Cardinal Stickler’s Tridentine Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NY On Sunday, May 12, 1996, an overflow crowd of over 4000 worshippers gathered at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City, to participate in a Pontifical Tridentine Mass celebrated by Cardinal Alphonse Stickler in what has been described as “one of the most important dates in the history of the restoration of the Traditional Mass in the United States and, for that matter, in the entire world”. The following Monday, May 13, a front page article in the New York Times Metro Section told the story. Excerpts from the article follow below: The Faithful Welcome An Old Rite By PETER STEINFELS [excerpts] “Vocem jucunditatis annuntiate” -”Declare it with a voice of joy.” With a choir chanting those Latin words, Alfons Cardinal Stickler, prefect emeritus of the Vatican Library, proceeded to the altar of St. Patrick’s Cathedral to begin a Solemn High Pontifical Mass sung in Latin according to the traditional Tridentine Rite. It was the first such Mass to be celebrated in the cathedral in 35 years. The words, taken from the prophet Isaiah, captured the spirit of the worshipers who filled the Cathedral last evening to exult in every magnificent detail of a form of the Roman Catholic Mass that has largely disappeared since the Second Vatican Council called for a revision of the church’s liturgy in 1963. John Cardinal O’Connor, the Archbishop of New York, briefly addressed the congregants, receiving warm applause after welcoming them to what he called “this historic occasion.” “I feel privileged that you have requested this Mass be celebrated here in what is your cathedral,” the Cardinal said. “All are welcome here. We are one body, one body in Christ.” The worshipers were dazzled by the rite’s precise choreography, beginning with the entrance by Cardinal Stickler, who wore a scarlet kappa magna, a silk cape with a 30 foot train. They were quieted in their souls by the rippling rise and fall of Latin chant. And they were stirred by the Gloria of Mozart’s Coronation Mass. The Mass was a special moment of triumph for a hard core of traditionalist Catholics who have fought, sometimes quite bitterly, to preserve a form of worship that they believe is an essential link to the Catholic past and the fullness of their faith. “This is the restoration of our liturgical home,” said one worshiper, Christopher A. Ferrara, a 44-year-old lawyer from West Caldwell, N.J., who heads a public-interest law firm that aids Catholics involved in anti-abortion campaigns and other public controversies. “You can’t go into someone’s home and remove the furniture and everything else without disorienting everyone,” he said, “but that’s what happened with our liturgical home 30 years ago.” After the Second Vatican Council, the Tridentine rite was replaced by a new liturgy written to encourage the congregation’s active participation. Local languages replaced Latin. Prayers that had been whispered or said silently were now said aloud, and ritual gestures that had been blocked from view now became visible because the priest faced the congregation across the altar rather than facing the altar with his back to the congregation. The changes led to complaints that the liturgy’s sense of mystery had been lost, and that the Catholic idea of the Mass as reenacting Christ’s sacrificial death on the cross had been swallowed up by the imagery of the Mass as a meal. Many Catholic officials agree that the change from one rite to another was carried out hastily and has sometimes produced unapproved innovations that range from the banal to the nearly blasphemous… Cardinal Stickler, a tiny man of 85 with a fringe of white hair and a cherubic face. spoke in grandfatherly tones on Saturday about the requests he had received to celebrate the old Tridentine Mass from places as distant as Nepal. He said that he never went without the permission of the local bishop. “I don’t want to create conflict in a diocese or parish,” he said. The numerous traditional Catholics who were privileged to attend this historic event left with encouragement and inspiration. This moment should be remembered by all — especially where there continues to be resistance to the legitimate celebration of the Tridentine Mass in dioceses where an interest has been shown by the faithful. With the testimony of Cardinal Stickler, a bishop who was a peritus at the Second Vatican Council, it cannot be justly said that the Tridentine Mass is a “fringe” phenomenon, or in any way “unfaithful” to the mission of the Church.
Cardinal Alfons Stickler on the changes in the Mass and Vatican II...
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Cardinal Alfons Stickler on the changes in the Mass and Vatican II...
My position at the Council--pardon me, please, if I
begin with some personal background; it is necessary in order to understand what
I have to say. I was Professor of Canon Law and Church Legal History at the
Salesian University and for eight years, from 1958 until 1966, I was the
university's rector. As such I worked as consultant to the Roman Congregation
for Seminaries and Universities; and from the preparatory work to the
implementation of Council regulations, I was a member of the Conciliar
commission directed by that dicastery. In addition, I was named a peritus of the
Commission for the Clergy….
