Some theologians argue that in the event of say a nuclear blast that destroyed Rome the Pope could have his new See anywhere like London, New York, Texas, etc.
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This question has been discussed by theologians, and the most common opinion is that it is tied to the Faith that Rome will always exist, at least in a way that it will be able to have a bishop. The reason for this is that there are dogmatic definitions that say things like, "If anyone deny that someone must be submitted to the
Roman Pontiff in order to be saved, let him be anathema." Or something along those lines.
The problem is that if there is no Rome, then the term "Roman Pontiff" has no meaning. Worse still, if the seat of the Church were moved from Rome to, let's say, New York, then that dogmatic definition would be null and void, because then one would have to submit to the "New York Pontiff" and not the "
Roman Pontiff", and dogmatic definitions cannot ever cease to be true.
And how could the pope continue to be the Roman pontiff if the seat of the Church were moved to New York, and the pope was now the bishop of New York instead of Rome?
That's how they argue it.