Send CathInfo's owner Matthew a gift from his Amazon wish list:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/25M2B8RERL1UO

Author Topic: A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX  (Read 16202 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline PartyIsOver221

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 1238
  • Reputation: +640/-1
  • Gender: Male
A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
« Reply #75 on: February 11, 2013, 06:49:48 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • All the ostriches with the heads in the sand come out now... or even will they. With their modernist false pope now gone, will they come to the realization of the crisis today?


    Part of me wants to be hopeful and say yes they will, but most likely they will not. For God only shines His grace on those He knows are apt to receive it.

    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #76 on: February 11, 2013, 02:25:34 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • I will pray for Benedict.  Despite all the damage he has done to the Church, I hope he repents and saves his soul.  

    I see three possible outcomes to all of this:

    1.  A liberal becomes "pope."  If this happens, perhaps it will finally be the proof that Catholics need to see the public heresy clearly, as they were beginning to do under John Paul II.

    2.  The status quo continues.  We have another Benedict who is good at playing the role of a conservative, and by that continuing the confusion.  He masked his public heresy with occasional acts of orthodoxy and throwing bones to the traditionalists at times.  All the while he continued to appoint openly heretical bishops, allow heresy to run rampant in the Church and in the seminaries, and openly teach the heretical doctrine that schismatics and Protestants are partial churches, and are means of salvation.  

    3.  The best case scenerio, and something we all can pray for:
     They elect a Catholic.  If this happens, the grace of the office of the Papacy will be given to the man, and as he is already acknowledged by the remaining members of the hierarchy and the clergy of Rome, he will become Pope, whether or not he is a bishop.  

    He can be consecrated a bishop at a later time, but if he is a Catholic and he is acknowledged universally as Pope, then by that fact he is the Pope.  I hope and pray that this will be the case.  I know it appears doubtful, as the Conciliar cardinals are all so liberal, but they may inadvertently pick a Catholic.  This crisis would end, we would have a Pope, then the real work would begin.
    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic


    Offline Machabees

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 826
    • Reputation: +0/-0
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #77 on: February 16, 2013, 07:34:53 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Machabees wrote:
    Quote

    4.  The indelible mark on the soul given at Baptism does not mean that one is always a Catholic. [No.  This is false.  An indelible mark is an indelible mark.  It is never removed.  Like confirmation and Holy Orders.  One can be an apostate Catholic, and be in a different religion, but one always has the “indelible mark” as a Catholic.  You cannot “indelible un-mark” in sin, and then “indelible mark” back up again.] Most Protestants and eastern schismatics possess this mark, but are outside the Church.  [Yes they are outside of the Church only by apostation and formal heresy.  It is important to also understand in the Catechism that if a “Protestant and eastern schismatics, are Baptized in the Gospel form of the Bible, with water (the Bible comes from the Catholic Church), saying the words: “I Baptize thee in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost (Spirit).”, they become truly, and very, Catholic; yet, while “practicing” in another religion, they are a Catholic apostate.

    Here is another example I heard in catechism class: A person is in a car accident, and it is fatal.  The person who is dying was not yet baptized and is still conscience.  With people looking over him (a Protestant, Jew, Muslim, Pagan, and even an atheist), the dying person wants to be baptized.  He says to one of them, take that water, pour it over my head while saying these words: “I Baptize thee in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost (Spirit).”, the Priest in this catechism class has said, that the soul is baptized as a Catholic and is in the Catholic Church.

    To understand more of the Church’s intention on this, go to any Catholic Priest and ask him why he would need to do a “conditional” baptism to a convert who just came to him, and is ready through catechism class, for baptism.  The answer is: You cannot baptize a soul twice.  Once the soul has the “indelible mark of Catholicism” on it, another Catholic baptism has no effect.  Thus, the Church gives a “conditional” baptism to make sure the soul was baptized correctly in order to have no doubt in the matter.]
     

    Hello Ambrose,

    My apologies for being away for a little while in not responding to your latest posts.  My work and duties are paramount with responsibilities to me that I need to keep before God.

    Let me respond to you where we left off.

    Ambrose said:

    I agree with you that the indelible mark cannot be removed.  I also believe that the indelible mark is the mark of a Catholic, but that does not mean one is still a member of the Church.  Perhaps you mean that and we are not using the same terms. [Yes.]

    What I am confused about is when you say what I said is "false."  Do you believe that the indelible mark from baptism makes it impossible for one to sever oneself from the Church?  [No.  I responded to the question the way you had it written; in answering that the indelible mark and being Catholic is really one and the same.  But your question was different:  “The indelible mark on the soul given at Baptism does not mean that one is always a Catholic.”] That is what it appears you are saying, but as I said this may be a matter of not using the same terms.

    I also understand that one cannot baptize twice.  You and I both agree, as we must that one of the effects of Baptism is the indelible mark.  There is no disagreement on this point.

    I stand by my initial statement that the "indelible mark does not mean that one is always a Catholic." [Ambrose, this is a matter of terms again.  In your sentence, you are interchanging the word Catholic and member again.   Like you said above: “I also believe that the indelible mark is the mark of a Catholic”, which means you can never lose it.  I believe what you mean to say in your question is, the indelible mark does not mean that one is always a Catholic member.  Yes, that is correct.] Those who are baptized but who are outside of the Church, (the ark of salvation), have the indelible mark, but they outside the Church, they are not members of the Church. [The word “member” needs to be clarified.  RJS had brought in some good sources for this clarification. http://www.cathinfo.com/catholic.php?a=topic&t=22784&min=20&num=5

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

    Machabees,

    Here's a few quotes showing that faith is not necessary for membership in the Church.

