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One God, One Faith, One Spiritual Authority. Pope Boniface VIII - 1302. Bull of Pope Boniface VIII promulgated November 18, 1302 Urged by faith, we are obliged to believe and to maintain that the Church is one, holy, catholic, and also apostolic.
Unam sanctam [a] is a papal bull that was issued by Pope Boniface VIII on 18 November 1302. It laid down dogmatic propositions on the unity of the Catholic Church, the necessity of belonging to it for eternal salvation, the position of the Pope as supreme head of the Church and the duty thence arising of submission to the Pope in order to ...
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Jun 28, 2019 · The Unam Sanctam (1302) was a papal bull issued by Pope Boniface VIII (served 1294-1303) requiring the complete submission of all people, including kings, to the authority and dictates of the pope. As the Church was understood as holding the keys to heaven and hell, and the pope was head of the Church, failure to comply threatened salvation.
- Joshua J. Mark
Apr 18, 2024 · In November 1302 Boniface had issued an even more fundamental declaration concerning the position of the papacy in the Christian world, the bull Unam sanctam (“One Holy”), which has become the most widely known of all papal documents of the Middle Ages because of its allegedly radical and extreme formulation of the content of the papal ...
Nov 11, 2002 · Pope Boniface VIII issued the papal bull Unam Sanctam, the most famous papal document of the Middle Ages, on November 18th, 1302. Cardinal Benedict Gaetani, a canon lawyer and diplomat from a leading Roman family who had spent many years working his way up in the papal government, was chosen pope in 1294 to replace the elderly Celestine V, a ...
Mar 16, 2005 · Unam Sanctam — Papal Bull of Pope Boniface VIII. WE ARE COMPELLED, OUR FAITH URGING us, to believe and to hold—and we do firmly believe and simply confess—that there is one holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, outside of which there is neither salvation nor remission of sins; her Spouse proclaiming it in the canticles, “My dove, my ...
Pope Boniface VIII (r. 1294 – 1303) believed that all authority derived from God, and that the pope, as the Vicar (or lieutenant) of Christ, was the highest embodiment of his will on Earth.