Dr. Mazza: "The Pope might be above Canon Law (I’ve heard it both ways)—but he is certainly Not above Natural Law"
The scholar Dr. Ed Mazza in a guest post on the Ann Barnhardt website wrote the "pope might be above canon law (I’ve heard it both ways)—but he is certainly not above natural law":
In the case of Pope Benedict, the stakes couldn’t be higher. If his notion of the munus Petrinum was erroneous, then his resignation was invalid. Canon 188 of the New Code of Canon Law (1983) states explicitly that “a resignation made out of…substantial error” is invalid. This would mean Benedict is still the Head of the Catholic Church and that Jorge Bergoglio is “Antipope Francis.”
Furthermore, it must be noted that for years-on-end critics of those who hold that Benedict is pope have accused them (among other things) of “not being trained canon lawyers.” Others have argued that Canon 188 does not matter anyway because the Pope as Supreme Legislator is “above canon law.” Still other prominent critics argue that because all the cardinals and 99% of the bishops of the Church have “peacefully accepted” Francis as pope, Benedict’s resignation AUTOMATICALLY MUST HAVE BEEN VALID.
The plain facts of the matter are these. If the mind presents an erroneous idea to the will and the will acts on it, that act is invalid by the very fabric of realty itself—not because canon law says so. And it doesn’t take a canon lawyer to determine the erroneous nature of the idea of the person when said person has been obliging enough to make official speeches and book-length interviews for eight years. The pope might be above canon law (I’ve heard it both ways)—but he is certainly not above natural law, which is man’s participation in God’s Eternal Law, under which heading substantial error falls. Lastly, the silent acquiescence of the shepherds of the Conciliar Church to Bergoglio’s abysmal regime hardly has the power to bend the nature of ontological reality either. [https://www.barnhardt.biz/2021/03/12/dr-mazza-guest-post-its-nothing-business-its-strictly-personal/]
The respected Fr. Brian Harrison appears to agree with Dr. Mazza:
On January 13, 2013, the Canon Law Made Easy website in a article titled "Can a Pope Ever Resign?" said in speaking of a canon 332.2 phrase on a pope's resignation having to be "properly manifested" said:
"[T]he Pope is the Church's Supreme Legislator, he can interpret this law however he wishes." [https://canonlawmadeeasy.com/2013/01/03/can-a-pope-everresign/]
On the other hand, the respected Fr. Brian Harrison in speaking on is the pope above canon law thought the statement "the pope is “above canon law” is a half-truth" according to a post on the Catholic Answers website:
The article “White Smoke, Valid Pope” by Fr. Brian Harrison (March 2001) makes an interesting but flawed argument against the sedevacantists’ claims about Rome. Fr. Harrison argues from canon law regulations on heresy and excommunication in order to show that a pope who incurs latae sententiae excommunication would be a valid but illicit pope. He writes, “While this [heretical] pope would offend God gravely by exercising his office while under an (undeclared) excommunication, all his official acts still would be juridicially valid.”
These arguments that place the pope under the rule of canon law are futile. A closer scrutiny of the situation would reveal that the pope answers only to God: The pope is the author of canon law, which depends solely on his will. Excommunication is a disciplinary decision of the Church, and thus the qualifications that automatically incur excommunication-such as advising someone to have an abortion-are subject to change.
Fr. Harrison writes, “A pope who began his pontificate as an orthodox Catholic but became a formal heretic or apostate during his pontificate would thereby legally incur excommunication.” That statement is an impossibility. The pope is above canon law and is not subject to excommunication.
Thank you for all the good your organization has done. Your magazine is the most interesting and informative Catholic publication I have encountered.
Mara Mirus 
Nokesville, Virginia 
Fr. Harrison replies: To
 say that the pope is “above canon law” is a half-truth. It is true in 
the sense that the pope has no superior on earth who could declare, 
enforce, or remove any penalty against him for breaches of the law. But 
it is false insofar as it means that he could never incur, in God’s 
sight, any such penalty or that he has no moral duty to act and govern 
the Church according to the law that he himself officially recognizes as
 valid at any given moment in his pontificate.
