heeded it not; His thought was for His
disciple. Satan had interposed between Peter and his Master, that
the heart of the disciple might not be touched at the vision of
Christ's humiliation for him. The words of Christ were spoken, not
to Peter, but to the one who was trying to separate him from his
Redeemer. "Get thee behind Me, Satan." No longer interpose between
Me and My erring servant. Let Me come face to face with Peter, that
I may reveal to him the mystery of My love.
quoted from 'Acts of the Apostles' by Ellen White
New Apostolic Church
The
New Apostolic Church, who
believes in the re-established Apostle ministry, sees Peter as the
first
Chief Apostle.
Latter Day Saint movement
The
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church or
"
Mormons") along with other sects of the
Latter Day Saint movement
believe that Peter was the first leader of the early Christian
church, but reject papal succession. In interpreting the LDS Church
has stated, "The words then addressed to him, 'Thou art Peter, and
upon this rock I will build my church,' have been made the
foundation of the papal claims. But it is the Godhead of Christ,
which Peter had just confessed, that is the true keystone of the
Church."
Latter-day saints believe that Peter,
James, and John. came from heaven and conferred the
keys of the Melchizedek
Priesthood upon Joseph Smith
and Oliver Cowdery in 1829, near
Harmony Township, Susquehanna County,
Pennsylvania
as part of the restoration of priesthood
authority.
Afro-American syncretism
In the Cuban
Santería and
Palo Mayombe, he has been syncretized with
Ogún.
Jewish folklore

Saint Peter statue, Israel
According to Jewish folklore (
Toledot
Yeshu narrative), St. Peter (Shimeon Kepha Ha-Tzadik) had a
pristine reputation as a greatly learned and holy man.
Writings
Traditionally, two canonical epistles (1 & 2 Peter) and several
apocryphal works have been attributed to Peter.
New Testament
The
New Testament includes two letters
(
epistles) ascribed to Peter. Both demonstrate a high
quality of cultured and urban Greek, at odds with the linguistic
skill that would ordinarily be expected of an
Aramaic-speaking fisherman, who would have learned
Greek as a second or third language. However, the author of the
first epistle explicitly claims to be using a secretary (see
below), and this explanation would allow for discrepancies in style
without entailing a different source. The textual features of these
two epistles are such that a majority of scholars doubt that they
were written by the same hand. This means at the most that Peter
could not have authored both, or at the least that he used a
different secretary for each letter. Some scholars argue that
theological differences imply different sources, and point to the
lack of references to 2 Peter among the early Church
Fathers.
Of the two epistles, the
first
epistle is considered the earlier. A number of scholars have
argued that the textual discrepancies with what would be expected
of the biblical Peter are due to it having been written with the
help of a secretary or as an
amanuensis.
Indeed in the first epistle the use of a secretary is clearly
described: "By Silvanus, a faithful brother unto you, as I suppose,
I have written briefly, exhorting, and testifying that this is the
true grace of God wherein ye stand". Thus, in regards to at least
the first epistle, the claims that Peter would have written Greek
poorly seem irrelevant. The references to
persecution of Christians, which
only began under
Nero, cause most scholars to
date the text to at least 80, which would require Peter to have
survived to an age that was, at that time, extremely old, and
almost never reached, particularly by common fishermen. However,
the Roman historian
Tacitus and the
biographer
Suetonius both record that
Nero's persecution of Christians began immediately after the fire
that burned Rome in 64. Such a date, which is in accord with
Christian tradition, especially Eusebius (
History book 2,
24.1), would not have Peter at an improbable age upon his death. On
the other hand, many scholars consider this in reference to the
persecution of Christians in Asia Minor during the reign of the
emperor
Domitian (81-96).
In the salutation of the First Epistle of Peter, the writer refers
to the diaspora, which did not occur until 136:Peter, an apostle of
Jesus Christ, to God's elect, strangers in the world, scattered
throughout Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia and Bithynia, who have
been chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father,
through the sanctifying work of the Spirit, for obedience to Jesus
Christ and sprinkling by his blood: Grace and peace be yours in
abundance.
