Fr. Paul Kramer B.Ph., S.T.B., M.Div., S.T.L. (Cand.)
THE FIVE OPINIONS ON A HERETICAL POPE
SECTION I – HERETICS
The burning of the pantheistic Amalrician heretics
in 1210, in the presence of King Philip II Augustus.
|
“Moreover, we determine to
subject to excommunication believers who receive, defend or support heretics…
If however, he is a cleric, let him be deposed from every office and benefice,
so that the greater the fault the greater the punishment. If any refuse to
avoid such persons after they have been pointed out by the Church [postquam ab
ecclesia denotati fuerint], let them be punished with the sentence of
excommunication until they make suitable satisfaction. Clerics should not, of
course, give the sacraments of the Church to such pestilent persons nor give
them a Christian burial…” (Fourth Lateran Council,
Constitution 3, On Heretics. Pope Innocent III. 1215).
In addressing
the question of the possibility of a heretical pope, and if possible, could
such a pope be deposed or judged by the Church, one must first distinguish the
various senses in which the term “heretic” has been employed by ecclesiastical
writers. Giuseppe de Luca[1] explains
that the term «heresy» (αἴρεσις) which denotes a choice, selection, election,
or a preference for one position rather than another, was a term used in
classical Greek; and in Alexandrian Greek it began to be typically applied to
philosophical, political, and religious doctrines. In Josephus Flavius, it
already acquired the meaning of “sect”, although without any connotation of
condemnation or disapproval. In the New Testament, the word αἴρεσις occurs nine
times, and the word αίρετικός, once, and the connotation in which it is used is
always one of condemnation and reproach. In 1 Cor. 11:19, there already appears
to be a clear distinction between heresy and schism, and throughout the New
Testament, its signification is one of heinously grievous culpability. In Acts
24:14, St. Paul rejects the Jewish attribution of the term to the nascent
Christianity of the Church.
St. Irenaeus
gave the term a more widespread usage due to his work, Adversus
Haereses, in which he referred to the Catholic doctrine as “orthodox”, and
the Gnostic beliefs (Valentinians, Marcosians, etc.) as “heresy”. The term
gained more precision during the period of the Apostolic Fathers, and was
properly defined by Tertullian in Chapter VI of De Praescriptione,
in which he explains the Greek origin of the term, and contrasts the
self-condemnation of the heretic by his willful choice of doctrines in
opposition to the teaching of the Apostles, which was not the result of their
choice or preference, but was received from Christ and faithfully transmitted
to the nations; and therefore, if an angel from heaven should preach a
different Gospel, he would be anathematized. (haereses dictae graeca uoce ex
interpretatione electionis qua quis maxime siue ad instituendas siue ad
suscipiendas eas utitur. [3] Ideo et sibi damnatum dixit haereticum quia et in
quo damnatur sibi elegit. Nobis uero nihil ex nostro arbitrio inducere licet
sed nec eligere quod aliquis de arbitrio suo induxerit. [4] Apostolos Domini
habemus auctores qui nec ipsi quicquam ex suo arbitrio quod inducerent,
elegerunt, sed acceptam a Christo disciplinam fideliter nationibus
adsignauerunt. [5] Itaque etiamsi angelus de caelis aliter euangelizaret,
anathema diceretur a nobis.).
I have
explained in Part I the Catholic teaching on heresy, and present here what is
the most common definition of heresy, given by A. Michel in the Dictionnarire
de théologie catholique[2],
where it is said of heresy that, “It is a doctrine that immediately, directly,
and contradictorily opposes the truths revealed by God and authentically set
forth as such by the Church.” In his above cited article, de Luca sums up the
distinctions commonly made by theologians in their works, between the
“internal” and “external” heretic, the former keeps the heresy within himself,
the latter manifests it to others; the external heretic is “occult” (secret)
who manifests the heresy to only a few (or even to no one, but commits external
acts of heresy), and “public” if the heresy is manifested to a sufficient
number of persons. There is also the distinction between “formal heretic” and
“material heretic”; material when one denies or doubts an article of faith
without being aware of denying or doubting an article of faith, or does it
without obstinacy or full consent of the will; formal when it is done with full
knowledge and deliberation. De Luca, in 1932, rightly mentions that the
distinction between formal and material heretics is of the maximum importance,
and gave the common understanding of them. Quoting a 21stCentury
author, Wikipedia also defines these terms according to what is the common
understanding of these terms today: «In traditional Catholic theology, the term
material heresy refers to an opinion that is objectively contradictory to the
teachings of the Church, and as such heretical, but which is uttered by a
person without the subjective knowledge of its being so. A person who holds a
material heresy may therefore not be a "heretic" in the strict sense.
Material heresy is distinguished from "formal heresy", i.e. a
heretical opinion proposed deliberately by a person who is aware of its being
against the doctrine of the Church.»[3]
I have given
particular emphasis to express what is even today the commonly understood
distinctions between the terms “formal heretic” and “material heretic”; as well
as “internal” and “external” heresy, because the common understanding of the
terms is firmly rooted in Catholic traditional usage. John Salza and Robert
Siscoe have deviated from the signification of these terms as they have
traditionally been understood for centuries in Catholic theology, (calling the
traditional scholastic usage of the term ‘material heretic’ “perverted”), and
have made use of the relatively recent and novel definition of “material
heretic”; as well as inventing their own deviant and totally erroneous distinction
between external and internal heresy, in order to more persuasively argue their
own heretical doctrines. Most notably, as I pointed out in Part I of this
article, Salza & Siscoe have used their deviant understanding of the “sin
of heresy”, to make it appear that the external sin of heresy pertains to the
internal forum as an “externalized internal sin”, which (according to their
convoluted heretical reasoning) by itself, suapte natura, does not
separate the heretic from the body of the Church, but only does so after
judgment has been pronounced on the “crime of heresy” by Church authority. It
is the matter and not the form which determines whether heresy is an internal
or external; and it is the form or lack thereof, and not the matter which determines
whether the sin is pertincious, merely culpable but not pertinacious, or
inculpable (i.e. material sin). Salza & Siscoe have totally distorted the
Catholic doctrine on heresy by speaking of “the internal sin of heresy that the
person manifests to many by his external actions (but actions that are not
public heresy, as such […]). These external actions are what lead others to
conclude that he is guilty of the sin of heresy.” The error of formal heresy is
culpable and pertinacius; the error of material heresy is not pertinacious, but
in both cases, it is the matter alone that determines whether the sin is
internal or external. It is not the form that determines whether a sin
is internal or external. Such a totally muddled notion of internal and
external sin of heresy as expounded by John Salza and Robert Siscoe is worthy
of the Dictionary of Voodoo Theology, but Salza and Siscoe attempt to convince
their readers that their heretically errant theological deviations are faithful
to the magisterium of the Church.
So, having
given what is the common understanding of heresy and the distinctions related
to it, I will proceed to demonstrate that these terms as they are commonly
understood, faithfully represent the doctrine of St. Thomas, St. Alphonsus, and
the theologians who have followed their teaching for centuries. Only then will
it be precisely understood what is meant by the terms, “manifest heretic” and
“heretical pope”.
Salza,
ignorantly challenging me on the definition of the term, "material
heretic" wrote to me on 12 July 2014: «An ignorant Catholic is not a
heretic (formal or material) because he possesses divine faith and is
invincibly ignorant of his heresy through no fault of his own. A material
heretic is also invincibly ignorant of his heresy, but does not possess divine
faith, thus rendering him a material heretic.» Trying to express their doctrine
with at least some semblance of theological coherence, Salza and Siscoe resort
to the weakest of arguments, the argument from authority – not the magisterial
authority of the Church, which is the strongest argument in theology, but the
private authority of an “expert witness”, writing on their website:
«What we see
is that Fr. Kramer understands the term “material heretic” to refer to
Catholics – “faithful sons of the Church” – who err materially in good
faith. He says that such persons are only material heretic (sic) since
they do not “prefer their own judgment to the teaching of the Church.” But is
this the correct use of the term “material heretic,” or has Fr. Kramer
“entirely perverted” the “legitimate use of the expression”? We will
allow Cardinal Billot to answer this question for us.
In the
following citation, we will see that, according to one of the greatest Thomists
of the 20th Century, a material heretic is not a Catholic who errs in good
faith, but rather a non-Catholic – that is, one who has chosen something other
than the Church’s Magisterium as his rule of faith (e.g., the “bible alone”, a
local Protestant minister, etc.).
Here is
Cardinal Billot’s definition of a material heretic and a formal heretic:
Cardinal
Louis Billot S.J., De Ecclesia Christi:
"Heretics are divided into formal and material. Formal heretics are those
to whom the authority of the Church is sufficiently known; while material
heretics are those who, being in invincible ignorance of the Church herself, in
good faith choose some other guiding rule. So the heresy of material heretics
is not imputable as sin and indeed it is not necessarily incompatible with that
supernatural faith which is the beginning and root of all justification. For
they may explicitly believe the principal articles, and believe the others,
though not explicitly, yet implicitly, through their disposition of mind and
good will to adhere to whatever is sufficiently proposed to them as having been
revealed by God. In fact they can still belong to the body of the Church by
desire and fulfill the other conditions necessary for salvation. Nonetheless,
as to their [i.e., the material heretics] actual incorporation in the visible
Church of Christ, which is our present subject, our thesis makes no distinction
between formal and material heretics [in other words, neither material or
formal heretics are members of the visible Church], understanding everything in
accordance with the notion of material heresy just given, which indeed is the
only true and genuine one. For, if you understand by the expression material
heretic one who, while professing subjection to the Church's Magisterium in
matters of faith [i.e. a professing Catholic], nevertheless still denies
something defined by the Church because he did not know it was defined, or, by
the same token, holds an opinion opposed to Catholic doctrine because he
falsely thinks that the Church teaches it, it would be quite absurd to place
material heretics outside the body of the true Church; but on this
understanding the legitimate use of the expression would be entirely perverted.
For a material sin is said to exist only when what belongs to the nature of the
sin takes place materially, but without advertence or deliberate will. But the
nature of heresy consists in withdrawal from the rule of the ecclesiastical
Magisterium and this does not take place in the case, since this is a simple
error of fact concerning what the rule dictates. And therefore there is no
scope for heresy, even materially" (Cardinal Louis Billot S.J., De
Ecclesia Christi). »
Firstly,
Cardinal Billot, in this passage cited by Salza & Siscoe, errs on the
nature of heresy by confusing the generic nature of infidelity, common to
apostasy and heresy, with the specific nature of heresy. It is not that, “the
nature of heresy consists in withdrawal from the rule of the ecclesiastical
Magisterium”, as Billot asserts, but heresy consists in the obstinate denial or
doubt of some article of faith. Following the doctrine of St. Thomas, St.
Alphonsus states the definition of heresy: «Hæresis est error
intellectus, et pertinax contra Fidem, in eo qui Fidem
sucepit» Thus, the nature of heresy is 1) the
pertinacious error of the intellect against faith, 2) in one who
has received the faith. St. Alphonsus distinguishes between the matter and
the form of heresy: «Hæresis est error intellectus, et
pertinax contra Fidem, in eo qui Fidem sucepit. ... Unde patet, ad Hæresim, ut
et Apostasiam, duo requiri, 1. Judicium erroneum, quod est ejus quasi
materiale. 2. Pertinaciam; quae est quasi formale. Porro
pertinaciter errare non est hic acriter, et mordicus suum errorem tueri; sed
est eum retinere, postquam contrarium est sufficienter propositum: sive quando
scit contrarium teneri a reliqua universali Christi in terris Ecclesia, cui
suum iudicium præferat»[4].
Thus, the matter is the erroneous judgment, and
the form is the pertinacity. Accordingly
therefore, the material heretic is one who is not ignorant of the Church
herself, but is one of her own who is ignorant of her teaching. None of
those among the baptized who have reached the age of judgment, and who deny
some article of faith, while professing some other creed or rule of faith, are,
according to traditional Catholic usage, called “material heretics”, but are
simply referred to as “heretics”; since, according to Canon Law and scholastic
theology, they are rightly understood not to have the Catholic faith.
The opinion
that there can be adult "material heretics" with faith and justifying
grace, but in invincible ignorance, as members of non-Catholic sects who do not
know the Church, seems scarcely believable, smacks of heresy; and is refuted by
St. Alphonsus de Liguori, who explains that, "unbelievers who arrive at
the use of reason, and are not converted to the Faith, cannot be excused,
because though they do not receive sufficient proximate grace, still they are
not deprived of remote grace, as a means of becoming converted." [5] Thus,
Bishop George Hay expounds on those who say invincible ignorance will save a
man, «will bring him to salvation;" saying, "[T]hey suppose that a
man may be a member of the true Church in the sight of God, though not born
with her in communion, as all baptised children are, though born in heresy, at
least till they come to the age of judging for themselves. Their mistake here
lies in not reflecting that all adults who are in a false religion, can be
members of the Church in the sight of God, in no other sense than those were of
whom our Saviour says, "Other sheep I have who are not of this fold."
But as he expressly declares, that it was necessary to bring even those to the
communion of the Church; this evidently shows that they and all such are not
members of the Church in such a way as that they can be saved in their present
state without being joined in her communion. »[6]
Of those who
deny some article of faith, but who profess themselves to be Catholics and
members of the Catholic Church, St. Thomas makes the distinction between such
persons, some of whom, who might be called heretics either because they err
solely from ignorance, who are therefore not excommunicated; and others who, because
erring through obstinacy and trying to subvert others, then fall under the
excommunication latae sententiae: «Sed numquid ex hoc sunt
excommunicati omnes haeretici? Videtur quod non, quia dicitur Tit. III,
10: haereticum hominem post primam et secundam correctionem devita,
et cetera. Respondeo. Dicendum est, quod haereticus potest dici aliquis, vel
quia simpliciter errat ex ignorantia, et ex hoc non est excommunicatus; vel
quia errat ex pertinacia et alios nititur pervertere, et tunc incurrit in canonem
latae sententiae.»[7] Since
St. Thomas speaks in this passage of canonical warnings and the ecclesiastical
censure of excommunication, he is clearly not speaking of persons who are
members of some non-Catholic sect who have never known the Church, but
distinguishes here between Catholics who become formal heretics, and incur the
excommunication; and those Catholics whom he calls “heretics”, but who err
against the faith in ignorance as merely material heretics: “It is to be said
that one can be called a heretic because he simply errs out of ignorance, and
therefore is not excommunicated.” Such an ignorant Catholic, who errs out of
ignorance, and who therefore does not incur the excommunication, is called a
“heretic”, but not properly in the sense of a ‘formal heretic’, who “errs out
of pertinacity and tries to pervert others”, and therefore is not properly a
heretic, but is called a ‘material heretic’ in traditional Catholic usage. From
this passage of the Angelic Doctor alone, one sees how far the Cardinal Billot
drifted away from the doctrine of St. Thomas and St. Alphonsus on heresy.
Salza &
Siscoe are quite unaware of the fact that it is precisely because the material
heretic retains the formal cause of faith, that he still has the Catholic
faith, and is not one who is ignorant of the Church. The material heretic
believes in revelation on divine authority, and does not reject the formal
cause of faith -- "supernaturalis enim virtus fidei causam formalem habet,
Dei revelantis auctoritatem” (Pius XI - Mortalium Animos).
The material
heretic believes in the authority of the Church, accepts the authority of the
revealing God, professes the Creed, and thus does not reject the formal object
of faith, but, errs ignorantly on some matter of faith, being unaware that his
opinion materially opposes some truth of revelation. Such a one still adheres
to the formal object of faith, but it is the formal heretic who rejects the
infallible rule of faith: “Formale autem obiectum fidei est veritas
prima secundum quod manifestatur in Scripturis sacris et doctrinae Ecclesiæ.
Unde quicumque non inhæret, sicut infallibili et divinæ regulæ, doctrinæ
Ecclesiæ, quæ procedit ex veritate prima in Scripturis sacris manifestata, ille
non habet habitum fidei, sed ea quae sunt fidei alio modo tenet quam per
fidem.”[8] The
material heretic adheres formally to the doctrine of the Church as an
infallible and divine rule, assenting on divine authority to the divinely
revealed truths, but errs objectively in ignorance regarding the matter of some
article(s) of faith. “[W]hoever does not adhere to the doctrine of the Church,
as an infallible and divine rule does not have the habit of faith, but holds to
matters of faith in some other manner than by faith.”
The material
heretic retains the formal cause of the virtue of faith, because the form of
heresy which is contrary to that virtue is absent in material heretics, who do
not err out of pertinacity, but out of simplicity or ignorance, as Reiffenstuel
explains, "Hæretici materiales (qui autem iuxta S. Augustinum . .
. nequaquam sunt inter hæreticos deputandi) dicuntur illi, qui non ex malo
animo aut pertinacia, sed ex simplicitate, aut defectu debitæ informationis,
errant circa Fidem."[9]
Hence, as Abbé F.X. de Feller states, material heretics remain faithful sons of
the Church: "Gli eretici materiali sono figliuoli della chiesa."[10]
Those who
because of simplicity and ignorance err materially do not deliberately prefer
their own judgment to the teaching of the Church, in which consists the sin of
infidelity and the form of heresy, as St. Alphonsus explains: "Porro
pertinaciter errare (quæ est formale) . . . est eum [errorem] retinere,
postquam contrarium est sufficienter propositum: sive quando scit contrarium
teneri a reliqua universali Christi in terris Ecclesia, cui suum iudicium
præferat”. Therefore it is only the formal heretic who is properly
called a heretic because he has defected from the faith by refusing to believe
what he knows to be the faith of the universal Church, and thus no longer has
the virtue of faith -- but the material heretic still has divine and Catholic
faith but errs out of ignorance. Material heresy is properly a “material sin”.
The term, "material sin" is defined by St. Alphonsus de Liguori as an
action that would be matter of sin but without the knowledge of the law, and
therefore inculpable: "il peccato materiale non è altro, che un'azione che
sarebbe materia di peccato, se vi fosse la cognizione della legge, ma essendo
la legge invincibilmente ignota . . . la trasgressione non è colpevole."[11] Hence,
"material heresy" is the inculpable, or at least not gravely culpable
act of heresy, because of ignorance, and thus “material heretics” accordingly
defined and distinguished from “formal heretics” by theologians: "Qui
cum sua culpa veritatem de fide negant, formales haeretici vocantur, qui id
sine sua culpa faciunt, materiales haeretici dicuntur."[12] (Those
who culpably deny a truth of faith are called formal heretics, those who do so
without fault are said to be material heretics.)
The error of
material heresy is not always entirely inculpable, but can be culpable and
vincible, but without pertinacity, as moral theologian, Patrick Sporer explains
the three degrees of material heresy: "Et quia illa ignorantia,
vel error potest esse, aut inculpabilis, aut culpabilis & vincibilis, eaque
vel levis, vel lata, crassa, supina, vel denique etiam affectata, & directe
voluntaria, ideo triplicis gradus distingui possunt hæretici materiales." [13]
Thus, with a
clear understanding of heresy as understood according to the mind of the
Church, we can safely proceed to the exposition of the five opinions on the
question of the deposition of a heretic pope.
Defection
from the Faith & the Church - Faith , Heresy, and Loss of Office - An
Exposé of the Heresy of John Salza & Robert Siscoe Part III
SECTION TWO
The eminent
canonists Wernz and Vidal outline the five opinions[14]:
«Concerning
this matter there are five Opinions of which the first denies the hypothesis
upon which the entire question is based, namely that a Pope even as a private
doctor can fall into heresy. This opinion although pious and probable cannot be
said to be certain and common. For this reason the hypothesis is to be accepted
and the question resolved. »
« A second
opinion holds that the Roman Pontiff forfeits his power automatically even on
account of occult heresy. This opinion is rightly said by Bellarmine to be
based upon a false supposition, namely that even occult heretics are completely
separated from the body of the Church. »
«The third
opinion thinks that the Roman Pontiff does not automatically forfeit his power
and cannot be deprived of it by deposition even for manifest heresy. This
assertion is very rightly said by Bellarmine to be "extremely
improbable".»
«The fourth
opinion, with Suarez, Cajetan and others, contends that a Pope is not
automatically deposed even for manifest heresy, but that he can and must be
deposed by at least a declaratory sentence of the crime. "Which opinion in
my judgment is indefensible" as Bellarmine teaches. »
« Finally,
there is the fifth opinion - that of Bellarmine himself - which was expressed
initially and is rightly defended by Tanner and others as the best proven and
the most common. For he who is no longer a member of the body of the Church,
i.e. the Church as a visible society, cannot be the head of the Universal
Church. But a Pope who fell into public heresy would cease by that very fact to
be a member of the Church. Therefore he would also cease by that very fact to
be the head of the Church.»
They state
their own position on the question: « By heresy which is notorious and openly
made known. The Roman Pontiff should he fall into it is by that very fact even
before any declaratory sentence of the Church deprived of his power of
jurisdiction. » And conclude, « Indeed, a publicly heretical Pope, who, by the
commandment of Christ and the Apostle must even be avoided because of the danger
to the Church, must be deprived of his power as almost all admit. But he cannot
be deprived by a merely declaratory sentence... Wherefore, it must be firmly
stated that a heretical Roman Pontiff would by that very fact forfeit his
power. Although a declaratory sentence of the crime which is not to be rejected
in so far as it is merely declaratory would be such, that the heretical Pope
would not be judged, but would rather be shown to have been judged. »
Similarly,
Eduardus F. Regatillo: “The Roman Pontiff ceases in office: . . . (4) Through
notorious public heresy? Five answers have been given: 1. ‘The pope cannot be a
heretic even as a private teacher.’ A pious thought, but essentially unfounded.
2. ‘The pope loses office even through secret heresy.’ False, because a secret
heretic can be a member of the Church. 3. ‘The pope does not lose office
because of public heresy.’ Objectionable. 4. ‘The pope loses office by a
judicial sentence because of public heresy.’ But who would issue the sentence?
The See of Peter is judged by no one (Canon 1556). 5. ‘The pope loses office
ipso facto because of public heresy.’ This is the more common teaching, because
a pope would not be a member of the Church, and hence far less could be its
head.”[15]
The doctrine
of St. Robert Bellarmine is of the greatest importance the Church’s teaching on
the papacy, since the First Vatican Council to a great extent based its doctrine
on the primacy and infallibility of the Roman Pontiff on his doctrine. Pope
Pius XI declared in Providentissimus Deus,«But it is an outstanding
achievement of St Robert, that the rights and privileges divinely bestowed upon
the Supreme Pontiff, and those also which were not yet recognised by all the
children of the Church at that time, such as the infallible magisterium of the
Pontiff speaking ex cathedra, he both invincibly proved and most learnedly
defended against his adversaries. Moreover he appeared even up to our times as
a defender of the Roman Pontiff of such authority that the Fathers of the
[1870] Vatican Council employed his writings and opinions to the greatest
possible extent. »[16] Particularly
concerning the primacy of the pope, Bellarmine’s doctrine during his lifetime
on the absolute injudicability of the pope while still in office had not yet
been adopted by the First Vatican Council, which definitively settled and
closed the question forever in a solemn decree of the extraordinary
magisterium; but was still treated as an open question by theologians in
Bellarmine’s day. Similarly it can also be said about his doctrine on the loss
of office in specific relation to the pronouncement on the nature of heresy by
Pius XII in Mystici Corporis, in which is set forth more
definitively the doctrine of the universal magisterium, but not ex
cathedra, that heresy suapte natura severs the
heretic from the body of the Church – in both cases Bellarmine demonstrated
that these not yet solemnly defined teachings were already fulfilling the
criteria of de fide doctrines of the universal and ordinary
magisterium (what Ballerini called “manifest dogma” of the Church as
distinguished from “defined dogma” of the extraordinary magisterium). So, while
the five opinions were all accorded various degrees of legitimacy by
theologians in the Seventeenth Century, and were at least tolerated by the
magisterium, the same can no longer be said today of the third and fourth
opinions, since there have been subsequent magisterial pronouncements which
render them untenable and therefore theologically antiquated. I have already
explained the doctrinally problematic nature of the second opinion earlier in
this work; so that leaves us with only the first and fifth opinions as
theologically viable and legitimate. Thus, having given ample consideration to
the fifth opinion earlier, I will focus here primarily on the first opinion,
and Bellarmine’s analysis of the fourth opinion in the next section, in which
he provides his theological foundation for the fifth opinion.
First to be
considered is in what manner a pope can be considered to be a heretic. The
question is whether a pope can properly be a heretic; that is, a formal
heretic, since all, Catholics and non-Catholics, says Bellarmine in Book IV
Chapter II of De Romano Pontifice, are in agreement that a pope can
be materially in heresy due to ignorance: «Posse pontificem ut privatum
Doctorem errare, etiam in quaestionibus juris universalibus, tam Fidei, quam
morum, idque ex ignorantia, ut aliis Doctoribus interdum accidit. » The
Holy Doctor then focuses on four opinions:
«Prima
(sententia) est, Pontificem etiam ut Pontificem, etiamsi cum generali Concilio
definiret aliquid, posse esse haereticum in se, & docere alios haeresim,
& de facto ita aliquando accidisse. Haec est haereticorum omnium huius
temporis, et praecipue Lutheri […] & Calvini»
This opinion,
says Bellarmine, that the pope can himself be heretical and teach others
heresy, even when defining with an ecumenical council, and that this has
actually happened, is the opinion of all heretics, and particularly of Luther
and Calvin.
«Secunda
sententia est, Pontificem ut Pontificem, posse esse haereticum, & docere
haeresim, si absque generali Concilio definiat, & de facto aliquando
accidisse. Hanc opinionem sequitur, & tuetur Nilus in suo libro adversus
primatum papae: […] & Hadrianus VI. Papa in quaest. de confirm.; qui omnes
non in Pontifice, sed in Ecclesia sive in Concilio generali tantum, constituunt
infallibillitatem iudicii de rebus Fidei.»
The second
opinion is that the pope can be a heretic and teach heresy, if he defines
without a general council, because infallibility in matters of faith and morals
pertains not to the pontiff but to the Church in a general council; and he
mentions that this was the opinion of Pope Adrian VI.
«Tertia
sententia est in alio extremo, Pontificem non posse ullo modo esse haereticum,
nec docere publice haeresim, etiamsi solus rem aliquam definiat. Ita Albertus
Pighius lib. 4. Hier. Eccles. Cap. 8»
The third
opinion is of the opposite extreme, that of Albert Pighius, which holds that a
pope cannot in any manner be a heretic, nor teach heresy, even when defining by
himself.
