Vatican Confirms SSPX Is Being Offered Personal Prelature

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Maybe. They’re headquartered in Arizona, or at least they used to be, and have a house in Rome. It can be like pulling teeth to get canonical distinctions out of some of these smaller organizations, because a good many of them want to be as big-looking and reputable-looking as possible for obvious reasons.

I do know that the diocese of Rome was involved. They have houses all over the world but the initial attention to the problem actually occurred in the diocese of Rome.
That’s the same community. They’re very big and they are approved by the Church. They’re just in a different classification. I don’t know anything about their relationship with the Holy See. The first time that I ran into them was in Rome, many years ago and later in the USA.

Your canonical status does not make you reputable. Look at the Legion. It has pontifical right and it has many problems too. My little community has the approval of the local Archbishop and we have little problems and so far, praise God, much success.

It’s funny, because I was just asked that question in the Cath News forum. Someone went to our website and said that we were not approved by either bishop or pope. I went :confused:

I knew that our site needs to be updated and the format has to be changed, but I thought that was in there. I went to look and it is in there, embedded in a paragraph. I remember when I wrote that section, a long time ago. I was more interested in our mission than our status. I just sort of threw it in there Whereas I went on and on about our mission and spirituality. Maybe the status is more important. I never thought so. You can say it in one line. We were approved by such and such a bishop or pope. Not much more to tell. 🤷

I guess that my point is that I don’t understand why it would be so difficult for any group or superior to say, "Our status is . . . " as long as their legally Catholic. Maybe it’s me. 🤷

I’m glad that we’re small, because I’m old, not very healthy and I want to enjoy and do a few other things before I die, which are more interesting that sitting behind a desk with accounts and paperwork that goes into managing a large community. Did that once. Don’t want to do it again. :nope:

Fraternally,

Br. JR, FFV 🙂
 
Okay, just snooping around for a bit, it looks like they had diocesan right in the diocese of Rome for the last few years and that’s where the general house had been moved to from Phoenix, AZ, where they were founded. So yes, that’s the occasion for the changes in charism that they’ve undergone, which have been very significant.

Still these other things that I mentioned before really do enter into the equation…as they did with the Legionaries of Christ, also undergoing radical changes that reach right down deeply into the way of life and the charism, which in their case is also necessary.
 
Your canonical status does not make you reputable. Look at the Legion.
I know, but the people who are even aware enough to think about it do. There’s no other “better business bureau” in the Catholic world. 😃
It’s funny, because I was just asked that question in the Cath News forum. Someone went to our website and said that we were not approved by either bishop or pope. I went :confused
:…
I guess that my point is that I don’t understand why it would be so difficult for any group or superior to say, "Our status is . . . " as long as their legally Catholic. Maybe it’s me. 🤷

I know, Br JR, but you’re just honest. 😃

PS. I found it. It’s there. Most organizations are about 1% that forthcoming. 😛
 
I must admit, lifting the excommunication has caused more confusion. Since the excommunication was a charge of canon 1382 (1983 Code of Canon Law) dealing with the unlawful consecration of four bishops, and not their differences with Vatican II and the OF, what is the purpose of this reconciliation then if they were never formally charged with their stance against the council? Unless they’re position is grounds for latae sententiae interdict or suspension?
The bold is mine

That’s the issue. The really shot themselves in the foot with Bl. John Paul and Pope Benedict when they started to run a campaign against Vatican II and some of them even questioned the validity of the sacraments after the changes in the rites.

Their love for the Tridentine mass never was the issue. It was their hostility toward the Council, the CCC, the OF, the beatification of John Paul II, Mother Teresa and John XXIII, their antagonism of the big three: (Dominicans, Franciscans and Jesuits) and toward Opus Dei. Let’s admit here here. The SSPX is little league next to these guys. Especially if you stop and think that all the religious communities in the Church the Dominicans and Franciscans have more bishops than anyone else. You’re going to be creamed, if you badmouth them. Opus Dei is a personal prelature of the pope and you’re openly hostile to it? That’s not one of your better ideas.

Together, Dominicans, Franciscans, Jesuits and Opus Dei make up more than 50% of the best scholars in the Church today. There are very bright men in the SSPX, but scholarship is not their thing. These other guys have houses with several hundred men who do nothing all day but research, read and write. They run pontifical universities. They are employed by the Holy See in very high offices. You criticize their understanding of the Church and the past and you criticize them because they allegedly “blindly obey” as was said, you’re not making friends.

