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Defending the Papacy
« on: April 12, 2011, 09:52:36 PM »
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  • http://www.fatima.org/crusader/cr80/cr80pg08.asp

    Defending the Papacy
    Opposing the Sedevacantist Enterprise
    Part I — INTRODUCTION

    by Christopher A. Ferrara

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

           This essay refutes a thesis that has been advanced by a few Catholics as an explanation for the profound crisis of faith and discipline in the Catholic Church since the Second Vatican Council: the thesis of sedevacantism, a term derived from the Latin phrase for "empty seat".

           The proponents of the sedevacantist thesis generally agree that all the popes since 1958 — John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul I1, John Paul II, and now Benedict XVI — cannot be true popes because they are "manifest heretics" or because they approved harmful changes in the Church, which no true Pope would have done. To quote a leading sedevacantist spokesman:

           Traditional Catholics have tried to explain in various ways how the errors and evils of the officially-sanctioned Vatican II changes could have come from what appears to be the authority of an infallible Church. The sedevacantist position maintains that the only coherent explanation for this state of affairs is to conclude that, since error and evil cannot come from the authority of an indefectible and infallible Church, the ecclesiastics who promulgated these changes — from pope on down — at some point lost their office and authority through personal heresy.2

           As we can see, the basic proposition is inherently plausible if one accepts as true the premises that (a) the "errors and evils" of the "Vatican II changes" were actually imposed de jure on the Church by the Pope and his ecclesiastical subordinates, who acted in areas within the scope of the Church’s infallibility, and (b) the popes and other ecclesiastics involved in the "Vatican II changes" were manifestly guilty of the personal sin of heresy. For how could an infallible Church be fallible, or how could Catholic ecclesiastics, including the Pope, be Catholics if they are heretics?

    A Patent Absurdity

           That the premises, and thus the conclusions, are demonstrably false will be shown later. But even without such a demonstration, it must be stressed at the outset that the sedevacantist thesis is plainly untenable, because when all is said and done the thesis comes down to the following claim: that since 1958 the entire membership of the Catholic Church has been adhering to a series of impostor popes and a hierarchy of impostor bishops, except a few sedevacantists who alone have noticed what is "manifest" about these ecclesiastics — that they are all formal heretics. For the Church’s entire membership to adhere for nearly half a century to five consecutive heretical, impostor popes and an impostor episcopacy would make a mockery of the promises of Christ to His Church that "the gates of hell shall not prevail against it" (Matt. 16:18) and that He will be with His Church "all days unto the consummation of the world" (Matt. 28:20). Without the Pope at its head and bishops in communion with him, the visible Church would cease to exist, and Christ would have been made a liar.

           Granted, it may well be that the Church is ultimately reduced to a very tiny remnant by the time Antichrist appears and asserts himself. But that remnant will still have a Pope at its head and some number of bishops in communion with him. Otherwise that remnant would not be the Church, but a headless and diffuse "body of believers," just as the Protestants imagine the Church to be. Quite simply, if there is no Peter, there is no Church. As Pope Leo XIII taught in his monumental encyclical on the Church, Satis Cognitum: "It is clear that by the will and command of God the Church rests upon St. Peter, just as a building rests on its foundation. Now the proper nature of a foundation is to be a principle of cohesion for the various parts of the building. It must be the necessary condition of stability and strength. Remove it and the whole building falls."3

           Now of course there are interregnums between the death of a Pope and the election of his successor, during which the Church is temporarily without a Pope. But the sedevacantist thesis maintains that the last five elected popes have not been popes, and there is no end in sight to its claims of papal imposture and a vacant Chair of Peter. This idea contradicts the infallible definition and anathema of the First Vatican Council, which insisted upon the perpetuity and visibility of the papal succession:

           But, that the episcopacy itself might be one and undivided, and that the entire multitude of the faithful through priests closely connected with one another, might be preserved in the unity of faith and communion, placing the blessed Peter over the other apostles, He [Christ] established in him the perpetual and visible foundation of both unities, upon whose strength the eternal temple might be erected ...

           Moreover, what the Chief of pastors and the Great Pastor of sheep, the Lord Jesus, established in the blessed Apostle Peter for the perpetual succession and perennial good of the Church, this by the same Author must endure always in the Church which was founded upon a rock and will endure firm until the end of the ages …

           If anyone then says that it is not from the institution of Christ the Lord Himself, or by divine right that the blessed Peter has perpetual successors in the primacy over the universal Church … let him be anathema.

            Hence it appears that the sedevacantists are flirting with the Vatican I anathema, which condemns and excludes from the Church anyone who would call into question the perpetual succession of the papacy as the visible foundation of the entire Church. Far from being "the only coherent explanation" for the current ecclesial crisis, the sedevacantist thesis is unthinkable — if not heretical.

           Never in Her history has the Church, even for a moment, been without a successor of Peter, validly elected upon the death of his validly elected predecessor. Indeed, the longest interregnum between two popes in Church history was only two years and five months, between the death of Pope Nicholas IV (1292) and the election of Pope Celestine V (1294). Even during the Great Western Schism, which lasted some 38 years (1379-1417), there were always true popes reigning at the same time as the series of anti-popes, until the entire schism was resolved with the resignation of anti-pope John XXIII and the election of Martin V in 1417. Yet, the sedevacantists would have us believe that the Church has been afflicted by a series of no fewer than five anti-popes which virtually the entire Church has somehow recognized as legitimate, with no true pope reigning since 1958 – a span of 47 years without any successor of Peter. It is hard to imagine a more blatant contradiction of the infallible teaching of the First Vatican Council on the perpetuity of the Petrine succession.

           In the face of the divine promises and the infallible teaching of the Church, therefore, the sedevacantist position, no matter how "logical" it might seem to its adherents, can only be dismissed as patently absurd.

           Defending the patently absurd is a task that certain renowned lawyers, for example, are paid handsomely to perform, for it takes a great deal of skill to persuade a judge or a jury to believe that an obvious absurdity (such as the innocence of a certain Mr. S.) is reasonable. But even if the endeavor succeeds, what is absurd is still absurd. Such is the case with the sedevacantist thesis. As the late Michael Davies said with admirable succinctness: "Could any true Catholic, anyone with a sense of what it means to be a Catholic, give any consideration, let alone serious consideration, to such madness?"4

           In his masterpiece Orthodoxy, G.K. Chesterton observed: "A madman is not the man who has lost his reason. The madman is the man who has lost everything except his reason." Such a man, wrote Chesterton, "is in prison; the prison of one thought." Having developed all of the logical arguments in support of that one thought, "The madman’s explanation of a thing is always complete, and often in a purely rational sense satisfactory." Hence, Chesterton concluded, "if you argue with a madman, it is extremely probable that you will get the worst of it; for in many ways his mind moves all the quicker for not being delayed by the things that go with good judgment."

           So it is with the ever multiplying and ever more elaborate arguments of the sedevacantists. It is not that sedevacantists are literally mad in holding their beliefs. That is not at all what I mean to suggest, nor is it what Chesterton meant to suggest concerning the workings of the modern mind, trapped by the "logic" of the materialist system. It is, rather, that sedevacantists exhibit the impenetrable self-enclosed reasoning of the madman, even if they themselves are quite sane, and in many cases highly intelligent. Sedevacantism is perfectly logical to sedevacantists, but perfectly insane to any Catholic who, viewing their inherently plausible system from the outside, exercises informed good judgment in assessing its claims.

    From "Small" Beginnings

           The first publications of what I would call "the sedevacantist enterprise" (hereafter simply the Enterprise) emerged around 1976, as a reaction against the undeniably disastrous course of the post-Vatican II "reform" of the Church authorized or tolerated by Pope Paul VI in the name of the Council convened by Pope John XXIII. The Enterprise began by taking up a theological hypothesis of St. Robert Bellarmine which is commonly accepted by theologians: that a Pope would lose his seat if he were to become a true and proper formal heretic, that is, if he notoriously and pertinaciously (openly and obstinately) denies or doubts an article of divine and Catholic faith, such as the existence of three Persons in the Holy Trinity. (The profession of some lesser theological error is not formal heresy, for not every Catholic teaching is an article of Faith.)5

           Did Paul VI lose his seat due to formal heresy or even fail to attain to it due to preexisting heresy? Did John XXIII likewise fall, or fail to ascend, due to heresy? Would this explain how these two occupants of the See of Peter could have approved or allowed such damage to the Church — i.e., that they were both impostors on the throne? These were questions the Enterprise would soon answer in the affirmative, although, as we shall see, the Enterprise is hardly unified at the theoretical level. From these "small" beginnings the Enterprise has mushroomed into what it is today: a vast system of argumentation which proposes not only that we have had no Pope (literally or at least "formally") since the death of Pius XII in 1958, but also that no Cardinals have been validly created since then, and that no priests have been validly ordained or bishops consecrated under the "invalid" rites approved and/or used by "anti-Popes" Paul VI, John Paul II and Benedict XVI.

           In other words, the Enterprise proposes not only that the Church has had no head for 47 years, but also that there are almost no priests, bishops or Cardinals left alive in the Church’s official structure of canonical dioceses, and that even the few "official" clerics who were "validly" ordained under the pre-conciliar rites have probably lost their offices due to "manifest" heresy in their adherence to "the Vatican II changes" and the "impostor popes". Some at the fringes of the Enterprise even question the validity of the priestly ordinations and episcopal consecrations of the clergy of the Society of Saint Pius X (due to alleged impediments to the episcopal consecration of its founder, Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre).6 The Enterprise thus effectively declares that only a handful of sedevacantist priests and bishops, viewed as legitimate by the Enterprise, are the truly faithful members of a vestigial Catholic hierarchy.

           In consequence, the Enterprise informs us, it will be impossible to elect a valid Pope again without a "miraculous" intervention by God. Effectively, the Church no longer exists as a visible institution, as it no longer has a head or governing hierarchy. The promises of Christ are ignored in favor of a hypothetical deus ex machina that will supposedly bring the Church back from veritable extinction.

           In the Enterprise’s best publications these propositions are supported by seemingly plausible arguments and even some impressive scholarship. But if these propositions do not belong to the category "patently absurd," then nothing does. And yet, it is necessary to discuss the merits of the sedevacantist thesis, because in this time of ecclesial confusion many Catholics do not recognize a theological absurdity when they see one. They can be taken in by facile arguments and seemingly overwhelming docuмentation. So let us proceed to a refutation of the Enterprise’s claims in the hope of providing aid to the unwary.

    Judging Papal "Heresy"

           It is certainly inherently plausible that if the Pope were to become a heretic he would thereby cease to be Pope, for heretics are not Catholics, and non-Catholics cannot be Popes. As already noted, theologians commonly accept this theoretical possibility. St. Robert Bellarmine summed up the theological consensus thus: "A pope who is a manifest heretic ipso facto ceases to be pope and head, just as he ceases automatically to be a Christian and a member of the Church …"7

            The problem, however, is two-fold: First, the Pope must have uttered a truly manifest heresy, which requires denial of an article of divine and Catholic faith, such as the Trinity, not just any error against the teaching of the Church. Second, the Pope must, in uttering that heresy, actually be guilty of the personal sin of heresy in that he knowingly and pertinaciously (obstinately) denies an article of faith. One who thinks his false belief is consistent with the Catholic faith cannot be guilty of the sin of formal heresy. He is only a material heretic who remains a member of the Church.

           Given the maxim Prima Sedes a nemine iudicatur — "no one may judge the First See" — how is any isolated member of the Church to determine on his own that the conditions for formal heresy have been met? That no one may judge the Pope — that is, his personal sin of heresy as opposed to the heretical import of his words — is a fundamental truth of our religion, as well as a dictate of reason. This is because by the will of the Church’s divine Founder there is no office on earth above the papal office.

           That being the case, how would isolated members of the Church know for certain that a Pope who uttered a heresy had not lost his mind, made some awful mistake in his choice of words, been subjected to some compulsion such as a threat on his life, or had somehow persuaded himself that his erroneous opinion was not contrary to the Faith? Absent a procedure to investigate the papal statement and the surrounding circuмstances, including direct questioning of the Pope himself with an opportunity to retract, it would be impossible to judge the matter fully and fairly. Indeed, even Martin Luther was summoned to defend his views and then given sixty days to retract his 41 distinct heresies before finally suffering the sentence of excommunication.8 Who exactly would afford the Pope this due process? Or are we to believe that the holder of the papal office is entitled to less justice than the likes of Martin Luther?

    A Remedy

           This does not mean the Church would be without a remedy in the case of some manifestly heretical Pope who would publicly deny one or more dogmas of the Faith. Although this remedy has yet to be employed in practice against a living pope,9 an accepted theological view, taught by St. Anthony of Florence and St. Alphonsus Liguori, a doctor of the Church, provides that should a Pope really pronounce or teach a "manifest" heresy, a general council could assemble to verify the statement or statements allegedly uttered by the Pope. If such a council were convoked, the Pope would be given an opportunity to explain his words or retract them, and his refusal to appear at the council could be considered proof of pertinacity. The council could then declare that the Pope, by his own act, had excluded himself from the Church, thereby ceasing to be Pope, so that the election of a new Pope could proceed with safety. This procedure would not entail a judgment on the Pope’s person, but merely a declaratory sentence verifying what the Pope had done to himself by embracing heresy and refusing to explain or retract it when given the opportunity to do so. Once it has been verified as a fact that a pope knowingly and obstinately denies a defined dogma of the Faith, knowing that his personal theological view contradicts the Faith, the dogmatic definition itself (ex sese, to use Vatican I’s term) constitutes a sentence against the Pope. This is because dogmatic definitions of the Church are irreformable or "unalterable"10, as Vatican I declared in defining the infallible magisterium of the Roman Pontiff (which applies also to the infallible definitions of ecuмenical councils confirmed by a Pope). Hence dogmatic definitions are generally attached to anathemas which declare of anyone who denies the defined dogma: "Let him be anathema" — that is, let him be accursed and excluded from the Church.

           But even assuming for argument’s sake that one or more of the Popes since Pius XII had uttered manifest heresy, no general council was convoked to investigate any such statements or determine pertinacity on the part of the accused Pope. But the Enterprise does not even get to first base since, as we shall see, despite its indefatigable efforts it has failed to identify any "manifest" heresy among the many ambiguous pronouncements and disturbing (even scandalous) actions of John Paul II or Paul VI; and much less has it succeeded in the case of John XXIII or John Paul I. For example, a tract entitled "101 Heresies of Anti-Pope John Paul II," which is typical of the Enterprise’s literature, merely catalogues tendentious interpretations of ambiguous papal statements without quoting any plainly heretical propositions, or else it lists as "manifest heresies" scandalous papal actions such as John Paul II’s kissing of the Koran.11 (The latter did not amount to formal heresy, as the kissing of the Koran was not the pertinacious denial of an article of divine and Catholic faith, but rather a probably impetuous and certainly outrageous gesture of respect to the Islamic delegates who had presented the Pope with the book.)12

           That John Paul II alone stands accused by the Enterprise of at least sixty more "manifest heresies" than the infallible Magisterium at the Council of Trent was able to find in the writings of Martin Luther, probably the worst heretic in Church history, does not give the Enterprise’s amateur heresy sleuths the least pause for reflection. On and on they go, detecting one papal "heresy" after another on which they unhesitatingly affix the label "manifest".

           Remember, we are defining manifest heresy as: First, the denial of an article of divine and Catholic faith, such as the Trinity, not just any error against the teaching of the Church. Second: the Pope must, in uttering that heresy, actually be guilty of the personal sin of heresy in that he knowingly and pertinaciously (obstinately) denies an article of faith. Again, one who thinks his false belief is consistent with the Catholic faith cannot be guilty of the sin of formal heresy. He is only a material heretic who remains a member of the Church.

           Compare the Enterprise’s lack of success in finding "manifest" heresy in the pronouncements of the conciliar popes with the historical example of Pope John XXII. In 1331, certain French theologians and Cardinal Orsini denounced John XXII as a heretic when, in a series of sermons, he taught that the souls of the blessed departed, after finishing their appointed time in Purgatory, do not see God until after the last judgment. Cardinal Orsini called for a general council to pronounce the Pope a heretic, precisely in keeping with the teaching of St. Alphonsus Liguori and St. Anthony of Florence, already noted, which proposes such a council to deal with a truly manifest papal heresy. Confronted in this manner, John XXII replied that he had not intended to bind the whole Church to his sermons, and he impaneled a commission of theologians to consider the question. The commission informed the Pope that he was in error, and he did retract the error several years later, the day before his death.13 Yet despite being denounced as a heretic and threatened with a general council to declare his heresy, John XXII never ceased to be regarded by the Church as Pope, and Church history duly records him as such.

           Another instructive historical example is that of Pope Honorius I (625-638). Honorius approved ambiguous formulas propounded by Sergius, Patriarch of Constantinople, which favored the Monothelite heresy, i.e., the error that Christ possessed only one divine will rather than distinct human and divine wills. Although laboring under a misunderstanding of the import of Sergius’s formulae, Honorius "had laid himself open to accusations of heresy."14 Hence the Third Council of Constantinople (680-81) posthumously condemned Honorius, along with Sergius, for having held the heresy. Pope Leo II confirmed the Council’s condemnation, but wished it to be understood in the sense that "Honorius … did not, as became the Apostolic authority, extinguish the flame of heretical teaching in its first beginning, but fostered it by his negligence," in that he had agreed to ambiguous formulae so that "the whole matter should be hushed up."15 Yet although Honorius was posthumously condemned for heresy by a general council, the Church does not consider him to have ceased to be Pope, even though he stood accused of heresy during his very reign.

    Popes May Be Resisted

           The examples of John XXII and Honorius show us the Catholic way to address a Pope who is in error or takes some action that threatens harm to the common good of the Church: one may resist a wayward Pope, but (absent the measure of a general council that issues a purely declaratory sentence) one may not privately judge him or declare his seat vacant.

           St. Thomas Aquinas teaches the positive duty to rebuke and correct even the Pope when there is danger to the Faith, but not to declare his authority to have been forfeited. In the Summa Theologica, under the question "Whether a man is bound to correct his prelate," St. Thomas concludes as follows: "It must be observed, however, that if the Faith were endangered, a subject ought to rebuke his prelate even publicly. Hence Paul, who was Peter’s subject, rebuked him in public, on account of the imminent danger of scandal concerning faith …" (Peter had scandalized potential converts and threatened the mission of the Church by appearing to follow Mosaic dietary laws and refusing to eat with Gentiles.) St. Thomas here observes that the public rebuke of a prelate "would seem to savor of presumptuous pride; but there is no presumption in thinking oneself better in some respect, because, in this life, no man is without some fault. We must also remember that when a man reproves his prelate charitably, it does not follow that he thinks himself any better, but merely that he offers his help to one who, ‘being in the higher position among you, is therefore in greater danger,’ as Augustine observes in his Rule quoted above."16

           Implicit in Saint Thomas’s teaching, however, is that the Pope who commits "scandal concerning the faith" remains the Pope, though he may be rebuked and corrected, as was John XXII. This same Catholic principle is summarized by the great Doctor of the Church, St. Robert Bellarmine, who wrote in his work De Romano Pontifice:

           Just as it is licit to resist the Pontiff that aggresses the body, it is also licit to resist the one who aggresses souls or who disturbs civil order, or, above all, who attempts to destroy the Church. I say that it is licit to resist him by not doing what he orders and by preventing his will from being executed; it is not licit, however, to judge, punish or depose him, since these acts are proper to a superior.17

           One sedevacantist, quoting the passages preceding this oft-cited quotation, argues that in context St. Bellarmine is treating only resistance by "kings or councils" to a Pope "who upsets the political order or ‘kills souls by his bad example’," and that Bellarmine’s teaching does not apply to cases of heresy. But nowhere does Bellarmine teach that "kings or councils," much less isolated members of the Church, can judge a Pope guilty of heresy. Indeed, if, as this sedevacantist himself admits, Bellarmine teaches that kings or councils may not judge or depose the Pope even for a manifest violation of the political order or manifest immorality, but may only resist him, by what right would they judge the Pope or deem him deposed18 in the far more serious matter of heresy — a matter which, moreover, is beyond the expertise of kings and councils? And, again, how would an accused Pope receive the due process even heretics like Martin Luther are accorded if any Pope could privately be judged a heretic, shunned and de facto deposed by rank and file Church members?

           The renowned Sixteenth Century theologian Francisco Suarez, called a pious and eminent theologian (eximius et pius) by Pope Paul V, explained the principle of resistance to a wayward Pope thus:

           And in this second way the Pope could be schismatic, if he were unwilling to be in normal union with the whole body of the Church, as would occur if he attempted to excommunicate the whole Church, or, as both Cajetan and Torquemada observe, if he wished to overturn the rites of the Church based on Apostolic Tradition … If [the Pope] ... gives an order contrary to right customs, he should not be obeyed; if he attempts to do something manifestly opposed to justice and the common good, it will be lawful to resist him ...19

           It is remarkable that in the 16th Century an esteemed theologian would matter-of-factly discuss the possibility that the Pope could be guilty of schismatic acts his own subjects would be forced to resist. But nowhere does Suarez teach that any member of the faithful, even a priest or bishop, may declare that a Pope is actually in schism and has ceased to be the Roman Pontiff. On the contrary, Suarez speaks entirely in terms of resisting one who remains the Pope despite his schismatic acts.20

           Clearly, then, absent the hitherto unused device of a general council, resistance — not judgment or deposition — is the only possible option in dealing with an apparently heretical Pope. The mind of the Church on this point was expressed at the level of the papal Magisterium by Pope Paul IV in his Bull cuм Ex Apostolatus Officio (1559). Gravely concerned that, in the midst of the Protestant rebellion, a future Pope might succuмb to a Protestant heresy, Paul IV declared that "the Roman Pontiff, who is the representative upon earth of our God and Lord Jesus Christ, who holds the fulness of power over peoples and kingdoms, who may judge all and be judged by none in this world, may nonetheless be contradicted if he be found to have deviated from the Faith."