Canon law includes numerous prescriptions of divine law that no pope can ever overturn (see for example cc. 330, 925, 849, 864, and 1024 in the 1983 Code). Even the “merely” ecclesiastical law contained in the Code is for the universal Church, and the pope is morally obliged to be the first in giving a good example by living and acting as a law-abiding Christian. Of course, as supreme legislator, the pope may change any ecclesiastical law by officially and expressly abrogating it or derogating from it. But if he were to decree something which broke the law-that is, which acted against an existing ecclesiastical law without expressly adding a clause derogating from that law-then canon law itself (c. 38, 1983 Code; c. 46, 1917 Code) states that such a lawless action, even on the part of a “competent authority” (and that, of course, includes the pope) would have “no effect.” [https://www.catholic.com/magazine/print-edition/is-the-pope-above-canon-law]
Last year, Steven O'Reilly debated a Catholic Monitor commenter on if Benedict is Pope and also discussed the issue of "is the pope above canon law" as well as other matters:
On , the Catholic pundit Steven O'Reilly from Roma Locuta Est and a Catholic Monitor commenter In Their Hearts squared off on
 if Benedict is Pope (BiP). It was a joy to read. You had two scholars 
going toe-to-toe with interesting well written arguments.
[http://catholicmonitor.blogspot.com/2020/06/steve-oreilly-tons-of-problems-with.html?m=1] 
In Their Hearts apparently
 is learned in the Latin language and I am hoping he might debate 
Latinist Br. Alexis Bugnolo in the future on their disputes over the 
best translation of the Pope Benedict XVI resignation text. The Monitor reader is also well versed in theology as is O'Reilly who has excellent debating skills.
Is Benedict pope?
Who won the debate?
I leave it up to the Catholic Monitor readers to decide. Enjoy this well fought debate:
In Their Hearts:
Concerning Benedict's resignation let's set the record straight:
1.
  We are not at the time of the antichrist!  Why?  Precisely because 
with the Consecration and conversion of Russia, the world will 
experience "an era of peace," promised by Our Lady at Fatima.
2. 
 Revelations and prophecies in Sacred Scripture are NOT always given 
chronologically, at least in a clear fashion. All one has to do is read 
the Commentary of St. Thomas on 2 Thess. 2.  There St. Thomas divides 
the two events mentioned by St. Paul, the Mystery of Iniquity, i.e., the
 "revolt" or as it is sometimes translated the "falling away," and the 
coming of the antichrist, the man of sin, the son of perdition with a 
space of time between them--most likely the period of peace promised by 
Our Lady.  
3. Benedict chooses his words very carefully, but HE 
DID NOT choose the future tense to say that  "the See WILL be vacant."  
He used the subjunctive which has specific uses but basically it 
represents not a fact but an idea.  It was not a mistake, nor was he 
hiding anything; he was testing the Cardinals for their knowledge of 
Latin!  Although I give a technical explanation with the translation in 
my Treatise what Benedict ultimately says is that "a conclave is needing
 to be called PROVIDED the see is vacant.  No one has shown where this 
is wrong--they can't because I very carefully document what I say.  
Hence IN NO WAY can it be said that Benedict was splitting the Petrine 
Office from the Roman See, PRECISELY AND ESPECIALLY SINCE HE WAS 
DETERMINED TO REMAIN IN THE VATICAN!!!
4.  Benedict publicly 
stated that his renunciation was made freely and was valid.  For any 
attempt to say that he made an error one HAS AN OBLIGATION TO SHOW 
EITHER THAT BENEDICT WAS STUPID OR THAT HE INTENDED TO LIE; or as the 
rage in some quarters has it, Benedict intentionally "pulled the wool 
over the eyes" of those dressed in sheep's clothing. But this must be 
proved as well!!!
