ASK FATHER: Considering the chaos surrounding ‘Traditionis custodes” could we say that, in effect, it is no law at all?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Some years ago I studied for graduate theology with several distinguished theologians, one of whom was chancellor for Card. Burke in Lacrosse. In those Canon Law classes, he made the point over and again that the law is specific, defined and unambiguous and that when one interprets the law you should never add, nor subtract from what is explicitly stated.

Couldn’t it be reasoned then that because so many bishops have made such wide ranging rules, or no rules, based on Traditionis custodes that effectively there is no law at all? It is one thing to have some reasonable variations of implementation of law, but there isn’t just variation, there are outright different worlds being forged. I contend that the chaos is desired, but that will be the downfall, for in chaos there is no law leaving the faithful to appeal to higher laws than ecclesiastical ones.

Thank you for all you do Father.

The chaos is an opportunity.  I’ll get to that.

Let me come at this from two directions.  First, there are the differences between Summorum Pontificum and Traditionis custodes, including the problem of the lack of a vacatio.   Then, there is the issue of “reception” of Tradionis, for which Francis will ever be remembered as quite simply cruel.

“Wide ranging rules”?

When Summorum Pontificum was issued, Cardinal Darmaatmadja, S.J., the Archbishop of Jakarta, simply said “it does not apply here.” And that was that.

No one ever seems to have gone after him for that. He served out his time as archbishop and retired.

I assume he must have somehow invoked can. 87 §1.

Will bishops who refuse to implement TC eventually be targeted by Rome for torture?  It would not surprise me.  As a matter of fact, someone recently intimated to me that Rome was contacting bishops to tell them to get on it – or else – rather more than bishops were contacting Rome to obtain cover for their plans.

Traditionis custodes (TC or “Taurina cacata“) is disciplinary law.  You could argue that a bishop is supposed to comply, but if conditions on the ground warrant, if in the bishop’s estimation the application of the disciplinary law would be counterproductive or disruptive, etc., then a bishop could do what Card. Darmaatmadja did.

There are subtle differences between the “legal aspects” of Summorum Pontificum (SP) and TC , but they are crafted in an similar way. They are both Apostolic Letters given motu proprio, SP has a paragraph before the Articles with DECERNIMUS [sic, full caps] (“WE DECREE … the following”) and TC’s paragraph before Articles has decernere (“…it seemed to Us opportune to decree the following”).

SP: Instantibus precibus horum fidelium iam a Praedecessore Nostro Ioanne Paulo II diu perpensis, auditis etiam a Nobis Patribus Cardinalibus in Concistorio die XXIII mensis martii anni 2006 habito, omnibus mature perpensis, invocato Spiritu Sancto et Dei freti auxilio, praesentibus Litteris Apostolicis DECERNIMUS quae sequuntur:

TC: Nunc igitur, examinatis votis ab Episcopatu expressis et iudicio Congregationis pro Doctrina Fidei audito, cupimus, praesentibus Litteris Apostolicis, magis magisque in communione ecclesiali assidue conquirenda perseverare. Qua de causa, opportunum nobis visum est quae sequuntur decernere:

The big question is the “Qua de causa” — having examined the votes/opinions expressed by the bishops and heard the judgment of the CDF”.

I and others have called B as in B, S as in S.  I don’t even for an instant believe that the poll of bishops laid adequate grounds for TC.  We should be able to for ourselves what the votes/opinions were and to read the judgment of the CDF.

Gonna happen?  Not so much.

This reminds me of the “annulment reform” legislation that Francis issued in 2015. Mitis Iudex abolished the automatic appeal of an affirmative sentence in favor of nullity. Francis stated that he ended the automatic “2nd Instance” review of annulments because, he said:

“This was called for by the majority of the synod fathers in the synod last year [2014]: streamline the process because there are cases that last 10-15 years, no? There’s one sentence, then another sentence, and after there’s an appeal, there’s the appeal then another appeal. It never ends. The double sentence, when it was valid that there was an appeal, was introduced by Pope Lambertini, Benedict XIV, because in central Europe, I won’t say which country [Poland], there were some abuses, and to stop it he introduced this but it’s not something essential to the process.”

