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rcwitness
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Wouldnt it be much more of a gesture than mere “observing”?How would their participation as an “observer” resolve anything?
Wouldnt it be much more of a gesture than mere “observing”?How would their participation as an “observer” resolve anything?
Yes but the addresses such as the one given by Philip were translated so that the fathers could understand.“It was not till the Renaissance that the age of convenient grammars and dictionaries arose. St. Gregory I (d. 1604) had been apocrisary at Constantinople, but he does not seem to have learned Greek; Pope Vigilius (540-55) spent eight unhappy years there and yet never knew the language. Photius was the profoundest scholar of his age, yet he knew no Latin. When Leo IX (1048-54) wrote in Latin to Peter III of Antioch, Peter had to send the letter to Constantinople to find out what it was about. Such cases occur continually and confuse all the relations between East and West. At councils the papal legates addressed the assembled fathers in Latin and no one understood them; the council deliberated in Greek and the legates wondered what was going on. So there arose suspicion on both sides. Interpreters had to be called in; could their versions be trusted?”
newadvent.org/cathen/03477c.htm
Either way haughtiness and arrogance are not heresy. It’s when you turn those into dogmatic definitions that the issues arise.
Ecumenical Council of Ephesus (431), Council Decree:
As, in addition to other things, the impious Nestorius has not obeyed our citation, and did not receive the holy bishops who were sent by us to him, we were compelled to examine his ungodly doctrines. We discovered that he had held and published impious doctrines in his letters and treatises, as well as in discourses which he delivered in this city, and which have been testified to. Compelled thereto by the canons and by the letter (αναγκαιως κατεπειξθεντες απο τε των κανονων, και εκ της επιστολης, κ. τ. η.) of our most holy father and fellow-servant Celestine, the Roman bishop, we have come, with many tears, to this sorrowful sentence against him, namely, that our Lord Jesus Christ, Whom he has blasphemed, decrees by the holy Synod that Nestorius be excluded from the episcopal dignity, and from all priestly communion.
Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon in 451 [To Pope St. Leo I, Epistle 98:1-2],
The great and holy and universal Synod…in the metropolis of Chalcedon…to the most holy and blessed archbishop of Rome, Leo … **being set as the mouthpiece unto all of the blessed Peter, and imparting the blessedness of his Faith unto all …and besides all this he [Dioscorus] stretched forth his fury even against him who had been charged with the custody of the vine by the Savior, **we mean of course your holiness …
The Holy Fathers of the Ecumenical Council of Constantinople III (January 23 EO) say in 681 [Prosphoneticus to Byzantine Emperor Constantine IV from Session 18 in Mansi XI:665CD]:
But the highest prince of the Apostles fought with us: for we had on our side his imitator and the successor in his see, who also had set forth in his letter the mystery of the divine word θεολογίας]. For the ancient city of Rome handed you a confession of divine character, and a chart from the sunsetting raised up the day of dogmas, and made the darkness manifest, and Peter spoke through Agatho…
The same Holy Fathers say in the Letter of the Sixth Council to Pope St. Agatho [Mansi XI:684B-D]:
Serious illnesses call for greater helps, as you know, most blessed [father]; and therefore Christ our true God, Who is the Creator and governing power of all things, gave a wise physician, namely your God-honored sanctity, to drive away by force the contagion of heretical pestilence by the remedies of orthodoxy, and to give the strength of health to the members of the church. Therefore to you, as to the bishop of the first see of the Universal Church, we leave what must be done, since you willingly take for your standing ground the firm rock of the faith, as we know from having read your true confession in the letter sent by your fatherly beatitude to the most pious emperor: and we acknowledge that this letter was divinely written [perscriptas] AS BY CHIEF OF THE APOSTLES, and through it we have cast out the heretical sect of many errors which had recently sprung up…
Bishops have resisted Rome throughout history. Saints have confronted popes. This is not unusual.Why is it every time a bishop resists Rome they are self aggrandizing and every time a pope claims authority for themselves it’s not?
You say that. The Church didn’t agree.Bishops have resisted Rome throughout history. Saints have confronted popes. This is not unusual.
However, the popes, by and large, do not “claim authority for themselves”.
They *exercise *authority given to them by God.
In looking at the barriers between unification of East and West, it seems it would be much easier if all the statements/dogmas about the Papacy were restricted to the Western Church. Proclaiming supremacy over those that already recognize your supremacy is one matter, but doing so over others that do not just seems to create more of a rift.Very weak argumentation. Yes the Canons are often written when needed but that does nothing with the absence of exceptions and waivers and current supremacy of Rome.
Yes, the role of the Pope will be the same, unless Canon Law (Which I posted on the first page) is amended and “De Fide” articles in regards to be Papacy are amended as well.
It did not/does not in the West. The Papacy grew into what it is today because that was what was needed to make it function. Perhaps this is not the case in other Patriarchies, but it was necessary in Europe at the time.We’ve had plenty of bad bishops, some of them patriarchs, yet they’ve never had a lasting impact on the Church. All this without the papacy.