5. Benedict demonstrated that it is the Pope, 
to whom St. Paul was referring, who was holding back the mystery of 
iniquity which was active from the time of St. Paul, so when Benedict 
“stepped aside," he did so “that he may be revealed in his time.”  
Benedict was in a way “taken out of the way,” but he did it in a way 
that preserved the Indefectibility of the Church, by remaining the true 
Pope whereby the enemy of the Church was only a figurehead," or if you 
will is an anti-Pope."  The Church had been filled with apostates to the
 extent that NO POPE could expose of get rid of them, not even if he 
were regarded as a most saintly Pope.  They had to be allowed to expose 
themselves.
Steven O'Reilly:
Points 1
 and 2: They don't appear relevant to anything I've said re BiP.  If I 
am missing something on that score, please clarify.
Point 3: I am
 not a Latinist in any sense of the word. But, I would make three 
points. First, another BiP theorist, Br. Bugnolo, has a translation that
 differs from yours--as I understand it. I tend to use his in my 
responses to various BiP theories, since that is the general reading 
BiPers seems to accept (at least the "standard theory" of BiP). 
In
 making my second point, I'd stress again I am not a latinist is any 
sense of the word. That said, common sense suggests to me your 
translation is off. That is, if you must go to the lengths of writing an
 explanation in a treatise to demonstrate your translation; that very 
fact in itself seems almost a proof your rendering must NOT be -- at a 
minimum -- the plain, obvious reading of the text. 
Third, it 
doesn't make sense for BXVI to go through the trouble of the Declaratio,
 and saying a conclave should be called only "provided" that the See is 
empty.  Of course it was going to be vacant as Feb 28, 2013, 20:00 
hours, Rome time...that was the ultimate point of the document. All of 
his actions demonstrate he intended the reality of the matter, e.g., see
 Normas Nonnnullas. I refer you to my replies to Dr. Mazza's thesis on 
the question of the Declaratio, Normas Nonnullas, the last audience, and
 Ganswein.
Regarding Point 4...I think we're in agreement on 
that.  I've made that point as well. If one says BXVI did not resign 
freely, one must defend calling BXVI a liar. But, I'd add, one must call
 him a liar as well if one says he did not resign, e.g., he calls 
himself a "former pope" in a letter to Cardinal Brandmuller.
Regarding
 Point 5...I disagree with your thesis as outlined. I've argued on my 
blog (www.RomaLocutaEst.com) -- see the "Summa Contra BiP" -- that BXVI 
fully renounced the papacy. He retains nothing of the office or 
ministry. Therefore, all BiP theories are erroneous. To suggest he still
 has some authority...or full authority, etc; but still allowed 
Bergoglio to be among us is to call BXVI worse than a liar. It would be 
monstrous if this were part of some complicated ploy on BXVI's part.  I 
must reject your thesis.
As to your theory being unique; it seems
 there are as many as 4-6 unique BiP theories.  But, Socci seems to 
believe he kinda resigned and kinda didn't. No? Dr. Mazza believes BXVI 
successfully resigned part of the papacy, e.g., the "bishop of Rome" 
part. 
A quick follow up on setting conditions on the 
resignation. I've heard it before, and recently read it again...but I 
forget where at the moment...that St. Pius XII had submitted some sort 
of pre-resignation that would be effective if he were ever taken from 
Rome by the Germans during WWII. Again, I might be mistaken, but I 
believe I had heard that JPII also had some sort of resignation that 
would be effective should he be incapacitated. Hearing this, it wouldn't
 surprise me if more of the modern popes at least had had such a 
document.
As to one canonist's opinion, while certainly of 
interest, I am sure others would differ -- and I would suspect the 
consensus would be against him. Certainly, it seems to me at least to be
 a matter of common sense that a 'resignation if condition applies' 
document would be of benefit to the Church.
