M
mardukm
Guest
Dear All,
As stated before, I will give evidence that the intentions of the Vatican fathers regarding its Decrees were not intended to be a license for the Pope to do what he wants, where he wants, whenever he wants (as our resident EO polemicists, and even some EO apologists have contended). To this end, I shall discuss issues and bring in texts from the Decree on the Primacy of the Pope, and the Decree on Infallibility.
DECREE ON THE PRIMACY
First, I will discuss three important texts in the Decree, and then provide the impetus for these amendments, thereby fulfilling my stated intention in the first paragraph.
First amendment: There was a revision in the statement of anathema.
First draft: “We condemn any who affirm that the jurisdiction of the Roman Pontiffs is not ordinary and immediate both over all the churches together, and over individual churches of particular pastors.”
Proposed amendment: “If anyone says that the primacy of the Roman Pontiff is only the office of inspection and direction, and that his supreme power of jurisdiction over the universal Church is not full, but only extraordinary and mediate; let him be anathema.”
Final form: “If anyone says that the Roman Pontiff has only the office of inspection or direction, but not the full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the whole Church…that this power is not ordinary and immediate either over each and every church or over each and every shepherd and faithful member: let him be anathema.”
Second amendment: A very important addition.
“This power of the Supreme Pontiff is far from standing in the way of the power of ordinary and immediate Episcopal jurisdiction by which the bishop who, under appointment of the Holy Spirit, succeeded in the place of the apostles, feed and rule individually, as true shepherds, the particular flock assigned to them. Rather, this latter power [of the bishops] is asserted, confirmed, and vindicated by this same supreme and universal shepherd in the words of St. Gregory the Great: ‘My honor is the honor of the whole Church. My honor is the solid strength of my brothers. I am truly honored when due honor is paid to each and every one.’”
Third amendment: A very important deletion.
First draft explained the prerogatives of the Pope in the terms “episcopal, ordinary, and immediate.”
The final form deleted the word “episcopal.”
Why were these amendments enacted? There was a tremendous concern from the Minority bishops that: 1) the rights and privileges of the Patriarchs would be demeaned or erased; 2) the Pope’s brother bishops would be viewed either as mere vicars or representatives of the Popes. 3) The Pope’s prerogatives should not be regarded as something that is normally or usually utilized. The changes were enacted to meet these concerns.
Notice in the first amendment that the original draft made a stark distinction between “all the churches together,” on the one hand, and “individual churches” on the other hand. This highlighted the idea that the Pope could exercise his FULL prerogatives in EITHER sphere of jurisdiction (in fact, this is the very issue we are talking about currently in this thread). This was unacceptable. The final form mollifies this feature. Instead of distinguishing between “all the churches together” and “individual churches”, the stark distinction in the final form is now between “each and every church,” on the one hand, and the members of those churches, on the other. This lessened the possibility of the misinterpretation that the Pope can interfere in the affairs of individual churches at his whim.
In order to mollify the second concern noted above, a WHOLE NEW PARAGRAPH was inserted into the schema of the Decree, and this has already been quoted. It should also be noted that in Pope Leo XIII’s encyclical Satis Cognitum (published 1896), he explicity asserts that “bishops are not to be accounted as vicars of the Roman Pontiff.”
To address the third concern, the word “episcopal” was removed. The word made it appear that, when the Pope exercised his unique prerogatives, there would either be more than one ordinary bishop in a diocese, or the ordinary bishop was being completely replaced (albeit temporarily), which is against the canons of the Church. There had to be a way to express the fullness of the papal prerogative while preserving the prerogatives of the local bishop. The truth of the matter was and is, of course, the Pope, when exercising his unique prerogatives in a jurisdiction outside his own, does so in an extraordinary manner – both in the sense that it is rare, and that such exercise is not a mere episcopal function. Suggestions were various: remove the words “ordinary and immediate”; preserve all the words with an official explanation of “ordinary and immediate”; retain “episcopal and immediate,” while substituting “extraordinary” for “ordinary”; remove all the words. In the end, it was decided that removing the word “episcopal” was sufficient to reflect the mind of the Church on the matter, leaving the proper explanation of the words “ordinary and immediate” to the discretion of the local bishops to their respective flocks.
The third concern is also the reason for the rejection of the anathema in the form that explicitly condemns the use of the word “extraordinary” (see Proposed amendment to the first draft above under the heading of “First Amendment”). Many of the Minority and even some of the Majority Fathers proposed the use of this very word in place of “ordinary” in the text. As noted in the previous paragraph, though the word “ordinary” was retained, it was obvious that in the proper explanation of the texts to their flock, the bishops would and should have recourse to the word “extraordinary” to explain the actual intention of the Decree. Hence, the Fathers decided that use of the word “extraordinary” to describe the prerogatives of the Pope should not obtain an anathema.
