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Vatican Council, Sess. IV, Const. de Ecclesiâ Christi, c. iv, holds:
Dogmas promulgated by ecumenical councils of the Catholic Church, such as the dogmatic definition quoted above, are themselves considered infallible.
Following the first Vatican Council, 1870, a dissent, mostly among German, Austrian and Swiss Catholics, arose over the definition of Papal Infallibility. The dissenters, holding the General Councils of the Church infallible, were unwilling to accept the dogma of Papal Infallibility. Many of these Catholics formed independent communities which became known as the Old Catholic Church.
The only statements of the Pope that are infallible are ex cathedra statements, and many of the statements that opponents of papal infallibility point to are not ex cathedra. The conditions required for ex cathedra teaching are mentioned in the Vatican decree:
Invocations of papal infallibility are rare. The most recent one at the time of this writing (July 3, 2003) was in 1950; see Pope Pius XII.
The clearest recent statement of the church on its understanding of infallibility is in the Catechism of the Catholic Church promulgated in 1994, in which papal infallibility is clearly understood as an aspect of the infallibility of the Church Herself rather than as a personal authority (sections 889-892).
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