Shortly before the beginning of the Council, Cardinal
Laarona, whose student I had been at the Lateran, and who had been named
chairman of the Conciliar Commission for the Liturgy, called to say he had
suggested me as a peritus of that Commission. I objected that I was already
committed to two others, above all the one for seminaries and universities, and
as a Council peritus. But he insisted that a canon lawyer had to be called upon
on account of the significance of canon law in the requirements of the liturgy.
Through an obligation I did not seek, then, I experienced Vatican II from the
very beginning.
It is generally known that the liturgy had been
placed as the first topic of the discussion sequence. I was appointed to a
subcommission that had to consider the modi of the first three chapters, and had
also to prepare the texts that would be brought to the Council hall for
discussion and voting. This subcommission consisted of three bishops-Archbishop
Callewaert of Ghent as president; Bishop Enciso Viana of Majorca and, if I am
not mistaken, Bishop Pichler of Yugoslavia-as well as three periti: Bishop
Marimort, the Spanish Claretian Father Martinez de Antoñana and me. I understood
precisely, therefore, the wishes of the Council fathers, as well as the correct
sense of the texts that the Council voted on and adopted.
"You can understand my
astonishment when I found that the final edition of the new Roman Missal in many
ways did not correspond to the Conciliar texts that I knew so well, and that it
contained much that broadened, changed or even was directly contrary to the
Council's provisions."
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You can understand my astonishment when I found that
the final edition of the new Roman Missal in many ways did not correspond to the
Conciliar texts that I knew so well, and that it contained much that broadened,
changed or even was directly contrary to the Council's provisions. Since I knew
precisely the entire proceeding of the Council, from the often very lengthy
discussions and the processing of the modi up to the repeated votes leading to
the final formulations, as well as the texts that included the precise
regulations for the implementation of the desired reform, you can imagine my
amazement, my growing displeasure, indeed my indignation, especially regarding
specific contradictions and changes that would necessarily have lasting
consequences. So I decided to go see Cardinal Gut, who on May 8, 1968 had been
named prefect of the Congregation of Rites in place of Cardinal Laarona, who had
resigned from the prefecture of the congregation on January 9 of that year. I
asked him for an audience at his apartment, which he granted me on November 19,
1969. (Here I would like, incidentally, to note that the date of Cardinal Gut's
death is repeatedly given in Archbishop Bugnini's memoirs as one year too early:
December 8, 1969 instead of the correct date of 1970.)
He received me very cordially, although he was
already visibly quite ill, and I could pour my heart out to him, so to speak. He
let me speak without interruption for half an hour, and then said that he shared
my concerns completely. He emphasized, however, that the Congregation of Rites
bore no blame, for the entire work of reform had been achieved by the Consilium,
which was appointed by the Pope specifically for that purpose, and for which
Paul VI had chosen Cardinal Lercaro as president and Fr. Bugnini as secretary.
This group worked under the direct supervision of the Pope.
Now, Fr. Bugnini had been secretary of the Council's
Preparatory Commission for the Liturgy. Because his work had not been
satisfactory-it had taken place under the direction of Cardinal Gaetano
Cicognani-he was not promoted to secretary of the Conciliar Commission; Fr.
Ferdinand Antonelli, OFM (later Cardinal) was named in his place. An organized
group of liturgists represented this neglect to Paul VI as an injustice against
Fr. Bugnini, and they managed to see that the new Pope, who was very sensitive
to such procedures, righted that "injustice" by naming Fr. Bugnini as secretary
of the new Consilium responsible for the implementation of the reform.
Both of these appointments-of Cardinal Lercaro and
Fr. Bugnini-to key positions on the Consilium made it possible for voices to be
heard that could not be heard during the proceedings of the Council, and
likewise silenced others. The work of the Consilium was accomplished in working
areas that were inaccessible to non-members.
(It must, of course, be left to the future to throw
light upon why, despite their great effort in the immense and sensitive work of
the Consilium and especially in the heart of the reform, the new Ordo Missae,
which had been put together in the shortest time, both men fell visibly out of
favor: Cardinal Lercaro had to give up his position as archbishop; and Fr.
Bugnini, named Archbishop as well as the new secretary of the Congregation of
Rites in 1968, did not receive the red hat to which a position of that kind
entitled him but was instead named Nuncio in Teheran, a position he held until
he ended his earthly work with his death on July 3, 1982.)
In order to assess the agreement or contradiction
between the Council's regulations and the reform as it was actually carried out,
let's look briefly at the most important of the Council's instructions for the
work of reform.
The general instructions, which concern above all the
theological foundations, are contained principally in article 2 of Sacrosanctum
Concilium. Here is first stated the earthly-heavenly nature of the Church, her
Mystery, as the liturgy should express it: everything human must be ordered to
the divine and subordinated to it; the visible to the invisible; the active to
the contemplative; the present to the future city of God which we seek.
