ecumenism

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Below is a message from blogger Kevin1.  Since we’ve never had a thread on Islam, I thought I would seek permission to use his message to kick start a discussion on the topic before  30 June.

Kevin1 writes:

A thought for your blog before it closes – I saw this video recently,   What do your readers think about Islam in relation to Fatima, being as it was never mentioned by Our Lady of Fatima?  Islam could hardly be described as ‘Russia’s errors’ . . . Where does Islam fit into all this?  When Russia is consecrated, will they all convert?  End

Tell us your thoughts about the Fatima Connection to Islam – is there one?


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The two faiths, historically divided along sectarian lines, have taken what the Kirk has described as “a monumental step in inter-church links” by creating a “joint-liturgy” for the reaffirmation of baptismal vows. As a result, Scotland has the first Protestant church in the world to form such a bond with the Catholic Church. The two churches will also join together to mark the 450th anniversary of the Reformation later this year.

…Mr Kearney said that, while there were differences between the two churches, worshippers from both denominations were “part of the body of Christ”. He added, in an increasingly secular world, Catholics and Protestants had more in common than what divides them.   Click here to read more

A gentleman emailed me this story, which I’d missed since I’ve been travelling the length and breadth of Scotland these past few days, and he concluded his email by asking if we had any plans to protest this outrage.  What do you think?  What, if anything, can we do about this most recent assault on the Faith by the very shepherds charged with guarding and protecting it?  We’ve already reported plans to celebrate the Reformation anniversary, and managed to scupper at least one (the litany prayer to Protestant “saints”) but is there anything else that we can do – that YOU can do – to protest this public scandal?

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…May we together promote a healthy relationship between human beings and the environment. By enhancing our efforts to promote ecological consciousness for serenity and peaceful coexistence, we can give witness to a respectful way of life that finds meaning not in having more, but in being more. By sharing the insights and commitments of our respective religious traditions, we can contribute to the well- being of our world. Click  here to read more and then click here to view the programme for the Pontiff’s forthcoming Apostolic Visit to Cyprus.  Note the predominantly ecumenical flavour of this visit – goodness, they can’t even bring themselves to mention “Mass” on the programme – instead referring to (on two occasions only) “Eucharistic Celebrations”.

Seems the  notion of converting Buddhists and everyone else, has gone right out of fashion.  Instead, the Vatican sends Feast Day greetings to all and sundry, whatever the name of their “god” and the First Commandment isn’t, it seems, going to get in the way.

Crisis?  What crisis?

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Torkay, one of our American bloggers, has been on the mailing list of a new group calling itself RealCatholicTV.com. RCTV puts out internet videos exposing various points of clerical corruption, usually connected with the American bishops’ conference, the USCCB. A couple of weeks ago, RCTV did a week-long series about “progressives,” defining them and detailing the dangers they present to the Church. They were excellent – as RCTV’s productions usually are – but Torkay noticed a strange omission. Nowhere did these videos mention the role of “progressives” at Vatican II and afterward, including their masterminding and implementing of the radical changes in liturgy, theology and discipline that have so poisoned the Church ever since.

Torkay wrote in to express his concerns, and so began a brief but intense (and ultimately futile) discussion between himself and an official of RCTV, who shall remain nameless.  In the thread below this one, you can read Part 1 of the conversation.   This thread contains some additional excerpts from their exchange, in Part 2 of 2…

TORKAY: “Union between the SSPX and Rome have been and continue to be imperfect.” I believe the word Rome uses is “irregular,” and yes, I think this is a demonstration of the advanced nature of this crisis, the advanced state of penetration of the “smoke of Satan,” and the advanced nature of the “diabolical disorientation” within the hierarchy. That is, here we have a Catholic society whose position is unwavering fidelity to Tradition, but not in full union with Rome, who is the guardian of that Tradition, but who seems to have fallen victim to some very clever and unprecedented novelties since Vatican II. Only the enemy could think this one up. (Well, the novelties aren’t really unprecedented: many pre-Vatican II Popes warned us about them.)

“Not unlike what could be said about most Protestant denominations.” Actually, not an apt comparison, since the Protestants ARE in formal schism. They reject the authority of the Pope, of the Magisterium. The Orthodox Churches are also in schism: again, not an apt comparison (oops, I just noticed the end of your note, where you do state that they are in formal schism. Sorry.). Now, I hear you say, “But the SSPX also rejects the authority of the Pope!” Which leads me to ask: the SSPX, i.e. Abp. Lefebvre, disobeyed the Pope once. Yet everyone acts as though this disobedience is a permanent state of rejection of his authority. My understanding is that it is not. Does one act of disobedience make for a permanent rejection of Papal authority? Are you aware, for example, that the SSPX prays for the Pope and the Church continuously?

“All statements that I have read coming from SSPX leaders reject some teachings contained in the documents of the Second Vatican Council, most frequently the Declaration on Religious Liberty, but others as well.” I think “reject some teachings” is accurate, most specifically, as far as I can tell, certain statements on religious liberty, ecumenism, collegiality (I think I left one out), as well as the Novus Ordo. However, it is important to add one word: they reject NOVEL teachings, i.e. those which contradict tradition, i.e. those which contradict the Magisterium.

