J
jeannetherese
Guest
Patience and prayer… May our Lord bless them and keep them and guide them home. Amen.
I advise caution here. Bishop Fellay spoke for over an hour and a half, which is difficult to condense in a news article of a few hundred words. In my opinion this article lacks the full context necessary to understand what the Bishop actually meant and was trying to get across in the message he delivered. The inflammatory statements regarding the “enemies” of the Church are a bit misleading in their presentation. I suggest listening to the whole statement personally prior to drawing any absolute conclusions or opinions.I have this latest update to offer but do so very sadly, as it looks to me like the SSPX will never, certainly in this generation, enter into full communion with the Church and all the efforts of our Holy Father have come to nothing, except a sorrow that all mother’s bear when their child is prodigal.
Bishop Fellay has for the past few months been travelling the globe giving sermons to his followers stating that it was due to being misled by vatican officials that he appeared to be betraying the SSPX position and that he personally had no intention of NOT holding the line…
"In an audio recording from a nearly two-hour talk Dec. 28 at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Academy in New Hamburg, Ont., Bishop Bernard Fellay, superior general of the society, claimed that top Vatican officials told him not to be discouraged by official statements from the Vatican, because they did not reflect Pope Benedict XVI’s true feelings.
The Vatican press office declined to comment Jan. 4 on the claims."
“Apparently speaking without a text, he also called the Jewish people “enemies of the Church,” saying Jewish leaders’ support of the Second Vatican Council “shows that Vatican II is their thing, not the Church’s.””
“Those most opposed to the Church granting canonical recognition to the traditionalist society have been “the enemies of the Church: the Jews, the Masons,” he said.”
There was no response Jan. 4 from the society’s Swiss headquarters to a Catholic News Service e-mail request for comment.
**
"The unofficial assurances were what kept him engaged in talks, he said, since the Vatican’s official demands, which carried the Pope’s approval, “would mean the end of our relation with Rome.”**
"Fellay said, “Even in the council there are some things we accept,” as well as reject, however, the group wishes to be free to say, “there are errors in the council” and that "the new Mass is evil."Code:"Fellay said Pope Benedict wrote to him, emphasizing that full recognition required the society accept the magisterium as the judge of what is tradition, accept the council as an integral part of tradition and accept that the modern Mass is valid and licit."
“The group will not accept reconciliation if it means no longer being able to make such pronouncements, he said.”
catholicregister.org/news/international/item/15637-sspx-head-says-vatican-sent-mixed-messages-during-reconciliation-talks
Yes, it is a very long talk to explain to his followers that he had not had any intention to “betray” the cause and reconcile with Rome, nor to accept their offer of a Personal Prelature under the conditions of the Doctrinal Preamble - nor those of the Holy Father who wrote to him to confirm the conditions for full communion.I advise caution here. Bishop Fellay spoke for over an hour and a half, which is difficult to condense in a news article of a few hundred words. In my opinion this article lacks the full context necessary to understand what the Bishop actually meant and was trying to get across in the message he delivered. The inflammatory statements regarding the “enemies” of the Church are a bit misleading in their presentation. I suggest listening to the whole statement personally prior to drawing any absolute conclusions or opinions.
mda
A few pages back there is a link to the whole speech. It has already been commented on by myself and others.These extracts contradict what Bishop Fellay is trying to say right now - although he could go on to claim they were made in the midst of the “confusion” created by Vatican officials
DICI: *The year 2012 is not 1988, the year of your episcopal consecration. In 2009 the excommunications were lifted, in 2007 it was officially acknowledged that the Tridentine Mass had “never been abrogated”, but now some members of the Society lament the fact that the Church has not yet converted. Is their *a priori *refusal of a canonical recognition due to forty years of an exceptional situation, resulting in a certain inability to understand submission to authority?
