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Author Topic: Bergolio says that there are many American Catholics who won’t accept Vatican II  (Read 39929 times)

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Offline Stubborn

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Stubborn twists Pius XII around to be saying the EXACT OPPOSITE of what he actually meant and then has the audacity to accuse the sedes of distorting it.

What Pius XII is saying is precisely that Heresy and Schism are NOT LIKE other mortal sin.  Stubborn falsely alleges that "all mortal sin severs from the Church".  That's a blatant lie and the opposite of what Pius XII was teaching.  "Ordinary" (aka non-heresy/schism) mortal sin deprives the soul of life and makes the sinner a DEAD member of the Church, but he remains a member just the same.  With Heresy and Schism, these sins, unlike the other mortal sins, DO sever from the BODY of the Church.

Dead members of the Church continue to be part of the body of the Church and therefore can exercise authority and jurisdiction.  Non-members, such as those severed by heresy and schism, CANNOT exercise authority in the Church.

This is absolutely astonishing that Stubborn twists Pius XII into saying the exact opposite of what he was actually teaching.

Will his fellow R&R have the honesty to correct his malicious stupidity?
You're just desperate to maintain a vacant chair. Same o same o.

You are making PPXII to say what he does not say - you have him saying: "For no other sin, however grave it may be, is such as of its own nature to sever a man from the Body of the Church, as does schism or heresy or apostasy."

But that is not what he said. He said "For not every sin, however grave it may be..." Now, you, the great wind bag, purport to be a knowledgeable brainiac, so the question (you will never answer) is - in context, what does "For not every sin" mean?

This is absolutely astonishing that Lad twists Pius XII into saying the exact opposite of what he was actually teaching.

If sedes ever make it past that sentence, in the next sentence the pope goes on to say:
 "Men may lose charity and divine grace through sin, thus becoming incapable of supernatural merit, and yet not be deprived of all life if they hold fast to faith and Christian hope, and if, illumined from above, they are spurred on by the interior promptings of the Holy Spirit to salutary fear and are moved to prayer and penance for their sins.
"

Which is to say that although all sinners lose charity and grace, it is possible for them to be moved to payer and penance for their sins. Even though it is apparent that heretics do not "hold fast to faith and Christian hope", Pope Pius XII does not exclude heretics from being moved to prayer and penance - it is you who exclude heretics from any possibility of repentance.

"But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

Offline DigitalLogos

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No, I am not skirting around the issue, I am merely pointing out your errors, errors which you rely on to support your narrative.

First you said  "heretics are outside of the Church. They are not Catholics." This is false as I just showed you - and apparently you now agree? - because now you just said above: "The problem is not that heretics cannot repent and go to confession..."

If they've never had the faith, then Lutherans, Calivinists, Methodists, Eastern "Orthodox" et all are *not* Catholics, so no, they are not permitted to go to confession because those heretics are outside of the Church.

So knowing that only Catholics can use the sacrament of confession, can Catholics guilty of the mortal sin of heresy and want to repent go to confession or not?


Again, you are off the mark. It is the Church's logic that says one who is Catholic - which of course means one who is baptized and believes all the Church teaches and believes in the Church - and who commits the mortal sins of heresy will be forgiven of those sins in the Sacrament of Penance if he wants to repent of those sins. Indeed,  the Church urges all Catholics who fall into whatever mortal sin, including the sin of heresy, to get to confession because they must go to confession if they want to repent and be forgiven.

The problem is, as PPXII said, the nature of the sins of heresy. Due to the nature of this sin it will be very unlikely for the heretic to even think about seeking forgiveness.

This is just basic Catholic truth, if it does not make sense to you then the truth does not make sense to you.
:facepalm: Says the guy who is literally arguing that heretics are still inside the Church. To be inside the Church is to be Catholic, what I originally said still stands.

You need to go think a little more thoroughly about what you're saying
"Be not therefore solicitous for tomorrow; for the morrow will be solicitous for itself. Sufficient for the day is the evil thereof." [Matt. 6:34]

"In all thy works remember thy last end, and thou shalt never sin." [Ecclus. 7:40]

"A holy man continueth in wisdom as the sun: but a fool is changed as the moon." [Ecclus. 27:12]


Offline Stubborn

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Manifest Heretics in the external forum are required to make an abjuration of heresy before they can be admitted back to the Sacraments.  Those who commit heresy in the internal forum (e.g. occult heretics) can simply go to Confession.  In terms of membership in the Church, there's a huge difference  between a manifest heretic and an occult heretic.  Occult heresy, as per St. Robert Bellarmine, does not sever from the Church, whereas manifest heresy does.
Another Ladism used in desperation to maintain a vacant chair.

