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Author Topic: Crux of the Pope Problem  (Read 8062 times)

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Online Stubborn

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Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
« Reply #45 on: May 02, 2018, 10:54:57 AM »
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  • And he has no idea that he just succeeded in nothing. His brainwashing is impenetrable.
    Well that's not so AES, I succeeded in helping whoever is on the fence in this matter that might happen across this thread, that is my intention.

    For the record, I had parents, priests and other authorities who kept me away from all brainwashing while you were out novus ordoing it up - I'm not the one who's been brainwashed.

    One example is me and my family entirely disowning +Sanborn due to his slanderous and heretical sermons from the pulpit and in private. Meanwhile, some years later poor lad walks in and gets sedebrainwashed from studying under the same +Sanborn. SMH.   
    "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 RomanTheo

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #46 on: May 02, 2018, 11:05:50 AM »
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  • I'd like to see where the Church teaches this in bold. We are to avoid heretics but they cannot be our shepherds because it's dogmatic that heretics are not Catholics and implied that our Shepherds must be Catholic. It's not even really implied.
    This is your problem. You obstinately hold the heretical notion that the ravenous wolves can be our shepherds simultaneously.


    Bellarmine: “Matthias Illyricus, in his book on the election of bishops, collects nearly all of the arguments thought up by Luther, Brentius, Calvin, and the rest.  In the first place, he offers six arguments from the Word of God. (…) The second argument is the following: According to John 10, the Lord commands us not to hear the voice of strangers.  Again, in Matthew 7, He commands us to flee from false prophets; and, in his epistle to the Galatians, the Apostle commands that those who teach anything besides the Gospel be anathematized: therefore, the Christian people has a divine mandate by which it is obliged to seek out and call to themselves good pastors, and to reject those that are pernicious.
     
    “I respond that the people indeed ought to discern a true from a false prophet, but not by any other rule than by diligently attending to whether he that is preaching says things contrary to those which were said by his predecessors, or else contrary to those things which are preached by the other legitimate pastors, and especially the Apostolic See, which is the principal Church; … Moreover, it should be observed that, on the one hand, the people, by the rule which we have laid down, can indeed discern a true prophet from a false one; but, on the other hand, they cannot, for all that, depose the false prophet, if he be a bishop, and substitute another in his place.  For the Lord and the Apostle command only that the people not hear false prophets, and not that they depose them.  And certainly the practice of the Church has always been thus, that heretical bishops be deposed by bishops’ councils or by the supreme pontiffs.”


    Heretic bishops are not to be listened to by the faithful, but they can only be removed from office by a council or pope.  


    Online Stubborn

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #47 on: May 02, 2018, 11:44:31 AM »
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  • Wrong. You quoted a Passage of Scripture that has nothing to do at all with heresy and what I was talking about. Wrong. I received nothing from the NO. You received brainwashing from the SSPX.
    I see, God condemning the pastors has nothing to do with your error saying "We are to avoid heretics but they cannot be our shepherds because it's dogmatic that heretics are not Catholics and implied that our Shepherds must be Catholic".

    Do you suppose your life novus ordoing it up helped form you for the good in some way, while my years serving priests (and Masses) in basements, halls, and the SSPX was something I should have avoided? What should I have done, novus ordo it up like you? Is that what you recommend to everyone in order to help form their thinking like yours?

    You silly sedes, just when I thought I'd heard it all. LOL
    "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

    Online Stubborn

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #48 on: May 02, 2018, 11:47:54 AM »
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  • Yes it is, idiot.  It's classified as Discipline (praxis) because it's not Doctrine.  This isn't Novus Ordo, you blithering moron.
    Sorry you brainwashed Novus Ordo theologian scholar you! It is not classified as a discipline because it is LITURGY and it is not universal.

    Let me know if I need to explain it to you again, I might consider it. No guarantees mind you, but I might.
    "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

    Online Stubborn

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #49 on: May 02, 2018, 12:14:11 PM »
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  • HAHA. You have no idea what you are talking about. How is hardly receiving any religious instruction (me) compare to receiving a lifetime of false religious instruction (you).
    Well at least now I know where I went wrong, I should went faithless and NOing with you, then I'd be a sede just like you.

