It seems Catholics want some sense of divinity to emanate from their leader, so democratizing his powers, setting checks and balances, and having strict oversight aren't what they want because that might overly humanize him. — Hanover
I see it as you do. But this premise could end up in an argument where the Pope is above God. Catholics don't want to humanize the Pope but I understand that, at the same time, no one is divine as much as God.
So, they will always have this debate. Are the faculties of the Pope object of criticism? If we critize him, are we arguing against God's mercy? — javi2541997
I think this issue makes me wonder a lot of questions because my failure is see the Pope as someone different from God but probably a Catholic sees him as the pure representation of the idea of God. — javi2541997
I am not so involved with Vatican and Catholic dogmas, but this debate between theologians It has made me wonder: How much power and authority should the Pope have? — javi2541997
I think this issue makes me wonder a lot of questions because my failure is see the Pope as someone different from God but probably a Catholic sees him as the pure representation of the idea of God. — javi2541997
I'm not Catholic, but I deeply and most sincerely hope that the Pope is entirely different from God. As I understand it (several times removed from a catechism class) is that the Pope is, at most, the on-site human representative of Jesus -- the vicar, — Bitter Crank
Whether one is a Catholic, a Protestant, a Buddhist, a Jain, a Moslem, Hindu, or Zoroastrian, animist or atheist, in the end the individual has to personally decide what to do. — Bitter Crank
Your testimony is interesting because it shows that priests and nuns are "free" to critique the Pope. I always thought that they were forced to venerated him whatever the circumstances... — javi2541997
. I was referring to their dislike of Ratzinger. — Tom Storm
Pope Francis — Tom Storm
Despite Pope Francis is more warmly than Ratzinger he receives hard criticism from the conservative wing too. — javi2541997
One must have the right enemies. Or in F's case, enemies in the Right. :wink: — Tom Storm
The doctrine of papal infallibility, the Latin phrase ex cathedra (literally, "from the chair"), was proclaimed by Pius IX in 1870 as meaning "when, in the exercise of his office as shepherd and teacher of all Christians, in virtue of his supreme apostolic authority, [the Bishop of Rome] defines a doctrine concerning faith or morals to be held by the whole Church." — javi2541997
Yes, you are right Crank. Nevertheless, there are some doctrines and dogmas who see the Pope "above" of Jesus. I mean, as a pure representation of God. — javi2541997
The Protestants have plenty of problems, but at least they don't have a pope. — Bitter Crank
Even abortion hasn't been infallibly defined as a sin — Gregory
Any rational organization would first ask itself if past popes had ever spoken ex cathedra but nonetheless been wrong. — Art48
When less solemnity is used, it is not sure whether infallibility is used and if it's not clear then how can it be part of dogma? There are all kinds of Catholics. — Gregory
How much power and authority should the Pope have? — javi2541997
Who but a believing Catholic would be interested in this question, though? — Ciceronianus
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