The facts remain the same. All of this debate about tradition and change isn’t changing anything.
What are we trying to accomplish here, to answer the original question that was posted, play a game just to kill a few boring hours in the day or try to show the other person that “I’m right and you’re wrong.”
Refer to the Apologist Forum if you want explanations of each document and declaration made by the Church since its birth.
The fact is that the Pope ordered one of his bishops not to ordain. The bishop disobeyed. Tradition also has it that the pope is the final authority on this matter. Through his disobedience, the bishop incurred excommunication.
The church did not do anything that it did not have a right to do. The pope has the right to excommunicate. If you want to question that right, take it up with him. Stop pulling out documents that most people here do not understand, that you’re quoting out of context, and that even the poster is not qualified to interpret.
As to the final question, do you go with tradition or the pope? Obviously, you obey. The gates of hell will not prevail against the Church. Lefebvre is not the Church’s Messiah. We already have one. He is not the Holy Spirit, we have one of those too. He is not the head of the church. We have one of those too.
If like the first Peter, other Peters take twists and turns, the Holy Spirit will act, just as he has in the past. We’ve had other difficult periods in our history and we’re still here.
Get back to the fact. Lefebvre was excommunicated by his disobedience. Some people seem to want to justify that disobedience. So bei it. Justify away. It won’t lift the excommunication.
You can attack the pope all you want and he will remain the pope until proven otherwise.
Why do some people seem to find it so necessary defend Lefebvre? No one said he was an evil man or his followers. He disobeyed in what the pope considered a grave area and he was excommunicated. the pope has the right to make that call.
This is not Washington, where we can debate whether Bush had the right to send troups to Iraq and if we disagree we vote in the next election for someone who is on the other side of the issue. This is the Church a MONARCHY. The debate will change nothing.
The only ones who can change anything is the Pope and those whom he delegates. He did not delegate Lefebvre to ordain bishops. It’s that simple. In fact, he ordered him not to do so.
As to defending tradition, obedience to Peter’s authority dates back to the Acts of the Apostles.
vatican.va/holy_father/index.htm
If one has questions about tradition and papal authority, why not write your local bishop or speak to your diocesan canonist. That’s what I did and actually received a response. They will take the time to do this.
Here is a blog where you can ask a very orthodox cardinal of the Church these questions.
cardinalseansblog.org/
Here is the Vatican’s official site with lots of answers
vatican.va/holy_father/index.htm