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Salient: Victoria University Students' Paper. Vol. 30, No. 1. 1967.

[introduction]

Curious Cove—The Papacy could be a possible centre for the reunification of Christianity. Father Francis Durning told students at Curious Cove.

He said the primacy of the See of Rome was one of the facts of history and that until the end of the fifth century nearly all Christians acknowledged its authority.

The main obstacles to the reunification of the churches was the misunderstanding of the doctrine of Papal infallibility.

Father Francis Durning is an assistant lecturer in Religious Studies at the University of Canterbury. He was born in Scotland and came to New Zealand as a child. He studied at Canterbury and Victoria colleges and graduated MA in History. His special field of studies is the Reformation.

Catholics believed the Pope; was the last court of appeal on matters of faith and the direct inheritor of the author-ity of St. Peter. They did not believe anything about the Pope personally. They did not believe he was divinely inspired or had any special revelations, or that he knew all the answers.