Yes. Now we are getting to the heart of the matter. Notice what you have done above. … So, indeed, as I suspected, and stated earlier, your position is not based on any facts, but only assumptions.
I have shown the documents that state clearly that the pope does not need to speak with the bishops. Whether the pope has actually exercised his charism on his own or not is irrelevant to whether he has the capacity to do so. The Second Vatican Council states clearly that he does have this capcity. The authority does not proceed from his communion with the other bishops, it proceeds from his being the successor of Peter.
I don’t know what the difference is between “true” and “infallibly true.” Since we are talking about the epistemological reality of the Church’s DIVINE doctrine, whatever is “true” must necessarily be “infallibly true.”
We are talking about infallibility of the pope not whether Leo’s Tome was true.
Namely: Demonstrate to us that the Catholic Church defines religious obedience as BLIND obedience; demonstrate to us that conscience is NOT an indispensable element in the Church’s call to obedience.
What does it matter whether the bishops had to convince themselves of the truth of Pope St. Leo’s teaching? Answer this question: Was Pope St. Leo’s teaching infallibly true or not?
Whether the document was true or not is not the question, the question is whether the infallibility of the pope preceeds the truth of the document. It is about whether the document is true because it was written by the pope or whether it was true simply because of the words which it incorporates. The doctrine of infallibility says that it was true because it was written by the pope who has a charism of infallibility. It could not err because the pope intended to teach the whole Church.
By the structure of your first sentence it seems that you have already assumed that it was established prior to the reading of the Tome that it was orthodox. So consequently you have made it a question of conscience. So now the bishops of Chalcedon are simply reading the Tome to inform their own consciences and so the Pope is the teacher of the whole council who simply accepts the popes teaching. This assumption which it seems you have is throwing a big cog into our discussion. You have transferred the statement that the pope does not need the consent of the college to define truths from a question of a charism to that of the conscience of the bishops.
It is about whether the orthodoxy of the Tome was established prior to their reading it or whether they accepted it because they found Leo’s way of speaking to be orthodox. The way you phrase this question it sounds like Leo wrote an infallibile Tome and the bishops at Chalcedon had to convince themselves of the truth of the two natures of Christ. Is this how the council viewed Leo’s Tome or is it that they had to be convinced of whether Leo’s Tome was actually orthodox or not?
The only way it becomes about conscience is if the bishops of Chalcedon were simply informing their consciences about the truth by reading the Tome of Leo. This comes with the assumption that the pope has a charism of infallibility. But if the answer to the quesiton regarding the Tome is that they read the Tome and declared it to be true because of what it said then conscience has no play in the discussion.
Can you give more information on this? Let me ask you: was the rejection of collegial action based on a rejection of the value of consensus for UNITY, or was it based on a rejection of the value of consensus for the establishment of TRUTH
You are making this about whether the popes statements are true or not. Whether they are true or not is irrelevant. The question is whether the pope has authority to define new dogmas. That is what infallibility is about. It says that the pope is personally protected from error when defining a dogma. This is about the charism. Does the pope have a charism that protects him from error or not? The councils say he does. And to apply this to Leo’s Tome, was the Tome true because Leo had a charism which protected him from error or was it true only because the explanation he gave is true?
Unity is determined by communion with the pope not by consensus. As Lumen Gentium says the pope is the visible sign of unity. Consensus seems to be a meaningless concept for this discussion. The document says that the consensus of the bishops is not necessary.And therefore his definitions, of themselves, and not from the consent of the Church, are justly styled irreformable, since they are pronounced with the assistance of the Holy Spirit, promised to him in blessed Peter, and therefore they need no approval of others, nor do they allow an appeal to any other judgment. For then the Roman Pontiff is not pronouncing judgment as a private person, but as the supreme teacher of the universal Church, in whom the charism of infallibility of the Church itself is individually present, he is expounding or defending a doctrine of Catholic faith.[LG25]You can read about it in
The Rhine Flows into The Tiber which is a history of Vatican II.
According to the commentaries of the Council Fathers,has always been involved.
I have been quoting Vatican II not Vatican I. Probably the most influential man on the council was Karl Rahner due to the fact that he was the theologian of the German conference of bishops and the documents he wrote to guide the German conferences actions at the council largely determined the outcome of the council. He says clearly in his commentary on Lumen Gentium that there are no restrictions on the pope to seek the views of the other bishops.