Saint Peter the Holy Apostle

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Troparion in Tone 4
Leaders of the Apostles and teachers of the world,
pray to the Master of all to grant peace to the world
and great mercy to our souls.

Saint Peter, also known as Peter, Simon ben Jonah/BarJonah, Simon Peter, Cephas and Kepha—original name Simon or Simeon (Acts 15:14)—was one of the twelve original disciples or apostles of Jesus. His life is prominently featured in the New Testament Gospels.

A Galilean fisherman, he (with his brother Andrew) was literally "called" by Jesus to be an apostle. Above all the other disciples, Peter was assigned a leadership role by Jesus (Matt 16:18; John 21:15–16); and indeed, his supremacy within the early Church is recognized by many.

Simon Peter is considered a saint by many Christians, and the first Pope by the Roman Catholic Church and its Eastern Rites. Other Christian denominations recognize his office as Bishop of Antioch and later Bishop of Rome, but do not hold the belief that his episcopacy had primacy over other episcopates elsewhere in the world. Still others do not view Peter as having held the office of bishop or overseer, holding the view that the office of bishop was a development of later Christianity. Furthermore, many Protestants do not use the title of "saint" in reference to Peter, believing instead that all Christians are 'saints'.

The Liturgy of the Hours records June 29, AD 69 as his date of death. However, the date is uncertain. Some scholars believe that he died on October 13, AD 64. He is traditionally believed to have been sentenced to death by crucifixion by the Roman authorities. According to tradition, Simon Peter was crucified upside down, and is buried in the grottoes underneath the Basilica of Saint Peter in Vatican City. He is often depicted in art as holding the keys to the kingdom of heaven (the sign of his primacy over the Church), as described in the Gospel of Matthew.

Peter's original name of Simon or שמעון comes from the Hebrew language meaning "hearkening and listening". In standard Hebrew it is pronounced as Šhimʿon, and in Tiberian Hebrew it is pronounced as Šhimʿôn. According to New Testament gospels of Mark, Luke, and John, Jesus renames him "Petros" or Πέτρος, which comes from the Greek meaning "pebble" or "piece of rock" (but can also be understood to be Matthew changing the feminine "Petra" to the masculine "Petros"). The name is also occasionally given in the Aramaic form "Cephas" (כיפא). As Jews of that time spoke Aramaic it was the name Cephas (Aramaic: Rock) which was given to Simon by Jesus

Most reconstructions of Peter's life depend primarily on the New Testament; there are no other contemporary accounts of his life or death. According to the New Testament, before becoming a disciple of Jesus, Simon (that is, Peter) Bar Jonah was a fisherman. He was originally a native of Bethsaida (John 1:44), the son of Jonah (Matt 16:17) or son of Jochanan (John 1:42). The synoptic gospels all recount how his mother-in-law was healed by Jesus at their home in Capernaum (Matt 8:14–17; Mark 1:29–31; Luke 4:38f), so we know he was married, but the name of his wife is not known. A number of later legends allege that he had a daughter. In one of his epistles, the apostle Paul of Tarsus also mentioned that Peter had a wife.

According to the New Testament, while fishing in the Lake of Gennesaret, Simon was called by Jesus to be his follower, along with his brother Andrew. Seeing them cast a net for fish, Jesus is said to have told them, "Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men."

Peter is often depicted as spokesman of the twelve disciples, and he and James and John seem to have formed the core of an intimate group which was "closest" to Jesus, present in many moments of special revelations, such as the Transfiguration.

The gospels also state that Jesus foretold that Peter would deny him three times after Jesus' arrest. Again according to the Gospel of Matthew, on the evening before the Feast of Unleavened Bread (which is called the Passover), Jesus predicted to his disciples that they would "fall away" from him that night. Peter replied, "Even if all desert you, I will never desert you." Jesus answered, "In truth I tell you, this very night, before the cock crows, you will have denied me three times." Confronted after Jesus had been arrested, Peter did deny knowing Jesus to avoid being arrested himself. When he heard a cock crow, he remembered what Jesus had said, and wept bitterly (Matt 26:31–35, 69–75; Mark 14:26–31, 66–72; Luke 22:31–34, 54–62; John 18:15–18, 25–27).

