1. The Of is the ordinary form of the Roman mass
This is merely a matter of rule.
2. The OF is to be respected as it is equal to the EF
I cannot personally accept this having seen the criticisms I have. I defer to the Holy Father in all things, but I cannot simply act as if I see no deficiencies in a liturgy that I think cannot compare to the ancient use. Our Holy Father himself speaks of the hermeneutics of rupture and continuity, and to me it seems as if a liturgy created by a committee replacing a liturgy that came about organically through Catholic history is the very essence of rupture. To me, the Novus Ordo itself is a product of an hermeneutic of rupture. The Orthodox would never do what we Romans have done to our liturgy.
3. These are not two rites, but the same Roman mass with the same dignity and sanctity
I do not deny this.
*4. The Of will remain in effect the official form for the Western Church
*I think this is unfortunate, but I have no power to effect otherwise.
5. The creation of the OF was needed
I accept all of the dogmas of the Catholic faith, but I cannot believe this and there is no anathema that forces me to.
6. All abuses are to be avoided in both the EF and the OF
I heartily agree.
**Also, while I desire to trust you in a charitable manner, I find it difficult to believe the same Ratzinger who said this
“After the Council… in place of the liturgy as the fruit of organic development came fabricated liturgy. We abandoned the organic, living process of growth and development over centuries, and replaced it, as in a manufacturing process, with a fabrication, a banal on-the-spot product.”
Would also claim what you have claimed./**QUOTE]
I’m hering the last point in this post. The highlight is mine. Obviously, I’ve never been a pope, but I have been and am in positions of leadership. Sometimes you have to do the best with a situation that you inherit.
To do so, you must look at it from all sides. As a theologian who was in the the Congregation for the Faith it was easy for Joseph Ratzinger to zone in on the problems with the liturgical reform and identify them. He did a very good job at it too. This was his job. That’s what he got paid for, to help the Holy Father and bishops see areas of strength and weaknesses within the Church.
It was not his job to fix any of it. He was not the boss. Nor did he fave to live the the moral judgement over him if he made a mistake. He was a theological consultant. That is what the Secretary for the Congregation of the Faith is. The Protector of the Faith is really the Pope.
Now he’s in a different pair of shoes. He has to look at the liturgical reform from a different window. He has to look at his own prior assessment of the situation and of the assessment by his predecessors. He didn’t have to dothat before. Being a scholar and a holy man he realizes one thing. “I have the authority to make this right by legitimizing it.”
As the keeper of the keys and the person who has the power to bind and unbind, he can legitimize the liturgical reforms by declaring them valid and the same as the Tridentine form and requiring that people tweek out the abuses that were present over the years, but preserve the form as it was intended by his predecessors.
What he is doing is something that he could not do in the past, because he had no authority. He is no binding. He is binding Catholics to accept the reform of the liturgy as equal to in dignity and sanctity to the traditional liturgy, regardless of its origin. In a certain sense, this is his first real exercise of power as Peter.
It’s almost as saying, “Forget how it came to be. This is what it is and I am authorizing it. Now, take the junk out of it and celebrate it as it was meant to be celebrated.”
If one notices, when he celebrates the OF, he does so in the manner that the reform meant for it to be celebrated. It is actually quite beautiful.
Get what I mean?
JR