Clear
Ideas On the Pope’s Infallible Magisterium
What worries Catholics most in the current crisis in the Church is
precisely the “problem of the Pope.” We need very clear ideas on this question.
We must avoid shipwreck to the right and to the left, either by the spirit of
rebellion or, on the other hand, by an inappropriate and servile obedience. The
serious error which is behind many current disasters is the belief that the
“Authentic Magisterium” is nothing other than the “Ordinary Magisterium.”
The “Authentic Magisterium” cannot be so simply identified with
the Ordinary Magisterium. In fact, the Ordinary Magisterium can be infallible
and non-infallible, and it is only in this second case
that it is called the “Authentic Magisterium.” The Dictionnaire de Théologie
Catholique [hereafter referred to as DTC—Ed.] under the
heading of “papal infallibility” (vol.VII, col. 1699ff) makes the following
distinctions:
1) there is the “infallible or ex cathedra papal
definition in the sense defined by Vatican I” (col.1699);
2) there is the “infallible papal teaching which flows from
the pope’s Ordinary Magisterium” (col.1705);
3) there is “non-infallible papal teaching” (col.1709).
Similarly, Salaverri, in his Sacrae Theologiae Summa (vol.I,
5th ed., Madrid, B.A.C.) distinguishes the following:
1) Extraordinary Infallible Papal Magisterium (no. 592ff);
2) Ordinary Infallible Papal Magisterium (no. 645ff);
3) Papal Magisterium that is mere authenticum, that is,
only “authentic” or “authorized” as regards the person himself, not as regards
his infallibility (no.659ff).
While he always has full and supreme doctrinal authority, the pope
does not always exercise it at its highest level, that is at the level of
infallibility. As the theologians say, he is like a giant who does not always
use his full strength. What follows is this:
1) “It would be incorrect to say that the pope is infallible
simply by possessing papal authority,” as we read in the Acts of Vatican I
(Coll.L ac. 399b). This would be equivalent to saying that the pope’s authority
and his infallibility are the same thing.
2) It is necessary to know “what degree of assent is due to the
decrees of the sovereign pontiff when he is teaching at a level which is not
that of infallibility, i.e., when he is not exercising the supreme
degree of his doctrinal authority” (Salaverri, op.cit., no.659).
Error by Excess and/or By Defect
Unfortunately this three-fold distinction between the
Extraordinary Magisterium, the Ordinary Infallible Magisterium, and the
authentic non-infallible Magisterium, has fallen into oblivion. This has
resulted in two opposite errors in the crisis situation of the Church at the
present time: the error by excess of those who extend papal
infallibility to all acts of the pope, without distinction; and the error by defect
of those who restrict infallibility to definitions that have been
uttered ex cathedra.
The error by excess actually eliminates the Ordinary
Non-Infallible or “Authentic” Magisterium and inevitably leads either to
Sedevacantism or to servile obedience. The attitude of the people of this
second category is, “The pope is always infallible and so we always owe him
blind obedience.” The error by defect eliminates the Ordinary Infallible
Magisterium. This is precisely the error of the neo-Modernists, who devalue the
ordinary papal Magisterium and the “Roman tradition” which they find so
inconvenient. They say, “The pope is infallible only in his Extraordinary
Magisterium, so we can sweep away 2000 years of ordinary papal Magisterium.”
Both of these errors obscure the precise notion of the Ordinary Magisterium,
which includes the Ordinary Infallible Magisterium and the ordinary,
“authentic,” noninfallible Magisterium.
Confusion and Controversy
These two opposing errors are not new. They were denounced even
before Vatican II. In 1954, Fr. Labourdette, O.P., wrote: Many persons have
retained very naive ideas about what they learned concerning the personal
infallibility of the sovereign pontiff in the solemn and abnormal exercise of
his power of teaching. For some, every word of the supreme pontiff will in some
way partake of the value of an infallible teaching, requiring the absolute
assent of theological faith; for others, acts which are not presented with the
manifest conditions of a definition ex cathedra will seem to have no
greater authority than that of any private teacher (Revue Thomiste LIV,
1954, p.196)! Dom Paul Nau has also written about the confusion that has arisen
between the pope’s authority and his infallibility: By a strange
reversal, while the personal infallibility of the pope in a solemn judgment, so
long disputed, was definitely placed beyond all controversy, it is the Ordinary
Magisterium of the Roman Church which seems to have been lost sight of.