    Bellarmine: "
    • ccult heretics are still of the Church, they are parts and members… therefore the Pope who is an occult heretic is still Pope. This is also the opinion of the other authors whom we cite in book De Ecclesia. …the occult heretics are united and are members although only by external union; on the contrary, the good catechumens belong to the Church only by an internal union, not by the external”.


    An occult heretic is one who has lost the faith.

    Suarez: “[T]he faith is not absolutely necessary in order that a man be capable of spiritual and ecclesiastical jurisdiction and be able to exercise true acts which demand this jurisdiction …. The foregoing is obvious, granted that, as is taught in the treatises on penance and censures, in case of extreme necessity a priest heretic may absolve, which is not possible without jurisdiction. (…) The Pope heretic is not a member of the Church as far as the substance and form which constitute the members of the Church; but he is the head as far as the charge and action; and this is not surprising, since he is not the primary and principal head who acts by his own power, but is as it were instrumental, he is the vicar of the principal head, who is able to exercise his spiritual action over the members even by means of a head of bronze; analogously, he baptizes at times by means of heretics, at times he absolves, etc., as we have already said”.

    Bouix:  “Faith is not necessary for a man to be capable of ecclesiastical jurisdiction and that he might exercise true acts which require such jurisdiction.  (…) Moreover, the power of orders, which in its way is superior, can remain without faith, that is, with heresy; therefore ecclesiastical jurisdiction can do so too (…) To the argument that, not being a member of the Church [the soul], the heretical Pope is not the head of the Church either … one can give the following answer: I concede that the Pope heretic is not a member and head of the Church in so far as the supernatural life which commences by faith and is completed by charity, by which all the members of the Church are united in one body supernaturally alive; but I deny that he might not be a member and head of the Church as far as the governing power proper to his charge”.

    Regarding a pope who loses the faith Garrigou-Lagrance wrote the following:

    Garrigou-Lagrange: “This condition is quite abnormal, hence no wonder that something abnormal results from it, namely, that the pope becoming secretly a heretic would no longer be an actual member of the Church, according to the teaching as explained in the body of the article, but would still retain his jurisdiction by which he would influence the Church in ruling it. Thus he would still be nominally the head of the Church, which he would still rule as head, though he would no longer be a member of Christ, because he would not receive that vital influx of faith from Christ, the invisible and primary head. Thus in quite an abnormal manner he would be in point of jurisdiction the head of the Church, though he would not be a member of it.

    “This condition could not apply to the natural head in its relation to the body, but such a condition is not repugnant in the case of the moral and secondary head. The reason is that, whereas the natural head must receive a vital influx from the soul before it can influence the members of its body, the moral head, such as the pope is, can exercise his jurisdiction over the Church, although he receives no influx of interior faith and charity from the soul of the Church. More briefly, as Billuart says, the pope is constituted a member of the Church by his personal faith, which he can lose, and his headship of the visible Church by jurisdiction and power is compatible with private heresy. The Church will always consist in the visible union of its members with its visible head, namely, the pope of Rome, although some, who externally seem to be members of the Church, may be private heretics”.



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


    Perhaps you took that to mean that I thought that if one fell from the Church, that the mark was removed, but I did not say or imply that.

    The indelible mark will remain even in the damned, but the Catholic Church in any of its three parts, Militant, Suffering or Triumphant, does not exist in Hell.  The Indelible mark will remain in the damned one which increases their shame.  [Yes.]

    If you want to learn more about the nature of the indelible mark, I would urge you to read St. Thomas on this point:  http://www.catholictheology.info/summa-theologica/summa-part3.php?q=457

    I hope this helps to clarify.  God bless.

    Offline Machabees

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 826
    • Reputation: +0/-0
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #78 on: February 16, 2013, 07:58:21 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Machabees wrote:
    Quote
    6.  One cannot be a "Catholic heretic."  They are mutually exclusive. [No.  You seem to separate the word Catholic from baptism, while associating as one meaning, a Catholic and member.  It is the other way around.  A Catholic and baptism is one and the same, and a Catholic and a member can be two different things.  When one says they are Catholic, it is because they are baptized.  When one says they are baptized (in the Catholic form of the Gospel), they are Catholic; it is one and the same.  When one says that they are a member of the Catholic Church, it is because they are a Catholic.  However, when one says that they are Catholic (by baptism) it does not mean that they are a practicing member of the Catholic Church i.e. lapse mortal sin, apostation, or formal heresy.

    In regards to Faith and Catholic, when one says they have the Faith, it is because they are Catholic; it is one and the same.  However, when one says they are Catholic, it does not mean that they are practicing the Faith, or even have it any longer i.e. lapse mortal sin, apostation, or formal heresy; but they are still a Catholic.

    Also, you seem to separate the word Catholic from heretic (mutually exclusive).  The word Catholic and heretic are only associated by cause and effect.  Like truth and error.  The definition of “error” is the absence of truth.  The definition of “darkness” is the absence of light.  In other words, you need first to be a Catholic before you can apostate into a heretic.

    You can also say in that meaning, that to combine those two words of “catholic heretic” is really redundant in a Catholic discussion; because when you say heretic, one means apostation from being a Catholic.  But to the uneducated world, redundancy is necessary.

    Also, when the word heretic is used in the case of “a catholic heretic”, it is used as a noun; and the word Catholic is used as a descriptive to that noun (The catholic heretic.  A catholic heretic.  As like: A catholic soldier. A catholic man.  Etc).    A heretic has only one meaning; and other religions (false) cannot use it.  It is a word that has a direct relationship to the Truth.  One can have the truth.  One does not know the truth.  One can be a heretic to the truth.  Truth is Catholic; as Catholic is Truth.  So the word heretic can only be used in relation to apostation from Catholicism –a catholic heretic.]

