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The Traditional Catholics point to many dubious things that have come from Vatican II.I know I’m hijacking the thread here, but this needs to be said. No Catholic may disagree with Vatican II – certain interpretations of it, yes, but never outright disagreement. The fact that it’s pastoral makes no difference. Pope Paul VI said the following to Archbishop Lefebvre:
“You cannot invoke the distinction between dogmatic and pastoral in order to accept certain texts of the Council and to refute others. Certainly, all that was said in the Council does not demand an assent of the same nature; only that which is affirmed as an object of faith or truth attached to the faith, by definitive acts, require an assent of faith. But the rest is also a part of the solemn magisterium of the Church to which all faithful must make a confident reception and a sincere application” (Letter to Archbishop Lefebvre, Nov. 10, 1976).
… just as the full impact of St. Athanasius was not fully recognized until after the Arian crisis. During the crisis Athanasius and his followers were ignored as well when they were not being persecuted by those fully approved Bishops with faculties saying “fully approved” yet heretical Masses.Originally Posted by **stevusmagnus **
Originally Posted by **pnewton **
I am very familiar with both the parallels and the failure of the parallel. I once even started a whole thread on this topic, also drawing a parallel to Godwin’s Law, in a Catholic version.
Can you give us the link?Originally Posted by** numealinesimpet **
Sure.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=310397
Was there a Crisis? Yes.Excellent point. The Archbishop did not want to have any confrontation with Rome. It is clear he did what he had to do; such is the burden of being in a position of leadership.
Precisely!
The most vocal critics of the SSPX, and of Traditionalists in general, seem to be those who think everything is just hunky-dory, that no problems exist in the Church, and that despite the foundering of the faith of many, the Church is on the right track.
A better question maybe: Did the Bishop abuse his God-given power to consecrate other bishops, in light of the fact he was dying and there were no other bishops who were ordaining priests to say the Latin Mass?Was it sufficient to justify the actions His Grace took?
Is Easter Sunday not enough reason to hold your tongue ?Was there a Crisis? Yes.
Was it sufficient to justify the actions His Grace took? Doesn’t seem so. HH JP II didn’t think so. HH Benedict doesn’t seem to think so.
He broke his own vows of obedience by how he responded to the crisis.
Had he consecrated only one or two, just enough to ensure the SSPX had a bishop and he had a successor, I doubt highly the SSPX would be in such a harshly worded position as “… exercise no valid ministry within the Church.”
So the crisis is over? Have you seen the recent Mahoney Mass video?Was there a Crisis? Yes.
Was it sufficient to justify the actions His Grace took? Doesn’t seem so. HH JP II didn’t think so. HH Benedict doesn’t seem to think so.
He broke his own vows of obedience by how he responded to the crisis.
Had he consecrated only one or two, just enough to ensure the SSPX had a bishop and he had a successor, I doubt highly the SSPX would be in such a harshly worded position as “… exercise no valid ministry within the Church.”
There is no better day for truth. The SSPX are one of the crises of the Church, not a solution to some single crisis, at least at present.Is Easter Sunday not enough reason to hold your tongue ?![]()
It seems like the crisis is only getting worse as time passes.So the crisis is over? Have you seen the recent Mahoney Mass video?
youtube.com/watch?v=nZ5it20gKqw
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Bad PR. But then the SSPX knows all about that.I’m just troubled at what is going on with the media.
Of course you would say that. The SSPX constantly says that. Here is my objection.Thank you, pnewton, although I am surprised you quote it against yourself in this way. Your main point seems to be, that the more the case of Athanasius is raised, the less credibility it I would say your objection to using the comparison was comprehensively refuted.
On the contrary. The two of us have raised the question of Athanasius a couple of times on different threads on this forum. Once I asked you, "If you had lived in the fourth century, and Athanasius & Eusebius of Samosata had come to you for advice, what advice would you have given them? Unfortunately the thread had closed down before you replied. I was hoping for some interesting thoughts on the thread you linked the other day, and I admit (I am not being facecious) to being very disappointed.…
FYI - Next time you ask me for something I will remember this incident. I did not guess your motivation.
Not so. These things can be discussed intelligently. I myself did not at first agree with Mgr Lefebvre’s action in consecrating the bishops in 1988, but when i saw all around me the ever-deepening crisis, and when I saw how the Vatican subsequently double-crossed the FSSP, I realised how wise and far-seeing he was. The people begging the question are those who say at the outset he disobeyed the pope! He’s in the wrong! He must be proud and arrogant! He must be condemned!Finally, the best the comparison might show, ever, is a begging of the question. An analogy only exists if one buys what the SSPX is selling. And if one does that, no comparison is necessary.
