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No Salvation Outside the Church
Catholic Answers ^ | 12/05 | Fr. Ray Ryland

Posted on 06/27/2009 10:33:55 PM PDT by bdeaner



Why does the Catholic Church teach that there is "no salvation outside the Church"? Doesn’t this contradict Scripture? God "desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth" (1 Tim. 2:4). "I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father, but by me" (John 14:6). Peter proclaimed to the Sanhedrin, "There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved" (Acts 4:12).

Since God intends (plans, wills) that every human being should go to heaven, doesn’t the Church’s teaching greatly restrict the scope of God’s redemption? Does the Church mean—as Protestants and (I suspect) many Catholics believe—that only members of the Catholic Church can be saved?

That is what a priest in Boston, Fr. Leonard Feeney, S.J., began teaching in the 1940s. His bishop and the Vatican tried to convince him that his interpretation of the Church’s teaching was wrong. He so persisted in his error that he was finally excommunicated, but by God’s mercy, he was reconciled to the Church before he died in 1978.

In correcting Fr. Feeney in 1949, the Supreme Congregation of the Holy Office (now the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith) issued a document entitled Suprema Haec Sacra, which stated that "extra ecclesiam, nulla salus" (outside the Church, no salvation) is "an infallible statement." But, it added, "this dogma must be understood in that sense in which the Church itself understands it."

Note that word dogma. This teaching has been proclaimed by, among others, Pope Pelagius in 585, the Fourth Lateran Council in 1214, Pope Innocent III in 1214, Pope Boniface VIII in 1302, Pope Pius XII, Pope Paul VI, the Second Vatican Council, Pope John Paul II, and the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in Dominus Iesus.

Our point is this: When the Church infallibly teaches extra ecclesiam, nulla salus, it does not say that non-Catholics cannot be saved. In fact, it affirms the contrary. The purpose of the teaching is to tell us how Jesus Christ makes salvation available to all human beings.

Work Out Your Salvation

There are two distinct dimensions of Jesus Christ’s redemption. Objective redemption is what Jesus Christ has accomplished once for all in his life, death, resurrection, and ascension: the redemption of the whole universe. Yet the benefits of that redemption have to be applied unceasingly to Christ’s members throughout their lives. This is subjective redemption. If the benefits of Christ’s redemption are not applied to individuals, they have no share in his objective redemption. Redemption in an individual is an ongoing process. "Work out your own salvation in fear and trembling; for God is at work in you" (Phil. 2:12–13).

How does Jesus Christ work out his redemption in individuals? Through his mystical body. When I was a Protestant, I (like Protestants in general) believed that the phrase "mystical body of Christ" was essentially a metaphor. For Catholics, the phrase is literal truth.

Here’s why: To fulfill his Messianic mission, Jesus Christ took on a human body from his Mother. He lived a natural life in that body. He redeemed the world through that body and no other means. Since his Ascension and until the end of history, Jesus lives on earth in his supernatural body, the body of his members, his mystical body. Having used his physical body to redeem the world, Christ now uses his mystical body to dispense "the divine fruits of the Redemption" (Mystici Corporis 31).

The Church: His Body

What is this mystical body? The true Church of Jesus Christ, not some invisible reality composed of true believers, as the Reformers insisted. In the first public proclamation of the gospel by Peter at Pentecost, he did not invite his listeners to simply align themselves spiritually with other true believers. He summoned them into a society, the Church, which Christ had established. Only by answering that call could they be rescued from the "crooked generation" (Acts 2:40) to which they belonged and be saved.

Paul, at the time of his conversion, had never seen Jesus. Yet recall how Jesus identified himself with his Church when he spoke to Paul on the road to Damascus: "Why do you persecute me?" (Acts 9:4, emphasis added) and "I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting" (Acts 9:5). Years later, writing to Timothy, Paul ruefully admitted that he had persecuted Jesus by persecuting his Church. He expressed gratitude for Christ appointing him an apostle, "though I formerly b.asphemed and persecuted and insulted him" (1 Tim. 1:13).

