Dear All,
Actually, it can. The business of “determining the consensus of the Church” (or the “College of Bishops” or however one wants to look at it) is very nice, but doesn’t really make much difference. That consensus is advisory only. It doesn’t make policy and it doesn’t declare dogma, unless it’s within the context of an Oecumenical Council (or at least a Local Council such as Florence, Trent, Vatican I & II, etc). If it were required to convene a Council, things would be as you say. Unfortunately, there is no such requirement.
I missed this post earlier, which makes an important point requiring a response.
The highlighted portion above is actually not true. I quoted the
Official Relatio earlier that specifically refutes this notion. The
Official Relatio calls the necessary consensus the RULE OF FAITH, and uses terms such as “ought” and “should” (denoting duty and responsibility, not mere choice) when it comes to the consensus of the Church. There is absolutely no indication in the
Official Relatio that the Pope has the option of contradicting the consensus of the Church or of the present teaching of the whole Magisterium.
There are three possible sources for the misunderstanding:
(1) The
Official Relatio affirms that the consultation of the bishops is not absolutely required. Do not confuse
consultation with
consensus. For the formulation of a Decree, the consensus can be determined by means other than direct consultation with the bishops of the world.
(2) It is true that the Canon of the Decree on the Infallibility states that the irreformibility of an
ex cathedra Decree is not by virtue of the consent of the Church. As brother Ignatios had been corrected in the other thread, this statement simply means that once an
ex cathedra Decree has been formulated and promulgated, the Truth of it (i.e., its irreformibility or infallibility) is not determined by consensus. This is nothing more than a mere restatement of the well known axiom against the Modernist heresy that claims Truth is determined by consensus. It has no bearing on the separate issues of (a) the fact that the consensus of the Church is necessary for the
formulation of an *ex cathedra Decree, and (b) the Apostolic Canon that states consensus is necessary for the sake of the
unity of the Church.
(3) There are 2 or 3 Canons indicating that for any body during a legislative or judicial process, though the consultation of other parties may be required for certain acts of a superior to be valid, the consultation need not be accepted by the superior of that body. Please understand that such canons apply only to purely canonical/disciplinary matters. Matters of canon and discipline that are primarily ecclesiastical should not be confused with matters of doctrine and morals which are in the realm of the divine.
Blessings,
Marduk*