    Once one becomes a public heretic, he has lost the Faith, and by losing the Faith and this being public, he loses his membership in the Church.  In order to return to the Church he must be accepted and make an abjuration. [Yes, however, justice requires more stringencies on the accuser to prove the “heretic” with “matter and form”.  Matter: of the substance of the heresy, and form: of the conscience of the heresy.  In other words, knowing the contents of “material and formal” heresy to pass judgment.]


    Ambrose said:

    Without getting into the dispute about whether an occult heretic is a member of the Church, let us keep this on a public defection from the Faith.  It is an indisputable fact of our Faith that when one publicly and pertinaciously denies a teaching of the Church that he by that fact ceases to be a member of the Church. [Formal heretic, yes.]

    I am well aware of the dispute about occult heresy, but I did qualify what I wrote when I said "public."  I also agree that when making a judgment about another Catholic on whether he is a pertinacious public heretic, one must be very slow and cautious about making such a judgment giving the suspected person every chance to show his innocence.

    I also believe that if times were normal, and the hierarchy was properly functioning that these matters would be resolved by those in authority, and our main duty as laypeople would be to report the heretic to our local bishop.  He would then take it from there.  But, we are not in normal times, which is why we are discussing this in the first place.  Most of those who currently reject the heresies of Vatican II are vagus bishops and priests and laypeople.  The bishops who have kept the Faith and have habitual jurisdiction appear to be doing nothing to end this crisis. [I do not know what you mean by this last sentence: “The bishops who have kept the Faith and have habitual jurisdiction appear to be doing nothing to end this crisis.”  Are you speaking about some novus ordo bishops?  Do they still have the faith?]

    I agree with you you wrote about cause and effect, but I think you misunderstood the point I was trying to make.  When one is a (public) heretic, they are not professing the Catholic Faith, [Yes.] therefore one cannot be a Catholic heretic. [? Use of terms.] In order to be a [practicing] Catholic one must profess the true Faith.  A Catholic cannot deviate in even one point.

    God bless.

    Offline Machabees

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 826
    • Reputation: +0/-0
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #79 on: February 16, 2013, 08:09:49 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Ambrose,

    May I recommend to bring into our conversation of what others have brought into this discussion?  Namely, RJS's has some excellent insights that is opportune on this whole question within this thread: "Is the Pope Pope; a Formal heretic?"

    Perhaps you have been following the other posts; I do not know.  RJS had made some very good points from the Church's teachings and questions that have not been answered.

    What are your thoughts on these points and questions that RJS, and others, have brought in?


    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #80 on: February 17, 2013, 08:41:58 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Machabees wrote:
    Quote

    Hello Ambrose,

    My apologies for being away for a little while in not responding to your latest posts.  My work and duties are paramount with responsibilities to me that I need to keep before God.

    Let me respond to you where we left off.

    Ambrose said:

    I agree with you that the indelible mark cannot be removed.  I also believe that the indelible mark is the mark of a Catholic, but that does not mean one is still a member of the Church.  Perhaps you mean that and we are not using the same terms. [Yes.]

    What I am confused about is when you say what I said is "false."  Do you believe that the indelible mark from baptism makes it impossible for one to sever oneself from the Church?  [No.  I responded to the question the way you had it written; in answering that the indelible mark and being Catholic is really one and the same.  But your question was different:  “The indelible mark on the soul given at Baptism does not mean that one is always a Catholic.”] That is what it appears you are saying, but as I said this may be a matter of not using the same terms.

    I also understand that one cannot baptize twice.  You and I both agree, as we must that one of the effects of Baptism is the indelible mark.  There is no disagreement on this point.

    I stand by my initial statement that the "indelible mark does not mean that one is always a Catholic." [Ambrose, this is a matter of terms again.  In your sentence, you are interchanging the word Catholic and member again.  Like you said above: “I also believe that the indelible mark is the mark of a Catholic”, which means you can never lose it.  I believe what you mean to say in your question is, the indelible mark does not mean that one is always a Catholic member.  Yes, that is correct.] Those who are baptized but who are outside of the Church, (the ark of salvation), have the indelible mark, but they outside the Church, they are not members of the Church. [The word “member” needs to be clarified.  RJS had brought in some good sources for this clarification. http://www.cathinfo.com/catholic.php?a=topic&t=22784&min=20&num=5

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

    Machabees,

    Here's a few quotes showing that faith is not necessary for membership in the Church.

    Bellarmine: "
    • ccult heretics are still of the Church, they are parts and members… therefore the Pope who is an occult heretic is still Pope. This is also the opinion of the other authors whom we cite in book De Ecclesia. …the occult heretics are united and are members although only by external union; on the contrary, the good catechumens belong to the Church only by an internal union, not by the external”.


    An occult heretic is one who has lost the faith.

    Suarez: “[T]he faith is not absolutely necessary in order that a man be capable of spiritual and ecclesiastical jurisdiction and be able to exercise true acts which demand this jurisdiction …. The foregoing is obvious, granted that, as is taught in the treatises on penance and censures, in case of extreme necessity a priest heretic may absolve, which is not possible without jurisdiction. (…) The Pope heretic is not a member of the Church as far as the substance and form which constitute the members of the Church; but he is the head as far as the charge and action; and this is not surprising, since he is not the primary and principal head who acts by his own power, but is as it were instrumental, he is the vicar of the principal head, who is able to exercise his spiritual action over the members even by means of a head of bronze; analogously, he baptizes at times by means of heretics, at times he absolves, etc., as we have already said”.