However, after Jesus' resurrection, Peter is presented as meeting the risen Jesus. As Peter reaffirms his love for his master, Jesus reaffirms Peter's calling (John 21:15–17).

The author of the Acts of the Apostles portrays Peter as an extremely important figure within the early Christian community. Peter delivers a speech immediately after the event of Pentecost. Furthermore, according to the Acts of the Apostles, Peter takes the lead in selecting a replacement for Judas (1:15). Peter is twice examined, with John, by the Sanhedrin and directly defies them (4:7–22; 5:18–42). Once, Peter was arrested, but an angel appeared and miraculously secured his release. He undertakes a missionary journey to Lydda, Joppa and Caesarea (9:32–10:2). He is instrumental in the decision to evangelize the Gentiles (Acts 10), and he is present at the Council of Jerusalem, where Paul further argues the case for admitting gentiles into the Christian community without circumcision.

From the early Christian writings, it is clear that Peter was considered chief leader of the early community. Most of the gospels suggest that he was favored by Jesus. Although, since Peter does not reappear in Matthew's gospel after his denial of Jesus, a few scholars have suggested that for Matthew, Peter was an apostate. Perhaps the mystery is solved by the fact that Jesus appeared to Peter and charged him to return.

After Acts turns its attention away from Peter and to the activities of Paul, Peter's movements are not recorded. It is clear that he lived in Antioch for a while, for not only did Paul confront him there (Gal 2:11f), but tradition makes him the first bishop of that city, and thus the first Patriarch of Antioch. Some scholars interpret Paul's mention of Peter in 1 Cor 1:12 as evidence that Peter had visited Corinth. A far more insistent tradition, at least as early as the first century, is that he came to Rome, where he was martyred during the time of the burning of Rome, as Nero wanted to put the blame for the fire on Christians. The Gospel of John may be interpreted as suggesting that Peter was martyred by crucifixion ("when you are old you will stretch out your hands, and someone else will dress you and take you where you do not want to go" John 21:18), and Clement of Rome in his Letter to the Corinthians placed his death in the time of Nero. Later traditions hold that the Romans crucified him upside down by his request, as he did not want to equate himself with Jesus. On the way to his execution, it is said he encountered Jesus and asked, "Domine, Quo Vadis?" ("Lord, where are you going?"). Other versions of this story claim that this occurred as Peter was fleeing Rome to avoid his execution, and that Jesus' response, "I am going to Rome, to be crucified again," caused him to turn back. This story is commemorated in an Annibale Carracci painting. The Church of Quo Vadis, near the Catacombs of Saint Callistus, contains a stone in which Jesus' footprints from this event are supposedly preserved, though this was actually apparently an ex-voto from a pilgrim, and indeed a copy of the original, housed in the Basilica of St Sebastian.

This story is recorded in a number of places, notably the apocryphal Acts of Peter (35):

And as they considered these things, Xanthippe took knowledge of the counsel of her husband with Agrippa, and sent and showed Peter, that he might depart from Rome. And the rest of the brethren, together with Marcellus, besought him to depart. But Peter said unto them: Shall we be runaways, brethren? and they said to him: Nay, but that thou mayest yet be able to serve the Lord. And he obeyed the brethren's voice and went forth alone, saying: Let none of you come forth with me, but I will go forth alone, having changed the fashion of mine apparel. And as he went forth of the city, he saw the Lord entering into Rome. And when he saw him, he said: Lord, whither goest thou thus (or here)? And the Lord said unto him: I go into Rome to be crucified. And Peter said unto him: Lord, art thou (being) crucified again? He said unto him: Yes, Peter, I am (being) crucified again. And Peter came to himself: and having beheld the Lord ascending up into heaven, he returned to Rome, rejoicing, and glorifying the Lord, for that he said: I am being crucified: the which was about to befall Peter. (M.R. James, The Apocryphal New Testament, Clarendon Press, 1924.)

