It is apparent that a serious discussion about the matter of attending illicit Masses is impossible. I did not want to turn this into another sspx debate but it seems that those, who insist that there are so many “sspx haters” here, are the very same ones who go two steps over the mark in rationalizing there own actions when it comes to matters which they don’t agree.
The constant references to abuses in the Ordinary Form is used as a way of validating attending illicit celebrations, but any honest person will tell you that pointing out bad behavior in another does not make your own bad behavior acceptable; it simply means that you both have something to answer for.
As for the legitimacy of attending sspx Masses, the Church, in her generosity, has said that it is ok to attend these Masses out of love for the traditional rite but NOT out of support for the society. A warning was also made that frequent attendance at sspx chapels can create a sympathetic attitude for the “schismatic acts” (to quote Pope John Paul II) of the society over time, and that that can become a dangerous situation.
Consider this by CAF’s own Michelle Arnold:
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=85351
I would like to draw your attention to this quote:
“In theory, if there were no other place in your area where you could go for Mass, an SSPX Mass could satisfy the Sunday obligation. Even then, though, when such circumstances as being in a place without a valid, licit Catholic Mass exist, the Sunday obligation is dispensed and so there is no need to try to fulfill the obligation at an SSPX Mass. In your case, you do have access to the valid, licit Masses offered by your diocese, so there is absolutely no reason you should be attending an SSPX chapel for daily or Sunday Mass.”
There is no prohibition against attending these Masses however. The Church doesn’t want you to and if you do they don’t want to attend regularly but they have never said that you cannot attend.
If a Mass is branded illicit, then there is an understood prohibition against attending. When something is said to be “sinful,” it isn’t necessary to tell someone not to do it; it is enough to say “it’s wrong.”
Suppose the following: A Catholic priest finds himself dissatisfied with his position in the Church. As a result, he leaves and joins the local episcopal church. As a priest, he has been suspended of his faculties but he still has the authority to celebrate the sacraments. Let us further suppose that in his sermons he toes the Catholic line and speaks nothing but praise for the Church but finds that he feels out of place in it. In his episcopal services, he prays the Eucharistic prayers which are very similar to the Catholic prayers, and using the proper words, consecrates the Eucharist. His celebration of the Eucharist is valid, for once a priest, always a priest, though highly and gravely illicit. Would you suggest that it would be appropriate to attend and receive at his services? Canon law does say that, under certain situations, we may receive from "non-Catholic ministers. But is there a prohibition from attending Masses by Catholic priests who have left the Church but still celebrate valid but illicit Masses?
As you can see, we can spend all day twisting the words of this Pope or that Cardinal in order to support our argument. I think the proper line is, though, to follow the law of the Church. If a celebration is “unlawful,” then that should be enough for a good Catholic to seek celebrations that are licit and in full communion with the Church and with Rome. As of yet, there has not been an official pronouncement from the Holy See regarding the state of the sspx being in official schism or not. It may be that there never is one and so things will continue as they are. But I would like to draw your attention to the following regarding Cardinal Hoyo’s personal opinion about the state of the sspx; when Pope Paul VI convened a commission to study the acceptance of artificial birth control, there were many on the commission, including priests, bishops and theologians, who said that birth control was morally justified. What Pope Paul VI gave them in response was the great encyclical Humanae Vitae which crushed their personal opinions. My point is, Cardinal Hoyo’s opinion is just one out of many, and unless he is the Pope, it can be squashed just like the priests, bishops and theologians who disagreed with Pope Paul VI.