Is Ecum Council needed if Pope is infallible?

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Me thinks that sometimes Rome speaks out of both sides of her mouth. I think that when Rome says “supremacy”…they mean “supremacy.”

Furthermore, it follows from that supreme power which the Roman Pontiff has in governing the whole Church, that he has the right, in the performance of this office of his, to communicate freely with the pastors and flocks of the entire Church, so that they may be taught and guided by him in the way of salvation.
****Pastor aeternus
With all due respect, I think that you are still missing the nuances of the Catholic teaching, which several people have tried to explain throughout this thread. The above quote is simply an elaboration upon the Lord’s charge to St. Peter to “confirm the brethren” and “feed the sheep”. Of course the Pope exercises primacy, to ensure the unity of the Church universal in matters of faith and morals, but from St. Gregory on, the Popes have made it clear (with a few exceptions - there are always those who will abuse their office, whatever that office may be), that this primacy is one of service to the bishops of the Church. The Pope intervenes when truly necessary to preserve the faith and discipline of the Church - much more so in the Latin Church, of which he is patriarch, than in the Eastern Churches - but has no need nor desire to micromanage the bishops. My archbishop asks that the faithful kneel throughout the eucharistic prayer; the bishop of the neighbouring diocese asks that the faithful kneel during only the consecration itself. My archbishop encourages married men to seek ordination to the diaconate in service of the local church; the bishop of the neighbouring diocese ordains only celibate men to the diaconate in preparation for the priesthood. These are local affairs and the Pope has no need nor desire to intervene…
 
With all due respect, I think that you are still missing the nuances of the Catholic teaching, which several people have tried to explain throughout this thread.
That is the point. It takes long dissertations and linguistic acrobatics to explain the nuances. On one hand you’ll have something on paper from Rome which seens to explain things clearly, but then we hear that it really does not mean this at all! The “nuances” must be analyzed. 🤷

The sentence of the Apostolic See (than which there is no higher authority) is not subject to revision by anyone, nor may anyone lawfully pass judgment thereupon. And so they stray from the genuine path of truth who maintain that it is lawful to appeal from the judgments of the Roman pontiffs to an ecumenical council as if this were an authority superior to the Roman Pontiff.
Pastor aeternus
 
My archbishop encourages married men to seek ordination to the diaconate in service of the local church; the bishop of the neighbouring diocese ordains only celibate men to the diaconate in preparation for the priesthood.
Really? That’s odd. I was under the impression that it is a universal discipline of the RCC to allow married men to be ordained to the diaconate. Interesting.
 
Really? That’s odd. I was under the impression that it is a universal discipline of the RCC to allow married men to be ordained to the diaconate. Interesting.
Universal law allows it, but that doesn’t mean that the local bishop is *required *to do so. Latin bishops, contrary to the popular opinion of some, have a lot of autonomy. Even if one were to accept that the Pope has the power and desire to micromanage the entire Church…there are 2000+ sees in the Latin Church spread across the entire world…
 
Universal law allows it, but that doesn’t mean that the local bishop is *required *to do so.
I am guessing that there might be repercussions to this bishop if a married man who wishes to pursue the diaconate, appeals to a higher power. 😉
Even if one were to accept that the Pope has the power and desire to micromanage the entire Church…there are 2000+ sees in the Latin Church spread across the entire world…
It would be very difficult to micromanage such quantities.
 
The common reading of this text is not a misreading at all. One could, without violence to the text simplify it this way:

This is the common interpretation. One can cite other statements and Magisterial documents all one wants but those don’t cancel out this statement. The statements can be harmonized but both points have to be acknowledged.
Let me also say, welcome to the forums! 🙂

Concerning the above, I’d qualify your simplification: the clause “not from the consent of the Church” is modifying the adjective “irreformable.” In other words, that which makes an exercise of papal infallibility irreformable is “not from the consent of the Church.” This is not only perfectly in line with Marduk’s position - remember, he said that the pope’s judgment on such a matter does not depend for its validity on the judgment of other bishops - but is actually necessitated by the nuances of the rest of the context of Vatican I.
In the history of the Church, both from the Catholic and Orthodox perspective, there were times when what was not clearly a majority view (due to the presence of heresy) became recognized later as dogma. Why would papal infallibility (if such exists) be required to act differently than the infallibility accorded to the college of Bishops but not always recognized until later? Your interpretation would demand more of the papal exercise than the exercise by the episcopate.
That’s an excellent point, and as with the previous one, I don’t find it to be in tension with the interpretation Marduk has laid out here. Remember, he clarified that both of these are true: (a) papal infallibility must be exercised in conformity with the faith of the Church (the sensus fidelium) and is not separate from but rather a participation in the infallibility of the Church, yes, but also (b) the judgment in an exercise of papal infallibility is the Supreme Pontiff’s; truth is not determined by consensus. As Marduk said above, the pope can exercise the Church’s infallibility personally, but it is still the Church’s infallibility in which he participates - not some kind of monarchical and independent exercise.
Having read about the background debates at Vatican 1, I finally understood that it is not the “definitions” that is the subject of the clause “not from the consent of the Church,” but rather the term “irreformable.” The definition’s quality of irreformability - i.e., its infallibility, it’s quality as God’s Truth - is not from the consent of the Church.
Hey, cool! I swear, I wrote that first part of my reply before I read this part of yours. 😃

