B
bear06
Guest
This whole conversation, of course, point out why we are not to appeal to an ecumenical council as if it were an authority higher than the Roman Pontiff. Hmmm…Where have I hear this before?
I haven’t argued against the teachings of the Catechism of Pius X. I have only asked Dave the simple question of whether or not he believes the teaching of the infallible dogmatic council of Florence.USMC - I cannot BELIEVE that you are arguing against the very clear words of the Catechism of Pope Pius X. Obviously according to your logic the sainted Pius himself was a heretic! Guilty of grave sin and of allowing error to be taught by the Church! You can’t seriously accept this.
sigh I’m neither angry, nor have I called you any names. I was joking with regard to Air Force guys being smarter than Marines, I hope you know. It very much depends upon the Marine and upon the Air Force guy.Dave,
In your anger and name-calling …
I haven’t ignored this assertion of yours, nor do I care. I’ve not claimed you were a member of the SSPX, so it appears again your exegetical skills are wanting. Nonetheless, it doesn’t have any relevance upon the evident Lefebvrist bias you consistently tend toward.(BTW, I am not a member of the SSPX. I attend Mass at an SSPX Church from time to time (it has actually been a while), but am not a member of the group. I’m sure you will ignore this statement (which I have told you several times in the past), since, in order to attempt to discredit my points, you would like to pretend that I am a member of that vilified group who is keeping the faith in the midst of the current crisis.)
Hmmmm…the Council of Florence was a 15th century council. Pius V was a 16th century pope. I think perhaps you’re a bit confused.1.) … the clear and unambiguous teachings of the council of Forence, which teaches:
The Council of Florence, Pope St. Pius V, De Defectibus, chapter 5, Part 1: …
There were two quotes I was going to use, and I mistakenly posted the wrong source. The quote I posted was from De Defectibus of Pius V, not the Council of Florence under Pope Eugene IV. Sorry about that. Let me post both quotes now.Hmmmm…the Council of Florence was a 15th century council. Pius V was a 16th century pope. I think perhaps you’re a bit confused.![]()
Now you’re just building strawmen, and everyone here knows it. Not very convincing.…The “approved ecclesistical liturgical norms” in Orange allow for the Halloween Mass.
According to a 1908 text, P. Hermann, Institutiones Theologiae Dogmaticae (4th ed., Rome: Della Pace, 1908), vol. 1, p. 258:Code:**Disciplinary Infallibility**] has, however, found a place in all recent treatises on the Church (De Ecclesiâ}. The authors of these treatises decide **unanimously** in favour of a negative and indirect rather than a positive and direct infallibility, inasmuch as in her general discipline, i. e. the common laws imposed on all the faithful, the Church can prescribe nothing that would be contrary to the natural or the Divine law, nor prohibit anything that the natural or the Divine law would exact. If well understood this thesis is undeniable; it amounts to saying that the Church does not and cannot impose practical directions contradictory of her own teaching.
Code:“The Church is** infallible in her general discipline**. **By the term general discipline is understood the laws and practices which belong to the external ordering of the whole Church.** Such things would be those which concern either external worship, **such as liturgy and rubrics, or the administration of the sacraments. . . .**
So, while this doesn’t apply toward the norms established by any one diocesan bishop for his diocese, it does apply to the GENERAL norms, such as the Code of Canon Laws, and to the Roman Missal approved and promulgated by the Roman Pontiff.**“If she [the Church] were able to prescribe or command or tolerate in her discipline something against faith and morals, or something which tended to the detriment of the Church or to the harm of the faithful, she would turn away from her divine mission, which would be impossible.”
**
Pope Gregory XVI, Quo Graviora, 4-5 (1833), who condemns the proposition that…the discipline sanctioned by the Church must never be rejected or branded as contrary to certain principles of the natural law. It must never be called crippled, or imperfect
(published by Our predecessor, Pius VI on August 28, 1794)… do they not try to make the Church human by taking away from the infallible and divine authority, by which divine will it is governed? And does it not produce the same effect to think that the present discipline of the Church rests on failures, obscurities, and other inconveniences of this kind? And to feign that this discipline contains many things which are not useless but which are against the safety of the Catholic religion? Why is it that private individuals appropriate for themselves the right which is proper only for the pope?""… categorically that there are many things in the discipline of the Church… [which] are harmful for the growth and prosperity of the Catholic religion… these men [who make such claims] were shamefully straying in their thoughts, they proposed to fall upon the errors condemned by the Church in proposition 78 of the constitution *Auctorem fidei *
Forgive me, but a don’t agree that it is truly traditional of Catholics to assert propositions which directly oppose the condemnations of an 18th century pope.“The Novus Ordo Missae, even when said with piety and respect for the liturgical rules…bears within it a poison harmful to the faith” (Marcel Levebvre, An Open Letter to Confused Catholics, p. 29)
Please. This kind of thing is usually said by someone who apparently thinks he has been bestowed the authority of interpretaion of documents. Mysterium Fidei affirms that nothing essential has been changed.After all, it contradicts De Defectibus.
