Some time ago I came across an interesting article on Eponymous Flower (one of the few blogs i read daily, by the way). The article, by guest author Clement Victor Odendorf and entitled "Faithful Catholics and Theological Positions: A Difference Which Must Be Overlooked", explores the tendency of Traditionalist Catholics to arrogate Magisterial authority to themselves, which leads them over time to conflate their own opinions with orthodoxy itself, with the obligatory condemnations of those outside their own niche.
The example given by Odendorf is that of an SSPX priest who preached on the Feast of Christ the King that Extraordinary Form Masses celebrated by the FSSP were "unacceptable for Catholics" because the FSSP had condoned - or at least remained silent - about the "errors" of Vatican II. Hence they had been compromised and their masses were "unacceptable". This priest went on to pronounce the same about other priests who celebrate the EF under the provisions of Summorum Pontificum.
Odendorf notes the implication of the SSPX priest's homily: it is not only participation in the Novus Ordo that was to be rejected, but also every Mass in the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite not celebrated by the SSPX. In essence, this particular SSPX priest had assumed a kind of magisterial authority about the importance of the Society, its positions and its Masses.
That particular argument is not what this post is about. The SSPX priest may have had a point; some priests celebrating the EF under Summorum Pontificum do not have a comprehensive view of tradition and the problems in the modern Church. But that's beside the point. The point is there is no traditionalist "Magisterium" that has the authority to bindingly declare what is an is not an acceptable incarnation of traditionalism.
There is tremendous variety among traditional Catholics. Some like the Divine Mercy Devotion, others do not. Some believe in the Great King and Era of Peace, others don't. Some are Distributists, others ardent Capitalists. Some attend the EF Mass exclusively while others (like myself) go to the EF sometimes and the Novus Ordo sometimes. Some trads are monarchists, others are not. Some traditionalists are deep into the culture of smoking tobacco and drinking fine wines and beers, a kind of 'classy Catholicism', while others couldn't care a lick for smoking or drinking. Some are willing to openly criticize a sitting pontiff, others believe this crosses the line. Some argue women should never wear pants, others aren't so strict on this. Some pray in Latin, some don't. Some attend SSPX Masses, others want nothing to do with the Society. Some are Thomists, some Augustinians or followers of other theological traditions. Some think the failed Consecration of Russia is the crux and center of all the modern Church's problems, others see this only as a small part of a larger picture. You get the point.
There are many, many differences among trads, and with them all comes a variety of opinions on a whole host of matters. And our Tradition allows room for these sorts of diversifications. It's not that these differences are inconsequential; I have very strong opinions on most of these points, but I am not so certain in them that I would accuse those who don't agree with me of being subpar traditionalists. What I reject, as what Odendorf rejects in his article, is the idea that there is some sort of Traditionalist "magisterium" that can authoritatively define what a Catholic traditionalist ought to look like and proclaim those who do not adhere to this version of traditionalism to be "unacceptable."
The very existence of traditional Catholic blogs attests to the fact that there are many out there interested in examining Tradition, defining what a traditionalist is, and promoting a return to traditional Catholicism. But there is no one website or blog, no organization, no one author, no one order or society, no one publication, no one prelate, no one individual who authoritatively speaks for Catholic traditionalists, and whom to disagree with is to risk ostracism. There is no trad Magisterium.
There are many, many differences among trads, and with them all comes a variety of opinions on a whole host of matters. And our Tradition allows room for these sorts of diversifications. It's not that these differences are inconsequential; I have very strong opinions on most of these points, but I am not so certain in them that I would accuse those who don't agree with me of being subpar traditionalists. What I reject, as what Odendorf rejects in his article, is the idea that there is some sort of Traditionalist "magisterium" that can authoritatively define what a Catholic traditionalist ought to look like and proclaim those who do not adhere to this version of traditionalism to be "unacceptable."
The very existence of traditional Catholic blogs attests to the fact that there are many out there interested in examining Tradition, defining what a traditionalist is, and promoting a return to traditional Catholicism. But there is no one website or blog, no organization, no one author, no one order or society, no one publication, no one prelate, no one individual who authoritatively speaks for Catholic traditionalists, and whom to disagree with is to risk ostracism. There is no trad Magisterium.
Hi Boniface, Glad you're back. I stumbled across your blog a month ago, and I've gotten hooked. The fact that you can be a Trad and not get swallowed up by it. That you have perspective is very refreshing. And I don't just mean the sedevacantists(talk about demonic pride), but I see in comboxes sincere Catholics who reject some blogger based on a single error or weakness or blindspot and be completely blind to all the good the blogger does. Anyway, keep up the good work.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words, Tom. May you be blessed!
