Well I think so, but then I would also think it is rather obvious who the pope is. If one is to deny that Pope Benedict is Pope, I would not be surprised at anything that came from them. Electing their own pope would seem to be a logical step.
But it’s not a logical step. Why do you think this? I am trying to get you to focus on the
unity and visibility of the Church as key.
newton:
You are right and I was mistaken. Jansenist were never judged heretics. I would have to look closer at these people to see if they were so hypercalvinist enough to be heretics.
Do they deny the Vatican I definition of Papal infallibility? If yes, what that make them?
newton:
No point though since they are sedevacantist and don’t even recognize the Pope. Heck even if they disagree with anything said in Catholic history, they could just claim that person was the heretic and thereby irrelevant.
Actually, that site attacked sedevacantist Catholics until just recently. It’s always been a site promoting Jansenism.
newton:
SFD:
How ironic…let’s take a look at this more closely.
I don’t get it. This seems like a slam dunk case against sedevacantism.
You don’t “get it” because you fail to understand the concepts of unity and visibility as taught by Bellarmine.
newton:
The total lack of agreement or even communion between the sects as opposed to the unity with in the Catholic Church. One would think the numbers alone would speak for themselves.
Unity is not about numbers. Protestants claim to be unified as christians…and there are alot of them.
newton:
It is not like sedevacantist are a significant movement.
Sedevacantists are just traditional Catholics who hold a theological opinion about the current claimant to the Papacy. There are a lot of “resistors” who are in the SSPX, FSSP, Independents, etc. They are unified in the Faith…that’s why they are resisting what is against the Faith.
newton:
So why do you and others get so upset when others say you are not Catholic?
Because I am a Catholic. And I know it is the last resort of someone who can’t argue their position very effectively.
newton:
I will not say that St Bellarmine is the final say in all matters. But since he is quoted so much, shouldn’t you accept that we do not acknowledge those who fail to submit to the lawful authority of the Pope as being Catholic?
But traditional Catholics have had to “fail to submit” just to keep the Faith. We’re talking about the Bishops here too…don’t forget.
The position of St. Robert Bellarmine arises by simple logic from his definition of the Church as a visible institution. As such, it must have a visible membership, distinguishable from other men by visible (perceivable) means. The Church is a visible unity of faith. One who departs from that unity by a perceivable rejection of her teachings (a heretic), by this very fact ceases to belong to that unity, by his own act.
This position is taught clearly by the Popes. First of all, Bellarmine has been made a Doctor of the Church by them, and he is probably the leading theological authority on the Church and the papacy since the Reformation, whose errors he dedicated himself to refuting. Thus his teaching is recognized as solidly Catholic, on the highest authority.

" by whatever reasoning?" The white smoke, the conclave… Surely you must have seen it. It was in all the papers. Most of us just aren’t clever enough to be smarter than the whole of the College of Cardinals, the thousands of faithful bishops, tens of thousands of priest and the Holy Spirit.
Maybe it’s just a matter of faith.
You’ve ignored the point of the post…the visible unity of Faith. Please read it again:
Those who claim, by whatever reasoning, that Benedict XVI is truly Pope, implicitly accept that the Church has no visible unity in faith. They accept as members of the Church not only him, but all the bishops in his communion, and all those who openly reject both the teachings and the authority of the Church, none of whom, or virtually none, have been excommunicated. Thus they deny, in effect, the unity of the Church. Pax et Caritas, for example, has no difficulty admitting that Paul VI and John Paul II were heretics, as well as schismatics, apostates, and scandals, and he proves this abundantly, but he still claims that they remain members of the Church. This is to deny the teaching of the Doctors, the Popes, and canon law itself. It is to reduce the Church to a mere political unity, like the Protestants, who have no unity of faith at all, even within a single sect.
SFD