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Author Topic: Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty  (Read 2045 times)

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Offline Ladislaus

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Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
« on: July 01, 2015, 03:32:42 PM »
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  • http://www.rtforum.org/lt/lt9.html#II

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    PIUS IX, VATICAN II AND RELIGIOUS LIBERTY
    by Brian W. hαɾɾιson

            Part I.   The question of religious liberty, so hotly debated more than twenty years ago amongst the Bishops and periti of Vatican Council II, has been in the news again during the last year or two. Rather surprisingly, we have seen Fr. Charles Curran coming out - on one issue - on the side of none other than Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre. These two dissidents at opposite ends of the Catholic spectrum have joined forces for once in maintaining that Vatican II's Declaration on Religious Liberty, Dignitatis Humanae, is irreconcilable with preconciliar Catholic doctrine. This alleged conflict pleases Fr. Curran (since he thinks it provides a precedent for his own proposed 'revisions' of Catholic morality), while it scandalizes the Archbishop (who sees it as a reason for rejecting Vatican II).

            Whence arises the difficulty? It would need a whole book to cover this question adequately, but of the pre-conciliar doctrinal statements of the Magisterium which are supposedly incompatible with the teaching of Vatican II, the most commonly cited is probably Pope Pius IX's very emphatic teaching, in the 1864 encyclical Quanta Cura, on the duties of civil authorities towards "violators of the Catholic religion." He condemns as an "evil" opinion - one, in fact, which he "commands" to be "absolutely held (omnino haberi) as reprobated, denounced, and condemned by all the children of the Catholic Church"1   - the view that in the "best" condition of society, such persons are not to be penalized by the government unless they endanger the "public peace" (pax publica).2   Governments can and should be more restrictive than that towards non-Catholic propaganda, teaches the Pope.

            To understand precisely what Pius IX had in mind here we need to be aware of the historical background of the encyclical. Quanta Cura was largely a reaffirmation of what Gregory XVI had said thirty years earlier in the 1832 encyclical Mirari Vos. The principal target in that case was the French philosopher-journalist H.F. de Lamennais, whose newspaper, L'Avenir, was demanding from the State, as a matter of universal principle, a liberty for the diffusion of error which it admitted would be virtually unlimited ("on laisse à 1'erreur la faculté illimitée de se produire"). 3   The State, according to L'Avenir, should be totally secular, and may limit propaganda of any sort "only in the order of material interests" ("ne ... que dans l'ordre des interêts matériels").4   Total liberty of propaganda must be granted, so that

    The Constitutional power possesses only the right and duty to repress crimes and other offences which would materially attack these liberties (qui attenteraient matériellement à ces libertés) - or other civil and political rights of the citizens.5

            In other words, Lamennais would not allow the State to recognize in any effective way the existence of God or a transcendent, spiritual nature in man - much less the unique truth of the Catholic faith or of Christian moral values. "Total separation" of Church and State was demanded (even in overwhelmingly Catholic countries)6   along with the abolition of all concordats between governments and the Holy See.7   In this system, the avowedly "materialistic" criteria required of the State would allow it to exercise censorship or coercion only in order to prevent incitement to riots, ѕєdιтισn, or revolution, or to forestall physical harm or annoyance to persons or property. In other words, to preserve "public peace."

            Lamennais was condemned and eventually left the Church, but his influence remained strong, especially in France, and Pius IX eventually felt constrained to renew his predecessor's condemnation. It is clearly the same extreme liberalism which Quanta Cura has in mind: the kind which demands that

    citizens have the right to all kinds of liberty, to be restrained by no law, whether ecclesiastical or civil, by which they may be enabled to manifest openly and publicly their ideas, by word of mouth, through the press, or by any other means.8

