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It seems we have reached a new height of post-conciliar absurdity.
1 posted on 12/23/2001 4:30:08 PM PST by ELS
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To: Catholic_list
In a related vein, I received the following in an e-mail message:

An interview with Bishop Fellay in the Fall 2001 issue of The Latin Mass Magazine

During this past summer, The Latin Mass had the opportunity to speak with the Superior General of the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX), His Excellency Bishop Bernard Fellay. During a three-hour conversation, Bishop Fellay explained how the recent discussions between the Holy See and the SSPX developed, as well as his view of the details concerning their nature and substance. The following relates the heart of the conversation.

TLM: Your Excellency, what was the genesis of the conversations between the Holy See and the SSPX?

BBF: A signal was given with comments made by Msgr. Camille Perl [of the Ecclesia Dei Commission] in May 2000. He remarked in a publication that for the sake of furthering ecumenical efforts with the Orthodox, a solution needed to be found regarding the situation with the SSPX. Remember, towards the end of April Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos had been appointed Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy. He was also made responsible for the Ecclesia Dei Commission. The naming of an active Cardinal to head this commission was a new development.

On June 1, 2000 Cardinal Hoyos sent a letter inviting the SSPX bishops to meet with him. He said, "Now that I am head of Ecclesia Dei, why don't we meet to suppress this rupture. I want you to know that my doors are open and the Pope wishes to embrace you."

At the end of June, all the bishops met during the SSPX pilgrimage to Rome. We decided to signal that if the Cardinal desired to meet, we were ready. By the way, the pilgrimage clearly revealed the hand of Divine Providence. All of Rome came to realize that Tradition was not only alive, but that it was also Catholic! The press made a point of saying that never before in the history of the Church had there been 5,000 "excommunicated" Catholics praying for the Holy Father in St. Peter's Basilica! This was pivotal in breaking the ice.

When in Rome, during the third day of the pilgrimage, our bishops received an invitation to visit Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos. When we met, the Cardinal stated, "1 am happy. The fruits are good [referring to our pilgrim- age] and hence the Holy Ghost is there." One of our bishops responded, "But Eminence, these are two religions!" I tried to bring up the subject of the Mass. The Cardinal responded, "1 am not an expert." It was clear that he did not want to discuss the matter. He agreed to receive our dubia [theological objections]. Most of the memorandum we delivered to him dealt with our dubia concerning the Mass [the ancient Mass as found in the Missal of St. Pius V]. Grant every priest the Mass, I implored.

TLM: Your Excellency, why do you consider it crucial that every Catholic priest be given the opportunity to offer the ancient Mass at will?

BBF: If this were granted, it would create a new climate in the Church and in turn would make it easier to speak of the deeper problems, such as those dealing with doctrinal matters. As a first step, this is all we ask.

TLM: What happened after you delivered the dubia?

BBF: I returned to Rome to meet with Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos in late December 2000. When I arrived he had a proposed agreement in his hand. It was a big surprise, because I thought that many issues first needed to be thoroughly discussed. For instance, I asked him during this conversation about the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter (FSSP). I said, "You crushed them. How do we interpret that?" The Cardinal said that the FSSP had been preparing for its members an oath against the new Mass. The Cardinal does not understand the problem with the new Mass, so I tried to explain it to him.

Then I brought up the Roman attitude toward ecumenism. For example, I told His Eminence that in September 2000 a schismatic [Orthodox] bishop had wanted to convert. He approached the SSPX. We advised him to arrange things directly with Rome. He was put in touch with the secretary to the Pope and told him, "1 want to become a Catholic." Panic ensued. The following day, Cardinal Neves, Prefect of the Congregation of Bishops, said to the schismatic bishop, "Your Excellency, it is not necessary to convert. Since the Council, things have changed! There's no need to convert anymore." The schismatic bishop then asked Cardinal Neves, "What would you think if I joined the SSPX?" And he replied, "Good heavens, don't do that! They're fossils!"

Bishop Walter Kasper then got involved and told the schismatic bishop to go to Utrecht. [A Modernist segment of the Orthodox] "With all our ecumenical contacts, I have good contacts with them. I think you should join them!"