ReplyDeleteI agree that none of us, Catholic, or NewCatholic, can erect our own magisterium. (I use 'Catholic' for traditional Catholic, and 'NewCatholic' for the post Vatican II faithful who have been led astray.)
ReplyDeleteBut don't we have one? I mean there is 2,000 years of magisterium there for the reading without having to cobble together one. Novelty is novelty.
If Catholics cherry-pick the true magisterium just like NewCatholics are we better off?
That part of your point is well taken. Cultural specifics can and do change so be careful not to mix the fairly superficial with the all-important. We really do need to get back to our history which was ripped out of our hands around 1960.
It is all there - no need to pick, or reject, anything. Don't we have to believe all the Church teaches, in the same way, with the same docility as was done in the past?
When we compare present so-called magisterial pronouncements with those of the past, it really is clear - hold to the real magisterium, and reject any thing else. If it smells, it's rotten.
Barbara
Sounds like just another way for a "traditionalist" to justify your own sinful pride. Boniface accepts like myself vat ll and post vat ll church. It takes lots of prayer and faith and trust. It's one thing to study historical periods of great turmoil in the church, and there have been many. We are living through one of those times today. I've learned the hard way the perils of pride which are mostly hidden from us. humility does not come easily to our fallen nature. And if you think you are not guilty of pride(re the gist of your comment)that means you are. Our judgements,our convictions are appalling prone to error which we don't see without help from the Holy Spirit and relentless prayer.
ReplyDeleteI think much of this is the result of a deadening of conscience. It's easy to talk about a malformed conscience among those who, say, promote contraception. It's a lot harder when you see this kind of thing. What I believe has happened is that people are so disoriented by the lack of teaching these days that they are willing to forfeit their own prudence just to grab on to something that seems solid. In doing so, they mistake that solidity for the rock of the Magisterium. People should discern that the universality of the Church extends to a lot of different things just like the stuff you named. And even things that might be great of themselves might be harmful to others in a different spiritual situation.
ReplyDeleteGreat post.
I want to avoid quibbles, but a "deadened" and a "malformed" conscience are different. Cardinal Dolan may have deadened his conscience presuming that he was taught the true faith. Whereas, a teenager today probably was never taught the faith correctly, so his conscience was malformed. Also, your last sentence - your meaning is ambiguous. "And even things..." - do you mean things outside the body of church doctrine? Please clarify.
ReplyDeleteI can go along with that, but I think in terms of practical effect that it's a distinction without a difference. Both involve checking our discernment at the door in favor of what we're getting from someone else, whether it's society or a misguided priest.
ReplyDeleteMy last sentence is actually referring to things that are promoted by the Church. Fasting and mortification, for example, are very good things of themselves. However, for a person who has trouble with scruples or who has no spiritual director (or a perhaps a poor spiritual director) might be placing themselves in jeopardy with such practices. My overall point here is that Catholic spirituality is a very broad spectrum of things. In this context, I'd say that because one person might be called to heroic levels of fasting and virtue doesn't mean that they should criticize those who are not.
Thank.you throwback.
DeleteThank Boniface once again for you logical and level headed prospective regarding the situation you refer to in this post. I hope many people read this post because it needs to be heard. I too "have very strong opinions on most of these points" you made and I too "am not so certain in them that I would accuse those who don't agree with me of being subpar traditionalists." One thing I am certain of is that all this madness taking place in the Catholic church between modernists, traditionalists and extremist traditionalists is somehow God's Divine Will. One day our sacred traditions will be restored to it's former glory and universality through the triumph of Our Lady's Immaculate Heart. So everybody don't get too strongly opinionated, prideful and judgmental. Just hold your horses, be humble and pray very hard.
ReplyDeleteHi bill, "one thing I'm certain of..." do you mean God's permissive will or that God is punishing the church for being unfaithful?
DeleteI don't see that it matters too much...from my understanding of Scripture, God can chastise His people either permissively or by His positive will.
ReplyDeleteIf God is positively punishing His church, that matters a great deal. That would mean that the church has sunk so far into inequity that God decides to punish his Church. That can send catholics into despair and start to abandon Peter' Barque. so far, I see His permissive will, a very different spiritual reality.
ReplyDeleteThen the problem is with those interpreting the actions of God in the world, not with God's actions. I have never encountered anything in Scripture (where God positively chooses to chasten the Israelites and their kingdom) nor in Tradition to suggest God can't positively will to chastise the Church.
ReplyDeleteWe know too that God's chastisement is always a sign of love as well:
"As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten" (Rev. 3:19)
"For whom the Lord loveth, he chastiseth: and as a father in the son he pleaseth himself" (Prov. 3:12)
"For whom the Lord loveth, he chastiseth; and he scourgeth every son whom he receiveth" (Heb. 12:6).
This is clearly true on the individual level; I don't see why it could not be true on the corporate level.