The Abjuration of Heresy is used primarily for adult converts seeking to enter the Church prior to their baptism or conditional baptism. Otherwise, it is not a requirement - unless specifically required by the official censure itself, or the pope or bishop or confessor requires it. Look it up.

A public abjuration may (or may not) be the prudent thing to do, but it is not the law, nor is a public abjuration found anywhere in the sacrament of penance's formula for absolution.   
"But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

Offline Stubborn

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:facepalm: Says the guy who is literally arguing that heretics are still inside the Church. To be inside the Church is to be Catholic, what I originally said still stands.

You need to go think a little more thoroughly about what you're saying
So knowing that only Catholics can use the sacrament of confession, can Catholics guilty of the mortal sin of heresy and want to repent go to confession or not?

This is not a trick question, it is actually a VERY basic question that any 8 year old Catholic could answer in the blink of an eye. But because you know that the answer is completely against the whole idea of sedeism, you will find it all but impossible to give the true and simple answer. And also, I would love to be proven wrong on this.

In case of replies, I'll be back in the morning.
"But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

Offline DigitalLogos

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So knowing that only Catholics can use the sacrament of confession, can Catholics guilty of the mortal sin of heresy and want to repent go to confession or not?

This is not a trick question, it is actually a VERY basic question that any 8 year old Catholic could answer in the blink of an eye. But because you know that the answer is completely against the whole idea of sedeism, you will find it all but impossible to give the true and simple answer. And also, I would love to be proven wrong on this.

In case of replies, I'll be back in the morning.
Heretics are outside of the Church until they repent (i.e. repudiate their errors and convert). I don't see how I ever said that wasn't the case. You're trying to twist my position into a contradiction where one doesn't exist.

You know you're wrong, that's why you're resorting to insulting my intelligence. Go right ahead. I'm not the one holding to a contradictory position here like the heretical and schismatic R&R position you hold.
"Be not therefore solicitous for tomorrow; for the morrow will be solicitous for itself. Sufficient for the day is the evil thereof." [Matt. 6:34]

"In all thy works remember thy last end, and thou shalt never sin." [Ecclus. 7:40]

"A holy man continueth in wisdom as the sun: but a fool is changed as the moon." [Ecclus. 27:12]


Offline Ladislaus

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You're just desperate to maintain a vacant chair.

No, I'm just capable of reading English.  You're the one who butchers Pius XII to say the exact opposite of what he teaches ... in a desperate attempt to save your heretical brand of R&R.  Heresy tends to do that ... wreak havoc on your rational faculties, which are clearly impaired.

Offline augustineeens

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Catholics who are bad willed heretics

When will you get it through your thick head that there is no such thing as a "Catholic heretic"? If a Catholic commits the sin of heresy, he ceases to be a Catholic and loses his membership in the Church!

Pope Innocent III, Eius exemplo, Dec. 18, 1208: “By the heart we believe and by the mouth we confess the one Church, not of heretics, but the Holy Roman, Catholic, and Apostolic Church outside of which we believe that no one is saved.”

You don't confess the one Church, not of heretics, therefore the logical conclusion is that you yourself are a heretic!

Pope Pius XII, Mystici Corporis Christi (# 22), June 29, 1943, addressed to the universal Church: “Actually only those are to be included as members of the Church who have received the laver of regeneration and profess the true faith…”

You hold that a manifest heretic can be a member of the Church!

If someone repents of their heresy, and accepts the Catholic Faith again, then they are once again a Catholic and can be absolved with the sacrament of Penance. They may even be justified before receiving the sacrament, through perfect contrition. That is not to say a heretic can receive the sacraments. If he renounces his heresy, then he is no longer a heretic. This is so basic that a five year old could grasp it. It shows how bad-will and obstinacy in error can completely blind someone's intellect.

Offline Ladislaus

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When will you get it through your thick head that there is no such thing as a "Catholic heretic"? If a Catholic commits the sin of heresy, he ceases to be a Catholic and loses his membership in the Church!

To lose membership in the Church the heresy must be manifest.  Occult sin of heresy does not exclude one from membership in the Church ... according to St. Robert Bellarmine.

I’ve long ago stopped arguing with Stubborn about this issue.  His mind is so warped that the logic is too badly twisted and can’t be unraveled.