I might have missed it, please correct me if I’m wrong, but I didn’t see anything from the 2014 synod indicating that a “majority of the synod fathers” wanted this.

It’s not unlike the bizzare claim that, before the Council, “everyone” wanted a vernacular liturgy.  It’s not unlike that claim in that weird appendix to Sacrosanctum Concilium that “everyone” was clamoring for a fixed date for Easter.  The only people who wanted these things were pointy-headed “experts” in rarely dusted university offices bored during their office hours and, like the infamous Good Idea Fairy who spreads chaos and wasted time, thinking up stuff.

Make stuff up as an excuse to impose your personal desire.   There are a lot of ways to squander moral capital.  This is one of them.

NB: TC had no vacatio, that is, a period of time before it was to go into effect.  SP did.  TC didn’t.  A vacatio allows for planning on how to implement it.  That means that if a priest were to rise in the morning and gone straight to say Mass without having perused the Vatican Bolletino, he would have been, technically, in violation of the law.  Big deal, right?  Well, if you are interested in charity, yes.  It isn’t charitable to drop bombs in such a way that you – by your haste- cause problems for others.

The wisdom of including a vacatio is proven by the fact of the confusion, chaos and irregular application over the year after TC was issued.  A lot of bishops just arbitrarily created for themselves a pseudo-vacatio.  Fair to the bishops to do it that way?  Nope.

Also, the lack of a vacatio suggests that TC  was a long time in the making, but when Francis needed surgery, it could not be put off any longer. Hence, it was hastily sprung on everyone without a vacatio.  It smacks of panic, under the circumstances (of his impending surgery) as well as total disdain for the people it would effect, including the bishops.

Continuing with similarities, SP has a clear “servari iubemus” at the end, while TC has more convoluted language.

The alarming lack of knowledge of Francis about, as above, canon law and matrimonial nullity procedures was on full display in his statements.  Maybe the situation in Argentina was so bad that he heard about endless cases and appeal.   But to impose something on the whole world because in some places reform is needed?

Regarding liturgy, let’s not forget the virtually iron-clad adage about the essentially clueless: As lost as a Jesuit in Holy Week. To impose something truly draconian on the whole world because in a few trads are jerks?   That smacks of despotism and lack of competence driven by personal animus egged on by sycophantic ideologues.

Shifting gears, I predict is that TC is not going to be received in the long run.  It will prove to be no law at all. 

Reception theory states that a law, in order to be a law, a binding law, must be received by the community for which it is intended.  If they community does not receive it, that is, they reject it outright or it fails to have any effect on how they live, the presumed law is non-binding and is really no law at all.

This doesn’t apply to moral law, because it flows from above reception or rejection by mere human beings.   In the late 1960’s and after, dissidents from Humanae vitae infamously tried to apply “reception theory” to the Church’s teaching on contraception.  Fail.

Reception theory does not apply to moral teaching, but it can apply to certain of the Church’s disciplinary law, which includes liturgical law.

BTW… did you all see that the… I am not making this up… Pontifical Academy for Life tweeted that Paul VI didn’t intend that the Church’s teaching about contraception was infallible?  HERE

Let’s have a mind exercise and think about reception theory in view of Traditionis custodes, 

Popes make mistakes.  The faithful can see that they make mistakes.  The faithful have the right to express themselves about those mistakes, even when they have to do with disciplinary laws.  Sometimes the faithful respectfully and quietly vote with their feet.  Sometimes they organize and take action.  Sometimes they organize and quietly resist.

Sure, there will be some zealous bishops who turn on the faithful who want Tradition.  It is inevitable, considering.  However, my sense is that there are so many young priests and young people who now know and love the TLM that they will find a way simply to keep going.  It might be as simple as Father leaving the doors open when he says Mass privately (that is, not on the schedule) and people happen to wander in for some time in church.   It might be that the bishop will strike down that young priest.  A couple others will spring up.

