Dear Alex,
I read the posting in which you said:
"It is as if Catholics who support women priests are acting as if they've never heard of Tradition before, much less accept its authority."
"Such Catholics seem to think they can change almost anything in the Church as long as they work hard to try and convince the Pope that such change is warranted so that he can use his "infallible wand" to effect that change."
"It is wrong for those Catholics to think that way."
"But it is also wrong for Rome to have underscored papal authority to the extent that Catholics get the impression that the Pope has this arbitrary power over and above Tradition."
"Instead, Rome should be pointing to the sources of Tradition and historic ecclesial praxis that have always taught the doctrines that it wishes to underscore with modernizing Catholics."
'Ultimately, if I were a modernist in the Church, I would simply look at what the pope said and say, "O.K., he's an old fogie with not much time left in the Chair, we'll have to work on his successor!" '
"And it's not a question of getting a pope "who'll do as we say."
"It's a question of the authority of Tradition of Scripture, the Seven Ecumenical Councils et al."
"And if Rome, I might add, were really serious about this, then it would also obey the voice of Tradition, return to the Creed without the Filioque and a number of other things that it is still intransigent over - giving the Orthodox East the enduring impression that Rome considers the Papacy to be above Tradition in the final analysis."
Dear Alex,
The cup of Tradition is, of course, always full. The Truth held in the Tradition of the Churches is always complete. The Truth about what is real that is taught by the Church is Tradition; Tradition is the Truth about what is real that is taught by the Church. If I understand correctly, there is one Truth/Tradition.
But the task for each new generation of believers is to make that Truth/Tradition its own in the context of its world. So, it seems to me that the challenge for each generation is to ask, "Is the cup of our understanding of Truth/Tradition half full or half empty?" In other words, is this what Truth/Tradition really says?
If that is true, I have some comments and a question or two. Please bear with me.
First, let me say that I am not questioning what the Church has to say about who should be ordained. That example is simply the one which caused me to question about a larger issue.
In the context of talking about ordination of wormen, I understood you to say that it is wrong for Catholics to carefully examine Truth/Tradition to understand what it means in the light of the world in which they live. I am trying to understand why you say that it is wrong for Catholics to think that way. Perhaps I misunderstood.
Further, I am trying to understand why it is wrong for Catholics to act on the basis of the conclusions arising from examination of Truth/Tradition. Why is it wrong for Catholics to try to ensure that their practices accurately relect what they understand Truth/Tradition to be?
It seems to me that that is what has been done by some Catholics on a number of issues. Clarifying the role of the papacy is one.

Clarifying who can be called to priesthood is another.
Other Catholics are upset by their efforts. These
Catholics then interpret what the proponents of change do as some dastardly cabal. They charge that those who propose change, like ordination of women, do so out of a desire to destroy the content of Truth/Tradition.
The proponents of change claim that their behavior is a living out of their baptismal responsibility to examine their Faith and its Truth/Tradition. They claim that they work for the good of the Church.
They claim that the charges made against them are groundless. They charge their critics with creating needless division among believers.
There is a historical process here. The discussion about ordination of women provides a clear example.
Some Catholics have examined the Church's Truth/Tradition about whom God can choose to be ordained for priestly ministry in the Church and have proposed changes in practice. The specific proposal was ordination of women.
It arose from an attempt to know the Truth/Tradition that there are those called by God to ministerial service in the Church. In practice, believing males are ordained by the Apostolic Churches. In Eastern terms, only they can be Axios. Most Apostolic Churches have accepted that as an expression of Truth/Tradition.
During the past 20 - 40 years, some in the Church have explored that Truth/ Tradition in the light of different views of what makes man to man and woman to be woman. That is and was controversial and certainly non traditional.
These proponents of women's ordination claimed to have explored that Truth/Tradition in the light of Scripture. They pointed to the teaching that in Christ there is neither male nor female, etc. They came to question whether the parctice of ordaining only males is a is practice mandated by Tradition or a long-standing traditional practice.
As I noted, this is one issue being discussed in the Church today. There are others. Your comments appear to be applicable to Catholics and their right to engage in the process of examining any given Truth/Tradition.
Apparently the understanding of what is proper practice about ordaining women in Truth/Tradition had not been challenged. The Truth/Tradition had not been discussed and thus made clearer. Apparently no one asked.
It seems to me that one can disagree with proponents of change in practice about how that practice is located on the continuum from truth/tradition to Truth/Tradition. On what basis can anyone make the assertion that Catholics, who do raise the question and suggest change before the teaching is clarified, do not accept the authority of Truth/Tradition.
Why should Catholics not think this way?
Why should they not show that they value the authority of Truth/Tradition by seeking to know more about it and how it applies to practices in the Church in their own time. If the practices seem to run counter to Truth/Tradition, is it not their responsibility to work hard to bring about the changes that will bring the practices into line with Truth/Tradition.
That, it seems to me, is not an act of unfaithfulness. Isn't it a matter of faith seeking understanding? It is certainly a part of our tradition.
Of course, the proponents of change, are not necessarily right. In turn, they are reminded by the Pope of what the Truth/Tradition of the Church is. Hopefully they will accept the Truth/Tradition that the bishops and the Pope, acting in His service role to the Church, make clear is Truth/Tradition.
The process of discernment ends with the clear teaching. (The pope appears to have made his meaning clear on the issue of ordination of women by, among other things, excommunicating some women who sought ordination on a riverboat, if I remember correctly.)
But the historic process leading to their act of questioning or seeking change is not wrong is it?
Didn't the Orthodox faithful do the same at the time of St. Mark of Ephesus in the face of a Counciliar teaching?
Not one Catholic that I know wants to try to make what is Truth/Tradition into what is Un-Truth/Non-Tradition. I do not know any Catholic who believes that the Pope's charism of infallibility is about doing that. We certainly don't believe that he has a magic wand that enables him to do so.
But, of course, you're Catholic and you know that.
So, rather than see those seeking understanding and right practice as a problem, I wonder if they aren't a blessing to the Church. These Christians take Truth/Tradition seriously enough to raise the question. Truth/Tradition will be made clearer through the answers. The Church's teachers are given the opportunity to address the concerns of humans in the world in which they live in terms they understand in the process.
As Catholics we believe that the Spirit will protect the Truth/Tradition that God has shared with us. He has gifted the Church with the charism of infallibility to preserve the Truth. The teaching authority of the Pope and bishops is part of the practice that reflects the Truth/Tradition of the Churches. The People of God who, though not ordained, are baptised into Christ the teacher, have a role in protecting Truth/Tradition, too.
Perhaps those who propose changes in our practices to ensure that they accurately express Truth/Tradition are part of the process. Isn't it possible that the Spirit is using them to do so?
Isn't it also possible that their existence is a sign to the Orthodox that the teaching of our Church sets the Papacy in the context of Tradition?
Thanks for hearing me out.
Steve
PS I can't imagine the words the Pope is an old fogey leaving the lips of any Catholic I've ever heard. I do know some who do advocate change, as you know.
If they thought that he could change Truth/Tradition, they certainly wouldn't want to get on his bad side and have him wave his infallible wand in their direction.
