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Author Topic: Fr. Kevin Robinson (SSPX) sues New Jersey governor  (Read 8388 times)

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Offline Meg

Re: Fr. Kevin Robinson (SSPX) sues New Jersey governor
« Reply #95 on: May 05, 2020, 08:08:54 AM »
5. The meaning of faith, scripture, and everything else is determined by authority. I can give you a great example. Please tell me who is right on the issue of BOD and BOB? Each will say that a Pope, Church Father, or Doctor has spoken definitively on the matter and both sides have their proofs from authority. So we need an authority to interpret authority. A living infallible guide. Not fools such as yourself.

Others on this forum can explain this better than I, but I'd like to address the authority issue, since it seems to be of extreme importance to you. The main duty of the Pope is to faithfully pass on the Deposit of Faith and to unify the Church. It is not his main duty to re-interpret the Catholic Faith according to new-fangled novelties. We already know what the Deposit of Faith is from the Popes who faithfully passed it on before the Council. If a Pope veers away from and contradicts what the Church has always taught, then we do not follow his errors. We follow God First, since we know what He wants us to know for our salvation, which has already been provided by His Holy Church.

The Catholic Church did not begin after the Council. However, the idea that the Pope has to be followed and not questioned regardless of his errors did begin after the Council, or maybe a little before.

Online Stubborn

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Re: Fr. Kevin Robinson (SSPX) sues New Jersey governor
« Reply #96 on: May 05, 2020, 08:45:05 AM »
First of all, I appreciate your civility in conversation!


Secondly, I did not say that they were "The Church." I said that they are the authority of the Church which must be obeyed if one is to be considered Catholic. I highly recommend you read The Papal Monarchy by Dom Gueranger. It will clear up the inconsistency in mindset you seem to hold to.
Initially, in this post, you said: "The Church has told us to stop Mass for the time being and it has authority to do so for those who believe that Francis is Pope". It seems to me that this is what you still believe.  

Yes, we are bound to obey the Church's authority, unless this authority wants us to do something sinful. This is a fundamental truth of our holy faith which has given way to a blind obedience to the Church's authority due to the false idea that whatever their directives are, are automatically infallible.


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As for Msgr. Lefebvre, he was disobedient, but as to how to go about determining if he was justified in his disobedience? I will leave that question to someone more knowledgeable than I. I have no authority to determine that.
It is not at all complicated. He was obedient to the Church, disobedient to the pope, as such, his disobedience to the pope was certainly justified. There should be no question in your mind about this.



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3. I know yours was a rhetorical question. The reason I asked what I asked was for this reason: if Catholicism consists of simply the Sacraments, Faith, & Mass then the Orthodox would certainly be part of the Church. Their Priests and Bishops are valid, Sacraments are valid, Mass is valid, yet they are schismatics who will go to hell. Pope Boniface VIII said it clearly: "Furthermore, we declare, we proclaim, we define that it is absolutely necessary for salvation that every human creature be subject to the Roman Pontiff."
First, no, the Orthodox are certainly not the Church because although they may have valid sacraments, they are against defined dogma, they reject the pope and subjection to the pope, therefore they do not have the faith - which is where it all begins. Without the faith, even with valid sacraments, they are outside of the Church. They cannot reject any dogma and at the same time be part of the Church. Never the less, it all begins with faith, which is why I said "if you have faith, the Mass and the sacraments, it's a rhetorical question". If you do not have the faith, it is a question where no answer will ever suffice.


Re: Fr. Kevin Robinson (SSPX) sues New Jersey governor
« Reply #97 on: May 05, 2020, 08:59:44 AM »
Others on this forum can explain this better than I, but I'd like to address the authority issue, since it seems to be of extreme importance to you. The main duty of the Pope is to faithfully pass on the Deposit of Faith and to unify the Church. It is not his main duty to re-interpret the Catholic Faith according to new-fangled novelties. We already know what the Deposit of Faith is from the Popes who faithfully passed it on before the Council. If a Pope veers away from and contradicts what the Church has always taught, then we do not follow his errors. We follow God First, since we know what He wants us to know for our salvation, which has already been provided by His Holy Church.

