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ZoomerVince
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Was Quo Primum Ever Abrogated? If not, wouldn’t that mean that it still applies?
Are you aware of any Masses that are being said according to a formula not published by a pope?“[L]et Masses not be sung or read according to any other formula than that of this Missal published by Us.”
Except the changes to the mass have not been done by just any clergy, but have instead been instituted by Popes.So if it is still in effect then that means the following would be in effect:
“[L]et Masses not be sung or read according to any other formula than that of this Missal published by Us.”
And it was published by a Pope. You keep forgetting that part.The New Mass was not a change to the Roman Missal. It was a new missal, it was literally published as the ‘New Order of the Mass.
Short of a new dogma being proclaimed, a Pope cannot bind another Pope. Not to mention that there have been numerous charges to the Mass since the 1500’s, so the Mass celebrated in 1962 was not the Mass promulgated by Quo Primium.If not, wouldn’t that mean that it still applies?
No, it does not mean it still applies. Disciplines that a pope gives in his life time do not have to be formally abrogated. No pope can bind a subsequent pope in matters of discipline.Was Quo Primum Ever Abrogated? If not, wouldn’t that mean that it still applies?
After Summorum Pontificum, all priests can say the Traditional Latin Mass, with or without approval of their bishop. So your understanding of even that is flawed, unless I’m misreading what you’re saying.I don’t know how that percolates down to the hypothetical scenario of a recalcitrant diocesan priest who attempts to play this trump card, and tell his bishop, “no, I’m not celebrating the OF, when I say Mass, it will always be the EF”. Just using my mother wit and sensus catholicus (such as it is), I would say that the obedience to his bishop, which he promised at the time of his ordination, would take priority — “yes, Father, that is true, you may always say the EF, but your ‘marching orders’ are, unless specified otherwise, where you have a congregation, to say the OF, because that’s what we do in this diocese, it’s part of your ‘job description’, so to speak”.
There is a difference between revising a missal and instituting a new one.And let’s not forget that the missal, whether OF or EF, is always being “revised” to incorporate new propers and other prayers for newly canonized saints, as well as other changes to the liturgical calendar. Protocols for the EF were recently revised to accommodate new saints, to address the situation of the EF missal having been basically “frozen in 1962”.
I am presuming that a Pope has such authority. I’m asking if Quo Primum ever was abrogated in the first place. And if not, wouldn’t that mean that it is still in effect?As @fauken rightly points out, the disciplines instituted by one pope are not binding on another. This is because subsequent popes are equals to their predecessors - with equal “binding and loosing” authority. Theoretically a future pope could completely abrogate the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite and replace it with the Extraordinary Form.
There is a difference between revising a Roman Missal and making a new one. And the 1962 Missal was never abrogated:Finally, there’s the point of history. As others have mentioned, the Extraordinary Form of today isn’t the “Tridentine Mass” of the 1570s. There have been numerous changes, revisions, removals, and the like in the Extraordinary Form since its missal was first abrogated.