Marius Victorinus, makes Paul's visit an acknowledgment of Peter's Primacy,164.Mastrezat, referred to,232.Metaphor, tests of clearness in,267.More, Sir Thomas, his statement to Luther of reasons for maintaining the Primacy,263.Mosheim, his admission that the early Fathers set forth a unity which terminates in the Papal See, as the hand does in the fingers,197-198, note.Muzzarelli, his works referred to,255.N.Names, classes of, given in Scripture,16.Nicole, referred to,232.O.Œcumenius, on the fruit of the Incarnation,179.Optatus, St., calls St. Peter's the single chair in which unity was to be observed by all,110calls schism the greatest of evils,231referred to, as explaining the term Catholic,237ascribes the origin and maintenance of unity to Peter,242.Origen, says that Peter is so called from Christ the Rock,10calls Peter the great foundation of the Church,15describes the great honour given by Christ to Peter in the matter of the didrachmna,36makes Peter the first, as Judas the last, of the Apostles,89referred to, as defining the Church,223distinguishes the Church as Catholic,236states the principle of tradition,275referred to, on same,275.P.Pacian, St., calls the Church Catholic,236explains the term,237,238describes the Church's unity,239, noteascribes the origin of unity to Peter,242.Paul, St., distinguishes St. Peter among the Apostles,67why so much said of him in the Acts,121his visitatorial power contrasted with St. Peter's,146his epistles incidentally confirm St. Peter's Primacy,160recognises St. Peter's Primacy,161by going to visit him,162-165and in his second visit,166-169what is involved in his censure of St. Peter,169-171its real amount,177force of his terming the Church "one body,"193how emphatic he is in setting forth visible unity,197.PelagiusII., Pope, 578-590states privileges of the Apostolic See,253.Petavius, shows that spiritual jurisdiction springs from the direct gift of Christ,107.Peter, St., first mention of him in the Gospel,8meaning of his name,9a special title of our Lord,9name first promised,8conferred,11explained and promises attached,12,97-99titles of, betokening his association with Christ,15parallel between, and Abraham,17-25,206,213-214his name explained by St. Chrysostome,27his relation to the Apostles,28,98-9,102,104,108his instruction in the theology and economy,30witness of the transfiguration,30of the Lord's prayer in His agony,32of raising the daughter of Jairus,33associated with Christ in paying of the didrachma,34designated to be chief ruler of the Church,48charged to confirm his brethren,49-63is distinguished in having the resurrection proved to him,66all our Lord's promises fulfilled to him,70, and followingmentioned by the Evangelists differently from the other Apostles.,84named first in every catalogue,86his sphere distinguished from that of John,91his predominance in the sacred history,92how often mentioned in the Gospels,93and in the Acts,118the type, the origin, and the efficient cause of unity,100,108looked up to, as a God upon earth, by the West,113prominence given to him in the Acts116-122directs the election of a new Apostle,122defends the Apostles on the day of Pentecost,125speaks for them the third and fourth time,128proves his supreme authority by special miracles,129cures Œneas and raises Dorcas,132heals with his shadow,133receives the Samaritans into the Church,133-137and the Gentiles,138-142exercises supreme judicial power,144visits all churches,145is the first to pronounce decision in the council of Jerusalem,147-151his imprisonment and that of St. James and St. Paul,151summary of his conduct in the Acts,153-156his visible headship quite other than the headship of mystical influx,157set with James and John parallel to Paul with Barnabas and Titus,166the head, centre, fountain, root, and principle of unity,195is in the episcopate what God the Father is in the divine monarchy,195his office in the Church acknowledged by friend and foe,198typified in Judith,206,214-215.Peter, St. Chrysologus, says of Peter that he founds the Church by his firmness,15advises Eutyches to obey the Pope,61.Philip, St., perhaps the first-called Apostle,88Pionius, St., his acts call