           This is a remarkable statement for two reasons: First, it confirms the constant teaching of the Church that no one may judge the First See, even when confronted with alleged papal deviations from the Faith. Second, it nevertheless admits the possibility that a Pope might deviate from the Faith while remaining Pope. In such case the erring Pope may only be contradicted, but not judged. We shall return to this Bull later to discuss Paul IV’s provisions concerning someone who is a known manifest heretic before a conclave elects him Pope, but for now it suffices to say that here the Magisterium confirms that while the faithful may resist a wayward Pope, they have no right to judge him guilty of the personal sin of heresy and declare his seat to be vacant.

    The Fundamental Problem

           This, then, is the fundamental problem with the Enterprise: that its entire position rests upon a private judgment, truly worthy of Protestants, that the conciliar Popes are all heretical impostors, when the very nature of the papacy precludes such a judgment. While there is the possibility of a general council to declare that a Pope has excommunicated himself due to heresy, the Enterprise’s position is nothing but a jumble of unverifiable and purely debatable private opinions (often based on conjecture, hearsay or rash judgment on the Pope’s personal motives) on the existence and consequences of alleged papal "heresy" or other papal failures.

           The Enterprise, then, simply refuses to recognize the limits on what a Catholic may do when confronted with the extraordinary event of papal words or deeds that appear to be contrary to the Faith or the good of the Church. These limits provide entirely sufficient freedom of action for dealing in conscience with the current crisis in the Church. Hence, the Enterprise is useless for dealing with the crisis. Worse still, it is a massive waste of time and intellectual energy that could be devoted to a truly constructive movement of opposition to the crisis. Moreover, the Enterprise is siphoning off financial and other resources that could be used for the true defense of the Church against scandal and heresy, while causing senseless division among Catholics who are trying to work for the Church’s restoration.

    Why the Enterprise Must Be Opposed

           But, as I have already suggested, it is not enough to dismiss the Enterprise as useless and leave it at that, for the opinions it circulates are not mere academic exercises. With superficially plausible logic and a mountain of docuмents, the Enterprise has led some of the faithful into true and proper schism. This schism has arisen with the illicit and suspect ordination of bishops and priests, who justify their putative offices on the basis of the Enterprise’s doctrine of a vanishing Pope and hierarchy.

           Since 1976 the Enterprise has illicitly consecrated more than 100 bishops scattered throughout the world. The "genealogy" of these bishops began with the illicit consecration in 1976 of five bishops at Palmar de Troya, Spain, by Bishop Ngo-Dinh-Thuc (1897-1984), the late titular Archbishop of Hué (Vietnam). Archbishop Thuc was reconciled with the Vatican in 1977 only to relapse into sedevacantism almost immediately, followed by still more illicit episcopal consecrations. In 1982 Archbishop Thuc issued the so-called Munich Statement, declaring that "the See of the Catholic Church at Rome is vacant, and that it is fitting that I as a bishop do all that I can so that the Catholic Church may continue for the salvation of souls." Here we see the Enterprise’s belief that it is continuing the existence of the Catholic Church.

           The bishops consecrated by Thuc have consecrated "successors," some of whom have in turn consecrated further "successors." Another line was begun by the illicit episcopal consecration in 1995 of Fr. Clarence Kelly (formerly of the Society of St. Pius X) by Alfredo José Isaac Cecilio Francesco Mendez-Gonzalez, C.S.C., retired Roman Catholic Bishop of Arecibo, Puerto Rico. Kelly has not, thus far, consecrated his "successor," although this seems inevitable.

           The bishops of the Enterprise are hardly united as a body, but rather question each other’s doctrine and legitimacy, even if they share the same basic conclusions about the state of authority in the Church. For example, Bishop Kelly contests the validity of the "Thuc line" consecrations, and some Thuc line bishops contest the validity of Kelly’s consecration. At the theoretical level, Bishop Donald Sanborn (a Thuc line bishop consecrated by "Thuc line" Bishop Robert McKenna in June 2002) and his followers depart from the strict sedevacantist line — that the See of Peter has been literally empty since 1958 — and hold that the popes since Pius XII are validly elected "material" popes, but not "formal" popes due to their heresy. This argument, devised in an effort to avoid the absurd results of the sedevacantist thesis, will be discussed further below.

    Society of St. Pius X is Not Sedevacantist

           To be distinguished radically from the bishops of the Enterprise are the four non-sedevacantist bishops consecrated for the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) by the late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre in 1988. (The Society has argued vigorously against the sedevacantist thesis.) The Vatican recognizes all four episcopal consecrations as valid (but does not accept that they are licit), as well as the priestly ordinations performed by SSPX bishops. Further, the SSPX bishops have engaged in discussions with the Vatican on possible "regularization" of the status of the Society, notwithstanding the 1988 motu proprio of John Paul II, Ecclesia Dei Adflicta, which declared the latae sententiae (automatic) excommunication of Archbishop Lefebvre and the four bishops (but not SSPX’s priests or lay adherents) for violation of Canon 1382, which prohibits consecration of bishops without a papal mandate.

           Here it must be noted that the same Code of Canon Law which imposes an automatic penalty of excommunication for consecrating a bishop without a papal mandate also exempts from Latae sententiae (automatic) penalties such as excommunication one who acts out of what he believes is necessity, even if his good faith belief in the state of necessity is mistaken. Canon 1323 4°, 7°. Since Archbishop Lefebvre professed that he acted in the good faith belief that the consecration of four traditional Catholic bishops was an urgent necessity during this unparalleled crisis in the Church — and no one is in a position to judge his state of mind on the question — it can be said in his defense that this belief exempted him from the automatic operation of the penalty, even if his belief were wrong.21 Ironically enough, the Enterprise bishops cannot appeal to the cited canon, since the Enterprise declares the 1983 Code of Canon Law to be a "heretical" product of the "false council" Vatican II, and thus void.22 Moreover, Archbishop Lefebvre’s violation of Canon 1382 was arguably merely technical, as the Vatican had assured the Archbishop that there was no objection in principle to the consecration of at least one traditionalist bishop from within the ranks of the SSPX and that a papal mandate would be granted. Not so with the bishops consecrated by the Enterprise.

           In stark contrast to its view of the SSPX clerics, the Vatican refuses to recognize as valid any of the consecrations of Enterprise bishops or the priestly ordinations they have performed — a number of which took place under suspect circuмstances, such as the ritual being performed in a private house without a public ceremony or the traditional co-consecrators, whose participation insures validity. In consequence, when an SSPX priest decides to "regularize" his situation by leaving SSPX, the Vatican simply finds him an assignment somewhere, whereas (reportedly) priests of the Enterprise may be "regularized" only as laymen.

