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steve_green_2
Guest
No you didn’t. It was a very heartfelt and well written thought.I didn’t state anything that does not accord with authentic and traditional Catholic teaching or historical reality.
No you didn’t. It was a very heartfelt and well written thought.I didn’t state anything that does not accord with authentic and traditional Catholic teaching or historical reality.
Well, I consider myself to be obedient and am against weckovations and having the Novus Ordo or nothing so I am well within my rights to challenge your generalizations which you so often make.My post was about liturgical “reform”…not about you, amazingly enough, bear6.
I thoroughly agree with finding the use of phrases like “obedient puppets” offensive. I also find it somewhat interesting that I myself, who love the Latin Mass, have petitioned for its use in my diocese, and have borne witness to many abuses in individual vernacular Masses, am being characterized as part of the ‘fuzzy left’ because I actually acknowledge that the vernacular Mass, WHATEVER its individual real and/ or PERCEIVED deficits may be, is still a valid Mass. Do I prefer the Latin Mass? Yes, I do. Most certainly. Do changes need to be made to the vernacular–yes they do. Changes were made to the Latin Mass as well (need I remind posters of this? I should not have to) over time, and in times where literacy and mass communications were nothing like that of present times.
Do I adhere to the AUTHORITY of the Popes? Yes I do. The Mass is the Mass is the Mass. The consecration is still valid whether the priest says, “this is my body. . .” or “Hoc est einim corpus meum. …”
I agree with the poster who very CORRECTLY noted that it is not obedience which is misunderstood here. Obedience is a good thing and humility still better. Having said that, I humbly acknowledge that I am just a fallible being; I submit myself to the TRUTH of God Almighty and to the authority of the church He gave us.
That would be a subjective opinion. That’s not what the Bull says. That said, it doesn’t matter because one Pope cannot bind another in matters of discipline.The changes of Pius X and Pius XII to the Breviary did not alter the existing texts in any appreciable way. You could still put the bull of Pius V in front of their breviaries and not make it a joke to do so.
Thanks, AJV. Same argument, different Bull?Er, bear06… don’t have much time, but you’ve linked to ‘Quo Primum’ rather than ‘Quod a nobis’. Though the “in perpetuity” thing there is the same.
Explain please, why St. Pius X could not just alter the rubrics to allow recitation of the ferial psalter like Benedict XIV was going to do. (Actually, please see the post below which was in response to your earlier post.) The psalter could have easily been recited in a week with minor rubrical changes.The Breviary of Pius X introduced NO new texts into the Roman Breviary, and didn’t cut ANY existing ones.
Note: an obvious exception to the above would be the Office of a new saint.
It was the same Breviary as Pius V. Rubrics adjusted here and there, Psalter adjustments, sure…but the ancient Benedictine principle of reciting the WHOLE PSALTER in ONE WEEK was preserved. Perfectly. In fact, after Pius X, it actually did get recited in 1 week, since the proliferation of saints’ offices between Pius V and Pius X had often made that an ideal that couldn’t be followed in practice.
1970 gave us an entirely new book (with a new title, even).
The bottom line here is the argument between those who think a pope can just rewrite the entire liturgy except for the words of institution and those who think he can’t. (More accurately: those who think a pope can appoint a committee to rewrite it, since Paul VI didn’t actually work on the liturgy, he appointed a committee to do it).
Quibbling about what popes did up to 1970 is irrelevant. What happened in 1970 was NOT business as usual. Arguing that other popes “changed the liturgy” sets up red herrings.
What existed up to 1970 was DEMONSTRABLY the same liturgy as what had preceded it back through history. What came in 1970 was a new creation. Not surprisingly, its authors stamped NOVUS ORDO on it in gold letters. Not surprisingly, they cut all the papal bulls that used to appear before the text of their new construction.
So what is your opinion on St. Pius X forbidding his clergy and anyone else to recite a psalter that went back 1500 years (adequately proven) under pain of the wrath of Almighty God and Ss. Peter and Paul. 1500 years of tradition not surviving anywhere in the world.And, for the first time in recorded liturgical history, they decreed you HAD to follow THEIR Novus Ordo, or you were somehow “disobedient”, and everything before them was relegated to “old” and “mere discipline” and “out of date”. Sort of like Pol Pot and the Year Zero.
Then you should have no problem providing links to catholic teaching to back up your assertions. I am waitng with bated breath…I didn’t state anything that does not accord with authentic and traditional Catholic teaching or historical reality.
The pre-eminent part of the breviary as you full well know is the psalter. In another thread you stated that you don’t go by ‘Quo Primum’ et al, which is as well or the “in perpetuity” might have applied. You stated, that you went by tradition. Now doesn’t the psalter have a 1500 year tradition? What merits its complete and utter transformation? The transformation wasn’t even organic in the least. It was a thorough reformatting of the psalter.The changes of Pius X and Pius XII to the Breviary did not alter the existing texts in any appreciable way. You could still put the bull of Pius V in front of their breviaries and not make it a joke to do so.
In the first place we notice the respect shown by the congregation for the ancient elements of the Roman breviary: I mean, the traditional distribution of the psalter among the various canonical hours……they declare the Roman distribution of the psalms to be a matter outside the sphere of discussion”.
contd…On this point they deserve our highest praise- their method of work did not run counter to that of the Council of Trent and Pius V, but was in complete conformity. It was because the distribution of the psalter had been so firmly stamped with his authority by Pius V that they held to it so firmly”
The number of changes proposed by his commission with respect to the above as well as antiphons and responsories would take a dissertation to write. He died before they could be implemented. For examples of the historical lessons being talked about (most of which still remained and in some cases, remain for the 1962, in the breviary) see the historical lessons of the II Nocturn for all the following (and the ones I’m citing are just a fraction) the records of which are found among the last writings of Benedict XIV which he worked on in his library:We have received your Eminences letter of May 20 in which you mention the project of a new Roman breviary. We have remarked with the most sensible pleasure the hopes which your Eminence suggests to us……….the following is the general plan which We have proposed to follow in the composition of this breviary. Criticism having become so exacting, and the facts which our good forefathers regarded as undoubted now being called into question, We see no other way of defending ourselves than by compiling a breviary in which everything should be drawn from Holy Scripture which, as your Eminence is aware, contains plenty of matter on the subject of the mysteries celebrated in the feasts of the Chruch, as well as about the Hoyl Apostles and the Blessed Virgin. Whatever the Scriptures themselves might not furnish would be supplied form the universally accepted writings of the earliest Fathers. As to the other saints which now have a place in the Breviary, a simple memorial of them would be deemed sufficient. All that can be said on the other side is this derogates form the cultus which these saint shave received; and true it is that cutting out of their legends will make some people cry out, who consider the things related in them so certain that they would be ready to go to the stake in support of ther truth. But such criticism as this appears to us of far less importance than that which is made a reproach to us that we have read things read in the name of the Church which are apocryphal or of doubtful veracity.”