Anglican Rite, Mozarabic Rite, Ambrosian Rite, Dominican Rite, Carmelite Rite, Gallican Rite… and the Polish and Irish Ritual Traditions within the Roman Rite. Each of these was part of the Roman Church, and yet, were foreign traditions to the US part of the Church.
I would have to ask you, as Simple Sinner has asked…now if I could implore you to take the next step and make the correlation between this text from the regional council of Baltimore and demonstrate it was in reference to and with view of precluding the Anglican Rite, Mozarabic Rite, Ambrosian Rite, Dominican Rite, Carmelite Rite, Gallican Rite… and the Polish and Irish Ritual Traditions within the Roman Rite.
The nineteenth century was an age when all maner of religious orders were being invited (even implored and coerced) to come to America, there was just so much work to do.
Can you provide any evidence that even one Carmelite, Dominican etc. institution was barred or suppressed on that basis?
I have never ever encountered it.
Not Catholic…at least, not at that time.
Mozarabic Rite, Ambrosian Rite,
This claim could have merit if there were enough immigrants to clamor for such from their home countries, but in reality their numbers have been small in Europe for centuries and never amounted to much in America. There has been a notable lack of available priests of those rites, so the danger of them being introduced in North America must have been miniscule, especially when one considers that they never even appeared in Latin America, which had both Spanish and Italian migrant communities continously for centuries.
Nevertheless I agree that the policy of the Roman Catholic church has been to consistantly suppress these ancient church rites. That they should be the subject of a special canon in the USA is indeed remarkable to contemplate.
Oh, and the Lutherans, too.
You are starting to amaze me.
These were the rites specifically barred by the Council of Baltimore as a threat.
Please provide any evidence you have for these assertions. I am willing and eager to learn more history.
The Eastern churches were a side casualty.
I am not necessarily going to disagree here. By some logic they are all side casualties.
My point is clearly laid out:
Archbishop Ireland was working within established Roman Catholic church policy. Uniformity, not diversity, was the ideal of the age. I assert that he was on good ground as far as Canon Law for the American church was concerned. All foreign rites are forbidden.
So if I should buy your argument that the Dominican Rite was intended to be forbidden as foreign, how am I to interpret the bishops’ attitude toward a rite from eastern Europe or the Middle East, or India?
It is clear that the decrees of the Plenary Councils had no force until approval came from the Holy See, as the fathers stated themselves.
If the Holy See approves the banning of foreign rites in America, while it has a longstanding (300 years by this time) agreement with Eastern Orthodox-Catholics in Europe (See Union of Brest), what does this say about the promises made to them? What does this imply about the Holy Sees stewardship over Eastern Catholics?
Does
Praestantia Ritus Latini mean anything to you?
Go back and reread Woodstocks excellent recap of history of the Byzantine Catholics since the Baltimore Councils.
See if you can find Father Hal Stockerts excellent “Clash of the Titans” series of articles. I could not find them the last time I looked.