The Second Vatican Council says that the hierarchical structure of the Catholic Church and the mystical body of Christ "form one complex reality that comes together from a human and a divine element" (Lumen Gentium 8). The Church is "the fullness of him [Christ] who fills all in all" (Eph. 1:23). Now that Jesus has accomplished objective redemption, the "plan of mystery hidden for ages in God" is "that through the Church the manifold wisdom of God might now be made known to the principalities and powers in the heavenly places" (Eph. 3:9–10).

According to John Paul II, in order to properly understand the Church’s teaching about its role in Christ’s scheme of salvation, two truths must be held together: "the real possibility of salvation in Christ for all humanity" and "the necessity of the Church for salvation" (Redemptoris Missio 18). John Paul taught us that the Church is "the seed, sign, and instrument" of God’s kingdom and referred several times to Vatican II’s designation of the Catholic Church as the "universal sacrament of salvation":

"The Church is the sacrament of salvation for all humankind, and her activity is not limited only to those who accept her message" (RM 20).

"Christ won the Church for himself at the price of his own blood and made the Church his co-worker in the salvation of the world. . . . He carries out his mission through her" (RM 9).

In an address to the plenary assembly of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (January 28, 2000), John Paul stated, "The Lord Jesus . . . established his Church as a saving reality: as his body, through which he himself accomplishes salvation in history." He then quoted Vatican II’s teaching that the Church is necessary for salvation.

In 2000 the CDF issued Dominus Iesus, a response to widespread attempts to dilute the Church’s teaching about our Lord and about itself. The English subtitle is itself significant: "On the Unicity and Salvific Universality of Jesus Christ and the Church." It simply means that Jesus Christ and his Church are indivisible. He is universal Savior who always works through his Church:

The only Savior . . . constituted the Church as a salvific mystery: He himself is in the Church and the Church is in him. . . . Therefore, the fullness of Christ’s salvific mystery belongs also to the Church, inseparably united to her Lord (DI 18).

Indeed, Christ and the Church "constitute a single ‘whole Christ’" (DI 16). In Christ, God has made known his will that "the Church founded by him be the instrument for the salvation of all humanity" (DI 22). The Catholic Church, therefore, "has, in God’s plan, an indispensable relationship with the salvation of every human being" (DI 20).

The key elements of revelation that together undergird extra ecclesiam, nulla salus are these: (1) Jesus Christ is the universal Savior. (2) He has constituted his Church as his mystical body on earth through which he dispenses salvation to the world. (3) He always works through it—though in countless instances outside its visible boundaries. Recall John Paul’s words about the Church quoted above: "Her activity is not limited only to those who accept its message."

Not of this Fold

Extra ecclesiam, nulla salus does not mean that only faithful Roman Catholics can be saved. The Church has never taught that. So where does that leave non-Catholics and non-Christians?

Jesus told his followers, "I have other sheep, that are not of this fold; I must bring them also, and they will heed my voice. So there shall be one flock, one shepherd" (John 10:16). After his Resurrection, Jesus gave the threefold command to Peter: "Feed my lambs. . . . Tend my sheep. . . . Feed my sheep" (John 21:15–17). The word translated as "tend" (poimaine) means "to direct" or "to superintend"—in other words, "to govern." So although there are sheep that are not of Christ’s fold, it is through the Church that they are able to receive his salvation.

People who have never had an opportunity to hear of Christ and his Church—and those Christians whose minds have been closed to the truth of the Church by their conditioning—are not necessarily cut off from God’s mercy. Vatican II phrases the doctrine in these terms: Those who, through no fault of their own, do not know the gospel of Christ or his Church, but who nevertheless seek God with a sincere heart, and moved by grace, try in their actions to do his will as they know it through the dictates of their consciences—those too may achieve eternal salvation (LG 16).

Since Christ died for all, and since all men are in fact called to one and the same destiny, which is divine, we must hold that the Holy Spirit offers to all the possibility of being made partakers, in a way known to God, of the Paschal mystery (Gaudium et Spes 22).

The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches:

Every man who is ignorant of the gospel of Christ and of his Church but seeks the truth and does the will of God in accordance with his understanding of it can be saved. It may be supposed that such persons would have desired baptism explicitly if they had known its necessity (CCC 1260).

