Ad tuendam fidem

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Ad tuendam fidem
Latin
for 'To Protect the Faith'

Apostolic constitution of Pope John Paul II
Coat of arms of Pope John Paul II
Signature date 18 May 1998
SubjectProfession of faith
Text
Apostolos Suos →


Ad tuendam fidem (English: To Protect the Faith) is an

ministers of the Church before assuming office.[1]

Description

The

Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
accompanied publication of the document with a doctrinal commentary, clarifying the three levels of authoritative teaching of the Church. The highest level is that of doctrines solemnly propounded as revealed by God. These call for divine faith. The second level is that of doctrines likewise infallibly taught not as revealed by God but as truths inseparably connected with revelation. The third category is that of teachings on matters more or less loosely connected with revelation that without being set forth with the solemnity of infallible doctrines are nevertheless authoritative. For this last category, what is required of Catholics is "religious submission of will and intellect". The other two call for firm and definitive assent, an assent that in the first category is one of divine faith.

The congregation's doctrinal commentary gave several examples of teachings of the first category, including the articles of the Creed, and teachings on the sacrificial nature of the Eucharist and on the grave immorality of direct and voluntary killing of an innocent human being. The second category includes teachings on such matters as the illicitness of euthanasia, prostitution and fornication, and on what are called "

.

References

  1. ^ a b John Paul II, Ad tuendam fidem, accessed Jan-9-2013

Further reading

  • Dulles, Avery (2013). "Catholic Doctrine: Between Revelation and Theology". Proceedings of the Catholic Theological Society of America. 54: 83–91.

External links