Okay Gerard, you have now accused people of being “coy” 3 times on this thread. It’s getting to be kind of a pattern. When someone draws your statements to a logical conclusion. You respond with “coy.” For the sake of a continuing discussion, perhaps you could drop that tactic.
It’s not drawing a logical conclusion from my statement. It’s being coy. Saying, “I don’t know of St. Thomas stating that not consecrating bishops is immoral.” is being coy.
St. Thomas defines principals that can be applied to circumstances. He didn’t write a “how to” guide for every specific contingency. To pretend that that is what he did is to treat him, and the subject with contempt.
I have stated as has Bear and others that I believe one has a moral obligation to disobey the Pope when he gives an immoral command.
Great.
I agree (as I stated earlier, but I guess you missed it) that Pope Stephen may have given an immoral order.
Oh I Love it! He “may” have given an immoral order when he ordered the corpse of his predecessor to be dug up, put on trial, convicted, desecrated and invalidly overturned every papal action, ordination, consecration the man ever did!
That “MAY” have been immoral?
Yet there is no circumstance in which a bishop could consecrate other bishops against the will of the Pope which “May” be a case of jusified disobedience?
So, you can drop the whole “you’re a bunch of papalopolapaloloterers” bit. We’re not. We just don’t believe that “Don’t consecrate a bishop without my approval” constitutes an immoral command that Lefebvre was bound to disobey.
You claim he was bound to obey. Based on what?
That’s really the crux of the whole argument…How is “don’t consecrate a bishop without my approval” an immoral order that one is bound to disobey?
Simple. It’s a tough pill to swallow but brace yourself. JPII was interested in leaving the traditions of the Church to die. He loved the modern and wanted to reshape the Church in his image as he envisioned the Council. He was not going to leave untouched any aspect of Catholicism that was pre-conciliar. He even made those absurd changes to the rosary that not only go against the teaching of previous Popes like Leo XIII, it goes directly against the teaching of Pope Paul VI who refused additional mysteries. (the “Hopeful” mysteries)
Pope John Paul II didn’t view it as immoral. Cardinal Ratzinger did not view it as immoral. The PCILT did not view it as immoral. Were all of them just mistaken???
Either mistaken, weak or malicious. But they certainly weren’t fair, just or logical. Or even following the documents of Vatican II which seemed to be their guiding light in everything.
Michael Davies once said that from what he saw, JPII considered his participation in the Council as something more important than his becoming Pope. (both were destructive if you ask me) But if you commented to him on what a beautiful day it was in regards to the weather, JPII would tell you it was the fruit of “Guadeum et Spes.”