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Author Topic: Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede  (Read 22547 times)

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Offline stevusmagnus

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Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
« Reply #30 on: June 11, 2011, 01:28:19 PM »
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  • Quote from: Cristian
    No, he doesn´t say that. He says that if a Pope is manifest heretic he would cease to be member of the Church and therefore he would cease to be Pope and therefore that person, who was a former Pope could be judged by the Church in the same way as the Church judges any other person. He is rebuking specially Cajetan´s argument who said that the Pope has to be deposed instead of losing the office automatically. What we, sedes, are doing is merely recognizing that BXVI cannot be the Pope since he is manifest heretic (first part of Bellarmine´s quote) and therefore he lost the office (or, to be more precise, he never had it). We are not judging the Pope. Actually in Bellarmine´s argument the Church doesn´t judg the Pope either, but rather a former Pope.

    You see the difference?


    Yes, I recognize this. My point is that the Church declares that that Pope X has, in fact, become a formal heretic. Joe sede doesn't decide for himself that Pope X is a formal heretic and consider him anti-pope when there has been no formal declaration recognizing this. This would induce anarchy. It would create a burden for each lay Catholic to examine everything every Pope publicly says for heresy and then make his own private determination as to whether the Pope is Pope. So then every lay Catholic, in effect, becomes his own Pope, under the guise that the "heresy" is "obvious" and "indisputable". Prots do the same thing.

    Offline Telesphorus

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #31 on: June 11, 2011, 01:32:35 PM »
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  • Quote from: stevusmagnus
    Yes, I recognize this. My point is that the Church declares that that Pope X has, in fact, become a formal heretic.


    The Church can't presume ahead of time that the Pope is the Pope otherwise it would be trying to judge the Pope.  The situation of a Pope ceasing to be a Pope can only be resolved by it becoming manifest to Catholics.  The "conciliar church" will never do anything about it.


    Offline Cristian

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #32 on: June 11, 2011, 01:58:35 PM »
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  • Quote from: stevusmagnus
    Quote from: Cristian
    No, he doesn´t say that. He says that if a Pope is manifest heretic he would cease to be member of the Church and therefore he would cease to be Pope and therefore that person, who was a former Pope could be judged by the Church in the same way as the Church judges any other person. He is rebuking specially Cajetan´s argument who said that the Pope has to be deposed instead of losing the office automatically. What we, sedes, are doing is merely recognizing that BXVI cannot be the Pope since he is manifest heretic (first part of Bellarmine´s quote) and therefore he lost the office (or, to be more precise, he never had it). We are not judging the Pope. Actually in Bellarmine´s argument the Church doesn´t judg the Pope either, but rather a former Pope.

    You see the difference?


    Yes, I recognize this. My point is that the Church declares that that Pope X has, in fact, become a formal heretic. Joe sede doesn't decide for himself that Pope X is a formal heretic and consider him anti-pope when there has been no formal declaration recognizing this. This would induce anarchy. It would create a burden for each lay Catholic to examine everything every Pope publicly says for heresy and then make his own private determination as to whether the Pope is Pope. So then every lay Catholic, in effect, becomes his own Pope, under the guise that the "heresy" is "obvious" and "indisputable". Prots do the same thing.


    2 Things here:

    1) Nowhere Bellarmine or other theologian said that in order for a Pope to be public heretic and therefore lose membership and the office a declaration is needed.
    Actually even if you accept that a declaration is needed that means that the fact of the Pope losing the office already took place and what the Church would do is to say "X by X fact lost the office ipso facto".

    2) Ad hominem. You take and choose from post Vat. II "Popes" what is in accordance with tradition and reject what is wrong. The very raison d´etre of traditionalism is to reject many things after Vat II. I mean you (and everyone else) do exactly the same thing you accuse sedes, unless you believe that each human being has the right to worship anything he wishes, or that any religion is a mean of salvation, or that we can actively participate in non-catholic worships, or that JPII is an example for all of us to go to heaven, etc. etc. etc.