Among other things, he holds that the Magisterium is inerrant, but only because when there’s error it’s no longer Magisterium.  So he turns the inerrancy of the Magisterium into a tautology.  He defines Magisterium as only the Traditional teaching, so that the Magisterium is always Traditional.  It’s mind-boggling in its insanity.  So I’ve stopped wasting my time debating him.  Heresy has warped his brain.


Offline Stubborn

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Heretics are outside of the Church until they repent (i.e. repudiate their errors and convert). I don't see how I ever said that wasn't the case. You're trying to twist my position into a contradiction where one doesn't exist.

You know you're wrong, that's why you're resorting to insulting my intelligence. Go right ahead. I'm not the one holding to a contradictory position here like the heretical and schismatic R&R position you hold.
I really was hoping that you would simply answer the question, instead, look ^^ what you reply with.

 

"But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

Offline DecemRationis

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I’ve long ago stopped arguing with Stubborn about this issue.  His mind is so warped that the logic is too badly twisted and can’t be unraveled.

Among other things, he holds that the Magisterium is inerrant, but only because when there’s error it’s no longer Magisterium.  So he turns the inerrancy of the Magisterium into a tautology.  He defines Magisterium as only the Traditional teaching, so that the Magisterium is always Traditional.  It’s mind-boggling in its insanity.  So I’ve stopped wasting my time debating him.  Heresy has warped his brain.

This is so richly ironic, Lad. 

Look, with a simple change from "Magisterium" to "Church/Magisterium" (but you could also leave it as Magisterium), and "inerrant" and "Traditional teaching" to "indefectible":


Quote
Among other things, he holds that the [Church/Magisterium] is [indefectible], but only because when there’s error it’s no longer [the Church/Magsiterium].  So he turns the [indefectibility] of the [Church/Magisterium] into a tautology.  He defines [the Church/Magisterium] as only [indefectible (capable of inerrant teaching)], so that the [Church/Magisterium] is always [indefectible] It’s mind-boggling in its insanity.  So I’ve stopped wasting my time debating him.  Heresy has warped his brain.

Of course, unlike Stubborn, who places the Magisterium in the Revelation of God to the Church through Scripture and Tradition, which the pope is to teach and defend, you place the Magisterium in the pope and the bishops in union with him - for you they are the Church/Magisterium. So when they teach error to the world in their ordinary Magisterium, the Magisterium teaches error.

Let's paraphrase that a bit: you hold that John XXXIII (perhaps not him), Paul VI, JPII, Benedict XVI and Francis - all elected by the cardinals of the Church according to the laid down procedures of the Church -do not teach as the Magisterium despite their lawful elections because the Magisterium can't teach error its official, Magisterial capacity, and they do.

So, whenever a pope comes along who teaches error he can't be pope because, well, he teaches error, and popes can't teach error.

Did you say something about tautology, Lad?

I suggest investing in a big mirror and saying your morning prayers in front of it. 


Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

Apoc 17:17 For God hath given into their hearts to do that which pleaseth him: that they give their kingdom to the beast, till the words of God be fulfilled.

Offline Ladislaus

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So Decem had adopted the same insane heretical stupidity as Stubborn ... where the Magisterium isn’t known a priori based on the authority of the teacher and his intent to teach, but rather discerned a posterior by people like Stubborn and Decem ... once they’ve determined that a particular teaching is in conformity with Tradition, effectively making themselves into the Magisterium.  This is rich.


Offline Ladislaus

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Absolutely unbelievable :facepalm:

DL, you’re right.  These people have lost the faith.  They’re manifest heretics outside the Church.  We’re no longer talking about material heresy here, since this error uproots the Magisterium as the proximate rule of faith, replacing it with their private judgment.  When heresy guts the formal motive of faith, it’s formal heresy.

Offline Stubborn

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When will you get it through your thick head that there is no such thing as a "Catholic heretic"? If a Catholic commits the sin of heresy, he ceases to be a Catholic and loses his membership in the Church!

Pope Innocent III, Eius exemplo, Dec. 18, 1208: “By the heart we believe and by the mouth we confess the one Church, not of heretics, but the Holy Roman, Catholic, and Apostolic Church outside of which we believe that no one is saved.”

You don't confess the one Church, not of heretics, therefore the logical conclusion is that you yourself are a heretic!

Pope Pius XII, Mystici Corporis Christi (# 22), June 29, 1943, addressed to the universal Church: “Actually only those are to be included as members of the Church who have received the laver of regeneration and profess the true faith…”

You hold that a manifest heretic can be a member of the Church!