*
Bishop Fellay:"** What is happening these days clearly shows some of our weaknesses with regard to the dangers that are created by the situation in which we find ourselves. One of the great dangers is to end up inventing an idea of the Church that appears ideal, but is in fact not found in the real history of the Church. Some claim that in order to work “safely” in the Church, she must first be cleansed of all error. This is what they say when they declare that Rome must convert before any agreement, or that its errors must first be suppressed so that we can work. But that is not the reality. ** It is enough to look at the Church’s past: often, and almost always, we see that there are widespread errors in the Church. ** Now the reforming saints did not leave the Church in order to combat these errors.** Our Lord taught us that there would always be weeds until the end of time. Not just the good crop, not only the wheat."
“At the time of the Arians, the bishops labored in the midst of errors to convince those who were mistaken about the truth. They did not say that they wanted to be outside, as some say now. Of course, we must always be very careful about these expressions, “inside”, “outside”, because we are of the Church and we are Catholic.”
"But can we for that reason refuse to convince those who are in the Church, on the pretext that they are full of errors? Look at what the saints did! ** If the Good Lord allows us to be in a new situation, in close combat in the service of the truth**…. This is the reality that Church history presents to us. The Gospel compares Christians to yeast; and do we want the dough to rise without us being in the dough?"
"In this situation, which some currently depict as an impossible situation**, we are being asked to come and work just as all the reforming saints of all times did. Certainly that does not do away with the danger. But if we have sufficient freedom to act, to live and to grow, this must be done. ** I really think that this must be done, on the condition that we have sufficient protection."
From A Interview with Bishop Fellay on relations with Rome DICI June8,2012
Might I ask what is in the context that might make these statements appropriate? It you do not think they fairly represent Bp. Fellay, then why?I advise caution here. Bishop Fellay spoke for over an hour and a half, which is difficult to condense in a news article of a few hundred words. In my opinion this article lacks the full context necessary to understand what the Bishop actually meant and was trying to get across in the message he delivered. The inflammatory statements regarding the “enemies” of the Church are a bit misleading in their presentation. I suggest listening to the whole statement personally prior to drawing any absolute conclusions or opinions.
mda
Dee likes to cut and paste. I think she might be a primary school teacher!A few pages back there is a link to the whole speech. It has already been commented on by myself and others.
Volume VII of Joseph Ratzinger’s Collected Works, an anthology of his writings on the Second Vatican Council, was recently published in German. On November 28, 2012, the editor of the Opera Omnia, Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Müller, who is now also prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, presented this latest volume in the series at the Teutonic College of Santa Maria dell’Anima in Rome. This was the place where German and Austrian Council Fathers used to confer regularly with theologians and periti, including then-Father Ratzinger, at special meetings organized by Cardinal Frings of Cologne. An Italian version of Archbishop Müller’s speech appeared in the edition of L’Osservatore Romano dated November 29.
Although the speech ostensibly outlined the contents of Volume VII and quoted a few familiar passages from a Vatican II document, it elicited several sharply critical responses from traditional Catholics, including an unsigned, six-part analysis by a theologian from the Society of St. Pius X and an essay by historian Roberto de Mattei. What under other circumstances might have been a routine publishing event proved to be an informal but revealing moment in the ongoing theological discussions between the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the Society of St. Pius X.
Truer words have not been spoken…They are to be admired, because of all they have achieved in 40 years, but they are also to be helped. They have created a world of their own and it’s probably very frightening to them and their constituency to get out of that world. We need to show them that they will be OK, that other Catholics will help them and that the Church will protect them.
Fraternally,
Br JR, FFV![]()
I didn’t mention the bureaucracy at the Vatican because it’s their place to be there, unlike all of these other folks who are trying to be part of the SSPX’s daily affairs. Also, because when I hear Bishop Fellay speak about “One person told me one thing and another person told me something else,” it annoys me.Truer words have not been spoken…
But to the first part Brother, I think you also could note that the Vatican has probably more bureaucracy than ever as well. It would seem both sides have a lot of cooks in the kitchen and both sides are releasing information designed to elicit a response from the other.