But I agree that whenever we speak of God's judgment, especially on the Church, it must always be tempered with its connection to His mercy in using these judgments to bring the Church to a greater state of purification, remembering "For the time is, that judgment should begin at the household of God," but recalling the second part of the verse as well, "And if first at us, what shall be the end of them that believe not the gospel of God?" (1 Pet. 4:17)
Hi Boniface, Something that always amazes me is the fact that we humans can communicate at all given the complexity of language and the complexity of our interior lives. I see it here as well. I started out asking Bill for clarification re God's will and it went from there. I read your last comment several times before I got what you were saying. I also had to struggle with my lower ego which just wants to go "its" own way. And of course I agree with your very deep biblical/theological understanding. This just confirms what I said above that I got hooked on your posts a month ago. The point I just came to see is that I'm coming from my apophatic spiritual life in which it's difficult for me to separate myself from the crisis in the church. As in abstract knowledge - subject/object. I don't know if this makes any sense or not. My spiritual life, which is God's gift, includes vulnerability and helplessness. I live from my interior life which has it's own crosses. Anyway I depend on guys like you to fill in the rather large gags in my biblical/theological understanding. Keep up the good work.
ReplyDeleteDebate, questioning, contrary opinions, etc. are always welcome here, so long as the spirit of the discussion is good and people stay on topic!
ReplyDeleteAnd if I am right, it is probably luck - I have been wrong many, many times, as my readers will tell you!
God bless you.
For the SSPX magisterial teachings are accepted on the Letter of the Holy Office 1949 but rejected with respect to Vatican Council II (with the premise)
ReplyDeletehttp://eucharistandmission.blogspot.it/2015/02/for-sspx-magisterial-teachings-are.html
Hey friends! I'm just getting around to reading all these comments, as I was out all day yesterday. One thing I'd like to point out is that my comment was kind of a knee jerk reaction to the blog post. I wrote it without having read all the other comments. After reading them it seems to me that a lot of what I said was already pointed out by others in previous comments... Sorry about that. One thing I do want to do is answer Tom's question to me. The subject of which, I see that Tom and Boniface have already been discussing. Just wanted to clarify what I meant when I talked about the "one thing I'm certain of." What I meant by that is, I am completely certain that all this going on is the will of Our Heavenly Father. What I don't know for certain is why or how it is His will. whether He's simply permitting it or it is a direct decree of punishment because we've fallen so far into iniquity. I do not at all know or understand the reasons why Our Lord wills what He wills. I just know, as I'm sure everybody reading this already knows, that God's Will governs everything that happens in this universe. I do "believe", after looking hard at all that is going on, that it is in fact a punishment. God love all of you
ReplyDeleteThanks Bill. I have one question re "governs". I assume you don't mean that God is the cause of evil.
ReplyDeleteAs the lay Pope, Raider Fan, is this close to excommunicating you from the Trad Kingdom, Boniface.
ReplyDeleteSure you are holier, more intelligent, better read, and more highly organised in thought and presentation....
Wait, what?
OK, just consider this a warning...
Hi Tom,
ReplyDeleteNo, not at all. In my understanding evil is permitted by God, but God is never the cause of evil.
Part I
ReplyDeleteI am a reader of this blog, and have been following it for a very long time, especially through though times of wondering if I was supposed to subject myself to a novus ordo mass for the sake of fulfilling a Sunday obligation. It is through this blog especially and that of Athanasius Contra Mundum that I was able to stand tall and balk at the idea of compromised Catholicism.
Now, I am one of those traditionalists who thinks that the Latin Mass being said by the diocesan priests, FSSP and Institute are problematic. As a point here, if you could listen to Fr. Gregory Hesse online (youtube) and tell me the reasons why he is wrong, then I would gladly listen.
For sure, it's a delicate subject, but I think we are at a point where lines need to be drawn to save in the faithful what it means to be Catholic.
The premise (among a vast number of others) of those in the Society is this--
I)People do not have the right to worship God or other gods as their conscience dictates - Dignitatis Humanae (if you can't see it there, then it is obviously in Assisi I, II, III )
II)The Muslims and Catholics do not worship the same God
III)The Latin mass and sacrament and other traditional practices cannot be held hostage for any reason whatsoever, let alone signing a document permitting one to say it.
Those (not all) who say the Latin mass and are subject to Novus Ordo bishops are handicapped. Who will remind the faithful from the pulpit that actually, 21 Copts are not strictly able to be called martyrs (contrary to the Pope) and neither are they able to be canonized.
Who will tell the faithful that getting pagan ashes on their heads and kissing the koran is not Catholic?
Sincerely,
Paul
Who will the faithful that the bishop of Rome cannot bow down and get a "blessing" from a leader of the Anglican church?