“Many express more than a mere preference for the Traditional Latin Mass, suggesting the invalidity of the Novus Ordo Mass and other sacraments.” As far as I know, the official position of the SSPX, derived from Abp. Lefebvre, is that the NO is valid, but a danger to the faith because of the Catholic theology that has been stripped from it (see: Ottaviani Intervention). I have never seen any SSPX statement to the contrary, or that suggests inherent invalidity (unless the conditions of validity are not met – which, as we agreed, is highly likely to occur). By the way, who is this “many” who are expressing “more than a mere preference”?

“The mere fact that the SSPX even feels the need for discussion of doctrinal issues with Rome is a sign that the leaders, and probably most members, do not feel they are in union with Rome.” I think the leaders are probably acutely aware of this lack of union, or irregularity, or whatever you want to call it. However, what is driving them, in my perception, is a zeal to restore the health of the Church, not any regrets about their own status. Now, what about the other side of the coin? Why does Rome feel the need for doctrinal discussions? Is that a sign that perhaps the Pope thinks the SSPX may be correct in its doctrinal analyses? If the SSPX is wrong, in other words, why invite them for discussions? Why not just reject their positions out of hand?

“SSPX sophistry etc.” I don’t pretend to understand the canon law argument, but I’ve been told that many canon lawyers do not consider the excommunications valid since Abp. Lefebvre correctly invoked Canon Law, which allows for what he did in cases of perceived necessity: i.e. a bishop is permitted to take whatever action he deems necessary to preserve the faith. My personal reaction, though, is that if Canon Law does indeed permit such cases, I think it gives the bishop too much power. But the whole argument is way over my bald head. Are you familiar enough with Canon Law to comment?

“You cannot claim conditional submission to the authority of Rome.” What if Rome contradicts tradition? Didn’t St. Robert Bellarmine write about this subject? (But don’t ask me where!) In that case, where is the authority? With the human being who contradicts tradition, or with tradition?

“You cannot, as the Protestants say, proclaim the infallibility and the inerrancy of Scripture and then qualify that statement with ‘rightly interpreted.’” But rightly interpreted, to a Catholic, means the authentic teaching of the Magisterium on Scripture, doesn’t it? I didn’t understand where you were going with this statement.

“I could be wrong, but my impression is that the SSPX believes not that they have separated themselves from Rome but that Rome has separated itself from the Tradition and that this Tradition is now under the protection of the SSPX.” I’d say your impression is correct, as far as I understand the situation, but I would use “preserved,” rather than “protect.”

“SSPX priests do not submit to the authority of the local Bishop and, therefore, cannot be said to be in union with Rome.” Aren’t there religious orders who are not under the authority of the local Bishop? Anyway, everyone already agrees, I think, that the SSPX is not in full union with Rome.

“Their only heresy, if there is any, is their rejection of the supreme authority of the Roman Pontiff as manifested in their rejection of authoritative teachings of the Church.  I don’t understand how one can say “we are in union with Rome except” and be considered in full communion with Rome.” You’ve switched targets here: you’ve gone from “rejecting the authority of the Pope” to “rejecting the authoritative teachings of the Church.” Why? Also, you are incorrect in claiming that the SSPX rejects the authoritative teachings of the Church, for the following reasons: one, they embrace and defend the entire Magisterium; two, none of the documents of Vatican II are “authoritative teachings,” because both Council Popes declared the Council to be pastoral, not dogmatic (thus making the Council a historical aberration). Pope John XXIII did that because he knew that the “Progressives” were about to wreak havoc at the Council, and that was how he thought he could head them off. That means that Council documents are not binding on the faithful, despite two of the documents bearing the word “dogmatic,” thus disobeying the Pope.

[SIDEBAR: Uh-oh! Who gave those 2 documents those titles and disobeyed the Pope? And why didn’t they by their actions excommunicate themselves?] (Sorry, I couldn’t resist.)

The Council documents do repeat Magisterial teaching, in their vague, frequently inconsistent, and even self-contradictory way, but as stand-alone documents, they cannot be said to be part of the Magisterium. I’ve heard some prelates, by the way, try to sneak around this by proclaiming something called a “post-Conciliar Magisterium,” but that is a completely transparent and specious ploy. How can there be two Magisteria?

And the third reason why the SSPX has not rejected the authoritative teachings of the Church is that there is no such thing as a “new teaching,” such as those contained in various Council documents. The SSPX judges the Vatican II documents against the infallible yardstick of the Magisterium, as taught by all the Popes before Vatican II, and finds them wanting. That yardstick is not their personal yardstick, it is the yardstick of the Church! What else could we –or they – possibly have to rely on?

But, I hear you say: “You (like the SSPX) have imposed your personal interpretation on Vatican II and its documents! You are acting like a schismatic Protestant! You think you know better than the Church!” To which I would reply: “No, all I have done is to recite the facts. Pope John decreed that the Council was pastoral, not dogmatic, so that its modernist/liberal/progressive errors, which he clearly saw coming, would not be binding on the faithful. This status was affirmed by Paul VI. Therefore, no Vatican II document can be considered to be binding on the faithful. Therefore, none of them can be considered Magisterial. Q.E.D.”


