Are the SSPX in schism?

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They are related. Who is the Shepherd who appointed weak bishops, didn’t stamp out relativism, allowed bad catechesis?

It’s amazing how the modern Popes get exempted from responsibility for their leadership or lack thereof when the results are negative.

Had the Popes done their job, LeFebvre would have been behind them the whole way. Instead in the interests of a Hans Kung idea of 'kenosis" in the Church, they allowed utter debasement of the Church’s treasure and armament. And they allowed the persecution of traditional devout Catholics.

If the Pope will just be a strong Pope and really lead, the SSPX will support him.

But allowing truth and error to mix together is not guarding the purity of the faith.
Well then you must have thought Leo X a really big wimp. Half of the Church left under him.
 
Words actually mean things. Your characterization that I’ve parsed and spun things is your own “spin.” Prove me wrong if you think I’m wrong.
It is hard to “prove” anything in this realm, as you know, because each person simply adopts his own definitions. Nonetheless I will comment on a few things.
I think it can be easily inferred that you don’t care about inconvenient Canon Laws that support the SSPX’s position.
The Canon Laws do not support the SSPX position. My point has consisently been that they do not. You can defend the wisdom of the Canon all you want, but I have not attacked it.
You are not taking it far enough. What would be the consequence of the Pope not allowing a consecration? Answer: The end of “project survival”.
This is the crux of the matter. I think we agree there, don’t we?

LeFebvre’s point of view was that the Traditions of the Church could not survive without the four bishops he had hand selected. I understand that you really believe that. My problem is that believing that the Deposit of Faith was transmitted by LeFebvre to these men, but has not been faithfully retained by the Church meaning by John Paul, the Cardinals, and the other Bishops, is a denial that the Chair of Rome retains Apostolic Succession or the Charism of Truth. What is hard to understand is why anyone that believes that would refuse to admit it.
Policies, not teachings.
Only if Rome clarifies the documents of Vatican II by condemning unorthodox interpretations of it’s documents.
The Grace of the Church operates outside of the Church only to draw people into the Church. Not to save non-Catholics.
This is not the Catholic faith. Here is one “policy” difference that is really a teaching. By insisting that the Vatican II documents do not mean what they say, SSPX sidesteps its dissent on the teachings in them.

The Catholic faith teaches that although the Catholic faith is the one true faith and superior to other Christian denominations, non-Catholic Christians can also be saved:
It follows that the separated Churches(23) and Communities as such, though we believe them to be deficient in some respects, have been by no means deprived of significance and importance in the mystery of salvation. For the Spirit of Christ has not refrained from using them as means of salvation which derive their efficacy from the very fullness of grace and truth entrusted to the Church. (from UNITATIS REDINTEGRATIO)
And those non-Christians touched by Christ in their hearts but who have never praised Him with their lips can also be saved:
The universality of salvation means that it is granted not only to those who explicitly believe in Christ and have entered the Church. Since salvation is offered to all, it must be made concretely available to all. But it is clear that today, as in the past, many people do not have an opportunity to come to know or accept the gospel revelation or to enter the Church. The social and cultural conditions in which they live do not permit this, and frequently they have been brought up in other religious traditions. For such people salvation in Christ is accessible by virtue of a grace which, while having a mysterious relationship to the Church, does not make them formally part of the Church but enlightens them in a way which is accommodated to their spiritual and material situation. This grace comes from Christ; it is the result of his Sacrifice and is communicated by the Holy Spirit. It enables each person to attain salvation through his or her free cooperation. (from Redemptoris missio)
This is one of those Vatican II teachings that you would like to have reinterpreted. Here is what VII said on the topic in GAUDIUM ET SPES:
All this holds true not only for Christians, but for all men of good will in whose hearts grace works in an unseen way.(31) For, since Christ died for all men,(32) and since the ultimate vocation of man is in fact one, and divine, we ought to believe that the Holy Spirit in a manner known only to God offers to every man the possibility of being associated with this paschal mystery.
I agree that this is about more than the form of the Mass. Why can’t you admit that SSPX followers dissent from core Church teachings on the nature of salvation?
 
You think that Veritatis Splendor and other encyclicals are navel-gazing poetry??? LOL!!! Sorry, that’s just funny. Clearly, you are not well-grounded in the Christian Philosophy of Aquinas and Augustine. Any reputable Thomistic philosopher will confirm for you that John Paul II is a thorough and brilliant Thomist. You should refrain from the parallel of Brilliant Thomist and JP2, since actions are utmost in the profession of Faith (see Summa Theologica), it is imprecise and negligent to make this parallel.

