Pope Lifts Excommunications of SSPX Bishops

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As you might be, or I, or anyone. The exception is in matters of discipline and Canon Law. In this he is the final word. He might be imprudent, contradictory or even mean, but right or wrong do not apply. He can no more be wrong that he could pick out the wrong carpet, although this matter is surely more serious.
The example of Athanasius (not to mention Peter & Paul over the Jewish dietary laws) shows that this is not the final answer. Paul did not defer to Peter. Athanasius did not defer to Liberius. Law at the best of times is a delicate matter, and even more so in the case of Canon Law (sensu lato) where, as the final paragraph says, ‘The salvation of souls is the highest law’. Aquinas speaks of the sins against obedience. As usual . there is the sin of defect and the sin of excess. Defect is simple disobedience. Excess is what he calls indolent obedience, where one complies even where the legislator is abusing authority. You cannot just switch off your mind and comply - unless you have. like the Religious Orders, taken a specific vow of obedience. Such people are forbidden to marry - because No man can serve two masters. (am I making myself clear? because [sorry] I have to log off now) … It’s a little like the delicate question of how many children to try to conceive. Some use the NFP systematically, to produce the number they themselves have decided for; others ruin their wellbeing by begetting imprudently, especially where it ruins the health of the mother, and then congratulate themselves on their fidelity to the Faith. There is no safe, automatic rule of thumb: much dpeneds on genuine, internal willingness to do God’s Will despite the consequences. It is easy for outsiders to criticise this attitude. Likewise, it is supported by Canon Law, as well as Natural Reason and Justice, that a command manifestly injurious to the Church is not binding.

The interesting fact is that every one of the questionable novelties introduced since 1965, when you look closely, contains some defect in its legality. This is in part inherent in the error of Liberalism. If one does not follow the rules, one cannot ehn demand compliance according to the Book. One cannot have it both ways.
 
The example of Athanasius (not to mention Peter & Paul over the Jewish dietary laws) shows that this is not the final answer. Paul did not defer to Peter. Athanasius did not defer to Liberius.

The interesting fact is that every one of the questionable novelties introduced since 1965, when you look closely, contains some defect in its legality. This is in part inherent in the error of Liberalism. If one does not follow the rules, one cannot ehn demand compliance according to the Book. One cannot have it both ways.
Both of these hve the assumption that your analogy is right to make a point. The example of Athanasius does not apply here, in my mind and the mind of Church authority. The idea of a defective novelty implies that there is a defect and a novelty. I know this sounds silly, but this type of break from the Church, while maintaining one is still Catholic, requires a suspension of logic and inclusion of circular reasoning.

Athanasius did not differ in matters of discipline or canon law. Athanasius, Athanasius, Athanasius until the sun set. Lefebvre was no Athanasius. Would that we had Athanasius instead of Lefebvre.

I repeated the name so many times because I get the impression that this is an argument that the SSPX feels if the say it more often will make it better.
 
Originally Posted by numealinesimpet 
The example of Athanasius (not to mention Peter & Paul over the Jewish dietary laws) shows that this is not the final answer. Paul did not defer to Peter. Athanasius did not defer to Liberius.
The interesting fact is that every one of the questionable novelties introduced since 1965, when you look closely, contains some defect in its legality. This is in part inherent in the error of Liberalism. If one does not follow the rules, one cannot then demand compliance according to the Book. One cannot have it both ways.
Both of these have the assumption that your analogy is right to make a point.

The example of Athanasius does not apply here, in my mind and the mind of Church authority. The idea of a defective novelty implies that there is a defect and a novelty. I know this sounds silly, but this type of break from the Church, while maintaining one is still Catholic, requires a suspension of logic and inclusion of circular reasoning.

Athanasius did not differ in matters of discipline or canon law. Athanasius, Athanasius, Athanasius until the sun set. Lefebvre was no Athanasius. Would that we had Athanasius instead of Lefebvre.

I repeated the name so many times because I get the impression that this is an argument that the SSPX feels if the say it more often will make it better.