It all happened—as is not unheard of elsewhere in the history of
doctrine—as if the very brilliance of the Vatican I definition had cast into
shadow the truth hitherto universally recognized; we might almost say, as if
the definition of the infallibility of the solemn judgments made these
henceforth the unique method by which the sovereign pontiff would put forward
the rule of faith [Pope or Church?, Angelus Press, 1998, p.13]. On the temporary
fading of a doctrine from Catholic consciousness, see the entry “dogme”
in DTC (vol.IV). Dom Nau also mentioned the disastrous consequences
which flow from this identification of the pope’s authority and his
infallibility: No place would be left, intermediate between such private acts and
the solemn papal judgments, for a teaching which, while authentic, is not
equally guaranteed throughout all its various expressions. If things are looked
at from this angle, the very notion of the Ordinary Magisterium becomes,
properly speaking, unthinkable [Pope or Church?, p.4]. Dom Nau
considered from where this phenomenon had developed: Since 1870 [the
year of Vatican I—Ed.], manuals of theology have taken the formulae in
which their statements of doctrine have been framed from the actual wording of
the Council text. None of these treated in its own right of the ordinary
teaching of the pope, which has accordingly, little by little, slipped out of
sight and all pontifical teaching has seemed to be reduced solely to solemn
definitions ex cathedra. Once attention was entirely directed to these,
it became customary to consider the doctrinal interventions of the Holy See
solely from the standpoint of the solemn judgment, that of a judgment which
ought in itself to bring to the doctrine all the necessary guarantees of
certainty (ibid., p.13).
This is partly true, but we should not forget that liberal
theology had already been advertising its reductive agenda. That is why Pius
IX, even before Vatican I (1870) felt obliged to warn German theologians that
divine faith’s submission “must not be restricted only to those points which
have been defined” (Letter to Archbishop of Munich, Dec. 21, 1863).
The naive ideas entertained by many on the question of papal
infallibility after Vatican I played into the hands of the liberal theology. In
fact, while the two errors are diametrically opposed, they are at one in
equating papal authority and papal infallibility. What is the difference
between them? The error by excess, regarding as infallible everything that
comes from papal authority, stretches the pope’s infallibility to the extent of
his authority. The error by defect, considering only those things authorized
that emanate from the ex cathedra infallibility, restricts papal
authority to the scope of the infallibility of the pope’s Extraordinary
Magisterium. Thus both errors have the same effect, namely, to obscure the very
notion of the Ordinary Magisterium and, consequently, the particular nature of
the Ordinary Infallible Magisterium. It is essential for us to rediscover this
notion and its nature because they are of the greatest importance in helping us
to get our bearings in the time of crisis.
The Ordinary Magisterium in Shadow: Humanae Vitae and Ordinatio
Sacerdotalis
The lack of clear ideas on the pope’s Ordinary Magisterium
appeared in full with Pope Paul VI’s encyclical, Humanae Vitae, and more
recently with Ordinatio Sacerdotalis, in which Pope John Paul II
repeated the Church’s refusal to ordain women.
When Humanae Vitae came out, various theologians indicated
that the notion of ordinary papal Magisterium was obscured. Generally speaking,
those who supported the infallibility of Humanae Vitae deduced “the
proof [of this infallibility—Ed.] on the basis of the Church’s constant
and universal Authentic Magisterium, which has never been abandoned and
therefore was already definitive in earlier centuries.” In other words, on the
basis of the Ordinary Infallible Magisterium (E. Lio, Humanae Vitae ed
infallibilità, Libreria Ed. Vaticana, p.38). They should have
noticed that even the notion of the Ordinary Infallible Magisterium and its
particularity [its constancy and universality—Ed.] had been effaced from
the minds not only of the ordinary faithful but also of the theologians.
Cardinal Siri commented: By presenting only two possible hypotheses for the case in
question [the encyclical Humanae Vitae—Ed.], namely, an ex
cathedra definition [which was avoided—Ed.] that is, proceeding from
the solemn Magisterium, and that of the Authentic Magisterium [which does not
of itself imply infallibility—Ed.], a grave sophism in enumeration has
been committed. It is in fact a serious error, because there is another
possible hypothesis, i.e., that of the Ordinary Infallible Magisterium.
It is very strange how certain people are at pains to avoid speaking about
this....It is necessary to realize that there is not only a solemn Magisterium
and a simply Authentic Magisterium; between these two there is also the
Ordinary Magisterium which is endowed with the charism of infallibility (Renovatio,
Oct.-Dec., 1968).
