Dear brother Madaglan,
If you feel that is what it implies, then it contradicts what the Decree on the primacy explicitly states:
The power of the Supreme Pontiff is far from standing in the way of the power of hte oridnary and immediate episcopal jurisdiction by which the bishops who, under appointment of the Holy Spirit, succeded in the place of the apostles, feed and rule individually, as true shepherds, the particular flock assigned to them. Rather this latter power is asserted, confirmed and vindicated by this same supreme and universal shepherd in the words of St. Gregory the Great: "My honor is the honor of the whole Church. My honor is the solid strength of my brethren. I am truly honored when due honor is paid to each and every one."
The question is simple. Do you feel a mere implication trumps the explicit affirmation of the Vatican Decree?
You also have to understand that Vatican 1 taught that infallibility is PART OF the primacy. So infallibility must be exercised according to the standards of primacy, and those standards exclude unilaterally intervening in the affairs of local Churches:
“Moreover, this Holy See has always held that the supreme power of teaching is also included in this apostolic primacy.”
That’s the first sentence of the Decree on Infallibility, brother. I don’t know how you can miss it. As a brotherly exhortation, may I suggest reading the entirety of the Vatican Decrees on primacy and infallibility, without the benefit of the distortions by non-Catholic (and Catholic) polemical misinterpretations?
I hope that helps.
I wanted to clarify something. I don’t want to be misunderstood as saying that the Pope does not have the authority to directly, without appeal, discipline bishops or individuals if they are heretics or are violating a universal canon of the Church.
The Pope DOES have this authority,
but only in the absence of the authorities that has been established by ancient custom or canon.
Let’s imagine a priest preaching heresy or is violating a universal canon of the Church. That priest is under the direct authority of his local bishop. A Pope, Patriarch, or Metropolitan at this point has no canonical authority to discipline that priest. In the normal course of events, the local bishop and him alone has all authority to discpline that priest. A priest may appeal to an authority higher than his bishop. A priest may appeal to the Pope, but only with the consent of his Metropolitan (if that is the highest level of authority in that Church) or Patriarch (if that is the highest level of authority in that Church).
Now, imagine that the priest is not only not disciplined, but the bishop himself supports his actions. IF the bishop is under the omophorion of a Metropolitan, then Pope or Patriarch has no canonical authority to discipline that priest or bishop. In the normal course of events, the Metropolitan and the Metropolitan alone has all authority to discipline that bishop (normally done in Synod, depending on local canon and custom). If the bishop has no Metropolitan head, then the Patriarch in the region has the canonical authority to discipline. If the bishop has no Patriarchal head, the Pope has the canonical authority to discpline. A bishop has the canonical right of appeal to the Pope.
Now, imagine that the Metropolitan fails in his duty or, even more, supports the irregular actions of the bishop and priest. In the normal course of events, the Patriarch and Patriarch alone has all canonical authority to discpline that Metropolitan (normally done in Synod, depending on the local canon and custom). If the Metropolitan has no Patriarchal head, then the Pope has the canonical authority to discipline. A metropolitan has the canonical right of appeal to the Pope.
Now, imagine that the Patriarch fails in his duty or, even more, supports the irregular actions of the Metropolitans, bishop and priest. In the normal course of events, the Patriarchal Synod has the authority to discipline the Patriarch. The Patriarch has the canonical right of appeal to the Pope if the decision of the Synod is adverse to him.
If the Patriarchal Synod fails in its duty or, even more, if all bishops of that Patriarchal Church support the irregular actions, the Patriarchs of other Churches may get involved with letters of correction or exhortation, but the only one canonically authorized to discpline would be the Pope. If the irregularities of that Patriarchate infect other areas outside of the Patriarchate, the Pope has the canonical right and divine obligation to intervene. If it ever gets to that point, the normative and historic procedure is to call an Ecumenical Council.
The point of all this is that the office of the papacy is not a unilateral micromanager, nor was intended to be such, by the First Vatican Council - nor has he ever been so in the history of the Church, even in the Middle Ages after the schism with the East.
Blessings