In my opinion, anyone who understands English grammar, syntax, and sentence structure should be able to tell from the English translation of that passage that the phrase “not from the consent of the Church” is modifying the adjective “irreformable” … but then again, I was an English major. 🙂
Me thinks that sometimes Rome speaks out of both sides of her mouth. I think that when Rome says “supremacy”…they mean “supremacy.”
Mickey, what do you think “supremacy” means? It means “highest” or “above all others.” Thus it really has - or ought to have - no connotations of absolute power…

The fact that it means “highest” makes it quite clear that at the very least, the word “supremacy” is quite consistent with the way in which the early church functioned, in which the bishop of Rome was treated as a sort of “court of final appeal.”

As twf pointed out, the Coptic Orthodox routinely apply the adjective “supreme” to their patriarch of Alexandria. Marduk’s doing the detail work, but if you want simple, you can have simple: just as the pope of Alexandria is “supreme” over his patriarchate, so the bishop of Rome, as the successor of Saint Peter, is “supreme” over the Church Universal… understood properly, the concept becomes so much less controversial and less scary.
That is the point. It takes long dissertations and linguistic acrobatics to explain the nuances. On one hand you’ll have something on paper from Rome which seens to explain things clearly, but then we hear that it really does not mean this at all! The “nuances” must be analyzed. 🤷
No, the documents mean what they say, but you’ve clearly misunderstood a selection if you take it in a way that contradicts what the Catholic Church authoritatively teaches elsewhere. It’s not about linguistic acrobatics, it’s about context.

Sometimes one’s misinterpretation can be simply grammatical: i.e. failing to understand what the phrase “not from the consent of the Church” modifies in the passage being discussed just previously.

Other times the problem can be one of connotations: i.e. the notion of “supremacy” communicating to English-speaking minds far more micromanaging than the word itself actually conveys.

In both of these examples - and they are representative - you have not “linguistic acrobatics” but simple clarification and, perhaps, contextualizing.
 
Sadly, I cannot speak or read Italian. And I speak and read very little Spanish. 🤷
Translating all of it would take too much space. Is there anything specific needed from this document? Most of it is standard RC stuff, e.g., the bishop of Rome is the successor of Peter, Vatican II showed that the bishop of Rome (as “Vicar of Christ”) has supreme and universal authority (in Spanish, they use the word “potestad”, meaning “power”) over the whole church, etc. Interestingly, it says “this power, like that of all bishops [emphasis mine], has a ministerial character, as noted by the Church Fathers.” Then, oddly, it goes on to specify various things about the mission of the Bishop of Rome. 🤷

And then there’s a bunch of stuff about how the conciliar definitions of the mission of the Bishop of Rome must be read and understood in light of this Christian tradition, and particularly the definitions of Vatican I…and then my mind kinda trailed off for a while. We all know where this is going, I think. Various post-Schism councils and proclamations are referenced, a heartfelt blessing is given to all, and then there’s a link at the bottom to go back to the top of the page. Fin. :rolleyes:
 
Concerning the above, I’d qualify your simplification: the clause “not from the consent of the Church” is modifying the adjective “irreformable.” In other words, that which makes an exercise of papal infallibility irreformable is “not from the consent of the Church.” This is not only perfectly in line with Marduk’s position - remember, he said that the pope’s judgment on such a matter does not depend for its validity on the judgment of other bishops - but is actually necessitated by the nuances of the rest of the context of Vatican I.
Well done, brother Fone Bone.

The quality of being “IRREFORMABLE” depends on one thing and one thing only - the Promise of Christ through St. Peter with the assistance of the Holy Spirit. Infallibility is from God and God alone. The Truths pronounced with the charism of infallibility are likewise from God and God alone.

Consensus has nothing to do with the quality of irreformability of the Church’s dogmas (whether they come from a Pope or an Ecumenical Council). A dogma of the Church is irreformable because it is from God. Period. When St. Peter promulgated the first dogma of the Church (that the Gentiles should be incorporated into the People of God), who among us - Orthodox or Catholic - would presume to claim that the truth of that dogma - its irreformability - depended on the consensus of the Church? When Moses came down from the mountain with the Ten Commandments (20 according to Mel Brooks :D), who among us - Orthodox or Catholic - would presume to claim that the truth of those dogmas - their irreformability - depended on the consensus of Israel?

