I can anticipate where you’re going with the second post, Abyssinia, so I am posting this as a FYI well worth considering.
I noted in
this Vatican article, that there were negative sentiments regarding the proclamation of the Assumption, yet Pope Pius XII overruled them and issued the solemn proclamation. The same overruling may be done by Pope Francis, despite the public outcry regarding some of the Synod issues. The last paragraph (blue) is the only true possibility for us as Catholics.
Before publishing the Apostolic Constitution defining the dogma of the Assumption,
Pius XII asked theology faculties around the world for an opinion. "Our teachers’ answer was emphatically negative" Ratzinger wrote. "What here became evident was the one-sidedness, not only of the historical, but also of the historicist method in theology. ‘Tradition’ was identified with what could be proved on the basis of* texts*.
“This argument is compelling if you understand ‘tradition’ strictly as the handing down of fixed formulas and texts,” Ratzinger remarked. “This was the position that our teachers represented. But if you conceive of ‘tradition’ as the living process of truth whereby
the Holy Spirit introduces us to the fullness of truth and teaches us how to understand what previously we could still not grasp (cf. Jn 16:12-13), then subsequent ‘remembering’ (cf. Jn 16:4, for instance) can come to recognize what it had not caught sight of previously and yet was already handed down in the original Word.”
Ratzinger wrote that in 1949, one year before the proclamation of the dogma was issued, Professor Gottlieb Söhngen expressed firm disagreement. Another professor, Eduard Schlink, who taught Systematic Theology at Heidelberg, asked him:
“What will you do if the dogma is proclaimed anyway? Wouldn’t you have to turn your back on the Catholic Church?” Söhngen’s response was this: “If the dogma is proclaimed, I will bear in mind that the Church is wiser than I am and that I have more faith in the Church than in my erudition.”" I think that this small scene says everything about the spirit in which theology was done [in those days]," Ratzinger said, “both critically and with faith.”