In Their Hearts:
Regarding your comments on my five point comment above you reply: 
"Points 1 and 2: They don't appear relevant to anything I've said re 
BiP. If I am missing something on that score, please clarify."  Although
 you may consider those first two points dealing with the nature and 
circumstances surrounding Benedict's resignation, you indeed did not 
include them in your BiP arguments, but that was the precise reason why I
 was addressing these two points to you.  Perhaps you don't consider 
that events, circumstances, conditions in the Church among many other 
matters as important, I don't know.  However, I do consider them 
important and that they ought to be brought into any consideration on 
what is going on in the Church today.
Regarding your comment on 
not knowing Latin, one ought to know some Latin in treating of such a 
momentous act as Benedict's renunciation.  That being said I must 
disagree with Br. Alexis' translation: “so that on February 28, 2013, at
 20:00 Roman Time [Sedes Romae], the see of Saint Peter be vacant.”  
This translation in no way reflects the Subjunctive; on the contrary it 
is a very clever way to use the Present Future Indicative, which states a
 fact as opposed to stating an idea, a possibility, etc. which the 
Subjunctive does--in which case the translation should have been "may be
 vacant".  The reason Brother uses provides an Indicative translation is
 so that he can say that Benedict made a mistake and hence the 
resignation is invalid.  I'm sorry, but I cannot agree either that 
Benedict made a mistake or that he was intentionally trying to say the 
wrong thing, which would indeed be lying; it certainly wouldn't be a 
so-called mental reservation since that sentence as Brother translates 
it can only be understood in ONE WAY.  Secondly, Benedict uses  “ita 
ut”, not “ut” alone, which according to the Latin dictionaries means “in
 such a way,” to such an extent,” “on condition that,” “only insofar 
as.”   
As for going to lengths to explain the translation I gave
 to that long sentence by Benedict where he declares his intention to 
resign from the “ministry” is because most people don't know Latin and I
 felt that every possible use of that construction ought to be set out. 
 Furthermore, it is in no way a refutation as such of my translation in 
saying that it is so lengthy.     
Concerning the comment “Third,
 it doesn't make sense for BXVI to go through the trouble of the 
Declaratio, and saying a conclave should be called only "provided" that 
the See is empty. Of course it was going to be vacant as Feb 28, 2013, 
20:00 hours, Rome time...that was the ultimate point of the document.” 
it must be stressed that given the word Benedict used here, namely 
“ministry,” he DID NOT RESIGN FROM THE OFFICE.  In the history of Canon 
Law, until Vatican Council II, the only words used to refer to the 
Petrine Office were “Papatus” and “Munus.”  And even Br. Alexis shows 
that there is a difference in meaning between “Munus” and “ministerium.”
  Hence, since Benedict is NOT resigning from the Petrine Office he 
could use a time limit, precisely because, as I mentioned in an earlier 
comment, it is not legitimate to use time limits and conditions in 
“Juridical acts” concerning such important matters as the Papal Office 
or Marriage.
In the whole of your Summa Contra the BiP Theory there is an implicit 
denial of a basic Philosophical principle:  "Actio sequitur esse" 
(Action follows being).  The FACT that Benedict wears the white Soutane,
 calls himself His Holiness Pope Benedict, intentionally lives within 
the Vatican, has the Prefect of the Papal Household as his Secretary, 
wears a Papal Ring (from Pope Paul, I believe), among many other actions
 and events, one cannot really honestly state what you do state:  "Of 
course it was going to be vacant as Feb 28, 2013, 20:00 hours, Rome 
time...that was the ultimate point of the document. All of his actions 
demonstrate he intended the reality of the matter, e.g., see Normas 
Nonnnullas."