    See how that works?
    "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 Ladislaus

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #50 on: May 02, 2018, 01:01:54 PM »
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  • “I respond that the people indeed ought to discern a true from a false prophet, but not by any other rule than by diligently attending to whether he that is preaching says things contrary to those which were said by his predecessors, or else contrary to those things which are preached by the other legitimate pastors, and especially the Apostolic See, which is the principal Church; … Moreover, it should be observed that, on the one hand, the people, by the rule which we have laid down, can indeed discern a true prophet from a false one; but, on the other hand, they cannot, for all that, depose the false prophet, if he be a bishop, and substitute another in his place.  For the Lord and the Apostle command only that the people not hear false prophets, and not that they depose them.  And certainly the practice of the Church has always been thus, that heretical bishops be deposed by bishops’ councils or by the supreme pontiffs.”


    Heretic bishops are not to be listened to by the faithful, but they can only be removed from office by a council or pope.  

    Sounds like sedeprivationism, akin to Father Chazal's position, to me.  This does not say that they should be listened to when they're teaching the truth, but that they are not to be listened to when they don't teach the truth, i.e., they have lost teaching authority entirely while remaining materially in possession of the office.  They remain in office to the extent that they cannot be replaced except by a Pope or Council, i.e. remain in material possession of the See but deprived of authority.  They are to be rejected and fled from ... just not deposed.

    Offline Pax Vobis

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #51 on: May 02, 2018, 01:56:53 PM »
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  • Quote
    Sounds like sedeprivationism, akin to Father Chazal's position, to me.  This does not say that they should be listened to when they're teaching the truth, but that they are not to be listened to when they don't teach the truth, i.e., they have lost teaching authority entirely while remaining materially in possession of the office.  They remain in office to the extent that they cannot be replaced except by a Pope or Council, i.e. remain in material possession of the See but deprived of authority.  They are to be rejected and fled from ... just not deposed.

     i.e., they have lost teaching authority entirely while remaining materially in possession of the office.
     i.e. remain in material possession of the See but deprived of authority.

    The above 2 comments you added are not part of +Bellarmine's commentary.  You are adding things to what he said.

    +Bellarmine clearly says that the faithful have ONE duty:  "diligently attending to whether he that is preaching says things contrary to those which were said by his predecessors, or else contrary to those things which are preached by the other legitimate pastors."

    +Bellarmine does not say "ignore everything he says because he doesn't have any teaching authority".  He says to judge whether or not what he says is consistant with previous orthodox popes (i.e. Tradition).  This implies that if such a pope were to teach something orthodox, then the faithful should accept it.


    Online Stubborn

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #52 on: May 02, 2018, 02:17:52 PM »
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  • Oh yeah? How'd you get from a to b there? I learned my whole faith from the Popes, Councils, Catechisms, Saints; all from before V2. You learned it from SSPX priests and Fr. Wathen. Do you want to know how I know that with certainty? 1) Fr. Wathen is the only person you ever cite to prove yourself and the only person to come up with such nonsense 2) you're "doctrines" are easily refutable with Catholic Dogma. Your beliefs were not present at all before V2. They are a poor and erroneous explanation of the current situation, and demonstrably so. The Pope is the head of the Catholic Church and a false "church" at the same time? That's horrible and heretical, not Catholic. A manifest heretic can be Pope? That's also heretical, not Catholic. You cannot prove these doctrines of yours from any Magisterial Teachings. The opposite is true for me.
    Ok, so you don't see how that works.

    Fwiw, I never even heard of Fr. Wathen until about 2005/2006. When I read the things he wrote, I read many of the exact same things I was taught in my youth, the same teachings that were handed down to me since I was a child. By me quoting him, it's as if I am quoting at least dozens of other expelled-for-keeping-the-faith priests who were never recorded nor were they authors. Not that any of this matters to such a scholar who learned from popes, such as yourself.

    So I really don't wonder why you first, have no faith and second, have no understanding - two traits inherent in sedes, as well as all who've yet to purge the errors from themselves that they were raised in and saturated with prior to discovering tradition. So feel free to refute the truth all you want, but until you accept the entire truth, you will remain a confused sede. That's how that works.

