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To: Natural Law
The priest can bind the Church, but not God. Even the act of Excommunication is implemented such that it is an explicit choice by the one excommunicated and the Church does not suggest a loss of salvation or an interference between the excommunicated and God.

Ok, thanks.

This then naturally brings us to the Council of Trent. The Anathemas that were declared there... do they bind God?

Must God curse the Reformers and all who vow fealty to the Westminster Confession for their doctrinal differences with the Catholic Magisterium?

Are those Anathemas binding on God? If not, then why were they pronounced and why have they not been rescinded? Did the Council of Trent have the authority from God to make those pronouncements?

133 posted on 02/25/2010 3:22:10 PM PST by P-Marlowe (LPFOKETT GAHCOEEP-w/o*)
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To: P-Marlowe
"The Anathemas that were declared there... do they bind God?"

Of course not, they only bind the Church. In fact, the anathemas were only put on Catholics. You had to be a "card carrying Catholic" in order to "qualify." Anathemas never applied to non-Catholics. Anathema was the most severe form of excommunication. Someone can't be "excommunicated" if they were never in communion with the Church in the first place. Also, the canonical penalty of Anathema was removed from Canon Law (Catholic Church law) in 1983. It is not in the Catechism.

134 posted on 02/25/2010 3:46:10 PM PST by Natural Law
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