In the chaos, there is opportunity.

I don’t think this can be stopped.

Mind you, there are going to be a lot of tears and anguish because of these bishops.  But in the end, they are only bishops.

This not like the earlier attempts to crush tradition.  Now, we have the internet, access to materials for Mass, many thousands have been exposed to it and want it.  These days are very different from the 70s-90s.

Friends, when your bishops do something good and generous regarding the Traditional Roman Rite, thank them.  When they do something stingy, work on them with spiritual bouquets, fasting, sincere requests.  Be the woman at the door of the judge before you turn to more drastic measures.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, B as in B. S as in S., Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Pò sì jiù, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, Traditionis custodes | Tagged
6 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 526, etc.

Please remember my links when shopping online. Thanks in advance.  US HERE – UK HERE  Tell your friends.

Life of Christ by Fulton Sheen

This is a little tricky.  White to move and gain material.

If there are chess playing PRIESTS out there, drop me a line. Perhaps a private group on lichchess would be possible.

Also…

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
Comments Off on Daily Rome Shot 526, etc.

FATHERS! LAITY! Are you ready?

I’ll also take this opportunity to remind/inform about a network of doctors who prescribe the REVERSAL of the “abortion pill” with no bad effects.

From the moment a woman takes the abortion pill, she has about 72 hours to change her mind and save her baby. The Abortion Pill Rescue Network, through Option Line’s 24/7 contact center, answers more than 150 mission-critical calls a month from women who regret their abortion decision. Statistics show that more than 3,000 lives have been saved (and counting) through the abortion pill reversal protocol!

Seeking a last chance to choose life for their little ones, women can reach out to the Abortion Pill Rescue Network and be connected with a local medical provider who starts the Abortion Pill Reversal Process.

HERE

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, Si vis pacem para bellum!, Sin That Cries To Heaven | Tagged
2 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 525, etc.

Please remember me when shopping online. Thanks in advance. US HERE – UK HERE

In Iceland, 50 years ago today, a dramatic win for Boris Spassky, his first against Bobby Fischer since games 1 and 2.  Fischer did not defend well and Spassky trapped Fischer’s queen and handed him his only defeat ever as Black in the Poisoned Pawn Sicilian.  But Fischer’s lead at this point seems unassailable.

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Bg5 e6 7.f4 Qb6 8.Qd2 Qxb2 9.Nb3 Qa3 10.Bxf6 gxf6 11.Be2 h5 12.0-0 Nc6 13.Kh1 Bd7 14.Nb1 Qb4 15.Qe3 d5 16.exd5 Ne7 17.c4 Nf5 18.Qd3 h4 19.Bg4 Nd6 20.N1d2 f5 21.a3 Qb6 22.c5 Qb5 23.Qc3 fxg4 24.a4 h3 25.axb5 hxg2+ 26.Kxg2 Rh3 27.Qf6 Nf5 28.c6 Bc8 29.dxe6 fxe6 30.Rfe1 Be7 31.Rxe6 1–0 (Resignation)

Use your phone’s camera!

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
Comments Off on Daily Rome Shot 525, etc.

ASK FATHER: I failed to do my confession penance. Now what?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I went to confession the other day to get back into the state of grace with the plan to get my spiritual life back in order after slacking and falling into habitual mortal sin during the pandemic restrictions on churches and not being able to receive communion for over a year. It’s been a real struggle and I’m not feeling particularly hopeful I can get back to where I was before. I feel very weak willed.

Anyways, I had to go to a parish where the priest, well meaning and traditionally minded, gives out non-conventional penances that take a long time to complete. Last time it was to pray for everyone I came into contact with the following day (I work in fast food. I come into contact with 1000 people a day).  This time it was, “starting [the next day] fast from unnecessary use of the internet for two days. Spend the extra time I would have used for internet to spend in prayer of my choosing.” I failed my penance within 5 minutes of waking up the next day when I habitually did a quick check of Instagram as part of my daily morning routine.  I usually spend the first 30 minutes of my morning eating breakfast and enjoying my morning coffee while watching personal development videos before going off to my crap job that I hate with a passion, but can’t seem to get myself out of.

