I sincerely appreciate the opportunity to continue this conversation with you. Openly discussing our differences is by far the most important thing we can do in order to develop an understanding of each other’s reasons for our beliefs.
In my previous response I tried to show my understanding of your position by stating why, for example, that the story of Peter’s martyrdom was an important ingredient of why you believe. In other words, you believe it because it was a tradition, which is defined as the passing down of elements of a culture from generation to generation, especially by oral communication. Was I correct in making the connection that you hold tradition as a method of preserving historical facts? The very same line of “tradition” that is the only support for the veracity of any of the Gospels, including all the miracle stories, and even the resurrection of Jesus?
Notice too that I brought the 21st chapter of John because it is the primary source, i.e., the only plausible source, for Clement’s claims. I had assumed you were aware of its connection to the Clementine story. If John 21 is in doubt then so is the foundation of Clement’s story.
> Ignatius puts Peter in Rome (Ignatius' letter to the Romans, where he says Peter and Paul had also spoken to them, 4:3)
Ignatius: The Epistles of Ignatius are noted to contain later interpolations or are the product of the late second century which makes them unreliable evidence for the subject at hand. This is just one of many refutations for the entire corpus of writings:
http://www.bible.ca/history-ignatius-forgeries-250AD.htm> Clement of Rome, in his first epistle to the Corinthians, mentions Peter's martyrdom (Chapter 5)
Clement: Written from Rome, 1 Clement mentions Peter's “many labors” and makes a general comment about Peter's death, without mentioning Rome: "There was Peter who by reason of unrighteous jealousy endured not one not one but many labors, and thus having borne his testimony went to his appointed place of glory." The legend that Peter visited Rome appears in the non-canonical Acts of Peter, composed in about 185 CE.
> Tertullian, in Prescription Against Heretics, chapter 36, says Peter endured a passion like his Lord's.
Tertullian: “It is a happy fact that Peter is on the same level with Paul in the very glory of martyrdom.” Where is Rome? Where is Tertullian’s source? It’s only tradition or invention.
> Irenaeus (Against Heresies, book 3, chapter 1 section 1; chapter 3 section 2)
One of the best responses I could give would largely reflect this:
http://www.vision.org/visionmedia/article.aspx%3Fid%3D18200> Origen says Peter was crucified in Rome
Origen: You say, “Origen says Peter was crucified in Rome.” But this is learned only through Eusebius and is not uncontroversial at all. What do we know about where Eusebius gets his information centuries after the fact?
Eusebius: Where does Eusebius get his information about Peter ever being in Rome? He embellishes the non-canonical Acts of Peter, two centuries later, by adding that both Peter and Paul were executed in Rome during Nero's persecutions, but he cites no sources and gives an erroneous date, casting doubt on his research. Rex Weyler, “The Jesus Sayings: The Quest for His Authentic Message.”
Now let me offer this from Francis A. Sullivan, who says, in
From Apostles to Bishops, page 15, that there is a broad consensus among scholars, including most Catholic ones, that the Church of Rome was most probably led by a college of presbyters until well into the second century. He says there is no evidence of a ruling bishop in the first century. Now, it seems inconceivable that Peter would lead the church in Rome, as its first bishop, and appoint a successor as bishop, only for the Christian community of Rome to ignore this precedent for up to a century after the death of Linus.
Basically, I understand you to be saying that if there is nothing in early history that directly contradicts the early traditions, then, the traditions must stand as historically viable, truthful and historic. That's your base level form of an argument from ignorance. Even though I did not present any historical figure directly contradicting Peter's martyrdom in Rome there is plenty of evaluation of the history that definitely contradicts all the claims.
To further our conversation into something of a productive nature we need to agree on how tradition is able to be transformed into factual evidence, don't we?
Did I provide reasonable controversial evidence against the "traditional" claims?