So here’s the deal as I see it. The bishop has the authority to regulate the sacraments, he also has the responsibility to verify that any act on his part is allowed by the Church. BUT it is not my responsibility to check up on him. I trust him and assume he is using his authority properly, so it is necessary for me to give him my obedience.
Is there a point to that?
Since you posted it as a quote of what I wrote, it appears you’re addressing what I wrote.
Do you have a question for me? Do you have something to say about what I wrote?
I’ll break it down for you:
So here’s the deal as I see it. The bishop has the authority to regulate the sacraments
Both yes and no. He has the authority to regulate them. He has the authority and the responsibility to enforce the Church’s norms. He is not competent to make any changes beyond what authority the Church has specifically given him to do so.
he also has the responsibility to verify that any act on his part is allowed by the Church.
Yes. That’s true.
BUT it is not my responsibility to check up on him.
This is where you stop making sense. I don’t see how or when the question of “who checks up on the bishop?” has ever been a part of this conversation.
Yes, the fact that the Congregation for Divine Worship has that responsibility is an element of the conversation; but the question of whether or not it is the responsibility of any particular person in a parish has not been part of the conversation.
However, as a direct answer to your implied question, no it is not your responsibility. It is the responsibility of the archbishop (c. 436). It is the responsibility of the Papal Nuncio. It is the responsibility of the various Congregations in Rome (depending on the particular issue). It is not your “responsibility” unless you happen to be in one of the above categories.
If you are not one of those people “may you” verify what the bishop is doing? Of course, yes, you may. But no, you are not (to use your own word) responsible for doing so.
I trust him and assume he is using his authority properly, so it is necessary for me to give him my obedience.
That statement makes no sense.
The fact that one person trusts another and assumes that the other is using his authority properly does not mean that it is “necessary” for that person to be obedient to the other.
If you want to know “why” it is necessary to obey the bishop, that’s a different topic, but the answer is not (as you put it) because “[you] trust him and assume he is using his authority properly.”