I told Cardinal Hoyos that these events reflected attitudes that were contrary to the Faith, and that we could not accept them. I pointed out that Bishop Kasper [now a Cardinal] had stated in L 'Osservatore Romano that post-conciliar ecumenism did not have as its goal the conversion of people to Catholicism as in the days of Pius XI and Pius XII. He said that, with Vatican II, things had changed from an "ecumenism of return" to an "ecumenism of reconciled diversity."

After a period of silence, Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos said, "That's ambiguous."

TLM: Why did you bring these matters to the attention of Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos at that time? Some might suggest that you were deliberately putting obstacles in the path of the agreement that you said the Cardinal held in his hand.

BBF: Because I was getting the sense that this agreement was part of a political struggle that is presently going on in the Vatican as the Holy Father's health deteriorates. We do not want reconciliation under these circumstances. We desire a rapprochement on principle, with wide agreement among the Roman hierarchy, not as pawns in a Roman power play during the nadir of an ailing Pontiff.

TLM: Was there further conversation during this meeting?

BBF: Yes. Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos responded with the accusation that the SSPX regularly attacks Rome. So I told him that in a war some bullets go astray. He then said, "But we want you to fight Modernism, Liberalism and Masonry in the Church!" So then I was really puzzled. What did he mean? I again attacked liberalism. The Cardinal then said, "1 do the same." He then gave some examples of how he attacked liberalism in the Church. With these examples I realized that he meant moral liberalism. But he offered no examples of doctrinal liberalism to which he was opposed.

Overall, this meeting with Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos was very interesting. The Cardinal was very sympathetic and tried his best to smooth over everything. For him it seemed very easy. He said as I left, "When you come back to Rome we'll sign the agreement and be done with it."

TLM: Were you offered the opportunity to meet with the Holy Father?

BBF: Yes, but our meeting was short and uneventful. When the Pope left to attend the daily Angelus, Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos remarked, "There are Cardinals and bishops with you and the Pope is with you. We want you to fight liberalism and modernism in the Church!"

TLM: What happened after the meeting with the Holy Father?

BBF: I met with Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos and relayed to him that all of the bishops of the SSPX agree that we are open to discussion, but that the concerns I had noted to His Eminence needed to be addressed. We do not want to return as a component of some grand design for ecclesial pluralism. I told him that a much better climate for reconciliation would be created if every priest in the world were given permission to say the traditional Mass.

TLM: Did the question of your excommunication ever enter into the discussion?

BBF: Yes. We asked for the lifting of the penalty. We said that dialogue with the Orthodox would be made much easier if this were done. I told the Cardinal that, while the question of excommunication was a non-issue for us, we would ask that it be removed because bishops make use of it to prohibit people from attending our chapels.

TLM: I sense that you remained uncomfortable with the situation after all this.

BBF: We are a sign of contradiction. Wherever we are, we are a source of division, not by our desire, but by force of circumstances. We suffer from the hatred of local bishops and priests. We did not create it; it comes to us because of what we represent. If we receive Rome's approval, this fight will come to Rome and be fought openly throughout the whole Church. We fear that after the agreement, Rome will say to us, "For the sake of peace, make a concession." Truth is not a matter of politics and concessions.

By the way, I learned not long after that Cardinal Lustiger had informed Rome that if the SSPX were reconciled and received the approval to work openly in France, 65 French bishops would enter into disobedience [Cardinal Lustiger is a Jewish convert]. He told this to Cardinal Sodano.

TLM: So you left Rome and awaited a response. When did you get it?

BBF: It was February 12,2001. Cardinal Hoyos said, "Listen, we have a problem. The problem is this permission for the Mass. The Pope agrees to say that the old Mass has never been abrogated and that it is legitimate to offer it. Cardinals Ratzinger, Medina and Sodano all agree. But their secretaries and under-secretaries do not agree. Therefore, we cannot say what you want. Instead, we will say that every priest and every group of faithful who wants the old Mass will have the ability to ask permission from a new commission that will oversee the concerns of the traditionalists." I replied, "Well, that's Ecclesia Dei II!" When the Cardinal relayed this information, I said, "That's it. They don't care about the problem."

Nonetheless, we sent one of our canon lawyers to discuss the proposed canonical structure that we were being offered. The structure being proposed is absolutely splendid. If there were no other problems, it would be perfect. One day, and I think this day will happen very soon, Rome will use a structure of this type to reform the Church.