The ancient historian Josephus describes how Roman soldiers would amuse themselves by crucifying criminals in different positions. This is consistent with the ancient traditions about Peter’s crucifixion.

Peter's Writings

The New Testament includes two letters (or epistles) ascribed to Peter. While neither demonstrates the quality of Greek expected from an Aramaic fisherman who learned it as a second or third language, a number of scholars argued that if his first epistle was not at least written by him with the help of a secretary or amanuensis, then its author was a close associate of Peter who not only knew his opinions well, but felt comfortable speaking in Peter's name.

The Second Epistle of Peter is another possible case. This letter demonstrates a dependence on the Epistle of Jude, and some modern scholars date its composition as late as AD 250. However, this epistle is included in numerous early Bibles of around that time and before, such as Papyrus 72 (3rd century) and the Bible of Clement of Alexandria (ca. 200). See the following section for more detail.

The Gospel of Mark is generally attributed as being the teachings of Peter, recorded by John Mark. According to Eusebius's Ecclesiastical History 3.39.14–16, Papias recorded this from John the Presbyter: "Mark having become the interpreter of Peter, wrote down accurately whatsoever he remembered. It was not, however, in exact order that he related the sayings or deeds of Christ. For he neither heard the Lord nor accompanied Him. But afterwards, as I said, he accompanied Peter, who accommodated his instructions to the necessities [of his hearers], but with no intention of giving a regular or chronological narrative of the Lord's sayings. Wherefore Mark made no mistake in thus writing some things as he remembered them. For of one thing he took especial care, not to omit anything he had heard, and not to put anything fictitious into the statements." If this tradition is authentic, and Mark was the faithful amanuensis of Simon Peter, then very strong doubt is cast on Peter stories found in the NT but not in the Gospel of Mark, including the paean to Peter in Matt 16:17–19. If this were authentic, then Mark would certainly have included it, but it is found only in Matthew and nowhere else. However, Matthew was also an eyewitness to Jesus' sayings, and a companion of Peter. Note that the attribution of the Gospels of Matthew and Mark to their traditional authors is disputed among scholars, as the gospels themselves are anonymous, and their titular attributions are not attested earlier than the second-century writings of Papias.

[edit]

Further detail on the authenticity of Second Peter

Until the early 4th century, there was controversy in the Western Church over the authorship of Second Peter. In the East as well, the work was not accepted universally for an even longer period; the Syriac Church only admitted it into the canon in the 6th century.

It is to be noted, however, that the church historian Eusebius remarks on Origen's reference to the epistle before 250. In the collection of Cyprian's letters, the Bishop Firmilian speaks in favor of authenticity. Many scholars have noted the similarities between pseudo-Second Epistle of Clement (2nd century) and Second Peter. Several early church writers, the author of the Epistle of Barnabas and the Shepherd of Hermas among others, make allusions to the letter, which may give it an earlier priority.

Second Peter may be earlier than AD 250, but there is no reference to it dating back to the first century or even the early second century. The strongest evidence, according to some scholars, that it is a late forgery is the reference in 3:15 to "our beloved brother Paul," and to Paul's writings as "Scriptures." Many historians believe that relations between Paul and Peter were tense, even antagonistic (see Gal 2:11), and Peter would not have considered Paul's letters "scripture." Further, other scholars argue that the elevation of Pauline letters to scriptural status was a gradual process that was not completed early enough for Peter's reference.

Regardless of doubt on the legitimacy of Second Peter, some scholars believe that it was written in the first century (not the second or even third century AD

St. Peter
(d.c.64)

Originally named Simon, St. Peter was a fisherman in Galilea who can be read about in the Gospels.

