Catholic Encyclopedia Theological censures are divided into three groups by the
Catholic Encyclopedia; this division is according to as the censures bear principally upon either 1) the degree, or 2) the expression, or 3) the consequences, of condemned propositions: •
Pertinacious adhesion to a doctrine contradictory to a point of faith clearly defined by the Catholic Church is heresy pure and simple, heresy in the first degree • If the doctrine in question has not been expressly defined or is not clearly proposed as an article of faith in the ordinary, authorized teaching of the Catholic Church, an opinion opposed to it is styled
sententia haeresi proxima, that is, an opinion approaching heresy • Next, a doctrinal proposition, without directly contradicting a received
dogma, may yet involve logical consequences at variance with revealed truth. Such a proposition is not heretical, it is a
propositio theologice erronea, that is, erroneous in
theology • Lastly, the opposition to an article of faith may not be strictly demonstrable, but only reach a certain degree of probability. In that case the doctrine is termed
sententia de haeresi suspecta, haeresim sapiens (scholarly heretic); that is, an opinion suspected, or savouring, of heresy
Ludwig Ott Catholic theologian
Ludwig Ott describes the following censures, which he says are the most common theological censures: • Heretical proposition (): "This signifies that the proposition is opposed to a formal dogma" • Proposition proximate to heresy (
propositio haeresi proxima): "the proposition is opposed to a truth which is proximate to the Faith (
sententia fidei proxima)" • Proposition savouring of, or suspect of, heresy (
propositio haeresim sapiens or
de haeresi suspecta) • Erroneous proposition (
propositio erronea): "opposed to a truth which is proposed by the Church as a truth intrinsically connected with a revealed truth (
error in fide ecclesiastica) or opposed to the common teaching of theologians (error theologicus)" • False proposition (
propositio falsa): "contradicting a
dogmatic fact" • Temerarious proposition (
propositio temeraria): "deviating without reason from the general teaching" • Proposition offensive to pious ears (
propositio piarum aurium offensiva): "offensive to religious feeling" • Proposition badly expressed (
propositio male sonans): "subject to misunderstanding by reason of its method of expression" • Captious proposition (
propositio captiosa): "reprehensible because of its intentional ambiguity" • Proposition exciting scandal (
propositio scandalosa)
Sommaire de théologie dogmatique The
Sommaire de théologie dogmatique proposes the following degrees of theological censure: • Heretic: if the proposition "directly and immediately opposes a truth formally revealed and defined or proposed as such by the solemn or ordinary and universal Magisterium of the church" • Proximate to heresy: if the proposition "opposes a truth presented by
the common teaching of [''l'ensemble'' des] theologians as certain and soon to be defined". An example of one of those truths is the
universal Mediation of the Virgin Mary • Scholarly heretic: if the proposition "can be interpreted in either a Catholic or heretical sense; but, juging by the circumstances, the latter sense prevails. Example: someone who is rightly suspected of
Protestantism affirms insistently that faith alone
justifies, and never affirms that
works are also necessary for justification" (see
Sola fide) • Erroneous: the proposition "opposes a strictly speaking theological conclusion". An example of erroneous proposition is: "each
Bishop in his
diocese is independent of the
Sovereign Pontiff, since he [each Bishop] holds from
Christ himself the powers necessary to govern his diocese" • Positively temerarious: the proposition "having for itself no probable reason, [...] opposes a doctrine universally received in the Church". An example of a positively temerarious proposition is: "there is no
Limbo for children who died without baptism" • Negatively temerarious: the proposition "without probable foundation, [...] affirms a theological doctrine which has never been taught by the Church". An example of a negatively temerarious proposition is: "some more people other than the
Holy Virgin have been
exempted from the
original sin" • Offensive to pious ears: "[w]hen the terms used go against the respect due to
holy things" • Badly expressed [
Mal sonnante]: "[i]f the words are improper and open to misinterpretation" • Scandalous, seducing: "[i]f the professed doctrine leads to evil" •
Seditious: "[i]f the doctrine leads to rebellion against the legitimate Authority" •
Schismatic: "[i]f it leads to separation from the Church"
John Hardon Catholic theologian
John Hardon states: == See also ==