wizards8507
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I'd love the input of some of the old timers and traditionalists about Vatican II and how it's changed the Church. I've been reading and listening to a lot of traditionalist speakers lately about the new Mass, ecumenism, and other things.
Christopher Ferrara, in Liberty, the God That Failed...
These guys (Fatima Center and The Remnant chief among them) are intense. They're extremely open and harsh in their criticism of Pope Francis, most specifically regarding Amoris laetitia and the attacks from within the Church on the family.Not an old timer, but I'm definitely one who is deeply dissatisfied with the Novus Ordo (at least as I've experienced it). If we actually believe in the miracle that is occurring on the altar, the reverence of the Tridential Rite accompanied by Gregorian chant is obviously far superior. Martin Mosebach just published a great article on this subject in First Things.
That's on my reading list!
Not an old timer, but I'm definitely one who is deeply dissatisfied with the Novus Ordo (at least as I've experienced it). If we actually believe in the miracle that is occurring on the altar, the reverence of the Tridentine Rite accompanied by Gregorian chant is obviously far superior. Martin Mosebach just published a great article on this subject in First Things.
That's on my reading list!
Sometimes I like to contemplate whether there are certain characteristics about myself that are unique among all humans throughout history. Congratulations, I'm pretty sure you've spoken a sentence that has never before been uttered.He even does Compline on Sunday nights, it's baller.
Sometimes I like to contemplate whether there are certain characteristics about myself that are unique among all humans throughout history. Congratulations, I'm pretty sure you've spoken a sentence that has never before been uttered.
These guys (Fatima Center and The Remnant chief among them) are intense. They're extremely open and harsh in their criticism of Pope Francis, most specifically regarding Amoris laetitia and the attacks from within the Church on the family.
Find an Ordinariate or just a priest that gives the Mass its proper reverence. My parish's pastor does a very good job (he even does Compline on Sunday nights, it's baller) and it's in the Ordinary Form. Before, I went to a parish ran by the Paulists and though the Masses were valid, they lacked the mystical air found in the EF and when the OF is done properly.
Protected from teaching error on doctrinal matters, not on pastoral matters.Just be careful not to stray into sedevacantist territory. Given what Pope Francis and the German bishops closely allied with him seem to want, and their apparent inability to simply make it happen, one is reminded that the Magisterium is protected by the Holy Spirit from teaching error.
.... just know, gentlemen, that good highly spiritual Catholics differ in what they (even tangibly) feel brings them into communion with The Holy Spirit --- thus the nearly endless shelves of historical methodologies inviting us to deep meditation and prayer. There seems to me to be a need for a little humility here. Everyone isn't "just like me" and "I've got the Way clearly in sight." One might even come to the horrid realization that what "appeals" wholesomely to oneself just might have something to do with one's upbringing or even the subtle differences in the structure of one's brain.
I wonder if we should grab certain persons who are living in cultures wildly different from our own (to paint an extreme case for clarity's sake --- I realize that some folks cannot see the intellectual benefit of considering extreme situations when they are attempting to make absolutist declarations, but others get it), and strip their worship of any remnant of their natural history and culture, replacing it with a severely "cleansed" European mediaeval atmosphere (note "mediaeval" not first century Middle Eastern). If one might "make an exception" (anywhere) then why the Absolutism on something which is a matter of form, and not substance (the ritual of the Eucharist remains, as do the Gospel readings, The Creed, the various Blessings.)
It stuns me that when people "feel" that they like something some way, they want to force everyone to do it their way --- even when neither way violates the fundamental basis of the Faith. It smacks of fragile faith. There is not enough faith in The Lord and the Gospel and the Eucharist to believe that those other people's souls will be granted plenty of grace to face the moral decisions of their lives. And, just because some @ss committed mortal selfish sins in violation of priestly duties is pretty irrelevant to the form-of-the-Mass issue. Here in Michigan we had a severely (outwardly) "traditional" priest who raped kids also. These citations are straw men.