Obviously, it is not their ignorance that enables them to be saved. Ignorance excuses only lack of knowledge. That which opens the salvation of Christ to them is their conscious effort, under grace, to serve God as well as they can on the basis of the best information they have about him.

The Church speaks of "implicit desire" or "longing" that can exist in the hearts of those who seek God but are ignorant of the means of his grace. If a person longs for salvation but does not know the divinely established means of salvation, he is said to have an implicit desire for membership in the Church. Non-Catholic Christians know Christ, but they do not know his Church. In their desire to serve him, they implicitly desire to be members of his Church. Non-Christians can be saved, said John Paul, if they seek God with "a sincere heart." In that seeking they are "related" to Christ and to his body the Church (address to the CDF).

On the other hand, the Church has long made it clear that if a person rejects the Church with full knowledge and consent, he puts his soul in danger:

They cannot be saved who, knowing that the Catholic Church was founded as necessary by God through Christ, would refuse either to enter it or remain in it (cf. LG 14).

The Catholic Church is "the single and exclusive channel by which the truth and grace of Christ enter our world of space and time" (Karl Adam, The Spirit of Catholicism, 179). Those who do not know the Church, even those who fight against it, can receive these gifts if they honestly seek God and his truth. But, Adam says, "though it be not the Catholic Church itself that hands them the bread of truth and grace, yet it is Catholic bread that they eat." And when they eat of it, "without knowing it or willing it" they are "incorporated in the supernatural substance of the Church."

Extra ecclesiam, nulla salus.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR



Fr. Ray Ryland, a convert and former Episcopal priest, holds a Ph.D. in theology from Marquette University and is a contributing editor to This Rock. He writes from Steubenville, Ohio, where he lives with his wife, Ruth.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Ecumenism; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; church; cult; pope; salvation
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To: Petronski

Ah, your usual retort, LOL.


1,561 posted on 07/02/2009 5:13:53 PM PDT by Marysecretary (GOD IS STILL IN CONTROL!)
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To: Mr Rogers

He told the rich young ruler to sell all he had and follow Him because He knew that his riches kept Him from following Christ after he asked what he must do to be saved. That doesn’t mean WE have to. This was a direct order for HIM to follow, not us. Now, if he tells you to do it, you’d better.


1,562 posted on 07/02/2009 5:29:05 PM PDT by Marysecretary (GOD IS STILL IN CONTROL!)
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To: Mr Rogers

Oh, dear, I hope you’re all right!


1,563 posted on 07/02/2009 5:29:50 PM PDT by Marysecretary (GOD IS STILL IN CONTROL!)
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To: Petronski

And you have displayed a pattern of avoiding the question and running.


1,564 posted on 07/02/2009 5:36:02 PM PDT by Marysecretary (GOD IS STILL IN CONTROL!)
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To: Markos33

AMEN, Markos.


1,565 posted on 07/02/2009 5:46:50 PM PDT by Marysecretary (GOD IS STILL IN CONTROL!)
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To: bdeaner

So the guy who accepts Jesus on his deathbed and does no works is going to hell, then, according to your view.


1,566 posted on 07/02/2009 5:47:45 PM PDT by Marysecretary (GOD IS STILL IN CONTROL!)
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To: PugetSoundSoldier

And WE are the church Christ founded. Not some institution.


1,567 posted on 07/02/2009 5:51:25 PM PDT by Marysecretary (GOD IS STILL IN CONTROL!)
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To: bdeaner

All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God. That’s why we needed a Saviour, but the leadership of the “one true church” should not have abused Christ’s teachings.


1,568 posted on 07/02/2009 5:52:50 PM PDT by Marysecretary (GOD IS STILL IN CONTROL!)
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To: PugetSoundSoldier; stfassisi; CTrent1564; bdeaner
First of all, I am a proud father of a five month old baby girl (a guy in other words!).

The definition of why the Nicene Creed is needed did not come from Roman Catholic sources. Nor did it come only from church Fathers from way back when. That statement has been made by Lutheran theologians and pastors teaching a confirmation class for many, many years. In other words, most confessing catholic (in other words, Creedal, and I will not play the word games) Lutherans heard much of that same explanation of the Nicene Creed in their confirmation classes at some point. Granted most probably forgot as soon as the test was done, but that is true of many teenage kids.

