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Gabriel_of_12
Guest
A Pope if making an “infallible” statement or teaching on faith and morals is addressing the Whole Church in a official capacity, not by a personal correspondent letter to one individual.Trebor135;8990640]I see what you’re saying. But Honorius employed the expression “we confess”–language which would seem to indicate that he was offering official teaching. Plus, it seems anachronistic to say that the pope was or wasn’t speaking ex cathedra then, unless such a concept was recognized by the church of his day. (Then again, I recently heard that the infallibility of ecumenical councils was first posited in the ninth century…)
Faith and Trust added with eyewitness accounts and personal testimonies to the passion, death and resurrection which the Church proclaimed are “infallible” professions of faith, without ever using the term infallible.Was this a principle widely and consistently recognized in the first millennium?
.I understand the criteria; I just don’t see a basis for the doctrine in the Early Church
The Doctrine of infallibility protects the Catholic faith from falling into error. Pope teaching on faith and morals along with Church doctrines can never change and will never conflict with sacred scripture and sacred Tradition. This is what infallibility protects the teachings of Jesus Christ revelations and Jesus Christ teachings from falling into error when the Holy Spirit protects them infallibly. Infallibility is a negative doctrine, contrary to secular understanding as one falsely thinks it to make the Pope a perfect human, or possessing super human powers.
As far as the Early Church all the teachings of the apostles written and practiced from sacred Tradition handed down are infallible teachings for example; baptism, Eucharist, confession and repenting of sins, the letters of the apostles were not canonized yet, but the Church’s kept to their teachings as infallible and revealed by God.
Your argument for papal infallibility based on Acts 15 is indeed intriguing.
Scholars today debate whether or not this James was not one of the two apostles named James, but I am not gonna go there.An interesting aside: though the apostle James states, “Therefore my judgment is that we should not trouble those of the Gentiles who turn to God,” (v. 19) I’ve read here that it would be more accurately translated something like, “Therefore I offer my opinion that…”
This James “bishop of Jerusalem” community is the one with the problem of Jewish converts forcing baptized Gentiles to be circumcised. James judgement comes at the conclusion of Peter’s revelation addressing his judgement upon his community. James judgement went by letter to all the surrounding Jewish convert communities, which included dietary laws to both Jew and Gentile convert. Because Jewish converts found it difficult to eat with Gentile converts.
One must note however that James judgement was not universal. Because Paul installs different dietary laws to his Gentile converts.
But this makes the process of determining which papal statements are infallible all the more confusing and convoluted. Why have a gift of infallibility if no one can determine when it has been exercised?