T
thistle
Guest
Only disciplines can be changed.I mean, that has to be some pretty new Canon Law then. Just saying. Certainly a discipline or a doctrine but not a dogma. Definitely subject to change.
Only disciplines can be changed.I mean, that has to be some pretty new Canon Law then. Just saying. Certainly a discipline or a doctrine but not a dogma. Definitely subject to change.
He should have been suspended for liberation theology.When he entered the political arena Father Aristide was suspended.
True, but that’s different because both the Bishop of Urgell and the President of France do not live in Andorra. They are both figureheads with no real power.Technically, the Bishop of Urgell is Co-Prince and reigning monarch of the country of Andorra and has a representative (a priest) as his personal representative in the government. It is one of the smallest countries in the world in both size and population and is more of a figurehead than a political position as the other co-prince is the President of France. The political leader of Andorra is considered to be Head of Government, elected by their legislative parliament, the General Council.
I suppose we should credit Ed Peters for that nice translation.Maybe it would be worthwhile to post the entire canon: …
Yes, sorry! I should have thought to mention where I pulled the quote from. I have the text electronically via Verbum. Comes in handy.I suppose we should credit Ed Peters for that nice translation.
Huh. Maybe I should have gone that route instead of buying the hard-copy…I have the text electronically via Verbum.
Wasn;t the Pope the Head of the Papal states? And now who is the head of Vatican State?I was surprised to hear of bishops being politically active.
Why is it a bad thing for the Roman Catholic Pope to be the head of the Catholic Church and at the same time the Monarch of the Vatican State?Serving two masters is always a bad thing
I do apologize, because I find many peole put words in my mouth on CAF.Either you did not read my post thoroughly, or you are trying to put words in my mouth. I never said anything even close to “the Church was wrong the whole time”.
Even that statement could be used as an argument for temporal power. The Protestants had their princes as well, as did we. Most of the rulers at the time were still secular, but were either Catholic or Protestant. And only allowed Catholics or Protestants in their lands for some time. That’s how it was. If the Church was wrong to hold political power, the Protestants certainly offered nothing different. They wanted the same. That’s what the Northern Princes were.some historieans have posited that at least some of the strength of the Protestant Revolution can be attributed to northern princes taking up the cause as a reaction to the power, politically, which the Church swung at the time. Subjective opinion and not objective fact? I hardly think so.
So there’s that.