XR, I don't believe that anyone, apart from God, is infallible so it wouldn't matter to me whether a belief was a dozen years old or a billion years old. If a belief is truly from God, a rather difficult assertation to prove, in my opinion, if it is not found in the pages of Holy Scripture, it matters not how long ago it was revealed. Conversely, there are numerous beliefs held by peolpe throughout history that survive to this day. They are certainly not infallible beliefs. This is proof positive that the length of time a belief is held does not dictate whether it is infallible. If it comes from God, it is infallible the minute it comes from Him, regardless of wether the body of Christ ever ratifies that belief.
In short, I don't believe the Church establishes the truth of God's revelation. I think the Church acknowledges and receives the truth of God's revelation.
Well, I'm not Roman either so I would not endorse papal infallibility as tenable either.
I see. Well, thanks.
God bless
If you don't mind a late entry into this, I can see where you would be skeptical of 'corporate infallibility'. Heaven knows every other group I belong to is prone to error great and small. Our common experience with human organizations tells us clearly that while two heads may be better than one, a whole crowd can not only be hugely wrong, but will almost never achieve any level of real consensus. So far, we think alike.
The difference, as expressed by Xenia Rose and others, is that we do not consider the Church to be a human organization. Of course, it is populated by humans, sinners each and every one, so at times the Church can look like it is all over the map, without a firm consensus on one issue or another. And, of course, we are not immune from the occasional evil person, a bad bishop or priest -- or even deacon -- who will bring disrepute on the Church.
Yet we firmly believe that in the long run the Church is indeed infallible, because the Holy Spirit works in it and through it. As a Christian yourself, you would probably endorse the idea that God is not limited in the way that we are limited. He uses us sinners to achieve His purpose, and our ecclesiology insists that the Church is not just His work, but His Bride. Would He leave her bereft?
As I say, there are times when it appears the Church has fallen into error. For example, when Arianism was rampant it appeared as if the Church had fallen into it. Jerome wrote that "the whole world awoke, and found itself Arian". Yet over time, the ship righted itself, Arianism was shaken off, and the right course resumed.
That is why we have learned to be patient. Over time, by the guiding of the Holy Spirit, the Church finds its oneness on each issue that arises. It may be quick, or it may be agonizingly slow. But we get there.
Fr. Deacon James