            This historical background is essential for an accurate understanding of what Gregory XVI and Pius IX had in mind when they condemned "liberty of conscience and of worship." Admittedly, the concordats which they and their pre-conciliar successors established with nations such as Spain and certain Latin-American states were a good deal more restrictive towards other religions than any agreement which the Holy See would now be prepared to countenance;9   but all that the early encyclicals condemned as incompatible with Catholic doctrine (that is, with divine law) was this totally permissive and secularist vision of the State which was fashionable, then as now, amongst certain Catholic intellectuals. (It was the pre-conciliar public law of the Church, not pre-conciliar doctrine, which held that in predominantly Catholic countries non-Catholic propaganda as such could be seen as a threat to the common good, and therefore restricted by law.)10

            Now, Vatican II's teaching is not nearly as liberal as that of Lamennais and his followers. It therefore does not fall under the ban of the 19th-century encyclicals which were aimed precisely at those gentlemen. In fact, Dignitatis Humanae, far from contradicting Pope Pius IX, explicitly repeats his teaching that "public peace" is not the only criterion which governments may appeal to in restricting religious (or anti-religious) manifestations or propaganda. According to article 7 of the conciliar Declaration, "public peace" is only one of three criteria which the State may invoke for that purpose. The other two are "the necessary protection of public morality", and "the effective protection of the rights of all citizens" (and the "peaceful settlement of conflicts of rights"). Thanks to an intervention by the young Archbishop Karol Wojtyla, a statement was added to this paragraph insisting that these limits are to be decided and imposed on the basis of the "objective moral order". And it is, of course the Catholic Church which is the unique interpreter of what is objectively moral or immoral.

            Is the Council implying, then, that governments ideally ought to recognize the Catholic Church's unique role in that respect? Yes it is. Not only does article 1 of the conciliar Declaration reaffirm the "traditional Catholic teaching" about the "moral duty" of "societies" (not just individuals) towards the true religion; but the official relator for the schema on religious liberty, Bishop Emil de Smedt, explained to the assembled Fathers that this first article definitely must be understood to reaffirm the duty of "public authority" towards the Catholic Church as the true religion. He pointed out that the previous draft had been revised precisely in order to bring the docuмent more clearly into line with the teaching of the 19th-century Popes. (Until this and other last-minute revisions were made to the schema, persistent conservative criticism - and, we might add, the power of the Holy Spirit - had repeatedly prevented a solid consensus of positive votes from being gained, whenever earlier drafts had been submitted to the judgment of the Council Fathers.)11   Bishop de Smedt's vitally important official commentary (which as far as I know has never been published before in English) is worth quoting. During the 164th general congregation of the Council (19 November 1965) he gave the following explanation:

    Some Fathers affirm that the Declaration does not sufficiently show how our doctrine is not opposed to ecclesiastical docuмents up till the time of the Supreme Pontiff Leo XIII. As we said in the last relatio, this is a matter for future theological and historical studies to bring to light more fully. As regards the substance of the problem, the point should be made that, while the papal docuмents up to Leo XIII insisted more on the moral duty of public authorities towards the true religion, the recent Supreme Pontiffs, while retaining this doctrine, complement it by highlighting another duty of the same authorities, namely, that of observing the exigencies of the dignity of the human person in religious matters, as a necessary element of the common good. The text before you today recalls more clearly (see nos. 1 and 3) the duties of the public authority towards the true religion (officia potestatis publicae erga veram religionem); from which it is manifest that this part of the doctrine has not been overlooked. However, the special object of our Declaration is to clarify the second part of the doctrine of recent Supreme Pontiffs - that dealing with the rights and duties which emerge from a consideration of the dignity of the human person.12

            Here are the last two sentences of Dignitatis Humanae, article 1, in which we have underlined the words added in this final revision to which Bishop de Smedt was referring:

    So while the religious freedom which men demand in fulfilling their obligation to worship God has to do with freedom from coercion in civil society, it leaves intact the traditional Catholic doctrine on the moral duty of men and societies towards the true religion and the one Church of Christ. Over and above this, the sacred Council, in dealing with this question of liberty, intends to develop the teaching of recent Popes on the inviolable rights of the human person and on the constitutional order of society.

            The addition to article 3, mentioned by Bishop de Smedt, comes in the last sentence of that section, and makes it clear that governments should not be merely "neutral" or "agnostic" about the value of religious activity. On the contrary, because of its "transcendent" character, they have a duty to "recognize and favour the religious life of citizens."

            In the light of these additions, which were certainly not sought by liberal periti such as Fr. John Courtney Murray, the comment by Murray in Abbott's edition of the Council docuмents must be seen as both exegetically and doctrinally equivocal. He says there:

    The Church does not make, as a matter of right or of divine law, the claim that she should be established as the "religion of the state".13

            We should distinguish two propositions:

            (a) Divine law requires the civic community as such to recognize the Catholic Church as the "religion of state" explicitly, in a written Constitution or law-code;

            (b) Divine law requires the civic community as such to give at least de facto recognition to the Catholic Church as the true religion, and to reflect that recognition in its laws and communal decisions.

            Neither Vatican II nor pre-conciliar magisterial teaching insisted on (a) above, because written constitutions and legal docuмents are only one historically-determined form of "recognition". Divine law concerns what is true always and everywhere; and in earlier centuries (or theoretically even today) a less modern, less developed, or very small society might have no written laws or Constitution at all. (As the Church's Code of Canon Law recognizes in canons 27 and 28, custom - especially ancient or long-established custom - is a very respectable form of law.) Vatican II deliberately refrained from passing judgment on whether the Catholic Church ought to be constitutionally recognized as the "State religion": article 6 simply makes a brief, very general statement that, if one religion (Catholic or non-Catholic) is given special recognition "in the constitution of a State" (in iuridica civitatis ordinatione), then the religious freedom of others must be respected as well.

            However, proposition (b) above is equivalently reaffirmed in article 1's teaching that "societies" (a general term that covers everything from the most simple nomadic tribe to a modern superpower) have a moral duty towards the true religion - a duty set out more fully in the "traditional" teaching of earlier Pontiffs, which the Council says it intends to leave "intact". With societies, as with individuals, Almighty God is more fundamentally interested in what we actually do than in what promises or guarantees we may happen to make on paper; and as history amply bears out, nations without a constitutional, legal, "establishment" of the Church have sometimes been more favourable in practice towards Catholic principles than some other nations where Catholicism, on paper, is described as the "religion of the State". (Ireland and the Philippines are arguably commendable examples of this). This unchanging Catholic doctrine about the duty of societies as such towards the true religion allows, of course, for the fact that in societies with a plurality of religions, as well as unbelievers, the fulfilment of this social duty will often be politically difficult, or even impossible. Much more so will that be the case, obviously, where some other religion - or even atheism - is firmly "established".

            Part II.   Let us return to the question of legal limits on religious liberty. Vatican II, as we saw, teaches that governments can and should restrict activity carried out in the name of religious freedom not only when "public peace" is endangered, but also when public morality or any other rights of citizens are jeopardized by such activity. "All these matters", says the Council, "constitute the fundamental part of the common good (partem boni communis fundamentalem constituunt) and belong to what is called public order".14   These "other rights" of citizens are not defined exhaustively, but the Council itself gives some examples. Any kind of religious propaganda - especially amongst the poor and uneducated - which even "seems to savour" (sapere videatur) of what is "coercive, dishonest, or unworthy" must "at all times" be avoided.15   Then, in another last-minute "tightening-up" of the docuмent, a statement was added that such propaganda is "an infringement of the rights of others".16   This addition made it clear that governments might justly ban such coercive, dishonest, or unworthy activity as an offence against public order, as defined in article 7.

            It should be clear by now that Dignitatis Humanae, that alleged precedent for radical doctrinal change which Fr. Curran finds so encouraging (and Archbishop Lefebvre so alarming), escapes quite unscathed from the thunderbolts hurled by Pio Nono against Lamennaisian liberalism. A very significant range of "violations of the Catholic religion" could in fact be penalized by governments acting in line with Vatican II, over and above the kinds of propaganda which might disturb or endanger the "public peace".

            Atheistic and anti-religious propaganda, for instance, can scarcely appeal to Vatican II in seeking to justify a "right" to legal protection. What the Declaration intends to protect are "the private and public acts of religion by which men direct themselves to God according to their convictions".17   That clearly does not include acts of irreligion, by which men direct themselves (and others) away from God.

            Not only pornographic material, but what Msgr. John McCarthy has aptly termed "pornology", could be legally suppressed, according to Vatican II, insofar as it undermines "public morality". ("Pornology" means literature which, while it may not be directly lurid or erotic and may purport to be serious and scholarly - nevertheless sets out to persuade people that they may justifiably engage in certain kinds of sɛҳuąƖ activity which, in point of fact, are contrary to the "objective moral order").

            Someone may object that the Council would not want governments to let the Catholic Church be the arbiter of what is (or is not) in accordance with this "objective moral order", since it says that in deciding what limits to set, they should avoid "the unfair practice of favouritism" (to use the translation given in the Flannery edition). However, apart from the fact that it would be impossible for a Council of the Catholic Church to insinuate that some authority other than the Church herself might be a better judge of what is "objectively" right or wrong, the Latin text does not carry Flannery's possible hint that favouring one side is, as such, necessarily unfair. It just says that in deciding what sort of activity to forbid or permit, governments are to avoid "unfairly favouring one side" (uni parti inique favendo).18   That the chief signatory of Dignitatis Humanae, Paul VI, did not understand the Declaration to teach that it is "unfair" to favour the Catholic "side" (or what is popularly seen as the "Catholic side") became clear three years later. Most people are unaware that the 1968 encyclical Humanae Vitae did not merely reaffirm the immorality of contraception as a private activity, but also exhorted "Rulers of Nations ... not (to) tolerate any legislation" which would permit the distribution of contraceptives.19   His call found receptive ears in Ireland, at least until a year or two ago.

            The more virulent forms of Protestant and other propaganda against the Catholic Church could certainly be legally banned in accordance with Vatican II's strictures against "dishonest" and "unworthy" forms of promoting religion. As we saw, religious publicity, according to the Council, should not even "seem to savour" of such defects. But some current expressions of fundamentalism are positively reeking with "dishonesty" and "unworthiness"! Jack Chick's anti-Catholic comic books, for instance, contain at least one travesty of Catholic doctrine per page. They also accuse the Jesuits of brain-washing would-be converts to Protestantism while keeping them locked in padded cells; while Catho1ic Action, we are told, sends attractive girls to infiltrate Protestant seminaries and parish congregations, spurred on by promises of generous mitigations of their time in Purgatory for every pastor or seminarian they can seduce and corrupt!

            Blasphemy, too, is an obviously "unworthy" form of "religious" expression. As recently as 1985, Pope John Paul II aligned himself with Gregory XVI and Pius IX in calling for action against this particular form of "violating the Catholic religion": he protested against the public showing in Rome of the notorious film "Hail Mary", even though neither he nor anyone else tried to claim that it was a menace to "public peace".

            Let us summarize. With Vatican II, Catholic doctrine, or divine law, remains as always that societies and their public authorities are morally obliged to act, legislate, and govern in accordance with the principles of the true religion. (The Council's Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity also reaffirms that teaching in its article 13, which says that Catholics should "strive to infuse a Christian spirit into the mentality, customs, laws, and structures" of their community). This same unchanging divine law entails the right and duty of public authorities to penalize those who attack the true religion - to the extent that the common good requires.

