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Fr. Z is Moderator of the Catholic Online Forum and the ASK FATHER Question Box. The WDTPRS columns appear weekly in The Wanderer. Fr. Z lives in Rome, though he is often in the USA. He is available for retreats and conferences. E-mail
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  • 22 November 2007

    Bishop of Norwich on the older form of Mass

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 12:33 pm

    His Excellency Most Reverend Michael R. Cote, Bishop of Norwich has sent a letter:

    My emphases and comments.

    Office of the Bishop
    Diocese of Norwich, CT.

    August 15, 2007.

    Dear Brothers in Ministry:

    You are aware that in the Roman Catholic Church there has always been a multiplicity of liturgical rites and usages. The two major liturgical families are, of course, the Western and Eastern Rites. Within these families are various rites: in the East: the Ukrainian Rite, the Byzantine Rite, the Malabar Rite, the Maronite Rite, to name a few; and there are various rites in the West or Roman Rite. Some of these have fallen into disuse, while others continue to be celebrated on a limited basis: the Rite of Braga, the Rite of Lyon, the Ambrosian Rite, and the Dominican Rite. Never has a rite been formally banned or abrogated.

    By his Motu Proprio, Summorum Pontificum, Pope Benedict XVI has clarified the status of the Rite of 1962, often called the Tridentine Rite, a rite used throughout the Church till 1969. Far from calling into question the liturgical reform of the Second Vatican Council, the Pope has confirmed the liturgical reform of 1969, and has now made provisions that the wealth of this ancient rite be maintained [A nice way to say it.] for the Church. As Our Holy Father says, What earlier generations held as sacred, remains sacred and great for us too, and it cannot be all of a sudden entirely forbidden or even considered harmful. (Letter to the Bishops accompanying the Motu Proprio, July 7, 2007.)

    To properly implement the provisions of the Motu Proprio, I have established the Ecclesia Dei Ministry of the Diocese of Norwich. This ministry will respond to the spiritual needs of the faithful in the Diocese who have an attachment to the Extraordinary Rite of the Roman Rite, the Rite of 1962. It will provide the necessary resources and provide a place of reference should any of the faithful request celebrations of the Rite of 1962 for funerals or weddings or should pastors or priests have any questions. It will assist to make certain that every celebration according to the Rite of 1962 is done reverentially and correctly. It will implement the guidelines to be offered by the Bishops’ Liturgy Committee. [Hmmmm….] I have appointed Father Gregoire J. Fluet, Ph.D., Pastor of Saint Bridget of Kildare, to be Chaplain and Director of the Ministry. Father Fluet has celebrated the Tridentine Mass for the Diocese since 1990. Because our Diocese is small, this Ministry should be able to fulfill the stipulations of Summorum Pontificum.

    Should you have any questions concerning Summorum Pontificum, or specific requests or concerns, I invite you to contact Father Fluet directly at Saint Bridget of Kildare Parish in Moodus, and to refer your parishioners who have requests or questions to him.

    [...]

    With every best wish, I am

    Sincerely yours in Christ,

    +Michael R. Cote
    Bishop of Norwich 

    I am all in favor of a central office for resources.  However, Summorum Pontificum does place all this in the hands of parish priests, in every parish, and there is not provision for some central office to say where the old Mass can be celebrated.  Neither can a bishop’s conference utter guidelines that restrict Summorum Pontificum.

    It sounds like what the bishop offered is irenic.  We shall see how this plays out.

    • • • • • •

    Vestments for a consistory

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 12:27 pm

    According to a a communique of the Office of Pontifical ceremonies, on Petrus:

    His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI may use for the Saturday consistory a miter of Pius IX, with images of the Blessed Virgin and the Lord, a cope of guilded silk with a stole coming from perhaps the 16th century, with images of Sts. Peter and Paul. 

    On the feast of Christ the King, he will use a miter for for him and a chasuble used by John Paul II for his last consistory but made for Paul VI. The chasuble made with part of an old cope with an image of Christ the King with the three-tiered tiara, sceptre and orb.

    Is seems as if theological statements are being made in the symbols of vestments.

    It might be worth tuning in to see this.
     

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