Long story short, I failed my penance. I thought I could do it, but it was more onerous and disruptive to my daily routines than I thought (I motivate myself to do house work by listening to podcasts and vlogs while I work as a reward for myself, but my penance prevented me from doing so).

Firstly, your sins are still forgiven.  They were forgiven the moment you received absolution.  You don’t snap back into a state of mortal sin if you fail to do your penance.  The penance is something that should be done (and it seems you tried, so don’t worry) out of justice and for your own good in view of, perhaps, future Purgatory.

Next, if you are ever unsure about being able to do the penance assigned, ask for something else, something doable.

Explanation: All penances assigned are arbitrary and have little or no real proportion to the effects of mortal sin.  Mortal sin opens a gap between us and God who is infinite.  Hence, no penance is ever enough.  It is not nothing and that is the best we can do.

Sometimes priests get the idea that the penances they assign should be “meaningful”.  Okay.  Nothing wrong with that.  However, they get, at times, a little dreamy or idealistic, especially if they don’t know the circumstances of the penitents’ lives.

In ongoing spiritual direction a case can be made for tailoring penances to the penitent.  However, in my humble opinion, it is best, in most cases of anonymous auricular confession to give something simple, memorable and doable in a brief period of time.

I never want a penitent to walk out and think, “What was that again?” because I wasn’t clear.  I never want a penitent to wonder “When and how am I going to do this?”

It might be thought that a standard, “3 Hail Marys and 3 Our Fathers” seems a little bland.  Well, okay.  But, the penance can be performed quickly, usually on the spot, and the sense of having performed it works wonders.   Also, when I give rather standard penances, I do them myself as well.  Some priests do that.  Not all, some.

So, advice to penitents: If you are not sure about a penance, don’t leave scratching your head.  Ask for a clarification or for something else.

Advice to young priests: Don’t get all dreamy and meaningful.   If you know the penitent very well, it could be possible to come up with an “unconventional” penance.   Remember that all penances are arbitrary and none of them are “adequate”.   There are times when you sense that a longer penance, such as a chaplet of the Rosary could be in order.  In that case, you might just ask, “Do you think you can do that?”

I think one of the worst things we priests can do to people is leave them in doubt about the validity of a sacrament or what their part is in it.  So, sound instruction for children and converts about making a confession is of critical importance.  There is nothing worse, in my experience, than a terrified child who know deep down that this is an important moment but who doesn’t know what to do or even how to start.  Sure, they lock up sometimes, but normally with a slight prompt to get them into the groove of the form they learned, they go along just fine.  A priest can really tell who was taught and how.

Make sure children or converts – or YOU – know by heart an Act of Contrition.  To my mind, the classic can’t be surpassed in clarity and content. There are variations. This is what I learned:

O my God, I am heartily sorry for having offended Thee,
and I detest all my sins because I dread the loss of Heaven and the pains of Hell, [attrition]
but most of all, because they offend Thee, my God,
Who art all-good and deserving of all my love. [contrition]
I firmly resolve, with the help of Thy grace, to sin no more
to do my penance and to amend my life. Amen.

All the elements are there that the priest needs to hear so that he can give absolution.

Remember that confessional is a “tribunal” in which you are your own prosecutor. Not the priest. Not God. You are the prosecution of yourself. The priest, as judge, exercises justice and mercy. To do so, he has to hear that a) you are sufficiently sorry (at least attrition) and that b) you will amend your life. In a pinch the expression of sorrow for sin, even imperfect attrition, is sufficient. That’s why some priests, having been taught that, once they are sure of the penitent’s disposition, are not to delay absolution, start the form of absolution even before the penitent is done with the Act of Contrition.

Your job, as penitent prosecutor, is to examine your case, your evidence, thoroughly and then expose it all to the merciful judge.

