J
jmj1984
Guest
Perhaps you should let the documents speak for yourselves rather than force your erroneous interpretation onto themYes, this is what I explained earlier - the issue between the Majority and Minority party was not the consensus, but the necessity of obtaining the consultation of all the bishops. Note that the Official Relatio (OR) presents the axiom “do nothing without the advice and consent of his brothers.” But in his response, he does not challenge the “consent” part, only the “advice” part. Again, take off your Absolutist Petrine glasses so you can see what these documents are actually saying.
The relatio states that neither consultation nor consent is required and it does explicitly, one can therefore only assume that you are not reading the documents presented to but instead simply continuing to argue ab absurdam. The relatio does not distinguish between the two but simply states ‘As such, this type of necessity cannot have a place in the definition of a dogmatic constitution.’
The relatio states ‘For this is what the words of Christ and the words “supreme judge,” “universal doctor,” and “pastor of the whole flock of Christ” signify. So, on that point, too, the adduced comparison limps, and the consequence about the necessity of the advice of the bishops falls’. There is no mention of the need for the bishops consent or for them to act as witnesses once again you are reading things into a text that are simply not present in it. On top of that you appear to mixing up the extraordinary and infallible magisterium and the ordinary and merely binding or ordinary and universal (infallible magisterium). Its an understanble mix up but is nevertheless a serious mistake.Again, what do you pretend that your underlining proves? As previously explained, only the Pope acts as JUDGE (i.e., exercises the infallibility of the EXTRAordinary Magisterium) during the specific instance when he is exercising infallibility as defined by V1. But this does not challenge the fact that the bishops themselves exercise the infallibility of the Ordinary Magisterium as WITNESSES, exactly as this excerpt states. This section is merely saying that the Pope indeed acts as the teacher of the whole Church, even of bishops, IN THE PARTICULARLY UNIQUE CIRCUMSTANCE when he is DEFINING. It does NOT say, according to your Absolutist Petrine error, that the Pope is ALWAYS the be-all and end-all of doctrine in the Church.
And yet the relatio states ‘Therefore the bishops are not able to do anything in this regard without the Pope. But is the other case true, viz., that the Pope is not able to do anything in this regard without the bishops? This other part has no value, since Christ said to Peter alone: “You are Peter (Mt. 16:18) … I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail” (Lk. 22:32).’ Again you prove that you are simply quoting snippets, out of context and on top of this forcing your errors onto the text.A worthy statement of the High Petrine position that has been the standard of the Catholic Church from the beginning. Followers of these debates between the Absolutist and High Petrine views will recognize that this contradicts the Absolutist Petrine error that it is ONLY the Pope that grants an Ecumenical Council its infallibility/authority.