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Traditionalist Catholic priestly society (SSPX) well acquainted with new pope
Kansas City Star ^ | May 12, 2005 | STEVE BRISENDINE

Posted on 05/13/2005 1:15:36 PM PDT by NYer

For all its disagreements with the Roman Catholic Church - and the list is long - the Society of St. Pius X has always maintained its loyalty to the papacy.

Now, with the election of Pope Benedict XVI, the ultra-traditionalist priestly society - considered a breakaway group by the Vatican - sees "a gleam of hope" that the changes wrought by the Second Vatican Council will be undone.

One Catholic scholar doubts that will happen, though - especially given that the last time the society dealt with then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, he was trying to persuade its founder to accept those changes.

"To try to reconcile the traditionalists with the church would be an implicit rejection of Vatican II, and that's not going to happen," said William Dinges, associate professor of theology and religious studies at the Catholic University of America.

The Society of St. Pius X, founded in Switzerland in 1969 and first recognized by the Vatican in 1970, maintains its American headquarters in Kansas City. The movement, named for the pope who wrote against modernism in a 1907 encyclical, claims between 1 million and 2 million lay adherents worldwide, 20,000 to 30,000 in the United States.

The society's Superior General, Bishop Bernard Fellay, welcomed Ratzinger's election in a statement issued April 19 from the society's international headquarters in Menzingen, Switzerland.

The statement, which appears on the society's American and international Web sites, said Fellay "sees there a gleam of hope that we may find a way out of the profound crisis which is shaking the Catholic Church, of which some aspects have been spoken of by the former Head for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith."

A subsequent statement reiterates the order's loyalty to Benedict.

A lay secretary in Kansas City, who asked that his name not be used because of the society's rules, said the society would have no comment beyond anything published on the society's Web sites and in its newsletters.

"He knows who we are, and we know who he is," the secretary said of Benedict.

The Society of St. Pius X's profession of loyalty to the pope sets it apart from most other traditionalist movements, who either consider the position vacant or have elected "popes" of their own.

A former society seminarian, David Allan Bawden, has claimed to be "Pope Michael I" since 1990 and maintains his "Vatican in Exile" in Delia, Kan., about 90 minutes west of Kansas City.

Still, even a cursory review of the Society of Saint Pius X's positions shows how deep the divide runs between it and the post-Vatican II church.

The order's late founder, French-born Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, publicly rejected the church's new Mass, which replaced the 16th-century Tridentine Mass in 1971.

The new Mass may be celebrated in any language, while the Tridentine rite is celebrated only in Latin.

There are other differences: In the Tridentine Mass, the priest faces the altar - away from worshippers - and communion is given only in the mouth, never in the hand. There are no lay readers or communion servers.

The Society of St. Pius also opposes the Vatican's efforts to reach out to Orthodox and Protestant Christians and other religions. One statement on its Web site defends the Inquisition, while another expresses support for capital punishment.

The Vatican banned the Tridentine rite from 1971 to 1984, although Lefebre's followers and other traditionalist groups continued to use it. In 1984, Pope John Paul II said the Tridentine rite could be used in special circumstances.

The Society of St. Pius X dismissed the Vatican's move as a ploy to undermine traditionalists. Still, more than three dozen of the society's priests and seminarians did leave in 1988 to reconcile with the Vatican and form the Fraternity of St. Peter, which emphasizes the Tridentine Mass.

Lefebvre was suspended by Pope Paul VI in 1976, along with his newly ordained priests, and excommunicated in 1988 after consecrating four bishops - also excommunicated, along with a Catholic bishop who supported Lefebvre - against Pope John Paul II's orders.

Several months earlier, the archbishop and Ratzinger signed a protocol that made reconciliation with the Vatican seem imminent, but Lefebvre rejected the accord over a clause that gave Vatican representatives the majority on a commission to settle differences in interpretation of Vatican II documents.

He and his followers' excommunication is considered the church's first major schism since the "Old Catholics" broke from the Vatican after its proclamation of the doctrine of papal infallibility in 1870. The society denies a schism exists, however, saying Lefebvre's disobedience was necessary to deal with a crisis in the church and did not constitute an outright rejection of the pope's authority.

The Society of St. Pius X also contends that as a cardinal, Benedict agreed in principle in 1988 that the order had the right to ordain priests and bishops for service to the larger church.

