N
newbie1234
Guest
“Ex cathedra” is latin for “from the chair.”
This phrase is from the First Vatican Council’s statement on Infallibility, 18 July 1870, and pertains to when the pope “defines a doctrine regarding faith or morals to be held by the Universal Church [that’s ALL christians].”
There have only been TWO ‘ex cathedra’ pronoucements in the 1900+ year history of the Church: the Immaculate Conception and the Assumption of Mary.
Our own government has an official who speaks ‘ex cathedra:’ the President when he writes an Executive Pardon or goes to war without the consent of Congress, or does any number of things permitted to him by custom (defined by the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Constitution) or by statute from Congress.
Monarchs speak ‘ex cathedra.’
Non-denominational ministers speak ‘ex cathedra’ when they tell you what a passage means or what you should believe as a christian in good standing with the Lord or with his or her “church.”
What’s the problem here, Newbie??
Come on dude!
When the pope speaks ex cathadra he is inffalible and speaks as if it is right from God. YOU AND I BOTH KNOW THIS.
Our president never made any such claims!
Only the pope and Caesar and other kings make these claims.
If the canon and revelation ended with John, how can any pope claim this power?