Superior
General's Letter # 70
to
Friends and Benefactors
Dear Faithful
and Benefactors,
For a long
time we have desired to send you this letter to give you some news
of our dear Society.We have postponed sending it because we wanted
to explain to you our position after the publication announced months
ago of the motu proprio on permission to celebrate the
Tridentine Mass. For, last October while we were gathering our spiritual
bouquet for obtaining the liberation of the holy Mass, everything
seemed to indicate an imminent publication of a motu proprio
by Pope Benedict XVI concerning the question. But it seems that
the staunch opposition of certain episcopates has constrained the
Sovereign Pontiff to delay it “a little while.”
This “little
while” is turning into a lengthy duration, so that we shall
not wait any longer to share with you our take on the situation.
First, let
me thank you warmly for your generous prayer. Our [General] Chapter
had set the goal of offering a million rosaries by the end of October.
The harvest was abundant indeed, as we were finally able to send
the pope a spiritual bouquet of two and a half million rosaries.
In our letter [to the pope] accompanying the bouquet, we indicated
that we had wanted to show by this concrete act our will to collaborate
in the rebuilding of the Church and Christendom. It is obvious to
us that this terrible crisis, which has afflicted the Church since
the SecondVatican Council, will not come to an end without a vast
effort and a very great determination on the hierarchy’s part,
beginning with theVicar of Christ. For, in the circumstances, it
will take overcoming the lethargy created by a bad habit; it will
mean refuting errors and even heresies and other positions totally
incompatible with the doctrine of the Church, the Bride of Christ,
which have become embedded in the Mystical Body.A happy result cannot
be hoped for without the powerful help of Heaven. That is why we
turned, and are still turned, towards Our Lady and Our Lord to obtain
an improvement in the Church.
Even if till
now the desired result has not come about, nevertheless, in the
month of October we were witness to a scene concerning the Mass
of All Time that had not been seen in the last decade. For, contrary
to the usual slogans, which attribute attachment to the Latin liturgy
to nostalgia or a particular sensibility, this time serious arguments
were being made: freedom for priests to celebrate the Tridentine
Mass would create doctrinal problems, they tell us; this Mass endangers
the achievements ofVatican II. How can we not rejoice over this
sudden discovery?
If we closely
consider the arguments advanced this time, especially by the French
episcopate, but also at Rome and in Germany, one notices that the
bishops in fact are afraid of this Mass. Even Rome is being extremely
careful not to disavow Paul VI’s reform while outlining the
possibility of a return to the old Mass. The progressivists’
fear is such that it is necessary [for Rome] to go to great lengths
and to argue forcefully for broadening the permission for priests
to celebrate the Tridentine Mass. Certainly, that also explains
why we have not yet received either thanks or a response to our
letter from the Sovereign Pontiff or even theVatican.
In the present
situation, we can and we must draw some conclusions for the future,
even if we do not yet know the exact terms of this much talked-about
motu proprio.
- If we consider
how Roman documents have been received during the last decade
by the episcopate and the faithful, we are obliged to say that
what prevails is a very great indifference that has frustrated
the measures recommended in them by Rome. Whether it be the place
of laymen in the liturgy or, more recently, liturgical prescriptions;
whether it concern the Declaration Dominus Jesus or the
condemnation of abortion and euthanasia, one cannot fail to notice
that the documents have had no real effect. One can well wonder
even now whether the motu proprio will not have the same
fate.
- Nonetheless,
since the document extends a favor rather than imposes a restriction,
and since, moreover, it is addressed to persons who are very interested
in the matter, it could well be that the expectations of the faithful
and priests will awaken the hierarchies in some countries from
their lethargy and disturb their resistance. This is what certain
bishops are thinking of when they warn of a risk of liturgical
anarchy in their dioceses. Considering the multiplicity of forms
the New Mass has taken in reality, one might wonder where this
new-found fear of “division” can be coming from. On
the contrary, the traditional liturgy has always proven to be
a factor of unity, especially because of its sacred language,
Latin.
- It is quite
unlikely that this motu proprio will be followed by a
mass movement. The priests and faithful who desire the old liturgy
are proportionally few in number, and the others have lost the
taste for it or the interest. It will take many serious efforts
to restore to its place of honor in the whole Church the venerable
and sacred rite that sanctified centuries and centuries of Christendom.
- It will
be, rather, a movement that will take off slowly, but which will
slowly gain strength as the riches and beauty of the lost liturgy
are rediscovered. Indeed, simply by granting the Tridentine Mass
the right to exist (this Mass was never suppressed!), it will
gradually impose itself since the New Mass cannot rival it.
- At any
rate, a broader permission to celebrate the old Mass is a blessing
for the Church. Certainly, the publication of this document might
engender a certain confusion “among us,” in the sense
that it will create the impression of a rapprochement between
the official Church and Tradition. When it happens, an appeal
by Rome for renewed unity should be expected. For the SSPX, a
greater liberalization of the holy Mass is a cause for rejoicing,
a step towards the restoration of Tradition; however, the distrust
born of years of self-defense and combat against “those
who should be our pastors” will not be easily allayed. Indeed,
the New Mass should be considered an effect much more than a cause
of the crisis that has afflicted the Church for nearly forty years.
In other words, our situation will be practically unchanged by
the return of the old Mass so long as it is not accompanied by
other absolutely essential rectifications.
- Ecumenism,
liberalism, and this spirit of the world that defiles the Bride
of Christ are still the principles animating the Conciliar Church.
These principles kill the spirit of God, the Christian spirit.We
must understand more than ever the roots of the crisis in order
to keep ourselves from rushing blindly into the new situation
that would be created by the motu proprio. Before thinking of
the measures that will need to be taken for our canonical regularization,
an in-depth discussion of these questions is indispensable.We
hope that Rome at last understands our demand to see any discussions
preceded by what we call our preliminaries or preconditions, one
of which would be met by the motu proprio. For thirty years we
have refused to take the poison; it is for this reason that we
have been rejected, and it is still the condition (more or less
hidden) that Rome imposes for accepting us. Ecumenism, religious
liberty, and collegiality remain the points of contention over
which we will not budge.
- What we
have been saying up to this point is just speculation. The concrete
circumstances, that is, the actual terms of the motu proprio,
may require other distinctions and clarifications.
Entering Lent,
let us remember that the gifts of Heaven are obtained by purifying
prayer and penance, that God listens more willingly to the prayer
of a pure and humble heart. Let us continue, then, our crusade of
prayer, and join to it some voluntary penances to wrest from Heaven
what the Churchmen find so hard to give to our souls. Even if God
does not seem to listen to our supplications, let us not be discouraged.
He is putting us to the test, and wants to make us earn even more
merits.
On the First
Sunday of Lent
February 25, 2007
+ Bernard Fellay
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