Y
Yours_Truly
Guest
I think it is very clear that he was speaking of the Mass itself. Consider where the quote came from: It was from the preface to the French edition of the book The Reform of the Roman Liturgy, Msgr Klaus Gamber. Before looking at more of what Cardinal Ratzinger wrote in the preface, let’s consider what Msgr Gamber says in the book about the Subject:No, the distinction is necessary. If he was speaking of the Pauline Mass, then it needs to be scrapped. If he was speaking of the way it’s often celebrated, then a whole bunch of priests need to clean up their act.
Reform of the Roman Liturgy: "Does the Pope have the authority to change a liturgical rite founded on apostolic tradition and developed over many centuries? … *n the past, the Church hierarchy did not exercise a strong influence on the development of liturgical forms. It simply sanctioned the rite that grew out of local custom, and even the Church practice of officially sanctioning a rite emerged relatively late, only after printed liturgical books became popular.
In the West, this practice began after the Council of Trent; and it is defined in Article 22 of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy [Sacrosanctum Concilium]. Referring to Canon 1257 of the Codex Iuris Canonici [1917], it says, “The supervision of the sacred liturgy depends solely on the authority of the Church, which resides in the Apostolic See and, in accord with the law, with the diocesan bishop (…Therefore, no other person, not even a priest, may add, remove, or change anything in the liturgy on his own authority).”
The Council did not elaborate on what the term “supervision of the sacred liturgy” (Sacra Liturgiae moderatio) means.** If we consider past practices and customs, however, the term cannot mean the type of sweeping revisions of the Mass ritual and the alteration of liturgical texts that we are now experiencing**. Rather, we must understand the real meaning in a larger context: Above all, the Council Fathers were intent on preventing every priest from “devising” the liturgical rite “on his own authority”—which, of course, is exactly what is happening today.
Nor can the liturgical reformers derive their authority from Article 25 of the Liturgy Constitution, which says, “The liturgical books are to be revised (recognoscantur) as soon as possible.” …
T]he type of revision of the liturgy of the Mass envisioned by the Council was the Ordo Missae published in 1965. At the very beginning, the decree [of 1965] points out that the revision (nova recensio) of the Order of the Mass is being issued because of the mutationes made to the Council’s Instructions on the Proper Implementation of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy [Inter oecumenici].
As recently as May 28,1966, in an official letter written on behalf of the Pope and addressed to the Abbot of Beuron, who had sent to the Pope a copy of the new (post-Council) edition of the Schott-Missal, then Cardinal Secretary of State Cicognani stated, "The singular characteristic and primary importance of this new edition is that it [the revisions of 1965] reflects completely the intent of the Council’s Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy." The letter made no mention of the fact that a comprehensive revision of this very Missal was already under way.
Only four years had passed since the publication of the new Missal when Pope Paul VI surprised the Catholic world with a new Ordo Missae, dated April 6, 1969 [and promulgated by the Apostolic Constitution “Missale Romanum”]. The revision made in 1965 did not touch the traditional liturgical rite. In accordance with the mandate of Article 50 of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, it had been primarily concerned with removing some later additions to the Order of the Mass.
The publication of the Ordo Missae of 1969, however, created a new liturgical rite [which is exactly what Pope Paul VI said, even if our current Pope says it is a different form of the sate Rite].** In other words, the traditional liturgical rite had not simply been revised as the Council had intended. Rather, it had been completely abolished, and a couple of years later, the traditional liturgical rite was, in fact, forbidden.**
All this leads to the question: Does such a radical reform follow the tradition of the Church? Given the evidence we have presented, one cannot invoke the Council’s decisions to support such an argument. …
The argument could be made that the pope’s authority to introduce a new liturgical rite, that is, to do so without a decision by a council, can be derived from the “full and highest power” (plena et suprema potestas) he has in the Church, as cited by the First Vatican Council, i.e., power over matters quae ad disciplinam et regimen ecclesiae per totum orbem diffusae pertinent (“that pertain to the discipline and rule of the Church spread out over all the world”).
However, the term disciplina in no way applies to the liturgical rite of the Mass, particularly in light of the fact that the popes have repeatedly observed that the rite is founded on apostolic tradition.** For this reason alone, the rite cannot fall into the category of “discipline and rule of the Church.” **To this we can add that there is not a single document, including the Codex Iuris Canonici, in which there is a specific statement that the pope, in his function as the supreme pastor of the Church, has the authority to abolish the traditional liturgical rite. In fact, nowhere is it mentioned that the pope has the authority to change even a single local liturgical tradition. The fact that there is no mention of such authority strengthens our case considerably.
continue…*

