• If you ask me, why I am a Catholic Christian, my answer would be like the one of Saint Augustine’s: “I won’t be a Christian if not for the Catholic Church”.

  • By James Divine. September 4th, 2024 (https://substack.com/inbox/post/148703931?r=4ca6ix&triedRedirect=true). Foreword During the time I wrote this article, a gentleman, a scholar, an author and wordsmith; Dr. James Likoudis passed away. Perhaps asleep is he to us, but in soul; with Our Lord. May this Catholic champion rest in peace. Condolences to his family and friends who survive…

  • The quotes are courtesy of Divine Mercy Apologetics. They prove that St. Gregory Palamas’ position on Muslims is in perfect agreement woth the Catholic Church. Catechism of the Catholic Church #841: “The Church’s relationship with the Muslims. “The plan of salvation also includes those who acknowledge the Creator, in the first place amongst whom are…

  • St. Gregory mentions a dialogue he had with a group of Turkish Muslims. What makes his comments rather amazing is that he affirms that both the Muslims and himself are calling upon one and the same God, even though these Turks are ignorant of the fact that this God whom they worship is inseparable from…

  • In this post I will be citing extracts from the letters sent by Pope Agatho during the third Council of Constantinople (680-681 AD), which was convened to settle the matter of there being two wills in Christ our Lord.   Pope Agatho not only speaks of Peter’s primacy as the prince of the Apostles, he…

  • SEVENTEEN times the Gospel of John mentions the “hour” of Jesus. In the first half of the book, the “hour” is a highly anticipated moment in the ministry of Jesus that constantly grabs the attention of the reader and drives the narrative forward (Jn 2:4; 4:21; 5:25; 7:30, 8:20). In the second half of the…

  • I post here the commentary of the blessed St. Cyril of Alexandria on John 14:28 where he plainly states that the Father was greater than the Son only because of the Son’s Incarnation and descent to the earth to humble himself by becoming a slave. The saint refutes those heretics who used this verse to…

  • The quotations from St. Augustine are taken from On the Trinity, Book 1. Augustine will cite texts such as 1 John 5:20, where Jesus is called the true God and eternal life, to prove that Christ is one divine Person who operates in/by/through two natures since he is the God-Man. He will explain that Jesus, by virtue of…

  • In this post I will be quoting snippets from John the Damascene’s monumental tome titled, Exposition of the Faith, in regards to his articulation of the Trinity, the Son’s eternal generation, and two natures of Christ. As the readers will readily discern, John’s insights, depth of knowledge, and mastery of the Holy Scriptures are simply remarkable,…

  • Some anti-Trinitarians and/or subordinationists like to use St. Irenaeus’ statements in his refutation to the Gnostics where he states that not even the Son knew the hour to prove that this holy bishop did not affirm the Trinity. They argue that his words show that he was at the very least a subordinationist who did…

  • The quotations from St. Augustine are taken from On the Trinity, Book 1. The beloved saint will show that the words of our Lord Jesus in Mark 13:32 do not imply that the Son was ignorant of the Day or Hour, but that he chose to veil that knowledge for the express purpose of not making it…

  • This post is a continuation of my previous one from blessed St. Hilary of Poitier’s work On the Trinity, Book VII: Hilary: God is the Trinity. Here I provide more quotes from that same section showing how this holy saint confirmed that the phrase “one God” does not refer to or mean the Father, As the citations will prove,…

  • Here I cite from St. Hilary of Poitier’s work On the Trinity, Book VII, where this holy saint affirms that the term God refers the divine Persons who share the same name and nature. All emphasis will be mine. 31. We see how the living Son of the living Father, He Who is God from God,…

  • In this post I will be quoting from the works of another early church father, namely Hilary of Poitiers, in respect to his Trinitarian beliefs. The citations will show that Hilary affirmed that the Son was timelessly begotten, and therefore not a creature, since the Son has been eternally God with the Father. The quotations…

  • In this somewhat lengthy post, I quote the words of another great saint, Hilary of Poitiers, from his writing On the Holy Trinity, Book IV.   This holy saint not only argued that Jesus is that very divine Angel that appeared throughout the OT, he also quoted texts such as Genesis 1, Psalms 45:6-7, Isaiah 45:11-14, Hosea…

  • The excerpts cited here are all taken from Ambrosiaster’s Commentary on the Pauline Epistles: Romans, Translated with Notes, by Theodore S. de Bruyn, with an Introduction by Theodore S. de Bruyn, Stephen A. Cooper, & David G. Hunter. It was published by SBL Press in 2017. All emphasis will be mine.   5.1. The Context…

  • The quotations from St. Augustine are taken from On the Trinity, Book 1. The blessed saint will cite texts such as 1 Timothy 6:13-16 and apply that to the Trinity. In so doing, he identifies the only God of the passage as the Trinity. Augustine also applies 1 John 5:20 to the Son, which describes Christ as…

  • In this post I will quote from a few fathers and saints of the Church whom all believed that the reason the Son honored the Father as his God is because of the Incarnation, as a result of the eternal Word becoming flesh and taking on a human nature. Hippolytus 60. To grasp this divine mystery we…

The authority of the Pope Supremacy

The Pope’s authority over other bishops is real, direct, and juridical, not merely honorary, because it belongs to the very constitution of the Church willed by Christ. At the same time, it is ordered to communion and the safeguarding of the faith, not to arbitrary domination.

