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Michael19682
Guest
Basically. Try comparing one moment to the next. We live in the present and we act according to a hope for our future welfare. The Gospel is that hope. I believe the Pope fights off the work of the devil, who is very shifty. The devil shifts the ground beneath our feet so that what was once the correct way forward is no longer so. But the Gospel is Light and not the shifting ground, so really this relativity you speak of is not a change in course but a renewed call to see the Light. Decisions are made with available evidence. When the evidence changes a new decision is made that remains final until a new change in evidence. The Church is still alive and prospering and the Pope has always been its final authority. If a Pope sees a dire need to save his flock. why shouldn’t he be free to change a past decision according to the new evidence of danger? The Gospel can’t be changed – just ask the LDS Church – but likewise as your example of Hitler shows, a man or many men can be induced to ignore or defy it.You’re kidding! You think that an infallible decision is relative and subject to change, which would of coarse make that decision not infallible any more. Is that what you are saying, that infallibility can become not infallible because a subsequent “final authority” says it isn’t?
To use a legal example, take the product label warnings on foods. One minute its good for you and the next its a poison. Do the labels affect the reality of the nutritional value of the food? Not that we know of. But the minute the evidence changes, the goverment has to warn us or possibly encourage us (depending on its moods).
All that can be said of an infallible decision that has been changed is that it was once infallible according to the evidence on which it was based. What remains always infallible is the authority of the position of the Pope to make such decisions. All Pope’s make only infallible decisions. In a certain sense, one Pope’s decision, even when on the same subject as a past Pope’s decision, is unrelated to it. The relationship of Popes to each other is a spiritual apostolic succession. Spirit is constant. The people the Pope is trying to protect are constantly changing their views and predilections. Time and again the Gospels have proven to be sound advice for humanity. The number of moral situations that face man are innumerable. It looks like the Gospel effectively truncates these into moral categories which reappear over and over again. Pope’s are infallible because their decisions are based on applying the finality of the Gospels. Still, if people abandon the Gospel, then following them on their erroneous path might be the only way to Bring Them Back. Jesus said that if a sheep was to become lost, what good shepard would not go in search of it - implying that he would leave the others of the flock while he is searching.