«Quarta
sententia est quodammodo in medio. Pontificem, sive haereticus esse possit,
sive non, non posse ullo modo definire aliquid haereticum a tota Ecclesia
credendum: haec est comunissima opinion fere omnium Catholicorum»
The fourth
opinion occupies the middle ground; the pope, regardless of whether or not he
can be a heretic, cannot in any manner define something heretical for the whole
Church to believe – and this opinion, says the Holy Doctor, is the most common
opinion among all Catholics.
He then
pronounces his verdict on each of the four opinions: «Ex his quatour
opinionibus prima est haeretica; secunda non est proprie haeretica: nam adhuc
videmus ab Ecclesia tolerari, qui illam sententiam sequuntur; tamen videtur
omnino erronea & haeresi proxima; tertia probabilis est, non tamen certa;
quarta certissima est et asserenda, ac ut ea facilius intelligi &
confirmari possit, statuemus aliquot propositiones. »
The first, he
says, is heretical; the second, while not properly heretical, because the
Church still tolerates (i.e. in Bellarmine’s day) those who follow this
opinion; but it appears to be entirely erroneous and proximate to heresy; the
third is probable; the fourth is most certain and is to be held. Since the definition
of Vatican I on papal infallibility, the second opinion is now to be judged as
heretical, and the fourth as de fide definita.
In Book II
Chapter XXX of De Romano Pontifice, Bellarmine proposes the
solution to the question on whether a heretic pope can be deposed. He first
states the thesis: “A Pope can be judged and deposed by the Church in the case
of heresy; as is clear from Dist. 40, can. Si Papa: therefore, the Pontiff is
subject to human judgment, at least in some case.” (Pontifex in casu haeresis
potest ab Ecclesia judicari, et deponi, up patet distinct. 40. Can. Si
Papa. Igitur, Pontifex est subjectus humano judicio, saltem in aliquot
casu.); and then introduces his response, saying there are five opinions on
this matter.
The Holy
Doctor’s response to the first opinion is brief and plainly stated in the
original Latin, and in the precise English translation of Ryan Grant: «Prima
est Alberti Pighii lib. 4 cap. 8 hierarchiae Ecclesiasticae; ubi contendit,
Papam non posse esse haereticum, proinde nec deponi in ullo casu; quae
sententia probabilis est, & defendi potest facile, ut postea suo loco
ostendemus».[17] What
he means by “in its proper place”, is Book Four Chapter Six & Seven of the
same work. There Bellarmine explains: 1) «Nam Pontifex non solum non debet, nec
potest haeresim praedicare, sed etiam debet veritatem semper docere, & sine
dubio id faciet, cum Dominus illi jusserit confirmare fratres suos, &
propterea addiderit, Rogavi pro te, ut non deficiat fides tua,
idest, ut saltem non deficiat in throno tuo praedicatio verae Fidei: at
quomodo, quaeso, confirmabit fratres in Fide, & veram Fidem semper
praedicabit Pontifex haereticus? Potest quidem Deus ex corde haeretico
extorquere verae Fidei confessionem, sicut verba posuit quondam in ore
asinae Balaam: at violentum erit, & non secundum morem providentiae Dei
suaviter disponentis omnia. »[18]
The question,
«at quomodo, quaeso, confirmabit fratres in Fide, & veram Fidem
semper praedicabit Pontifex haereticus? » (How, I ask, will a heretical Pope confirm the brethren in faith
and always preach the true faith?), is of the greatest importance, because
faith, (as Bellarmine explains in Book II Ch. XXX on the fourth opinion), which
is the necessary disposition to retain the form of the supreme pontificate,
would be utterly lacking in a heretic, who therefore would be incapable of
preserving the form of the papacy in himself, and would therefore cease to be
pope straightaway. A heretic would necessarily cease to be pope because even if
he were only externally a member of the Church, he would lack faith as the
necessary disposition to exercise the charism of Infallibility, since Christ
did not confer a magical power of infallibility on Peter (and his successors),
but He conferred on him the gift of unfailing faith as the necessary disposition
to exercise the charism of Infallibility. Then there is the further
consideration, as, Bellarmine remarks, “Certainly God can wrench the confession
of the true faith out of the heart of a heretic just as he placed the words in
the mouth of Balaam’s ass. Still, this will be a great violence, and not in
keeping with the providence of God that sweetly disposes all things”; but such
a confession would not require, nor would proceed from unfailing faith as
the disposition on which the exercise of the charism of
Infallibility is based and in which it is rooted; and it would be
contrary to the nature of man which is constituted of free will, and
therefore would not be a human act proceeding from the soul
as the principle of the operation of the exercise of a
charism – the exercise of the supernatural charism of infallibly confessing the
true faith, given by Christ as the free and infallible exercise of that charism
hinged upon and rooted in the virtue of unfailing faith as its necessary
disposition. If God were to wrench the confession of the true faith out of a
heretic in whom faith is absent, that heretic would not be exercising the
charism of Infallibility any more than the ass of Balaam was exercising the
prophetic charism, because the act would not proceed from the soul as
its principle making use of the organs of speech, exercising the faculty of
speech, but God would be using the mouth of the heretical Pontiff in the same
manner that He used the mouth of the ass, which did not possess the faculty of
speech.[19](Numbers 22: 28 – 30)
Faith would
be utterly unnecessary for a Pontiff to profess the faith infallibly in such a
manner as that; and therefore the grace of unfailing faith, which was promised
by Christ to the Pontiff precisely for the purpose of enabling him to confirm
the faith of his brethren, would have been given by Christ to serve no purpose,
and would be utterly superfluous if the confirmator fratrum could
exercise the charism of Infallibility with no faith at all; but since Christ
gave to Peter and his succors the gift of unfailing faith precisely for the
purpose of confirming the faith of the brethren, faith is seen, therefore, to
be the absolutely necessary disposition for the exercise of the charism of
Infallibility, and hence, pertains essentially to the form of the Supreme
Pontificate, and is therefore the necessary disposition for the form of the
Pontificate to be conserved in the person of the Pontiff, and remain united to
him.
As I have
explained, the "necessary disposition", which Bellarmine says is
faith, is necessary, because, the exercise of the charism of Infallibility
depends entirely on the grace of unfailing personal faith of the pope,
which Pastor Aeternus declares Christ promised to Peter and
his successors in order that they may fulfill the office of confirmator
fratrum. The argument proving this ex ratione is based
philosophically on St. Thomas' doctrine on the operation of the powers of the
soul and the necessary dispositions for these operations. The application of
St. Thomas' teaching on the operation of the powers of the soul to the exercise
of the papal charism of Infallibility is as follows:
Distinguishing
between the essence of the soul and its powers, Aquinas explains that the
powers of the soul are rooted in the potentiality and act of the substance of
the soul, which, in its essence as form is act, but is in potentiality as the
principle of the operation of the powers of the soul. [20] In
Article 2, St. Thomas explains that a plurality of powers of the soul are
necessary for the realization of a perfection, which requires the
proper disposition without which it cannot be brought from potentiality to act,
and therefore, is accordingly realized in degrees according to the disposition
to operate the powers of the soul and thereby realize the perfection.[21] From
what is set forth in article 4 on the operation of the powers of the soul [22],
it can be understood that in the same manner as of the purely natural operation
of the powers of the soul, and accordingly as there exists an order between the
powers by which one is ordered as a disposition for the operation of another,
likewise when those natural powers are elevated by the supernatural grace of
infused virtues, and ordered to operate in relation to their charisms – the
virtue of faith as a dispositive habit is necessary as the disposition out of
which is generated the charism of Infallibility, and is its substrate,
the virtus and potentia required as the basis
for its operation, and therefore the necessary disposition upon which the
operation of the charism of Infallibility is conditioned, and to which operation
it is ordered.[23] Thus
it is that the charism of Infallibility cannot exist and be exercised in a
subject in which the virtue of faith as a dispositive habit is absent, due to
the order of dependence of the charism on the virtue.
St. Thomas
elaborates in Article 5 on the operation of the powers of the soul,
distinguishing between those powers which exist in the soul as their subject,
and those which have for their subject the conjoined body and soul, and
therefore not proper to just the soul or the body: «philosophus dicit, non est
proprium animae neque corporis, sed coniuncti. Potentia ergo sensitiva est in
coniuncto sicut in subiecto. Non ergo sola anima est subiectum omnium
potentiarum suarum». And he continues in the corpus of the article: «Respondeo
dicendum quod illud est subiectum operativae potentiae, quod est potens
operari, omne enim accidens denominat proprium subiectum. Idem autem est quod
potest operari, et quod operatur. Unde oportet quod eius sit potentia sicut
subiecti, cuius est operatio; ut etiam philosophus dicit, in principio de somno
et vigilia. Manifestum est autem ex supra dictis quod quaedam
operationes sunt animae, quae exercentur sine organo corporali, ut intelligere
et velle. Unde potentiae quae sunt harum operationum principia, sunt in anima
sicut in subiecto. Quaedam vero operationes sunt animae, quae
exercentur per organa corporalia; sicut visio per oculum, et auditus per
aurem. Et simile est de omnibus aliis operationibus nutritivae et sensitivae
partis. Et ideo potentiae quae sunt talium operationum principia, sunt in
coniuncto sicut in subiecto, et non in anima sola. »[24] And
finally, «Ad primum ergo dicendum quod omnes potentiae dicuntur
esse animae, non sicut subiecti, sed sicut principii, quia per animam
coniunctum habet quod tales operationes operari possit. »[25]
Thus, in the
manner of the purely natural operation of the powers of the soul: therefore
likewise in the operation of those powers in the supernatural order of grace
which presupposes and builds upon nature, and acts in conjunction with and
upon the basis of nature, and in accordance with the natural powers of the
soul; and therefore most necessarily the operation of the charism of Infallibility
requires a subject in which is present the habit of faith as the necessary
disposition in order that it be operated on the basis of faith, with
the soul as the principle of the operation aided by grace – with
faith acting as the supernatural disposition in the soul, by which the power of
the charism is exercised as a human act, through the powers of the soul acting
in the composite of body and soul. Thus it is that for the exercise of
the charism of Infallibility to be properly a human act of the Pontiff,
faith is the necessary disposition for the form of the supreme pontificate, to
which pertains the charism of Infallibility, in which there is not just a
participation in the power of the virtue of faith, but the plenitude of power
(as Pope Innocent III says[26]):
the plenitude of power – in which plenitude there is unfailing faith as the
basis upon which depends the operation of the charism to infallibly speak and
bind in matters of faith. Thus from reason, from considering the nature of the
powers of the soul, one understands the why both Pope Innocent III[27] and
St. Robert Bellarmine[28] were
correct in their belief that the Roman Pontiff cannot personally confirm the
faith of others if that virtue is lacking in the Pontiff himself, because faith
is necessary as a disposition of the soul and must be in the soul as its
subject for the soul to be the principle of the operation of the charism of
Infallibility.
This entire
argument is premised on the promise of Christ to Peter of the gift of unfailing
faith so that he may confirm the faith of his brethren, and thus that unfailing
faith is the necessary disposition for Peter's operation of the charism of
Infallibility. Christ did not simply bestow infallibility on Peter to speak
through Peter in such a manner as God spoke through the ass of Balaam, but He
gave him the unfailing virtue of faith as the basis and necessary disposition
for Peter to exercise the charism of Infallibility, thus
constituting him as the confirmator fratrum; and
thus it is, that the charism cannot be exercised in one in whom the virtue of
faith is absent, and as a consequence, the form of the Supreme Pontificate
cannot be retained in the person of a heretic Pope.
The opposing opinion
was expressed already by Cardinal Enrico da Susa (a.k.a. Ostiene or Ostiense),
and was explained by Cardinal Alfons Stickler, as Roberto de Mattei
relates: «Professor Jamin recalls in particular Ostiene’s commenting of
these words relating to the Pope, “Nec deficiat fides eius”. According to
the Cardinal Bishop of Ostia: “The faith of Peter is not exclusively his
“faith” meant as a personal act, but is the faith of the entire Church of which
he is the spokesman and the Prince of the Apostles. Christ prays therefore, for
the faith of the entire Church in persona tantum Petri, since it is the faith
of the Church, professed by Peter, which never fails et propterea ecclesia non
presumitur posse errare" (op. cit. p. 223). » This notion of the
unfailing faith of Peter not being meant as a personal act, but is the faith of
entire Church, is the basis of opinion no. 5. De Mattei
continues, « Ostiene’s thought matches that of all the great medieval
canonists. The greatest scholar of these authors, Cardinal Alfonso Maria
Stickler, points out that “the prerogative of infallibility of office does not
impede the Pope, as an individual, from sin and thus become personally
heretical (...). In the case of an obstinate and public profession of certain
heresy, since it is condemned by the Church, the Pope becomes "minor
quolibet catholico" (a common phrase of canonists) and ceases to be pope
(...). This fact of a heretic Pope does not touch then Pontifical
infallibility since it does not signify impeccability or inerrancy in the
person of the Pontiff, [or] inerrancy in establishing forcefully from his
office a truth of the faith or an immutable principle of Christian life
(...). The canonists knew very well how to distinguish between the person
of the Pope and his office. If then they declared the Pope dethroned, when
certainly and obstinately heretical, they admit implicitly that from this
personal fact not only is the infallibility of the office not compromised, but
that it is somewhat defended and affirmed: any ‘papal’ decision whatever
against a truth already decided is automatically rendered impossible” (A. M.
Stickler, Sulle origini dell'infallibilità papale, "Rivista Storica della
Chiesa in Italia" , 28 (1974), pp. 586-587)." »[29]
The fatal
defect in the notion of the unfailing faith of Peter being not the personal
faith of Peter, but the faith of the entire Church represented in
persona tantum Petri, consists in the impossibility of the faith of the
entire Church to be represented in the person of Peter through the charism of
Infallibility if faith does not exist as a virtue in the soul of Peter as its
subject, thus uniting his soul to Christ by faith, and thereby disposing the
soul of the Pontiff as the principle of the operation of the charism of
unfailing faith, which is Infallibility: «modus actionis sequitur
dispositionem agentis, unumquodque enim quale est, talia operatur. Et ideo, cum
virtus sit principium aliqualis operationis, oportet quod in operante
praeexistat secundum virtutem aliqua conformis dispositio.» (1a 2æ q. 55. A. 1
ad 1) The virtus, understood as the principle of an operation
cannot be operative unless there preexist in the soul of the operating subject
a disposition by which it is brought into conformity with that active
principle. Hence, the charism of Infallibility which consists of the fullness
of the power of the virtue of faith, cannot operate in the soul where that
virtue, as a dispositive habit ordered to the operation of the charism, is
totally absent; and thus, the virtue of faith is the necessary disposition
which must be present in the soul as its subject for that charism to be
operative; and therefore, the virtue of faith existing in the soul of the pope
as its subject is the necessary disposition for the preservation of the form of
the supreme pontificate in the person of the pope. It follows therefore as a
strict corollary that were it possible for the pope’s faith to fail, then, as
Bellarmine says, «ista dispositione sublata per contrariam quae est
haeresis, mox papa desinit esse; neque enim potest forma conservari sine
necessariis dispositionibus. » (De Romano Pontifice lib. II
Cap. XXX)
Bellarmine
explains why this would be so: “either faith is a necessary disposition as one
for this purpose, that someone should be Pope, or it is merely that he be a
good Pope. If the first, therefore, after that disposition has been abolished
through its opposite, which is heresy, and soon after the Pope ceases to be
Pope: for the form cannot be preserved without its necessary dispositions. If
the second, then a Pope cannot be deposed on account of heresy. On the other
hand, in general, he ought to be deposed even on account of ignorance and wickedness,
and other dispositions which are necessary to be a good Pope, and besides,
Cajetan affirms that the Pope cannot be deposed from a defect of dispositions
that are not necessary as one (non necessarium simpliciter), but merely
necessary for one to be a good Pope (ad bene esse).”
Bellarmine
then responds to Cajetan’s objection: “Cajetan responds that faith is a
necessary disposition simply, but in part not in total, and hence with faith
being absent the Pope still remains Pope, on account of another part of the
disposition which is called the character, and that still remains. But on the
other hand, either the total disposition which is the character and faith, is
necessary as one unit, or it is not, and a partial disposition suffices. If the
first, then without faith, the necessary disposition does not remain any longer
as one, because the whole was necessary as one unit and now it is no longer
total. If the second, then faith is not required to be good (fides non
requiritur nisi ad bene esse), and hence on account of his defect, a Pope
cannot be deposed. Thereupon, those things which have the final disposition to
ruin (quae habent ultimam dispositionem ad interitum), soon after cease to
exist, without another external force (sine alia vi externa), as is clear (ut
patet); therefore, even a heretical Pope, without any deposition ceases to be
Pope through himself. (Papa haereticum sine alia depositione per
se desinit esse Papa.”) [Italics in original]
Bellarmine
argues here of faith as a necessary disposition for the pope to remain united
to the Church as visible member by means of the public confession of faith. The
logic of the argument is air tight and unassailable, and as such proves beyond
legitimate dispute that if a pope were to become a public heretic, he would
cease automatically to be pope. However, faith as a necessary disposition to
remain in the Church as a visible member does not suffice to account for why it
is that faith, not merely the material and external profession of the objective
content of faith, but the virtue of faith as a principium
operationis is necessary to be in the soul of person of the pope as
its subject in order to receive and preserve within himself the form of the
supreme pontificate. As I mentioned earlier, St. Thomas explains that, « Primum
est quod per fidem anima coniungitur Deo»; and therefore, «Baptismus enim sine
fide non prodest»; and thus, as Bellarmine notes, «ex B. Thoma, qui
3. part. q. 8. dicit, eos qui fide carent, non esse unitos Christo actu,
sed in potentia tantum», and therefore, «secundum B.
Thomam, solus character non unit actu hominem cum Christo» -- and thus not
being united to Christ by faith, a heretic pope would lack the capacity to
exercise the function of confirmator fratrum, being incapable
of exercising the charism of Infallibility, and therefore, lacking the
necessary disposition to retain the form of the papacy, in which is the
fullness of power of an unfailing faith. In Bellarmine’s own words, lacking the
necessary disposition to retain the form of the papacy, «Papa haereticus sine
alia depositione per se desinit esse Papa»;
because, «ista dispositione sublata per contrariam quae est haeresis, mox
papa desinit esse; neque enim potest forma conservari sine necessariis
dispositionibus. »
Simply
stated, the charism of Infallibility depends on the virtue of faith as its
necessary disposition, because it consists of the fullness of power of the
unfailing virtue of faith; and therefore it would clearly be impossible for one
to be a valid Roman Pontiff without the virtue of faith; nor would it be
possible for a Pontiff who possesses the fullness of power of unfailing faith
to fail in his faith and to defect from the faith by falling into heresy.
The virtue of
faith as the absolutely necessary disposition for a man to validly receive and
preserve the form of the Supreme Pontificate can also clearly be seen to be the
basis of the teaching of Paul IV in Cum ex apostolatus officio,
which, although not dogmatically defined[30],
was the basis of disciplinary canonical provisions set forth in that decree
which remained in force until 1983, and as a doctrine remains perpetually
valid. The problematic aspect of its teaching would be its applicability,
insofar as it appears to be unenforceable. As a pure hypothesis, this doctrine
would seem to constitute a valid basis for opinion no 2, according to which
even a pope who is a secret heretic would cease to be pope, not because he
would thereby cease altogether to be a member of the Church, but because the
heretic can neither receive nor conserve the form of the papacy. However, since
a secret heretic could neither be pope, nor could it be known and judged that
he is not a valid pope, and therefore he could not be removed by men, (as
Bellarmine points out), the papacy would cease to be a visible institution,
because it could not ever be known whether or not the pope is a true and
visible head of the Church, or if he is a counterfeit heretic impostor. Thus,
the necessity of personal faith as the doctrinal basis of Cum ex
apostolatus officio would only superficially appear to provide a
theological basis for opinion no. 2; whereas in reality, it underscores and confirms
the validity of opinion no. one, and manifests the irresolvable problematic
aspect of opinion no. 2, which plainly demonstrates it to be utterly
inapplicable in reality, and logically incoherent even as a mere hypothesis,
since the pope is by definition the visible head of the Church, and that
visibility would not exist in the papacy if a man who is not the pope would
visibly appear to be the pope. Hence, it is clear that opinion no. one, and not
opinion no. 2 (which only superficially appears to be), was the basis for Paul
IV’s doctrine in that decree.
2) «Secundo probatur ab
eventu; nam hactenus nullus fuit haereticus, vel certe de nullo probari [PK1] potest, quod haereticus fuerit; ergo signum est, non posse esse. »[31]
Dr. Edward
Peters, in A Canon Lawyer’s Blog notes, «Beste,
(Introductio (1961) 242), “In history no example of this can be found.”
And the great Felix Cappello, Summa Iuris I (1949) n. 309, thought
that the possibility of a pope falling into public heresy should be “entirely dismissed
given the special love of God for the Church of Christ [lest] the Church fall
into the greatest danger.” » Not only does St. Robert Bellarmine affirm
that no pope has ever fallen into heresy, but Innocent III and Pope St. Agatho
had already stated the same: «Et ideo fides apostolicae sedis in nulla
nunquam turbatione defecit, sed integra semper et illibata permansit: ut Petri
privilegium persisteret inconcussum. » [32];
and, Pope St. Agatho in his response to Sergius: “Let your clemency therefore
consider that the Lord and Saviour of all, to whom faith belongs, who
promised that the faith of Peter should not fail, admonished
him to strengthen his brethren; and it is known to all men that the
apostolic pontiffs, the predecessors of my littleness, have always done this
with confidence...”[33]
Citing the
work of Da Silveira, Don Curzio Nitoglia explains that the first opinion, that
a pope cannot be a heretic, is the one that is most commonly taught as
the most probable by the majority of theologians and Doctors: Bellarmine,
Francisco Suarez, Melchior Cano, Domingo Soto, John of St. Thomas, Juan de
Torquemada, Louis Billot, Joachim Salaverri, A. Maria Vellico, Charles Journet
(and Cajetan who is not cited by Da Silveira, but is demonstrated by Msgr.
Vittorio Mondello in La dottrina del Gaetano sul Romano Pontefice,
Messina, Istituto Arti Grafiche di Sicilia, 1965, cap. V, pp. 163-194 e cap.
VI, pp. 195-224) and that the pope as pope cannot fall into formal heresy,
whereas he can favour heresy or fall into material heresy as a private doctor
or also as pope, but only in the non defining magisterium, which in neither
infallible nor binding.[34]
Commenting on
Ballerini, Don Curzio explains, “If one studies well the thought of don Pietro
Ballerini, one sees that according to him, the pope is obligated to place
himself under supernatural faith, and the natural moral law as well as the
divine law; there is no human authority over him, but his power is limited to
that which God has given to him who is his vicar on earth, which is only when
he defines and infallibly binds; but when expressing opinions on manners not
yet defined, he can err; and in an eventual and possible case
of external heresy, Ballerini is not opposed to the possibility that
the pope could fall, not dealing with definitions, but he maintains that it
has never happened in all the history of the Church and will never happen.”[35]
For a long
time opinions have been divided among eminent theologians and canonists between
opinion no 1 that a pope simply cannot fall into heresy, and the opinion that a
pope could fall into heresy. Peters, observes, « Wrenn, writing in
the CLSA NEW COMM (2001) at 1618 states: “Canon 1404 is not a statement of
personal impeccability or inerrancy of the Holy Father. Should, indeed, the
pope fall into heresy, it is understood that he would lose his office. To fall
from Peter’s faith is to fall from his chair.” »[36] An
earlier edition of that same commentary says, “Communion becomes a real
issue when it is threatened or even lost. This occurs especially through
heresy, apostasy and schism. Classical canonists discussed the question whether
a pope, in his private or personal opinions, could go into heresy, apostasy or
schism.” The footnote refers to S. Sipos, Enchiridion Iuris Canonici, 7th ed.
(Rome: Herder, 1960), who “cites Bellarmine and Wernz in support of this
position; this view, however, is termed ‘antiquated’ by F. Cappello, Summa
Iuris Canonici (Rome: Pontificia Universitas Gregoriana, 1961), 297.” The Commentary
continues, “If he were to do so in a notoriously and widely publicised manner,
he would break communion and, according to an accepted opinion, lose his office
ipso facto (c. 194 par. 1, n. 2). Since no one can judge the pope (c. 1404) no
one could depose a pope for such crimes, and the authors are divided as to how
his loss of office would be declared in such a way that a vacancy could then be
filled by a new election.” – (James A. Coriden, Thomas J. Green, Donald
E. Heintschel; , p. 272) Bellarmine states in his comment on opinion no. one,
that he accepted this opinion (no.5) as a hypothesis, but considered opinion no
1 one as the more probable: “Still, because it is not certain, and the common
opinion is to the contrary, it will be worthwhile to see what the response
should be if the Pope could be a heretic.”
I have
already quoted above, Cardinal Stickler (“the prerogative of infallibility of
office does not impede the Pope, as an individual, from sin and thus become
personally heretical”), and most recently, Cardinal Raymond Burke, “If a Pope
would formally profess heresy he would cease, by that act, to be the Pope. It’s
automatic. And so, that could happen.”[37]
Dominic
Prummer: “The power of the Roman Pontiff is lost. . . (c) By his perpetual
insanity or by formal heresy. And this at least probably. . . . The
Authors indeed commonly teach that a pope loses his power through certain and
notorious heresy, but whether this case is really possible is rightly
doubted.” [38]
Matthaeus
Conte a Coronata: “2. Loss of office of the Roman Pontiff. This can occur in
various ways: . . . c) Notorious heresy. Certain authors deny the supposition
that the Roman Pontiff can become a heretic. It cannot be proven however that
the Roman Pontiff, as a private teacher, cannot become a heretic – if, for
example, he would contumaciously deny a previously defined dogma. Such
impeccability was never promised by God. Indeed, Pope Innocent III expressly
admits such a case is possible. If indeed such a situation would happen, he
would, by divine law, fall from office without any sentence, indeed, without
even a declaratory one. He who openly professes heresy places himself outside
the Church, and it is not likely that Christ would preserve the Primacy of His
Church in one so unworthy. Wherefore, if the Roman Pontiff were to profess
heresy, before any condemnatory sentence (which would be impossible anyway) he
would lose his authority.” [39]
The contrary
opinion is expressed by St. Robert Bellarmine, who first states the argument:
“Many canons teach that the Pope cannot be judged unless he may be discovered
to have deviated from the faith, therefore he can deviate from the faith.
Otherwise these canons would be to no effect. It is clear from the preceding
canon, Si Papa, dist. 40, from the 5th Council under Symachus, from the
Eighth general council, act 7, from the third epistle of Anacletus, the second
epistle of Eusebius, and from Innocent III [411].”[40] He
then tersely refutes it: “Therein it is gathered correctly that the Pope by his
own nature can fall into heresy, but not when we posit the singular assistance
of God which Christ asked for him by his prayer. Furthermore, Christ prayed
lest his faith would fail, not lest he would fall into vice.”[41] Thus,
Bellarmine answers the impeccability objection.
