W
Wandile
Guest
But that is the reality of the situation. The council had to be ratified by the popeThe most charitable way I can think of to describe that argument is “circular”. The pope restored unity because he ratified the council that gave him the authority to ratify the council… ad infinitum.Come on. As the Roman Catholic historian I quoted in my first post said, the council was necessary to restore unity.
see the council was only delegated authority to choose the pope because the parties assented to it. But for any ecumenical council to have binding force, it must be ratified by the pope. This very same council admits there is no authority higher than a pope. No council can judge a pope nor can it have any authority over him. The council gains authority through papal ratification. The reason why the elected pope at Constance was considered legitimate was not because the councils election was the final judgment but rather because the Reigning Pope and two antipopes agreed to the findings of this election as binding upon all parties involved. See it was not the council itself that made the election binding , rather the parties assent to the election.