Now, let us give what is a final answer. Let us suppose which we do not for a moment grant — that it is proved to the hilt that Honorius really was a heretic, and, moreover, taught heresy. Would it follow that those who condemned him thereby avowed their disbelief in papal infallibility?
No, not unless Honorius as making an
ex cathedra statement, and there is not the slightest ground for believing that he made such a pronouncement. For
(i.) In no less than four places in his letters, he rejects all idea of defining doctrine in favour of one side or the other:
(a) “We must not wrest what they say into Church dogmas”;
(b) “We must not define either one or two operations”;
(c) “We leave the matter to grammarians”;
(d) “We must not, defining, pronounce one or two operations.”
(ii.) Secondly, he imposed no obligations upon the faithful to hold any of the doctrinal opinions expressed in his letter: the customary grave penalties for refusing to assent to the doctrine taught, receive no mention: he makes no reference to the use of Petrine authority nor to the traditional teaching of the Church. In other words, Honorius did not claim to be speaking with the mouth of Peter nor to be exercising that Apostle’s privilege of infallibility.
Therefore, in face of all this it cannot be asserted that an ex cathedra statement was made, or that that Council thought that such a definition had been pronounced. Bishop Gore’s objection accordingly loses its force.
THE CASE OF HONORIUS IS ALL IN OUR FAVOUR
But now that our adversaries have cited this condemnation pronounced by the Sixth General Council upon Honorius, they should themselves bear the consequences of their appeal to history. For the proceedings of this very Council, furnish a flat denial to the statement that the doctrine of papal infallibility was unknown in the early Church. The reigning Pope, Saint Agatho, wrote, through the Emperor, to the Fathers assembled in Council. And we stress very strongly the tone and contents of this letter, and still more the manner in which the instructions were received.
The salient features of this long epistle are as follows: Saint Agatho begins by making it clear beyond all doubt that he is about to state no mere personal opinion, but is declaring the faith of the Church. In this, the nature of his letter differs* toto coelo* (‘as wide as the heavens’ or diametrically) from that of Honorius’s letter to Sergius. Next, he asserts that no successor of Saint Peter had defiled the Petrine tradition by teaching error to the Church of God. Lastly, he imposes upon the Council the obligation of receiving the doctrine of two wills and two operations, as expounded by himself; the assembled Bishops were to accept his ruling at their peril. They had not, in this instance, the office of defining faith, but the duty of accepting it from the Pope, and of publishing it abroad to the world. They might, indeed, examine his arguments — as they did — and verify his citations from the Fathers; but they might not dissent from his final and authoritative decision upon a question which had so long vexed men’s minds.
Now what would be the answer of such a Council if it had not — as Bishop Gore asserts it had not — even a rudimentary idea of the doctrine of papal infallibility? Would it tamely and without protest admit the Pope’s right to dictate to a General Council of Bishops? If it disbelieved the right of Rome thus to take precedence of the See of Constantinople, would it not be at pains to reject this claim, even though it fully agreed with the doctrinal teaching concerning two wills and two operations in Christ Our Lord? But the Council made no such protest. It accepted not only the doctrine proposed to it, but also the principle so explicitly stated in the letter of Pope Agatho. For the Fathers address the Pope as one “standing upon the firm rock of the faith”; they “freely admit his true doctrine” expressed in his letter, and profess that it is “divinely prescribed by the supreme Head of the Apostles”; they relate that they have refuted the heretics by means of his teaching; and finally they ask him to confirm the acts of the Council because they have carried out his instructions and “have not changed a particle of the traditional teaching” he had expounded to them. Thus we have a full and whole-hearted acceptance of Agatho’s letter, and, therefore, a clear proof that the assembled Bishops acknowledged both that the Pope’s infallibility was independent of a General Council, and further that he had the right to dictate to a Council what doctrine it should define. Thus the history of the condemnation of Pope Honorius, far from showing that early Councils knew nothing of papal infallibility, really gives striking evidence to the contrary.
Source:
pamphlets.org.au/australia/acts0382.html