Not only does
St. Robert Bellarmine argue that there has never been any pope proven to have
been a heretic, but it was the position of the First Vatican Council under Pope
Pius IX, as Archbishop Purcell testified (in the earlier cited passage on the
query of a cardinal on a heretic pope), “It was answered that there has never
been such a case”. St. Robert also argues that it cannot be gathered from
those canons that a pope can in fact become a heretic, but (says Bellarmine in
the same chapter VII), “I say those canons do not mean the Pope can err as a
private person but only that the Pope cannot be judged; it is still
not altogether certain whether the Pontiff could be a heretic or not.
Thus, they
add the condition ‘if he might become a heretic’ for greater caution.”[42] These
words of the Holy Doctor, «sed tantum non posse Pontificem judicari», provide a key for understanding the distinctions he makes in refuting
opinion no. 3 and 4, and the basis of opinion no. 5.
Needless to say, St. Robert
Bellarmine’s declaration that “the Pope
cannot be judged”, directly refutes the interpretation of John Salza and Robert
Siscoe, who say that according to Bellarmine, a heretical pope would not lose
office unless he would be judged to be a heretic by the Church. In their
hysterical article, RESPONDING TO
FR. KRAMER'S ERRONEOUS INTERPRETATION OF BELLARMINE , Salza &
Co. quote my statement: “Bellarmine
does not refute the argument that a pope who is a manifest heretic loses office
[by himself] – he is speaking specifically of removal of the pope when he says
the judgment of men is required to remove him. The fact of loss of office
occurs ipso facto, but the heretic “pope” must be removed by
the judgment of the Church.” (Non aufertur a Deo nisi
per hominem) Salza & Siscoe then comment, “Fr. Kramer says that the
heretical Pope is only ‘judged by men,’ after he has fallen from office. In
other words, according to Fr. Kramer, Bellarmine teaches that Christ secretly
deposes the Pope (removes him from office) and then the man who is ‘judged’ is
no longer the Pope. The ‘judgment of men,’ he claims, simply concerns the
Church’s physical removal of the former Pope from office.” I have already
explained in the first part of this work, the manner in which the loss of
office would take place in the case of a heretical pope, as set forth by
Bellarmine, Ballerini, and Pope Gregory XVI; and nowhere have I ever even
remotely suggested that “Christ secretly deposes the Pope”, but that according
to their doctrine, the heretic pope would by the very act of heresy fall
from office “by himself”, having pronounced judgment upon
himself; and the fall from office would take place without any
judgment by the Church, as Ballerini explicitly states.[43]
Thus the only question of law would not be concerned with how the loss of
office would come about, (which is a doctrinal question that cannot be settled
by legislation), but with the means and procedures by which the Church would
declare the heretic’s fall from office to have taken place, so that the vacancy
could be filled.
Salza and
Siscoe also write most stupidly in their magnum opus of, “Pope
Honorius, who has been declared a heretic by the Church (albeit after his
death)!”[44] The
Church has never judged Pope Honorius to have actually been guilty of the crime
of heresy. Salza in particular most ignorantly pontificates that there have
been several historical examples of popes who were formal heretics, claiming
that there have been “several historical examples”.[45]
Bellarmine
deals with the question of judging a pope, and of Pope Honorius in particular
in his commentary on the third opinion:
“The third
opinion is on another extreme, that the Pope is not and cannot be deposed
either by secret or manifest heresy. Turrecremata in the aforementioned
citation relates and refutes this opinion, and rightly so, for it is
exceedingly improbable. Firstly, because that a heretical Pope can be judged is
expressly held in the Canon, Si Papa, dist. 40, and with Innocent [321]. And
what is more, in the Fourth Council of Constantinople, Act 7, the acts of the
Roman Council under Hadrian are recited, and in those it was contained that
Pope Honorius appeared to be legally anathematized, because he had been
convicted of heresy, the only reason where it is lawful for inferiors to judge
superiors. Here the fact must be remarked upon that, although it is probable
that Honorius was not a heretic, and that Pope Hadrian II was deceived by
corrupted copies of the Sixth Council, which falsely reckoned Honorius was a
heretic, we still cannot deny that Hadrian, with the Roman Council, and the
whole Eighth Synod sensed that in the case of heresy, a Roman Pontiff can be
judged. Add, that it would be the most miserable condition of the Church, if
she should be compelled to recognize a wolf, manifestly prowling, for a shepherd.”
A
fundamentalistic interpretation of Bellarmine’s refutation of opinion no. 3,
(such as that of Salza and Siscoe), simplistically applies the Canon Si
papa like a blunt instrument, with a total disregard for the subtly
nuanced understanding of the canon as it was understood by Medieval canonists
and interpreted by Bellarmine. Siscoe most ignorantly states, in his Remnant
article, replying to those who would «object by saying, since a pope
cannot be judged by a council, Bellarmine could not have meant that a council
would depose a heretical Pope. They will then insist that this is why
Bellarmine taught that a heretical pope loses his office automatically. But
this is clearly not the case, since Bellarmine himself defended the opinion
that a heretical Pope can be judged by a council. He wrote: “Firstly, that a
heretical Pope can be judged is expressly held in Can. Si Papa dist. 40, and by
Innocent III (Serm. II de Consec. Pontif.) Furthermore, in the 8th
Council, (act. 7) the acts of the Roman Council under Pope Hadrian are recited,
in which one finds that Pope Honorius appears to be justly anathematized,
because he had been convicted of heresy, which is the only case in which
inferiors are permitted to judge superiors.” (79) » . Indeed, if Bellarmine were
invoking that canon as a justification for a pope’s inferiors to judge a
reigning Pontiff for heresy, then he would have involved himself in an
irreconcilable contradiction, having stated in Book IV that “the pope cannot be
judged”. Salza and Siscoe completely overlook the critical distinction
between deponendus and depositus that
Bellarmine and Ballerini make, as I have already pointed out earlier, and as
Don Curzio also explains: «the third opinion has been taken into
consideration by only one French theologian of the Nineteenth Century (D.
Bouix, Tractatus de Papa, Parigi/Lione, Lecoffre, 1869) out of 137
authors, according to which if the pope, as a hypothesis, falls into heresy he
retains the pontificate, but the faithful must not remain passive, but should
manifest the error to the pope so that he may be corrected, without, however,
being able to declare him “depositus” or to be deposed “deponendus” (cfr.
A. X. Da Silveira, Qual è l’autorità dottrinale dei documenti pontifici
e conciliari?, “Cristianità”, n. 9, 1975; Id., È lecita la
resistenza a decisioni dell’Autorità ecclesiastica?, “Cristianità”, n. 10,
1975; Id., Può esservi l’errore nei documenti del Magistero
ecclesiastico?, “Cristianità”, n. 13, 1975) This third opinion is not
shared by any “approved” theologians”.»[46] Accordingly
Bellarmine presents the third opinion thus, “Papam neque per haeresim occultam,
neque per manifestam, esse depositum aut deponi
posse”. Thus Bellarmine rejects this opinion not on the basis of a pope
being able to be judged and deposed by the Church, but to be judged as having
fallen from office and to simply “be deposed” by his own actions, and thus not
deposed by the Church, but per se to have fallen from office.
Don Curzio concludes, «In reality, Bellarmine treats of the pure hypothesis of
a heretic pope, “admitted but not conceded”, but holding speculatively, as an
investigative hypothesis – that the pope would be deposed ipso facto
(“depositus”) and not to be deposed (“deponendus”) after
a declaration of the bishops or the Sacred College of Cardinals»[47]
One of the
great Medieval canonists was Pope Innocent III, whose sermons strongly support
opinion no. one, but who at least hypothetically admitted opinion no. 5 as
well. It is absolutely clear from Innocent’s teaching that, so long as the pope
holds office, he cannot be judged by anyone, and no judgment of the Church
pronounced on the pope would be of any effect: «Petrus ligare potest cæteros,
sed ligari non potest a cæteris. Tu, inquit, vocaberis
Cephas (Joan. 1), quod exponitur caput; quia sicut in capite consistit
omnium sensuum plenitudo, in cæteris autem membris pars est aliqua
plenitudinis: ita cæteri vocati sunt in partem sollicitudinis, solus autem
Petrus assumptus est in plenitudinem potestatis. Jam ergo videtis quis iste
servus, qui super familiam constituitur, profecto vicarius Jesu Christi,
successor Petri, Christus Domini, Deus Pharaonis: inter Deum et
hominem medius constitutus, citra Deum, sed ultra hominem: minor Deo,
sed major homine: qui de omnibus judicat, et a nemine judicatur:
Apostoli voce pronuntians, qui me judicat, Dominus est (ICor.
iv).» [48] The
Pope is the divine pharaoh, he is less than God but more
than man, who pronounces with the voice of the Apostle, He who judges
me is the Lord. (1 Cor. 4) Being “minor Deo sed major
homine”, he is judged by no one – ”a nemine
judicatur”.
However, if a
pope were to become a heretic, he would, according to the Medieval canonists,
(as Cardinal Stickler explains), “cease to be pope”, and thus would no longer
be major homine, but as a heretic who is no longer a
member of the Church would become minor quolibet catholico:
from being more than man, he would become less than any
Catholic, since (as Bellarmine would later explain) he would no longer be
pope, a Christian, or a member of the Church. Having fallen from office – from
the highest position to the lowest, i.e., minor quolibet catholico, he
can be shown to be already judged, (as Innocent III says) and having been
already judged by God and having ceased to be pope, he can then be
judged and punished by the Church (as Bellarmine says). Don Curzio
Nitoglia[49] writes,
“Monsignor Vittorio Mondello (La dottrina del Gaetano sul Romano Pontefice,
cit., pp. 163-194) explains that the hypothesis of the possibility of a heretic
pope derives from the Decree of Gratian (dist. XL, cap. 6, col. 146) written
between 1140 and 1150, in which is found a fragment erroneously believed to be
of St. Boniface, († 5 June 754), a Benedictine monk of Exeter in England sent
by Pope Gregory II to evangelize Germany, consecrated Archbishop of Mainz, and
martyred in Freising, who is considered to be the apostle of Germany, and whose
body rests in Fulda.” [50] “This
fragment,” continues Don Curzio, “has the title, ‘Si Papa’, and
expresses the doctrine according to which [the pope] ‘a nemine est
iudicandus, nisi deprehendatur a Fide devius/ cannot be judged by any
human authority, except if he has fallen into heresy’.”[51] “Basing
themselves on this spurious decree erroneously attributed to St. Boniface and
accepted at face value by Gratian,” continues Don Curzio, “the Medieval and
Counter-Reformation theologians maintained as possible the hypothesis but not
the certitude of the possibility of a heretic pope. At this point they are
divided in how to resolve the question of a pope who eventually falls into
heresy as a private person (cfr. A. M. Vellico, De Ecclesia Christi,
Roma, 1940, p. 395, n. 557, in footnote 560 there is an ample bibliography).
Cardinal Charles Journet (L’Eglise du Verbe Incarné, Bruges,
Desclée, II ed., 1995, vol. I, p. 626) maintains that the opinion according to
which the pope cannot fall into heresy ‘is gaining ascendency above all due to
the progress of historical studies. Bellarmine (De Romano Pontifice,
lib. II, cap. 30) was one of the supporters of this thesis. The opinion that
admits of the possibility of papal heresy has its remote origin from the
already cited Decree of Gratian, which brings up again a spurious text
attributed to St. Boniface’ (cited in V. Mondello, op. cit., p.
164).”[52]
“Now the
eventual condemnation of a pope in the sole case of heresy by an imperfect
Council (of bishops only),” continues Don Curzio, “is the thesis of mitigated
Conciliarism, condemned as heretical and the child of radical Conciliarism,
which holds that the Council is always superior to the pope, and which has been
condemned per se as heretical. Msgr. Antonio Piolante writes, ‘Conciliarism is
an ecclesiological error, according to which an ecumenical Council is superior
to the pope. The remote origin of Conciliarism is found in the juridical
principle of the Decree of Gratian (dist. XL, cap. 6)
according to which the pope can be judged by the Church (the bishops or the
cardinals) in case of heresy. […] this error was condemned by the Council of Trent
and received its coup de grâce from the First Vatican Council’ (Dizionario di teologia dommatica, Roma,
Studium, IV ed., 1957, pp. 82-84, voce Conciliarismo).”[53] I
have already quoted verbatim the relevant texts of Trent and Vatican I earlier
in this work.
In spite of
their protestations that they refrain from holding a position in these matters
which have not been decided by the ecclesiastical magisterium, Salza and Siscoe
have emphatically stated and elaborated their heretical position on the
question of a heretical pope. In their Gloria TV interview, Salza and Siscoe
emphatically declare (proximate to heresy) in response to the question, “So, are you saying
that heresy itself would not cause a Pope to fall from office?”: (Salza
and Siscoe) - “Yes, that is correct. In the book, we use the metaphysics of
Thomas to explain why it is that heresy does not directly cause a
Pope to fall from the pontificate.” Robert J. Siscoe states with unequivocal
clarity his heretical mitigated Conciliarist opinion in his Remnant article
(Nov. 18, 2014): “The Church
must render a judgment before the pope loses his office. Private judgment of
the laity in this matter does not suffice.” — Robert J. Siscoe
Clueless
Robert Siscoe still cannot grasp the simple notion of an automatic loss
of office that does not take place by either private judgment, or official
judgment by the Church, but by the act of heresy itself, independently of the
judgment of others, but pronounced as a judgment by the heretic upon himself,
so that he loses office “straightaway”, as Bellarmine teaches: “by himself” (per
se), and ipso facto, which means “by the very
act itself”, and therefore “immediately”, “automatically” or
“straightaway”, as Bellarmine states with the word “mox”. Cardinal
Raymond Burke, unlike John Salza and Robert Siscoe, does not suffer from the
hang-up about automatic loss of office for heresy (which Salza & Siscoe
repeatedly declare to be “sedevacantist theology” and a “misinterpretation” and
“distortion” of the teaching of St Robert Bellarmine), but understands the
clear and unequivocal teaching of St. Bellarmine in his presentation of opinion
no. 5, so Cardinal Burke simply states, “If a Pope would formally profess
heresy he would cease, by that act, to be the Pope. It’s automatic. And so,
that could happen.”
Salza &
Siscoe have become so desperately obsessed with their heretical mitigated
Conciliarist belief that a pope who falls into heresy must first be judged by
the Church, that they have resorted to a plainly irrational argument against
the plainly expressed position of Bellarmine, which I have interpreted and
understood in the manner of Cardinal Burke and all the expert commentators of
the recent centuries. Here is Salza & Siscoe’s moronic argument against
what is universally understood as opinion no. 5:
«Suffice it
to say that not a single theologian has ever taught the laity, or individual
priest, are permitted render such a judgment or make such public declarations
on their own authority. Before a person can conclude that a Pope has lost
his office for heresy, it requires an antecedent (prior) judgment that he has,
in fact, fallen into heresy. The antecedent judgment must be rendered by the
Church before the consequent judgment can be declared. And if the
antecedent judgment is forbidden, as Kramer now argues ("a Pope cannot be
judged, even for heresy") how could the consequent judgment (that he lost
his office for heresy) ever be determined? If the Church was not
permitted to render a judgment of heresy concerning a pope, it would be equally
forbidden to declare that a Pope had lost his office for heresy. This
explains why the famous axiom "the first see is judged by no one" has
been understood to include the exception "unless he is accused of
heresy." But only the Church possesses the authority to render such
a judgment and make any consequent declarations. »
First, to the
statement, “that not a single theologian has ever taught the laity, or
individual priest, are permitted render such a judgment or make such public
declarations on their own authority.” St. Robert Bellarmine says: “For although
Liberius was not a heretic, nevertheless he was considered one, on account of
the peace he made with the Arians, […] for men are not bound, or able to read
hearts; but when they see that someone is a heretic by his external works, they
judge him to be a heretic pure and simple [simpliciter], and condemn him as a
heretic.” [54] No
authority is required to express an opinion on a notorious fact. That is a
basic right of natural law. Now here is the Salza/Siscoe lunacy: “Before
a person can conclude that a Pope has lost his office for heresy, it requires
an antecedent (prior) judgment that he has, in fact, fallen into heresy. The
antecedent judgment must be rendered by the Church before the consequent
judgment can be declared. And if the antecedent judgment is forbidden, as
Kramer now argues ("a Pope cannot be judged, even for heresy") how
could the consequent judgment (that he lost his office for heresy) ever be
determined?” [As Kramer now argues? What a load of codswallop!]
Salza &
Siscoe speak of those (i.e. “sedevacantists”) who “ have
misunderstood (and abused) the quote from
St. Robert Bellarmine, who said ‘the
manifest heretic is ipso facto deposed,’
as if Bellarmine actually meant that a cleric
or Pope automatically loses his office when
a person privately judges him to be
a heretic.” In fact it is Salza and Siscoe who crudely misinterpret
Bellarmine, who does not say that a heretic pope loses office ipso
facto “when a person privately judges him”, but who loses office
“straightaway”, “by himself”, when he publicly pronounces judgment upon
himself. It is at this point when, as Bellarmine says, “men are not bound, or
able to read hearts; but when they see that someone is a heretic by his
external works, they judge him to be a heretic pure and simple [simpliciter],
and condemn him as a heretic.” As both Bellarmine and Ballerini have plainly
stated in the quotations I have cited earlier in this work, the loss of office
would take place automatically and independently of anyone else’s judgment when
the heretic pronounce judgment upon himself; and the judgment of the Church and
that of private individuals would take place after the ipso fcto loss
of office. All of the decrees and canons (such as Canon 10 of the Fourth
Council of Constantinople) cited by Salza and Siscoe, which forbid subjects to
depose their prelates, are clearly not applicable, and were not intended to be
applied to such a case as would take place when a holder of ecclesiastical
office publicly defects from the Catholic faith by manifest heresy. This is
most evident from the clear wording of that Canon 10 of Constantinople, which
says, “As divine scripture clearly proclaims, ‘Do not find fault before you
investigate, and understand first and then find fault’. And does our law judge
a person without first giving him a hearing and learning what he does?’” This
text clearly does not refer to a person who pronounces a public judgment of
heresy upon himself, and is not to be found among the canons dealing with
heresy, but is in a different section dealing with other crimes. The Church did
not excommunicate those who refused to be in communion with Nestorius, but
vindicated them by declaring their excommunications to have been null and void.
Siscoe also
makes an errant application of Bellarmine’s words in his Remnant article when
he says, «St. Bellarmine himself explained that a heretical bishop must be
deposed by the proper authorities. After explaining how a false prophet (meaning
heretical pastor) can be spotted, he wrote:“…if the pastor is a bishop, they
[the faithful] cannot depose him and put another in his place. For Our Lord and
the Apostles only lay down that false prophets are not to be listened to by the
people, and not that they depose them. And it is certain that the practice of
the Church has always been that heretical bishops be deposed by bishop’s
councils, or by the Sovereign Pontiff.” » It is patent from the
explicitly expressed doctrine of Bellarmine in this text, that he is not
treating of matters of opinion, but of acts of jurisdiction – jurisdiction
which the faithful do not possess. One has the natural right to judge as a
matter of opinion that a manifest heretic who openly rejects dogma has lost
office; but private individuals do not have the right to enforce their private
opinions, but the loss of office can only be enforced by proper authority upon
declaration by ecclesiastical authority. (Canon 194§ 2)[55]
The position
of Pope Pius IX at the First Vatican Council was quite different from that of
Salza and Siscoe, and did not concern private judgment of a heretical pope, but
the plainly evident fact of manifest heresy, as Archbishop Purcell related: “If
he denies any dogma of the Church held by every true believer, he is no more
Pope than either you or I”. No ‘antecedent judgment’ is required or even
possible, because by the very fact of public heresy, the heretic would have
already fallen from office, and thus there can be no antecedent judgment. An
individual person or the Church can only understand and judge that a manifest
heretic, who openly denies the faith, is in fact a heretic after the fact of
the manifest formal heresy and the immediately consequent fall from office. The
Church must declare the fact officially, in order to fill the vacancy, and to
protect the souls of the faithful from the heretical wolf, but there is no
reason why men would be morally forbidden from forming their own opinions in
the matter before the Church makes its official pronouncement: “men are not
bound or able to read hearts; but when they see that someone is a heretic by
his external works, they judge him to be a heretic pure and simple
[simpliciter], and condemn him as a heretic.”
Salza and
Siscoe say, The antecedent judgment must be rendered by the Church
before the consequent judgment can be declared. Really? But there is
no antecedent judgment made before the fall from office – it is impossible,
because the pope remains in office so long as he is not a heretic, and cannot
be judged. According to Bellarmine, and all who hold to opinion no.
5, the first judgment is pronounced by the heretic upon himself, who
automatically falls from office without any judgment by the Church. This
is patently manifest in Bellarmine’s own words:
“Therefore,
the true opinion is the fifth, according to which the Pope who is manifestly a
heretic ceases by himself to be Pope and head, in the same way as he ceases to
be a Christian and a member of the body of the Church; and for this reason he
can be judged and punished by the Church. This is the opinion of all the
ancient Fathers, who teach that manifest heretics immediately lose all jurisdiction.”
It is at this
point, that, after the fall from office, that, as Bellarmine says,
“when they [men] see that someone is a heretic by his external works, they
judge him to be a heretic pure and simple, and condemn him as a heretic.” The
Church judges after the fact, and therefore after the fall, and thus judges
juridically and punishes the heretic who by his heresy defected from the faith
and the Church and became “minor quolibet catholico”. Individuals also judge
according to their own private opinion, according to an informed conscience,
but the private judgment of individuals does not have the juridical effect of
authorizing a new papal election.
As Gregory
XVI (quoted earlier) explained, such a one would have “fallen” from office “by
himself” (per se decaduto dal pontificato). Similarly, St.
Alphonsus: “After all, if God were to permit that a pope would be
notoriously heretical and contumacious, he would cease to be pope, and the
pontificate would be vacant.” [56] And
again in the same work, “The same (i.e. “the See would be considered
vacant”) would be in the case, if the pope were to fall notoriously and
pertinaciously in some heresy. Since then, … the pope would not be deprived by
the Council … but would be immediately stripped by Christ, having in fact
become an incapable subject, and fallen from his office.”[57] Thus,
the very justification for the Church to convene in a Council to judge the
heretic pope would be the fact that the See would have already been considered
to be having been vacated by a heretic pope, who would have become an incapable
subject to retain the papacy, and would have already fallen from office. The
proposition that one is morally bound not to acknowledge such a fact, and to
believe the falsehood that a heretic is still the pope until the Church will
have declared otherwise, is absurd on its face, and is a perverted belief. No
one can ever be bound to believe a falsehood until the Church declares it is
false; and that would also leave the wolf free to prowl and destroy souls for
however so long it would take for the Church to finally get its act together
and render a judgment – quod esset miserrima conditio Ecclesiæ,
si lupum manifeste grassantem, pro pastore agnoscere cogeretur. (Bellarminus).
As I have
already explained earlier, an ipso facto loss of office takes place immediately by
the very act itself, by that fact alone, otherwise it is
not ipso facto. If such a fall does not take place
immediately by the fact itself, but only after judgment by the
Church, then it is not ipso facto, because ipso
facto means “by the fact itself”, and if the fact of heresy has
already taken place in reality but the heretic does not yet fall from
office by that fact alone, i.e., “by himself”, THEN
IT IS NOT IPSO FACTO. The notion of an ipso facto fall
from office that does not take place immediately by the very fact of heresy
alone, by itself, but only after the judgment of the Church, is a
self-contradictory notion. This is how the teaching of St. Robert Bellarmine is
understood by all ecclesiastical scholars who comment on his exposition of
opinion no. 5 – that the ipso facto fall from office is automatic.
“According to
Bellarmine,” explains Don Curzio Nitoglia, “(De Romano Pontifice lib. II. Cap.
30, p. 420), since notorious and public manifest heretics lose jurisdiction
ipso facto, granted but not conceded that the pope can fall into heresy,
in the eventual case of manifest heresy, he would immediately lose the papal
authority. This is the interpretation of the Bellarminian position given by the
Jesuit Fathers Franz Xavier Wernz and Pedro Vidal (Jus Canonicum), Rome,
Gregorian, 1943, vol. II, p. 517)”[58] Then Don Curzio points out that the same interpretation is given
by other eminent authorities as well: “(cfr. also L. Billot, Tractatus de
Ecclesia Christi, Prato, Giachetti, 1909, tomo II, p. 617; J. Salaverri, De
Ecclesia Christi, Madrid, BAC, 1958, p. 879, n. 1047).” [59]
Against this
unanimous interpretation of commentators on Bellarmine made by all eminent
theologians and canonists in recent centuries, Salza and Siscoe most stupidly
declare:
«Bellarmine
and Suarez (two Jesuits) disagree with the opinion of Cajetan and John of St.
Thomas (the Dominicans). As we explain in great detail in our book,
Bellarmine and Suarez teach that the Pope will lose his office, ipso facto,
once he is judged by the Church to be a heretic, without the additional
juridical act of vitandus declaration. » (emphasis added)
And then they
explain what (according to them) is the “erroneous interpretation of
Bellarmine” which they characterize as the “sedevacantist interpretation of
Bellarmine”, which,(they say), “Fr. Kramer has swallowed hook, line and sinker”
(!!!):
«Where the
Sedevacantists have erred is by interpreting the ipso facto loss of office to
be similar to an “ipso facto” latae sententiæ excommunication, which occurs
automatically (or ipso facto), when one commits an offense that carries the
penalty, without requiring an antecedent judgment by the Church. But this is
not at all what Bellarmine and Suarez meant by the ipso facto loss of
office. What they meant is that the ipso facto loss of office occurs
after the Church judges the Pope to be a heretic and before any additional
juridical sentence or excommunication (which differs from Cajetan’s opinion).
In other words, after the Church establishes “the fact” that the Pope is a manifest
heretic, he, according to this opinion, is deemed to lose his office ipso facto
(“by the fact”). This is clear from the following quotation from Suarez who
wrote: . . . »
Incredibly,
Salza and Siscoe would attempt to interpret the meaning of Bellarmine, (who
said opinion no. 5 is the true opinion), not by analyzing Bellarmine’s own
words, but by quoting Suarez, who, according to all the expert canonists and
theologians subscribed to opinion no. 4! Salza & Siscoe say they are all
wrong, and that Suarez followed opinion no. 5! Don Curzio comments, “The fourth
opinion, studied above all by Cardinal Tommaso de Vio ‘Cajetan’, by John of St.