However, in a 1986 letter, Ratzinger insisted that Lefebvre accept the reforms of Vatican II, "the texts of which are magisterial and enjoy the highest doctrinal authority."

And there, Dinges said, lies the stumbling block for traditionalists.

"The society is intransigent on the liturgy issue and the (Vatican) council issue," he said. "Those are two - in my mind - insurmountable issues to any long-term reconciliation."

ON THE NET

U.S. site: http://www.sspx.org

International site: http://www.fsspx.org

Society's international news site: http://www.dici.org


TOPICS: Activism; Catholic; Current Events; Ecumenism; General Discusssion; History; Ministry/Outreach; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture; Theology; Worship
KEYWORDS: cult; schism; sspx
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To: Arguss
Re: "I believe that time is of the essence. The longer we wait, the more souls may be lost through relativism, and the gap widened so much that the past may not even be remembered, much less desired."

I agree but I realize some things I can do something about and some things I can not. For those I have no power over I can pray over. By all means do what you can I will support you in all correct things (I hope I will be able to tell which from witch). If I was planning the New Holy Father's schedule the first thing I would include is a Consecration of RUSSIA (by name) to the Immaculate Heart of Mary in conjunction with all the Bishops of the world. With the words of consecration taken directly from the testimony of Sister Lucia dos Jesus Maria of the Immaculate Heart.

I believe many of the problems with Liturgy, and church discipline and relationships with dissenter groups such as SSPX will be corrected. I even believe the much hoped for union with Protestants and Orthodox will be healed in a few short years after that is done.

Alas the Pope does not consult me. So I pray.
81 posted on 05/15/2005 11:38:28 AM PDT by Mark in the Old South (Sister Lucia of Fatima pray for us)
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To: BulldogCatholic
Pope Leo DeMedici who purchased the papacy and then had to sell indulgences to pay off the sistine chapel and caused Luther to go nuts

Bad history. Luther's Protestant Revolution was touched off by his own heresies, nothing to do with indulgences:

Luther on the Eve of his Revolt - A criticism of Luther's Lectures on the Epistle to the Romans given at Wittenberg in 1515-1516. by The Very Rev. M. J. Lagrange, O.P.

82 posted on 05/15/2005 12:02:09 PM PDT by gbcdoj (Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life.)
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To: BlackElk
"My Catholic Faith" is distributed by the Angelus. Newman Press is the publisher.
83 posted on 05/15/2005 12:26:56 PM PDT by HapaxLegamenon
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To: NYer
An excommunication without due process according to canon law is just an assumption on the Holy Ghost's conclusion. It could be correct or just the vanity of the man in religious garb working against his priestly gifts. As the Church teaches even Popes sin. Show me the infallible declaration and I will consider them excommunicated. The SSPX were the only people who asked for prayers for Pope John Paul II when he died. Which was far more charitable then what many of their //cough// betters did when Archbishop Lefebvre died. But then there has always been those who put their faith in action and then there are posers.
84 posted on 05/15/2005 1:42:15 PM PDT by Mark in the Old South (Sister Lucia of Fatima pray for us)
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To: Wessex

Please note my post #8. It might have some relevance to the size of the Church and where we are in time.


85 posted on 05/15/2005 1:54:17 PM PDT by Mark in the Old South (Sister Lucia of Fatima pray for us)
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To: NYer

Re: "Both are cafeteria catholics."

That's a hoot. Are you always this funny? I have hear of the pot calling the kettle black but never the pot calling snow black.


86 posted on 05/15/2005 1:56:41 PM PDT by Mark in the Old South (Sister Lucia of Fatima pray for us)
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To: Mark in the Old South; Wessex
Are you always this funny?

Thanks for the compliment!

Tell me this, if the Holy Father opened the doors to reconciliation with the SSPX on condition that they acknowledge and accept the Novus Ordo liturgy, what do you suppose the SSPX 'leaders' would do?

87 posted on 05/15/2005 2:48:28 PM PDT by NYer ("Love without truth is blind; Truth without love is empty." - Pope Benedict XVI)
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To: NYer
Re: "if the Holy Father opened the doors to reconciliation with the SSPX on condition that they acknowledge and accept the Novus Ordo liturgy, what do you suppose the SSPX 'leaders' would do?"

