O
OraLabora
Guest
No, one needs to be realistic and understand how orders work, what’s possible and not possible, and the limits of the laity vs. a religious order.One does need to maintain a positive attitude though, no? A negative one would be self-defeating and only reinforce the status quo IMO.
One must first of all clearly understand how SP applies in the context of religious orders. There is no mandate or obligation for religious orders to answer the call of the laity for the EF Mass. It’s not their charism, unless as I said it’s a society like the FSSP or ICKSP that do have that mandate and for which it is part of their charism. The orders can in fact even forbid priests from celebrating the EF Mass, and it us up to the superior to decide which form, for instance, to use at the community’s conventual Mass. The priests are bound in obedience to their superior. Some have chosen the EF Mass. If one is lucky enough to live in Oklahoma near Clear Creek abbey, well one can attend their EF Mass (or Fontgombault or Barroux in France to name a couple, or the new American monastery in Norcia, Italy). But they’re contemplative orders and not likely to allow priests to leave the cloister for any reason. They may help, if the bishop asks, but they still have the right to refuse as living outside the cloister is a very serious thing for a monk.
By being realistic one won’t expend energy uselessly pursuing a dead end, and I’m pretty sure a layman asking the superior of a religious order, particularly one of pontifical right, for an EF Mass is almost bound to fail.
One has to work within the diocesan framework to obtain an EF Mass according to SP. That means asking a diocesan priest, or the bishop, or the FSSP, for help. That’s where the OP should concentrate his (or her) efforts.
With a username like “bardegaulois”, I’m guessing the OP is in France, there are EF monasteries in France but again, cloistered. Not sure about other orders though, such as Jesuits.