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No one has tried to say the others recieved the keys
I do. First, on the level of the passage in question. In Mt. 16, Peter asked the disciples a question. Peter responded. Jesus responded in turn to Peter. This was a conversation between two individuals. It does her not indicate that any such 'keys' were given EXCLUSIVELY to Peter. If that were the case, then it would be "you alone" or "you yourself") a double pronoun as is used in the last verse of Romans 7. {Peter said, "Thou art the Christ . . ." Jesus responds to that affirmation, speaking to Peter. Did the other apostles also believe that Jesus was the Christ? James and John definitely did, the others struggled, but in the end, they ALL, except Judas, made that same affirmation. And on the Day of Pentecost, they ALL were together in the Upper Room, they ALL received the Holy Spirit, they ALL were speaking with other tongues. Peter preached on that occasion, others of them preached on other occasions.
As for what the 'keys' were, Jesus explains in the rest of the verse. "Whatsoever you bind on earth shall be loosed in heaven, and whatsoever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven." These are the 'keys' Jesus was here describing.
Did the other apostles have these 'keys' as well? Yes, the same 'keys' are described in ch. 18:18. The same wording, the same powers. the pronoun there is plural. The other apostles had the same powers as Peter. But Jesus did not intend for those powers to be limited to the 12 apostles. They are given to those also who should believe on Jesus throughout the centuries, as they had. We, too, as believers, have the keys of the kingdom in the same sense they had the keys. We too have the power to heal, to cast out demons.
ONE huge issue which is a GIGANTIC red flag in the RC theology is the exaltation of man. That is a tell-tale marker. Lucifer wanted to exalt himself above the other angels. Self wants to exalt itself above others. But Jesus said to be a servant, and seek the lowest place. Incidentally, as I recall that is one thing that aroused the ire of the Church against Hus and Jerome. that painting of the lowly Jesus, contrasted with the picture of the pope in his pomp and regalia. What I have read on this thread CONFIRMS the exaltation of man--a sinful, erring mortal. that was NOT the teaching of Jesus.
As for the Biblical account of the apostles after Christ's ascension, there is nothing to indicate any special powers or position that Peter had, over the other apostles. Several apostles are mentioned by name, as well as deacons. Stephen, Philip, John, Peter, James the Less, James the brother of John, and of course Paul, for example. Each is desribed, each had a ministry. They were equals, as God's people today are equals.
Dave
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