I know. And you are right but it is still frustrating and one cannot help but feel that if the Pope and Fellay were in a room together for an evening there would be a solution. Or at least no room for the SSPX to claim it is getting mixed signals…I didn’t mention the bureaucracy at the Vatican because it’s their place to be there, unlike all of these other folks who are trying to be part of the SSPX’s daily affairs. Also, because when I hear Bishop Fellay speak about “One person told me one thing and another person told me something else,” it annoys me.
Any of us, bishops and major superiors, deal with the Vatican on a regular basis. We know that there are many voices in the Vatican. We also know that people at the Vatican are very human and they want to be helpful, but in attempting to be helpful they may speak out of turn. Unless they have been authorized to deliver a message, we take what they say in context. It is an attempt at kindness and it is speculation. For a major superior of an institute and a bishop of the Church not to know this or to use this as an excuse is unacceptable. Unless you’re a superior and a bishop who lives in a bubble. Bishop Fellay has been superior for more than 12 years.
A perfect example comes to my mind. When we applied to become an independent community, a certain cardinal told us that our request was very timely and it would be honored. That cardinal is part of the Sacred Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life. A few months later, the local bishop told us that this had to wait and be discerned more. We waited two years. The local bishop trumps any cardinal on this matter. Only the pope can overrule him. Had we not known this, we would have gone around saying, “But a cardinal told us that the time was right and now the bishop tells us that it’s not right. Which is it?”
But we knew who had the last word on this matter and we waited for him to speak. We waited for two years to do what we wanted to do.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, FFV![]()
It is not the Pope’s job to deal with the SSPX or with any institute in the Church. It’s not in his job description and he has more important things to deal with. This has been said everywhere in many polite ways.I know. And you are right but it is still frustrating and one cannot help but feel that if the Pope and Fellay were in a room together for an evening there would be a solution. Or at least no room for the SSPX to claim it is getting mixed signals…
I take it you’re bored of cutting & pasting…Dee likes to cut and paste. I think she might be a primary school teacher!![]()
He actually has been several times. Take a look at the ending of this video clip, where Bishop Fellay http://i1.ytimg.com/vi/DdnJigNzTuY/mqdefault.jpgI know. And you are right but it is still frustrating and one cannot help but feel that if the Pope and Fellay were in a room together for an evening there would be a solution. Or at least no room for the SSPX to claim it is getting mixed signals…
The great strength of the SSPX is the fact that they have a valid axe to grind. Nothing is going to change until mainstream parish life cleans its act up, which means until the ‘progressist’ parishes described earlier in this thread turn into approximations of the ‘ideal’ parish. So long as a Catholic with a knowledge of his Faith and an instinct for reverence finds himself parish hopping like a cat on a hot tin roof, the SSPX will be there saying “I told you so.”They are to be admired, because of all they have achieved in 40 years, but they are also to be helped. They have created a world of their own and it’s probably very frightening to them and their constituency to get out of that world. We need to show them that they will be OK, that other Catholics will help them and that the Church will protect them.
Fraternally,
Br JR, FFV![]()
If men like St. Augustine, St. Bernard of Clarevaux, St. Francis of Assisi, St. Dominic, St. Ignaitius of Loyola and women like St. Teresa of Avila, and Bl. Teresa of Calcutta has held this position that the Church had to clean up its act before they obliged the pope and obeyed, we would not have the wonderful fruit of their work and the great spiritual schools that they left us.The great strength of the SSPX is the fact that they have a valid axe to grind. Nothing is going to change until mainstream parish life cleans its act up, which means until the ‘progressist’ parishes described earlier in this thread turn into approximations of the ‘ideal’ parish. So long as a Catholic with a knowledge of his Faith and an instinct for reverence finds himself parish hopping like a cat on a hot tin roof, the SSPX will be there saying “I told you so.”
Personally, I would like to see the guns turned around a bit, and aimed at the very serious shortcomings in mainstream parish life that in effect are propping up the SSPX’s position. Once catechetics is solid and orthodox, and liturgy is reverent and recollected, everywhere, not just here and there, then the Society’s position won’t have a leg to stand on. That is how the problem of the SSPX will be solved. Until then it’s just King Lear shouting in a storm.