    Bouix:  “Faith is not necessary for a man to be capable of ecclesiastical jurisdiction and that he might exercise true acts which require such jurisdiction.  (…) Moreover, the power of orders, which in its way is superior, can remain without faith, that is, with heresy; therefore ecclesiastical jurisdiction can do so too (…) To the argument that, not being a member of the Church [the soul], the heretical Pope is not the head of the Church either … one can give the following answer: I concede that the Pope heretic is not a member and head of the Church in so far as the supernatural life which commences by faith and is completed by charity, by which all the members of the Church are united in one body supernaturally alive; but I deny that he might not be a member and head of the Church as far as the governing power proper to his charge”.

    Regarding a pope who loses the faith Garrigou-Lagrance wrote the following:

    Garrigou-Lagrange: “This condition is quite abnormal, hence no wonder that something abnormal results from it, namely, that the pope becoming secretly a heretic would no longer be an actual member of the Church, according to the teaching as explained in the body of the article, but would still retain his jurisdiction by which he would influence the Church in ruling it. Thus he would still be nominally the head of the Church, which he would still rule as head, though he would no longer be a member of Christ, because he would not receive that vital influx of faith from Christ, the invisible and primary head. Thus in quite an abnormal manner he would be in point of jurisdiction the head of the Church, though he would not be a member of it.

    “This condition could not apply to the natural head in its relation to the body, but such a condition is not repugnant in the case of the moral and secondary head. The reason is that, whereas the natural head must receive a vital influx from the soul before it can influence the members of its body, the moral head, such as the pope is, can exercise his jurisdiction over the Church, although he receives no influx of interior faith and charity from the soul of the Church. More briefly, as Billuart says, the pope is constituted a member of the Church by his personal faith, which he can lose, and his headship of the visible Church by jurisdiction and power is compatible with private heresy. The Church will always consist in the visible union of its members with its visible head, namely, the pope of Rome, although some, who externally seem to be members of the Church, may be private heretics”.


    Machabees,

    I fully understand time issues, so I don't mind if we discuss this at a very slow pace.  Feel free to post as time permits.  

    It seems to me that we are in agreement about all of the issues regarding the indelible mark and membership in the Church, just that we were not on the same page as far as we were explaining it differently.

    I have read everything Msgr. Fenton has ever written, so the issues of membership in the Church and what that means is very clear to me.  I find him to be one of the greatest theologians of modern times.  The other benefit to learning from Fenton is that his writings use the most recent magisterial pronouncements, something that the older theologians would lack.   Things that may have been more obscure for example, prior to the Pius XII's Mystici Corporis, are now clear.  

    One example of theological development, as taught in the Mystici Corporis, is relevant to the dispute over occult heresy, and it seems to me that it may no longer be permissible to hold that occult heretics are members of the Church,  You can read more on that point here:  http://www.ts.mu.edu/readers/content/pdf/10/10.4/10.4.3.pdf  Surprisingly, it appears that although Pope Pius XII adopts almost all of St. Robert's teaching on the Church, it seems that on this point he holds the necessity of Faith, even internal, as necessary to maintain membership in the Church.  


    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic

    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #81 on: February 17, 2013, 09:05:52 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Machabees wrote:
    Quote



    Here's a few quotes showing that faith is not necessary for membership in the Church.

    Quote
    Bellarmine: "
    • ccult heretics are still of the Church, they are parts and members… therefore the Pope who is an occult heretic is still Pope. This is also the opinion of the other authors whom we cite in book De Ecclesia. …the occult heretics are united and are members although only by external union; on the contrary, the good catechumens belong to the Church only by an internal union, not by the external”.


    An occult heretic is one who has lost the faith.

    Suarez: “[T]he faith is not absolutely necessary in order that a man be capable of spiritual and ecclesiastical jurisdiction and be able to exercise true acts which demand this jurisdiction …. The foregoing is obvious, granted that, as is taught in the treatises on penance and censures, in case of extreme necessity a priest heretic may absolve, which is not possible without jurisdiction. (…) The Pope heretic is not a member of the Church as far as the substance and form which constitute the members of the Church; but he is the head as far as the charge and action; and this is not surprising, since he is not the primary and principal head who acts by his own power, but is as it were instrumental, he is the vicar of the principal head, who is able to exercise his spiritual action over the members even by means of a head of bronze; analogously, he baptizes at times by means of heretics, at times he absolves, etc., as we have already said”.

    Bouix:  “Faith is not necessary for a man to be capable of ecclesiastical jurisdiction and that he might exercise true acts which require such jurisdiction.  (…) Moreover, the power of orders, which in its way is superior, can remain without faith, that is, with heresy; therefore ecclesiastical jurisdiction can do so too (…) To the argument that, not being a member of the Church [the soul], the heretical Pope is not the head of the Church either … one can give the following answer: I concede that the Pope heretic is not a member and head of the Church in so far as the supernatural life which commences by faith and is completed by charity, by which all the members of the Church are united in one body supernaturally alive; but I deny that he might not be a member and head of the Church as far as the governing power proper to his charge”.

    Regarding a pope who loses the faith Garrigou-Lagrance wrote the following:

    Garrigou-Lagrange: “This condition is quite abnormal, hence no wonder that something abnormal results from it, namely, that the pope becoming secretly a heretic would no longer be an actual member of the Church, according to the teaching as explained in the body of the article, but would still retain his jurisdiction by which he would influence the Church in ruling it. Thus he would still be nominally the head of the Church, which he would still rule as head, though he would no longer be a member of Christ, because he would not receive that vital influx of faith from Christ, the invisible and primary head. Thus in quite an abnormal manner he would be in point of jurisdiction the head of the Church, though he would not be a member of it.

