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Author Topic: The pope/head of 2 different Churches  (Read 4548 times)

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Offline Xenophon

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Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
« Reply #45 on: September 25, 2020, 01:03:45 PM »
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  • First of all, I personally believe the new rites are valid.  I realize most people here don't or at least have more doubts.

    Second, I agree that those who die as visible members of false religions could be saved, as do *almost all* of the trad clergy including most sede clergy.

    Which is really why the MHFM position is kind of absurd.  It leaves the church basically consisting of only laity at this point.
    The new rite is most definitely invalid, there is a lot of evidence for this. Are you aware that the essential form and ceremonies have been changed? Also, did you know that Pius XII and Leo XIII addressed the validity of ordinations?
    Pope Pius XII, Sacramentum Ordinis, Nov. 30, 1947: “But regarding the matter and form in the conferring of every order, by Our same supreme apostolic authority We decree and establish the following: … In the ordination of priests, the matter is the first imposition of the bishop’s hands which is done in silence… But the form [of Ordination] consists of the words of the preface of which the following are essential and so required for validity:


    Pope Leo XIII, Apostolicae Curae, Sept. 13, 1896: “When anyone has rightly and seriously made use of the due form and the matter requisite for effecting or conferring the sacrament he is considered by that very fact to do what the Church does. On this principle rests the doctrine that a sacrament is truly conferred by the ministry of one who is a heretic or unbaptized, provided the Catholic rite be employed. On the other hand, if the rite be changed, with the manifest intention of introducing another rite not approved by the Church, and of rejecting what the Church does, and what by the institution of Christ belongs to the nature of the sacrament, then it is clear that not only is the necessary intention wanting to the sacrament, but that the intention is adverse to and destructive of the sacrament.”

    The same exact issue that the Anglican rite had which Leo XIII stated was invalid, is exactly what is wrong with the new rite!
    Pope Leo XIII, Apostolicae Curae, Sept. 13, 1896: “… of Our own motion and certain knowledge We pronounce and declare that Ordinations carried out according to the Anglican rite have been and are absolutely null and utterly void.”
    Also, there is absolutely no such thing as visible members of false religions. You are very much in contradiction to the dogmatic pronouncements on this issue. There is absolutely nothing that merits you believing that there is an invisible church and that every heathen is part of it. This doesn't make sense because how is anyone ever not saved with this logic?
    Pope Eugene IV, Council of Florence, “Cantate Domino,” 1441, ex cathedra: “The Holy Roman Church firmly believes, professes and preaches that all those who are outside the Catholic Church, not only pagans but also Jews or heretics and schismatics, cannot share in eternal life and will go into the everlasting fire which was prepared for the devil and his angels, unless they are joined to the Church before the end of their lives; that the unity of this ecclesiastical body is of such importance that only those who abide in it do the Church’s sacraments contribute to salvation and do fasts, almsgiving and other works of piety and practices of the Christian militia productive of eternal rewards; and that nobody can be saved, no matter how much he has given away in alms and even if he has shed blood in the name of Christ, unless he has persevered in the bosom and unity of the Catholic Church.”
    You are not part of the church until you are baptized. Is is a dogma from the church.

    Pope Gregory XVI, Mirari Vos (# 13), Aug. 15, 1832:  “With the admonition of the apostle, that ‘there is one God, one faith, one baptism’ (Eph. 4:5), may those fear who contrive the notion that the safe harbor of salvation is open to persons of any religion whatever.  They should consider the testimony of Christ Himself that ‘those who are not with Christ are against Him,’ (Lk. 11:23) and that they disperse unhappily who do not gather with Him.  Therefore, ‘without a doubt, they will perish forever, unless they hold the Catholic faith whole and inviolate (Athanasian Creed).” Pope Gregory XVI, Summo Iugiter Studio (# 2), May 27, 1832: “Finally some of these misguided people attempt to persuade themselves and others that men are not saved only in the Catholic religion, but that even heretics may attain eternal life.”

    If you say those who do not profess faith in Christ can be saved, who cannot then be saved? You are also directly rejecting the John 3:5

    You should really reconsider your positions with sound reason, you are in direct contradiction of dogmatic pronouncements and scripture.

