Una Fides, can you present a case that Vatican II did contradict previously defined dogma?
I could, but I don’t agree with it. I personally do not think that V2 contradicted previously defined dogma. I think it has been misinterpreted and must be interpreted in light of what the Church has always taught, which would also include the fact that false religions do not have a divine right to exist.
I was recently in a thread about religious liberty. Here’s a link to it:
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=272104&page=6
I’m particularly fond of Pax Et Charitas’s posts. Here’s one in particular that makes a lot of sense:
forums.catholic-questions.org/showpost.php?p=4520608&postcount=78
I know they taught freedom of religion . . . and they left an opening for the Bible being in error on matters of history or science by saying it was true in all matters of “faith and morals,” but leaving out reference to the other matters. While freedom of religion was formally condemned as a heresy in the Syllabus of Pope Pius, was it condemned infallibly, there or elsewhere? On what grounds would you say that the Church in Vatican II did contradict previously defined dogma?
I do not believe that Vatican II taught “freedom of religion” other than that the Catholic Church has such freedom. Other religions cannot have the right to objectively sin against God any more than mothers have a “right” to have an abortion. Such “rights” are made up and contradict true divine rights.
I think the argument can be made the freedom of religion was infallibly condemned both by solemn definition and by the Church’s ordinary universal magisterium. Since the pope settled the issue in an encyclical and since virtually all the bishops in union with the pope accepted such teaching and did not teach contrary to it, then in my mind that would make such teaching is infallible according to the Church’s ordinary universal magisterium. In the words of St. Augustine, “Rome has spoken, the case is closed.”
In addition, we must understand that the Church herself by her very nature is Tradition. She is not innovation, and in order to teach something as true, she must reach into the deposit of faith handed down by the apostles and practiced by the Church throughout her life and can then come to a conclusion on a matter. To my knowledge, the Catholic Church has never taught in her 2000 years that people have a right to practice their false religions and spread lies and false ideas. Such an idea also according to Catholic theology does not make sense. False religions can be
tolerated and for the sake of peace or some other greater good can be permitted to exist, but they cannot be given a right by God to exist and spread their lies and errors nor can they be given the right to offer up false worship and thereby violate the 1st Commandment. If we wish to discuss religious liberty more so, I suggest posting in the thread I cited above.
Again, concerning V2, I do not believe the council directly taught contrary to defined dogma. If you are referring to my previous comments, I was more asking in the hypothetical than necessarily applying those comments to V2.