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SanRafael1102
Guest
Check out the FSSP, and see if they have any masses near you. They’re basically SSPX that are in good standing with Rome.
Why would you do that if you could attend a licit Mass?If I go to an SSPX EF Mass
And this is why they SSPX exists, for better or worse. If most Catholic parishes did a better job of living up to their obligations and actually worshipping with Catholic piety and preaching and teaching authentic Catholic doctrine, there would be no reason for people to be attracted to the SSPX–they would have no need to exist. Whenever a bishop or priest tells Catholics to give up salutory Catholic beliefs and traditions or to conform more to secular or Protestant norms, an SSPX priest gets his wings (or at least gets a few more chapel goers)…I can say as a convert of two years that at the local parish I heard that the Church now teaches that we are to “give up non-essentials,” as the priest put it, and that we are supposed to “worship more simply, following the example of our shepherd.”
The SSPX church a mile away frankly sounds more Catholic when I’ve visited there.
No.Technically yes, because the Mass is valid. …
Very simple: absolutely not.I keep getting different answers. If I go to an SSPX EF Mass is my Sunday obligation fulfilled?
Very very close, but not quite. Yes, they are members of the Catholic Church. However, it is not that they lack “full faculties.” Instead, they lack what we call the “clerical state.” Meaning that they lack the status of ministers of the Church.They are members of the Church, but their priests do not have full faculties–…
This is true, especially as to why the SSPX was founded. But in the US, SSPX chapels often linger on after more conservative bishops come in, and the TLM is equally close to the SSPX chapel. In 2017, there is also an Anti-Religious-Authority movement in the wind. It impacts mostly liberals but conservatives too.And this is why they SSPX exists, for better or worse. If most Catholic parishes did a better job of living up to their obligations and actually worshipping with Catholic piety and preaching and teaching authentic Catholic doctrine, there would be no reason for people to be attracted to the SSPX–they would have no need to exist. Whenever a bishop or priest tells Catholics to give up salutory Catholic beliefs and traditions or to conform more to secular or Protestant norms, an SSPX priest gets his wings (or at least gets a few more chapel goers)…
At the time the good Monsignor wrote his letter, I would have accepted his decision on the matter. After he wrote his decision, the fact that the Supreme Pontiff himself clarified the situation so as to make it “clear once again [that the SSPX] do not exercise any ministry in the Church” that statement by the Vicar of Christ now changes the answer to the same question as it is asked in the present day.As long as the Society does not have a canonical status in the Church, its ministers do not exercise legitimate ministries in the Church. There needs to be a distinction, then, between the disciplinary level, which deals with individuals as such, and the doctrinal level, at which ministry and institution are involved. In order to make this clear once again: until the doctrinal questions are clarified, the Society has no canonical status in the Church, and its ministers – even though they have been freed of the ecclesiastical penalty – do not legitimately exercise any ministry in the Church. Letter to the Bishops of the Catholic Church concerning the remission of the excommunication of the four Bishops consecrated by Archbishop Lefebvre (March 10, 2009) | BENEDICT XVI