The same “sophism of enumeration” was pointed out 30 years later
by Msgr. Bertone, speaking against the opposition to Ordinatio Sacerdotalis.
On this occasion he explicitly denounced the tendency “to substitute de
facto the concept of authority for that of infallibility” (L’Osservatore
Romano, Dec. 20, 1996).
In fact, it is not only the Ordinary Infallible Magisterium which
has fallen into oblivion, but, since authority and infallibility have been
equated, the distinction between Ordinary Infallible Magisterium and the ordinary
Authentic Magisterium has also been consigned to oblivion. After Vatican I, as
Dom Nau wrote, Catholics have no longer any reason for hesitating about the
authority to be recognized in the dogmatic judgments pronounced by the
sovereign pontiff: their infallibility has been solemnly defined in the
Constitution Pastor Aeternus....But definitions of this sort are
relatively rare. The pontifical documents which come most frequently before the
Christian today are encyclicals, allocutions, radio messages which usually
derive from the Ordinary Magisterium or ordinary teaching of the Church.
Unfortunately, this is where confusions remain still possible and do occur,
alas! all too often (op.cit. p.3). Thus, we will devote ourselves, not to
the Extraordinary Magisterium (whose infallibility is generally acknowledged),
but to the Ordinary Magisterium. Once we have illustrated the conditions under
which it is infallible, it will be clear that outside these conditions we are
in the presence of the “authentic” Magisterium to which, in normal times, we
should accord due consideration. In abnormal times, however, it would be a
fatal error to equate this “authentic” Magisterium with the infallible
Magisterium (whether “extraordinary” or “ordinary”).
The Point of the Question
The infallible guarantee of divine assistance is not limited
solely to the acts of the Solemn Magisterium; it also extends to the Ordinary
Magisterium, although it does not cover and assure all the latter’s acts in the
same way”
Thus, the assent due to the Ordinary Magisterium “can range from
simple respect right up to a true act of faith.” (Msgr. Guerry, La Doctrine
Sociale de l’Église, Paris, Bonne Presse 1957, p.172). It is most
important, therefore, to know precisely when the Roman pope’s Ordinary
Magisterium is endowed with the charism of infallibility. Since the pope alone
possesses the same infallibility conferred by Jesus Christ upon his Church [i.e.,
the pope plus the bishops in communion with him, cf. Dz.1839), we must
conclude that only the pope, in his Ordinary Magisterium, is infallible in the
same degree and under the same conditions as the Ordinary Magisterium of the
Church is.
Thus the truth that is taught must be proposed as already defined,
or as what has always been believed or accepted in the Church, or attested by
the unanimous and constant agreement of theologians as being a Catholic truth
[which is therefore] strictly obligatory for all the faithful (“Infaillibilité
du Pape,” DTC, vol.VII, col.1705). This condition was recalled by Cardinal
Felici in the context of Humanae Vitae: On this problem we must remember
that a truth may be sure and certain, and hence it may be obligatory, even
without the sanction of an ex cathedra definition. So it is with the
encyclical Humanae Vitae, in which the pope, the supreme pontiff of the
Church, utters a truth which has been constantly taught by the Church’s
Magisterium and which accords with the precepts of Revelation (L’Osservatore
Romano, Oct. 19, 1968, p.3). No one, in fact, can refuse to believe
what has certainly been revealed by God. And it is not only those things that
have been defined as such that have certainly been revealed by God; the latter
also include whatever has been always and everywhere taught by the Church’s
Ordinary Magisterium as having been revealed by God. More recently, Msgr.
Bertone reminded us that the Ordinary Pontifical Magisterium can teach a doctrine as definitive
[bold emphasis in original] in virtue of the fact that it has been
constantly preserved and held by Tradition.
Such is the case with Ordinatio Sacerdotalis when it
repeats the invalidity of the priestly ordination of women, which has always
been held by the Church with “unanimity and stability” (L’Osservatore
Romano, Dec. 20, 1996). Cardinal Siri, still speaking of Humanae Vitae in
the issue of the review Renovatio to which we have referred, explains as
follows: “The question, therefore, must be put objectively thus: given that
[Humanae Vitae] is not an act of the Infallible Magisterium and that it
therefore does not of itself provide the guarantee of “irreformability” and
certitude, would not its substance be nonetheless guaranteed by the Ordinary
Magisterium under the conditions under which the Ordinary Magisterium is itself
known to be infallible? After giving a summary of the Church’s continuous tradition
on contraception, from the Didache to the encyclical Casti Connubii of
Pope Pius XI, Cardinal Siri concludes: This Encyclical recapitulated the ancient
teaching and the habitual teaching of today. This means that we can say that
the conditions for the Ordinary irreformable [i.e., infallible—Ed.]