“It may not be a formal sin to participate in the life the SSPX in any way.  It is, in my opinion, to place oneself in a “near occasion of sin” because of a pervasive “culture of doubt” that accepts conditional submission to the authority of Rome.  Even the most devout Traditionalist who rejects the authority of Rome plants a cancer of disobedience in their soul.  If you think I’m exaggerating, just look at the history of the Protestant Reformation: once they rejected the authority of Rome, all manner of doctrinal aberrations became thinkable, then possible, then doable.” You have set up a straw man argument here. First of all, the Vatican has given express permission to attend SSPX Masses to fulfill our Sunday obligation, so where is this “near occasion of sin”? Then, you once again compare traditionalists to Protestants, which is not valid – you can compare sedevacantists to Protestants accurately, but not any traditionalist who is guided by the Magisterium (and if they are not guided solely by the Magisterium, then they are not traditionalists, and lay false claim to that label). Then, you once again unjustly compare the SSPX to schismatics, after you’ve already had to backtrack and admit that they are not schismatic! Sorry, but I think you got carried away with yourself, allowing one false assumption to lead you into an entire 3-story house of false assumptions. Are you aware that you did that?

“I reject the claim that Rome has abandoned the Tradition as inconsistent with the indefectibility of the Church.” In that case, the onus is on you to read the encyclicals of previous popes, to read Pope St. Pius X Pascendi, the Syllabus of Errors, and many more, and to then demonstrate how these are not contradicted by Vatican II.  And as for the indefectibility of the Church, John XXIII’s decree making the Council pastoral has preserved that indefectibility, since the errors contained in the documents are not binding on the Church.

But here’s a thought I had while typing the above paragraph: in a strange sense, you are correct in claiming that Rome has not abandoned Tradition, because, thanks to John XXIII, no Vatican II error is binding on the Church. Which means the problem really is this: Rome acts as though it has abandoned Tradition in several areas, by acting as though the false new ideas of Vatican II have legitimately replaced Magisterial teaching. So, if I have my Latin correct, it is a de facto abandonment, not a de jure abandonment. Example: remember Joseph Ratzinger’s “Countersyllabus,” a description of one of the VII documents (which one was it, Lumen Gentium?) he made when he was a young, and very progressive, peritus? So let’s see: the Syllabus is Magisterial. What then would a “Countersyllabus” be? Could it be…..ANATHEMA????? [accompanying image: Dana Carvey as the Church Lady on Saturday Night Live]

This reminds me of something else: I’ve read in a couple of places that the Novus Ordo was never really promulgated, and for two reasons: one, Paul VI’s apostolic letter (?) introducing it was deliberately mis-translated, and two, the Pope himself stated that he only intended to offer the Novus Ordo as an alternative. If this is true, we have the well-placed enemies of the Church acting as though, once again. The tragedy, and the heart of the crisis, therefore, is that acting as though, the sleight-of-hand of the progressives, has been made to obscure the truth.

