Restoration
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PETER IN CHAPTER VIII Conclusions We have examined the Biblical and
literary record for evidence of the Apostle Peter at The introduction to Foakes-Jackson’s work draws an interesting comparison
between the lives of the Apostles Peter and Paul: St. Peter and Competent and learned scholars make
such admissions, yet it is interesting to note how many find the tradition
attractive nonetheless. “It is
difficult to suppose that so large a body of tradition has no foundation in
fact” is the way the escape clause usually reads. And while that may be true, it does not
constitute proof. Attractive conclusions,
it must be remembered, can be false.
And there may be explanations beyond the obvious. All this is not to say that
Peter never was at The burden of proof is upon those
who make weighty claims about Peter’s life and death in that city, and use
those claims as the authority for the foundation of a great religion. To show that those claims are not
well-founded and historically proved, is sufficient. Tradition or Theory? Some will still argue that we must
in some way account for the tradition.
But do we, in fact, have a genuine tradition? Ramsay challenges that fact in his work, The
Church in the The tradition that he [Peter] died
under Nero is not a A true tradition? No.
An “historical theory”?
Yes! That is a good way to
describe what we see evolve before our eyes in the record of Peter at But who would have framed such a
theory? And why? Perhaps an equally good word would be
“explanation.” Who would have devised
such an explanation and why? Need for Peter in Could
it be that there was a definite need for such an explanation or theory
on the part of some? If so, this would
account for the fact that the evidence all goes one way. Perhaps what we have is not a true
tradition, the original details of which are revealed one by one with the
turn of the centuries, but rather an explanation, justification, or “theory”
that goes in the name of fact, the details being safely added long after the
true facts had been lost or forgotten. In the literary evidence we may not
be witnessing a true tradition coming to light, but a false legend being
created because of the need for such a fable. What if only one Peter had
ever been in The point of setting forth this
possibility is not to prove that such a dark conspiracy took place, but to
offer a possible explanation for the evolving Petrine
tradition. While such a legend may
have had its original roots in truth, we must also allow that they may have
been just as deeply rooted in error.
And while the literary evidence may have been set forth as helpful
additions to a true story, they may also have been added by men who were strongly
motivated to preserve what was already in their day a well-established
religious system. Failure to discover a true apostle
of God named Peter in the city which became the seat of their activities
would have proved fatal, which is to say that theirs may have been the
best kept secret of the ages! We know, if only from the
contradictions, that not all of the story is
true. Other portions can be proved to
be false. If all of the facts
were known, is it possible that the entire theory would prove a monumental
hoax spawned about the time of the outpouring of the apocryphal
literature, the middle of the second century, or before? Biblical and literary scholarship
has demonstrated that we must not be gul |