Any thoughts on this?
Peace,
Deacon Richard
I have had some thoughts (its a miracle!)

But they are embeeded in my usual diatribe

Dear Deacon Richard...
You said ... that Rome has no means to deal with other churches except as subordinates. And I echoed your observation.
In what I say below ... I make no effort to be real accurate. It is an overview and I do not feel like cracking the books to write at a forum. I teach nothing.
Since my last research into Papal Primacy and Infallibility (the first not standing the test of history and the second not standing either the test of classical philosophy or Catholic Mystical Theology) .. I have reluctantly been studying Western Middle Ages that set the direction for current Latin conditions. I am not done (a lot to learn) but I am lucky to be able to listen to mp3 lectures at work so I have a few weeks of study under my belt. I did hesitant to take on such a subject but I do need (for myself) to bridge the gap between Peter in the early Church ... and Rome today.
Now there may be no interest in what I say ... and some may already know what I am about to say. Again .. I may not get every detail right and am not trying to.
In your statement above ... you have hit upon a key feature. One that definitely has more to do with the inability for Rome to draw together into better communion with other churches. And such a lack (the inability to deal with other churches in any other way excepting subordination to Rome) certainly has its solidification in the circumstances of the Catholic reformation (Trent). Some would say that Trent was not a reformation ... but indeed its results are definitely a direct reformation of the main causes which precipitated the Reformation. Which amounts to an admission that such church and clergy abuses actually did exist. If nothing had been wrong then changes would not have been needed. Drastic changes evidence that there was a need to address them.
With Trent .. Catholic dogmas were reformed and elevated to the same statues as Revelation.
But here is the interesting part ... two fold. Which sets the stage for why Rome can not deal with any other church except through subjugation. One reason of which was/is the focus of my own study.
Q: How did the 'Privilege of Peter' turn into the 'Primacy of Peter'?
A: Peter .. to Roman today .. there are three stages.
The final results of my own study of Matthew 16 ("upon this rock I will build my church") is that this is a prophecy (prediction if you will) that Jesus makes regarding the person of Peter. The rock is understood as to be a foundation of a new church (paralleled to the rock upon which the Temple had been built upon). I totally agree with Meyendorff (the book: The Primacy of Peter) that this prediction/prophecy related to the person of Simon Peter .. and not any 'office' of Peter. That is: Peter himself would be the foundation of the birth of the church ... which event did take place in Jerusalem.
Peter the person - acts first - and boldly - at Pentecost etc... and is in many ways becomes personally responsible for the birth of the Church (the foundation). The first phase of the church is its foundation being laid.
But it is very clear that a second phase of building begins with Paul .. and Peter subsides. While Peter and other apostles remain in Jerusalem (with the mind set that Christianity is really a restoration or clarification of the Jewish cult) ... Paul finds that gentiles are responding and it is Paul who begins build the gentile churches. Eventually the church at Jerusalem is dispersed and the church becomes predominantly - a gentile church. The command "Go and preach to all nations ..." should be understood in a Jewish context which has it to mean 'not just Jews'. In other words tell the gospel not just to Jews alone (the nation of Abraham) but too anyone who will listen (commonly called the 'Greeks' by Paul because Greek was an international language and by it Paul did not mean just Greeks alone).
The first part of ACTS is essentially about Peter ... but the second part of ACTS (the greater part) is entirely Paul being the second phase of building upon the Jewish foundation having already been laid by Peter in Jerusalem. In fact we go so far as to recognize that the Judisicors(sp) which Paul so bitterly complains about ... were set with letters of authority ... from the Jerusalem church ... the home church .. of Peter.
I will certainly not note all details but it is clear that Peter's leadership subsided and was at times .. problematic regarding this second phase of church growth (among the gentiles). I do note that when Peter's life was in danger and he had to flee Jerusalem .. he was offered sanctuary by the Roman community - which was founded by hearers of Paul and had considered Paul as their apostle. Peter was not the first bishop of Rome but the second bishop - and like Christ - was apparently thought to have been a problem as he was betrayed to Roman authorities and killed. A change of leadership through what amounts to assasination.
A correct reading of history regarding the bishops of the line of Peter from that point ... to the event of Western Christendom ... records that Rome (being a large church of wealth and at the heart of the Holy Roman Empire) was sometimes asked to media disputes in other churches. At the same time - Rome was also often rebuked by other churches for butting into their affairs. A prime example would be the African church (Augustine) which declared at Council to send message to the Roman Pope to keep his legates and opinions - to himself - and to stay in Rome and out of African church affairs.
When all historical records are correlated it seems clear that Peter (himself and not his apostolic line) was indeed a proto (the first to act and preach etc..) in his boldness ... but his line ever after his death ... displays an equality among Patriarchates. The Petrine line was both honored (invited) and at times refused (told to mind its own business).
A privilege of honor (similar to the current role of the Ecumenical Patriarch among the Orthodox) seems to have been the Papal role - only when invited. But certainly no universal jurisdiction or judicator of a Roman Patriarch either existed or was tolerated.
Now comes the Orthodox / Latin schism of mutual excommunication.
The result of this non-communication .. is that the Latin church ... is isolated. Both by communication and by geography. There ceases communication between the Eastern churches and Rome. Western Christendom grows and is a world power - however - the world we are talking about is just ... the extent of the old Roman Empire.
The Latin church is in an environment in which she is only concerned with herself. Both the Eastern church and the Latin church (separated not only ecclesiastically but also geographically) both continue to grow but in almost total isolation from each other. As isolated s the two cultures are and continue to be. Planes and the internet had not yet been invented

The Roman Emperor and the Roman Pontiff ... (up to this point) are coregents of the Roman empire. Up to about 1054 ... the Roman Pope is appointed by the Holy Roman Emperor .. and in turn .. the Holy Roman Emperor - is appointed by the Pope. Very reciprocal. Peter (the office) is granted what is called 'Privilege of Peter' ... which grant is solely within the Latin church and within the boundaries of the Holy Roman Empire.
From what I can tell so far .. Peter's Privilege had to do with the Holy Roman Emperor granting the Pope (Emperor's appointment) ... certain governmental privileges as Patriarch over the offcial religion of the entire Roman empire. I say privileges because these were not automatic and the rights of these privileges did not transfer to the Papacy. These privligages always belonged to the emperor and were lent at his will. This is evidence by the fact that it was most often the emperor who commanded bishops to councils ... which the Pope was obliged to attend.
It must be understood - that in isolation ... the 'known world' and the only 'world' that mattered ... was the West. The extent of the Roman empire (Europe, Italy, etc...). As for any other apostolic churches ... out of sight ... was indeed out of mind. The
universal church . .. consisted of
only the Latin church.
Proof of this isolationist mindset exists with Western Ecumenical Councils which consisted entirely of Latin bishop ... no invitation and no participation from other churches (Syrian, Oriental, Chaldean, Orthodox, whatever). Ecumenical in name (applying to the entire universal Church) but not in participation. And so the term ecumenical was used to designate its
application and not its fact of universal collegiality.
At this time .. comes all the Western religious wars. The break up of the Roman Empire .. the Reformation ... the Enlightenment .. etc.. etc... and decades of blood. And an election of three concurrent Popes (the Roman line, the Avignon line, and the Pisan line) which legitimacy was indeterminable ... compounded by the fact that the King of Germany named himself (as opposed to being appointed by the Pope) as the Holy Roman Emperor. At the age of six I add.
The method of appointing Pontiffs .. had fallen apart .. no longer workable.
All this mess was ended when the Council of Constance declared that ... a council of the bishops has supremacy over Popes ... and deposed one of the current popes ... and elected a fourth Pope - which election was accepted by all - and whoes first Pontifical act was to declared that ... a Pope has supremacy over any council.
So it is clear that we are still dealing with a Privilege of Peter and not a Primacy in as much as it was a primacy of a
council - which ended the era and made (retroactive) anti-popes.
Luther (who never intended to do anything more than debate reform to the Catholic church) nails what he proposed to debate - to the church door (as was the custom)... and that whole thing begins.
Much blood is spilled etc.. etc.. particularly bad wars in France and Gernany, England, Spain, Netherlands, Sweden .. on and on and on.
In response to the rebellions against the Pope and the Church - the Latin church launches a counter-reformation in the form of the Council of Trent. And THIS is when the Privilege of Peter is transformed into Papal Primacy. A primacy declared over all the Christian churches and divisions ... but the defacto purpose is over all Chritinaity within the territory of what had been the Holy Roman Empire.
Thus began the next round of Catholic/Protestant wars where Rome (aligned with certain kings) sought to re-assert the empirical privileges (now become a Primacy) .... the Primacy of Peter ... re-asserted in all religious matters.
And so the Primacy of Peter .. grown out of the Privilege of Peter ... became a universal Primacy of the Latin Pope over all Christianity ... as now existed (fragmented and divided) within the West.
But no matter how much Rome wanted or expected the clock to be turned back - religious plurality had come to what was no longer one holy Roman empire.
Now sick of religious wars - secularism came to be. If religions could not agree and caused so much blood - religion needed to get out of governing.
No thought was given to (Primacy of Peter) its true universal consequence involving collegiality with other original apostolic churches (Orthodox, Syrian, Oriental, etc..). Out of site out of mind. Rome was simply saving herself.
In retrospect ... a contributing cause to Rome's having to go it alone ... was the East/West excommunications. There was no body there !!! no other apostolic bishop to confer with the Roman bishop and keep the reality of other apostolic churches in their minds.
Rome was alone .. and had to act alone as true ecumenical communications were cut off. There was no need and no call to work out ways to deal with other churches on a brotherly bases. However there was need (of survival) to establish a primacy over all Christianity within the territory that was the old Holy Roman Empire. West. Spain, England, France etc... the bishops were all acting independently and Christianity itself was fragmentation into Protestants (who thought of themselves as a reformed Catholic church) and extremist Protestants (who thought of themselves as reformed Christianity and not part of the Catholic church).
Trent (absolutism) began a round of absolutism... across the board. Positions which one can not retreat from.
Again, this is a rough outline and all details might not be entirely accurate. Heck .. this is only an internet forum.
With the solidification of the idea of the Primacy of Peter over all Christianity ... it is easy to now look back to scriptures and see certain sections as metaphorical ... ignoring (or changing) the tense of the Greek and ignoring the fact that all the apostles received the same keys and they were not exclusive to one apostle alone. A simple and straight forward reading of Matthew 16 has it that Jesus is telling Simon that he (Chephas the rock) that he (personally) would (at some time in the future) would be the foundation (first stone laid) of the new church. Nothing further than what was said .. should be assumed.
Can Rome reform Papal Primacy? No dogma can be re-formed. But on the other had there is a history of dogmas being ... re-formed.
Trent and Vatican II - do not say or mean the exact same thing. With Trent there is no religious freedom one is either Roman Catholic or one is not-saved. With Vatican II there is now a recognition of existing plurality of religion and a God given right to freedom of religion.
In Trent ... Christ is only at work within the Roman Catholic church - and with Vatican II Jesus is also at work (saving souls) in other churches. A reform (err.. 'further understanding') that also resulted in several fundamentalist (traditionalist) splits in the Catholic church. Dogmas are forever - untill the next time they are adjusted.
Such reformations of dogma only became a problem when scholastic dogmas (arrived at by reasoning) were made absolute and infallible and raised to the same level as Revelation (which in reality is a limited number of items not arrived at through human reasoning).
Historically - when one refroms what one has pronounced as not-reformable ... it is best to wait one or two generations between. Meemory is a problem (everyone has one) but research and study into the past which one had not not known first hand ... is something very few do.
http://www.teach12.com/store/course...-%20Ancient%20and%20Medieval&fMode=sPeace to all Chritians
-ray