Misplaced Pages

Auctorem fidei

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Papal bull of Pope Pius VI
Auctorem fidei
Latin for 'Author of the Faith'
Papal bull of Pope Pius VI
Coat of arms of Pope Pius VI
Signature date 28 August 1794
SubjectCondemnation of Jansenism

Auctorem fidei is a papal bull issued by Pius VI on 28 August, 1794 to condemn the tendency towards Gallicanism and Jansenist-tinged reforms of the Synod of Pistoia (1786).

The bull catalogued and condemned 85 articles of the Synod of Pistoia. After the bull's publication, Scipione de' Ricci submitted. In 1805, he took occasion of the presence of Pius VII in Florence on the latter's way to Rome from his exile in France to ask in person for pardon and reconciliation.

The document has been cited as a source of doctrinal orthodoxy when later popes were called to combat doctrinal errors in the 19th and 20th centuries. It is mentioned in Gregory XVI's brief, Quo graviora (1833) and his encyclical letters Commissum divinitus (1835) and Inter praecipuas machinationes (1844), and in Pius X's Pascendi Dominici gregis (1907) and Paul VI's Mysterium fidei (1965). Pius VI's statement on adoration of the person of Christ, whose humanity is inseparably united with "the person of the Word" (Proposition 63 in Auctorem fidei), is quoted by Pope Francis in his encyclical letter Dilexit nos (2024).

References

  1. Pope Gregory XVI, Quo Graviora, paragraph 5, published on 4 October 1833, accessed on 11 December 2024
  2. Gregory XVI, Inter Praecipuas, paragraph 5, published 8 May 1844, accessed 6 August 2023
  3. Pope Francis, Dilexit nos, paragraph 50, published on 24 October 2024, accessed on 11 December 2024

Sources

External links

Stub icon

This article related to an official document of the Catholic Church is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: