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Is the Catholic Church in De Facto Schism?
Crisis Magazine ^ | March 31, 2017 | E. Christian Brugger

Posted on 03/31/2017 10:00:24 PM PDT by ebb tide

March 31, 2017

Is the Catholic Church in De Facto Schism?

E. Christian Brugger vatican-city

Why is there confusion in the Catholic Church over Amoris Laetitia, and what consequences does it have for Church unity? I argue here that the confusion is ultimately over two de fide dogmas of Christian faith and that one consequence of the confusion is de facto schism within the Catholic Church.

When de fide (“of the faith”) is used in Catholic theology to designate a doctrine, it signifies a truth that pertains to Divine Revelation. The term Divine Revelation refers to truths by which God chose to reveal himself and his will to humanity in order to reconcile the world to himself so men and women might live united with him imperfectly in this world and, after death and judgment, perfectly with him in the Kingdom. Thus, the Church considers de fide doctrines necessary for salvation. Their status in Catholic teaching is irreformable. And their mode of proclamation is infallible.

This essay has three aims. First, it introduces and explains the theological concept of “secondary objects of infallibility” and shows how almost all of the truths pertaining to sexual matters taught by the Catholic Church belong to the category of secondary objects of infallibility, and so are rightly designated de fide doctrines. Second, it argues that beginning with the intra-ecclesial dissent from the papal encyclical Humanae Vitae, the Catholic Church has existed in a grave state of disunity over de fide doctrines, and that this disunity is deepened by the problems caused by Amoris Laetitia. Finally, it offers practical advice to the hierarchy and laity for responding to the crisis.

Secondary Objects of Infallibility
The documents of the Second Vatican Council teach that Jesus willed the Catholic Church’s infallible authority in defending and teaching the truths of divine revelation (also known as the “deposit of faith”) to extend not only to formally revealed truths, but also to truths necessarily connected to the truths of divine revelation, even if they have never been proposed as formally revealed. These can be taught infallibly because they are necessary for religiously guarding and faithfully expounding the truths of divine revelation (Lumen Gentium, no. 25). These are sometimes referred to as “secondary objects” of infallibility, in contrast to “primary objects,” which refers to formally revealed truths.

Pope John Paul II notes in a 1998 Apostolic Letter that the Church not only possesses primary truths of divine revelation by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, it also possesses these secondary objects of infallibility by “the Divine Spirit’s particular inspiration.” In his commentary, Joseph Ratzinger, then-Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), writes that when compared with doctrines set forth as formally revealed, “there is no difference with respect to the full and irrevocable character of the assent which is owed to these teachings.” Ratzinger designates the assent owed to them as “based on faith in the Holy Spirit’s assistance to the Magisterium and on the Catholic doctrine of the infallibility of the Magisterium.” So, like formally revealed truths, these truths too are owed an assent of faith, even if they also could be understood without the assistance of divine revelation.

Although “de fide doctrine” has ordinarily (though not always) been reserved for teachings set down by the Church as formally revealed, it is no less true that Catholic teachings specifying secondary objects of infallibility are de fide doctrines—as Ratzinger calls them, “doctrines de fide tenenda (to be held by faith).” Canon law says they “must be firmly accepted and held” and that anyone who rejects them “sets himself against the teaching of the Catholic Church” (Canon 750, § 2).

Moral Doctrines on Sex and Marriage
The moral norms on sex and marriage taught by the Catholic Church fall into both the categories of primary and secondary objects of infallibility. Primary objects include truths explicitly taught in Divine Revelation, such as the prohibition against adultery and the indissolubility of marriage; secondary objects include teachings on sex and marriage taught by the Church since apostolic times as to be definitively held. These latter, in virtue of the way they have been proposed, should be held as taught infallibly by the Church’s Ordinary and Universal Magisterium, which teaches infallibly when the bishops “though dispersed throughout the world, but still preserving the bond of communion among themselves and with the successor of Peter, teaching authentically on a matter of faith and morals (res fidei et morum), agree on a single judgment (on that matter) and teach that judgment as to be definitively held (definitive tendendam).”

