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Vatican II's teaching (and that of the 1983 Code of Canon Law) that the true Church of Christ 'subsists in' (n.b. rather than 'is') the Catholic Church. This implies that the true Church can also "subsist" in other religious bodies. |
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Abolition in Vatican II and the 1983 Code of Canon Law of the traditional distinction between the primary (procreative) and secondary (unitive) ends of marriage, the placing of those ends on the same level, and the reversal of their order. The change provides tacit support for contraception, since the prohibition against birth control was based on the teaching that procreation is marriage's primary end. |
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The systematic suppression, in the original Latin version of Paul VI's new Missal, of the following concepts: hell, divine judgement, God's wrath, punishment for sin, the wickedness of sin as the greatest evil, detachment from the world, purgatory, the souls of the departed, Christ's Kingship on earth, the Church Militant, the triumph of the saints and miracles. To purge these doctrines from the liturgy is to signal that they are no longer true, or at least sufficiently important, to merit a mention in the Church's official prayer. |
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Paul VI's official approval of communion in the hand. This practice was imposed by 16th-century Protestants in order to deny transubstantiation and the sacramental nature of the priesthood. |
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The official doctrinal introduction to the New Order of Mass which taught that the Mass is an assembly-supper, co-celebrated by the congregation and its president, during which Christ is present in the people, the Scripture readings, and in the bread and wine. This is a Protestant or modernist understanding of the Mass, and it provided the theoretical foundation upon which so many subsequent 'abuses' would rest. |
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All men are united to Christ solely by virtue of the Incarnation. (Redemptor Hominis 13.3) |
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All men are saved. (Osservatore Romano, 6 May 1980) |
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Christ's Mystical Body is not exclusively identified with the Catholic Church. (Osservatore Romano, 8 July 1980) |
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The one, holy, Catholic, and apostolic Church is present, in all its essential elements in non-Catholic sects. (Letter to the Bishops on "Communion," 1992) |
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The Catholic Church is in communion with non-Catholic sects. (Ibid.) |
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The Catholic Church is incapable of giving credibility to the Gospel unless there is a "reunion of Christians". (Osservatore Romano, 20 May 1980) |
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The Catholic Church shares a common apostolic faith with non-Catholic sects. (Ibid.) |
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Non-Catholic sects have an apostolic mission. (Osservatore Romano, 10 June 1980) |
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The Holy Ghost uses non-Catholic sects as means of salvation. (Catechesi Tradendae, 16 October 1979) |
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It is divinely revealed that men have a right to religious freedom and freedom of conscience. (Redemptor Hominis 12.2, Dives in Misericordia, and passim) |
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The miracles of Christ do not prove his messianic dignity. (Speech to Lutherans, 11 December 1983) |
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The article in the Apostles' Creed, 'He descended into hell', simply means that Christ's body was in the earth for three days. (Osservatore Romano, 16 January 1989) |
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Officially sanctioned Vatican II and post-Vatican II teachings and laws embody errors and/or promote evil. |
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Because the Church is indefectible, her teaching cannot change, and because she is infallible, her laws cannot give evil. |
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It is therefore impossible that the errors and evil officially sanctioned in Vatican II and post Vatican II teachings and laws could have proceeded from the authority of the Church. |
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Those who promulgate such errors and evils must somehow lack real authority in the Church. |
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Canonists and theologians teach that defection from the faith, once it becomes manifest, brings with it automatic loss of ecclesiastical office (authority). They apply this principle even to a pope who, in his personal capacity, somehow becomes a heretic. |
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Even popes have acknowledged the possibility that a heretic could one day end up on the throne of Peter. Paul IV decreed that the election of such a pope would be invalid, and that he would lack all authority. |
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Since the Church cannot defect but a pope as an individual can defect (as, a fortiori, can diocesan bishops), the best explanation for the post-Vatican II errors and evils we have catalogued is that they have proceeded (proceed) from individuals who, despite their occupation of the Vatican and of various diocesan cathedrals, did (do) not objectively possess canonical authority. |