Salvation of Archbishop Lefebvre ?

  • Thread starter Thread starter florence_f
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Since Our Lord said we are to find the Holy Spirit guiding the Church throught the successors of Peter, I have no problem finding the Father, Son and Holy Spirit within the Church. To deny the Papacy is to deny a central belief of the Catholic faith; it is an action that makes someone something other than a devout, faithful Catholic. Spre us, Oh Lord.
Jesus gave the keys to St. Peter and then what happened? St. Peter:
  1. tried to turn Him away from the Passion
  2. tried to prevent the fulfillment of the Scriptures by drawing the sword
  3. abandoned Him
  4. denied Him, not once, not twice, but three times, even though he was warned in advance! He did not heed the warning, and thus fell
  5. he did not go to Jesus in His Agony. Who did? Of 12 Apostles, ***ONE ***remained faithful.
I don’t know about you, but I prefer to imitate the Magdalene by being bowed down before my Crucified God rather than off in hiding like the others, as if nothing is happening.
 
Jesus gave the keys to St. Peter and then what happened? St. Peter:
  1. tried to turn Him away from the Passion
  2. tried to prevent the fulfillment of the Scriptures by drawing the sword
  3. abandoned Him
  4. denied Him, not once, not twice, but three times, even though he was warned in advance! He did not heed the warning, and thus fell
  5. he did not go to Jesus in His Agony. Who did? Of 12 Apostles, ***ONE ***remained faithful.
I don’t know about you, but I prefer to imitate the Magdalene by being bowed down before my Crucified God rather than off in hiding like the others, as if nothing is happening.
If you attempted to make a point, you’ve failed. Our Blessed Mother was at the foot of the cross as well as John. It is she who told servants, regarding her Son, do whatever He tells you. It is He Who has told us, we are to follow Peter - not to judge Peter as you seem quite willing to do - but to follow Peter with the Church founded on Peter by Jesus Christ Himself. Lefebvre saw himself as an exception to the rule. Perhaps you do too.
 
I f you attempted to make a point, you failed.Our Blessed Mother was at the foot of the cross as well as John. It is she who told servants, regarding her Son, do whatever He tells you. It is He Who has told us, we are to follow Peter - not to judge Peter as you seem quite willing to do - but to follow Peter with the Church founded on Peter by Jesus Christ Himself.
I didn’t fail, you for some reason just don’t get it. Not obeying irrational judgments is my point. Not following the Pope in his errors, mistakes, bad judgments, example, etc.
Judging has nothing to do with it. It doesn’t take a genius to know that Lefebvre did nothing wrong. If I were judging the pope than I’d be saying he’s in hell. Refusing to acknowledge mistakes because he’s the pope is turning him into a god.

But I did goof up in forgetting to mention the Blessed Mother. She was onthe mind but didn’t reach my fingers for some reason. And I did make not of St. John.
 
Our Blessed Mother was at the foot of the cross** as well as John.** It is she who told servants, regarding her Son, do whatever He tells you. It is He Who has told us, we are to follow Peter - not to judge Peter as you seem quite willing to do - but to follow Peter with the Church founded on Peter by Jesus Christ Himself. Lefebvre saw himself as an exception to the rule. Perhaps you do too.
St. John was a bishop who did not follow St. Peter into the shadows. Was St. John seeing himself as exceptional?

Cardinal Ottaviani called the Apostles running from the Cross as the first act of collegiality by the bishops in union with the Pope.
 
I didn’t fail, you for some reason just don’t get it. Not obeying irrational judgments is my point. Not following the Pope in his errors, mistakes, bad judgments, example, etc.
Judging has nothing to do with it. It doesn’t take a genius to know that Lefebvre did nothing wrong. If I were judging the pope than I’d be saying he’s in hell. Refusing to acknowledge mistakes because he’s the pope is turning him into a god.

But I did goof up in forgetting to mention the Blessed Mother. She was onthe mind but didn’t reach my fingers for some reason. And I did make not of St. John.
~But I did goof up in forgetting to mention the Blessed Mother.~ A little goof up. Nothing like a mistake.
 
Cardinal Ottaviani called the Apostles running from the Cross as the first act of collegiality by the bishops in union with the Pope.
He did? Do you recall where you read that, I’d like to copy it with whatever else he said.
 
Even still, the current Pope doesn’t forbid our attending their Masses.
This is done for the laity and has nothing to do with the bishops being excommunicated and the priests being suspended. They are not supposed to be performing priestly functions (except in the Titanic situation).
 
