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The Jesuits were evicted from some countries by the governments for political reasons, long before various governments pressured the papacy to extend that ban elsewhere. I’m sure there were always other complicating factors, could include theology. I don’t know a lot about that era. A few Jesuits were confidants of royalty, teachers of the sons of the powerful, suspected of using international connections to promote their own agenda, exerting excess influence. But I am not aware of any changes during their 40 year “intermission” that would make them harder to connect with the Church later on.Maybe so, but there had to have been something there to prompt that suppression of the Jesuits. (You can probably include intellectual property in that mix, btw.) I have my own opinions given the history books I have read on the topic. Either way, there had to have been some I’m-right-and-you’re-wrong resentment and as a sociologist you probably agree that this does not necessarily bring on the perfect union we all seem to envision in the end.
For SSPX, I think the changes in 40 years are more significant. I would guess SSPX seminary professors in the 1970s, for instance, had a broad range of experiences in the Church itself. They likely had worked in Catholic institutions, had worked alongside members of male and female religious orders, had served in diverse parish situations, had known ordinaries, chancellors, and participated directly in diocesan ministries. I would bet they (in the 1970s) had more priest friends in the Church itself than in SSPX. Seminarians then benefitted from their teachers’ background practical experiences in the Church, both positive and negative, productive and not. What works, what doesn’t work, in the Catholic Church priesthood.
How much practical background experience, specifically in the Church itself, do you think 2016 SSPX seminary teachers and 2016 SSPX administrators have had? Do you think recent SSPX seminarians have gotten anything like practical exposure to the Catholic Church that their predecessors got? Do you think SSPX priests today have as many priest friends outside SSPX, as the SSPX priests in the 1970s?
OK, I am a sociologist, not a theologian, but I think the social is more significant than the speculating you see on the internet, about this meeting, or that interview, etc. Sociologically it was not a separate denomination 40 years ago; but today? tomorrow?