    The Ultimate Aberration

           The expanding parallel hierarchy of the Enterprise has led to the ultimate aberration of "conclavism". According to the "conclavist" brand of sedevacantism, since the official structure of the Church has effectively ceased to exist, it falls to the sedevacantist remnant to elect a pope. Thanks to the "conclavists", there are about 20 known anti-popes throughout the world, with at least five claimants to the throne of Peter in America alone (yet another testament to America’s entrepreneurial spirit). [It should be noted that "Pope" Clemente Dominguez y Gomez (consecrated by Archbishop Thuc) was not elected by a conclave. As he tells it, God personally informed him he was Pope. Clemente who dubbed himself "Pope" Gregory XVII has also held "councils" and made "Cardinals".]23

            While conclavist sedevacantism is an aberrant spin-off of the Enterprise that even the Enterprise "officially" disowns, it is the inevitable outgrowth of the Enterprise’s own logic. For if, as the Enterprise contends, the sedevacantists are the only part of the Church that recognizes the "manifest heresy" of the last four or five popes, why should this remnant of true believers not elect a pope instead of waiting indefinitely for a "miracle" to provide one?

           In sum, schism is the poisoned fruit of the Enterprise. The Enterprise does not merely disseminate academic notions about the state of authority in the Church, but rather promotes grave errors with serious ecclesial consequences. The Enterprise’s members have constituted themselves the last vestige of the believing Church. Moreover, they tend to think, or declare outright, that Catholics who will not join the Enterprise have lost the Faith and that those who accept John Paul II or Benedict XVI as Pope are "going to hell". For all these reasons, and despite the patent absurdity of its conclusions, the Enterprise must be opposed for the good of the Church.

    Three Lines of Sedevacantist Argument

           The Enterprise follows three basic lines of argument in contending that the See of Peter has been strictly vacant since the death of Pius XII.24

           (1) The primary line of argument, which we have already sketched, is that the ostensible pope in question was a heretic, either before he was elected, in which case the election was null and void, or he became such at some point after his election, in which case he fell from office due to heresy, as no heretic can be a pope; or

           (2) Closely related to the primary argument is the claim that the ostensible pope in question could not have been a true Pope since he promulgated harmful universal legislation for the Church, something no true Pope could have done; or

           (3) The papal election itself was invalid due to some impediment in the person of the ostensible pope or some defect in the election procedure.

           As if to give their position greater strength, spokesmen for the Enterprise combine these arguments into one presentation, like a lawyer who uses "fall back" positions in a legal brief: The ostensible Pope was a heretic and thus not Pope. Or, even if we assume for the sake of argument that he was not strictly a heretic, he could not have been Pope because of his harmful legislation for the Church, which no true Pope could have enacted. Or, even if we assume that no strict heresy or harmful legislation was at issue, still the election itself was invalid due to impediment or procedural defect.

           In this way the Enterprise builds concentric rings of argument around its central contention that John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul I, John Paul II, and now Benedict XVI, are not true popes. These rings of argument render "fortress sedevacantist" virtually impregnable in the minds of its defenders, since no objector can succeed to their satisfaction in breaching all three rings of defense of the central contention. For them, the central contention has become practically non-falsifiable, a veritable axiom impervious to refutation.

           For those who are not committed to the Enterprise and are reasonably well-informed about the Faith, however, refutation is a simple matter. In the next part of this essay I will make a more detailed examination of the first of the Enterprise’s three basic arguments: that the See of Peter has been vacant since 1958 due to "manifest" papal "heresy."

    Footnotes:

    1. The 33-day reign of John Paul I is generally included in the sedevacantist thesis, even though this poor Pope barely lived long enough to move into the papal apartments.

    2. All quotations by sedevacantist spokesmen are taken verbatim from their own sources, which are in my files. The quotations will generally be without attribution, since the identities of the spokesmen are not relevant to the aim of this essay.

    3. Satis Cognitum (1896), n. 12.

    4. Michael Davies, "The Sedevacantists," The Angelus, February 1983, Vol. VI, No. 2.

    5. A "material" heretic, unlike a formal heretic, is not aware that he is contradicting an article of Faith, but thinks his heretical belief is Catholic. See discussion below.

    6. Some sedevacantist theorists, demonstrating their endless inventiveness, argue that Archbishop Lefebvre’s consecration of the four bishops in 1988 was invalid because he himself was not a bishop! They maintain that Cardinal Liénart, who consecrated Archbishop Lefebvre as a bishop, was a Mason and thus excommunicated and unable to confer an episcopal consecration. These theorists overlook the fact that there were two co-consecrators with Liénart, so that any disqualification of Liénart is irrelevant. This, indeed, is precisely why Tradition requires multiple consecrators of new bishops, even if only one consecrator is strictly necessary. Moreover, even if Liénart had been the sole consecrator, the excommunication for membership in Masonry would not have deprived him of the power to consecrate another bishop, any more than schismatic Orthodox bishops are deprived of this power. Some sedevacantists argue that Archbishop Lefebvre could not have been made a bishop because he was not a priest! He was not a priest, they conclude, because he was ordained by the same Cardinal Liénart, an alleged Mason. That Liénart may have been a Mason did not deprive him of the power of ordaining a priest. To this the sedevacantists reply with yet more unfounded speculation: Liénart, they argue, must not have had the intention to make Lefebvre a priest even if he had the power to do so, because a Mason would never wish to ordain a valid priest. Of course, one can never reason with people who endlessly invent arguments supported by nothing but speculation about hidden motives. At any rate, these sedevacantists seem unaware that when Marcel Lefebvre was consecrated a bishop by Liénart and the two co-consecrators (thus eliminating any possible invalidity), he received ordination to the priesthood even if he did not receive it before, since episcopal consecration confers the fullness of the priesthood as well as the powers of the office of bishop. (Under Church law, ordination to the diaconate and the priesthood are each to be conferred separately, but if one is immediately and directly consecrated a bishop, he is also a priest, although that procedure would be irregular.) Here the sedevacantists reveal an ignorance of sacramental theology.

    7. De Romano Pontifice. II-30.

    8. "The Bull of ex-communication, Exsurge Domine, was accordingly drawn up July 15. It formally condemned forty-one propositions drawn from [Luther’s] writings, ordered the destruction of the books containing the errors, and summoned Luther himself to recant within sixty days or receive the full penalty of ecclesiastical punishment." From "Martin Luther," Catholic Encyclopedia (1917). The Enterprise evidently believes it can condemn the conciliar popes as heretics without even an opportunity to recant!

    9. But see the historical example of the posthumous condemnation of Pope Honorius I by a general council, discussed below.

    10. First Vatican Ecuмenical Council, Session IV, Dogmatic Constitution I on The Church of Christ, Chapter 4; Denzinger, 1839.

    11. Not every apparent breach of orthodoxy amounts to formal heresy. The Catholic Church employs different "censures" depending on the different degrees of error against Church teaching. As explained in Father Ludwig Ott’s Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma: "The usual censures are the following: A Heretical Proposition (propositio haeretica). This signifies that the proposition is opposed to a formal dogma; a Proposition Proximate to Heresy (propositio heresi proxima) which signifies that the proposition is opposed to a truth which is proximate to the Faith (Sent. fidei proxima); a Proposition Savouring of or Suspect of heresy (propositio haeresim sapiens or de haeresi suspecta); an Erroneous Proposition (prop erronea), i.e., opposed to a truth which is proposed by the Church as a truth intrinsically connected with a revealed truth (error in fide ecclesiastica) or opposed to the common teaching of theologians (error theologicus); a False Proposition (prop. falsa), i.e., contradicting a dogmatic fact; a Temerarious Proposition (prop. temeraria), i.e., deviating without reason from the general teaching; a Proposition Offensive to pious ears (prop. piarum aurium offensiva), a Proposition badly expressed (prop. male sonans), i.e., subject to misunderstanding by reason of its method of expression; a Captious Proposition (prop. captiosa), i.e., reprehensible because of its intentional ambiguity; a Proposition exciting scandal (prop. scandalosa)." See Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma, (Tan) p. 10.