    Offline s2srea

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #33 on: June 11, 2011, 02:23:15 PM »
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  • Offline s2srea

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #34 on: June 11, 2011, 02:23:54 PM »
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  • Quote from: Cristian
    How do you reconcile this with canon 1556? "The Holy See cannot be judged by anyone"


    Cristian- I think I made a somatic/ vocabulary mistake.. stevus sums it up nicely:

    ...the Church declares that that Pope X has, in fact, become a formal heretic. Joe sede doesn't decide for himself that Pope X is a formal heretic and consider him anti-pope when there has been no formal declaration recognizing this. This would induce anarchy. It would create a burden for each lay Catholic to examine everything every Pope publicly says for heresy and then make his own private determination as to whether the Pope is Pope. So then every lay Catholic, in effect, becomes his own Pope, under the guise that the "heresy" is "obvious" and "indisputable". Prots do the same thing.[/i]

    Quote

    Cristian: But opinions can be wrong or true, right?. Besides if you accept the possibility BXVI may not be the Pope, that is, if you have serious reasons or doubts about he being the Pope, in practice, you should act as if he were not the Pope, since as the saying goes "a doubtful Pope is not Pope".



    Yes, and because opinions can be wrong I decide to leave the matter to a future council. And it is because opinions may be right that I do not attend NO and will  reccomend no one attends NO, FSSP, Indult, or anywhere where they have a strong hold on the priests and can 'force' them to do things which are contrary to the faith... I don't think you can go wrong spiritually with that can you? But trying to judge the pope, as sede's do, I think can (lets be precise- not will, but can) get you in trouble with God imho.

    So, I will quote stevus again: My point is that the Church declares that that Pope X has, in fact, become a formal heretic. Joe sede doesn't decide for himself that Pope X is a formal heretic and consider him anti-pope when there has been no formal declaration recognizing this.


    Offline s2srea

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #35 on: June 11, 2011, 02:29:02 PM »
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  • Quote from: Cristian
    2 Things here:

    1) Nowhere Bellarmine or other theologian said that in order for a Pope to be public heretic and therefore lose membership and the office a declaration is needed.

    But they also do not mention that it is not needed... now what? I believe i read somewhere on here (caminus?) something which actually refuted this point.

    Quote

    Actually even if you accept that a declaration is needed that means that the fact of the Pope losing the office already took place and what the Church would do is to say "X by X fact lost the office ipso facto".


    Right, but this doesn't address the issue that you 'may' be wrong for you and I are not Cardinals or bishops, and technically, in normal times, we wouldn't be even discussing theological matters so openly, much less the office of the pope because ordinarily these things are left to be decided by those who have the ability to in fact decide them.

    Offline Cristian

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #36 on: June 11, 2011, 02:40:27 PM »
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  • Quote from: s2srea
    Quote from: Cristian
    How do you reconcile this with canon 1556? "The Holy See cannot be judged by anyone"


    Cristian- I think I made a somatic/ vocabulary mistake.. stevus sums it up nicely:

    ...the Church declares that that Pope X has, in fact, become a formal heretic. Joe sede doesn't decide for himself that Pope X is a formal heretic and consider him anti-pope when there has been no formal declaration recognizing this. This would induce anarchy. It would create a burden for each lay Catholic to examine everything every Pope publicly says for heresy and then make his own private determination as to whether the Pope is Pope. So then every lay Catholic, in effect, becomes his own Pope, under the guise that the "heresy" is "obvious" and "indisputable". Prots do the same thing.[/i]


    I already responded to this.

    Quote

    Cristian: But opinions can be wrong or true, right?. Besides if you accept the possibility BXVI may not be the Pope, that is, if you have serious reasons or doubts about he being the Pope, in practice, you should act as if he were not the Pope, since as the saying goes "a doubtful Pope is not Pope".



    Quote
    Yes, and because opinions can be wrong I decide to leave the matter to a future council. And it is because opinions may be right that I do not attend NO and will  reccomend no one attends NO, FSSP, Indult, or anywhere where they have a strong hold on the priests and can 'force' them to do things which are contrary to the faith... I don't think you can go wrong spiritually with that can you?


    No, I don´t have much problem, except for the fact that on doing so you are judging the Pope, because, do you really think those priests who "force" people to do things which are contrary to the faith are acting against BXVI?

    Even if you wish to leave this matter to a future council, which is ok, yet you have to take now some measures regarding BXVI. You can´t wait that much.

    Quote
    But trying to judge the pope, as sede's do, I think can (lets be precise- not will, but can) get you in trouble with God imho.
    .

    Once again sedes do not judge the Pope. We merely see a public heresy and draw conclusions.
    When you criticize Vat. II and what came after it, are you judging the Pope? If not why?

