T
Tarpeian_Rock
Guest
Liked your post. In my reading I’ve come across so many shades of “traditionalists:” people who regard Pius XII as unforgivable for the Holy Week changes; people who regard St. Pius X as unforgivable for the Breviary changes of 1911, and thereby paving the way (in their minds) for the “Novus Ordo;” people who reject the 1962 Missal because of the inclusion of St. Joseph. People who regard the last “sound” papacy as that of Pius IX. And I’ve even seen one writer claim that the last truly unimpeachable papacy took place sometime in the 12th Century. All this is terribly sad.I think it’s just that the word “traditionalist” has become loaded in the Catholic context. There are those who use the label in a derisory way to denigrate those with attachment to some older forms of piety, and there are those who impose it on themselves to “circle the wagons” and keep out people who don’t think the way they do (trust me the latter exists). Part of the problem too is that “traditions” of the Church is a moving target. The Church continues to evolve, as does her liturgy. So yes, often “traditionalist” becomes a snapshot in time (in the Catholic usage). There are some, for instance, who can’t brook the 1955 Holy Week changes. So you have pre-55 and post-55 “traditionalists”! You have “traditionalist” laity attached to the 1960 Breviary that in the first place isn’t “traditional” and in the second, that was almost never prayed by the Laity except in the public celebration of Vespers from time to time or when visiting religious communities. Hardly a “tradition”!
It just all makes little sense to me.
Thus I say labeling is not Catholic.
Dialogue is Catholic.
Maybe people just feel like they want to “belong” to something. Funny me for thinking that belonging to the Church, or one of her recognized lay movements (oblates, third orders, whatever) was sufficient![]()