TLM: What kind of canonical governing structure was the SSPX offered?

BBF: They offered us an Apostolic Administration, a universal diocese. This is excellent because it would preserve a part of the Church that is still sound and give it protection from those who would wish to persecute us.

In the end, I told Cardinal Hoyos that we could not sign the agreement. If Rome was unwilling to recognize openly what it knows to be the right of every priest (namely, to offer the traditional Mass), then we have no reason to trust men who permit and encourage such a deception to continue.

I repeated my discomfort that after all the assurances offered to the FSSP, they had still been forced to accept what most of them did not want [Protocol 1411]. The Cardinal then said that they had never been offered the protection that was being offered now to the SSPX. He said, "They are against the new Mass! The SSPX priests are in favor of the old Mass." What am I to think of such reasoning?

TLM: So you left Rome with the discussions in this state. What happened next?

BBF: We were told that the Pope would speak in favor of the old Mass, but said he would do it at the time when he would erect the SSPX as an Apostolic Administration.

On March 29,2001 I communicated with Cardinal Hoyos. I said that we would never arrive at a solution if we don't first settle the preambles (foundational questions). Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos informed Michael Davies (President of Una Voce International) in a letter that permission to offer the old Mass would be granted only to those who have nothing to do with people who question the authority and legitimacy of the new Mass. Therefore, the only condition for people who say the traditional Mass is that they have nothing to do with us! This is a contradiction. Something is wrong.

I also told him that when he speaks with the SSPX he carefully avoids the word "schismatic." But when he writes bishops he says that we are in schism. Finally, I told him, you say that the FSSP had been chastened because of its position with regard to the new Mass. But our position is much more severe. So what will happen to us? How can we trust so many contradictions?

Some weeks later, we heard that there had been a plenary session of the major dicasteries [offices of the Roman Curia]. Two or three cardinals stood strongly against us. The majority, indeed the great majority, was in favor of reaching an agreement with the SSPX. The same majority refused, however, to consider recognizing every priest's right to offer the traditional Mass. Why? Because there would be too much opposition in the Church. Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos told us, "Listen, you cannot speak against the new Mass. We are proceeding with the beatification of Pope Paul VI [who promulgated the new Mass]. You cannot speak against the new Mass."

On Apri1 13, 2001 we were informed that the Pope could not grant the preambles because of the opposition within the Curia. Cardinal Hoyos said to me that the SSPX's requested recognition of the equal status of the traditional Mass with the new was impossible. Such recognition would place the new Mass in jeopardy. Furthermore, he said that we could not continue attacking the Council. He admitted to me that some of the language of the Council was ambiguous, but that under the present Pontiff a greater precision was being achieved.

TLM: How did you respond?

BBF: I told him that his response put us in a dilemma. We are told: "Come in and shut up, or you are outside." You tell us that we will come to an agreement on the Council when we have a broader view of the Church and her history. What's that? So, if we follow Vatican II we end up in the synagogue, and in the forests of Togo and Assisi, and we don't want to go there. How is it that all the experts of Vatican II had all been condemned under Pius XII: Congar, de Lubac, Courtney Murray, etc.? These are the major thinkers of the Council.

TLM: Do you continue to converse with Cardinal Castrillon?

BBF: I have always viewed our desired rapprochement as another part of the war, not as an attempt for a peace treaty. Something has changed in Rome; the attitude has changed. The most probable explanation can be summarized in one word: ecumenism. The SSPX jeopardizes the grand scale of the ecumenism they seek. It seems that some of the Orthodox have said, "As long as you fail to solve the problem of Tradition, we stay back."

Others in Rome are desperate. They see the disaster in the Church and they look at us as a possible counterforce. But at the same time, they don't understand or they don't want to understand the depth of the crisis. To put ourselves now under them with such an agreement as they propose would hurt us. That's why we repeatedly insist that we touch the doctrinal problems. We want to address the roots of our present estrangement. We're not interested in a practical solution that is nothing more than a political game. Rome recognizes in their discussions with us that there is a problem. However, they do not want to touch Vatican II. Until we can break the taboo on discussing the new Mass and Vatican II, any talk of a rapprochement is premature.

