Dear brothers Greg and Fonebone2001,
I challenge you to show instances in the history of the Church when a Pope made a decision and his decision was submitted to an Ecumenical Council for review. Your claim is that someone can appeal to an Ecumenical Council from the decision of the Pope if one considers the Ecumenical Council as EQUAL TO the Pope (that is, not ABOVE him). What I appreciate about the Catholic and Orthodox religions is that they both claim to follow Sacred Tradition. So I am assuming there must be proof in Catholic Tradition where your claim is proven to be true. I’m going to play devil’s advocate and say, “For all I know, you could just be saying this to attract someone into your Church.” For I indeed find your presentation very, very attractive. But I want some actual proof from your Tradition that what you say is true IN PRACTICE.
I can think of three instances when a Pope’s decision for the universal Church was submitted to an Ecumenical Council for review: (1) Pope St. Leo’s Tome against Eutychianism (i.e., classic monophysitism) to the 4th Ecum, and (2) Pope St. Agatho’s Epistle against Monothelitism to the 6th Ecum. In my own opinion, (3) the decree of Pope St. Stephen on accepting the Baptism of certain heretics/schismatics should be counted (this was reviewed by the 1st Ecum). In all these instances, the teaching of the bishop of Rome was reviewed and accepted as the standard for the Church.
Non-Catholics usually interpret (1) and (2) as examples that supposedly contradict the Catholic dogmatic teaching on “papal infallibility,” since they apparently violate the particular assertion that an
ex cathedra decree is “
irreformable by its nature not by the consent of the Church.” This claim is based on one of the many misunderstandings about the Church’s teaching. The phrase “
irreformable by its nature, not by the consent of the Church” is understood by both non-Catholics and many Catholics alike as appositive of the distinction between the Pope and the Church.
THAT IS AN ERROR. Rather, the phrase is appositive of the distinction between God and the Church (which includes the Pope). V2 explains more clearly the sense in which the passage is to be taken: “
For that reason his definitions are rightly said to be irreformable by their very nature, not by reason of the consent of the Church, INASMUCH AS THEY WERE MADE WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT…”
The key is the clause “
by its nature” The clause has nothing to do with
how an
ex cathedra decision comes about. With this misunderstanding, Absolutist Petrine exaggerators and Low Petrine detractors both presume that “
by its nature” basically means “
because the Pope said so” (i.e., the phrase in their minds becomes “
irreformible because the Pope said so, not by the consent of the Church”). It is impossible that the clause “
by its nature” can be interpreted to mean “
because the Pope said so” because, according to the
Official Relatio, “
exactly the same has to be said of the infallibility of the Pope in defining truths, as of the infallibility of the Church defining them.” (as quoted earlier in greater context in my post #138). So, to repeat, the clause “
by its nature,” has nothing to do with
how an
ex cathedra decision comes about. Rather, it cuts to the chase about the very nature of an
ex cathedra decree
as God’s Truth. As consistently affirmed throughout all my years in CAF, Truth is never determined by consensus. The idea that truth is determined by consensus is nothing more than a modernist error (actually, heresy).
NOTE: In light of the above, one can hopefully see that the phrase at issue really has nothing to do with Apostolic Canon 34. The Apostolic Canon merely affirms that the purpose of consensus between the head bishop and his brother bishops is to ensure
the unity of the Church. In distinction, V1’s Definition is affirming that God’s Truth is not determined by consensus. Of course, there are other places in the
Official Relatio directly related to the Apostolic Canon, not least of which are its statements that AC 34 is the
RULE OF FAITH even for definitions by the Pope.
Both Absolutist Petrine exaggerators and Low Petrine detractors,
misinterpreting the phrase at issue to refer to the relationship between the Pope and the Church during the Pope’s exercise of the Church’s infallibility, mistakenly conclude that the CC teaching that the Pope is separated from the Church when he makes an
ex cathedra decree on Faith/morals. That is an absolutely false conclusion. And I pray this entire discussion (including the debate with brother Beng) has demonstrated that to be the case for you, brother Greg.
Given the foregoing primer, we now address the matter of the 4th and 6th Ecums. At this point, please recall the axioms in my previous post to you. I’ll repeat it here for your benefit.
quote=Mardukm The Church has no authority to create new doctrine. She can only recognize/affirm what is infallibly true.
(2) What the Church recognizes/affirms as infallibly true was the Truth even before the Church recognized/affirmed it to be infallibly true, because it is the eternal Truth from God Himself.
[/quote]
CONTINUED