Furthermore, if you hold that his resignation was 
valid, but also admit that he established a date separate from the date 
of his actual declaration of resignation, you are pitting yourself 
against a renowned Canonist whom Antonio had consulted concerning that 
later date of 28 February 2013 as the effective date for his 
resignation.  In his book "The Secret of Benedict XVI, Is He Still the 
Pope?" Socci quotes Francisco Patruno as indicating that Benedict's 
resignation would be invalid given that did set a later date.  And since
 his resignation was invalid HE WOULD STILL BE POPE. You are going to 
have to be more consistent in your arguments if you are going to have 
any credibility.
It is true that Benedict, in his letter to 
Cardinal Brandmuller:  "I can very well understand the deep-seated pain 
that the end of my papacy has inflicted on you and many others."  I do 
not read German, however, it is certain that Benedict is not going to 
tell the good Cardinal that is actually still Pope in a letter whose 
contents could easily become public.
Yes, you are correct in 
saying:  "But, Socci seems to believe he kinda resigned and kinda 
didn't. No?"  He even suggests that Benedict resigned from all exercise 
of the three Powers of Office, but goes no further.  In my Treatise, I 
do say the same thing, however, I maintain that it would not be right to
 "step aside" from all exercise and then rest on one's laurels.  this is
 because an office (MUNUS) means or connotes a DUTY; one must in some 
way, in order to hold the office has an obligation to exercise his power
 in some way. 
But, Archbishop Ganswein provides the answer in 
his speech on 20 May 2016 at the Gregorian University.  He says early in
 his talk there is ONLY ONE POPE, and then says in paragraph 18 of that 
speech:  "He has left the Pontifical Throne and yet, with the step of 11
 February 2013, has not absolutely abandoned this ministry. He has 
instead integrated/supplied the personal office with a collegial and 
synodal dimension, as if a ministry in common, as if with this he had 
wanted to validate once again the invitation contained in that motto 
which the then Joseph Ratzinger took for himself as Archbishop of Munich
 and Freising and which later on he naturally maintained as Bishop of 
Rome: 'cooperatores veritatis', which signifies precisely 'cooperators 
of truth.'”  I explain that after resigning from the regular exercise of
 the three Powers of the Petrine Office, the Powers of Governance, of 
Teaching and of Order, he established a sort of "Curia" with two 
members; as Abp. says, there is an active member and a contemplative 
member.  This does not signify any splitting of the Papacy; notice that 
Ganswein doesn't say "two Popes," but "two MEMBERS."  Simply put, 
Benedict is the contemplative member and Ganswerin is the active member,
 and they exercise the Power of Order in a special way, mainly by 
undertaking the requests of Our Lady of Prayer and Sacrifice.  In this 
way Benedict carries out that which the Papacy is all about, namely the 
spiritual end for which Christ established the Church.
Steven O'Reilly:
Again, regarding your original points 1 and 2, I certainly don't believe
 "that events, circumstances, conditions in the Church" are not 
important. Of course, I consider them important. I am just not sure what
 you want me to address in reference to them and in specific regard to 
the question at hand: BiP. I certainly do not believe the points you 
make in 1 or 2 make your thesis more or less probable. 
Regarding
 not knowing Latin. Yes, of course, it would be best if we all knew 
Latin. That is ideal. However, I do not believe lack of latin knowledge 
or of any other language is an insurmountable obstacle to entering the 
debate, or having and expressing an opinion. One looks for and finds 
translations to work with--in any field of study, as necessary. If you 
are not a full blown scholar of Greek, it should not be an absolute 
barrier to prevent one from discussing scripture. Certainly you cannot 
mean to say only Latinists can debate BiP. Obviously, one looks for 
translations to work with. 
Given Br. Bugnolo has published a 
portion of his translation of the Declaratio and it is the only 
translation I am aware of that BiP theorists seem to accept, it makes 
sense for me to use it on that basis. I said that before. Now, you say 
above the "The reason Brother uses provides an Indicative translation is
 so that he can say that Benedict made a mistake and hence the 
resignation is invalid." Perhaps you are not suggesting the contrary, 
but I fully accept that the reason Brother has translated it the way he 
has, is that it is the translation he fully believes is the most 
accurate. Whether it is the most accurate for other Latin scholars I 
have no clue--I am not a latinist, but perhaps the two of you might 
debate the question, citing other current Latin scholars as well.
