T
Tradycja
Guest
The modernists were already dreaming it up BEFORE Vatican II. Catechisms are not infallible documents.then it means that while they’re not part of the Body of the Church, they’re nevertheless part of the SOUL of the Church. And lest you think it’s something that “modernist” bishops, priests, and laity dreamed up after Vatican II, many pre-Vatican II catechisms say that same thing. I believe the Baltimore Catechism is one of them.
The idea of the “soul of the Church” is erroneous. The Soul of the Church heresy is that which teaches that one can be saved in another religion or without the Catholic Faith by being united to the Soul of the Church, but not the Body. Belonging to the Body of the Church only comes with the Sacrament of Baptism.
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First, this heresy stems from a misunderstanding of the true meaning of the term “Soul of the Church.” The Soul of the Church is the Holy Ghost. It is not an invisible extension of the mystical body which includes the unbaptized.
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Second, the Church is essentially (i.e., in its essence) a Mystical Body.
Pope St. Pius X, Editae saepe (# 8), May 26, 1910: “… the Church, the Mystical Body of Christ…”
Pope Leo XII, Quod Hoc Ineunte (# 1), May 24, 1824: “… His mystical Body.”
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Therefore, to teach that one can be saved without belonging to the Body is to teach that one can be saved without belonging to the Church, since the Church is a Body. And this is without question WRONG.
A man can be either inside the Church or outside the Church. He can be either inside or outside the Body. There isn’t a third realm in which the Church exists – an invisible Soul of the Church. Those who say that one can be saved by belonging to the Soul of the Church, while not belonging to her Body, deny the undivided unity of the Church’s Body and Soul, which is parallel to denying the undivided unity of Christ’s Divine and Human natures.
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The denial of the union of the Church’s Body and Soul leads to the heresy that the Church is invisible, which was condemned by Popes Leo XIII (above), Pius XI and Pius XII.
Third, the most powerful proof against the “Soul of the Church” heresy logically follows from the first two already discussed. The third proof is that the infallible magisterium of the Catholic Church has defined that belonging to the Body of the Church is necessary for salvation!
Pope Eugene IV, in his famous Bull Cantate Domino, defined that the unity of the ecclesiastical body (ecclesiastici corporis) is so strong that no one can be saved outside of it, even if he sheds his blood in the name of Christ. This refutes the idea that one can be saved by belonging to the Soul of the Church without belonging to its Body.
Pope Pius XI, Mortalium Animos (# 10), Jan. 6, 1928: “For since the mystical body of Christ, in the same manner as His physical body, is one, compacted and fitly joined together, it were foolish and out of place to say that the mystical body is made up of members which are disunited and scattered abroad:** whosoever therefore is not united with the body is no member of it, neither is he in communion with Christ its head.”**