Leibniz #31
I tend to think it’s much safer to keep infallible statements to as small of a set as possible, in order to not look like a fool later after having claimed something was infallible (limbo? non-moving Earth? charging interest rates?) when it really wasn’t.
Such a false view of infallibility needs to be jettisoned. False views can be changed only by understanding that papal teaching infallibly on faith and morals does not have anything to do with theologians views on topics like Limbo, the earth’s orbit or interest rates.
Further “tending to think” needs to be replaced by the reality that the Church, through the Popes and Ecumenical Council decrees approved by them, teaches infallibly only on faith and morals to the whole Church when defining on faith or morals.
Certainly Christ’s Church was not empowered by Him to decide scientific questions, as St Augustine had said more than a thousand years before, and a tribunal calling Galileo’s theory “false and absurd” was wrong.”
Since a “decree” is neither a dogma nor even a doctrine, and as the authority of the Holy Office does not extend to infallible pronouncements, there is no “fact” of heresy pronounced by any Pope concerning Galileo.
Darwin’s bulldog, Thomas Huxley, “went to Rome and examined the Case, a little more thoroughly than the average humanist, probably intending to use it in his ongoing controversy with the Anglican bishop, Samuel Wilberforce. In a letter written to Mivart in 1885 he concluded, rather disappointedly, I presume – ‘I looked into the matter when I was in Italy and I arrived at the conclusion that the Pope and the College of Cardinals had rather the best of it.’ ”
[Arthur Koestler, *The Sleepwalkers, MacMillan, 1959, p 353; cited in
The Six Days of Creation, Br Thomas Mary Sennott, Ravengate, 1984, p185-6].
Galileo was, in the 1633 Decree of the Inquisition, censured as “vehemently suspected of heresy.” No papal declaration of heresy was made.
I tend to take a conservative, minimalist view on what constitutes infallible dogma (Ludwig Ott’s book from the 1950s is a great resource),
Political terms have no place in Catholicism when discussing teaching and while Ott can be helpful, nothing can substitute for the development of doctrine which has occurred, as shown in post #22:
“The three levels of teaching are:
1) Dogma – infallible (Canon #750.1) to be believed with the assent of divine and Catholic faith.
2) Doctrine – infallible (Canon #750.2) requires the assent of ecclesial faith, to be “firmly embraced and held”.
3) Doctrine – non-definitive (non-infallible) and requires intellectual assent (“loyal submission of the will and intellect”, Vatican II, *Lumen Gentium *25), not an assent of faith.”
See
Ad Tuendam Fidem, as in that Apostolic Letter *Motu Proprio * (on his own authority)1998, St John Paul II identified clearly the three levels of teaching and taught:
“TO PROTECT THE FAITH of the Catholic Church against errors arising from certain members of the Christian faithful, especially from among those dedicated to the various disciplines of sacred theology, we, whose principal duty is to confirm the brethren in the faith (Lk 22:32), consider it absolutely necessary to add to the existing texts of the Code of Canon Law and the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches, new norms which expressly impose the obligation of upholding truths proposed in a definitive way by the Magisterium of the Church, and which also establish related canonical sanctions.” [My emphasis].
vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/motu_proprio/documents/hf_jp-ii_motu proprio_30061998_ad-tuendam-fidem_en.html
Thus, I would disagree with Telstar’s statement that “He always protects them from making any error on faith or morals.” Popes make errors when teaching on faith and morals all the time, including our current one (see his pacifist-leaning statements on just war). It is only when you see those formulaic words “let anathema sit” that you can be absolutely sure that something is heretical with an infallible degree of certainty.
The term is *ex cathedra *(teaching from the Chair of Peter) and that is only for dogmas. Popes do not pretend to be infallible when expressing views on all sorts of subjects including wars so care must be taken not to confuse infallibility with the views of Popes on various subjects.