Thomas, (De aucttoritate Summi Pontificis, Quebec, Laval University,
1947) and also by Francisco Suarez (who examines the first and the fourth, but
maintains the first more probable than the fourth); according to the fourth
opinion there must be a declaration of heresy of the pope by the bishops or the
College of Cardinals.”[60] All
commentators, whether theologians or canonists, distinguish between opinion no.
4 and no. 5 on the basis that in opinion no. 4 a judgment of the Church is
necessary for a manifest heretic pope to fall from office, and in opinion no 5
the fall is automatic, without any judgment by the Church. This is the opinion
of Cardinal Burke, whom I have quoted earlier saying the fall would be
“automatic”. According to Salza & Siscoe, they are all wrong, and their
interpretation of opinion no. 5 is “sedevacantist theology”— and they
ignorantly insist that both Suarez and Bellarmine were of opinion no. 5, which
they interpret to mean that the heretic pope would fall from office after a
judgment by the Church.
It is by this
fraudulent and grotesquely distorted misinterpretation of Bellarmine, that
Salza and Siscoe attempt to make it appear that Bellarmine, Cajetan, Suarez,
John of St. Thomas, Billuart, Layman (and others) were all in agreement that a
judgment of the Church would first be necessary before a heretic pope would
fall from office, and they fraudulently maintain that this universally
abandoned opinion is the common opinion today! The opinion that a manifestly
and formally heretical pope would remain in office and retain jurisdiction
until judged by the Church is proximate to heresy, because it opposes the
teaching of the universal magisterium that a heretic is severed from the body
of the Church by the public act of formal heresy; and it is also contrary to
the unanimous teaching of the Fathers, as Bellarmine plainly demonstrates. The
opinion also professes the heresy that a pope can be judged by the Church while
still in office (mitigated Conciliarism). Salza and Siscoe make a desperate
attempt to salvage their heretical doctrine by appealing to the teaching of
Billuart, who misapplies the provisions of Ad evitanda scandala (Martin
V) to the case of a heretic pope. This topic will be dealt with in the next
section.
SECTION THREE
St. Robert Bellarmine’s Treatment of the Five Opinions
1
I have
presented St. Robert Bellarmine’s exposition on the First Opinion, that a pope
cannot be a heretic, in the previous section, and also presented my own
argument proving this opinion to be the correct one. Bellarmine says of this
opinion, “such an opinion is probable, and can easily be defended”, but, he
adds, “it is not certain”. As has been pointed out already, the then more
common belief that a pope could fall into heresy had its origin in the spurious
Canon Si papa, which heavily influenced the medieval canonists and
even held sway among the majority of theologians and canonists in Bellarmine’s
day. That this canon was the basis for that opinion is clear from the manner
that Bellarmine presents the topic for discussion: “The tenth argument. A Pope
can be judged and deposed by the Church in the case of heresy; as is clear from
Dist. 40, can. Si Papa: therefore, the Pontiff is subject to human judgment, at
least in some case.” One must bear in mind that here, Bellarmine is only
presenting the argument, and not stating his own opinion in the
matter. This is obvious enough from the context, since he then says, “I
respond: there are five opinions on this matter.” The reason I mention this
here is because Salza and Siscoe very deceptively quote this passage, in which
Bellarmine merely presents the argument to be discussed, as evidence that this
argument represented Bellarmine’s own opinion.[61] Bellarmine’s
own opinion was that a pope cannot fall into heresy and cannot be judged; and
that hypothetically, if a pope could fall into heresy, he would ceased to be
pope by that very fall, and only then could he be judged by the Church. I
quoted the passage earlier, where he said, “I say those canons do not mean the
Pope can err as a private person but only that the Pope cannot be judged; it is still not altogether certain whether the
Pontiff could be a heretic or not. Thus, they add the condition ‘if he might
become a heretic’ for greater caution”; and then the passage in which he most
emphatically declares, “the Pope by his own nature can fall into heresy, but
not when we posit the singular assistance of God which Christ asked for him by
his prayer. Furthermore, Christ prayed lest his faith would fail”. It is clear
that for St. Robert Bellarmine, the pope cannot be judged for heresy because he
cannot become a heretic. Nevertheless, he says, “it is still not altogether
certain whether the Pontiff could be a heretic or not.” Although St. Robert
knew the teaching of Innocent III, that the grace of unfailing faith pertains
essentially to the holder of the Petrine office, he did not yet have the solemn
dogma of Infallibility pronounced by the First Vatican Council, which
established the promise of unfailing faith of the Pontiff as the premise and
basis, and therefore the necessary disposition for Papal Infallibility: Quorum quidem apostolicam
doctrinam omnes venerabiles Patres amplexi et sancti Doctores orthodoxi
venerati atque secuti sunt; plenissime scientes, hanc sancti Petri
Sedem ab omni semper errore illibatam permanere, secundum Domini Salvatoris
nostri divinam pollicitationem discipulorum suorum principi factam: Ego rogavi
pro te, ut non deficiat fides tua, et tu aliquando conversus confirma
fratres tuos.[62] So, while the Vatican Council did not define
papal inerrancy, or that a pope cannot fall into heresy; nevertheless, the
Council did magisterially establish that the infallibility of the See of Peter
is premised on the basis of the promised grace of unfailing personal faith of
the Pontiff. Thus, without such a clear magisterial pronouncement in his day,
Bellarmine did not consider his own opinion to be altogether certain, and
therefore says, “it will be worthwhile to see what the response should be if
the Pope could be a heretic.”
2
Proceeding to
the Second Opinion, Bellarmine states that opinion: “Thus, the second opinion
is that the Pope, in the very instant in which he falls into heresy, even if it
is only interior, is outside the Church and deposed by God, for which reason he
can be judged by the Church.” The glaring defect in this opinion is that
according to it, the one who falls into interior heresy can be judged by the
Church; since the Church authorities could not possibly know that he is a
secret heretic, and that he has been deposed by God, and therefore there would
be no way they could judge and remove him, as Bellarmine notes, “But a secret
heretic cannot be judged by men”. Thus it would be quite impossible for him to
be “declared [by the Church] deposed by divine law, and deposed de facto, if he
still refused to yield”. If such a heretic pope were to be deposed by God, he
would be deposed invisibly, and that would be to no avail, because no one would
know he had fallen from the pontificate, and he would therefore remain
illegitimately in power as a usurper, in such a manner that he could not be
removed. Hence, Bellarmine says, “For Jurisdiction is certainly given to the
Pontiff by God, but with the agreement of men, as is obvious; because this man,
who beforehand was not Pope, has from men that he would begin to be Pope,
therefore, he is not removed by God unless it is through men.” It is clear
therefore, that for a pope to be removed by some act other than death (or
permanent insanity which is equivalent to death), he must be removed by men,
and such a process of removal is first accomplished by the renunciation of
the papacy either expressly or tacitly, which effects the loss of
office. It is only by such visible actions as acts of manifest heresy,
which constitute a visible and obvious defection from the faith and the Church,
that bring about the automatic loss of office, that the pope can be judged to
have left office by himself, as Bellarmine puts it; or, as
Ballerini says, to have “ipso facto by his own will abdicated the
primacy and the pontificate”.[63] Thus
it is that a pope can be judged by men to have tacitly
abdicated by defecting into heresy, and as a public heretic, (and not as a
secret heretic as Torquemada maintained), be “judged by the Church, that
is, he is declared deposed by divine law, and deposed de facto, if he
still refused to yield.” Thus the heretic who loses office by himself can
be judged to have lost office and be effectively removed
by men. Such automatic loss of office, according to Bellarmine, would only
take place in the case of a manifestly heretical pope (Opinion No. 5); and not
in the case of a pope who falls into internal heresy (Opinion No. 2). However,
in either case, the “necessary disposition” to preserve the form of the
pontificate, which is faith (as Bellarmine explains in
his refutation of Opinion No. 4), would be lost; but while in the case of a
manifest heretic, Bellarmine says by the removal of that necessary disposition
the heretic would straightaway cease to be pope; but in the case of an internal
heretic pope, he would not cease to be pope.
At first
glance, it might appear that the Holy Doctor had contradicted himself, but it
was not Bellarmine who asserted a contradictory position on the question, but
rather Bellarmine himself was only too aware of the intrinsically contradictory
nature of Opinion No. 2, and the irresolvable paradox it creates. St. Robert
Bellarmine demonstrated conclusively, that in accordance with divine
revelation, external acts of manifest heresy bring about an automatic loss of
office; and therefore if a pope were to fall into manifest heresy, according to
“the fifth and true opinion”, he would immediately cease to be pope and could
be judged by the Church; but in the case of internal heresy, “it is not proven
to me”, because such an impostor as a counterfeit heretic pope could not be
judged and removed from the throne he usurps, and, he adds, “that the
foundation of this opinion is that secret heretics are outside the Church,
which is false, and we will amply demonstrate this in our tract de Ecclesia.”
Quite rightly, Bellarmine expressed his belief and presented proofs (which he
judged not to be altogether certain), that such a thing as a heretic pope is
impossible; and this is especially borne out by the fact that an internal
heretic pope could not confirm the faith of his brethren (as Bellarmine himself
believed), being cut off (internally) from the unity of the Church[64],
and therefore incapable of exercising the charism of Infallibility and carrying
out his munus of confirmator fratrum, he would,
(lacking the necessary disposition to preserve the form of the papacy),
necessarily cease to be pope; while at the same time, remaining a visible but
atrophied member of the Church by a merely external and material union, he
would necessarily remain pope as the visible head, (because he could not be
visibly removed by men), but incapable of exercising his munus.
However, since the dogma of Infallibility had not yet been defined, Bellarmine
was clearly not disposed to declare the opinion as certain on the sole basis of
the ex ratione argument of loss of papal office due to the
removal of the necessary disposition (faith) to preserve the form of the
pontificate in the person of the pope, since that disposition is necessary to
preserve the form of the Pontificate in the person of the Pontiff precisely
because it is the necessary disposition to exercise the charism of
Infallibility – and thus the proof would not have been certain until the
certain existence of the charism itself had been defined. The
contradiction, and the irresolvable paradox that Opinion No. 2 creates,
demonstrates that a heretic pope is impossible, since, if a pope could be a
manifest heretic, then he could also be a secret heretic; and in either case,
the “necessary disposition” would be lost – and therefore, even Opinion No. 5, can
only be considered valid as a pure hypothesis.
3
Bellarmine
presents the Third Opinion as the opposite extreme (to the extreme opinion that
not only a manifest heretic pope would lose office by the very act of manifest
heresy [Opinion No. 5], but even an internal heretic would
lose office and could be judged [Opinion No. 2]); according to which, “The
third opinion is on another extreme, that the Pope is not and cannot be deposed
either by secret or manifest heresy.” (“Papam neque per haeresim occultam, neque
per manifestam, esse depositum aut deponi
posse”.) I have explained in the previous section that Bellarmine
rejects this opinion not on the basis of a pope being able to be judged and
deposed by the Church for heresy (Opinion No. 4), but to be judged as having
fallen from office by himself and therefore to simply “be
deposed” (esse depositum) by his own actions, and thus not deposed,
i.e. deponendus by the Church (deponi posse), but per
se to have fallen from office (Opinion No. 5).
The basis for
Bellarmine’s opinion which refutes Opinion No. 3, is set forth in his
refutation of Opinion No. 4, and in his explication of the Fifth Opinion: that
a manifest heretic ceases to be pope, because he ceases to be a member of the
Church by the very act of manifest heresy, which is an act of manifest
defection from the Catholic faith, which, by its very nature and thus intrinsic
to the act of heresy, severs a member from the body of the Church, and as a
direct consequence of that defection, results automatically in the ipso
facto loss of office. Bellarmine cites the unanimous teaching of the
Fathers in support of his position, and particularly St. Jerome, saying “Jerome
comments on the same place, saying that other sinners, through a judgment of
excommunication are excluded from the Church; heretics, however, leave by
themselves and are cut from the body of Christ”. Ballerini follows Bellarmine
on this point exactly, and quotes St. Jerome verbatim: «Perspicua hac in re est
S. Hieronimi ratio in laudata Pauli verba, Propterea a semetipso
dicitur esse damnatus, quia fornicator, adulter, homicida, et cetera vitia per
sacerdotes ex Ecclesia propelluntur: haeretici autem in semetipsis sententiam
ferunt, suo arbitrio de Ecclesia recedentes: quae recessio propriae conscientiae
videtur esse damnatio. » Both Bellarmine and Ballerini were
certainly aware that their position on this point was firmly supported by the
teaching of St. Pius V in the Roman Catechism: “"Heretics and schismatics
are excluded from the Church, because they have defected (desciverunt) from her
and belong to her only as deserters belong to the army from which they have
deserted.” Therefore, Bellarmine declares: “this is indeed very certain. A
non-Christian cannot in any way be Pope, as Cajetan affirms in the same book
[324], and the reason is because he cannot be the head of that which he is not
a member, and he is not a member of the Church who is not a Christian. But a
manifest heretic is not a Christian, as St. Cyprian and many other Fathers
clearly teach [325]. Therefore, a manifest heretic cannot be Pope.” Thus,
according to Bellarmine, if a pope were to fall into manifest heresy, by the
very nature of his act of defection, he would by himself (per se), sever
himself from the body of the Church and bring about his immediate fall from
office, which Ballerini describes as an act of abdication (ipso facto sua
voluntate primatu & pontificatu exauctoratus). This opinion was summed
up by Gregory XVI, who wrote (on the case of Pedro de Luna), “So then he could be
considered, as noted by Ballerini, to have been a public schismatic and
heretic, and consequently to have fallen from papacy, even if he had been
validly elevated to it.”[65]
In his own
words Bellarmine explains, “The foundation of this opinion is that a manifest
heretic, is in no way a member of the Church; that is, neither in spirit nor in
body, or by internal union nor external.” A heretic pope would cease to be
pope, because by the very act of defection from the faith, he would cease to be
a member of the Church; and this is so because heresy, in its nature is an act
of defection from the faith, which suapte natura and not by
authority of the Church, severs the heretic from the body of the Church. On
this solid doctrinal foundation Bellarmine concludes: “Therefore, the true
opinion is the fifth, according to which the Pope who is manifestly a heretic
ceases by himself to be Pope and head, in the same way as he ceases to be a
Christian and a member of the body of the Church; and for this reason he can be
judged and punished by the Church. This is the opinion of all the ancient
Fathers, who teach that manifest heretics immediately lose all jurisdiction.”
And, “Thenceforth, the Holy Fathers teach in unison, that not only are heretics
outside the Church, but they even lack all Ecclesiastical jurisdiction and
dignity ipso facto.” And further, “those Fathers, when they say that heretics
lose jurisdiction, do not allege any human laws which maybe did not exist then
on this matter; rather, they argued from the nature of heresy.”
Bellarmine is
clear and explicit on this general point: that the separation from the body of
the Church, as well as loss of office and all jurisdiction, are effected by the
very act of heresy, ex natura haeresis,and are not by the authority
of the Church as a penalty for an ecclesiastical delict. This sententia is de
fide regarding the separation from the Church, in virtue of the unanimity
of the Fathers, the teaching of the universal magisterium set forth in the
Roman Catechism, and the teaching of Pius XII in Mystici Corporis;
and is de fide regarding the loss of office and jurisdiction,
because of the unanimity of the Fathers on this point which Bellarmine amply
demonstrates (in his refutation of Opinion No. 4), which, therefore, qualifies
it as a doctrine pertaining to the universal and ordinary magisterium. Thus, it
is not a question of law, but of settled magisterial doctrine that heretics and
schismatics are separated from the Church by their own actions, apart from any
ecclesiastical law; and the consequent loss of office and jurisdiction is not
the result of any penal sanction or any judgment pronounced by the Church, but
is the direct effect of the defection from the Church which, apart from
any human law, ex natura haeresis or ex natura
schismatis, takes place as a direct result of tacit renunciation
of office.
The Sixteenth
and Seventeenth Century exponents of Opinion No. 4, (which holds that a
manifest heretic pope must either be deposed by the Church, or at least
declared deposed by the Church before the loss of office takes place), can
perhaps be excused for having held this errant legalistic opinion, but there is
no longer any excusing circumstance to justify adherence to it now. The
doctrine of Bellarmine and Ballerini on this point was advocated by Pope
Gregory XVI, and adopted by the First Vatican Council; and was then formally
incorporated into the 1917 Code of Canon Law as the doctrinal basis for Canon
188 §4, and in the 1983 (Canon 194 §2). Since the loss of office and
jurisdiction takes place not as a penalty for the ecclesiastical crime of
heresy, but is the intrinsic consequence of the manifest sin of formal
heresy[66] ex
natura haeresis, apart from any human law, there can be no
exception for a pope.
Clearly, the
mind of the Church on the question of loss of office for defection from the
faith into heresy has been magisterially expressed as a tacit renunciation from
office, which brings about the automatic removal from office ex natura
haeresis, as Bellarmine taught, and not as a punishment for the canonical delict of
heresy, a penal deprivation of office which must be pronounced
as an official judgment of Church authority on a reigning Pontiff; but as a
loss of office that takes place ipso facto by the act of
heresy per se, and which is then enforced by a declaratory sentence
so that the loss of office can be officially recognized, the heretic removed,
and the vacancy filled. “Therefore, the true opinion is the fifth,
according to which the Pope who is manifestly a heretic ceases by himself to be
Pope and head, in the same way as he ceases to be a Christian and a member of
the body of the Church; and for this reason he can be judged and punished by
the Church.”
The
distinction made by Bellarmine and Ballerini between a manifestly heretical
pope to be judged as having fallen from office by himself and
therefore to simply “be deposed” (esse depositum) by his own actions
(Opinion No. 5), as opposed to one who is to be tried and deposed (deponendus),
i.e. deprived of office either by a juridical pronouncement, or merely ipso
facto deposed upon a juridical declaration, as a punishment for a
penal canonical delict of heresy (Opinion No. 4), has either been studiously
ignored by Salza and Siscoe, or else they have simply been obliviously unaware
of it staring them in the face in Book II Chapter XXX of De Romano
Pontifice. [67]Whether
their oversight is due to deliberate sophistry or oblivious incompetence, in
either case, they have interpreted St. Robert Bellarmine’s rejection of Opinion
No. 3 to be an endorsement of the opinion that the Church has the authority to
judge a reigning pontiff for heresy, and ministerially bring about his
deposition from office (Opinion No. 4). In view of all that has been stated
above, the heterodoxy of that opinion is patent.
4
«Depositus» vs. «Deponendus»
St. Robert
Bellarmine, in his doctrine on the question of the deposition of a manifestly
heretical pope, with a tightly woven logic, gives systematic expression to the
teaching of Pope Innocent III set forth in his Sermons; 1) on the
point that the Roman Pontiff may be judged by no one, except for heresy, in
which case he cannot be tried as pope and judged (deponendus), but, 2)
he can only be shown to have already been judged – to have fallen from the
Pontificate (depositus). Thus, the Church would exercise no power over
the pope if it were to judge that the man occupying the cathedra had
actually fallen from the pontificate by his heresy, but then the Church would
only determine that the occupant of the throne, being a heretic, and thereby
having fallen from the pontificate, is no longer the pope; and would therefore
declare the See to be vacant, and proceed to the election of a new pope. It is
in this broad sense that Bellarmine and Ballerini speak of the manner in which
a heretical pope can be “deposed”.
The Catholic
Encyclopedia notes that, “No canonical provisions exist regulating the
authority of the College of Cardinals sede Romanâ impeditâ, i.e. in case the
pope became insane, or personally a heretic; in such cases
it would be necessary to consult the dictates of right reason and the teachings
of history.” The teachings of history demonstrate that there is no such case in
history in which a pope manifestly defected into formal heresy; and therefore
it is not surprising that there do not exist any canonical provisions for such
a case. Bellarmine himself stated that there has never been such a case, and
(as quoted earlier) Archbishop John Purcell, who was present at the First
Vatican Council, related that, «The question was also raised by a Cardinal,
“What is to be done with the Pope if he becomes a heretic?” It was answered
that there has never been such a case; the Council of Bishops
could depose him for heresy, for from the moment he becomes a
heretic he is not the head or even a member of the Church […] and
he would cease to be Pope, being deposed by God Himself. » It is
manifestly evident that the relator’s reply to the Cardinal did not refer to an
internal heretic, since he further stated, «If the Pope, for instance, were
to say that the belief in God is false, […] or if he
were to deny the rest of the creed, ‘I believe in Christ,’ etc. […] If he
denies any dogma of the Church held by every true believer, he is no more Pope
than either you or I”. »
What is
particularly worthy of note, is that the reply to the Cardinal on the question
of a pope who becomes a heretic, was given as a pure hypothesis, and was not
considered as a serious possibility, as is evident from the relator’s words, “The
supposition is injurious to the Holy Father in the very idea, but serves
to show you the fullness with which the subject has been considered and
the ample thought given to every possibility.” At the First
Vatican Council, (as Pope Pius XI stated in the earlier cited passage of Providentissimus
Deus) “the Fathers of the [1870] Vatican Council employed his
[Bellarmine’s] writings and opinions to the greatest possible extent” – and
indeed they adopted his teachings to the fullest extent on the question of a
heretical pope, adopting his position on Opinion No. 1; as well as
hypothetically adopting his position on Opinion No. 5. Thus, the opinion of
Bellarmine, Ballerini, de Liguori, and Cappellari [Gregory XVI], (that a pope
who becomes a manifest heretic, 1} “ceases by himself to be Pope and head, in
the same way as he ceases to be a Christian and a member of the body of the
Church; and for this reason he can be judged and punished by the Church” [Bellarmine][68],
2] “by his public pertinacity which for no reason can be excused, since
pertinacity properly pertains to heresy, he declares himself to be a heretic,
i.e. to have withdrawn from the Catholic faith and the Church by his own will,
so that no declaration or sentence from anyone would be necessary” [69],
and would thus be said to have “abdicated the primacy and the pontificate”[70] [Ballerini];
3} “For the rest, if God should permit that a Pope should become a notorious
and contumacious heretic, he would cease to be Pope, and the pontificate would
be vacant” [St. Alphonsus de Liguori][71];
4} “would be considered as a public schismatic and heretic, and in consequence,
and to have fallen by himself from the pontificate, if he had been
validly elevated to it”. [Gregory XVI][72]),
was adopted by the Holy See under Pius IX at the First Vatican Council.
Ballerini
applied this doctrine specifically to the case of Pedro de Luna (Benedict
XIII), who, “if one believes him to have been a true pontiff, by his own will
ipso facto abdicated the primacy and the pontificate, [and] rightly and
legitimately was able to be deposed by the Council as a schismatic and
heretic”.[73] What
is of the greatest importance to note is that the Council did not actually
depose Benedict, but, as Ballerini explains, “by what means the divine
providence employed the synod of Constance to end the most tenacious schism, so
that that synod did not need to exercise any power of jurisdiction by its
authority to depose any true, albeit unknown, actual Pontiff.” [74] Thus,
Ballerini concludes, the Council did not declare that it had “deposed” him, but
simply declared him to “be deposed” (depositum declaruit potius quam
deposuit); and Gregory XVI likewise, “So then he could be considered, as
noted by Ballerini, to have been a public schismatic and heretic, and
consequently to have fallen from the pontificate, even if he had been validly
elevated to it.” [75]
Ballerini
expounded on Bellarmine’s doctrine on this point with great precision,
explaining how a heretic pope would fall from the pontificate at the moment he
manifests his pertinacity in heresy, and any action taken against him before
that point is a work of charity – fraternal correction; but once he manifests
that he is a heretic, he severs himself automatically from the body of the
Church, falls from the Pontificate and ceases to be pope; and then, any
judgment pronounced against him would be pronounced on one who already is no
longer pope, and no longer superior to a council:
(Text
highlighted in yellow has either been cut out or left out by Salza and Siscoe,
and the faulty translation has been carefully crafted to falsify the authentic
text of Ballerini, and to change his meaning, in order to make Ballerini as
well as Bellarmine appear to be of the same opinion as Suarez.)[76]
Latin text:
(Pietro Ballerini, De Potestate Ecclesiastica. Summor. Pont. Et Conc.
Gen.Cap. IX § II. pp. 128-9)
«Cur vero in praesentissimo omniumque
gravissimo periculo fidei, quod ex Pontifice haeresim privato licet judicio
propugnante impendens, diuturniores moras
non pateretur, remedium ex generalis synodi non ita facili convocatione
expectandum credatur? Nonne etiam inferiores quicumque in tanto fidei
discrimine superiorem suum correctione fraterna commonere queunt, in faciem
eidem resistere, atque revincere; &, si opus sit, redarguere ac ad
resipiscentiam urgere? Poterunt id Cardinales, qui ipsi a consiliis adstant;
poterit Romanus Clerus; Romana etiam synodus, si expedire judicetur, congregata
poterit. Quemcumque vel privatum respiciunt illa Pauli ad Titum: Haereticum
hominem post unam & alteram correctionem devita, sciens quia subversus est,
qui ejusmodi est, & delinquit, cum sit proprio judicio condemnatus. Qui
nimirum semel & bis correptus non resiscipit, sed pertinax est in sententia
dogmati manifesto aut definito contraria; hac sua publica pertinacia, cum ab
haeresi proprie dicta, quae pertinaciam requitur, excusari nulla ratione
potest; tum vero semetipsum palam declarant haereticum, hoc est a fide
catholica, & ab Ecclesia voluntate propria recississe, ita ut ad eum praecidendum
a corpore Ecclesiae nulla cujusquam declaratione aut sententia necessaria
sit. Perspicua hac in re est S. Hieronymi
ratio in laudata Pauli verba. Propterea
a semetipso dicitur esse damnatus , quia fornicator, adulter, homicida, &
cetera vitia per Sacerdotes ex Ecclesia propelluntur: haeretici autem in
semetipsos sententiam ferunt, suo arbitrio de Ecclesia recedentes: quae
recessio propriae conscientiae videtur esse damnatio. Pontifex
ergo, qui post tam solemnem et publicam Cardinalium, Romani Cleri, vel etiam
synodi monitionem se se obfirmatum praeferret in haeresi, & de Ecclesia
palam recessisset, juxta praeceptum Pauli esset vitandus; & ne aliis
perniciem afferret, in publicum proferenda esset ejus haeresis, &
contumacia, ut omnes similiter ab eo caverent, sicque sententia, quam in se
ipsum tulit, toti Ecclesiae proposita, eum sua voluntate recessisse, & ab
Ecclesiae corpore declararet avulsum, atque abdicasse quodammodo
Pontificatum, quo nemo fruitur, nec frui
potest, qui non sit in Ecclesia. Vides igitur in casu haeresis, cui Pontifex in
privato sensu adhaereret, promptum & efficax remedium absque generalis
synodi convocatione: qua in hypothesi quidquid contra ipsum ageretur ante
declaratam ejus contumaciam & haeresim, ut ad sanum consilium adduceretur,
caritatis, non jurisdictionis officium esset: postea vero manifestato ejus
recessu ab Ecclesia, si quae sententia a concilio in eumdem ferretur, in eum
ferretur, qui Pontifex amplius non esset, neque superior concilio. Sed haec (3) hypothesis nullo facto comprobatur;
siquidem nullus vel privatus error cuipiam Pontifici adscriptus contra ullum
dogma evidens aut definitum hactenus inventus est, aut futurus putatur. Quid
igitur in mera hypothesi laboremus pluribus. »[77]
My literal
translation:
«But why is it to be believed, that the remedy is to
be expected from the not so easily done convocation of a general synod,
when a most present and gravest of all dangers for the faith, which,
impending from a Pontiff espousing heresy even in his private judgment, would not be able to be endured through lengthy
delays? In such a crisis for the faith, cannot even inferiors warn their
superior by fraternal correction, resist him to the face, and subdue; and, if
need be, refute and drive him to the recovery of his good sense? The Cardinals,
who are there to advise him, will be able to do it; the Roman Clergy will be
able to; even a Roman synod, if it is judged to be expedient, having been
convened, will be able to. For any person, even a private person, the
words of Saint Paul to Titus hold: “A man that is a heretic, after the
first and second admonition avoid : knowing that he that is such an one, is
subverted, and sinneth, being condemned by his own judgment.” (Tit. 3,
10-11). He forsooth, who having been once or twice corrected, does not repent,
but remains obstinate in a belief contrary to a manifest or defined dogma; by
this his public pertinacity which for no reason can be excused, since
pertinacity properly pertains to heresy, he declares himself to be a heretic,
i.e. to have withdrawn from the Catholic faith and the Church by his own will,
so that no declaration or sentence from anyone would be necessary. Conspicuous in this matter is the explanation of St.
