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Slavishly accurate liturgical translations & frank commentary on Catholic issues - by Fr. John Zuhlsdorf o{]:¬)






























You know that Catholic World News has issued a story that the Holy Father says the older form of Mass in private. Here are the salient bits:
Pope Benedict uses older ritual for his private Mass
Vatican, Jul. 16, 2007 (CWNews.com) – Pope Benedict XVI (bio – news), who recently issued a motu proprio allowing all Catholic priests to celebrate the old Latin Mass, uses the older ritual himself for his private Mass, CWN has learned.
Informed sources at the Vatican have confirmed reports that the Holy Father regularly celebrates Mass using the 1962 Roman Missal.
...
Since becoming Roman Pontiff, Benedict XVI has always used the new ritual—which he identifies in Summorum Pontificum as the "ordinary form" of the Roman rite—for public celebrations of the Eucharistic liturgy. However few people have witnessed the Pope celebrating his private daily Mass.
I can’t get into the details of this report. But there is something I can bring to your attention.
What I find really amusing, and what gives the CWN story legs, is how Catholic News Service (owned and operated by the USCCB) rushed to post a denial!
Please note that the denial lacks some really important direct quotes.
Vatican spokesman: Pope concelebrates daily Mass using current missal
By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
VATICAN CITY (CNS)—Pope Benedict XVI concelebrates his daily morning Mass in Italian using the current edition of the Roman Missal, the Vatican spokesman said.
Claims that the pope celebrates his private Mass using the Tridentine rite are incorrect, Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi told Catholic News Service July 17.
....
Less than 10 days after Pope Benedict July 7 issued his letter and norms providing greater opportunity for the celebration of the Tridentine Mass, news reports claimed Pope Benedict already had been celebrating the old rite privately.
"The confusion probably was caused by our footage of the pope celebrating facing the altar, which is due to the fact that the altar is against the wall" in the private chapel of the Apostolic Palace, Father Lombardi said. [I am reasonably sure that the editor of CWN, Phil Lawler, is smarter than that. However, when so many people are totally bound up in the idea that the older form of Mass is about "mumbling in Latin" or that the priest has "his back to the people", this is what I expect.]
With the altar against the wall, the concelebrants in the private chapel end up having their backs toward the congregation during the eucharistic prayer. [I still think the people at CWN are smarter than that.] The congregation at the morning Mass generally is made up of the pope’s valet and the consecrated women who staff the papal apartment.
The images Father Lombardi referred to were released by the Vatican to coincide with celebrations of Pope Benedict’s 80th birthday April 16. Father Lombardi heads the Vatican Television Center, which produced the footage, as well as serving as director of the Vatican press office and Vatican Radio. [A trifecta, I’d say.]
Father Lombardi also said the fact that the pope’s two private secretaries concelebrate the Mass with him each morning [I wonder if Fr. Lombardi said "each morning"....] "obviously means he is using the new Missal," since the Tridentine Mass strictly limits concelebration.
....
Meanwhile, and what follows is entirely circumstantial, here are photos of the Holy Father’s Redemptoris Mater chapel in the Apostolic Palace:
2003
2007
This interesting story is in from the South China Morning Post
July 17, 2007
Catholics could make pilgrimage to Shanghai
Ambrose Leung
Hong Kong Catholics hope to make a pilgrimage to Shanghai on the day next May that Pope Benedict has urged the faithful to pray for the church in China.
The Pope made the appeal for prayers on May 24 in his pastoral letter to Chinese Catholics, issued last month.
Cardinal Joseph Zen Ze-kiun, head of the Hong Kong diocese, said pilgrims would be asked to take a copy of
Pope’s letter along. He hoped more than 1,000 would join the pilgrimage to the Sheshan Basilica.
He was speaking after a question-and- answer session with Catholics last night.
"I am seriously considering organising a
large-scale pilgrimage, since we are so close to Shanghai. I have to see whether [the mainland authorities] will
agree. They should welcome it," Cardinal Zen said.
In his letter, the Pope called for reconciliation between the state-recognised and underground Catholic communities
on the mainland. He said the church’s feast day of Mary, Help of Christians, which falls on May 24 each year,
should be dedicated to a day of prayers for China.
Bishop Zen said Catholics worldwide should pray with their Chinese brethren, who traditionally paid respects to
Mary in the Sheshan Basilica on that day.
The Hong Kong diocese has yet to make a proposal to the mainland. If such a pilgrimage is approved, it would be
the first such large-scale cross-border religious exchange. The diocese has printed more than 30,000 copies of the
Pope’s letter in simplified Chinese characters and has also printed copies in traditional Chinese characters.
