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Heretic! Blasphemer!I would shout “Halleluliah!” and rejoice in the good news!!
Heretic! Blasphemer!I would shout “Halleluliah!” and rejoice in the good news!!
If these conditions are met then the encyclical is infallible and cannot be changed.
This is certainly true.It is my understanding (someone correct me if I’m wrong), but the pope does not have to use the words “I am speaking ex cathedra”
The conditions for the extraordinary papal magisterium, a.k.a. papal infallibility, a.k.a “ex cathedra”, have not been met by Ordinatio Sacerdotalis. Cardinal Ratzinger has stated this point-blank.And as posted by byzcath these conditions have been met.
It is my understanding (someone correct me if I’m wrong), but the pope does not have to use the words “I am speaking ex cathedra” As long as the pope speaks
----In the exercise of his office as shepherd and teacher of all Christians,
----in virtue of his supreme apostolic authority,
----he defines a doctrine of faith or morals to be held by the whole church…"
If these conditions are met then the encyclical is infallible and cannot be changed.
And as posted by byzcath these conditions have been met. The Pope never said that **he **didn’t have authority to ordain women. He said “THE CHURCH HAS NO AUTHORITY”. So no matter who becomes pope, he cannot change what the universal church has taught. So the statement “that this judgment is to be definitively held by all the Church’s faithful.” means exactly what it says. The matter is closed. No further discussion. Why do we keep coming up with these “what if’s”. What is the purpose of “debating” this issue? Why not debate something like “What would happened if some day we decided to kill a dead horse?” Or, “lets debate as to how we can draw a square circle or draw a four-sided triangle.” Makes about as much sense.
Either you are not very widely traveled, or you are very myopic.I am not talking about rites. What I am talking about is reverence, and the common sense to know what is from what is not reverent or appropriate during Mass. Arguably, some of the rites within the Catholic Church have managed to maintain this very basic understanding of the true nature of the Mass – and they don’t seem to abuse it and trivialize it. Here in the United States at this time in history, it is a rarity. This is what happens to people when they no longer remember what the Mass really is.
BulldogCath said:What! What do you call Ecumenism! Pope after Pope spoke out against it-and Vatican II and Pope JPII ran with it-it was the cornerstone of his Papacy.
**You will see woman priests shortly, this is already being primed at the seminary level, as most seminaries wont allow you in unless you are OK with woman ordination, as they are paving the way for the Priests and Bishops-when the reach that level of decision making-to allow it. **
It has been 40 years since Vatican II and all of those liberal priest who were ordained in the 60’s on up are now Bishops, Cardinals, and possibly Pope soon. And they will ALLOW it.
It was the master plan of Vatican II. The same press that is in Love with Pope JPII and actually considered him CONSERVATIVE because he would not allow woman ordination. That is considered conservative???
What would you do if the next Pope said Christ was not God?
I don’t think it will ever happen and I hope it never does.
As Mother Angelica says, **“Can you imagine going to confession to a WOMAN??” :nope: :nope: **
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Shannin
Gottle of Geer said:## What looks like a denial, can always be qualified into being an affirmation. So “Christ is not God” can always be interpreted as meaning “Christ is God”. And that is equally true - for He is man as well. It is also possible that some theological statements are in fact meaningless; this is a big question in itself.
There is a way round every single proposition one cares to make - no statement is so beyond interpretation, that it cannot be made to mean something other than it seems to. There is always a way to “get round” even the most challenging problems. Sometimes, it does look as if theologians and apologists are not much more than Papal “spin-doctors”. There is also the debate about the status of religious language - one’s philosophical views about meaning and language and semantics, can hardly avoid influencing what one makes of theological assertions.
Most - all ? - religious arguments are about the use of language, and the ways in which it is intended, and understood. Past prohibitions of the ordination of women could always be explained away as really meant to be affirmations of their dignity, which was now being recognised by allowing their ordination to the Priesthood.
There is nothing new in this - Papal Infallibility (for example) has been defended by some remarkable, and conflicting, interpretations of past events. Catholics have come to very different conclusions about certain episodes in Church History, but concluded that these episodes are not problematic for the dogma - probably they began by accepting the dogma as true, and went on from there. If that approach is adopted, no amount or quality of objections will ever unsettle a single dogma; because the truth of the dogma is the assumption on which reasoning that vindicates it is is built; the argument defending its truth is circular.
Whether all these word-games are honest or rational, is another matter. They may convince Catholics - whether they will convince anyone else, is another matter. Some of them have analogies in Protestant Fundamentalism: Protestant Fundamentalists are concerned to ensure the inerrancy of the Bible - Catholics are usually more concerned to ensure the inerrancy of the Church.
To answer your question:
Hypothetical questions can’t be answered; but if it happened, the Church would still be the Church. It’s done so many daft things in the past, that even if ordaining - or not ordaining - women is one of them, another daft thing is unlikely to make a difference.##
A human is made up of two ‘parts’ the physical and the spiritual, body and soul, biological and ontological.If there can be Gentile priests in the priesthood founded by Christ, which was nothing to do with the “everlasting” Aaronic priesthood - why should the sex of the priest be any more unalterable than the supposedly unalterable and eternal Law of Moses ?
It would seem you intend to say anything can be justified? That would mean man could never really know the truth.
Gottle of Geer said:## The one statement need not imply the other - man’s ability to engage in that kind of reasoning is real, but it does not imply that we can’t know the truth with certainty: what we know as a triangle, is still different in shape from what we know as a square, even if we throw out thegeometry of the last three thousand years. “Triangle” can signify what we mean by “square” only if we take the view that names are more important than what they name.
Things are more complex when we move from geometry to ethics, religion, history, philosophy and theology - because these deal with human beings, and with entities less directly known to us than geometrical figures. Geometry is less ambiguous, and more readily measured: something is either square in shape - or it is not. Even if one believes that it is in principle impossible to draw a square. That which corresponds to what is conventionally known as a square in its shape, is still a fact of experience.
Unlike a lot of theological and historical things: in principle, we might agree that cruelty is wicked and unChristlike - but, what is a cruel act ? Is it, for example, cruel to burn heretics ? We might think so: but, even if that is granted, cruelty can always be redefined as “tough love”. If it is allowable to hurt children by slapping them so that they don’t put their hands in a fire - maybe it is allowable to burn Christians in this life so that they do not burn in the next. The question is one of definition, and of ethics. It would not be unduly difficult to argue that Catholics have never committed atrocities - to argue either that they have shown a lot of tough love; or, that to commit atrocities is proof of not being Catholic. FWIW, I don’t think either argument is ethically responsible.
What I do think, is that we should look very carefully at what arguments are used for theological & doctrinal positions. For example: do people reason backward from the positions they hold, to the premises on which they base those conclusions - or, from, conclusions to premises ? Do they argue from the fact that something is a dogma, to how it should be interpreted - or from its interpretation, to the dogma which it is used to justify ?
IOW: what is the connection between dogma, history, theological reasoning, ethics, truth, and faith in Christ ? It’s complex; which is one reason not everyone is Catholic: faced with the same facts, Christians may well make different connections between them - what is more important to one, is less so to another. For example: Catholics emphasise the words of the Roman legate Philip, that “Peter has spoken through Leo” at the Council of Chalcedon - the Orthodox, notice that the Roman Bishop was expressing the Catholic faith in the Incarnation. Rome sees the acclamation as evidence of Roman supremacy - the Orthodox, see it in as showing that his doctrine was orthodox. Both notice things that are real, but they draw different conclusions because the realities they see are interpreted by what is already in their minds.
So long as we recognise:
and so long as we believe the world external to the intellect can be apprehended by the intellect, we are going to have to interpret how entities are related to one another. And even faith does not free us from this need to interpret the entities of the external world and the relations between them; because faith does not obliterate reason or the intellect. Which is why even Catholics are not identical in all their ideas, even in religion ##
- that there is a world of entities external to man’s intellect
- a difference between entities in the world