Now,
 my point on your treatise's discussion of the Latin was not intended to
 say because it is lengthy it is not true. Rather, I was making the 
point that to me, as a matter of common sense, your rendering must not 
be plain and obvious if it requires a treatise, which is not to say I 
therefore meant it was not true. Clearly, something might be neither 
plain nor obvious, but still be true. But, consider, if your rendering 
was the plain and obvious translation, certainly Br. Bugnolo and others 
would have reached the same conclusions as you. But he hasn't, and 
"they" haven't. Also, I've been rereading Socci recently, and I don't 
recall him appealing to a translation similar to yours on this point. I 
assume some of the canonists he interviewed would have raised this 
specific translation issue if there was a dispute, and he would have 
raised it in his book if he thought it helped his argument. I don't 
recall him doing that. If I am wrong on that score, please point out 
where Socci discusses it, as I'd be interested in seeing it.
Finally
 as to the munus vs. ministerium question, I've addressed this question 
on my blog (www.RomaLocutaEst.com), either in my series of rebuttals of 
Dr. Mazza's thesis or of BiP in general ("Summa Contra BiP").
  
 In Their Hearts:
From this quote from Part 1 of your Response to Dr. Mazza: "Reading this
 canon, BiP-ers observe that while canon 332.2 speaks of  resigning the 
“munus”; Benedict specifically only renounces the “ministero.”  This, 
they conclude, means that Benedict thought he could either (1) separate 
the ministry/ministero from the office/munus . . .," you apparently hold
 that the Petrine Office and the exercise of it are one.  This is not 
true!  We must consider that the Munus Petrinum was established by 
Christ with three Powers:  The Power of Governance, the Power of 
Teaching (Magisterium), which together make up the Power of 
Jurisdiction, as well as the Power of Order.  These constitute the 
essence of the Petrine Office.  Now, it is obvious that the Pope does 
not exercise the three Powers at once, nor does he exercise any Power 
continually!  
In other words, if we consider the power of sight,
 we know that one doesn't always have to be "seeing." i.e. exercising 
that power.  If he is sleeping, if he closes his eyes, if he needs 
strong glasses, it doesn't mean that the Power is gone.  If we take the 
last example, we could say that the power is damaged, but the power is 
still there.  Hence, it cannot be said that the use (exercise) of the 
eye is in fact the power.  If a house is wired so that electric "power" 
can run the lights in every room.  Just because one or the other of the 
lights are not "on" it doesn't mean that the power doesn't exist.  The 
power is at the switch but the switch may not be turned on.  I think you
 get the idea.  Power and the exercise of it are distinct.  There is 
also a philosophical explanation, but there's no need to go int it here.
But
 lets take a couple Popes in the History of the Church.  Pope Caius 
lived at the time of the persecutions of the Church and at one point had
 to go into hiding.  While in hiding, he was not able to exercise his 
power of Governance or his power of teaching.  He could, however, 
exercise his power of Order, in a limited way.  The same goes for Pope 
Gregory VII who went into exile toward the end of his life and for Pope 
Pius VII who was in captive by Napoleon. These latter two were not able 
to exercise their powers of Jurisdiction, though they could still to a 
certain extent exercise the Power of Order.  Does this mean that they 
were no longer Pope?  No, nowhere will one find that they were no longer
 considered Pope.
What Benedict did was to excuse himself from 
the normal "exercise" of the Three Powers by his Renunciation 
Declaration, but, but then he placed himself, canonically, in a position
 
analogical position of the three Popes just mentioned as I 
explained in one of my above comments--creating a type of Curia with 
Benedict as the contemplative member and Abp. as the active member.