There can be no reasonable doubt that the Church’s teachings on the singular context of marriage for upright genital sexual expression and the wrongfulness of every form of freely chosen non-marital sexual behavior (e.g., masturbation, extra-marital intercourse, homosexual acts, contraceptive acts, etc.) have been taught by the bishops in universal agreement, always and everywhere, as clearly pertaining to the temporal and eternal welfare of the faithful, and so definitive tendendam. The fact that Catholics in recent times have denied some or all of the teachings in no way compromises the fact that the conditions for an infallible exercise of the Ordinary and Universal Magisterium have been met for most of the Church’s long history.

It follows that the basic truths of sexual ethics taught and defended by the Catholic Church pertain either directly (as primary objects) or indirectly (as secondary objects) to the deposit of faith and thus may be referred to—and in fact are—de fide doctrines.

Unacknowledged Ecclesial Schism
Beginning with the dissent from the Catholic Church’s reassertion of its ancient teaching on the wrongfulness of contraceptive intercourse in Humanae Vitae (1968), and carrying through the widespread acceptance of utilitarian—called “proportionalist”—reasoning in Catholic moral theology in the 1970s, many Catholics began to deny the existence of intrinsically evil actions (i.e., actions that are never morally legitimate to choose because their choosing always radically contradicts the good of the human person). This logically led to the rejection of the Church’s teachings on the wrongfulness of all types of sexual activity traditionally designated as intrinsically evil. This rejection has existed at all levels in the Catholic Church, from the laity to the hierarchy, and has been both resolute and obstinate.

The Catholic Church has thus existed for decades in a condition of objective and grave disunity over matters of de fide doctrine. Another way to say this is that the Catholic Church has existed in a de facto state of schism.

Confusion, Disunity, and Amoris Laetitia
There is confusion in the Catholic Church over Amoris Laetitia because some bishops are saying—and prescribing as policy in their dioceses—that remarried divorcees, under certain circumstances, may return to Holy Communion without resolving to live in perfect continence with their partners. Other bishops, in continuity with Catholic tradition, hold that this is not and cannot be legitimate.

The matters of de fide doctrine raised by these conflicting interpretations are the intrinsic wrongfulness of adultery and the absolute indissolubility of Christian marriage, both of which are infallibly affirmed by Scripture and Tradition. If the doctrines are true, then a divorcee who is sexually active with someone other than his first valid spouse, while his first spouse still lives, is committing adultery.

Although Cardinal Kasper, and other episcopal defenders of granting permission to civilly remarried divorcees to receive Holy Eucharist, affirm the wrongfulness of adultery and the indissolubility of marriage, their affirmations would seem to be incompatible with the permission they defend. For no one in manifest unrepentant objective serious wrongdoing can be freed to receive the Holy Eucharist, not by a priest or bishop or anyone, since their “state and condition of life objectively contradict that union of love between Christ and the Church which is signified and effected by the Eucharist” (Familiaris Consortio). They must therefore not be doing anything objectively wrong. But this can only be the case if adultery is sometimes licit, or marriage is not indissoluble.

Many bishops recognize this contradiction and so oppose granting the permission. But others believe there is no conflict and so grant permission.

Thus, the hierarchy exists in a state of grave disunity on matters pertaining to the deposit of faith. In other words, as I have said, the Catholic Church is in de facto schism. The conflict over Amoris Laetitia is not the cause of the disunity, which has existed for decades. But it perpetuates the division and deepens it in a very significant way. It deepens it because the pope has gone on record defending the position that is contrary to the Church’s perennial teaching. It is hard to overstate the seriousness of this situation.

Duties of the Holy See
What should the Holy Father do? He should begin by directing Cardinal Müller of the CDF to reply to the five dubia submitted by Cardinals Brandmüller, Burke, Caffara, and Meisner. This would help to clarify some of the harmful confusions raised by chapter eight of Amoris Laetitia. Then he should teach clearly and authoritatively what is true on matters of sexual morality that have been thrown into doubt and confusion since the beginning of his pontificate. He should teach that each and every consummated Christian marriage is absolutely indissoluble; every form of freely chosen non-marital sexual behavior is always wrong, especially adultery, but also homosexual acts, contraceptive acts, masturbation, and fornication; sexual intercourse with someone other than one’s valid spouse is always adulterous; one who is bound by a valid marriage bond, who lives with a different person more uxorio (in a marital way), is in an object state of adultery; and such a one must refrain from Holy Communion unless and until he confesses with contrition his wrongful actions and resolves to live chastely.