     

     
    "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 Pax Vobis

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #53 on: May 02, 2018, 03:23:08 PM »
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  • They are only deprived of authority because they are teaching contrary to Tradition.  If they changed their teaching to be in accordance with Tradition, their teaching authority would return.  You are assuming they lose this authority "from now on".  +Bellarmine does not say this at all.

    Offline RomanTheo

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #54 on: May 02, 2018, 03:23:20 PM »
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  •  
    An Even Seven: “I see you still don't understand the position of those you think to be refuting. We are not deposing anyone. We are simply recognizing that those "who teach anything besides the Gospel [are] anathematized". Straight from your St. Bellarmine quote.”
     
    Roman Theo: You are not simply recognizing that those who teach another Gospel are to be anathema (which is a statement to be believed, not a fact to be recognized), you are instead judging that a pope has lost his office for heresy and declaring it to be so. 
     
    Furthermore, the teaching of St. Paul does not support your position, for he says if one preaches another Gospel he is to be anathema – “let him be anathema” (anathema means excommunication).  What he means is such a person is to be excommunicated by the Church.  Not that he has already been excommunicated or lost his office.   
     
    Commenting on this teaching of St. Paul, Cardinal Tommaso de Vio wrote, “anyone, even an angel of heaven, would be anathematized by God if he preached against the gospel of Christ. This is to proclaim him to be separated from God and worthy of the Church’s excommunication by men. This is confirmed by Saint Thomas … For it is obvious that the divine word establishes that they have to be excommunicated by the Church, not (for this would be to contradict itself) that they had been excommunicated by it.”
     
    The teaching of St. Paul that a heretic is to be anathema (to be excommunicated by the Church) does give you the authority to declare that a pope you believe to be a heretic has lost his office.
     
    An Even Seven: St. Bellarmine also says: "Finally, the Holy Fathers teach unanimously not only that heretics are outside of the Church, but also that they are ‘ipso facto’ deprived of all ecclesiastical jurisdiction and dignity.” Ipso Facto means by that very fact. By the very fact that they are heretics, they are removed and deprived of all jurisdiction. This is because those who are no longer Catholic, through heresy, cannot preside over Catholics.”
     
    Roman Theo: By the fact that the Church has determined them to be heretics they lose jurisdiction. That is what Bellarmine meant, as can be seen from what he wrote a few paragraphs earlier (quoted already), as well as what Cardinal Tommaso de Vio wrote: “the ipso facto loss of honor and power of jurisdiction is understood to the extent that they are heretics on their part … and are heretics according to the Church’s judgment. This is how we should interpret St. Thomas and others who speak of this.”
     
     
    An Even Seven: Pope St. Celestine, quoted by St. Robert Bellarmine: "The authority of Our Apostolic See has determined that the bishop, cleric, or simple Christian who had been deposed or excommunicated by Nestorius or his followers, after the latter began to preach heresy shall not be considered deposed or excommunicated. For he who had defected from the faith with such preachings, cannot depose or remove anyone whatsoever."
     
    Roman Theo: Two comments.
     
    First, Pope Celestine declared that the excommunications imposed by Nestorius were null and void, in the same way that the excommunication imposed by Pope Liberius against Athanasius was null and void. But that does not mean Nestorius had already been cut off from the Church for heresy and lost his office.  Simply because a specific juridical act of a superior is later declared null does not mean the superior lacked authority when he imposed it.  This is clear from the fact that the excommunication of Athanasius was later declared null, even though no one disputes that Pope Liberius possess papal authority when he imposed it. Possessing the authority of the office is one thing; the acts of authority - which can be just or unjust, valid or invalid - are another.  We will come back to this point in a moment.
     
     
    Second, the fact that Nestorius was not cut off from the Church and did not lose his office before he was judged to be a heretic by the Church is proven from the facts of the case.  A year before Nestorius was finally deposed by the Council of Ephesus, he had already been issued two “formal corrections” by the Patriarch of Alexandria, and had been judged to be a heretic by the Pope at a local council held in Rome.  Following the council, Pope Celestine issued a third and final warning to Nestorius, giving him 10 days to renounces his heresy, and declaring that if he did not do so he would becast off from the communion of the universal Catholic Church.”
     