    The issue with how many people reject MHFM and their positions do not make it any less true. The end is supposed to be very harsh and difficult, so much so that if it keeps going nobody could ever be saved.

    ATHANASIAN CREED
    "Furthermore, it is necessary to everlasting salvation; that he also believe faithfully the Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ. For the right Faith is, that we believe and confess; that our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is God and Man; God, of the Substance [Essence] of the Father; begotten before the worlds; and Man, of the Substance [Essence] of his Mother, born in the world. Perfect God; and perfect Man, of a reasonable soul and human flesh subsisting. Equal to the Father, as touching his Godhead; and inferior to the Father as touching his Manhood....This is the catholic faith; which except a man believe truly and firmly, he cannot be saved."

    How can't even say the Athanasian creed with what you believe, do you understand this?



    “The Roman pontiff is the true vicar of Christ, the head of the whole church and the father and teacher of all Christians; and to him was committed in blessed Peter, by our lord Jesus Christ, the full power of tending, ruling and governing the whole church.” Council of Florence, Session 6

    Offline Xenophon

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #46 on: September 25, 2020, 01:20:41 PM »
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  • My friend. From reading your posts you sounded like a fervent new convert. One of the main problems I have with MHFH is that they do not have clergy who agree with them and support them. I would be more supportive of them if they had a traditional Bishop who supported them and ordained one of them as a priest so that they could then have Mass and the sacraments at their monastery. And then they could better follow the rule of St. Benedict. My best friend is a follower of MHFM and I wouldn't call them schismatics or heretics, though I think they may flirt with schism in their condemnations of most of the traditional Catholic clergy. I liked their video on magicians having power from the demons.
    Matto, I also like that video. But what I would say to you in regard to there not being a hierarchy is this.

    The situation is very horrible all around, living in the secular world is a total disaster... How would it have ever been as our Lord said in Luke 17 if there was a very obvious and true position with many followers and externals?

    "21 Neither shall they say: Behold here, or behold there. For lo, the kingdom of God is within you.
    22 And he said to his disciples: The days will come, when you shall desire to see one day of the Son of man; and you shall not see it.
    23 And they will say to you: See here, and see there. Go ye not after, nor follow them:
    24 For as the lightning that lighteneth from under heaven, shineth unto the parts that are under heaven, so shall the Son of man be in his day.
    25 But first he must suffer many things, and be rejected by this generation.
    26 And as it came to pass in the days of Noe, so shall it be also in the days of the Son of man.
    27 They did eat and drink, they married wives, and were given in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark: and the flood came and destroyed them all.
    28 Likewise as it came to pass, in the days of Lot: they did eat and drink, they bought and sold, they planted and built.
    29 And in the day that Lot went out of Sodom, it rained fire and brimstone from heaven, and destroyed them all.
    30 Even thus shall it be in the day when the Son of man shall be revealed.
    31 In that hour, he that shall be on the housetop, and his goods in the house, let him not go down to take them away: and he that shall be in the field, in like manner, let him not return back.
    32 Remember Lot's wife.
    33 Whosoever shall seek to save his life, shall lose it: and whosoever shall lose it, shall preserve it."

    Furthermore, we have this prophecy from our Lady at La Sallette.

    "All the universe will be struck with terror and many will let themselves be lead astray because they have not worshipped the true Christ who lives among them. It is time; the sun is darkening; only faith will survive" Our Lady of La Sallette, 1846 (Click for full translation)

    I believe that there not being an external and pastoral hierarchy to MHFM makes sense because we are at the end. Nobody agrees on anything, even the SSPX and FSSP who accept heresy don't agree with each other. Look at how broken the SSPX resistance is!  Look at Archbishop Thucs line, it has totally gone astray. I believe the nature of MHFM being simply apostolic makes sense. I don't see how we should stick to externals right now when there's no actual reason other than comfort and security!
    “The Roman pontiff is the true vicar of Christ, the head of the whole church and the father and teacher of all Christians; and to him was committed in blessed Peter, by our lord Jesus Christ, the full power of tending, ruling and governing the whole church.” Council of Florence, Session 6


    Offline claudel

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #47 on: September 25, 2020, 02:08:20 PM »
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  • Because it doesn't address the 2 churches concept, which is what this whole thread is about.

