H
holdencaulfield
Guest
I assume that a new Pope must either do it or an Ecumenical Council be called. Can this be done while the heretic Pope is still alive.
No, many a Pope has been excommunicated. The prime example is Pope Honorius who was excommunicated for being a heretic. Before the Great Schism this was easy to do because the of the other Patriarchs.I don’t know what you mean by that, but I’m pretty sure a pope can’t be.
Many? Who are some of the others then? Who declared them heretics? And are you unaware of the heated debate about whether Honorius actually was a heretic? Do a search on him on CAF and you’ll see.No, many a Pope has been excommunicated. The prime example is Pope Honorius who was excommunicated for being a heretic. Before the Great Schism this was easy to do because the of the other Patriarchs.
I believe that the normal process for this would be for the next Pope to excommunicate the Pope before him, or for someone to call an Ecumenical Council before or after the Popes term ends, and to then excommunicate him. That is all I can think of. I’m sure however it is Canon Law somewhere.
The real point is that you stated that ‘many a Pope has been excommunicated’. Which goes well beyond saying a Pope can be a heretic. Goes beyond even saying that many a Pope has been a heretic.The point is that a Pope can be a heretic. The answer I received on Fish Eaters was that either the Church would wait until the Pope’s death, and then declare him a heretic and anathematize him and declare his teachings heresy. Or an Ecumenical Council could do this before his death perhaps, and definitely after.
Not to stray off topic, but the fish eaters site is far and away not the best place to be getting information on the Church. By enlarge they reject Vatican II and the Novus Ordo Mass. God bless.The point is that a Pope can be a heretic. The answer I received on Fish Eaters was that either the Church would wait until the Pope’s death, and then declare him a heretic and anathematize him and declare his teachings heresy. Or an Ecumenical Council could do this before his death perhaps, and definitely after.
they reject Vatican II and the Novus Ordo Mass. God bless.*Not to stray off topic, but the fish eaters site is far and away not the best place to be getting information on the Church. By enlarge
LOL, thank you Irish. I’ll try to remember that.Not to be the grammar police but…the phrase is actually rendered as “by and large.” According to Answers.com, the term has the following etymology:
This expression originated in 17th-century seamanship, where it referred to sailing into the wind and then off it, which made it easier to steer. By the early 1700s the term had been broadened to mean “in one direction and another,” whence its present meaning of "in general."
No living pope has been shown here to have been validly excommunicated; Dioscorus tried it, but he was the one who wound up being anathematized, and this was in fact one of the reasons given by the Roman legates who did it.I assume that a new Pope must either do it or an Ecumenical Council be called. Can this be done while the heretic Pope is still alive.
It’s good to know the word “many” has some meaning after all.The real point is that you stated that ‘many a Pope has been excommunicated’.
So the only good places to be getting information is to seek sites where every document of Vatican II is accepted literally AND the Novus Ordo Mass is accepted without any criticisms? Good luck in trying to find one of those since the two appear to be in contradiction. Maybe that’s not the best word to use here but I can’t think of a better one at this moment.Not to stray off topic, but the fish eaters site is far and away not the best place to be getting information on the Church. By enlarge they reject Vatican II and the Novus Ordo Mass. God bless.
No, you can of course seek information from lots of sources that oppose Church teaching, but perhaps if you want to know what the Church actually says about a specific matter it would be more beneficial to get your info from those sources that accept the authority of the Church. For those that refuse to accept the Church’s authority, likewise refuse to accept the authority of Christ Himself, who gave His authority to the Church. God bless.So the only good places to be getting information is to seek sites where every document of Vatican II is accepted literally AND the Novus Ordo Mass is accepted without any criticisms? Good luck in trying to find one of those since the two appear to be in contradiction. Maybe that’s not the best word to use here but I can’t think of a better one at this moment.
many also has some meaning before all, and separate from all…It’s good to know the word “many” has some meaning after all.
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I’m pretty sure you could depose a Pope in extreme cases.No living pope has been shown here to have been validly excommunicated; Dioscorus tried it, but he was the one who wound up being anathematized, and this was in fact one of the reasons given by the Roman legates who did it.
Many theologians, especially before Vatican I, thought that a pope could become a heretic, but from what I can see it’s all theory. A living pope cannot be deposed or excommunicated.