C
cassini
Guest
OK Marc, I see you bring out the ultimate Copernican ploy, infallibility.With regard to the doctrinal teaching of the Church it must be well noted that not all the assertions of the Teaching Authority of the Church on questions of Faith and morals are infallible and consequently irrevocable. Only those are infallible which emanate from General Councils representing the whole episcopate, and the Papal Decisions Ex Cathedra. The ordinary and usual form of the Papal teaching activity is not infallible. Further, the decisions of the Roman Congregations (Holy Office, Bible Commission) are not infallible. Nevertheless normally they are to be accepted with an inner assent which is based on the high supernatural authority of the Holy See. The so-called “silentium obsequiosum.” that is “reverent silence,” does not generally suffice. By way of exception, the obligation of inner agreement may cease if a competent expert, after a renewed scientific investigation of all grounds, arrives at the positive conviction that the decision rests on an error. - Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma
The ordinary infallibility of the Catholic Church had to die a thousand deaths at the hands of those who believed that science proved the Church wrong. In their ignorance and loss of faith these loyal Catholics had of course to expurgate the Church from the responsibility and consequences of having defined and declared by papal decree the proposition of a fixed sun as formal heresy and for condemning Galileo accordingly. For many years now, there has been a desperate attempt to try to present the anti-Copernican condemnations and decrees as the mistaken waffling of ignorant theologians, declarations carrying no real authority at all, rulings that could be ignored as non-events and forgotten in time. In a desperate effort to have their divinely guided Church and their Church that defined and declared formal heresies, they bring in what they think is their ACE card, infallibility. The first casualty in this abuse of the Holy Ghost (infallibility) is of course the Church’s ordinary infallibility. Without it then only extraordinary infallibility can guarantee a pope when he teaches on matters of faith and morals. Unless one can show extraordinary Infallibility then that teaching COULD BE IN ERROR. Given the history of the Church is awash with doctrines promulgated outside the extraordinary infallibility, every word of it can now be said to have no divine guidance or (name removed by moderator)ut, that it could be all a pile of errors and codswallop.
Such pathetic delusion and denial desperately tries to avoid the fact that the Catholic Church, according to its own teaching, does not indulge in pert, frivolous, or erroneous decrees when deciding on matters of faith or morals; yet one could well believe it did such a thing were one to believe the stories put out these past centuries.
For me, when a Pope defines and declares something formal heresy. I accept he has the Holy Ghost protecting him. It was this simple belief that led me to find the truth of the Galileo case and that truth set me free. When a pope goes before the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, a bunch of Atheists and Agnostics with a scattering of Copernican Catholics and tells the world that the Church of 1616 was wrong, that I consider outside his area of infallibility and I am not obliged to believe a word of it.
To sum up. When a Copernican says that Pope Paul V’s decree that heliocentrism was formal heresy was not infallible what he really means is that a papal decree can be wrong, in error, a total sham. Copernicans use the dogma of infallibility in the Galileo case to get rid of the ordinary infallibility of a papal decree. After the Galileo case there is only one kind of infallibility, the one that means a pope can err even when defining and declaring a formal heresy. This of course is just another heresy trying to protect the first heresy.