    “This condition could not apply to the natural head in its relation to the body, but such a condition is not repugnant in the case of the moral and secondary head. The reason is that, whereas the natural head must receive a vital influx from the soul before it can influence the members of its body, the moral head, such as the pope is, can exercise his jurisdiction over the Church, although he receives no influx of interior faith and charity from the soul of the Church. More briefly, as Billuart says, the pope is constituted a member of the Church by his personal faith, which he can lose, and his headship of the visible Church by jurisdiction and power is compatible with private heresy. The Church will always consist in the visible union of its members with its visible head, namely, the pope of Rome, although some, who externally seem to be members of the Church, may be private heretics”.


    Let's go through this one by one:

    1.  The quote from Bellarmine.  As stated before, it appears that in light of Mystici Corporis, that this thinking on occult heresy may no longer be permitted.  But, even besides this point, we are not talking about occult heresy in regarding to the Vatican II "popes."  They are public heretics, and this is provable.  We are not talking about some secret heresy, the matter in this case is explicit, clear and public.

    2.  The same can be said of the quote from Rev. Garrigou-Lagrange.  Again, we are not talking about secret heresy, but public heresy.  This distinction is critical to any discussion on this subject.  

    3.  Regarding the quotes from Suarez and Bouix, I have two points.  First, I would argue that at least in the case of John Paul II and Benedict XVI, we are not strictly speaking talking about a heretical Pope, as their claims have been in dispute.  Significant portions of the Church have explicitly denied their claim to the Papacy and another portion of the Church has accepted their claim in name only, as a figurehead who cannot teach or govern.  It is also clear that no Catholic who has kept his Faith in the crisis, even if they accept the title of these men as Pope, does not accept these "Popes" their rule of Faith.  They do not learn from them, because if they do they will lose their faith.

    I do believe the question can be applied to Paul VI.  It appears that the universal Church did initially accept his claim, so he is in a different category.  I believe that there are two possibilities with Paul VI.  One could argue that he since he was a public heretic that he was never Pope.  This argument is more difficult to prove.  The other argument, and this one can be more easily made and proved is that on December 7th, 1965 Paul VI certainly lost his office due to professing public heresy.  

    Now, I realize that you may say that Bellarmine believed that a Pope would not fall into heresy, but he taught that as his opinion, not as a certain doctrine.  I would have most certainly agreed with him on this pious thought if we had not lived through it.

    Public heretics immediately lose their jurisdiction in the Church, as they are no longer members of the Church.  St. Robert teaches, basing his teaching on the universal agreement of the Fathers  "Finally, the Holy Fathers teach unanimously not only that heretics are outside of the Church, but also that they are "ipso facto" deprived of all ecclesiastical jurisdiction and dignity."  You can read his entire teaching on the subject here, where he explains the error Cardinal Cajetan on these points:  http://strobertbellarmine.net/bellarm.htm  




    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic

    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #82 on: February 17, 2013, 10:22:26 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote
    Ambrose said:

    Without getting into the dispute about whether an occult heretic is a member of the Church, let us keep this on a public defection from the Faith.  It is an indisputable fact of our Faith that when one publicly and pertinaciously denies a teaching of the Church that he by that fact ceases to be a member of the Church. [Formal heretic, yes.]

    I am well aware of the dispute about occult heresy, but I did qualify what I wrote when I said "public."  I also agree that when making a judgment about another Catholic on whether he is a pertinacious public heretic, one must be very slow and cautious about making such a judgment giving the suspected person every chance to show his innocence.

    I also believe that if times were normal, and the hierarchy was properly functioning that these matters would be resolved by those in authority, and our main duty as laypeople would be to report the heretic to our local bishop.  He would then take it from there.  But, we are not in normal times, which is why we are discussing this in the first place.  Most of those who currently reject the heresies of Vatican II are vagus bishops and priests and laypeople.  The bishops who have kept the Faith and have habitual jurisdiction appear to be doing nothing to end this crisis. [I do not know what you mean by this last sentence: “The bishops who have kept the Faith and have habitual jurisdiction appear to be doing nothing to end this crisis.”  Are you speaking about some novus ordo bishops?  Do they still have the faith?]

    I agree with you you wrote about cause and effect, but I think you misunderstood the point I was trying to make.  When one is a (public) heretic, they are not professing the Catholic Faith, [Yes.] therefore one cannot be a Catholic heretic. [? Use of terms.] In order to be a [practicing] Catholic one must profess the true Faith.  A Catholic cannot deviate in even one point.

    God bless.


    Dear Machabees,

    In answer to your question:  
    Quote
    [I do not know what you mean by this last sentence: “The bishops who have kept the Faith and have habitual jurisdiction appear to be doing nothing to end this crisis.”  Are you speaking about some novus ordo bishops?  Do they still have the faith?]


    I am speaking about bishops who appear to be adhering the Conciliar church but who in fact remain in the Catholic Church.  Let me put forward some points to explain this more clearly:

    1.  The hierarchy of the Catholic Church can never disappear, it must continue to the end of the world.  This is a dogma of our Faith.

    2.  The hierarchy consists of the bishops lawfully appointed by a Pope.  This would most certainly consist of the bishops appointed by Pius XII, some of whom are still alive, and possibly the bishops appointed by John XXIII and Paul VI until the date that he publicly professed heresy to the universal Church, December 7, 1965.  

    3.  Some argue that these bishops have resigned, but resignation to one who is not a lawful superior has no effect.  

    4.  The presumption must be that these bishops have the Faith, until the contrary can be shown by external evidence, not assumptions.  Whichever of these bishops have the Faith, they would still possess their offices, and they would constitute the hierarchy.