Magisterium were met. The period of widespread turbulence is a very recent fact
and has nothing to do with the serene possession [of the Magisterium—Ed.]
over many centuries (Renovatio, op.cit.). It is an error,
therefore, to extend infallibility unconditionally to the whole of the Ordinary
Magisterium of the pope, whether he is speaking urbi et orbi or just
addressing pilgrims. It is true that the infallibility of the Extraordinary
Magisterium is not enough for the Church; the Extraordinary Magisterium is a
rare event, whereas “faith needs infallibility and it needs it every day,” as
Cardinal Siri himself said (Renovatio, op.cit.). But Cardinal Siri is
too good a theologian to forget that even the pope’s infallibility has
conditions attached to it. If the Ordinary Magisterium is to be infallible, it
must be traditional (cf. Salaverri, loc.cit.). If it breaks with
Tradition, the Ordinary Magisterium cannot claim any infallibility. Here we see
very clearly the very special nature of the Ordinary Infallible Magisterium, to
which we must devote some attention.
The Special Nature of the Ordinary Infallible Magisterium
As we have seen, Cardinal Siri observes that the Humanae Vitae,
even if it is not an act of the ex cathedra Magisterium, would still
furnish the guarantee of infallibility, not “of itself,” but insofar as it
recapitulates “the ancient teaching and the habitual teaching of today” (Renovatio,
op.cit.). In fact, in contrast to the Extraordinary Magisterium or the
Solemn Judgment, the Ordinary Magisterium does not consist in an isolated
proposition, pronouncing irrrevocably
on the Faith and containing its own guarantees of truth, but in a collection of
acts which can concur in communicating a teaching.
This is the normal procedure by which Tradition, in the fullest
sense of that term, is handed down;...(Pope or Church?, op.cit. p.10).
This
is precisely why the DTC speaks of “infallible papal teaching which flows
from the pope’s Ordinary Magisterium” (loc.cit.). So, while a simple
doctrinal presentation [by the pope] can never claim the infallibility of a
definition, [this infallibility] nonetheless is rigorously implied when there
is a convergence on the same subject in a series of documents whose continuity,
in itself, excludes all possibility of doubt on the authentic content of the
Roman teaching (Dom Nau, Une source doctrinale: Les encycliques, p.75). If we fail to
take account of this difference, we are obliterating all distinction between
the Extraordinary No act of the Ordinary Magisterium as such, taken in isolation,
could claim the prerogative which belongs to the supreme judgment. If it did
so, it would cease to be the Ordinary Magisterium. An isolated act is
infallible only if the supreme Judge engages his whole authority in it so that
he cannot go back on it. Such an act cannot be “reversible” without being
plainly subject to error. But it is precisely this kind of act, against which
there can be no appeal, which constitutes the Solemn [or Extraordinary]
Judgment, and which thus differs from the Ordinary Magisterium” (ibid.,
note 1).
It follows that the infallibility of the Ordinary Magisterium, whether of
the Universal Church or that of the See of Rome, is not that of a judgment, not
that of an act to be considered in isolation, as if it could itself provide all
the light necessary for it to be clearly seen. It is that of the guarantee
bestowed on a doctrine by the simultaneous or continuous convergence of a
plurality of affirmations or explanations, none of which could bring positive
certitude if it were taken by itself alone. Certitude can be expected only from
the whole complex, but all the parts concur in making up that whole (Pope or
Church?, op.cit., p.18). Dom Paul Nau explains further: In the case of
the [Ordinary] universal Magisterium, this whole complex is that of the
concordant teaching of the bishops in communion with Rome; in the case of the
Ordinary pontifical Magisterium [i.e., the pope alone—Ed.], it is
the continuity of teaching of the successors of Peter: in other words, it is
the “tradition of the Church of Rome,” to which Msgr. Gasser appealed at
Vatican I (Collana Lacensis, col.404).
About this subject, A.C. Martimort wrote: Bossuet’s error
consisted in rejecting the infallibility of the pope’s Extraordinary
Magisterium; but he performed the signal service of affirming most clearly the
infallibility of the Ordinary Magisterium [of the pope] and its specific
nature, which means that every particular act bears the risk of error....To sum
up: according to the Bishop of Meaux, what applies to the series of Roman popes
over time is the same as what applies to the episcopal college dispersed across
the world (Le Gallicanisme de Bossuet, Paris, 1953, p.558).
