Dear brother Steve,
- Cyprian ~70 years before Sardica referenced the pope as the court of appeal
- Irenaeus ~100 years before Cyprian referenced the pope as the one all churches are to agree with
- Clement ~100 years before Irenaeus, one could say Corinth went to the bishop of Rome because they knew it would bring closure to the sedition of their clergy
That history for papal decision and final appeal is a long one.
Yes, I said it was “enshrined” not “established.” I think your generally Absolutist Petrine mindset (which I gratefully notice has been mitigated somewhat since we first debated these matters many months ago) causes you to
unjustifiably be suspicious of any statements coming from High Petrine advocates. I sometimes suspect you really do support the High Petrine view, but are so used to combatting the overly democratic excesses of Protestant ecclesiology that you automatically, perhaps unwittingly, align with excesses in the opposite direction to the Absolutist Petrine camp.
The pope ALSO has the right to choose which manner he uses, whether it be his personal judgement, or collegial effort.
But that’s not the end of the story. Our Canons affirm, supported by the dogmatic and doctrinal principles established by V1 and V2, that whether personally or collegially, his decisions are CONSTRAINED AND LIMITED by considerations for the needs of the Church. But, contrary to our SSPX brother’s error, the Pope himself does not determine the needs of the Church. That is CLEARLY not what the canons say. The needs of the Church are determined COLLEGIALLY. The Pope himself determines
ONLY whether he should address those needs in a personal or collegial manner. The Pope has absolutely no authority, according to Vatican 1, to go into a local diocese and say, “
I know better than your own orthodox bishop.”
The Pope has
proper authority in (1) what pertains to the ENTIRE Church and (2) what pertains to his local diocese. He DOES NOT have
proper authority in any other local jurisdiction.
ONLY the local bishop has
proper authority in his local diocese. That is the same principle applied to all levels of jurisdiction - e.g., a Patriarch has proper authority in what pertains to the ENTIRE Patriarchate and what pertains to his own local diocese, but the Patriarch does not have proper authority in any other local diocese.
Neither can Pastor Aeternus violate the authority of the pope.
Rather, the Pope cannot exceed the authority that
Pastor Aeternus dogmatically affirmed he possessed. We have our SSPX brother claiming that as a general principle the Pope’s authority extends beyond the purpose for which Christ established the Primacy - namely, the good of the Church. Do you support TrentCath’s error?
Blessings,
Marduk