I take your technical point, but my point is that nobody with authority to speak for the Mgisterium has yet come out and said that the Pope has changed the Magisterium’s teaching on the subject dogma or its discipline. Absent some official direction from the Pope himself (which he has thus far refused to do), it’s not going to happen. A change of that magnitude requires some sort of clear notice to and for the whole Church–not by means of a private, leaked letter to a few local bishops regarding a draft document which is hardly dispositive of anything to begin with.
The draft document, when and as it will be promulgated, will be dispositive for the Particular Churches entrusted to those Bishops. And, I am sure, supplemented by verbal guidance or confidential communication from the respective diocesan bishop to his presbyterate. All that is beyond the canonical competence of ANY lay person. The bishop may decide not even to engage the deacons of the diocese in his expositions and delineations…which is absolutely his prerogative.
You keep returning to points that are simply valueless.
There is no need for any further public statement or declaration whatsoever by the Vicar of Christ. Official direction comes from the Pope by many means, which hardly need involve advising the lay faithful…in any way, shape, or form. The lay faithful are to comply with the directive of the hierarchy just as the presbyterate is to carry out what the bishop directs; those at these respective level (the presbyterate and laity) are not implicated in the implementation of such directives as they are brought into existence…
Over the decades, I have been in receipt of many letters, often transmitted for convenience through the nuncio to the Conferences of Bishops around the world (including my own) with official directives from the Holy Father or from one of the dicasteries. You seem to have no familiarity with how things are actually transmitted.
The laity are not informed in these many instances because the laity, frankly, are not implicated in any meaningful way. Period.
There is often no need to advise the laity of the Church of any change in pastoral practices…and certainly not that are extremely narrow in their application. Anymore than they are in need of advisement on issues related to, for example, certain cases involving the internal forum, which guidance comes to us from the Holy See, or on specific procedures related to recourse in an appeal process engaging the tribunals, similarly communicated to us by the Holy See…to use but two of what could be many examples.
That you think something or everything should be communicated in very public ways is perfectly meaningless. And perfectly purposeless.
Communications also come, from the diocesan bishop but above all from the Holy See, under varying categories of confidentiality.
Ultimately when it concerns matters that are the prerogative of the Pope alone or of the Bishops (or some number of them) with the Pope or to the extent it devolves to them, the Bishops alone, that is the locus of activity. Not with the lay faithful. Not in the media. Not in public. That point should be, by this point, crystal clear.
When you make a statement “A change of that magnitude requires some sort of clear notice” you demonstrate thereby that you do not know of what you speak. The statement is an error in fact, from the perspective of theology and ecclesiology.
You may wish that it were otherwise but the wishing does not oblige the Successors of the Apostles to act in any way other than the way in which they, in fact, freely and deliberately act.
You probably meant to say authoritatively interpret or clarify. Otherwise, parents, theologians and other teachers would be denied their lay apostolate. We don’t appear to have a disagreement.
No. You are wrong in what you suppose I meant to say. I said exactly what I wrote, in the formulation I wrote it, for specific theological reason.
A parent, a theologian, a teacher or anyone engaged in a lay apostolate
transmits the teaching of the Magisterium.
Interprets is a technical term and it does not apply in the categories you cite.
Even those of us who hold a mandate as theologian are, by that vocation, at the service of the Magisterium. We do not interpret the Magisterium. We explicate what the Magisterium articulates.
In the service of our respective bishop as his theological advisor or as
periti to a gathering of bishops, we will offer our advice and our counsel that derives from our lifetime of study and research in so far as we are asked or consulted. The bishops, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, may accept, amend, or reject that which we have offered…for they alone…the Successors of the Apostles…either the successor of Peter acting alone or the college acting with and under Peter’s Successor…are the guardians of the Sacred Deposit of the Faith and the ones who also govern its applications.
To
interpret, as to
define, has a specific and technical definition in theology related to the Magisterium. You manifest by your statement a lack of acquaintance with the terminology which therefore makes me arrive at the conclusion, after reading so many posts, that the attempt of explaining this topic yet one more time would be truly a fruitless effort.
As for the pastoral accompaniment that is being discussed, let us be crystal clear. A lay person may say something is “not going to happen”…they may say that the action requires some “official declaration” according to some manifestation that they conjure in their own mind…they may think other avenues of proceeding wrong…but such musings do not impede the process that is proceeding apace, even as I type this post.