PopeWatch: Tearing the Church Apart

Father Z gives us this oped that was published in The New York Times of all places.  Comments in red by Father Z:

 

Yesterday Hell’s Bible (aka New York Times) published an op-ed which is a cri de coeur about what is going on in the Church today.   Take this together with Damian Thompson’s recent podcast.  My emphases and comments.


OPINION
GUEST ESSAY

Pope Francis Is Tearing the Catholic Church Apart
Aug. 12, 2021

By Michael Brendan Dougherty

Mr. Dougherty, a senior writer at National Review, has written extensively about faith and the Roman Catholic Church.

In the summer of 2001, I drove up to Poughkeepsie, N.Y., to find what we called “the traditional Latin Mass,” the form of Roman Catholic worship that stretched back centuries and was last authorized in 1962, before the Second Vatican Council changed everything. Back then, conservative Catholics called people who sought it out “schismatics” and “Rad Trads.”

The Mass-goers there weren’t exactly a community; we were a clandestine network of romantics, haters of Pope John Paul II, people who had been jilted by the mainstream church [lots of those] and — I believe — some saints.

There I learned that the Latin language was not the only distinguishing feature of this form of worship. The entire ritual was different from the post-Vatican II Mass. It wasn’t a mere translation into the modern vernacular; less than 20 percent of the Latin Mass survived into the new.

It took me a month to adapt to its rhythm. But in that thick August air, the long silence before the consecration of the host fell upon my heart, like sunshine landing on the bud of prayer for the very first time.

Years later, Pope Benedict allowed devotees of this Mass to flourish in the mainstream of Catholic life, a gesture that began to drain away the traditional movement’s radicalism and reconcile us with our bishops. Today, it is celebrated in thriving parishes, full of young families.  [If he knows anything accurate about Traditional Catholics one would think that Francis wants the radicalism and breaks with bishops to return.  Otherwise, … why the brutality?]

Yet this Mass and the modestly growing contingent of Catholics who attend it are seen by Pope Francis as a grave problem. He recently released a document, Traditionis Custodes, accusing Catholics like us of being subversives. To protect the “unity” of the church, he abolished the permissions Pope Benedict XVI gave us in 2007 to celebrate a liturgy, the heart of which remains unchanged since the seventh century.

For those of us who travel long distances to participate in it, its perseverance is a religious duty. For the pope, its suppression is a religious priority. The ferocity of his campaign will push these young families and communities toward the radicalism I imbibed years ago in Poughkeepsie, before Benedict. It will push them toward the belief that the new Mass represents a new religion, one dedicated to the unity of man on earth rather than the love of Christ.

In the Latin Mass, the priest faces the altar with the people. It never had oddities, as you sometimes encounter in a modern Mass, like balloons, guitar music or applause. The gabby religious talk-show host style of priest is gone. In his place, a priest who does his business quietly, a workmanlike sculptor. By directing the priest toward the drama at the altar, the old Mass opens up space for our own prayer and contemplation.

In the years after Pope Benedict liberalized the old rite, parishes began to bring back the mystical tones of Gregorian chant, the sacred polyphony written by long-dead composers like Orlando Lassus and Thomas Tallis as well as contemporary composers like Nicholas Wilton and David Hughes.

These cultural offshoots of the Latin Mass are why, after Vatican II, the English novelists Agatha Christie and Nancy Mitford and other British cultural luminaries sent a letter to Pope Paul VI asking that it continue. Their letter doesn’t even pretend to be from believing Christians. “The rite in question, in its magnificent Latin text, has also inspired a host of priceless achievements in the arts — not only mystical works, but works by poets, philosophers, musicians, architects, painters and sculptors in all countries and epochs. Thus, it belongs to universal culture as well as to churchmen and formal Christians.”

But the Vatican Council had called for a revision of every aspect of the central act of worship, so the altar rails, tabernacles and baldachins were torn up in countless parishes. This ferment was accompanied by radical new theologies around the Mass. A freshman religious studies major would know that revising all the vocal and physical aspects of a ceremony and changing the rationale for it constitutes a true change of religion. Only overconfident Catholic bishops could imagine otherwise.

The most candid progressives agreed with the radical traditionalists that the council constituted a break with the past. [I recall that Karl Rahner thought it was the most important event since the Council of Jerusalem.] They called Vatican II “a new Pentecost” — an “Event” — that had given the church a new self-understanding. They believed their revolution had been stalled in 1968 when Pope Paul VI issued “Humanae Vitae,” affirming the church’s opposition to artificial contraception, and then put it on ice in 1978 with the election of Pope John Paul II.

To stamp out the old Latin Mass, Pope Francis is using the papacy in precisely the way that progressives once claimed to deplore: He centralizes power in Rome, usurps the local bishop’s prerogatives and institutes a micromanaging style that is motivated by paranoia of disloyalty and heresy. Perhaps it’s to protect his deepest beliefs.

Pope Francis envisions that we will return to the new Mass. My children cannot return to it; it is not their religious formation. Frankly, the new Mass is not their religion. [What an incredibly sad thing to read. I am right now pondering the amazing grace I was given to have come into the Faith and the Church at St. Agnes in St. Paul, MN during the pastorate of Msgr. Richard Schuler.   But so many Catholics had simply to suffer the lunacy of the 60’s-90’s without any relief, not even a decently celebrated Novus Ordo Mass.  It is incredible that people still go to Mass at all in some places.] In countless alterations, the belief that the Mass was a real sacrifice and that the bread and wine, once consecrated, became the body and blood of our Lord was downplayed or replaced in it. With the priest facing the people, the altar was severed from the tabernacle. The prescribed prayers of the new Mass tended never even to refer to that structure anymore as an altar but as the Lord’s table. The prayers that pointed to the Lord’s real presence in the sacrament were conspicuously replaced with ones emphasizing the Lord’s spiritual presence in the assembled congregation.