Go back to school, buddy.** Now this is uncalled for and an injustice to yourself, Since not all of us may have had the opportunity to go to, or back to school(s) (secondary, tertiary. etc.,) for that matter. This is a demeanor that is Anti-Christian.**

God bless!
 
Therecanbeonly1,

I apologize if I sounded uncharitable. However, I find it uncharitable, as well as ridiculously wrong, when people refer to John Paul II’s works as “navel-gazing.” JP II’s Veritatis Splendor is the preeminent work dismantling modernism! It is a thoroughly Thomistic document. The fact that some say he lacks “metaphysics” or that his works are “navel-gazing” is truly laughable, and leads me to believe that the people who state such things have never even bothered to read the work in question.
 
The Grace of the Church operates outside of the Church only to draw people into the Church. Not to save non-Catholics.
Let’s see what some of your heroes have said on the issue:
Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, Against the Heresies, Angelus Press [SSPX], p. 216: “Evidently,certain distinctions must be made. Souls can be saved in a religion other than the Catholic religion (Protestantism, Islam, Buddhism, etc.), but not by this religion.”

Fr. Schmidberger, Time Bombs of the Second Vatican Council, Angelus Press [SSPX], p. 10: “Ladies and gentlemen, it is clear that the followers of other religions can be saved under certain conditions, that is to say, if they are in invincible error.”​

Bishop Bernard Fellay, Conference in Denver, Co., Feb. 18, 2006:
Consider a Hindu in Tibet who has no knowledge of the Catholic Church. He lives according to his conscience and to the laws which God has put into his heart. He can be in the state of grace, and if he dies in this state of grace, he will go to heaven.” (The Angelus, “A Talk Heard Round the World,” April, 2006, p. 5.)
 
Your indignation is meaningless. While parishes are being sold and closed by the hundreds and lawsuits are being paid out in the billions, Apostasy is rampant now, you think the problem is the SSPX instead of the only man who could’ve stopped this calamity?
I agree that this issues are related. The Church began to lose some of its grip on the faithful for a variety of interrelated reasons. As a result, some folks began to disregard teachings they were uncomfortable with and to pick and choose what to obey and what to disregard. One of those groups was SSPX.
 
Therecanbeonly1,

I apologize if I sounded uncharitable. However, I find it uncharitable, as well as ridiculously wrong, when people refer to John Paul II’s works as “navel-gazing.” JP II’s Veritatis Splendor is the preeminent work dismantling modernism! It is a thoroughly Thomistic document. The fact that some say he lacks “metaphysics” or that his works are “navel-gazing” is truly laughable, and leads me to believe that the people who state such things have never even bothered to read the work in question.
Yes, I understand your frustration.
Dismantling of modernism is a wonderful thing.

God Bless you.
 
You think that Veritatis Splendor and other encyclicals are navel-gazing poetry??? LOL!!! Sorry, that’s just funny. Clearly, you are not well-grounded in the Christian Philosophy of Aquinas and Augustine. Any reputable Thomistic philosopher will confirm for you that John Paul II is a thorough and brilliant Thomist. Go back to school, buddy.

God bless!
Actually you’ll find that Bishop Williamson did a brilliant analysis exposing the subtle problems in Veritatis Splendor.

sspx.ca/Documents/Bishop-Williamson/March1-1994.htm

A quick example:
Now to reach out to modern man is one thing; but to pander to his errors is quite another. Let us take another look at the Encyclical itself.
The rich young man of Mt. XIX with whom it begins is presented by John-Paul II not as being commanded by Jesus from without, but as being guided or** led by Jesus from his yearnings within** (#7), to an inner awareness of himself (#8) and of the will of God. Of course this Gospel passage lends itself to such a presentation, less of God commanding than of man being invited, which is no doubt why the Pope chose it as a launching-pad for this Encyclical. But is it wise to introduce an authoritative presentation of Catholic morals — or of any law for that matter — in a mode of invitation rather than command? **Is hell for real? It gets no mention in Veritatis Splendor. **From this first part one might suspect that the Pope is going to highlight the appeal of Catholic morals and disguise any element of command or threat.
 
I agree that this issues are related. The Church began to lose some of its grip on the faithful for a variety of interrelated reasons. As a result, some folks began to disregard teachings they were uncomfortable with and to pick and choose what to obey and what to disregard. One of those groups was SSPX.
I would say a stronger case can be made against the conciliar and post conciliar Bishos and Popes. Hardly ever a mention of Hell. Never to my knowledge a clear call to convert to the Catholic faith as the necessary means of salvation.

