Cum occasione explained
Latin: Cum occasione is an apostolic constitution in the form of a papal bull promulgated by Pope Innocent X in 1653 which condemned five propositions said to have been found in Cornelius Jansen's Augustinus as heretical.
The five errors of Jansen on Grace condemned in Latin: Cum occasione are:
- "Some of God's commandments are impossible to just men who wish and strive to keep them, considering the powers they actually have; the grace by which these precepts may become possible is also wanting to them."
- "In the state of fallen nature no one ever resists interior grace."
- "In order to merit or demerit, in the state of fallen nature, we must be free from all external constraint, but not from interior necessity."
- "The Semi-Pelagians admitted the necessity of interior preventing grace for all acts, even for the beginning of faith; but they fell into heresy in pretending that this grace is such that man may either follow or resist it."
- "It is Semi-Pelagian to say that Christ died or shed His blood for all men."
Bernard Otten explained, in A manual of the history of dogmas, that the first four of these propositions are absolutely condemned as heretical; while the fifth is condemned as heretical when taken in the sense that Christ died only for the predestined.
See also
References
- Encyclopedia: San Francisco. Ignatius Press. Enchiridion symbolorum: a compendium of creeds, definitions and declarations of the Catholic Church. 43rd. Denzinger. Heinrich. Heinrich Joseph Dominicus Denzinger . Hünermann. Peter. Fastiggi. Robert L.. Nash. Anne Englund. 2. 2012. 978-0898707465. . Compendium of Creeds, Definitions, and Declarations on Matters of Faith and Morals.