882: The Pope, Bishop of Rome and Peter’s successor, “is the perpetual and visible source and foundation of the unity both of the bishops and of the whole company of the faithful.” “For the Roman Pontiff, by reason of his office as Vicar of Christ, and as pastor of the entire Church has full, supreme, and universal power over the whole Church, a power which he can always exercise unhindered.”
scborromeo.org/ccc/para/882.htm
Montalban:
Not at all. If they don’t believe in an infallible leader and they judge someone else’s infallible leader against the claims of infallibility, then they are, as I see it perfectly justifiable in doing so. In fact it would be quite logical to judge someone against the claims that they make, as opposed against the claims of their own belief.
Petergee:
You are confusing infallibility (the Holy Spirit protecting the pope and all the bishops from teaching doctrinal error) with impeccability (sinlessness). Infallibility doesn’t come into the question. Some of the medieval popes were notorious sinners. This has nothing to do with their infallibility.
No. I’m not. I understand the difference. I am not even arguing against this system, but illustrating why a Protestant can criticise Catholicism, even when both have a corrupt leader. You are pegging a lot more authority on one person than they are. It is thus a lot more critical to your faith than to theirs. ESPECIALLY when you have to be in communion with the Pope to be Catholic. So even if the Pope is personally in error, you still have to be in communion with them. You could have a Pope who is in an immoral relationship, and even though you as a Catholic might personally feel that it is sinful, you still must be in communion with him in order to be defined as Catholic. In that sense the difference between his personal belief and his ability to speak infallibly is irrelevant.
Petergee:
Not really. If a man is a thief, that has an effect on whatever institution he is charge of,
Only to the degree that he has charge of it. That is the point. If the ‘head’ of one church is only, say, an 'honorary head, and has no real power then it’s totally different from a Pope. And the other difference as mentioned is that you must be in communion with the Pope. A protestant could just walk away from that church, go to another and still remain Protestant.
The point about ‘similar’ effect doesn’t work because of the fluidity of the meaning of ‘church’ for that Protestant.
Petergee:
Ignatius means that anyone who is cut off from the bishops, priests and deacons is not part of the Church. It is a severe distortion of his words to claim that he means “you must not have any other title or level of authority in the church other than bishop, priest and deacon”. If you argue that St Ignatius is implying there must be no Pope, you must, to be consistent, also argue that he means there must be no patriarchs, archbishops, exarchs, eparchs, Parish Priests, abbots, monks, nuns, Presidents of the Parish Council, etc.etc.
It’s not a distortion. You can cease communion with your priest, go to another priest and still be Catholic as long as you are linked by communion to the Pope. For Ignatius the link of communion stops at the bishop.
He stated all churches headed by a bishop are Catholic (Smyrnaeans 8), not the Pope, not a bishop of bishops, not power held only reference to Rome.
He stated nothing should be done without the bishop (Smyrnaeans 8), not Pope, not reference to Rome. RCC teaching allows the Pope to interfere in a bishopric.
The structure of the church has no place above Bishop (Trallians 3), not Pope, no reference to Rome
The bishop holds all power (Trallians 7), not Pope, not only in reference to Rome
He states that there’s no one above the bishop, save for Jesus (Letter to Polycarp; Romans 9), not the Pope, not only in reference to Rome
He stated all churches headed by a bishop are Catholic (Smyrnaeans 8), not the Pope, not a bishop of bishops, not power held only reference to Rome.
He stated nothing should be done without the bishop (Smyrnaeans 8), not Pope, not reference to Rome. RCC teaching allows the Pope to interfere in a bishopric.
The structure of the church has no place above Bishop (Trallians 3), not Pope, no reference to Rome
The bishop holds all power (Trallians 7), not Pope, not only in reference to Rome
He states that there’s no one above the bishop, save for Jesus (Letter to Polycarp; Romans 9), not the Pope, not only in reference to Rome