In his letter to the Galatians, Paul, sometimes described as the
co-founder of Christianity, writing in around AD 50, well before any of
the Gospels were written, told of a bitter argument he had in Antioch
with the apostle of Jesus, Peter (whom Paul called “Cephas”).
The
argument reflected a division among the early followers of Jesus on
whether non-Jews could be admitted to the Christian religion – in
essence it was whether Christianity was to be a sect of Judaism, which
would require circumcision and adherence to Judaic dietary regulations,
or an entirely new religion.
Paul wrote of Peter: “I opposed him
to his face because he stood self-condemned; for, until certain people
came from James, he used to eat with the Gentiles. But after they came
he drew back and kept himself separate for fear of the circumcision
faction. And the other Jews joined him in this hypocrisy, so that even
Barnabas [an associate of Paul] was led astray by their hypocrisy. But
when I saw they were not acting consistently with the truth of the
gospel, I said to Cephas before them all: ‘If you, though a Jew, live
like a Gentile and not like a Jew, how can you compel Gentiles to live
like Jews’?”
Deference
There seemed to
have been no appreciation on the part of Paul that Peter was head of the
new church, certainly no deference. Indeed, it seems Peter himself had
no appreciation of that either for, according to this account, he,
Peter, deferred to instructions from another apostle, James, the brother
of Jesus, who was regarded in Jerusalem as head of the new religion.
The
argument about whether non-Jews should be admitted to the new religion
provoked the convening of the first council of the new church, the
Council of Jerusalem, which happened apparently shortly after the
confrontation between Paul and Peter. What occurred there is told in
chapter 15 of Acts of the Apostles. In it is reported Peter spoke in
favour of opening the church to non-Jews.
Then Paul and Barnabas
told the assembly “of all the signs and wonders that God had done
through them among the Gentiles”. Then James spoke, saying he had
“reached the decision” that the Gentiles should not be troubled by the
circumcision requirement but would have to succumb to the Judaic dietary
demands. And that was agreed.
So who was running the show at that
stage? James? Or the assembly as a whole? Certainly not Peter and it
seems Peter did not think so either.
Some several decades later,
the synoptic Gospels (Mark, Matthew and Luke) were written and the
Gospel of Matthew – and Matthew alone – recorded Jesus as saying: “Thou
art Peter and upon this rock I will build my church and the gates of
hell shall not prevail against it” (chapter 16.18). Many biblical
scholars doubt that this quotation is authentic.
There are other
bits of the Gospel which seem to give primacy to Peter but the
troublesome bits remain, which, at the very least, cast doubt on the
primacy of Peter.
Then there is the fairly stunning evidence that
at the moment on which arguably by far the most significant decision in
the history of the Catholic Church was taken, the pope was nowhere to be
seen. This was at the Council of Nicaea, which was summoned not by any
bishop but by the then Roman emperor, Constantine, to adjudicate on
competing claims concerning the divinity of Jesus. The council decided
Jesus, the son of God, was co-eternal with the father and begotten from
the father. It was the basis for what we know now as the Nicene creed.
Yes
there is a catalogue of important fathers of the church who
subsequently took a different line on the primacy of Peter, but there is
no escape from the reality that the great theologian of Christianity,
Paul, had scant regard for the status of Peter, and that no one else in
the early days of Christianity seemed to have regarded Peter as the
gaffer. Certainly from what we know of the Council of Jerusalem, that
was so. And, anyway, the great apostle of Jesus turned out to have been
someone who had never met him: Paul, not Peter.
Bishop of Rome
And
then there is the issue of whether Peter ever made it to Rome and
whether, therefore, he could ever have been bishop of Rome.
At the very
least there is some doubt about that.
Nevertheless, in the next
few weeks, amid great and splendid ceremony, 115 elderly men in scarlet
robes will decide who should succeed to the primacy of Peter, a primacy
Peter probably never possessed, on the basis of a bishopric succession
from Peter, a bishopric which may never have existed in the first place.
And the elected one will be endowed with a status and authority not
known since the fall of empires.
Even from the perspective of Catholic belief, this seems fanciful.