The French bishops who threatened their own schism during our discussions well understand the problem. Last year during the meeting of their Episcopal Conference, the Bishop of Poitiers stood up and said that he had a serious problem in his diocese and he knew that he wasn't alone. He said he had twelve priests who wanted to say the traditional Mass and that he was losing control of them. The only way to deal with them, he said, was to isolate them from one another and watch them carefully. He told his brother bishops that unless something was done soon, the problem would be everywhere.

This is happening everywhere among the young priests. They question the fruits of Vatican II. They have this Catholic instinct. They now look for guidance. We must strengthen them and assist them.

TLM: So, Excellency, where do we go from here?

BBF: Where we have always gone: prayer and penance. Our Lord and Our Lady will intervene. All things will be revealed.

TLM: Thank you, Your Excellency.

2 posted on 12/23/2001 4:33:11 PM PST by ELS
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To: Orual
Dunno what this all means, but I suspect it's in your line.
8 posted on 12/23/2001 5:22:00 PM PST by dighton
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To: ELS
Just a bump from Oschisms to TwoSchisms. :)
9 posted on 12/23/2001 5:22:42 PM PST by Oschisms
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To: ELS; *Catholic_list; patent; notwithstanding; JMJ333; Aunt Polgara; AgThorn; IM2Phat4U; toenail...
I am very much "up to speed" on these issues, but I will not debate it here. I do not question whether it is appropriate here, but it is scandalous to the unitiated and could cause some Catholics considerable distress, and weakens the witness of Catholics in general here.

To counterbalance the article here, I recommend Catholics check out these resources:

"Traditionalist" and Schismatic Catholics"