1) The foundation: why the Pope can discipline bishops

a) Christ gave Peter a unique pastoral office

– **Matthew 16:18–19 (Douay-Rheims):** “Thou art Peter; and upon this rock I will build my church… And I will give to thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven…”

– **Luke 22:31–32:** Jesus prays specifically for Peter: “I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not: and thou, being once converted, confirm thy brethren.”

– **John 21:15–17:** “Feed my lambs… feed my sheep.”

These texts are the biblical root of the Church’s constant teaching that Peter’s office includes a responsibility for the unity of faith and communion among the bishops.

b) The Church teaches the Pope has “supreme, full, immediate, and universal” power

– **Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC) 882:** The Pope has “supreme, full, immediate, and universal power in the care of souls.”

– **CCC 937:** The Pope is “the perpetual and visible source and foundation of the unity” of bishops and faithful.

“Immediate” matters here: it means the Pope can act **directly** with respect to bishops and dioceses, not only through intermediaries.

2) What authority does a bishop have and how does it relate to the Pope?

Bishops are not merely “branch managers.” They possess real authority in their dioceses by divine institution. Yet their authority is exercised **in communion with** the head of the college of bishops.

– **CCC 895:** Bishops govern their churches as vicars and legates of Christ, but this authority is exercised within the hierarchical communion with the head and members of the college.

So: a bishop’s authority is genuine, but it is not independent of communion with the Roman Pontiff.

3) Discipline of bishops: the Pope’s concrete legal power

The Church’s law is explicit that the Pope can:

– investigate,

– correct,

– restrict,

– remove from office,

– and impose penalties (including for heresy).

Key canons (1983 Code of Canon Law):

– **Canon 331:** The Roman Pontiff has “supreme, full, immediate, and universal ordinary power” in the Church.

– **Canon 333 §1:** The Pope can always exercise this power freely.

– **Canon 333 §3:** “There is neither appeal nor recourse against a sentence or decree of the Roman Pontiff.”

– **Canon 1405 §1, 1°:** The Pope alone has the right to judge bishops in penal cases.

That last point is crucial: if a bishop is accused of a grave delict (like heresy), the Pope (personally or through the dicasteries acting in his name) is the supreme judge.

4) Heresy: what it is, and what can be done to a bishop who persists in it

a) Definition of heresy in canon law

– **Canon 751:** Heresy is “the obstinate denial or obstinate doubt after the reception of baptism of some truth which is to be believed by divine and Catholic faith.”

So it’s not mere confusion or a poorly phrased sermon; it involves **obstinacy** regarding a truth that must be believed.

b) Penalties for heresy

– **Canon 1364 §1:** “An apostate from the faith, a heretic, or a schismatic incurs a latae sententiae excommunication…”

For bishops, the process and judgment belong to the Pope (cf. **canon 1405**). The Pope can also impose additional penalties or administrative measures.

5) Removal from office (even apart from a full penal trial)

Sometimes the Church proceeds not by a penal sentence but by an administrative act for the good of the Church, especially if governance has become gravely harmful.

– **Canon 193 §1:** A person cannot be removed from an ecclesiastical office conferred for an indefinite time except for grave causes and observing the law.

– **Canon 401 §2:** A diocesan bishop is “earnestly requested” to present his resignation if he has become less able to fulfill his office because of grave cause (this can include situations of scandal or serious doctrinal rupture).

– **Canon 416:** A diocese becomes vacant by removal or transfer of the bishop (among other causes).

In practice, Rome may request resignation; if refused, the Pope can remove.

6) Limits and meaning of papal authority

The Pope’s authority is not “above revelation.” He is bound to serve the deposit of faith.

– **CCC 890:** The Pope and bishops have the charism to teach without error under specific conditions, but always as servants of the Word of God, not its masters.

So the Pope’s power to discipline bishops is ordered to:

– protecting the faithful from error,

– preserving communion,

– restoring the bishop if possible,

– and safeguarding the Church’s unity.

7) A simple summary

– A bishop truly governs his diocese, but only **in communion** with the Pope and the whole college of bishops (CCC 895).

– The Pope has **supreme and immediate** authority over the whole Church, including bishops (CCC 882; canons 331, 333).

– In cases of heresy, the Pope alone is the supreme judge of bishops in penal matters (canon 1405), and heresy is clearly defined (canon 751) with serious penalties (canon 1364).

– The Pope can also remove a bishop from office for grave cause, sometimes through administrative means (canons 193, 401–416).

