M
mardukm
Guest
Dear all,
I wanted to start this new thread on this specific topic in response to a query (via PM) from a new Chaldean Catholic member of the forum. The basic gist of the query was:
Thank you for your question. I believe Bishop Gasser explained the Catholic Church’s position rather clearly in the excerpts you provided. First, I will provide a general explanation, and then I will address the quotes you gave concisely in light of the explanation. The Relatio uses the term “consent” in two senses:
(1) Agreement. This is the meaning accepted by the Catholic Church. This is the meaning of the term “consent” in the statement from BIshop Gasser, “It is true that the consent of the present preaching of the whole Magisterium of the Church, united with its head, is a rule of faith even for pontifcal defintions.” The Pope MUST be in agreement with the present preaching of all the orthodox bishops. It is his divine responsibility to ascertain this BEFORE he makes an ex cathedra decree. The Relatio asserts, “We do not exclude the co-operation of the Church, because the Pope’s infallibility does not come to him by way of inspiration or revelation, but by divine assistance.” Not just the official Relatio, but Pastor Aeternus itself makes it plainly evident: “The reason for this is that the Holy Spirit was promised to the successors of St. Peter not that they might make known new doctrine by His revelation, but rather, that with His assistance they might religiously guard and faithfully explain the revelation or deposit of faith that was handed down throug the apostles.” Of course, the cooperation or aid of the Church is not the issue before us, but rather the necessary agreement of the Church. The cooperation/aid of the Church is simply a means by which the necessary agreement is determined.
(2) Manifest consent. This is the specific term used by Bishop Gasser to refer to the idea that there must be an explicit and formal expression of consent from the individual bishops of the Church as a condition for an exercise of “papal” infallibility. Aside from the particular statement indicated in (1) above, this is the meaning of “consent” in the entire Relatio., as he indicated in your quote regarding the “third axiom” --“the matter has come to the extreme point”; the translation of the Relatio I possess makes it more obvious that this was the true issue: “We here come to the crucial point.” In fact, it is in this very sense that the Relatio interprets the Gallican axiom “from the consent of the Church.” – “Whoever therefore contends that the Pope, either for informationm or for an infallible judgment on faith or morals, depends WHOLLY on the manifested consent of the bishops, or on their help, must lay down that false principle, that all the dogmatic judgments of the Pope are in themselves and of themselves reformable, unless the consent of the Church is given to them [the Fourth Gallican principle].” Bishop Gasser asserted, as the official representative of the official body of bishops that formulated the Decrees, that while the agreement of the orthodox bishops is necessary, their manifest consent is not, because the agreement of the bishops can be determined by means other than direct contact with the bishops. He argued that if the agreement of the bishops can be arrived at by means other than direct contact with the bishops, then direct contact with the bishops in order to obtain their explicit agreement cannot be made a dogmatic rule.
Of the two connotations of “consent,” the official Relatio affirmed the necessity of the first, but not of the second. This was the official position of Vatican 1, and it is to that official position that I adhere as a Catholic High Petrine advocate. Confusing these distinct meanings of the term “consent” will lead to inevitable confusion about the true meaning of V1’s decree on “papal” infallibility.
The question, brother, is: Do you understand the important difference between “agreement” and “manifest consent.”
CONT’d
I wanted to start this new thread on this specific topic in response to a query (via PM) from a new Chaldean Catholic member of the forum. The basic gist of the query was:
Hence, the member provided several excerpts from the Relatio. The following is my response:You quote the Relatio of Bishop Gasser to prove such a case [the High Petrine view]. I took your word for it since you quoted the relatio yourself and it seemed to have agreed with you. However, when I read the relatio myself, I encountered paragraphs on there that seemed to strictly and directly contradict your interpretation of the papacy…How do you reconcile those paragraphs with your stance, being the HP view, which you say you took from the Relatio. When I read the Relatio, I get the complete opposite understanding of it. Please help me understand. I will be forever grateful to you
Thank you for your question. I believe Bishop Gasser explained the Catholic Church’s position rather clearly in the excerpts you provided. First, I will provide a general explanation, and then I will address the quotes you gave concisely in light of the explanation. The Relatio uses the term “consent” in two senses:
(1) Agreement. This is the meaning accepted by the Catholic Church. This is the meaning of the term “consent” in the statement from BIshop Gasser, “It is true that the consent of the present preaching of the whole Magisterium of the Church, united with its head, is a rule of faith even for pontifcal defintions.” The Pope MUST be in agreement with the present preaching of all the orthodox bishops. It is his divine responsibility to ascertain this BEFORE he makes an ex cathedra decree. The Relatio asserts, “We do not exclude the co-operation of the Church, because the Pope’s infallibility does not come to him by way of inspiration or revelation, but by divine assistance.” Not just the official Relatio, but Pastor Aeternus itself makes it plainly evident: “The reason for this is that the Holy Spirit was promised to the successors of St. Peter not that they might make known new doctrine by His revelation, but rather, that with His assistance they might religiously guard and faithfully explain the revelation or deposit of faith that was handed down throug the apostles.” Of course, the cooperation or aid of the Church is not the issue before us, but rather the necessary agreement of the Church. The cooperation/aid of the Church is simply a means by which the necessary agreement is determined.
(2) Manifest consent. This is the specific term used by Bishop Gasser to refer to the idea that there must be an explicit and formal expression of consent from the individual bishops of the Church as a condition for an exercise of “papal” infallibility. Aside from the particular statement indicated in (1) above, this is the meaning of “consent” in the entire Relatio., as he indicated in your quote regarding the “third axiom” --“the matter has come to the extreme point”; the translation of the Relatio I possess makes it more obvious that this was the true issue: “We here come to the crucial point.” In fact, it is in this very sense that the Relatio interprets the Gallican axiom “from the consent of the Church.” – “Whoever therefore contends that the Pope, either for informationm or for an infallible judgment on faith or morals, depends WHOLLY on the manifested consent of the bishops, or on their help, must lay down that false principle, that all the dogmatic judgments of the Pope are in themselves and of themselves reformable, unless the consent of the Church is given to them [the Fourth Gallican principle].” Bishop Gasser asserted, as the official representative of the official body of bishops that formulated the Decrees, that while the agreement of the orthodox bishops is necessary, their manifest consent is not, because the agreement of the bishops can be determined by means other than direct contact with the bishops. He argued that if the agreement of the bishops can be arrived at by means other than direct contact with the bishops, then direct contact with the bishops in order to obtain their explicit agreement cannot be made a dogmatic rule.
Of the two connotations of “consent,” the official Relatio affirmed the necessity of the first, but not of the second. This was the official position of Vatican 1, and it is to that official position that I adhere as a Catholic High Petrine advocate. Confusing these distinct meanings of the term “consent” will lead to inevitable confusion about the true meaning of V1’s decree on “papal” infallibility.
The question, brother, is: Do you understand the important difference between “agreement” and “manifest consent.”
CONT’d