Yes, the statement from Vatican 1 is very clear indeed - “definitions of the Roman Pontiff are irreformable by their nature, not from the consent of the Church.” No fancy rhetoric is needed to understand exactly what it states.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Then, oddly, it goes on to specify various things about the mission of the Bishop of Rome. 🤷
Why is it odd?🤷
And then there’s a bunch of stuff about how the conciliar definitions of the mission of the Bishop of Rome must be read and understood in light of this Christian tradition
Which is what Orthodox Churches desire and demand. Since you are not yet a member of any particular Church, that is perhaps lost on you.🤷

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Why is it odd?🤷
I dunno. It just struck me as odd when the preceding paragraph mentioned that this power is like that of all the bishops. If it is like that of all the bishops, it seems odd to specify all these special things that are given to the Pope of Rome only (I know that this is explained with reference to the uniqueness of the Petrine See as mentioned in the paragraph before it, but for someone who does not see this as conferring any particular “extra powers” or what have you, it still seems odd).
Which is what Orthodox Churches desire and demand. Since you are not yet a member of any particular Church, that is perhaps lost on you.🤷
As it is apparently lost on you when I am merely describing what is in the translation.
 
Really? That’s odd. I was under the impression that it is a universal discipline of the RCC to allow married men to be ordained to the diaconate. Interesting.
Universal law does not forbid married men into the presbyterate nor the diaconate.

Roman Discipline reserves the presbyterate within the Roman Church to unmarried men and those convert ministers already married upon conversion; it does, since 1974, permit married men to be ordained to the diaconate, but does not, and can not, compel a bishop to ordain men he feels are unfit. And some bishops do feel married men are unfit for the diaconate - and so, they do not ordain married men, nor incardinate them; a few will grant transferees faculties whilst not permitting a formation program locally.

It’s a huge change of the praxis of Rome back towards that of the pre-schism church… one of several that Vatican II council, and Popes Paul VI and John Paul II have put forward to correct drifts from the deposit of the faith.
 
I dunno. It just struck me as odd when the preceding paragraph mentioned that this power is like that of all the bishops. If it is like that of all the bishops, it seems odd to specify all these special things that are given to the Pope of Rome only (I know that this is explained with reference to the uniqueness of the Petrine See as mentioned in the paragraph before it, but for someone who does not see this as conferring any particular “extra powers” or what have you, it still seems odd).

As it is apparently lost on you when I am merely describing what is in the translation.
A similar but lesser “superior fullness” exists for the patriarchs, as well.
 
“lesser ‘superior fullness’”? I don’t understand that, but okay. 🤷
 
That is the point. It takes long dissertations and linguistic acrobatics to explain the nuances. On one hand you’ll have something on paper from Rome which seens to explain things clearly, but then we hear that it really does not mean this at all! The “nuances” must be analyzed. 🤷
It doesn’t take long or repeated dissertations for most people. Indeed, dcointin grasped the reasons for “and” rather than “through” for the Filoque in a single post of Ghosty. Mileage varies.

An understanding of the mind of the church is very helpful for discerning meaning. Just as in the case of: Most Holy Theotokos save us; or God became man so that men might become gods. Both seem crystal clear, but both have a meaning that more nuanced than would be gleaned from a simple-minded reading of the text.
 
“lesser ‘superior fullness’”? I don’t understand that, but okay. 🤷
A bishop has the fullness of Holy Orders. But he’s still subject to the fuller expression of them by his Archbishop, and if an Eastern Catholic of a patriarchal church, the patriarch is an even fuller expression of that authority that comes with being a bishop of a diocese. The Pope is the fullest expression of it.

In an ontologically different, but metaphorically similar way…

A deputy sheriff has a full expression of a law enforcement license. His supervisor is a more full expression of that same licensure - his authority over the civilian is not significantly different, but due to his job, he as additional powers in dealing with other deputy sheriffs. The Sheriff has the fullest expression of that law enforcement licensure, for his position allows him to exercise that authority over even the supervisors.

Or a Mayor - the mayor is a full expression of elected executive authority. But by virtue of being elected to a larger position, a Governor is a more full expression of that same role, and the president even more so.
 
Well done, brother Fone Bone.
Thank you, Marduk.

I think you already know this, but just to make sure I’m clear: I’m still always learning a lot, so if I say anything that you believe to be inaccurate - whether about papal infallibility or supremacy or anything else - please do not hesitate to correct me.
It doesn’t take long or repeated dissertations for most people. Indeed, dcointin grasped the reasons for “and” rather than “through” for the Filoque in a single post of Ghosty. Mileage varies.

