Absolutely. A Bishop’s responsibility is overwhelming and they deserve our love, respect, and prayers.
My specific response was to the post that wondered why someone would go to an SSPX chapel when there are EF Masses available elsewhere. My point was that in many places, EF Masses are not available. Brother, you did an admirable job listing many practical reasons why this may be so. However, in my particular situation, the Bishop (and the Bishop in the neighboring diocese) are actively hostile towards the EF and traditional Catholic practices, and not for the reasons you mention. I imagine this situation exists elsewhere, too. I ask you, and other readers, to accept that there are Bishops who refuse the EF, despite the desire of parishioners and priests, and it has nothing to do with scheduling, but mainly to do with their disapproval of things traditional.
There are going to be all kinds of people in all walks of life. The priesthood is no exception. Unless the priesthood draws its men from a pool other than the one Microsoft uses, dioceses and religious orders are going to draw the same mixed bag of people. The fact that there are some bishops or pastors hostile to the EF is not a surprise to me. Though in my experience, working with many bishops, the number of hostile bishops is an insignificant percentage. It seems bigger than life to the person who loves the EF and happens to be in that bishop’s diocese. As a conference, the US bishops are come in three groups. The vast majority who are neither going to market it nor oppose it, as long as it’s possible to do. A smaller group that loves it and the smallest group that is antagonistic toward it.
Like everything else in life, we must strive to understand why someone would be antagonistic. I can only speak from personal experience.
I have heard some people say that the EF was brought back only to please the SSPX; but look at how the SSPX has treated Rome and how the SSPX clergy speak about the rest of us Catholics every chance they get. This has bred some resentment. In my opinion, the resentment is misplaced; but it’s there and it happens in many situations. Ask anyone who is married or anyone who has kids.
There is that second group to which I belong. When I first became superior, the EF lovers would not leave me in peace. They knew that I have one brother who knows how to celebrate it and likes doing so. Now I know what a parents of a nagging five-year old feels like. These folks could not take, “Let’s see” or “I have to think about it” or “Our community is not a community of priests. Our priests are for the benefit of the community, not the outside world.” These are perfectly reasonable responses. What I received in return were challenges, “What do you have against the EF?” I have nothing against the EF. I do have something against people getting in my way when I’m trying to work and I have something against people trying to get me to turn my community into something that it’s not.
Like me, there are others who at the end of the day saw a Traditionalist coming and we’d cross the street. Yet, we would pray our LOTH in Latin, attend an EF mass with comfort, attend an OF in Latin, English, Spanish or other and are very orthodox in our theology and how we live. But we wanted to avoid certain people. I could mention the folks from the other side of the aisle whom I avoided, but that’s another thread.
A third group simply does not like the EF. They have a misunderstanding of Vatican II. They see the EF as going backward. But this happens because they see Vatican II out of context. When you don’t look at it as part of an ongoing and fluid tradition, your Church history either ends or begins at Vatican II.
Finally, there is a fourth group, which is a younger group and I include myself there. I was about 12 when Vatican II started and maybe 19 when the liturgy was revised. I can’t really say that I was an EF kid. Most of my life I’ve known only the OF or the other rites. We’re curious about the EF. Some of us like it very much. However, for some it’s a novelty that wears out within a year or two. There are many reasons why the novelty wears off. But these men stop celebrating it after a while. Within this younger group you have the many priests in the Ecclesia Dei institutes and religious communities.
There is no one reason why people in the mainstream are for or against the EF. I’m sure there are other reasons that I missed. Whether the bishop allows it or not, every Catholic must remember that unless there is what the Church considers a legitimate reason to attend mass at an SSPX chapel, they should not do so. I am being very specific, because we have a tendency to create our own “legitimate reasons” for doing or not doing things. In this case, the Church tells us what she wants. She has said that the SSPX chapels are to be avoided. She has not put a contingency, “avoid unless you can’t find another EF mass.”
We must be very careful not to put the form of the mass over the authority of the Church. In the end, it is the authority of the Church that acknowledges or abrogates the form.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, FFV