    5.  The mere adherence to an anti-pope, even one who is a (undeclared) public heretic, does not prove that those who adhere to him are schismatics or heretics, respectively.

    6.  In regards to those bishops of the Roman Rite, the saying of the Novus Ordo Missae would not in and of itself be proof of public heresy.  

    7.  There is also a good argument, put forward by John Lane that bishops appointed by the anti-popes, who possess the Catholic Faith, and if it were for the common good could be given habitual jurisdiction as the act would be done with supplied jurisdiction which was supplied to the anti-pope for that individual act.  This argument is reasonable, and would substantially increase the numbers of the hierarchy, and I could see this especially in the Eastern Rites.


    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic


    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #83 on: February 17, 2013, 10:35:00 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Quote from: Machabees
    Ambrose,

    May I recommend to bring into our conversation of what others have brought into this discussion?  Namely, RJS's has some excellent insights that is opportune on this whole question within this thread: "Is the Pope Pope; a Formal heretic?"

    Perhaps you have been following the other posts; I do not know.  RJS had made some very good points from the Church's teachings and questions that have not been answered.

    What are your thoughts on these points and questions that RJS, and others, have brought in?


    Dear Machabees,

    I was busy at the time, so I did not respond to RJS, but the answers provided by SJB would have been no different than what I would have said.

    Which points do you see that RJS put forward, that you believe were not adequately answered by SJB?
    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic

    Offline Machabees

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 826
    • Reputation: +0/-0
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #84 on: February 21, 2013, 09:21:20 PM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Ambrose,

    Ambrose wrote:

    Dear Machabees,

    In answer to your question:  

    Quote
    [I do not know what you mean by this last sentence: “The bishops who have kept the Faith and have habitual jurisdiction appear to be doing nothing to end this crisis.”  Are you speaking about some novus ordo bishops?  Do they still have the faith?]


    I am speaking about bishops who appear to be adhering the Conciliar church [appear or support?] but who in fact remain in the Catholic Church.  Let me put forward some points to explain this more clearly:

    1.  The hierarchy of the Catholic Church can never disappear, it must continue to the end of the world.  This is a dogma of our Faith. [True.]

    2.  The hierarchy consists of the bishops lawfully appointed by a Pope.  This would most certainly consist of the bishops appointed by Pius XII, some of whom are still alive, and possibly the bishops appointed by John XXIII and Paul VI until the date that he publicly professed heresy to the universal Church, December 7, 1965.  [Speaking generally, even though they follow the errors of Vatican II, yes.]

    3.  Some argue that these bishops have resigned, but resignation to one who is not a lawful superior has no effect.  [I do not know about such an “argument”.  However, in your scenario, a bishop can formally place their letter of resignation following the proper Canon Law in letter and “spirit” to the proper Ecclesiastical office of the Church.  

    Simply, here is a secular point.  One works at a job as a C.O.O. (Chief Operating Officer).  He files the proper papers to the correct office that he is resigning on a certain date.  It is in effect.  If there is a CEO in place, or not, the next CEO will need to deal with his replacement.  It is legal, proper, and formal.  

    One can say that the Pope just resigned; but he has no “superior”.  Not true.  He has to formally follow the proper form of the Church’s Law to be in effect.  So it is the Church’s Law that is the “superior”.  So if a Bishop wants to formally resign, it is the Church’s Law that is his “superior”.]


    4.  The presumption must be that these bishops have the Faith, until the contrary can be shown by external evidence, not assumptions.  Whichever of these bishops have the Faith, they would still possess their offices, and they would constitute the hierarchy. [Always giving a benefit of the doubt; however, wouldn’t that also be an assumption on your part?  If they follow and promote the errors of Vatican II to be in “union” with the conciliar Pope in which he also follows and promotes, yet, you condemn the Pope for doing it and not others.]  

    5.  The mere adherence to an anti-pope, even one who is a (undeclared) public heretic, does not prove that those who adhere to him are schismatics or heretics, respectively. [Adherence means - adherence to his teaching.  Wouldn’t they also be (undeclared) public heretics?]

    6.  In regards to those bishops of the Roman Rite, the saying of the Novus Ordo Missae would not in and of itself be proof of public heresy.  [It would depend on which form of Novus Ordo Missae it is.  In the abuses in the Church, there are unfortunately, many different kinds and variations of the Novus Ordo masses out there; some are very “ecuмenically” heretical, and some also add in “clowns”.]

    7.  There is also a good argument, put forward by John Lane that bishops appointed by the anti-popes, who possess the Catholic Faith, and if it were for the common good could be given habitual jurisdiction as the act would be done with supplied jurisdiction which was supplied to the anti-pope for that individual act.  This argument is reasonable, and would substantially increase the numbers of the hierarchy, and I could see this especially in the Eastern Rites.  [The emphasis in bold and underlined is mine.] [Ambrose, I do find it interesting that you had written this.  In like manner, in another post (above) you had written:

    "Now, in addition to the bishops alive with habitual jurisdiction, that I have mentioned above, John Lane has put forth an interesting argument that bishops appointed by the anti-popes would be valid due to supplied jurisdiction given to the anti-pope for that specific act if that act were for the common good.”

    Yet, you also had said in the same post (above), that:

    “I do believe the question can be applied to Paul VI.  It appears that the universal Church did initially accept his claim, so he is in a different category.  I believe that there are two possibilities with Paul VI.  One could argue that he since he was a public heretic that he was never Pope.  This argument is more difficult to prove.  The other argument, and this one can be more easily made and proved is that on December 7th, 1965 Paul VI certainly lost his office due to professing public heresy.