    The notion of two churches has genuine utility in the sphere of discussion, especially with regard to distinguishing (1) those who adhere to the Faith handed down once for all time by the Apostles from (2) those who use the intentional ambiguities built into the conciliar docuмents to proclaim a new, better, up-to-date faith that at best resembles an image reflected in a carnival funhouse mirror. Alas for us, the latter group comprises the overwhelming mass of the laity, clergy, and prelature of the visible church.

    The dualistic mode of expression may be seen in such a sentence as "They have the buildings, but we have the Faith." Likewise, the old axiom "possession is nine-tenths of the law" similarly responds to the practical limits available to a legal system that genuinely aims at doing less harm than good. That is to say, it abandons a priori any attempt to determine whether the possession in question is even licit. In both quoted statements, what looks to be absolutely straightforward is merely formally so; that is, it is so within a context whose framework needs to be made plain.

    To get back to two churches, the fundamental fact to be faced is that the truth that God sees in its entirety has no necessary rhetorical connection with human attempts to express or cope with that truth. Put otherwise, if there truly were two churches, all discussion would boil down to a claim that the second group described above was guilty of false advertising. The fact that this situation, were it to be so, would make nonsense of Revelation must simply be swept under the carpet (sedes do this a lot!).

    I for one shall probably continue to speak and argue as if the core issue is that there are two churches—sense evidence surely seems to confirm this—but I shall not kid myself that the actual core issue is linked to the problem of evil, which remains what it has always been: the central problem of creation. Turning our ecclesiastical superiors in the One Church in which we and they are members away from the evil they have embraced and back to the True Faith that, by rights, they should be inculcating into us is a task as daunting now as it was fifty-five years ago. Wanting to transform the task into something entirely different is certainly an error, perhaps even an error of diabolical origin.

    Offline DecemRationis

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #48 on: September 25, 2020, 02:13:51 PM »
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  • I believe that there not being an external and pastoral hierarchy to MHFM makes sense because we are at the end. Nobody agrees on anything, even the SSPX and FSSP who accept heresy don't agree with each other. Look at how broken the SSPX resistance is!  Look at Archbishop Thucs line, it has totally gone astray. I believe the nature of MHFM being simply apostolic makes sense. I don't see how we should stick to externals right now when there's no actual reason other than comfort and security!

    Hello, Xenophon. Welcome.

    It is my understanding that MHFM condemns the home alone position. Whom may one receive the sacraments from? A Sedevacantist Feenyite priest - assuming he professes no other heresies that require one to separate oneself from the heretic? There are maybe, what, 3 of those in the world?

    How could MHFM condemn a position that recognizes the general apostasy of Rome and maintains one must save one's soul through the means of the faith exercised through prayer, the Rosary and Scripture when such seems to be the reality of the elect these days?

    After all, one of the prophecies of the end, as for example it was understood by St. Alphonsus and arguably applicable to these times by the Scriptures themselves (Daniel 9:27), is that the sacrifice will be abolished and end.
    Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

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

    Offline DecemRationis

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #49 on: September 25, 2020, 02:16:35 PM »
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  • I  left out the appropriate quote:

    Quote
    "All the universe will be struck with terror and many will let themselves be lead astray because they have not worshipped the true Christ who lives among them. It is time; the sun is darkening; only faith will survive" Our Lady of La Sallette, 1846 (Click for full translation)
    Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

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


    Offline claudel

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #50 on: September 25, 2020, 02:24:10 PM »
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  • To state that a true pope presides over different churches is to say that there are different, contradictory beliefs which are true. This is heresy.

    Furthermore, Vatican II was absolutely infallible. There are three main reasons.

    First, Antipope John [XXIII] convoked the council in solemn language, enacting the unfailing magisterium;

    Vatican II was definitely infallible, but it was done so by the devil in a certain way so that people are led into nonsensical positions which end up in schism while still acknowledging and accepting Vatican II and the all the antipopes, including francis …

    Think about it …

    The characterizing term that springs most readily to mind with reference to the misinformation and outright malice in this comment is "tendentious."

