18
July 1870 A.D. Vatican
1—Gavel Dropped for Papal Infallibility
We would recommend the pertinent section on Vatican 1 by
Prof. Philip Schaff, volumes every serious Churchman should own and study:
Mr. Graves brings his perspective.
There was no question how the vote would go. On
this day, July 18, 1870, the First Vatican
Council declared by an overwhelming majority that "the Roman Pontiff, when
he speaks ex cathedra, that is, when in discharge of the office of pastor and
teacher of all Christians, by virtue of his supreme
apostolic authority he defines a doctrine regarding faith or morals to be held
by the universal Church is possessed of that infallibility with which the
divine Redeemer willed that his church should be endowed."
In other words, the pope is "infallible" under
certain conditions. The decision was sent to the faithful in a letter titled
Pastor aeternus.
The vote may have made sense to the Vatican Council
but to others it was not so obvious. Protestants world-wide denied its claim.
So did a small percentage of Catholics. To political analysts, the doctrine
seemed politically motivated. The ideas of the Roman Church were under attack.
Italy had confiscated lands long controlled by the popes. The pope had even
fled from the Vatican for a time. To some analysts it seemed that because the
church could not assert its supremacy in political matters, it was throwing
down a gauntlet in the spiritual realm.
One of the Roman Church's most gifted historians,
Johann Joseph Ignaz von Dollinger wrote a long letter in which he said that he
could not accept the pope's infallibility "as a Christian, a theologian, a
historical student and a citizen." His strong opposition was echoed by
several bishops, although all of these others yielded when the church put heavy
pressure on them.
Other scholars and about 60,000 Catholic lay-people
did not yield. They withdrew from the Roman Church, and called themselves Old
Catholics. To them it was a matter of truth. They documented instances when
popes, speaking authoritatively, had made mistakes; a couple popes had even
been condemned by church councils as heretics.
Dollinger never joined the Old Catholics. Nor did
he return to the Roman Church. He was urged to do so on his death bed but
replied, "Ought I (in obedience to your suggestion) to appear before the
Eternal Judge, my conscience burdened with a double perjury?" He went on
to add, "I think that what I have written so far will suffice to make
clear to you that with such convictions one may stand even on the threshold of
eternity in a condition of inner peace and spiritual calm."
The Old Catholics made overtures of friendship
toward the Church of England and Orthodox churches. They adopted an episcopal
form of government.
At the Council of Utrecht in 1889, Old Catholics
laid out the guidelines of their theology. They agreed that the pope is
"first among equals," but rejected "the decrees of the so-called
Council of the Vatican, which were promulgated [issued] July 18th, 1870, concerning the infallibility and the universal
Episcopate of the Bishop of Rome, decrees which are in contradiction with the
faith of the ancient Church, and which destroy its ancient canonical
constitution [divisions of power in old church laws] by attributing to the pope
the plenitude [full range] of ecclesiastical powers over all dioceses [areas
that bishops control] and over all the faithful."
Bibliography:
1. Baumgarten, Paul Maria. "Old
Catholics." The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton, 1914.
2. De Rosa, Peter. Vicars of Christ;
the dark side of the papacy. Dublin: Poolbeg Press, 2000.
3. Dollinger, Johann Joseph Ignaz
von. The Pope and the Council, by Janus. London, Rivingtons, 1869.
4. "Infallibility." The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Edited by F. L. Cross and E. A.
Livingstone. Oxford, 1997.
5. McGovern, James J. Life and
Life-work of Pope Leo XIII. 1903, source of portrait.
6. "Old Catholics; a historical
sketch." http://www.oldcatholic.com/ochistory.html
7. Sugrue, Francis. Popes in the
Modern World. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1961.
8. Toner, P. J.
"Infallibility." The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert
Appleton, 1914.
Last updated June, 2007.
We would recommend the pertinent section on Vatican 1 by
Prof. Philip Schaff, volumes every serious Churchman should own and study:
Mr. Graves brings his perspective.
There was no question how the vote would go. On
this day, July 18, 1870, the First Vatican
Council declared by an overwhelming majority that "the Roman Pontiff, when
he speaks ex cathedra, that is, when in discharge of the office of pastor and
teacher of all Christians, by virtue of his supreme
apostolic authority he defines a doctrine regarding faith or morals to be held
by the universal Church is possessed of that infallibility with which the
divine Redeemer willed that his church should be endowed."
In other words, the pope is "infallible" under
certain conditions. The decision was sent to the faithful in a letter titled
Pastor aeternus.
The vote may have made sense to the Vatican Council
but to others it was not so obvious. Protestants world-wide denied its claim.
So did a small percentage of Catholics. To political analysts, the doctrine
seemed politically motivated. The ideas of the Roman Church were under attack.
Italy had confiscated lands long controlled by the popes. The pope had even
fled from the Vatican for a time. To some analysts it seemed that because the
church could not assert its supremacy in political matters, it was throwing
down a gauntlet in the spiritual realm.
One of the Roman Church's most gifted historians,
Johann Joseph Ignaz von Dollinger wrote a long letter in which he said that he
could not accept the pope's infallibility "as a Christian, a theologian, a
historical student and a citizen." His strong opposition was echoed by
several bishops, although all of these others yielded when the church put heavy
pressure on them.
Other scholars and about 60,000 Catholic lay-people
did not yield. They withdrew from the Roman Church, and called themselves Old
Catholics. To them it was a matter of truth. They documented instances when
popes, speaking authoritatively, had made mistakes; a couple popes had even
been condemned by church councils as heretics.
Dollinger never joined the Old Catholics. Nor did
he return to the Roman Church. He was urged to do so on his death bed but
replied, "Ought I (in obedience to your suggestion) to appear before the
Eternal Judge, my conscience burdened with a double perjury?" He went on
to add, "I think that what I have written so far will suffice to make
clear to you that with such convictions one may stand even on the threshold of
eternity in a condition of inner peace and spiritual calm."
The Old Catholics made overtures of friendship
toward the Church of England and Orthodox churches. They adopted an episcopal
form of government.
At the Council of Utrecht in 1889, Old Catholics
laid out the guidelines of their theology. They agreed that the pope is
"first among equals," but rejected "the decrees of the so-called
Council of the Vatican, which were promulgated [issued] July 18th, 1870, concerning the infallibility and the universal
Episcopate of the Bishop of Rome, decrees which are in contradiction with the
faith of the ancient Church, and which destroy its ancient canonical
constitution [divisions of power in old church laws] by attributing to the pope
the plenitude [full range] of ecclesiastical powers over all dioceses [areas
that bishops control] and over all the faithful."
Bibliography:
1. Baumgarten, Paul Maria. "Old
Catholics." The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton, 1914.
2. De Rosa, Peter. Vicars of Christ;
the dark side of the papacy. Dublin: Poolbeg Press, 2000.
3. Dollinger, Johann Joseph Ignaz
von. The Pope and the Council, by Janus. London, Rivingtons, 1869.
4. "Infallibility." The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Edited by F. L. Cross and E. A.
Livingstone. Oxford, 1997.
5. McGovern, James J. Life and
Life-work of Pope Leo XIII. 1903, source of portrait.
6. "Old Catholics; a historical
sketch." http://www.oldcatholic.com/ochistory.html
7. Sugrue, Francis. Popes in the
Modern World. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1961.
8. Toner, P. J.
"Infallibility." The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert
Appleton, 1914.
Last updated June, 2007.
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