In fact, we know that the bishops, individually, are not
infallible. Yet the totality of bishops, throughout time and space, in their
moral unanimity, do enjoy infallibility. So if one wishes to ascertain the
Church’s infallible teaching one must not take the teaching of one particular
bishop: it is necessary to look at the “common and continuous teaching” of the
episcopate united to the pope, which “cannot deviate from the teaching of Jesus
Christ” (E. Piacentini, O.F.M. Conv., Infaillible même dans les causes
de canonisation? ENMI, Rome 1994, p.37). The same thing applies to the
Ordinary Infallible Magisterium of the Roman pope on his own: this Ordinary
Magisterium is infallible not because each act is uttered by the pope, but
because the particular teaching of which the pope’s act consists “is inserted
into a totality and a continuity” (Dom P.Nau, Le encycliques, op.cit.),
which is that of the “series of Roman popes over time” (Martimort, op.cit.).
We can understand why, in their Ordinary Magisterium, the Roman popes have
always been careful to associate themselves with their “venerable
predecessors,” often quoting them at length. “The Church speaks by Our mouth,”
said Pope Pius XI in the Casti Connubii. Pope Pius XII in Humani
Generis, emphasized that “most of the time what is set forth and taught in
the encyclicals is already, for other reasons, part of the patrimony of
Catholic doctrine.”
The very particular nature of the pope’s Ordinary Infallible
Magisterium was quite clear until Vatican I. While this Council was in session,
La Civiltà Cattolica, which published (and still publishes) under
the direct control of the Holy See, replied in these words to Fr. Gratry, who
had criticized Pope Paul IV’s Bull Cum ex Apostolus: We ask Fr. Gratry,
in all serenity, whether he believes that the Bull of Paul IV is an isolated
act, so to speak, or an act that is comparable to others of the same kind in
the series of Roman popes. If he replies that it is an isolated act, his
argument proves nothing, for he himself affirms that the Bull of Paul IV
contains no dogmatic definition. If he replies, as he must, that this Bull is,
in substance, conformable to countless other similar acts of the Holy See, his
argument says far more than he would wish. In other words, he is saying that a
long succession of Roman popes have made public and solemn acts of immorality
and injustice against the principles of human reason, of impiety towards God,
and of apostasy against the Gospel (vol.X, series VII, 1870, p.54). This means, in
effect, that an “isolated act” of the pope is infallible only in the context of
a “dogmatic definition”; outside dogmatic definitions, i.e., in the
Ordinary Magisterium, infallibility is guaranteed by the complex of “countless
other similar acts of the Holy See,” or of a “long succession” of the
successors of Peter.
Practical Application
Because it declared itself to be non-dogmatic, the charism of
infallibility cannot be claimed for the last Council, except insofar as it was
re-iterating traditional teaching. Moreover, what is offered as the Ordinary
Pontifical Magisterium of the recent popes-—apart from certain acts-—cannot
claim the qualification of the “Ordinary Infallible Magisterium.” The
pontifical documents on the novelties which have troubled and confused the
consciences of the faithful manifest no concern whatsoever to adhere to the
teaching of “venerable predecessors.” They cannot adhere to them because they
have broken with them. Look at the footnotes of Dominus Jesus; it’s as
if the Magisterium of the preceding popes did not exist. It is clear that when
today’s popes contradict the traditional Magisterium of yesterday’s popes, our
obedience is due to yesterday’s popes: this is a manifest sign of a period of
grave ecclesial crisis, of abnormal times in the life of the Church. Finally,
it is evident that the New Theology, which is so unscrupulous in contradicting
the traditional teaching of the Roman Pontiffs, contradicts the Infallible
Pontifical Magisterium; accordingly, a Catholic must in all conscience reject
and actively attack it.
The Almost Total Eclipse of the “Authentic” Magisterium
The Church’s current crisis is not at the level of the
Extraordinary or Ordinary Infallible Magisterium. This would be simply
impossible. Furthermore, it is not at the level of the Extraordinary Infallible
Magisterium because the Council did not wish to be a dogmatic one, and because
Pope Paul VI himself indicated what theological “note” it carried: “Ordinary
Magisterium; that is, it is clearly authentic” (General Audience of Dec. 1,
1966: Encycliques et discours de Paul VI, Ed.Paoline, 1966, pp.51,52).