As for why I am not a Roman Catholic, that is an interesting question. One that time and packing for our July 4th trip back home won't give me the chance to fully explain it.

For starters I have theological problems with the Roman Catholic (by this I mean the church body headed by the Pope in Rome, not just the Latin rite) Church. For starters, Papal infallibility. There are cases of Popes being tried for heresy (one famous case of a dead pope being so tried), an early Pope who was at best VERY sloppy with his Christology, not to mention the Western Schism where you had at times three Popes running around accusing all comers of heresy and schism. Which was handled in a very non Papal Supremacy way by the university in Paris (but I am rambling).

Then there is the deal with evolution. It amazes me that the Vatican, full of first class theologians, has so many rush to say that evolution is just fine without stopping to think about what that would do to the Incarnation. In short, which species did Jesus save, and when do we evolve out of that species.

In the race to be nice with the world who hates it, many have wandered into a Christological error as serious as Ariaus.

That and while most of the Catholics on Free Republic are very (for lack of a better term) orthodox, the church as a whole is very divided. I often use the term American Catholic Church in that in reality there are at least two churches pretending to be in communion with each other who do no believe in the same thing. When I lived in Nebraska, and met my Catholic wife there, we both believed much the same thing. Yes there are theological differences (which made the discussions I had with the priest during our pre Cana classes very fun for us, but annoying to my wife), but at our core, we believe much the same thing. The Catholics and the LCMS Lutherans may fight, but it more the fight between cousins or brothers than those who are total opposites. There is a lot of respect on both sides.

Here in eastern Iowa, that is not the case. Rainbow sashes at the altar. Sex scandals that drove some out of the Catholic Church to my Lutheran parish in order to escape. Not to mention the fact that while in Nebraska if you were a regular church attending Catholic or Lutheran, the life issues were pretty much the same. Here there are a great many pro death Catholics and priests.

In short, if I were to take say St. Fassisi blind folded to a church in the Diocese of Lincoln and then to one in Davenport, he might have a hard time knowing that they were the same religion, must less church body.

Many of the Catholics here know this. How many have jumped to the Eastern rites, even though that is not really licit. How many have complained about the bishop of so and so. Look at the Norte Dame speech.

Beyond the the theological issues, I have no desire to join a church body in the midst of an internal schism. To many family and friends in the ELCA to want to join that party.

1,569 posted on 07/02/2009 6:35:02 PM PDT by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: Marysecretary
So the guy who accepts Jesus on his deathbed and does no works is going to hell, then, according to your view.

No. Purgatory and, after satisfying his debt of temporal punishment, finally Heaven.
1,570 posted on 07/02/2009 6:52:35 PM PDT by bdeaner (The bread which we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ? (1 Cor. 10:16))
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To: Marysecretary
They sat down together and ATE.

Do you claim to have authority to interpret the Bible infallibly?
1,571 posted on 07/02/2009 6:54:40 PM PDT by bdeaner (The bread which we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ? (1 Cor. 10:16))
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To: PetroniusMaximus
Christ, the thinker, is the true author of the Bible.

Bingo! Christ acting via the Holy Spirit through the BODY that is His Church: the instrumental, material means of salvation He activated to spread the Good News after His Ascension.
1,572 posted on 07/02/2009 6:58:34 PM PDT by bdeaner (The bread which we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ? (1 Cor. 10:16))
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To: PetroniusMaximus

***Christ, the thinker, is the true author of the Bible.

It is the product of God’s “brain” - not man’s.***

One might think about what constitutes authorship. If you go to the beginning of Luke, e.g., there is no claim of divine authorship; there is only the earnest desire to tell people about Jesus. Luke 1:

1
1 Since many have undertaken to compile a narrative of the events that have been fulfilled among us,
2
just as those who were eyewitnesses from the beginning and ministers of the word have handed them down to us,
3
I too have decided, after investigating everything accurately anew, to write it down in an orderly sequence for you, most excellent Theophilus,

This is what sets us apart from the Mohammedans, Petronius. They believe that God dictated the Koran. Joseph Smith would have us believe that God dictated the BOM and the other Mormon tomes.