CONTINUED
As stated before, I will give evidence that the intentions of the Vatican fathers regarding its Decrees were not intended to be a license for the Pope to do what he wants, where he wants, whenever he wants (as our resident EO polemicists, and even some EO apologists have contended). To this end, I shall discuss issues and bring in texts from the Decree on the Primacy of the Pope, and the Decree on Infallibility.
DECREE ON THE PRIMACY
First, I will discuss three important texts in the Decree, and then provide the impetus for these amendments, thereby fulfilling my stated intention in the first paragraph.
First amendment: There was a revision in the statement of anathema.
First draft: “We condemn any who affirm that the jurisdiction of the Roman Pontiffs is not ordinary and immediate both over all the churches together, and over individual churches of particular pastors.”
Proposed amendment: “If anyone says that the primacy of the Roman Pontiff is only the office of inspection and direction, and that his supreme power of jurisdiction over the universal Church is not full, but only extraordinary and mediate; let him be anathema.”
Final form: “If anyone says that the Roman Pontiff has only the office of inspection or direction, but not the full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the whole Church…that this power is not ordinary and immediate either over each and every church or over each and every shepherd and faithful member: let him be anathema.”
Second amendment: A very important addition.
“This power of the Supreme Pontiff is far from standing in the way of the power of ordinary and immediate Episcopal jurisdiction by which the bishop who, under appointment of the Holy Spirit, succeeded in the place of the apostles, feed and rule individually, as true shepherds, the particular flock assigned to them. Rather, this latter power [of the bishops] is asserted, confirmed, and vindicated by this same supreme and universal shepherd in the words of St. Gregory the Great: ‘My honor is the honor of the whole Church. My honor is the solid strength of my brothers. I am truly honored when due honor is paid to each and every one.’”
Third amendment: A very important deletion.
First draft explained the prerogatives of the Pope in the terms “episcopal, ordinary, and immediate.”
The final form deleted the word “episcopal.”
Why were these amendments enacted? There was a tremendous concern from the Minority bishops that: 1) the rights and privileges of the Patriarchs would be demeaned or erased; 2) the Pope’s brother bishops would be viewed either as mere vicars or representatives of the Popes. 3) The Pope’s prerogatives should not be regarded as something that is normally or usually utilized. The changes were enacted to meet these concerns.
Notice in the first amendment that the original draft made a stark distinction between “all the churches together,” on the one hand, and “individual churches” on the other hand. This highlighted the idea that the Pope could exercise his FULL prerogatives in EITHER sphere of jurisdiction (in fact, this is the very issue we are talking about currently in this thread). This was unacceptable. The final form mollifies this feature. Instead of distinguishing between “all the churches together” and “individual churches”, the stark distinction in the final form is now between “each and every church,” on the one hand, and the members of those churches, on the other. This lessened the possibility of the misinterpretation that the Pope can interfere in the affairs of individual churches at his whim.
In order to mollify the second concern noted above, a WHOLE NEW PARAGRAPH was inserted into the schema of the Decree, and this has already been quoted. It should also be noted that in Pope Leo XIII’s encyclical Satis Cognitum (published 1896), he explicity asserts that “bishops are not to be accounted as vicars of the Roman Pontiff.”
To address the third concern, the word “episcopal” was removed. The word made it appear that, when the Pope exercised his unique prerogatives, there would either be more than one ordinary bishop in a diocese, or the ordinary bishop was being completely replaced (albeit temporarily), which is against the canons of the Church. There had to be a way to express the fullness of the papal prerogative while preserving the prerogatives of the local bishop. The truth of the matter was and is, of course, the Pope, when exercising his unique prerogatives in a jurisdiction outside his own, does so in an extraordinary manner – both in the sense that it is rare, and that such exercise is not a mere episcopal function. Suggestions were various: remove the words “ordinary and immediate”; preserve all the words with an official explanation of “ordinary and immediate”; retain “episcopal and immediate,” while substituting “extraordinary” for “ordinary”; remove all the words. In the end, it was decided that removing the word “episcopal” was sufficient to reflect the mind of the Church on the matter, leaving the proper explanation of the words “ordinary and immediate” to the discretion of the local bishops to their respective flocks.
The third concern is also the reason for the rejection of the anathema in the form that explicitly condemns the use of the word “extraordinary” (see Proposed amendment to the first draft above under the heading of “First Amendment”). Many of the Minority and even some of the Majority Fathers proposed the use of this very word in place of “ordinary” in the text. As noted in the previous paragraph, though the word “ordinary” was retained, it was obvious that in the proper explanation of the texts to their flock, the bishops would and should have recourse to the word “extraordinary” to explain the actual intention of the Decree. Hence, the Fathers decided that use of the word “extraordinary” to describe the prerogatives of the Pope should not obtain an anathema.
CONTINUED