The
Second Epistle of Peter,
on the other hand, appears to have been copied, in part, from the
Epistle of Jude, and some modern
scholars date its composition as late as
c. 150. Some
scholars argue the opposite, that the Epistle of Jude copied 2
Peter, while others contend an early date for Jude and thus observe
that an early date is not incompatible with the text. Many scholars
have noted the similarities between the
apocryphal second pseudo-
Epistle of Clement (2nd century) and 2
Peter. Second Peter may be earlier than 150, there are a few
possible references to it that date back to the first century or
early second century, e.g.,
1 Clement
written in
c. AD 96, and the later church historian
Eusebius claimed that
Origen had made reference to the epistle before 250.
Even in early times there was controversy over its authorship, and
2 Peter was often not included in the
Biblical Canon; it was only in the 4th
century that it gained a firm foothold in the New Testament, in a
series of synods. In the east the
Syrian Orthodox Church still did not
admit it into the canon until the 6th century.
Traditionally, the
Gospel of Mark was
said to have been written by a person named
John Mark, and
that this person was an assistant to Peter, hence its content was
traditionally seen as the closest to Peter's viewpoint. According
to
Eusebius's
Ecclesiastical History,
Papias recorded this belief from
John the Presbyter:
- Mark having become the interpreter of Peter, wrote down
accurately whatsoever he remembered. It was not, however,
in exact order that he related the sayings or deeds of Christ.
For he neither heard the Lord nor accompanied Him. But
afterwards, as I said, he accompanied Peter, who accommodated his
instructions to the necessities [of his hearers], but with no
intention of giving a normal or chronological narrative of the
Lord's sayings. Wherefore Mark made no mistake in thus
writing some things as he remembered them. For of one
thing he took especial care, not to omit anything he had heard, and
not to put anything fictional into the statements.—Eusebius,
Ecclesiastical History, 3.39.14–16
Also Irenaeus wrote about this tradition:
- After their (Peter and Paul's) passing, Mark also, the
disciple and interpreter of Peter, transmitted to us in writing the
things preached by Peter. (Irenaeus, Against
Heresies, III. 1.2.; quoted by Eusebius in Ecclesiastical
History, book 5, 7.6)
Based on these quotes, and on the Christian tradition, the
information in Mark's Gospel about St. Peter would be based on
eyewitness material. It should be noted, however, that some
scholars (for differing reasons) dispute the attribution of the
Gospel of Mark to its traditional author. The gospel itself is
anonymous, and the above passages are
the oldest surviving written testimony to its authorship.
Pseudepigrapha and apocrypha
There are also a number of other
apocryphal writings that have been either
attributed to or written about St. Peter. They were from antiquity
regarded as
pseudepigrapha. These
include:
Popular culture
Over the years "St. Peter" has evolved into a
stock character that is now widely used in
jokes,
cartoons,
comedies,
dramas, and
plays. Such caricatures almost all
play upon Peter's role as the "keeper of the keys of the
kingdom of heaven" in , on the basis of
which he is often depicted as an elderly, bearded man who sits at
the
pearly gates that serve as heaven's
main entrance, and acting as a sort of hotel-style
doorman /
bouncer
who personally interviews prospective entrants into Heaven, often
seated behind a desk, or standing at a lectern.
In traditional Medieval
iconography,
Peter is a bald man with a long beard. He usually has one or more
large keys in his hand or hanging from his belt.
In the
South Park episode
"
Fantastic Easter Special"
he was portrayed as being a
rabbit (
Peter Rabbit) because Jesus knew no human could
speak for all Christianity as Pope without any acts of corruption,
and that rabbits were pure, tolerant, and incorruptible.
Patronage
Saint Peter is the
patron saint of the
following categories
| Workers |
|
|
|
| Called for aid in |
|
|
|
| Institutions |
|
|
|
| Locations |
|
|
|
Holy relics
Pope Vitalian sent filings from Apostle
Peter's chains to Oswy, King of Northumbria
in the seventh century.
Peter's remains continue to be subject of investigation, but his
tomb is located under Saint Peter's Basilica in the Vatican, which
was announced by
Pope Pius XII on
Christmas Day in 1950 after years of painstaking research.