Go here to read the damning rest. PopeWatch sometimes thinks that the clerics who run the Church these days view the Laity as walking atms and lab rats for their experiments in Church transformation.

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Michael Dowd
Michael Dowd
Monday, August 16, AD 2021 4:31am

Yes, and they also consider them stupid, that they can change the rules and no will notice.
For example yesterday in our Novus Ordo bulletin this statement appeared written by one of our new priests. ” “Beyond our unworthiness as creatures, there is a different kind of unworthiness – namely sin. Yet even when someone is aware of grave sin, a serious offense against love for God and neighbor, they should not let that unworthiness remain an excuse to stay away from the Lord.”

I sent a letter in response to our Rector and noted the following:
“This statement suggests it is now OK for a person to receive Holy Communion in a state of mortal sin. As we all know doing this is a sacrilege. Note below:The Catechism of the Catholic Church:

“To respond to this invitation we must prepare ourselves for so great and so holy a moment. St. Paul urges us to examine our conscience: “Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of profaning the body and blood of the Lord. Let a man examine himself, and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup. For any one who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment upon himself.” Anyone conscious of a grave sin must receive the sacrament of reconciliation before coming to Communion (1385).”

Monsignor ______, please ask Fr. _____to explain or retract his misleading statement at Mass and/or in the bulletin.

Blessing to you and Fr. ______.
NB: Our new Rector/Monsignor arrived at our parish direct from the Vatican. Sounds llike
something Pope Francis might do to help spread his “improvements” in the Church.

Michael Dowd

Quotermeister
Quotermeister
Monday, August 16, AD 2021 10:25am

From the Comments section at the WDTPRS article:

JerseyCatholic says: he lost me at “haters of John Paul II.”

Fr. John Zuhlsdorf says: Yeah… disturbing. John Paul II was not a perfect Pope. He made mistakes, bad ones. Among them was one that really set some people’s teeth on edge: kissing a Koran… the Assisi debacle. He made some really bad appointment of Cardinals and bishops. He omitted doing some things that he ought to have. He contributed to the development of a kind of “rock star” view of popes. All that said, he was a titanic figure in the 20th c., and his manifest suffering was moving. “Hate” JP2? I sure hope that he was just using a rhetorical flourish, but I fear that that is indeed the case for some.

Art Deco
Art Deco
Monday, August 16, AD 2021 10:51am

A quibble: if I’m not mistaken, the term RadTrad was coined by Sandra Miesel about 20 years ago to refer to people associated with (or at least congenial to) the American Society for Tradition, Family, and Property as well as a selection of figures associated with Fr. Nicholas Gruner, Catholic Family News, and The Remnant. (Solange Hertz, to name one). I assume she meant the SSPX as well, but I cannot recall her mentioning it specifically. I don’t think she ever used it to apply to the general run of those attending indult Masses.

Noodling around, I’m surprised to discover that Sandra Miesel is still providing content for Catholic World Report. I’d thought she retired about 15 years ago.

Art Deco
Art Deco
Monday, August 16, AD 2021 11:04am

“Hate” JP2? I sure hope that he was just using a rhetorical flourish, but I fear that that is indeed the case for some.

Mr. Dougherty was 19 years old in 2001. As a young man, I think he was given to eccentric enthusiasms. He had a stand-alone blog ca. 2004 (the name of which I cannot recall) where he promoted sartorial dandyism, Edith Wharton, heavy drinking, and immigration restriction. His interest in the traditional rite succeeded a period in which he was associated with evangelicalism and led a Bible study club in his high school. (He was also involved in community theatre). Betwixt and between, he was enrolled at Bard College, a place which makes an ordinary college look like an engineering school. He was out there, though, unlike his chum Daniel Larison, never gave you the impression he was held together with psychotropics. (He’s been married for 12 years and has four kids; IIRC, he and his wife were acquainted for a long run of years before they married – approx 10 years – so his adolescent oddity doesn’t seem to have driven her away.

Art Deco
Art Deco
Monday, August 16, AD 2021 11:23am

the Church these days view the Laity as walking atms

What Dale Price said: it’s a business with these guys. That’s the bishops.

and lab rats for their experiments in Church transformation.

As far as I can tell, the music program in any novus ordinary parish you care to name is composed so as to please the music director and a small corps of people appended to her. Neither pastors nor parish councils take an interest in correcting this. I am acquainted with one Catholic parish who recruited a music professor at the local college to act as a consultant; he’s a specialist in early music as well as a Mass-going Catholic, so was almost certainly paid nothing. His tangles with the music director were sufficiently frustrating that he just gave up. AFAICT, the pastor’s disposition was that she owned the position, rather like a government office in Bourbon France. (A curio: this woman died about four months ago just shy of 90, having relinquished the music director’s position a dozen years earlier; her children stick a picture of her in the paper that must have been taken 30+ years ago and they cannot be bothered to arrange for a requiem (“No services are planned”)).

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