Your understanding of obedience is going to be called into question as well as your commitment to obey from now on. All of these pieces created an image and raised a concern in many minds. I’m not talking about anti-Trad minds. I’m talking about honestly good people who try very hard to do the right thing.

The worse part was that it was never Bishop Fellay. It was his subordinates and one or two of the other bishops. Bishop Fellay is pretty polite person. But these guys were blogging and writing newsletters all over the Internet and making statements from the pulpit. It’s probably a handful of men. As I always say, “Those who are not causing trouble rarely get noticed.” I can’t blame the Holy See for wanting them to sort out what they really think from what some of their hardliners think.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, FFV 🙂
 
Yes, and most of that kind of activity took place in Europe during the Vatican II New New New heyday, when it was very likely to get them into trouble. Particularly in France. France was really messed up after VII. Still is. So is Holland.

But the real kicker was when they looked like they were going to settle down, then suddenly Abp. LeFebvre bolted from the pack, and tried to illicitly ordain some bishops as some kind of guarantee. That’s what really elicited the excommunications. You can’t do that.
 
Yes, and most of that kind of activity took place in Europe during the Vatican II New New New heyday, when it was very likely to get them into trouble. Particularly in France. France was really messed up after VII. Still is.

But the real kicker was when they looked like they were going to settle down, then suddenly Abp. LeFebvre bolted from the pack, and tried to illicitly ordain some bishops as some kind of guarantee. That’s what really elicited the excommunications. You can’t do that.
Let’s face it, the Church in France has been a mess since the French Revolution. To say that it was Vatican II that threw the Catholics in France under the bus is not to know French history. France and Italy stopped being Catholic a very long time ago. The last Catholic nation in Europe was Spain and now that’s gone. Only the little nations are Catholic, like Malta and Monaco.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, FFV 🙂
 
Let’s face it, the Church in France has been a mess since the French Revolution. To say that it was Vatican II that threw the Catholics in France under the bus is not to know French history. France and Italy stopped being Catholic a very long time ago. The last Catholic nation in Europe was Spain and now that’s gone. Only the little nations are Catholic, like Malta and Monaco.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, FFV 🙂
Yes, probably right regarding France. Strange place, grossly overrated & overpriced. Wehn I visited a few years ago, they insisted that I speak French and got angry at me because I didn’t do it well, even though they knew exactly what I had been saying in English before. 🤷 Complete contrast to both the Spanish and the Dutch.

The Dutch even like keeping their language as a sort of code amongst themselves for business reasons. It upsets them a wee little bit when you start picking it up. They start looking at you out of one eye, wondering what you’re getting. 😛 I’ve been asked how much I understand point blank on occasion. They’re serious about it.

What’s really odd when you talk to Catholics is that many are under the impression that Italy is still very Catholic, which it’s not really. There are many people in Rome who aren’t Catholic in fact. One of the largest mosques in all of Europe is in Rome, not all that far from the Vatican.
 
What’s really odd when you talk to Catholics is that many are under the impression that Italy is still very Catholic, which it’s not really. There are many people in Rome who aren’t Catholic in fact. One of the largest mosques in all of Europe is in Rome, not all that far from the Vatican.
That’s depressing but perfectly acceptable according to Vatican II. It use to be that not even protestant churches were allowed in Rome. But when you stop being catholic, why would it matter.
 
The bold is mine
Misspelled ‘their.’ Apologies.
That’s the issue. The really shot themselves in the foot with Bl. John Paul and Pope Benedict when they started to run a campaign against Vatican II and some of them even questioned the validity of the sacraments after the changes in the rites.
It’s no secret though that Archbishop Lefebvre was not supportive of Vatican II. Unless I’m mistaken, he refused to accept Nostra aetate and Dignitatis humanae publicly and still was allowed his society and never had problems with Rome about his overt stance. It’s not the excommunication that bugs me; it’s that they were in communion prior to it with their position of the council.
 
