M
mardukm
Guest
CONT’d
The following is the actual manner by which Humanae Vitae was promulgated (the source IIRC is a book I read entitled “Observer in Rome” whose author - I think his last mane was Brown - was one of the official Protestant observers invited to V2 - I read it several years ago, and I unfortunately left it in the U.S. when I moved here to the Philippines):
During the discussions on the Decree on the Church in the Modern World, a South American bishop brought up the issue of contraception, which caused a minor furor. The matter was quickly appealed to the Pope for a decision. Thereupon, the Pope established a special commission of a handful of bishops to investigate the matter. This majority of the bishops in the commission (I think it was something like 7 out of 9 or 9 out of 12 - something of that proportion) came back with a recommendation to relax the Church’s teaching on contraception. The Pope rejected the findings of the commission, and sent the matter to the general congregation for vote - the matter naturally included during the voting for the Decree on the Church in the Modern World. The bishops overwhelmingly approved the preservation of the Church’s Tradition on the issue (over a thousand bishops, about 90% of the quorum). Thereafter, though the matter could have easily been promulgated by conciliar authority as part of the Council’s decisions, the Pope decided to promulgate it on his personal authority in the encyclical Humanae Vitae.
One can see how different the actual facts are from the severely abbreviated version circulated by Absolutist Petrine advocates (and many Catholics, innocently unaware) like a bad rumor. The rumor normatlly states that (1) the Pope decided on his own to bring up the matter; (2) the Pope rejected the advice of a majority of bishops - PERIOD. What this rumor fails to clarify is that (1) it came to the Pope’s attention by appeal; (2) the “majority of bishops” is referring to the majority of the handful bishops in the special commission, not the majority of bishops in the Council.
The following is the actual manner by which Humanae Vitae was promulgated (the source IIRC is a book I read entitled “Observer in Rome” whose author - I think his last mane was Brown - was one of the official Protestant observers invited to V2 - I read it several years ago, and I unfortunately left it in the U.S. when I moved here to the Philippines):
During the discussions on the Decree on the Church in the Modern World, a South American bishop brought up the issue of contraception, which caused a minor furor. The matter was quickly appealed to the Pope for a decision. Thereupon, the Pope established a special commission of a handful of bishops to investigate the matter. This majority of the bishops in the commission (I think it was something like 7 out of 9 or 9 out of 12 - something of that proportion) came back with a recommendation to relax the Church’s teaching on contraception. The Pope rejected the findings of the commission, and sent the matter to the general congregation for vote - the matter naturally included during the voting for the Decree on the Church in the Modern World. The bishops overwhelmingly approved the preservation of the Church’s Tradition on the issue (over a thousand bishops, about 90% of the quorum). Thereafter, though the matter could have easily been promulgated by conciliar authority as part of the Council’s decisions, the Pope decided to promulgate it on his personal authority in the encyclical Humanae Vitae.
One can see how different the actual facts are from the severely abbreviated version circulated by Absolutist Petrine advocates (and many Catholics, innocently unaware) like a bad rumor. The rumor normatlly states that (1) the Pope decided on his own to bring up the matter; (2) the Pope rejected the advice of a majority of bishops - PERIOD. What this rumor fails to clarify is that (1) it came to the Pope’s attention by appeal; (2) the “majority of bishops” is referring to the majority of the handful bishops in the special commission, not the majority of bishops in the Council.
3.) This part here, is still puzzling to me:
“Finally, it must never be overlooked that there is present to the Pope the tradition of the Church of Rome, that is, of that Church to which faithlessness has no access and with which, because of its more powerful primacy, every Church must agree. Therefore that strict necessity *, such as is required for a Dogmatic constitution, can in no way be demonstrated…Such a case is not to be established as a rule.”
As a Catholic, I believe that Rome is infallible in matters of faith and morals with regards to doctrines/dogmas; however, I can see an Orthodox Christian being turned off by this. Would something being taught by Rome only, for 2000 years, be made a doctrine even if it was never taught in the East? This part of the Relatio seems to suggest that since the Pope is the bishop of Rome, he doesn’t need to go any further than his See to find evidence of whether or not a doctrine is orthodox or not.*
Yes, I understand your concerns, for I had the same initial reservations when I was still not yet Catholic (though studying Catholicism). After some thought, however, I realized that the Relatio is not claiming that the underlined portion in the excerpt above justifies a general rejection of the consultation of other bishops, but merely as a justification for not imposing that consultation (i.e., their “manifest consent”) as a dogma. The consultation of other bishops will probably always remain normative during the formulation of an ex cathedra decree – only that it should not be imposed as a dogmatic necessity. Further - and this is the most important consideration - the underlined portion is not being used to justify a rejection of the Sacred Tradition that the agreement of the orthodox bishops is necessary even for a papal definition (this latter will always remain in force), but only as a justification for not dogmatizing the manifest consent (i.e., direct consultation) of those bishops.
CONT’d