    Here is an excerpt from the letter Pope Celestine wsnt to Nestorius after he had been found guilty of heresy.
     
     
    Letter of Pope Celestine to Nestorius: “Behold now what sentence we are obliged to give you; behold the fruits of your novelties. (…) How does it happen that a bishop preaches to the people words which damage the reverence owed to the Virgin Birth?  It is not right, that blasphemous words against God should trouble the purity of the ancient Faith.  Was there ever anyone who, adding to or subtracting something from the Faith, was not judged worthy of anathema?  For those things which were completely and manifestly handed down to us by the Apostles do not call for addition or subtraction.
     
    “Therefore, although our brother Cyril asserts that he has already addressed you with a second letter, I want you to understand, after his first and second correction, and this of ours, which already amounts to three, that you will have been completely cut off from the whole college and congregation of Christians, unless you quickly correct the things that have been badly said, and unless you return to that Way which Christ testifies Himself to be (Jn 14:6).  Know plainly, then, that this is Our sentence: that, unless you preach concerning God our Christ what the Church of Rome, and of Alexandria, and the whole Catholic Church holds—even as the most holy church of the city of Constantinople held perfectly up until you—and, with a clear written profession, given within ten days (which are to be numbered from the day on which you receive notice of this), you repudiate this perfidious novelty, which strives to separate what the venerable Scripture joins; you are cast off from the communion of the universal Catholic Church.

    Even though Nestorius preached blasphemous words that made him “worthy of anathema;” was given two formal warnings by the Patriarch of Alexandria; was judged to be a heretic by the Pope, and then given a third warning by the Pope himself.  Nevertheless, he was considered by the pope to have remained in communion with the Church, and given 10 days to renounce his heresy before being “cast off from the communion of the universal Catholic Church.”
     
    Next let’s review the letter from Pope Celestine to the clergy of Constantinople, in which he tells them the excommunications pronounced against them by Nestorius were null.  This letter was written after the one quoted above – after he had been judged a heretic by the Pope.
     
    Pope Celestine to the Clergy of Constantinople: “(…) What hope is there for the flock, when its very pastor shows himself to be a wolf, and so invades the sheep that he attacks each of them?  … your faith ought to reject his impious disputations with horror, so that, being vigilant in Christ, you may be certain of how to discern what is food and what is poison.  Remain constant in the things that you have learned from the mouths of your previous pastors … He (Nestorius) not only fails to treat the wounded, but wounds those who have been given care; he not only fails to lift up those have fallen, but even tries to strike down those who are standing; (…) For these sort are always to be cut off who, troubling the mind of the Christian people, and overturning the Gospels in favor of their own private judgment, cannot bear fruit before God. ….  Deservedly, if he persists, he will hear from us the words of Samuel, which he, the priest, once spoke to Saul: 'The Lord will reject you so that you no longer rule over Israel' (1 Kings 15:25).”
     
    Let’s pause here.  The Pope tells the faithful to remain constant in what they learned from their previous pastors, and to reject the impious disputations of Nestorius.  But he then says only if Nestorius persists (beyond the 10 days he was given) will he be told that he no longer rules over Israel (the Church).  This shows that just as the Pope did not yet consider Nestorius to be “cast off” from communion with the Church, neither did he consider him to have lost is office as "ruler" of the New Israel.  He continues by addressing the excommunications pronounced by Nestorius:
     
    Celestine: “Whoever among you have been ejected from the church by Nestorius have the example of the blessed and still recent memory of Athanasius, of the church of Alexandria, a most prudent priest.  Who does not derive some consolation from considering what he endured?  Who cannot take him as a model of fortitude?  (…) Hence, no Christian ought to lament it when a temporal exile is [unjustly] inflicted on him, for none of them is an exile from God.  (…) Nevertheless, lest his sentence seem to carry weight even for a time … the authority of our See has openly sanctioned that no one, whether a bishop, a cleric, or a Christian of any profession, who has been expelled from his place or excommunicated by Nestorius or his partners, from the time that they began to preach such things, should seem to be expelled or excommunicated; for all of these both were and have remained in Our communion even until now; for he who was wavering by preaching such things was unable to expel or remove anyone.”
     