An understanding of the mind of the church is very helpful for discerning meaning. Just as in the case of: Most Holy Theotokos save us; or God became man so that men might become gods. Both seem crystal clear, but both have a meaning that more nuanced than would be gleaned from a simple-minded reading of the text.
Well said.
 
Thank you for this explanation, Aramis. I had never heard that term before you used it.
A bishop has the fullness of Holy Orders. But he’s still subject to the fuller expression of them by his Archbishop, and if an Eastern Catholic of a patriarchal church, the patriarch is an even fuller expression of that authority that comes with being a bishop of a diocese. The Pope is the fullest expression of it.

In an ontologically different, but metaphorically similar way…

A deputy sheriff has a full expression of a law enforcement license. His supervisor is a more full expression of that same licensure - his authority over the civilian is not significantly different, but due to his job, he as additional powers in dealing with other deputy sheriffs. The Sheriff has the fullest expression of that law enforcement licensure, for his position allows him to exercise that authority over even the supervisors.

Or a Mayor - the mayor is a full expression of elected executive authority. But by virtue of being elected to a larger position, a Governor is a more full expression of that same role, and the president even more so.
 
Dear brother Peter,
Well done, brother Fone Bone.

The quality of being “IRREFORMABLE” depends on one thing and one thing only - the Promise of Christ through St. Peter with the assistance of the Holy Spirit. Infallibility is from God and God alone. The Truths pronounced with the charism of infallibility are likewise from God and God alone.

Consensus has nothing to do with the quality of irreformability of the Church’s dogmas (whether they come from a Pope or an Ecumenical Council). A dogma of the Church is irreformable because it is from God. Period. When St. Peter promulgated the first dogma of the Church (that the Gentiles should be incorporated into the People of God), who among us - Orthodox or Catholic - would presume to claim that the truth of that dogma - its irreformability - depended on the consensus of the Church? When Moses came down from the mountain with the Ten Commandments (20 according to Mel Brooks :D), who among us - Orthodox or Catholic - would presume to claim that the truth of those dogmas - their irreformability - depended on the consensus of Israel?

Yes, the statement from Vatican 1 is very clear indeed - “definitions of the Roman Pontiff are irreformable by their nature, not from the consent of the Church.” No fancy rhetoric is needed to understand exactly what it states.
In lieu of this last post in our discussion on the meaning of the phrase at issue, I just want to ask if you see and understand what the Catholic Church is actually teaching by that phrase.

Before you answer, I want to point out two more things that you may not realize:
(1) The Definition went through three revisions. The first revision had the explicit statement, “by the power of the divine assistance” and it is because of this that definitions are regarded as “irreformable by their nature.” Unfortunately, that first statement was dropped in the second revision, but it nevertheless became part of the historic Proem which was eventually added to the Decree. So the second revision only had the phrase “The definitions of the Roman Pontiff are irreformable by their nature.” It did not have the additional clause that has become the occasion for controversy. In this original form, and given the history just provided, it might be more easy for you to see and understand that the intent of the phrase never had anything to do with how the “papal infallibility” was to be exercised. It was always meant to be a simple affirmation of the infallibility (or irreformability) of the definition.

(2) It was in the third revision that the clause “not by the consent of the Church” was added. This was added literally at the “final hour,” for the sake of those who were intent on killing through the Definition the heresy of Gallicanism. However, at this same “final hour,” the historic Proem was added to the Decree (not the Definition, but the Decree that contained the Definition), which explicitly included the idea of the assistance of the Holy Spirit that was dropped in the second revision. To repeat, it was the addition of this historic Proem which caused several neo-ultramontanists to leave the Council in disgust, one even accusing the Council of proposing nothing more than an attenuated form of Gallicanism.

To recap: The phrase “The definitions of the Roman Pontiff are irreformable by their nature, not from the consent of the Church” has nothing to do with the exercise of papal infallibility – it only has to do with the nature of a definition as God’s Truth (being made with the assistance of the Holy Spirit), and Truth (especially God’s Truth) is never determined by consensus. The key is the clause “by their nature.” Many non-Catholics, and Absolutist Petrine advocates, misunderstand the clause to mean “The definitions of the Roman Pontiff are irreformable because the Pope said so, not from the consent of the Church.” But the clause actually means, “The definitions of the Roman Pontiff are irreformable because it was made with the assistance of the Holy Spirit, not from the consent of the Church.”

At this point, let me repeat my question – do you now see and understand what the Catholic Church is actually teaching by the phrase at issue?

Blessings,
Marduk
 
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