We haven’t even started on the discussion of S. Athanasius yet, pnewton, so I hope you will be more patient in the future.

I don’t know why you think I’m using circular arguments. Circular argument means one is assuming what one is trying to prove. Im not assuming that Mgr Lefebvre is justified: I am quoting general principles, from Canon Law and the historical record, and then showing that they apply to Mgr Lefebvre. Others are free to put a contrary case, so long as they can likewise justify their position. That is the correct way to argue.

What has been happening to the trads is that a double standard has often been applied. Laws & sanctions which are not being enforced against others, or only after literally decades of delay, have been applied swiftly and ruthlessly against trads. These assertions are open to being confirmed by anyone who will look at the record. No circularity there.

Now while we are at it, you have compared Mgr Lefebvre with Luther.
Luther is recorded as saying this:

“I declare that all brothels, murders, thefts, adulteries, are less evil than this abominable Mass!”

On one occasion when he was given a written papal reprimand he responded “Another fart from the Pope”.

He declared that contrition does not take away our sins, but ‘covers’ it “as a fall of snow covers a dunghill”. He taught that it was in this condition that the Elect would enter Heaven.

I wrote that charity prevented my responding to your original comment. However, I may as well mention that by equating Lefebvre with Luther, in light of these and innumerable other instances, you do but condemn yourself out of your own mouth (unless you can find some similar quotes from Mgr Lefebvre).

You have not yet proved that your knowledge of the Arian Crisis is any better than your knowledge of the Lutheran Rebellion - or of the Modernist Crisis. Let us go through it point by point.
Both of these have the assumption that your analogy is right to make a point.
Sorry, what are you trying to say here? (… and a little clearer grammar would do no harm – it is the tool of clear thought).

Can we break this down into checkable points?
Point one: The examples of Paul/Peter and Athanasius/Liberius show that {irrespective of the position of the SSPX} occasions can conceivably arise, and have arisen in the past concerning canonised saints, who have ‘withstood Peter to his face, because he was to be blamed’. In neither of the above cases did Peter or his successor teach heresy directly, but they left their actions open to an heretical interpretation.
True or false?

Point two: Pope John Paul II publicly kissed the Koran in a Moslem mosque. He did not teach that the Religion of Mohammed (or his ghost writers - the ‘secretaries’ who wrote it for him) is true, or that he himself had departed from the True Faith, but his action was open to an heretical interpretation, such that some have left the Catholic Church, to join the sedevacs, stating this as a prime example that has destroyed his – and the Church’s – credibility. I have been among those who have endeavored to keep them within the Church by pointing to fallacies in their reasoning, but this has been the actual reaction of many who have now left the Church.
True or false?
The example of Athanasius does not apply here, in my mind and the mind of Church authority.
Neither you nor I nor any anonymous ‘authority’ can erase the facts of history. As the Romans said, ‘There is no arguing with a fact’. As for whether it applies to the present case, that is the very topic of this thread.
Consider the following:

Point three: During the Arian Crisis, innumerable bishops and priests began preaching heresy from the pulpits, and they were not stopped by their superiors, even the Pope.
True or false?

Point Four: During the Modernist Crisis, innumerable bishops, priests and Religious Superiors began preaching heresy from the pulpits and in the seminaries under their authority, and they were not stopped by their superiors, even the Pope.
True or false?

To be continued……
 
From previous posting ….
The idea of a defective novelty implies that there is a defect and a novelty. I know this sounds silly, but this type of break from the Church, while maintaining one is still Catholic, requires a suspension of logic and inclusion of circular reasoning.
Point Six: Pope Paul declared, “The important words of the council are newness and updating …the word newness has been given to us as an order, as a programme …” Pope John Paul II declared, ”It is necessary not to lose the genuine intention of the Council Fathers; on the contrary, it must be recovered, overcoming cautious and partial interpretations that impeded expressing to the maximum the novelty of the Council Magisterium.” In other words, the Pope said that the Church has been too cautious in expressing ‘to the maximum’ the Novelty of the Council Magisterium.