    12. As Catholic Patriarch Bidawid of Iraq told a Vatican Press Agency: "On May 14th I was received by the Pope, together with a delegation composed of the Shiite imam of Khadum mosque and the Sunni President of the council of administration of the Iraqi Islamic Bank. At the end of the audience the Pope bowed to the Muslim holy book the Koran presented to him by the delegation and he kissed it as a sign of respect. The photo of that gesture has been shown repeatedly on Iraqi television, and it demonstrates that the Pope is not only aware of the suffering of the Iraqi people, he has also great respect for Islam." (Fides news agency, Rome, 4 June 1999) Some Catholics obstinately deny that the incident occurred, while others explain it away. Photographs of the event abound. See e.g., www.garykah.org/html/Pope koran.htm

    13. Eric John, The Popes: A Concise Biographical History (1964; repr., hαɾɾιson, NY: Roman Catholic Books, 1994), p. 253.

    14. Ibid., p. 115.

    15. Hubert Jedin, Ecuмenical Councils of the Catholic Church: An Historical Survey, trans. Ernest Graf, O.S.B. (New York: Herder and Herder, 1960), pp. 47-48; Warren H. Carroll, A History of Christendom, vol. 2: The Building of Christendom (Front Royal, VA: Christendom College Press, 1987), pp. 252-54; "Honorius I, Pope," Catholic Encyclopedia, 1913.

    16. Summa Theologica, Q. 33, Art. V, Pt. II-II.

    17. St. Robert Bellarmine, De Romano Pontifice, Book II, Chapter 29.

    18. The Enterprise never admits that it is declaring the deposition of the five alleged impostor popes, but insists it is merely "observing" their supposed self-deposition through "manifest" heresy. The "observation", however, is invariably accompanied by detailed explanations of the "heresy" that is supposed to be "manifest". Thus, the Enterprise is really issuing articulated private judgments of deposition, rather than merely "observing" a manifest fact. This artifice will be discussed more fully in the next part of the essay.

    19. De Fide, Disp. X, Sec. VI, N. 16.

    20. Nor, it must be noted, did Paul VI ever actually "legally overturn the rites of the Church based on apostolic tradition." In appearing to promulgate the New Mass, Pope Paul never legally abrogated the traditional Mass. As reported in Latin Mass magazine, Catholic Family News and The Fatima Crusader, John Paul II was advised of this fact by the commission of Cardinals he convened to consider the legal status of the traditional Mass in 1986. The commission, by a vote of 8-to-1, determined that Paul VI had never legally prohibited the traditional Mass. By a vote of 9-to-0, the commission determined that every priest was free to use the traditional Missal. The existence and votes of the commission were publicly disclosed by Cardinal Alfons Stickler, one of the nine Cardinals on the commission.

    21. In fact, the 1983 Code of Canon Law is even more forgiving than this. Canon 1324 further provides:

    §1 The perpetrator of a violation is not exempted from penalty, but the penalty prescribed in the law or precept must be diminished, or a penance substituted in its place, if the offense was committed by:

    5° one who was compelled by grave fear, even if only relative, or by reason of necessity or grave inconvenience, if the act is intrinsically evil or tends to be harmful to souls;

    8° one who erroneously, but culpably, thought that some one of the circuмstances existed which are mentioned in Can. 1323, nn. 4 or 5;

    §3 In the circuмstances mentioned in §1, the offender is not bound by a latae sententiae penalty. Thus, Pope John Paul II’s own Code of Canon Law provides that one is not bound by a latae sententiae (automatic) penalty for a violation even if one’s belief in the state of necessity was both erroneous and culpable, and even if the violation is intrinsically evil or tends to be harmful to souls. While this provision of the Code seems lenient, it reflects a legitimate abhorrence of automatic penalties without a canonical trial. In such a case, there is no penalty until a trial or legal proceeding takes place to declare the penalty. Archbishop Lefebvre never had the benefit of either process. Thus Church law itself precludes an automatic penalty against him or the bishops he consecrated. And no penalty can be inflicted without a legal process.

    22. As one Enterprise bishop put it: "The Second Vatican Council manifested itself to be a false council … the heretical nature of this council is confirmed by … the 1983 Code of Canon Law … which demonstrates heresies concerning the unity of the Church …"

    23. Cf., Sedevacantism: A False Solution to a Real Problem, (Angelus Press: Kansas City, MO, 2003), pp. 8-9.

    24. As already noted, we will defer to a separate section of this essay discussion of the theory of "material" popes versus "formal" popes.



    Offline Jehanne

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    Defending the Papacy
    « Reply #1 on: April 13, 2011, 07:16:02 AM »
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  • Quote from: stevusmagnus
    Popes May Be Resisted

    St. Thomas Aquinas teaches the positive duty to rebuke and correct even the Pope when there is danger to the Faith, but not to declare his authority to have been forfeited. In the Summa Theologica, under the question "Whether a man is bound to correct his prelate," St. Thomas concludes as follows: "It must be observed, however, that if the Faith were endangered, a subject ought to rebuke his prelate even publicly. Hence Paul, who was Peter’s subject, rebuked him in public, on account of the imminent danger of scandal concerning faith …" (Peter had scandalized potential converts and threatened the mission of the Church by appearing to follow Mosaic dietary laws and refusing to eat with Gentiles.) St. Thomas here observes that the public rebuke of a prelate "would seem to savor of presumptuous pride; but there is no presumption in thinking oneself better in some respect, because, in this life, no man is without some fault. We must also remember that when a man reproves his prelate charitably, it does not follow that he thinks himself any better, but merely that he offers his help to one who, ‘being in the higher position among you, is therefore in greater danger,’ as Augustine observes in his Rule quoted above."


    Some points:

    1) Since "all sins can be forgiven," a Pope who falls into heresy and/or apostasy can have his sins forgiven, and so even if the Pope would lose the Chair of Peter, it stands to reason that he could recover it through the ministry of the Holy Spirit.

    2) Saint Thomas' Summa, to the extent that it represents the Ordinary (hence, infallible) Magisterium of the Church, is of higher authority than even an ecuмenical Council of the Church, such as Vatican II, which contradicted not only the Ordinary Magisterium of the Church but itself, saying one thing in one place and another thing in another place (e.g., equating the primary and secondary ends of marriage.)

    3)  Life goes on.  I am not sure what you are trying to prove.  Even if the sedes here on this board are wrong, they are still right.


    Offline MyrnaM

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    Defending the Papacy
    « Reply #2 on: April 13, 2011, 07:50:06 AM »
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  • The Papacy

    By Bishop Mark A. Pivarunas, CMRI


    Sts. Peter and Paul
     June 29, 1997

    Dearly Beloved in Christ,

    Nearly 2000 years ago in ancient quarters of Caesarea Philippi, our Divine Savior chose St. Peter as the rock upon which He would found His Church. He promised to St. Peter and, in his person, to his successors, supreme power over the universal Church “to bind and to loose.”

    As we celebrate the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, it would be appropriate to consider the papacy, the office of the Supreme Head of the Catholic Church and of the Vicar of Jesus Christ on earth. This issue is especially critical in our own times, when we, who have remained faithful to tradition, have been labeled as disobedient to Rome for rejecting the Novus Ordo Mass and the false teachings on ecuмenism and religious liberty which have emanated from the Second Vatican Council.

