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Home 1806

Collaborators of the Apostles and the Reform of the Roman Curia

Gerald O'Collins, SJbyGerald O'Collins, SJ
June 15, 2018
in 1806, AFTER THE CANDLELIGHT REVOLUTION IN SOUTH KOREA, Church Life, Edition, Issues, June 2018, Vol. 2, no. 6, Politics, Pope Francis
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Do we have data about the collaborators of Peter that would support an analogy between them and the Roman Curia? Do the letters of Paul testify to a variety of “co-workers” who might provide a vision illuminating the Curia and its reform? Where might we find some precedents, or at least some ancient analogy that could provide a vision for illuminating theologically a reform of the Roman Curia that would go beyond mere legal changes and a bureaucratic restructuring?[1]

Apostolic leaders and their collaborators

The letters of St. Paul, the Acts of the Apostles, and further New Testament sources report the exercise of apostolic leadership by Peter, Paul and others in the very early Church.

Peter himself left Jerusalem to preach, for instance, in Lydda and Joppa (Acts 9:32-43), but we know little of his missionary activity outside Palestine.[2] His visit to Antioch prompted a famous difference with Paul (Gal 2:11-21); he was traditionally said to have become later the head (“bishop”) of its church. He may have visited Corinth (1 Cor 1:12). There is a possible reference to Peter’s activity in Rome (Rom 15:20), and he was martyred there, probably in A.D. 64.

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Gerald O'Collins, SJ

Gerald O'Collins, SJ

Professor of theology at the Catholic Theological College of Melbourne (Australia)

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