
Simon Peter: The Fisherman Who Became the Rock
The life of Simon Peter—first among the apostles and first pope—traced through Scripture, the Church Fathers, and modern archaeology at Capernaum and Rome.
A chronological series tracing the bishops of Rome from Saint Peter to the present — their lives, their decisions, and their enduring impact on the Church and the world.
The Catholic Church claims an unbroken line of bishops stretching from Saint Peter to Leo XIV — 266 successors across nearly two thousand years. This series will eventually cover every one of them: the theologians, the politicians, the reformers, and the saints who shaped the institution that shaped the West.
Each entry is a standalone essay, but the series is best read in order. It begins where the story begins — with a Galilean fisherman named Simon. Published entries appear as cards below; the rest are coming soon.

The life of Simon Peter—first among the apostles and first pope—traced through Scripture, the Church Fathers, and modern archaeology at Capernaum and Rome.

The third Bishop of Rome is named at every Mass, yet almost nothing about him can be verified. The honest history of Anacletus, the pope history can barely see.

Nearly everything claimed about Pope Linus dissolves under scrutiny—yet he remains the earliest test case for apostolic succession. What does the evidence actually say?

Clement of Rome wrote our earliest post-apostolic Christian letter. His message to Corinth still shapes apostolic succession and Roman primacy debates.

Evaristus is the fifth pope—a name on Irenaeus's list. Here's what the earliest sources actually say, and what the Liber Pontificalis added 400 years later.
* Martyred
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