S
Spider42
Guest
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Regarding Apostolic Authority:
Catholics, in good conscience, can disagree with the Mother Church and believe that She has been on the wrong path for the last 50 years on this particular issue, but Dogmatic teaching requires us to handle our disagreement in a very special way. See the Dogmatic Constitution of the Church I cited previously. Bishops, when teaching in communion with Rome, are authentic teachers with the authority of Christ. We are supposed to strive for “religious submission of mind and will”. With popes, from which bishop’s authority flows, the obligation is even more pressing.
Apostolic authority is a fundamental and dogmatic teaching of the Church. It is so important that we reaffirm it, out loud, at almost every Mass and have done so since at least the 3rd Century.
Making arguments to the effect that bishops, even acting as a group and authorized by still more of their peers, aren’t authoritative, that provisions of the Catechism aren’t especially binding, or that express statements by the Vicar of Christ aren’t binding until they appear in dogmatic documents of a particular stature, are all, according to the Church, a “dangerous attack” on fundamental Church dogma. See Paul VI’s “Paterna cum benevolentia”, #25.
15 years later the problem was viewed as serious enough that, based on the Plenary Meeting of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Blessed John Paul instructed then Cardinal Ratzinger to to prepare a document on appropriate theological discussion. It was published in 1990.
As someone who recites the Nicene Creed without hesitation and accepts that any gaps between the certainty of my own moral conscience and the teaching of the Magisterium are most likely due to the incomplete development of my conscience, the express instructions in this document, absolutely, apply to me.
That makes the question of belief in Apostolic Authority critical. If the answer is no, then arguments to the effect that the rightful Magisterium carries less or little weight are of a different nature and I am prohibited from further public discussion with you. Certain types of arguments cannot licitly be debated in the “court of public opinion”.
This is no reflection on anyone here. Dogmatically, “nobody is to be forced to embrace the faith against his will” (“Dignitatis humanae” 10). But for me personally, Rome’s instructions on appropriate theological discussion and discourse are just as binding on me as CCC 2265, CCC 2243, Gaudium et Spes, and direct papal instructions on the proper application of the Sermon on the Mount.
Regarding Apostolic Authority:
Catholics, in good conscience, can disagree with the Mother Church and believe that She has been on the wrong path for the last 50 years on this particular issue, but Dogmatic teaching requires us to handle our disagreement in a very special way. See the Dogmatic Constitution of the Church I cited previously. Bishops, when teaching in communion with Rome, are authentic teachers with the authority of Christ. We are supposed to strive for “religious submission of mind and will”. With popes, from which bishop’s authority flows, the obligation is even more pressing.
Apostolic authority is a fundamental and dogmatic teaching of the Church. It is so important that we reaffirm it, out loud, at almost every Mass and have done so since at least the 3rd Century.
Making arguments to the effect that bishops, even acting as a group and authorized by still more of their peers, aren’t authoritative, that provisions of the Catechism aren’t especially binding, or that express statements by the Vicar of Christ aren’t binding until they appear in dogmatic documents of a particular stature, are all, according to the Church, a “dangerous attack” on fundamental Church dogma. See Paul VI’s “Paterna cum benevolentia”, #25.
15 years later the problem was viewed as serious enough that, based on the Plenary Meeting of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Blessed John Paul instructed then Cardinal Ratzinger to to prepare a document on appropriate theological discussion. It was published in 1990.
As someone who recites the Nicene Creed without hesitation and accepts that any gaps between the certainty of my own moral conscience and the teaching of the Magisterium are most likely due to the incomplete development of my conscience, the express instructions in this document, absolutely, apply to me.
That makes the question of belief in Apostolic Authority critical. If the answer is no, then arguments to the effect that the rightful Magisterium carries less or little weight are of a different nature and I am prohibited from further public discussion with you. Certain types of arguments cannot licitly be debated in the “court of public opinion”.
This is no reflection on anyone here. Dogmatically, “nobody is to be forced to embrace the faith against his will” (“Dignitatis humanae” 10). But for me personally, Rome’s instructions on appropriate theological discussion and discourse are just as binding on me as CCC 2265, CCC 2243, Gaudium et Spes, and direct papal instructions on the proper application of the Sermon on the Mount.