    All this shows is that the Pope overturned the excommunications imposed by Nestorius – not because Nestorius had already been “cast off” off from communion with the Church and lost his office for heresy, but because the excommunications imposed by him were unjust, and “he who was wavering by preaching such things was unable to expel or remove anyone.”
     
    One last point.

    To refute the sedevacantist position that one can sever communion with a pope or bishop whom they personally judge to be a heretic, we will read a portion of a letter of St. Cyril, the Patriarch of Alexandria, to the Pope.  In this letter, Cyril refused to sever communion with Nestorius without the Pope's approval, even though Nestorius had persisted in his heresy after two warnings from Cyril. 
     
    Cyril to Pope Celestine: “I have written a second letter to him, which contained, in the manner of a brief summary, an exposition of the orthodox faith, exhorting and admonishing him lest he think and speak otherwise.  But yet again I accomplished nothing.  For even to the present time he still adheres pertinaciously to what he originally devised, nor does he cease to teach perversities. … What, then, shall we do, since we can neither induce him to come back to his senses nor persuade him to abstain from giving such sermons?  And the people of Constantinople are corrupted more and more day by day, even though they are not happy with what is going on and await the help of orthodox teachers. (…) But we do not publicly separate ourselves from his communion before indicating these things to your HolinessDeign, therefore, to declare to us what seems good to You, and tell us whether we should be in communion with him for some time, or whether we can freely declare that no one should be in communion with one who thinks and teaches such things.
     
    The Patriarch of Alexandria, and future Doctor of the Church, refused to sever communion with Nestorius on his own authority, as great as it was.And what was the response of Pope Celestine?   He replied by saying Cyril should remain in communion with the Nestorius for the time being in the hope that he would be converted, and only told Cyril to inform Nestorius that “if he persists” he will be cut off from the Church. 
     
    That’s the history of the case of Nestorius.  None of it supports your claim that heresy causes the ipso facto loss of office before the heretic is judged by the Church, or that we must separate ourselves from a pope or bishops that we personally judge to be a heretic.  On the contrary, the case of Nestorius demolishes the sedevacantist position and directly contradicts both of these sedevacantist errors.

    Online Stubborn

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #55 on: May 02, 2018, 04:50:20 PM »
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  • You keep proving my point. You learned from the SSPX religion and have been brainwashed. It's why you can't prove your beliefs from Catholic Teaching, only priests who were expelled [for keeping the faith]. Please think about that.
    I corrected your crazy post - please think about *that*.

    I don't really fault you - not my business or worry either way - but you need to know the truth regardless of whether you accept it or not. You will not be judged on whether or not you guessed the legitimacy or illegitimacy of the pope correctly, hopefully you are not so far gone that you can agree with me on this.

    For whatever it's worth, I remember a sermon given by, I think, one of the newly ordained SSPX priests now a sede bishop, perhaps +Dolan, perhaps not, I honestly cannot recall, but it is entirely relevant. From memory some +40 years ago and prior to the SSPX priest losing the faith, it went something like this:



    St. Vincent of Lerins (died 445) taught this concerning the way we discern between heresy and orthodoxy. St. Vincent says, that which is of the true faith, is that which has been believed by all of the faithful, all of the time.

    He said that any idea (sedeism) that has not been held as a part of Catholic doctrine through all the generations of the Church by the vast majority of the faithful, is not Catholic.

    This is to say that at any given time, an heretical idea (sedeism) can be widely held even by the vast majority of the faithful. That an heretical idea can be shown to have been wrongly held as a Catholic truth by a small group within the Church at any given time, even all through the Church's history, even during a number of generations of history, and that currently, modernism (sedesim) is that heresy. If you read up on this saint, you will find this to be accurate.



    The teaching of St. Vincent as I learned it, is the exact same teaching of Pope Pius IX, which is exactly what Fr. Wathen echoes, which is what I learned, initially from a newly ordained SSPX priest +40 years ago. Do you see how THAT works?

    FWIW, Fr. Wathen has a sermon saying pretty much the same thing as +Dolan(?), and if I can ever find it, I would post it for your edification if you would agree to listen to it. No worries, I'm confident there is not much chance of that happening.