Where does the Bible say that God dictated the NT?


1,573 posted on 07/02/2009 7:13:17 PM PDT by MarkBsnr ( I would not believe in the Gospel if the authority of the Catholic Church did not move me to do so.)
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To: redgolum

redgolum:

Thanks for the post, although I am unlcear what you meant with respect to the “why and how” the Nicene Creed came about. Also, I think you are referring to the Monothelite crisis in the 7th century. Since you raised it, I would like to respond to it in detail below, hopefully, in a respectful way, citing 2 historians, 1 Catholic [Warren Carrol] and one former Lutheran {J. Pelikan), who late in his life became Eastern Orthodox. [Note that the work that I cited was done while Professor Pelikan was confessional Lutheran]

The Monothelite Crisis was related to the Will of Christ, in that it was only a Divine Will. The passage from St. Luke 22: 39-42 (Mount of Olives” where Christ states “not my will, but thine, be done” was used to support the position. This heresy started in around 630 AD when the Patriarch of the Church at Constantinople, Patriarch Sergius, proposed the Monothelite formula as a theological position to reconcile the Monophysite’s and in particular the Monophysite Patriarch who was in charge at the former important Bishop/See in Antioch. The Church in Alexandria was also under the Monophysite’. . Remember, the Monophysite heresy was rejected at the Council of Chalcedon in 451 AD under the orthodox leadership of Pope St. Leo the Great. Eventually, Alexandria, Antioch and Constantinople would sign and agreement recognizing the Monothelite formula.

Warren Carroll in “The Building of Christendom: A History of Christendom Vol. 2”, pp. 223-224 points out that in all of the discussions among Alexandria, Antioch and Constantinople, Rome was never consulted. Finally, in 633 AD a monk named Sophronius of Jerusalem (who would become Patriarch of Jerusalem in 634 AD) voiced disapproval of the Monothelite formula but this disapproval had not reached Rome by early 634 when a letter from Patriarch Sergius of Constantinople reached Pope Honorius. In his letter, Patriarch Sergius told the Pope that the Monothelite formula had helped reconcile the Monophysites and the important Churches of Alexandria and Antioch. The letter also acknowledged that there were objections from Jerusalem and that as Patriarch of Constantinople; he would drop the usage of the phrase “one operation/will” of Christ if others would drop the insistence of “two operations/wills” of Christ. Pope Honorius’s letter of reply stated that it was better to not debate the question of “one operation” or “two operations” in Christ at this time as in any case, there could be no opposing wills in him since he always did the will of his Father.

With respect to Pope Honorius’s letter, Carroll writes (p. 224) “Somehow, through linguistic or intellectual incapacity or a culpable carelessness or timidity, the Pope entirely missed the point that even to talk about a man without a human will is philosophical nonsense and doctrinal heresy. A man without a will is not a man. If Christ had no human will He was not a man, but God only, and the Monophysites were right.
Papal infallibility was not involved, because the error was not one of ex cathedra teaching binding on all Christians, but a dangerous failure to not teach at a critical moment in a major theological controversy. Of such a failure, the Pope was clearly guilty. Forty seven years later, he was to be condemned for it-—The only Pope ever to suffer such a condemnation.”

In around 642 AD, the Monothelite heresy began to be supported by the emperors of Byzantine who saw it as a political tool to reconcile the Monophysite Christians, all of who lived in the Byzantine Empire that was now being challenged by Islam. All of Patriarch Sergius of Constantinople’s successors were Monotheletes. When Theodore, a Greek, became Bishop of Rome, he had the ability to do language to understand clearly the Monothelite heresy, wrote a letter to the Patriarch of Constantinople stating Monotheleteism is heretical. Patriarch Paul of Constantinople reacted by throwing the Papal representatives in jail and destroying the Pope’s Church in Constantinople. In 649, Martin, who had been Pope Theodore’s legate to Constantinople, became Bishop of Rome (Pope). In 649, Pope Martin called a council to Rome to deal with the Monothelite heresy and some 105 Bishops came, including the Bishops from Jerusalem who read Patriarch Sophronius’s letters against the Monotheletes. The Council condemned Monotheleteism, all of its original proponents who had proposed the doctrine, and the current leader of it (Patriarch Paul) who had joined with the Byzantine emperors to push it in the Empire. Pope Honorius was not condemned in the Council.