However, how much of this can be legitimately imposed on the Faithful? Ferrara & Woods write: “… the postconciliar novelties all operate below the level of the authentic Magisterium and are to be found entirely in the realm of pastoral in various forms: activities, “orientations”, … dialogues, … ambiguous new expressions – all of which lack the character of binding Catholic Doctrine” [The Great Facade ©2002, ISBN 1-980740-10-1. p.41]

The pre-conciliar popes taught that the schismatic Orthodox must return to the Catholic Church, outside of which there is no salvation, but the Balamand Statement, the teachings of which are commended by Jphn Paul II in* Ut Unum Sint* {= ‘That They May Be One’}, stated that ‘thanks to ‘radically altered perspectives and thus attitudes’ engendered by Vatican II, the Catholic Church will train new priests ‘to pave the way for future relations between the two Churches, passing beyond the outdated ecclesiology of return to the Catholic Church’. (Sections 13 & 30, Balamand Statement (1993), Cited approvingly in Ut Unum Sint by Pope John Paul II in section 59.)

Ferrara & Woods write ”… some neo-Catholic commentators [e.g. John Beaumont’s review of George Weigel’s biography of Pope John Paul II]** are honest enough to admit** that the council and the conciliar popes have introduced true novelties into the Church. Taking the Bull by the horns, they openly declare that John Paul II is an innovator, who sees in Vatican II (as did Paul VI) a mandate for previously unheard-of undertakings … “ [ibid, p 38].
Hence: Novelty and Innovations: True or false?

Point Five: I have posted the preface to the Ottavianin intervention.
“ … the Novus Ordo Missae–considering the new elements widely susceptible to widely different interpretations which are implied or taken for
granted–represents, both as a whole and in its details, **a striking
departure from the Catholic theology of the Mass as it was formulated in
Session 22 of the Council of Trent.?B] (My emphasis - nume) The “canons” of the rite definitively fixed at that time erected an insurmountable barrier
against any heresy which might attack the integrity of the Mystery.
Code:
The pastoral reasons put forth to justify such a grave break, even
if such reasons could still hold good in the face of doctrinal
considerations, do not seem sufficient. The ** innovations**** … (my emphasis - nume); the word itself, along with the word “novelty”, is found frequently in the speeches & writings of Pope Paul VI & JohnPaul II
True or false?
Point Seven:
The innovations in the Novus Ordo and the fact that all that is of perennial value finds only a minor place–if it subsists at all–could well turn into a certainty the suspicion, already prevalent, alas in many circles,
True or False?
… that truths which have always been believed by the Christian people can be changed or ignored without infidelity to that sacred deposit of doctrine to which the Catholic faith is bound forever. The recent reforms have amply
demonstrated that new changes in the liturgy could not be made without
leading to complete bewilderment on the part of the faithful, who
already show signs of restiveness and an indubitable lessening of their
faith. Among the best of the clergy, the result is an agonizing crisis
of conscience, numberless instances of which come to us daily.

A. Card. Ottaviani
A. Card. Bacci
Forgive my repeating this, but it was ignored last time I posted it.
To be continued……
 
From previous posting ….

Point Eight:
Athanasius did not differ in matters of discipline or canon law. Athanasius, Athanasius, Athanasius…
An astonishing statement. Athanasius ignored four decrees of excommuication, one of them endorsed by Pope Liberius, the others by bishops who were in no way censured by the pope.
True or False?

(I don’t know enough of the minute details of the Canon Law then in force, but it seems that the excommunication of Athanasius was actually in more correct form than that of Lefebvre, for the reasons I have mentioned before (notably the lack of protocol number). Athanasius could not, for his part, argue that the decree was invalid on procedural grounds. Actually, he wouldn’t even have bothered.

Point Nine:
Athanasius until the sun set. Lefebvre was no Athanasius. Would that we had Athanasius instead of Lefebvre.
You don’t seem to know what you are talking about. Athanasius, and St Eusebius, went into dioceses ordaining priests in standing defiance of the bishops, who although they were preaching one of the many brands of Arianism, were not being disciplined by the pope.
True or False?