This is hilarious. I suppose you think an excommunication isn’t null and can be ignored unless the Pope says, “I’m issuing an excommunication that is null.”

Gerard, did you bother reading the article? The behavior on the part of the excommunicate under a latae sententiae excommication is to be that of someone excommunicated. It’s not funny at all. Look again at what Innocent III said:
Some persons, he says, may be free in the eyes of God but bound in the eyes of the Church; vice versa, some may be free in the eyes of the Church but bound in the eyes of God: for God’s judgment is based on the very truth itself, whereas that of the Church is based on arguments and presumptions which are sometimes erroneous.
 
Just a quick note to thank GerardP for his excellent posts on page 3. His points need to be seriously considered by all. Archbishop Lefebvre wasn’t perfect, but I thank God daily for him.
 
Gerard, did you bother reading the article?
Yes. Years ago and many times since.
The behavior on the part of the excommunicate under a latae sententiae excommication is to be that of someone excommunicated.
The question is was the “excommunication” really latae sententiae? No. No one can reasonably believe that. It was a null intrinsically invalid “excommunication” whether one calls it latae sententiae or not.
It’s not funny at all. Look again at what Innocent III said:
Quote:
Some persons, he says, may be free in the eyes of God but bound in the eyes of the Church; vice versa, some may be free in the eyes of the Church but bound in the eyes of God: for God’s judgment is based on the very truth itself, whereas that of the Church is based on arguments and presumptions which are sometimes erroneous. He concludes that the chain by which the sinner is bound in the sight of God is loosed by remission of the fault committed, whereas that which binds him in the sight of the Church is severed only by removal of the sentence.

What’s your point? That is why the SSPX are demanding the false accusations of excommunication be nullified not lifted.
Quote:
JPII’s motive for declaring that LeFebvre excommunicated himself was manifestly incorrect and inconsistent.
I think you are wrong but let’s just say you are right. It’s irrelevant when it comes to how the unjustly or invalidly excommunicated are supposed to behave. This whole section was for those unjustly excommunicated so your whole “he was unjustly excommunicated” doesn’t matter but it is becoming quite a mantra.

No. If you concede that the excommunication was manifestly incorrect and inconsistent then, the excommunication is null and can be ignored without sin. That is what the very site you linked to stated.

The unjust excommunicated is supposed to behave as if the excommunication were just. But the invalid excommunication is to be ignored. The fact that it is simultaneously unjust to Archbishop LeFebvre does not bind him to it. It was invalid and he provided for the faithful where the Pope and bishops would not.
Quote:
No on sane would think that there is and was no crisis. No one would take simple disobedience because of the crisis and turn it into “implied schism”
Well, I’m guessing that you’ve just called JPII insane here but maybe it’s just your way of communicating.

JPII being “not all there” is the more charitable explanation than the alternative explanation for his behavior.
Quote:
JPII ultimately did admit when in 2002 he coined the term “silent apostasy” that had afflicted the Church and reflected that he had not been strong enough in his governance of the Church (a serious understatement)
So, JPII’s own admissions validate LeFebvre’s recognition of the state of emergency.
I can see we’re getting into a tizzy. Again STATE OF CRISIS has no bearing on the behavior of the excommunicated whether justly or unjustly excommunicated.

No. You can’t separate the crisis in the Church that JPII allowed to continue and LeFebvre’s refusal to condone JPII’s malfeasance in high office. The validity of the excommunication is directly tied to the Crisis in the Church and LeFebvre’s belief in it and actions to fight against it.

Had there been no crisis and had LeFebvre consecrated bishops out of a whim, he would have been validly and justly excommunicated.

Had LeFebvre say, not retired but fought against the Council from day one, and had he been excommunicated by Paul VI for outspokenness in say 1967, it would have been merely unjust and he would have had to submit and work through normal channels for justice.
Quote:
The excommunications were null
According to who? That would be you.

What does the word “manifest” mean?
 
That is why the SSPX are demanding the false accusations of excommunication be nullified not lifted.
**Now, the heart of the matter: give sources for your stated claim. **

Everyone might want to know about it.

 
**Now, the heart of the matter: give sources for your stated claim. **

Everyone might want to know about it.

Anyone paying attention does know about it. I’ve heard Bishop Fellay say it and I’ve read it in a dozen places.

Here’s an interview with Una Voce that Fr. Schmidberger gave in 2001. He was at both meetings with Bishop Fellay when he met with John Paul II and Benedict XVI

unavoce.org/father_schmidberger_march12.htm
 
Anyone paying attention does know about it. I’ve heard Bishop Fellay say it and I’ve read it in a dozen places.

