Hi Aaron.
What do you think Mat 16:17-19 is all about? It looks to me like Jesus Christ was making St. Peter the First Pope of His Church.
Mat 16:
"17 And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven.
18 And 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.
19 And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven."
Here is a Protestant Commentary on the passage: "The figure of the gates of Hades suggests the metaphor of the keys. There were keys of Hades, Rev 1:18; cf. 9:1; 20:1. The apocalyptic writer describes the risen Christ as having the keys of Hades, i.e. having power over it, power to enter it, and power to release from it, or to imprison in it. In the same way, 'the kingdom of the heavens' can be likened to a citadel with barred gates. He who held the keys would have power within it, power to admit, power to exclude. In Rev 3:7 this power is held by Christ Himself [quotes Rev 3:7]...The words are modelled on Is 22:22, and
express supreme authority. To hold the keys is to have absolute right, which can be contested by none...It would, therefore, be not unexpected if we found the Messiah or Son of Man described as having the keys of the kingdom of the heavens.
This would imply that He was supreme within it. But it is surprising to find this power delegated to S. Peter...To S. Peter were to be given the keys of the kingdom. The kingdom is here, as elsewhere in this Gospel, the kingdom to be inaugurated when the Son of Man came upon the clouds of heaven. If S. Peter was to hold
supreme authority within it, the other apostles were also to have places of rank...To 'bind' and to 'loose' in Jewish legal terminology are equivalent to 'forbid' and 'allow,' to 'declare forbidden' and to 'declare allowed'...The terms, therefore, describe an authority of a legal nature. If he who has the keys has authority of an administrative nature, he who binds and looses exercises authority of a legislative character....Further, the position of v. 18, with its description of the Church as a fortress impregnable against the attacks of evil (the gates of Hades), suggest irresistibly that
'the keys of the kingdom' mean more than power to open merely, and imply rather authority within the kingdom. (Allen,
The International Critical Commentary [orig 1909, 1985], page 176ff)" Taken from:
http://www.biblicalcatholic.com/apologetics/PeterRockKeysPrimacyRome.htm How do you interpret this passage, Aaron?
The above is why we believe Christ did not intend 10,000+denominations, but One Church with Pope and Bishops as Pastors to guide.
Resident Alien said:
I don't really care about the history of the Catholic church, it's irrelevant.
You don't care about the first 1500 years of Christianity? Is Martin Luther more important than Jesus Christ? Millions lived and died in those 1500 years, the gates of hell did not prevail, just as Christ had promised, and Millions were saved thanks to the Catholic Church.
What's relevant is the fact it won't repent of its idolatry and false teaching. Until then, you're talking to deaf ears.
Such accusations are easy to make and difficult to answer. Suffice to say having a Crucifix is not "idolatry",. We don't believe the Cross to be God, nor worship it. Jesus Christ Himself compared Himself being raised up on the Cross, to how Moses lifted the Bronze Serpent in the desert, that people may believe God had provided an Atonement for sin. See John 3:14. So images of Christ Crucified are not wrong. That is further confirmed in Gal 3:1, which shows there were portraits of Christ in the Early Church even in St. Paul's time.
Gal 3:1 "You foolish Galatians! Who has bewitched you? Before your very eyes Jesus Christ was clearly portrayed as crucified."
God Bless.