Lastly, it is not at the level of the Ordinary Infallible Magisterium. The
turmoil and division in the Catholic world have been provoked by a break with
this doctrinal continuity. Such a break is the very opposite of the Ordinary
Infallible Magisterium. Thus Paul VI’s Humanae Vitae, or John Paul II’s
intervention against women’s ordination in Ordinatio Sacerdotalis caused
no dismay to the Church’s obedient sons. The present crisis is at the level of
what is presented as the simply “authentic” Magisterium, which, as Cardinal
Siri reminds us, “does not of itself imply infallibility” (Renovatio, op.cit.).
But are we really dealing with the “authentic” Magisterium? The author of Iota
Unum [available from Angelus Press. Price: $24.95] wrote: Nowadays it is no
longer the case that every word of the pope constitutes Magisterium. Now, very
frequently, it is no more than the expression of views, ideas and considerations
that are to be found disseminated throughout the Church,...and of doctrines
that have spread and become dominant in much theology (“Église et Contre-Église
au Concile Vatican II,” Second Theological Congress of SISINONO, Jan. 1996). The Magisterium,
however, even in its non-infallible form, should always be the teaching of the
divine Word, even if uttered with a lesser degree of certitude. Nowadays, it is
very often the case that “the Pope does not manifest the divine word entrusted
to him,” but rather “expresses his personal views” which are those of the New
Theology. Here we are faced with a “manifestation of the decadence of the
Church’s Ordinary [‘authentic’] Magisterium,” a decadence which “is creating a
very grave crisis for the Church, because it is the Church’s central point
which is suffering from it” (ibid.). Can one really speak of the
“authentic” Pontifical Magisterium, or would it be more accurate to speak of an
almost total eclipse of the Authentic Pontifical Magisterium in the face of an
analogous crisis at the level of the episcopal Magisterium?
The Danger of Being Drawn into Error
Catholic are least prepared to meet the crisis of the Authentic
Pontifical Magisterium because of the confusion in their minds regarding the
distinction between the pope’s Ordinary Infallible Magisterium and his simply
“authentic” Ordinary Magisterium. This problem was pointed out before Vatican
II; it has caused and continues to cause Catholics to be drawn into error who
wrongly believe that they should give equal assent to the pope’s every word,
neglecting the distinctions and precise conditions which we now review. “The
command to believe firmly and without examination of the matter in hand...can
be truly binding only if the authority concerned is infallible” (Billot, De
Ecclesia, thesis XVII). That is why a firm and unconditional assent is
demanded in the case of the Infallible Magisterium (whether Extraordinary or
Ordinary). As regards those non-infallible doctrinal decisions given by the
pope or by the Roman congregations, there is a strict duty of obedience which
obliges us to give an internal assent...that is prudent and habitually excludes
all reasonable doubt, but this assent is legitimized [not by infallibility, but
rather] by the high degree of prudence with which the ecclesiastical authority
habitually acts in such circumstances” (entry “Église” in DTC, vol.IV,
col.2209). This is why we owe the “authentic” Magisterium not a blind and
unconditional assent but a prudent and conditional one: Since not
everything taught by the Ordinary Magisterium is infallible, we must ask what
kind of assent we should give to its various decisions. The Christian is
required to give the assent of faith to all the doctrinal and moral truths
defined by the Church’s Magisterium. He is not required to give the same assent
to teaching imparted by the sovereign pontiff that is not imposed on the whole
Christian body as a dogma of faith. In this case it suffices to give that inner
and religious assent which we give to legitimate ecclesiastical authority. This
is not an absolute assent, because such decrees are not infallible, but only a
prudential and conditional assent, since in questions of faith and morals there
is a presumption in favor of one’s superior....Such prudential assent does not
eliminate the possibility of submitting the doctrine to a further examination,
if that seems required by the gravity of the question (Nicolas Jung, Le
Magistère de l’Èglise, 1935, pp.153,154). Unfortunately,
all these truths have disappeared from Catholic consciousness, just as the
notion of the “authentic” Magisterium has. The Catholic world is all the more
in danger of being drawn into error, since it nourishes the naive and erroneous
conviction that God has never permitted the popes to be mistaken, even in the
Ordinary Magisterium (and here no distinctions are drawn), and so imagines that
the same assent should always be given to the papal Magisterium-—which in no
way corresponds to the Church’s teaching.
