Tuesday, April 2, 2024

E. Sylvester Berry (RC) on 1 Corinthians 3:11 and Ephesians 2:19-20

  

OBJECTION II.—In his first Epistle to the Corinthians St. Paul says: “Other foundation no man can lay, but that which has been laid, which is Christ Jesus.” (1 Cor. iii, 11) How, then, can St. Peter be called a foundation?

 

ANSWER.—In this passage the Apostle makes no reference to whatever to be the foundation of the Church; he is speaking of the foundation of doctrine, or faith. Rival parties had sprung up at Corinth and were causing much strife. Some claimed to be the followers of Paul; others of Apollo, whom they praised as a more eloquent preacher and a better teacher of doctrine. St. Paul rebukes them for such folly; he and Apollo taught them the same doctrine, although he had been unable to use eloquence of Apollo or to expound the more sublime doctrines of Christ: “I, brethren, could not speak to you as to spiritual men, but only as carnal, as to little ones in Christ. I fed you with milk, not with solid food, for you were not ready for it. Nor are you now ready for it, for you are still carnal,” (1 Cor. iii, 1 sq.) as your conduct shows. The Corinthians, being babes in Christ, St. Paul was forced to omit all attempts at eloquence and to teach them the mere rudiments of doctrine. He taught them nothing “except Jesus Christ, and Him crucified.” (1 Cor. ii, 2) This is the foundation of all faith and any one who gives them further instruction must built upon it, for “other foundation no one can lay.” (E. Sylvester Berry, The Church of Christ: An Apologetic and Dogmatic Treatise [Frederick County, Md.: Mount Saint Mary's Seminary, 1955; repr., Eugene, Oreg.: Wipf and Stock, 2009], 177-78)

 

 

OBJECTION III.—St. Paul writes to the Ephesians: “Therefore, you are no longer strangers and foreigners, but you are citizens with the saints and members of God’s household; you are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets with Christ Jesus himself as the cornerstone.” (Eph. ii, 19-20) Here all the Apostles are mentioned equally as the foundation stones of the Church in dependence upon our Lord as the chief cornerstone.

 

ANSWER.—This passage also has reference to doctrine, as is evident from the context, in which the prophets are associated with the Apostles as foundation stones of the Church. Yet the prophets were certainly not foundations of the Church in the same sense that Christ calls St. Peter the foundation rock. St. Paul teaches that the faithful are built upon the foundation of the prophets and Apostles by being instructed concerning Christ crucified, whom the prophets had foretold, and whom the Apostles now preach to them. Christ Himself is the chief cornerstone, i.e., the One foretold and now announced to the people.

 

Although St. Paul does not refer to the Apostles as the foundation of the Church, he could have done so with perfect truth; all were in a true sense foundation stones. They were the first members of the Church and its first ministers; through them Our Lord effected the actual organization of His Church, and by them it was extended far and wide to Jew and Gentile. For this reason it is often said that Christ instituted the Church in and through the Apostles, and St. John describes the Church triumphant as a city, “and the wall of the city has twelve foundation stones and on them twelve names on the twelve apostles of the Lamb.” (Apoc. xxi, 14) The twelve Apostles were the twelve foundation stones; St. Peter was even more than this. He was also the solid rock upon which stood both foundation and superstructure. (Ibid., 178)