Finally, knowing that the episcopate is divided on de fide doctrines of morality, he needs to lead his brother bishops to face frankly this crisis in the Church and to resolve firmly to overcome it. He should convene a closed-door synod exclusively of the world’s bishops at Assisi or Castel Gandolfo or some other venue out of the spotlight—no media, periti, ecumenical observers, etc.—on the theme of episcopal unity in matters of morality. The synod’s length should be unspecified, so it can last as long as necessary. He should address his brothers in charity, without scolding or innuendo, on how very injurious—indeed, how catastrophically harmful—it is to the salvation of souls when the successors of the apostles are not united on de fide matters.

As both a father to his sons and a brother among brothers, Pope Francis should admonish all to set aside petty and unchristian posturing, all vice and proud ignorance, and every expression of party spirit, to repent of the divisions that they themselves should long ago have addressed, and to commit themselves to the common goal of episcopal unity. He should allow—and not merely say he allows—his brother bishops to speak freely on matters of disagreement without fear of reprisal. He should use his exceptional Argentinian warmth to persuade his brothers to want unity in the episcopate; to urge them to talk to each other freely and forthrightly; and to facilitate consensus on whatever agreements need to be reached. The unity toward which he strives and on which he insists should extend no further than matters pertaining to the deposit of faith, insisting that the Church tolerates diversity on everything else, and being the first to model this to all of his brothers.

Finally, he should be willing to do whatever it takes, including laying down his own life, to facilitate among the bishops of the Catholic Church the dying request of Jesus to his Father, that “they all may be one.”

Duties of the Lay Faithful
What should lay Catholics do? They should form their consciences in accord with the definitive moral truths taught by the Catholic Church, especially the norms of sexual ethics and teachings about marriage. They should see that every negative norm (“thou shalt not”) that the Church defends is necessarily entailed by some positive good that that norm protects and promotes (e.g., we shouldn’t kill the innocent, because life is a great good). They need to see now more than ever that the teachings on the absolute indissolubility of marriage and the prohibition of adultery are not club rules, but moral truths entailed by the great goodness of Christian marriage. Jesus willed marriage to be a sacramentum (a divinely instituted sign or symbol) of his absolutely indissoluble love for his Church; thus consummated Christian marriage is absolutely indissoluble; divorce is not only wrong, it’s impossible: just as Jesus cannot be divorced from his Church, a man cannot be divorced from his valid wife. It follows that if he has sex with anyone else, for any reason, however socially acceptable, while his valid wife still lives, he’s an adulterer. Adultery can be forgiven, like every sin; but to be forgiven, it requires contrition and a firm resolve to avoid the sin. These are Christian moral truths; and they are de fide doctrines of the Catholic Church.

Moreover, Catholics should not allow distress over the present situation to shake their faith in Jesus’s promise to preserve the Church from damnable error and to provide a trustworthy barque for the salvation of souls. They mustn’t succumb to Wycliffe, Luther, or Zwingli’s temptation to turn their frustrations with churchmen, however justified, against the Church of Christ herself. They should realize that the Church has suffered from without and within many times over the centuries, and compared to other periods in history—the fourth century Arian heresy, the fourteenth century Great Schism, the French Reign of Terror, the German Kulturkampf—her problems today are mild.

Additionally, every baptized Catholic should resolve to live as a saint. Only the fewest saints make it to stained glass windows. The rest never gain great attention or grow famous enough to garner a “cause” in Rome. But they do their best to discern and follow Jesus’s will every day, turning from wrongful self-love, spurning ambition, accepting humiliations serenely, repenting of every sin they become aware of, saying no to every inclination to think about or act upon non-marital sexual desires, turning from immoderate anger, and denying, denying, denying the godless social constructivist narrative on sex, gender, and marriage promoted by the modern secular mind.

Every Catholic needs to be convinced that social and ecclesial renewal begins with him or with her. In history, renewal has almost never come from the top down, from the papacy and Rome, but rather from the bottom up. It has come from Christians firmly resolving to live by faith in Christ and endeavoring to know the power of his resurrection, sharing patiently in his sufferings so as to attain the resurrection from the dead that he promised.

Finally, they should pray for the unity of the episcopate.

Editor’s note: This essay first appeared February 22, 2017 in Public Discourse, the online journal of the Witherspoon Institute and is reprinted with permission.

