G
Gratia_Plena
Guest
For what it’s worth, just a interesting bit of history:
Original Catholic Encyclopedia said:Doctrinal Controversies; The Vatican Council.
—Though not professionally a theologian, Ketteler made his influence felt in the various doctrinal controversies of his time. In his “Liberty, Authority, and Church” (1862) he took a stand on the question of Liberalism, and set forth the Christian attitude towards the vari-ous meanings of the word liberty. The theological “school” which Ketteler established in his seminary at Mainz, and whose chief representatives were Moufang and Heinrich, was noted for its adherence to Scholastic theology and its hostility to the anti-Roman tendencies of “Germanism” and “German Science” represented by Dellinger and the Munich School. The former urged with much tenacity the theological seminaries, as preferable to the theological faculties of the universities, for the education of the Catholic clergy, and earnestly strove, since 1862, for the establishment of that free Catholic university in Germany which is yet a desideratum. Despite this firm attitude, Ketteler had great intellectual charity, and could understand theological views that differed somewhat from his own, and when necessary could be their advocate; it was doubtless to him that Kuhn of Tiibingen was indebted for escaping condemnation at Rome.
On the eve of the Vatican Council, Ketteler was not very favorably inclined towards the dogmatic definition of papal infallibility: “In our time it is not opportune to increase the number of dogmas”, he wrote to Bishop Dupanloup. Enemy as he was of political absolutism and centralization, he feared that a declaration of papal infallibility would result in religious absolutism and centralization. He submitted to the episcopal assembly at Fulda (September 1, 1869) a series of observations which he had asked from Francis Brentano, professor at Wurzburg, and in which the definition of papal infallibility was treated as inopportune; at the same time he rough-drafted the letter in which this assembly urged all Christians to submit to the future council. Though belonging to the minority in the council, he protested more than once against the “Roman Letters” of Dollinger, published at Munich under the pseudonym of “Quirinus”. He circulated in the council a pamphlet of the Jesuit Quarella, which in some respects seemed to militate against the doctrine of infallibility, but he did not personally accept all the theories of this work. It was he who suggested the petition of May, 1870, in which a number of bishops demanded that the eleven chapters of the “Schema” on the Church be taken up before entering on the discussion of infallibility. On May 23 he declared in a plenary meeting that he had always believed in papal infallibility, but he asked whether the theological proofs put forward sufficed to justify its dogmatic definition. He was not present at the final vote and left Rome after a written declaration that he submitted beforehand to the decision of the council. In September, 1870, he signed, with other German bishops, the Fulda declaration in favor of the newly defined dogma.