            But to what extent, precisely, does the common good require such coercive measures? That can vary a great deal according to historic, social, and political circuмstances; and the Church's infallibility does not extend to this area, which is one not of basic principle, but of deciding on proportionate means towards a given end. The Church's pre-conciliar public law applied the above doctrinal principles by ruling that in overwhelmingly Catholic countries, all non-Catholic religious activity in public should, as such, be considered a danger to the common good, and hence as deserving of legal prohibition.

            Vatican II, however, in highlighting another aspect of divine law - the natural right of all men to be left free (within due limits) to practice their own religion without human interference - has in effect substantially changed this earlier ecclesiastical law (not doctrine). In the same way, the Church has often changed many other aspects of her previous legislation or discipline when they no longer seemed appropriate, or appeared to be giving rise to injustices in practice.20   Since Vatican II, understood especially in the light of how the Holy See has applied the conciliar Declaration, the new law is that even in the most predominantly Catholic countries, the right of at least the more moderate and upright non-Catholic groups to immunity from government interference takes precedence over the right of Catholics not to be "led into temptation" towards sins against their faith, as a result of the public diffusion of heresy or infidelity.21   This immunity, according to the Council, is itself an aspect of the common good - understanding that term in the broadest sense. As far as civil restriction goes, then, the Church now interprets and applies the divine law less severely than before: in matters of religion, the common good now permits and requires coercive measures only if its most fundamental features are assailed - the features which are grouped together in Dignitatis Humanae: 7 under the term "public order". In other words, even in a strongly Catholic country, the public diffusion of non-Catholic ideas or practices should not now (according to Vatican II) be considered a punishable threat to the common good simply insofar as they are non-Catholic. Rather, in order to merit that classification they would usually have to be the kinds of anti-Catholic propaganda which also assault or threaten (by virtue either of their content or their methods) those norms of truth, honesty, civic responsibility, sɛҳuąƖ morality, and respect for other persons which can be validly argued and established on human and rational grounds alone, without appealing to the supernatural authority of divine revelation.

            In short, all Catholics who love and honour the Church's Magisterium can take heart. We do not have to rest content with the none-too-reassuring position that Vatican II has not been "proven guilty" of contradicting Pope Pius IX's Quanta Cura. Once we read the relevant docuмents with due care, in the original Latin, with a correct historical understanding of what they intended by the choice of certain expressions, and bearing in mind the crucial distinction between the Church's doctrine on the one hand, and her mutable public law on the other, only one verdict is possible: the Council is "proved innocent" of that charge.


    Offline Ladislaus

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #1 on: July 01, 2015, 03:34:22 PM »
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  • I was reading this and find it absolutely unpersuasive.  I'll get into why later.  But I throw it out there in case anyone else wants to start dissecting it.


    Offline Capt McQuigg

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #2 on: July 01, 2015, 04:54:06 PM »
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  • Thanks for posting this, Ladislaus!  

    I had read from that forum a while ago but lost contact with it.  It is a treasure trove of interesting articles.

    Offline Jehanne

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #3 on: July 03, 2015, 08:06:42 PM »
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  • Quote
    Condemned Error:  33. That heretics be burned is against the will of the Spirit.


    http://patristica.net/denzinger/

    Francis & Friends need to just admit that they are atheist, and not Catholic, because if the Triune God did, indeed, become man and walk the Earth, then religious liberty is in the same category as "division by zero."  It makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.

    Not only did Catholic princes & kings have the right to burn obstinate, unrepentant heretics alive at the stake, they had a duty & obligation to do so.  "Heresy is to the soul what murder is to be body"; as such, to not punish heretics with death is equivalent to not defending one's daughter and family from a rapist or murderer.

