V
Vince1022
Guest
My simple point is that the quotation from Leo, invoked at the Council of Chalcedon in 451 A.D. was indicative of his authority vis-a-vis primacy, not with any contemporary understanding of teaching infallibly (which didn’t exist at that time).What I asked you back in post #76 was:
“Since you stated that for papal primacy the quote of Leo has been an important and strong argument, and since the Vatican I dogmatic definiton of infallability, is as stated, based upon the apostolic primacy which the Roman pontiff possesses as successor of Peter with teaching authority, expressed by the ecumenical councils, it is not clear why you say that the quote of Leo does not apply.”
And you wrote on Nov 14:
"I don’t think I ever said primacy and infallibility are independent. If I did, I didn’t mean to. The point is, primacy belongs to the Pope alone, infallibility is a charism of the Church. So while the two are not independent, they are distinct.
And still…back to the original question, the quotation about Leo refers to primacy, not infallibility."
I will take “not infallibility” as “not for teaching infallibly”, if I may, so it will match your original post.
You say that any reference (**reference 5. a. **A note in a publication referring the reader to another passage or source) is supposed, and that is what I agreed to before also, yet the quote of Leo is referred to by Vatican I (**refer: 3. **To assign to or regard as belonging within a particular kind or class) as it pertains to the mentioned evidence of primacy with teaching authority in one of the forms given in Session 4, Chapter 4.
The Church cannot make infallible definitions without the Supreme Pontiff, of any category 1) ex cathedra or general council, which are extraordinary, or 2) the ordinary and universal magisterium of the Bishops of the Church.
Which is why I originally asked for your logic. I still could not describe your logic that the quotation about Leo refers to primacy, not for teaching infallibly. You do not show how the quote does not pertain to teaching authority.
And, again, Vatican I nowhere uses this quotation from Leo when it teaches about papal infallibility (nor does Vatican II when it teaches about the complete Catholic understanding of teaching infallibly).
Does that help? Thanks.