RCTV: Before going much further, I want to invite you to visit this page in our online “Amazon Partner Store” and, whether you order the books from our site or not, purchase and read “More Catholic Than the Pope: An Inside Look at Extreme Traditionalism” (by Pete Vere and Patrick Madrid) and “I Am With You Always” (by Michael Davies).  The first book, “More Catholic etc.” is co-authored by a former member of the SSPX and currently a Canon Lawyer.  It addresses each and every SSPX argument from Canon Law and, to my mind, dismantles them as “selective articles taken out of context and without regard for the historical record.”  The second book, “I Am With You Always” is written by the premier apologist and sympathizer of the SSPX and, again to my mind, successfully refutes all the standard SSPX arguments, both moderate and extreme, advancing what amounts to a charge of defectibility of the Church.  If all you do is read the comments entered for each of these books, it will raise and answer a lot of questions.I have probably, already, spent over $100 of my own money seeking satisfactory answers to every issue you have raised.  I have talked with a priest of the FSSP.  I have spent considerable personal time thinking about “The Traditionalist Critique of the Contemporary Church” and all its implications: theological, philosophical, psychological and sociological.  I have learned an enormous amount, been blessed plentifully by all this.  My faith has been questioned and strengthened in the process.  I am truly grateful that you have crossed my path as one obviously in love with the Church without an agenda.  I will not begin to question the sincerity of your search for Truth and the integrity of your conscience: those are rare qualities in any man.Nonetheless, I must invite you to do more of the heavy lifting on your own behalf.  You have found a “pearl of great price” that brings you joy, happiness and peace.  It is extraordinarily difficult to engage in a serious, objective search for a Truth that risks robbing you of so much that brings you joy.  “It can’t be wrong when it feels so right” can be sung about religious as well as romantic matters.  When we are invested in a “pearl of great price,” only God can make us move to another investment which, if true, will bring us even more joy than we think possible from where we are.  If our current investment is making us rich, it’s hard to believe that another could make us even richer or, if it could, why we would need more than we have.I am convinced from everything I have read that the SSPX is far more right than wrong.  What it is wrong about, however, is more important than everything it is right about.  The SSPX critique of the contemporary Catholic Church is in the finest traditions of the prophets.  Where it strays is in the arena of action, where critiques demand that they be expressed concretely.  Riddled throughout the SSPX “ideology” is the belief that, somehow, Rome has strayed from its divinely mandated role to protect the Tradition and SSPX is called to protect that Tradition.  It absolutely violates all understandings of the indefectibility of the Church to hold that position.  The Church is protected by God Himself from teaching errors of divinely revealed faith.  It is not protected from bad management, ineffective articulation of the faith or poor pastoral decisions.  Absolutely every apparent contradiction of the faith can and must be resolved in a way that maintains the Supremacy of the Petrine Office and the indefectibility of the Church.The Office of Peter is the “ultimate legislator,” the judge whose judgments are not subject to appeal, the one whose interpretations of Canon Law are final and definitive.  The SSPX apologetic is, as I wrote earlier, self-serving casuistry and sophistry.There is no articulation of divine Truth that can ever be considered fully adequate.  Transubstantiation, for example, is not an object of faith but an explanation of the Truth to which it points.  No articulation of what we believe about the divine mystery of the Mass, the Eucharist, can ever be complete or perfect.  But no attempt to better articulate that Truth can ever contradict it and be True.Transubstantiation, however, is of an order of Truth quite different from the Truths articulated in “The Declaration on Religious Liberty”  where we wrestle with issues like “the human conscience,” “coercion” and “the right of a human being to be wrong.”  These are issues which are truly subject to understandings heavily conditioned by historical realities that change over time. Pope Leo XIII, for example, may have said, very explicitly, that the divine Truth of the Catholic faith gives it certain prerogatives in the natural order by virtue of its divine origin.  That may be true, and the examples he uses may be valid, but a growing understanding of the radical love of the Father for each of His children may lead to a “new Truth”: that our respect for human beings demands that we respect them as much as God, who never coerces, does.  “Divine prerogatives in the natural order for the Catholic Church” may no longer be an adequate articulation of divine Truth.  The “new Truth” may logically contradict some parts of the old, but it’s because we now have a better articulation of the Truth.  It’s called “Development of Doctrine” and any such “development” will render some parts of earlier articulations wrong. Final example:  Jesus is traditionally defined as the final, complete, self-revelation of God.  Nothing more can be said, in human terms, about the nature of God that was not said in the Incarnation.  This is why Catholics believe that there can be “no new divine revelation” because everything has already been said in the person of Jesus.  However, we are also told, in Scripture, that Jesus will leave with us the Paraclete who will lead us into all Truth.  That means Jesus knows that we will need the assistance of the Holy Spirit, over time, to come to the knowledge of Truth.  We have the Holy Spirit to both protect and reveal the Truth of God, not Truth that at one time was false and now is true, but Truth proportionate to our ability to understand, Truth we are better able to grasp now than before.  When we were children, we spoke and understood as children.  It’s expected that we will grow and that our level of understanding and articulation will mature. Firm belief in the Supremacy of the Roman Pontiff and the Indefectibility of the Church are capable of providing the necessary guidance for addressing issues of disagreement with Rome.  Any belief that suggests that the Holy Father may one day wake up and realize that the SSPX had it right all along is just not compatible with Supremacy and Indefectibility. I’m not going any further with you on this journey.  I’ve learned a lot.  I also know where I cannot go.  It is my judgment that you ought to know where must go.

TORKAY: I can’t say that I’m surprised at your decision to terminate this discussion without responding to any of my original points. Instead, you have raised one straw man after another and tried to turn this into a referendum on the SSPX. You apparently cannot face the fact that the crisis in the Church is the deliberate, planned creation of progressives, both at Vatican II and in its aftermath, from liturgy to theology to discipline, so you engage in evasive behavior. That’s a real shame. This would be the equivalent to our federal government warning us about Arab terrorists, but then carefully scrubbing from its warnings all references to the fact that 9-11 was perpetrated by….Arab terrorists.

It might interest you to know that I never even heard of the SSPX during my original phase of reading about Vatican II – though I did read about Abp. Lefebvre’s efforts to counter the liberal alliance that had taken over the Council, while the Council was still in session. My initial opinion of the Council was formed by Father Wiltgen, Dietrich von Hildebrand, and Michael Davies. This initial opinion was confirmed, later on, when I came across various SSPX articles, as well as Abp. Lefebvre’s book “Against the Heresies,” and other books.

Your thinking tends to be not only imprecise, but quite Modernist: orthodox one moment, heretical the next. Here is a classic example of the Modernist pattern from your post above:

“But no attempt to better articulate that Truth can ever contradict it and be True.” That’s the orthodox part. But then you say this:

“The “new Truth” may logically contradict some parts of the old, but it’s because we now have a better articulation of the Truth.  It’s called “Development of Doctrine” and any such “development” will render some parts of earlier articulations wrong.”  Not only do you contradict yourself, but you have produced sheer heresy. Your note contains several other contradictory statements.