    First and foremost, Xenophon—unlike the great Greek soldier and scholar whose name he sullies with this nonsense—makes the category error of confusing the legitimacy (i.e., lawfulness) of the council's summoning and meeting with the doctrinal or theological merit of the docuмents it produced. This error poisons everything that he advances as "reasoning" and renders any response to it as (1) a waste of time and (2) a morally inappropriate activity—the appropriate one being a fraternal rebuke.

    Offline claudel

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #51 on: September 25, 2020, 02:30:16 PM »
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  • … I shall not kid myself that the actual core issue is linked to the problem of evil …

    Corrigendum: "I shall not kid myself that the actual core issue isn't linked to the problem of evil."

    Mea culpa.

    Offline DecemRationis

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #52 on: September 25, 2020, 02:42:57 PM »
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  • The characterizing term that springs most readily to mind with reference to the misinformation and outright malice in this comment is "tendentious."

    First and foremost, Xenophon—unlike the great Greek soldier and scholar whose name he sullies with this nonsense—makes the category error of confusing the legitimacy (i.e., lawfulness) of the council's summoning and meeting with the doctrinal or theological merit of the docuмents it produced. This error poisons everything that he advances as "reasoning" and renders any response to it as (1) a waste of time and (2) a morally inappropriate activity—the appropriate one being a fraternal rebuke.

    The legitimacy of the summoning and convocation (and of the summoning and convoking, and then ratifying, pope) is the guarantor of it's doctrinal and theological merit . . . such is the pre-Vatican II consensus and understanding. Hence, Pius XII in Mystici Corporis:


    Quote
    Certainly the loving Mother is spotless in the Sacraments by which she gives birth to and nourishes her children; in the faith which she has always preserved inviolate; in her sacred laws imposed on all; in the evangelical counsels which she recommends; in those heavenly gifts and extraordinary grace through which with inexhaustible fecundity, she generates hosts of martyrs, virgins and confessors.

    You have it backwards: if it comes from the Church, it is supposed to be spotless; it is not, if it is spotless, then it came from the Church. 

    I grant you this much: the latter formulation is an infallible argument that can't fail. But it is nothing more than a post hoc pinning of a pre-determined definition on something which should define itself. In other words, the Church is infallible and indefectible; it contains those qualities within herself. It doesn't become Church or come from Church only when it expresses those qualities. 

    Thus the Conciliar Church you recognize is capable of becoming the Catholic Church, but most of the times it's not. 

    That Church is not the "loving Mother" of Pius XII. 
    Rom. 3:25 Whom God hath proposed to be a propitiation, through faith in his blood, to the shewing of his justice, for the remission of former sins" 

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


    Offline forlorn

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #53 on: September 25, 2020, 02:46:41 PM »
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  • The notion of two churches has genuine utility in the sphere of discussion, especially with regard to distinguishing (1) those who adhere to the Faith handed down once for all time by the Apostles from (2) those who use the intentional ambiguities built into the conciliar docuмents to proclaim a new, better, up-to-date faith that at best resembles an image reflected in a carnival funhouse mirror. Alas for us, the latter group comprises the overwhelming mass of the laity, clergy, and prelature of the visible church.

    The dualistic mode of expression may be seen in such a sentence as "They have the buildings, but we have the Faith." Likewise, the old axiom "possession is nine-tenths of the law" similarly responds to the practical limits available to a legal system that genuinely aims at doing less harm than good. That is to say, it abandons a priori any attempt to determine whether the possession in question is even licit. In both quoted statements, what looks to be absolutely straightforward is merely formally so; that is, it is so within a context whose framework needs to be made plain.

    To get back to two churches, the fundamental fact to be faced is that the truth that God sees in its entirety has no necessary rhetorical connection with human attempts to express or cope with that truth. Put otherwise, if there truly were two churches, all discussion would boil down to a claim that the second group described above was guilty of false advertising. The fact that this situation, were it to be so, would make nonsense of Revelation must simply be swept under the carpet (sedes do this a lot!).

