Anyway, you’ve failed to take my comments at face value. These parishioners are not Byzantine Catholics. And you should apply your own statements about the faith of the parishioners who left to the pastor who left.
I certainly did take your comments at face value. You said that Fr. Riehl is guilty of “clerical snobbery.” I think that charge is ridiculous.
And I understand these parishioners are not Byzantine Catholic. So what? These parishioners are hostile to a type of worship that is natural to all rites of the Church, East or West. Let’s look at the article you approvingly quoted:
While Francis regularly lambastes clericalism, with the famous injunction that pastoral shepherds should take on the smell of their sheep, the Charlotte diocese has instead been filled with the smell of incense, the sounds of Latin chant…
Other diocesan priests over 50 describe what they call a movement to take the diocese back to pre-Vatican II piety, with a focus on externals, such as elaborate vestments and liturgies concentrated on Latin chant and prayers.
First off, the focus is not “on externals”; such things are simply a part of our Catholic identity. The focus is on the Eucharist, as can be seen if you listen to Fr. Riehl’s homilies, especially the most recent one.
Second. replace “Latin chant” with “polyphonic chant”, and those sentences I quoted accurately define the Byzantine Rite. Incense wafts throughout the church very often. The vestments of Byzantine Catholic priests are
always ornate, decorative, and beautiful. At least some of the prayers at each Divine Liturgy are said in Old Slavonic or the Slavic tongue of that particular Church. Here’s the point I’m trying to make:
If what is being described in the article is a
negative attribute of the legitimate traditions of the Latin rite, how can it be
positive and beneficial in the Byzantine or Syrian rites? If chant, incense,
ad orientem worship, and elaborate vestments are things to be avoided in the Latin Rite, should they not be avoided in the entire Universal Church, including the Eastern Rites? These “exiled” parishioners see these things as “out of step” with Pope Francis.
Well then, if some Latin Rite priests and laity are out of step with Pope Francis and Vatican II (as these practices are called “pre-Vatican II piety” in the article) for exercising these practices, then it follows that not only the entire Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church is out of step with Pope Francis and Vatican II,
but all 14 particular Churches of the Byzantine Rite are out of step! That’s pretty serious, no? External signs like elaborate vestments and chant are simply “appearances of reverence”. If the Latin Rite has purged them, then so should the Byzantine Rite so that the entire Universal Church conforms to the spirit of Vatican II, by this logic.
And this is why I think what these “exiled” parishioners are saying is not heroic or laudable, but absolutely ridiculous. These traditions have not been purged. They’ve been made optional, and many don’t like opting back in to the traditions that have developed in the Latin Rite. Similar traditions in the Byzantine Rite are simply a default, just as it was a default in the Latin Rite only a few decades ago.
As Pope Benedict said, "What earlier generations held as sacred, remains sacred and great for us too, and it cannot be all of a sudden entirely forbidden or even considered harmful. It behooves all of us to preserve the riches which have developed in the Church’s faith and prayer, and to give them their proper place. " These exiled parishioners apparently do think such things are harmful and should not be preserved, and since they are not sacred (in their view), they would logically believe that such practices that are still carried out in the Byzantine Rite carry the same traits of “clerical snobbery” and should be considered harmful. Because if they are
not inherently harmful, then why are such things permitted in the Byzantine Rite as a beneficial aid to worship, but
not seen as beneficial when they are done in the Latin Rite? This is the hard question that those who oppose “restorationists”, as they call them, need to answer.
In addition, I think it’s unfortunate that the pastor had to take a sabbatical over this, and I wish he would’ve had a bit more fortitude to stay, but to compare and apply my own statements about the faith of those parishioners that left to the pastor’s faith would be inaccurate. Fr. Riehl is not leaving the Church. He is also not disobeying his bishop as several of the exiled members did when they (for a time) kept holding mass at Living Waters Retreat House. He has also not left the Church for Methodism as some of those people have. The comments regarding those parishioners in no way apply to Fr. Riehl… that’s why I didn’t apply those statements to him.
Also, I never quoted that article from Church Militant. I’m not saying Zaffrann’s claim you posted is accurate. But NCR, in a fairly balanced article, did quote Zaffrann in a earlier
article from 2015:
Liturgically, the parish has improved, Zaffrann told NCR. “My impression is that the Mass is better,” he said. “It’s very humble, reverent and solemn. It brings respect to the Eucharist.”
In
reading unbiased news reports, Fr. Riehl seems like a great priest who was trying to lead his flock closer to God.