    Furthermore, this issue is all the more critical inasmuch as it is the one point that divides traditional Catholics today. How many traditional Catholics long for unity, yet are divided on this fundamental point which concerns the modern post-Conciliar hierarchy.

    Let us review the teachings of Jesus Christ and the infallible magisterium of the Catholic Church in order to better understand the nature and prerogatives of the divine-established office of the Pope.

    In the Gospel of St. John, we read how our Divine Savior had chosen His twelve Apostles and to Simon Bar-Jona Jesus Christ had given the name Cephas:


    “But Jesus, looking upon him said, ‘Thou art Simon, the son of John; thou shalt be called Cephas (which interpreted is Peter)” (John 1:42).

    Why did Christ change this man’s name? What significance would this change have in the future? The answers to these questions are found in the Gospel of St. Matthew, where we read:


    “Now Jesus having come into the district of Caesarea Philippi, began to ask His disciples saying, ‘Who do men say the Son of Man is?’ But they said, ‘Some say, John the Baptist; and others, Elias; and others, Jeremias, or one of the prophets.’ He said to them, ‘But who do you say that I am?’ Simon Peter answered and said, ‘Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God.’ Then Jesus answered and said, ‘Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-Jona, for flesh and blood has not revealed this to thee, but My Father in heaven. And I say to thee, thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. And I will give thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven; and whatever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven’” (Matt. 16:13-19).

    Jesus Christ gave to Simon Bar-Jona the name Cephas (rock) for upon would His Church be founded.

    This is further supported by the words of Our Lord to St. Peter found in both the Gospel of St. Luke and that of St. John:

     
    “And the Lord said, ‘Simon, Simon, behold, Satan has desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat. But I have prayed for thee, that thy faith may not fail; and do thou, when once thou hast turned again, strengthen thy brethren’” (Luke 22:31-32).

    “Jesus said to Simon Peter, ‘Simon, son of John, lovest thou Me more than these?’ He said to Him, ‘Yea, Lord, thou knowest that I love thee.’ He said to him, ‘Feed My lambs... Feed My lambs... Feed My sheep’” (John 21:15-17).
     
    In the holy Gospels, St. Peter is always named first in the lists of the Apostles (Matt. 10:2; Mark 3:16; Luke 6:14). In the Acts of the Apostles, it is St. Peter who speaks out that one must be chosen to take the place of the apostate Judas (Acts 1:15; Acts 2:14) and it is St. Peter who first addresses the crowds on the first Pentecost Sunday.

    When we investigate the early centuries of the Christian era, we find how St. Peter’s successors in Rome exercised the power of “the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven” “to bind and to loose.”

     
    Pope St. Clement, writing to the Corinthians in 96 A.D., while St. John the Apostle and Evangelists was still alive, warned certain disturbers among the Corinthians not to disobey what Christ had commanded them through him, thus claiming clearly the authority of the Vicar of Christ, the right to command the whole Church as the successor of St. Peter.

    In the second century, Pope St. Victor I (189-198) commanded the bishops of Asia to celebrate Easter on the same day as the Church of Rome, and he threatened them with excommunication if they refused obedience.

    In the third century, Pope St. Callistus (217-222) declared against the Montanists that by virtue of the Primacy which he held as successor of St. Peter, he had the power to forgive even the greatest sins.

    Pope St. Stephen I (254-257) commanded the Asiatic and African Churches under pain of excommunication not to re-baptize heretics.

    In the fourth century, Pope St. Julius I (337-352) taught that difficulties arising among the Bishops were to be decided by himself as the Supreme Judge.

    Pope Siricius (384-399) taught that the Universal Church had been committed to his care as to the one who had inherited the Primacy from St. Peter.
     
    The claims of the successors of St. Peter in the See of Rome down through the centuries are so explicit and numerous that it would be superfluous to give more testimonies. In addition to this list of the successors of St. Peter who exercised the Primacy of Jurisdiction over the universal Church, the testimony of the early Fathers of the Church and of the ecuмenical Councils also confirms this point as well. Again we have recourse to the testimony of history.

     
    St. Ignatius the Martyr (died 110), writing to the Romans, said that the Church of Rome is the head of the other churches.

    St. Irenaeus said that it would be a lengthy matter to enumerate the successors of all the churches; but that by showing the traditional teaching of the Church of Rome, we refute the heretics, for it is necessary that every church agree with the Church of Rome because of its higher authority.

    St. Cyprian called the Church of Rome the “principal Church and the source of unity.”

    At the Council of Ephesus in the year 431, Philip, the Legate of the Pope, made the following statement to which the Fathers of the Council unanimously agreed: “No one doubts, indeed it was known to all ages, that the holy and most blessed Peter, Prince and Head of the Apostles, the pillar of faith and the foundation stone of the Church, received from Our Lord, Jesus Christ, the Savior and Redeemer of the human race, the Keys of the Kingdom, and to him was given the power of binding and loosing. He [Peter] lives and exercises judgment even to this day and forever in his successors... His successor and representative in that office, Pope Celestine, has sent us to this synod.”

    The Fathers of the Council of Chalcedon (451), writing to Pope St. Leo, stated that in the Council he presided through his legate as the head over the members; they speak to him as sons to their father; as to the successor of Peter and the interpreter of the Faith; as to the one to whom the care of the whole Church has been entrusted; and they beg him to honor and affirm their decrees by his decision.

    The Third Council of Constantinople (680) addressed the Pope as The Archbishop of the Universal Church.

    The Second Council of Nice (787) addressed the Pope as the one whose See is preeminent because it possesses the Primacy of the whole world.
     
    There are many other references that could be quoted; however, the best reference to the Papacy, to its Primacy of Jurisdiction and to Papal Infallibility, is found in the First Vatican Council which was held under Pope Pius IX between 1869 and 1870.

    In this Council we find a summary of all the past teachings of the Church on this subject:

     
    “For the fathers of the Fourth Council of Constantinople, following closely in the footsteps of their predecessors, made this solemn profession: ‘The first condition of salvation is to keep the norm of the true faith. For it is impossible that the words of Our Lord Jesus Christ who said, “Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church” (Matt. 16:18), should not be verified. And their truth has been proved by the course of history, for in the Apostolic See the Catholic religion has always been kept unsullied, and its teaching kept holy.’”

    “For they fully realized that this See of St. Peter always remains untainted by any error, according to the divine promise of Our Lord and Savior made to the prince of His disciples, ‘I have prayed for thee, that thy faith may not fail; and do thou, when once thou has turned again, strengthen thy brethren’ (Luke 22:32).”

    “Now this charism of truth of never-failing faith was conferred upon St. Peter and his successors in this Chair, in order that they might perform their supreme office for the salvation of all.”
     
    These passages from the First Vatican Council remind us that the Pope is the one essential person in the Catholic Church’s exercise of her property of Infallibility.

    As Ludwig Ott, STD, explains in his comprehensive dogmatic theology book, Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma:


    “The possessors of infallibility are:
     A) The Pope: The Pope is infallible when he speaks ex cathedra.
     B) The whole episcopate: The totality of the bishops is infallible, when they, either assembled in general council or scattered over the earth, propose a teaching of faith or morals as one to be held by all the faithful. The bishops exercise their infallible teaching power in an ordinary manner when they, in their dioceses, in moral unity with the Pope, unanimously promulgate the same teachings on faith and morals. The Vatican Council expressly declared that also the truths of Revelation proposed as such by the ordinary and general teaching office of the Church are to be firmly held with ‘divine and catholic faith.’”

