Both you and Boru are conflating terms. You say olive oil is from Apostolic AND ecclesiastical authority. ?? It cannot be both. Apostolic authority = from Christ, which cannot change. Ecclesiastical authority = Church decision, which can change.
Boru says that Paul6 admitted that olive oil is from Scripture (ie Divine origin) but then says Paul6 is allowed to change it because the Church decided it. ??
Either olive oil is:
1. From Scripture (which it is)
2. From Scripture/Apostles (yes)
or
3) the church decided on Her own.
If you say 1 or 2, then this means it is DIVINELY CREATED, which means it cannot be changed.
If Scripture is involved, it’s unchangeable. If Apostolic authority is involved, this is part of Divine Revelation, and is unchangeable.
The Church can “declare, teach, decide” that something is Scriptural or Apostolic, but that doesn’t mean She can change it. She can only change things which are of human origin (ie canon law, some feast days, etc).
Olive oil is proper and ordinary matter because of Apostolic usage and ecclesiastical prescription, but it is not part of the divine institution of the sacrament itself. As +Pius XII teaches, 'The Church has no power over the substance of the sacraments… but the Church does have power over those things which it has established' (Sacramentum Ordinis, 42).
This means that the Church can prescribe olive oil as the ordinary matter, but in necessity she can allow another vegetable oil without affecting the sacrament’s validity. Apostolic practice establishes olive oil as proper and traditional, not as essential or divinely mandated. Therefore, the Church’s authority to regulate ordinary matter does not contradict Scripture or Apostolic tradition, and olive oil’s changeable nature in necessity is fully consistent with Catholic doctrine.
This principle illustrates why the Novus Ordo Mass and sacraments are a source of positive doubt. By altering traditional rites, formulas, and even proper or ordinary matter, the Novus Ordo departs from what the Church has always prescribed. In doing so, it directly violates +Pope Pius V’s decree in Quo Primum (1570), which commands the faithful to retain the Roman Missal unchanged. These innovations introduce uncertainty about whether the essential elements instituted by Christ are preserved intact, making every Novus Ordo sacrament potentially doubtful. Any claim to certainty in its validity ignores both the teaching of +Pius XII and the immutable law of +Pope Pius V. The Novus Ordo is therefore objectively and positively doubtful, and faithful Catholics must exercise prudence and adhere only to the sacraments that safeguard Christ’s institution without compromise.