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As we wait in fear and trembling for Jorge Bergoglio's next attack on the Traditional Latin Mass front, we might well reflect on a prescient piece published by renowned Catholic scholar and lawyer Christopher Ferrara in 2019:
"I must first recall what Summorum Pontificum (SP for short) established for liberation of the traditional Mass from its false imprisonment based on the fraudulent claim that Paul VI had forbade its celebration when he promulgated his disastrous New Mass, the creature of Annibale Bugnini’s infamous Consilium."
Ferrara's contribution comes per kind favour of Catholic Family News, whose editor notes::
"In light of this week’s news concerning the possibility of “imminent reform” of Summorum Pontificum by Pope Francis (see here, here, and here for details), we offer readers the following article by our longtime friend and contributor Christopher Ferrara.
At the time, Ferrara was responding to Pope Francis’ then-recent suppression of the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei (PCED) by means of an Apostolic Letter (Jan. 17, 2019).
We hope this article will be helpful for framing this week’s news in a wider context, one astutely identified by Ferrara over two years ago.
Christopher A Ferrara |
Bergoglio Abolishes Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei
No Big Deal or Prelude to Total Abrogation of Summorum Pontificum?
Introduction
On January 17, 2019, Pope Bergoglio issued motu proprio (“on his own initiative”) an Apostolic Letter suppressing the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei (PCED) and absorbing its functions entirely into a new section of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF). The PCED will no longer have a separate juridical existence or budget.
Certain commentators have dismissed the move as an inconsequential simplification of the Vatican organizational chart. I beg to differ. For the reasons that follow, I believe that the suppression of the PCED is the prelude to an attempted reversal of the Latin Mass revival launched by Benedict XVI’s historic Apostolic Letter Summorum Pontificum (SP).
The aim would be a quarantine of the traditional Latin Mass within a few established societies or communities, followed by ruthless suppression of its celebration by those bishops who have never accepted SP and have sought in every way to undermine its application.
To make my case, I must first recall what SP established for liberation of the traditional Mass from its false imprisonment based on the fraudulent claim that Paul VI had forbade its celebration when he promulgated his disastrous New Mass, the creature of Annibale Bugnini’s infamous Consilium.
Pope Benedict’s Liberation of the Traditional Latin Mass
SP, ending the “indult” (special permission) regime established by John Paul II, declared that the traditional Mass, last codified in the Missal of 1962, was “never abrogated.” And in his letter to the world’s bishops accompanying SP, Benedict further declared: “this Missal was never juridically abrogated and, consequently, in principle, was always permitted.”
Always permitted! Thus ended a fraud upon the faithful that Church leaders had perpetrated for nearly forty years. The fraud was assisted by Paul VI himself, who allowed the false impression of an abrogation of the traditional Latin Mass to spread throughout the Church, even though he rejected Bugnini’s request for a declaration that the traditional Mass was “definitively abrogated” because it would be “interpreted as ‘casting odium on the liturgical tradition.’”[1]
SP further provided as follows:
- Every priest may celebrate “private” Masses using the traditional Missal without permission from his bishop or the Holy See, and such Masses “may… also be attended by faithful who, of their own free will, ask to be admitted.” (Arts. 2, 4)
- All communities or institutes of consecrated life may celebrate Mass according to the traditional Missal, assuming a proper vote of the members where required. (Art. 3)
- Every pastor of every parish is free, without need of episcopal or Vatican permission, to provide for public celebration of the traditional Mass every Sunday whenever a “stable group” of the faithful requests it. (Art. 5)
- The pastor of any parish is free — without permission from Rome or the local bishop — to “allow celebrations in this extraordinary form for special circumstances such as marriages, funerals or occasional celebrations, e.g., pilgrimages…” (Art. 5)
- Pastors of parishes are also free “to grant permission to use the earlier ritual for the administration of the Sacraments of Baptism, Marriage, Penance, and the Anointing of the Sick, if the good of souls would seem to require it.” (Art. 9)
- Clerics are also free to “use the Roman Breviary promulgated by Bl. John XXIII in 1962.” (Art. 9)
- Finally, any bishop is free to erect “a personal parish in accordance with can. 518 for celebrations following the ancient form of the Roman rite, or to appoint a chaplain” for that purpose — that is, to establish an exclusively Latin Mass parish. (Art. 10)
Thus did SP lay the groundwork for a universal revival of the Latin liturgical tradition. But Pope Benedict did not stop there.