I like the tribunal imagery.  Many old confessionals even have carved on them juridical sounding phrases.   It’s far better than the image of some grinning therapist who wants to hold your hand and braid your hair.  Blech.  Let’s get serious.

Everyone…

Examine your consciences daily.   And remember, if you sweep a room and you don’t move things out of the way, but go around things in a half-assed job, you are doing a half-assed job of it.  In examining your conscience, go into the dark places.  Get serious.  Usually this is something that takes practice, just like playing the piano, learning a language, or even cleaning a house.  Repetita iuvant.

No matter what else, when you go to confession, don’t hold mortal sins back.  If you are unsure about something, ask.  But don’t hide them from nervousness or embarrassment.  Priests have heard it all and, usually, we almost immediately forget what we’ve heard!  True!

GO TO CONFESSION!

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, GO TO CONFESSION | Tagged , ,
12 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 524, etc.

Your use of my Amazon affiliate link is a major part of my income. It helps to pay for insurance, groceries, everything. Please remember me when shopping online. Thanks in advance.

US HERE – UK HERE

White to move.   There is a tricky move involved.  Find it.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
Comments Off on Daily Rome Shot 524, etc.

Daily Rome Shot 523, etc.

Please remember me when shopping online. Thanks in advance.

US HERE – UK HERE

Click!

There’s a back story, too.

Try this one. It is not the easiest. There are a few options. Note the placement of white’s King.

Black to move.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
4 Comments

Hilarious statement from the Archdiocese of Chicago about the suppression of the Institute of Christ the King

ABC7 Chicago has a blurb about the Institute of Christ the King’s Shrine on the South side.  This is hilarious.

“On July 31, the Shrine of Christ the King communicated to the archdiocese that they would stop offering Mass and other sacraments at the Shrine. It was their choice to do so,” the archdiocese said in a statement Wednesday.

I couldn’t find that statement on the website of the Archdiocese.  Maybe one of you can.

Think about this.

The Institute was being forced by Cupich into a situation that Cupich knew was a deal breaker.

The Issue: Cupich told them they had to sign something that admitted that the Novus Ordo is the only expression of the Roman Rite… or else.

OF COURSE no one from the Institute could sign that, and he knew it!   Therefore, it was “their choice” to suspend Masses?  B as in B.  S as in S.

It was Thomas More’s and John Fisher’s choice to have their heads cut off.

It doesn’t make any difference how many time and into what sort of document the claim that the Novus Ordo is the “only expression” of the Roman Rite.  It is patently absurd.  It is false.  Repeating it is tantamount to implementation of The Big Lie technique.

The irony of this is that, according to the statement, I supposed the Institute could now respond in another statement that,

“Since it is, according to the Archdiocese, ‘our choice’ to suspend Masses, we’ve changed our minds.  We will restart the schedule forthwith.”

Hey!  Traditional Catholics are pro-choice after all!

UPDATE:

The Sun Times has more of the hilarious statement from the Archdiocese.  It only makes what the the ABC station reported worse, if anything:

[…]

[A] representative of the archdiocese disputed Blackman, saying the decision to stop the Masses was made by the church.

They chose to discontinue the Masses and sent the archdiocese a letter [on July 31] stating that they would stop offering Mass and other sacraments at the Shrine,” said Susan Thomas, a spokeswoman for the archdiocese. “They were not denied. We did not ban them. They chose to discontinue altogether.

The Shrine had the option to continue Latin Mass under the guidelines and decided not to,” Thomas added. “It is a false statement that we have a citywide Latin Mass ban. That’s simply untrue. Latin Mass is offered in the archdiocese.”

Early this year, Cardinal Blase J. Cupich sent instructions to parishes and shrines for the “continuation of the Latin Mass in a manner consistent with the decree of Pope Francis,” Thomas said.

Cupich stated in the instructions, “As of Jan. 25, 2022, all priests, deacons and instituted ministers need to request and receive permission from the Archbishop of Chicago” if they wished to celebrate the Mass in Latin.

The cardinal listed several conditions that need to be met in making such requests, most of them dealing with recent reforms in the church. “Latin Mass continues in the archdiocese under those instructions,” Thomas said.

[…]

This is an example of lying by omission.   An important fact is left out by the Archdiocese’s spox: that the Institute was being forced, in order to stay functioning, to agree to something that the Archbishop knew they could not agree to.   Similarly, St. Thomas More would have taken the Oath of Supremacy depending on the wording.   However, the wording was such that More could not have even a mental reservation about it.  Hence, he had to either lie to himself and to God and sign and thus save his earthly life while committing a mortal sin, or refuse and be imprisoned and killed.    The statement, “Thomas More chose to be beheaded” is the parallel here.

Posted in B as in B. S as in S., SESSIUNCULA, The Drill, Traditionis custodes | Tagged ,
39 Comments

ASK FATHER: Should displaced Catholics attend the Novus Ordo? Wherein Fr. Z rants.

I begin with his peroration…

Perhaps the bishops are not thinking about the liturgy at all, but about the people – whose devotion they envy, and whose moral conservatism they detest. Is that it?

Are they more to be punished because their churches are full? You might say, “Let’s learn from what they do.” You might say, “We should have real music in our parishes also.”

Why are you not pleased by their faith? They believe that you bear them a grudge. Why do you prove them right?

Thus, the concluding challenge to bishops from thoughtful Anthony Esolen at The Catholic Thing about the efficacy of the Novus Ordo as it is actually being used. His peroration is guided by the cruel treatment, inexplicable in large part, by bishops of those who desire the ancient Vetus Ordo.

I start this way because of question that came in.

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Should the displaced Catholics now attend the Novus Ordo ? why is is ok for priests to obey orders that are evil that are given by clergy who have no legitimate authority
to issue such orders whose clear aim is to destroy the tradition of the church?

Briefly, I am reminded of the book,  Dominus Est!, that helped to put Bp. Schneider in the spotlight.  He recounts how ancient martyrs died rather than renounce their Faith and the Eucharist because without the Eucharist they simply couldn’t go on, couldn’t live:  sine dominico non possumus.

Did Japanese Catholics, isolated from the institutional church and without clergy manage to hang on for years?  Yes.  They survived but they did not thrive.

I’ve used the “survive/thrive” binomial for decades now concerning the Novus Ordo and the Vetus Ordo, about the old ICEL translation for the Novus and the newer, for how the NO could be celebrated and how it generally is.   The idea is that a grown man can survive on the baby food of pureed carrots, but he won’t thrive.  Something more substantive is called for.   But when you are starving and can’t go on, that jar of pureed carrots looks pretty good.  At least you have that.

CAN’T go to the Vetus Ordo?   You still need the Eucharist.   All the time? Maybe not.  But you do need it.

Let’s go back to Esolen, and start at the top of the piece.

Latin and God’s Holy People

do not attend the Latin Mass.  I believe that the Novus Ordo Mass can be filled with beauty, but that the surroundings, the habits that have grown into prescriptive laws, the ancillary people and their actions, and the problems with the lectionary, especially in its English rendering, make that beauty difficult to attain.

The problem is not that the Mass, as it is in fact celebrated almost everywhere in the English world, fails to be overpowering, like a Beethoven symphony.  We cannot live on grandeur alone.  We must have ordinary bread.  But there’s a beauty to ordinary bread, too, the beauty of what is simple, wholesome, unpretentious.

The old low Mass had that simplicity.  You could say it was not grand, but it did not pretend to be.  What you could never say was that it was ugly, silly, or sentimental.  It was reliable, like a rock.

Cardinals Cupich and Gregory, Bishop Burbidge of Arlington, and others insist that we Catholics shall not be united unless we cause everyone to give up the beauty and power they find in the Latin Mass – for it is there to be found, and even at a low Mass, the quiet power is as solid and confident and firm.

