"Pax et Caritas:
… It is certainly within the realm of possibility for a Pope to deviate from the faith, teach heresy, and become a heretic.
I disagree. Ironically, the above claim is far from “traditional” Catholic view. It smacks more of modernism to me, and has much in common with Charles Curran and his like.
Then why would a Pope teach the following?
POPE PAUL IV: “In assessing Our duty and the situation now prevailing, We have been weighed upon by the thought that a matter of this kind * is so grave and so dangerous that
the Roman Pontiff, who is the representative upon earth of God and our God and Lord Jesus Christ, who holds the fulness of power over peoples and kingdoms, who may judge all and be judged by none in this world, may nonetheless be contradicted if he be found to have deviated from the Faith. Remembering also that, where danger is greater, it must more fully and more diligently be counteracted, We have been concerned lest false prophets or others, even if they have only secular jurisdiction, should wretchedly ensnare the souls of the simple, and drag with them into perdition, destruction and damnation countless peoples committed to their care and rule, either in spiritual or in temporal matters; and We have been concerned also lest it may befall Us to see the abomination of desolation, which was spoken of by the prophet Daniel, in the holy place. In view of this, Our desire has been to fulfil our Pastoral duty, insofar as, with the help of God, We are able, so as to arrest the foxes who are occupying themselves in the destruction of the vineyard of the Lord and to keep the wolves from the sheepfolds, lest We seem to be dumb watchdogs that cannot bark and lest We perish with the wicked husbandman and be compared with the hireling”(Cum Ex Apostolatus Officio ).
If it was impossible for a Pope to deviate from the faith, why would this Pope teach us that it is permitted to disobey if a Pope if he deviates from the faith? And why would Pope Adrian VI teach the followig:
POPE ADRIAN VI (1522-1523) “If by the Roman Church you mean its head or pontiff, it is beyond question that he can error even in matters touching the faith. He does this when he teaches heresy by his own judgment or decretal. In truth, many Roman pontiffs were heretics. The last of them was Pope John XXII (1316-1334).” (Quaest. in IV Sententiam).
POPE ADRIAN VI: "After his death [Pope] Honorius was anathematized by the Eastern Church. We must remember that he was accused of heresy, a crime which legitimizes the resistance of inferiors to superiors, together with the rejection of their pernicious doctrines. (Allocution III, Lect. In Conc. VIII, act. VII)
Now be honest, if you had lived during the reign of Pope John XXII who taught publicly that the souls of the saved would not possess the beatifiv vision until after the general judgment, you would have defended that error, wouldn’t you? Be homest.
And had you lived during the time of Pope Honorious, you would have agreed with him that Jesus only had one will, wouldn’t you?
In fact, I bet you agree with John Paul II that “the old Covenant has never been revoked by God”, don’t you? And you probably also believe that a Mass that has no words of consecration is valid, don’t you?
So, do you believe that a “mass” having no words of consecration is valid? After all, John Paul II thought it was and he signed a document confirming it.*