I’m sorry that you cannot face the real cause of the crisis. That being the case, kindly remove me from your mailing list. However, should you ever decide to aim for the bull’s-eye, instead of flailing around on the outer circle, then you may once again send me your videos. END.

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12/4/10  NEWSFLASH!

This thread has been slow to take off so check out the posts – some very interesting material for discussion here.

However, in case you  are anxious to talk about the forthcoming UK Elections, here’s a link to our previous politics thread.  Feel free to add your comments there.

E C U M E N I S  M . . .

The Grand Orange Lodge of Scotland looks set to defy calls to oppose the Pope’s visit later this year after claiming it intends to avoid controversial opposition to the event.

In his first public statement on September’s visit by Pope Benedict XVI, the organisation’s leader in Scotland, Ian Wilson, said that while the Orange Order did not welcome the visit it had a “civic duty to be respectful of the sincerely held views of others”.

However, the Grand Master said the fact that the scandal currently engulfing the Catholic Church coincided with the Pope’s visit provided an unwitting boost to the Grand Orange Lodge’s plans for a celebration of the 450th anniversary of the Scottish Reformation.   Click here to read more

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In a remarkable interfaith gesture, Fifth Annual Catholic Diocesan Youth Rally held at Reno (Nevada, USA), involving Catholic teenagers from various parts of Nevada, heard from area Muslim-Hindu-Buddhist-Jewish leaders.

Catholic teenagers listened intently in the chapel of Bishop Manogue Catholic High School to Muslim imam Abdulrahim Barghouthi, Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, Buddhist priest William S. Bartlett, and Jewish rabbi Teri E. Appleby, explaining the tenets of their respective faiths, highlighting similarities. It ended with recitation of Gayatri Mantra (most sacred mantra of Hinduism from the oldest scripture Rig-Veda, dating to around 1,500 BCE) by Zed.
Click here to read more

And don’t think this phenomenon of providing opportunities for pupils to actively participate in the worship of  false gods is restricted to Catholic schools in the USA – I had an email a couple of days ago from a parent here in Scotland, expressing shock that his daughter was being taught to sing the praises of the Hindu god Shiva.

Let’s be clear:  we’re not talking about pupils being informed about other beliefs. We’re talking about Catholic schools actively promoting false religions. Put this together with our discussion about the invitation to public dissenter, ex-priest, Professor Tom Groome to lecture priests, teachers and catechists of the Archdiocese of Glasgow and you won’t be surprised to discover why we’re asking the question about parental duty.

Parents have a duty to protect and nurture the Faith of their offspring. Catholic schools share this responsibility (with the consent of the parents) but if the schools fail to teach the Faith and, instead, promote false religions, what can and should parents do about the situation?

In short, if you can think of one single reason why parents should continue to send their children to a Catholic school, whether in Scotland, England,  the USA, or anywhere else, we’d like to hear from you. Or, do parents now have a clear duty to withdraw their children from Catholic schools, to prevent malformation in the Faith?

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Below is an extract from an  article, ironically entitled Call for a return to Faith and spiritual obedience published in today’s Scottish Catholic Observer, penned by the eminently disobedient, Bishop Philip Tartaglia.  The SCO has yet to move into the 21st century; they do not publish all articles online (they struggle with sales in parishes, obviously) and so only the introduction to Bishop Tartaglia’s article is published on the SCO website, with an instruction to buy the hard copy if you want to read the rest.  Don’t bother.  Here’s (most of) the rest…

Bishop Tartaglia  in his own – quite shocking – words…

“… Media coverage of the Pope’s visit has chosen to highlight liturgical issues, as if to suggest that preparation for the Pope’s visit will be marred by damaging splits in the Catholic community over the liturgy… The truth is that priests are not breaking down bishops’ doors to ask for training to celebrate Mass in the extraordinary form nor are many of them freely choosing to celebrate Mass in that form, as they might do, if they wished.  Chatting to one of my younger priests about this matter, he said to me that he had no inclination to say Mass in the old form, even if he respected it for what it had been to many generations of Catholics.  He said that he got his Faith and vocation to the priesthood from his experience of the Mass as it is, and he was happy with that. (Ed: now there’s a very sensible priest.  He knows the mind of his bishop!  If I thought for a second that priests were career-minded, I’d say “there goes a potentially very successful career priest!” The fact is that the bishop is supposed to be a leader:  wherever he leads, the clergy will follow. Bishop Tartaglia has made his views known on the old rite Mass.  Goodness, given how open he has been with lay correspondents, revealing his dislike, to put it mildly, of the TLM, one can only imagine what he says to his priests on the topic…)

It also has to be said that there is little spontaneous demand from Catholics for Mass in the extraordinary form. Such provision as there is, some of it long-standing, centrally located and prime-timed on a Sunday morning, is vastly under-used. Why would bishops put pressure on priests to celebrate a form of Mass they do not want to celebrate and for tiny numbers of the faithful too, when most parishes only have one priest who is fully occupied on Sundays and holy days providing Mass in the ordinary form?  It just does not seem to make pastoral sense. (Ed: well the bishops thought nothing of making priests say a Mass that nobody had asked for, a Mass, moreover, concocted by a Freemason priest with the help of 6 Protestant Ministers.  Nobody asked for that, if I recall.  I remember clearly being one of those faithful who was open mouthed when the fact that we were getting a “new Mass” was announced.  I also remember being open mouthed when priests who felt they could not abandon the old rite were persecuted and punished for their trouble.  So, don’t gimme, “can’t force my priests to say the old Mass”. You forced plenty to say the new).

