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Humanae Vitae was not an exercise of the extraordinary magisterium. You are right: it defined no dogma. That being said, the teaching it articulates on contraception is infallible by virtue of the ordinary magisterium - the consistent witness of the Church Down through the ages. Blessed Pope Paul VI did not go as far to as promulgate an infallible dogma, but he did use his authority to definitively clarify what the ordinary magisterium had always taught. The Church’s infallibility is exercised ordinarily in this way - the consistent witness of the pope and bishops in every time and place. Extraordinary exercises of infallibility by ecumenical councils are rare. Extraordinary exercises of infallibility by the pope alone are extremely rare.After becoming confused from Pope Francis’ comments, I did some investigation and “Humanae Vitae” is not a document of the infallible magisterium? The teaching contained therein does not bear the highest guarantee of certitude? (ewtn.com/library/Theology/AUTHUMVT.HTM)
The Catechism of the Catholic Church itself isn’t infallible either.
What infallible document(s) exists on the teaching of contraception? Are these teachings based solely on interpretations of the Bible?
Maybe Catholic Answers needs update their literature in light of recent developments? The church leaders below suggest it’s a matter of “individual conscience.”