In a way, the SSSPX results from the encounter of 1) the resentment of numerous French catholic against the Republican regime and the Revolution with 2) a single man, Mgr Lefebvre.
Mgr Lefebvre studied in the French seminary of Rome, and he entered in contact there with the thinking of Charles Maurras and the Action française through the influence of the Superior of the seminary, the R.P. Le Floch.
Then, after his ordination, he left France for Africa and was a missionary there for many years. He was not in direct contact and knew little, if anything, about the evolution of French society during the 30’. He was not in France during World War II and not in France after either. He did not knew very much about the modern France of the 50’ and 60’.
After Vatican II, most of those who joined him were 1) French catholic with a profound hostility towards French Revolution 2) French people who supported the Maréchal Pétain during WWII and 3) French people who supported the colonization in Algeria and could not accept the political decision taken by de Gaulle in 1962.
The opposition to Vatican II, and the identification of it with the “collapse of Catholicism”, the “Revolution inside the Church” (the word Revolution is in direct reference to the French Revolution), was the cement of all these different people’s resentment.
It had almost nothing to do with the question of Latin or not Latin, of Mass back to the people or in front the people. The opposition of Mgr Lefebvre had to do mainly with a certain idea he had of the relation between Catholicism and modernity. In “religious liberty”, there was the word “liberty”, for him and for many French Catholics this word was inacceptable because it had to do with the vocabulary of the French Revolution.
The Latin mass was a very useful banner in the 70’, just because it permitted to gather people with very different ideologies around the same opposition to Vatican II.
Of course we are now in 2009, and I would say that most young people in their 20 or 30 now in the SSSPX are not there because they strongly oppose to Vatican II (like many young people, they do know history quite well) or are ideologically oriented (they don’t care at all about ideologies).
In their case, it is obvious that you have to resort to other explanations. Notably the fact that the Catholic Church in France has nothing to tell them, the fact that most priest are now old and living in their own past, the fact that the Mass in French are so boring, etc.
This is with these young people, and mainly for them, that the Pope Benedict XVI is seeking a reconciliation. Not for the old people who followed Mgr Lefebvre many years ago.
V.