Integrism (Extreme Traditionalists) and Schismatic Views

General / Miscellaneous

ULTRATRADITIONALISTS (website by "Matt1618")
On Liberal and Ultraconservative "Catholicism" (Luke Wadel)
A Prescription Against Traditionalism  (I. Shawn McElhinney)
Apologetics Papers and Critiques of False "Traditionalism" (I. Shawn McElhinney)
The "Remnant" (Mattite) Sect  (I. Shawn McElhinney)
Confusing Culture With 'Tradition' (I. Shawn McElhinney)
THE SYLLABUS OF ERRORS (I. Shawn McElhinney)
Was Pope John Paul II Ritually Anointed by a Hindu in India? (James Akin)
Catholic Encyclopedia: OLD CATHOLICS
Old Catholics: False Bishops, False Churches (Anthony Cekada)
Schismatic Traditionalists (Matt C. Abbott)
An Open Letter to Confused Traditionalists (F. John Loughnan)
Traditionalists and the Epistemology of Protestantism: Private Judgment (Stephen Hand)
Traditionalists, Tradition, and Private Judgment  (Stephen Hand)
Detection and Overthrow of the ‘Traditionalist Catholics’ Falsely So-Called (I. Shawn McElhinney, Dr. Art Sippo, and "Matt1618")
ORTHODOXY AND TRADITIONALISM (Gerard V. Bradley)
Christian Unity and the Role of Authority: The Infallibility of the Church and the Pope (I. Shawn McElhinney)
Vatican II
What Went Wrong With Vatican II? (Ralph McInerny)
Vatican II and its Authority (I. Shawn McElhinney)
Making the True Vatican II Our Own (John Saward)
Formal Debate: Was Vatican II an Infallible Council? (Adam Kolasinski vs. Art Sippo)
Was Vatican Council II Voided by Pope Pius II's "Execrabilis"? (F. John Loughnan)
Non-Schismatic Traditionalist, Tridentine / Novus Ordo Latin Mass, and Liturgical Reform Websites and Articles
Traditional Catholic Reflections & Reports ©  (Stephen Hand)
The Pete Vere Homepage (orthodox traditionalist canonist)
Apologetics Papers and Critiques of False "Traditionalism" (I. Shawn McElhinney)
Agenda (William Grossklas; contra-SSPX website)
F. John Loughnan's Page
The Catholic Liturgical Library
Traditional Latin Mass
Lex Orandi, Lex Credendi Web Site
Catholic Insight (Mario Derksen)
THE PRIESTLY FRATERNITY OF SAINT PETER
Latin Mass Magazine
The Wanderer Newspaper
JAMES LIKOUDIS' PAGE
A Bill of Rights for Orthodox Catholics (Mark J. Kelly)
Registry of Papally-Approved Traditional (Tridentine) Masses
Latin Mass (Novus Ordo) Directory for the USA
And to the Latin Mass (Tim Padgett; Time, June 7, 1999)
"How My Parish Fought Off an Invasion" (Edward C. Petty)
A New "Way" for the Church (Opus Dei) (Antonio Gaspari)
''Changes in Mass for Greater Apostolate'' (Pope Paul VI audience)
''The Mass is the Same'' (Pope Paul VI audience)
In Defense of the Novus Ordo Mass ("Matt 1618")
A Short Primer on the Mass (I. Shawn McElhinney)
The Red Herring of Communion in the Hand  (I. Shawn McElhinney and "Matt1618")
A Micro Look at the Pauline Mass (I. Shawn McElhinney)
THE PAULINE LITURGY: A TRUE RESTORATION (I. Shawn McElhinney)
THE ALTAR AND THE DIRECTION OF LITURGICAL PRAYER (Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger)
THE MASS OF VATICAN II  (Joseph Fessio, S.J.)
ARE WE BALKANIZING CATHOLIC WORSHIP?  (Helen Hull Hitchcock)
VANDALIZING CHURCHES (James Hitchcock)
Review of Coomaraswamy's The Problems With the New Mass (William G. Most)
Liturgical Abuses: The Church Speaks
Cardinal Ratzinger on the Collapse of the Catholic Liturgy (Paul Likoudis)
Historical Considerations on Communion on the Hand (Fr. Paul McDonald)
Rethinking Communion in the Hand  (Jude A. Huntz)
SSPX / Lefebvrites
Introduction to the Lefebvrist Schism (James Akin)
Decree of Excommunication on Marcel Lefebvre
The Protocol of Agreement of the Vatican and Archbishop Lefebvre
Archbishop Lefebvre and the Declaration on Religious Liberty (William G. Most)
Ecclesia Dei (Pope John Paul II on the schismatic Society of St. Pius X)
Agenda (William Grossklas; anti-SSPX website)
A Canonical History of the Lefebvrite Schism  (Peter J. Vere)
My Journey Out of the Lefebvre Schism: All Tradition Leads to Rome (Pete Vere)
A Case Study In Modern-Day Donatism (I. Shawn McElhinney)
SSPX Still in Schism (Vatican Pronouncement: 24 August 1996)
Is the Society of St. Pius X in Schism? A Recent Response from Rome (F. John Loughnan)
Status of Society of St. Pius X Masses (Pontifical Commission on Ecclesia Dei)
Status of SSPX (Pontifical Commission on Ecclesia Dei)
The Flat Earth Society and SSPX-Type "Traditionalists" (F. John Loughnan)
Overview of SSPX
Society of St. Pius X Gets Sick (Thomas W. Case)
Schism, Obedience, & SSPX (John Beaumont & John Walsh)
Marcel Lefebvre: Signatory to Dignitatis Humanae (Brian Harrison)
Archbishop Lefebvre and Canons 1323 & 1324 (Peter John Vere)
MY REASONS FOR WITHDRAWING SUPPORT FROM THE SOCIETY OF ST. PIUS X (F. John Loughnan)
Lefebvrism: Jansenism Revisited? (Anthony Fisher) + SSPX Type Traditionalists  (F. John Loughnan)
Sedevacantism
Do-it Yourself Popes: The Wacky World of Sedevacantists (Michael Petek)
A One-Step Refutation of Sedevacantism (I. Shawn McElhinney)

Main Index & Search | Church | Papacy | Saints | Tradition | Purgatory | Justification | Sacramentalism | Mary | Penance | Eucharist | Development | Trinity | Creation | Misc. Theology | Book & Search Links | Eastern Orthodoxy | Ecumenism | Catholic Documents & General/Apologetic Websites

Compiled by Dave Armstrong. Thorough URL Revision: 4 March 2001. Updated: 14 December 2001.