Jerome on the commended words of Paul. Therefore, by himself [the heretic] is said to be condemned, because
the fornicator, adulterer, murderer, and those guilty of other misdeeds are
driven out from the Church by the Priests: but heretics deliver the sentence
upon themselves, departing from the Church by their own will: this departure is
seen to be the condemnation by their own conscience. Therefore
a Pontiff, who after such a solemn and public admonition from the Cardinals,
Roman Clergy, or even a synod would maintain himself hardened in heresy, and
have openly departed from the Church, according to the precept of Paul he would
have to be avoided; and lest the ruin be brought to the rest, his heresy and contumacy,
and thus his sentence which he brought upon himself, would have to be publicly
pronounced, made known to the whole Church, that he by his own will departed,
making known to be severed from the body of the Church, and in some manner to
have abdicated the Pontificate, which no one holds or can hold, who is not in
the Church. One sees in the case of heresy to which a Pontiff adhered in a private manner, an efficacious
remedy without the convocation of a general synod: in which hypothesis whatever
action that would be taken against him before the declaration of his contumacy
and heresy, in order to bring him back to reason, would be a duty of charity
and not of jurisdiction: but afterward, with his departure from the Church
having been manifested, if a sentence were to be pronounced upon him by a
council, it would be pronounced on him who would no longer be the Pontiff, nor
superior to the council. But this (3) hypothesis is not established by any
fact, since no private error ascribed to any Pontiff against any evident or
defined dogma has been found, or is believed will be. Why then belabour further
a mere hypothesis? »
The Salza and
Siscoe version in True or False Pope:
“Is it not
true that, confronted with such a danger to the faith [a Pope teaching heresy],
any subject can, by fraternal correction, warn their superior, resist him
to his face, refute him and, if necessary, summon him and press him to repent?
The Cardinals, who are his counselors, can do this; or the Roman Clergy, or the
Roman Synod, if, being met, they judge this opportune. For any person, even a
private person, the words of Saint Paul to Titus hold: ‘Avoid the heretic,
after a first and second correction, knowing that such a man is perverted and
sins, since he is condemned by his own judgment’ (Tit. 3, 10-11). For the
person, who, admonished once or twice, does not repent, but continues
pertinacious in an opinion contrary to a manifest or defined dogma - not being
able, on account of this public pertinacity to be excused, by any means,
of heresy properly so called, which requires pertinacity - this person declares
himself openly a heretic. He reveals that by his own will he has turned away
from the Catholic Faith and the Church, in such a way that now no declaration
or sentence of anyone whatsoever is necessary to cut him from the body of the
Church. Therefore the Pontiff who after such a solemn and public warning by the
Cardinals, by the Roman Clergy or even by the Synod, would remain himself
hardened in heresy and openly turn himself away from the Church, would have to
be avoided, according to the precept of Saint Paul. So that he might not cause
damage to the rest, he would have to have his heresy and contumacy publicly
proclaimed, so that all might be able to be equally on guard in relation to
him. Thus, the sentence which he had pronounced against himself would be
made known to all the Church, making clear that by his own will he had turned
away and separated himself from the body of the Church, and that in a certain
way he had abdicated the Pontificate…”31 (TOFP pp. 245-6).
With such
pre-eminent theologians as Pietro Ballerini and St. Alphonsus de Liguori in the
18thCentury, and Bartolomeo Cappellari (Gregory XVI) in the late 18th and
early 19th Century, decisively adopting Bellarmine’s doctrine
of automatic papal loss of office for manifest heresy (Opinion No. 5) as their
own, the death knell for the legalistically flawed and conciliaristically
tainted theology, formulated in Opinion No. 4 mainly by 16th and
17th Century Counter-Reformation theologians, was already
sounding. Bellarmine’s teaching, that the Pope cannot be judged, echoes the
ancient teaching that the Church of Rome (which is synonymous with Prima
Sedes, i.e. the Roman Pontiff) absolutely cannot be
judged by anyone, (which had already been taught by Pope St. Gelasius) ; and is
asserted emphatically by Innocent III, confirmed by the fifth Lateran Council
and the Council of Trent (which confirmed the status of the Roman Pontiff as
the supreme judge) , and proclaimed by the first Vatican Council; so it was
inevitable that the Church would eventually enshrine the doctrine of the
injudicability of the Roman Pontiff in the 1917 and 1983 codes of Canon Law,
declaring that the “First See is judged by no one” (Prima sedes a
nemine judicatur.)[78];
and that loss of office for defection from the faith into heresy takes place
automatically as a tacit renunciation of office. So, while the Church has not
solemnly defined whether or not it is possible for a pope to fall into heresy,
she has already taught infallibly that the pope cannot be judged, and
therefore, if a pope were to fall into manifest heresy, the Church could only
judge him after he would have fallen from office by himself as a consequence of
defection from the faith. This is the doctrine advocated by St Robert
Bellarmine at a time when the more common opinion was the doctrine of mitigated
Conciliarism, that, a heretic pope would remain in office until he would be
judged to be a heretic by the Church. Bellarmine applied the teaching of the
Fathers, Doctors popes and councils to prove that a heretic pope would cease by
himself to be pope, ipso facto, upon falling into heresy, thereby
refuting the more prevalent opinion of the day, which was based on an
interpretation tainted by Conciliarism of the spurious Canon Si papa,
erroneously attributed to St. Boniface.
Bellarmine’s Argument
Bellarmine
states the Fourth Opinion, which in its most radical form, is that of Cajetan
(as well as John of St. Thomas): “that a manifestly heretical Pope is not ipso
facto deposed (non esse ipso facto depositum); but can and must to be deposed
by the Church (sed posse, ac debere deponi ab ecclesia).” The distinction made
by Bellarmine, as I have demonstrated above, is between a pope who simply “is
deposed” (depositus) by pronouncing the judgment of heresy against
himself by manifesting his obstinacy in heresy, thereby separating himself from
the Church, ceasing to be a Christian, a member of the Church, and its head;
and one who “can and must be deposed by the Church” (deponendus). The
clear distinction between the two consists in the difference between a pope who
“ceases by himself to be Pope and head, just as he ceases in
himself to be a Christian and member of the body of the Church: whereby,
he can [then] be judged and punished by the Church” – “quare ab
Ecclesia posse eum judicari et puniri” (per se depositus),
(as Bellarmine explains in Opinion No. 5), and one who “is not ipso facto
deposed”; i.e., does not cease by himself to be pope as a direct consequence of
his own judgment pronounced against himself; but who remains in office as pope
until he is judged, and must be judged by a juridical act of the authority of
Church before he ceases to be pope (ab ecclesia deponendus) –
in Bellarmine’s own words, sed posse, ac debere deponi ab ecclesia.
Thus, it is patent that according to Bellarmine, what distinguishes Opinion No.
4 from Opinion No. 5 is that according to No. 5, the heretic loses office and
ceases to be pope “by himself” (“per se”) “ipso facto”,
since heretics are condemned by their own self-pronounced judgment upon
themselves (sunt enim proprio judicio condemnati)[79], and
for that reason he can then be judged by the Church; whereas according
to Opinion No. 4, he must be judged by the Church in order to lose
office, and he remains in office until he is judged by the Church.According
to this distinction which Bellarmine makes between Opinion No. 4 and
Opinion No. 5: allthe variant opinions on this point which
require the judgment of the Church as a necessary condition for the loss of
office, for the very reason that they require the judgment of the Church in
order for the loss of office to take place, fall under the heading of Opinion
No. 4. Thus, not only Cajetan, John of St. Thomas, Billuart, Layman – but all others
without exception, including Suarez, who hold or who have
held this opinion (that the judgment of the Church is required for the loss of
office to take place) are of Opinion No. 4. [80] “ Now
in my judgment,” says Bellarmine, “such an opinion cannot be defended.”
He argues
thus: “[T]hat a manifest heretic would be ipso facto deposed” (quod haereticus
manifestus ipso facto depositus); and this,
he says “is proven from authority and reason.” “The Authority,” he elaborates,
“is of St. Paul, who commands Titus [323], that after two censures, that is,
after he appears manifestly pertinacious, an heretic is to be shunned: and he
understands this before excommunication and sentence of a judge.” He speaks of
the moral obligation to avoid a heretic after two
admonitions, since it is only an excommunicatus who can
be declared vitandus, and no one can excommunicate a pope,
so consequently, a pope cannot be declared to be vitandus. So
even if the Church had the power to administer juridical warnings to a pope,
and thereby establish the crime of heresy, it would serve no purpose, since the
Church could not declare him to be vitandus. Yet, Bellarmine
explains, even without the sentence of excommunicatus vitandus, one
could not avoid a pope, because one who remains pope cannot be
shunned: “Jerome comments on the same place, saying that other sinners,
through a judgment of excommunication are excluded from the Church; heretics, however,
leave by themselves and are cut from the body of Christ, but a Pope who remains
the Pope cannot be shunned. How will we shun our Head? How will we recede from
a member to whom we are joined?” Bellarmine provides the solution to the
problem in the same sentence, “heretics, however, leave by themselves and are
cut from the body of Christ”. Therefore, a heretic can be shunned because
heretics cease to be members of the Church. “Now in regard to reason this is
indeed very certain. A non-Christian cannot in any way be Pope, as Cajetan
affirms in the same book [324], and the reason is because he cannot be the head
of that which he is not a member, and he is not a member of the Church who is
not a Christian. But a manifest heretic is not a Christian, as St. Cyprian and
many other Fathers clearly teach [325]. Therefore, a manifest heretic cannot be
Pope.” And thus he argues, that it is proven from reason that a manifestly
heretical pope is ipso facto deposed. One who is a manifest
heretic simply is not pope, so a pope who would be a
manifest heretic would not need to be deposed, because he ceases by himself to
be pope and a member of the Church;
5
hence: “the
fifth true opinion, is that a Pope who is a manifest heretic, ceases by himself
to be Pope and head, just as he ceases in himself to be a Christian and member
of the body of the Church: whereby, he can be judged and punished by the
Church.” “This is the opinion,” he continues, “of all the ancient Fathers, who
teach that manifest heretics straightaway lose all jurisdiction”. Thus he
concludes, “The foundation of this opinion is that a manifest heretic, is in no
way a member of the Church; that is, neither in spirit nor in body, or by
internal union nor external.”
COMMENTARY
It is
manifestly evident that in the clearly stated context where he speaks of
warnings, that Bellarmine is not stating or implying that there is any
need for canonical admonitions for a pope to lose office. It
was the exponents of Opinion No. 4 who maintained that canonical admonitions
are necessary for a pope to be deposed for heresy. Canonical admonitions are
proper only to a superior, and are administered by a superior as the initial
phase of a penal process[i].
Bellarmine qualifies the sense of the term as he means it to be understood with
the words, “that after two censures, that is, after he appears
manifestly pertinacious”, thereby making it clear that the warnings are
not part of a juridical procedure, but only serve the purpose of fraternal
correction, and determining whether or not the pope in question “ceases
by himself to be pope” by his heresy, ipso facto,
and not by the ministerial instrumentality of any judgment at the conclusion of
an official procedure, whereby the Church authorities would render a judgment
on the supreme judge and ruler, and as a consequence of which the heretic
Pontiff would only then fall from the Pontificate upon such judgment passed on
him by his subjects and inferiors. Ballerini, a follower of Bellarmine’s
opinion, understood perfectly that Bellarmine was not speaking of canonical
admonitions being necessary in this context when he commented (in the
above cited passage), “In such a crisis for the faith, cannot even inferiors warn
their superior by fraternal correction [?]”; and,
“For any person, even a private person, the words of Saint Paul to Titus
hold” – and he demonstrates that he understood well that Bellarmine’s reason
for the Pontiff’s subjects to administer the warnings would not be an official
act of ecclesiastical authority, but “a duty of charity and not of
jurisdiction”, for the purpose only of discerning whether or not there is
pertinacity, in order to determine whether or not the individual in question is
properly a heretic who has fallen from the Pontificate: “having been once or
twice corrected, does not repent, but remains obstinate in a belief contrary to
a manifest or defined dogma; by this his public pertinacity which for no reason
can be excused, since pertinacity properly pertains to heresy, he declares
himself to be a heretic”.
Since
Bellarmine speaks properly of an ipso facto loss of office, which
is essentially a tacit renunciation of office due to defection
from the faith into heresy, the warnings are not strictly necessary as they
normally would be in a penal canonical process
of deprivation of office[81],
by which ecclesiastical authority establishes the fact of pertinacity and inflicts
the penalty, but are only of a relative and practical necessity to
determine whether the Pontiff has only erred in ignorance or negligence without
pertinacity, or rather if he has obstinately and consciously
hardened in heresy, thereby ceasing by himself to be pope. (papam
haereticum manifestum per se desinere esse papam) Thus, in
such a case when the heresy of a pope is expressed in such a manner that the
pertinacity is manifested sponte sua (as was the case of Pedro
de Luna “Benedict XIII”[82])
against a manifestly evident dogma, or a defined dogma, explicitly
professed by all Christians; and especially if it be one of the principal
dogmas, known even to the most ignorant Catholics, or known to all men as a
matter of Natural Law, then it is patent that in such a case, no warnings would
be necessary, being that warnings would be superfluous under those given
circumstances; and therefore the fall from office for manifest heresy would be
plainly evident as a judgment against himself as
Bellarmine argues in his refutation of Opinion No. 4, and therefore a tacit
renunciation of office, as Ballerini understood Bellarmine’s opinion to
be: that the Pope, “in some manner” would “have abdicated the
Pontificate”.
Now it might
be argued that such a loss of office is a matter of law, and that the
provisions for tacit renunciation set forth in the 1917 Code of Canon Law are
not found in the New Code of 1983; however, the provisions for loss of office
due to defection from the faith, which is in its very nature, a tacit but real
renunciation; which is to say, not merely implicit, and not a penalty, remain
in the 1983 Code in the third section on Loss of Office under Removal,
which the Code explicitly distinguishes from the penalty of Privation
of Office, dealt with in the fourth section.[83] Loss
of office takes place by, 1) Renunciation, 2) Transfer, 3) Removal, and 4)
Privation. The Code is explicit: Only loss of office by privation is a penalty[84],
and is dealt with separately in the section of the Code that deals with penal
law, whereas the first three sections on loss of office, under which is
included Removal, are set forth in the second chapter (On the Loss of
Ecclesiastical Office) of Title IX on ecclesiastical offices (De Officiis
Ecclesiasticis). Nevertheless, Salza and Siscoe adamantly continue to maintain
that loss of office by tacit renunciation (amotione) is a “severe
vindictive penalty” which must be inflicted sententia ferenda.[85] (!)
However, not only is the Code explicit on this point, but it is manifestly
patent in the very nature of the acts that effect “removal”, that such loss of
office is a tacit renunciation of office – acts such as attempting to marry,
losing the clerical state, and defection from the faith or from communion with
the Church, are intrinsically incompatible with the essential requirements for
holding of ecclesiastical office, which can only be validly held by a Catholic
cleric in major orders, and therefore such acts which are incompatible with
the clerical state effect the removal from office, which is not penal in
nature. Thus it is, as is patently clear from the wording of the canon, that
the loss of ecclesiastical office takes place ipso facto, by the
very act of defection into heresy, and does not require that a judgment be
pronounced by Church authority as Salza and Siscoe claim[86].
Removal from office by means of loss of office due to tacit renunciation
applies to all offices, including the papacy: The Very Rev. H. A. Ayrinhac
taught, in his General Legislation in the New Code of Canon Law, on Loss
of Ecclesiastical Offices, that such loss of office (Canons 185-191)
“applies to all offices, the lowest and the highest, not excepting the Supreme
Pontificate.” (p. 346)
Furthermore,
as Bellarmine demonstrates from the teaching of the Fathers in his exposition
on Opinion No. 4, loss of office due to heresy and schism is not a question of
law: it is not the effect of any human law but, “Patres illi”, Bellarmine
explains, “cum dicunt haereticos ammitere jurisdictionem, non allegant ulla
jura humana, quae etiam forte tunc nulla extabant de hac re, sed
argumentantur ex natura haeresis.”[87] In
a desperate and futile attempt to refute the argument of Bellarmine on this
point, [which they do not attribute to Bellarmine, but to the Sedevacantists
(!)], Salza and Siscoe adduce the argument of Billuart, based on the ruling of
Martin V in 1418 during the Council of Constance. (Ad evitanda scandala)
On this point, Bellarmine makes the very telling observation: “Nor does the
response which some make avail, that these Fathers speak according to ancient
laws, but now since the decree of the Council of Constance they do not lose
jurisdiction, unless excommunicated by name, or if they strike clerics. I say
this avails to nothing. For those Fathers, when they say that heretics
lose jurisdiction, do not allege any human laws which maybe did not exist then
on this matter; rather, they argued from the nature of heresy. Moreover,
the Council of Constance does not speak except on the excommunicates,
that is, on these who lose jurisdiction through a judgment of the
Church.” In the previous sentence, Bellarmine establishes the unanimity of
the Fathers, quoting an impressive array of Fathers, saying, “the Holy Fathers
teach in unison, that not only are heretics outside the Church, but they even
lack all Ecclesiastical jurisdiction and dignity ipso facto.”
Salza and
Siscoe quote Billuart (who quotes Martin V’s Ad evitanda scandala)
in a futile attempt to refute Bellarmine and the unanimous teaching of the
Fathers:
«I say that
manifest heretics, unless they are denounced by name, or themselves depart from
the Church, retain their jurisdiction and validly absolve. This is
proved by the Bull of Martin V, Ad evitanda scandala, [which reads thus]:
“To avoid the
scandals and the many perils that can befall timorous consciences, we mercifully
grant to the faithful of Christ, by the force of this decree (tenore
praesentium), that henceforth no one will be obliged, under the pretext of
any sentence or ecclesiastical censure generally promulgated by law or by man,
to avoid the communion of any person, in the administration or reception of the
Sacraments, or in any other matters sacred or profane, or to eschew the person,
or to observe any ecclesiastical interdict, unless a sentence or censure of
this kind shall have been published by a judge, and denounced specially
and expressly, whether against a person, or a college, or university, or
church, or a certain place or territory. Neither the Apostolic
Constitutions, nor any other laws remain in force to the contrary.”
Then [the
Bull] lists, as the only exception, those who are notorious for having
inflicted violence on the clergy. From these lines, we argue that
the Church is granting permission to the faithful to receive the sacraments
from heretics who have not yet been expressly denounced by name; and,
therefore, that she allows the latter to retain their jurisdiction for
the valid administration of the sacraments, since otherwise the concession
granted to the faithful would mean nothing.
Our argument
is confirmed by the current praxis of the entire Church; for no one
today ... avoids his pastor, even for the reception of the
sacraments, as long as he is allowed to remain in his benefice, even if the man
is, in the judgment of all or at least of the majority, a manifest Jansenist,
and rebellious against the definitions of the Church; and so on with the rest.
»
Billuart’s
error consists in his failure to make a critical distinction between those who
lose their jurisdiction as a result of excommunication, and those who lose
it ex natura haeresis, as a consequence of defecting from the faith
and the Church, and thereby losing office and jurisdiction. Bellarmine points
out that the decree only applies to excommunicates. Conlon, in the above cited
article, observes: “As was previously noted Pope Martin V's Constitution
"Ad Evitanda Scandala" of 1418 introduced the distinction between the
tolerati and vitandi. Though it may sound redundant, these laws
regarding excommunicates, applies to all excommunicates, even
heretics. This is selfevident from the fact that the Church made
no exceptions in regard to heretics when promulgating these laws concerning
communication with excommunicates.” He quotes Suarez, “This new law established
by the Council of Constance also extends to heretics and the words of
Extrav.[Ad evitanda] prove this, which are both general and add an exception to
confirm the rule towards everybody else.”[88] He
then makes the very crucial point that the heretics to be considered vitandi must
be excommunicates, and have been declared such:
“Cardinal De Lugo, another eminent Catholic theologian, also affirms that the
strict obligation to avoid a heretic depends on whether the Church has declared
them, by name, as an excommunicate that is to be avoided.”[89] He
quotes The Irish Ecclesiastical Record of 1886: “...according
to the unanimous teaching of theologians the Constitution Ad evitanda includes
heretics (excipiendis exceptis) equally with all other excommunicate in its
provisions of toleration, so that, ex vi illius Constitutionis, as full
communication with all heretics in quibuscumque divinis as with the rest of the
excommunicate is granted to the faithful. Theologians make practically no
distinction whatever on this point. (Livius, p.38)” Conlon then
quotes De Lugo again, mentioning the extremely important point that under
certain circumstances, sacrament s may be received from such excommunicates,
even heretics: “Cardinal De Lugo further teaches, in the same previously
mentioned work of his, that communication with undeclared heretics is, in
certain cases, also permitted in sacred matters”.[90]
The reason
why Billuart’s failure to distinguish between those who lose their jurisdiction
as a result of excommunication, and those who lose it ex natura
haeresis, is of such great consequence, is that the ordinary and habitual
jurisdiction of the officeholder is lost upon loss of office due to tacit
resignation; but the excommunicates were provided with supplied jurisdiction in
virtue of Ad evitanda scandala, and by the subsequent legislation
that later replaced its provisions. In the Catholic Encyclopedia,
it is explained: “We may now proceed to enumerate the immediate effects
of excommunication. They are summed up in the two well known verses: Res
sacræ, ritus, communio, crypta, potestas, prædia sacra,
forum, civilia jura vetantur, i.e. loss of the sacraments,
public services and prayers of the Church, ecclesiastical
burial, jurisdiction, benefices, canonical rights, and social
intercourse. Potestas signifies ecclesiastical
jurisdiction . . .” The Encyclopedia then explains why
the habitual and ordinary faculties and jurisdiction that are lost by excommunicati
tolerati are replaced with supplied jurisdiction and faculties in
virtue of the law itself: “It is easy to understand that
the Church cannot leave her jurisdiction in the hands of
those whom she excludes from her society. In principle,
therefore, excommunication entails the loss of jurisdiction both
in foro externo and in foro interno and
renders null all acts accomplished without
the necessary jurisdiction. However, for the
general good of society,
the Church maintains jurisdiction,
despite occult excommunication, and supplies it for acts
performed by the tolerati. But as the vitandi are
known to be such, this merciful remedy cannot be applied to them except in
certain cases of extreme necessity, when jurisdiction is said to
be "supplied" by the Church.” Thus, Billuart erroneously deduced
that “heretics retain their jurisdiction”, whereas all jurisdiction
is lost by heretics, ex natura haeresis; but since heretics incur
excommunication latae sententiae, jurisdiction was supplied by the
decree Ad evitanda scandala.
Billuart’s
failure to distinguish between retaining jurisdiction and receiving
supplied jurisdiction in virtue of the law itself led him into error
on the question of loss of jurisdiction of a heretic pope. Salza and Siscoe
quote Billuart further: “the law and praxis of the Church require that a
heretic be denounced before he loses his jurisdiction, not for his own benefit,
but for the benefit and tranquility of the faithful. But the Church does
not require a denunciation for someone to be considered a public sinner, or to
be repelled from Communion, because the welfare and tranquility of the faithful
do not require that. Also, it is not the business of the faithful to
pass judgment on the jurisdiction of their ministers, and often it is
impossible for them to do so; but this pertains to the superiors who grant the
ministers their jurisdiction. It pertains to the ministers, however,
to pass judgment on those who receive the sacraments. ...”; and, “The pope…
does not have his jurisdiction from the Church, but from Christ. Nowhere has it
been declared that Christ would continue to give jurisdiction to a manifestly
heretical Pope, since his heresy could become known to the Church, and the
Church could provide another pastor for herself. Nevertheless, the
more common opinion (sententia communior)[91] holds
that Christ, by a special dispensation, for the common good and tranquility of
the Church, will continue to give jurisdiction even to a manifestly heretical
pope, until he has been declared a manifest heretic by the Church.” Billuart’s
argues that since heretics retain jurisdiction “for the benefit and tranquility
of the faithful”, therefore similarly, “Christ, by a special dispensation, for
the common good and tranquility of the Church, will continue to give
jurisdiction even to a manifestly heretical pope, until he has been declared a
manifest heretic by the Church.” Bellarmine’s words crush Billuart’s
thesis: “I say this avails to nothing. For those Fathers, when they say that
heretics lose jurisdiction, do not allege any human laws which maybe did not
exist then on this matter; rather, they argued from the nature of
heresy.” Hence, there can be no exception for any “special
dispensation” from a loss of jurisdiction that results from the very nature of
heresy. Heretics do not retain their jurisdiction: Jurisdiction is supplied
to latae sententiae excommunicated heretics who not only lose
all jurisdiction, by their excommunication, but ex natura haersis.
