S
SFD
Guest
AlexV,ENOUGH, sheesh.
The WHOLE issue here is that what the Church teaches is that disciplines lawfully imposed by the Church cannot lead you to impiety.
That is QUITE different than saying that they’re “infallible”.
It is imprecise to call disciplines lawfully imposed “infallible”. That’s why Van Noort, and all the other manualists for that matter, describe the two-fold nature of a disciplinary decree…one aspect is infallible and the other is not.
VanNoort Christ’s Church:
SFDThe imposing of commands belongs not directly to the teaching office but to the ruling office; disciplinary laws are only indirectly an object of infallibility, i.e., only by reason of the doctrinal decision implicit in them. When the Church’s rulers sanction a law, they implicitly make a twofold judgment:
Although it would he rash to cast aspersions on the timeliness of a law, especially at the very moment when the Church imposes or expressly reaffirms it, still the Church does not claim to he infallible in issuing a decree of practical judgment. For the Church’s rulers were never promised the highest degree of prudence for the conduct of affairs. But the Church is infallible in issuing a doctrinal decree as intimated above — and to such an extent that it can never sanction a universal law which would be at odds with faith or morality or would be by its very nature conducive to the injury of souls.
- “This law squares with the Church’s doctrine of faith and morals”; that is, it imposes nothing that is at odds with sound belief and good morals. (15) This amounts to a doctrinal decree.
- “This law, considering all the circumstances, is most opportune.” This is a decree of practical judgment.
The Church’s infallibility in disciplinary matters, when understood in this way, harmonizes beautifully with the mutability of even universal laws. For a law, even though it be thoroughly consonant with revealed truth, can, given a change in circumstances, become less timely or even useless, so that prudence may dictate its abrogation or modification.