Sure, brother. No-one is querying that. The point is to recognise that ignoring the sometimes disastrous situation in contemporary parishes because to do so would imply a criticism of the hierarchy who oversee this situation, isn’t going to help anybody. One must respect and obey one’s hierarchical superiors in all that is not sin, but one must not forget that priests and bishops can fail spectacularly in their ecclesiastical mission, as did the quasi-totality of the English hierarchy during the reign of Henry VIII.If men like St. Augustine, St. Bernard of Clarevaux, St. Francis of Assisi, St. Dominic, St. Ignaitius of Loyola and women like St. Teresa of Avila, and Bl. Teresa of Calcutta has held this position that the Church had to clean up its act before they obliged the pope and obeyed, we would not have the wonderful fruit of their work and the great spiritual schools that they left us.
And sometimes it has been necessary, in a time of crisis, to remind the prelates in the Church of their duty, as St Paul did St Peter in Antioch: “I opposed him to his face”. There is a fine line to walk between accepting the decisions of one’s superior when no spiritual good is at stake, and not accepting it when it is. I would say bad catechism is a pretty major spiritual good at stake, as is a badly celebrated liturgy (the ‘not accepting’ means taking active steps to compensate for harmful effects of the bad decisions, all the while maintaining respect for superior concerned. It doesn’t mean sticking inflammatory notices on the parish noticeboard).The Church, like her master is human and divine, with one difference. Her humanity is affected by the ravages of Original sin. This has been the case since the first day that Peter set out to preach on Pentecost Sunday and has never changed. One crisis has replaced another, one weakness is overcome and another pops up and so forth.
Right. So one needs to clean house which means recognise there is dirt on the floor needing removal. Recognise, announce, repeat, state, repeat again. ***Not ***put up with.This was the position of Martin Luther. He would not work with the Church until the Church cleaned house. The more intransigent he became, the more distorted his view of the Church and of Christian doctrine became.
Absolutely. What is needed are distinctions (which I have mentioned in earlier posts). I have the impression Bishop Fellay was beginning to see the light earlier this year but there has been some major backpedalling since then. A real shame, but what can you do? Just get back to our own job of building up the Mystical Body.If the SSPX wants to wait until every parish runs ideally, then the SSPX shall remain outside of full communion and will never have a canonical place in the Church. This may seem trivial to some, but it’s of great importance to the Magisterium and to the reformers of history. These holy reformers not only won the crown of sanctity, but they proved that you can only change one thing at a time and you leave the rest to the next reformer who comes along. None of them transformed every parish and every religious community into the ideal. They succeeded in doing several things. They transformed their sphere. They gave to the Church the gift of their charism which goes on today. Most important to all of them, they remained in full canonical communion with the Primacy, which the SSPX lacks.
The four conditions that the Holy Father has laid out for full communion and canonical recognition of the SSPX are no different from what is expected of everyone else.
- Acknowledge and comply with the fact that only the pope can decide what is and is not part of Tradition.
- Acknowledge that the Ordinary Form of the mass is BOTH valid and licit. The SSPX says that it’s ilicit. To quote Bishop Fellay “It’s bad.” He’s not talking about the silliness that people insert into the mass. He says that the form itself is doctrinally bad. He’s making a judgment that’s contrary to that of five popes and teaching something that is contrary to what the Church teaches about this particular form of the mass.
- To acknowledge that the decrees of Vatican II are part of Tradition; therefore, they are error free. No one said that they do not need clarification and greater explanation or better implementation. What the pope is demanding is that the SSPX stop saying that the documents contradict the faith. There are many teachings that are faithful, but not very clear. Try reading the works of St. Catherine of Sienna.
- To accept that the CCC is the official catechism of the Catholic Church. The Catechism of St. Pius X was never the official catechism of the Catholic Church, nor was the Baltimore Catechism. The CCC is based on the Catechism of Trent, which is one of the official catechisms of the Church. There is nothing in it that contradicts the faith.