    Public heretics immediately lose their jurisdiction in the Church, as they are no longer members of the Church.
     St. Robert teaches, basing his teaching on the universal agreement of the Fathers "Finally, the Holy Fathers teach unanimously not only that heretics are outside of the Church, but also that they are "ipso facto" deprived of all ecclesiastical jurisdiction and dignity."


    So my question for you is: Which of these two extremes does your group of sedevacants believe in?  

    In other words, you cannot say on one hand that: “The Pope lost his office; and the chair of Peter is vacant.”…”Public heretics immediately lose their jurisdiction in the Church, as they are no longer members of the Church.”…”They are ipso-facto deprived of all ecclesiastical jurisdiction and dignity."  

    Then say on the other hand,: “Bishops appointed by the anti-popes would be valid due to supplied jurisdiction given to the anti-pope.”  

    Ambrose, in your sedevacant scenario, if he is illegally there with everything else you have said above, then that illegal man cannot appoint, direct, choose, nominate, etc., anyone regardless of Supplied jurisdiction.  Supplied jurisdiction is a Church Law that is used for “abnormal” situations for the Church (members) to function; it is not there for non-members, imposters, to use it, guide from it, and appoint with it.  As you said: “He is a NON-member with NO function and dignity.”

    Therefore, what remains, is actually your innate understanding of this.

    Meaning, as you summarized, you find it: “would be reasonable…and a good argument…that jurisdiction which is supplied to the (undeclared) public heretic bad Pope for the different acts of Government…for the common good of the Church to function”, this innate understanding of yours is precisely what I, RJS, and others are speaking about when we say that the (undeclared) public heretic bad Pope may have lost the “supernatural membership”, but not the membership of government; like an example of a father of a family.

    May I suggest, when you have the time, to read the good exchanges RJS had with others in this thread.  You will see, as he goes deeper into the question, which it is not really about the Pope, good or bad, heretic or not, it is about the “nature” and “function” of how the Church operates that is the necessary and essential question.

    In one of my earlier posts, I have addressed the “nature and function” of this in an example of a father of a family.  I will re-post it below.]  


    Quote
    A father of a family is a member of that family, first by natural propagation (let us leave that out to apply this example), he is a member by government and jurisdiction, and a member by the Faith in the "objective" sharing and cultivation of that faith commanded by God to spread that Faith.

    One day, this father started, in his person, to "teach" something different to that Faith in the "supernatural life" in his private capacity while in the Chair of his position (like Aaron and the golden calf, Caiaphas condemning Jesus Christ to death, Solomon and his permission of ecuмenical groves to be built to false gods and worship, and many others who had "taught" things contrary to that Faith). The children members started to complain to their father about this. The father listened, or half listened, and continued on; perhaps in human respect, or in peer pressure, or in a different upbringing of “understanding” of that Faith in its meanings and terms, or an outright abandonment of that understanding of the Faith to purposely teach something else, as with many other possibilities (matter/material of the heresy).

    As this persisted in the Providence of this cross in the family, God had provided also many prophecies and apparitions that this crisis will happen, there are now, unfortunately, more divisions and turmoils in the body of the family, which have now developed into different things of understandings, sayings, and beliefs from the original Faith and peace that was in that family to begin with. However, everyone does want the health of the body and membership of the family for the glory of God.

    In this cross that continues for many years, there now comes a question in the family by some members: is the father still the father? The obvious to this question is: of course he is; he is the father. He is the father to still provide and govern the family. He still has the jurisdiction of authority to do so unless God removes him and replaces him with another (foster) father.

    With this above example, it gives an understanding of today’s unprecedented crisis with speaking about the Pope. Like the father of the family, as with the Pope, the meaning and example is the same.

    The Pope is “teaching” something different to that Faith in his private capacity of the "supernatural life", while in the Chair of his position, like Aaron and the golden calf, Caiaphas condemning Jesus Christ to death, Solomon and his permission of ecuмenical groves to be built to false gods and worship, and many others who had "taught" things contrary to that Faith, but they are still members of that governing capacity, with authority, and jurisdiction.

    So is the Pope the Pope? Yes. He may have erred in his private capacity in the “supernatural life” like the father in his position; he is none the less, still the member of government, authority, and jurisdiction until God chooses to remove him.


    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #85 on: February 23, 2013, 01:50:18 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Hello Machabees,

    Thank you for your responses.  I will answer the different points we are discussing in separate posts to make it easier.

    Quote
    3.  Some argue that these bishops have resigned, but resignation to one who is not a lawful superior has no effect.  [I do not know about such an “argument”.  However, in your scenario, a bishop can formally place their letter of resignation following the proper Canon Law in letter and “spirit” to the proper Ecclesiastical office of the Church.

    Simply, here is a secular point.  One works at a job as a C.O.O. (Chief Operating Officer).  He files the proper papers to the correct office that he is resigning on a certain date.  It is in effect.  If there is a CEO in place, or not, the next CEO will need to deal with his replacement.  It is legal, proper, and formal.

    One can say that the Pope just resigned; but he has no “superior”.  Not true.  He has to formally follow the proper form of the Church’s Law to be in effect.  So it is the Church’s Law that is the “superior”.  So if a Bishop wants to formally resign, it is the Church’s Law that is his “superior”.]


    (your words in brackets)

    You appear to me as one who is well read, so I would urge you to read this point in the Code.  The section on resignations begins at Canon 183, but take note especially of Can. 187.  There are of course exceptions in the law in situations in which the superior does not have to accept a resignation in order for it to take effect, but the resignation of bishops in the cases we are describing is not one of them.  