Hardly a valid point, is it? The crisis in which Mgr Lefebvre was embroiled is still unresolved. None of us know who will be canonised one hundred years from now. Athanasius certainly would not have been canonised if he had died in the middle of the Arian Crisis.Of course you would say that. The SSPX constantly says that. Here is my objection.
LeFevbre is not a saint. Athanasius is.
It was not a tight, well-defined body of Faith like that professed by the True Church. This, in fact, is a notable feature of every heresy. There were innumerable shades of opinion: there was a 'hard core – the anousians – who stated definitely that Christ was of a “different nature” from The Father; then the ‘soft centre’: homoiousians who held that Christ was “like” the Father without being identical in nature; and then the Catholic teaching of homoousios – that Christ was 'of one substance with the Father". Cardinal Newman was deeply impressed by the parallels between that situation and his own in the Church of England: a Hard Core, a soft middle, some leaning as far as they could towards the Catholic church without actually submitting, and over against that, the Catholic Church teaching what she had always taught. He wrote, “I looked in the mirror, and behold I was an Arian!”Arianism was a heresy about the nature of Jesus himself.
Have you never heard the phrase: “Athanasius contra Mundum?” It was Athanasius against the world. He was certainly a ‘sliver’ of the college of bishops, who were supporting the Arian muddle. And the Pope, instead of supporting Athanasius, condemned him, apparently ‘to keep the peace’. The pope was under duress at the time, but this cannot excuse his action. He was free to choose martyrdom like any good Catholic.The SSPX is a sliver of a percentage of the Church.
Oh yes it was. The whole World of Power was, at any rate, and the sheep were left without shepherds. What else can one say? As the Romans used to say, “Against a fact there is no argument”. The body of bishops, and significantly the whole Roman Army, went Arian. If they had mental reservations, they kept quiet about it. [Just as happens today]. The common folk were left without leadership. The Catholics (those holding to the Council of Nicea) were driven out of the churches. That is why Athanasius, in exile, wrote his famous letter that is actually on the thread you linked for us. *“They have the churches, but ye have the Faith”. * Again, I recommend readers to check this link.Regardless of the idea that "the whole world was Arian, it really was not.
That is because the crisis was resolved before he died. What if he had died in the middle of the crisis?Athanasius was a bishop and finished his life in peace and union with the Holy Mother Church.
Liberius was unable to quell the Arian heresy. In fact, he found himself manoeuvered into condemning the very bishops who were upholding the true faith. I can see very clear parallels with the modern crisis. And I am not judging the state of soul of Liberius or any of the post-Vatican II popes. The Modernist heresy, condemned by the popes for a full century up to 1960, was a cat that got out of the bag. It is being supported by very powerful forces in the Church and the World. All Lefebvre ever did was refuse to follow novelties that could never have been imposed with infallibility, and never have been. The comparison with Athanasius, who refused all compromise with the watering-down that was Arianism, is striking.At best Lefebvre was in a questionable position up to the the end.
Are you telling us you don’t know that the Arian crisis dragged on for more than a century? Can I make a gentle suggestion that you spend less time on posting and more on reading up on the history?The controversy of the SSPX is longer lived,
I do hope you don’t think that the issue of the TLM is the main point of Mgr Lefebvre’s objections. Don’t you know that there are priests and bishops out there who deny Christ in the Eucharist? Either formally or by concelebrating with heretical prelates from Protestant churches who stoutly deny the Divinity of the Holy Eucharist? The biggest difference here is that in Arian times people spoke more openly. These days much of it is done implicitly.regardless of a less critical issue (unless you do not consider the deity of Christ critical).
With every post from an SSPX the pride is glaring. It is their way and no one else could possibly be right. The posts bring to mind Pontius Pilate’s “What is truth”?Was there a Crisis? Yes.
Was it sufficient to justify the actions His Grace took? Doesn’t seem so. HH JP II didn’t think so. HH Benedict doesn’t seem to think so.
He broke his own vows of obedience by how he responded to the crisis.
Had he consecrated only one or two, just enough to ensure the SSPX had a bishop and he had a successor, I doubt highly the SSPX would be in such a harshly worded position as “… exercise no valid ministry within the Church.”