  • Arius and Nestorius are excellent examples because they show two complementary truths at once:

1) the Church’s faith is safeguarded **through the episcopal college in council**, and  

2) the Pope possesses a **real primatial authority** that can confirm, judge, depose, and restore communion—often exercised through legates and authoritative judgments.

1) Arius (4th century) and the Arian crisis

What happened

Arius (a presbyter of Alexandria, not a bishop) taught that the Son is not true God but a creature. The crisis spread widely among bishops.

Where papal authority appears

– **Council of Nicaea (AD 325)** condemned Arianism and professed the Son as “consubstantial” with the Father. The Pope did not personally preside, but the Roman See’s role appears especially in the later consolidation of orthodoxy and in the appeal-to-Rome pattern that emerges in the aftermath.

– **Athanasius of Alexandria** (a bishop and chief defender of Nicaea) was repeatedly deposed by Arian-leaning synods and emperors; he appealed to Rome and was supported by the Roman Pontiff.

A key moment is **Pope Julius I** (AD 337–352), who defended Athanasius and insisted that such major cases should not be decided without reference to Rome. The point here is not that Rome “invented” orthodoxy, but that the Church increasingly recognized Rome as a court of appeal and a principle of communion in episcopal disputes.

**Takeaway:** In the Arian controversy you see: (a) councils condemning heresy, and (b) Rome functioning as a stabilizing center of communion and judgment when local or imperial pressures distorted episcopal discipline.

2) Nestorius (5th century) and the title “Mother of God”

Nestorius, Patriarch of Constantinople, rejected calling Mary *Theotokos* (“God-bearer,” Mother of God), effectively dividing Christ into two subjects.

Papal authority in action: a direct judgment and mandate

– **Council of Ephesus (AD 431)** condemned Nestorius and affirmed Mary as Mother of God, because the one born of her is truly a divine Person (the Word) in a true human nature.

But before and during the council, the Roman Pontiff acted decisively:

– **Pope Celestine I** judged Nestorius’s teaching and authorized **St. Cyril of Alexandria** to act in his name if Nestorius did not recant.

– At Ephesus, the papal legates’ presence and the council’s communion with Rome mattered greatly for the council’s authority and reception.

**Takeaway:** This is a classic example of the Pope (through judgment and legates) acting upon a major bishop/patriarch in a doctrinal crisis, with a council then giving solemn ecclesial expression to the judgment.

3) The “Robber Council” and Pope Leo I (Chalcedon, AD 451)

A powerful example of papal authority correcting episcopal disorder:

– In AD 449, the so-called **“Robber Council” of Ephesus** attempted to rehabilitate error and used coercion against orthodox bishops.

– **Pope Leo I** rejected its acts.

– At **Chalcedon (AD 451)**, Leo’s doctrinal letter (the **Tome of Leo**) was received as a touchstone of orthodox Christology, and the council condemned the earlier violent assembly.

**Takeaway:** The Pope can refuse confirmation of a council’s acts and thereby prevent a false “council” from binding the Church. This is papal authority exercised not as a rival to councils, but as a guardian of the Church’s faith and communion.

4) A very clear disciplinary case: 

Pope Hormisdas and the Acacian schism (6th century)

This is not Nestorianism exactly, but it shows Rome disciplining bishops and restoring communion.

– After the Henotikon controversy, communion between Rome and parts of the East fractured.

– **Pope Hormisdas (AD 514–523)** required bishops seeking reunion to sign a profession of faith (often called the **Formula of Hormisdas**) that explicitly linked full communion with communion with the Apostolic See.

**Takeaway:** Rome exercised a concrete condition for episcopal communion: bishops were reconciled by a profession of faith and acceptance of communion with the Roman See.

5) How these cases show the Pope’s authority “over bishops”

Putting it simply, in these controversies the Pope’s authority appears in several recurring ways:

1) **Doctrinal judgment**: identifying a teaching as contrary to the apostolic faith (e.g., Celestine with Nestorius; Leo with the “Robber Council”).  

2) **Canonical/communion consequences**: breaking communion, excommunication, or refusing recognition of a claimant or synod.  

3) **Legates and mandates**: the Pope acts through representatives, and their presence signals communion and juridical connection.  

4) **Confirmation/reception**: ecumenical councils are received as binding in the Church in union with the Roman See; a “council” rejected by Rome does not become an ecumenical norm (as with AD 449).  

5) **Appeal and protection**: bishops (like Athanasius) appeal to Rome when local synods act unjustly or under coercion.

6) One important clarification

In the first millennium, the Church often acted **synodally** (through councils), and the Pope often acted **primatially** (through judgment, legates, confirmation, and communion). These are not competing systems; they are two dimensions of one Church: the bishops teaching together, and the Petrine ministry safeguarding unity and the integrity of faith.

This fits the Church’s later canonical expression:

– the Pope’s “supreme, full, immediate, and universal” authority (CCC 882; canon 331), and

– the bishops’ true authority in their churches (CCC 895), exercised in communion.


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