Bear,On the one hand, you are indicating that this would invalidate the Eucharist. You would then have to say that the Magisterium is contradicting Tradition. This can’t happen so you would be wrong if this is your claim. It’s fairly simple no matter how learned you think you are.
Sorry USMC, but you aren’t the center of my world. I have other conversations going on, many of which do not involve people in cyberspace.Are you willing to answer my second question (posted above)? Either Dave is not going to answer…
OK, so again, are you saying the Church is contradicting Tradition when it says that the Institution is found in this rite? What in the Anaphora Rite of Addai and Mari contradicts this:Bear,
Are you willing to answer my second question (posted above)? Either Dave is not going to answer, or else he is scouring the internet trying to find some kind of explanation. I will post the question again now.
Question # 2.) Do you believe that the Anaphora Rite of Addai and Mari, which has no words of consecration, yet was approved by Rome, is a valid Mass?
This “mass” which has no words of consecration at all - NONE - was approved, as valid, by both John Paul II and Cardinal Ratizinger. Is it valid?
Since trawling is the word of the day, I don’t often go trawling for the obscure to condemn the “post-conciliar” Church so you’ll have to help me out here?. What in the Addai and Mari Rite doesn’t signify what we believe in our canons?If anyone removes or changes anything in the Form of Consecration of the Body and Blood, and by this change of words does not signify the same thing as these words do, he does not confect the Sacrament.
Alex, are you seriously suggesting that people are going to assume that Mary was a sinner because of ONE LINE in ONE SEQUENCE that is said only once a year?My point remains. Liturgically, SINCE the 1970 Missal and its translation into the vernacular, it’s no longer complete just to talk about those MYTHICAL Roman rubrics…I say MYTHICAL because they’re used in a handful of places compared to the places using the vernacular.
Local bishops and their conferences have tremendous authority over the liturgy, as noted in the 1970 Missal in various places.
And so, for example, we come back to the Easter Sequence. The Latin is very nice. Christus innocens Patri reconciliavit peccatores. That means The innocent Christ reconciled sinners to the Father. You don’t need to be a pope or bishop to know that.
But the ICEL translation reads Christ who only was sinless reconciled sinners to the Father.
Note they added something. Note what they added is false. Note the addition implicitly denies the sinlessness of Mary.
That’s an official translation. A liturgical text. Supposedly immune from all possible defect that would impact our faith.
Sorry, try again. Though I’ve love to see someone twist and contort that translation and show how stupid all of us are who happen to know Latin quite well and know that translation is not only wrong, period, but quite potentially damaging to the faith. Singing that verse year after year on the holiest day in the calendar…
Well, this would be according to you, wouldn’t it. Have you read the documents on this issue? BTW, I don’t believe anyone quoted anything on this issue so I’d have to assume you’re talking about the Vatican.The rite in question doesn’t have a Consecration formula. The little quotes people are parading out to do their command performance clearly imply that there actually IS a Consecration formula to confect the Sacrament validly.
Are you saying that the Vatican is contradicting Tradition?The Addai and Mari Anaphora question isn’t “obscure”. It touches on some of the fundamental issues of the Catholic faith.
Again, we aren’t going to agree on the pro multis issue. You knew this already because it’s been discussed to death. Go ahead and believe whatever you’d like and we’ll think what we like about your theories and you can think what you like about ours. Anyone who doesn’t agree with you is stupid or far less scholarly anyway according to you. It’s clear that think you’re far more scholarly or honest than the Magisterium. Check. It’s too bad you just don’t say what you mean so we can be done with this in a few posts instead of dragging this on and on for almost 100. Personally, I wouldn’t mind if they do change the translation because thn you’d have to rant about something else. Then we can just disagree with you on that and move on. What a vicious circle and yet, we’ve yet to hear what you hope to accomplish.But my translation issue…related to Pro Multis as an example of an incorrect translation that was either the product of stupidity, incompetence, or deliberate obfuscation…is used throughout the US every Easter.