A
Aramis
Guest
Within the context of the Roman Church, the Pope is THE last say; the pope can censure and/or remove bishops for failure to obey the liturgical prescriptions (and in some cases has done so).
In point of fact, control over the liturgical prescriptions has always been a function of a patriarchal see; sometimes by synodal action, others by unilateral declaration of the patriarch… the Rites of the Catholic Church… Roman, Constanopolitan (aka byzantine or greek), Antiocean (W. Syrian), Chaldean (E. Syrian), Alexandrian (Coptic), Armenian… each diverges under a patriarch’s guiding hand… in different directions. The Gallican, Celtic, Ambrosian, Mozarabic, and Bragan “Rites” also grow divergent, but under the Roman Patriarch, as Rome didn’t standardize as strongly until later than the other patriarchates.
So while a priest must answer to his bishop, his bishop is responsible to the Pope…
But the Bishop is not supposed to grant such exceptions to the GIRM.
In point of fact, control over the liturgical prescriptions has always been a function of a patriarchal see; sometimes by synodal action, others by unilateral declaration of the patriarch… the Rites of the Catholic Church… Roman, Constanopolitan (aka byzantine or greek), Antiocean (W. Syrian), Chaldean (E. Syrian), Alexandrian (Coptic), Armenian… each diverges under a patriarch’s guiding hand… in different directions. The Gallican, Celtic, Ambrosian, Mozarabic, and Bragan “Rites” also grow divergent, but under the Roman Patriarch, as Rome didn’t standardize as strongly until later than the other patriarchates.
So while a priest must answer to his bishop, his bishop is responsible to the Pope…
But the Bishop is not supposed to grant such exceptions to the GIRM.