I live in a house with other retired men. One of them is a retired priest. His "job" for years was (and to a degree is) chaplain to the Sisters of St. Joseph. Doubtless some people on this site really hate nuns, and think that they are part of the decay of The Church, but to them I'd have to say "Stick it." These are among the finest people I have ever known, continually for careers of up to 80 years in service, humbly and self-sacrificingly, laboring in the vineyards for The Lord. Attending Mass with them and my housemate as presider (Oh the Horror of facing the people and listening to the nuns sing something other than Gregorian chant!), has been one of the great privileges of my 76 year life, and always a moment of, as we say in the Cursillo Movement, "A Moment Closest to Christ."
Pope Francis is one of the great antagonists in this battle. He has a penchant for anecdotes in which young priests are rigid and worldly, while older ones are gentle and wise. At a press conference in October, Francis told a story about a parish in Spain where an old priest had been replaced by a young one. Whereas the first pastor had accompanied a transgender person in the parish, the new one (so Francis said) stood on the sidewalk yelling, “You’ll go to hell!” In a homily in September, he made fun of young priests for wearing more traditional vestments: “And it is said that the Church does not allow women priests!”
However one weighs those specific remarks, Francis has a point. Young people really do desire structure today. Call it “rigidity” if you like, but they have had occasion to learn the value of rules. Some of them would have been spared a great deal of misery if our Church and society had been more rigid on certain points.
...
Among my peers there is a vague, floating sense of dislocation and disinheritance. They have been schooled in rebellion but have nothing to rebel against. This is the cause, I think, of the enthusiasm many young people show for ritual, ceremony, and all things traditional. Having been raised in a culture of unending pseudo-spontaneity, they have had time to count its costs. They prefer more rigid forms.
I'm not sure the music is an entirely fair point of criticism, Whiskey.
Tell me that's not reverent just because it's performed in the vernacular by a "folk choir."
We also need to be realistic about the musical tools at the disposal of local parishes. When the only organist in town is Old Betty, you're not going to get the Sistine Chapel Choir.
Of that, I have no doubt. In my research this weekend I came across some folks reporting that "Bridge Over Troubled Water" was being sung as a Communion hymn.Agreed. That's plenty reverent. I'm not suggesting that every parish ought to return to the Tridentine Rite, with the full liturgy in Latin, and Palestrina's polyphony as the only music. Limited liturgical flexibility can be a good thing.
But the St. Louis Jesuits' hymnody that gave us Gather Us In and On Eagles Wings is abominable, and a perfect example of what happens when the liturgy becomes completely unmoored from tradition. Based on my experience, the average American parish is much closer to that pole now (and has been for decades) than the liturgically rigid one Vatican II was seeking to avoid.
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/LGT5_0GnWMU" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>Chant doesn't require much in the way of resources or talent to do properly. For a small parish with few people involved in the music ministry, I'd argue it's easier to do chant well than a full folk setup with piano, guitars, a tambourine (blech).
This doesn't do it for you? It's actually a shame that they have the percussion over-mic'ed in this video. The effect is quite triumphant in person.
But the St. Louis Jesuits' hymnody that gave us Gather Us In and On Eagles Wings is abominable, and a perfect example of what happens when the liturgy becomes completely unmoored from tradition. Based on my experience, the average American parish is much closer to that pole now (and has been for decades) than the liturgically rigid one Vatican II was seeking to avoid.
What exactly is wrong with that break from tradition? Is your point that such hymns are simply self-indulgent? In short, I'm not sure what the beef is beyond personal preference.
Could have done without the bongos, but when you're starting with a beautiful choral rendition of the Gloria, you've got a lot of room to work with before you stray into irreverent territory. Listen to the version of Gather Us In that I linked above. Now imagine that, but performed at a much lower level of musical competence, you've approximated what the average music minister here in Phoenix is putting out.
Maybe Arizona is just a liturgical hellscape, but the only time I ever hear a proper church choir is for Bishop Olmstead's annual Red Mass in the Basilica downtown.
Pope Bergoglio is a man in a hurry. It is almost as if he working on some sort of deadline to impose his designs upon the Church—a deadline of four years to be exact, as LifeSiteNews reminded us regarding an anonymous comment by one of the cardinals who voted for this disaster of a Pope: “Four years of Bergoglio would be enough to change things.”