Over the next 25 years, Monothelite doctrines where still held by Constantinople and the emperors, due to the need politically ally themselves with the Monophysites, as Islam and Byzantium were now fighting constantly. In 678, the Byzantine Emperor proposed to Pope Donus that a Council of the entire Church be called to finally resolve the Monothelite crisis. In 680, The Church of Rome in Holy week had a local Synod and reiterated the findings of the Western Council in 649 led by Pope Martin that had rejected the Monothelite formula and once again stated the Church of Rome’s position.. So, even before the Council, two clear positions had been taken by the Church of Rome. The Pope sent a letter to the Emperor reminding him of the inerrancy of the Church of Rome “in teaching Doctrine” as it had never deviated from the orthodox Apostolic Tradition. By the time the Council in Constantinople ended in September 681 AD, some 174 Bishops were present. The proponents of the Monothelite formula were challenged to find evidence that “clearly supported there position”. All the letters from the Patriarch’s of Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, etc, were presented, by a monk named Marcarius of Antioch, as well as the letter from Pope Honorius. However, the Patriarch’s of Constantinople had already been condemned by Rome in 649 AD and there was no statement of clear support in Pope Honorius’s letter; on the other hand, there was no clear rejection. As Carroll states, clearly Pope Honorius had left the matter open. So, the Council then included him on the list of heretics.

So some 40 years after his death, the Council condemned Pope Honorius personally, even though he had never taught the doctrine, and the Church of Rome, which condemned the Monotheletes way back in 649 AD, did not condemn him since he did not “Define anything”. So Pope St. Leo II, when the decrees of the Sixth Council at Constantinople (680-681 AD) were to be confirmed by the Pope, Pope Leo II made it clear to Bishops in Spain and the Emperor that the Church of Rome never “taught Monotheleteism” and that Pope Honorius “had not endorsed Patriarch Sergius’s Monothelite views”, but he only refrained from condemning them. As Warren Carroll notes (p. 254), when writing the Byzantine Emperor, Pope Honorius was condemned because “he permitted the immaculate faith to be subverted”. Carroll notes that when writing to the Spanish Bishops, Pope St. Leo II states “Honorius was condemned for not at once extinguishing the flames of heresy, but for fanning them by his negligence”.

Warren Carroll sums up the Monothelite crisis (p. 254) by stating “Despite all of this, the fact remains that no decree of a council has effect in the Catholic Church unless and until it is confirmed by the reigning Pope, and only in the form that he confirms it. There is no “supreme law” prescribing how the Pope shall designate his confirmation. Pope Honorius, therefore, was never condemned by heresy by the supreme Church authority, but only for negligence allowing heresy to spread and grow, when he should have denounced it.; for this is all Pope Leo II ever said in announcing the confirmation of the acts of the council and explaining to the bishops of the Western church and the Catholic Kings of the West the meaning of what he had confirmed.”

Jaroslav Pelikan in Volume 2 of The Christian Tradition: The Spirit of Eastern Christendom, which was written while he was a Protestant (Lutheran), also goes into the Monothelite crisis. Later in his life, Pelikan would enter into the Eastern Orthodox Church, which was the Church of his ancestors as he was of Slovakian and Serbian ancestry. Still, but he always hoped that West and East would re-unite and said as much when Pope John Paul II died. One gathers when reading his works, as I have, that his studies of Patristics brought about a respect for the Latin Church and Rome that he perhaps did not have as a Lutheran. His op-ed piece in the nytimes clearly expressed a desire for Rome and the East to return to Full Communion.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/04/opinion/04pelikan.html?ex=1270267200&en=663197d39d729c94&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland

In the section of Volume 2 “The Orthodoxy of Old Rome” (pp. 148-150), Pelikan reminds his readers of the “supreme example of orthodoxy of Rome in the period covered in Volume 1, the Catholic Tradition”, and in particular the role of Pope St. Leo were at the Council of Chalcedon (451 AD) the council Fathers stated “Peter has spoken through Leo”. Pelikan further notes that Rome had been on the side that emerged victorious from one controversy after another, and eventually it became clear that the side which Rome chose was the one that would emerge victorious. In the two dogmatic issues that we have addressed thus far, the doctrine of the person of Christ and the question of images in the Church, the orthodoxy of Rome was a prominent element, in the first of these perhaps the decisive element (p. 150).

