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SFD
Guest
What the above has to do with the below is unclear. Do you always answer rhetorical questions?The pope possesses supreme, full, immediate and universal ordinary power in the Church, which he is always able to exercise freely. Even more important, just as St. Peter and the other apostles constitute one college, so in a like manner the Holy Father, the successor of Peter, and the bishops, the successors of the Apostles are united among themselves. It is not a grouping, it is a college (‘collegium’). The pope is the Bishop of the Roman Church, he is not just Bishop of the church of Rome. He is the Shepherd of the Universal Church. (canons 330-333)
The Pontiff has supreme power in the Catholic Church. Canon 333 states that no appeal or recourse is permitted against a sentence or decree of the Roman Pontiff. By virtue of his office, the Roman Pontiff not only possesses power over the universal Church, but also obtains the primacy of ordinary power over all particular churches and groups of them.
The Pope possesses exclusive rights regarding an ecumenical council and other activities of the college of bishops. (c 337-338; c 341)
I have been saying all of this repeatedly, and yet we hear recalls of Robert Bellarmine. With what has been said, and what the Code says of the Pope’s powers., please tell me what Robert Bellarmine would say today about his probable opinion.?
When the See of Peter is vacant, (‘sede vacante nihil innovetur’) there can be no innovations in the governance of the Church (canon 335). In answer to your question, during this time, the tasks and rights of the college of cardinals and of the Roman Curia are regulated by the Apostolic Constitution Universi Domenici gregis. The Conclave is called according to this Apostolic Constitution. When the See of Peter is vacant, the college of cardinals regulate the daily business of the church, but they cannot take upon themselves the power of the pope (canon 359)
It is the Roman Pontiff alone who can convoke an ecumenical council, preside over it, transfer, suspend or dissolve a council (c 338). The Pope even oversees the agenda of a General Council. It is the sole right of the Pontiff to approve the decrees of a general council. Decrees of an ecumenical council does not have obligatory force unless they have been approved by the Holy Father.
Nothing can knock Peter off his throne but death. The Code of Canon law does not foresee a vacant see except in this case. The case of a ‘heretic’ pope is foolishness, and not foreseen or provided for in the Law of the Church.
You see, it is all controlled by the Code of Canon Law, and the Law gives to the Pope Supreme Power in the Church. Sedevacantists are knocking their heads against the Bark of Peter.
peace
SFDNeil Anthony:
Who calls the conclave after a pope dies? The dead pope?If we don’t know if there’s a pope, who calls the council to determine who the pope is?