Respectfully, patiently, after
the visit of Pope John Paul II to France, we renew our case
: in spite of all the official declarations over the marvelous
results of the Council, the Church Militant today is in decay.
She will recover herself in sanctity; and by the path of authority.
This authority will show up in a practical way by beginning
again to forbid what should be forbidden; and to stop forbidding
what should never have forbidden in the first place. It should
never have been forbidden to priests to say the Mass they were
ordained to celebrate: this prohibition, without any legal or
moral value, exists only by virtue of the sociological weight
of arbitrary administrative decision. The Catechism of the Council
of Trent and the Catechism of St. Pius X should never have been
banned, blocking the handing down of the three things that must
be known in order to be saved: this prohibition is null and
void. Neither the person of Archbishop Lefebvre, nor the re-birth
of the missionary Church,should ever have been struck by prohibition.Because
the missionary church is the means by which people are converted
from the modern world to the Christian Faith. It is the opposite
of a Church exposed to all influences, leading souls to despair
of the traditional Faith and let themselves be debased by modern
democracy.
Patiently,
respectfully, we say by way of reminder and petition: Archbishop
Lefebvre is not a rebel! All the condemnations lodged against
him rest on a single foundation, on the initial fact that he
has not accepted the first condemnation, that of 1975.2
Everything flows from that: not to have submitted and to have
complicated his case by persisting in not submitting. Now this
first condemnation has no legal or moral right to exist. Even
today, five years later, we do know by whom it was
lodged, we do not know who is responsible for it : there is
no mention of it in any document. There is strong suspicion
that it was Paul VI himself, but secretly. This initial condemnation
arose from the unbelievable scheme of inviting Archbishop Lefebvre
to two friendly talks, concealing from him the fact that in
reality he was being summoned as a defendant with the object
of conducting an investigation against him. Thus Archbishop
Lefebvre was not given to understand what was happening before
he was condemned; and he was condemned anonymously, by someone
whose identity cannot be discovered in the official texts of
the verdict which was made known to him. And it is this legal
non-entity that is the basis for all that has subsequently been
viciously built up, and comprising the so-called sanctions and
suspension. If it had been a question of simply disciplinary
cruelty touching only his personal convenience, Archbishop Lefebvre
would have been able to bow to the injustice. But it was a question
of a major administrative move against the handing down of the
knowledge necessary for salvation and against the celebration
of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. This is why Archbishop Lefebvre
has continued to view his missionary activity according to the
powers, rights, and abilities which were his after the foundation
of his Society and which have not validly been forbidden him.
The result has been a sad and confused situation. The only way
out is to declare the nullity of the arbitrary prohibitions
and to return to fundamental norms.
What
fundamental norms? First, the principle that it is not true
that one can be validly excluded from the Catholic communion
simply for having formulated an opinion – however bold
or reckless – on the pastoral orientation and modern spirit
of Vatican II and Pope Paul VI. It is not true that one can
continue to belong to the Catholic communion when one no longer
adheres to the dogmatic decisions of Nicea or Trent. By an anomaly
which amounts to treason, too many of those in the present-day
apostolic succession admit to their communion those who water
down or brush aside the dogmatic decisions of Nicea or of Trent,
so that they may profess adherence, at least general or verbal,
to non-dogmatic orientations of Vatican II; and they drive from
their communion those who question the modern orientations of
Vatican II but profess all defined dogmas. It is a “communion”
of a new type, suggested by Teilhard, a humanist communion,
ecumenical, philanthropic, democratic, or whatever, but no longer
a Catholic communion. The prohibitions designed to set up, defend
and impose the new communion have no validity in the Church.
We said so at the end of the reign of Paul VI, when he declared
in the spring of 1978: My pontificate is completed. We recalled
that Pius XI at the end of his reign was convinced that he should
lift the unjust ban lodged against Action Française:
by putting it off, he ran out of time. The lifting of the ban,
virtually without conditions, was one of the first acts of his
successor, Pius XII. Though fundamentally different in many
ways, the so-called “Lefebvre case” and that of
the “traditionalists,” is analagous in this: there
is no other way out. The longer we wait, the deeper will be
the wounds to the Church, and the more advanced the decay of
the Catholic fabric. Doubtless there will remain a number of
unanswered questions: but they will begin to be manageable about
the moment we recognize the nullity of the prohibitions against
the Mass, against the catechism, against the person of Archbishop
Lefebvre and against the priests whom he has formed and ordained,
waiting for the Second Spring of the Church.
While
we wait, we repeat with Alexis Curvers: May it please God
to make of Pope John Paul II the instrument of salvation, granting
to him the triple grace of a faith as trusting as that of Jairus,
as profound as that of the widow of Niam, as passionate as that
of Martha, in a word, all-powerful against death.
1.
Jean Madiran is the Editor of Itinéraires. This article
is a translation of his editorial for the July/August 1980 issue.
2. The reasons for the Archbishop
not accepting his initial condemnation in 1975 are explained
on pages 122-123 of Apologia I.