    Although at the time (mid 70s?) he was speaking about the NO and all the new liberalism raging throughout the world, the same concept is to be applied to sedeism. Sedeism is held only by a small minority of the faithful, was never even invented till after V2, it therefore was not believed by any of the faithful at all, certainly not for all of the time. Applying sedeism to St. Vincent's and pope Pius IX's teachings, sedeism is not Catholic.

    From where I come from, truer words were never spoken. From where you sit, St. Vincent, pope Pius IX and Fr. Wathen are only  brainwashed idiots, it was +Dolan(?) who ended up figuring out the real truth.

     
    "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 Ladislaus

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #56 on: May 04, 2018, 08:06:47 AM »
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  • My belief is that each of these false claimants have lost membership in the Church due to manifest heresy before their supposed election to the Papacy. This would be like the Dalai Lama being elected Pope. Neither were Catholic which is a prerequisite for election.

    I believe that there elections were rigged and not legitimate to begin with.  Passage below deals with Simony in particular, but the principle would apply to other invalidating circuмstances in an election.

    Quote
    "A simoniacal election of this kind is never at any time to be made valid by a subsequent enthronement or the passage of time, or even by the act of adoration or obedience of all the cardinals. It shall be lawful for each and all of the cardinals,...as well as for all the clergy and the Roman people,... to withdraw without penalty and at any time from obedience and loyalty to the person so elected even if he has been enthroned (while they themselves, notwithstanding this, remain fully committed to the faith of the Roman church and to obedience towards a future Roman pontiff entering office in accordance with the canons) and to avoid him as a magician, a heathen, a publican and a heresiarch."
    Pope Julius II, Council of Lateran V. 1513

    Offline songbird

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #57 on: May 04, 2018, 07:14:39 PM »
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  • Is the New Order mass heretical?  If you answer yes, ok.  Now, are those who say the New Order mass, are they not heretical then?  If the N.O. is heretical, Christ is not present.  No life is brought to the people.  Is this not the same as Luther?  Heretical.  Not Catholic.  In order for a pope to be nominated, he must be catholic.  We have had anti-popes before, Vatican 1 defined "pope" and nomination.

    We did not depart ourselves from the "church " that Christ founded.  It was the clergy that broke from Christ.  The imposters who support Gov't and state, Marxists.

    We are the innocent, standing by, waiting for Christ and Out Lady to bring Peace.

    Offline RomanTheo

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #58 on: May 05, 2018, 01:52:00 PM »
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  • An Even Seven: I am not of the opinion that a Pope can lose his office due to heresy. … My belief is that each of these false claimants have lost membership in the Church due to manifest heresy before their supposed election to the Papacy. This would be like the Dalai Lama being elected Pope. Neither were Catholic which is a prerequisite for election.
     
    Roman Theo: That is absurd. The Dalai Lama is a public member of the Buddhist religion.  He’s an unbaptized infidel who has never claimed to be a Catholic, nor has the Church ever recognized him as a member of the Church.    The recent popes, on the other hand, were all professed Catholics who were publicly and legally recognized as members of the Church before their elections.  That suffices for them to be validly elected pope. And if you believe John XXIII was a public heretic before his election in 1958, your post factum judgment seven decades later is opposed to the judgment of Pope Pius XII (who elevated him to Cardinal in 1953) and the entire Church at the time.
     
    An Even Seven: Here's a chance to learn something: “Catholic Encyclopedia on Anathema …”
     
    Roman Theo: I have no idea why you provided the quotation from the Catholic Encyclopedia’s article on “anathema” in response to my statement that “anathema means excommunication,” since the quotation you cited confirms what I wrote.  And I’m surprised you didn’t already know that anathema is comparable to a major excommunication, as opposed to a minor excommunication (according to the former distinction), and that it was “pronounced chiefly against heretics”.  I’m glad fact-checking my statement gave you “a chance to learn” that, but I’m sure the more informed people here already knew it.
     
    An Even Seven:  It is not "By the fact that the Church has determined". That is not what Bellarmine said, not that it matters. Your false understanding makes the phrase ipso facto meaningless and not effectual. The fact that they are manifesting heresy severs them from the Church. It makes no sense otherwise. You are saying that a personal examination should precede. This is the opposite of ipso facto and erroneous.

