The Problem of Sources: A Hermeneutical Dispute
Every theological argument between Catholics and Orthodox eventually reaches the same impasse: both sides claim to be following the Fathers, the Councils, and Scripture. The disagreement is not about whether these sources are authoritative — both traditions affirm they are. The disagreement is about what these sources say and how their apparent tensions should be resolved.
This creates a distinctive problem. When a Protestant debates a Catholic, the argument can at least be anchored in Scripture as common ground. When a Catholic debates an Orthodox Christian, even that anchor is contested — not because the Orthodox reject Scripture but because the hermeneutical principles for reading Scripture are themselves disputed. Catholics read Scripture through the lens of the Church’s developing magisterium; Orthodox read Scripture through the lens of conciliar reception and the undivided Church’s consensus.
The honest way forward is to survey each source category not as a debating exercise but as a genuine attempt to identify what each actually establishes — and where the evidence runs out.
What Scripture Actually Establishes
The New Testament presents a picture of the early Church that is neither simply papal nor simply synodal. It is hierarchical, apostolic, and Petrine — in ways that require explanation rather than dismissal from either side.
Matthew 16:18–19 is the foundational text. Jesus renames Simon as Kepha (Rock) and declares he will build his Church on this rock, giving him the keys of the kingdom with binding and loosing authority. The Aramaic removes the Greek ambiguity between petros and petra: in Jesus’s native tongue, the name and the foundation are the same word. The bestowal of keys invokes Isaiah 22:22, where the royal steward of the Davidic house holds an office that passes to successors — a succession office, not a personal charisma.
Luke 22:31–32 distinguishes Peter from the other apostles: Jesus prays specifically for Peter’s faith not to fail and commissions him to “strengthen your brothers.” The others are not given this commission. John 21:15–17 triple-charges Peter with pastoral care over the entire flock — “Feed my lambs… tend my sheep… feed my sheep” — in a deliberate echo of Peter’s threefold denial.
Peter received a personal charism, not an inheritable office. His prominence is unique but non-transmissible.
First: the Isaiah 22 typology is explicitly about a succession office — Eliakim’s stewardship passes to successors.
Second: someone must feed the sheep after Peter dies. The commission cannot logically expire with its recipient if the flock persists.
Acts 15 (the Jerusalem Council, c. 49 AD) shows Peter speaking first and decisively on the Gentile question. Peter does not merely vote; he settles the doctrinal question, after which the council moves to application. Galatians 2:11–14 is the Orthodox favorite: Paul “opposed Peter to his face.” But Paul confronts Peter precisely because Peter’s behavior was influencing others. You do not publicly rebuke someone whose conduct is inconsequential. Peter’s authority is the premise of the confrontation, not its refutation.
Taken together, the scriptural picture is this: Peter holds a distinctive role that the other apostles do not hold, including a commission over the whole flock. Whether that role is inheritable is not explicitly settled by Scripture — it is an inference from the Isaiahan typology and the Church’s own early practice. That inference is the beginning of the patristic question.
What the Fathers Actually Said
The patristic record on Rome is extensive, complex, and more favorable to the Catholic position than Orthodox apologetics typically acknowledges — while also being messier than Catholic apologetics sometimes presents.
Around 96 AD, the Church of Rome wrote to the Church of Corinth to address a dispute in which the Corinthian presbyters had been unlawfully deposed. Rome had not been asked. Corinth had its own bishop. Rome had no geographic claim over the Greek east. Yet Rome intervened, claimed to write “through the Holy Spirit,” and warned of “no small danger” for those who disobeyed. The letter was subsequently read liturgically in the Corinthian church for generations.
No church reads an intrusive letter from a mere peer as liturgy. This is Rome acting as a court of final resort without invitation.Ignatius of Antioch (c. 107 AD), writing to the Romans on his way to martyrdom, addresses them as the Church “which presides in the place of the region of the Romans” and which “presides over love” — a phrase he uses of no other church. His restraint toward Rome implies he knows Rome could act where others could not.
The Church of Rome holds a potentior principalitas — pre-eminent authority — and all churches must agree with Rome because “in her the apostolic tradition has been preserved continuously.”
Rome is the standard against which other churches are measured. Irenaeus wrote this a century and a half before any emperor had reason to favor the Roman see.
Cyprian of Carthage (d. 258) is the most complex figure on this question, and both sides claim him. He coined the phrase cathedra Petri (Chair of Peter) and described Peter as the foundation of the Church’s unity. He also resisted Pope Stephen I on heretical baptism. The honest reading: he held a high theology of Peter’s office while resisting what he considered overreach by a particular pope. Cyprian belongs to neither camp cleanly — which is itself evidence that the first-millennium church was not operating from a settled, sharply defined ecclesiology in either direction.
Pope Leo I (440–461 AD) is the most explicitly papalist figure of the first millennium, and he cannot be dismissed as a medieval innovation. His Tome was received at Chalcedon with the acclamation “Peter has spoken through Leo.” He rejected Canon 28 of Chalcedon on the grounds that Rome’s prerogatives came from apostolic institution, not imperial favor, and no council could override what Christ had given Peter.
The patristic record shows a trajectory: from Rome’s uninvited intervention in Corinth (96 AD) to Innocent I exercising jurisdiction over Constantinople (404 AD) to the assembled bishops at Chalcedon affirming that Peter spoke through the Bishop of Rome (451 AD). This trajectory does not establish Vatican I’s definition of ordinary and immediate jurisdiction. But it also cannot be collapsed into a merely honorific first place.
What the Councils Actually Presupposed
The seven Ecumenical Councils recognized by both Catholics and Orthodox are the strongest common ground in this debate. But what the councils presupposed about authority is contested — and the evidence is more favorable to the Catholic position than is commonly acknowledged.
Nicaea (325): Rome’s legate Hosius of Cordoba presided. The Nicene settlement came, in part, through Rome’s consistent refusal to rehabilitate Arian bishops even when Eastern politics demanded it.
Ephesus (431): Pope Celestine’s legates opened the council stating: “We carry the authority of the Apostolic See.” Cyril of Alexandria wielded Celestine’s prior condemnation of Nestorius as a settled judgment before the council voted — treating Rome’s decision not as one opinion among equals but as a declaration that the case was already decided.
“Peter has spoken through Leo.”
Leo then rejected Canon 28 of Chalcedon; the Eastern bishops wrote to Leo begging his ratification. This presupposes that Leo’s approval was necessary for the canon to have universal standing. Leo refused. The canon did not achieve universal standing.
Constantinople III (681): Pope Honorius was condemned posthumously — a fact Catholics must acknowledge. Nicaea II (787): Required Roman agreement for its decrees on icons to carry weight. The pattern of mutual dependence — councils needing Rome, Rome needing councils — recurs across all seven.
The consistent pattern is not that Rome defined everything by papal fiat — it plainly did not. But Rome’s agreement was treated as necessary for conciliar acts to achieve universal standing. Eastern bishops who disagreed with Rome appealed to councils; councils that disagreed with Rome sent their acts to Rome for ratification. This is not the Orthodox model of pure conciliarism. It is also not the Vatican I model of purely papal definition. It is something in between — and that something is closer to the Catholic claim than the Orthodox claim.
The Orthodox Counterreading and Its Difficulties
The Orthodox theological response rests on two interconnected claims: that the Church is constitutively conciliar, and that authority is located in the reception of the Spirit by the whole body of the faithful, not in any single see.
“A council is authoritative not because Rome ratifies it but because the whole Church receives it. The Arian councils were rejected by the Church’s reception even though they carried imperial approval.”
If conciliar reception by the whole Church is the criterion, who speaks for the whole Church when the Church is divided? The Orthodox communion today cannot answer whether the Patriarch of Constantinople or the Patriarch of Moscow holds the first place among equals — a dispute that has paralyzed pan-Orthodox decision-making for years. A model with no institutional conflict-resolution mechanism cannot function as a model of Church governance.
“Rome’s interventions in Corinth, Antioch, and Constantinople represent Roman aggression gradually overstepping its bounds.”
This requires believing that the Eastern churches who appealed to Rome, received Roman judgments, and read Roman letters as liturgy were all passive victims of Roman imperialism who somehow never noticed they were being dominated. Chrysostom himself appealed to Rome. You do not appeal to a tribunal you do not believe has jurisdiction over your case.
The sources do not resolve the Catholic-Orthodox dispute with a single decisive proof-text. But they do establish a pattern that is far more congenial to the Catholic claim than to the Orthodox claim: Rome exercised real authority, not merely honorific precedence, from the first century onward. The Fathers recognized it. The councils presupposed it. The Eastern churches appealed to it.
What remains contested is the extent of that authority — whether it includes the definitions of Vatican I or something less precisely specified. That is an honest disagreement, and it is the disagreement that deserves sustained engagement. The preliminary question — whether Rome held anything more than a symbolic first place — has been answered by the sources themselves. She did.