P
Prodigal1984
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Jeez. Don’t they know they could just join the FSSP or ICKSP and use the older one?The SSPV celebrates the TLM using the pre-1962 rite.
Jeez. Don’t they know they could just join the FSSP or ICKSP and use the older one?The SSPV celebrates the TLM using the pre-1962 rite.
The Fssp has to recognize Vatican II as a legitimate council. They also recognize all the post conciliar popes as legitimate. The SSPV is a sedevacantist group who believes that Vatican II is in error and heretical as it contradicts church doctrine and thus they believe all popes who promote Vatican II are heretics and thus antipope.Fauken:![]()
Jeez. Don’t they know they could just join the FSSP or ICKSP and use the older one?The SSPV celebrates the TLM using the pre-1962 rite.
I don’t think the ICKSP has been given permission to use the pre-1962 rite. And only recently were certain FSSP parishes were given permission.Jeez. Don’t they know they could just join the FSSP or ICKSP and use the older one?
I don’t find the documents themselves confusing. Other than the document on the Liturgy, most of the documents simply describe the situation as it already had become. Laity had, in the first half of the 20th century, taken on a much broader role than envisioned at Trent or V1. Religious orders of sisters had, since the 1950s, been in a process of “renewal”. Catholics, especially laity, had already been using the media in ways never envisioned at V1; so also Catholic education.when laity can’t even read these documents without getting confused, I’m not sure how pastoral it really was
The PNCC broke off from RCC for reasons of their own, specific to the USA immigrant situation and property management, not infallibility. After the break, they sought out the OCs for consecration of bishops, and for awhile were associated with them.There’s always groups who don’t recognize Councils it seems. I wonder if the Church knows by having a Council groups will break off?
Even Vatican l, the Old Catholics and I believe the Polish National Church broke away because of that Council, I believe it was papal infallibility they couldn’t agree to accept.
While I agree with you about disobedience leading to disunity, I also believe that most traditional Catholics would be able to accept Liturgy as Pope Paul VI gave to the Church- Ad Orientem, Latin, Novus Ordo with Incense. That is actually normative Liturgy of the Latin Church, and while Ad Populum is allowed, it is not original form of Novus Ordo- same way Extraordinary Form is allowed but is, well, extraordinary. Problem is that right now, many people see Liturgical abuses in Ordinary Form- something that was before done in Tridentine Mass too, but nowadays if someone wants to celebrate EF they are mostly very careful about doing so according to rubrics.That is ultimately the reason there is so much division today about liturgy. Disobedience always leads to disunity.
In short, because the ethnic Irish and German bishops were abusing the Polish portion their flock.The PNCC broke off from RCC for reasons of their own, specific to the USA immigrant situation and property management, not infallibility.
They tend to use and adapt RCC liturgical materials.The PNCC seems frustratingly close to the RCC, they likely wouldn’t disagree with much if anything in V2.
From what I’ve heard from SSPX folks, they generally do not post on here because they are run out of town by those who guard the commends, so you’re likely to only get one side rather than both on this issue. I have friends and contacts in the SSPX, and I can tell you that this particular family’s strong disdain for the FSSP is not the norm. There are some bitter feelings that Some still retain from the initial split where the leaders of the FSSP left after the ordinations and some view them as “traitors” because of that; however, from what I have seen and heard and overall feelings, most on both sides do not have hard feelings. There is a strong movement to reunite the clans, and there are conferences where members of all parties are uniting in the fight against modernism and overlooking the differences.If possible I would like to hear from both sides here. My goal is to understand how the two “sides” view each other now — so I can reason with the young man (and, eventually, his parents) on this. To me it’s ludicrous that two good Catholic kids with good intentions could be split up because they go to different “branches” of the Latin Mass church. It just seems insane.
That’s not entirely true. The SSPX has an entire article published on their website addressing the FSSP. I’m not sure if one is permitted to link to the SSPX website here, so I won’t, but I will post a brief excerpt from their site below in which they are referring to the FSSP (I apologize in advance if someone has already referenced this):I think I’ve found what I wanted to know, that this is more of a local thing than the norm in the SSPX.
The article goes on to write that attending their Masses demonstrates acceptance of their supposed “compromise”. This is not to say that every SSPX parishioner or priest necessarily feels this way. I do know for a fact that there are some SSPX priests who would not tell someone to stay away from an FSSP parish. However, the SSPX as a whole does generally discourage attendance at FSSP Masses, or any Mass in union with what they would term the “conciliar church”.In practice, the priests of the Fraternity must have recourse to a Novus Ordo bishop willing to permit the traditional rites and willing to ordain their candidates. They reject the Novus Ordo Missae only because it is not their “ spirituality ” and claim the traditional Roman Mass only in virtue of their “ charism ” acknowledged to them by the pope. Note, for example, the Fraternity’s whole-hearted acceptance of the (New) Catechism of the Catholic Church, acceptance of Novus Ordo professors in their seminaries, and blanket acceptance of Vatican II’s orthodoxy (question 6).
I suppose if would depend on what you mean by “illicit actions”. I do not believe I have ever witnessed such a Mass myself (that I can remember, anyway), but I would advise you to perhaps first express your disapproval of said actions with the pastor, and if that does not work, then do as Christ says and “shake off the dust from your feet” (Matthew 10:14) and find another parish. If the solution is for you to attend a Latin Mass, then go for it. Absolutely nothing wrong with that, if you have one available to you and it’s offered by your diocese or a priestly fraternity in communion with the Church.What if the Ordinary Form masses in your area have several illicit actions taking place. So many so that in effect they are further from truth than that of an SSPX mass?
This is a legitimate question. For I see this in my area frequently.
illicit does not mean invalid. Seek out better Masses then, but even if you are forced to attend those Masses time to time, it does not really invalidate your intention of visiting Masses for Christ.What if the Ordinary Form masses in your area have several illicit actions taking place. So many so that in effect they are further from truth than that of an SSPX mass?