Revisionist views
Many Protestant scholars accept the traditional story of Peter's
martyrdom in Rome. Some Protestants, however, have rejected Peter's
martyrdom as a later invention, arguing that evidence of Peter
exists only in Biblical accounts.
It has also been claimed that there was a serious division between
Peter's
Jewish Christian party and
Paul's Hellenizing party, seen in e.g. the
Incident at Antioch, which later
Christian accounts have downplayed.
Another revisionist view was developed by supporters of the
Christ myth theory, which holds
that the figure of Peter is largely a development from some
mythological doorkeeper figures. If there was a historical Peter
then all that is known about him is the brief mentions in
Galatians.
Notes
- Bible Lexicon
- Harris, Stephen L., Understanding the
Bible. Palo Alto: Mayfield. 1985.
- "Peter, St." Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford dictionary of the
Christian church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005
- His father's name is given as 'Jonah', although some
manuscripts of John give his father's name as John.
- Harrington, Daniel J. "Peter the Rock." America,
August 18–25, 2008. Accessed Oct. 9, 2009: p. 30.
- "Saint Peter the Apostle." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009.
Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 25 Nov. 2009 [1].
- , ,
- Kirsch, J.P. (1911). St. Peter, Prince of the Apostles. In
The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton
Company. Retrieved February 20, 2009 from New Advent:
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11744a.htm
- Sermon by Leo the Great (440-461)
- Archbishop Stylianos of Australia
- Patriarch H.H.Ignatius Zakka I Iwas
- Identity of the Syriac Orthodox Church
- http://cbi.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/5/1/73.pdf
- http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/250102.htm [Church History
Book II, Chapter I, quoting Clement of Alexandria's Sixth book of
Hypotyposes]
- , ,
- May, Herbert G. and Bruce M. Metzger. The New Oxford Annotated
Bible with the Apocrypha. 1977.
- Brodie, T. L. (1997). The Gospel according to John a literary
and theological commentary. New York: Oxford University Press. pg.
574
- John Vidmar, The Catholic Church through the ages:
a history. pp. 39-40
- Louise Ropes Loomis, The Book of Popes (Liber Pontificalis).
Merchantville, NJ: Evolution Publishing. ISBN 1-889758-86-8
(Reprint of the 1916 edition.
- This is provided in Downey, A History of Antioch, pp.
583–586. This evidence is accepted by M. Lapidge, among others, see
Bischoff and Lapidge, Biblical Commentaries from the Canterbury
School (Cambridge, 1994) p. 16. Lastly, see Finegan, The
Archaeology of the New Testament, pp. 63–71.
-
http://oce.catholic.com/index.php?title=Peter%2C_Apostle%2C_Saint
- Kirsch, J.P. (1911). St. Peter, Prince of the Apostles. In
The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton
Company. Retrieved February 20, 2009 from New Advent:
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11744a.htm
- Kirsch, J.P. (1911). St. Peter, Prince of the Apostles. In
The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton
Company. Retrieved February 13, 2009 from New Advent:
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11744a.htm
- "Jesus said this to indicate the kind of death by which Peter
would glorify God" ( ).
- Walsh, The Bones of St. Peter: A 1st Full Account of the
Search for the Apostle's Body
- Finegan, The Archeology of the New Testament, pp.
368–370.
-
http://www.saintpetersbasilica.org/Necropolis/JW/TheBonesofStPeter-1.htm
The Bones of St. Peter
- (Letter to Pope Soter A.D. 170, in Eusebius, History of the
Church 2:25:8)
- The evidence that Peter was "bishop" of Rome is corroborated by
both positive and "negative" evidence. Positively, Clement's letter
to the Corinthians situates Peter in Rome by mentioning his death
there. Ignatius of Antioch writes to the Romans and says, "I do not
command you as Peter and Paul did." The lists of Roman bishops
given by Irenaeus and Tertullian support this, as does the honor
given Peter's supposed burial place on Vatican Hill. Eamon Duffy's
text for a BBC production, Saints and Sinners, soft-pedals the
position of Peter as bishop. Duffy claims that there were five
Christian neighborhoods in Rome, and that Peter could not possibly
have been supervisor over all of them. One argument against this is
the fact that the historical letters (from Paul, Ignatius, and
Clement) are all addressed to "the Romans," and not one particular
community in Rome. Historians cite negative evidence as well,
namely that there is no rival tradition. No other city claims Peter
as its bishop except Antioch, and even it conceded that Peter had
moved on to Rome." John Vidmar
- J.N.D. Kelly, Oxford Dictionary of the Popes (Oxford
University Press, 1996), p. 6. "Ignatius assumed that Peter and
Paul wielded special authority over the Roman church, while
Irenaeus claimed that they jointly founded it and inaugurated its
succession of bishops. Nothing, however, is known of their
constitutional roles, least of all Peter's as presumed leader of
the community."
- Building Unity, Ecumenical Documents IV (Paulist
Press, 1989), p. 130. "There is increasing agreement that Peter
went to Rome and was martyred there, but we have no trustworthy
evidence that Peter ever served as the supervisor or bishop of the
local church in Rome."
- "most scholars, both Roman Catholic and Protestant,concur that
Peter died in Rome" Keener, Craig S., The Gospel of Matthew: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary,
p. 425, n. 74, 2009 Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company
- "[M]any scholars ... accept Rome as the location of the
martyrdom and the reign of Nero as the time." Daniel William
O’Connor, "Saint Peter the Apostle." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009.
Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 25 Nov. 2009 [2].
- "Rome", Catholic Encyclopedia [3]
- Cross, F. L., ed. The Oxford dictionary of the Christian
church. New York: Oxford University Press. 2005, article Rome
(early Christian)
- Gospel of Peter 14:3
- Doctrine & Covenants 27:12-13
- Doctrine & Covenants 128:20-21
- Joyce, George. "The Pope." ‘’The Catholic Encyclopedia.’’ Vol.
12. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 8 Oct. 2009
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12260a.htm
- Wilken, p. 281, quote: "Some (Christian communities) had been
founded by Peter, the disciple Jesus designated as the founder of
his church. ... Once the position was institutionalized, historians
looked back and recognized Peter as the first pope of the Christian
church in Rome"
- "Saint Peter the Apostle." Encyclopædia
Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 25 Nov.
2009.
- http://www.catholic.com/library/Peter_the_Rock.asp
- http://www.peshitta.org/pdf/Mattich16.pdf
- Catechism of the Catholic
Church, Articles 424 and 552
- Mathison, Keith A., The Shape of Sola Scriptura, pp.184-185
- WELS Topical Q&A
- Rykle Borger, "Remarks of an Outsider about Bauer's Worterbuch,
BAGD, BDAG, and Their Textual Basis," Biblical Greek Language and
Lexicography: Essays in Honor of Frederick W. Danker, Bernard A.
Tayler (et al. eds.) pp. 32-47.
- "Religion: Peter & the Rock." Time," Dec. 07, 1953.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,890753-1,00.html
Accessed Oct. 08, 2009
- D. A. Carson in The Expositor's Bible Commentary
(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1984).
- Jesus, Peter & the Keys: A Scriptural Handbook on the
Papacy
- John
Meyendorff, et al. (1963), The Primacy of Peter in the
Orthodox Church (St. Vladimir's Seminary Press,
Crestwood NY, ISBN 978-0-88141-125-6)
- Holy Apostles Convent (1999) The Orthodox New
Testament, Vol. I: The Holy Gospels (Dormition Skete, Buena
Vista CO, ISBN 0-944359-13-2) p. 105
- Primacy of St. Peter
http://www.syrianchurch.org/Articles/PrimacyofStPeter.htm
- LDS Bible Dictionary—Peter
- Doctrine & Covenants 27: 12–13
- Wall, J. Charles. (1912), Porches and Fonts. Pub.
London: Wells Gardner and Darton. P. 295.
- Domenico Cardinale Tardini, Pio XII, Tipografia
Poliglotta Vaticana, 1960, p. 76.
- White, L. Michael (2004). From Jesus to Christianity.
HarperSanFrancisco. pp. 170. ISBN 0–06–052655–6.
- http://www.egodeath.com/arthurdrewslegendstpeter.htm
- George Albert Wells, "St. Peter as
Bishop of Rome"
See also
External links