    Offline Arvinger

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #4 on: July 04, 2015, 06:18:06 AM »
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  • Quote from: Council of Vienne, 1311-1313
    25. It is an insult to the holy name and a disgrace to the Christian faith that in certain parts of the world subject to Christian princes where Saracens live, sometimes apart, sometimes intermingled with Christians, the Saracen priests commonly called Zabazala, in their temples or mosques, in which the Saracens meet to adore the infidel Mahomet, loudly invoke and extol his name each day at certain hours from a high place, in the hearing of both Christians and Saracens and there make public declarations in his honour. There is a place, moreover, where once was buried a certain Saracen whom other Saracens venerate as a saint. A great number of Saracens flock there quite openly from far and near. This brings disrepute on our faith and gives great scandal to the faithful. These practices cannot be tolerated any further without displeasing the divine majesty. We therefore, with the sacred council's approval, strictly forbid such practices henceforth in Christian lands. We enjoin on Catholic princes, one and all, who hold sovereignty over the said Saracens and in whose territory these practices occur, and we lay on them a pressing obligation under the divine judgment that, as true Catholics and zealous for the Christian faith, they give consideration to the disgrace heaped on both them and other Christians. They are to remove this offence altogether from their territories and take care that their subjects remove it, so that they may thereby attain the reward of eternal happiness. They are to forbid expressly the public invocation of the sacrilegious name of Mahomet. They shall also forbid anyone in their dominions to attempt in future the said pilgrimage or in any way give countenance to it. Those who presume to act otherwise are to be so chastised by the princes for their irreverence, that others may be deterred from such boldness.


    Just one of many examples of the teaching of the Catholic Church that the secular authorities are responsible for restraining public practice of false religions. The Council teaches that the Catholic princes are to forbid public Islamic worship. Note that the Council commands it not just as temporary solution, but as obligation under the Divine Law.

    Quote from: Lateran Council IV, Constitution 3., "On heretics", 1215
    Let secular authorities, whatever offices they may be discharging, be advised and urged and if necessary be compelled by ecclesiastical censure, if they wish to be reputed and held to be faithful, to take publicly an oath for the defence of the faith to the effect that they will seek, in so far as they can, to expel from the lands subject to their jurisdiction all heretics designated by the church in good faith. Thus whenever anyone is promoted to spiritual or temporal authority, he shall be obliged to confirm this article with an oath. If however a temporal lord, required and instructed by the church, neglects to cleanse his territory of this heretical filth, he shall be bound with the bond of excommunication by the metropolitan and other bishops of the province.


    Here the Lateran Council IV under Pope Innocent III teaches that secular authorities are bound to fight heresies, even under pain of excommunication if they were ordered and instructed by the Church and failed to surpress the development of heresy.


    Offline Cantarella

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #5 on: July 04, 2015, 10:36:27 AM »
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  • Error has no rights. It is an obligation of the Catholic Church to fight against heresies and errors and to install the Supernatural Reign and Truth of Christ into society. Truth and falsehood cannot co-exist. There is only one way that God wants to be glorified and one way alone of human salvation. Religious Liberty means that Christ and His Church are put on the same level with false religions, forever renewing and falling into the old temptation of the Idolaters.

    Quote from: Leo XIII

     Justice therefore forbids and reason itself forbids, the State to be godless; or to adopt a line of action which would end in godlessness, namely, to treat the various religions (as they call them) alike, and to bestow upon them promiscuously equal rights and privileges. Since then, the profession of one religion is necessary in the State, that religion must be professed which alone is true, and which can be recognized without difficulty, especially in Catholic States, because the marks of the truth are, as it were, engraved upon it.


    If anyone says that true and natural water is not necessary for baptism and thus twists into some metaphor the words of our Lord Jesus Christ" Unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Spirit" (Jn 3:5) let him be anathema.

    Offline songbird

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #6 on: July 04, 2015, 04:16:34 PM »
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  • Heresy, the new order is heresy!  If anyone wonders if the 'pope" is Catholic, just see what he says, new order mass.  That is heresy.

    Offline JPaul

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #7 on: July 05, 2015, 02:08:40 PM »
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  • Quote from: Ladislaus
    I was reading this and find it absolutely unpersuasive.  I'll get into why later.  But I throw it out there in case anyone else wants to start dissecting it.