Bp Eusebius even went into a major city, declared the bishop deposed on his own authority (which was, of course, that of the Catholic Faith) and installed another as the bishop.
True or false?

As has been commented, this is equivalent to Archbp. Lefebvre going to Paris, announcing that the archbishop was deposed, and declaring Fr Schmitnerger the new Archbishop of Paris.

Might I suggest you don’t know when you are well off with mild-mannered Mgr Lefebvre and the SSPX?
 
Now while we are at it, you have compared Mgr Lefebvre with Luther.

I wrote that charity prevented my responding to your original comment. However, I may as well mention that by equating Lefebvre with Luther, in light of these and innumerable other instances,……
*If *I had equated the two, you would be right. However, since I did not, I reject your judgement of me and your ability to properly re-word a simple statement.

What I really said, was that the man was more akin to Luther than any Saint. I am more akin to a monkey than a petunia, but that does not make me either.

The very nature of comparing two people should have implied that it was an opinion, just like if I said Pope John Paul the Great was the greatest man of the last century, it should be understood that it is an opinion, as such things are immeasurable. This also means all this comparison to Athanasius is also an opinion, though SSPX take it for gospel. The comparison I see is that Athanasius waged a war of ideas, Luther and Leferve both took the next step and translated that into action. St. Athanasius had no Society os Saint Clement I. He did not break away from the Church in his disagreement and commited no schismatic act.
 
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=44289&highlight=sspx

Consider there are four possibilities:
  1. The SSPX have valid Sacraments and you partake in them
  2. The SSPX do not have valid Sacraments and you partake in them
  3. The SSPX have valid Sacraments and you do not partake in them
  4. The SSPX does not have valid Sacraments and you do not partake in them.
I think we all know that the Eucharist is valid, (though the Mass illicit.) But that is scarcely the only Sacrament. In only one of these situations are you receiving valid a valid Sacrament (like Reconcilliation). Of course those in the SSPX will tell you number one is right, but it may or may not be.

If we change this same formula and for validity insert correct doctrine, then we have a more serious situation.
  1. Catholic
  2. ??
  3. Catholic
  4. Catholic
I didn’t fill in two so not to start a side issue. The message is, there is a security in being in the Catholic Church properly and obediently. In some places, this too may have its own dangers, but it is to never be something lightly disgarded. The extent to which the SSPX’s schism, irregularity or whatever status you thing they have separates one from the direct union with the Holy Father and Catholic Church, is the extent one places oneself in danger.
 
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=44289&highlight=sspx

Consider there are four possibilities:
  1. The SSPX have valid Sacraments and you partake in them
  2. The SSPX do not have valid Sacraments and you partake in them
  3. The SSPX have valid Sacraments and you do not partake in them
  4. The SSPX does not have valid Sacraments and you do not partake in them.
I think we all know that the Eucharist is valid, (though the Mass illicit.) But that is scarcely the only Sacrament. In only one of these situations are you receiving valid a valid Sacrament (like Reconcilliation). Of course those in the SSPX will tell you number one is right, but it may or may not be.

If we change this same formula and for validity insert correct doctrine, then we have a more serious situation.
  1. Catholic
  2. ??
  3. Catholic
  4. Catholic
I didn’t fill in two so not to start a side issue. The message is, there is a security in being in the Catholic Church properly and obediently. In some places, this too may have its own dangers, but it is to never be something lightly disgarded. The extent to which the SSPX’s schism, irregularity or whatever status you thing they have separates one from the direct union with the Holy Father and Catholic Church, is the extent one places oneself in danger.
I suppose then it is better to receive the Sacraments from Catholic priests and a bishop such as we see here?
ctanorcal.org/WCCTA2008.wmv
 
I suppose then it is better to receive the Sacraments from Catholic priests and a bishop such as we see here?
ctanorcal.org/WCCTA2008.wmv
This is a response to a logical inquiry with a logical fallacy. What is this fallacy? That this are the only two options. Simply put, one might ask if it is healthier to drink cyanide or inhale carbone monoxide. While there might be an answer, it is irrelevant if one can avoid both. In this case, my answer would be to avoid Call to Action conferences and the SSPX.
 