    Roman Theo: You are confusing an ipso facto excommunication with an ipso facto deprivation.  The former is incurred the moment a person commits an act to which the penalty is attached (provided they are also guilty of a mortal sin).  Only a divine judgment is required to incur an ipso facto excommunication, but human judgment is required to incur an ipso facto deprivation (loss of jurisdiction), as Cardinal Tommaso de Vio explains:
     
    “[T]he power of jurisdiction is by man’s appointment: both giving it and taking it away belong to human judgment. … more is required to incur deprivation ipso facto, than to incur excommunication, since incurring the censure does not require a declaration, whereas incurring deprivation does, according to the canonists.”
     
    An Even Seven: BTW, your quote doesn't support what you said, it's not saying the Church has had proceedings and determined guilt, he's only saying that the Church judges that the person lost jurisdiction by the heresy itself

    Roman Theo: No, that’s not what the quotations say, nor is it was Bellarmine held. Jurisdiction is given by human judgment and taken away by human judgment.  In the case of a pope, it is given by God after the Cardinals agree, or “judge” that he should be pope. It the same way, it is not removed by God without the judgment of man:
    Bellarmine: “For Jurisdiction is certainly given to the Pontiff by God, but with the agreement of men [electors] as is obvious; because this man, who beforehand was not Pope, has from men that he would begin to be Pope.  Therefore, he is not removed by God unless it is through men. But a secret heretic cannot be judged by men…”
     
    Bellarmine does not support your position that God deprives a pope of his jurisdiction without man.  On the contrary, he explicitly states that a heretic pope “is not removed by God unless it is through men.” 
     
    I can already hear the objection: “a pope cannot be judged”.  Fortunately, Bellarmine answers that very objection in the next paragraph:
     
    Bellarmine: “The Third opinion is on another extreme, that the Pope is not and cannot be deposed either by secret or manifest heresy. Turrecremata in the aforementioned citation relates and refutes this opinion, and rightly so, for it is exceedingly improbable. Firstly, because that a heretical Pope can be judged is expressly held in the Canon, Si Papa, dist. 40, and with Innocent. And what is more, in the Fourth Council of Constantinople, Act 7, the acts of the Roman Council under Hadrian are recited, and in those it was contained that Pope Honorius appeared to be legally anathematized, because he had been convicted of heresy, the only reason where it is lawful for inferiors to judge superiors. … in the case of heresy, a Roman Pontiff can be judged.”
     
    Notice that he defends his position by saying heresy is the only case in which it is permitted for inferiors to judge superiors.   If the pope had already been deprived of his jurisdiction, he would no longer be the superior to the bishops who judged him. Having lost his jurisdiction, the former pope would be their inferior. This again proves that Bellarmine believed human judgment was required before an ipso facto loss of jurisdiction occurs. The 1917 and 1983 Codes of canon law teach the same, but that will have to be the subject of another post.

    I would also add that as long as the Pope remained superior to the other bishops, the judgment could not be a perfect judgment with coercive power, but only the lesser form of judgment needed to determine a fact.  "Judging and punishing" could only take places after the pope had ceased to be superior of the other bishops. 



    Offline Lighthouse

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    Re: Crux of the Pope Problem
    « Reply #59 on: May 06, 2018, 12:25:56 PM »
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  • An Even Seven: I am not of the opinion that a Pope can lose his office due to heresy. … My belief is that each of these false claimants have lost membership in the Church due to manifest heresy before their supposed election to the Papacy. This would be like the Dalai Lama being elected Pope. Neither were Catholic which is a prerequisite for election.

    Roman Theo: That is absurd. The Dalai Lama is a public member of the Buddhist religion.  He’s an unbaptized infidel who has never claimed to be a Catholic, nor has the Church ever recognized him as a member of the Church.    The recent popes, on the other hand, were all professed Catholics who were publicly and legally recognized as members of the Church before their elections.  That suffices for them to be validly elected pope. And if you believe John XXIII was a public heretic before his election in 1958, your post factum judgment seven decades later is opposed to the judgment of Pope Pius XII (who elevated him to Cardinal in 1953) and the entire Church at the time.