If someone repents of their heresy, and accepts the Catholic Faith again, then they are once again a Catholic and can be absolved with the sacrament of Penance. They may even be justified before receiving the sacrament, through perfect contrition. That is not to say a heretic can receive the sacraments. If he renounces his heresy, then he is no longer a heretic. This is so basic that a five year old could grasp it. It shows how bad-will and obstinacy in error can completely blind someone's intellect.
I hold as a teaching of the Church that a Catholic who has fallen into mortal sin is exactly that, a Catholic who has fallen into mortal sin. 

I hold as a teaching of the Church that heresy, schism and apostacy are mortal sins. You adulterate this teaching in order to maintain the sede narrative.

I hold as a teaching of the Church that a Catholic who has fallen into the mortal sin of adultery, or murder, or heresy and any/every other mortal sin is a Catholic in mortal sin. You deny this teaching in order to maintain the sede narrative.

I hold as a teaching of the Church that no matter which mortal sin a Catholic is guilty of, there is only one way to be certainly absolved from that mortal sin, namely, the sacrament of penance. You adulterate this teaching in order to maintain the sede narrative.

I hold as a teaching of the Church that one who is not a Catholic cannot receive the sacraments. You are afraid to agree with this teaching because doing so obliterates the sede narrative.

You attempt to circuмvent these last two by installing your own rules, that of first making an act of perfect contrition, as if perfect contrition is a given - when even the penitent does not know if he achieved perfect contrition.

This rule of yours is NO in that it denies the teaching of the Church that even should one make a perfect act of contrition and the sin is forgiven, that person must still confess their sin in their next Confession - precisely because the penitent does not know if he achieved perfect contrition. One who is not a Catholic cannot receive the sacrament of penance - even if they were able to achieve an act of perfect contrition before hand.

Note: I realize that this is an exercise in futility.
"But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

Offline Stubborn

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Absolutely unbelievable :facepalm:

DL, you’re right.  These people have lost the faith.  They’re manifest heretics outside the Church.  We’re no longer talking about material heresy here, since this error uproots the Magisterium as the proximate rule of faith, replacing it with their private judgment.  When heresy guts the formal motive of faith, it’s formal heresy.

You're just desperate to maintain a vacant chair. Same o same o.

You are making PPXII to say what he does not say - you have him saying: "For no other sin, however grave it may be, is such as of its own nature to sever a man from the Body of the Church, as does schism or heresy or apostasy."

But that is not what he said. He said "For not every sin, however grave it may be..." Now, you, the great wind bag, purport to be a knowledgeable brainiac, so the question (you will never answer) is - in context, what does "For not every sin" mean?

This is absolutely astonishing that Lad twists Pius XII into saying the exact opposite of what he was actually teaching.
"But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

Offline Stubborn

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This is so richly ironic, Lad.

Look, with a simple change from "Magisterium" to "Church/Magisterium" (but you could also leave it as Magisterium), and "inerrant" and "Traditional teaching" to "indefectible":


Of course, unlike Stubborn, who places the Magisterium in the Revelation of God to the Church through Scripture and Tradition, which the pope is to teach and defend, you place the Magisterium in the pope and the bishops in union with him - for you they are the Church/Magisterium. So when they teach error to the world in their ordinary Magisterium, the Magisterium teaches error.

Let's paraphrase that a bit: you hold that John XXXIII (perhaps not him), Paul VI, JPII, Benedict XVI and Francis - all elected by the cardinals of the Church according to the laid down procedures of the Church -do not teach as the Magisterium despite their lawful elections because the Magisterium can't teach error its official, Magisterial capacity, and they do.

So, whenever a pope comes along who teaches error he can't be pope because, well, he teaches error, and popes can't teach error.

Did you say something about tautology, Lad?

I suggest investing in a big mirror and saying your morning prayers in front of it.
Meh, let them keep running in circles within their conundrum. After all, if we looked at all theology through the lens of a vacant chair, we would think just like they do. 

I think these words of Fr. Wathen as regards sedeism are accurate:
"...Its adherents are people who cannot think straight because they are anemic spirits. The disorder which the Conciliar Revolution has brought on the Church is too tragic a thing for them to bear psychologically, so that they have had to develop this subterfuge. Were it possible to communicate with them, we would say to these benighted souls: If you truly believe that the Church and the pope are infallible, why must you always be proving it? If the Church is indefectible, it will be so without any dialectic of yours. If these are the doctrines of the Church, the only One Who will prove them true is Christ the Lord..."


"But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse