C
Contarini
Guest
Absolutely not. The relationship between civil and religious authority is very much an issue today.Hi Edwin…
Would you agree that the Bull Unam Sanctam was attempting to resolve a 14th century crisis by discouraging king Phillip from trying to usurp, in some ways, Boniface’s authoritative role in the Catholic Church, which was the reason for the Unam Sanctam in the first place, and that that particular problem is no longer an issue today ?
Furthermore, the wording of the Bull is dogmatic and not simply circumstantial. He doesn’t say, “I decree that you, Philip, cannot be saved unless you give into me on this matter.”
And finally, all these discussions about the context of Unam Sanctam ignore the fact that similar if not stronger language was used more than a century later at Florence.
First of all, you have not seen me say that the Catholic Church has contradicted anything. I do not make that claim.The Catholic Church’s position is still: no salvation outside the Church. However, anyone from another denomination who has been baptised is an implicit member of the Catholic Church since there is only one Baptism. The CC has not contradicted anything. Like, in the past, the CC had simply reacted to something new (protestantism) - that was unheard of in the 14th century.
But in the second place, while Protestantism did not exist, heretical and schismatic forms of Christianity did exist and have always existed. So that particular argument is short-sighted and irrelevant.
Well, Christians often do, actually:shrug:.Of course,** if **the CC is the church founded by God almost 2000 years ago then to ignore particular aspects of Jesus’ church would be no different than ignoring particular aspects of the Bible, yet no Christian would ever do the latter.![]()
And it’s far more obvious that Catholics ignore large “aspects of Jesus’ church.” In fact, discussion of church history with Catholics routinely falls into a pattern of the non-Catholic pointing out various “aspects of Jesus’ church,” and the Catholic declaring those aspects irrelevant, because they aren’t expressions of “the Magisterium.”
Again, I am not attacking infallibility. I am pointing out that the level of certainty provided by infallibility about what the Catholic Church will or will not say or do in the future is, at best, extremely low. The purpose of infallibility is, in my opinion, something entirely different.
Edwin