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E. Christian Brugger

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Christian Brugger is Professor and Dean of the School of Philosophy and Theology at the University of Notre Dame Australia, Sydney.



TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Moral Issues
KEYWORDS: adultery; francischurch; schism
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1 posted on 03/31/2017 10:00:24 PM PDT by ebb tide
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To: ebb tide

No. The Catholic Church can never be in schism for the Church cannot be in schism to herself. Someone can be in schism in regard to the Church, however.


2 posted on 03/31/2017 10:07:14 PM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: vladimir998

You are wrong. The Catholic Church had three competing popes at one time. But It recovered.


3 posted on 03/31/2017 10:14:33 PM PDT by ebb tide (We have a rogue curia in Rome)
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To: ebb tide

“You are wrong.”

No, as usual, I am correct.

“The Catholic Church had three competing popes at one time.”

Nope. The Catholic Church had ONE pope. There were two other men CLAIMING to be pope. A few years ago there were at least seven or eight men claiming to be pope.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antipope#Modern_claimants_to_papacy

“But It recovered.”

I wish I could say the same for your knowledge. Anyone who says he’s Catholic and then says something as ridiculously impossible as “The Catholic Church had three competing popes at one time” needs to recover his wits. Once again we see you have a shoddy understanding of what the Church actually teaches.


4 posted on 03/31/2017 10:28:51 PM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: ebb tide

At the moment the Catholic faith is run by a dedicated progressive marxist pope. Progressive Marxists are progressive marxists uber-alles. It matter not about one’s faith, even IF you are POPE. You are a marxist progressive regardless of your faith. My absolutely wonderful Polish girlfriend was overwhelmed by this new pope carrying his own bags, as were many. I said nothing other than “we’ll see.” She is coming around to the FACT that this pope is a Marxist uber-alles progressive. I am honestly surprised he has not some out in support of open homosexuality and demands the Catholic Church starts funding abortion.


5 posted on 03/31/2017 10:33:07 PM PDT by Organic Panic (Flinging poo is not a valid argument)
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To: vladimir998
Do you enjoy embarrassing yourself?

1378 The Great Papal Schism

Quoting wiki as a legit source is a juvenile move to defend any position from a Catholic point of view.

6 posted on 03/31/2017 10:36:45 PM PDT by ebb tide (We have a rogue curia in Rome)
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To: vladimir998

And now the Church has two living popes, both who still dress in white and retain their papal names.

Are you in the Francis schism with Francis, the material and formal heretic?


7 posted on 03/31/2017 10:42:06 PM PDT by ebb tide (We have a rogue curia in Rome)
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To: vladimir998

http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_19980101_ratzinger-comm-divorced_en.html


8 posted on 03/31/2017 10:44:42 PM PDT by ebb tide (We have a rogue curia in Rome)
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To: ebb tide; vladimir998

Gentlepersons, let us remember that Charity is a great virtue.


9 posted on 03/31/2017 10:47:17 PM PDT by pbear8 (the Lord is my light and my salvation)
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To: pbear8
Gentlepersons, let us remember that Charity is a great virtue.

So is Faith, and I don't think Bergoglio has it.

10 posted on 03/31/2017 10:53:40 PM PDT by ebb tide (We have a rogue curia in Rome)
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To: ebb tide
These problems are coming about because Bergoglio isn't the Pope.

Benedict is still Pope.

This is why Bergoglio has none of the protections of the Holy Spirit, and why he veers from one horrific error to another. It's because he's not the Pope.

But why isn't Bergoglio the Pope?

Benedict apparently resigned in February 2013, declaring that he would resign in such as a way as to leave the seat vacant. How could he still be Pope?

Here's how:

Canon 188 states:

A (Papal) resignation made out of grave fear that is inflicted unjustly or out of malice, substantial error, or simony is invalid by the law itself.

The criterion of Canon 188 that most clearly invalidates Benedict’s attempted resignation is the criterion of 'substantial error'.

The substantial error is the concept of an Emeritus or 'Shadow Pope' - one who has the title of Pope. That is the modern usage of Emeritus - 'one who retains the title'.

This is error. The Papacy was instituted by Christ. It is one and indivisible, and no mortal man has power to amend it; nor to smudge or elide it with taxonomy.

There cannot be two men sharing the position of Pope, any more than there can be two men who are Christ.