    Quote
    So, I will quote stevus again: My point is that the Church declares that that Pope X has, in fact, become a formal heretic. Joe sede doesn't decide for himself that Pope X is a formal heretic and consider him anti-pope when there has been no formal declaration recognizing this.


    I addressed this post also.

    Cristian

    PS: I´m glad we can discuss calmly these things :)  :cheers:

    Offline stevusmagnus

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #37 on: June 11, 2011, 02:50:59 PM »
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  • Quote from: Cristian


    2 Things here:

    1) Nowhere Bellarmine or other theologian said that in order for a Pope to be public heretic and therefore lose membership and the office a declaration is needed.
    Actually even if you accept that a declaration is needed that means that the fact of the Pope losing the office already took place and what the Church would do is to say "X by X fact lost the office ipso facto".


    That is correct. In the objective order, the Pope loses his office already, before the Church declares it. But until the Church declares it, we cannot decide for ourselves that the Pope has lost his office. This is my point.

    Quote
    2) Ad hominem. You take and choose from post Vat. II "Popes" what is in accordance with tradition and reject what is wrong. The very raison d´etre of traditionalism is to reject many things after Vat II. I mean you (and everyone else) do exactly the same thing you accuse sedes, unless you believe that each human being has the right to worship anything he wishes, or that any religion is a mean of salvation, or that we can actively participate in non-catholic worships, or that JPII is an example for all of us to go to heaven, etc. etc. etc.


    I'm not sure I understand your point. I think you are trying to say that I use private judgment everytime I disagree with a Papal action, novel liturgical practice, etc. and that this is the same thing as a sede deciding for himself whether the pope has lost his office.

    If so, I disagree. My view on the crisis is The Great Facade view. The true Church and dogma and liturgy is still in the current Church, as is the Pope. However, they have layed an optional regime of novelty on top of it to make it appear to be something it is not. I, as a Catholic, am not obliged to agree with or support any optional post-conciliar novelty. The post-VCII Popes have "approved" a bunch of misguided novelties claiming them to be new expressions of Faith consistent with the old Faith. Doesn't really matter to me whether their reasoning is technically correct. Even if it is, these practices have produced rotten fruit and need to go. I reject all of it and I'm allowed to do so.  I'm also free to assist at a TLM and ignore the VCII circus as if it never happened and be just as Catholic as Joe-Neo-Cath in the eyes of Rome.


    Offline Cristian

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #38 on: June 11, 2011, 02:55:17 PM »
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  • Quote from: s2srea
    Quote from: Cristian
    2 Things here:

    1) Nowhere Bellarmine or other theologian said that in order for a Pope to be public heretic and therefore lose membership and the office a declaration is needed.

    But they also do not mention that it is not needed... now what? I believe i read somewhere on here (caminus?) something which actually refuted this point.


    If you read the whole chapter 30 which deals with the 5 opinions you will see he specifically says that the Pope loses the office immediately after he falls in public heresy and he rebukes Cajetan´s argument who says that an admonition is needed for a Pope to lose the office.
    Second you have canon 188.4, 646 and the official interpretation of it saying expressly that no declaration is needed for the tacit renuntiation, plus Pius XII in Mystici Corporis said that heresy, apostasy and schism by its very nature, (suapte natura) puts you out of the Church.

    Quote

    Actually even if you accept that a declaration is needed that means that the fact of the Pope losing the office already took place and what the Church would do is to say "X by X fact lost the office ipso facto".


    Quote
    Right, but this doesn't address the issue that you 'may' be wrong


    Even if I´m wrong, I still have reasons to reject BXVI. I think it is prudent to reject him. And if one has serious reasons about the existence of a law (or of the lawmaker himself), all theologians say we cannot accept that law, that it is as if it doesn´t exist.
    It is BXVI the one who has to prove with certainty that he is the Pope. Positive and serious doubts are enough to reject him.


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    for you and I are not Cardinals or bishops


    Are they infallible?

    Offline s2srea

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #39 on: June 11, 2011, 02:58:25 PM »
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  • Sorry Cristian- wont have timet o respond to your first argument, but can make a quick comment on the latter.

    Quote from: Cristian
    Quote
    Right, but this doesn't address the issue that you 'may' be wrong


    Even if I´m wrong, I still have reasons to reject BXVI. I think it is prudent to reject him. And if one has serious reasons about the existence of a law (or of the lawmaker himself), all theologians say we cannot accept that law, that it is as if it doesn´t exist.
    It is BXVI the one who has to prove with certainty that he is the Pope. Positive and serious doubts are enough to reject him.


