That works only if we accept that they come under that authority by virtue of the fact that they have appealed to it…
I’m not sure that I’m following but if I do I don’t agree. My point was, for authority to work (in the case of appealing to an authority), the one to be influenced has to believe that authority to be authoritative. Even then they might not even listen! But this is just more generally speaking; and the way I see it. I’ll give you another analogy (maybe not a very good one.) Let’s say Joe Catholic and Jimmy Protestant are roommates and both really hungry on a Lenten Friday and are staring at the last piece of Pepperoni in the fridge which they both go to grab for. Jimmy Protestant, though he is not under Catholic Canon Law nor does he view it as authoritative might appeal to it in order to convince Joe that he shouldn’t eat that piece of pizza. If Joe doesn’t believe that Canon Law is authoritative, Jimmy’s appeal to it would be in vain. That’s what I was getting at
We would liken the Pope’s role in these cases to that of binding arbitration between two bodies. The two agree that they will be legally bound to the decision of the third party, however they are not under that authority on any other issues past or future.
Right, I see what you are saying. Now we are talking about reality and although I disagree that this is/was the situation, it’s logical. If I understand you correctly, you’re trying to paint a picture like this: Cuba and Jamaica, both independent sovereign nations, agreed beforehand that the Dominican Republic would be the arbiter of a dispute between them in a case over fishing rights in the water or something, and that both would adhere to the decision. Then no, once the matter has been settled, that doesn’t mean that Cuba and/or Jamaica is now under the jurisdiction of the D.R. But obviously with Catholics and the Papacy, we believe that universal jurisdiction was bestowed upon St. Peter by Christ, and that it is passed on to his successors in the Roman Pontiffs.
And I’ll just take a moment here to point out how this should look, in the Catholic view, in light of Fr. Morris’ recent comment about early Popes being “power hungry”. I assume that someone like Pope St. Nicholas I is in mind (Father Morris please correct me if I’m wrong) but I believe they were (at the very least in their own minds but I believe in reality) fulfilling their Divinely appointed role as guardians of the faith, and did so with great zeal. In this I am reminded of the words of St. Siricius to ,Bishop Himerius (A.D. 385):
“. . . To your inquiry we do not deny a legal reply, because we, upon whom greater zeal for the Christian religion is incumbent than upon the whole body, out of consideration for our office do not have the liberty to dissimulate, nor to remain silent. We carry the weight of all who are burdened; nay rather the blessed apostle PETER bears these in us, who, as we trust, protects us in all matters of his administration, and guards his heirs.”
Source:
denzinger.patristica.net/
Anyway, what it should look like (at least in part) in the Catholic view according to Blessed John Paul II (I think), not that it has always been lived up to:
"This does not mean claiming for the Successor of Peter powers like those of the earthly ‘rulers’ of whom Jesus spoke (cf. Mt 20:25-28), but being faithful to the will of the Church’s Founder, who established this type of society and this form of governance to serve the communion in faith and love.
To fulfill Christ’s will, the Successor of Peter must assume and exercise the authority he has received in a spirit of humble service and with the aim of ensuring unity. Even in the various historical ways of exercising that authority, he must imitate Christ in serving and bringing into unity those called to be part of the one fold. He will never subordinate what he has received for Christ and his Church to his own personal aims. He can never forget that the universal pastoral mission must entail a very profound participation in the Redeemer’s sacrifice, in the mystery of the cross.
Regarding his relationship with his brothers in the episcopate, he must remember and apply the words of St. Gregory the Great: ‘My honor is the honor of the universal Church. My honor is the solid strength of my brothers. I am truly honored, then, when each of them is not denied the honor due him’ [1] ."
Source:
vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/audiences/alpha/data/aud19930224en.html
If what you said was truly how it worked, both Jerusalem and Cyprus would have come under the control of Constantinople in the past 50 years, something which, outside the imposed ethnarchy of the Turks, is quite obviously outside the canonical bounds of the Church, both that envisioned by Orthodox, and by Romans.
I’m guessing I didn’t make myself clear; what I was trying to say was kind of spelled out between Jimmy & Joe above. I was not trying to suggest that anyone came under the control of anyone.
Anyway Nine_Two,
Sorry for being long winded. Maybe if you just want to make the original point you wanted to make by taking the argument from a Catholic apologist which you object to, it might get through to me easier.