Cardinal Zen urged the faithful to take them to Catholics, especially priests, on the mainland if they joined the
pilgrimage, in order to help ensure the Pope’s message reached its intended audience.
Since the letter’s publication last month, many mainland websites carrying the full version of the letter have been
repeatedly blocked or have had their content removed.
Despite efforts by some mainland Catholics to print and circulate the letter, copies are still scarce.
His Excellency Most Reverend William Lori, Bishop of Bridgeport (who has a blog) has a rather chatty but very good piece about Summorum Pontificum.
As usual, my emphases and comments.
One Rite, Two Forms
By THE MOST REVEREND WILLIAM E. LORI, S.T.D., BISHOP OF BRIDGEPORT
Fairfield County Catholic, July 14, 2007
Somewhere, buried amid my elementary school report cards, essays, and other childhood memorabilia is the Mass card that was given me when I became an altar server. Its specific purpose was to help train servers on how to respond to the Mass prayers in Latin. Since we were unschooled in Latin, the card offered phonetic pronunciations of the Latin responses. Included on the card were prayers at the foot of the altar as well as responses for the Gospel, the Preface, the blessing, dismissal, and the Last Gospel.
My classmates and I took pride in learning these replies by heart and in achieving clear pronunciation of the Latin words. We were also fascinated by the intricacy of the Mass; under the tutelage of our assistant pastor, we learned to serve the High Mass and the Low Mass with effortless precision. Forty Hours, Confirmations, funerals, and weddings, as well as Holy Week (the rites for Holy Week had already undergone an initial revision) were special challenges which we relished. [What I like about this is that he describes a) that little kids can learn what to do and b) they were proud and happy in doing learning it. In contrast, so many people, not a few prelates included, pewl and whine about that the older form is tooo haaard for grown men to learn. Folks, let’s get this into perspective: if kids can do it, we can do it. If all those not too bright priests for centuries could do it, we can do it.]
Those memories came back to me this past week when I read Pope Benedict’s new documents permitting a more frequent use of the Mass and Sacraments as they were celebrated prior to 1970 – using both the ceremonial forms and the Latin language as found in the Roman Missal issued by Blessed Pope John XXIII in 1962. The first of Pope Benedict’s documents on this subject is an Apostolic Letter entitled Summorum Pontificum and given Motu Proprio, which means it sets down provisions or norms by the Holy Father’s own proper authority. [Yes, the Pope’s authority. Something many critics of the MP ought to remember.] That said, the Holy Father spent a good deal of time in prayer, reflection, and consultation [yes, it was collegial] with bishops and experts before he issued these new norms.
The second document is a pastoral letter addressed to bishops wherein the Holy Father treats pastoral concerns that his new directives might be expected to raise; this is coupled with words of encouragement to us members of the college of bishops who are his co-workers in proclaiming the truth and love of Christ.
These new norms will go into effect on September 14, 2007, the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross. In the coming weeks, I will seek the advice of both clergy and laity [I don’t remember other bishops saying they would consult lay people, even though the MP really seems to focus on the rights of lay people and priests] as we study the norms found in the Holy Father’s Apostolic Letter and how they will apply to our diocese. In the meantime, however, since these directives of the Holy Father are, to some degree, "in the news," I thought it best to offer you a few pastoral reflections and perspectives, based on what the Holy Father has said and written.
First, I want to speak about the enduring value of the extraordinary form of the Mass according to the Roman Missal of 1962. This Missal, though issued relatively recently, recapitulates centuries of liturgical development. In thinking back to my own youthful experience of the liturgy, I am reminded not only of its antiquity but also of the formative role it played in the lives of almost everyone I knew, including my parents. The Mass and the Sacraments in this form nurtured the faith of great saints, Catholic intellectuals, and untold millions of ordinary Catholics. [Thank you, Your Excellency, for not sneering at the old Mass. This expresses the respect the older form deserves.]
One of my prized possessions as a youth was the Saint Andrew Daily Missal which contained Mass prayers in Latin and English, together with explanations of the rite. Following along with this Missal, my classmates and I had a clear understanding of the parts of the Mass together with their significance. [Do you remember my entries on the importance of having a hand missal? Also, this reminds me of the influence the Schott hand missal played in the life of the young Joseph Ratzinger.]