In my experience as a bishop, the case for Mass in the extraordinary form in Scotland is seriously weakened by militant ultra-traditional groupings (Ed: plural? really? Who are they?) who propagate the false doctrine that the Mass in the ordinary form and Mass in the extraordinary form are not one and the same Holy Sacrifice of the Mass and that Mass in the extraordinary form is superior to the ordinary form, which should be suppressed.  They explicitly deny the teaching of the Second Vatican Council on ecumenism and on religious freedom. (Ed: these “teachings” are not binding on the faithful.  They are novelties condemned, consistently, by previous popes).They also frequently and egregiously disrespect the memory of Pope John XXIII, Pope Paul VI and Pope John Paul II, and have the nerve to express huge reservations about the person and ministry of Pope Benedict XVI. (Ed: only if and when we attack the Petrine Ministry, may you  criticise us. We are entitled to express, as robustly as we wish, our concerns about these Vatican II popes who have introduced errors into the Church. Thankfully, none of these errors have been pronounced binding on the faithful, so we remain loyal to the papacy and always will, for Christ will not abandon His Church – despite unfaithful popes and bishops.) What bishop would seriously want this kind of influence around his diocese?  What bishop would want one of his priests or one of his parish churches associated with such a group? (Ed: what bishop would not alert his people to unsavoury groups working within the Church?  Who are these “militant, ultra-traditional groups”?  I’d like to know to warn my friends in Paisley to have nothing to do with them. It would be, clearly, a charity to name these groups, not to say, an important episcopal duty to protect the faithful.)

These groups sometimes contend that the problems in the Church come from the liturgy and that all will be well if we go back to an earlier form of the liturgy.  This is an erroneous and somewhat simplistic analysis. (Ed: phew!  That lets us off the hook. We hold to no such simplistic analysis. We know that the restoration of the Mass is but one part of the solution to this terrible Church crisis – see our threads on Professor Groome, re-ordering of sanctuaries, priesthood etc. Phew! For a minute  I thought he was having a go at Catholic Truth…)

The problems in the Church today do not come from the liturgy; they come from a lack of Faith and a spirit of disobedience. (Ed: hear hear.  But that disobedience includes the liturgy. Bishop Tartaglia  knows perfectly well that there is extensive and illicit use of Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion at novus ordo Masses. That is blatant disobedience, never mind the hostile attitude towards the TLM).

And these are the result of hostile philosophical trends which originated in the 18th and 19th centuries, and which came to fruition in the 20th century. (Ed: Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion? Really?)

These trends developed while we were celebrating Mass in an older form. (Ed: Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion? Really?) Mass in the older form did not cause these trends nor prevent them developing.  Similarly, Mass in the newer form did not cause the problems in today’s Church, even if the liturgy has sometimes focused these problems. (Ed: what does that mean?) Mass in whatever form nourishes the Faith of those who participate (Ed: I disagree. Didn’t nourish my faith at all, Quite the reverse) but may not prevent evil things from undermining the Church.  Faith and holiness are the antidotes to the Church’s problems, not a wholesale return to an earlier form of the Mass. (Ed: the two things, “faith and holiness” are integral to the old rite Mass).

Of course, none of that is to contradict or gainsay the rightness or the wisdom of the Pope’s Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum in which the Holy Father gives a very generous permission for the celebration of Mass in the extraordinary form. And where priests wish to celebrate Mass in that form, they may freely do so both privately and publicly. But, as I read the Pope’s words, permission stops short of promotion. (Ed: then please read it again, Bishop and put it together with the interview from Monsignor Guido Pozzo that I sent you in my letter dated 30 November, 2009, where it is made clear that the Pope wants the old rite Mass in every parish).

The Pope’s document places no obligation on bishops to promote Mass in the extraordinary form. Mass in the ordinary form must remain the norm for our liturgies. (Ed: we’ll see…) When he issued his Motu Proprio in July 2007, the Holy Father promised a review after three years. The time for that review must be soon. If it takes place, one of the things I would hope to see clarified is precisely this point about permission, provision and promotion.

In the meantime, I, as a bishop, would certainly not attempt to dissuade one of my priests who on his own initiative chose to introduce that form of the Mass into public worship of his parish. (Ed: that, frankly, I do not believe. Having read Bishop Tartaglia’s letters to two separate, unconnected individuals, telling them, in words of one syllable, what he thinks of the old rite Mass and their request for it in the diocese, I simply do not believe him. Let any Paisley priest come forward and prove me wrong. Give me concrete details of arrangements to learn the TLM and a date  for your first TLM – I’ll make a point of attending it myself.  I repeat, I do not believe, for a second, that Bishop Tartaglia would not seek to dissuade any priest of his, who wished to offer the TLM on a regular basis, in his parish). But so far none has, and I can see why; they don’t sense any personal spiritual need to do it and they do not recognise any compelling pastoral  need to do so.  But if that should change, I will be the first to take due cognizance of that fact.

