You’re not off topic at all. In Catholic tradition, those with canonical (legal) authority must be obeyed in all matters, even those that we may believe to be unusual, ridiculous, unnecessary, or even when we believe that we have a better idea or know of something better for the soul.
The only time that one can refuse to obey without being culpable of sin is when authority commands something that is contrary to the law of God, contrary to dogma, contrary to the law of the Church, contrary to those things that the Church herself (not my conscience or yours) has declared to be sinful.
The conscience issue is a tricky one. The moral law says that every man owes obedience to his conscience. However, the law also says that every Catholic conscience must be formed by the mind of the Church (sentire cum ecclesiam). One must be of the same mind as the Church, this means the Magisterium.
Again, here is another little issue that’s not so little. The SSPX and others of the same mindset will argue that the Magisterium is the collective teaching authority of the popes and bishops from the time of the Apostles to today. This is part of the truth, but not all of it.
St. Boniface decreed that the Magisterium is the ONGOING teaching authority of the Church that finds its voice in the current pope. In other words, when the current pope speaks, all the previous popes speak with him or better said, he speaks for his predecessors.
In plain English, the current pope cannot be bound to anything that his predecessors taught or believed that is not revealed by God. The arguments that St. Pius X said this in such and such a writing, Bl. Pius IX said that, or St. Clement of Rome said thus, is moot unless the pope a) declared that his statement was ex-Cathedra or b) the pope was speaking about a dogma or a moral law held by the Church. If that was not the case, then it does not bind the current pope and he can lay it aside without impunity.
Obedience has two parts. We must always obey, except when authority orders that which it may not command.
The pope is bound to obey only that which is revealed by God. He is not bound to obey his predecessors.
When the living pope speaks, he speaks in his name and that of his predecessors. In other words, he safely assumes that his predecessors would concur. He cannot speak for his successors, because he does not know their mind.
For example, if Pope Benedict says something contrary to what St. Pius X said, which people allege that he has done so, he must still be obeyed. St. Pius X is no longer pope. Therefore he has no authority over the Church today. St. Pius X would be the first person to admit this. That’s why he’s a saint, He was humble and honest.
When people get upset because this pope laid aside the Oath Against Modernism, the other pope laid aside the Syllabus of Errors and the pope over there laid aside the Devil’s Advocate in the canonization process, they are engaging in futile exercises of their blood pressure.
None of those things were binding on the popes the followed their authors, because none of those things were of divine origin. They must be obeyed when they are in effect. The popes who put those rules into effect had the authority to do so. They were the successors of Peter. Therefore, they had the authority to bind and unbind. They put those thing in place because they believed that these were necessary at the time.
Bl. John XXIII, Ven. Paul VI, Bl. John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI also believe that laying these things aside is the right thing to do at this time. They too must be obeyed. The too have the power to bind and unbind.
The only things that no power in heaven or on earth can change are laws that are revealed by God and Truths that are revealed by God. Anything else, is up to those who have the authority to leave it or change it.
It’s just like the military. The Commander in Chief cannot command what is against the Constitution. Everything else is his to command. Those beneath him have the authority to command in his name and must be obeyed as long as they remain within the law.
The difference between the Church and the USA is that in the USA, the citizens can lobby to change a law. In the Church, you can only lobby if the pope says you can.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, FFV