Infallibility and the “Grace of State”
Our discussion of the “grace of state” of the sovereign pontiff
proceeds in the context of the Authentic Magisterium. When the pope engages his
infallibility, he enjoys a divine assistance that is entirely special, over and
above the grace of state. Nonetheless, even infallibility does not reduce him
to the level of an automaton. In fact: The Divine assistance does not relieve
the bearer of the infallible doctrinal power of the obligation of taking pains
to know the truth, especially by means of the study of the sources of
Revelation (Dz 1836). That is why, in his Infallible Magisterium, the pope
enjoys: 1) the positive assistance of the Holy
Spirit so that he can attain the truth, and 2) the negative
assistance which preserves him from error. Ultimately, in a case where
a pope, by negligence or ill will, were to fail in his duty of seeking out the
truth by the appropriate means, infallibility guarantees that God, through a
purely negative assistance, would prevent the proclamation ex cathedra of
an error.
This guarantee does not exist in the case of the Authentic
Magisterium because it does not enjoy the charism of infallibility. That is why
everything is entrusted to the grace of state alone, which impels the pope to
act with that “high degree of prudence” which, normally, shines forth from the
Authentic Magisterium of the successors of Peter. If, however, a pope were to
fail to attain this, no divine promise guarantees God will intervene and stop
him. In such a case, indeed, the Catholic world would run the risk of being
drawn into error. But it would not be because the pope lacked infallibility;
under the due conditions, he would enjoy infallibility just like his
predecessors. Nor would it be because he was deprived of the grace of state,
but rather that he had not laid hold of that grace. The risk of this is all the
greater since the principles we are here setting forth have fallen into
oblivion.
When the Catholic world had a clear grasp of these principles the
danger of being drawn into error was far less. In the history of the Church, we
find it was the justified resistance of cardinals, Catholic universities,
Catholic princes, religious, and simple faithful which blocked the faux pas of
a number of popes, such as Popes John XXII and Sixtus V, concerning whom St.
Robert Bellarmine wrote to Clement VIII: Your Holiness knows the danger to which
Sixtus V exposed himself and all the Church, when he undertook to correct Holy
Scripture according to the lights of his own personal knowledge. Truly, I do not
know whether the Church has ever been subject to a more grave danger (entry
“Jésuites: travaux sur les Saintes Écritures” in F. Vigouroux, Dictionnaire
de la Bible, vol.III, cols.1407-1408). This danger was identified and rejected
by the Catholic world. In reality, those who attribute infallibility always to
the pope are doing a service neither to themselves, nor to the Church, nor to
the pope himself, as the present times are plainly showing us. A pope’s faux
pas are a severe trial for the entire Catholic world.
Normal Times and Abnormal Times
In normal times the faithful can rely on the “authentic”
Pontifical Magisterium with the same confidence with which they rely on the
Infallible Magisterium. In normal times, it would be a very grave error to fail
to take due account of even the simply “authentic” Magisterium of the Roman
pope. This is because if everyone were permitted, in the presence of an act of the
teaching authority, to suspend his assent or even to doubt or positively reject
it on the grounds that it did not imply an infallible definition, it would
result in the ecclesiastical Magisterium becoming practically illusory in
concrete terms, because the ecclesiastical Magisterium is only relatively
rarely expressed in definitions of this kind (DTC, vol.III, col.1110).
It must not be forgotten (as it has been forgotten nowadays) that
the security of the Authentic Magisterium is not linked to infallibility, but
to the “high degree of prudence” with which the successors of Peter
“habitually” proceed, and to the “habitual” care they take never to swerve from
the explicit and tacit teaching of their predecessors. Once this prudence and
care are missing, we are no longer in normal times. In such a situation it
would be a fatal error to equate the Authentic Magisterium of the Roman pontiff
with his Infallible Magisterium (Ordinary or Extraordinary). These abnormal
times are rare, thanks be to God, but they are not impossible. If we are not to
be drawn into error, we urgently need to remember that the assent due to the
non-infallible Magisterium is ...that of inward assent, not as of faith, but as of
prudence, the refusal of which could not escape the mark of temerity, unless
the doctrine rejected was an actual novelty or involved a manifest discordance
between the pontifical affirmation and the doctrine which had hitherto been
taught (Dom P.Nau, Pope or Church?, op.cit. p.29). Dom Nau makes it
clear that this prudential assent does not apply in the case of a teaching that
is “already traditional,” which would belong to the sphere of the
Ordinary Infallible Magisterium. However, in the case of a teaching which is
not “already traditional,” the reservation which interests us does
apply: “unless the doctrine rejected...involved a manifest discordance between
the pontifical affirmation and the doctrine which had hitherto been taught.”
