P
Pax_et_Caritas
Guest
I didn’t get the statement from the SSPX. I either heard it, or read it, myself. I say “heard it” because it may have come from a recorded interview with the Cardinal that I listened to a few weeks ago. The interview was recorded within the past few months…First of I’d like a source and the whole context. I’ve noticed SSPX likes to take things apart. things and take one phrase and use it out of context against people.
Now that we agree onI don’t think even a perfectly done NO holds a candle to TLM.
If you notice, I deleted that part from my last post. I am not interested in pointing out any error of the Pope. That being said, the errors are extremely serious and are rooted in the “new ecclesiology” of John Paul II. It is not a matter of starting with what is agreed on and working from there to arrive at unity. The errors are more serious. They explicitly deny that the heretics need to accept the faith. They claim that a heretic (someone who knowingly rejects dogmas of the faith), is nevertheless part of the one true Church and does not need to accept all of the dogmas of the faith. In fact, they claim that the Orthodox heretics, who deny 13 infallible councils of the Church and the Primacy of the Pope, are part of the true Church. The heretical Orthodox are said to be a “sister Church”, and a “true particular Church” That is what the new ecclesiology teaches. There is a sliding scale of unity. Some “Christians” are more united to the Church of Christ, some less, but each has a certain amount of unity.I’d be careful calling the Pope a heretic. Read a couple of those before my eyes just glazed over. Frankly most of that is context less snippets and conjecture based on fairly vague statements. There is nothing wrong with taking someone that disagree with you and then finding a common ground and building form there.
The truth of the matter is that there is only one Church and neither heretics nor schismatics are part of it. And what’s more their heresy and schism in no way affects the unity of the Church. The Church is perfectly one - with no divisions. When a group falls into heresy or schism, they separate themselves from the One True Church, while the unity of the one true Church remains intact. It is just a little smaller than it was before they separated themselves from it.
The “old ecclesiology” (what the Church has always taught and infallibly defined), has been abandoned for the new ecclesiology.