" Pope Benedict XVI, in his Letter to the Bishops of the World, accompanying the Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum, made clear that the Roman Missal in use before the Missal of Pope Paul VI, 'was never juridically abrogated and, consequently, in principle, was always permitted.'
"But can the Roman Pontiff juridically abrogate the Usus Antiquior? The fulness of power (plenitudo potestatis) of the Roman Pontiff is the power necessary to defend and promote the doctrine and discipline of the Church. It is not 'absolute power' which would include the power to change doctrine or to eradicate a liturgical discipline which has been alive in the Church since the time of Pope Gregory the Great and even earlier. The correct interpretation of Article 1 [of Traditionis custodes] cannot be the denial that the Usus Antiquior is an ever vital expression of 'the lex orandi of the Roman Rite'. Our Lord Who gave the wonderful gift of the Usus Antiquior will not permit it to be eradicated from the life of the Church.
"It must be remembered that, from a theological point of view, every valid celebration of a sacrament, by the very fact that it is a sacrament, is also, beyond any ecclesiastical legislation, an act of worship and, therefore, also a profession of faith. In that sense, it is not possible to exclude the Roman Missal, according to the Usus Antiquior, as a valid expression of the lex orandi and, therefore, of the lex credendi of the Church. It is a question of an objective reality of divine grace which cannot be changed by a mere act of will of even the highest ecclesiastical authority."
I venture to add that, if Traditionis custodes is ultra vires, contingent and inferior attempts at legislation on the basis of what it appears to mandate ... for example, by bishops ... will also have no power to bind.
You have 'hit the canonical/theological nail on the head'. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThe problem is, as the evidence richly shows, this: Cardinal Burke is a Catholic Christian and an ethical man, for whom these important legal-ethical distinctions are important for civilized life: Francis is a lawless man ruled only by his personal will and disordered passions. More to the point: that is precisely OUR problem as orthodox Catholics trying to love the Church and the Papacy.
ReplyDeleteSadly, cardinal, archbishops or bishops will use (or misuse) their authority to pressure priests. Loss of assignments, loss of pay, loss of pension. Cancel a man. Or threaten him with psychological treatment. Or drop vague hints about accusations. These may be grave deterrents to a priest in his desire to offer the Usus Antiquor. These may become grave consequences if the superior is vindictive. It cannot be an easy time for a priest ever, and even worse now if devoted to the TLM.
ReplyDeleteMeanwhile, PF's message for World Communications Day extols the virtues of listening and dialogue and declares that “unity does not require uniformity, monotony, but the plurality and variety of voices, polyphony.” This obviously does not apply to the Liturgy.
ReplyDeleteDamian Thompson has a link to an interview with Roche in 2005 in which he defended the Usus Antiquior- presumably because he then believed that it would serve his careerist ambitions.
ReplyDelete