T
twf
Guest
Why is there so much resistance, in many “traditionalist” circles, to episcopal collegiality? It is hardly a novel idea nor was its renewed emphasis at Vatican II without precedent. The Church operated in a very collegial fashion for most of its history - certainly during the first millennium in particular. It was only very gradually that authority shifted from local synods to the Pope and Curia in Rome. The idea that the Pope should rule by decree with the bishops acting as mere advisers is, as far as I can tell, the novelty, not collegiality. There seems to be a resistance in some circles to the idea that the bishops are, with the Pope, truly part of the magisterium. I’ve seen some suggest that synods, such as the one currently opening in Rome, are a waste of time, and that the Church would be better off with the Pope issuing a ruling independently… yet what can be more traditional, to the governance of the Church, than the synodal model which finds its roots in Acts 15? There seems to almost be a fear that the bishops can’t be trusted to make the right decision. This baffles me when infallibility was entrusted to the college of bishops as a whole (with and under the Pope), and not only to the Pope alone. The infallibility of the college (particularly when assembled in an ecumenical council) has rarely been questioned in the history of the Church, while the question of papal infallibility was only settled in, by Church standards, very recent times.
I certainly accept and profess the papal dogmas promulgated at Vatican I, but it is impossible to deny that synodality is the historical model of Church governance - the pope WITH his brother bishops governing the Church in concert. Why the resistance?
I certainly accept and profess the papal dogmas promulgated at Vatican I, but it is impossible to deny that synodality is the historical model of Church governance - the pope WITH his brother bishops governing the Church in concert. Why the resistance?