R.I.P. Father Gruner

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Henry, if Father Gruner was a priest in good standing, then tell me please why no priest in full communion with the Church offered his funeral Mass? Instead, Bishop Fellay of the SSPX did.
Huh? :confused:Your question doesn’t even make any sense.
  1. Did you know that Pope Benedict lifted the excommunications of the SSPX Bishops?
    catholicnewsagency.com/news/pope_benedict_lifts_excommunication_of_bishops_ordained_by_lefebvre/
  2. The Vatican permitted the SSPX to say a Mass in St Peter’s basilica at the altar of Pope St Pius X in 2014:
    rorate-caeli.blogspot.com/2014/08/sspx-priest-celebrates-mass-in-saint.html
  3. Just as a side note, I attended an SSPX funeral Mass of a lady friend. Her son is a good priest in the Legion of Christ, and he attended the Mass as well. I don’t think it was a slight that the Mass was not celebrated by her beloved son. Rather, I believe that this lady preferred the traditional Latin rite, and that she understood the SSPX’s rejection of the heresies of Vatican II to be the orthodox Catholic view. Her son understood her views and he respected her wishes. The SSPX and LC priests were mutually respectful. (People should be extra respectful of the LC because they are giants.;))
 
When did the Holy Father make the announcement that the three SSPX bishops and the currently suspended priests of the SSPX have returned to full communion?

I must have missed it. The last time I checked with my chancery office here, the SSPX here weren’t under the jurisdiction of our bishop.
 
How does one explain that you say yes, but Mr. Ferrara says no?
The language of the release says volumes:

Apparently, someone informed you that Father Gruner is under some sort of penalty imposed upon him by “the Vatican.” That is simply not the case. This appears to be a reference to outdated canonical proceedings engineered by the same Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal xxxxxx, who covered up the scandal of Father Maciel for decades until he was overruled and then removed from office by Pope Benedict. In order to silence Father Gruner’s Fatima apostolate in the 1990s, xxxxx attempted to force Father’s return to the Diocese of Avelino, …

The language of conspiracy remains constant regardless of the person, venue, or object of the theory.
 
Now you are way off on a tangent regarding the current status of the SSPX. I don’t think your assessment is correct. My belief is that the SSPX recognizes the jurisdiction of the Pope and all bishops, and that none of the SSPX bishops have any jurisdiction. The SSPX bishops only have office for the purpose of ordaining priests in the traditional rite, of confirmation, and of ordaining new bishops. The jurisdiction of SSPX priests only comes from necessity, which arises from an emergency situation.

For example, what if all the priests and bishops started to preach the Aryan heresy? The priests who are truly loyal to the Church would not preach the heresy, but could continue to offer Mass even if the heretic Aryan bishop ordered him not to. That is because the primary role of the Church is the salvation of souls. In order to exercise this primary function is is NECESSARY for priests to offer Mass. If the faithful go to a mass offered up by a heretic, then his soul may be in danger. Therefore an orthodox priest could say Mass in a diocese that was under the control of a heretic bishop regardless of that Bishop’s orders to the contrary. This is actually what happened during the Aryan heresy in the time of St Athanasius. The Pope at that time, Lieberius, even excommunicated St Athanasius! St Athanasius said,
“It is a fact that they have the premises — but you have the Apostolic Faith. They can occupy our churches, but they are outside the true Faith…Even if Catholics faithful to Tradition are reduced to a handful, they are the ones who are the true Church of Jesus Christ.”
Another example of necessity is found when a priest is in mortal sin. Normally any person in mortal sin should not receive the Blessed Sacrament. But if a priest is in mortal sin, and he has to offer Mass, but he is not able to go to confession, then there is no sin for the priest to receive the Blessed Sacrament because it is NECESSARY to offer up the Holy Mass. (Of course the priest should make an act of contrition, and should go to confession as soon as possible.)

Although I believe that Pope Liberius was a valid Pope, I do not believe that the excommunication of St. Athanasius was valid. For how could a Saint be cut off from the Church for doing Saintly things? Similarly, I do not believe that the excommunications of the SSPX bishops were valid.

It is my understanding that when a person is baptized he becomes a member of the Body of Christ. When a person commits mortal sin, or is excommunicated, then he is cut off from the Body of Christ. Regardless of whether the excommunications were valid, when Pope Benedict lifted the excommunications, it would seem that the Vatican was essentially recognizing that the bishops were not cut off from the Body of Christ.

It seems to me that one is either part of the Body of Christ or not. I am not aware of some tertium quid: (semi-permanent, rotating, oscillating, bi-weekly member of the Body of Christ?)

Another example. There are certain sins that bring on automatic excommunication. Even after the sin is confessed, the excommunication can only be lifted by the Pope. The SSPX are not sedevacantist, and so it is their practice to write to Rome in order that those excommunications be lifted by the Pope. They do this on a regular basis, and the is always the practice of Rome to write back with notice that the excommunications have been lifted. Now: if the SSPX did not have jurisdiction to hear confessions, then the Vatican could not lift the excommunications. Therefore, these actions on the part of Rome are a recognition of the valid jurisdiction of the SSPX.

–Remember that you are the one dragging this conversation off topic. The original point was the passing of the very holy priest Fr Gruner. RIP.
–It was wrongly asserted that Fr Gruner was not in good standing, and no authority was cited for this assertion.
–You attempted to prove that Fr Gruner was not in good standing by saying that his funeral mass was offered by an SSPX priest.:confused:
–I showed that the excommunications of the SSPX were lifted, and that the Vatican permitted the SSPX to offer Mass in St Peter’s basilica.
–Now you are attempting to say that the SSPX, although officially sanctioned, and excommunications officially lifted, are not in “full communion”, and by that prove that Fr Gruner was not in good standing?:confused:
 
–You attempted to prove that Fr Gruner was not in good standing by saying that his funeral mass was offered by an SSPX priest.
I most certainly did not.