St. Paul did warn of a great Apostasy. Fr. Vincent Miceli S. J. believed in the early 1980’s that we were already in the midst of a grave apostasy within the Church.
 
Let’s see what some of your heroes have said on the issue:
I think they are too liberal on that position regarding EENS. The interesting thing is that it just shows you how far into “reducing dogma to a meaningless formula” that Pius XII warned about in Humani Generis.

The problem that LeFebvre saw was the destruction of the missionary efforts to convert. JPII in Crossing the Threshold of Hope spoke about people being saved “by” the Catholic Church instead of “in” the Catholic Church.

That’s extrapolating an idea till it no longer retains it’s essential meaning. Right out of Von Balthazar and Rahner.
 
The Canon Laws do not support the SSPX position. My point has consisently been that they do not. You can defend the wisdom of the Canon all you want, but I have not attacked it.
Canon Lawyers are divided on the issue. The Pope was not a Canon Lawyer instead he chose to ignore Canon Law. That decision will eventually be reversed.
LeFebvre’s point of view was that the Traditions of the Church could not survive without the four bishops he had hand selected.
Not at all. LeFebvre responded according to his state of life. The faithful pleaded to him after all attempts at getting Paul VI to do something failed. LeFebvre was obligated to do what he could.

This same dynamic continued through the reign of JPII who did nothing to restore the tradition of the Church and defend the faith.

LeFebvre simply provided a holding action for the souls who requested bread and recieved stones from the rest of the heirarchy.
I understand that you really believe that. My problem is that believing that the Deposit of Faith was transmitted by LeFebvre to these men,
I don’t know what you mean by “transmitted.” The Deposit of Faith is what it is. The bishops were consecrated as "sacrament machines for ordinations and confirmations. That is why they have no territories and are subject to the General Superior. Bishop Fellay is the only bishop who has been given voluntarily authority over the society by the member priests. But they have no jurisdiction.
but has not been faithfully retained by the Church meaning by John Paul, the Cardinals, and the other Bishops, is a denial that the Chair of Rome retains Apostolic Succession or the Charism of Truth.
That doesn’t hold water with what I’ve heard Bishop Williamson say in his sermons, interviews and classes. He says only the Pope can save the Church short of Divine Intervention.
What is hard to understand is why anyone that believes that would refuse to admit it.
I think the crux of the problem is that you don’t understand the real position of the SSPX.
 
Actually you’ll find that Bishop Williamson did a brilliant analysis exposing the subtle problems in Veritatis Splendor.

sspx.ca/Documents/Bishop-Williamson/March1-1994.htm

A quick example:
Wow. I just read Bishop Williamson’s article and got the distinct impression that the majority of Veritatis Spelndor went significantly over his head. He also seems to have great difficulty creating footnotes or citing page numbers for his citations. I have to tell you if he were to submit this paper in a philosophy class, the grade would not be pretty. He says the Pope is unduly influenced by Kant but provides absolutely no reference to support this assertion.

His attempt to refute the Pope’s section condemning proportionalism is laughable. He launches into an example of a couple using the pill because their “freedom of conscience” says they can??? Apparently, Bishop Williamson missed this statement on what freedom of conscience means:
It follows that the authority of the Church, when she pronounces on moral questions, in no way undermines the freedom of conscience of Christians. This is so not only because freedom of conscience is never freedom “from” the truth but always and only freedom “in” the truth.
He seems confused and unable to articulate his points. He constantly refers not to actual text, but to his own summary of the text at the beginning of the paper (a telling tactic, indeed). It is as though he builds his strawmen and then proceeds to knock them down.

Lastly, and I mean this most charitably, I question Bishop Williamson’s depth of study in the subject of philosophy. From his biography it appears as though he only has an undergraduate degree and nothing more???

Maybe you could post a small section (one paragraph perhaps) of Veritatis Splendor and then dissect it for us in order to reveal the errors.
 
I wrote:

*The Grace of the Church operates outside of the Church only to draw people into the Church. Not to save non-Catholics. *
This is not the Catholic faith.
Yes it is. Read the Athanasian Creed.
Here is one “policy” difference that is really a teaching. By insisting that the Vatican II documents do not mean what they say, SSPX sidesteps its dissent on the teachings in them.
The SSPX says the documents are ambiguous and prone to misinterpretation. Bishop Williamson said, “You can drag the language back onto the high ground and present it as Catholic but the very fact that you can put another interpretation on it, shows the problem.”

