Did Jesus Truly Say, “I Will Build My Church Upon Peter?”

by Chuck Ness

Until now I have not shared my opinion of what I think of the many inherent ways the Catholic Church has misinterpreted Scripture throughout the years. I can no longer be silent on the subject, because it is one that the Catholic Church has used to teach heresy.

To begin with, the Catholic Church has been making a mockery of Scripture for many years. There are many beliefs the Catholic Church holds that I have problems with, but for now I will explain why they are wrong in their interpretation that Peter is the rock upon which Christ has built His church.

Jesus is the ONLY foundation which His church can and is built upon. The only rock of truth is Jesus Christ and we need to keep our eyes on him, not some man chosen by flawed men. We need not pay attention to what color of smoke is billowing from a building built by flawed men to learn who the voice of God will be, because we already know. We are to look to no one else as the foundation or the hope on which the church is built, but Jesus, The Son of God.

“For no man can lay a foundation other than the one which is laid, which is Jesus Christ,” 

(1 Corinthians 3:11)

When Peter answered Jesus by stating,

“You are the Christ, the Son of the living God,” 

(Matthew 16:16)

Jesus answered and said to him,

“Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but My Father who is in heaven. And I also say to you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build My church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it. 

(Matthew 16:17-18)

To begin with, when you look at the original wording of Matthew, it was written in Koine Greek, which was the language of the common man in the day of Christ. Koinonia Greek was what today’s modern American English is to everyone from America to Korea, the universal language spoken around the world. So when you look at the original language Matthew was written in you will see something that is not readily apparent. When Jesus said,

“…you are Peter [(πΠέτρος) (petros)] and upon this

Rock [(πέτρᾳ) (petra)] I will build My church…”

(Matthew 18a)

Greek nouns have genders, which is similar to the English words actor and actress. The first is masculine and the second is feminine. Likewise, the Greek word, “petros”, is masculine; “petra” is feminine. Peter, the man, is appropriately referred to as, “Petros.” But Jesus said that the rock he would build his church on was not the masculine, “petros”, rather the feminine, “petra.”

A good example of this would be Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians, where he refers to Jesus as the rock that followed the Israelites through the desert;

“and all drank the same spiritual drink, for they were

drinking from a spiritual rock [(πέτρᾳ) (petras)] which

followed them; and the Rock [(πέτρᾳ) (petra)] was Christ.” 

(1Corinthians 10:4)

It must be pointed out that in Peter’s 1st letter, he refers to Jesus as the “Rock”,

Therefore it is also contained in the Scripture,

“Behold, I lay in Zion

A chief cornerstone, elect, precious,

And he who believes on Him will

by no means be put to shame.” (Isaiah 28:16)

Therefore, to you who believe, He is precious; but to those who are disobedient,

“The stone which the builders rejected

Has become the chief cornerstone,” (Psalms 118:22)

“A stone of stumbling”

And 

“a Rock of offense.” (Isaiah 8:14)

(1Peter 2:7-8)

So the word translated in this passage is not the same word as Peter, and nothing can be more wrong than to suppose Jesus meant Peter the person.  It’s ludicrous to claim that Jesus would build HIS church upon a sinful flawed individual. HE emphatically stated HE would build it upon the “truth” of which Peter recognized. That truth being, “Jesus is The Christ, The Son of The Living God!” Something we know Peter himself understood by reading his first epistle, as I pointed out above. 

Thus if Peter himself used the word, “petra” to refer to Jesus, then shouldn’t we? We can also see where Paul referred to Jesus as the rock, “petra”.

“Behold, I lay in Zion a stone of stumbling and a Rock of offense,

and he who believes in Him will not be disappointed.” 

(Romans 9:33)

 

We also see the word, “Rock,” used throughout the Old Testament to refer to GOD.

 

“The Rock! His work is perfect, for all His ways are just;

a God of faithfulness and without injustice.” 

(Deuteronomy 32:4)

“The Lord is my rock and my fortress and my deliverer;

My God, my Rock, in whom I take refuge.” 

(2 Samuel 22:2-3)

“And who is a Rock, except our God.” 

(Psalms 18:31)

“Is there any God besides Me, or

is there any other Rock? I know of none.” 

(Isaiah 44:8)

Finally, I challenge anyone to prove to me that, at any time in the Scriptures, GOD ever referred to any man as a rock.  However, throughout Scriptures we are told about the perfection of the Rock which is Christ, not a sinful man named Peter. So why would Jesus build His church upon an unstable human who needs to be saved? He wouldn’t, and He didn’t. It should be obvious from the Word of God that the Rock Jesus was referring to was not Peter, but himself.

“For no man can lay a foundation other than the

one which is laid, which is Jesus Christ,” 

(1 Corinthians 3:11)

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10 responses to “Did Jesus Truly Say, “I Will Build My Church Upon Peter?””

  1. Unknown Avatar

    Yes, actually he did, even the Orthodox who are not in communion with the RCC affirm this as doctrine. Peter got pulled out of Antioch 15 years after the resurrection (tryin to run away from our Savior) and sent to Rome by Jesus himself just for this purpose.

  2. Chuck Ness Avatar

    Unknown, your are wrong. There is not proof for what you claim, it was fabricated by the Catholic Church. No documentation, now witness, nothing to prove that happened. What I wrote is FACT!

  3. Henry Avatar

    Good exegesis

  4. Chuck Ness Avatar

    Thank you Henry

  5. Mose Casparis Avatar

    Insightful piece

    1. Chuck Ness Avatar
      Chuck Ness

      Thank you

  6. Moshe Koeppen Avatar

    Outstanding feature

    1. Chuck Ness Avatar
      Chuck Ness

      Thank you

  7. James Huffman Avatar
    James Huffman

    I agree with most of what you say, but when something as simple as the name of the language of the New Testament is wrong (it’s koine Greek, not “koinonia” Greek) it calls into question everything that’s said in the article.

  8. SkippingDog Avatar
    SkippingDog

    Thus emerges error and heresy.

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