This is not to say that there are no problems with liturgical practice in Scotland, a point well made by some commentators…At the same time, I distance myself from the allegation reported in the media coverage that Mass is commonly celebrated by Scottish priests in a casual or sloppy way.  Priests do not routinely deny the Church’s Faith in their homilies. Priests do not routinely set up unworthy liturgies. My experience of priests in my own diocese and elsewhere is that they try to offer worship which is celebrated according to liturgical norms, which is devout, which communicates the mysteries of the Catholic Faith, which is accessible and participative, and which includes the best music they have in their parish resources. In my experience, priests want to bring  Christ to their people in the liturgy and in their pastoral activity.The liturgy remains a work-in-progress (emphasis added) but, in the main, priests celebrate it well. (Ed: oh well, then, that’s OK – who cares if God is worshipped shabbily as long as “in the main” he is not thus insulted…) That’s why the people are not  generally clamouring for something else. (Ed: they’re not clamouring for something else because they don’t know what else is available – since the bishops have made sure that Summorum Pontificum has been kept well away from parish bulletins, announcements, church websites etc.)

So, when the Pope comes, everyone can be certain that any liturgy that the Holy Father celebrates in Scotland will include the best music, the best ceremonial, and the best liturgical practice that we can manage. But above all, the Pope’s Mass will make the living Christ present o his people.

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“THE Catholic Church last night vowed to challenge in court any move to legalise assisted suicide, after veteran MSP Margo MacDonald launched her right-to-die bill. The Church has questioned the legality of the proposed law that could introduce suicide clinics to Scotland and see those as young as 16 given the right to decide to have their lives ended.”  Click here to read the Scotsman front page news report 22 January.

Why, I wonder, would “The Catholic Church” (in Scotland) suddenly threaten legal action to challenge assisted suicide legislation when, all these years, there’s been no legal threat to the abortion law?  After all, people of 16 and over are capable of speaking for themselves, unlike the poor, entirely innocent, babies in the womb.  So, why this particular piece of legislation and why now?

Oops!  The Scots bishops’ ad limina visit is looming at the beginning of February and there’s a possible papal visit in the pipeline.   Call me Msssss McCynical if you will, but I’m not sure this latest episcopal headline is due to any genuine concern for “life” issues.   So, that’s double-standard number one.

Then read the report below, which a concerned reader in Edinburgh emailed – as did another concerned (former Anglican) reader in Wales.  Seems this news is doing the rounds again (it was mentioned, in passing, on this blog before Christmas).   Read the following, incredible report, and be aware of the fact that the Cardinal – and each and every other Scottish bishop – would sooner demolish every vacant church building in the land than hand it over to the Catholic Society of Saint Pius X.

Irony of ironies; the double-standard to beat all double-standards – Cardinal O’Brien is happy to help “traditional” Protestants, but not “traditional” Catholics – i.e. he’ll provide a place for Protestants who wish to resist the “liberals”  but not Catholics.  Disgraceful. Read the report from the grateful Protestant group below and reflect…

Traditionalist Anglicans in Scotland celebrate Christmas

Traditionalist Anglicans in Scotland are setting up a new community in Edinburgh. This is being made possible because of a generous offer from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St Andrews and Edinburgh to provide a place of worship for their first service this Christmas Eve.

Canon Len Black, Regional Dean of Forward in Faith Scotland, the organisation which represents orthodox Anglicans world-wide, said, “This move has come about because of the rapid drift of the Scottish Episcopal Church away from the traditional faith, morals and practices of the universal Church.

We are most grateful to Cardinal Keith O’Brien for the generosity he has shown us in making a place of worship available, not just for Christmas but in the months ahead, as we seek to serve those Episcopalians who look to us for spiritual and sacramental support.” “When the Scottish Episcopal Church first decided to ordain women as priests some 15 years ago we were assured of a ‘valued and honoured place’ within the church ‘for all time to come’. That promise has not been honoured and today some of our people even find that they are being told they are no longer welcome in the churches in where they were baptised as infants.

Now we find that the provision we were hoping for from our own Church is being offered to all disaffected Anglicans by the Catholic Church.” “Episcopalians in Scotland have a long and rich history and liturgical tradition and the offer from the Catholic Church to enable us to take this tradition with us is something we and all traditionalists must consider carefully.” Cardinal O’Brien commented, “I am delighted to help provide a place of worship for these Traditionalist Anglicans, taking the lead from Pope Benedict XVI and his predecessor Pope John Paul II.”