This is a response to a logical inquiry with a logical fallacy. What is this fallacy? That this are the only two options. Simply put, one might ask if it is healthier to drink cyanide or inhale carbone monoxide. While there might be an answer, it is irrelevant if one can avoid both. In this case, my answer would be to avoid Call to Action conferences and the SSPX.
I see that you yourself have characterised the partaking of the Sacraments of a Roman Catholic bishop in good standing in the Catholic Church as drinking cyanide or inhaling carbon monoxide. These were your characterisations. Well, if you didn’t know, this is why many people have turned to the SSPX, that is, to obtain their Sacraments in a more reverential setting. And the Pope seems to realise this as he is working with Bishop Fellay to bring about a mutually agreeable solution.
 
I see that you yourself have characterised the partaking of the Sacraments of a Roman Catholic bishop in good standing in the Catholic Church as drinking cyanide or inhaling carbon monoxide
Of course I did not. That is a ridiculous accusation. I will not respond as why because I think that it is obvious to anyone else what I said.
 
Of course I did not. That is a ridiculous accusation. I will not respond as why because I think that it is obvious to anyone else what I said.
Ah, you disappoint me, pnewton. I’m not being sarcastic. That is what you actually did say, by implication, it is what i thought you were saying, and it would have been a good, Catholic thought. I was pleased that you (unlike another poster) at least agreed you would not have gone along with the Football Confirmation, although we differed as to the concrete steps to take. You own strategy, as I remember, was to do nothing and hope everything would come right by the operation of Divine Providence without, however, yourself doing anything to help make it happen… St Thomas Aquinas would tell you that this is not the virtue of Relying on Providence, but the sin of Tempting Providence. We can do it the other way only when ALL other legitimate avenues have been blocked. This debate is precisely about which avenues are legitimate for the faithful Catholic.
 
*If *I had equated the two, you would be right. However, since I did not, I reject your judgement of me and your ability to properly re-word a simple statement.

What I really said, was that the man was more akin to Luther than any Saint.
Luther was a monster. This can be demonstrated very clearly from the known facts of his life. You should be more careful in making general statements like the above about Mgr Lefebvre. You should state clearly in what way any human being is ‘akin’ to Luther (as you finally did, further down in your latest posting).
I am more akin to a monkey than a petunia, but that does not make me either.
You are right there. I ought not to have used the word ‘equate’. I didn’t question your ability to re-word a statement; I simply asked you to do so, so that we could continue the discussion. I actually don’t know exactly what you mean. You are rolling up everything into one woolly idea.