the Church Catholic,236.Polycarp, St., the epistle on his death calls the Church Catholic,236.Porphyry, distorts Paul's censure of Peter,171.Primacy, the nature of, defined in the three palmary texts,104-110shown to consist in superiority of jurisdiction,209-212compared to the law of gravitation,109,209institution and exercise of, compared,155the controversy on, reduced to one point,205summary of, as set forth in the Acts,153and generally,200-203the end and purpose of,212to which end three classes of reasons guide us,i. the typical,213ii. the analogical,217iii. the real,219bound up in the visibility and unity of the Church,235what is required of those who deny it,247its denial the origin of all actual divisions among Christians,248its proof as consideredabsolutely,249comparativelywith that for the divine institution of bishops, the real presence, and the divinity of Christ,259-274multiplicity of proof for it,251-256the opposition of Greeks, Anglicans, and Protestants to it, merely negative,257parallel between the opposition to it by sects now, and that to the doctrines of the Trinity and the Incarnation in the fourth, fifth, and sixth centuries,264.PrimacyandApostolate, their relation to each other,78,98-99,102,104.Proclus, Patriarch of Constantinople, calls Peter first prelate of the Apostles,216.Proofs, the different sort of, and their whole sum, to be considered,8different sorts of, and the principal here used,246multiplicity of, for the Primacy,247as consideredabsolutely,249comparatively,259concurrence of four great proofs for the Primacy,250.Prudentius, calls Peter the first disciple of God,61.R.Reformers, distort Paul's censure of Peter,172opposition between them and the Fathers as to Peter's Primacy,176as to Church principles227, notedenied the visibility of the Church,222, note.S.SacramentsandSymbolslead from the visible to the invisible,192.Sense, in writing, definition of,266, note.SocratesandSozomen, their canon respecting the bishop of Rome,252.Stephen, bishop of Dora, describes Peter's Primacy,56,83.Stephen, bishop of Larissa, makes all the Churches of the world to rest in Peter's confession,62.Symmachus, Popea.d.498-514likens the unity of the Apostolic See to that of the Trinity,196.T.Tertullian, why our Lord gave Peter a name drawn from figures of Himself,11says the Church is built on Peter,15expresses Peter's supreme power, and distinguishes his sphere from that of John,91ascribes the decision in the council of Jerusalem to St. Peter,150,164referred to, as defining the Church,223and as explaining the term Catholic,237,238sets forth Church unity,224denies that Peter's doctrine was censured,175calls the Catholic Churchnear to Peter,241says the Lord left the keys to Peter, and through him to the Church,241his rule not to search for the truth among heretics,261referred to, on the principle of tradition,275.Theodore, Abbot of the Stadium at Constantinople, addresses Pope Pascal I. as Peter, and beseeches him to exert his Primacy,56calls Pope Leo III. father of fathers, &c.,216.Theodoret, saysstonea title of our Lord,10terms Peter the most solid rock,15ascribes the decision in the Council of Jerusalem to St. Peter,151recognises Peter's Primacy,161and163.Theophylact, says that Peter confirms not only the Apostles, but all the faithful to the end of the world,52interprets John xxi.15-17, of supreme power over the Church given to Peter,80.Thomas, St., of Canterbury, sees in Paul's visit to Peter a proof of his Primacy,165.U.Unity, that of the Father and the Son the archetype of the Church's unity,195fourfold in the Church, of mystical influx, charity, faith, visible headship,181-196texts on the Church's unity, referred to220,273, n. 27Protestant notions of the Church's unity,222that of Anglicans,222that of distinguishing between internal and external unity,225that of agreement in fundamentals,232.V.ValentinianIII., his constitution on the Primacy quoted,255.Vincentof Lerins, referred to, on principle of tradition,275.Vitringa, sets forth a Protestant notion of unity,225-8.Voss, on the Creed, referred to,236.W.Walemburg, the brothers, referred to,233.Z.Zaccharia, his works, referred to,253.Zeno, St., quoted,15.