The co-conspirators themselves have openly admitted the existence of a plot to elect Bergoglio to “change things” in the Church rapidly and “irreversibly” in ways exceeding even the catastrophic innovations of the past fifty years—or so they thought. Pope Benedict’s secretary, Archbishop Georg Gänswein, spoke of “a dramatic struggle” during the 2005 Conclave “between the “so-called ‘Salt of the Earth Party’ (named after the book interview with Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger) comprising ‘Cardinals Lopez Trujillo, Ruini, Herranz, Ruoco Varela or Medina’ and their adversaries: ‘the so-called St. Gallen group’ that included Cardinals Danneels, Martini, Silvestrini or Murphy O’Connor’ — a group Cardinal Danneels referred jokingly to as “a kind of mafia-club…” Another member of the “mafia-club” is Walter Kasper, the German arch-heretic who had fallen into obscurity until Bergoglio’s arrival on the scene.
With Bergoglio’s election at the 2013 Conclave the conspirators finally succeeded in achieving the proximate object of the conspiracy, but only after the hated Benedict XVI had been driven from the Chair of Peter, having semi-abdicated while clinging to his papal name, papal title, papal garb, papal insignia, and even the papal office in its supposedly “passive” versus “active” dimension. He thus became the first “Pope Emeritus” in Church history—a total novelty that in and of itself suggests Benedict is somehow still a Pope.
The conspirators have also succeeded in achieving a further object of the conspiracy: the admission of public adulterers to Holy Communion without an amendment of life, following a sham “Synod on the Family” in which were intimately involved none other than co-conspirator Kasper, whose heretical notion of “mercy” Francis began promoting immediately upon his election, and co-conspirator Danneels, the Modernist protector of a priest-rapist and a supporter of “gay marriage.”
And now the bimillenial Eucharistic discipline of the Church, integrally linked to her infallible teaching on the Eucharist and the indissolubility of marriage, stands divided along the fault lines Bergoglio has created. No less than the President of the Pontifical Council for the Interpretation of Legislative Texts, Cardinal Francesco Coccopalmerio—whose name has a disturbing assonance with the name of certain bird—has just given an interview with Edward Pentin wherein he announces the new Bergoglian Rule: one who is living in an adulterous “second marriage” can be absolved and admitted to Holy Communion while continuing to engage in adulterous sexual relations, so long as he declares to his confessor something like “I want to change, but I know that I am not capable of changing, but I want to change.”
So much for the constant teaching of the Church that absolution requires a “firm purpose of amendment,” which even the Catechism the very Pope that Francis declared a saint describes as “sorrow for and abhorrence of sins committed, and the firm purpose of sinning no more in the future.” Bergoglio will have none of that sort of merciless rigorism. As Coccopalmerio explains: “If you wait until someone changes their style of life, you wouldn’t absolve anymore anyone at all.”
But one might ask: How would a confessor know that the penitent who invokes the Bergoglian Rule and claims “I want to change but cannot” is sincere and thus should be absolved even though it is understood that he will continue to commit same sin? Not to worry, says Coccopalmerio: “You have to pay attention to what the penitent says. If you know — you can tell if he is misleading you.” You can tell! Really, you can!
Need I mention that the Bergoglian Rule flirts with the Council of Trent’s anathematization of Luther’s heresy that it is impossible to keep the Commandments even if one is in the state of grace? Then again, the difference between Bergoglian and Lutheran theology appears to be vanishingly small, which perhaps explains Bergoglio’s journey to Sweden to pay tribute to the arch-heretic’s “legacy.”
On February 24, during another rambling homily at Casa Santa Marta, Bergoglio told us yet again that a staunch defense of the moral law concerning matrimony is mere casuistry worthy of the Pharisees. In the Gospel According to Bergoglio, Jesus did not tell the Pharisees that divorce is unlawful: “Jesus does not answer whether it is lawful or not lawful; He doesn’t enter into their casuistic logic…. Casuistry is hypocritical. It is a hypocritical thought. ‘Yes, you can; no, you can’t.’”