If Benedict believes himself to - in any sense - be Pope then he is still Pope. Because if he believes that he can retain any part of the Papacy - such as the title - then he is in substantial error about the nature of the Papacy, and his abdication was illegitimate.

Question: when he abdicated, Benedict declared that he would abdicate in such a way that would 'leave the seat vacant'. Surely this means that he is not still the Pope?

Answer: the fact that Canon 188 exists indicates that a Pope may still be Pope even if he publicly declares otherwise.

The office of Pope is not only one and indivisible, but has a divine character hedged about with the magisterium of the Body of Christ. It is not under the entire control of its current holder. Canon 188 embodies the Church's discernment of this fact.

There are other signs - apart from being called 'Pope Emeritus' - that Benedict is in substantial error about the nature of the papacy:

* He is still called "Benedict".

* He is still called "Your Holiness"

* He still wears a white cassock.

* When a Pope leaves office his gold ring - known as the Fisherman’s ring - is smashed with a specially designed silver hammer. This is because objects strictly tied to the ministry of St Peter must be destroyed - to avoid any confusion.

* But Benedict XVI’s ring has not been destroyed. The insignia on Benedict XVI’s ring has merely been scratched with a cross so that it can be kept ‘for posterity’.

If the Papacy was some mundane position like professor or judge, then these would be laughable superficialities.

But because these facts indicate that Benedict believes himself to share or retain the Papal ministry in some way, they indicate substantial error. And therefore that his abdication is void, and that he is still Pope.

There's more. This is a quote from Pope Benedict’s personal secretary, Archbishop Georg Ganswein. I include it because the Archbishop is well placed to know the mind of Pope Benedict.

From the election of his successor, Pope Francis—on 13 March 2013—there are not then two Popes, but de facto an enlarged ministry with an active and a contemplative member. For this reason, Benedict has not renounced either his name or his white cassock. For this reason, the correct title with which we must refer to him is still “Holiness.” Furthermore, he has not retired to an isolated monastery, but [has retired] within the Vatican, as if he had simply stepped aside to make space for his Successor, and for a new stage in the history of the Papacy, which he, with that step, has enriched with the centrality of [prayer] and of compassion placed in the Vatican Gardens.

The Archbishop has done us all a great favor in documenting this confusion.

If more clarity were needed, here is a forthright quote from Pope John Paul II.

"A Pope Emeritus is impossible"

I hope that this proves helpful. To non-catholics these arguments might seem legalistic and pointless. But Christ's Church discerns marriages as existing or not existing; or the presence/non-presence of the Blessed Sacrament by similar determinations.

Please of your charity pray for Pope Benedict XVI: that he might realise his error and rectify the situation in whatever way seems good to God.

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

Hat tip to Anne Barnhardt, who saw this so much earlier than anyone else.

http://www.barnhardt.biz/2017/01/16/cutting-the-crap-31-questions-and-blunt-answers-about-the-catholic-church-and-antipope-bergoglio/

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

Some FReepers have posted indications that Benedict may have been forced to abdicate by the Obama White House.

If these rumors turn out to be true, then it may be that Benedict was not only in 'substantial error', but also 'grave fear' when he abdicated. This would bolster the argument that Benedict is still Pope. However I just don't know enough about Obama's putative coup upon the Catholic church to make the case for this.

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

Note that Ganswein's quote was made at a time when Benedict was still living in the Vatican. Benedict is apparently now living at the monastery of Mater Ecclesiae.

11 posted on 04/01/2017 1:11:28 AM PDT by agere_contra (Please pray for Pope Benedict XVI)
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To: vladimir998

I completely agree. No schism just a bad pope.


12 posted on 04/01/2017 4:38:15 AM PDT by miss marmelstein
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To: ebb tide

“Do you enjoy embarrassing yourself?”

You’re the only one embarrassing himself. ONE pope at a time. That’s all the Church can have. As I said there are many men claiming to be pope even now - and we still have only one pope at a time.

“1378 The Great Papal Schism”

There was ONE pope. There were two and then three men claiming to be pope, but only ONE of them was.

“Quoting wiki as a legit source is a juvenile move to defend any position from a Catholic point of view.”

Saying there were three popes when according to the Church - its canon laws, its theology, and its ecclesiology - there can only be ONE POPE is what a juvenile would do and no intelligent Catholic would do it. But you did.