Here’s an interview with Una Voce that Fr. Schmidberger gave in 2001. He was at both meetings with Bishop Fellay when he met with John Paul II and Benedict XVI

unavoce.org/father_schmidberger_march12.htm
Mind-boggling. You’re saying that the excommunicated themselves are requesting that the excommunications be declared null? Once excommunicated, those under that ruling are allowed re-union with the Church only through the Sacrament of Penance, as I understand it. Why do you think differently?
 
Mind-boggling. You’re saying that the excommunicated themselves are requesting that the excommunications be declared null? Once excommunicated, those under that ruling are allowed re-union with the Church only through the Sacrament of Penance, as I understand it. Why do you think differently?
Why do you assume the so-called excommunications were valid?

The innocent are requesting that false charges against them be dropped.

Did St. Joan of Arc really die a heretic?

The house is on fire and the resident that tried to put it out by bringing a hose is arrested for trespassing. The caretaker presses the charges against the person with the hose and at the same time, he watches while the arsonists continue to light their fires.
 
Why do you assume the so-called excommunications were valid?

The innocent are requesting that false charges against them be dropped.

Did St. Joan of Arc really die a heretic?

The house is on fire and the resident that tried to put it out by bringing a hose is arrested for trespassing. The caretaker presses the charges against the person with the hose and at the same time, he watches while the arsonists continue to light their fires.
What else might I be allowed to assume? I’m not a sedevacanist or anything close to that. I know that the Holy Father has the authority to declare and to enforce excommunication(s). I know that only a future Pope could rescind such an action and Pope Benedict XVI is not even hinting at such a thing.

How can anyone who imagines himself or herself to be “in the Church” believe or imagine otherwise?
 
What else might I be allowed to assume?
How about not assuming things in the first place?
I’m not a sedevacanist or anything close to that.
Where does sedevacantism even approach this conversation?

What does that have to do with anything?
I know that the Holy Father has the authority to declare and to enforce excommunication(s).
So, you don’t believe the Pope can invalidly excommunicate?
I know that only a future Pope could rescind such an action and Pope Benedict XVI is not even hinting at such a thing.
Popes have overturned each other on sentences and validity and then been later overturned themselves. Do you think the truth changed with each ruling? And yes, Pope Benedict has been hinting by way of Card. Hoyos at giving a “final ruling” in favor of Archbishop LeFebvre.
How can anyone who imagines himself or herself to be “in the Church” believe or imagine otherwise?
Could you make a theological argument instead of a rhetorical question?
 
CE:
The real punishment of ecclesiastical censures consists in the privation of the use of certain spiritual good or benefits. These spiritual goods are those which are within the power of the Church or those which depend on the Church, e.g., the sacraments, public prayers, Indulgences, sacred functions, jurisdictions, ecclesiastical benefices and offices. Censures, however, do not deprive of grace, nor of the private prayers and good works of the faithful; for, even if censured, the eternal communion of the saints still remains by virtue of the indelible character imprinted by baptism.
I suggest you worry about your own salvation which you are in control of…and not conjecture about Archbishop Lefebvre’s.

SFD
 
What else might I be allowed to assume? I’m not a sedevacanist or anything close to that. I know that the Holy Father has the authority to declare and to enforce excommunication(s). I know that only a future Pope could rescind such an action and Pope Benedict XVI is not even hinting at such a thing.

How can anyone who imagines himself or herself to be “in the Church” believe or imagine otherwise?
Did St. Joan of Arc really die a heretic? Yes or no?
 
How about not assuming things in the first place?

Where does sedevacantism even approach this conversation?

What does that have to do with anything?

So, you don’t believe the Pope can invalidly excommunicate?

Popes have overturned each other on sentences and validity and then been later overturned themselves. Do you think the truth changed with each ruling? And yes, Pope Benedict has been hinting by way of Card. Hoyos at giving a “final ruling” in favor of Archbishop LeFebvre.

Could you make a theological argument instead of a rhetorical question?
The use of rhetoric was first advanced by you when YOU accused me of assuming something. I answered you in your terminology. Rather than allow you to continue your self-serving game of spewing insults at me - you’re go your way, bud. (I doubt that Pope Benedict has ever pretended to himself that he uses Cardinal Hoyos to ‘give hints.’)

Sedvacantists believe and preach that the chair of Peter is vacant; therefore all recent excommunications are null and void - but you know that already. Amuse yourself elsewhere.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top