    Yes I believe I responded to this in the latter part of my last response. I'm curious about your thoughts.

    Quote
    for you and I are not Cardinals or bishops


    Are they infallible?
    [/quote]

    No. Is St. Robert Bellarmine?

    Offline Cristian

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #40 on: June 11, 2011, 03:13:25 PM »
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  • Quote from: stevusmagnus
    Quote from: Cristian


    2 Things here:

    1) Nowhere Bellarmine or other theologian said that in order for a Pope to be public heretic and therefore lose membership and the office a declaration is needed.
    Actually even if you accept that a declaration is needed that means that the fact of the Pope losing the office already took place and what the Church would do is to say "X by X fact lost the office ipso facto".


    That is correct. In the objective order, the Pope loses his office already, before the Church declares it. But until the Church declares it, we cannot decide for ourselves that the Pope has lost his office. This is my point.


    If you accept the possibility BXVI may not be the Pope you cannot accept him. This is comonly taught by thoelogians. A doubtful law is not law; a doubtful Pope is not Pope.
    Besides if it happened, well it happened! Therefore that person is not longer the Pope, independently if I say it or not, if the Church says it or not, or if an angel from heaven says otherwise!
    I´ve a person who says he is the Pope and tells me to worship false idols. I must act now and not wait till the Church decides about it.


    Quote
    2) Ad hominem. You take and choose from post Vat. II "Popes" what is in accordance with tradition and reject what is wrong. The very raison d´etre of traditionalism is to reject many things after Vat II. I mean you (and everyone else) do exactly the same thing you accuse sedes, unless you believe that each human being has the right to worship anything he wishes, or that any religion is a mean of salvation, or that we can actively participate in non-catholic worships, or that JPII is an example for all of us to go to heaven, etc. etc. etc.


    Quote
    I'm not sure I understand your point. I think you are trying to say that I use private judgment everytime I disagree with a Papal action, novel liturgical practice, etc. and that this is the same thing as a sede deciding for himself whether the pope has lost his office.


    Yes that was my point.

    Quote
    If so, I disagree. My view on the crisis is The Great Facade view. The true Church and dogma and liturgy is still in the current Church, as is the Pope.


    Quote
    However, they have layed an optional regime of novelty on top of it to make it appear to be something it is not


    No law is optional.

    Quote
    Doesn't really matter to me whether their reasoning is technically correct.


    So you don´t care if your Pope would ask you to hate God?

    Quote
    Even if it is, these practices have produced rotten fruit and need to go. I reject all of it and I'm allowed to do so.


    You are judging the Pope! You are despising his laws! You are making your own decisions whether or not to follow them, whether or not they are good or evil, etc.
    Why you can say "this universal law is evil" and we are not allow to do so? And if you say that we are allowed to say there are universal laws that are evil, then we merely draw the conclusion that the person who promulgated them cannot be Pope.


    Quote
    I'm also free to assist at a TLM and ignore the VCII circus as if it never happened and be just as Catholic as Joe-Neo-Cath in the eyes of Rome.


    You are not free to ignore a Universal Council, the new code, the new Mass etc. How can you say so?


    Offline Cristian

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #41 on: June 11, 2011, 03:27:31 PM »
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    Sorry Cristian- wont have timet o respond to your first argument, but can make a quick comment on the latter.

    Right, but this doesn't address the issue that you 'may' be wrong

    Even if I´m wrong, I still have reasons to reject BXVI. I think it is prudent to reject him. And if one has serious reasons about the existence of a law (or of the lawmaker himself), all theologians say we cannot accept that law, that it is as if it doesn´t exist.
    It is BXVI the one who has to prove with certainty that he is the Pope. Positive and serious doubts are enough to reject him.


    Yes I believe I responded to this in the latter part of my last response. I'm curious about your thoughts.


    Sorry but I don´t see how you did so... could you tell me again please?

    Quote
    for you and I are not Cardinals or bishops

    Quote
    Are they infallible?


    No. Is St. Robert Bellarmine?


    No, but Canon Law and Pius XII are :)

    Besides as Bellarmine said his teaching was commonly hold by all the Fathers and became the most common teaching among theologians in the subsequent centuries. Cajetan´s opinion was almost abandoned by XX cent.



