John Gerard
Published: 2013-09
Total Pages: 60
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1901 edition. Excerpt: ...severally received from their predecessors, besides instructing their Chief as to the needs and dangers of their respective peoples. We must also note that Papal infallibility attaches only to utterances ex cathedra, i.e., which are professedly addressed to the faithful for the purpose of their information and instruction as to matters of faith. When the Pope speaks as a private person--even as a private theologian--he is not infallible. An instructive example on this head is given us in regard of St. Peter himself. After the divine commission to confirm his brethren, he fell and denied his Master. But he never taught that denial to the Church, and his lapse was nowise permitted to interfere with his office. So again, the point upon which, as we have seen, St. Paul withstood him and pronounced him blameworthy, regarded not faith, but personal conduct. St. Peter had, out of deference to the prejudices of Jewish converts, withdrawn himself from familiar intercourse with the Gentiles. St. Paul held this to be culpable weakness--and so it may have been; but certainly it did not touch the question of infallibility. Still less do we claim for the Pope, as Protestants frequently imagine, the gift of impeccability, or sinlessness. The Pope like any other man must save his soul by resisting evil and doing good. If, failing in this duty, he should lead a bad life, his guilt would be the greater in proportion to the dignity of his office and the obligation it imposes; but this would not affect the authority of his office, which depends not upon his own qualities, but upon the power of God of which he is merely the instrument. As our Lord said of the Ministers of the Old Law, "The Scribes and the Pharisees have sitten on the Chair of Moses. All...