The Church says that the Pope's teaching is infallible when it is delivered in a formal or official capacity. That's what the doctrine of papal infallibility entails.
Rather, just as Peter taught infallibly under certain specific conditions---for example, when he wrote his New Testament epistles---so his successors (the popes) teach infallibly under certain specific conditions. Not everything Peter said was infallible, after all.
On the contrary. The distinction is spelled out right there in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Try again.
This is merely your Straw Man Fallacy. See above.
Now go ahead and post the passage in the Catechism that supposedly states that "The Pope is incapable of making mistakes or being wrong EVER," as you claim above.
That's exactly what the Church teaches. Sorry for your confusion/ignorance.
Gaudium de veritate,
Cruciform
+T+
Sorry, Cruciform, the RCC does NOT teach as you say that it does.
The RCC vociferously says that the Bible teaches pope succession, e.g., however, you know that that is NOT true.
IRENEAUS (AD 130-202) was the headspring of the RCC.
The Encyclopedia Britannica says
"his was the first systematic exposition of Catholic belief."
Irenaeus
introduced the false teaching of apostolic succession from Peter and the importance of tradition above the Bible.
Like Justin, Irenaus believed in transubstantiation and the annihilation of the wicked.
Based on Irenaeus, textual critics developed the heretical "Two document theory" that purports that the writers of the Gospels copied from each other.
(Encyclopedia Britannica, s.v. Irenaeus.)
BTW, infallible is infallible.
Either your pope is infallible or he is fallible. He
cannot be both.
Again, I repeat, Peter
never said he was infallible. The RCC says that all your popeS are infallible.
I would appreciate the RCC STOP lying about Peter.