Billuart correctly notes that “The pope… does not have his jurisdiction from
the Church, but from Christ”, but the pope would cease to be a member of the
Church and lose all jurisdiction from Christ if he fell into manifest heresy;
and since the pope cannot incur excommunication, he could not receive supplied
jurisdiction from such legislation as Ad evitanda scandala unless
he were to fall from the Pontificate by tacit renunciation of office. Only then
could he then incur excommunication latae sententiae, and straightaway
receive supplied jurisdiction until his loss of office could be enforced by a
declaratory sentence – but he would already have ceased to be pope.
Another huge
error they make in their book is that, “‘public heresy’ and ‘public
defection from the faith’ are two different things, and that the
old 1917 Code of Canon Law taught that in the extreme case in which a prelate
publicly defects from the Faith by joining a non-Catholic sect, he is deposed
without the need of a declaratory sentence.” On page 139 of The
Renunciation of an Ecclesiastical Office, Fr. Gerald McDevitt writes: “The
defection of faith must be public. It is to be noted immediately that adherence
to or inscription in a non-catholic sect is not required to constitute the
publicity that the canon demands.” In the above cited work, The Very Rev.
H. A. Ayrinhac comments on Canon 2197, that public defection from the faith
means: “Public defection from the faith, by formal heresy or
apostasy, with or without affiliation with another religious society. The
offense must be public, that is, generally known or liable to become so before
long.” This is all that is required for loss of office to take place: the
external act of defection that is public or liable to become public,
before any judgment, and without any judgment pronounced by the Church. Any
confusion that there may have been on this point is entirely cleared up in the
1983 Code, which speaks not only of defection from the faith as effecting loss
of office, but of defection from communion with the Church (a communione
Ecclesiae), which takes place by an act of heresy, schism or apostasy. As I
mentioned on page one of this work, “St. Pius V teaches in the Roman Catechism:
‘Heretics and schismatics are excluded from the Church, because they have
defected (desciverunt) from her and belong to her only as deserters belong to
the army from which they have deserted.’” Defection from the faith is intrinsic
to the act of heresy, which consists in the obstinate denial of some revealed
truth of faith which must be believed with divine and Catholic faith; and
therefore, defection from the faith cannot be understood to take place only
when one joins some other sect or denomination; or when one openly declares
oneself explicitly to have left the Church. Ecclesiastical laws must be
understood according to the proper signification of the terms considered in
their text and context[92] (Can.
17). Thus, the expression, ‘defection from the faith’ must be understood
as the Church defines it, and not according to the arbitrary whims of
fundamentalists such as Salza and Siscoe, who gratuitously define the terms
themselves in such a manner to make them appear to confirm the errant legalism
of their heretical doctrines.
It must also
be borne in mind that what is set forth in Canon Law on the nature of defection
from the faith or from communion with the Church, and on the consequent loss of
office resulting from such a defection, is not a matter of “merely
ecclesiastical law” (as mere provisions of purely human positive law in the
Code are referred to in Canon 11), but pertain to divine law revealed by God,
and that these precepts of divine law are merely enshrined in the provisions of
Canon Law that treat of loss of ecclesiastical office due to defection from the
faith. That heresy, apostasy, and schism (as demonstrated in Part I) according
to their very nature constitute defection from the faith, and sever a man from
the body of the Church by themselves, apart from any human law, and therefore
without any judgment or censure by ecclesiastical authority, must be believed
with divine and Catholic faith. It is plainly set forth and proven
by Bellarmine that it is the unanimous teaching of the Fathers interpreting
scripture, that heresy in its very nature not only severs one from the
Church, but also directly brings about the loss of ecclesiastical office before
and even without any judgment of the Church; and being the unanimous
teaching of the Fathers, it must be believed de fide. This has also
been demonstrated in Part I of this work. Thus, the commentaries of the
canonists which explain that defection from the faith takes place by acts of
heresy, even without joining some other sect, and that the consequent loss of
office takes place ipso facto (as an act of tacit renunciation
of office), and does not per se, (as a matter of fact determined by
doctrine and not by law), require any sentence or declaration by ecclesiastical
authority to take place, do not express mere opinions on these points, but
truths of faith which require an assent of faith. John Salza and Robert Siscoe
have explicitly denied these truths of faith in their articles, in their
interviews, and in their book, True Or False Pope.[93]
True or False
Pope website: “After explaining the bonds that unite man to the true Church,
the authors explain the distinction between heresy and lesser errors, and
how the sin of heresy alone does not sever one from the Church.”
Fr. Kramer
(quoted by Salza & Siscoe): “With or without the law, the heretic by the
very nature of the sin of heresy ceases to be a Catholic and is incapable of
holding office. Bellarmine explains this in De Romano Pontifice.” The judgment
of Salza and Siscoe, “with this utterly erroneous assertion it does not seem
possible that he has even read Bellarmine’s De Romano Pontifice.”
CONCLUSION OF PART III
“a nemine est iudicandus, nisi deprehendatur a Fide devius”
In his
earlier cited Fundamentaltheologie, Albert Lang points out that in the time of
the Apostolic Fathers, there was no formulated theology of the primacy of the
Bishop of Rome, but he demonstrates that the exercise of the primacy of the
Church Rome was already recognized and accepted by the other churches in the
first Century, when St. Clement of Rome intervened and ruled in the affairs of
the Church of Corinth. St. Irenaeus of Lyon asserted the Church’s doctrine on
the universal authority of the magisterium of the Church of Rome, but in the
early centuries there existed no developed formulation of legal principles
clearly outlining the papal prerogatives and powers. Pope St. Damasus I is
the first to refer to the See of Rome as the Sedes Apostolica. Pope
St. Zozimus in Quamvis Patrum teaches that the authority of the Fathers attributes such
authority to the Apostolic See, that no one would dare to dispute its judgment
which is set forth in canons, regulations, and ecclesiastical laws.[94] Pope
St. Gelasius, (as noted earlier) set forth the canons which declared the See of
Rome to be the judge over the whole Church, which is judged by none, and
against whose judgment there can be no appeal. During the pontificate of Leo I
the plenitudo potestatis is first spoken of; and primacy of
Rome was forcefully stated at Chalcedon and accepted by the Patriarch of
Constantinople. Pope Innocent III set forth and theologically elaborated the
doctrine of the primacy in terms of the plenitudo potestatis in
his letter to the Patriarch John of Constantinople.[95] Laetentur
Caeli[96] (Florence)
then defines the papal primacy over the whole world and the “full power” of the
Roman Pontiff for “ruling and governing the church”. But in spite of that “full
power”, there has always been the belief in the Church that if the pope were to
fall into heresy he can be judged for heresy, or rather,” as Innocent III
qualifies it, he “can be shown to be already judged.” Hinschius points out the
early example of such a case at the sixth general Council (Third Council of
Constantinople), where the posthumous condemnation for heresy of Pope Honorius
I was confirmed by Pope Leo II, and several popes subsequently upheld the
admissibility of such a judgment.[97] Nevertheless,
he was never proven to have been a formal heretic, and he was not judged by his
inferiors during his lifetime, nor was he deposed. In a passage I quoted in
Part I of this work, Hinschius pointed out that there has been a series of
Catholic writers, and in particular St. Robert Bellarmine, who find no
exception in such a case to the rule that the pope is judged by no one, because
the pope who falls into heresy would thereby sever himself from the Church by
himself in such a manner that the Church would not be able to impose a
deposition, but would only be able to establish the loss of the papal dignity
that has already taken place; and that this line of thought is already found in
Pope Innocent III’s Sermo IV. In consecrat. pontiff.[98]
It is
certainly not surprising that Innocent III taught that if a pope would “wither
away into heresy”, he would automatically cease to be pope; and it is no
mystery from whom he learned that doctrine. The Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages
(under Uguccio) relates, “Uguccio (Hugh of Pisa) studied theology and
probably canon law at Bologna, before teaching there; among his pupils was the
future Pope Innocent III.” The Catholic Encyclopedia adds, “Among his pupils was Lothario de' Conti, afterwards Innocent
III, who held him in high esteem as
is shown by the important cases which the pontiff submitted to him, traces of which still remain in the
"Corpus Juris" (c. Coram, 34, X, I, 29). Two letters addressed by Innocent
III to Huguccio were inserted in
the Decretals of Gregory IX (c. Quanto, 7, X, IV, 19; c. In quadam, 8, X,III,41).
Besides a book, "Liber derivationum", dealing with etymologies, he
wrote a "Summa" on the "Decretum" of Gratian, concluded according to some in 1187,
according to others after 1190, the most extensive and perhaps the most authoritative
commentary of that time.” It was in his Summa that, “Huguccio argued, in a widely known opinion, that a
pope who fell into heresy automatically lost his see, without the necessity of
a formal judgment.[4]”[99] Thus, we find the doctrine, (which Salza and Siscoe claim is an
invention of the Sedevacantists), that a pope who would become a heretic, would
lose office automatically; being taught in Bologna in the 12th Century
by the most eminent canonist of that century, Huguccio of Pisa, whose student,
Lothair de Conti, as Pope Innocent III taught that same doctrine in his
sermons. St. Robert Bellarmine and Don Pietro Ballerini theologically
explicated that doctrine, which was adopted by the first Vatican Council. The
doctrine that all who defect from the faith into heresy or apostasy lose
ecclesiastical office automatically was then incorporated into the 1917 and
1983 Codes of Canon Law. It is on this solid doctrinal basis that the
inescapable conclusion rests, namely, that the only doctrinally orthodox
opinions that are possible today on the question of a manifestly heretical pope
are Opinion No. 1, and Opinion No. 5 considered as a pure hypothesis.
I have
already pointed out in Section II of this Part, the fatal defect in the opinion
that it is even possible for a pope to become a heretic, given the divine
promise to Peter and his successors of unfailing faith. The opinion, explained
by Cardinal Stickler in the article I quoted seems to have originated from
Huguccio, and was taken up by Ostiense and others. The New Catholic
Encyclopedia (under Conciliarism) explains, «Huguccio also considered the
question of how the possibility of a pope erring in faith, which he admitted,
could be reconciled with the ancient doctrine that the true faith would always
live on in the Roman Church. His answer was based on a distinction between the
local Roman Church and the universal Roman Church. "The Roman Church is
said to have never erred in faith… but I say that the whole Catholic
Church which has never erred in toto is called the Roman
Church." And again, "Wherever there are good faithful men there is
the Roman Church." This distinction between the proneness to error of a
pope and the indefectibility of the whole Church became a most important
element in later conciliar theories. » The defect of Huguccio’s
notion of the “Roman Church” is so patent, that it needs only to be pointed out
without further elucidation, except to say; that the sense which Huguccio gives
to the term is entirely alien to the sense according to which it was used in
the canons of St. Gelasius, which is its proper sense, and is the way it has
always been generally understood since the doctrinal pre-eminence of the Roman
Church was explained by St. Irenaeus.
The
Encyclopedia continues, «Huguccio's views were repeated with various
modifications by the canonists of the early 13th century. Some taught that a
pope could be condemned only for heresy, not for notorious crimes in general.
Others held that he could be deposed for professing a new heresy and not for
only adhering to an old one. All agreed that a doctrinal definition of a
general council, that is of pope and bishops acting together, possessed a
higher authority than the bare word of a pope alone. A few accepted the more
radical view that a decision of the fathers of a council acting in concert
against the pope should be preferred to the pope's decision. Sometimes the
language employed was ambiguous, and perhaps deliberately so. The Glossa
Ordinaria to the Decretum of Joannes Teutonicus, a work used as
a standard text in canon law schools throughout the Middle Ages, declared
simply, "Where a matter of faith is involved a council is greater than a
pope." »
It is
precisely this idea, "where a matter of faith is involved a
council is greater than a pope," which is the basis of the
Conciliarist Argument, which is Opinion No. 4. It is the foundation of the
argument which holds that a council can canonically admonish a pope, and if he
remains obstinate in heresy, can then pronounce judgment upon him so that he
then falls from office; and according to some, a council would even need to
pronounce a vitandus sentence upon the heretic pope for him to
fall from office – a sentence which presumes the power to excommunicate the
heretic Pontiff, because as explained earlier, only an
excommunicatus can be pronounced “vitandus”.
St. Robert
Bellarmine, in the following segment of De Romano Ponifice (Book
II Chapter XXX) on Opinion No. 4 (precisely and accurately translated by Ryan
Grant) destroyed this argument that a pope can be judged by the Church, by
explaining that neither the bishops nor the cardinals have any power over a
pope, (and to pronounce official judgment on a pope is
to exercise power of jurisdictionover a pope):
"Next, what Cajetan says in the second place, that a heretical Pope who
is truly Pope can be deposed by the Church, and from its authority seems no
less false than the first. For, if the Church deposes a Pope against his will,
certainly it is over the Pope. Yet the same Cajetan defends the opposite in the
very same treatise. But he answers; the Church, in the very matter, when it
deposes the Pope, does not have authority over the Pope, but only on that union
of the person with the pontificate. As the Church can join the pontificate to
such a person, and still it is not said on that account to be above the Pontiff;
so it can separate the pontificate from such a person in the case of heresy,
and still it will not be said to be above the Pope.
"On the other hand, from the very fact that the Pope deposes bishops,
they deduce that the Pope is above all bishops, and still the Pope deposing a
bishop does not destroy the Episcopacy; but only separates it from that person.
Secondly, for one to be deposed from the pontificate against his will is
without a doubt a penalty; therefore, the Church deposing a Pope against his will,
without a doubt punished him; but to punish is for a superior and a judge.
Thirdly, because according to Cajetan and the other Thomists, in reality they
are the same, the whole and the parts are taken up together. Therefore, he who
has so great an authority over the parts taken up together, such that he can
also separate them, also has it over the whole, which arises from those
parts.
"Furthermore, the example of Cajetan does not avail on electors, who have
the power of applying the pontificate to a certain person, and still does not
have power over the Pope. For while a thing is made, the action is exercised
over the matter of the thing that is going to be, not over a composite which
does not yet exist, but while a thing is destroyed, the action is exercised
over a composite; as is certain from natural things. Therefore, when Cardinals
create the Pontiff, they exercise their authority not over the Pontiff, because
he does not yet exist; but over the matter, that is, over the person whom they
dispose in a certain measure through election, that he might receive the form
of the pontificate from God; but if they depose the Pope, they necessarily
exercise authority over the composite, that is, over the person provided with
pontifical dignity, which is to say, over the Pontiff."
The belief
that a reigning Pontiff, by way of exception, can be juridically judged for
heresy by his inferiors, has neither a basis in scripture nor in the doctrinal
tradition of the Church. It was a theory of law developed
by canonists, based on the spurious Canon Si papa, and
gained momentum under the influence of Conciliarism, and
later became the more common opinion of theologians during the
Counter-Reformation period. Its remote origin was the spurious Canon Si
papa. Its demise was the result of the influence of the doctrine of St.
Robert Bellarmine on the theologians of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries. By the Twentieth Century, with the principle, “Prima Sedes a
nemine judicatur” enshrined as a universal statute of Canon Law, and
unanimously interpreted in such a manner that no exception can be considered
admissible, Opinion No. 4, promoted by so many canonists and theologians of the
Counter-Reformation period, experienced its demise, having been all but
universally abandoned by theologians.
In spite of
the antiquity and unequivocal nature of the principle that the first
See is judged by no one, it is contrasted by the historical fact of
depositions of popes, and a tradition of some canonists which held that a pope
could be judged by a general council. On this point of the injudicability of
the Roman Pontiff, Hinschius makes a poignant observation and asks, ”But with
this theory [the injudicability of the pope] there stands in contrast the
undeniable fact several times during the course of the earlier centuries,
depositions of popes had taken place, which brings up the question whether
these depositions were only blameworthy violations of a principle of law
indisputably held in the Catholic Church from the beginning, or was it not
rather that this principle became fixed only later in the course of its
development?” [100] His
answer to the question is emphatic and unequivocal: “A detached consideration
without presuppositions of the particular occurrences that enter into the
question would appear to justify the latter conception. During the time of the
Roman Empire and throughout the greater part of the Middle Ages, in which the
opposition between the Pontificate and the Episcopacy was not yet the driving
factor of the development, rather the bishops for the most part, and only in
part joined with the secular power, we encounter only cases, where the secular
rulers, took part in the depositions at councils, while toward the end of the
Middle Ages, as the downtrodden Episcopacy, by means of the earlier conception,
raised its head and sought to decrease the papal prerogatives, bringing
practically into effect the claimed supremacy over the popes by means of
depositions.”[101]
Don Curzio
Nitoglia quotes Fr. Salvatorre Vacca, who elaborates on his point of the two
conflicting canonical traditions that were simultaneously present in the
Church: “Gratian, in order to establish the principle of the injudicability of
the pope, as opposed to the previous canonical tradition […] left the
principle Prima Sedes a nemine judicatur unshaken. However, he
partially transcribed the Fragmentum A (174-178) of Umberto di
Silva Candida. He thus gathered into his Decretum the two conflicting juridical
traditions which were present together in the Church: the first, maintained by
the Symmachian Apocrypha [Pope St. Symmachus (498 – 514) put under the judgment
of the particular council known as the Synod ad Palmaria in the atrium of St.
Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican by the Emperor Theodoric in 501. During the
course of the controversy, numerous polemical writings were drafted, among them
the Symmachian Apocrypha, put together by the supporters of Pope
Symmachus, which stated the axiom Summa Sedes a nemine iudicatur Ed]
affirms that the Pope cannot be judged by anyone; the second holds,
that in the case of heresy the Pope can be caught on heresy. So,
this conception was passed down until the 12th Century
[…].” [102]
So, even long
after the principle Apostolica sedes a nemine judicatur had
established the absolute injudicability of the pope, and had become firmly
entrenched in the canonical tradition of the Church, the “earlier conception”
was still resorted to by the Episcopacy, not only to counterbalance the supreme
authority of the pope, but even to challenge papal supremacy and exert
supremacy over the pope. The New Catholic Encyclopedia elaborates: «The
circumstances in which a pope's pronouncements could be regarded as infallible
had been neither defined nor much discussed. It was generally accepted that a
pope could err in faith and it seemed intolerable that the whole Church should
be thrown into confusion as a result. There was a need then to find
norms that might set proper limits to the powers even of a pope. In
seeking such norms the canonists turned to the general councils of the past and
it became commonplace around 1200 to assert that the pope was bound by the
canons of councils "in matters touching the faith and the general state of
the Church."
This raised
the problem of how to deal with a pope who offended against such canons. The
most eminent canonist of the age, Huguccio, discussed the problem at length. He
concluded that a pope who publicly professed his adherence to a known heresy
could be deposed by the Church and, further, that a pope who contumaciously
persisted in notorious crime could likewise be deposed since "to
scandalize the Church is like committing heresy." »
Pope Innocent
III affirmed in his ordinary magisterium that the Roman Pontiff cannot be
judged by men for any crime, but if he were to fall into heresy, he could be
“shown to be already judged”. Enrico da Susa, known as “l'Ostiense”, came
after Innocent III, and accordingly, «believed that while the pope should follow positive
law he was not bound by it. Thus the pope could not be tried for any crime, except
that of heresy, in which case “the pope could be subject to the 'ecclesia' (the
Church)." For any other
violation of law the pope could be judged by no one save God. »[103] As the passage from Cardinal Stickler which I quoted in the
previous section, explains, according to E. da Susa and his contemporaries, «In
the case of an obstinate and public profession of certain heresy, since it is
condemned by the Church, the Pope becomes "minor quolibet catholico"
(a common phrase of canonists) and ceases to be pope (...).» Although not
solemnly defined, this doctrine is clearly the doctrine of the Catholic Church
in respect to all offices in the Church, being enshrined in
both the 1917 and 1983 codes of Canon Law, in the canons on Tacit Loss of
Office (1917), and Removal (1983); and therefore, if it were possible for a
pope to become a formal heretic, he could be deposed only in the qualified
sense that he could be shown to be already judged – judged to have already
fallen from office. Hence, any opinion or theory which postulates any exception
to the principle, Prima Sedes a nemine judicatur, and accordingly
therefore that a pope can be judged by the Church for heresy before he falls
from office on the basis of a literal application of the principle cunctos
ipse iudicaturus a nemine est iudicandus, nisi deprehendatur a fide devius,
is contrary to the Catholic faith.
This is
manifestly evident in view of the fact that not only did St. Robert Bellarmine
demonstrate that the Fathers teach unanimously that heretics cease to be
members of the Church automatically by their heresy (as St. Pius V teaches in
the Roman Catechism, and Pius XII in Mystici Corporis), and by the
very nature of heresy (ex natura haeresis) lose office and all
jurisdiction; but ultimately because the primacy of jurisdiction of the Roman
Pontiff defined by Vatican I is the plenitudo potestatis taught
by Innocent III, the potestas absoluta taught by Ostiense,[104] and
the plena potestas defined at Florence; to which essentially
pertains the power of the supreme judge (as constantly
taught by the Church and in the decrees of the Council of Trent and in Pastor
Aeternus), whose judgment may be questioned by no one (Quamvis
Patrum, Pastor Aeternus, etc.), and who
absolutely cannot be judged by anyone.[105]
Although the
Counter-Reformation canonists were understandably phobic about the impetus such
a doctrine as that of automatic loss of the papal office for heresy without the
judgment of the Church might provide for the abusive application of the
Protestant principle of Private Judgment against the Papacy, the ancient
principle of law remains ever valid, that the abuse of a right does not
nullify the right to its legitimate exercise. Their understandable concern
for the possibility and even the likelihood that private individuals could
seize upon the right to judge privately as a matter of conscience, and abuse it
in the manner that it was abused by Luther to pronounce the pope a heretic, led
them to adopt the opposite extreme, equally harmful and heterodox, according to
which even a manifestly heretical pope remains in office and retains jurisdiction
until the Church, by a juridical act pronounces judgment on him; and that
private individuals may not avail themselves of their God-given right and last
means of defense against the ravenous wolf, to form an opinion to acknowledge
even the most manifest and patent public rejection of the Catholic faith by a
heretic pope; and as a consequence to be compelled to remain subject to him,
and be in communion with the public enemy of the Church for months, years or
even decades, until the Church, by some miracle of providence, can finally be
able to pronounce a judgment which effectively results in the heretic’s
deposition. The word “manifest” means, “clear or obvious to the eye or mind”.
If not only the matter of heresy is clearly manifest, but the conscious and
willful profession of “a doctrine that immediately, directly, and
contradictorily opposes the truths revealed by God and authentically set forth
as such by the Church,”[106] is
patently obvious to the mind, then the person who professes it may be judged by
others to be a heretic, even without a judicial pronouncement of the Church,
since no one needs any official declaration to be made in order to form a
judgment of opinion on a matter that by its very nature is already “clear or
obvious to the eye or mind”. The proposition that one is not a manifest heretic
until an ecclesiastical judge pronounces that one is a manifest heretic is
absurd on its face, since by the very fact that the heresy is manifest, it is
already “clear or obvious to the eye or mind” before any judgment is
pronounced; yet this is precisely the silliness that John Salza and Robert
Siscoe maintain in their rabid legalism. However, it is clearly the doctrine of
the Catholic faith that if a person is a manifest heretic, then it is manifest
that heresy has suapte natura severed that one from the body
of the Church, and if he is a holder of ecclesiastical office, he has
automatically lost office and all habitual or ordinary jurisdiction ex
natura haeresis, before any sentence is pronounced by the Church.
It is plainly
evident that the Counter-Reformation theologians and canonists who subscribed
to Opinion No. 4 theorized a hypothetical scenario of a pope who falls into
manifest heresy, in which the rest of the hierarchy, or at least the vast
majority of it would still be orthodox in their faith, and who would administer
correction to an errant Pontiff, and pronounce judgment upon him if he were to
remain obstinate in heresy. However, when a sizable portion of the hierarchy is
already in heresy, and the vast majority is to some degree infected by the
heresy, one can easily understand how such a manifestly heretical “pope” would
be tolerated and even fully accepted as a legitimate pope by the majority of
bishops and cardinals. In his Dialogue Against the Luciferians, St.
Jerome remarked, “The whole world groaned and was astonished to find itself
Arian.” In Chaper 4 of his Commonitory, St. Vincent of Lérins
says, “when the Arian poison had infected not an insignificant portion of the
Church but almost the whole world, so that a sort of blindness had
fallen upon almost all the bishops of the Latin tongue, circumvented
partly by force partly by fraud, and was preventing them from seeing
what was most expedient to be done in the midst of so much confusion”.
It is plainly
evident that in our own time, a sort of blindness has fallen upon
almost all the bishops of the Latin Church. With a prophetic insight,
more than 1,500 years ago St. Vincent described the present condition of the
Church today: “if some novel contagion seek to infect not merely an
insignificant portion of the Church, but the whole”. Under such circumstances,
the clergy and faithful cannot reasonably be expected to suspend judgment on
manifest heresy until the Church pronounces officially, and remain subject to a
ravenous wolf and destroyer of souls – quod esset miserrima conditio
Ecclesiæ, si lupum manifeste grassantem, pro pastore agnoscere
cogeretur. (Bellarminus).
[3] Oderberg, David S. (2011).
"Heresies". In Kurian, George T. The Encyclopedia of Christian
Civilization. 1. Malden: Wiley-Blackwell. p. 1119.
[5] "11. Si risponde pertanto ai Semipelagiani che gl'infedeli i
quali giunti all'uso di ragione non si convertono alla fede non sono degni di
scusa; perché, quantunque non ricevano la grazia sufficiente prossima, almeno
non sono destituiti della grazia rimota e mediata per convertirsi alla fede. E
qual è questa grazia rimota? È quella che insegna il dottore Angelico1, il
quale scrive: Si quis nutritus in silvis, vel inter bruta animalia ductum
rationis naturalis sequeretur in appetitu boni et fuga mali, certissime est
credendum quod ei Deus vel per internam inspirationem revelaret ea, quae sunt
ad credendum necessaria; vel aliquem fidei praedicatorem ad eum dirigeret,
sicut misit Petrum ad Cornelium. Sicché secondo s. Tommaso agl'infedeli che son
giunti all'uso di ragione almeno vien data da Dio la grazia rimotamente
sufficiente per salvarsi; la quale grazia consiste in una certa istruzione
della mente ed in una mozion della volontà ad osservar la legge naturale; alla
quale mozione se coopera l'infedele, osservando i precetti della natura, con
astenersi dai peccati gravi, riceverà appresso certamente per i meriti di Gesù
Cristo la grazia prossimamente sufficiente ad abbracciar la fede ed a
salvarsi." (Sant'Alfonso Maria de Liguori, Storia delle Eresie;
I edizione - Maggio 2003, p. 313.)
