Despite rumors, TLM advances in @ArchdioceseSF

Rumor volat.  Meanwhile, our response is to push ahead relentlessly, joyfully.

We are our rites and we cannot be stopped.

I received this…

“ In celebration of the 14th anniversary of the publication of Pope Benedict XVI’s Summorum Pontificum, St. Mary’s Cathedral in San Francisco will host the first public Traditional Latin Mass since the current Cathedral opened in 1971.”

HERE

And…the Benedict XVI Institute continues to offer free training for priests who wish to learn the Extraordinary Form.

HERE

There is also an offer to any Bay Area priest who receives this training to also be given a set of vestments!

Also in the archdiocese, recently ordained Fr. Cameron Pollette offered his First Mass in the Extraordinary Form at (the infamous!) Star of the Sea church in San Francisco.

That’s how it’s done.

If they want some lío, we’ve got some some lío.

¡Hagan lío!

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ASK FATHER: Can bishops or priests forbid Communion on the tongue?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Please help me to understand something about Communion on the hand.  As I’m understanding it, people can receive Communion on the hand if they want to but also on the tongue if they want that and the priest or EMHC isn’t supposed to force them one way or another.  Then COVID came along and people were being forced to receive only on the hand.  Maybe a virus pandemic is a good reason to restrict our rights. I don’t know.  I know there are arguments that Communion on the tongue is actually safer than on the hand.  In normal times can a bishop force priests to give Communion only on the hand?  Can a priest force that on his parish?   I know several priests who have been hammered by their bishop because in homilies they expressed their preferences for Communion on the tongue (over on the hand) even though they never denied anyone to receive on the hand.

There are several issues here.

Firstly, this applies to the Novus Ordo.  It is not permitted to give Communion in the hand when using the Usus Antiquior.

Next, no one is compelled to receive Communion at a given Mass.  You must receive once a year, according to the law.

Next, Communion in (or on) the hand is permitted – by an indult – in those places where it has been approved by the bishop.   NB: Communion in the hand is an exception to the norm.  The normative way of distribution is on the tongue.

Be clear about the equivocal use of “norm”.

“Norm” can be descriptive or prescriptive.   For example, in the sentence, “Weird behaviors among the Jesuits seems now to be the norm.”  Sorry about that, you good guys who drop me notes.  You also know what I mean.   In this case, we use “norm” to describe a prevailing behavior which isn’t necessarily mandated.  Or else, “Billy is above the norm when it comes to the other altar boys, since he knows not only all the Latin prayers, but all the rubrics, too.”  In this case, “norm” describes the average.   However, we also have in the 1st Book of the 1983 Code of Canon Law the Latin Church’s “General Norms”.  Here, a “norm” is pretty much synonymous with “laws” or “canon”.  A “canon” is “a standard, a measure, a rule”.   Think of how “rule” also means “law”, but can also just be a way of expressing what the general state is.   Hence, I like to make a distinction about “norm” as descriptive or prescriptive, depending on the context.

So, in one way, descriptively, it is the “norm” that people receive Communion on the hand.  Why?  Because that’s what most people do these days.  However, in another way, prescriptively, it is the “norm” that people receive Communion on the tongue because that is what the Church’s true law, “norm” establishes.

An indult is a permission granted for an exception from a particular norm (prescriptive sense) in certain circumstances.

In the case of Communion in the hand, the indult was originally a grant to make licit an abuse – the abuse was Communion in the hand – that hadn’t been suppressed successfully in specific places.

Where it was granted there was to be special catechesis against Communion in the hand (the abuse).  However, the Congregation in Rome started giving the indult to any bishops conference that asked!  The abuse turned into the common practice (norm, descriptive sense).

Moreover, in Paul VI’s 1969 Instruction Memoriale Domini, Latin for “Let’s Let The Cat Out Of The Bag”, we read about the conditions for the granting of the indult:

[…]

The condition is the complete avoidance of any cause for the faithful to be shocked and any danger of irreverence toward the Eucharist. The following norms must, therefore, be respected.

“1. The new manner of giving communion must not be imposed in a way that would exclude the traditional practice.

[…]

Reading that 1969 document is a little shocking.  What spectacular naiveté!  The overweening anthropocentrism that drove much of the Council was strongly in play, perhaps more than ever.

Think about this.  In some places the abuse of Communion on the hand was underway. So, someone in the Roman brain trust thought it would be a good idea to make the abuse licit through an indult so as to get rid of the abuse.

Let that sink in.

That’s like giving a hundred dollar bill and a new razor blade to a cocaine addict and then telling him that cocaine is bad.  That’s like telling Johnny not to swing his baseball bat in the living room ’cause he will break a lamp and then giving him a golf club.  That’s like telling criminals in New York City that they will be released without bail.

It all stems from that pervasive naïve optimism about the nature of fallen man that guided much of the Church’s doings from the 60’s onwards.  It fueled the anthropocentric drive of some of the Council’s documents, such as Gaudium et spes.  Example: remove the obligation to do X because, gee, it’s better if people do it willingly rather than out of a sense of duty.   That sure worked for Friday penance, Eucharistic fasting, Sunday Mass attendance, raising children in the Faith, etc. etc. etc.

I digress.

It was evident from the onset that Communion in the hand was diminishing reverence and increasing sacrilege.

In 1973 another Instruction was issued, Immensae caritatis, which addressed what Memoriale had.  It reminded about reverence and care for the Eucharist.

Then again in 1980 John Paul II in his Apostolic Letter Domincae cenae:

[C]ases of a deplorable lack of respect towards the Eucharistic species have been reported, cases which are imputable not only to the individuals guilty of such behavior but also to the pastors of the church who have not been vigilant enough regarding the attitude of the faithful towards the Eucharist. It also happens, on occasion, that the free choice of those who prefer to continue the practice of receiving the Eucharist on the tongue is not taken into account in those places where the distribution of Communion in the hand has been authorized.

The General Instruction of the Roman Missal, in describing the manner of distribution, actually makes a statement about “appropriate reverence” and says that the whole Host has to be consumed.

The more often laws are repeated, the clearer it is that they are not working.

In 1999 a dubium was sent to Rome about Communion (Notitiae 35 (1999): 160–161) (my translation)

Q: Whether in dioceses where distributing Communion in the hands of the faithful is allowed, it is permitted to a priest or to extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion to restrict communicants with the obligation that they receive the Holy only in the hands, but not upon the tongue.

R. Certainly it is clear from the documents of the Holy See themselves that in dioceses, where the Eucharistic bread is put into the hands of the faithful, nevertheless the right for them to receive on the tongue remains undiminished. Therefore, they act against the norms who either restrict communicants with the obligation to receive Holy Communion only on the hands or who refuse to the faithful to receive Communion in the hand in dioceses which enjoy this indult. Attention being paid to the norms concerning the distribution of Holy Communion, ordinary and extraordinary ministers should take care in a particular way that the host is consumed immediately by the faithful, in such a way that no one leaves with the Eucharistic species in his hand. However, let all remember that the centuries-long tradition is to receive the host on the tongue. Let the priest celebrant, if there is a danger of sacrilege, not give the faithful Communion in the hand, and let him inform them about this way of proceeding.

This response is cited in the 2002 Instruction Redemptionis Sacramentum, which defends the right of the faithful to receive Communion on the tongue and tells ministers not to distribute on the hand if there is danger of sacrilege.  (There is always greater danger of sacrilege with Communion on the hand.)

Note the language, above: restrict with an obligation.

Use your phone’s camera

In working out how to apply the Church’s laws, we apply the interpretive principle that laws which place restrictions or obligations must be interpreted as strictly as possible.  That is, they must be interpreted narrowly so as to protect people from undue obligations.   On the other hand, laws which grant favorable things to people must be interpreted as generously as possible, so as to expand what people can do licitly.  Odia restringi et favores convenit ampliari. 

As to the restriction of the faithful with the obligation to receive on the hand – exactly what we read about above and in Redemptionis – because of COVID-1984, there was a bizzare circular letter from the CDW in August 2020 which said that in “times of difficulty (e.g., wars, pandemics) Bishops and Episcopal Conference can give provisional norms”.

Contrary to everything the Holy See has ever promulgated, suddenly – during COVID-1984 Theater – a bishop could oblige people to receive on the hand, thus restricting their right to receive according to the norm!

And just what is a “time of difficulty”?   Right now there is problem of employment, businesses are having a difficult time hiring.  It’s a time of difficulty. NO COMMUNION ON THE TONGUE… PROVISIONALLY!   Right now, inflation driving prices up makes the times difficult.  Provisionally we have to stop Communion on the tongue until the numbers change.  And why, may I ask, would time of war require restriction of Communion on the tongue?   It’s as if someone with his head screwed on in the right direction managed to put that “war” thing in there just to show people how weird the letter is.  Figure this out. An indult to suspend a condition for the granting of that older indult which made an abuse licit so as to help to end the abuse that led to the indult in the first place.

A “circular” letter indeed.  More like a Mobius strip letter.  The topside is the downside.

Note that, back when, Paul VI said that an indult could be given to conferences, regions of dioceses.  At the same time, just because the indult was given to a conference, a region, that didn’t oblige the individual bishops to implement the indult.  Individual bishops could choose not to make use of the indult.

This is made clear in the Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship’s 1969 Letter to presidents of bishops conferences En réponse à la demande (Notitiae 5 (1969) 351-353):

“The Pope grants that throughout the territory of your conference, each bishop may, according to his prudent judgment and conscience, authorize in his diocese the introduction of the new rite for giving communion. The condition is the complete avoidance of any cause for the faithful to be shocked and any danger of irreverence toward the Eucharist.”

Of course years of Communion in the hand – along with the sloppy ars celebrandi of priests, hideous music, crummy architecture and ugly vestments – has, in fact, “shocked” the faithful into numbness and irreverence toward the Eucharist.

ERGO…

It is pretty clear that, pace the weird CDW letter, where common sense prevails people cannot be denied Communion on the tongue because Communion on the tongue is the true norm.

Odia restringi et favores convenit ampliari took a provisional vacation, I guess.

Furthermore, if a priest is called on the carpet for expressing a preference for the norm then something is upside down, particularly if he doesn’t deny people reception on the hand in the Novus Ordo.

Let a priest express his preference for Communion on the tongue, so long as he is accurate about the law and well-grounded in theology.   If another priest or the bishop himself has a contrary view, let them express their views.  People can decide which side is the most persuasive.

Could it be fear that drives the bullying of people into receiving on the hand?  After all, there are a lot of good reasons, and a great track record, for Communion on the tongue and rather few good reasons for reception on the hand.   Mustn’t let the people in on both sides of the issue!  Sheesh!  They might make an informed choice!

So long as there is an indult, and the bishop upholds the indult, then people must not (at the Novus Ordo) be denied Communion on the hand (i.e., restricted by an obligation to receive on the hand).  They also must not be denied Communion on the tongue.

Let them hear what Father has to say about it and then let them make up their own minds, rather than infantalize them through a condescending positivism based on a personal preference.

And may I just add that a diocesan bishop in a conference which received the indult could decide to end Communion in the hand in the diocese entrusted to his care.  If he were determined to decreased the danger of sacrilege and increase reverence for the Eucharist with a campaign of catechesis and particular laws, he would be entirely within the bounds of his authority to end Communion in the hand.

Of course libs would throw a spittle-flecked nutty.  There would ensue a storm of outrage and indignation and all manner of cant about “rights” and “turning back the clock”.  I’d wager that that bishop would even be called a “racist” and a “homophobe”.  The Rome of today would hurl lightning at that courageous bishop and probably figure out a way to sack him by Fiat, and I don’t mean the car.

Just as bishops can bully and torture priests in a thousand ways, so too Rome can bishops.

It comes down to power.  It comes down to courage.

 

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Daily Rome Shot 206

Photo by Bree Dail.

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Looking into Francis’ hand-written letter to Martin

People have asked my about the hand-written letter from Francis to the Jesuit homosexualist activist Fr James Martin.  Austin Ruse has a good piece about it HERE

Ruse does an autopsy on this letter and its meaning, especially the by now wearisome prevarication that Martin is, as Ruse cites the trope, “doing God’s own work in building bridges to a marginalized community.”

Irony oozes, particularly as Ruse points out, far from being a marginalized community right now, those to whom Martin addresses himself are, “among the most powerful ‘communities’ in the United States.”

The single most marginalized community in the Catholic Church in these USA is, without question or debate, those who desire traditional sacred worship.

Let’s game this out.   Let’s imagine that Francis has sent a private, hand-written letter… to me. He praises me for bringing countless people back to confession, inspiring dozens and dozens of men to try their vocations, prompted large numbers of converts, helped numerous couples get their marriages sorted out, resolved all matter of moral questions and catechized, asserted a strong influence in the liturgical translation process around the time of Liturgiam authenticam.  No, wait, let’s keep it simple.  He praises me for having brought many priests and people to experience – here we go – traditional sacred liturgical worship.

What would happen?

Immediately the New Red Guards at the Fishwrap and Amerika, RU-486 and La Crock, would pooh-pooh such a letter as being “only hand-written”, and therefore “not public”, but rather “merely private”. As a private letter, it is not published in an official organ of the Holy See.  Any such letter from Francis to someone “building bridges to a marginalized traditional community”, as Ruse put it, would be a mostly empty gesture made probably out of pity rather than “official” approbation.  Better yet, he wrote it out of mercy, ’cause that’s the kinda guy he is.

What could such a letter to me look like?  Let’s make a very few alterations to the letter which Martin received, which I shall indicate.  Remember, this is the imagined version, with a few changes.

Dear brother:

Thank you for your mail and for the photos. Please thank your nephew for his kindness to me and for having chosen the name Francisco. And congratulate him on the pontifical buskins. He made me laugh. Tell him that I pray for him and ask him to do so for me.

Regarding your P.S. [about the annual Summorum Pontificum Conference], I want to thank you for your pastoral zeal and your ability to be close to people, with that closeness that Jesus had and that reflects the closeness of God. Our Heavenly Father approaches with love every one of his children, each and everyone. His heart is to open to each and everyone. He is Father. God’s “style” has three aspects: closeness, compassion and tenderness. This is how he draws closer to each one of us.

Thinking about your pastoral work, I see that you are continuously looking to imitate this style of God. You are a priest for all men and women, just as God is the Father for all men and women. I pray for you to continue in this way, being close, compassionate and with great tenderness.

And I pray for your faithful, your online “parishioners,” and anyone whom the Lord places in your care, so that you protect them, and make them grow in the love of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

Please don’t forget to pray for me. May Jesus bless you and may the Holy Virgin protect you.

Fraternally,

Francisco

A few changes.   This letter could have been written pretty much to anyone engaged in any apostolate.  But… if it is addressed to a certain someone… well!  It is like the discovery of an authenticated letter of an Apostle!  3 Peter!

Would that the tradition-leaning marginalized community could get a little of that “closeness compassion and tenderness” which should be “for all men and women.”

Just a little, please?  If it’s not too much trouble?

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Daily Rome Shot 205

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What the mighty Jesuit Karl Rahner would say, said, about suppressing Summorum Pontificum

Jesuit Fr. Karl Rahner was an immensely influential theological guru of a couple of generations of clerics and theologians.   He is the darling, venerated oracle of the catholic left and modernists.

Here is a quote from Karl Rahner.  Given the rumors about changes to or suppression of Summorum Pontificum, this quote should be picked up and circulated widely.  Hat tip to my correspondent.

From Karl Rahner’s Studies in Modern Theology (Herder, 1965, pp. 394-395) under the subtitle:

A Distinction: Legal and Moral Norms

[…]

Imagine that the Pope, as supreme pastor of the Church, issued a decree today requiring all the uniate churches of the Near East to give up their Oriental liturgy and adopt the Latin rite….The Pope would not exceed the competence of his jurisdictional primacy by such a decree, but the decree would be legally valid.

But we can also pose an entirely different question. Would it be morally licit for the Pope to issue such a decree? Any reasonable man and any true Christian would have to answer “no.” Any confessor of the Pope would have to tell him that in the concrete situation of the Church today such a decree, despite its legal validity, would be subjectively and objectively an extremely grave moral offense against charity, against the unity of the Church rightly understood (which does not demand uniformity), against possible reunion of the Orthodox with the Roman Catholic Church, etc., a mortal sin from which the Pope could be absolved only if he revoked the decree.

From this example one can readily gather the heart of the matter. It can, of course, be worked out more fundamentally and abstractly in a theological demonstration:

1. The exercise of papal jurisdictional primacy remains even when it is legal, subject to moral norms, which are not necessarily satisfied merely because a given act of jurisdiction is legal. Even an act of jurisdiction which legally binds its subjects can offend against moral principles.

2. To point out and protest against the possible infringement against moral norms of an act which must respect these norms is not to deny or question the legal competence of the man possessing the jurisdiction.

[…]

I recall that the late Michael Davies used this argument in one of his books in the wake of the Novus Ordo.

It is clear that a Pope would have the power, the juridical authority, to suppress the TLM (pace fans of Quo primum), but he clearly would not have the moral authority to do such a thing.  It would be a…

“grave moral offense against charity”.

 

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ASK FATHER: Ought we import elements of the Traditional Latin Mass into the Novus Ordo?

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From a priest reader….

QUAERITUR:

As both the Extraordinary and the Ordinary Forms of the Mass have their own respective set of rubrics (the former being more detailed than the latter), my question relates to those priests celebrating both forms: What is the appropriateness of importing, say, varied rubrics and gestures into the OF from the EF intentionally? I am, of course, not asking about unintentional slips. Some examples might be:

Pivoting at the “et vobis, fratres” etc. in the Confitor;
The extension and elevation of the hands at the beginning of the Gloria or Credo, or when giving the final blessing;
Kissing or bowing as if to kiss the Altar at the Te Igitur, and the bow of the head at the mention of the pope’s name (in the Roman Canon); The sign of the Cross at the Sanctus;

And I could go on.

My concern here is the integrity of the principle of rubrics so that if we import them from one Form to another (including, I guess, from the Eastern Forms), could not some then justify a similar tampering in the reverse? Isn’t it safer, until permitted otherwise, to simply “say the black and do the red,” as someone once suggested?

Great question.

For the sake of BLUF: The Roman way of understanding the desideratum of “mutual enrichment” lends flexibility to the seemingly restrictive dictum “Say the Black – Do the Red”.

Now that we have the bottom line up front, let’s find some hooks to hang our thoughts on.

In no special order…

Back when the vaguely worded liturgical changes were being unilaterally forced on the the People of God,  someone sent a dubium to Rome about thurification (aka incensation) of the altar.  The rubrics in the pre-Conciliar (and Conciliar… remember, the 1962 Missal was the Missal used during the sessions of the Council) were clear about how the altar was to be incensed.  The new rubrics were deficient and didn’t describe the order of each ductus.  The questioner asked if, since there was no specific description, should the old, traditional method of incensation be used.  Rome responded (i.e., Bugnini) that when the new rubrics are silent about how to do things we should not assume that the old ways should be used!  Bam.  Of course the answer was wicked.  The result was chaos.  Eventually the post-Conciliar Ceremoniale Episcoporum came out and it had more specific rubrics for incensation, though quite truncated.

Another point to consider.  In the De Defectibus of the 1962 Missale Romanum, and in old manual moral theology, we learn that willing violation of rubrics is at least a venial sin and often mortal.   This was removed from the Novus Ordo editions.  That doesn’t mean that violation of the rubrics of the Novus Ordo isn’t objectively a sin.  However, since training for celebration of the Novus Ordo is risible in comparison with preparation for the Traditional Latin Mass, it could be said that celebrants who violate rubrics may be committing an objective sin, but they may not be culpable.  They’ve probably have never heard or thought of the morality of rubrics.   Strangely, we find a couple of categories of Novus Ordo celebrants: the careless and the careful, the improvisers and the imposers.  We find men who do pretty much what they want or else those who are rubrical positivists, legalists who make their determination about the vague rubrics the Novus Ordo provides and they rigidly require their way.

We must hold in tension two principles.  On the one hand, Pope Benedict in his Letter to Bishops about the “emancipation proclamation” Summorum Pontificum said that “the two Forms of the usage of the Roman Rite can be mutually enriching”.    He then gives the example of saints canonized after 1962 can be brought into the 1962 calendar and new prefaces could be adopted.   He goes on to talk about how the Usus Antiquior would helpt to improvement celebrations of the Novus Ordo in regard to reverence, etc.  This has given rise to the understanding that Benedict desired “mutual enrichment”, which I have called a mutual “gravitational pull”.  At the same time we are told that the two rites are not to be intermixed, that is, elements of the one should not be brought into the other.  The way we deal with that seeming contradiction is to a) be very patient and allow the TLM really to take root and spread without making any changes to it and b) allow the mutual enrichment to happen slowly, organically, over time.   THAT is what Benedict wanted all along.  He called the Novus Ordo and artificially created rite that, in its sudden imposition, broke the continuity of organic liturgical development.   Hitherto, small changes were codified over long periods of time.  With the imposition of the Novus Ordo, there was massive disruption.   Benedict, being a bit of a Hegelian on this point, thought that eventually a tertium quid would emerge, over time, from the side by side use of the two rites.

And I say “two rites” because… well… they are.  Summorum Pontificum is a juridical document that treats the Usus Antiquior and Novus Ordo as if they are two “forms” of one Roman Rite.  That was a fine juridical solution which allowed for every idoneus priest of the Roman Rite to celebrate either form.  But I think it is clear that the TLM and Novus Ordo are different enough that they are liturgically two different rites.

A tension will exist where these forms are side by side and when priests use both forms.   The celebrants and servers will be strongly inclined to bring elements of the TLM into the liturigically impoverished Novus Ordo and to adopt the traditional ars celebrandi inherent in the rubrics of the traditional form into their use of the post-Conciliar rite.

Another point.  Going back to the Council, the Council Fathers in Sacrosanctum Concilium mandated that changes must not be made except for the true good of the faithful and that all changes must flow organically from what was done before.  However, the people who then cobbled up the reformed rite, Novus Ordo, went way beyond their mandates.  They forced through huge changes which nobody was clamoring for and violated the mandate of continuity.  In a sense, putting certain things back into the Novus Ordo could be considered a corrective to the vandalism perpetrated in the name of the Council.

Moving along, what would some of the elements of the older, traditional form that could be really tempting to bring into the Novus Ordo?   Some elements that were suppressed against the Council Fathers’ admonitions about true need and organic growth?  For example,  prayers at the foot of the altar (Ps 42).  What good for the people did that bring about?  What harm to priestly identity did it cause?  Multiple collects, suppressed in the Novus Ordo are really helpful, given that we have a lot of needs to bring to the prayer of the Mass.   The silent Canon could help to restore the critically necessary element of silence which is often sorely lacking in celebrations of Mass with the Novus Ordo.  When the treasury of our sacred music is opened and employed for Mass, the “split” Sanctus and Benedictus, technically not permitted in the Novus Ordo, is simply so practical, along with the silent Canon that it seems a natural practice to import.  Genuflecting when passing before the tabernacle where the Eucharist is reserved.  This is one of the worst of all the bad changes in the Novus Ordo.  Servers and sacred ministers are instructed not to genuflect to God, but rather ignore His Presence in favor of a bow to the altar.  The idea being that we are to stress the Eucharist to be consecrated at that Mass.   Then there are the various signs of the Cross that the priest might make, or the double genuflection at the consecration, or, as the questioner brought up, kissing the altar at the Te igitur, bowing the head at certain names, etc.

Say the Black – Do the Red.   That’s been my byword for a long time.   I stick to that.   We have to know the rubrics and then follow them.   At the same time, I don’t believe in strict rubrical positivism.  One thing that I learned during those many years in Rome regarding the Roman Rite is that it is Roman.  Its genius is the Roman genius, which is at the same time orderly but pragmatic and flexible.  Think of the Roman way of interpreting law, in contrast to the Anglo-American.   When I began to be MC for Pontifical Mass, consulting various ceremonials by different authors from different places, I quickly figured out that the variations in their practices stemmed from having to find practical solutions various problems raised by the shape and size of the sanctuary, people available, etc.   The Roman Rite in its traditional form is somewhat malleable.  It can be stretched or kneaded when needed.

That’s a long ramble, I know, but some of these principles have to be put up in the air and juggled when approaching the really good question at the top.

Are we strictly forbidden to import elements from the Vetus Ordo into the Novus Ordo?   Are we allowed, by the admirable goal of mutual enrichment, to take some liberties with the Novus Ordo rubrics and bring in traditional (not innovative) practices?

I don’t think that kissing the altar at the Te igitur or genuflecting to God, or “making the box” at the Preface dialogue and final blessing (shot down by the CDW in a 1978 responsum), in view of the powerful desideratum of “mutual enrichment” violates the concept of Say the Black – Do the Red.

If we turn the sock inside out, however, can that be applied to the TLM?  Should enriching elements, good for the faithful and in continuity with tradition, from the Novus Ordo be brought into the TLM?  What elements would those be?

Benedict said, and this has been done, bring new saints into the traditional calendar and allowing for the Gallican Prefaces.  But the Gallican Prefaces are, frankly clunky and weird, composed by a heretic, Laurent-François Boursier, who was expelled from the Sorbonne in 1720.  That doesn’t sound all that organic to me.

Benedict said, and this has been done, that in Low Mass the readings could be in the vernacular alone.  BUT… I maintain, with Peter Kwasniewski, that the readings themselves are also sacrificial offerings raised, like incense, to the Father and that they deserve to be in the Church’s sacral language.  Moreover, the choice of one vernacular language excludes that of other groups, whereas Latin favors all groups.

How about not genuflecting to God when passing before the tabernacle.  Ummm… nope.

How about the audible Canon?   I suppose one could make an argument for that, though it undermines a major goal of sacred liturgical worship: encountering Mystery also through the apophatic.

How about eliminating signs of the Cross?   I have yet to hear how that benefits the faithful, whereas as Fr. Jackson argues they are not in the least superfluous.

In any event, I hope this helps your own thoughts about how to approach the Novus Ordo.

A last thought.

If we think about importing elements of the TLM into the Novus Ordo in order to bring it into greater continuity with tradition and in order to bring about a different ethos of Mass and ars celebrandi, then why not just use the TLM in the first place?   If the Novus Ordo is improved in proportion to how it is adjusted to resemble the TLM, then why not just use the TLM?

 

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Daily Rome Shot 204

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ASK FATHER: Priest removes maniple and chasuble before preaching

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Dear Father,
I am about Duck Duck go’d out on this and still can not find any answers.  I attend weekly mass at an institute of Christ the King oratory and in our mass’s after the priest reads the gospel in Latin he not only removes his maniple before reading the Epistle and Gospel in English and delivering his sermon but he also removes the outer vestment (Dalmatic ?) and leaves it folded on the altar.  What is the symbolism in not only removing the maniple but also the dalmatic?  All I was able to find on line was that this was practiced by some Dominicans but by the same token they leave the maniple attached while delivering the sermon.  Help! I am stumped and it’s driving me crazy!

The dalmatic is the vestment of the deacon, while the chasuble is the vestment of the priest.  You probably saw the priest take off his chasuble and maniple before the vernacular readings and sermon.

Before the Conciliar reforms the repetition of the readings in the vernacular and the sermon in the vernacular were not considered to be part of the Mass.  Therefore, there was a customary way to demonstrate that the priest was, for a moment, stepping out of the Mass: the removal of the maniple and perhaps also the chasuble.

And as often happens pragmatic things and actions can, over time, take on symbolic meanings.  It could be that in some places for ease of ascending a narrow or lofty pulpit or ambo, it was best for the priest to remove his vestment so that he wouldn’t be hindered and it wouldn’t be damaged.

It occurs to me that in the beginning of a Pontifical Mass, the bishop doesn’t put on his maniple until after he says the Iudica psalm.  That could be connected.   Also, at the Requiem Mass the sermon is preached after Mass and before the absolution.

As for the Dominicans, well… they are a peculiar lot with their own odd and endearing ways.   I can’t speak to their maniplology, but I bet one will soon jump in!

In the post-Conciliar way of seeing things, the sermon or homily is considered to part of the Mass.   That seems to be a nod to the way Protestants do things.  Remember: since classic Protestants don’t have the renewal of the Sacrifice of Calvary, their emphasis is on Scripture and preaching and singing every note of every verse of every hymn.

Mind you, there is no rubric in the traditional form of Mass that directs the priest to remove either maniple or chasuble to preach.  This is a custom.  Some might say it should not be done because there is no rubric.  O’Connell, for example, was strongly against it, reminding us that a bishop preaches fully vested, etc.   On the other hand, there are no rubrics for lots of the things we do and do so with a happy heart because they are customary.

My view is that the removal of the maniple is a good thing.  Chasuble?  Sure, if Father wants to do that, fine.  The removal of the vestments made you think, didn’t it, dear reader?  “What’s up with that?”  You were pushed to pay attention and then seek understanding.   The removal of the maniple before leaving it, lonely, at the altar is a way of signaling to the congregation that something different is about to take place.   It is, as a matter of fact, in the vernacular readings and sermon, that the priest is more “his own man” than at any other time.  At all other time during Mass he is under strict control concerning his words and gestures.

Again, custom, not obligation.  Practices will vary.

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The question of “two Popes” bothers a lot of people. Some thoughts.

Today, the Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, is also the 70th anniversary of Pope Benedict XVI’s ordination to the priesthood.

It seems a propitious a day to deal with questions that pepper my inbox.  Questions about Benedict’s resignation.

The questions range from “Did Benedict really resign? Was it valid?” to “If Benedict is really still The Pope, what happens if he passes away before Francis?” to “If Francis isn’t The Pope, and he is naming cardinals, how could there be a legitimate conclave?”

That scratches the surface of the questions.

I will try to deal with these issues dispassionately and work through some of them as mind exercises.

Mind you, I’m not an authority in this matter, in the sense of being able to give a definitive answer: no one really is.   The situation we have today, with Francis and Benedict both in white, both in the Vatican City State, both seemingly given apostolic blessings, is unlike anything we have seen in history.  Moreover, since your planet’s yellow sun doesn’t give me psychic powers, I can only guess at what, for example, Benedict was thinking when he read his resignation during that fateful consistory in 2013.

Again, our situation is not the same as previous times in the Church when there have been more than one pope, or there has been a resignation.  That doesn’t mean that history can’t give us a crowbar.

Over at his splendid blog, Fr. John Hunwicke had an engaging piece provoked by the whirling of your planet back to the annual Feast of St. Silverius, Pope and Martyr (+537).

Fr. H used this occasion to look into a question which vexes many a thoughtful Catholic these days: two popes at the same time.  Possible?  Fact: Francis is going around doing pope things while Benedict lives in the Vatican Gardens still looking a lot like The Pope.  It’s a head-scratcher.

NB: Some people wave away questions about “two popes” or an invalid resignation.  To my mind, it is wrong-headed to gloss over hard questions that vex people, to turn a blind eye to them and whistle a happy tune with fingers deep into one’s ears.  There are people who are really upset by this situation.  We have an obligation to tackle these questions head on in order to put people at ease about them.   Let’s do that.

Back to Fr Hunwicke’s piece.

Background first:  In 537, the Byzantine general Flavius Belisarius entered Rome and deposed Pope Silverius who had been elected the previous year.  Belisarius brought in his own guy, Vigilius, and made him Pope while Silverius was still alive (for a few months, at least).  So, who was the real Pope?

Is (and Fr. H brings this possibility up) it enough to say that whoever has his “bum on the seat” is The Real Pope?   Or is he a usurper and antipope even though he has the chair (aka “see”).

Here’s a mind exercise.  Say that there are two “popes”.   One of them (Pope 1) was, unquestionably elected according to the proper procedure after the death of his predecessor.  He is deposed or maybe resigns but under duress or in a confused way.  Another guy is, in these questionable circumstances, elected or imposed as Pope 2 and he starts to pope.  Francis didn’t, at first, call himself “Pope” and he seems to have dropped the title “Vicar of Christ”.

Then Pope 1, dies.   What then?

Hunwicke, good teacher that he is, gives us more to think about.

One possibility is that another conclave is to be held to replace Pope 1, because he was the real Pope.

Otherwise, “pragmatically”, we just say that Pope 2 is now the Pope and no conclave is necessary until he should die.

That’s what happened with Silverius and Vigilius.  Vigilius was, in effect, an antipope because Silverius was deposed by force.   But he seamlessly is acknowledged as legitimate Pope when news arrives that Silverius is dead.

Satisfying answer?

Hunwicke provides something from dom Gueranger concerning Silverius and Vigilius (my emphases):

“The inevitable play of human passions, interfering in the election of the Vicar of Christ, may perchance for a while render uncertain the transmission of spiritual power. But when it is proved that the Church … acknowledges in the person of a certain pope, until then doubtful, the true Sovereign Pontiff, this her very recognition is a proof that, from that moment at least, the occupant of the Apostolic See is as such invested by God himself.”

Do you get that?   No matter how strange a path by which some fellow became the one with his “bum in the chair”, when “the Church” acknowledges him, then he is the legitimate Pope.

Note well that phrase, “from that moment at least”.   Until that time, doubtful.  Afterward, certain.

This suggests that there is a way in which being Vicar of Christ and being Bishop of Rome can be, momentarily at least, bifurcated.

And as far as the authority of the separated-Bishop of Rome, his jurisdiction is concerned, I guess that would have to be an amazing case of Ecclesia supplet.  According to can. 144:

“In factual or legal common error and in positive and probable doubt of law or of fact, the Church supplies executive power of governance for both the external and internal forum.”

So, even if Francis is in a chair he shouldn’t be in, that of the Bishop of Rome, his juridical acts could be valid because the Church supplies the jurisdiction.  Hence, he can name clergy to Roman Churches… who are the Cardinals… who form the next conclave.

Again, satisfying answer?

If we were to apply this to the questions raised by smart and devout Catholics about the legitimacy – validity – of Benedict’s resignation and the subsequent election of Francis what would we say?

IF Benedict still is truly the only legitimate Pope, and if he outlives Francis and there is another conclave, we are in pretty much the same position as we are now.  More on that, and on the conclave that would follow, below.

IF Benedict, still truly the only legitimate Pope, dies before Francis, then – according to what Gueranger wrote about the situation of Silverius and Vigilius – Francis would be Pope because he is sitting in the chair no matter how he got there.   This is because “the Church” (I guess that’s a majority of people in the Church, especially the hierarchy and cardinals who elected him) says he is.  Again, Ecclesia supplet.

Of course the vast majority now say Francis is The Pope, period, end of discussion.   They don’t raise questions.  Some even scoff at those who do.

For some smart people that is not the end of the discussion.  They have hard questions and not all the answers are perfectly clear.  Thus, they keep asking the questions.  Some leave the unity of the Church for Orthodoxy or Sedevacantism today’s situation.  I believe those are foolish escapes into fantasy.

In this mind exercise, if Benedict is still The Real Pope, and he dies before Francis, must there be conclave to elect a new Pope or does Francis by default become Pope (cf. Gueranger)?

Keep going.

It’s the stuff of a ripping good novel.

By the way, in the same year as Francis – who from 2013 onward usually only referred to himself as “Bishop of Rome” – ordered that Pachamama demon idol bowl placed on the altar of St. Peter’s Basilica, a thing hard to imagine a Vicar of Christ doing, he also dropped the title “Vicar of Christ” from his own person, relegating it to a “historical title”.  HERE

Let’s play the mind exercise out a little more and hack through some of the issues which I have heard raised by, for example, Ann Barnhardt, who is without question of the mind that Benedict is still Pope and Francis is a usurper antipope.  Along with Ann is a smart fellow with well-articulated arguments, Edward Mazza.

I’ll try to spin out what they have been discussing.  I hope I don’t put my foot wrong and mischaracterize their positions.  I’m happy to be corrected.

It seems that… in their view…

Benedict did NOT legitimately resign, because the language he used at the time he announced his resignation is confused. The confused language suggests that Benedict intended to resign the active dimension of his role, his ministerium (for example, doing stuff as Bishop of Rome and doing stuff as Pope to the larger world). However, he did not intend to resign his munus as Vicar of Christ.  Much turns on the technical term munus.

The fact is that munus and ministerium do not mean the same thing, though they are often bound together.  For example, one carries out a certain ministry in the Church because he holds an office, a munus.  Canon law says that the Pope has to resign the munus.  

Canon 332 §2: Si contingat ut Romanus Pontifex muneri suo renuntiet, ad validitatem requiritur ut renuntiatio libere fiat et rite manifestetur, non vero ut a quopiam acceptetur.  … If it should come to pass that the Roman Pontiff resigns his office, it is required for validity that the resignation is made freely and that it be properly manifested, but not that it is accepted by anyone.

But Benedict said in his resignation:

Quapropter bene conscius ponderis huius actus plena libertate declaro me ministerio Episcopi Romae, Successoris Sancti Petri, mihi per manus Cardinalium die 19 aprilis MMV commisso renuntiare ita ut a die 28 februarii MMXIII, hora 20, sedes Romae, sedes Sancti Petri vacet et Conclave ad eligendum novum Summum Pontificem ab his quibus competit convocandum esse.…  For this reason, and well aware of the seriousness of this act, with full freedom I declare that I renounce the ministry of Bishop of Rome, Successor of Saint Peter, entrusted to me by the Cardinals on 19 April 2005, in such a way, that as from 28 February 2013, at 20:00 hours, the See of Rome, the See of Saint Peter, will be vacant and a Conclave to elect the new Supreme Pontiff will have to be convoked by those whose competence it is.

Words have meanings.   It is not right simply to conflate munus and ministerium as if they are interchangeable.  They are closely tied to each other but they are not synonyms.  Not even close.

It is interesting to read the Canon that introduces the figure of the Roman Pontiff, the Pope:

Can. 331 — Ecclesiae Romanae Episcopus, in quo permanet munus a Domino singulariter Petro, primo Apostolorum, concessum et successoribus eius transmittendum, Collegii Episcoporum est caput, Vicarius Christi atque universae Ecclesiae his in terris Pastor; qui ideo vi muneris sui suprema, plena, immediata et universali in Ecclesia gaudet ordinaria potestate, quam semper libere exercere valet. … The bishop of the Roman Church, in whom persists the office given by the Lord uniquely to Peter, the first of the Apostles, and to be transmitted to his successors, is the head of the college of bishops, the Vicar of Christ, and the pastor of the universal Church on earth. By virtue of his office he possesses supreme, full, immediate, and universal ordinary power in the Church, which he is always able to exercise freely.

First, in this, we see the person of the Bishop of the Roman Church.  In this Roman Bishop one thing which “continues, endures”: a munus given by Christ.   Permaneo is “to stay to the end; to hold out, last, continue, endure, remain; to persist, persevere”.  Sounds rather “permanent”, no?  This munus can be and must be (-ndum) passed to his successors.  It goes from one Bishop of Rome to another.  If you are legitimately Bishop of Rome, the munus is yours.    It is reasonable to assume that the three things that follow in the canon, are results of this munus, and they go to whomever is legitimately Bishop of Rome, namely, 1) “Head of the college of Bishops, 2) Vicar of Christ, 3) Pastor of the universal Church on earth.   On earth, not in heaven.

There is some evidence (e.g., a speech given by Archbp. Gaenswein) that Benedict reasoned that he could tease the active, ministerial role of the papacy away from the interior, perhaps even ontological, reality of being Vicar of Christ, an office which, once offered by the current legitimate practice (i.e., conclave) and accepted, cannot be lost until death or proper form of resignation (which Canon Law described).  Hence, if that accurately describes Benedict’s thought, if a pope is invested as Vicar of Christ, he can’t lose that office even if he resigns as, say, Bishop of Rome.  Why?  Because, in this line of thought, it is “permanent” (cf. permaneo).   Of course we can say that something is permanent, until it isn’t.  The Washington Monument is a permanent structure… but it could be knocked down.

Let’s stick with “permanent” for a moment. There is permanence in the sense of baptism or Holy Orders.  Matrimony is also permanent, until it isn’t. While the spouses are alive on earth, they are legitimately married, bound to each other by a bond that no man can break.  On earth, it is permanent.  Yet, when one of them dies, the other is no longer married.   The bond ceases.  On the other hand, when you are baptized or ordained, a permanent mark is on the soul such that even after death you remain baptized or ordained.

Now look at that phrase: “pastor of the universal Church on earth…. universae Ecclesiae his in terris Pastor.”  Look at the structure. The words his in terris are inserted between Ecclesiae and PastorNot only that, in separates his and terris.   Two examples of timesis, the separation of words that go together with other words, one timesis creating the other timesis.

The Latin of Canon Law isn’t really the place where one expects elegant flourishes.  It’s legalese and, as such, it’s precise.  Words and their arrangement have meanings.   Does this elegant timesis within timesis, like onion peels, suggest that the dimension of the munus which confers being Pastor of the Church endures (permaneo) only while on earth?   Again, words and their organization have meanings.  If, for example, that sentence read: “Collegii Episcoporum est caput, Vicarius Christi atque universae Ecclesiae Pastor his in terris…”, it could seem that all three, Head, Vicar, Pastor, are only “his in terris“, while on earth.  In the actual sentence, there is Head and Vicar and then, Pastor-while-on-earth.  In English, it could sound like his in terris applies to all three but the Latin strongly connects it to Pastor, otherwise… why the timesis which obviously calls attention to it in Latin?

There is another timesis in that canon which emphasizes that the Roman Pontiff has full authority… where? Let’s see “suprema, plena, immediata et universali in Ecclesia gaudet ordinaria potestate”.  All those adjectives connect to the last word, the noun potestas.  Plop in Ecclesia smack into the middle of all that and you underscore that a pope’s power is in the Church, not in the world.  He can command that which has to do with the Church, but he cannot command world leaders or make civil laws (outside Vatican City State).

Where is this going?

This Adventure In Timesis suggests that somehow being Pastor doesn’t have the same quality as being Head and Vicar.   Just to spin that out a little more, could Pastor be the way that ministry is connected juridically to the munus that endures?  Is this the way by which Benedict may have thought that he could separate ministerium and munus, remaining Vicar of Christ (an interior state of being) while handing over the activity, the ministry, of Bishop of Rome?

I’m not saying hereby that, because of this phrase, the state of being Vicar of Christ endures in heaven, like priesthood or baptism.  However, it seems to me that that is something that Benedict suggested: that once conferred the state of being Vicar of Christ was like to, similar to, an ontological mark on the soul.   So, resign the ministry of Pastor, and the qualities given by the munus of Vicarius and Caput remain.

This brings up some pretty interesting questions.

There have been discussions, for example around the time of Vatican I, about the nature of the papacy, the Petrine office.   Among these questions is that of the connection of the papacy, the office of Vicar of Christ, with the See of Rome.

Is the Petrine Office absolutely and inextricably bound up with being the Bishop of Rome?

When Christ made Peter His Vicar at Caesarea Philippi, Peter wasn’t bishop of anything, much less of Rome.  He wasn’t even a priest.  That would come at the Last Supper.  At that times Christ redefined who Peter was and renamed him.  Inwardly, something was new about Peter.  He had a munus.  He didn’t lose it with his threefold denial during the Passion.  Later, at See of Galilee in John 21, Peter was already Vicar of Christ when (now a priest and bishop), he was reconciled with the Lord for his threefold denials.   At that time, Christ described more fully what Peter was to do: feed my sheep.  Peter, who had an inward munus, then also had an active ministerium that flowed from the enduring munus.   Later, Peter went to Antioch and founded a Church.  Even later, Peter went to Rome where he died.  A new Vicar of Christ was chosen in Rome, thus sealing the deal: Peter’s successor is both Bishop of Rome and Vicar of Christ.  He has both the inward munus, and the outward ministerium.

But is being Vicar of Christ absolutely bound up with being Bishop of Rome?

Today we celebrate Sts.  Peter and Paul, namely their martyrdom in Rome.  Perhaps by Peter’s martyrdom, being Vicar of Christ (and Head and Pastor) was inextricably welded with being Bishop of Rome.    Perhaps not.

The fact remains that Peter was Vicar of Christ before he was ordained, before left the Holy Land, before he went to Rome.  Being Bishop of Rome and Vicar of Christ were not, in an absolute sense, tied together.  Are they now?  Auctores scinduntur.

BTW… I once was chatting with Card. Ratzinger in the halls of the Palazzo del Sant’Uffizio.  He jokingly quipped that he was glad that Peter stopped in Rome and didn’t go north to Germany.  “Think of the great efficiency with which we could make our mistakes!”   At least the Italian way of doing things slows down the effects of incompetence.   I bring that up because I think that Ratzinger had pondered the connection of being Bishop of Rome and being Vicar of Christ long before he was elected as both.

Back to the issue of Benedict’s resignation.  Let’s tease out some threads.

If the somewhat ambiguous use of what are technical terms in the resignation really means something, namely that Benedict intended to resign as Bishop of Rome but not as Vicar of Christ, and IF THE OFFICES ARE SEPARABLE, Benedict could still be Vicar of Christ while the guy the cardinals elected in the conclave of 2103 would really be the Bishop of Rome.  After all, the cardinals are really clergy of Rome.  That’s why all cardinals have assigned churches in Rome.  In the ancient way of things, the Roman clergy elected their bishop when the See of Rome was empty. As it happens, that Bishop of Rome is also now Vicar of Christ because Bishop of Rome Peter was Vicar of Christ.

BUT… if it really is possible to resign the ministry of Peter as Bishop of Rome without resigning the office of Vicar of Christ, and if that is what Benedict intended, then in 2013 the cardinals elected the Roman Pontiff, their Bishop, but not the Vicar of Christ, that office still sticking stubbornly to Benedict.

Back to our scenario of Pope Silverius and Pope Vigilius.

Recall: Silverius is still alive when Belisarius imposes Vigilius. For all purposes he is Bishop in Rome. Vigilius acts like Bishop of Rome while Silverius is still the Vicar of Christ.  Silverius dies and Vigilius is… then… what?  Vicar of Christ also from the time Silverius dies?   It defaults to him because a) the office of Vicar of Christ can be separated from Bishop of Rome though they are still tied together and b) the holder of the office of Vicar of Christ dies, thus “releasing” that office to snap over into Vigilius?  That’s Gueranger’s solution.

But wait there’s more.

Still working the mind exercise now.

If the offices can be separated and if Benedict really was trying to separate the office of Vicar of Christ, which he desired to retain (hey… he still wears white, lives in the Vatican, kept his regnal name, etc.) then he is, in a sense, still Pope (insofar as he is Vicar of Christ) but without being Pope (insofar as he is no longer Bishop of Rome).  That means that there are two Popes: Benedict (insofar as he would still be Vicar of Christ) and Francis (insofar as he was legitimately elected Bishop of Rome by the Roman clergy, the College of Cardinals, in a legitimate conclave).

Meanwhile, don’t forget what Benedict allegedly said to Corriere della Sera in an incoherent report in March 2020: “Non ci sono due Papi.  Il Papa e uno solo… (ellipsis in the original)”, that is, “There are not two Popes.  The Pope is one only….”

Remember: “pope” is just a word, a title.  It isn’t magic.  There are various “popes” in various Churches.   Don’t get caught up too much in that one word.

However, if, as some people think, the offices CANNOT be separated, then Benedict was in substantial error about what he was trying to do.  This is Ann and Edward’s position.  Being in substantial error about the terms of his resignation would mean that the resignation itself was invalid.  That would mean that Benedict is still Vicar of Christ.

If that is right, then what the cardinals did in the conclave in 2013 was to elect a new Bishop of Rome who, like Vigilius in 537, took Silverius’s See.  As Hunwicke puts it: possession is nine tenths of the law.

Therefore, if all of that is right, should Benedict go to God before Francis, then the office of Vicar of Christ might mysteriously – a la Gueranger – attach itself within Francis (Bishop of Rome) and life goes on.  If that doesn’t happen, then the office of Vicar of Christ would be empty, as it is normally between pontificates, until Francis should die and the College of Cardinals elects a new Bishop of Rome who will then also be, because of the powerful bond between being Vicar of Christ and Roman Pontiff, both, again in one person.

Whew.

That said, if Benedict did the resignation properly so as to resign the whole shootin’ match, then all of this is moot: Francis is both Vicar of Christ and Bishop of Rome whether or not those offices can be separated.  That’s the majority position, as you know.

Historically, there were long periods of time when the See of Peter was empty.  For example, between the death of Nicholas IV on 4 April 1292 and the election Celestine V (of unhappy memory) on 5 July 1294, 2 years and 3 months passed.   Then Celestine resigned and Boniface VIII was the result.   Even Dante, who detested Boniface VIII, still defended Boniface’s office, if not his person, in the Divine Comedy.

Historically, there were long periods of time when the Vicar of Christ was not in Rome, starting with Peter.  At Caesarea Philippi Peter received his office as Christ’s Vicar in AD 31-32.   Peter goes to Rome in, perhaps, the early 50’s and dies in Rome in 64.  So, Peter was Vicar of Christ for a long time before he arrived in Rome.   Later, the Successors of Peter, who were Bishops of Rome, were away from Rome in Avignon from 1309 to 1377.

