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Guest
Yes.Can you please re-post the link to this “general audience statement”.
Here is the text of an interesting general audience given by the late Holy Father, Blessed John Paul II, on Feb. 24, 1993:
vatican.va/holy_father/jo…9930224en.html
I’ve included a few highlights below which I believe support Marduk’s position (which I as a Latin share - long before getting involved in any of these CAF discussions, I was always struck by the fact that the CCC carefully emphasizes that all the bishops are true vicars of Christ and not mere deputies of the Pope of Rome):
*The Second Vatican Council teaches that the Bishop of Rome, as Vicar of Christ, has supreme and universal power over the whole Church (cf. LG 22). This power, as well as that of all bishops, has a ministerial character (ministerium means service), as the Fathers of the Church had already observed.
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It is a mission of service to the universal Church, which necessarily entails a corresponding authority precisely because of this service: the full power of shepherding, ruling and governing, without prejudice to the privileges and rights of the Eastern patriarchs, according to the order of their dignity.
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In this regard it would be well to clarify immediately that this “fullness” of power attributed to the Pope in no way detracts from the “fullness” also belonging to the body of bishops. On the contrary, one must assert that both the Pope and the episcopal body have “all the fullness” of power. The Pope possesses this fullness personally, while the body of bishops, united under the Pope’s authority, possesses it collegially. The Pope’s power does not result from simply adding numbers, but is the episcopal body’s principle of unity and wholeness.
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Vatican I’s definition, however, does not assign to the Pope a power or responsibi*lity to intervene daily in the local churches.
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Indeed, we should keep in mind a statement of the German episcopate (1875) approved by Pius IX that said: “The episcopate also exists by virtue of the same divine institution on which the office of the Supreme Pontiff is based. It enjoys rights and duties in virtue of a disposition that comes from God himself, and the Supreme Pontiff has neither the right nor the power to change them.” The decrees of Vatican I are thus understood in a completely erroneous way when one presumes that because of them “episcopal jurisdiction has been replaced by papal jurisdiction”; that the Pope “is taking for himself the place of every bishop”; and that the bishops are merely “instruments of the Pope: they are his officials without responsibility of their own” (DS 3115).
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Because of this new clarification the erroneous interpretations often made of Vatican I’s definition are rejected and the full significance of the Petrine ministry is shown in its harmony with the doctrine of episcopal collegiality
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He will never subordinate what he has received for Christ and his Church to his own personal aims.
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Regarding his relationship with his brothers in the episcopate, he must remember and apply the words of St. Gregory the Great: “My honor is the honor of the universal Church. My honor is the solid strength of my brothers. I am truly honored, then, when each of them is not denied the honor due him”(emphasises added)
Blessed Pope John Paul II clearly affirms that the “absolutist” position misinterprets the intentions of the holy fathers of Florence, Vatican I, and Vatican II.
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