5 Dubia Questions for 1P5's Steve Skojec & All faithful Catholics especially Francis is definitely Pope Cardinals, Bishops & pundits
Here are five really short and easy to answer dubia questions which hopefully aren't too complicated for Steve Skojec, publisher of the One Peter Five website, to answer. To make it really easy for the publisher of One Peter Five it has been formatted so that he only has to answer: yes or no. 1. Doctor of the Church St. Francis de Sales said "The Pope... when he is explicitly a heretic... the Church must either deprive him or as some say declare him deprived of his Apostolic See." Was St. Francis de Sales a Sedevacantist or a Benevacantist? Answer: yes or no. 2. "Universal Acceptance" theologian John of St. Thomas said "This man in particular lawfully elected and accepted by the Church is the supreme pontiff." Was John of St. Thomas for saying "the supreme pontiff" must be BOTH "lawfully elected and accepted by the Church" a Sedevacantist or a Benevacantist? Answer: yes or no. 3. Do you think that a "supreme pontiff...
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But let us read carefully what "Pastor Aeternus" says:
"(...) if anyone asserts that the Roman Pontiff has simply a task of inspection or direction, and not the full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the whole Church, not only with regard to faith and morals, but also with regard to the discipline and government of the Church spread throughout the earth; or that it be invested only with the principal role and not the whole plenitude of this supreme power; or that this power of his is not common and direct both over all individual Churches and over each believer and pastor: let him be anathema."
There is no contradiction in God, because He is coherence. And God is goodness. Someone cannot restrict this, much less, put a control on God as something harmful. Because the person vetoing the author of grace, who inspired Pope Pius IX on these teachings, the Holy Spirit, sins gravely against the same Spirit.