Rohzek #159
“a Council acting without the Pope has no doctrinal force."
That is a Catholic doctrine that I obviously don’t believe nor have supported for quite some time now
Thus encouraging the errors in the Orthodox Churches.
In* Apologetics and Catholic Doctrine *by Archbishop Michael Sheehan, revised by Fr Peter Joseph, The Saint Austin Press, 2001, p 206, it is explained:
“1) Honorius did not pronounce a definition ex cathedra, for he said expressly, ‘It does not behove us to settle the question whether the number of operations is one or two.’ He had been misinformed by Sergius as to the point at issue, and thought that the controversy was, as he observed, ‘a war of words’ to be settled by ‘grammarians.’
“2) His words bear an orthodox sense; they were written to contradict the false doctrine, ascribed by Sergius to his opponent, ‘that there are two
conflicting wills in Christ.’
“3) The decree of the Council of Constantinople must be regarded as condemnatory of the conduct of Honorius, not of his teaching as head of the Church. So much is clear from the words of Pope Leo II who explained that he had confirmed the decree, because Honorius had been negligent ‘in extinguishing the rising flame of heresy.’
“It is, however, much disputed whether the Fathers of Constantinople intended to stigmatise Honorius as a heretic in the modern acceptation of the term. The word seems to have been applied in those days to anyone whose action, apart from any positive teaching, was thought to favour heresy or schism.”
It is said that Pope Honorius specifically taught Monothelitism, a heresy that held that Christ had only one will (a divine one), not two wills (a divine one and a human one) as all orthodox Christians hold.
But that’s not at all what Honorius did. He simply decided not to make a decision at all. As Msgr Ronald Knox explained, “To the best of his human wisdom, he thought the controversy ought to be left unsettled, for the greater peace of the Church. In fact, he was an inopportunist. We, wise after the event, say that he was wrong. But nobody, I think, has ever claimed that the pope is infallible in
not defining a doctrine.” [Msgr Ronald Knox and Arnold Lunn, *Difficulties, Eyre and Spottiswode, 1952].
catholic.com/tracts/papal-infallibility
In the 1983 Code of Canon Law,
Can. 751: “Heresy is the absolute denial or doubt, after baptism, of a truth which must be believed by divine and catholic faith.