The main point that should be argued, is why is Ultima Ratio pitting popes against each other?
But every single Pope I quoted was in agreement with the rest. Did you miss that?
What your post implicitly confirms is that you yourself see the apparent contradiction between EVERY Pope I quoted, and the recent Popes (
who I didn’t quote).
So, how do you explain this apparent contradiction that you see regarding religious liberty? And by what you wrote above, you can no longer deny that you see it.
Am I the only sane person in a room full of crazies?
I think you may have it exactly backwards
The same spirit guides all popes.
Explain what you mean by the spirit guiding the Popes. Do you mean that a Pope loses his free will when he is elected? Are you claiming that a Pope cannot teach something contrary to the faith after being elected Pope? If so, how do you explain Pope John XXII, who taught that the souls of the blessed do not obtain the beatific vision until after the final judgment? He taught this error publicly on multiple occasions before finally retracting it in writing on his death bed. When someone is elected Pope he does not loose his free will; and he is only protected by the charism of infallibility when he meets the guidelines set down by the first Vatican Council.
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).
I asked you multiple times to tell me what you think Vatican II taught regarding religious liberty, since you denied that the teaching was ambiguous. But, knowing how Vatican II is interpreted by EVERYONE, I warned you (privately) that as soon as you gave me your interpretation of
Dignitatis Humanae, I would fill your computer screen with magisterial statements saying the exact opposite. Taking that warning to heart, and not wanting to be embarrassed, you would not give me your interpretation of Vatican II.
Then, when I posted some of the magisterial teachings I was referring to on the subject of religious liberty, you claimed that I was pitting Pope against Pope. By this statement you acknowledged the contradiction between what you think is being taught today and what was clearly taught prior to the council.
This is the same apparent contradiction that the SSPX and other like-minded Catholics see on this point. And since the SSPX and other likeminded Catholics believe in the INFALLIBILITY of the* universal ordinary magisterium,* they refuse to accept as true, errors that have been formally condemned by the Church. **Therefore, they are asking Rome to explain how this apparent contradiction can be reconciled with the practice of the Church for about 1600 years prior to Vatican II, and the explicit teachings of the Popes prior to Vatican II. **
Rome was well aware of the chaos caused by the apparent contradiction between what Vatican II taught, and what was taught prior to the council, but they would not address the matter. All they would say is “you have to accept Vatican II”, without showing how Vatican II could be reconciled with what the Church teaches. If you are honest, you yourself will admit that you cannot reconcile the two. For you, to quote the pre-Vatican II Popes on this subject is to “pit Pope against Pope”.
Fortunately the persistence of the SSPX has paid off and Rome is finally dealing with the elephant in the room. Not only the elephant of religious liberty, but several other ambiguities and contradictions as well.
Let us thank God that He gave the SSPX the strength to hold out, thereby forcing Rome to deal with these apparent contradictions - contradictions that have resulted in major divisions within the Church.
I want to end with one final comment: The Church does not condemn the idea that false religions can, and sometimes should, be tolerated by the State. This is a matter of prudence, and sometimes becomes the best policy (depending on the percentage of non-Catholics in the State).
But what the Church condemns is the idea that man has an inherent right to publicly profess a false religion, and/or promote errors contrary to the Catholic faith. This is where the problem of Vatican II comes in. It is interpreted by just about everyone as saying that man, due to his “dignity”, has a natural right to profess a false religion; and therefore, due to this pretended “dignity” the State should make such practice a “civil right”. If Vatican II teaches this - which is how it is interpreted by just about everyone - the teaching is totally false and will have to be corrected by the Church.
This is the apparent contradiction that they are now dealing with, thank to the SSPX.