As given in the Catholic Encyclopedia:Original sin is the privation of sanctifying grace in consequence of the sin of Adam. This solution, which is that of St. Thomas, goes back to St. Anselm and even to the traditions of the early Church, as we see by the declaration of the Second Council of Orange (A.D. 529): one man has transmitted to the whole human race not only the death of the body, which is the punishment of sin, but even sin itself, which is the death of the soul [Denz., n. 175 (145)]. As death is the privation of the principle of life, the death of the soul is the privation of sanctifying grace which according to all theologians is the principle of supernatural life. Therefore, if original sin is “the death of the soul”, it is the privation of sanctifying grace.
The Council of Trent, although it did not make this solution obligatory by a definition, regarded it with favour and authorized its use (cf. Pallavicini, “Istoria del Concilio di Trento”, vii-ix).
Nihil Obstat. February 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor. Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York.
Harent, S. (1911). Original Sin. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved August 20, 2012 from New Advent:
newadvent.org/cathen/11312a.htm
How interesting! So even before Vatican II, we’ve got this source that defines original sin as “the privation of sanctifying grace” rather than this whole “inherited guilt” concept which so many eastern Christians get so worked up about…
I think this very much goes to show that what our contemporary Catechism of the Catholic Church says about inherited guilt - i.e. it’s real, but does not “have the character of a personal fault in any of Adam’s descendants” - is really not as alien to the Latin tradition as many eastern Christians suspect…
Two reasons: he died already (over a century ago in fact) and he was the Pope.
Okay, I confess I can’t identify what you’re referring to from this comment alone. Please enlighten me. I’m dying to know which pope said to eastern Catholics something like, “Say that the Blessed Virgin Mary was conceived without the stain of original sin, or you’re a heretic.”
At least in the case of Vatican I, it is unclear how free from undue influence by Pius IX the bishops were.
Mardukm, on this forum, has shared a lot of text from both primary and secondary sources on Vatican I. One exchange really stands out to me: a dispute concerning the nature of the papacy that got one bishop (I think this one was also a cardinal) into a brief dispute with Pope Pius IX. The former appealed to Tradition in support of his view, and Pope Pius IX lost his temper and said, “I am Tradition!”
There are other aspects of what I’ve learned about Vatican I that come to mind as well… the way the council’s agenda shifted, for example. Or the extent to which one of the eastern Catholic patriarchs
fully got away with
conditionally confirming the council’s teachings on the papacy… etc.
Suffice it to say, Vatican I was definitely
not a rubber stamp on Pope Pius IX’s pre-Vatican I views.
Far from it.
More importantly, there was no (name removed by moderator)ut from the separated East. I don’t know if that is what the OP meant by “unilateral”, but I would consider it so.
By that logic, many of the first seven ecumenical councils were unilateral affairs that excluded the West, which was severely outnumbered at them. At
Constantinople I there weren’t even
any western bishops present at all.
But that didn’t disqualify that council from ultimately being considered ecumenical.
Besides, I think
any coherent ecclesiology - whether Catholic or Orthodox - would have to acknowledge that
schism cannot hold the Church’s teaching authority hostage.
That’s why the Orthodox who know what they’re talking about consistently reject the claim that they
can’t hold an ecumenical council even if they want to, since the whole pentarchy has to confirm it. They know better. The whole pentarchy
doesn’t have to confirm it, if Rome is in schism and heresy as they believe she is.
And that’s why the Catholic Church will never acknowledge that the existence of a state of schism between us and certain eastern churches means that the universal teaching authority of the Church cannot be exercised.
It can be. East and West were represented at Vatican I, albeit in reverse proportion from the first millennium councils. It was unquestionably a general council of the Catholic Communion… and it’s therefore more than capable of exercising universally binding authority.
It certainly, in my view, disqualifies it from being “ecumenical”.
Fair enough.

I’ve discovered that what counts as “ecumenical” is a bit of a red herring. The original concept - an Empire-wide council - makes no sense anyway, since we don’t have a Roman Empire anymore.
The point is that such a gathering of Catholic bishops does have the authority to exercise the supreme authority of the Church in a universally binding manner, our lack of communion with the Eastern and Oriental Orthodox Churches notwithstanding.
We do not deny that Mary is pure and immaculate from conception to dormition. But still, we do not have Original Sin in our theology, therefore the Immaculate Concepcion does not fit our theology.
But if that’s what “the Immaculate Conception” truly means - merely that Mary was pure and immaculate from conception to dormition - then you do have it in your theology.
No, of course not. There are a few Orthodox scholars who will go so far as to term the Immaculate Conception as an acceptable theologoumenon.
Such as Bishop Kallistos Ware.
But there are far more who actively oppose the concept. Typically, and certainly in the many threads at CAF, the opposition betrays a misunderstanding of what Catholics mean by the concept of “stain of Original sin”.
Definitely. Take that quote from an Antiochian Orthodox website a few pages ago, which objected to the dogma on the grounds that the Theotokos wasn’t immortal.
Sometimes it bends so far over backwards to reject the Catholic thinking that it actually opposes Orthodox thinking. For example, the idea that Mary was not sanctified until the Annunciation is flatly contradicted by the liturgy of the Orthodox church at the Entrance of the Theotokos.
Excellent point.
When we argue about how long she endured the separation of body and soul, we miss the good news.
How true.