[6] Bishop George Hay; The Sincere Christian Instructed in the
Faith of Christ; Dublin, 1822, p. 341-2.
[10] Catechismo filosofico, o raccolta d'osservazioni atte a
difendere la religione cristiana contro de' suoi nemici. Opera del sig. abate
F. X. De Feller tradotta dal francese secondo la terza edizione di Liegi
corretta, e notabilmente accresciuta; Tomo III, Milano, 1828, p. 203.
[12] THEOLOGIAE FUNDAMENTALIS Tractatus prior. Demonstratio
christiano-catholica contra adversarios generatim omnes TRACTATUS DUO.
SCRIPSIT SAC. F. H. REINERDING, H. ET. PH. DR. ET TH. PROF. IN SEMINARIO
FULDENSI, . Monasterii Guestphalorum. SUMPTIBUS
LIBRARIAE ASCHENDORFFIANAE.
[14] Jus Canonicum by Franz Xavier Wernz S.J. and
Pedro Vidal S.J. (1938) Chapter VII; and, Jus Canonicum, Roma, Gregoriana, 1943, vol. II, p.
517
[16] Pope Pius XI, Decree Providentissimus Deus (declaring
St. Robert Bellarmine a Doctor of the Church), 17 Sept, 1931.
[17] “The first is of Albert Pighius, who contends that the Pope cannot
be a heretic, and hence would not be deposed in any case [319]: such an opinion
is probable, and can easily be defended, as we will show in its proper place.
Still, because it is not certain, and the common opinion is to the contrary, it
will be worthwhile to see what the response should be if the Pope could be a
heretic.”
[18] It is proved: 1) because it seems to require the sweet disposition
of the providence of God. For the Pope not only should not, but cannot preach
heresy, but rather should always preach the truth. He will certainly do that,
since the Lord commanded him to confirm his brethren, and for that reason
added: “I have prayed for thee, that thy faith shall not fail,” that is, that
at least the preaching of the true faith shall not fail in thy throne. How, I
ask, will a heretical Pope confirm the brethren in faith and always preach the
true faith? Certainly God can wrench the confession of the true faith out of
the heart of a heretic just as he placed the words in the mouth of Balaam’s
ass. Still, this will be a great violence, and not in keeping with the
providence of God that sweetly disposes all things.
[19] 28 «And the Lord opened the mouth of the ass, and she said:
What have I done to thee? Why strikest thou me, lo, now this third
time?29 Balaam answered: Because thou hast deserved it, and hast served me
ill: I would I had a sword that I might kill thee. 30 The ass said: Am not
I thy beast, on which thou hast been always accustomed to ride until this
present day? tell me if I ever did the like thing to thee. But he said: Never.
»
[20] «Respondeo dicendum quod impossibile est dicere quod essentia
animae sit eius potentia; licet hoc quidam posuerint. Et hoc dupliciter
ostenditur, quantum ad praesens. Primo quia, cum potentia et actus dividant ens
et quodlibet genus entis, oportet quod ad idem genus referatur potentia et
actus. Et ideo, si actus non est in genere substantiae, potentia quae dicitur
ad illum actum, non potest esse in genere substantiae. Operatio autem animae
non est in genere substantiae; sed in solo Deo, cuius operatio est eius
substantia. Unde Dei potentia, quae est operationis principium, est ipsa Dei
essentia. Quod non potest esse verum neque in anima, neque in aliqua creatura;
ut supra etiam de Angelo dictum est. Secundo, hoc etiam impossibile apparet in
anima. Nam anima secundum suam essentiam est actus. Si ergo ipsa essentia
animae esset immediatum operationis principium, semper habens animam actu
haberet opera vitae; sicut semper habens animam actu est vivum. Non enim,
inquantum est forma, est actus ordinatus ad ulteriorem actum, sed est ultimus
terminus generationis. Unde quod sit in potentia adhuc ad alium actum, hoc non
competit ei secundum suam essentiam, inquantum est forma; sed secundum suam
potentiam. Et sic ipsa anima, secundum quod subest suae potentiae, dicitur
actus primus, ordinatus ad actum secundum. Invenitur autem habens animam non
semper esse in actu operum vitae. Unde etiam in definitione animae dicitur quod
est actus corporis potentia vitam habentis, quae tamen potentia non abiicit
animam. Relinquitur ergo quod essentia animae non est eius potentia. Nihil enim
est in potentia secundum actum, inquantum est actus. » (Summa Theol. 1.77.1)
[21] «Respondeo dicendum quod necesse est ponere plures animae
potentias. Ad cuius evidentiam, considerandum est quod, sicut philosophus dicit
in II de caelo, quae sunt in rebus infima, non possunt consequi perfectam
bonitatem, sed aliquam imperfectam consequuntur paucis motibus; superiora vero
his adipiscuntur perfectam bonitatem motibus multis; his autem superiora sunt
quae adipiscuntur perfectam bonitatem motibus paucis; summa vero perfectio
invenitur in his quae absque motu perfectam possident bonitatem. Sicut infime
est ad sanitatem dispositus qui non potest perfectam consequi
sanitatem, sed aliquam modicam consequitur paucis remediis melius autem dispositus
estqui potest perfectam consequi sanitatem, sed remediis multis; et
adhuc melius, qui remediis paucis; optime autem, qui absque remedio
perfectam sanitatem habet. »
[22]« Respondeo dicendum quod, cum anima sit una, potentiae vero
plures; ordine autem quodam ab uno in multitudinem procedatur; necesse est
inter potentias animae ordinem esse. Triplex autem ordo inter eas
attenditur. Quorum duo considerantur secundum dependentiam unius
potentiae ab altera, tertius autem accipitur secundum ordinem obiectorum.
Dependentia autem unius potentiae ab altera dupliciter accipi potest, uno
modo, secundum naturae ordinem, prout perfecta sunt naturaliter imperfectis
priora; alio modo, secundum ordinem generationis et temporis, prout ex
imperfecto ad perfectum venitur. Secundum igitur primum potentiarum
ordinem, potentiae intellectivae sunt priores potentiis sensitivis, unde
dirigunt eas et imperant eis. Et similiter potentiae sensitivae hoc ordine sunt
priores potentiis animae nutritivae. Secundum vero ordinem secundum, e converso
se habet. Nam potentiae animae nutritivae sunt priores, in via generationis,
potentiis animae sensitivae, unde ad earum actiones praeparant corpus. Et
similiter est de potentiis sensitivis respectu intellectivarum. Secundum autem
ordinem tertium, ordinantur quaedam vires sensitivae ad invicem, scilicet
visus, auditus et olfactus. Nam visibile est prius naturaliter, quia est
commune superioribus et inferioribus corporibus. Sonus autem audibilis fit in
aere, qui est naturaliter prior commixtione elementorum, quam consequitur odor.
»
[23] Respondeo dicendum quod, cum per habitum perficiatur
potentia ad agendum, ibi indiget potentia habitu perficiente
ad bene agendum, qui quidem habitus est virtus, ubi ad hoc non
sufficit propria ratio potentiae. Omnis autem potentiae propria ratio
attenditur in ordine ad obiectum. Unde cum, sicut dictum est, obiectum
voluntati sit bonum rationis voluntati proportionatum, quantum ad hoc non
indiget voluntas virtute perficiente. Sed si quod bonum immineat homini
volendum, quod excedat proportionem volentis; sive quantum ad totam speciem
humanam, sicut bonum divinum, quod transcendit limites humanae naturae, sive
quantum ad individuum, sicut bonum proximi; ibi voluntas indiget virtute.
Et ideo huiusmodi virtutes quae ordinant affectum hominis in Deum vel in
proximum, sunt in voluntate sicut in subiecto; ut caritas, iustitia et
huiusmodi. (Ia IIæ 56 a.6)
[26] «Ego tamen facile non crediderim, ut Deus permitteret
Romanum pontificem contra fidem errare: pro quo spiritualiter oravit in Petro:
<Ego, inquit, pro te rogavi, Petre, etc. (Luc.xxii),> Ergo qui
habet sponsam, sponsus est. Haec autem sponsa non nupsit vacua, sed dotem
mihi trihuit absque pretio pretiosam, spirilualium videlicet
plenitudinem et latitudinem temporalium, magnitndinem et multiudinem
utrorumque. Nam caeteri vocati sunt in partem sollicitudinis, solus autem
Petrus assumptus est in plenitudinem potesatis. » (Sermo III De
Deversis); «Tu, inquit, vocaberis Cephas (Joan.
1), quod exponitur caput; quia sicut in capite consistit omnium sensuum
plenitudo, in cæteris autem membris pars est aliqua
plenitudinis: ita cæteri vocati sunt in partem sollicitudinis, solus autem
Petrus assumptus est in plenitudinem potestatis. » (Sermo II De Diversis)
Diversis); «Ego tamen facile
non crediderim, ut Deus permitteret Romanum pontificem contra fidem errare» (Sermo
III De Deversis)
[28] «Nam Pontifex non solum non debet, nec potest haeresim praedicare, sed
etiam debet veritatem semper docere, & sine dubio id faciet, […] at
quomodo, quaeso, confirmabit fratres in Fide, & veram Fidem semper
praedicabit Pontifex haereticus? »
[31] “2) It is proved ab eventu. For to this point no
[Pontiff] has been a heretic, or certainly it cannot be proven that any of them
were heretics; therefore it is a sign that such a thing cannot be [410].”
[33] A canonical primer on popes and heresy(https://canonlawblog.wordpress.com/2016/12/16/a-canonical-primer-on-popes-and-heresy/)
[34] «la prima opinione o meglio l’antecedente, che è
quella insegnata comunemente come la più probabile dalla maggior parte dei
teologi e dei Dottori: S. Roberto Bellarmino, Francisco Suarez, Melchior Cano,
Domingo Soto, Giovanni da San Tommaso, Juan de Torquemada, Louis Billot,
Joachim Salaverri, A. Maria Vellico, Charles Journet (ed anche il Gaetano non
citato dal Da Silveira, ma lo dimostra mons. Vittorio Mondello, ne La
dottrina del Gaetano sul Romano Pontefice, Messina, Istituto Arti Grafiche
di Sicilia, 1965, cap. V, pp. 163-194 e cap. VI, pp. 195-224) è che il Papa
come Papa non può cadere in eresia formale, mentre può favorire l’eresia
o cadere in eresia materiale come dottore privato oppure come Papa, ma solo nel
magistero non definitorio, non obbligante e quindi non infallibile (cfr. A. X.
Da Silveira, p. 33, nota 1; cfr. B. Gherardini, Concilio Ecumenico
Vaticano II. Un discorso da fare, Frigento, Casa Mariana Editrice,
2009; Tradidi quod et accepi. La Tradizione, vita e giovinezza della
Chiesa, Frigento, Casa Mariana Editrice, 2010;Concilio Vaticano II. Il
discorso mancato, Torino, Lindau, 2011; Quaecumque dixero vobis.
Parola di Dio e Tradizione a confronto con la storia e la teologia, Torino,
Lindau, 2011; La Cattolica. Lineamenti d’ecclesiologia agostiniana,
Torino, Lindau, 2011). »
[35] «Se si studia bene il pensiero di don Pietro Ballerini si vede che
secondo lui il Papa è obbligato a sottomettersi alla fede soprannaturale e alla
morale naturale e divina; non ha nessuna autorità umano/ecclesiastica sopra di
lui, ma il suo potere è limitato da quello di Dio di cui è il Vicario in terra;
soltanto quando definisce e obbliga a credere è infallibile; come dottore
privato opinando su questioni non ancora definite può errare; infine in caso
di eventuale e possibile eresia esterna il Ballerini non si
oppone alla possibilità che il Papa vi cada, non trattandosi di
definizioni, ma ritiene che ciò non si è mai verificato nella corso
della storia della Chiesa e non si verificherà mai. »
[40] «Multi canones docent , Pontificem non posse judicari, nisi inveniatur a
fide devius; ergo potest deviare a Fide: alioqui frustra essent illi
canones. Antecedens patet ex can. Si Papa dist. 40. Ex Concilio V sub Symmacho,
ex Concilioi VIII. Generali act. 7. Ex Anacleto epist. 3.Eusebio epist. 2. Ex
Innocentio III. In serm. 2. De consecrate. Pontif. »
[41] «Respondeo ad primum argumentum: inde recte colligi, posse Papam ex
natura sua incidere in haeresim, non tamen posita singulari Dei assistentia,
quam Christus oration sua illi impetravit: oravit autem Christus, ne dificeret
Fides ejus, non autem ne incideret in alia vitia. » (De Romano Pontifice, Lib. IV, Cap. VII)
[42] «Canones autem citati loquuntur expresse de haeresi; igitur non loquuntur
de errore judiciali, sed personali Pontificis. Secundo dico; canones illos non
velle dicere, Pontificem etiam ut privatam personam posse errare, sed tantum
non posse Pontificem judicari: quia tamen non est omnino certum, an possit
necne esse haereticus Pontifex; ideo ad majorem cautelam, addunt conditionem,
nisi fiat haereticus. »
[43] «semetipsum palam declarat haereticum, hoc est a fide catholica,
& ab Ecclesia voluntate propria recessisse, ita ut ad eum praecidendum a
corpore Eccleaiae nulla cujusquam declaratio aut sententia necessaria sit»
[45] «Nevertheless, even conceding the
possibility that a Pope could fall into formal
heresy (which I do, based on the teaching of
Pope Innocent III and several
historical examples)» [John Salza Replies to Another
Sedevacantist] (emphasis qadded)
[46] «La terza opinione è stata presa in esame da un
solo teologo francese del XIX secolo (D. Bouix, Tractatus de Papa,
Parigi/Lione, Lecoffre, 1869) su oltre 137 autori; essa ritiene che il Papa se
per ipotesi cade in eresia mantiene egualmente il Pontificato, ma i fedeli non
devono restare passivi, manifestando al Papa il suo errore affinché si corregga
(cfr. A. X. Da Silveira, Qual è l’autorità dottrinale dei
documenti pontifici e conciliari?, “Cristianità”, n. 9, 1975; Id., È
lecita la resistenza a decisioni dell’Autorità ecclesiastica?,
“Cristianità”, n. 10, 1975; Id., Può esservi l’errore nei documenti del
Magistero ecclesiastico?, “Cristianità”, n. 13, 1975) senza tuttavia
poterlo dichiarare deposto (“depositus”) o deponendo (“deponendus”);
questa terza opinione non è condivisa da tutti i teologi “probati”. »
[47]« In realtà il Bellarmino tratta della pura ipotesi dell’eresia del
Papa, “ammessa e non concessa” la quale, ritiene - solo speculativamente,
indagativamente e ipoteticamente - che il Papa sarebbe deposto ipso
facto (“depositus”) e non da deporsi (“deponendus”)
dopo dichiarazione dell’Episcopato o del S. Collegio cardinalizio»
[50] Monsignor Vittorio Mondello (La dottrina del Gaetano sul Romano
Pontefice, cit., pp. 163-194) spiega che l’ipotesi della possibilità del
Papa eretico deriva dal Decreto di Graziano (dist. XL, cap. 6, col.
146) composto tra il 1140 e il 1150, in cui si trova riportato un frammento
creduto erroneamente di S. Bonifacio († 5 giugno 754), un monaco benedettino
dell’Exeter in Inghilterra inviato da papa Gregorio II ad evangelizzare la
Germania, consacrato arcivescovo di Magonza e martirizzato dai Frisoni, che è
considerato l’apostolo della Germania e il cui corpo riposa a Fulda.
[51] «Questo frammento si intitola “Si Papa” ed esprime la
dottrina secondo cui “a nemine est iudicandus, nisi deprehendatur a Fide
devius / non può essere giudicato da nessuna autorità umana, tranne
che sia caduto in eresia”. »
[52] «A partire da questo decreto spurio attribuito erroneamente a San
Bonifacio e ripreso come tale da Graziano i teologi medievali e controriformistici
hanno ritenuto possibile la ipotesi e non la certezza del Papa eretico. Da qui
si sono divisi nel discettare come risolvere la questione di un Papa
eventualmente caduto in eresia come persona privata (cfr. A. M. Vellico, De
Ecclesia Christi, Roma, 1940, p. 395, n. 557, nella nota 560 vi è un’amplia
bibliografia). Il cardinal Charles Journet (L’Eglise du Verbe Incarné,
Bruges, Desclée, II ed., 1995, vol. I, p. 626) ritiene che la sentenza secondo
cui il Papa non può cadere in eresia “va oggi divulgandosi grazie soprattutto
al progresso degli studi storici. Il Bellarmino (De Romano Pontifice,
lib. II, cap. 30) è stato uno dei sostenitori di questa tesi. La sentenza che
ammette la possibilità dell’eresia del Papa trae la sua lontana origine dal già
citato Decreto di Graziano, che riporta un testo spurio attribuito a San
Bonifacio” (citato in V. Mondello, op. cit., p. 164). »
[53] «Ora la eventuale condanna del Papa solo in caso di eresia da
parte del Concilio imperfetto (i soli Vescovi) è la tesi del conciliarismo
mitigato, condannato come ereticale e figlio del conciliarismo radicale, che
ritiene il Concilio superiore al Papa sempre e per sé ed è stato anch’esso
condannato come ereticale. Mons. Antonio Piolanti scrive: “il Conciliarismo è
un errore ecclesiologico, secondo cui il Concilio ecumenico è superiore al
Papa. L’origine remota del Conciliarismo si trova nel principio giuridico
del Decreto di Graziano (dist. XL, cap. 6) secondo il quale il
Papa può essere giudicato dalla Chiesa (l’Episcopato o i Cardinali) in caso di
eresia. […]. Il Papa può errare e persino cadere in eresia, dovrà in tal caso
essere corretto ed anche deposto. […] quest’errore fu condannato dal Concilio
di Trento e ricevette il colpo di grazia dal Concilio Vaticano I” (Dizionario
di teologia dommatica, Roma, Studium, IV ed., 1957, pp. 82-84, voce Conciliarismo). »
[54] «Tametsi enim Liberius hæreticus non erat, tamen habebatur,
propter pacem cum Arianis factam, hæreticus, […] Non enim homines tenentur, aut
corda possunt scrutari; sed quem externis operibus hæreticum esse vident,
simpliciter hæreticum iudicant, ac ut hæreticum damnant. » (Lib. IV,
Cap. IX)
[55] Canon 194 § 2. Amotio, de qua in nn. 2 et 3, urgeri tantum
potest, si de eadem auctoritatis competentis declaratione constet.
[56] «Del resto, se Dio permettesse che un papa fosse notoriamente
eretico e contumace, egli cesserebbe d'essere papa, e vacherebbe il
pontificato. » Verita della Fede, part 3, ch. 8, no. 10.
In: Opere dommatiche di S. Alfonso de Liguori (Torino, G.
Marietti, 1848), p. 720. (Opere di S. Alfonso Maria de Liguori, v. 8)
[57]«Lo stesso (i.e. “si tiene vacante la Sede Apostolica”) sarebbe nel
caso, che il Papa cadesse notoriamente e pertinacemente in qualche eresia.
Benchè allora […] non sarebbe il Papa privato dal Pontificato dal Concilio … ma
ne sarebbe spogliato immediatamente da Cristo, divenendo allora Soggetto affato
inabile, e caduto dal suo Officio. »
[58] «Secondo il Bellarmino (De Romano Pontifice, lib. II, cap. 30, p.
420), siccome gli eretici manifesti, notori e pubblici perdono ipso facto
la giurisdizione, ammesso e non concesso che il Papa possa cadere in eresia, in
caso di eventuale eresia manifesta egli perderebbe immediatamente l’autorità
papale. Questa è l’interpretazione della posizione bellarminiana data dai
padri gesuiti Franz Xavier Wernz e Pedro Vidal (Jus Canonicum, Roma,
Gregoriana, 1943, vol. II, p. 517). »
[59] Don Curzio explains that the opinion of Ballerini follows that of
Bellarmine, as I have already explained earlier, that the heretic pope would
declare himself a heretic and fall from office by himself: «In breve ciò che don Pietro Ballerini mantiene come certissimo è
che il Papa nel definire non errerà mai; infine come ipotesi investigativa
“ammesso e non concesso” che il Papa cada in errore contrario alla fede,
dovrebbe essere ammonito e corretto e dopo due ammonizioni, se si ostina
nell’errore, si dichiara da se stesso eretico e decaduto dal
Pontificato, ma tutto ciò deve essere opera non di giurisdizione bensì
di carità (De Potestate ecclesiastica Summorum Pontificum et Conciliorum
generalium, Verona, 1765, cap. 9, nn. 3-8; cap. 15, n. 21; cfr. T.
Facchini, Il Papato principio di unità e Pietro Ballerini di Verona,
Padova, Il Messaggero di S Antonio, 1950, pp. 126-128). Anche dallo studio
testé citato di padre Tarcisio Facchini si capisce bene che l’ipotesi di don
Pietro Ballerini segue l’opinione del Bellarmino» The warnings given are of the
nature of fraternal correction, and are not canonical warnings (which are
impossible, because they are properly the act of a superior), as Salza &
Siscoe mendaciously claim. As I have demonstrated above from Ballerini’s
exposition on Pedro de Luna (Benedict XIII), since the warnings are not
canonical, if the heretic pope manifests his pertinacity sponte sua without
warnings, he would fall from office even without being warned. Both Bellarmine
and Ballerini speak of the necessity of the warnings not in terms of a
canonical procedure, but only for the practical necessity of establishing
pertinacity; and at which point the heretic would fall entirely by
himself ipso facto without being judged by the Church, and
before any merely declaratory sentence confirming the fact could be made.
[60] «La quarta opinione è stata studiata soprattutto
dal cardinal Tommaso de Vio detto il Gaetano, da Giovanni di San Tommaso (De
auctoritate Summi Pontificis, Québec, Università di Laval, 1947) e
anche da Francisco Suarez (che esamina la prima e la quarta, ma ritiene più
probabile la prima della quarta); secondo la quarta opinione occorre che vi sia
una dichiarazione dell’eresia del Papa da parte dell’Episcopato o del Collegio
cardinalizio»
[64] Ineffabilis Deus: Quapropter si qui secus ac a Nobis
definitum est, quod Deus avertat, prassumpserint corde sentire, ii noverint, ac
porro sciant, se proprio judicio condemnatos, naufragium circa fidem passos
esse, et ab unitate Ecclesiæ defecisse, ac præterea facto ipso suo semet pœnis
a jure statutis subjicere si quod corde sentiunt, verbo aut scripto, vel alio
quovis externo modo significare ausi fuerint.
“Wherefore if
any persons should have the presumption, which God forbid, of thinking in their
hearts contrary to what has been in this respect defined by us, let them be
made aware, and let them further know, that they are by their own decision
condemned; that they have suffered shipwreck of the faith, and have fallen away
from the unity of the Church, and that moreover, by their own act itself, they
subject themselves to the penalties imposed by the law, if they should either
by word written or oral, or by any other external sign, attempt to give outward
expression to the erroneous views they form in their hearts.”
[65] «Ond’è che poteasi, come osserva il Ballerini, considerarlo quale
pubblico scismatico e eretico, ed in conseguenza per se decaduto dal
pontificato, se anche ad esso fosse stato validamente inalzato. » (Il
trionfo della santa sede e della chiesa contro gli assatti dei novatori, p. 47)
[67] It appears more likely that they have studiously avoided the
distinction; since, they quoted a passage of Cardinal Journet on page 277 of
their screed tht makes the distinction: “Some, such as Bellarmine and Suarez, considered that such a Pope,
withdrawing himself from the Church, was ipso facto deposed, papa haereticus
est depositus. (…) Others, such as Cajetan, and Johnof St. Thomas, whose
analysis seems to me more penetrating, have considered that even after a
manifest sin 114 of heresy the Pope is not yet deposed, but should be deposed
by the Church, papa haereticus non est depositus, sed deponendus.” However, the
authors pass over it in silence as a matter of little or no importance
[68] «papam haereticum manifestum per se desinere esse papam et caput,
sicut per se desinit esse christianus et membrum corporis Ecclesiae; quare ab,
Ecclesia posse eum judicari et puniri »
[69] «hac sua publica pertinacia, cum ab haeresi proprie dicta, quae
pertinaciam requirit, excusari nulla ratione potest; tum vero semetipsum palam
declarat haereticum, hoc est a fide catholica, & ab Ecclesia voluntate
propria recessisse, ita ut ad eum praecidendum a corpore Eccleaiae nulla cujusquam
declaratio aut sententia necessaria sit»
[71] “Del resto, si Dio permettesse che un papa fosse notoriamente
eretico e contumace, egli cesserebbe d'essere papa, e vacherebbe il
pontificato.” (Verita della Fede, part 3, ch. 8, no. 10. In:Opere
dommatiche di S. Alfonso de Liguori, Torino, G. Marietti, 1848, p.
720; Opere di S. Alfonso Maria de Liguori, v. 8)
[72] «considerarlo quale pubblico scismatico e eretico, ed in
conseguenza per se decaduto dal pontificato, se anche ad
esso fosse stato validamente inalzato. »
[73] «Benedictus XIII. , (si verum Pontificem fuisse existimes) ipso
facto sua voluntate primatu & pontificatu exauctoratus, rite ac legitime
deponi potuit a Concilio tamquam schismaticus & haereticus; quod non
congrueret Joanni XXIII, in sententia contra hunc edita declaratum non legitur.
»
[74] «Vides interim, quibus modis divina providentia usa est ad
abolendum per Constantiensem synudum pertinacissimam schisma, ut ne opus esset
eamdem synodum quiquam juris exercere ad deponendum sua auctoritate quempiam
verum, licet ignotum, actualem Pontificem. »
[75] «Ond’è che poteasi, come osserva il Ballerini, considerarlo quale
pubblico scismatico e eretico, ed in conseguenza per se decaduto dal
pontificato, se anche ad esso fosse stato validamente inalzato. » (Il trionfo
della santa sede e della chiesa contro gli assatti dei novatori, p. 47).
[76] This point will be fully elaborated in its proper place, on Salza’&
Siscoe’s treatment of the Five Opinions.
[77] https://books.google.ie/books?id=saaqPWkUgKEC&pg=PA151&lpg=PA151&dq=Una+cum+vindiciis+auctoritatis+pontificiae+contra+opus+Justini+Febroni&source=bl&ots=HNlPiupSCa&sig=_ZvBpEY_djDCtKQ5MDJ-3dI0VkA&hl=en&sa=X&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q&f=false
[78] This doctrine expressed in these terms, apostolica sedes a
nemine iudicatur, dates back to the 4th Century
pontificate of Pope St. Damasus.