    I would agree. This when distilled down, amounts to little more than modernist whoey, using historical circuмstances to undermine true doctrine. The same method which is used to reinterpret and gut the Doctrine of Exclusive salvation.

    Everything means something other than what it says to these folks, including Vatican II.

    It is truly comical that the fellow calls ABL a dissident for dissenting from Vatican II, which itself was the grandest dissent from the Faith and doctrine of the Catholic Church.


    Offline Ladislaus

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #8 on: July 05, 2015, 04:35:53 PM »
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  • Quote from: J.Paul
    Quote from: Ladislaus
    I was reading this and find it absolutely unpersuasive.  I'll get into why later.  But I throw it out there in case anyone else wants to start dissecting it.


    I would agree. This when distilled down, amounts to little more than modernist whoey, using historical circuмstances to undermine true doctrine. The same method which is used to reinterpret and gut the Doctrine of Exclusive salvation.


    Exactly.  That's just the first terrible argument.

    He argues that Gregory XVI had in mind one specific heretic (Lamennais) in his condemnations, listed several of the heretic's extreme false propositions, then claims that Pius IX was just blindly reiterating the teaching of Gregory XVI.  Ergo, according to hαɾɾιson, unless one holds ALL of the extreme false propositions of Lamennais, one doesn't fall under the condemnation of Pius IX.  That's utterly preposterous.  And that's just the beginning.

    Notice how carefully hαɾɾιson avoids quoting any substantial sections of Mirari Vos, Quanta Cura, and Dignitatis Humanae ... for the juxtaposition of certain texts would be damning to his thesis.

    Offline Ladislaus

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #9 on: July 05, 2015, 04:42:02 PM »
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  • I cite this article because the Modernist Apologists on "Catholic Answers" cite hαɾɾιson's article as THE seminal work "PROVING" that DH doesn't contradict Pius IX and Gregory XVI.

    It doesn't even come close to doing so.

    But the mere fact that one priest decades later needs to write entire articles to "prove" that V2 does not contradict previous Magisterium IN ITSELF demonstrates what an abomination V2 is.  Never should the faithful be scandalized by such garbage and be required to read article after article to understand the "true meaning" of previous Magisterium.

    And, yes, the same process has been used to attack the EENS dogma for a couple centuries now.  So, what the Church REALLY meant was [the opposite of] EENS ... please see the following twenty pages of explanation.

    Offline Charlemagne

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #10 on: July 05, 2015, 06:18:47 PM »
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  • Quote from: Ladislaus
    But the mere fact that one priest decades later needs to write entire articles to "prove" that V2 does not contradict previous Magisterium IN ITSELF demonstrates what an abomination V2 is.  Never should the faithful be scandalized by such garbage and be required to read article after article to understand the "true meaning" of previous Magisterium.


    Perhaps they should have included this in their misguided effort to introduce more Scripture into "Mass" with their three-year cycle:

    "For God is not the author of confusion, but of peace." --1 Corinthians 14:33
    "This principle is most certain: The non-Christian cannot in any way be Pope. The reason for this is that he cannot be head of what he is not a member. Now, he who is not a Christian is not a member of the Church, and a manifest heretic is not a Christian, as is clearly taught by St. Cyprian, St. Athanasius, St. Augustine, St. Jerome, and others. Therefore, the manifest heretic cannot be Pope." -- St. Robert Bellarmine


    Offline TKGS

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #11 on: July 05, 2015, 08:04:11 PM »
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  • Quote from: Ladislaus
    I cite this article because the Modernist Apologists on "Catholic Answers" cite hαɾɾιson's article as THE seminal work "PROVING" that DH doesn't contradict Pius IX and Gregory XVI.

    It doesn't even come close to doing so.

    But the mere fact that one priest decades later needs to write entire articles to "prove" that V2 does not contradict previous Magisterium IN ITSELF demonstrates what an abomination V2 is.  Never should the faithful be scandalized by such garbage and be required to read article after article to understand the "true meaning" of previous Magisterium.