“Silence gives consent”. Since this is the only point you reject from my three postings last evening, can I take it that your reply to the others is “True”? Can I take this as read in future discussion?
The very nature of comparing two people should have implied that it was an opinion, just like if I said Pope John Paul the Great
I suppose you here refer to Pope John Paul II, who, in addition to his many attractive qualities, publicly organised at Assisi a meeting at which those of other Faiths were encouraged to pray to their false gods against the First Commandment (such that his closest ally, Cdl Ratzinger, actually refused to attend); publicly kissed the Holy Book of arguably the most militant and dangerous enemy of the Church in the present age, who sheltered known paedophiles and even satanists in the clergy, who presided over vast open-air Masses in which the Holy Eucharist was often trampled into the dirt in the general confusion, and who persisted in these events even when this was made known to him…
was the greatest man of the last century, it should be understood that it is an opinion,
I hope you are not here falling into the common modern error that ‘we all have a right to our opinion’. Firstly (to lay out the full argument, not as a personal slight to yourself) one must earn an opinion by having sufficient knowledge,
as such things are immeasurable.
… and secondly, one must be prepared to defend that opinion by showing the facts and principles from which your opinion was derived. The contrary error is routinely invoked in the modern world by those who wish to insulate themselves against any incursion of reality into their erroneous opinions. It is one of the most pernicious errors, and on that the Catholic Church strenuously fraught against until the 1960s.
N.B. this ‘right to an opinion’ and especially ‘take me as I am - you have no right to judge’ derives in great measure from rousseau, the 18th century Frenchman, whose ideas have penetrated so far that they have inspired modern educational philosphy –*and all but wrecked modern education.
This also means all this comparison to Athanasius is also an opinion, though SSPX take it for gospel.
On the contrary, they are prepared to back it up with historical evidence. That’s what anyone should be prepared to do. “If there is harm in what I said, show us the harm in it.” Instead of ‘the Establishment’ debating it honestly, the SSPX have, until very recently, been illegally excluded from the public life of the Church. This is a very old political manoeuver. If you cannot bring your enemy round, ring-fence him, isolate him and bar him from the public forum. This was used routinely by the communists, as any student of the history of the communist Scourge will know. I for one am grateful to His Holiness Pope Benedict for allowing the real issues once again to be debated honestly, as the SSPX have requested for decades.
The comparison I see is that Athanasius waged a war of ideas, Luther and Leferve (Lefebvre) both took the next step and translated that into action. St. Athanasius had no Society of Saint Clement I. He did not break away from the Church in his disagreement and commited no schismatic act.
Thank you! This is a clear statement that can be debated. Let us consider it point by point. I see that you are concerned about the status of the Priestly Fraternity Without Vows of S. Pius X. That is something concrete that is worth discussing. [See later].
 
“Silence gives consent”. .
No, it does not. Again, there are other possibilities. Rather than leave that hanging I will explain. I have discussed it, at length, and have learned much in doing so, not only about St. Athanasius, but more about the type of people who attend the SSPX, at least all who have come here so far. It is out side of my area of expertise. It is outside of my arena of authority. Therefore, convince Pope Benedict, and I will be persuaded.
 
Of course I did not. That is a ridiculous accusation. I will not respond as why because I think that it is obvious to anyone else what I said.
Here is your analogy as you have written it. This is a direct quote:
This is a response to a logical inquiry with a logical fallacy. What is this fallacy? That this are the only two options. Simply put, one might ask if it is healthier to drink cyanide or inhale carbone monoxide. While there might be an answer, it is irrelevant if one can avoid both. In this case, my answer would be to avoid Call to Action conferences and the SSPX.
It was a Catholic bishop who celebrated the Mass which you are referring to here. So you have made the analogy with drinking cyanide or inhaling carbon monoxide. now you are trying to run away from your own words.
 
No, it does not. Again, there are other possibilities. Rather than leave that hanging I will explain. I have discussed it, at length, and have learned much in doing so, not only about St. Athanasius, but more about the type of people who attend the SSPX, at least all who have come here so far. It is out side of my area of expertise. It is outside of my arena of authority. Therefore, convince Pope Benedict, and I will be persuaded.
You can’t run away from it like that. Do you mean to say that, having been asked a series of questions on an historical fact, on the same level as…“The Battle of Hastings was in 1066. True or false?” … that you refuse to answer, taking refuge in personalities or referring me to the pope. In Australia they have a sport called ‘Australian rules football’ – said to be a cross between Gaelic Football, Rugby Football and a bar-room brawl –*and they have a proverb down there, “Play the ball, not the man”. I have met a wide spectrum of types at SSPX Mass Centres, from beautiful souls to crackpots. But I asked you direct, specific questions. We have not yet begun to discuss the implications, which are debatable once the facts are acknowedged. You act as though you are afraid of the implications, therefore refuse to acknowledge simple facts of history, available to all in the public record.

This thread is supposed to be a public debate. The Catholic Church has always stood firmly in defence of the human intellect - in fact, of all that is good in human nature. ~If you are afraid to debate, why bother to post on the thread?
 
Here is your analogy as you have written it. This is a direct quote:

It was a Catholic bishop who celebrated the Mass which you are referring to here. So you have made the analogy with drinking cyanide or inhaling carbon monoxide. now you are trying to run away from your own words.
An analotgy only needs one point to prove something harmful. In this case, what they have in common is that they have a negative effect. They are harmful.

Let me use letters.

If I said A is harmful. You then said, here is a video of B, which is worse (i.e. more harmful). My response is that saying that B is bad does not change the nature of A. We still have the opportunity to go with C,D,E or F.

In this, I am not saying the Mass is alphabetical.
 
Hello. Since pnewton refuses to answer simple questions, and therefore is ipso facto dropping out of the debate, I therefore address the following to the general reader (if any) …
The message is, there is a security in being in the Catholic Church
Indeed. In fact, “Outside the Catholic Church there is no salvation’. The Church gives us everything we need to gain eternal life. Thank God for the Faith.
properly and obediently.
S. Thomas Aquinas will tell us, however, that obedience does not necessarily mean following each and every directive of the one in authority. This strategy, which he calls ‘indolent obedience’, can be a sin: that of conniving in the sin of “exceeding legitimate authority” by the leader, which itself is a material sin against justice.
In some places, this too may have its own dangers, but it is to never be something lightly disregarded.
That is true, and the Church down the ages has provided this route to Heaven. But mark well the conditions and the price.
The Church has always (well, since S. Benedict at least) endorsed the Religious Life as the simplest and easiest route to Heaven. One takes a Vow of Obedience to the Religious Superior, and by this voluntary act places one’s soul in his hands. Thereafter, one’s only duty is to obey without question. This will involve sacrificing one’s own self-will. The Superior is now directly responsible for the souls of all under his jurisdiction.
But there is a condition. The religious brother or sister must take a vow of celibacy. Our dear Mother, the Church, realises that the condition accepted by the Religious is incompatible with having other souls of his own under his responsibility. ‘No man may serve two masters’.
Because of the operation of ‘Predestination, Grace and Free Will’ (all three are inseparably linked in this Mystery), what might be legitimate for a Lay Brother or nun may not be legitimate for a parent. Because the Religious Superior might make a *manifestly * erroneous ruling. The Religious may choose to accept it and offer it up, but the parent will not be let off so lightly at the Judgment. Catholic teaching is that the parent is the primary educator of his children. It will not be accepted at the Judgment if he blames anybody else for the misdirection of his children.
This becomes even more poignant when an ostensive Superior commands against the Divine Law. “One must choose God before man”.

These are Basis Principles. It would be useful (in a later posting) to apply them to the modern situation.
Any comment on the above, as an actual valid principle?
 
An analotgy only needs one point to prove something harmful. In this case, what they have in common is that they have a negative effect. They are harmful.

Let me use letters.

If I said A is harmful. You then said, here is a video of B, which is worse (i.e. more harmful). My response is that saying that B is bad does not change the nature of A. We still have the opportunity to go with C,D,E or F.

In this, I am not saying the Mass is alphabetical.
Whatever. Letters, alphabets, carbon monoxide, cyanide. All these analogies etc.
My point is pretty simple. There are many people today who are attending Mass at SSPX and other Tradtional Mass centers because they see something wrong with what has been going on in the Church since Vatican II. Some people think that the SSPX Traditonal Latin Mass offers more reverence and is more respectful toward God than the Mass as celebrated in the link given.
 
Whatever. Letters, alphabets, carbon monoxide, cyanide. All these analogies etc.
My point is pretty simple. There are many people today who are attending Mass at SSPX and other Tradtional Mass centers because they see something wrong with what has been going on in the Church since Vatican II. Some people think that the SSPX Traditonal Latin Mass offers more reverence and is more respectful toward God than the Mass as celebrated in the link given.
I totally understand and respect that. That is why the news article linked is good news to all. Hopefully it will be a first step. I am still waiting to see how the SSPX will respond.
 
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