Great point. Cavaradossi has not taken into account that the bishop of Rome’s confirmation of a Council is necessary for it to be fully authoritative. That answers the question of why the Council did not - and really could not - have deposed or anathematized Pope Vigilius. The head bishop of the Church had not yet confirmed its decisions. There was enough evidence to indicate that Pope Vigilius was wholly orthodox, and the Church would not formally condemn its head bishop on the mere whim of political expedience.
Blessings,
Marduk
This is, of course, the fallacy of affirming the consequent. Your logic is that if the approval of the pope was needed for the council to have authority, then they could not have deposed the pope. Therefore because they did not depose the pope, you conclude that the pope was needed for an ecumenical council to have authority. This reasoning fails of course, because even if your conditional statement is true, it does not follow that because the antecedent is true the consequent must be true.
As stated, the so-called banishment was no more an “effective” deposition than the emperor’s removing him from his See. Why are you consistently avoiding the question? Where is the Council record of a deposition or anathematization of Pope Vigilius by name? What the emperor does to force the matter is not part of the Council’s actions.
Strawman argument. You misrepresent my argument to be that Vigilius was anathematized by name. I, of course, never argued that, but argued that the language of the anathema and the treatment of Vigilius and his party of bishops after the council suggests that he was implicitly anathematized.
You are confusing yourself. We were talking about Theodore of Mopsuestia, not the letter of ibas.
Another strawman, with an ad hominem argument added into the mix. The argument always was over Vigilius’ erroneous position on the three chapters in their entirety, not just Theodore of Mopsuestia.
We’re talking about the letter of Ibas now. Don’t confuse the issue by referring to the Three Chapters as a whole. The issue of the letter of Ibas was purely theological, and Pope Vigilius made no theological analysis or defense of its contents other than to say It might be orthodox taken in the best possible sense. And this purely on the basis that the previous Council had it before them and did not condemn it. That’ is not a theological defense on the merits of its contents.
No true Scotsman. You contend that because Vigilius’ defense was not heavily theological, it therefore was not a real defense.
“Banish” him from where? Rome. They already forcibly took him from his See. Yet he was STILL regarded as the bishop of Rome. The so-called banishment was effectively INeffective as a deposition.
Same fallacy as above. You argue that because Vigilius was held captive in Constantinople for several years that his banishment to an island was therefore not a real banishment. This is of course false, because the common understanding of banishment entails being sent by on somebody’s authority outside of a certain geographical area.
Yes, you go by implications based on the actions of the emperor. You have yet to provide a single piece of evidence from the Council itself that Pope Vigilius was deposed or anathematized. Still waiting.
Here we see a combination of the strawman fallacy with the fallacy of moving the goalposts. You misdirect the debate by claiming my argument is that they explicitly anathematized Vigilius. Secondly, when provided with evidence that the anathema was in fact directed against Vigilius and his bishops, you demand more evidence (specifically evidence which you know does not exist).
you seem to be under the strange assumption that the existence of schism deprives the Church of its established authority. I guess the fact that there are sinners deprives God of his authority, too, according to your rationale?
You have a faulty understanding of the argument being made. The idea that many have rebelled against the papacy does not indicate that the papacy does not have authority, but only that it was not universally believed. Since, however, much emphasis is placed on the faith of the apostles once delivered, the non-universal nature of submission to the papacy indicates that it may not be part of that faith once delivered.