The Catholic Church did not begin after the Council. However, the idea that the Pope has to be followed and not questioned regardless of his errors did begin after the Council, or maybe a little before.
The deposit of faith is not always clear hence why general councils were necessary to combaf misunderstandings and heresies. Revelation ended with the Apostles, but the transmission and understanding of the faith has developed over time. Cardinal Newman's "Development of Christian Doctine" outlines this point rather succinctly. But once again we are to ask ourselves, who is to interpret the deposit of faith that has already been transmitted and developed if not the authority of the Church? What has already been settled cannot be changed obviously, but only authority can clarify matters for us that people until this day continue to dispute amongst themselves.

Re: Fr. Kevin Robinson (SSPX) sues New Jersey governor
« Reply #98 on: May 05, 2020, 09:06:00 AM »
Initially, in this post, you said: "The Church has told us to stop Mass for the time being and it has authority to do so for those who believe that Francis is Pope". It seems to me that this is what you still believe.  

Yes, we are bound to obey the Church's authority, unless this authority wants us to do something sinful. This is a fundamental truth of our holy faith which has given way to a blind obedience to the Church's authority due to the false idea that whatever their directives are, are automatically infallible.

It is not at all complicated. He was obedient to the Church, disobedient to the pope, as such, his disobedience to the pope was certainly justified. There should be no question in your mind about this.


First, no, the Orthodox are certainly not the Church because although they may have valid sacraments, they are against defined dogma, they reject the pope and subjection to the pope, therefore they do not have the faith - which is where it all begins. Without the faith, even with valid sacraments, they are outside of the Church. They cannot reject any dogma and at the same time be part of the Church. Never the less, it all begins with faith, which is why I said "if you have faith, the Mass and the sacraments, it's a rhetorical question". If you do not have the faith, it is a question where no answer will ever suffice.
1. Who determines what is sinful in obedience? Do I open up my Denzinger and determine it myself? Just look at the Dimond Bros. This is exactly what they do. Look at everyone who purports to be Catholic and is actually interested in their faith. This is what they all do and everyonr arrives at opposing and different conclusions!
2. The authority of the Church, while not being the entirety of the Church, is still the center of and the majority of the totality of its being for without its head, there is no Church.
3. I do not wish to discuss Msgr. Lefebvre's case. Like I said. I don't have the authority.
4. The Orthodox, like yourself, have rejected the authority of the Church albeit in different ways. While they reject the dogma, you reject the practice of the dogma in reality. The faith without the head of the Church is a dead one. It is an ancient tome that is interpreted by each person to his or her own liking and pre-existing dispositions.

Offline Meg

Re: Fr. Kevin Robinson (SSPX) sues New Jersey governor
« Reply #99 on: May 05, 2020, 10:27:16 AM »
The deposit of faith is not always clear hence why general councils were necessary to combaf misunderstandings and heresies. Revelation ended with the Apostles, but the transmission and understanding of the faith has developed over time. Cardinal Newman's "Development of Christian Doctine" outlines this point rather succinctly. But once again we are to ask ourselves, who is to interpret the deposit of faith that has already been transmitted and developed if not the authority of the Church? What has already been settled cannot be changed obviously, but only authority can clarify matters for us that people until this day continue to dispute amongst themselves.

What is needed for our salvation is clear. Heresies are always, for the most part, cropping up, and we have Councils to deal with that, and good Popes like St. Pius X who strive to deal with heresies such as Modernism. We do need the authority of the Popes and Councils, but the Popes are not needed to continually re-interpret Scripture and Tradition. Every time a new Pope is elected, he is not supposed to re-interpret Church teaching according to his own inclinations. That's not how the papacy works.

The Popes are to pass on the Deposit of Faith in a faithful manner. I'm pretty sure that you don't understand this, or you just don't agree with it, since you seem to be an advocate for "development of doctrine." That's a phrase that the Modernists like to use, too.