12 posted on 12/23/2001 6:26:59 PM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: ELS
So are we talking about the Tool song, "Schism"?
17 posted on 12/23/2001 7:34:53 PM PST by The Drowning Witch
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To: ELS
One of the points we make in the book is that neo-Catholicism is a defense of novelty rather than Catholic doctrine as such.
Once upon a time the Orthodox considered defense of the filoque to be a defense of novelty, rather than a defense of Catholic doctrine as such.
Once upon a time the Old Catholics considered defense of Vatican I’s formal definitions to be a defense of novelty, rather than a defense of Catholic doctrine as such.
Etc.

So many fail to follow the Church because they think it is making a change contrary to the Traditional faith. So many have proven so wrong.

Dr. Thomas Woods and I are putting the finishing touches on a book defending the traditionalist position against attacks from within the neo-Catholic (a.k.a. "conservative" Catholic)

Because they are essentially defenders of novelty, the neo-Catholics are more or less practical liberals, objectively speaking, whether or not individual members of the neo-Catholic movement subjectively understand this.

Yep, that must be me. This whole article seems chock full of insulting and sarcastic language. Read through it and not the number of times it speaks with sarcasm or insult, when the logic of its argument might have been left on its own, for better or for worse.

It speaks rather strongly about the merit of the author’s position that he can’t make his case with straight logic.

While the motu proprio applied the excommunication and the delict of schism by name only to Lefebvre and the four priests he consecrated, since then, true to form, neo-Catholic commentators at EWTN, The Wanderer and elsewhere have with great alacrity denounced as "schismatic" not only Lefebvre and the four bishops he consecrated, but all the priests of the Society of Saint Pius X, any member of the faithful who frequents their chapels, and anyone who defends Lefebvre's actions. The neo-Catholics have even coined the terms "Lefebvrist" and "Lefebvrism" to stigmatize "extreme traditionalists" in general.
I don’t generally speak on who is schismatic and who is not. In my view that is the Pope’s decision, not mine. I would note, however, that Martin Luther was excommunicated. Most of his followers were not. Yet, one suspects, Mr. Ferrara would admit they are schismatic. Even those who don’t know enough about theology to hold any heretical positions are schismatic. One does not have to be excommunicated to be schismatic.

patent  +AMDG

19 posted on 12/23/2001 8:10:21 PM PST by patent
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To: ELS
A Bad Year for Integrists [Catholicism's Many Internal Enemies Are LOSING]
Culture/Society
Source: www.TCRnews.com
Published: 12-23-01 Author: Stephen Hand
Posted on 12/23/01 10:17 AM Eastern by Notwithstanding

It has been another bad year for Integrists. Their conferences which used to pack a couple or few hundred---not much even then---can now barely pay for the costs involved we are informed. This has forced the most bizarre disparate factions to join efforts in a weird kind of ecumenism so that one now beholds the spectacle of such groups as rigorist Feeneyites joining hands with TFP’ers (1), TFP factionalists, Grunerite Fatima conspiracy buffs, SSPX'ers (2), Sedevacantists (3), and many other colorful mixes thrown into the brew.

The law of contradiction, as you can readily see, is not held in high regard in such circles; it's either ignored or rejected altogether in such incongruous alliances, born of financial necessity. Maybe combined they can get a small crowd to buy their basement papers (The Remnant has no overhead, produced in mom's cellar). Such is the possibly fading hope. (It would, by the way, be nice to have some financial disclosure from these papers to see what they have done with the widow's mite over the years. But don't hold your breath...)

The Integrists as we have noted before operate by begging more questions than one can shake a stick at. They blame the Pope for all of the consequences of the failure to obey the Pope and then conclude the Pope must therefore be a heretic.

Farewell to logic.

Then they say that anyone who obeys the Holy Father and the Magisterium is a mere "conservative," which conservatism, they insist, represents only one strand of theological opinion. That, of course, is a whopper. Consult any catechism or Encyclical produced at any time in history and one will find that he who obeys the Holy Father and the living magisterium is simply a Catholic. One who does not is not (unless one is invincibly ignorant of the fact).

But since the Integrists do not obey the Holy Father and the living Magisterium this is maxima problematic for them. So they represent themselves as “traditionalists” who have no need of the living magisterium, of a mediated and interpreted tradition (even if tradition is the second stream of revelation which only the Church may interpret, as Luther and the Easterns were told!) since they have the dusty texts of yester-year which they can hire Michael Matt or Michael Davies or Christopher Ferrara to interpret for them! See how easy it is?