In making this form of the Mass and Sacraments more readily available today, Pope Benedict is not suggesting that the liturgical renewal following the Second Vatican Council was mistaken, nor is he attempting to "roll the clock back," as some may fear. The Mass according to the Missal of Pope Paul VI (the Third Edition of which was issued by Pope John Paul II) will continue to be the ordinary form of the liturgy, whereas the previous form will remain extraordinary.
Far from rejecting the renewed liturgy, the Holy Father is making an important point: the ordinary form of the liturgy (that of Pope Paul VI) is in continuity with the older usage; thus there are two forms (ordinary and extraordinary) in the one Roman Rite. This is not just a technical point. It means that you and I stand in communion, in a continuity of faith and prayer, with those who have gone before us. We are one with those who for centuries worshipped in liturgical forms which in the West gradually took shape until they were more or less standardized by Pope Pius V following the conclusion of the Council of Trent in 1563. [Nicely done.]
Perhaps, in the strenuous efforts to reform the liturgy following the Second Vatican Council, there was insufficient appreciation of the important role which these venerable liturgical forms continued to play in the spiritual lives of many, not only those in advancing years but also a surprising number of young people. [I don’t think it is surprising. His Excellency describes the effect it had on him when he was young. Why would young people today not be interetsed?] Perhaps it took a few decades of experience for this to be clearly seen; ["Don’t it always seem to go / that you don’t know what you’ve got ‘till it’s gone…"] this has been observed in the two parishes in the diocese were the older usage is celebrated. So with a mix of gentleness and firmness, the Holy Father is encouraging us to embrace all things Catholic in a spirit that seeks the unity and common of the Church. [Again, nice.]
Various other pastoral concerns have been voiced. Some have wondered aloud whether this undercuts the authority of the local bishop to regulate the liturgy. I truly do not believe that it does. [At last, a measured voice.] The role of the local bishop is not to "invent" the liturgy but rather to ensure that it be faithfully and prayerfully celebrated in accord with the teaching and discipline of the Church. Echoing the thought of Saint Paul, we bishops, together with our priests, are "stewards" of the liturgy, not its owners. [Sorry, that loud THUNK you heard was me falling off my chair.]
An ancient adage tells us that "the law of praying is the law of believing." This means, among other things, that the liturgy is to reflect in beauty and simplicity the faith of the Church. The first job of a bishop is to teach the faith – primarily through the preaching and instruction which he delivers or that which is delivered on his behalf by pastors and parish priests. For the vast majority of Catholics, however, this occurs within the liturgy. The Holy Father has provided the bishops of the world with an opportunity to teach about the nature and role of the liturgy in the lives of all the faithful. [Excellent.]
Some have also wondered if these new directives will bring about unity with those who have effectively left the Church following the Second Vatican Council, not only over liturgical reforms but also over aspects of conciliar teaching. They worry that efforts to re-unite these dissident groups might produce a greater disunity among the vast majority of Catholics who seem relatively satisfied with the liturgy as it was restored and renewed following the Council.
In weighing such concerns, we should recognize the pope’s global perspective on this question; [RIGHT. The Pope is the Pope of the whole church. A lot of the criticism of the MP has been very parochial.] it is estimated that, worldwide, some 400,000 individuals, including nearly 500 priests, are involved in such groups, the largest being the Society of Saint Pius X founded by the late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre.
No one imagines that the Motu Proprio will bring about automatic reunification with such groups, for the issues go beyond the liturgy. However, it may help many to find their way back to full communion with the Church. This is a worthy pastoral goal which all of us should reflect on with serenity and open-heartedness. We should also be attentive to the wise provisions that the Holy Father has put in place so as not disrupt the ordinary flow of parish life.
Concerns were also voiced in the media about the effect the Motu Proprio might have on Roman Catholic-Jewish relations. Prior to the Missal of 1962, the Good Friday Liturgy contained prayers which, lamentably, were indeed anti-Semitic. "Are we returning to such forms?" it was asked.
As just indicated, such references were already removed in the Missal of 1962; furthermore the older usage cannot be used at all during the Triduum, that is, Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday. [Ummmm…. no, Your Excellency. Where there is a parish for the older us, where the Novus Ordo is not celebrated, the older form of the Triduum is used.] Thus the Motu Proprio should have no effect, one way or the other, on Roman Catholic-Jewish relationships. Rather, the Church’s commitment to dialogue and cooperation with the Jewish community will continue unabated.
To read the text of the Apostolic Letter, the Pope’s letter to bishops, and a useful Q&A on the subject, click here. I urge you to read these documents for yourself. Again, after appropriate consultation, I will offer guidance on the implementation of the Motu Proprio that will be faithful to its spirit and its letter.
How refreshing! Thank you, Bishop Lori.