The first service – a Christmas Vigil Mass – is being held on Thursday 24th December at 7pm in the Chapel of the Convent of Mercy (St Catherine’s), 4 Lauriston Gardens, Tollcross, Edinburgh EH3 9HH  – www.forwardinfaith.info/scotland.
Canon Len Black
Forward in Faith Scotland Regional Dean

Click on ‘comments’ with your views on both of these issues, which centre, in large part, on the double-standards, confusion, whatever it is, of the Scottish Bishops. I haven’t noticed a lot of pro-abortion-voting Catholic MPs being taken to task, have you?  Let alone, that abominable Act being challenged in the courts.  There wasn’t so much as a murmur when the Civil Partnerships Bill make its smooth and very merry way through the House.  And notice, too, how the Cardinal is careful to use not one, but two Popes to justify his unconscionable action in providing church premises for the Protestant “traditionalists”.  I’ve not heard him quoting Pope Benedict on the liturgy, though, have you?  Does Cardinal O’Brien really not see the irony in helping Protestants to escape the liberals in their ecclesial communities, while refusing to help Catholics do the same?  If you see the irony, the double-standards, tell us, now.

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HUMAN EVENTS asked a panel of 15 conservative scholars and public policy leaders to help us compile a list of the Ten Most Harmful Books of the 19th and 20th Centuries. Each panelist nominated a number of titles and then voted on a ballot including all books nominated. A title received a score of 10 points for being listed No. 1 by one of our panelists, 9 points for being listed No. 2, etc. Appropriately, The Communist Manifesto, by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, earned the highest aggregate score and the No. 1 listing.
Click here to check the list

Got me thinking.  I avoid the  Bookshop of the Sisters who, before feminism got them in its grip, were known as the Daughters of St Paul – they’re now going about the place calling themselves the Pauline Sisters.  Anyway, I avoid their bookshop in Glasgow  like the plague (well, the whole silly notion of freedom of speech and religious freedom almost got me arrested on one occasion, when a man who overheard my opinion about some of the heresy on sale there, asked the  Sister who was trying not to listen to me, to call the police. I expect he’s an MP now. Goodness, between that and being banned from the Gonzaga Lectures, it’s a wonder I’ve managed to cling on to my good reputation…)

Like I say, though, the Human Events list  got me thinking about the books which have influenced Catholics since Vatican II and which are proudly on sale in cathedrals, parishes and Pauline Bookshops around Scotland and the wider UK.   Which of these books, I asked myself, would I identify as the most harmful?  As a student teacher, I was exposed to modernists like Hans Kung and Edward Schillebeeckx whose respective writings on papal infallibility and the Eucharist, had us all debating the  truth (or lack thereof) of Catholic doctrines on papal infallibilility and  the Real Presence, would you believe.   And parents wonder why children are not taught the Faith in Catholic schools!  And bishops wonder why priests don’t want to be priests any more.  Schillebeeckx was called to explain himself in December, so I’ve copied the following paragraph from the first obituary to show up on Google…

“When plans for the Second Vatican Council (1962-65) were announced, Schillebeeckx responded as coauthor of a statement, signed by the seven Dutch bishops, that anticipated virtually all the progressive changes that would come out of Vatican II on issues like liturgy, ecumenism and openness to other faiths and the encouragement of lay initiative. Although Schillebeeckx was not a peritus (expert) at the council, he worked closely with Utrecht Cardinal Bernard Alfrink and others to emphasize the collegial nature of the episcopacy, as a balance to papal infallibility pronounced at Vatican I (1869-70). The Dogmatic Constitution of the Church reflected his views on the subject. Also during the Second Vatican Council, Schillebeeckx joined with fellow theologians Hans Küng, Karl Rahner and Yves Congar in launching the theological journal Concilium.”

Off the top of my head, then,  Kung and Schillebeeckx would be removed from the library of every seminary and teacher training college in the world, if it were up to me.  Oh and I’d close down every Pauline Bookshop in aforementioned world, as well.  I sure would. The police have quite enough to do, thank you very much.

What about you?  Feel free to discuss the Human Events list, of course, but as well, it would be interesting to know which, if any, post-Vatican II literature you think has caused most harm, whether to bishops, priests, religious, laity, or all.

This is something we’ve never discussed before and we have our Torkay to thank for sending the link.  So, a brand new topic to start a brand new year of blogging: think, research, stretch your mind – enjoy!

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Listen, I had no intention of opening a “weather” thread this weekend until a chance conversation with a total stranger today.  We were exchanging pleasantries, as folk do until they get to know me, and, of course, “The Big Freeze” was mentioned, casually, by me, saying that I detest this snow and ice and it seems set to go on for another couple of weeks.  “Yes” the lady replied, “but it’s got nothing to do with climate change.”  Before I could compliment her on her immense intelligence, the lights switched to green and we crossed the road in different directions but not before her parting shot, like music to my ears: “I think God is trying to tell  us something” she muttered and off she went, a beacon of hope in a mad, mad world.

Then I heard the news experts explaining that this prolonged freeze doesn’t disprove global warming.  Not at all.  We’re all so ignorant that we don’t realise that “weather” is not the same thing as “climate”.

Well, whatdiyaknow?  Here’s me thinking that when folk tell me the climate is great in Spain if I’m looking for a holiday destination (or, in the case of some hopefuls, a place to live permanently)  they mean the weather is great.  Silly me.

Anyway, do you agree with the lovely lady I met, perchance, today?  Or not?

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