The worse part was that it was never Bishop Fellay. It was his subordinates and one or two of the other bishops. Bishop Fellay is pretty polite person. But these guys were blogging and writing newsletters all over the Internet and making statements from the pulpit. It’s probably a handful of men. As I always say, “Those who are not causing trouble rarely get noticed.” I can’t blame the Holy See for wanting them to sort out what they really think from what some of their hardliners think.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, FFV 🙂
Bishop Fellay is polite, but that doesn’t mean he didn’t criticize Vatican II, Modernist Rome, the Conciliar Church, although he didn’t go around making anti-semetic remarks, etc.

I can send you a link to one of his sermons. I am sure Bishop Fellay is aware of what is espoused on the SSPX website.

I am very curious to see how all this will work out.
 
Their love for the Tridentine mass never was the issue. It was their hostility toward the Council, the CCC, the OF, the beatification of John Paul II, Mother Teresa and John XXIII, their antagonism of the big three: (Dominicans, Franciscans and Jesuits) and toward Opus Dei. Let’s admit here here. The SSPX is little league next to these guys. Especially if you stop and think that all the religious communities in the Church the Dominicans and Franciscans have more bishops than anyone else. You’re going to be creamed, if you badmouth them. Opus Dei is a personal prelature of the pope and you’re openly hostile to it? That’s not one of your better ideas.
Numbers and power don’t matter.

Now as I said before, I still think its unfair that the SSPX gets a prelature and the FSSP does not, although I thank you for explaining the limits of both.

However, I wholeheartedly believe that the SSPX were raised for a reason. I hope it is okay to say this. I am not prosyletizing.

They were raised at a time when a modernist mindset had so infected the Church, that we were moving away from our traditions. Thank God we have a Pope who understands sacred tradition.

Without the SSPX, I doubt the Latin mass would even be around, except for a few here and there taking place in hotel rooms.

I find this passage from the Book of Acts, chapter 5 to be very applicable. This takes place after some Apostles were put in jail for preaching the Word.
25 Then someone came and said, “Look! The men you put in jail are standing in the temple courts teaching the people.” 26 At that, the captain went with his officers and brought the apostles. They did not use force, because they feared that the people(AI) would stone them.
27 The apostles were brought in and made to appear before the Sanhedrin(AJ) to be questioned by the high priest. 28 “We gave you strict orders not to teach in this name,”(AK) he said. “Yet you have filled Jerusalem with your teaching and are determined to make us guilty of this man’s blood.”(AL)
29 Peter and the other apostles replied: “We must obey God rather than human beings!(AM) 30 The God of our ancestors(AN) raised Jesus from the dead(AO)—whom you killed by hanging him on a cross.(AP) 31 God exalted him to his own right hand(AQ) as Prince and Savior(AR) that he might bring Israel to repentance and forgive their sins.(AS) 32 We are witnesses of these things,(AT) and so is the Holy Spirit,(AU) whom God has given to those who obey him.”
33 When they heard this, they were furious(AV) and wanted to put them to death. 34 But a Pharisee named Gamaliel,(AW) a teacher of the law,(AX) who was honored by all the people, stood up in the Sanhedrin and ordered that the men be put outside for a little while. 35 Then he addressed the Sanhedrin: “Men of Israel, consider carefully what you intend to do to these men. 36 Some time ago Theudas appeared, claiming to be somebody, and about four hundred men rallied to him. He was killed, all his followers were dispersed, and it all came to nothing. 37 After him, Judas the Galilean appeared in the days of the census(AY) and led a band of people in revolt. He too was killed, and all his followers were scattered. 38 Therefore, in the present case I advise you: Leave these men alone! Let them go! For if their purpose or activity is of human origin, it will fail.(AZ) 39 But if it is from God, you will not be able to stop these men; you will only find yourselves fighting against God.”
Is it possible that God, through the Church, is affirming that these holy priests are here for a reason?
 
That’s depressing but perfectly acceptable according to Vatican II. It use to be that not even protestant churches were allowed in Rome. But when you stop being catholic, why would it matter.
I don’t think Vatican II has anything to do with who is allowed to build in Rome. Rome is part of Italy, not part of the Vatican state.
 
Really?

I do not think so. Even if all the SSPX priests were to come in there are only 511 of them world wide.

The United States has 39,466 priests. Worldwide there are 409,166.