You will have to be more specific with your question. I believe SSPX has already said it would reconcile as long as the right to say the Mass for the ages is not abridged. What they do not want is to be forced to SAY the new rite. My understanding is they are willing for a peaceful coexistence. After all there is the Indult but many at my Chapel went that route and found it was not as promised. The Host from NO rites are used with the Latin Mass etc.

I admit I have no idea how much of a problem this is but there have been groups that reconciled and regretted it. Even the Marionite and Byzantine rites are under pressure, or so I hear. I have no specifics, perhaps you do, just a rumor. I am leaving it to those with more experience.

I have been considering my affection for SSPX. They are very proud and a bit exasperating I grant you but I know what I feel when I am in our little Chapel and what I did not feel in the NO Churches, it was an astonishing difference. I also read Scripture every day. I see much of this fight described in OT and New. They (SSPX) is not telling me this stuff, our priest has little time outside the Sunday sermon and he almost never rails on about the SSPX vs NO. I think there will be a complete removal of the sacrificial aspects of the Mass before it is all said and done. This is pretty clear in the Bible, the question remains who will notice? I hope you will as well as all readers of this thread.
88 posted on 05/15/2005 3:09:28 PM PDT by Mark in the Old South (Sister Lucia of Fatima pray for us)
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To: Mark in the Old South
My understanding is they are willing for a peaceful coexistence. After all there is the Indult but many at my Chapel went that route and found it was not as promised.

Not as promised? What does that mean? What was the promise? I have attended an Indult and found it to be identical to the Mass celebrated pre-Vatican II (which I still remember).

The Host from NO rites are used with the Latin Mass etc.

The forumula for confecting the host consists of wheat and water. What's different?

Even the Marionite and Byzantine rites are under pressure, or so I hear.

What sort of pressure? I attend the Maronite Divine Liturgy. If anything, VCII mandated that they are to restore their liturgy to its authentic origins, which they are in the process of doing.

They are very proud and a bit exasperating I grant you but I know what I feel when I am in our little Chapel and what I did not feel in the NO Churches, it was an astonishing difference.

The RC diocese in which I reside is 'shepherded' by one of the most liberal bishops in the US. Exasperated by the liturgical abuses at my parish, I set off in search of a more reverent liturgy, a holy priest and a welcoming community. I compiled a list of other Catholic parishes within a certain radius of home, and included any Eastern Catholic Churches within that range. At NO time did it ever occur to me to include SSPX Chapels on that list!

This is what I do not understand. Why would someone who seeks a more reverant liturgy turn towards a schismatic group? It simply doesn't make any sense.

After visiting different parishes each week, it was the Maronite Catholic liturgy that grabbed my heart and soul and would not relinquish them. That is where I attend Mass each week. The Maronites have welcomed me with open arms and, in utter gratitude to the Lord who directed me to them, I have spent the past year assisting them in all aspects of their community.

The Eastern Churches are the Treasures of the Catholic Church" - Pope John XXIII

By separating themselves from the Magisterium, the SSPX, like other denominations that have traveled this route, are sepated from Church teachings.

"The Pope is the Supreme legislator in the Church." Communion with him is a fundamental, non-negotiable hallmark of Catholicism which is not determined by those who set themselves up to judge him, but by the Pope himself (cf. Second Vatican Council's Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium #22-25).

It may still be difficult to characterize the entire Society of St. Pius X, but SSPX documentation witnesses to a consistent condemnation of the new Mass, the Pope and anyone who disagrees with the authorities of the Society in the smallest degree. Such behaviour is not consistent with the practice of the Catholic faith.

89 posted on 05/15/2005 4:04:41 PM PDT by NYer ("Love without truth is blind; Truth without love is empty." - Pope Benedict XVI)
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To: Mark in the Old South
The SSPX picks and choose what part of tradition to follow. Little things like incardination and papal leave are tossed by the roadside, while they worry which way the altar should face.

Like any schism, there are many who chose the SSPX not to find God, but to spite their superiors in the Episcopacy and Rome.
90 posted on 05/15/2005 4:09:36 PM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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To: NYer
Re: "Not as promised? What does that mean? What was the promise? I have attended an Indult and found it to be identical to the Mass celebrated pre-Vatican II (which I still remember)."

