• Thumbnail for Papal infallibility
    Papal infallibility is a dogma of the Catholic Church which states that, in virtue of the promise of Jesus to Peter, the Pope when he speaks ex cathedra...
    90 KB (11,137 words) - 03:44, 11 October 2024
  • Look up infallibility in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Infallibility refers to an inability to be wrong. It can be applied within a specific domain...
    15 KB (1,851 words) - 11:09, 16 September 2023
  • Thumbnail for Ultramontanism
    Ultramontanism (category Papal primacy)
    primacy in the Roman pontiffs, the meaning and power of the papal primacy, and Papal infallibility. [W]e teach and declare that, by divine ordinance, the Roman...
    17 KB (2,059 words) - 08:52, 31 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for First Vatican Council
    First Vatican Council (category 1869 establishments in the Papal States)
    Italian Capture of Rome. Its best-known decision is its definition of papal infallibility. The council's main purpose was to clarify Catholic doctrine in response...
    25 KB (2,611 words) - 23:24, 17 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Magisterium
    decree on justification and the First Vatican Council's definition of papal infallibility. The Catholic Church's magisterium is exercised without this solemnity...
    41 KB (5,304 words) - 06:54, 2 November 2024
  • Protestants believe in the infallibility of ecumenical councils,[citation needed] and these usually restrict infallibility to the Christological statements...
    21 KB (2,337 words) - 20:16, 15 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pope
    Pope (redirect from Papal)
    time, culminating in 1870 with the proclamation of the dogma of papal infallibility for rare occasions when the pope speaks ex cathedra—literally "from...
    173 KB (19,488 words) - 09:40, 17 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Papal supremacy
    Donation of Constantine Eastern Orthodox opposition to papal supremacy Papal infallibility Papal primacy Paragraph 882 of the Catechism of the Catholic...
    66 KB (7,492 words) - 16:07, 9 July 2024
  • Catholic Church over certain doctrines, primarily concerned with papal authority and infallibility. Some of these groups, especially in the Netherlands, had...
    43 KB (4,282 words) - 05:33, 28 August 2024
  • the reaction produced the concept of papal infallibility whereas, in the evangelical churches, the infallibility of the Bible was asserted. "Both movements...
    12 KB (1,566 words) - 19:27, 13 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pastor aeternus
    Roman pontiffs, the definition of the papal primacy as a papal supremacy, and Papal infallibility – infallible teaching authority (magisterium) of the...
    9 KB (1,163 words) - 09:33, 13 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pope Pius IX
    this infallible dogma raised a question: Can a pope make such decisions without the authority of the bishops? This doctrine of papal infallibility, enhancing...
    82 KB (9,600 words) - 17:00, 17 November 2024
  • magisterium having an infallible character, whereas the First Vatican Council defined a dogma on the infallibility of the extraordinary papal magisterium, in...
    3 KB (195 words) - 09:49, 27 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Febronianism
    (ordinis et consociationis). The Roman (ultramontane) doctrine of papal infallibility is not accepted by the other Catholic Churches and, moreover, has...
    21 KB (2,912 words) - 03:03, 19 October 2024
  • led to the definition by the Roman Catholic Church of the dogma of papal infallibility at the First Vatican Council. Gallicanism tended to restrain the...
    32 KB (4,712 words) - 04:42, 26 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Papal primacy
    churches." This council also affirmed the dogma of papal infallibility, deciding that the "infallibility" of the Christian community extended to the pope...
    102 KB (12,306 words) - 17:29, 19 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Ignaz von Döllinger
    Catholic priest and church historian who rejected the dogma of papal infallibility. Among his writings which proved controversial, his criticism of...
    22 KB (2,776 words) - 20:09, 26 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pope John XXII
    Press. Tierney, Brian (1972). Origins of papal infallibility, 1150–1350: a study on the concepts of infallibility, sovereignty and tradition in the Middle...
    31 KB (3,866 words) - 02:43, 1 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Josip Juraj Strossmayer
    Escudero. It was full of heresies and denied not only papal infallibility, but also the papal primacy. On 26 December 1872, Strossmayer published the...
    16 KB (1,413 words) - 00:32, 10 November 2024
  • 1874. Gladstone was outraged at the Vatican Council's decree of papal infallibility and set about to refute it. The pamphlet sold 150,000 copies by the...
    3 KB (289 words) - 21:09, 22 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Ecclesiastical differences between the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church
    two churches are ecclesiastical. Principal among them is the meaning of papal primacy within any future unified church. The Orthodox insist that it should...
    17 KB (2,069 words) - 23:12, 23 August 2024
  • dogmatic and a small number of decrees promulgated by popes exercising papal infallibility (for examples, see Immaculate Conception and Assumption of Mary)...
    15 KB (1,522 words) - 00:19, 17 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Evolution and the Catholic Church
    1859, during the papacy of Pope Pius IX, who defined dogmatically papal infallibility during the First Vatican Council in 1869–70. The council has a section...
    76 KB (9,662 words) - 01:46, 7 July 2024
  • First Vatican Council. The Council, in turn, proclaimed the dogma of papal infallibility. In Syllabus Errorum, the Church condemned as false some 80 philosophical...
    81 KB (10,461 words) - 14:05, 5 November 2024
  • Conciliarism (category Papal primacy)
    Fifth Lateran Council, 1512–1517. The final gesture, the doctrine of papal infallibility, was not promulgated until the First Vatican Council of 1870. Conciliar...
    10 KB (1,156 words) - 04:09, 23 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Temporal power of the Holy See
    Italian, clergy suggested an ecumenical council to dogmatically define papal infallibility as an article of faith, binding upon the consciences of all Catholic...
    15 KB (1,688 words) - 00:25, 25 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pentarchy
    significance to the pentarchy as the five pillars of the Church upholding its infallibility: it was held to be impossible that all five should at the same time...
    42 KB (4,807 words) - 19:56, 2 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for James Gibbons
    Council in Rome where he voted in favor of defining the dogma of papal infallibility. In 1872, Gibbons was named Bishop of Richmond by Pope Pius IX. In...
    32 KB (3,164 words) - 22:11, 21 November 2024
  • The papal deposing power was the most powerful tool of the political authority claimed by and on behalf of the Roman Pontiff, in medieval and early modern...
    28 KB (3,091 words) - 00:13, 20 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Martin John Spalding
    he first opposed, and then supported, a dogmatic proclamation of papal infallibility. Martin Spalding was born on May 23, 1810, in Rolling Fork, Kentucky...
    26 KB (2,712 words) - 06:10, 27 May 2024