Proof of that would be how Vatican II allows the Vernacular but doesn’t say how much. Now we have all-vernacular masses that were never envisaged by the Council itself but they were envisaged by modernists at the Council.
The Catholic faith teaches that although the Catholic faith is the one true faith and superior to other Christian denominations, non-Catholic Christians can also be saved:
One true faith. That means that all others are false faiths.
Quote:
It follows that the separated Churches(23) and Communities as such, though we believe them to be deficient in some respects, have been by no means deprived of significance and importance in the mystery of salvation. For the Spirit of Christ has not refrained from using them as means of salvation which derive their efficacy from the very fullness of grace and truth entrusted to the Church. (from UNITATIS REDINTEGRATIO)
Here’s where you are misinterpreting the document. “Means of Salvation” can only mean a secondary means by which the Holy Ghost leads them to the primary means of Salvation. (ie. the Catholic Church) Read the collection of Cardinal Bea’s speeches and articles in the book “On the Unity of Christians” You’ll be shocked at how clear he was about the meaning of ecumenism.

It’s significant and important that a Protestant baby be Baptized legitimately. If they die prior to the age of reason, they will go to Heaven as a baptized member of the Catholic Church.

It doesn’t mean anything more than that and similar examples that were always understood by the Church.
And those non-Christians touched by Christ in their hearts but who have never praised Him with their lips can also be saved:
Quote:
The universality of salvation means that it is granted not only to those who explicitly believe in Christ and have entered the Church. Since salvation is offered to all, it must be made concretely available to all. But it is clear that today, as in the past, many people do not have an opportunity to come to know or accept the gospel revelation or to enter the Church. The social and cultural conditions in which they live do not permit this, and frequently they have been brought up in other religious traditions. For such people salvation in Christ is accessible by virtue of a grace which, while having a mysterious relationship to the Church, does not make them formally part of the Church but enlightens them in a way which is accommodated to their spiritual and material situation. This grace comes from Christ; it is the result of his Sacrifice and is communicated by the Holy Spirit. It enables each person to attain salvation through his or her free cooperation. (from Redemptoris missio)
That only means what St. Thomas taught. “If necessary God will send an Angel to instruct them.” It doesn’t mean false religions have any merit on their own.
This is one of those Vatican II teachings that you would like to have reinterpreted. Here is what VII said on the topic in GAUDIUM ET SPES:
Quote:
All this holds true not only for Christians, but for all men of good will in whose hearts grace works in an unseen way.(31) For, since Christ died for all men,(32) and since the ultimate vocation of man is in fact one, and divine, we ought to believe that the Holy Spirit in a manner known only to God offers to every man the possibility of being associated with this paschal mystery.
This is dancing around for Ecumenism’s sake. Nothing in there is new and it was all expressed more clearly prior to the Council.
I agree that this is about more than the form of the Mass. Why can’t you admit that SSPX followers dissent from core Church teachings on the nature of salvation?
Because they don’t. But the conservatives and liberals deviate from what the Church is actually teaching by extrapolating what the Council said and falling into the traps that the language provides.
 
Canon Lawyers are divided on the issue. The Pope was not a Canon Lawyer instead he chose to ignore Canon Law. That decision will eventually be reversed.

Uh, this is a contradictory statement. If canonists are divided on the issue, it would appear that he chose ones you did not and, since he’s the Supreme Legistlator…
Not at all. LeFebvre responded according to his state of life. The faithful pleaded to him after all attempts at getting Paul VI to do something failed. LeFebvre was obligated to do what he could.
 
He also seems to have great difficulty creating footnotes or citing page numbers for his citations.
Always, always watch this with radical traditionalists. Footnotes and citations don’t seem to concern them. If they say it, we’re just supposed to accept it as fact. Unfortunately, far too many people fall for this. I’ve seen several of those who realized this come out of the SSPX because they realize the faultiness of the statements.
 
Always, always watch this with radical traditionalists. Footnotes and citations don’t seem to concern them. If they say it, we’re just supposed to accept it as fact. Unfortunately, far too many people fall for this. I’ve seen several of those who realized this come out of the SSPX because they realize the faultiness of the statements.
Did you read the link? That paper would be utterly failed by any University professor. I’m sort of embarassed for the bishop, I mean, what must his flock think of him after reading that jumbled mess?
 
Yes, surprisingly enough the SSPX rejects the Feeneyite position. Which makes me wonder what their problem is with Unitatis Redintigratio.
I’m just trying to ascertain if Gerard is referring to the above 3 being liberal on the subject or someone else. I think it funny that he would find them so liberal on a matter so serious and encourage people to follow them.🤷
 
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