Of course that is simply not Catholicism. That is Luther’s private judgment transposed into a Catholic context which is not Catholicism at all. It is similar to the errors of the Greeks in the 11th century or the Jansenists in Pascal’s day, both of whom usurped the papal / magisterial exclusive prerogative---bestowed by Our Lord Himself----to judge what is and what is not the substance of the Church’s tradition. So what we end up with in any of these cases is a group of zealots donning magisterial robes in their own minds. Alas for them, the Church only knows those who are faithful to a living magisterium and those who are not.

What makes matters easy for them, relative to beguiling the innocent-minded who have no interest in Catholic dogmatics, is that we live in a time of open rebellion against the teachings of the magisterium, not only by these Integrists, but by Neo-modernists who also ignore the teachings of the living magisterium and also speak of themselves as a true remnant (or collection of ‘base communities’).

So the Integrists ignore the multitudes of responsible priests who obey the magisterium and selectively comb the liberal papers for pictures of outrages and abuses which have neither papal approval or support. But since the latter, like the former, do not obey the Pope, if the Pope acts against them they wear it as a badge of ideological martyrdom.

On that last point let me illustrate what a friend related to me not too long ago. A priest friend was having lunch with some students in theology and older people. One of the elders in the group said, “Father, why doesn’t the Pope excommunicate Hans Kung?” Before the priest could answer, one of the students said, “Who’s Hans Kung?”. The priest’s face morphed from surprise to delight. Then he said, “You know, I always trusted that the Vatican knew what it was doing when it picked its fights selectively in our day, but your question proves the wisdom of the Church.” Had the Church gone further than quietly stripping him of his license to teach as a Catholic theologian and excommunicated Hans Kung, he would have rallied a world hostile to the Church against her; especially in our day of instant communication. As it is, few young people today have ever heard of him or even read his ponderous writings.

Meanwhile, 6 million (!) people this month (Dec 2001) showed up to honor our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico and the Holy Father preaches Jesus Christ to more multitudes than a rock star could hope to gather, time and time again.

It’s enough to make Integrists and Neo-modernists pass the bottle!

==========================

______________

FOOTNOTES

(1)What a mess of squirming things hide under a Rock! TFP stands for Tradition, Family and Property, a monarchist sect founded by a Brazilian which has split into aggressive factions today.

(2)The schismatic Society of St. Pius X founded by the late Marcel Lefebvre.

(3)Sedevacantists believe the Pope is a heretic and therefore not a Pope. They are sometimes explicit about this (as with the Society of St. Pius V) or implicit and doubletalking, like the signers of the schismatic manifesto, We Resist the Pope to the Face. Either way they are identical in methodology.

Note: other bad news this year for Integrists: Their favorite archbishop and critic of the vatican, Archbishop Milingo, became a Moonie and married for a time; Sr. Lucy, the last surviving of the three children at Fatima, explicitly repudiated Fr. Gruner's conspiracy theories regarding the Third Secret; just as during the Jubilee all the dire predictions of the SSPX and Michael Matt regarding syncretism at Mt. Sinai AND Assisi (Oct 99) came to nothing of the sort. Their latest prediction, about the next Pope being a liberal who might as well put the Vatican up for sale, reflects their confusions regarding substance and accidents in Church tradition and their absence of trust in the infallible guidance of the Holy Spirit; not to mention its corollary, the Church's indefectibility, per the divine promises of our Lord Jesus Christ.


VIVA JOHANNES PAULUS II!

28 posted on 12/23/2001 9:04:06 PM PST by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: ELS
What is most irritating about the SSPXers is their insistence on alienating those who would have the most empathy toward them and the most in common. Yet by labeling traditionalists who attend the indult masses as neo-Catholics they seem to be hell-bent in their obstinancy to remain a distinct sect. As the trend toward traditionalism continues to grow in the mainline church, and the orthodox beliefs and practices move toward those of the SSPXers, they seem to want to maintain that distance. A bunch of elitist fools. And disingenuous....I suspect that their insistence that they pray for the pope in every mass is due to the fact that the mass requires them to (such is their legalistic mindset) not because they owe John Paul any allegience. They probably pray for pope Fellay.
46 posted on 12/24/2001 10:27:34 AM PST by St.Chuck
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