Vatican clarifying Latin Mass rules

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Vatican clarifying Latin Mass rules

Associated Press via Yahoo
1/3/08

By NICOLE WINFIELD, Associated Press

The Vatican has begun drafting a document to elaborate on Pope Benedict XVI’s recent liberalization of the old Latin Mass because some bishops are either ignoring his move or misinterpreting it, Vatican officials said.

The Vatican’s No. 2, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, said in comments published Thursday that the Vatican would be issuing an “instruction” on how to put the pope’s document into practice, since there had been what he called some “uneven” reactions to it since it went into effect last year.

The document Benedict issued in July removed restrictions on celebrating the so-called Tridentine Mass, the rite celebrated in Latin before the liberalizing reforms of the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s paved the way for the new Mass used widely today in local languages.

Following the 1960s reform, the Tridentine rite could only be celebrated with permission from local bishops — an obstacle that supporters of the old rite said had greatly reduced its availability.

In a gesture to such traditional Catholics, Benedict removed that requirement in his document, saying parish priests could celebrate the Tridentine Mass if a “stable group of faithful” requested it.

Implementation, however, has been uneven, with some bishops issuing rules that “practically annul or twist the intention of the pope,” Monsignor Albert Malcolm Ranjith, secretary of the Vatican’s Congregation for the Divine Cult and Discipline of Sacraments, said recently, according to the Vatican’s missionary news agency FIDES.

Such reactions amounted to a “crisis of obedience” toward the pontiff, he was quoted as saying, although he stressed that most bishops and other prelates had accepted the pope’s will “with the required sense of reverence and obedience.”

Bertone, the Vatican’s secretary of state, said the upcoming instruction would lay out criteria for the pope’s document to be correctly applied, according to an interview published Thursday in the Italian religious affairs weekly Famiglia Cristiana. He gave no date for its publication.

He complained that reactions to the pontiff’s document had been uneven.

“Some have even gone so far as to accuse the pope of having reneged on Council teaching,” Bertone was quoted as saying. “On the other hand, there are those who have interpreted the (document) as authorization to return exclusively to the pre-Council rite. Both positions are wrong, and are exaggerated episodes that don’t correspond to the pope’s intention.”

Despite such incidents, the Rev. John T. Zuhlsdorf, who runs a blog that has charted implementation of the pope’s document, said he had seen growth in both interest in and celebrations of the older form of the Mass.

“In some dioceses in the United States, bishops have been stepping up to the plate and not only learning the older form, but celebrating it themselves,” he said in an e-mail. “Younger priests are attending workshops. Several seminaries are offering training for their priesthood candidates.”

Even before the pope’s document was released, liberal-minded Catholics had complained that Benedict’s move amounted to a negation of Vatican II, and some bishops and cardinals publicly warned that its implementation would create a rupture in the church.

Jewish groups also complained because the old rite contains a Good Friday prayer for the conversion of Jews. Bertone has said the issue could be resolved and that the church in no way intended to go against its spirit of reconciling with Jews.

Benedict’s document was also a bid to reach out to the followers of an excommunicated traditionalist, the late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, who split with the Vatican over Council reforms, notably the introduction of the new Mass.
 
Vatican, Dec. 31, 2007 (CWNews.com) - The Vatican will soon issue a new document clarifying the terms of Summum Pontificum, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone has revealed.
Confirming reports that have circulated around Rome in recent weeks, the Vatican Secretary of State told the Italian weekly Famiglia Cristiana that the Ecclesia Dei commission will issue instructions to “clarify the criteria for the application of the motu proprio” in which Pope Benedict XVI broadened access to the traditional Latin Mass.
Cardinal Bertone said that the new document was needed because there have been some “confused reactions” to the motu proprio. In fact some Vatican officials-- most notably Archbishop Malcolm Ranjith, the secretary of the Congregation for Divine Worship-- have energetically criticized bishops who have failed to accept the papal directive.
This news came out earlier this week, but I have been working with my contacts to try to get more information. In a world exclusive I have gotten hold of the new document which is being released in a format that up to now has never been used before by the Vatican. I don’t know how it will be received by some bishops, but I think the new format will be helpful for them.

http://www.splendoroftruth.com/curtjester/Pics/motu_dummies.png

And here is a sample page.

http://www.splendoroftruth.com/curtjester/Pics/motu_dummies_inside.png

Posted by Jeff Miller at January 3, 2008 05:28
 
I may get rotten tomatoes thrown at me, but if Cardinal Bertone is issuing a clarification about the Motu Proprio, I am concerned
 
I may get rotten tomatoes thrown at me, but if Cardinal Bertone is issuing a clarification about the Motu Proprio, I am concerned
Why? (By the way, I know nothing about Cardinal Bertone)
 
This seems to be a very fair and well-informed article by the AP. It’s nice to see that happen in the media!

-Rob
 
I say we honor what Vatican II gave us, the right to say mass in the language of the region where mass is celebrated. The Catholic high school in my hometown doesn’t even teach Latin anymore.
 
And I say we honor what the Council of Trent gave us WHILE we honor what Vatican II gave us.

And nobody has the ‘right’ to say Mass.

Luckily nobody needs to have learned Latin from their parochial school, we have Missals.
 
I say we honor what Vatican II gave us, the right to say mass in the language of the region where mass is celebrated. The Catholic high school in my hometown doesn’t even teach Latin anymore.
I wholeheartedly agree. Thus, we look to Sacrosanctum Concilium, the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy from Vatican II:
    1. Particular law remaining in force, the use of the Latin language is to be preserved in the Latin rites.
-ACEGC
 
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