    I for one shall probably continue to speak and argue as if the core issue is that there are two churches—sense evidence surely seems to confirm this—but I shall not kid myself that the actual core issue is linked to the problem of evil, which remains what it has always been: the central problem of creation. Turning our ecclesiastical superiors in the One Church in which we and they are members away from the evil they have embraced and back to the True Faith that, by rights, they should be inculcating into us is a task as daunting now as it was fifty-five years ago. Wanting to transform the task into something entirely different is certainly an error, perhaps even an error of diabolical origin.
    Using the term "Conciliar Church" to refer to those that embrace V2 and the New Mass, etc. is perfectly fine. It's a useful term. But referring to the Conciliar Church as if it's actually a different and entirely separate Church that the pope also leads, rather than just a part of the Church that is rife with heresy and error, is something different altogether and it's completely ridiculous. For example, when I asked "Can the Church as a body can even fallibly teach things dangerous to souls?", Sean asked "Which church?", as if the Conciliar Church and the Catholic Church are two actually distinct churches in the way the Catholic and Orthodox churches are. Yesterday he said Vatican 2 was a council of the Conciliar Church and not the Catholic Church. So again, the Conciliar Church is not just a liberal and heresy-ridden segment of the Catholic Church, but it's an entirely separate church with its own separate ecuмenical councils.

    What it amounts to is that the pope is the leader of the true church and a false church at the same time. Not only that, but any of his actions, even when he explicitly states they're for the Catholic Church, may actually be for the false church. How do we know when he acts for the true church and when he acts for the false church? We have no way, except Sean's private judgement about whether the act is Catholic or not.

    So, to reiterate, I have no issues whatsoever with using "Conciliar Church" as a rhetorical device to refer to non-Trads, etc. But when it's envisioned as a truly separate church, no different to the Anglican Church or the Orthodox Church, etc. and then say that the pope leads that false church and the Catholic Church at the same time--THAT is what I find absurd and untenable.

    Offline SeanJohnson

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #54 on: September 25, 2020, 02:53:20 PM »
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  • Using the term "Conciliar Church" to refer to those that embrace V2 and the New Mass, etc. is perfectly fine. It's a useful term. But referring to the Conciliar Church as if it's actually a different and entirely separate Church that the pope also leads, rather than just a part of the Church that is rife with heresy and error, is something different altogether and it's completely ridiculous. For example, when I asked "Can the Church as a body can even fallibly teach things dangerous to souls?", Sean asked "Which church?", as if the Conciliar Church and the Catholic Church are two actually distinct churches in the way the Catholic and Orthodox churches are. Yesterday he said Vatican 2 was a council of the Conciliar Church and not the Catholic Church. So again, the Conciliar Church is not just a liberal and heresy-ridden segment of the Catholic Church, but it's an entirely separate church with its own separate ecuмenical councils.

    What it amounts to is that the pope is the leader of the true church and a false church at the same time. Not only that, but any of his actions, even when he explicitly states they're for the Catholic Church, may actually be for the false church. How do we know when he acts for the true church and when he acts for the false church? We have no way, except Sean's private judgement about whether the act is Catholic or not.

    So, to reiterate, I have no issues whatsoever with using "Conciliar Church" as a rhetorical device to refer to non-Trads, etc. But when it's envisioned as a truly separate church, no different to the Anglican Church or the Orthodox Church, etc. and then say that the pope leads that false church and the Catholic Church at the same time--THAT is what I find absurd and untenable.

    Nobody has made the argument that the conciliar church is ENTIRELY distinct from the Catholic Church (de Mallerais’ article explicitly denies this).

    Proof you too have not read the article.

    Like a parasite attached to the host, the conciliar church is distinct from the Catholic Church, but not separated from it.

    As for your sede incomprehension (feigned and disingenuous, of course) about how to distinguish Catholic from conciliar teaching, and the dishonest claim that any such determination must result from private interpretation, I have already provided you the Catholic means contained in Scripture, popes, and saints:

    Universality (in time).

    But if applying the universality test were tantamount to private interpretation, then St. Paul and St. Vincent were teaching Protestantism!
    Rom 5: 20 - "But where sin increased, grace abounded all the more."

    Offline forlorn

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #55 on: September 25, 2020, 03:15:35 PM »
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  • Nobody has made the argument that the conciliar church is ENTIRELY distinct from the Catholic Church (de Mallerais’ article explicitly denies this).

    Proof you too have not read the article.

    Like a parasite attached to the host, the conciliar church is distinct from the Catholic Church, but not separated from it.
    Yes, yes, "materially linked" because one can appear to be a member of both. That doesn't change the fact that a "schismatic church" with its own ecuмenical councils must be an entirely separate church. The Catholic Church cannot be in schism with itself.

    As for your sede incomprehension (feigned and disingenuous, of course) about how to distinguish Catholic from conciliar teaching, and the dishonest claim that any such determination must result from private interpretation, I have already provided you the Catholic means contained in Scripture, popes, and saints:

    Universality (in time).

    But if applying the universality test were tantamount to private interpretation, then St. Paul and St. Vincent were teaching Protestantism!
    Except you also dismissed a change to fasting discipline as conciliar. The universality of fasting laws, right?

    And of course, I'd love to see where St. Paul and St. Vincent told laymen to question all the laws, decrees, promulgations, constitutions, etc. of the Church and dismiss them if we personally judge them to be novel. 


    Offline SeanJohnson

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #56 on: September 25, 2020, 04:07:23 PM »
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  • Yes, yes, "materially linked" because one can appear to be a member of both. That doesn't change the fact that a "schismatic church" with its own ecuмenical councils must be an entirely separate church. The Catholic Church cannot be in schism with itself.
    Except you also dismissed a change to fasting discipline as conciliar. The universality of fasting laws, right?

    And of course, I'd love to see where St. Paul and St. Vincent told laymen to question all the laws, decrees, promulgations, constitutions, etc. of the Church and dismiss them if we personally judge them to be novel.

    1) A false ecuмenical council is no ecuмenical council at all.  It merely has the form (method of promulgation), but not the substance (traditional Catholic doctrine);

    2) Every schismatic is separated from the Catholic Church;

    3) Ahem, fasting laws are not doctrines/teachings, and therefore are not judged on the basis of universality, but upon whether they conduce to the common good or are detrimental to it;

    4) The purpose of both the Pauline and Vincentian injunctions were to declare that any teaching not contained in antiquity was false, and implicit in their injunction therefore is the need to assess (otherwise, why warn of false shepherds, false doctrines, and doctrinal innovations if these can neither be deduced nor resisted?).

    Yet, if the sede were not able to assess doctrinal orthodoxy, by what means does he depose 6 popes (and all the future popes until the end of time)?

    Therein lies the irony of being lectured about (alleged) private interpretation, made all the more ironic in light of the fact the sedes themselves agree these teachings are errors.

    Violating the principle of non-contradiction, the sede claims such teachings could not emanate from the Catholic Church (at least, he does so for the sake of deposing popes), but then objects to R&R agreeing with him that such teachings do not come from the Catholic Church (ie., because allowing the distinction between Catholic and conciliar churches would preserve the popes whom he has determined to depose).

    You see: We can only make such conclusions to depose popes, but if the popes remain, those conclusions magically become private and subjective.
    Rom 5: 20 - "But where sin increased, grace abounded all the more."

    Offline forlorn

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #57 on: September 25, 2020, 04:20:38 PM »
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  • 1) A false ecuмenical council is no ecuмenical council at all.  It merely has the form (method of promulgation), but not the substance (traditional Catholic doctrine);

    2) Every schismatic is separated from the Catholic Church;

    3) Ahem, fasting laws are not doctrines/teachings, and therefore are not judged on the basis of universality, but upon whether they conduce to the common good or are detrimental to it;

    4) The purpose of both the Pauline and Vincentian injunctions were to declare that any teaching not contained in antiquity was false, and implicit in their injunction therefore is the need to assess (otherwise, why warn of false shepherds, false doctrines, and doctrinal innovations if these can neither be deduced nor resisted?).

    Yet, if the sede were not able to assess doctrinal orthodoxy, by what means does he depose 6 popes (and all the future popes until the end of time)?

    Therein lies the irony of being lectured about (alleged) private interpretation, made all the more ironic in light of the fact the sedes themselves agree these teachings are errors.

    Violating the principle of non-contradiction, the sede claims such teachings could not emanate from the Catholic Church (at least, he does so for the sake of deposing popes), but then objects to R&R agreeing with him that such teachings do not come from the Catholic Church!