13 posted on 04/01/2017 5:11:16 AM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: ebb tide

“And now the Church has two living popes, both who still dress in white and retain their papal names.”

ONE is pope. The other is “pope emeritus” - meaning he is NOT the pope. http://www.cnn.com/2013/02/26/world/europe/vatican-benedict-title/ I can’t believe I have to school you on this. Everyone knows there’s ONLY ONE pope.

“Are you in the Francis schism with Francis, the material and formal heretic?”

Are you in the so ill-informed as a Catholic that you actually believe there were three popes AT THE SAME TIME in the late 14th century? Apparently you are - because you’ve said so. I think you know you were caught saying something incredibly stupid and now you’re (apparently) desperately trying to cover it up with nonsense. That won’t work so now you’re apparently trying to change the subject. YOU WERE WRONG. There’s only one pope AT A TIME. The fact that you said otherwise shows what I have always said: You don’t know what you’re talking about. I won’t change the subject. I will simply stay riveted on the fact that you were wrong on something so fundamental that there’s no way for you to explain it away. You’ve been exposed - yet again - as someone who apparently doesn’t know the most basic things that any practicing Catholic should know. Yet you post constantly as if you’re some sort of authority on Catholic teaching. You’re not.

Changing the subject, apparently out of desperation, will not hide your embarrassment at being caught out making ridiculous claims about three popes at one time. It’s like when Obama said there were 57 states and he apparently meant it. He was exposed as a twit. Wear it ebb tide. Wear it.


14 posted on 04/01/2017 5:33:32 AM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: ebb tide

http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_19980101_ratzinger-comm-divorced_en.html";

ebb tide, apparently desperately trying to change the subject of his error.

That won’t work: https://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2016/06/there-arent-two-popes-in-any-way-shape-or-form

There’s only ONE pope at a time - not three as you claimed: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/3540000/posts?page=3#3 Wear it, ebb tide. Wear it.


15 posted on 04/01/2017 5:37:54 AM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: vladimir998

Your circular logic: “The Catholic Church can never be in schism for the Church cannot be in schism to herself” is not logical. It presumes there can be only one condition - an institutional church - clergy at all levels - that is true, and acting in truth to the foundation and faith of the church. The term schism implies there is a looming separation between the later and the former. Of course that can happen, though I am not making a judgement that it is happening.


16 posted on 04/01/2017 5:59:46 AM PDT by Wuli
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To: Wuli

“Your circular logic: “The Catholic Church can never be in schism for the Church cannot be in schism to herself” is not logical.”

It’s entirely logical based on what the Church is.

“It presumes there can be only one condition - an institutional church - clergy at all levels - that is true, and acting in truth to the foundation and faith of the church.”

No, it presumes that the Church was founded by God and is the Body of Christ. In a schism you only have some members who willingly choose to set themselves against the Body. Thus, the Church can never be at schism against itself for there is no logical way for the Church to BE ITSELF and BE OPPOSED TO ITSELF at the same time. A thing cannot BE and NOT BE at the same time. The Church cannot BE ITSELF and BE AGAINST ITSELF at the same time. That would be a logical impossibility. What some members of the Church choose to do by going against the Church as they choose schism in no way means the Church is set against itself. Again, that would be a logical impossibility.

“The term schism implies there is a looming separation between the later and the former.”

False. The term schism means THERE IS A SEPARATION where someone in the Church has chosen to follow someone other than the appointed authority. Schism does NOT suggest a “looming separation”. It means there IS a separation. Here for instance is the definition of “Schism” found in the Catechism of the Catholic Church in its entirety: “SCHISM: Refusal of submission to the Supreme Pontiff, or of communion with the members of the Church subject to him (2089).” You see your error? There’s no “looming” there. It’s “Refusal”. This is why other authors, being more careful to detail, are using the term “de facto schism”. Hence, the title of the article we are all commenting on now. Do you see the difference?

“Of course that can happen, though I am not making a judgement that it is happening.”

The Church cannot stand opposed to herself. That is a logical impossibility. The Body of Christ is always ONE. Some members might choose schism, but the Body of Christ always remains ONE.


17 posted on 04/01/2017 6:43:54 AM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: vladimir998

“No, it presumes that the Church was founded by God and is the Body of Christ.”