    Offline stevusmagnus

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #42 on: June 11, 2011, 03:35:12 PM »
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  • Cristian,

    I am not saying there is a reason to doubt that BXVI is Pope. I don't believe there is.

    What I am saying is that if there were a hypothetical situation where the Pope publicly stated something questionably heretical, we should wait for the Church to make a declaration, after investigation, that the Pope lost his office due to formal heresy. Just like Vennarri said. Each individual Catholic would not be authorized to make a private judgment as to whether the Pope lost his office due to formal heresy.

    And even if a particular sede did so, wouldn't they still be bound to obey their legitimate diocesan bishops if the diocesan bishop is not a formal heretic? What about their local NO parish priest?

    If a Pope tells you to worship false idols you refuse to obey because it is against the 10 commandments and you leave it to the Church to decide whether he committed formal heresy.

    The New Mass is optional. Ecuмenical acts are optional. One could decide not to participate in any VCII novelty, attend one's TLM, do one's Traditional devotions and still be Catholic. What does VCII require me to believe or do that I wasn't required of me pre-VCII?

    You are using the term "law" ambiguously. Assisi is not a "law". The promulgation of the NO Mass is not a law I must assist at it to fulfill my Sunday obligation when other Masses are available. Pope's musings in Wednesday audiences are not "laws". These things and other novel programs and practices can have bad fruits

    What "universal law" have I said is evil?

    Quote
    You are not free to ignore a Universal Council, the new code, the new Mass etc. How can you say so?


    Sure I am. Because this Council obligated me to believe nothing different than Catholics believed pre-VCII, the new mass is not mandatory on me, the New Code mandates me to do nothing uncatholic, etc.

    Offline ServusSpiritusSancti

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #43 on: June 11, 2011, 03:36:11 PM »
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  • Quote from: MyrnaM
    Quote from: SpiritusSanctus
    Here's Bellarmine's quote again. Pay close attention to the underlined part.

    "Therefore, the true opinion is the fifth, according to which the Pope who is manifestly a heretic ceases by himself to be Pope and head, in the same way as he ceases to be a Christian and a member of the body of the Church; and for this reason he can be judged and punished by the Church. This is the opinion of all the ancient Fathers."  

    His quote says that a Pope may be judged and punished by the Church should he fall into heresy. He never said that laypeople can judge or punish the Pope.


    What does he say about a heretic being elected a pope?  Speaking of a heretic prior to election, i.e.  freemason or enemy of God with the intention to destroy.    Can the laypeople judge a heretic who was never qualified to be a pope?  



    In the case of a Freemason of ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖ, a person would be automtically excommunicated. So when I say that Paul VI was an anti-pope due to being a mason, I'm not judging him but rather saying that since he was already excommunicated he wasn't a valid Pope.

    However, Benedict is not a Freemason. There are rumors that he is gαy, but there isn't near enough evidence to prove that.
    Please ignore ALL of my posts. I was naive during my time posting on this forum and didn’t know any better. I retract and deeply regret any and all uncharitable or erroneous statements I ever made here.

    Offline ServusSpiritusSancti

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    Why I believe they Pope(s) is a heretic, but do not call myself a Sede
    « Reply #44 on: June 11, 2011, 03:42:42 PM »
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  • Christian, you said:

    "If you accept the possibility BXVI may not be the Pope you cannot accept him. This is comonly taught by thoelogians. A doubtful law is not law; a doubtful Pope is not Pope.
    Besides if it happened, well it happened! Therefore that person is not longer the Pope, independently if I say it or not, if the Church says it or not, or if an angel from heaven says otherwise!
    I´ve a person who says he is the Pope and tells me to worship false idols. I must act now and not wait till the Church decides about it."

    That is not correct. Some people believe that Pius XII was a doubtful Pope, so using your logic we must conclude that because Pius XII did some things that are questionable, he must not be a valid Pope. Heck, there were a few nutcases here who believed both Pius V and X were anti-popes. So should we assume that they aren't Popes since other people think they aren't?

    And even though it's true that it will be the laypeople that help save the Church through the Grace of God, it doesn't mean that they should judge a still-reigning Pope.  

    Please ignore ALL of my posts. I was naive during my time posting on this forum and didn’t know any better. I retract and deeply regret any and all uncharitable or erroneous statements I ever made here.