    An Even Seven: Here's a chance to learn something: “Catholic Encyclopedia on Anathema …”

    Roman Theo: I have no idea why you provided the quotation from the Catholic Encyclopedia’s article on “anathema” in response to my statement that “anathema means excommunication,” since the quotation you cited confirms what I wrote.  And I’m surprised you didn’t already know that anathema is comparable to a major excommunication, as opposed to a minor excommunication (according to the former distinction), and that it was “pronounced chiefly against heretics”.  I’m glad fact-checking my statement gave you “a chance to learn” that, but I’m sure the more informed people here already knew it.

    An Even Seven:  It is not "By the fact that the Church has determined". That is not what Bellarmine said, not that it matters. Your false understanding makes the phrase ipso facto meaningless and not effectual. The fact that they are manifesting heresy severs them from the Church. It makes no sense otherwise. You are saying that a personal examination should precede. This is the opposite of ipso facto and erroneous.

    Roman Theo: You are confusing an ipso facto excommunication with an ipso facto deprivation.  The former is incurred the moment a person commits an act to which the penalty is attached (provided they are also guilty of a mortal sin).  Only a divine judgment is required to incur an ipso facto excommunication, but human judgment is required to incur an ipso facto deprivation (loss of jurisdiction), as Cardinal Tommaso de Vio explains:

    “[T]he power of jurisdiction is by man’s appointment: both giving it and taking it away belong to human judgment. … more is required to incur deprivation ipso facto, than to incur excommunication, since incurring the censure does not require a declaration, whereas incurring deprivation does, according to the canonists.”

    An Even Seven: BTW, your quote doesn't support what you said, it's not saying the Church has had proceedings and determined guilt, he's only saying that the Church judges that the person lost jurisdiction by the heresy itself.

    Roman Theo: No, that’s not what the quotations say, nor is it was Bellarmine held. Jurisdiction is given by human judgment and taken away by human judgment.  In the case of a pope, it is given by God after the Cardinals agree, or “judge” that he should be pope. It the same way, it is not removed by God without the judgment of man:
    Bellarmine: “For Jurisdiction is certainly given to the Pontiff by God, but with the agreement of men [electors] as is obvious; because this man, who beforehand was not Pope, has from men that he would begin to be Pope.  Therefore, he is not removed by God unless it is through men. But a secret heretic cannot be judged by men…”

    Bellarmine does not support your position that God deprives a pope of his jurisdiction without man.  On the contrary, he explicitly states that a heretic pope “is not removed by God unless it is through men.”  

    I can already hear the objection: “a pope cannot be judged”.  Fortunately, Bellarmine answers that very objection in the next paragraph:

    Bellarmine: “The Third opinion is on another extreme, that the Pope is not and cannot be deposed either by secret or manifest heresy. Turrecremata in the aforementioned citation relates and refutes this opinion, and rightly so, for it is exceedingly improbable. Firstly, because that a heretical Pope can be judged is expressly held in the Canon, Si Papa, dist. 40, and with Innocent. And what is more, in the Fourth Council of Constantinople, Act 7, the acts of the Roman Council under Hadrian are recited, and in those it was contained that Pope Honorius appeared to be legally anathematized, because he had been convicted of heresy, the only reason where it is lawful for inferiors to judge superiors. … in the case of heresy, a Roman Pontiff can be judged.”

    Notice that he defends his position by saying heresy is the only case in which it is permitted for inferiors to judge superiors.   If the pope had already been deprived of his jurisdiction, he would no longer be the superior to the bishops who judged him. Having lost his jurisdiction, the former pope would be their inferior. This again proves that Bellarmine believed human judgment was required before an ipso facto loss of jurisdiction occurs. The 1917 and 1983 Codes of canon law teach the same, but that will have to be the subject of another post.

    I would also add that as long as the Pope remained superior to the other bishops, the judgment could not be a perfect judgment with coercive power, but only the lesser form of judgment needed to determine a fact.  "Judging and punishing" could only take places after the pope had ceased to be superior of the other bishops.
    RT, +Bellarmine is very precise and careful to set his arguments into context.  With your hodgepodge of unrelated and without citation quotes it is difficult to judge what you are trying to say. Are you working from your translation of the Latin, or could you cite an English translation and the translator?