Fr
Tim Finigan writes:
It is the defined doctrine of the Church that
when the Pope makes a solemn definition concerning faith or morals, ex
cathedra, that is, as shepherd and teacher of all the faithful, he enjoys
that infallibility which Christ gave to the Church.
Matters of faith and morals as revealed by Christ
to the Church are thus the primary object of papal infallibility.
Theologians have traditionally regarded a solemn
decree of canonisation as one of the secondary or indirect objects of
infallibility because all the actions of the Church are ordered to the
sanctification of the faithful, and a decree of canonisation does not merely
tolerate or permit veneration of a particular saint, but solemnly prescribes
such a cultus for all the people of God, for all time.
Were such veneration to be prescribed for someone
who is not in heaven, the Church would fail in her divine mission to lead all
the faithful in the path of salvation.
Hence, for example, in 1933 Pope Pius XI
explicitly referred to a decree of canonisation as infallible.
We do not
have to agree with all the details of the process of canonisation: the formal
process of canonisation was introduced gradually in the Church and has often
changed over time.
We are
only committed to believe that a canonised saint is in heaven, should be
venerated as a saint, is worthy of our imitation, and prays for us.
We do not
have to agree with everything a saint said or did.
The
canonisations of St Bernadette, St Maria Goretti, and St Gemma Galgani were opposed
strongly by some, but once their decrees were pronounced, Catholics united in
venerating them.
The
forthcoming canonisations can spur us to look anew at the encyclicals of
Blessed John Paul, and Blessed John XXIII’s Journal of the Soul to learn
from them, honour them, and seek their intercession for ourselves, for the
Pope, and for the whole Church today.
Today
is the day on which the Lefebvrist movement finally becomes sedevacantist, as
has always been the logic of its position. The Catholic media ought therefore
to stop reporting anything about it.
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