It was not necessary for the SSPX to take “emergency measures.” JPII was more than willing to work with the SSPX, but it was the archbishop who refused to listen to the Vicar of Christ:
catholic.com/thisrock/2003/0304fea2.asp
It sure sounds to me as though Lefebvre absolutely rejected the authority of the Pope.
No, my friend, and it is a very hard thing to say, but we are now dealing with very hard things, and, on the basis of decades of bitter experience, Mgr Lefebvre [and I now speak as a layperson, not in any way as a spokesperson for the SSPX] did not have the confidence that Pope John Paul II would be able to enforce his will. Yet it could not wait for that. Lefebvre felt death approaching. That is why he called the bluff on the Vatican’s Waiting Game. They did not, even at that eleventh hour, provide a name, or even a short list, of candidates. And they had a decades-old record of reneging on their promises. Look it up if you don’t believe this.
I can only ask readers of this post to read the SSPX side and make your own decision how willing JPII really was to accomodate the traditionalists. In all honesty, I do think he tried - unlike his predecessor. But he was trapped in the mindset that the Pope must work with the consesnus of the other bishops. He did not fully accept that there were times when he had to face them head on and assert his superior authority (though he did great work ‘round the corner’ - maybe in another post I will tell you how he dealt with the English bishops in his visit to London in 1982, which I attended. I was so proud of him.) I do a bit of teaching to pay the bills, and I am not the only teacher who can tell you in 3 seconds what happens if you try to operate on the principle of Universal Consensus.
John Paul II did meet with Archbp. Lefebvre, but at the meeting, instead of asserting his authority, hie delegated the whole thing to a Cardinal who was known to be an adamant opponent of Lefebvre. I don’t want to open the can of worms, but despite the many great things this Pope did, he has a really dismal record of acting to curb abuses.
Now that Pope Benedict has issued a motu propio requesting more widespread use of the TLM, why hasn’t the SSPX rejoined the Church?
Actually, they never left it. See previous posts. And they are in the process of ‘regularising’ their position. In the process they are generating more than a few red faces. They are now proving to the Pope who his real friends are. (I do not mean they are his only friends). But these things simply cannot be done overnight.
Now that the alleged “state of emergency” no longer exists, why does the schism?
They are not now, and never were, in schism,
wanner.
That tells me that the SSPX did not schism due to an alleged “state of emergency,” but rather over a desire to disobey lawful authority and remake the Church in their own image (just like Martin Luther).
You would not, I promise you, say that if you knew the facts about Lefebvre and Luther. But that would belong on another thread.
We are grateful to Pope Benedict XVI for affirming in his Motu Proprio
Summorum Pontificum that (contrary to a widespread misconception) the Traditional Latin Mass was never abrogated.
This would be an opportune moment to scotch, once and for all, some common false accusations against Archbp. Lefebvre: that he was excommunicated by Pope Paul II and is in schism, and that he declared the New Order of Mass to be invalid.
On 1st July 1988 Cardinal Gantin - not Pope John Paul - declared Mgr Lefebvre excommunicated under Canons 1382 & 1364 New Code of Canon Law, that forbid consecration of a bishop without papal mandate. This Canon was promulgated in the 1950s in response to the schismatic Chinese Patriotic Church (CPA), a stooge organisation established according to classic Marxist principles: these bishops declare publicly & loudly that The Party over-rides the pope. Strangely, however, none of the 150+ CPA bishops has ever been excommunicated since VAtican II, even though the Canon is there for the purpose. Before consecrating his bishops, Mgr Lefebvre gave a public sermon in June 1988 clearly explaining that he was invoking Canons 1321-4 of the New Code of Canon Law, which provide for emergency situations by indemnifying from any sanction if one genuinely believes an emergency has arisen. The emergency was the spreading of false doctrine, and the illegal attempt to suppress the traditional liturgical life when it had not been abrogated. Significantly the Vatican has never refuted this correct usage of Canon Law by Mgr Lefebvre.
The SSPX insist that this alleged excommunication by Cdl Gantin - which Pope John Paul referred to in Ecclesia Dei but never issued on his own authority - is not legally binding: you cannot invoke one law while ignoring another. That would be like prosecuting a motorist for parking on a [no-parking] yellow line, while ignoring that it was a Sunday afternoon [when the yellow Line Law is suspended].
Likewise, Mgr Lefebvre
categorically refused to declare the 1969 (Novus Ordo) Missal invalid (which would mean that the priest was holding a piece of bread after the Consecration instead of the Body of Christ) and he disciplined those of his followers who made such judgments which, he insisted, can be made only by a Pope or an Ecumenical Council. What he did assert is that the New Mass glosses over many important truths of the Faith that are clearly stated in the Old Mass, and that it breeds a certain casual irreverence, dangerous to keeping the Faith.
Unlike the CPA bishops, Mgr Lefebvre
at no time rejected the authority of the Pope. He insisted that the widespread promotion of error and the
de facto suppression of the Traditional Liturgy was illegal, and refused to comply. That is saying, “Father, in this case I cannot give in to your demand!” He did not add, “And therefore you are not my Father”.
This was brilliantly demonstrated in the Holy Year of 2000, when thousands of “Traditional” religious and lay Catholics, organised by the SSPX, processed into S. Peter’s Square, to the feet of the Holy Father, who was visibly impressed, “and all Rome with him”. It was after this that Pope John Paul II began in earnest to look for a way to normalise the position of the SSPX established by Mgr Lefebvre. They are among the Papacy’s most loyal supporters.