July 15-21, 2007 Issue |
Posted 7/10/07 at 3:16 PM
VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI has relaxed the rules on
the use of the Mass celebrated before the Second Vatican Council.
In a document titled Summorum Pontificum, issued July 7, the
Pope has instructed bishops to make the Tridentine Mass freely available in any
parish that desires to have it.
The Holy Father called the instruction the “fruit of much
reflection, numerous consultations and prayer.” It comes into effect Sept. 14,
the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross.
At present, any priest or group of faithful wishing to
celebrate the old Latin rite requires the permission of their bishop who can
arbitrarily refuse the request.
But from September, all the faithful will now have the right
to use without further permission what Pope Benedict describes as this
“extraordinary form” — the Mass celebrated according to the 1962 Missal of
Blessed Pope John XXIII.
The “ordinary form” of the Mass will continue to be the 1970
Novus Ordo Mass of Pope Paul VI.
Cardinal Camillo Ruini, the Vicar of Rome, said unity drove
the decision.
“His first and principal motive concerned the unity of the
Church,” he wrote July 8, “unity that subsists not only in space but also time
and that is not compatible with rupture and opposition between different phases
of her historical development.”
A large part of that striving for unity includes
reconciliation with the Society of St. Pius X. The society has long pushed for
liberalization of the old Mass. Its four
bishops remain excommunicated for being consecrated without permission from
Rome.
Bishop Bernard Fellay, superior general of the Society, was
quoted July 8 saying, “This is really an historic day. We convey to Pope
Benedict XVI our profound gratitude. His document is a gift of Grace. It’s not
just any step, it’s a step in the right direction. It’s an act of justice,
extraordinary supernatural help in a moment of grave ecclesial crisis.”
Bishop Fellay added that the Pope’s reaffirmation of the
post-conciliar Mass meant discussions on “doctrinal issues must continue,” but
said the document is a “fundamental step which will accelerate the way [to
reconciliation], and we hope to tackle the question of excommunication in a
state of calm.”
‘Treasure Chest’
Among Tridentine Mass devotees in undisputed union with
Rome, the initial response to Summorum Pontificum has been overwhelmingly
favorable.
“Pope Benedict has broken open the treasure chest of the
Lord!” said Michael Dunnigan, chairman of Una Voce America, the largest lay
organization in the U.S. promoting wider access to the traditional Mass.
Dunnigan said his organization greeted news of the Pope’s
decree with “profound gratitude.” He added that the traditional Mass “is a true
gem of the Church’s heritage, and the Holy Father has taken the most important
step toward making it available to many more of the faithful.”
Father Joseph Kramer, parish priest at San Gregorio dei
Muratori, one of three churches in Rome permitted to celebrate Mass using the
1962 Missal, said the document “went beyond what we could ever have hoped for.”
He particularly welcomed how the Holy Father placed both
rites in historical and cultural context, and stressed continuity. Placing them
under one Roman Rite “certainly resolves a lot of the possible frictions that
otherwise might arise,” he said.
Father Kramer also believed both rites could mutually
influence the other for the better.
“It’s a great godsend and something I and my friends have
been praying for, for a long time,” said Luke De Weese, a Tridentine rite
devotee from Lexington, Ky. “It was greater than I expected insofar as he made
it very clear in the motu proprio, and in the accompanying letter, that the
pre-conciliar liturgy was never abrogated.”
Added De Weese, “It seems to me the Catholic Church is like
a very large international family and in the past 50 years we’ve gone through a
major crisis of identity which is centered around the crisis of how we should
celebrate the liturgy.”
The Document
The new directives allow that “each Catholic priest of the
Latin rite, whether secular or regular, may use the Roman Missal published by
Blessed Pope John XXIII in 1962, or the Roman Missal promulgated by Pope Paul
VI in 1970, and may do so on any day with the exception of the Easter triduum.”
The priests who use the Latin-language 1962 Roman Missal,
however, “must be qualified to do so and not juridically impeded.” Priests are
also allowed to use the Roman Breviary promulgated by John XXIII in 1962.
The papal directives state that for “such celebrations, with
either one missal or the other, the priest has no need for permission from the
Apostolic See or from his ordinary,” and that lay faithful may attend.
“In parishes, where there is a stable group of faithful who
adhere to the earlier liturgical tradition,” the letter states, “the pastor
should willingly accept their requests to celebrate the Mass according to the
rite of the Roman Missal published in 1962, and ensure that the welfare of
these faithful harmonizes with the ordinary pastoral care of the parish ...
avoiding discord and favoring the unity of the whole Church.”
The norms allow for only one pre-Vatican II Mass to be said
in parishes on Sundays and feast days.
In an accompanying explanatory letter to bishops, the Holy
Father said he had issued this decree, given motu proprio (on his own
initiative), for two main reasons.
Firstly, contrary to the concerns of those who feared such a
change would foment division, he believes this instruction will help foster
internal unity within the Church. He calls on those who may disagree to
“generously open” their hearts, and reminds the Church to realize that this
“extraordinary” and “ordinary” form of the Mass are not “two Rites” but
actually the “twofold use of one and the same rite” and therefore “mutually
enriching.”
In the history of the liturgy there is “growth and progress,
but no rupture,” Pope Benedict explained. “What earlier generations held as
sacred, remains sacred and great for us too, and it cannot be all of a sudden entirely
forbidden or even considered harmful.”
The second reason for the document was in order to respond
to the demands of some Catholics, including growing numbers of young people,
who had found deformations of the modern liturgy following the Second Vatican
Council “hard to bear” and wished to “recover the form of liturgy that was
sacred to them.”
From his previous writings, the Holy Father is known to hold
the same view, and he shared them in the letter.
“I too lived through that period with all its hopes and its
confusion,” he wrote. “And I have seen how arbitrary deformations of the
liturgy caused deep pain to individuals totally rooted in the faith of the
Church.”
Precise Norms
To facilitate implementation of the motu proprio, he has
included more “precise juridical norms.” These were lacking in the most recent
document on the Tridentine rite, Pope John Paul II’s 1988 motu proprio Ecclesia
Dei adflicta, which trusted bishops to generously grant permission to use the
rite.
Benedict stresses that local bishops remain the overseers
and custodians of the liturgy in their dioceses. And, he said, the new norms
also “free bishops from constantly having to evaluate anew how they are to
respond to various situations.”
Father Kramer, who celebrates the older form of the Mass in
Rome, said bishops have nothing to fear. “It’s not going to be a big explosion,
a big reversal of the general direction of the Church,” Father Kramer said.
It’s going to make the practice of the faith easier for a relatively small number
of people within Catholicism.”
He added that increasing the availability of the “old rite”
will take time. “For this Mass you really need quite an infrastructure,” he
said. “A priest alone in a parish with 10 or 20 people cannot really set this
up. This rite requires a lot people to get it going, acolytes, sacristans, a
choir, and this means a commitment not only in terms of number of people but
also finances. And since these things have been disposed of over the last 40
years, they need to be put back in place.”
Edward Pentin writes
from Rome.
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