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In order to appease the obvious desire for a tuss-up over Honorius and the alledged counter-evidence against Papal infallibility which his story provides, I give you Ronald Knox’s letter to Arnold Lunn:
To the best of his human wisdom, [Honorius] thought the controversy ought to be left unsettled, for the greater peace of the Church. In fact, he was an inopportunist. We, wise after the event, say that he was wrong. But nobody, I think, has ever claimed that the pope is infallible in not defining a doctrine… Has it ever occurred to you how few are the alleged ‘failures of infallibility’? I mean, if somebody propounded in your presence the thesis that all the kings of England have been impeccable, you would not find yourself murmuring, ‘Oh, well, people said rather unpleasant things about Jane Shore . . . and the best historians seem to think that Charles II spent too much of his time with Nell Gwynn.’ Here have these popes been, fulminating anathema after anathema for centuries—certain in all human probability to contradict themselves or one another over again. Instead of which you get this measly crop of two or three alleged failures!"
Honorius did not teach monothelitism; he simply did not admonish Sergius for teaching monothelitism. Even then, however, his letter to Sergius was not any sort of solemn ex cathedra pronouncement, and as such, it is irrelevant to the subject of Papal infallibility.
To the best of his human wisdom, [Honorius] thought the controversy ought to be left unsettled, for the greater peace of the Church. In fact, he was an inopportunist. We, wise after the event, say that he was wrong. But nobody, I think, has ever claimed that the pope is infallible in not defining a doctrine… Has it ever occurred to you how few are the alleged ‘failures of infallibility’? I mean, if somebody propounded in your presence the thesis that all the kings of England have been impeccable, you would not find yourself murmuring, ‘Oh, well, people said rather unpleasant things about Jane Shore . . . and the best historians seem to think that Charles II spent too much of his time with Nell Gwynn.’ Here have these popes been, fulminating anathema after anathema for centuries—certain in all human probability to contradict themselves or one another over again. Instead of which you get this measly crop of two or three alleged failures!"
Honorius did not teach monothelitism; he simply did not admonish Sergius for teaching monothelitism. Even then, however, his letter to Sergius was not any sort of solemn ex cathedra pronouncement, and as such, it is irrelevant to the subject of Papal infallibility.