Accordingly, the renewal of the liturgy must also go hand in hand with the
development and renewal of the concept of the Church.
Article 21 sets down the precondition for any
liturgical reform-that there is in the liturgy an unchanging part, because
decreed by God, and parts which can be changed, namely those which in the course
of time have intruded in an improper way or have proven less appropriate. Texts
and rites must correspond to the order articulated in article 2, and can thereby
be better understood by the people and better experienced by them. In article 23
appear mainly practical guidelines that must be followed to bring about the
right relationship between tradition and progress. A precise theological,
historical and pastoral investigation must be undertaken; in addition one must
heed the general laws of the structure and of the sense of the liturgy, and the
experiences derived from recent liturgical reforms. It is then laid down as a
general norm that innovation may be introduced only if a genuine benefit to the
Church demands it. Finally, the new forms must always grow organically out of
those already existing.
I would like to point out the practical
norms which arise for the work of reform from the didactic and pastoral nature
of the liturgy. According to article 33, the liturgy is principally the cult of
the majesty of God, in which worshippers come into relation with Him by means of
visible signs that the liturgy uses in order to express invisible realities,
which have been chosen by Christ Himself or by the Church. Here there is a
vibrant echo of what the Council of Trent of the Catholic Church already
recommended in order to protect her patrimony from the rationalistic and
spiritless emptiness of Protestant worship, a patrimony which the Holy Father in
his writings on the Eastern churches has characterized as their special
treasure. This "special treasure" also deserves to be a source of nourishment
for the Catholic Church. It distinguishes itself by being rich in symbolism,
thus providing didactic and pastoral education and enrichment, making it
splendidly suited even to the simplest people.
When we consider that the Orthodox churches, despite
their separation from the rock of the Church, through the symbolic expression
and theological progress that continuously found entrance into their liturgy,
have preserved the correct beliefs and the sacraments, every Roman Catholic
liturgical reform should rather increase the symbolic richness of its form of
worship than (sometimes even drastically) decrease it. As far as the guidelines
for the particular parts of the liturgy are concerned-above all for their
center, the Sacrifice of the Mass-only a few especially significant points for
the reform of the Ordo Missae, on which we are concentrating, should be
recorded. Regarding the reform of the Ordo Missae, two Conciliar directives are
especially to be emphasized. In article 50, first the general directive is given
that in the reform the intrinsic nature of the several parts of the Mass and the
connection between them should be more clearly manifested, in order that devout
and active participation might be made easier for the faithful.
As a consequence, it is emphasized that the rites
should be simplified, while faithfully retaining their substance, and that
elements which in the course of centuries had been duplicated or added in a way
that was not especially opportune, would again be eliminated; while others,
which had been lost with the passage of time, would be restored in harmony with
the tradition of the fathers as far as should appear appropriate or necessary.
As far as the active participation of the faithful is
concerned, the various elements of external involvement are indicated in article
30, with special emphasis on the necessary silence at the proper moments. The
Council comes back to this in greater detail in article 48, with a special note
about interior participation, through which alone the divine worship and the
attainment of grace jointly with the sacrificing priest and the other
participants are made fruitful.
Article 36 speaks about the liturgical language
generally, and article 54 of the Mass in particular cases. After a discussion
lasting several days, in which arguments for and against were discussed, the
Council fathers came to the clear conclusion-wholly in agreement with the
Council of Trent-that Latin must be retained as the language of cult in the
Latin rite, although exceptional cases were possible and even welcome. We shall
return to this point in detail.
Article 116 speaks extensively about Gregorian chant,
noting that it has been the classical chant of the Roman Catholic liturgy since
the time of Gregory the Great, and as such must be retained. Polyphonic music
also deserves attention and cultivation. The other articles of Chapter VI, on
sacred music, speak about appropriate music and singing in the Church and the
liturgy, and emphasize splendidly the important, indeed the fundamental role of
the pipe organ in the Catholic liturgy.
Interestingly, article 107 discusses the reform of
the liturgical year, with an emphasis on the affirmation or reintroduction of
the traditional elements, retaining their specific character. Particularly
emphasized is the importance of feasts of the Lord and in general of the
Proprium de tempore in the annual sequence, to which some sacred feasts had to
give way in order that the full effectiveness of the celebration of the
mysteries of redemption not be impaired.
This account of the liturgical reform in light of the
Liturgy Constitution cannot be complete, both as far as the individual subjects
are concerned and the way they are treated. I shall select as many and as varied
examples as appear necessary in order to reach a convincing conclusion.