Pope Bergoglio appears to have overlooked the same verses he has been ignoring for the past four years: “Whoever divorces his wife and marries another, commits adultery against her; and if she divorces her husband and marries another, she commits adultery.” Thus it would appear that even Jesus succumbed to the “casuistic logic” of the Pharisees, according to the Bergoglian Hermeneutic. So did God the Father when He declared: “Thou shalt not commit adultery” as well as “thou shalt not” do various other things enumerated in what were once known as the Ten Commandments, but have since been redefined—by Bergoglio in Amoris Laetitia—as the Ten Objective Ideals or the Ten General Rules (cf. AL nn. 300-305).
This papacy has become such a mockery that it is now arousing open opposition from deep within the Catholic mainstream, which is finally awakening to the alarm “radical traditionalists” have been sounding for decades. In a piece entitled simply “This Disastrous Papacy,” Phil Lawler recounts how “something snapped” when he read Bergoglio’s claim that Jesus did not say “you can’t” to the Pharisees regarding divorce. He declares: “I could no longer pretend that Pope Francis is merely offering a novel interpretation of Catholic doctrine. No; it is more than that. He is engaged in a deliberate effort to change what the Church teaches.” The Bergoglian pontificate, he concludes, “has become a danger to the faith.”
But Bergoglio has much more danger in mind as he rushes to fulfill his megalomaniacal “dream” of “transforming everything, so that the Church’s customs, ways of doing things, times and schedules, language and structures can be suitably channeled for the evangelization of today’s world rather than for her self-preservation.” Nothing as trivial as the Church’s self-preservation*—or God, for that matter—can be allowed to interfere with the apotheosis of Bergoglianism. Thus there are rumors (based on leaks from Casa Santa Marta, which tend to be accurate) of a new payload of blockbusters Bergoglio is planning to drop before he drops:
- some sort of non-ordained “female deacon”;
- a Novus-Novus Ordo, under construction by a secret commission, that would permit a form of intercommunion with Protestants;
- the transformation of Catholic parishes into “ecumenical communities” administered not only by priests but also Protestant ministers on the theory that their ministries possess “partial” validity, as Coccopalmerio suggests at the end of his interview with Pentin.
Like a runaway train on a sharp curve, the Bergoglio Express has left the tracks. Now, even a significant number of the cardinals who made the mistake of voting for him at the 2013 Conclave can see the wheels coming off the train. With opposition and even outright mockery of Bergoglio rising everywhere, the Times of London, quoting Antonio Socci in Il Libero, reports in a headline story that “A large part of the cardinals who voted for him is very worried and the curia . . . that organised his election and has accompanied him thus far, without ever disassociating itself from him, is cultivating the idea of a moral suasion to convince him to retire…”
Socci observes that “Four years after Benedict XVI’s renunciation and Bergoglio’s arrival on the scene, the situation of the Catholic church has become explosive, perhaps really on the edge of a schism, which could be even more disastrous than Luther’s, who is today being rehabilitated by the Bergoglio church… The cardinals are worried that the church could be shattered as an institution. There are many indirect ways in which the pressure [to resign] might be exerted.”
It isn’t going to happen. Bergoglio will cling to power until his dying breath. As one Vatican insider (who prefers to remain anonymous) confided to the Times: “A good number of the majority that voted for Bergoglio in 2013 have come to regret their decision, but I don’t think it’s plausible that members of the hierarchy will pressure the Pope to resign. Those who know him know it would be useless. [He] has a very authoritarian streak. He won’t resign until he has completed his revolutionary reforms, which are causing enormous harm.”
But there is an auspicious development in all of this: The recognition that Bergoglio is running amok and that, to recall Lawler’s words, his pontificate “has become a danger to the faith,” is now well established in the Catholic mainstream. The neo-Catholic knee-jerk defense of every papal word and deed (lest the traditionalist critique of the post-Vatican II innovation of the Church be in any way vindicated) is no longer operative, a few shameless diehards excepted. Intellectual honesty is blooming everywhere as Pope Bergoglio rubs the Church’s face in the ugly reality of what the post-conciliar revolution has been all about from the beginning: Quite simply, the end of Catholicism, if that were possible.