    Without the Pope, the Church cannot exercise her infallibility. For this reason Canon Law legislates that an Ecuмenical Council is suspended (ipso jure) in the event of the death of the Pope. It is reconvened only after the election of the new Pope.

    Now all these considerations bring us to the primary issue of our pastoral letter. What happened at the Second Vatican Council from 1962 to 1965?

    The answer is most shocking. After two years of work by a Preparatory Commission made up of bishops and theologians from around the world, 75 schemata (topics for discussion) had been gathered to be presented to the Council; nevertheless, by the intervention of John XXIII, all these docuмents were discarded and replaced by new schemata.

    As Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre (who was a member of the Preparatory Commission) lamented:


    “Now you know what happened at the Council. A fortnight after its opening not one of the prepared schemata remained, not one! All had been turned down, all had been condemned to the wastepaper basket. Nothing remained, not a single sentence. All had been thrown out.... After a fortnight, we were left without any preparation. It was really inconceivable.”

    At this point, it became possible to present other agenda — that of ecuмenism and religious liberty.

    Despite the fact that the Catholic Church had previously condemned false ecuмenism (inter-religious dialogue and worship with non-Catholics), especially condemned by Pope Pius XI in Mortalium Animos, and despite the fact that the 1917 Code of Canon Law had forbidden communicatio in sacris (Canon 1258) and held under suspicion of heresy those who would be involved in it (Canon 2315), the Second Vatican Council now encouraged ecuмenism in its decree Unitatis Redintegratio and its declaration Nostra Aetate. Whereas before the Council, the Catholic Church always taught that the Catholic Faith was the one, true religion revealed by God, now the Council opened the doors of salvation to other religions — Protestant and non-Christian (Hinduism, Buddhism, Islamism, Judaism, etc.) alike. Now the new mission of the Church according to Vatican II is to promote the good which is found in these false religions. No longer is there any reference to conversion to the true Faith.

    Following the Council, it became necessary for the liberal innovators to do away with the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass because it posed a barrier to the Protestants. In the name of ecuмenism, six Protestant theologians representing the World Council of Churches, the Lutheran Church, the Anglican Church and the Presbyterian Church actively participated in the special commission established by Paul VI to re-write the Mass. The end result of this commission, as we know, was the Novus Ordo Missae — the New Order of the Mass — which by no means represented the propitiatory Sacrifice of Calvary, but rather, as they defined it in Luther’s own words, “The Lord’s Supper.”

    For the past thirty-two years the modern hierarchy has daily promulgated in their “ordinary and universal teachings” these blatant errors. On a regular basis John Paul II reiterates over and over the false and freemasonic principles of religious liberty and practices false ecuмenism, not only with Protestants, but also with non-Christians.

    How can the modern hierarchy represent the infallible magisterium of the Catholic Church? How can “popes” of Vatican II represent the rock upon which Christ founded His Church? Can the words of Vatican Council I “in the teachings of the Apostolic See, the Catholic religion has always been kept unsullied” and “this See of St. Peter always remains untainted by any error,” be applied to the modern hierarchy?

    What then has happened in the Catholic Church? The answer is found in St. Paul’s Second Epistle to the Thessalonians:


    “The day of the Lord will not come unless the Apostasy comes first and the man of sin is revealed, the son of perdition... who sits in the temple of God and gives himself out as if he were God” (2 Thess. 2:3-4).

    In the instructions of the Grand Orient Fɾҽҽmαsσɳɾყ, the Alta Vendita, their plan was clearly delineated to infiltrate the Catholic Church to the highest levels, even to the Chair of Peter. Excerpts from the Grand Orient Fɾҽҽmαsσɳɾყ Unmasked, by Monsignor George F. Dillon, D.D.:

     
    “Now then, in order to secure to us a Pope in the manner required, it is necessary to fashion for that Pope a generation worthy of the reign of which we dream. Leave on one side old age and middle life, go to the youth, and, if possible, even to infancy.”

    “In a few years the young clergy will have, by the force of events, invaded all the functions. They will govern, administer and judge. They will form the council of the Sovereign. They will be called upon to choose the Pontiff who will reign; and that Pontiff, like the greater part of his contemporaries, will be necessarily imbued with the Italian and humanitarian principles which we are about to put in circulation.

    “Seek out the Pope of whom we give the portrait. You wish to establish the reign of the elect upon the throne of the prostitute of Babylon? Let the clergy march under your banner in the belief always that they march under the banner of the Apostolic Keys. You wish to cause the last vestige of tyranny and of oppression to disappear? Lay your nets like Simon Bar-Jona. Lay them in the depths of sacristies, seminaries and convents, rather than in the depths of the sea, and if you will precipitate nothing you will give yourself a draught of fishes more miraculous than his. The fisher of fishes will become a fisher of men. You will bring yourselves as friends around the Apostolic Chair. You will have fished up a Revolution in Tiara and Cope, marching with Cross and banner — a Revolution which needs only to be spurred on a little to put the four quarters of the world on fire.”
     
    We witness today the rapid formation of a nєω ωσrℓ∂ σr∂єr under the auspices of the United Nations, but there can be no doubt that the U.N. has its counterpart in the modern Conciliar Church of Vatican II.

    May we remain steadfast in the true Faith, for “whoever perseveres to the end, he shall be saved” (Matt. 24:13).

    In Christo Jesu et Maria Immaculata,
     Most Rev. Mark A. Pivarunas, CMRI
    Please pray for my soul.
    R.I.P. 8/17/22

    My new blog @ https://myforever.blog/blog/

    Offline TKGS

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    Defending the Papacy
    « Reply #3 on: April 13, 2011, 09:17:17 AM »
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  • Quote from: Christopher Ferrara
    Never in Her history has the Church...


    I find this to be an incredible statement to use in a refutation of the sedevacantist theory.

    How often does the Conciliary church use essentially the very same statement.  The Conciliarist often proclaim with great satisfaction that this or that action, idea, novelty, etc., etc., etc., is the first time in the history of the church that something has been done, almost always to the chagrin of neo-conservatives such as Mr. Ferrara.  

    The new church is so proud of her novelties, her "never in Her history has the Church..." activities.  This simply cannot be used as a refutation the idea that Benedict 16 is not the pope.

    The fact that there are all too often statements and actions (including the Novus Ordo each and every day) that are proclaimed by the Conciliar church that every person who has any understanding of pre-Counciliar teachings and faith knows is heresy and apostasy.  Alarm bells have to go off when a child sees something on television (in my case, Benedict at the Blue Mosque) and asks, "Dad, what's the definition of apostasy?"

    Never in Her history has the Church changed all the sacraments.

    Never in Her history has the Church considered religious liberty to be a fundamental right and in accordance with God's will.

    Never in Her history has the Church used words in the form of the Sacrament that pervert what our Lord said.

    Never in Her history has the Church taught that committing sin (e.g., using condoms) is the first step to salvation.

    Never in Her history has the Church declared that the Church is actually bigger than the Church.

    Never in Her history has the Church taught to intrinsic goodness of praying to false gods with pagans.

    I will grant one thing to you stevusmagnus, at least this post is an actual attempt at a refutation even though Mr. Ferrara falls very short.