    You see: We can only make such conclusions to depose popes, but if the popes remain, those conclusions magically become private and subjective.
    1) Is Vatican 2 an ecuмenical council of the Conciliar Church or is it not?

    2) Bishop de Mallerais said the Conciliar Church is a "schismatic church", and here you are saying every schismatic is separate from the Catholic Church. So, therefore, by your words and the bishop's, all members of the "Conciliar Church" are separate from the Catholic Church. How then do you propose someone could be in both at once?

    3) Obviously. But I asked you how you determine an act of the Catholic Church from an act of the Conciliar Church, and "universality" was all you gave. So now your stance is, when it comes to discipline and law, if laymen privately interpret laws to be contrary to the common good, they're actually laws of the Conciliar Church? So once again, every single act of the Church is down to every layman to determine for himself whether it's truly an act of the Church or not.

    4) Because individuals can teach novelties, of course, and Catholics should be wary of that. But at the end of the day, it's the Church that decides if a doctrine is true or heretical, and when the Church proposes an article of faith then it says that it's traditional(since dogma cannot charge). Where does any Saint say we ought to question what the Church teaches?

    And here we go with more random irrelevant screeching about sedevacantism.

    Offline claudel

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #58 on: September 25, 2020, 04:42:14 PM »
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  • The legitimacy of the summoning and convocation (and of the summoning and convoking, and then ratifying, pope) is the guarantor of it's doctrinal and theological merit . . . such is the pre-Vatican II consensus and understanding. Hence, Pius XII in Mystici Corporis

    No. The only guarantee attendant upon the legitimacy of the process is the a priori one that something of merit could emerge from the process.* Well-meaning, even holy people make mistakes all the time, and legitimacy alone cannot prevent such things from happening, save in the instance of a formal declaration of infallibility. Ultimately, it is up to the pope to assess the work of a council a posteriori and declare what is worthy about it and what is not.

    Furthermore, the passage from Mystici Corporis is simply not germane to the topic under discussion. It is a truism of orthodox Catholic understanding of the Church's teaching office.
    __________________
    *The conditional tense is used here advisedly, since it is by no means impossible, albeit unlikely, that churchmen, acting illegitimately, can produce doctrinally sound and meritorious work of great importance. The Gospels make pointed reference in several well-known instances to useful and meritorious things that the wicked can teach the virtuous, the parable of the Unjust Steward being simply the best known. The Portuguese proverb "God writes straight with crooked lines" has never been the object of a debunking campaign—or will you be the initiator of the first one?

    Offline SeanJohnson

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    Re: The pope/head of 2 different Churches
    « Reply #59 on: September 25, 2020, 04:42:27 PM »
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  • 1) Is Vatican 2 an ecuмenical council of the Conciliar Church or is it not?

    2) Bishop de Mallerais said the Conciliar Church is a "schismatic church", and here you are saying every schismatic is separate from the Catholic Church. So, therefore, by your words and the bishop's, all members of the "Conciliar Church" are separate from the Catholic Church. How then do you propose someone could be in both at once?

    3) Obviously. But I asked you how you determine an act of the Catholic Church from an act of the Conciliar Church, and "universality" was all you gave. So now your stance is, when it comes to discipline and law, if laymen privately interpret laws to be contrary to the common good, they're actually laws of the Conciliar Church? So once again, every single act of the Church is down to every layman to determine for himself whether it's truly an act of the Church or not.

    4) Because individuals can teach novelties, of course, and Catholics should be wary of that. But at the end of the day, it's the Church that decides if a doctrine is true or heretical, and when the Church proposes an article of faith then it says that it's traditional(since dogma cannot charge). Where does any Saint say we ought to question what the Church teaches?

    And here we go with more random irrelevant screeching about sedevacantism.

    1) In such measure as it teaches Catholicism, it is Catholic, and in such measure as it teaches novelty, it is conciliar.

    2) Materially, they are members of the Catholic Church; formally, they are members of the conciliar church;

    3) Nope.  Universality is all that’s required.  There is no private interpretation involved when the Church has already decided.

    4) Was Liberius merely an “individual” when he taught/signed/agreed to a semi-Arian formula?  Was Athanasius exercising private interpretation when he refused to go along with it?
    Rom 5: 20 - "But where sin increased, grace abounded all the more."