    Fr. hαɾɾιson's ultimate problem is the fact that his pope and bishops simply don't interpret DH the way he does.  Frankly, this is the problem that all Novus Ordo "conservative" apologists have in trying to prove Vatican 2 to be a Catholic Council.  The Conciliar hierarchy is so utterly anti-Catholic that they contradict conservatives every attempt to reconcile the Council with Catholicism.

    Offline Arvinger

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #12 on: July 05, 2015, 08:33:43 PM »
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  • Quote from: TKGS
    Quote from: Ladislaus
    I cite this article because the Modernist Apologists on "Catholic Answers" cite hαɾɾιson's article as THE seminal work "PROVING" that DH doesn't contradict Pius IX and Gregory XVI.

    It doesn't even come close to doing so.

    But the mere fact that one priest decades later needs to write entire articles to "prove" that V2 does not contradict previous Magisterium IN ITSELF demonstrates what an abomination V2 is.  Never should the faithful be scandalized by such garbage and be required to read article after article to understand the "true meaning" of previous Magisterium.


    Fr. hαɾɾιson's ultimate problem is the fact that his pope and bishops simply don't interpret DH the way he does.  Frankly, this is the problem that all Novus Ordo "conservative" apologists have in trying to prove Vatican 2 to be a Catholic Council.  The Conciliar hierarchy is so utterly anti-Catholic that they contradict conservatives every attempt to reconcile the Council with Catholicism.


    Yes, I think this is one of the reasons why there are growing speculations among the Novus Ordites that Benedict XVI's resignation could have been invalid. Ratzinger spoke a lot about "hermeneutics of continuity" and at least gave appearence of trying to reconcile Vatican II with the Catholic teaching, and of course he promulgated Summorum Pontificuм. Of course these moves do not change the fact that he was a complete modernist, just like the rest of Conciliar Popes(?), but under Benedict XVI it was much easier for the conservative wing of Novus Ordo to at least attempt to reconcile the post-Vatican II madness with the Catholic faith. This quote from Bishop Sanborn about conservative Novus Ordites sums it up perfectly:

    Quote from: Bishop Sanborn
    So while under Ratzinger the structure linking pre-Vatican II and post-Vatican was in their minds stable, Bergoglio has become for them the name of a theological hurricane which is  doing heavy damage to their system, and threatens to bring it down altogether.

    Offline Ladislaus

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    Fr. Brian hαɾɾιsons Defense of Religious Liberty
    « Reply #13 on: July 06, 2015, 10:09:43 AM »
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  • Benedict XVI's "heremeneutic of continuity" was in fact a Hegelian-dialectic-based form of modernism.  You take Old Magisterium (thesis) and New Magisterium (antithesis) and then blend the two.  He applied the same dialectic to the Liturgy.  So what of Ratzinger's "hermeneutic of continuity" when he famously referred to the V2 being the equivalent of the French Revolution in the Church?

    Also, Summorum was nothing but a clever sleight of hand.  You see, with the Indult, the Tridentine Mass was forbidden except when permitted.  With SP, it was permitted except when forbidden (due to the last out clause which allowed the bishops final say in the matter).  It was just a trick to win over Traditionalists, a bait set for them to lure them into the V2 trap.

    Offline Ladislaus

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    « Reply #14 on: July 06, 2015, 10:13:23 AM »
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  • Quote from: TKGS
    Fr. hαɾɾιson's ultimate problem is the fact that his pope and bishops simply don't interpret DH the way he does.


    While this is true, the reason for this is that Fr. hαɾɾιson's explanation is bunk and "his pope and bishops" are actually correct in their understanding of it and of its logical conclusions and concrete application.  Fr. hαɾɾιson is attempting to do theological gymnastics (like playing the old Twister game) in order to get the new and the old to fit and doesn't really convince anybody ... except those few NeoCon Catholics who WANT to be convinced by it.