D
Dovekin
Guest
The profession of faith asked of people joining the Church says just that:are you saying that, in your view, dogma and only dogma cannot be disagreed with, or dissented from? That doctrine which does not rise to the level of dogma, is free game? Some doctrines but not others?
There are dogmas, which we believe and are proclaimed to be revealed by God. Other doctrines are taught by the Church but are not covered by this profession.I believe and profess all that the holy Catholic Church believes, teaches, and proclaims to be revealed by God.
Ad Tuendam Fidem from St John Paul II in the 1990s created a profession of faith for Church’s teachers and some other workers that categorizes what must be believed (dogma), what must be held (other infallible teaching), and what must be respected (everything else). The doctrinal commentary on ATF goes into some detail, though it does not give an exhaustive list.
Whether doctrine can change from X to non-X is often a matter of perspective; X can sometimes appear to be non-X, but is not. This is why Benedict XVI proposed a hermeneutic of reform rather than a hermeneutic of continuity as the antithesis of the hermeneutic of discontinuity. Reform includes discontinuities and continuities together on different levels.The Church consistently and authoritatively teaches many things that, strictly speaking, are not dogma. Doctrine can develop and become more refined, but it cannot change from X to non-X. True cannot become false.
The example the Pope used was religious freedom, which changed dramatically after WW2. He placed earlier statements in the context of the martyrs who were executed by the State in part for asserting freedom of religion. That assertion was in no way the target of earlier teachings on religious freedom!
SSPX still seems to think the teaching on religious freedom went from X to non-X. There is some validity to that position, but the faith of the martyrs is the faith of the Church. The teaching on religious freedom may not be part of that faith, but that faith is a norm for us.