Words of Encouragement










             


    Marcellino D'Ambrosio, Ph.D.
     Peter and the Keys

    “More Catholic than the Pope.”  There is nothing more
    quintessentially Catholic than the Papacy.  When we
    think “Catholic,” we think Rome, the Vatican, the dome of
    St. Peter’s.

    But the roots of the papacy actually go back to Jerusalem
    and the messiah-kings who ruled there.

    Like most heads of state, David and his descendants, the
    anointed kings of Judah, realized that they could not
    govern alone.  The most important officer assisting the
    king was something akin to a prime minister.  He was
    called “the Master of the Palace.”  In Isaiah 22, this
    Sunday’s first reading, we see God tell an unworthy
    Master of the Palace, Shebna, that he will be replaced by
    Eliakim, who will do things correctly.  Here’s what we
    learn from this passage — the Master of the Palace
    wears special robes of honor indicating his special
    authority.  He is to be a “father” to everyone in the
    Kingdom.  The symbol of his authority is a key, for he has
    the power to open doors for people and to close doors as
    well.  Particularly, he controls access to the king himself.  
    He is someone who you can hang a lot of weight upon,
    like a peg in a sure spot.

    When Jesus began His public ministry, He did not just
    come right out and proclaim that He was the long-awaited
    messiah.  At Caesarea Philippi (Matthew 16:13-20), He
    asked His disciples what the crowd was saying about
    Him.  They quickly volunteered various opinions they’d
    heard.  But then the Lord asked a more pointed
    question.  “Who do you say that I am?”  Perhaps an
    awkward moment of silence followed.  Then one of them
    blurted out: “You are the Messiah, the son of the living
    God!”  Notice I did not say that it was Peter who
    proclaimed this.  For he was not yet called Peter.  And
    that’s the point.  Nowhere else in the Gospels does Jesus
    change anyone’s name.  In the Old Testament, when
    God changed someone’s name, it indicated that the
    person was to play a unique role in salvation history —
    Abram to Abraham, Jacob to Israel, and so on.  Plus, the
    new God-given name itself provides a clue to the special
    role the person will play.  Abraham means father of many
    nations, for example.

    Peter means, of course, rock.  Remember Eliakim, the
    reliable peg that could bear much weight?  A rock is
    something stable you can stand on, even build on.  And
    the key Jesus is talking about?  Jesus is making plain
    that as Founder of the new Israel, He is choosing His
    prime minister.  In fact He notes that it is His Father who
    made the selection.  For it is by virtue of divine revelation
    that the fisherman knows what no man on his own could
    know — that Jesus is the Christ, the Anointed One of
    God.

    One of the most difficult things to swallow about Catholic
    teaching is the dogma of papal infallibility.  But this
    passage provides the foundation of this doctrine.  Peter,
    and his successors, are given a charism of truth whereby,
    when push comes to shove, they are empowered by the
    Holy Spirit to identify the truth about Jesus.  Otherwise,
    the truth would be up for grabs.  If that was the case, the
    jaws of death would in fact prevail over the Church.  
    Jesus, in making Simon “Peter,” made sure they wouldn’
    t.  And despite 2000 years of persecution from without
    and enemies from within, they haven’t.

    So why is Rome the center of the Catholic Church?  
    Because Peter died there.  And why the fancy robes and
    the title “Holy Father”?  Because Eliakim wore robes of
    honor and was a “father” to the people.

    So yes, the Papacy is quintessentially Catholic, but that’s
    because it is thoroughly biblical.




    Dr. D'Ambrosio studied under Avery Cardinal Dulles for his Ph.D. in
    historical theology and taught for many years at the University of Dallas.
    He now directs www.crossroadsinitiative.com, which offers Catholic
    resources for RCIA and adult and teen faith formation, with a special
    emphasis on the Year of the Eucharist, the Theology of the Body, the
    early Church Fathers, and the Sacrament of Confirmation.

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