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For the sake of argument, let’s say a future pope officially fulfills all of the required conditions for an infallible teaching and formally declares that God is a quadrality. Father, mother, son, spirit: four persons, one being. In other words, the pope formally declares that the theotokos is actually a divine person, and that the quadrality was a doctrine that had always been believed by true Catholics, but only recently have we become aware of it consciously. This explains the devotion to Mary seen throughout history more fully and completely than prior theological notions.
Do you think it would be possible to refute this teaching? How would you overcome the arguments from scripture, authority, tradition, “development of doctrine” and other techniques that would surely arise in the wake of such a pronouncement?
How about this: you go ahead and attempt to prove this pope wrong, and I’ll argue on his behalf using the same arguments put forward by contemporary apologists.
Second issue: do you think it is a problem if I can use the same arguments to “prove” the “quadrality” that apologists use to “prove” the “trinity?” Why or why not?
Do you think it would be possible to refute this teaching? How would you overcome the arguments from scripture, authority, tradition, “development of doctrine” and other techniques that would surely arise in the wake of such a pronouncement?
How about this: you go ahead and attempt to prove this pope wrong, and I’ll argue on his behalf using the same arguments put forward by contemporary apologists.
Second issue: do you think it is a problem if I can use the same arguments to “prove” the “quadrality” that apologists use to “prove” the “trinity?” Why or why not?