The following is a quoted from past archives. I get a laugh at how many have tried to make Vatican II a binding council when it was clearly called to be pastoral. Many in the pro-vatican II community have even stated that this is in direct contradiction to what was called out in Vatican I
The difference between doctrinal and pastoral teachings has great implications at an Ecumenical Council. To ensure that the teachings at doctrinal Ecumenical Councils are true and contain no error, the Holy Ghost is solemnly invoked at such Councils. As Pope Pius IX taught on March 12, 1870, at the time of Vatican Council I: “The Ecumenical Council is governed by the Holy Ghost… it is solely by the impulse of this Divine Spirit that the Council defines and proposes what is to be believed.”
Doctrinal Ecumenical Councils form part of the Church’s solemn Extraordinary Magisterium. By the solemn invocation of the Holy Ghost, each and every doctrinal teaching of the Extraordinary Magisterium is assured to be infallible.
Because pastoral pronouncements are neither “true” nor “false”, and because they must be expressed in language that is vague and ambiguous, they
cannot be the subject of infallibility. Thus it follows that the Holy Ghost simply
cannot be solemnly invoked at a strictly pastoral Council, because the
pastoral pronouncements could not be infallible anyway. All pastoral pronouncements, even those of Ecumenical Councils which are partly doctrinal and partly pastoral, form part of the Church’s day to day Ordinary Magisterium. Thus, what is taught in a pastoral pronouncement is not assured to be infallible.
It is a consequence of the Church’s infallibility that the doctrine contained in any new teaching must not contradict doctrine that had previously been taught “always and everywhere” in the Church.
If a new “teaching” does contradict what was taught before, then the new teaching is obviously not infallible. This is confirmed by the infallible proclamation of Vatican Council I on July 18, 1870: “For the Holy Ghost was not promised to the successors of Peter that by His revelation they might disclose new doctrine, but that by His help they might guard sacredly the revelation transmitted through the apostles and the deposit of Faith [Tradition], and might faithfully set it forth.”
Thus we may conclude from this that if a “teaching” proposed to us by the Ordinary Magisterium of the Church is contrary to previous Church teaching, then the new teaching is
not infallible, not from the Holy Ghost, and is not to be believed or obeyed. Archbishop Felici, the Council’s General Secretary, at the closing of Vatican II, confirmed that we must judge the infallibility of individual pronouncements made by Vatican II by comparing them with previous Church teaching : "We have to distinguish according to the schemas and the chapters those which have already been the subject of dogmatic [infallible] definitions;
as for the declarations which have a novel character, we have to make reservations."
The Pope said that Vatican II was not Infallible
Pope Paul VI, at the close of Vatican II on Dec. 7, 1965, confirmed that the Council did not make infallible pronouncements. He said that the Council “as much as possible wanted to define no doctrinal principle of an extraordinary dogmatic sentence.”
Later, on Mar. 8, 1972, the same Pope repeated that “it was one of the programmed items [of the Council] not to give solemn dogmatic definitions.”
The most explicit confirmation that Vatican II was not infallible was given by Pope Paul VI on Jan.12, 1966, when he stated that: “Given the pastoral character of the Council, it avoided proclaiming in an extraordinary manner dogmas endowed with the note of infallibility.” (A. de Lassus, Vatican II: Rupture or Continuity, (French publ.), p. 11).
Thus we conclude that because Vatican II was not infallible like the previous doctrinal Ecumenical Councils had been, it was possible that
not only mere ambiguities but actual errors were able to creep into the Council documents. It is shocking enough to realize that errors were
possible in the documents of Vatican II
ST100:
I have a few questions on church councils and infallbility. These dont have to do with papal infallibility, just infallibility in regards to councils.
- Which councils are proclaimed as being infalliblie? Is it just the 21 ecumenical councils or are there more?
- Why is it that some places try to say Vatican II was not an ecumenical council and not infallible?
- Are the canons that are defined in the councils also infallible or are those instead just disciplines of the church?
Thanks in advance.