So Pelikan discusses the case of Pope Honorius in the context of the previous discussion I cited above. He notes, correctly, that the case of Pope Honorius, was considered the strongest obstacle to the definition of Papal Infallibility even at the time of Vatican I (1870 AD). Pelikan cites the same sources as Warren Carroll does and goes into the case of Pope Honorius in detail. Pelikan draws a conclusion similar to Carroll and writes (p. 151) “If we distinguish between Monoenergism, the doctrine of one action in Christ, and Monotheletism, the doctrine of one will in Christ, Honorius must be identified with the latter but not the former, while many, perhaps most, who held to either doctrine held to both. Pelikan note that when faced with the question of one action or two, he (Honorius) had stressed one agent, the Lord Jesus Christ, who carried out the divine as well as the human actions through the humanity that was united to the Logos. Pelikan further notes that the question of one action or two actions was insoluble and thus was ruled out of discussion. So by stating “one agent”, who is Christ, “one action” was not explicitly stated. So Pope Honorius’s actions were based on not making it seem like Christ had “two competing wills”. Still, his failure to clearly reject Monothelitism makes it possible to explain why he was a Monothelete, and not to deny that he was one. In sum, the Council of Constantinople in 681 condemned the letter Pope Honorius and the Patriarchs of Constantinople (e.g. Sergius) and then describes how Pope St. Leo, while not condemning Honorius, did state that he had allowed for the Monothelete heresy to pollute the Apostolic Faith.

Pelikan goes back and states, as Carroll noted, that Pope Martin in 649 AD had condemned the Monotheletes’ and Honorius was not on the list. So as Pelikan puts it, while Honorius had agreed with the Monotheletes (Carroll does not come to that conclusion), Pope Martin when he confirmed the decrees at the Council of Rome in 649 AD, he could state that the we (Church of Rome) “that is, the pontiffs of this apostolic see, have not permitted them to spread this [error], or to steal the treasure of the faith’ (p. 153). Pelikan states, the case of Honorius apart, Pope Martin’s claim for Old Rome was borne out by record. What Rome decided in opposition to Monotheletism, in 649 and again in 680, was what the orthodox, catholic, and ecumenical church decided, in council assembled, in 681. Peter was sill speaking through the mouth of the Pope (p. 154)

In closing, the evidence presented from both Warren Carroll and Jaraslov Pelikan supports the notion that Pope Honorius did not “condemn the Monothelete heresy” when he first found out about it, and he may have agreed with it personally (although we don’t know that for a fact). However, what we do know is the following: 1) Pope Honorius did not teach the Monothelete doctrine via a Papal Letter that demanded “Full assent of the entire Church and Faithful” or 2) Pope Honorius did not call a Synod or Council that taught the Monothelete doctrine. We also know that the Church of Rome, when it chose to speak, spoke definitively against it in 649 AD at the Western Council in Rome called by Pope Martin and again at a Synod of Rome during Holy Week in 680 AD, some 6 months before the Council of Constantinople started in the fall of 680.

Anyway, thanks for the post and congrats to you and your wife on the new baby


1,574 posted on 07/02/2009 7:15:43 PM PDT by CTrent1564
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To: MarkBsnr

“If you go to the beginning of Luke, e.g., there is no claim of divine authorship; there is only the earnest desire to tell people about Jesus. Luke 1:”

There doesn’t need to be such a claim.

********************

“This is what sets us apart from the Mohammedans, Petronius. They believe that God dictated the Koran. Joseph Smith would have us believe that God dictated the BOM and the other Mormon tomes.

Where does the Bible say that God dictated the NT?”

I know of no Christian that claims dictation as the means for producing the Bible. Nevertheless, the Scripture is clear that the Bible was not the product of the “will of man”. It is a document of Divine, not human origin.


