And this rules out a head of the visible church...how?
Because one was never established. Only Christ could have done that, and He didn't. He left Himself as the Head.
If said individual ignores the sign and goes around, he's on his own.
The Holy Spirit gave the Church 72 books...who made the decision to change it to 66? A man. This is the perfect example of men not following the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. That happens a lot, by the way. But never to the doctrines of the Catholic Church.
No, a perfect example of men not following the inspiration of the Holy Spirit can be found in doctrines that go contrary to the word of God. Doctrines that elevate the traditions of man over "Thus saith the Lord."
Trying to limit how the Holy Spirit works is not a point worth arguing? A Biblical manifestation of the Holy Spirit at work? Too funny. Your determination is not such a manifestation, though.
I was actually saying that I wasn't going to split hairs behind casting lots, and how your church chooses currently. It wouldn't be profitable. That said, there is no biblical manifestation at work when your church selects a Pope given that that office is not one sanctioned by God.
Read the first part of the first letter. To Timothy, my child in faith...then he instructs him to remain in Ephesus. Chapter 4 gives Timothy instructions about how to be a good bishop. Earlier, he was taught how to choose a good bishop. Paul named Timothy head of the Church where he left him.
Paul does no such thing in the his letter. Telling Timothy to stay where he was so that he could instruct individuals in proper doctrine does not make him a bishop. As already stated, the disciples were evangelists. If Timothy was following after Paul, it would have been in the same vein.
Well, we don't confine ourselves to only Scripture.
Wasn't saying you had to. It would however be in your best interest to confine yourself to teachings that don't go contrary to what the scriptures say. That's where the problem is.
It doesn't matter? There's no distinction in Aramaic between pebble and boulder. For one.
Maybe not linguistically, but I'm certain no one would mistake a pebble for a boulder. It would be understood based on the context in which the word was used. Thus one could tell that the Rock Christ would build His church upon wouldn't be a movable one, but an immovable one.
Christ is certainly the Rock, but that does not preculde Peter from being the Rock, as Christ named him. Jesus didn't make Peter head of the Church while Christ was still walking the hills of Galilee. And Christ chose fallible men to further his ministry. Peter took the position at Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit manifested in him and the other apostles. The Early Church knew what Christ did with Peter. Why did it take a thousand years for anyone to question it?
I'm not saying that Peter didn't have a prominent role among the apostles, even one of leadership in some sort of way. I wouldn't doubt that at all. What I'm saying is that he is not the Rock, nor was he the first pope or the visible head of Christ in the church.
Who says it can't refer to Christ and Peter? You? By what authority?
The text makes itself clear. God does not share His glory. Such logic is the reason why the scriptures have been pushed to the wayside in favor of man's words. You don't need to look for any "authority" to explain the text. Line upon line. Precept upon precept. How many prophecies were there that pointed to the apostles? Each prophecy in that book pointed to the coming Savior so that we would know who He was. Trying to apply that to Peter is down right...well it's just wrong, and if you're going to base your understanding on "authority" than base it upon the inherent authority of the word of God.