Such a situation would legitimize the doctrine’s rejection and would imply no
”mark of temerity.” Is this kind of “discordance” an impossible hypothesis? Dom
Nau, whose attachment to the papacy was without doubt, wrote: This is not a
case which can be excluded a priori since it does not concern a formal
definition. But, as Bossuet himself says, “It is so extraordinary that it does
not happen more than twice or thrice in a thousand years” (Pope or Church?,
p.29). In such a case, refusing one’s assent does not only not manifest
temerity: it is a positive duty. The “discordance” with “doctrine
which had hitherto been taught” dispenses the Catholic from all obligation to
obedience on this point: The general principle is that one owes obedience to the
orders of a superior unless, in a particular case, the order appears manifestly
unjust. Similarly, a Catholic is bound to adhere interiorly to the teachings of
legitimate authority until it becomes evident to him that a particular
assertion is erroneous (DTC, vol.III, col.1110). In the case we
are examining, evidence of error is provided where an act of the Authentic
Magisterium is discordant with the Extraordinary or Ordinary Infallible
Magisterium, i.e., discordant with the traditional doctrine, to which
the Catholic conscience is bound for eternity.
Faith Does Not Require the Abdication of Logic
In conclusion we shall excerpt the text of a theologian, whose
passing is much to be regretted, who had a very clear grasp of the doctrine we
are recalling here, and who knew well that it had been brought into confusion
by the New Theologians. In arguing against Joseph Kleiner on the manifest
contradiction between Pope Pius VI’s Auctorem Fidei, which condemns
concelebration, and Pope Paul VI’s Instructio, which encourages it, Fr.
Joseph de Sainte-Marie, O.C.D., wrote: Has it ever been known for the
Magisterium to intervene against a declaration of the Magisterium? In his mind
[i.e., of Joseph Kleiner—Ed.] the reply must be in the negative:
No, for the sake of the infallibility of the Magisterium. This infallibility
does imply, of course, that the Church cannot contradict herself, but only
under a condition which our author has forgotten, namely, that she engages the
fullness of her infallibility in such an act; or, in the case of the Ordinary
Magisterium (and we must take great care not to minimize the latter’s
authority), provided that it conforms to what the Infallible Magisterium
teaches, either in its solemn acts or in its constant teaching. If these
conditions are not respected, there is nothing impossible about one
“intervention” of the Magisterium being in contradiction with another. There is
nothing to trouble one’s faith here, for infallibility is not involved; but
people’s Catholic sensibilities are right to be scandalized at it, for such
facts reveal a profound disorder in the exercise of the Magisterium. To deny
the existence of these facts in the name of an erroneous understanding of the
Church’s infallibility, and to deny it a priori, is to fly
in the face of the demands of theology, of history, and of the most elementary
common sense.
The facts are there. They cannot be denied. We have given an
example of them, and others could be given. It will suffice to recall...the Institutio
Generalis which introduces the Novus Ordo Missae, particularly its
celebrated Article 7. There the dogmas of the Eucharist and the priesthood were
presented in such ambiguous terms, and so obviously orientated towards
Protestantism—to say no more—that they had to be rectified. This Institutio,
however, constituted an “intervention by the Magisterium.” Should it be
accepted on that account, when it was going in a direction manifestly contrary
to that of the Council of Trent, in which the Church had engaged her
infallibility? If we were to follow the approach urged by Joseph Kleiner and so
many others, the answer would be: “Yes.” But to do this we would have to
swallow the contradiction by denying that there is a contradiction-—which is in
itself contradictory. This would be a real abdication of the intellect, and it
would leave us defenseless in the face of a principle of authority that would
be totally outside the control of truth. Such an attitude is not in conformity with
what the Magisterium itself requires of the faithful....Faith demands the
submission of the intellect in the face of the Mystery that transcends it, not
its abdication when confronted with the demands of intellectual coherence which
pertain to its sphere of competence; judgment is a virtue of the intellect.
That is why, when a contradiction is evident, as in the two cases we have just
cited, the believer’s duty (and, even more, the duty of the theologian) is to
address the Magisterium and ask for the said contradiction to be removed (L’Eucharistie,
salut du monde, Paris , ed.du Cèdre, 1981, p.56ff). To this, nothing
need be added, except perhaps to invite readers to pray the Divine Pity,
through the intercession of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, to remove, as soon as
possible, this exceedingly severe trial from the Catholic world.
Hirpinus