I’m sorry, but Catholic South America is not without problems, and significantly so. They are merely different problems than those of North America.
I did not say South America was without problems, and by the way I stated my comment, a discerning reader would have understood that. Thank you for pointing out what others may not have perceived.
You can keep telling posters that they’re “off-topic,” but the facts are that the SSPX (topic of this thread) was and is a response to perceived crises, plural. Initially and today. The canonical situation has been talked to death, and I think most people are aware that the SSPX is on the margins of the Church and remains in ambiguous status at best. The election of Pope Francis has intensified concerns within some such groups about the direction of the Church. (I’m not an SSPX-er) To the extent that there is a perception, accurately reported in the media or not, that the Pope is disinclined to view the western Church to be in crisis, the SSPX will likely be more inclined to schism, and thus discussion of hypothetical “crises” is quite on-topic.
It seems clear that you don’t wish to address it, but other posters do, because the SSPX (topic of thread) wants to.
It was and is a response to a perceived problem, and their perception is seriously skewed as to the source of the problem. We seem to have a number of people wringing their hands over Pope Francis. That is in large part due to the fact that those wringing their hands do not understand that the secular press should never be the source of information concerning the Catholic Church.
And having read the Pope’s comments - not from the secular press but from reliable Catholic sources, I am aware, as anyone else who reads reliable sources should be, that this Pope clearly recognizes there is a crisis in the world; and that world includes both Catholics who have left the Church, and those who were merely baptized and never went further in their faith, as well as those who are not Catholic - which is pretty much the greater majority of the world.
And as he has so clearly and unequivocally stated, the world - including the greater majority of those baptized Catholic - need to be evangelized, for they have not the faintest clue who Christ is. That, however, has precious little to do with the bishops (and priests) of the SSPX.
The SSPX will not be more likely to drift into schism because of this. They are more likely to drift into schism because they simply will not comply with what the Church - as represented by the dicastery and at the direction of Benedict 16, said was the minimum necessary.
The issue with the SSPX is truly simple, but it takes critical thinking to separate all the chaff from the last 40 or so years and distill what the essence of the issue is. I have no doubt that if they do end up in formal schism, that people will be going on and on about how it was Pope Francis, and his “failure to understand the true crisis in the Church”; and we will see Benedict blamed, and John Paul blamed, and Paul blamed. And there will be all sorts of rationalizations about this and that and other sundry non-issues. Coincidence is not causality, a point that the bishops and priests of the SSPX can’t seem to learn. Add to that a Church teaching prior to Vatican 2 (since they seem so enamored with prior teaching and so put off by the documents), that the Holy Spirit protects the Church from error when it teaches on faith and morals, and their arguments simply fall apart. A point (about the Holy Spirit) I learned in grade school before John 23rd was any more than just another bishop.