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Papal infallibility isn’t nearly as broad in its powers as non-Catholics think! Roman Catholicism teaches that this dogma (defined in 1870) is a specific application of Church infallibility, something both sides believe in. It says the Pope can at times act as a one-man ecumenical council to defend and interpret Holy Tradition, not invent new dogmas that contradict Tradition. It is a function of the Pope’s office, not a personal power of the man. In his opinions as a man the Pope is as fallible as everybody else (he can’t predict the weather, for example) and can even be a private heretic (which takes care of Pope Honorius, condemned posthumously for heresy). St Robert Bellarmine explained that if a Pope tried to teach heresy in his function of infallibility, he ipso facto wouldn’t be Pope anymore, because by so doing he would have put himself outside the Church: ‘The manifestly heretical Pope ceases per se to be Pope and head as he ceases per se to be a Christian and member of the Church, and therefore he can be judged and punished by the Church. This is the teaching of all the early Fathers’ — De Romano Pontifice (Milan, 1857), vol. II, chap. 30, p. 420. (Orthodox may understandably ask why only the patriarch of the West is blessed with this gift, since again it seems to place the Eastern churches in the role of supporting players to the Roman Church, but the first-millennium Church believed in Roman primacy.) In about 900 years only three Popes have been canonised as saints (including St Peter Celestine, a holy monk but a disaster as Pope, the only one who has had to resign!). John Paul II was said to go to Confession often, so obviously he didn’t think he wasn’t a sinner! Here is an article by Jonathan Tuttle, a Roman Catholic, explaining that Catholicism is not the cult of the Pope.