Dear brother Jimmy
My view doesn’t follow the view of apostolic as defined by Rome but it certainly is apostolic. I don’t think that Cyprian would agree with you, considering the fact that he held two councils in opposition to the declaration by Pope Stephen concerning baptism of heretics.
Yes, and the Nicene Council sided with the Pope on the issue. No matter how you look at it, Tradition agreed with the Pope. Are you now going to appeal to all those who disagreed with the decisions of Ecumenical Councils to state that the Ecumenical Councils really don’t have authority for the entire Church? I am confident you would not, so I do not see how your appeal to St. Cyprian’s opposition affects the orthodoxy and propriety of Pope St. Stephen’s decisions.
As I already mentioned, I have no problems with AC 34. I have problems with authority in the Church being reduced to the authority of the bishop of Rome or that delegated from him.
You nor any other non-Catholic (not saying YOU are not Catholic) apologist or polemicist here has given ANY proof that the bishop of Rome has acted in this tyrannical manner that you assume the Vatican Council gave him authority to do (and I as well as others have asked for this proof many times in the past). Your belief is not based on facts, but assumptions.
AC 34 did not have this ultra centralized view of the Church. The bishop of Rome did not determine the truth. This is clearly seen in the fact that pope Leo rejected Canon 28 of Chalcedon but the east continued to accept it regardless. The pope later accepted it in the 13th century. So the fact is that this extremely centralized interpretation of AC 34 was not present in the early Church. The bishop of Rome rejected the canon but the body of bishops still accepted it. So aparrently the pope can not simply veto a declaration by the council. Whether the pope vetoed it or not it still remained authoritative.
You are the one who said that a decision can be authoritative in the east even if the pope rejects it. Your assertion is that the popes rejection only means that it is not authoritative in the west. I have simply attempted to show that that is not an accurate interpretation of Vatican II. I have asserted that the popes veto of the document according to Vatican II and the modern western approach to ecclesiology is a veto for the whole Church. I have used Chalcedon to say this is not consistent with the early Church.
No. You have “cut and pasted” statements from two separate decrees (the Decree on Infallibility and the Decree on the Primacy) to create a non-existent papacy for yourself with which you feel dissatisfaction. The fact is, the statement in the Decree on Infallibility that the Pope does not need consensus to proclaim an
ex cathedra decree has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with the statement in the Decree on the Primacy that the Pope has full, supreme, universal authority. The statement in the Decree on Infallibility is based on nothing more than the fact that the TRUTH does not need consensus. The Vatican Council does not abrogate the necessity of consensus from the body of the Pope’s brother bishops FOR THE SAKE OF UNITY (which is the purpose of the mutual consent of head bishop and body of bishops in the apostolic canon - you seem to understand this as you explicitly stated it somewhere else). All the Vatican Council is saying is that consensus is not necessary for TRUTH (i.e., the
ex cathedra decree).
Tell me, do you seriously believe that when God revealed to St. Peter that the Gentiles should be let into the Church, St. Peter needed the consensus of the other Apostles to know that what he was teaching was the divine Truth? Certainly, the consensus of the rest of the Apostles would be necessary for the UNITY of the Church (which is what the apostolic canon states), but no way no how did St. Peter need the consensus of the Church to make his decree.
Do you seriously believe that the consensus on Pope St. Leo’s Tome added ANYTHING to the Truth of his decree? Certainly, consensus was necessary to ensure UNITY on the matter, but no consensus was required to determine the OBJECTIVE Truth of his decree.
What do you mean by ‘from the memory of the Church’? Are you refering to tradition? I have seen ‘memory’ applied to tradition by Pope Benedict so that sounds like what you are saying.
Yes. That would be a good interpretation of what I meant.
So as long as we have a virtuous pope we should be pretty good.
Just to be clear - So
DESPITE your own admission of a moral law that the Pope is required to follow,
DESPITE the clear infallible teaching of the Vatican Council that the Pope is obligated to uphold the prerogatives of his brother bishops, and
DESPITE the canons that assert that the universal authority of the bishop of Rome is meant to REINFORCE the immediate and ordinary authority of his brother bishops, NOT supplant them, AND
DESPITE the fact that you nor anyone else has given historical proof that the Pope acts in a manner by which he can do anything he wants, whenever he wants, wherever he wants, you still maintain that there is no canonical or divine limit to the Pope’s exercise of his functions aside from his whim? If your response is “yes,” which I suspect it might be (judging from our conversation so far - if it is NOT, then I rejoice that I would be wrong), I just want you to see how utterly incomprehensible your position is.
Blessings,
Marduk