 Steven O'Reilly:
On the munus and ministerium question, you are
 reading into my statement, and incorrectly so--I do not believe the 
office and the exercise of it are the same thing. I suggest you read my 
3-part rebuttal (and addendum) of Dr. Mazza's thesis if you are 
interested in my position. The quote you selected is a restatement of 
the position of certain BiPers. The question was not whether the two 
things are distinct or not, but whether one is separable from the other,
 i.e., whether one could really resign the ministry only while keeping 
the munus. Some BiPers seem to say "yes" (e.g., Socci seems to think 
this) while others seem to say "no" -- and, in the latter case, this 
constitutes a "substantial error" on Benedict's part, making his 
resignation invalid. 
Another example from earlier, Dr. Mazza 
argues via his theory (a BiP variant) that Benedict separated the 
"ministry of the Bishop of Rome" from the Petrine munus. Thus, he 
believes as I understand him, Benedict in his act of renunciation 
renounced ONLY being the Bishop of Rome while maintaining for himself 
the Petrine primacy. Thus, Dr. Mazza believes that although Francis 
really is the Bishop of Rome, he not hold the Petrine Primacy. 
In
 my rebuttal of Dr. Mazza, I granted, arguendo, his premise that such a 
separation was possible. However, my personal view is such a separation 
is impossible, i.e., my view is that the Petrine primacy in Rome is 
Divinely willed. Furthermore, I would also reject that Benedict could 
truly resign only the "active ministry" while keeping some sort of 
"contemplative ministry" of the Petrine ministry for himself. I reject 
that it is possible. I reject that is what he either actually did, or 
attempted to do. Thus, I must reject your thesis as well. 
Anyway,
 I will not argue the case all over again in detail here...that's why I 
have a blog of my own. :-)  You are welcome to read what I believe and 
argue there in detail, and comment to your heart's content, as is anyone
 else for that matter. I am generally pretty good about responding to 
everyone, though I cannot guarantee you'll like my answers any better 
there. 
 In Their Hearts:
OK so you do maintain that the Office and the "exercise" of the Office 
are distinct, since you say that "I do not believe the office and the 
exercise of it are the same thing."  However, you question "whether one 
could really resign the ministry only while keeping the munus."  But 
since they are in fact distinct, it cannot be denied that it is possible
 that they can be separated.  The real question is whether it is proper 
to do so.  In one of my comments above I indicated that it would be 
improper to do so, but please listen to a Canonist.  Socci, in his 
latest book on Benedict states:  The canonical literature is unanimous. 
 Luigi Chiappetta writes that 'the Roman Pontiff freely accepts his 
office, and he can freely renounce it, presuming for liceity (through a 
moral, non-juridical impetus) a just and proprotionate reason."  A 
serious reason is generally considered to be a loss of mental faculties;
 otherwise, while it would be a valid resignation, it would be a morally
 deplorable act.  The canonist Carlo Fantappie also confirms that the 
renunciation of the papacy can happen only 'in truly exceptional cases 
and for the superior good of the Church.' This is 'the condition for 
renouncing the office [of pope] without falling into a grave fault 
before God."  This should be sufficient to dispel any doubt you have 
about "resign[ing] the ministry only while keeping the munus."
Furthermore,
 the three instances, mentioned in an earlier comment, when previous 
Popes were forced through circumstances of hiding, exile or captivity 
which made it impossible to for them to exercise the Powers of Teaching 
and Governing, though they could exercise the Power of Order to a 
certain extent, they were still considered Pope, and without any moral 
guilt from the non-exercise of the Jurisdictional Powers.
For 
Benedict while he was active, there is no question that he was being 
forced by the "deep state" in the Church, over which he had NO CONTROL, 
to do what he knew was wrong and being prevented from doing what he knew
 should be done. Thus he said at his last General Audience on 27 Feb. 
2013: "I have asked God insistently in prayer to grant me his light and 
to help me make the right decision, not for my own good, but for the 
good of the Church. I have taken this step with full awareness of its 
gravity and even its novelty, but with profound interior serenity. 