That is the entire problem with Catholics. The Roman Catholic Church is a human institution founded by humans, humans who believed, or taught, they were inspired by G-d AS TO WHAT WAS CORRECT BELIEFS ABOUT G-D. Being inspired by G-d, as all who believe in G-d hope they are, is not the same as “founded by G-d”.

The Body of Christ is a spiritual body that includes humans that are living, but it is not, singularly, any human earthly institution but may see members of that body in various human religious institutions.

“The Church” is not “founded” on “Peter” “the rock” (a play on words with the name Peter). It is founded on Peter’s answer to Christ as to what IS the foundation of His Church, and that answer (the foundation) is the belief, faith and knowledge that He is the Christ. That, the answer, not Peter, is what Christ declared to be the foundation of His Church. And who is in “the body of Christ”. Christ knows.

That said, the very human institution of the Roman Catholic Church can be “in schism”.


18 posted on 04/01/2017 8:18:24 AM PDT by Wuli
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To: Wuli

“That is the entire problem with Catholics.”

You’re about to show the entire problem of people who post about the Catholic Church and don’t understand what it is.

“The Roman Catholic Church is a human institution founded by humans, humans who believed, or taught, they were inspired by G-d AS TO WHAT WAS CORRECT BELIEFS ABOUT G-D.”

Jesus was a man, but also God. Jesus is the God-man. He founded the Catholic Church. The Church IS NOT a human institution, but there are human beings in it.

“Being inspired by G-d, as all who believe in G-d hope they are, is not the same as “founded by G-d”.”

What? If someone is inspired by God to do a thing, then that thing is a product of God’s inspiration. Sacred Scripture is inspired by God. We call it God’s Word. It was FOUNDED by God. It was inspired by Him. You would have been at least partially right if you had written:

“Saying you’re inspired by God, as all who believe in God hope they are, is not the same as “founded by God”.”

If you had written that, you would have been correct as regards a general principle. Not every man who says he is sent by God is in fact sent by God. Not every man who says God inspires him and his actions is, in fact, actually inspired by God.

The Catholic Church, however, was sent by God, founded by God.

“The Body of Christ is a spiritual body that includes humans that are living, but it is not, singularly, any human earthly institution but may see members of that body in various human religious institutions.”

The Body of Christ includes members who are no longer living on this earth but who have died and gone to Heaven for all passing through the final theosis. It is not merely a “spiritual body” for no human being on this earth is merely a spiritual being. The Church is a visible Body on this earth and we are its visible members. God only founded one Church. God only sent one Church.

““The Church” is not “founded” on “Peter” “the rock” (a play on words with the name Peter). It is founded on Peter’s answer to Christ as to what IS the foundation of His Church, and that answer (the foundation) is the belief, faith and knowledge that He is the Christ.”

No, the Church, according to Christ is founded on Peter, and not just his confession of faith in Christ. There are even Protestant scholars who admit this plain fact. Baptist scholar D. A. Carson, writes, in The Expositor’s Bible Commentary:

[T]he underlying Aramaic is in this case unquestionable; and most probably kepha was used in both clauses (”you are kepha” and “on this kepha”), since the word was used both for a name and for a “rock.” The Peshitta (written in Syriac, a language cognate with a dialect of Aramaic) makes no distinction between the words in the two clauses.

And I am well aware of the false argument less scholarly Protestants put forward regarding Peter as the Rock. I reject that false argument.

http://patrickmadrid.com/bam-bam-the-%E2%80%9Cpebbles%E2%80%9D-argument-goes-down-2/

Plenty of Protestants have rejected it too: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/davearmstrong/2016/10/peter-the-rock-protestant-contra-catholic-exegetical-bias.html

“That, the answer, not Peter, is what Christ declared to be the foundation of His Church. And who is in “the body of Christ”. Christ knows.”

In any case, your wrong about Peter the Rock. I can’t trust anything else you post.

“That said, the very human institution of the Roman Catholic Church can be “in schism”.”

Not with itself. People can be in schism with it. But it cannot be in schism with itself. That’s a logical impossibility.


19 posted on 04/01/2017 8:35:21 AM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: vladimir998

Fortunately for me, all the rest of Christendom, outside of the Roman Catholic Church agrees with me as to what the Roman Catholic Church is and is not. That is not a comment on persons who may be members of the Roman Catholic Church, but the human institution that that Church is.


20 posted on 04/01/2017 8:52:27 AM PDT by Wuli
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