D
Dovekin
Guest
I cited the comments on the dubia not because it was correct, but only as evidence that the use of papal infallibility in OS is not “manifest.” If the CDF is not convinced it was infallible, I cannot see any way to think it was “manifest” that it was.That document is mostly correct, except for where it states it’s merely an exercise of the ordinary non-infallible Papal magisterium. There are no grounds for such an opinion. My opinion is more strongly supported by the OS itself, Vatican I, and Vatican II. And yes, I realize that this is Cardinal Ratzinger himself I’m disagreeing with, and I don’t take that fact lightly. But I must insist. OS meets all the requirements of Vatican I, and there is no way to demonstrate otherwise.
Porthos probably agrees with this, and sees his current judgment of infallibility as part of that process of “judging over time.” At least, that would be my guess.I think the Catholic position must be that Vatican I does not provide a reliable way of KNOWING when a Pope speaks infallibly. Instead a faithful Catholic must allow “Securus judicat orbis terrarium” (the “Secure Judgement of the World.” A phrase from St. Augustine and used powerfully by Cardinal Newman) to over time determine what was infallibly declared and what was only ordinarily declared.
That does not seem adequate to me. In general, we know the authority of papal statements by:
The character of the documents should be known from the CDF, if the document itself does not reveal it. If the CDF does not think it infallible, it isn’t. They are the first judges of that sort of thing, moreso under JP2 than under Francis.His mind and will in the matter may be known either from the character of the documents, from his frequent repetition of the same doctrine, or from his manner of speaking.
There was little problem with the definition of the Assumption. It was manifest that it was infallible. A few years before, PIus XII asked the bishops of the world if he should define the Assumption as a dogma, responses came in, and so on. When he did it, everybody knew what he had done! Clarity is possible on these things; the lack of it settles whether it was meant to be infallible.