[79] “Yet heretics are outside the Church, even before excommunication,
and deprived of all jurisdiction, for they are condemned by their own judgment,
as the Apostle teaches to Titus; that is, they are cut from the body of the
Church without excommunication, as Jerome expresses it.”
[80] This point is simply lost on Salza and Siscoe, who in all their
writings insist that Suarez was of Opinion No. 5 (!), and that Suarez and
Bellarmine were of the same opinion on this point! By means of this sophistry
they then claim that all the great theologians were of the opinion that the
loss of office does not take place until it has been officially judged to be so
by the Church, and that this opinion has always been the common opinion of
theologians!
[81] Canonical admonitions are not always necessary: “Neither is it always demanded in the external forum that there be a
warning and a reprimand as described above for somebody to be punished as
heretical and pertinacious, and such a requirement is by no means always
admitted in practice by the Holy Office” (De Lugo, disp. XX, sect. IV, n.
l57-158. De Lugo elaborates further
in his continuation of the passage: “For if it could be established in
some other way, given that the doctrine is well known, given the kind of person
involved and given the other circumstances, that the accused could not have
been unaware that his thesis was opposed to the Church, he would be considered
as a heretic from this fact […] The reason for this is clear because the
exterior warning can serve only to ensure that someone who has erred
understands the opposition which exists between his error and the teaching of
the Church. If he knew the subject through books and conciliar definitions much
better than he could know it by the declarations of someone admonishing him
then there would be no reason to insist on a further warning for him to become
pertinacious against the Church.”
[82] “Now such harassment she, the Church received from Benedict, who
obstinately with the fact attacked the article unam, sancatm? He fulminated
these most terrible anathemas against the Council, and against adherents to
other Pontiffs, and made the more precipitous attacks in order to keep himself
on the illegitimately occupied throne; claiming that the Church of Jesus Christ
to have perished in all other parts of the world, and that it was restricted
only in Paniscola, as he said to the legates of the Council: ‘That is not a
Church, but in Paniscola, I say, is the true Church,. . This is Noah's Ark’. So
then be could be considered, as noted by Ballerini, to have been a public
schismatic and heretic, and consequently to have fallen from papacy, even if he
had been validly elevated to it.” (Gregorio XVI: Il trionfo della santa sede e
della chiesa contro gli assatti dei novatori, p. 47)
[83] Can. 192 — Ab officio quis amovetur sive
decreto ab auctoritate competenti legitime edito, servatis quidem iuribus forte
ex contractu quaesitis, sive ipso iure ad normam can. 194
Can. 194 — § 1. Ipso iure ab ecclesiastico amovetur: 2° qui a fide
catholica aut a communione Ecclesiae publice defecerit;
[84] Can. 196 — § 1. Privatio ab officio, in poenam scilicet delicti, ad normam iuris tantummodo fieri potest.§ 2. Privatio effectum sortitur secundum praescripta canonum de iure poenali.
[85] “The sin of heresy alone, which has not been judged and declared
by the Church, does not result in the loss of ecclesiastical office for a
cleric. The loss of office for a cleric is a vindictive penalty, and there is a
process in Church law which must precede vindictive penalties” (TOFP p. 260)
[86] Salza and Siscoe deceptively interpret Section 2 of Canon 194 (§ 2. Amotio, de qua
in nn. 2 et 3, urgeri tantum potest, si de eadem auctoritatis competentis
declaratione constet.), to make it appear that the loss of office does not take
place until it has been declared by the competent ecclesiastical authority. The
canon states explicitly (§ 1) that the loss of office takes place by the
operation of the law itself (ipso jure), and therefore automatically;
and § 2 states that the loss of office, which as a fact took place ipso
jure, “can be enforced only if it is established by the declaration of a
competent authority.” Thus, § 2 only specifies that the post factum enforcement of
the loss of office (that has already taken place ipso jure) can
only be carried out after having been confirmed by declaration of Church
authority.
[87] “For those Fathers, when they say that heretics lose jurisdiction,
do not allege any human laws which maybe did not exist then on this matter;
rather, they argued from the nature of heresy.”
[89] “The first opinion teaches, as often as it is evident that someone
is a heretic, the very fact makes communication with him forbidden. Thus,
Soto 4. Dist.25. Quast.1 art.1 & 3. & dist. 20. Quast.1. art.5.
conclus. 2. The common opinion, however, denies this, in as much as they
are not legally declared a heretic, & denounced; because the Council of
Constance granted all the faithful in general, as to permit communication with
all the excommunicated, except those denounced by name, & those notorious
for striking a cleric, with no given exception of heretics: therefore,
there is no reason by which that permission does not extend to communicate with
them [heretics]. Thus teach Toetus, Ugolinus, Suarez, Azor, & others,
whom I have reported, & followed by Thomas Sanchez lib.2. in
Decal.cap.9.n.3 Hurtado in prasenti, disp.76&4. & others in
common, which I’ve always embraced in other places.” (Tractatus de Virtute
Fidei Divinae: Disputatio XXII, Sectio.1. 1646)
[90] “So as these heretics are not declared excommunicates or
notoriously guilty of striking a cleric, there is no reason why we should be
prevented from receiving the sacraments from them because of their
excommunication, although on other grounds this may often be illicit unless
necessity excuse as I have explained in the said places.” (Tractatus de Virtute
Fidei Divinae: Disputatio XXII, Sectio.1. 1646)
[92] Can. 17 — Leges ecclesiasticae
intellegendae sunt secundum propriam verborum significationem in textu et
contextu consideratam; quae si dubia et obscura manserit, ad locos
parallelos, si qui sint, ad legis finem ac circumstantias et ad mentem
legislatoris est recurrendum.
[94] « (n 1) Quamvis Patrum traditio
Apostolicae Sedi auctoritatem tantam tnbuerit, ut de eius iudicio disceptare
nullus auderet, idque per canones semper regulasque servaverit et currens adhuc
suis legibus ecclesiastica disciplina Petri nomini, a quo ipsa quoque
descendit, reverentiam quam debet exsolvat: ...
« (3) cum ergo tantae auctoritatis et Petrus caput sit et sequentia omnium maiorum statuta firmaverint, ut iam humanis divinisque legibus disciplinisque omnibus finiretur Romanam Ecclesiam, cuius locum regeret (al.: firmetur Romana Ecclesia, cuius locum Nos regere), ipsius quoque potestatem nominis obtinere...:
« (4) tamen, cum Nobis tantum esset auctoritatis, ut nullus de Nostra possit retractare sententia, nihil egimus, quod non ad vestram notitiam Nostris ultro litteris referremus, dantes hoc fraternitati et in commune consulentes, non quia quid deberet fieri nesciremus aut faceremus aliquid, quod contra utilitatem Ecclesiae veniens displiceret, sed pariter vobiscum voluimus habere tractatum de illo (Caelestio accusato). [St. Zozimun 21 March 418 “Quamvis Patrum”]
« (3) cum ergo tantae auctoritatis et Petrus caput sit et sequentia omnium maiorum statuta firmaverint, ut iam humanis divinisque legibus disciplinisque omnibus finiretur Romanam Ecclesiam, cuius locum regeret (al.: firmetur Romana Ecclesia, cuius locum Nos regere), ipsius quoque potestatem nominis obtinere...:
« (4) tamen, cum Nobis tantum esset auctoritatis, ut nullus de Nostra possit retractare sententia, nihil egimus, quod non ad vestram notitiam Nostris ultro litteris referremus, dantes hoc fraternitati et in commune consulentes, non quia quid deberet fieri nesciremus aut faceremus aliquid, quod contra utilitatem Ecclesiae veniens displiceret, sed pariter vobiscum voluimus habere tractatum de illo (Caelestio accusato). [St. Zozimun 21 March 418 “Quamvis Patrum”]
[95] «Apostolicae
Sedis primatus, quem non homo, sed Deus, immo verius Deus homo constituit,
multis quidem et evangelicis et apostolicis testimoniis comprobatur, a quibus
postmodum constitutiones canonicae processerunt, concorditer asserentes
sacrosanctam Ecclesiam in beato Petro Apostolorum principe consecratam quasi
magistram et matrem ceteris praeeminere. Hic enim ... audire promeruit: 'Tu es
Petrus ... tibi dabo claves regni caelorum' (Mt 16, 18 s). Nam licet primum et
praecipuum Ecclesiae fundamentum sit unigenitus Dei Filius Jesus Christus,
iuxta quod dicit Apostolus 'Quia fundamentum positum est, praeter quod aliud
poni non potest, quod est Christus Jesus' (l Cor 3, 11), secundum tamen et
secundarium Ecclesiae fundamentum est Petrus, etsi non tempore primus,
auctoritate tamen praecipuus inter ceteros, de quibus Paulus Apostolus inquit:
'Iam non estis hospites et advenae, sed estis cives sanctorum et domestici Dei,
superaedificati supra fundamentum Apostolorum et Prophetarum' (Eph 2, 20). ...
Huius etiam primatum Veritas per se ipsam expressit, cum inquit ad eum: 'Tu
vocaberis Cephas' (Io 1, 42): quod etsi 'Petrus' interpretetur, 'caput' tamen
exponitur, ut sicut caput inter cetera membra corporis, velut in quo viget
plenitudo sensuum, obtinet principatum, sic et Petrus inter Apostolos et
successores ipsius inter universos Ecclesiarum praelatos praerogativa
praecellerent dignitatis, vocatis sic ceteris in partem sollicitudinis, ut
nihil eis de potestatis plenitudine deperiret. Huic Dominus oves suas pascendas
vocabulo tertio repetito commisit, ut alienus a grege dominico censeatur, qui
eum etiam in successoribus suis noluerit habere pastorem. Non enim inter has et
illas oves distinxit, sed simpliciter inquit: 'Pasce oves meas' (Jo 21, 17), ut
omnes omnino intelligantur ei esse commissae. ... (Explicando allegorice Jo 21,
7:) Cum enim mare mundum designet (juxta Ps 103, 25), per hoc, quod Petrus se
misit in mare, privilegium expressit pontificii singularis, per quod universum
orbem susceperat gubernandum, ceteris Apostolis ut vehiculo navis contentis,
cum nulli eorum universus fuerit orbis commissus, sed singulis singulae
provinciae vel Ecclesiae potius deputatae. (Simile argumentum allegoricum
deducitur ex Mt 14, 28 ss:) Per hoc quod Petrus super aquas maris incessit,
super universos populos se potestatem accepisse monstravit. [Innocent III, Ep. 'Apostolicae Sedis primatus' ad
(Iohannem) patriarcham C'polit., 12
novembre 1199]
«Item
diffinimus, sanctam Apostolicam Sedem, et Romanum Pontificem, in universum
orbem tenere primatum, et ipsum Pontificem Romanum successorem esse beati Petri
principis Apostolorum et verum Christi vicarium, totiusque Ecclesiae caput et
omnium Christianorum patrem ac doctorem exsistere; et ipsi in beato Petro
pascendi, regendi ac gubernandi universalem Ecclesiam a Domino nostro Jesu
Christo plenam potestatem traditam esse; quemadmodum etiam in gestis
oecumenicorum Conciliorum et in sacris canonibus continetur. (“Laetentur
Caeli“ 6 July 1439)
[97] «Freilich ist eine derartige Verurtheilung wegen Ketzerei schon
früh vorgekommen, indem die sechste allgemeine , von Leo II. Bestätigte Synode
von Konstantinopel (680) den Papst Honorius I. (625 — 638) nach seinem Tode
wegen Ketzerei anathematisirte. Später haben mehrere Päpste die Statthaftigkeit
eines Urtheils über den Papst in dem gedachten Fall anerkannt , und demnach
kann an der Geltung jenes Satzes nicht gezweifelt werden.
[98] «Eine Reihe katholischer Schriftsteller wollen aber darin
keine Ausnahme von der gedachten Regel finden, weil der in Ketzerei verfallene
Papst sich dadurch selbst von der Kirche ausscheide , damit weiter den
Pontifikat verwirke und also das Konzil keine Deposition mehr verhängen könne,
sondern nur die Thatsache des erfolgten Verlustes der Päpstlichen Würde zu
konstatiren habe. [3] (Dieser Gedanke tritt schon bei Innocenz III. auf (im
Sermo IV. In consecrat. pontiff. opp. Colon. 1575. 1. 197): «Potest (pontifex)
ab hominibus iudicari vel potius iudicatus ostendi, si videlicet evanescat in
haeresim, quoniam qui non credit, iam iudicatus est» ) Vgl. ferner Bellarmin,
christ. Fidei controv. gen. III. De Romano pontifice II. 30. (ed. Ingolstadt.
1605. 1083): «Est ergo opinio quinta vera, papa haereticum manifestum per se
desinere esse christianus et membrum corporis ecclesiae, quare ab ecclesia
posse eum iudicari et puniri. Haec est sententia omnium veterum patrum qui
docent haereticos manifestos mox amittere omnem jurisdictionem»; Fagnan. comm.
Ad c. 4. X. de elect. I. 6. n. 70 ff; Fragosi, regimen reipubl. Christianae
lib. II. c. I. §. 2. n. 21 (Lugduni. 1648. 2, 11); Kober, Deposition. S. 585.
[99] Wikipedia provides the reference: “4. ^ See the text from
Huguccio's Summa printed in Appendix 1 of Brian Tierney, Foundations of
the Conciliar Theory, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1955).”
[100] “Aber mit dieser Theorie steht die unleugbare Thatsache in
Widerspruch, dass mehrfach im Verlauf der früheren Jahrhunderterte Absetzungen
von Päpsten erfolgt sint, und es fragt sich daher, ob diese Depositionen bloss
verwerfliche Verletztungen eines von Anfang an in der katolischen Kirche
unbestritten feststehenden Rechtssatzes waren oder ob sich nicht vielmehr
dieser letztere erst im Laufe der Entwicklung fixiert hat.” (Op. cit., p. 297)
[101] “Eine unbefangene, voraussetzungslose Betrachtung der einzelnen,
in Frage kommenden Begebnisse wird die letztgedachte Auffassung als berechtigt
erscheinen lassen. In der Römischen Kaiserzeit und den grössten Theil des
Mittelalters hindurch, in welchem der Gegensatz zwischen dem Pontifikat
und Episkopat noch nicht der hauptsächliche treibende Faktor der
Entwicklung gewesen ist, vielmehr die Bischöfe sich höchstens und nur zum Theil
der weltlichen Macht angeschlossen haben, begegnen uns daher nur Fälle, wo die
weltlichen Herscher allerdings unter Hinzutritt von Kirchensammlungen
dergleichen Absetzungen vornahmen, während gerade gegen Ende des Mittelalters,
als der durch die frühere Verfassungsgestaltungen zurückgedrängt Episkopat sein
Haupt erhoben und die päpstlichen Rechte zu vermindern suchte, dieser
beanspruchte Oberhoheit über die Päpste auch durch Depositionen der letzteren
praktisch zur Geltung brachte.”
[102] Ora «Graziano, per fondare il principio sulla ingiudicabilità del
Papa, a differenza della tradizione canonistica precedente […] ha
lasciato inconcusso il principio Prima Sedes a nemine iudicatur.
Tuttavia, ha trascritto parzialmente il Fragmentum A (174-178)
di Umberto di Silva Candida. Egli raccoglie così nel suo Decreto le due
tradizioni giuridiche contrastanti, che sono state compresenti nella Chiesa: la
prima, sostenuta dagli apocrifi simmachiani [papa san Simmaco (498-514)
sottoposto al giudizio del concilio particolare detto palmare nell’atrio della
basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano dall’imperatore Teodorico nel 501. Nel corso
della controversia furono stilati numerosi scritti polemici, fra cui gli apocrifi
simmachiani, redatti dai sostenitori di papa Simmaco, che emanò
l’assioma Summa Sedes a nemine iudicatur ndr], afferma
che il Papa non può essere giudicato da nessuno; la seconda ritiene
che, in caso di eresia, il Papa può essere ripreso. Dunque questa
concezione si è tramandata sino al secolo XII. […].» (S. Vacca, Prima
Sedes a nemine iudicatur, cit., p. 253-254).
[104] “Gli storici moderni hanno individuato due campi nei quali E.
ha contribuito in modo rilevante al pensiero giuridico: si tratta delle dottrine
sull'autorità papale e su quella episcopale. Fu il primo ad applicare il
termine "potestas absoluta" al papa. Pur nell'esaltazione del potere
papale si avvalse della teoria collegiale per sostenere il diritto dei vescovi
e dei cardinali a partecipare al governo della Chiesa. La sua dottrina è un
complesso tessuto di pensiero autoritario e di pensiero costituzionale in cui
entrambe le tendenze raggiungono un equilibrio.” – ENRICO da Susa, detto
l'Ostiense [Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani - Volume 42 (1993)
di Kenneth Pennington]
[105] «c. 16 (Gelasius I. a. 493) C. IX. qu. 3 : “Ipsi sunt
canones qui appellationes totius ecclesiae ad huius sedis examen voluere
deferri. Ab ipsa vero nusquam prorsus appellari debere sanxerunt ac per hoc
illam de tota ecclesia iudicare, ipsam ad nullius commeare iudicium nec
de eius unquam praeceperunt iudicio iudicari”; c. 17 (idem a. 498) ead.
: “Cuncta per mundum novit ecclesia, quod sacrosancta Romana ecclesia
fas de omnibus habet iudicandi neque cuiquam de eius liceat iudicare iudicio. » (Hinschius,
Op. cit. p. 297)
[i] Christopher Conlon quotes multiple authorities in his excellent
article, On the Admonitions of Titus 3:10: An analysis of Catholic
history, laws, and teachings which illustrate the true nature of the
"admonitions" referenced in Titus 3:10:“A man that is a heretic
after, the first and second admonition avoid” (pp. 4 -7)
«These admonitions or correptions must be given to such as err, by our
spiritual governors and pastors, to whom if they yield not, Christian men must
avoid them. (Rheims New Testament, p.549).
According to
the original annotations of the Rheims NT, in St. Paul’s Epistle to Titus, “he
instructeth him, and in him all Bishops” (p.545), affirming that the purpose of
the Epistle to Titus is to instruct the Church hierarchy. Then, in the specific
annotation for Titus 3:10, it is explained that the admonitions mentioned
therein are given by our “spiritual governors and pastors”. If, after these
admonitions, the heretic does not yield to our spiritual governors and pastors,
then the faithful must avoid the heretic. Though a layman might attempt to
admonish or instruct a heretic in some way, the Rheims New Testament annotation
shows that the admonitions that could effectively result in having to avoid, or
shun, a heretic are those that come from the authorities in the Church. The
layman’s admonition is obviously not the same as the admonitions of Church
officials mentioned in Titus 3:10. Those admonitions of a layman, therefore,
have no bearing on the instruction of Titus 3:10and who ought to be avoided.
Though there may be other reasons to avoid a heretic, the instruction of Titus
3:10 does not oblige the faithful to avoid anyone if only a laymen has
admonished them, since the passage is referring to authoritative, or official,
admonitions. These official admonitions in Titus 3:10 are, in other words,
canonical admonitions.
Canonical
Admonitions
The only
article of the Catholic Encyclopedia with the word “admonition” in the title,
the 1907 article, Canonical Admonitions, defines these as, "A preliminary
means used by the Church towards a suspected person, as a preventive of harm or
a remedy of evil" (Burtsell). According to this article, an Instruction
directed by Pope Leo XIII states that, "Among the preservative measures
are chiefly to be reckoned the spiritual retreat, admonitions, and
injunc-tions." This Instruction also says, "the canonical admonitions
may be made in a paternal and private manner (even by letter or by an
intermediary person), or in legal form, but always in such a way that proof of
their having been made shall remain on record." It is then explained that
these admonitions are founded, “after an investigation to be made by one having
due authority, with the result of establishing a reasonable basis for the
suspicion.” The first admonition is a paternal admonition, by which “the
prelate either personally or through a confidential delegate informs the
suspected person of what has been said about him, without mentioning the source
of information, and without threat, but urges amendment.” If the paternal
admonition, and other measures, are ineffective; then a legal admonition is
resorted to, and this is, “to a great extent akin to the summons to judgment.”
Canon 2143 of
the 1917 Code of Canon Law prescribes the way in which admonitions are to be
administered.
Admonitions,
if necessary, may be made orally or in writing. If they are administered
orally, this must be done by the Ordinary in the presence of the chancellor, or
some other of-ficial of the diocesan court, or two witnesses. If by letter, the
latter should be registered and receipted by the post office…
(Augustine,
p.405.
1921)
That the
admonitions mentioned in Titus 3:10 are canonical admonitions is obvious from
the fact that, as was previously shown, St. Paul’s Epistle to Titus, including
the instruction in verse 3:10, was addressed to him in his capacity as a Church
official. The 1910 Catholic Encyclopedia article on heresy also explains that
this instruction to Titus was an early piece of legislation in regards to the
way the Church dealt with and excommunicated heretics.The spirit which animates
the dealings of the Church with heresy and heretics is one of extreme severity.
St. Paul writes to Titus: "A man that is a heretic, after the first and
second admonition, avoid: knowing that he, that is such a one, is subverted,
and sinneth, being condemned by his own judgment" (Titus 3:10-11). This
early piece of legislation reproduces the still earlier teaching of Christ:
‘And if he will not hear the church, let him be to thee as the heathen and the
publican’ (Matthew 18:17); it also inspires all subsequent anti-heretical
legislation. The sentence on the obstinate heretic is invariably
excommunication. He is separated from the company of the faithful, delivered up
‘to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that the spirit may be saved in the
day of our Lord Jesus Christ’ (1 Corinthians 5:5). (Wilhelm)
Affirming what
the 1910 Catholic Encyclopedia article said above and further showing that the
admonitions in Titus 3:10 are what would be called canonical admonitions, the
1932 book,The Delict of Heresy, by Rev. MacKenzie, states that St. Paul’s order
to Titus in this verse indicates part of a “more or less formal process of
trial.”
Paul’s orders
to Titus have already been quoted, requiring that there be a first and second
warning, and then avoidance of the heretic. He also wrote to Timothy decreeing
that there must be two witnesses before certain punishments be inflicted, and
this text has been thought to indicate a more or less formal process of trial
even in these earliest days of ecclesiastical organization. (MacKenzie, p.4.
1932).
The following
quotes also illustrate that the Church officials are those that determine, by
their admonitions, who is to be avoided.
“A fortiori,
therefore, must the faithful have been obliged to shun the company of those
whom the Apostles found necessary to separate from the communion of the
faithful.”
(Excommunication.
Francis Hyland, J.C.L., p.36. 1928)
“Those who
voluntarily separate themselves from the Church are (a) heretics, i.e., those
who profess a doctrine declared as heretical by the Church, and infidels, who
entirely reject the Church’s teaching. Fore whosoever publicly departs form the
unity of the faith thereby ceases both inwardly and outwardly to belong to the
Church. Therefore St. Paul admonishes the pastors of the Church: “A man that is
a heretic after the first or second admonition, avoid” (Tit. iii. 10). If such
a man still belonged to the fold the Apostle would not admonish the pastors to
shun him." (Handbook of the Christian Religion. Wilmers, Wilhelm,S.J., p.381.
1891).
“The heretic,
St. Paul instructs Titus, shall be admonished a first and a second time of the
grave character of his offense; if he will not heed, he must be avoided by
Christians as a man in evident bad faith, who stands self-condemned… a heretic
was a person who deliberately taught a doctrine he knew to be false, in
contradiction of the infallible teaching of the Church. Heretics were
consequently cut off from all association with the faithful, who must hold no
relations with them so long as they obstinately refuse to heed the official
remonstrances of the Church authorities.”(The American Catholic Quarterly
Review, vol.24. “Church and State in the Fourth Century.” Rev. Maurice M.
Hassett, pp.301-302. 1909)
“The external
enforcement of laws against heretics as heretics, always involves some judicial
process. This process may have various stages, marked by the judicial sentences
imposed: a declaratory sentence that excommunication has been incurred by a
delict of heresy; a sentence of juridical infamy; deprivation of offices,
benefices, etc.; deposition and degradation. The issuance of any of these
sentences (save the declaratory sentence), requires canonical warnings and
trials, with full observance of the criminal code in all details of the
process.” (The Delict of Heresy. Rev. Eric MacKenzie, A.M., S.T.L., J.C.L., p.98.
1932).
“And in
matters spiritual, a bishop, by virtue of his office, is an inquisitor of the
same kind. It is his duty, laid down in the plainest language of Holy Writ, to
watch over those who are entrusted to his charge; and where he sees any going
astray, to "reprove," to "rebuke sharply," and "with
all authority," and if necessary, "after the first and second
admonition to reject," that is, to cut off from the society of the church,
or in other words, to excommunicate (2 Tim. iv, 2. Titus i, 13. ii, 15. iii,
10). This, I say, is contained in the very idea of a bishop, or overseer
"of God's flock. He is bound to maintain the integrity of the faith, and
to keep his people from being corrupted by teachers of false doctrines; and he
has authority given him for this special purpose.” (The Catholic
Missionary, “The Inquisition.” Andrew Kim (first Korean-born Catholic priest),
Martyred, p.5. 1853).
“Moreover, so
far from wishing to tolerate such persons in the Church, St. Paul warns the faithful
to avoid them (Romans 16:17), calls upon those who are set over Churches to
cast out the recalcitrant heretic, as one who is "subverted and
self-condemned" (Titus 3:10-11), and, in a particular instance, tells St.
Timothy that he has "delivered" two such heretics "to
Satan" — that is, cast them out of the Church — "that they may learn
not to blaspheme" (1 Timothy 1:20).” (The Catholic Encyclopedia. “Union of
Christendom”. Sydney Smith, S.J. 1912).
“Moreover, we determine to subject to
excommunication believers who receive, defend or support heretics… If however,
he is a cleric, let him be deposed from every office and benefice, so that the
greater the fault the greater the punishment. If any refuse to avoid such
persons after they have been pointed out by the Church [postquam ab ecclesia
denotati fuerint], let them be punished with the sentence of excommunication
until they make suitable satisfaction. Clerics should not, of course, give the
sacraments of the Church to such pestilent persons nor give them a Christian
burial…” (Fourth Lateran Council, Constitution 3, On Heretics. Pope Innocent
III. 1215).
The
admonitions that Titus is instructed to give are clearly official admonitions,
or those that come from a Church authority; and they relate to the Church’s
official process of excommunicating and separating heretics from the faithful.
This fact is also drawn from the works of St. Thomas Aquinas. » (The author
then presents the exposition of St. Thomas).
Related article: Defection from the Faith and the Church - Faith, Heresy, and Loss of Office - An Exposé of the Heresy of John Salza and Robert Siscoe (Part I)
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