R
Randy_Carson
Guest
“Whatever you loose on earth is also loosed in heaven; whatever you bind on earth is also bound in heaven.”No, the pope’s infallibility spreads further than just two cases (where did you get that number?). I asked because I have seen some Eastern Orthodox deny the infallibility of the Church.
If you accept infallibility, how is something known by the Church to have been decided infallibly? Either it is a minimal solution, the pope, or a maximal solution, the universal acceptance of the entire body faithful, which seems to be the EO position. If we consider this from the perspective of practicality, the papacy is a more suitable principle because the principle is definite and discernible. Relying on the acceptance of the whole body of the faithful is a question-begging method because the identity of the faithful is uncertain and the fact of universal acceptance is impossible to verify. What good is infallibility if you can’t discern it? If the infallibility of the Church is to be maintained by the EO, it will have to better explained than it has been to me in popular EO apologetics.
The word “whatever” in this context is truly breathtaking, isn’t it?
And yet, it is precisely to one man, Peter, that Jesus gives such awesome authority and responsibilty. That is why we know that the Holy Spirit takes an active role in protecting the one flock from the vicarious shepherd through the charism of infallibility.