After being a follower of
St. John the Baptist, St. Peter and his brother St. Andrew became disciples of Christ.
Christ named Peter after his firmness, the name meaning rock. After the death of Christ he preached in many places, and was eventually crucified downwards in Rome.

The relics of the saint can be found in the St. Peter's church, Rome.

In art he is usually depicted as a quite sturdy man of some age with curly hair and beard. He often holds keys or a book, or is painted crucified upside down.

Orthodox nameday: 29/6

 

 

The Apostle Peter’s Denial.

When they led Jesus Christ to the high priest’s house, the Apostle John, who was known to the high priest, entered the court, but Peter remained outside at the door. Then, John spoke to the maid who kept the door and brought Peter in.

The maid, seeing Peter, said to him, "Are you not also one of the disciples of this Man (Jesus Christ)?"

Peter answered, "No."

The night was cold. The officers kindled a fire in the middle of the courtyard and sat warming themselves. Peter also warmed himself with them. Soon another maid seeing him as he sat in the light warming himself said to the guards, "This man also was with Jesus of Nazareth."

But Peter again denied it saying "Woman, I do not know him."

After an interval of about an hour still, another insisted to Peter, "Certainly, you also were with Him; for your accent betrays you. You are a Galilean." One of the servants of the high priest, a kinsman of the man, Malchus, whose ear Peter had cut off, asked, "Did I not see you in the garden with Him?"

Peter began to invoke a curse on himself and swear, "I do not know this Man of Whom you speak." While he was still speaking, the cock crowed and reminded Peter of the words of the Lord how He had said to him, "Before the cock crows today, you will deny Me three times." The Lord being among the guards in the court turned and looked at Peter. The gaze of the Lord penetrated the heart of Peter. Shame and repentance seized him, and he went out from the court and wept bitterly over his grievous sin.

From that moment, Peter never forgot his fall. St. Clement, a disciple of Peter, tells how Peter throughout all his remaining days at the midnight crowing of the cock fell on his knees and in a flood of tears repented of his denial although the Lord Himself immediately after His resurrection forgave him. The ancient traditional teaching preserved that the eyes of the Apostle Peter were red from frequent and bitter weeping.

Note: See the Gospel of Matthew 26:69-75; Mark 14:66-72; Luke 22:55-62; John 18:15-18, 25-27.

The Death of Judas.

Friday morning came. Immediately, the chief priests with the elders and scribes convened their council. They brought Jesus Christ and again condemned Him to death for calling Himself Christ, the Son of God.

When Judas, His betrayer, found out that He was condemned to death, he understood all the horror of his act. Perhaps, he did not expect such a sentence or supposed that Christ would not permit it or would deliver Himself from His enemies in some miraculous way. Judas understood to what his love of money had led. Tormenting guilt seized his soul. He went to the chief priests and elders and brought back the thirty pieces of silver saying, "I have sinned in betraying innocent blood."

They said to him, "What is that to us? See to it yourself" (that is, you yourself must answer for your deed).

But Judas did not want to humbly repent in prayer and tears before the merciful God. Cold despair and depression overcame his soul. Throwing down the pieces of silver in the Temple before the chief priests, he departed, and he went and hanged himself. The chief priests taking the pieces of silver said, "It is not lawful to put them into the treasury since they are blood money." So they took counsel and bought with it the potter’s field to bury strangers in. Therefore, that field (a cemetery) has been called in Hebrew Akaldema, which means "field of blood."

Then, was fulfilled what had been spoken by the Prophet Jeremiah saying, "And they took thirty pieces of silver, the price of Him on Whom a price had been set by the sons of Israel, and they gave them for the potter’s field."

Note: See the Gospel of Matthew 27:3-10.

 

 

 

 


The Holy Apostle
Saint Peter

 

 

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