I see a great irony in this. Perhaps now, as at no other time can such issues exist. As much as the SSPX rails against the need for the Second Vatican Council, it is modern society that makes their existence possible. As much as we must reject modernism with it’s view of Man, it is this exaltation of many that gave rise to democracy as we have today, and therefore, treating Church authority as of lesser importance than one’s own exalted opinions. It is the things that the SSPX hates the most and fights the most that allow them to exist.
In a sense, if we argue for a return to all traditions, then we must also accept the papacy as an absolute monarchy, not a constitutional one where citizens have rights accorded them by human law.
In this case, if we say that anyone has a right to a hearing, because the law of the Church allows that, then we also have to accept that the law of the Church allows the Pontiff to deny or ignore the request.
If we follow the ancient tradition, the Pontiff has never been subject to canon law. He is the giver of the law. There has never been a decree that says that the Pontiff is subject to canon law. Pontiffs have applied law and used it to govern, but they have also dispensed from it.
There are several cases that come to mind.
- The canonization of our Holy Father Francis. Pope Gregory IX dispensed with the requirements of miracles and a study of his life. He canonized Francis based on his belief that Francis was a saint through a Motu Proprio.
- The age of ordination or the profession of religious vows has been dispensed with a number of times, the most famous one being that of St. Terese of Liseux.
- The waiting period for postulating a cause for canonization, such as the cases of John Paul II and Bl. Mother Teresa of Calcutta have been dispensed with.
- The use of the words of consecration by certain Eastern Churches. The Pope declared that they are present in a Eucological Form.
- LIfting the excommunication of the four SSPX bishops, but not giving them episcopal authority or an episcopal see. The law says that every bishop must have a see.
In Church history these are actions of a pontiff who is also an absolute monarch with absolute authority over his people. What we have here is a blend of tradition and contemporary pontifical practices blending into one and applied as the Holy Father believes to be appropriate.
The only way to deny him this power would be to deny his authority to exercise such power. That can only be done by a council where the bishops are united in the belief that the See of Peter has become vacant because the person who occupies the Chair is not competent to exercise such authority.
As long as we accept that the See of Peter is occuppied, then we must also accept that the occupant has supreme rights that cannot be denied him.
I am reminded of a passage in the rule of our order where St. Francis tells the brothers and sisters to obey the pope in all things, regardless of how sinful he may be, for he alone is the Vicar of Christ, the Successor of Peter, he alone has the power to bind and unbind, and though he can sin, he cannot teach sin, because the “gates of hell will not prevail against him”
It was good advice. This month the Franciscan family has celebrated its 800th birthday with more than 1.7 million brothers and sisters in 114 countries around the world. We have certainly had our problems and problem children, some very serious, but we have survived them and continue to grow in communion with the Church.
Fraternally,
JR