So that means that the SSPX, again if all enter which I greatly doubt, amount to 0.125%.
I’m aware of that. I meant that their regularisation would be a signal to the wider Church that pre-1960’s Catholicism is no longer equivalent to heresy. I hope also that in a few decades a priest may elect to say the old rite without fear of losing preferment. Maybe even a few years! The message might get 'round.
 
Without the SSPX, I doubt the Latin mass would even be around, except for a few here and there taking place in hotel rooms.
Well, the FSSPX certainly were and are among the TLM/EF’s chief promoters.

I think some of them went a little overboard on their public negative campaigning (against the council, OF, etc) though. I don’t know if those in the mainstream will ever forgive them for that.
 
Well, the FSSPX certainly were and are among the TLM/EF’s chief promoters.

I think some of them went a little overboard on their public negative campaigning (against the council, OF, etc) though. I don’t know if those in the mainstream will ever forgive them for that.
Sorry. What I mean is that the FSSP came out of the SSPX.

The SSPX made it apparent to everyone that some of the faithful are really blessed by the TLM and so, the FSSP was created.
 
TrueLight;9414799:
Without the SSPX, I doubt the Latin mass would even be around, except for a few here and there taking place in hotel rooms.
Well, the FSSPX certainly were and are among the TLM/EF’s chief promoters.

I think some of them went a little overboard on their public negative campaigning (against the council, OF, etc) though. I don’t know if those in the mainstream will ever forgive them for that.
I agree with both of you.

Also, I remember attending the Latin Mass at a hotel. It confused the heck out of my kids.

Maybe it was the folding chairs :hmmm:

Anyway, I give Archbishop LeFebvre and the SSPX full 100% credit for saving the EF. Everyone else was obediently just letting it slip away, while it was breaking their hearts.

This did require some hardening of attitude among the followers. I heard comments like “we don’t trust the bishop” and that sort of thing. It was very off-putting. I turned my back on them because of that. Still, it is quite clear that there would not have been any indult Masses anywhere if not for the backlash. The very real threat of schism forced the bishops to react and try to defuse the movement by offering indult Masses.

Thankfully there were still some older priests around ready and eager to participate, and there were still some gorgeous old parishes in changing neighborhoods (which almost had become surplus properties) and indults were offered. Then instead of simply splitting the traditionalist movement, or defanging the SSPX, Latin Rite traditionalism became encouraged and grew.

My father didn’t live to see it. He would have appreciated the restored ‘Old Mass’, and this forum, I feel sure.
 
I agree with both of you.

Also, I remember attending the Latin Mass at a hotel. It confused the heck out of my kids.

Maybe it was the folding chairs :hmmm:

Anyway, I give Archbishop LeFebvre and the SSPX full 100% credit for saving the EF. Everyone else was obediently just letting it slip away, while it was breaking their hearts.

This did require some hardening of attitude among the followers. I heard comments like “we don’t trust the bishop” and that sort of thing. It was very off-putting. I turned my back on them because of that. Still, it is quite clear that there would not have been any indult Masses anywhere if not for the backlash. The very real threat of schism forced the bishops to react and try to defuse the movement by offering indult Masses.

Thankfully there were still some older priests around ready and eager to participate, and there were still some gorgeous old parishes in changing neighborhoods (which almost had become surplus properties) and indults were offered. Then instead of simply splitting the traditionalist movement, or defanging the SSPX, Latin Rite traditionalism became encouraged and grew.

My father didn’t live to see it. He would have appreciated the restored ‘Old Mass’, and this forum, I feel sure.
👍
 
I also believe that he replaced the superior at that time.
Neither of these are quite right.

Fr. Bisig was superior, but he was near the end of his term at the time the controversy arose.
Fr. Bisig was asked to delay any major decisions and, when his term was complete, his reelection was not permitted, and, Fr. Devillers was appointed superior by the Ecclesia Dei commission. It is not clear why Ecclesia Dei opposed Fr. Bisig, but perhaps the fact that he was older and had been rector of the SSPX seminary at Zaitzkofen played a role.
Six years later, at the end of Fr. Devillers’ term, in the first election since 1994, Fr. Berg was elected superior general of the FSSP.
 
My point is that regularization is about brothers coming home so that we can share the feast, not to convert each other. Conversion comes through the grace of God and it’s a process not magic.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, FFV 🙂
I love the way you articulated that, Bro. And it can be applied to more than just the SSPX.
 
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