A few years ago the patriarch of Jerusalem was deposed by a council of his peers for his misuse of properties owned by the patriarchate. No pope needed.
The Church functions perfectly well without the office of the papacy as demonstrated above. Your question is moot.
What would have to be done today in order for this to happen?This is a perfect example of leadership and not supremacy. An Ecumenical Council was called and the Whole Church determined.
I am interested in reading more about this. I assume you are speaking of excommunication of the successor of Peter by other Patriarchs?Quite the contrary quite a few popes were excommunicated.:
I believe that God would do such a thing if needed to prevent the Church from teaching error. Even something as drastic as what happened to Ananias and Sapphira.That actually does bring up some questions. How does God prevent a pope from teaching heresy? I’ve heard people say God would kill a pope before he taught heresy. Do most Catholics believe that? Does the pope lose free will? Why wouldn’t God protect all of his bishop and not just one?
That. Whole killing a pope before he taught heresy is a true story.That actually does bring up some questions. How does God prevent a pope from teaching heresy? I’ve heard people say God would kill a pope before he taught heresy. Do most Catholics believe that? Does the pope lose free will? Why wouldn’t God protect all of his bishop and not just one?
This sounds very much like the papacy conformed itself to the world.It did not/does not in the West. The Papacy grew into what it is today because that was what was needed to make it function. Perhaps this is not the case in other Patriarchies, but it was necessary in Europe at the time.
Sounds to me like pope Sixtus V had already made his ex cathedra declaration in accordance with the relevant canons regarding papal infallibility. It simply hadn’t been published. He obviously believed the canons regarding papal infallibility and trusted that the Holy Spirit was guiding his decisions. It doesn’t seem like much of a charism if it doesn’t actually protect a pope from falling into error as pope Sixtus V obviously did.That. Whole killing a pope before he taught heresy is a true story.
Pope Sixtus V, 1585 - 1590 was, in most repects, a very successful pope. He eliminated lawlessnes in northern Italy, re-filled the Vatican treasury by the use of good business sense and gained control of a rambunctious college of cardinals.
What he was not was a Latin scholar. Nevertheless, he re-translated the Vulgate. The result was a Bible of errors.
He had already issued the bull on his new Vulgate and had it printed. The night before it was to be issued, he died, apparently of natural causes.
St. Robert Bellarmine re-re-translated the Vulgate, correctly, and it was issued properly.
newadvent.org/cathen/14033a.htm
The Council of Trent having stamped the Vulgate as “authentic,” ordered that a correct edition of the authentic, authorized Vulgate Bible should be published. Pope Sixtus V undertook this task. In his preface he claims supremacy over the group of translators, because he had authority as successor to Peter. He tells of the endless hours he spent reading the opinions of others and judging the validity of their arguments. When the work was printed he corrected the press-proof personally. Most certainly, then, we should expect the Latin Vulgate translation of the Bible to be totally error-free, right? After all, it was a work approved and published by an infallible Pope. Pope Sixtus’s edition appeared in 1590. In the front matter, Sixtus affirmed the plenary authority of the edition for all future time in these words:
“By the fullness of apostolic power we decree and declare that this edition, approved by the authority delivered to us by the Lord, is to be received and held as true, lawful, authentic, and unquestioned, in all public and private discussion, reading, preaching, and explanations.”
The infallible Pope Sixtus pronounced that all readings in other editions and manuscripts, which might vary from these of this Vulgate edition, should have no credit or authority for the future. It was forbidden to alter the version in the smallest particle; and anyone who thought or did otherwise was condemned to excommunication. Here was an ‘ex-cathedra’ declaration on a matter of faith, from an infallible Pope.
Linguists and scholars who were really competent to judge that the edition found it full of errors. Yet they could say or do nothing for fear of being excommunicated.
Just about a week before the formal document was to be published along with the Bible, he died suddenly - a man of good health. Many believe this was the work of the Holy Spirit.
Sixtus V had given his Bible and the Bull to his cardinals and died just before both were released to the public. However his decree wasn’t infallible because didn’t make his decree public, it was not binding on the Church and doesn’t disprove papal infallibility.Sounds to me like pope Sixtus V had already made his ex cathedra declaration in accordance with the relevant canons regarding papal infallibility. It simply hadn’t been published. He obviously believed the canons regarding papal infallibility and trusted that the Holy Spirit was guiding his decisions. It doesn’t seem like much of a charism if it doesn’t actually protect a pope from falling into error as pope Sixtus V obviously did.
Most of it did.You say that. The Church didn’t agree.![]()
The Sistine edition of the Vulgate did have some minor errors, but nothing of substance. The vast majority of the text of the Sistine edition of 1590 was retained by the Clementine editions of 1592, 93, and 98. That three Clementine editions were issued successively shows the difficulty of the work. These minor errors were not due to a lack of scholarship or knowledge on the part of Pope Sixtus V. And I don’t know of any source that attributes the Clementine editions wholly or mainly to Saint Bellarmine.That. Whole killing a pope before he taught heresy is a true story.