I asked you an honest question, and it still stands.

If Father Gruner was a priest in good standing, why did Bishop Fellay offer his funeral Mass?
 
This is the reason why I am so turned off to Fatima.

Too much controversy.

Every time someone brings it up, the same tired and worn out argument ensues.
Well, the mainstream Fatima apostolate seems to be still fruitful, totally in union with the Magisterium. Fr. Gruner (may he rest in peace) was not in the mainstream Fatima apostolate. Mr. Ferrara disagrees with the Church on many things.

Turn to Our Lady of Fatima. With anything of value there will be side issues that are controversial. You are better off staying off the side issues, and not responding to people like Mr. Ferrara who are intelligent in some things but not reliably in union with the Church.
Read other people who are also intelligent, and are consistently in union with the Church.
 
Well, the mainstream Fatima apostolate seems to be still fruitful, totally in union with the Magisterium. Fr. Gruner (may he rest in peace) was not in the mainstream Fatima apostolate. Mr. Ferrara disagrees with the Church on many things.

Turn to Our Lady of Fatima. With anything of value there will be side issues that are controversial. You are better off staying off the side issues, and not responding to people like Mr. Ferrara who are intelligent in some things but not reliably in union with the Church.
Read other people who are also intelligent, and are consistently in union with the Church.
When was it officially decided that Mr. Ferrara is not in union with the Church?
 
Now you are way off on a tangent regarding the current status of the SSPX. I don’t think your assessment is correct. My belief is that the SSPX recognizes the jurisdiction of the Pope and all bishops, and that none of the SSPX bishops have any jurisdiction…
The SSPX recognizes Catholic bishops as bishops - as sacramental ministers who can confirm, ordain, etc. But popes designate some bishops as ordinary of a diocese. The SSPX does not recognize the jurisdiction of the ordinary of the diocese where they operate, which means they don’t recognize the local jurisdiction of the pope who appointed the ordinary.

The local SSPX chapel does not recognize the jurisdiction of the local ordinary, or any other ordinary, with the possible exception of the bishop of Rome, only within Rome. Even there it is doubtful - they recognize the jurisdiction of Francis as ordinary, within the Vatican, but maybe not as ordinary out in the city itself. Do they have a chapel or other ministry in Rome? If so, does that chapel recognize Francis as their bishop-ordinary?
 
–You attempted to prove that Fr Gruner was not in good standing by saying that his funeral mass was offered by an SSPX priest.
I most certainly did not.

I asked you an honest question, and it still stands.

If Father Gruner was a priest in good standing, why did Bishop Fellay offer his funeral Mass?
Huh? You are either entirely unfamiliar with rhetoric or you are being intellectually dishonest.

–Your question is phrased in the form of an argument: It is attempting to prove that Fr Gruner was not a priest in good standing.
–It is based on the wrongful assumption that if a priest is in good standing then he would not have an SSPX offer his funeral Mass.

I have already refuted your assumption by showing that the Vatican recognizes the lawfulness of the SSPX: they are allowed to offer Mass in St Peter’s; they repeatedly recognize their jurisdiction to hear confession…

Are you reading my posts, or are you distracted by something?
 
The SSPX recognizes Catholic bishops as bishops - as sacramental ministers who can confirm, ordain, etc. But popes designate some bishops as ordinary of a diocese. The SSPX does not recognize the jurisdiction of the ordinary of the diocese where they operate, which means they don’t recognize the local jurisdiction of the pope who appointed the ordinary.

The local SSPX chapel does not recognize the jurisdiction of the local ordinary, or any other ordinary, with the possible exception of the bishop of Rome, only within Rome. Even there it is doubtful - they recognize the jurisdiction of Francis as ordinary, within the Vatican, but maybe not as ordinary out in the city itself. Do they have a chapel or other ministry in Rome? If so, does that chapel recognize Francis as their bishop-ordinary?
You make a lot of unsupported assertions and draw invalid conclusions, and then you want me to research your argument for you? Why should I do all the heavy lifting?

The SSPX are not sedevacantist. They recognize the jurisdiction of the bishops and the popes and the priests. They DO NOT recognize Vatican II, but Vatican II was NOT a dogmatic council, but merely pastoral. So says John XXIII; so says Paul VI; so says Benedict XVI. The SSPX reject Vatican II because of its many heresies. Those statements are heretical, not by the judgment of the SSPX, but by the judgments of previous Popes. It is the basic rule of non-contradiction that something cannot be both True and Not-True. If a Pope has infallibly declared something to be True, then it is True for all Time. That is what the SSPX believe. A Catholic has a PERFECT RIGHT to hear a Mass without any heresy.

You’re way off topic. Fr Gruner was a very holy priest. RIP.
 
When was it officially decided that Mr. Ferrara is not in union with the Church?
It was not “officially decided”. I apologize if I implied such. I have never met him, don’t mean to judge him personally. Based on his writing, he is intelligent, and has done good work advocating for prolifers.

Looking only at his public actions, not judging the man himself as a Catholic, I have concerns. Anyone who would go to the anti-Catholic government of the European Union, to seek** their** help in putting political pressure on the Catholic Church, in my opinion is not acting in union with the Church at least some of the time. That doesn’t mean he doesn’t act in union with the Church at other times.
 
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