D
diggerdomer
Guest
It’s not a question of an ecumenical council (as understood by Catholics) to “choose” the level of teaching authority. De facto, an ecumenical council (as understood by Catholics) is the highest teaching authority the Church has. Whether or not this or that ecumenical council chose to teach infallibly is irrelevant in this respect.We cannot pick and choose what parts of our faith we will adhere to. However, Religious Freedom is not part of the deposit of faith. Sacred Tradition preserves the Deposit of Faith. Religious Freedom is contradictory to more than one and a half thousand years of official Church teaching and has no place in Tradition for most of our history. Therefore it cannot justly be described as part of our Sacred Tradition. In fact, until the last 50 years, its reverse has been taught “always and everywhere.” If Religious Freedom was part of the Deposit of Faith, we would see it taught in our history, not condemned by our highest authorities and officially rejected again and again for well over a thousand years.
The Church can choose what level of authority it wants to teach with when it’s gathering in an ecumenical council. Ecumenical Councils don’t always act with the same level of authority. Vatican II chose to act in the authority of the Ordinary Magesterium, according to Pope Paul VI, not the Extraordinary. Therefore this council did not choose to use the power of the “highest teaching authority of the Catholic Church.” One of our recent popes said the council chose not to use an extraordinary dogmas because it wanted to speak with ordinary man on his own level, rather than talking down to him through infallibility.