For the past four years, Bergoglio has been laboring to bridge the gap between concept and reality in these final stages of the revolution. But his cunning faux magisterium of the wink and the nod, the either and the both, the employment of subalterns to put forth what he is thinking while he maintains the thinnest pretense of plausible deniability, has been exposed for what it is: a fraudulent abuse of papal authority. Everyone knows this now. The question is: What are we to do about it?
When historical trends reach such a climax—what the historians call a “climacteric”—great reactions set in. But the Church is no mere human institution, guided solely by human movements. The reaction is this case will indeed occur on the human level in the form of growing resistance to Bergoglio’s madness. The infinitely greater element of the reaction, however, will come from on high, as Heaven itself intervenes when all seems lost. So Our Lady of Good Success assures us: “To test this faith and confidence of the just, there will be occasions when everything will seem to be lost and paralyzed. This, then, will be the happy beginning of the complete restoration.”
In this year of the centenary of the apparitions of Our Lady of Fatima, we have good reason to hope that our heavenly rescue is near at hand, even if the Triumph of the Immaculate Heart may occur amidst the ruins of the visible Church and the body politic. But after all, what are such travails in view of the eternal felicity to which we are all destined if only we persevere to the end?
For this reason, and well aware of the seriousness of this act, with full freedom I declare that I renounce the ministry of Bishop of Rome, Successor of Saint Peter, entrusted to me by the Cardinals on 19 April 2005, in such a way, that as from 28 February 2013, at 20:00 hours, the See of Rome, the See of Saint Peter, will be vacant and a Conclave to elect the new Supreme Pontiff will have to be convoked by those whose competence it is.
No, that's exactly the opposite of what he's saying. His point is that Benedict is NOT the Pope, so it confuses people that he's still referred to as "Pope Benedict" and not Joseph Ratzinger. The issue is not that Ratzinger is still Pope, it's that we maintained all of these trappings of the Papacy that make it seem like Ratzinger is still Pope.The 3rd paragraph in the article suggests that Pope Benedict somehow didn't actually resign and is in some way still the Pope. Your head is in the sand if you think that reading sh*t like this is productive.
No, that's exactly the opposite of what he's saying. His point is that Benedict is NOT the Pope, so it confuses people that he's still referred to as "Pope Benedict" and not Joseph Ratzinger. The issue is not that Ratzinger is still Pope, it's that we maintained all of these trappings of the Papacy that make it seem like Ratzinger is still Pope.
"...a total novelty that in and of itself suggests Benedict is somehow still a Pope."
He's mocking that suggestion, not advocating for it.
but only after the hated Benedict XVI had been driven from the Chair of Peter, having semi-abdicated while clinging to his papal name, papal title, papal garb, papal insignia, and even the papal office in its supposedly “passive” versus “active” dimension. He thus became the first “Pope Emeritus” in Church history—a total novelty that in and of itself suggests Benedict is somehow still a Pope.
You're cherry-picking words even from the already cherry-picked quote you referenced. The term "semi-abdicated" is a reference to the "papal name, papal title, papal garb, papal insignia" that Benedict maintains. It feels like half measures. If you want to abdicate, fine. But go be Father Joe in a priestly retirement community some place. It confuses the faithful when you abdicate but you're still wearing white and everyone is supposed to refer to you as His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI.Look wiz, I know you're smart, but reading the drivel (thank you) you linked will do nothing but push you towards schism and farther away from the. Church. The sentences read:
Throwing out words like semi-abdicated with the last sentence in that paragraph lead people to think not that the author is mocking the idea of a false resignation, but that he believes in it. If that is not the author's intention, then he needs to work on his grasp of the English language.
His Holiness is not Benny, nor is he JP II, but he was validly elected by the Cardinals and therefore we trust that the Holy Ghost has placed him on the chair of St Peter. That does not mean that we must abandon Church teaching to follow him in the name of Mercy, but it does mean that we cannot be writing uncharitable articles, nor should we be spreading them, as that will lead one on the path to schism.