Crucial Role of PCED in Securing the Right to Liturgical Tradition
SP also provides — and this is critical to understanding the significance of Bergoglio’s move — that the PCED, first established solely to address “regularization” of priests in the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX), would now have a new appellate function for communities or members of the faithful who might be denied their right to the traditional Mass and other rites as guaranteed by the norms of SP summarized above: “The same Commission, in addition to the faculties which it presently enjoys, will exercise the authority of the Holy See in ensuring the observance and application of these norms” (Art. 12).
Confronted by the murmuring of numerous bishops against SP and the rights of the faithful it secures, Benedict approved PCED’s promulgation, on April 30, 2011, of an Instruction (Universae Ecclesiae) for the implementation of SP. The Instruction reaffirmed that the Pope’s intention in SP was that of “offering to all the faithful the Roman Liturgy in the Usus Antiquior, considered as a precious treasure to be preserved” and “effectively guaranteeing and ensuring the use of the forma extraordinaria for all who ask for it…” (Art. 8).
Note well: Under SP and the Instruction, the Latin Mass is to be made available to all the faithful who ask for it. In keeping with that mandate, the 2011 Instruction slammed shut various loopholes certain bishops were attempting to create to evade enforcement of SP, while reaffirming that the PCED has authority to overrule them upon petitions from the faithful individually or in community. To summarize some key provisions:
- SP is “a universal law for the Church,” not a mere series of suggestions for bishops to consider. (Art. 2)
- SP enforces “the traditional principle, recognised from time immemorial and necessary to be maintained into the future, that ‘each particular Church must be in accord with the universal Church not only regarding the doctrine of the faith and sacramental signs, but also as to the usages universally handed down by apostolic and unbroken tradition. These are to be maintained not only so that errors may be avoided, but also so that the faith may be passed on in its integrity, since the Church’s rule of prayer (lex orandi) corresponds to her rule of belief (lex credendi).’” (Art. 3, emphasis in original)
- No less than St. Gregory the Great and St. Pius V are cited for the proposition that the traditional Missale Romanum “has enjoyed a particular prominence in history, and was kept up to date throughout the centuries….” (Art. 4)
- “On account of its venerable and ancient use, the forma extraordinaria [tradtional Mass] is to be maintained with appropriate honor.” (Art. 6)
- “…. What was sacred for prior generations, remains sacred and great for us as well, and cannot be suddenly prohibited altogether or even judged harmful [citing Benedict’s letter to the bishops accompanying SP].” (Art. 7)
- Every bishop must “undertake all necessary measures to ensure respect for the forma extraordinaria of the Roman Rite, according to the Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum.” (Art. 14)
- The “stable group of faithful” who have the right to a traditional Mass in a parish means not only “some people of an individual parish who… come together by reason of their veneration for the Liturgy in the Usus Antiquior” but also “persons coming from different parishes or dioceses, who gather together in a specific parish church or in an oratory or chapel for this purpose.” (Art. 15)
- A priest visiting a parish must be permitted to celebrate his Mass according to the traditional Missal. (Art. 16)
- Not only secular but religious priests have the right to celebrate their “private” Masses according to the traditional Missal without any “special permission from…superiors.” (Art. 23)
PCED’s Decisive Role Highlighted in 2011 Instruction
The 2011 Instruction also affirmed the PCED’s decisive role as enforcer of the rights of the faithful to the whole of liturgical tradition:
- “The Sovereign Pontiff has conferred upon the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei ordinary vicarious power for the matters within its competence, in a particular way for monitoring the observance and application of the provisions” of SP. (Art. 9)
- Accordingly, the PCED has the power “to decide upon recourses [appeals] legitimately sent to it, as hierarchical Superior, against any possible singular administrative provision of an Ordinary which appears to be contrary to the Motu Proprio” — meaning that the PCED, as hierarchical superior, can overrule any local bishop who defies the provisions of SP. (Cf. Arts. 11-13)
- “In cases of controversy or well-founded doubt about the celebration in the forma extraordinaria, the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei will adjudicate.” (Art. 13)
In sum, with SP and the 2011 Instruction, Benedict XVI established, at least on paper, a strong canonical framework freely allowing for a widespread and unhindered revival of liturgical tradition in parishes as well as in societies, institutes and orders to be enforced by the PCED as the hierarchical superior of the bishops with the power to overrule them on petitions from the faithful.
To this framework Benedict added, by his Apostolic Letter Ecclesiae Unitatem (July 2, 2009) the proviso that the PCED would be organically linked to the CDF such that its President would henceforth be Prefect of the CDF. Nevertheless, the PCED would continue with “its own allocation of staff,” including a Secretary and officials, and thus would continue to exercise its enforcement function with respect to the rights secured by SP. This reorganization, Benedict declared, was in order to facilitate discussions with the SSPX following his previous remission of the purported excommunication of its four bishops on January 21, 2009. These discussions were to be had under the CDF’s auspices because, according to Benedict, “the problems that must now be addressed with the Society are essentially doctrinal in nature” and the CDF is the Vatican dicastery whose competence is doctrine.
What Bergoglio Has Really Done
With this background in view, it should be apparent that Bergoglio’s Apostolic Letter entirely suppressing the PCED substantially negates Benedict XVI’s canonical framework for the protection and spread of the traditional Latin Mass and the other traditional rites and liturgical books throughout the Church. A prudently close reading of the Letter reveals a sinister intention: to quarantine use of the Latin liturgy and traditional sacramental rites and books within a few approved orders and societies while ending universal access to liturgical tradition by all priests and laity as enforced by the PCED.
If this claim seems extravagant, consider the following language from the Apostolic Letter itself:
- “For over thirty years the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei…has carried out…the task of collaborating…in facilitating the full ecclesial communion of priests, seminarians, communities or individual men and women religious connected with the Fraternity founded by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre…”
- “… [B]y virtue of the Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum of 7 July 2007, the Pontifical Commission extended the authority of the Holy See to those Institutes and Religious Communities which had adhered to the extraordinary form of the Roman Rite and had assumed the precedent traditions of religious life…”
- “Two years later, my Venerable Predecessor Benedict XVI, with the Motu Proprio Ecclesiae Unitatem of 2 July 2009 reorganized the structure of the Pontifical Commission…. [C]onsidering that…the questions addressed [regarding SSPX]…were of a primarily doctrinal nature, he connected it more systematically to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith…”
- “Considering that today the conditions which led the holy Pontiff John Paul II to institute the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei have changed; noting that the Institutes and Religious Communities which customarily celebrate in the extraordinary form have today found proper stability of number and of life; recognizing that the aims and questions addressed by the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei are of a predominantly doctrinal order…”
- “I decree that… The Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei, instituted on 2 July 1988 with the Motu Proprio Ecclesia Dei adflicta, is decommissioned [soppressa, “suppressed”, in the original Italian].”
- “Furthermore, I establish that this Motu Proprio – to be observed notwithstanding anything to the contrary, even if worthy of specific mention – be promulgated by publication in the 19 January 2019 issue of L’Osservatore Romano, entering immediately into force, and that it be inserted thereafter into the official register of the Holy See, the Acta Apostolicae Sedis.”
It doesn’t take a lawyer to discern in the quoted language an implied negation of everything the now-abolished PCED was empowered to do in order to ensure that under SP the Church’s Latin liturgical patrimony be made available “to all the faithful,” “all who ask for it” and every priest. Consider the following points:
First, notice how the Letter clearly implies that only a few “Institutes and Religious Communities” — not all the faithful — were ever the beneficiaries of SP and the PCED’s powers to enforce SP’s norms and that today these institutes and communities have “stability of number.”
Second, the crucial phrase “stability of number” is a dead giveaway of an intention to limit use the traditional Mass and sacramental rites to the few institutes and communities that already use them — no additions to this “stabile” list permitted! — while obrogating (impliedly repealing a prior law by enacting a new law) the Benedictine mandate that the traditional Mass and sacraments be made available to all individual members of the faithful and all individual priests who request them.
