Matthew the Apostle
Gospel of Matthew 16:18–19
The foundational Petrine text. "You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my Church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it. I will give you the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven."
Apologetic note
The word play between Petros (Peter) and petra (rock) is only a problem in Greek translation. In the original Aramaic spoken by Jesus, both are the same word: Kepha. The objection that "petra means a small stone" is a translation artifact, not a theological argument.
John the Apostle
Gospel of John 21:15–17
"Feed my lambs… tend my sheep… feed my sheep." The three-fold commission of Peter after the Resurrection, restoring him after the three-fold denial.
Apologetic note
The universal pastoral commission — not a restricted geographical one — is given to Peter alone in this text. No other Apostle receives it. The question is not whether Peter had this commission but whether it ended with his death.
Paul the Apostle
First Corinthians 11:23–29
The earliest written eucharistic text, predating all four Gospels. "I received from the Lord what I also passed on to you: the Lord Jesus, on the night he was betrayed, took bread… This is my body." Paul's warning about receiving "unworthily" presupposes a real presence.
Apologetic note
Written c. AD 54–55 — fifteen years before Mark's Gospel. The chain of transmission is explicit in the text itself: from the Lord → Paul → the Corinthians → the Church. This is apostolic tradition operating in real time.
Luke the Evangelist
Acts of the Apostles 15:1–29
The Council of Jerusalem (c. AD 49). James presides, Peter speaks definitively, the council issues a binding decree. The first exercise of collegial apostolic authority.
Apologetic note
The structure of Acts 15 is the prototype of every ecumenical council: a disputed question, deliberation, a presiding figure who speaks decisively, a binding communal decree transmitted in writing to all the churches.