Loving the Church means also having the courage to make difficult, 
painful decisions, always looking to the good of the Church and not of 
oneself." 
Nevertheless, having renounced the usual exercise all 
three Powers in his Declaration, he did not allow himself to be without 
some exercise of his Power of Order.  Further on in the Audience he 
says:  I no longer bear [the Italian verb "porto" can also mean 'carry 
out'] the power of office for the governance of the Church, but in the 
service of prayer I remain, so to speak, in the enclosure of Saint 
Peter."  And as mentioned in a comment farther up, he set up a kind of 
Curia with himself as the contemplative member and Abp. Gainswein as the
 active member, precisely in order be able to exercise the Power of 
Order.  To do this, I maintain that with the great power a Pope posses, 
it was to epieikeia that Benedict had recourse.  In his "Canon Law" 
textbook Cicognani defines epieikeia as "The benign application of the 
law according to what is good and equitable, which decides that the 
lawgiver does not intend that, because of exceptional circumstances, 
some particular case be included under his general law."  Benedict 
therefore had the right and duty to establish a means if exercising, to a
 certain extent, the Power of Order.  
Francis Notes:
- Doctor
 of the Church St. Francis de Sales totally confirmed beyond any doubt 
the possibility of a heretical pope and what must be done by the Church 
in such a situation:
"[T]he Pope... WHEN he is EXPLICITLY a heretic, he falls ipso facto from his dignity and out of the Church, and the Church MUST either deprive him, or, as some say, declare him deprived, of his Apostolic See."
 (The Catholic Controversy, by St. Francis de Sales, Pages 305-306)
Saint Robert Bellarmine, also, said "the Pope heretic is not deposed ipso facto, but must be declared deposed by the Church."
[https://archive.org/stream/SilveiraImplicationsOfNewMissaeAndHereticPopes/Silveira%20Implications%20of%20New%20Missae%20and%20Heretic%20Popes_djvu.txt]
- "If Francis is a Heretic, What should Canonically happen to him?": http://www.thecatholicmonitor.com/2020/12/if-francis-is-heretic-what-should.html
- "Could Francis be a Antipope even though the Majority of Cardinals claim he is Pope?": http://www.thecatholicmonitor.com/2019/03/could-francis-be-antipope-even-though.html
 -  LifeSiteNews, "Confusion explodes as Pope Francis throws magisterial 
weight behind communion for adulterers," December 4, 2017:
The AAS guidelines explicitly allows "sexually active adulterous couples
 facing 'complex circumstances' to 'access the sacraments of 
Reconciliation and the Eucharist.'"
-  On February 2018, in Rorate Caeli, Catholic theologian Dr. John Lamont:
"The AAS statement... establishes that Pope Francis in Amoris Laetitia 
has affirmed propositions that are heretical in the strict sense."
- On December 2, 2017, Bishop Rene Gracida:
"Francis' heterodoxy is now official. He has published his letter to the
 Argentina bishops in Acta Apostlica Series making those letters 
magisterial documents."
Pray an Our Father now for the restoration of the Church by the bishops by the grace of God.
Election Notes:
- Intel Cryptanalyst-Mathematician on Biden Steal: "212Million Registered Voters & 66.2% Voting,140.344 M Voted...Trump got 74 M, that leaves only 66.344 M for Biden" [http://catholicmonitor.blogspot.com/2020/12/intel-cryptanalyst-mathematician-on.html?m=1]
- Will US be Venezuela?: Ex-CIA Official told Epoch Times "Chávez started to Focus on [Smartmatic] Voting Machines to Ensure Victory as early as 2003": http://catholicmonitor.blogspot.com/2020/12/will-us-be-venezuela-ex-cia-official.html
http://www.thecatholicmonitor.com/2021/01/a-hour-which-will-live-in-infamy-1001pm.html?m=1