1,575 posted on 07/02/2009 7:55:51 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: bdeaner

“Bingo! Christ acting via the Holy Spirit through the BODY that is His Church: the instrumental,”

Human hands wrote the Bible. Nevertheless, God in the author. You seem to want to conflate the two. I hear you inching towards the idea that “the Church is God.”


1,576 posted on 07/02/2009 7:59:11 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: PetroniusMaximus
Human hands wrote the Bible. Nevertheless, God in the author. You seem to want to conflate the two. I hear you inching towards the idea that “the Church is God.”

No. The Church is the Christ's BODY; Christ is the Head. That's Biblical.
1,577 posted on 07/02/2009 8:01:17 PM PDT by bdeaner (The bread which we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ? (1 Cor. 10:16))
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To: bdeaner; Marysecretary; Dr. Eckleburg
I agree with you bdeaner, saving faith in Christ will produce fruit, but the faith comes first.

James was looking at Christianity from an observational standpoint...”faith without works is dead”.

A man who makes a profession of faith in Christ but doesn't produce any evidence of the inner workings of the Holy Spirit in his life is probably not born again. We shall know them by their fruits.

What is the work that is pleasing to God?
John 6:29 - “Jesus answered and said unto them, “This is the work of God, that you believe on Him whom He has sent.”

Ephesians 2:8-9 “For by grace are ye saved through faith, and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:
Not of works, lest any man should boast.” That's rather clear, isn't it?

Does that contradict what James is saying? No. James just wants to see the proof, the evidence of your new birth.

The bible clearly states that our own righteousness is as dirty rags, there's nothing that we can do to give us standing before a Holy God.

Matthew 5:20 does NOT refute “Faith Alone” salvation.
Man has no righteousness and can never attain righteousness. We are doomed! Would you dare stand before a Holy God, who is a consuming fire, in your own righteousness?

Christ alone has remedied the righteousness problem.

Ephesians 2:8-9 “For by the grace of God are ye saved through faith, and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast.”

Romans 3:10 “As it is written, There is none righteous, no, not one.”

Romans 3:20-22 “Therefore by the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified in His sight: for by the law is the knowledge of sin.
But now the righteousness of God is manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets.
Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe:”

Verse 24 - “Being justified freely through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.”

Verse 27 - “Where is boasting then? It is excluded.
By what law? of works? Nay: but by the law of faith.”

Romans 4:4-5 “Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt. But to him that worketh not but believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness.”

Verse 6 - Even as David also describeth the blessedness of the man whom, unto whom God imputeth righteousness without works.”

Christ died for the sins that were on our account, the sin debt that we owed to a Holy God. When we trust Him by faith, His righteousness is imputed to us.

I've accepted that trade.

1,578 posted on 07/02/2009 8:03:49 PM PDT by Semper Mark (Third World trickle up poverty, will lead to cascading Third World tyranny.)
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To: bdeaner

“No. The Church is the Christ’s BODY; Christ is the Head. That’s Biblical.”

Good analogy.

Hands don’t author books, heads do.

Why do I get the feeling you want to give the Church the “credit” from writing the Bible? Is it because you want to set the Church up above the Scriptures?


1,579 posted on 07/02/2009 8:05:02 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: PetroniusMaximus
Why do I get the feeling you want to give the Church the “credit” from writing the Bible? Is it because you want to set the Church up above the Scriptures?

No, but I would say that the Church, as Christ's body, through the Holy Spirit, with Christ at it's head, has the purpose of preserving/guarding and teaching God's Word. I would include not only written Scriptures, but also Sacred Tradition, per Catholic teaching. I realize the latter point is not going to go over well with a Protestant. But, nevertheless, that's what I believe.

If the Holy Spirit inspired the Scriptures, why not also the Councils? Is that such a stretch? The Biblical evidence supports this contention, I would argue, and, in addition, it was Sacred Tradition that canonized the Bible, distinguishing inspired from non-inspired Scripture. And so, it seems to me, the inspired nature of tradition is implied by the claim that scripture is inspired.

The above is probably the primary reason I became a Catholic. Not the only reason, but a big one.
1,580 posted on 07/02/2009 8:15:48 PM PDT by bdeaner (The bread which we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ? (1 Cor. 10:16))
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