[…]

There follows a series of blistering commandments from the theoretical imaginations of men like Gregory, Cupich, Francis, along the line of “We are going to strip away everything you love and find helpful and, dammit, you’re going to like it”.  Read them there and see if maybe that series doesn’t force an involuntary nod, jaw clench and perhaps a watery eye.

My emphases and comments.

[…]

I don’t question the validity of the Novus Ordo.  I certainly do question the efficacyeven the fidelity and the sanity of almost everything that has gotten tangled up with the Novus Ordo, which the despisers of the Latin Mass show no sign of wishing to reform.

Take that whole package all in all.  It doesn’t work.  It hasn’t worked.  It’s not going to work, because it runs counter to human nature, because it doesn’t acknowledge the full range of man’s needs as he stands before God, and because, in subtle but pervasive ways, it tends to make religion into a pleasant hobby and God into a hobbyhorse.

I’m referring to the whole thing there, the typical experience of Mass since 1970, and I’m speaking in general terms that do not apply to every parish or, much less, to every parishioner.

I’ve been blessed with pastors who understand beauty, and who keep in mind that God is the focus of our worship and not ourselves.  But innovations that apply generally must be evaluated for their general effect. [The Novus Ordo is exactly such an innovation.  It is, as Ratzinger aptly said, “The liturgical reform, in its concrete realization, has distanced itself even more from its origin. The result has not been a reanimation, but devastation. In place of the liturgy, fruit of a continual development, they have placed a fabricated liturgy. They have deserted a vital process of growth and becoming in order to substitute a fabrication. They did not want to continue the development, the organic maturing of something living through the centuries, and they replaced it, in the manner of technical production, by a fabrication, a banal product of the moment.” Before the pewling papalatrous peanut gallery pipes in about Novus Ordo being a derogatory term, it is exactly the term used at the time of Paul VI. And let it be known that, in Classical Latin, the very idea of something “new” is automatically to be held as suspect.]

Perhaps the bishops are not thinking about the liturgy at all, but about the people – whose devotion they envy, and whose moral conservatism they detest.  Is that it? [I’m convinced that many of the people who are trying to repress the Vetus Ordo are plagued with a particular moral problem, one that allows demons to attach, a sin that cries to heaven.  The prayers of the Novus Ordo were systematically stripped of concepts like propitiation, guilt, sin in favor of hope in eschatological fulfillment in the life to come.  Why? “Because Paschal Mystery… and shut up, you Vatican II hater!  That’s why!”  They are right in claiming that there is a difference in the theology of the Old and the New.  And, if you want to insist on “People of God” and “Paschal Mystery”, and that the Novus Ordo has – at long liberating last – got that, we respond that so does the Vetus, and it is has it better.  Why better? Because in the Novus Ordo the Resurrection aspect of the Paschal Mystery is so emphasized that the rest, Passion and Death, is eclipsed.   Problem: You can’t get to the kind of Resurrection we would prefer without Passion and Death.  Suffering, reparation, propitiation are necessary to obtain the joy of Heaven.   THAT’s what the haters of the traditional Mass don’t want to hear.  It’s like the evils of the “prosperity Gospel” and “rapture Christianity” messages: reward without suffering.  Again and again I say it here.  It’s not just that these tradition suppressors dislike the tradition – and they do – they dislike the people who want it.  Why?  Everything about the Vetus and the people who want it makes them feel guilty about something they are doing, hiding, have done and feel ashamed about.  That’s part of it, not all of it.  The true, pure ideologue is a rara avis.]

Are they more to be punished because their churches are full?  You might say, “Let’s learn from what they do.”  You might say, “We should have real music in our parishes also.”  [They’d rather close a church than have a choir that could handle Palestrina, a schola that could provide the Proper.]

Why are you not pleased by their faithThey believe that you bear them a grudge.  Why do you prove them right?

Questions to be asked, now asked.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , ,
21 Comments

Just Too Cool: Mars rover Curiosity is 10 years old

For your amazement…

Posted in Just Too Cool, Look! Up in the sky! |
1 Comment