قراءة كتاب St. Peter, His Name and His Office, as Set Forth in Holy Scripture

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St. Peter, His Name and His Office, as Set Forth in Holy Scripture

St. Peter, His Name and His Office, as Set Forth in Holy Scripture

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VIII.

SUMMARY OF THE PROOF GIVEN FOR S. PETER'S PRIMACY.
Points in question, generally, inequality in the Apostolic College:
  specially, the appointment of one over the rest; resolution of these tried
   by four examinations:—1. Into the words and acts of Christ; which relate
  to the Apostles.—2. Into those which seem to mark the institution of
  a singular authority.—3. Into the mode of writing used by the
  evangelists.—4. Into the history of the rising Church.—A
  concurrence of these four points would prove the two questions 200
The analysis of what has been written shows this concurrence 201
Twelve arguments from what has been written, proving the inequality of
  the Apostolic college, and Peter's Primacy 203
What is the force and nature of the Primacy.—Six proofs establishing
  this to consist in superior jurisdiction 209
Enquiry into the end and purpose of the Primacy: for the knowledge of
  the intention and purpose equivalent at least to a negative rule,
  ascertaining what must be given to it 212
Three classes of reasons, typical, analogical, and real, ascertain for us this
  purpose.—1. Typical. Parallel of Peter with Abraham and its results 213
Parallel of Peter with Judah and its results 214
ii. Analogical. Analogy of body, house, kingdom, city, and fold, and its
  results.—And of universal, and each particular Church on one hand,
  and Primate and bishops on the other 217
iii. Real, whether educed from texts containing the institution of the
  Primacy, or from the inherent properties of the Church.—1. Educed
  from texts 219
2. Educed from properties of the Church; first, its identity; secondly, its
  unity; thirdly, its catholicity; scriptural setting forth of unity 220
Further illustration from Protestant opinions of the Church's unity.—
A. First, that of Anglicans, of unity in particular Churches, but not in
  the universal Church, represented by Dodwell 222
B. Second opinion, set forth by Vitringa, of distinction between the
  necessity of internal and that of external unity 225
C. Third opinion, of agreement in fundamentals 232
Two causes of this being held, one theoretical, the other practical.—The
  former stated 233
The practical cause 234
Reasons educed, thirdly, from the Catholicity of the Church, with which
  the Primacy is bound up.—Catholicity has two parts, one material and
  one formal 236
The material part, amplitude and extension.—The formal part, not only
  negative, but affirmative.—Negative, as expelling from the one true
  Church all heretics and schismatics: testimonies to it 237
Affirmative, at making a coherent body with members and articulations 238
Testimonies to the mode of this coherence, in Irenæus, Cyprian, and
  Tertullian, and the other Fathers, summed up in S. Leo 239
Hence answers to the question whether the doctrine of S. Peter's Primacy
  is contained in the creed.—It is involved in one Catholic Church public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@38147@[email protected]#Page_243" class="pginternal"

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