Dear brother Madaglan,
In the Latin Catholic understanding, is there a distinction between the appellate jurisdiction of the Pope of Rome found in the first seven Ecumenical Councils and the full, immediate, universal jurisdiction that the Pope of Rome and Latin Catholics claim?
It wasn’t just appellate jurisdiction, but
universal appellate jurisdiction. In distinction (for the sake of clarity), the Patriarch of Constantinople had a pan-regional appellate jurisdiction in the Eastern portion of Christendom. Other Patriarchs have a regional appellate jurisdiction in their Patriachate, Metropolitans have a regional appellate jurisdiciton in their Metropolitan See; finally, bishops have a local appellate jurisdiction in their diocese.
There is no
practical difference between “universal, appellate jurisdiction” and “universal, full, immediate and ordinary jurisdiction,” if you have followed any of the many posts I’ve given on the issue of what the latter phrase actually means (if you want another explanation, let me know). The
perceived difference between Catholics and Eastern Orthodox is that Catholics believe this jurisdiction was divinely established by Christ in St. Peter and inherited in the Apostolic Succession by the bishop of Rome, while Eastern Orthodox (though their positions vary) seem to generally view the jurisdiction as merely ecclesiastically established. As a point of comparison, the Oriental Orthodox also agree that the unique role of St. Peter as coryphaeus of the Apostles was divinely established by Christ in St. Peter, was inherited in the Apostolic Succession, but disagree with Catholics on the locus of the Petrine Succession.
All three (CC, OO, and EO) agree that the office of bishop is divinely established.
Pay attention closely to the text of the Decree on Infallibility: “
Therefore, the bishops of the whole world, sometimes singly, sometimes assembled in councils, following the long-standing custom of the churches and the form of the ancient rule, reported to this Apostolic See those dangers especially which came up in matters of faith, so that here where the faith can suffer no diminution, the harm suffered by the faith might be repaired. However, the Roman Pontiffs, on their part, according as the condition of the times and the circumstances dictated…defined…”
Even on matters of Faith, Vatican 1 recognized that even the solicitude that the Pope exercises for the Faith of the Church is conditioned by the appeals and (name removed by moderator)ut of his brother bishops (whereby the collegiality of the Church is upheld, even for
ex cathedra definitions). The Pope doesn’t just one day wake up and say, “Oh, you know what, I think today is a good day for a definition of the Faith.”
One can’t take the Vatican Decrees on either the Primacy or Infallibility in a vacuum. It must be understood in the context of Sacred Tradition - something both papalists and detractors of the papacy constantly (perhaps consciously, perhaps not, perhaps with malice towards the other party, perhaps not) fail to recognize.
The Church Fathers didn’t interpret Matthew 16 all the same way either though.
Which one do you feel is a better position to hold: the one which accepts all three patristic views (the Catholic view), or the one which seeks to exclude one or more of the patristic views altogether (non-Catholic polemicists will claim Peter
cannot be the Rock; I’ve encountered Catholic polemicists who claim that
only Peter is the Rock).
Blessings,
Marduk