As I’m sure you know, this homily was given while St. Chrysostom was just a priest or deacon. He did not have the teaching authority of a bishop. But we also know that as priest and as bishop, he never tired of explicitly acknowledging the authority of the rule of Faith which is Sacred Tradition. So we are secure that St. John would have bent his understanding to the unanimous tradition of Mary’s sinlessness if push came to shove. So we do not consider him a heretic by any sense. The term “heretic” is reserved to those who are obstinately heretical, and we are secure, as stated, that St. John would have accommodated himself to the authority of Sacred Tradition.
This is very silly, what you are suggesting is that we dont really know if anyone is truly a heretic. Many “heretical patriarchs” of Constantinople, Alexandria and Antioch died prior to the councils which declared them heretics. If we take your theory to its logical conclusion, then there werent really many heretics at all - most of the condemned heretics of the church died before an ecumenical council condemned them. How are we to know they would not have repented their heresy?
Patriarch Sergius of Constantinople is often called a “monothelite”, but had he died after the 6th council, would he have been a monothelite? How do we know he didnt have a correct understanding using different phraseology - like some people attribute to Pope Honarius? How do we know that Origen would not have joined orthodox doctrine had he knew the church were going to condemn apokastasis?
I dont think your theory is too tenable. If the Immaculate Conception is a DOGMA then St John Chrysostom is a heretic!
mardukm:
As far as the consensus issue is concerned, consensus is a SIGN that points us to the Truth. And often, consensus is enough to determine that a certain teaching is de fide and thus infallible. But what about in those instances when it is not enough? In truth, consensus can, objectively, only REFLECT what is true. But by no means is consensus to be regarded as a CONDITION for Truth or infallibility. Do you see the difference? Did St. Peter need consensus for the infallible teaching (that the Gentiles should be included in the Church) to be Truth? Did Moses? Of course not. Why do you suppose our Lord assigned to ONE the responsibility to be the confirmer of the brethren, if it was not other than what God intended for the order of His Church? Please answer that.
There needs to be a primacy of servitude/honour/authority - nobody denies this. But Peter was not ABOVE the rest of the disciples but AMONG them. He confirmed them as brother does to his brother, he did not confirm them as a king does to slaves. The difference is the first is in a relationship sense, while the second is seen in “legal” terms.
Apostolic canon 34 states “The bishops of every nation must acknowledge him who is first among them and account him as their head, and
do nothing of consequence without his consent… but neither let him (who is the first) do anything without the consent of all; for so there will be unanimity…”
A pope can call an ecumenical council, but does he need to confirm it in the end for it to be valid? The canon doesnt say that. All it says in my private judgement is that the Pope can call an Ecumenical Council.
In a discussion with a traditionalist Catholic, he told me that the Pope has the authority to alter canon laws. But he is still subject to them as, if he falls under the penalty of a canon law after it is passed, he is still subject to it. Shouldn’t it be the same with councils - the pope can call it, but becomes subject to it if the pope himself is found by the council to be wrong after the judgement is passed?
mardukm:
You mention that God may work through anyone to convince the church of God of the truth. But can you admit that this is only in hindsight – AFTER the Church has established in the past what is to be held as Truth? But put yourself in the position of our common Fathers, brother Ematouk. Who did THEY turn to when there was no other recourse? Who did St. Athanasius turn to? Who did St. Basil turn to? Who did St. John Chrysostom turn to? Who did St. Cyril turn to? Who did St. Cyprian turn to (don’t get off the track on the matter, because St. Cyprian DID turn to St. Stephen, but when St. Stephen disagreed with him… well, let’s just say the First Ecumenical Council proved St. Stephen correct)? Who did St. Augustine turn to? Ask yourself this question, and please give us your answer: If you were in the position of any one of these men, what would cause you to turn to Rome?
Well you answer your own question. They turned to the Pope, but in the same manner that we turn to the Patriarch of Constantinople today. The Pope’s word was not the last word, St Stephen’s position wasnt held because it came from a Pope, it was held because it was approved by a council later on. The council settled the dispute, not the pope.
The honor belonged to Rome, being the first patriarchate. The honour is SECONDARILY to the bishop of that patriarchate - the Pope. I believe the Pope had an administrative role in governing the church and recieving appeals from all of Christendom, but not immediate and universal jurisdiction. Otherwise each diocese has 2 heads - the local bishop and the pope. If this is the case, then either the pope is the ‘real’ bishop and the local bishop is merely a vicar for the pope - OR each diocese has 2 heads (2 people whom we would sing “many years, master”) - and the Lord Himself told us we can not serve 2 masters.
mardukm:
No, it is not even theoretically possible, though your EO sensibilities are probably straining to believe that to be so. The ONLY way for such a circumstance to take place wherein the Pope makes a decision without the Church is if the Pope was gifted with INSPIRATION or OMNISIENCE. You’ll have a better chance of looking for a needle in a haystack than to find any Catholic document or teaching that states that the charism of infallibility is equivalent to the charism of inspiration or omniscience. Rather, you will find categorical denials of such a thing in our official documents.
mardukm:
First, an explanation of the statement “therefore such definitions of the Roman pontiff are of themselves and not from the consent of the Church irreformable.”
This statement has nothing to do with HOW the declaration comes about. Rather, it is simply a statement of the NATURE of an ex cathedra decree, as Truth which needs no consensus to be Truth. HOW the declaration comes about, which denotes the involvement of the Church is addressed in the second point.
If it is the nature of the ex cathedra decree, then this means everything flows through the Pope. IOW, the Pope is what is the cause of the church’s infallibility. The church only has infallibility because it is possessed by the Pope who guides it (not personally, but due to his office).
This is silly, Jesus said the gates of Hades will not provail against His church - He didn’t say the gates of Hades will not provail against Peter.
mardukm:
Now, answer this question for me (I know I am asking a lot of questions!): Would you agree that when Jesus spoke of confirming the brethren, this confirmation consisted of confirmation in the FAITH? If so, how could Christ’s praeyer be said to have any effect if there was the slightest iota of possibility that the confirmer could err in the Faith (i.e., in those times when his confirmation is necessary – remember the charism of infallibility is rarely used)?
Amen. It did consist of confirmation of the faith, because Peter had just denied the faith.
I do not think this implies infallibility. Just because Jesus prays for something, it does not mean HUMAN sin cannot prevent it. Jesus prayed that all Christians will be one, but there was a Great Schism. Jesus wants all to be saved, but some will be damned. God wanted Adam to grow in communion with Him, but he fell from grace and committed sin.
God gave man freewill (See Ecclesiasticus 15). Even human sinfulness can prevent Peter from confirming the faith. Wasn’t it Peter who was called “Satan” for being more concerned with Earthly things then that of the Heavenly?
ONE can fall at a time. But it is impossible for Satan to possess ALL the church at once.
[CONTINUED]