Third, Bergoglio’s intention to obrogate Benedict’s universally operative pro-Latin liturgy regime is confirmed by the Letter’s provision that “this Motu Proprio – to be observed notwithstanding anything to the contrary, even if worthy of specific mention….” This is classic canonical language for a blanket obrogation (again, implied repeal) of all prior Church law deemed inconsistent with new legislation.
Fourth, accordingly, the Letter clearly implies that the new section of the CDF replacing the PCED as a separate entity will exist solely to conduct discussions with the SSPX on its supposed “doctrinal” differences with Rome, not to ensure access to the traditional Mass and sacraments throughout the Church.
St Thomas Aquinas Seminary, SSPX, Minnesota In sum, the right of any aggrieved member of the faithful to have access to the Church’s liturgical patrimony, guaranteed under both SP and the 2011 Instruction, now quietly disappears without a trace, along with the former PCED’s crucial function as hierarchical superior for enforcement of SP’s norms against local interference.
If anyone doubts that this is precisely the outcome contemplated by Bergoglio and his collaborators, consider a prominent article published in the January 19, 2019 issue of L’Osservatore Romano, to which LifeSiteNews has alerted its readers. In the article, distributed to journalists by the Vatican Press Office, one Nicola Gori tellingly observes:
“It is therefore not a question of a wholesale suppression [of the PCED], but of a transfer of competencies, given that the main axis on which the activity will be based has been restricted to the doctrinal sphere…. This means that progress has been made in communion and therefore the current motu proprio offers implicit recognition to the Pontifical Commission which, with its efforts and activity, has fulfilled its duties.”
Note well: According to Gori and the Vatican Press Office, the PCED’s work is done, and now all that remains is for the CDF to continue its endless palaver with the SSPX’s representatives about vague “doctrinal differences.”
None of these “doctrinal differences,” by the way, have ever been reduced to actual propositions stating in so many words the new doctrines arising from Vatican II and its aftermath that SSPX adherents would be required to accept in order to be considered Catholics in good standing. That is because no such propositions exist, the Church having no power to announce new doctrines at Vatican II or otherwise.
So, everything else the PCED did (or was supposed to do) for the benefit of the faithful in general has been extinguished by the stroke of a pen. As Gori confirms: “Over the years, the institutes and religious communities that celebrate in the extraordinary form of the Roman Rite have also reached a certain stability of both people and life. And this evolution has also gradually led to a reduction in the work of the Pontifical Commission.”
This “stability” obviously means no further growth in the number of people outside “institutes and religious communities” that “celebrate in the extraordinary form of the Roman Rite.” In short, a Bergoglian quarantine of the Latin liturgical tradition.
Adding to the trail of breadcrumbs, the newly appointed editorial director of Vatican communications, the prominent Vaticanist and relentless Bergoglian apologist Andrea Tornielli, has published an editorial in which he states tellingly as follows:
“The emergency no longer exists, thanks also to the decision of Benedict XVI to permit the use of the 1962 Roman Missal (promulgated by Pope St. John XXIII before the beginning of the Second Vatican Council).
For this reason, Pope Francis said in the motu proprio that ‘the Institutes and Religious communities which habitually celebrate in the extraordinary form have today found their own stability of number and life’. Their existence is therefore consolidated, and all the functions are transferred to the new section which, among other things, will consist of the same staff previously employed by the Commission….
This most recent change is motivated by the fact that the aims and questions dealt with by the Commission ‘are of a primarily doctrinal order’. This is a reference to the dialogue between the Holy See and the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X, or FSSPX, founded by Archbishop Lefebvre.”
Like the Apostolic Letter itself and the article by Gori, Tornielli’s editorial conspicuously fails to mention the former PCED’s role in ensuring that the traditional Mass and sacraments would be available to all priests and all faithful who ask for them, not just those attached to “the Institutes and Religious communities which habitually celebrate in the extraordinary form [and] have today found their own stability of number and life.” As to the latter, Tornielli says “their existence is therefore consolidated….” Meaning juridically frozen as the only vehicles for access to the traditional Mass and sacraments.
I hasten to add that this does not mean that bishops here and there will not continue to be favorable to a wider access to liturgical tradition in various dioceses, where Latin Mass parishes and chapels have exploded in number since SP was promulgated. But it does mean that bishops hostile to liturgical tradition will no longer have to contend with the PCED as a “hierarchical superior” with the power to overrule them should they refuse to comply with the norms of SP and the 2011 Instruction. They can now simply point to Bergoglio’s suppression of the PCED and say to those requesting access to liturgical tradition: As the Pope has declared, you have your religious institutes and communities, which are stable in number. Go look for one of them if you want a Latin Mass.
All that remains is a formal abrogation of SP — i.e., its complete and explicit repeal, as distinct from obrogation — on the same ground on which the PCED was suppressed: that there is no longer any need for SP as “the Institutes and Religious communities which habitually celebrate in the extraordinary form have today found their own stability of number and life.”
I would venture that Bergoglio is quite disposed and is even planning to abrogate SP upon the death of Pope Benedict, should Bergoglio survive him.
Then the way would be open to a papal or local episcopal diktat, once again reducing access to the Latin Mass to a mere indult that can be granted or withdrawn at will. The principle (to quote Benedict) that “what was sacred for prior generations, remains sacred and great for us as well, and cannot be suddenly prohibited” would once again be buried by a brutal exercise of raw power.
Pozzo Removed
While the staff of the suppressed PCED is supposed to be carried over into the superseding section of the CDF, whose work will now apparently be limited to “doctrinal” discussions with the SSPX, in another of the cunning maneuvers that have characterized this pontificate Bergoglio has removed one, and only one person, from the former PCED’s staff: its Secretary, Monsignor Guido Pozzo. By a separate decree, Pozzo was humiliatingly demoted to finance chief for the Pontifical Musical Choir.
Archbishop Guido Pozzo, humiliatingly demoted It was Pozzo who, while serving as PCED’s Secretary, famously described a “para-conciliar ideology” according to which, in the name of Vatican II, a “foreign way of thinking has entered into the Catholic world, stirring up confusion, seducing many souls, and disorienting the faithful.” There is in the Church today, said he, “a ‘spirit of self-demolition’ that pervades modernism….”
And it was Pozzo who expressed strong sympathy for the position of the SSPX regarding the notoriously problematic texts of the Council (including Nostra Aetate, Unitatis Redintegratio, and Dignitatis Humanae) whose compatibility with Tradition is far from evident.
Regarding the “doctrinal” discussions with the SSPX, Pozzo uttered the forbidden thought that the conciliar documents at issue are not strictly doctrinal but in many places pastoral or prudential in character and therefore may be subjected to legitimate criticism as such. Pozzo even dared to speak the truth that “the Church’s tradition is developing, but never in the sense of a novelty – which stands in contrast to the previous teaching – but [rather] a deeper understanding of the Depositum fidei, the authentic deposit of the Faith.”
So, obviously, Pozzo had to go. Which means there is no one left among the former staff of the PCED who will admit that the “doctrinal discussions” are not really about strict doctrine but rather ambiguous and novel pronouncements which, being novelties, cannot possibly pertain to the perennial Faith and thus cannot be forced upon Catholics as objects of belief.
“Dialogue” and “ecumenism,” for example, are not articulable doctrines but novel ecclesial activities in which Church leaders have vainly engaged for half a century with no results except grave damage to the integrity of the Faith through the now-prevalent attitude “which considers all religions to be more or less good and praiseworthy”—precisely the grave error condemned by Pope Pius XI in Mortalium Animos as leading to “naturalism and atheism” and ultimately to “altogether abandoning the divinely revealed religion” (n. 2).
Conclusion
Perhaps I will be proven wrong in my prediction that the suppression of the PCED is but the opening salvo in Bergoglio’s attack on the Latin liturgical revival launched by his predecessor. We shall soon see.
"But there is one prediction in which we can all be completely confident: the Church’s eventual full recovery from the madness of the post-conciliar “updating” of the Church.
"When that happens, coincident with the Triumph of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, this pontificate and the preceding ecclesial chaos of which it represents the apex will fade from memory to reside only in the annals of the most embarrassing failures of the Church’s fallible human element.'
Anon says:
ReplyDeleteI think you need to look at the bigger picture. The Church hierarchy needs its own Latin Mass to help keep SSPX at bay. It would be a bad strategy for the Church hierarchy to completely suppress the Latin Mass. However Pope Francis does seem to have a very negative attitude towards traditional Catholicism and that may cause him to favour the complete disposal of the Latin Mass regardless of the fact that he will lose a huge number of parishioners to SSPX.
I say: The 'worst-case scenario' would retain to the Vatican the right to allow the Latin Mass when and where it chooses. Even if he has a degenerative mental disease, as is rumoured, Bergoglio has no intention of shooting himself in the foot.
Joshua Kizer:
ReplyDeleteThe Latin Mass wasn't codified until the Council of Trent, in 16th century. Before that, it was said in various forms of Vulgar Latin (hence Latin Vulgate Bible translations), various forms of Greek (Septuagent Bibles), as well as in the earliest Church in Jerusalem, most likely in Liturgical Hebrew. Hope this helps clarify why the Mass doesn't need to be said in Latin....while that still is a very important and recent advent in the multi-millenial Church.
I say:
Joshua no, of course the Mass doesn't need to be said in Latin. It's still the Sacrifice of Calvary, no matter what the language. But the texts and the readings of the traditional Latin Mass are incomparably richer - and enriching - than the dumbed-down Novus Ordo in the vernacular.
Philippa O'Neill:
Julia du Fresne even going back to the Mass when it changed .. to now.. is quite different. Many parts of the NO Mass are left out. The saints are never mentioned in the Canon... the Confiteor is very ever said... my kids don't actually know it as it is never, ever said at any NO Masses we go to. I must introduce them to it! Isn't that sad?
I say:
Philippa, it's nothing short of tragic. Your children are very blessed to have a mother to teach them the Creed.
Theresa Rogers:
The Latin Mass is often called the Tridentine Latin Mass, a reference to the fact that it was codified by Pope St. Pius V shortly after the Council of Trent (1545-1563), from which is derived the term “Tridentine.”
Contrary to what some people think, Pope St. Pius V did not issue a new Mass but simply unified the already existing liturgy.
His Quo Primum decree not only declared that this Mass was to remain unchanged for all time, but it forbade the introduction of new Mass liturgies.
The Latin Mass itself can rightly be called the Mass of the Apostles since it dates back to the time of Our Lord and the Apostles.
Remnants of early liturgies parallel the Tridentine Latin Mass in its essential details.
The Mass was originally said in Aramaic or Hebrew since these were the languages which Christ and the Apostles spoke, the words amen, alleluia, hosanna and sabbaoth are Aramaic words which were retained and are still found in the Latin Mass of today.
“When the Church had spread to the Gentile world, about the year 100 AD it adopted the Greek tongue for the liturgy because it was the common language of the Roman Empire.
Use of the Greek language continued throughout the second and into part of the third centuries.
The Kyrie eleison is a remnant of Greek which survives in the Latin Mass. The liturgical symbol IHS is a derivative of the Greek word for Jesus.
“The beginnings of the Roman Mass are found in the writings of St. Justin (150 AD) and St. Hippolytus (215 AD). Latin finally replaced Greek as the official language of the Empire.
By the year 250 AD, the Mass was being said in Latin throughout most of the Roman world. This included the cities in North Africa and northern Italy such as Milan. The Church in the western empire adopted Latin for the Mass by 380 AD.
The Latin Canon as we know it was finished by 399 AD. Latin ceased to be a vernacular language between the 7th and 9th centuries; however, the Mass continued to be offered in Latin because much of the liturgy had already been established in that language. The Fathers of the Church at that time, saw no reason to adopt new vernacular languages which were developing throughout the known world. This was a fortunate situation, since a language, although ‘dead,’ served as a common means of communication throughout the Church, down through the ages.
I say:
And the Mass was exactly the same, all over the world. It was 'catholic'; universal.