    I understand your point about a corporation, and perhaps in the corporate world, such customs could prevail.  But, the Church is a Divine society, and in this society there is a Divine Constitution.  The bishops are the successors of the Apostles, and they cannot just cease being the lawful bishop without resigning and the resignation being accepted.  They have what is called the "care of souls," and they are responsible before God for their flocks, and they cannot be freed from this obligation without it being accepted by the Pope.  The Code requires that those resigning their offices present the resignation and that it be accepted by the competent superior.  

    In the case of a Pope, he would not need to resign to a superior, as he has no superior on earth,  He would simply need to publicly declare this fact, and I would argue the date and time for it to take place, and that would be sufficient.  (can. 187)

    You may have a commentary on the Code, but if you need one I recommend this one, and it is in English which should make this discussion easier:  http://archive.org/stream/1917CodeOfCanonLawCommentary#page/n373/mode/2up


    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic


    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #86 on: February 23, 2013, 02:16:15 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Machabees wrote:

    Quote
    4.  The presumption must be that these bishops have the Faith, until the contrary can be shown by external evidence, not assumptions.  Whichever of these bishops have the Faith, they would still possess their offices, and they would constitute the hierarchy. [Always giving a benefit of the doubt; however, wouldn’t that also be an assumption on your part?  If they follow and promote the errors of Vatican II to be in “union” with the conciliar Pope in which he also follows and promotes, yet, you condemn the Pope for doing it and not others.]  


    (your words in brackets)

    Yes, it is a presumption.  Our duty as Catholics by both virtues of justice and charity is to see the best in our neighbor until the contrary is shown.  All have the right to their good name and their reputations.  To accuse one of heresy is a terrible accusation, and it must be supported by evidence.  

    In the cases of Paul VI, John Paul II and Benedict XVI, the evidence is overwhelming.  They have professed heresy publicly in words, writings and through their actions.  The case is enough to give a Catholic certainty that they have defected from the Faith and have fallen into heresy, and by that they have ceased being a member of the Church, and due to that have lost their offices. (if they had them to begin with)

    We do not know for a fact that these bishops in question adhere to the errors of Vatican II.  One may assume that, but I have never seen any evidence to support it.  You may argue that they signed the decrees, but that is not definitive proof, as Archbishop Lefebvre and Bishop de Castro Mayer signed, and we know they were not heretics.  There must be more than the signature to have certainty.

    Another point to consider, if one adheres to an error of Vatican II, but not a heresy, then one would not lose membership in the Church by operation of the law.  He would incur censure, but that would be given to him by authority.  In the context of the discussion we are having it is strictly about heresy.  

    Lastly, the Conciliar "popes" are undeclared heretics.  The Church has not judged them, so adherence to them does not prove anything against anyone.  If a bishop, believes Benedict XVI is pope, but still believes the Faith completely, then he is still Catholic and is still a bishop of the Church.  

    You may argue that they could have lost their office through schism, and that is possible, as the Conciliar church is a schismatic church, (as Archbishop Lefebvre rightly observed), but in order to prove that, evidence would have to be presented which could give a Catholic certainty that the bishop in question is knowingly adhering to a new church, which has separated itself from the Catholic Church.  The principle above in regard to heresy, also applies here, that there is not declaration from the Pope about the Conciliar church, and until there is, there is always the possibility that Catholics could be caught up in it in good faith.
    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic

    Offline Telesphorus

    • Hero Member
    • *****
    • Posts: 12713
    • Reputation: +28/-13
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #87 on: February 23, 2013, 02:32:13 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • There's a huge problem with "the Pope must be the Pope or the Church has failed" argument.

    Where is the limit?  What would it take to say the Pope is not the Pope?

    (other than resignation!)  

    The sort of things the conciliarists have said in their writings are totally incompatible with the Catholic Faith.  They ARE NOT BELIEVERS.  How could they be?  You can only claim they are believers by destroying the meaning of the term.

    So where is the limit?  

    It is absurd to say - past some arbitrary line in the sand - then he's not Pope.

    "He must be Pope or the Church has failed" - that is madness.  It can't be the Catholic Faith.


    Offline Sede Catholic

    • Full Member
    • ***
    • Posts: 1306
    • Reputation: +1038/-6
    • Gender: Male
    • PRAY "...FOR THE CHURCH OF DARKNESS TO LEAVE ROME"
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #88 on: February 23, 2013, 02:40:28 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Dear Tele,

    Yes, that is it.
    We are not saying that "the Pope is not the Pope".
    Our criticisms are of the heretic Benedict. Not of any Pope.
    Clearly what Sedes say is that Benedict is not Pope. He is an Antipope.
    There have been antipopes in history before, and no one made this insincere claim that the Church had "failed".

    Benedict is not pope. Therefore his actions do not prove anything about the nature of the church or the papacy.





    Francis is an Antipope. Pray that God will grant us a good Pope and save the Church.
    I abjure and retract my schismatic support of the evil CMRI.Thuc condemned the Thuc nonbishops
    "Now, therefore, we declare, say, determine and pronounce that for every human creature it is necessary for salvation to be subject to the authority of the Roman Pontiff"-Pope Boniface VIII.
    If you think Francis is Pope,do you treat him like an Antipope?
    Pastor Aeternus, and the Council of Trent Sessions XXIII and XXIV

    Offline Ambrose

    • Sr. Member
    • ****
    • Posts: 3447
    • Reputation: +2429/-13
    • Gender: Male
    A broader conversation on sedevacantism and the SSPX
    « Reply #89 on: February 23, 2013, 03:16:30 AM »
  • Thanks!0
  • No Thanks!0
  • Machabees,

    I will continue discussing the other points later.  God bless.
    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic