How the Name Peter (Rock) Reveals Christ’s Intentions About the Church’s Head
For Sunday’s Living Jesus chat, in celebration of the election of Pope Leo XIV, we will reflect on an article by St. Francis de Sales on the papacy. Original version found here. We will start with Chapter 1 titled: “First and Second Proofs. Of the First Promise Made to S. Peter: Upon this Rock I Will Build My Church.”___________________________________________To prepare for our chat, please read the article, which is reproduced below, and review the questions at the end.Click for Living Jesus Chatroom https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pope_Leo_XIV_3_(3x4_cropped).pngPhoto by Edgar Beltrán, The Pillar 

When Our Lord imposes a name upon men, he always bestows some particular grace according to the name which he gives them. If he changes the name of that great father of believers, and of Abram makes him Abraham, also of a high father he makes him father of many, giving the reason at the same time: Thou shalt be called Abraham; because I have made thee the father of many nations. And changing that of Sarai into Sara, of lady that she was in Abraham’s house, he makes her lady of the nations and peoples who were to be born of her. If he changes Jacob into Israel, the reason is immediately given: For if thou hast been powerful against God, how much more shalt thou prevail against men.So that God by the names which he imposes not only marks the things named but teaches us something of their qualities and conditions. Witness the angels, who have names only according to their offices, and S. John Baptist, who has the grace in his name which he announced in his preaching as is customary in that holy language of the Israelites. The imposition of the name in the case of S. Peter is no small argument of the particular excellence of his charge, according to the very reason which Our Lord appended: Thou art Peter, and so on.


But what name does he give him? A name full of majesty, not common, not trivial, but one expressive of superiority and authority, like unto that of Abraham himself. For if Abraham was thus called because he was to be father of many nations, S. Peter has received this name because upon him as upon a firm rock was to be founded the multitude of Christians. And it is on account of this resemblance that S. Bernard calls the dignity of Peter “patriarchate of Abraham.”
When Isaias would exhort the Jews by the example of Abraham, the stock from which they sprang, he calls Abraham Peter: Look unto Abraham, unto the rock (petram) whence you are hewn: . . . look unto Abraham your father; where he shows that this name of rock very properly refers to paternal authority. This name is one of Our Lord’s names, for what name do we find more frequently attributed to the Messias than that of rock?This changing and imposition of name is then very worthy of consideration. For the names that God gives are full of power and might. He communicates Peter’s name to him; he has therefore communicated to him some quality corresponding with the name. Our Lord himself is by excellence called the rock, because he is the foundation of the Church, and the cornerstone, the support and the firmness, of this spiritual edifice. And he has declared that on S. Peter should his Church be built, and that he would establish him in the Faith: Confirm thy brethren.I am well aware that he imposed a name upon the two brothers John and James, Boanerges, the sons of thunder, but this name is not one of superiority or command, but rather of obedience, nor proper or special but common to two, nor, apparently, was it permanent, since they have never since been called by it. It was rather a title of honor, on account of the excellence of their preaching. But in the case of S. Peter he gives a name permanent, full of authority, and so peculiar to him that we may well say to which of the others hath he said at any time, Thou art Peter? showing that S. Peter was superior to the others.


But I will remind you that Our Lord did not change S. Peter’s name, but only added a new name to his old one, perhaps in order that he might remember in his authority what he had been, what his stock was, and that the majesty of the second name might be tempered by the humility of the first, and that if the name of Peter made us recognize him as chief, the name of Simon might tell us that he was not absolute chief, but obeying a subaltern chief, and head servant.S. Basil seems to have given support to what I am saying, when he said,“Peter denied thrice and was placed in the foundation. Peter had previously not denied, and had been pronounced blessed. He had said: Thou art the Son of the living God, and thereupon had heard that he was Peter. The Lord thus returned his praise, because although he was a rock, yet he was not the rock; for Christ is truly the immovable rock, but Peter on account of the rock.”Christ indeed gives his own prerogative to others, yet he gives them not losing them himself, he holds them none the less. He is a rock, and he made a rock; what is his, he communicates to his servants; this is the proof of opulence, namely, to have and to give to others.”Thus speaks S. Basil.
What does he [Christ] say? Three things, but we must consider them one after the other: Thou art Peter; and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. He says that Peter was a stone or rock, and that on this rock or this stone he would build his Church.


But here we are in a difficulty, for it is granted that Our Lord has spoken to S. Peter, and of S. Peter as far as this—and upon this rock—but, it is said that in these words he no longer speaks of S. Peter. Now I ask you, What likelihood is there that Our Lord would have made this grand preface, Blessed art thou Simon Bar-jona; because flesh and blood hath not revealed it to thee, but my Father who is in heaven: and I say to thee, and so on, in order to say no more than Thou art Peter, and then suddenly have changed his subject and gone on to speak of something else?And again, when he says, And on this rock I will build my church, do you not see that he evidently speaks of the rock of which he had previously spoken? And of what other rock had he spoken but Simon, to whom he had said, Thou art Peter? But this is the ambiguity which may be causing hesitation in your mind; you perhaps think that as Peter is now the proper name of a man, it was so then, and that so we transfer the signification of Peter to rock by equivocation of masculine and feminine. But we do not equivocate here, for it is but one same word, and taken in the same sense, when Our Lord said to Simon, Thou art Peter, and when he said, and on this rock I will build my church.And this name of Peter was not a proper name of a man, but was only [then] appropriated to Simon Barjona. This you will much better understand, if you take it in the language in which Our Lord said it; he spoke not Latin but Syriac. He therefore called him not Peter but Cephas, thus, Thou art Cephas, and on this Cephas I will build, as if one said in Latin, Thou art saxum, and on this saxum, or in French, Thou art rocher, and on this rocher I will build my church.Now what doubt remains that it is the same person of whom he says, Thou art Rock, and of whom he says, And on this Rock? Certainly there is no other Cephas spoken of in all this chapter but Simon. On what ground then do we come to refer this relative hanc [Latin, this] to another Cephas besides the one who immediately precedes?
You will say, Yes, but the Latin says, Thou art Petrus, and not, Thou art Petra. Now this relative hanc, which is feminine, cannot refer to Petrus, which is masculine. The Latin version indeed has other arguments enough to make it clear that this stone is no other than S. Peter, and therefore, to accommodate the word to the person to whom it was given as a name, who was masculine, there is given it a corresponding termination as the Greek does, which had put, Thou art Πέτρος, and on this τῇ πέτρᾳ. But it does not come out so well in Latin as in Greek, because in Latin Petrus do not mean exactly the same as petra, but in Greek Πέτρος and Πέτρα is the very same thing.Similarly in French rocher and roche is the same thing, yet still so that if I had to predicate either word of a man, I would rather apply to him the name of rocher than of roche, to make the masculine word correspond with the masculine subject. I have only to add, on this interpretation, that nobody doubts that Our Lord called S. Peter Cephas (for S. John records it most explicitly, and S. Paul, to the Galatians), or that Cephas means a stone or a rock, as S. Jerome says.


In fine, to prove to you that it is really S. Peter of whom it is said, And on this rock, I bring forward the words that follow. For it is all one to promise him the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and to say to him, Upon this rock; now we cannot doubt that it is S. Peter to whom he promises the keys of the kingdom of heaven, since he says clearly, And to thee will I give the keys of the kingdom of heaven. If therefore we do not wish to disconnect this piece of the Gospel from the preceding and the following words in order to place it elsewhere at our fancy, we cannot believe but that all this is said to S. Peter and of S. Peter, Thou art Peter, and on this rock I will build my church. And this the Catholic Church, when, even according to the admission of the ministers, she was true and pure, has confessed loudly and clearly in the assembly of 630 Bishops at the Council of Chalcedon.Let us now see what these words are worth and what they import.(1) We know that what the head is to a living body, the root to a tree, that the foundation is to a building. Our Lord then, who is comparing his Church to a building, when he says that he will build it on S. Peter, shows that S. Peter will be its foundation stone, the root of this precious tree, the head of this excellent body. The French call both the building and the family, house, on this principle, that as a house is simply a collection of stones and other materials arranged with order, correspondence and measure, so a family is simply a collection of persons with order and interdependence. It is after this likeness that Our Lord calls his Church a building, and when he makes S. Peter its foundation, he makes him head and superior of this family.
(2) By these words Our Lord shows the perpetuity and immovableness of this foundation. The stone on which one raises the building is the first, the others rest on it. Other stones may be removed without overthrowing the edifice, but he who takes away the foundation, knocks down the house. If then the gates of hell can in no wise prevail against the Church, they can in no wise prevail against its foundation and head, which they cannot take away and overturn without entirely overturning the whole edifice.


He shows one of the differences there are between S. Peter and himself. For Our Lord is foundation and founder, foundation and builder, but S. Peter is only foundation. Our Lord is its Master and Lord in perpetuity; S. Peter has only the management of it, as we shall explain by and by.


(3) By these words Our Lord shows that the stones which are not placed and fixed on this foundation are not of the Church, although they may be in the Church.

Reflections:

Why are names so important to God, and why is it so important that Simon was renamed Peter? Was this just a casual nickname?How can Peter be “the rock”? Isn’t Jesus the rock of our faith? Or at least isn’t Peter’s profession of faith “the rock upon which the Church is built”?How does the idea of the pope being a “rock” help us in our faith? How is the pope “a rock”? Consider the parable Jesus gave about building a house on sand versus rock (see Matthew 7:24-27).Why is it important for us to respect the authority that God Himself has given to the pope and in the office of the papacy? And what does that look like?Why would God put such trust in humans to lead His Church? Why not just establish the Church and be the “pope,” so to speak? Instead of risking having people like St. Peter who rejected Him three times, or some scandalous popes from the Middle Ages?What happens to the doctrines of faith and morals believed by Christians when they reject one person as the head of Christ’s Church on earth?Will you be anticipating with eagerness any encyclicals, letters and speeches by the new Pope Leo XIV? What are your thoughts and feelings? 

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