J
JReducation
Guest
I truly like your thought pattern here. It’s very logical. It’s interesting that you should mention the LCWR. The truth is that the LCWR has not shot back at the Vatican. Individual sisters have, but not the leadership. It’s leaders have been rather discrete in their answers to media questions. Their usual answer is that they have think about this or that or that the meeting was fraternal and cordial. I mean, vague answers. Whereas the SSPX’s answers lately have not been so discrete. To say that the pope is making things worse is very concrete, not discrete.To anyone considering attending an SSPX Mass, to me it’s not a question of whether it is permissible - it is - but whether it’s prudent, which I think not. Suppose an SSPX priest is considering “coming in from the cold”. When you attend an SSPX Mass, or retreat, or other program, you encourage him to stay where he is.
The SSPX of the 1970s was filled with people who lived almost their whole lives benefitting from the living Magisterium of the Church. Most of the SSPX leaders and clergy of today lack that common experience, or at least not for recent years. Their spiritual heritage now is mostly SSPX, not the Catholic Church.
The leaders of the SSPX today are far more adversarial than the SSPX in the 1970s. When I go to their own, and other pro-SSPX websites, they are no longer complaining about abuses in local parishes, rarely criticizing Protestants or secularists, but almost exclusively criticizing the Pope and bishops. The recent years of making, or condoning, the attacks on Catholic Church leaders undoubtedly affect the SSPX leaders and clergy.
I think the SSPX of the 1970s or 1980s could have been “regularized” as a communion, because there then was more agreement than disagreement with the Church. Today, that area of common heritage is much less. Like the LCWR and Call to Action, SSPX will become more aggressive, more focusing on the Vatican as the main, or only source of evil in the world.
The SSPX has moved far from the Vatican, and farther still from the SSPX of the 1970s.
The moderate SSPX members will join, or rejoin full communion with Rome as individuals. The entire situation calls for prayer.
It would really be sad if they do go that route. They are bent on protecting the Church from heresy, but it’s precisely the first generation of any breakaway group this is made up of heretics. The second generation born into the group are not considered heretics by Canon Law. To be a heretic, you must be a Catholic. Non Catholics cannot be heretics, even if they believe in something that’s a heresy. As the generations progress their believes are part of a faith tradition, not a position of dissent.Reply to OP:
I don’t think there will be regularization of the SSPX. Not now, probably not ever. In fact I think that at this point they are more likely to schism completely than to reconcile. I do predict, however, that they will have an increase in attendance/growth.