Br.JR, that’s interesting. I wonder when the Roman Canon was formed in the early centuries, the design was such that it would allow saints/martyrs to be added. Is that possible? John XXIII clearly saw that he could add St. Joseph without causing a major disruption in the Mass; yet he was being criticized for changing the very Canon which Trent and Quo Primum protected.
The Roman Canon begins to take a familiar form around the the year 200 CE. By familiar I mean a form that we would recognize today. But it was never static. Monks kept trying to work with the wording to make it flow better.
Trent and Quo Primum have been over accentuated by a group of people who believe that the Roman Canon is an untouchable revelation, which is not the case at all. It’s one of several anaforas. We just don’t call it by that term in the Latin world. There is one anafora that doesn’t even have the words of consecration, yet it’s valid.
The Council Fathers at Trent knew these existed. It would be unreasonable to think that Trent was trying to lock in the Canon as one would lock in the Canon of Scripture. That’s why we have to look at historical context. Trent was tying to streamline the liturgy of the time. There were many rites and forms within the Latin Church. The Council kept the Roman Canon because of its antiquity and apostolic tradition. But it was never the intent of Trent or Quo Primum to bind any future pope to the Roman Canon.
I think this is what “burns” popes like Pope John XXIII, Pope John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI and now Pope Francis. They politely try to ignore the rabid whining and finger pointing done by those who would try to use Trent and Quo Primum to lock them in. No one has the right to lock a pope into a box.
I’m not sure what it’s going to take from some Catholics to get this. Maybe it will take a few rolling heads. Maybe we’ll get a pope who will put his foot down and say as my grandmother use to say, “It is because I said so and that’s that. Live with it.”
This brings up a conversation that I had with one of my older confreres about a week or two ago. We were chatting about Pope Francis’ style. This is a friar who has been around for many years. He’s 89, a member of my former community. He made an observation that I thought was very insightful. I’ll try to quote as best as I can recall his wording.
“People don’t really understand Pope Francis, because people don’t understand absolute authority. But if there ever was a post Vatican II pope who will go down in history for slamming his foot down and running the Church and exercising all of his muscle and power to the chagrin and frustration of the curia, clergy and laity, it will be Pope Francis. The man does exactly what he believes is needed and sleeps quite soundly. I don’t understand why people say that we need a tougher pope.”
I thought about this for a long time that night. Now that you have brought up Trent, Quo Primum and John XXIII, I am reminded of this observation. People can jump up and down, beg, bargain and threaten, but when you have a pope who is a truly authoritarian, he will do as he wishes. So the rest of us may as well calm down and go along for the ride. I’m reminded of Clement of Rome. He was another pope who smiled, waved, and probably kissed babies too; but took no prisoners. Go back and read his bio. A very interesting man. Charming as could be and with a spine of steel.
Just a PS. I know that Augustine was not a pope, but he was another who was charming and had a wonderful sense of humor, but took no prisoners. Read the complete Confessions. He’s hilarious in certain parts and then comes in for the kill in the next paragraph. He does it deliberately. He positions you.