Now to your point about never excluding someone from the Canon (Pope or Ordinary),
Might there ever be any circuмstance and or doctrine that would not only allow, but oblige someone to omit a name from the Canon of the Mass? If yes, please elaborate.
Well, IDK maybe because your calling the teaching "crap" without telling us which teachings are "useless junk" - so it makes it look like you are disparaging the teaching because you would not specify WHICH teachings are false. This looks gravely suspect.
What are you reading? I never said the teaching was crap, I said the
AI was crap . . .
"I don't know enough about it, but I know the AI link in the OP is full of crap and most certainly should not be used by those new to tradition." And that the
AI is junk. . ."
I don't know what you think you're accomplishing with this AI thing, but it's junk,"So whenever you accuse me of saying something wrong, be sure you're accusing me of something I actually said.
The reason I said the AI was crap is because it describes heretics alright, but says the conciliar popes are not heretics. It says the pope's name can be omitted for heresy, and also says Quo Primum forbids it. The thing is unreliable, it's junk. It says V2 did not teach heresy. And there are other (easy) questions I asked it that are often brought up in debates here on CI, that AI's answers were 100% wrong.
Plus you performed a most impressive double entendre in claiming that you think the pope is a heretic and that he must still be named in the Canon.
1) You affirm the principle of non-communion with heretics/schismatics especially in omitting their names from the Canon.
2) But you then insist on a no-holds-barred interpretation of the the two words "omit nothing" from Quo Primum, which leads you to gaff and think heretics must always be named in the Mass until they are "officially declared by the pope" regardless of any circuмstantial or doctrinal consideration whatsoever.
I already posted why the priest prays for the pope by name in the canon, either you disagree with this excellent explanation, or you did not read it.
Here is another quote from Fr. Wathen - please show where he is wrong.
"....If the person who incurs the censure [of excommunication for heresy] be the pope himself, since there is no tribunal within the Church with the right to pass judgment against him, he cannot be removed from his office, even though he be under censure, and, according to the law, have no right to function as the head of the Church. We, his subjects, are not permitted to do anything about this. It is not within our right to declare his acts devoid of validity, due to his having been expelled from his office.
Yes, the faithful may know well that he has committed a sin to which a censure is affixed by the Church, but this knowledge in no way qualifies them to declare him deprived of his office, or never to have been elected. We should have to continue to obey him as the pope in all those religious matters which fall within the ambit of his authority, UNLESS he should command something which is sinful."