I am not the one to answer your question. I do not attack the Indult and have not been convinced to follow suit by those who do. I can only offer a limited understanding of the reasoning of those who say stay away from the Indult. They say it is a danger to the faith, but I doubt that fully answers your question because it does not fully answer mine.

Re: "What sort of pressure? I attend the Maronite Divine Liturgy. If anything, VCII mandated that they are to restore their liturgy to its authentic origins, which they are in the process of doing."

Now this would worry me. After all getting back to the early church rites was the claim the NO used to justify their changes. They were selective in what they chose. At no point in the early church was the service like it is today. They picked the parts they liked and ignored other parts from the same period they did not have a hankering for. You do not see them giving penances such as they had in the early church do you? There is no way the early Church would have tolerated the permissiveness on divorce and abortion that is routine in the Church today.

Re: "At NO time did it ever occur to me to include SSPX Chapels on that list!"

I'm not sure what you want me to do about that. You will have to come to terms as best you can. I advise you to follow your conscience after much prayer.

Re: "Why would someone who seeks a more reverent liturgy turn towards a schismatic group? It simply doesn't make any sense."

Of course it doesn't as long as you see them as schismatic. They recognize the Pope and they mourned the passing of John Paul II. A SSPX priest is accepted as a priest without another ordination, which the RCC does not do for Anglican priest or any other that I know about. So how schismatic they are is not confirmed by action on the part of Bishops, even liberal Bishops. But you think they are schismatic. I understand the words but not how you got there. I doubt I will change your mind, I accept that is your position and I leave it to time and event to do what I have inadiquate words to accomplish.

Re: "It may still be difficult to characterize the entire Society of St. Pius X, but SSPX documentation witnesses to a consistent condemnation of the new Mass, the Pope and anyone who disagrees with the authorities of the Society in the smallest degree. Such behaviour is not consistent with the practice of the Catholic faith."

That has not been my experience. I hear it most often from folks who would not go near SSPX, so how useful is that. People with no experience with SSPX telling people with experience to watch out they are gonna get you. The reverse is not true. Most people in SSPX have been battered and bruised by liberal even conservative but political Bishops. All right that is the way it is for now. Not much has changed at least for now.
91 posted on 05/15/2005 4:35:23 PM PDT by Mark in the Old South (Sister Lucia of Fatima pray for us)
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To: Dominick
Re: "Like any schism, there are many who chose the SSPX not to find God, but to spite their superiors in the Episcopacy and Rome."

No doubt there are some but you would not like me to do the same. Would you like it if I applied to you what motivates a few in the Novus Ordo, say a Cardinal Mahoney or Bernardin, how about a Greenley? I promise not to do it to you if you don't do it to me. Agreed?
92 posted on 05/15/2005 4:39:11 PM PDT by Mark in the Old South (Sister Lucia of Fatima pray for us)
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To: Mark in the Old South
I think playing the numbers game, and assuming absolutes in the motivation for joining a schismatic body is not benefecial for either side. I think I was trying to say when the vast majority of the people who now affilate with the SSPX return to Rome, so to speak, there will be die hards trying to continue on with the "cause".

Clearly, when the Latin Mass is an option universally, or as a personal prefecture, it would be very attractive to me.
93 posted on 05/15/2005 4:52:33 PM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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To: Dominick
Re: "I was trying to say when the vast majority of the people who now affilate with the SSPX return to Rome, so to speak, there will be die hards trying to continue on with the "cause"."

Sure I will agree with that (there is always those whose motives leave much to be desired) but I will add when a Bishop eliminates without question the eternal Sacrifice of the Mass there will be those to complain about the disobedience of dissenters and rebels.
94 posted on 05/15/2005 4:59:49 PM PDT by Mark in the Old South (Sister Lucia of Fatima pray for us)
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To: NYer
The SSPX are protestants who claim to be catholic. They are no different from the liberal wing of the church in their selective teachings. Both are cafeteria catholics.

What doctrine do they reject? You make claims "the Vatican" does not even make. "The Vatican" doesn't even call Protestants Protestant, they're separated brethren, don't you know. Who died and made you pope? Calumny is a sin you know.

