The Charism of Infallibility: The Magisterium
Vatican Council II, The Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Chapter 25
- Bishops, teaching in communion with the Roman Pontiff
- are to be respected by all
- as witnesses to divine and Catholic truth.
- In matters of faith and morals,
- the bishops speak in the name of Christ, and
- the faithful are
- to accept their teaching and
- adhere to it with a religious assent of souls.
- This religious submission
- of will and
- of mind
- must be shown in a special way
- to the authentic teaching authority of the Roman Pontiff,
- even when he is not speaking ex cathedra ...
- his supreme magisterium is acknowledged ...
- the judgments made by him ... adhered to ...
- known chiefly
- from the character of the documents,
- from his frequent repetition of the same doctrine,
- from his manner of speaking.
- ... the individual bishops do not enjoy the prerogative of infallibility,
- they can ... proclaim Christ's doctrine of infallibility...
- when they are dispersed around the world ...
- maintaining the bond of unity
- among themselves and
- with Peter's successor,
- while teaching authentically on a matter of
- faith or
- morals,
- concur in a single viewpoint as the one which must be held ...
- This authority is even more clearly verified when,
- gathered together in an ecumenical council,
- they are teachers and judges of
- faith and
- morals for the universal church.
- Their definitions must be adhered to with the submission of faith.
-
- This infallibility
- with which the divine Redeemer willed his Church to be endowed
- in defining a doctrine of
- faith and
- morals
- extends as far as the deposit of divine revelation which must be
- religiously guarded and
- faithfully expounded.
- This is the infallibility
- which the Roman Pontiff, the head of the college of bishops
- enjoys in virtue of his office, when
- as the supreme
- shepherd and
- teacher of all the faithful,
- who
- confirms his brethren in their faith,
- proclaims ... some doctrine of
- faith or
- morals.
- Therefore his definitions,
- of themselves, and
- not from the consent of the Church,
- are justly styled irreformable, for they are
- pronounced with the assistance of the Holy Spirit,
- assistance promised to him
- in blessed Peter ...
- need no approval of others,
- nor do they allow an appeal to any other judgment.
- ... the Roman Pontiff is not pronouncing judgment
- as a private person ...
- but rather as the supreme teacher of the universal Church,
- as one in whom
- the charism of infallibility of the Church herself is individually present,
- he is
- expounding or
- defending a doctrine of Catholic faith.
- The infallibility
- promised to the Church
- resides also in the body of bishops
- when that body exercises supreme teaching authority
- with the successor of Peter ...
- When either
- the Roman Pontiff, or
- the body of bishops together with him
- defines a judgment
- they pronounce it in accord with Revelation itself ...
- Under the guiding light of the Holy Spirit, Revelation is thus
- religiously preserved and
- faithfully expounded in the Church.
- The Roman Pontiff and
- the bishops, strive painstakingly and by appropriate means
- to inquire properly into that Revelation and
- to give apt expression to its contents.
- ... they
- do not allow that there could be any new public revelation
- pertaining to the divine deposit of truth.
By Paul Flanagan and Robert Schihl.
Catholic Biblical Apologetics, © Copyright 1985-1997, Paul Flanagan and Robert Schihl
Unless otherwise noted, all Scripture texts are taken from the New American Bible with Revised New Testament, © 1986, Confraternity of Christian Doctrine.
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Last Updated: January 3, 1997