Furthermore: On the Papacy of Pope Francis Part 2

Joe Heschmeyer and Cy Kellett make some good points in their video, although overall their tone is unacceptably dismissive and undermines, as I say here, their argument. However, they bring up two points in their response to Patrick Coffin (with whom I disagree, let me repeat) that I want to address. 

First, they say that the distinction between munus and ministerium in the resignation is a quibble, one that points to the legalism of Coffin's approach -- one that is not worth putting much weight on. I would simply reply that in itself, this is not a reason to dismiss the claim that something is meant by Pope Benedict when he himself dwells on those words. Yes, it's true that a father, a ruler, a bishop, an emeritus of any sort, retains the mantle and dignity of the office even when he is no longer carrying out its responsibilities. Of course, peaceful transition depends a lot on the dignity and commitment of the successor. 

In other words, if the father is a good father, determined to uphold the institution of the family in general and his family in particular (even acknowledging his own imperfections), the grandfather can, so to speak, rest on his laurels. Things may appear different if the person carrying out the ministerium is perceived as devouring it.

However, the obscurity of the distinction is not in itself enough to dismiss it. Keep in mind that the Arian crisis -- the direst event of our history and the one to which I would compare this moment -- turned, literally, on an iota, the least significant Greek letter. The way the Church understood the divine and human natures of Our Lord, and thus of the Church itself in representing that nature and indeed participating in it as His body, was at stake: homoousion, of one substance, as opposed to homoiousion, similar but not identical essence or substance. 

Such a small difference! It's hard to even see it in there in between the o's! Above our paygrade! Don't worry about it! Yet, St. John Henry Newman states, in his Notes on Arians of the Fourth Century: 

... in that time of immense confusion the divine dogma of our Lord's divinity was proclaimed, enforced, maintained, and (humanly speaking) preserved, far more by the "Ecclesia docta" than by the "Ecclesia docens;" that the body of the Episcopate was unfaithful to its commission, while the body of the laity was faithful to its baptism; that at one time the pope, at other times a patriarchal, metropolitan, or other great see, at {466} other times general councils, said what they should not have said, or did what obscured and compromised revealed truth; while, on the other hand, it was the Christian people, who, under Providence, were the ecclesiastical strength of Athanasius, Hilary, Eusebius of Vercellæ, and other great solitary confessors, who would have failed without them ... (Note 5: 20 -- read the whole thing!) (emphasis mine)

 

Second, the hosts in the video caution, rightly, against resorting to a kind of gnosticism in which a certain undecipherable electoral protocol has not been followed and a vague disturbance in the spiritual stratosphere points to a situation in which what we can plainly see -- that Pope Francis is pope -- should be declared untrue -- that he is an anti-pope. 

Yet they themselves, in their final remarks, do worse. 

They agree together that we must obey and submit to this undeniably destructive papacy because of some possibility that Pope Francis is aiming at something better for us that we cannot understand, in our simple role as lay faithful. This is the Spadaro thesis, in which many words, never defined or fluid with the fluidity of the mind that can see that theologically (that is, gnostically), 2 + 2 = 5, are tossed together to convince us that monkeys may inhabit the Vatican for our own good, and it maybe raining in some spiritual sense.

Heschmeyer and Kellett spend a lot of time in this video cheerfully assuring us that it's easy to be Christian, that God never intends things to be difficult to see or understand. But then, in true gaslighting fashion, they end in also telling us that what we see plainly as offenses against God's Commandments (and frankly, just conduct unbefitting a Catholic) are part of some plan for our good. In short, they ask us to accept an attack on the very first principle of reason, the principle of non-contradiction, and to be at peace.

That would mean that to be told to reject the good is to be good. 

I don't mean to pick on them. Speaking of pay grades, I think they are above theirs. I am speaking of what is just the latest iteration of a tendency we have seen in action since the first tremors brought on by this pope, to ascribe to his actions some deep and unknowable effort to transform us as Christians. Anyone who minimizes the danger he represents must beware -- all such endeavors end the same way: in denying Christ in order to follow Christ. 

 (Go here for Part 1)

2 comments:

  1. Leila,

    I am a new reader here, definitely love both of your blogs! Just curious, would you be willing to say exactly what it is that you find wrong with Patrick Coffin's thesis? My husband and I recently watched his video and found it quite compelling, especially in regards to the Latin errors in Pope Benedict's decleratio. I did not find Patrick's approach "legalistic" but rather, reasonable, thoughtful, and common sense in it's analysis. Although some of the items Patrick brought into the debate seem rather superfluous, it seems to me (as he says himself) that when taken as a whole, the evidence is quite convicting. Again, just curious on specifics, if you are willing to give them. Thanks for your words of wisdom! :)

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    Replies
    1. Thanks for your kind words!
      Basically, I find each of the points disturbing or challenging or mystifying for sure, and that is why the CA treatment annoys me -- we should be able to be peaceful and we simply can't be. But none of it is decisive, and putting them together doesn't add up to something more convincing than the parts.
      I agree that Patrick is not being legalistic at all -- far from it! It's more an intuition that something is not right, and with that I agree. But Benedict is *right there*. If he is really pope, then wouldn't he say so? If there's a reason he can't, okay, but we have no evidence of anything that would prevent him from speaking up -- he has spoken up about certain things.
      So I say that *given what we know,* Francis is pope.
      The seventh point is not convincing at all, by the way. I am convinced that those cardinals have indicted *themselves* with their worldly and morally corrupt scheming -- they better be careful and repent because they are not headed anywhere good --but none of it calls into question the validity of the conclave. It's important to stick with evidence. Watch my husband's interview with Julia Meloni, author of the St. Gallen Mafia book: https://restorationchristianculture.org/audio-recordings/
      https://open.spotify.com/episode/6oNnxs4pM4o4aYGDIaSR3b?si=Z6rYi8zESYeyxw_IxYqj-g

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