95 posted on 05/15/2005 6:54:02 PM PDT by murphE (These are days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed but his own. --G.K. Chesterton)
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To: CouncilofTrent; ninenot
No matter how many good, holy and actually Catholic books from the rich history of Catholic publishing may be re-printed by SSPX and its Angelus Press, it is safe to say that SSPX and the Angelus Press continue in the schismatic mode so long as they defy and deny papal authority and continue to illicitly benefit from the grand theft ecclesiastical which is each and every consecration of an SSPX bishop and the acts flowing from those consecrations.

Hence to purchase the books produced by SSPX and Angelus (however Catholic by content) is to subsidize schism because it keeps their presses going and their employees at work where they are also publishing and distributing schismatic work that undermines Holy Mother the Church. I would not have purchased perfectly accurate Bibles from Communist publishing houses nor Missals that might be printed by NAMBLA for similar reasons of moral obligation not to cooperate with other evils.

The behavior of Lefebvre and his co-conspirators has put him, them and their organizations beyond the pale until they first take care of the basic business of surrendering to papal authority, retracting their nearly two decades of character assassination of John Paul II, retracting their anti-Catholic cafeteria views, apologizing to those whom they have duped and to whom they have lied, publicly and unconditionally pleading for forgiveness and mercy by the Holy See, and publicly performing appropriate and hopefully drastic penance.

But, hey, that is just me, speaking from the experience of the actual tradition of my upbringing in 1950s Catholicism. If B-16 is more charitable towards the schism, then who am I to disagree? Until B-16 says otherwise, my preference is for the full measure of richly deserved punishment of SSPX, its excommunicated leaders and its schismatic adherents as a condition of the restoration of those still alive to Catholicism in good standing.

96 posted on 05/15/2005 7:35:07 PM PDT by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline of the Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
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To: murphE; NYer
MurphE: SSPX in the gross violation of vows of obedience embodied in the criminal consecrations at Econe by dead, excommunicated Marcel and those who received the stolen goods of consecration as bishops, denied papal authority over them and, by implication, generally (since the SSPX have no monopoly on defying legitimate ecclesiastical authority vested in the popes.

No one died and made anyone here pope BUT conclaves, through the work of the Holy Ghost, made Karol Wojtlywa into Pope John Paul II and Josef Cardinal Ratzinger into Pope Benedict XVI. Catholics obeyed JP II and obey Benedict XVI accordingly. Non-Catholics do not. Non-Catholic Christians are either Orthodox or Protestant. No one that I know of accuses SSPX of being part of Eastern Orthodoxy (that would indeed be calmny against our Orthodox brethren in Christ). That leaves Protestant as the category applicable to SSPX (with appropriate apologies to our separated brethren of good intent and our prayers for them in having to share the category with SSPX) and the excommunicated leaders of SSPX bear a very strong stylistic resemblance to Luther, at al., in their attacks on the institution of the Church and on the papacy. Protestants have a moral advantage over SSPX in that they do not claim dishonestly to be Catholic while refusing Catholic authority. If the shoe fits (and it certainly does), you must wear it. You are not entitled to invent your own facts.

97 posted on 05/15/2005 7:52:01 PM PDT by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline of the Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
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To: Gerard.P

If my mailman were so benighted as to succumb to whatever seductions the SSPX schism may have to offer in lieu of Roman Catholicism, I will try to remember to include him/her at Mass. Actually, I am well acquainted with the actually Protestant postmaster in my town and we get our mail at the post office. I know of no one in my georgraphical vicinity who is such a howling moonbat as to be defending dead Marcel and SSPX on the internet.


98 posted on 05/15/2005 7:58:10 PM PDT by BlackElk (Dean of Discipline of the Tomas de Torquemada Gentlemen's Club)
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To: NYer; gbcdoj

gbcdoj,

Would you ask NYer to provide examples of how she has come to her conclusion that the SSPX are Protestants?

I think this fulfills your criteria for quizzing someone to find out what they have read or not read in order to come to their conclusions.


99 posted on 05/15/2005 8:01:59 PM PDT by Gerard.P (The lips of liberals drip with honey while their hands drip with blood--Bishop Williamson)
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To: BlackElk
I asked NYer, to support her assertion, not you.

I don't value your pontifications, given your track record of making accusations and subsequently being found to be in error. But have a swell night.

100 posted on 05/15/2005 8:07:26 PM PDT by murphE (These are days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed but his own. --G.K. Chesterton)
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