No, but there are some expressions and beliefs of Popes that are erroneous, Honorius not being the first, though one of the most grievious. Let’s not turn this thread into examples of popes who wrote things or pronounced things that are clearly an opposition to the Gospel of Christ. They are human. They make mistakes. Not everything they publish is protected by the gift of infallibility.
In all the letters that Pope Honorius I wrote that included heresy, not once did he claim to speak with the voice of St. Peter, or condemn or define anything. You need to look at the wording in
Unam Sanctam again before you brush it off as non-infallible.
“We declare, say, define, and pronounce…”
you seem to be conflating the mystical body of Christ with the visible Church.
You are interpreting “Church” as visible church. Not all who are saved are members of the visible Catholic Church.
You seem to be conflating the visible church with the mystical. God remits sins of those who are not members of the visible Catholic church.
Pope Leo XIII,
Satis Cognitum #3 “If we consider the chief end of His Church and the proximate efficient causes of salvation, it is undoubtedly
spiritual; but in regard to those who constitute it, and to the things which lead to these spiritual gifts, it is
external and necessarily visible.”
Pope Leo XIII,
Satis Cognitum #3 “For this reason the Church is so often called in Holy Writ a
body, and even the body of Christ - “Now you are the body of Christ” (I Cor. 12:27)-and precisely because it is a body is the Church visible… From this it follows that those who arbitrarily conjure up and picture to themselves a hidden and invisible Church are in grievous and pernicious error.”
vatican.va/holy_father/leo_xiii/encyclicals/documents/hf_l-xiii_enc_29061896_satis-cognitum_en.html
Can you provide one Magisterial teaching which claims that God “remits sins of those who are not members of the visible Catholic” Church?
You complained that the Church never canonized non-Catholics. Why would they?
First off, a correction. I did not “complain” that the Church never canonized non-Catholics, nor would I! They are outside the Church! I offered the
fact that the Church has never canonized a non-Catholic as evidence for the necessity of conversion to the Catholic Church…
Are you saying that the CCC is in error? Do you believe there is no such thing as invincible ignorance?
“The individual doctrines which the Catechism presents receive no other weight than that which they already possess.” Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger,* Introduction to the Catechism of the Catholic Church*, p. 26
The CCC does not grant anything doctrinal value, its authority (and weight) come from the declarations made by the Magisterium outside of the Catechism.
Invincible ignorance is a theory… Regardless, while ignorance can excuse a person, it cannot save him.
Pope Pius IX,
Singulari Quadam “It must, of course, be held as a matter of faith that outside the apostolic Roman Church no one can be saved, that the Church is the only ark of salvation, and that whoever does not enter it, will perish in the flood. On the other hand, it must likewise be held as certain that those who live in ignorance of the true religion, if such ignorance be invincible, are not subject to any guilt** in
this matter before the eyes of the Lord”
I agree about our duty to study and seek, but the assertion that one is necessarily led and will find the Catholic faith is not necessarily so.
I meant honest study accompanied by divine grace. If a man asks for grace, God will grant it. That grace WILL lead them to the Church IF they are open to it. If they are not open to that, then they are in turn culpable for what they reject of the graces God gives them. Or do you claim that God does not give all men the graces necessary to find the Catholic Church?
I already saw the instruction of Paul posted above. He made it clear that people will be saved who are not visible members of the Church. Each man is judged by his own conscience.
I missed this then. Please point out where in the Scriptures St. Paul says that persons outside the Church can be saved.
Just because a man is judged by his conscience and can be excused by his ignorance, does not mean his ignorance will save him.
We covered this ground already. All salvation occurs through the Church. Some saved persons are not members of the visible Catholic Church.
And yet… who has been saved who was not a member of the visible Catholic Church? Can you provide one name?
Well, we differ on what has been revealed, but I do agree that it makes no sense to act outside of what He has provided as the means.
By all means, demonstrate what I have not presented in the Church’s official teachings that has been revealed.
This is the point you seem to be missing, Anne. These people have not cut themselves off. They were born into conditions by which they were separated. The separation happened centuries ago.
And yet, they are still affected by the separation, just as we are still affected by Original Sin until Baptism. Just because it happened centuries ago doesn’t mean it does not need to be remedied in order to find salvation. A soul that dies with only Original Sin on its soul cannot enter Heaven.
Separation IS separation. Not union.