At best we can say their heresy is hopefully material. Inculpable ignorance excuses them from formal heresy, due to their belief thast science has proven the 1616 decree to have been erroneous. Since 1905 however that ignorance should have been corrected. Alas now they believe heliocentrism as a scientific dogma, that is, they have placed their faith now in science rather than in the Church of 1616.
Fortunately the Catholic Church is not involved in this as all anti-1616 decree Copernicans acted outside the Church’s magisterium. Proof for this is that nowhere will you find any suggestion of abrogation, the only way to overturn a papal decree, nor was there ever a retrial of Galileo, the only official way to overturn his condemnation as a suspected heretic.
Then again you could believe pope granny who also speaks unofficially for the Church.
Cassini, I can certainly appreciate your desire to defend the Church’s integrity, but I’m not sure you’re seeing the full ramifications of what you’re saying. You speak very generally of “they” and “them”, without acknowledging that you are speaking of a whole succession of Popes and all the bishops in communion with them.
Over in another thread you explicitly admit that you believe that this “heresy” will harm the faith of the faithful. Is it really true, then, that the entire hierarchy themselves hold a heresy and allow it to spread unchecked for centuries without one word or action to check it? And this has been the
status quo for centuries? Notice what happened to Pope Honorius I who, in reply to an heretical letter penned by Sergius the Patriarch of Constantinople, utilized the phrase “one will”. Most scholars agree that he did not hold the heresy to which he was responding. But he was formally condemned by the Sixth Ecumenical Council and this condemnation was affirmed by Pope Leo II: “We anathematize the inventors of the new error, that is, Theodore, Sergius, …and also Honorius, who did not attempt to sanctify this Apostolic Church with the teaching of Apostolic tradition, but by profane treachery permitted its purity to be polluted.”
Here you tell us that
not siding with the condemnation of Galileo will cause tremendous harm to the Church’s credibility, indeed will undermine her claim to infallibility.
So then, what does
siding with the pronouncements against Galileo do? For almost three hundred years now, not one word has been said by any bishop or any Pope in condemnation of this “formal heresy”. This includes even the sainted Pius X and the beatified Pius IX and John XXIII. More than that, this “formal heresy” has been openly taught in Catholic grade schools, high schools, colleges, universities, and pontifical institutions. This “formal heresy” has been presented as established fact in numerous articles and books written by Catholics and for Catholics, many of which bear the Church’s
imprimatur and
nihil obstat. It is believed by the vast majority of the Catholics of the world—that includes the world’s bishops and priests, not to mention the Pope. The Magisterium has given the faithful not one hint that there is any problem whatsoever in believing this “formal heresy”, let alone actively and repeatedly warn them away from it. More than that, a Pope has publicly apologized for the treatment of Galileo, which could do nothing but bolster the view that this belief is perfectly legitimate for the faithful to hold.
I’m not trying to put words in your mouth, but typically within the testosterone-drenched apologetics of those like Sungenis, the only reason anyone could possibly fail to teach openly against a “formal heresy” is if he’s either a simpleton or a coward. Which again tars the entire Catholic magisterium for the past 300 years as either dupes or traitors.
It seems amazing to me that you would be willing to uphold the logical conclusion of your position, namely that all the Popes at least from Benedict XIV (1740) up through Benedict XVI (present), along with all the bishops in communion with them, have utterly failed to exercise the vigilance their office demands of them. According to your position they “did not attempt to sanctify this Apostolic Church with the teaching of Apostolic tradition, but by profane treachery permitted its purity to be polluted.”
Now there are very good reasons not to hold that the motion of the earth is a “formal heresy”. But the indefectibility of the Catholic Church is without a doubt a dogma of the faith. I see no way your position can be held in light of that dogma and thus, to be blunt, it seems to me that it is you who are flirting with heresy. GrannyH and others have demonstrated that it is relatively easy to harmonize the indefectibility of the Church with a mistake made by a theological commission, even one approved by the Pope. It is far easier to see that terrestrial motion is a matter of scientific belief and not a matter of faith and morals, to believe that a commission of theologians erred in their judgment of Galileo, than that the entire Church, hierarchy and faithful, have been plunged into this “formal heresy”.
It would seem that those who hold this extreme position with respect to geocentrism are like a monkey grasping a pebble in a precious Ming vase, unwilling to give up his prize and willing instead to smash the jar in order to have it. Or perhaps more like a man who would burn down a whole building, with all the people in it, just to kill a rat.