Someone linked up Fr. Hesse's video on this on my Facebook page; I have yet to watch it. But please note that that particular argument about EF Masses and the SSPX was only incidental to the main point of this post. I will watch the video when I have time, but I have a hard time believing that the ONLY really acceptable Mass to go to in the whole Latin rite is one offered by a group in a irregular canonical situation.
ReplyDeletePart III
ReplyDeleteWhen the bible talks about a great apostasy, to whom do we Catholic think it refers? To us of course. The great apostasy will not sound a great bell. Instead, it will be a subtle music playing in the background over something that is good and true. Some will hear the introduction of a perverse sound at the beginning and retreat to safety. Some won't hear it at first, but will eventually stir because they note something is increasingly wrong with the sound for it moves them some strange way. Some won't hear the adulteration--not even after it becomes the only sound emitting from the perverse instrument. They will dance all the same, because to them, it is just music. If the days were not shortened, even the elect will be lost.
When Our Lady says Rome will lose the faith and become the see of the AntiChrist she was speaking in plain language.
When Our Lady told Lucia to make sure the envelope is opened before either her death or in 1960, and Lucia asked why, Our Lady said, "It will be clearer then"
All this is to say that we are past the dawn of a new Church. We are in the thick of it. Yes, the sacraments are barely valid depending on who is saying mass and how it is being said. But how can we act as though God is please with this? He has Rights which we have to protect. If we reason something is wrong and we permit it to continue under His name, then are we not in cooperation with that evil?
In the case of England under King Henry VIII, should the faithful have continued to attend the valid mass of those priests and bishops who had signed the oath of supremacy? What about when small changes were introduced to the mass under King Henry VIII, should they have said, a few changes here and there--no problem. When the last queen of France was offered confession by a pious priest who said the Latin Mass but was part of the group who had aligned with the state, should she have not declined vociferously?
Sincerely,
Paul
FYI, I accidentally deleted the second part of your comment. If you post it again, I will make sure to publish it. Apologies. I was using my clumsy touch-screen.
ReplyDeletePart II
ReplyDeleteWho will the faithful that the bishop of Rome cannot bow down and get a "blessing" from a leader of the Anglican church?
If we are circumventing these very things and teaching a different thing to Our children and friends, then we must explain why we are doing so and why we must not do what we see our priests, bishops and popes do.
Today, vast numbers of people are baptized into the Catholic Church holding heterodox ideas, but do not realize it. This is all because of the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s up till now. Fifty years of confusion.
Bishops themselves are heterodox and do not realize this--so too are the priests that work in their dioceses. Because of people like Fr. X at Mundelein seminary who thinks Von Balthazar was right about hell being possibly empty, we have people touting him as a great thinker and Catholic evangelist...he too is breeding spiritual sons and daughters.
The Von Balthazar theory has won. The Church of the New Advent is the Novus Ordo Church as it is today. Things will not get better. The movement of the silent apostasy is picking up steam. Vast numbers of people will wake up and find themselves Protestant.
Can we not see that we are the Hellenistic jews of Maccabees? We have mingled with society so much that we are incorporating pagan and protestant things into the faith. How will God chastise us? We must read the book of Maccabees to see how it ends.
Sincerely,
Paul
Dear Brother Boniface. It is getting crazy out there. We have Priests from a schism claiming that their Mass is the only acceptable Mass and we have Priests like Rev Cekada saying that only their Mass - his and Bishop Sanborn's et al (sedes all) -are acceptable AND that any man who assists at a different Mass (including the sspx schism) is committing a sin by that action
ReplyDeleteAccording to Tradition, the SSPX Masses are gravelly illicit, criminal, and sacrilegious:
ReplyDeleteAD APOSTOLORUM PRINCIPIS
40. And when We later addressed to you the letter Ad Sinarum gentem, We again referred to this teaching in these words: "The power of jurisdiction which is conferred directly by divine right on the Supreme Pontiff comes to bishops by that same right, but only through the successor of Peter, to whom not only the faithful but also all bishops are bound to be constantly subject and to adhere both by the reverence of obedience and by the bond of unity."[14]
41. Acts requiring the power of Holy Orders which are performed by ecclesiastics of this kind, though they are valid as long as the consecration conferred on them was valid, are yet gravely illicit, that is, criminal and sacrilegious.
Lionel/Catholic Mission-
ReplyDeleteI am not publishing your comments, because once again, you are rambling about the same rant you cannot seem to get off of - Vatican II, Ad Gentes 7, "the dead visible", SSPX, etc. You only use (spam?) comboxes to continually push the same rant and contribute nothing valuable to the conversation. As long as you continue to post things totally irrelevant to the article, I will continue to block your comments.
And please do not waste my time trying to demonstrate how your comments are somehow relevant to every post.