Pope Sixtus V, 1585 - 1590 was, in most repects, a very successful pope. He eliminated lawlessnes in northern Italy, re-filled the Vatican treasury by the use of good business sense and gained control of a rambunctious college of cardinals.
What he was not was a Latin scholar. Nevertheless, he re-translated the Vulgate. The result was a Bible of errors.
He had already issued the bull on his new Vulgate and had it printed. The night before it was to be issued, he died, apparently of natural causes.
St. Robert Bellarmine re-re-translated the Vulgate, correctly, and it was issued properly.
newadvent.org/cathen/14033a.htm
The Council of Trent having stamped the Vulgate as “authentic,” ordered that a correct edition of the authentic, authorized Vulgate Bible should be published. Pope Sixtus V undertook this task. In his preface he claims supremacy over the group of translators, because he had authority as successor to Peter. He tells of the endless hours he spent reading the opinions of others and judging the validity of their arguments. When the work was printed he corrected the press-proof personally. Most certainly, then, we should expect the Latin Vulgate translation of the Bible to be totally error-free, right? After all, it was a work approved and published by an infallible Pope. Pope Sixtus’s edition appeared in 1590. In the front matter, Sixtus affirmed the plenary authority of the edition for all future time in these words:
“By the fullness of apostolic power we decree and declare that this edition, approved by the authority delivered to us by the Lord, is to be received and held as true, lawful, authentic, and unquestioned, in all public and private discussion, reading, preaching, and explanations.”
The infallible Pope Sixtus pronounced that all readings in other editions and manuscripts, which might vary from these of this Vulgate edition, should have no credit or authority for the future. It was forbidden to alter the version in the smallest particle; and anyone who thought or did otherwise was condemned to excommunication. Here was an ‘ex-cathedra’ declaration on a matter of faith, from an infallible Pope.
Linguists and scholars who were really competent to judge that the edition found it full of errors. Yet they could say or do nothing for fear of being excommunicated.
Just about a week before the formal document was to be published along with the Bible, he died suddenly - a man of good health. Many believe this was the work of the Holy Spirit.
He did say ALL Bishops would be protected and NOT just one.Why wouldn’t God protect all of his bishop and not just one?
This declaration changed the situation from one of temporal authority to an infallible decree ex cathedra binding on all christiansThe Sistine edition of the Vulgate did have some minor errors, but nothing of substance. The vast majority of the text of the Sistine edition of 1590 was retained by the Clementine editions of 1592, 93, and 98. That three Clementine editions were issued successively shows the difficulty of the work. These minor errors were not due to a lack of scholarship or knowledge on the part of Pope Sixtus V. And I don’t know of any source that attributes the Clementine editions wholly or mainly to Saint Bellarmine.
The declaration of Sixtus V on the Vulgate edition of 1590 was not an infallible teaching, nor a teaching at all; it was an exercise of the temporal authority of the Church (prudential judgment), which can err to some extent. The same can be said for official Church approval for any edition of the Bible; it does not imply that no errors of any kind (such as translation or editing errors) are present.
The idea that the Holy Spirit kills Popes to prevent them from infallibly teaching an error is absurd. It is the grace of God that inspires, guides, and protects the Magisterium and the Popes, esp. when infallibility is exercised. Popes only occasionally teach infallibly. Most teachings are non-infallible.
If this were true then why are there so many heretical bishops in church history yet the see of Rome remain unsullied?He did say ALL Bishops would be protected and NOT just one.
In Matt 18:18 - ALL the other disciples can WHATEVER they bind and lose.
In 1 Tim 3:15 - the Pillar and Bulwark of TRUTH is the Church.
In Eph 2:19-21 - The entire foundation is the Church is laid out and Her Chief Cornerstone.
The Church acting in Unity under One Spirit, not making exceptions for a single Apostle. Any and All exceptions apply to Christ. That’s it.
Vatican II states the dogma of papal infallibility as requiring a definition on a “doctrine of faith and morals” and the subject area for such a definition “extends as far as the deposit of Revelation extends” (LG 25). Approval for a particular edition of the Bible, and the rules for its use are not included in the deposit of divine revelation. The decree of Sixtus V is not a doctrine (teaching), nor is it, as concerns that particular edition, something found in Divine Revelation. So it does not fall under papal infallibility.This declaration changed the situation from one of temporal authority to an infallible decree ex cathedra binding on all christians
*By the fullness of apostolic power we decree and declare that this edition, approved by the authority delivered to us by the Lord, is to be received and held as true, lawful, authentic, and unquestioned, in all public and private discussion, reading, preaching, and explanations." *
That’s why people like St.Robert Bellarmine were so concerned about the edition. As soon as the pope passes, they jumped on the issue at hand and rectified the translation