Why doesn't the Pope try asserting doctrines ex cathedra to check if they're true?

Upvote:0

"it would be a great idea for the Pope to attempt to assert ex cathedra that they are saved"

Probably not. God would probably have to kill or otherwise divinely stop the mouth (or pen in this case) of said pope before he did so, as stated by another person here, else the Church would have been overcome by Satan (the true faith is anathematized and lost and error taught in its place) in which impossibility the infallibility of the Church (in an extraordinatary sense with regard to the successor of St. Peter—due to the fact that he overrides the authority of all bishops and has the authority to bind all Catholics to a certain interpretation of the deposit of Faith whereas individual bishops do not—and in an ordinary overall sense with regard to the world's bishops) exists.

Papal infallibility precludes that such a 'trial dogma definition' could ever happen, ever. It would breach the infallibility of the Pope (more a descriptive fact about the Church than a 'power').

That is, your question is like 'what if water wasn't H2O' and is meaningless to ask (sorry, in the logical sense, not that it has no value in being asked).

Papal infallibility is a necessary consequence of 1) the infallibility of the Church as a whole (that the gates of Hell will not prevail against it—which a new faith/false doctrine being taught would constitute) and 2) that the Pope has the authority to teach and bind all to his teaching, in a way other bishops cannot and therefore do not require, and are not protected by, this kind of infallibility. They possess an infallibility which basically means no amount of bishops teaching heresy x will result in the same overcoming of the Church by Hell—a much more descriptive 'infallibility' than even the Pope.

It isn't some magic power.

Upvote:1

Do not put the LORD your God to the test (Deuteronomy 6:16).

We know the Pope is infallible because God gave Peter specifically, and the Apostles generally, the Keys of the Kingdom. What the Apostles can do collectively (like in an Ecumenical Council), Peter can do as an individual. Same keys, but different ways to excerise them.

Furthermore, the Pope and the Bishops generally aren't creating new doctrine, but rather discovering or emphasizing or interpretating the Revelation the Christ already gave us.

Christi pax,

Lucretius

Upvote:4

You massively misunderstand the process of promulgating doctrine. It's not a magic process where God causes true statements to be generated out of thin air. Doctrine is developed through prayer, research, consultation, discernment and much more, and involves the whole church, not just the Pope. The belief is that God guides this process to ensure it is correct. Shortcutting the means would be equivalent to cheating God.

Upvote:6

Pope Pius XII—in his apostolic constitution that defines the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, Munificentissimus Deus (1950)—describes the process in which he sought counsel from all the bishops of the world in the letter Deiparæ Virginis Mariæ (1946), where he asked them (§11):

Do you, venerable brethren, in your outstanding wisdom and prudence, judge that the bodily Assumption of the Blessed Virgin can be proposed and defined as a dogma of faith? Do you, with your clergy and people, desire it?

The response was almost unanimous.

Although a pope has the authority to define a dogma without asking for counsel regarding its "definability," it would be rash not to seek counsel.

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