The point being that the Church can exist and function for a while without a Vicar of Christ or a Bishop in Rome. Perhaps the office of Roman Pontiff, Vicar of Christ, has, as John O’Malley suggests in his fascinating book on Vatican I, morphed into something that it wasn’t before.  No.  Better… perhaps our view of popes has, over time, shifted.  Perhaps we emphasize the person of The Pope today in a way which clouds other important things.

Let’s be clear.  The Petrine Office is a necessary, constitutive part of the Church as Christ founded it.   In the short term it can be interrupted, but it is, in the long term, indispensable.   The Church is indefectible and, therefore, there will be, to the end, a Successor of Peter, a Vicar of Christ.

At this point you might be wondering what practical effect this has for your life.

In some regards, not much.  Popes came and went and things remained stable.  Provided you have a couple of solid priests nearby, it doesn’t make a huge difference who the bishop is or who the Pope is.  But… wait… bishops are replaced by popes and priests are replaced by bishops.  Let there come “new pharaoh who knows not Joseph” and see just how fast he can screw up your faith life in serious ways!   Hence, in shorter terms who The Pope is doesn’t make much difference, so long as there is one in one condition or the other, healthy and active or elderly and frail, sharp or not, etc.   People once went for years with no idea about even the name of the Pope or that one had died and another was elected.  In the long term it does matter.

Another thing you might wondering is, if it makes a difference who the Pope is, and if something is screwed up now in the succession, what’s going to happen?   If Benedict is really the Pope and Francis is, but Francis is making all these changes, what is going to happen?  If Francis is naming all sorts of cardinals, but Francis isn’t the Pope, then will the conclave be legit?   Is this the end of the papacy?

No, the Church is indefectible.   Gueranger tried to work through that, above.

Think of it this way.  If Benedict was right, and he resigned being Bishop of Rome adequately (some say he didn’t) and Francis was elected to be Bishop of Rome (but isn’t Vicar of Christ), then Francis can name cardinals because cardinals are clergy of Rome.   That’s why they have Roman churches.  Naming cardinals is a function of the Bishop of Rome.   Even if both Benedict and Francis should go to God, there is still a College of Cardinals.  The one whom they would elect, Benedicto Franciscoque defunctis, would be The new Pope.

“But Father!  But Father!”, some of you are jittering and puffing, “Why didn’t Benedict just tell us what he was doing?  Why do we have to doubt and guess and surmise and … and … guess?”

Good question.

There are a few theories about why he resigned.  Firstly, he said that he didn’t feel up it or have the strength to do it anymore.   I think we have to believe that he really thought that.   But there may have been additional factors.

For example, it could be that he was under huge pressure from monetary concerns and problems at the “Vatican Bank”. There were reports about internal corruption and a “gay mafia”.  It could be that he was worried about his health.  He had had a stroke in 1991 and perhaps he was afraid that, with modern medicine, those around him would be able to keep him alive and then act badly in his name and authority.  It could be all of those.

Remember: can. 188 says that a resignation made in the state of grave fear inflicted unjustly would be invalid.  If Benedict was being pressured by powers that control banking, or if he was being threatened about a dossier or even matters concerning his brother, then he was under duress and the resignation would have been invalid.

Perhaps he did so willingly, but so willed because he was under duress from without and from within that caused him to think that resigning was the best option: and in that case it was willing.   It turns into a Catch-22.

Again, why didn’t Benedict say what he was doing?  Why doesn’t he say NOW what he tried to do?

If Benedict intended – here comes the speculation again – if he intended to bifurcate the papacy and remain Vicar of Christ while letting go of being actively the Bishop of Rome, then perhaps his use of ministerium rather than munus was a kind of “breadcrumb”, which he knew people would eventually follow.   Thus, at the time he was being forced out, but he left tell-tale signs that he was under duress.  And that would mean that he wanted people to figure out that his resignation was invalid.

Remember:

If a Pope doesn’t resign willingly, the resignation is invalid.

If the Pope has in mind some sort of project papacy – like bifurcate it – and that project is in fact impossible, then the Pope is in substantial error and the resignation is invalid.

Can. 188 – A resignation made out of grave fear that is inflicted unjustly or out of malice, substantial error, or simony is invalid by the law itself.

Either way, duress or error, Benedict would still be Pope in the sense of being Vicar of Christ, for sure, and perhaps also of Bishop of Rome.

Breadcrumbs.  Here’s another.  I alluded to it, above.

At his last General Audience, Benedict said:

[A]llow me to go back once again to 19 April 2005. The real gravity of the decision was also due to the fact that from that moment on I was engaged always and forever by the Lord. Always – anyone who accepts the Petrine ministry no longer has any privacy. He belongs always and completely to everyone, to the whole Church. In a manner of speaking, the private dimension of his life is completely eliminated.  …

[…]

The “always” is also a “forever” – there can no longer be a return to the private sphere. My decision to resign the active exercise of the ministry does not revoke this. I do not return to private life, to a life of travel, meetings, receptions, conferences, and so on. I am not abandoning the cross, but remaining in a new way at the side of the crucified Lord. I no longer bear the power of office for the governance of the Church, but in the service of prayer I remain, so to speak, in the enclosure of Saint Peter. Saint Benedict, whose name I bear as Pope, will be a great example for me in this. He showed us the way for a life which, whether active or passive, is completely given over to the work of God.

Breadcrumbs.   Those remarks in the last audience can be read in different ways.  For example, when he says he is not returning to his former life of conferences, etc., remember that as Cardinal Ratzinger he did a lot of that private activity that didn’t have to do with his munus and ministerium as Prefect of CDF and Dean of the College of Cardinals.

And he still dresses like a pope, except that he doesn’t use the shoulder cape that is/was a sign of jurisdiction.

Breadcrumbs?

Friends, I think the main point to take from this is, “all shall be well – all manner of things shall be well”.

The Church is indefectible. The Petrine dimension of the Church was willed by Christ as a constitutive element of the Church.  Popes come and go.  Historically there have been gaps and, as we have seen, overlaps of a kind.

“All shall be well.”

The Holy Spirit, as Joseph Ratzinger pointed out, guides the election of popes in such a way that they don’t cause total disaster.  Fallible men elected wicked popes in the past.  Some popes were imposed even while others were alive.  Turning the sock inside out, it could be that even wicked popes were elected under the influence of the Holy Spirit in order to punish the Church or to awaken her from a slumber and to begin a reform.  It could be that the Holy Spirit rigged the election of bad popes precisely to break us from thinking that their every word and action is more important than it really is; to batter down papalotry.

“All manner of things shall be well.”

One way or another, and it won’t be that long from now, all of these questions will be moot.  The whole thing will resolve in time.

I apologize for the length of this.  I apologize for the repetitions, too.  After re-reading I left some in because I wanted to help some people keep track of important points.

I have turned on the moderation queue for this.  There will be no Francis bashing.  If that’s your point, think again and stick to the topic.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Canon Law, Francis, The Drill, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , , ,
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