The Church and the liturgy
grow and develop together, but always in such a way that the earthly is
organized around the heavenly. The Mass comes from Christ; it was adopted by the
apostles and their successors as well as by the Fathers of the Church; it
developed organically, with the conscious retention of its substance. The
liturgy developed along with the Faith that is contained within it; thus we can
say, with Pope Celestine I, in his writings to the Gallican bishops in the year
422: Legem credendi lex statuit supplicandi: The liturgy contains, and in proper
and comprehensible ways, brings the Faith to expression. In this sense the
constancy of the liturgy participates in the constancy of the Faith itself;
indeed it contributes to its protection. Never has there been, therefore, in any
of the Christian-Catholic rites, a break, a radically new creation-with the
exception of the post-Conciliar reform. But the Council again and again demanded
for the reform a strict adherence to tradition. All reforms, beginning with
Gregory I through the Middle Ages, during the entry into the Church of the most
disparate peoples with their various customs, have observed this ground rule.
This is, incidentally, a characteristic of all religions, including non-revealed
ones, which proves that an attachment to tradition is standard in any religious
worship, and is therefore natural.
"It is not surprising, therefore, that every heretical
offshoot from the Catholic Church featured a liturgical
revolution"
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It is not surprising, therefore, that every heretical
offshoot from the Catholic Church featured a liturgical revolution, as is most
clearly recognized in the case of the Protestants and the Anglicans; while the
reforms effected by the popes, and particularly stimulated by the Council of
Trent and carried out by Pope Pius V, through those of Pius X, Pius XII and John
XXIII, were no revolutions, but merely insignificant corrections, alignments and
enrichments. Nothing new should be introduced, the Council expressly says of the
reform desired by the fathers, which the genuine good of the Church does not
demand. There are several clear examples of what the post-Conciliar reform
actually produced, above all in its core, the radically new Ordo Missae. The new
introduction to the Mass grants a significant place to many variants and,
through further concessions to the imagination of the celebrants with their
communities, is leading to a practically unlimited multiplicity. Next comes the
Lectionary, to which we will return in another connection. Thereupon follows the
Offertory which, in its contents and text, represents a revolution. There is to
be no preceding sacrificial act, but only a preparation of the gifts with
evidently humanized content, which impresses one as contrived from beginning to
end. In Italy it was called the sacrifice of the coltivatori diretti, that is,
of the few people who still personally cultivate their small parcels of land,
for the most part beyond and after their principal occupation. On account of the
great technical means at the disposal of agriculture, which today can be
maintained only via industry, very little human labor is necessary for the
production of bread. From the plowing to the harvester from which the sacks of
grain come, few human hands are needed. The substitution of the offering of the
gifts for the coming Sacrifice is rather an unfortunate, outdated kind of
symbolism that can scarcely replace the many genuine symbolic elements that were
suppressed. A tabula rasa was also made of the gestures highly recommended by
the Council of Trent and required by the Second Vatican Council, as well as of
many Signs of the Cross, altar kisses and genuflections.
The essential center, the sacrificial action itself,
suffered a perceptible shift toward Communion, in that the entire Sacrifice of
the Mass was changed into a Eucharistic meal, whereby in the consciousness of
believers the integrating component of Communion replaced the essential
component of the transforming act of sacrifice. Cardinal Ratzinger has expressly
determined also, with reference to the most modern dogmatic and exegetical
investigations, that it is theologically false to compare the meal with the
Eucharist-which practically always occurs in the new liturgy. With that, the
groundwork is laid for another essential change: in place of the sacrifice
offered by an anointed priest as alter Christus comes the communal meal of the
convened faithful under the presiding priest. The intervention of Cardinals
Ottaviani and Bacci persuaded the Pope to overturn the definition [in the
original General Instruction that accompanied the new Missal-Translator's note]
that confirmed this change in the Sacrifice of the Mass; it was "pulped down" by
order of Paul VI. The correction of the definition resulted, however, in no
change to the Ordo Missae itself.
This change of the heart of the Sacrifice of the Mass
received confirmation and activation in the celebration versus populum, a
practice which had previously been forbidden and which was a reversal of the
entire tradition of celebration towards the East, in which the priest was not
the counterpart of the people but rather one who acted in persona Christi, under
the symbol of the rising sun in the East.
It is germane to point out a quite serious change in
the consecration formula of the wine into the Blood of Christ: the words
mysterium fidei were removed, and inserted as a later joint acclamation
with the people-quite a blow for "actuosa participatio." What does historical
research, which had been prescribed by the Council before every change, now say
exclusively? That the words go back to the beginning of the traditions of the
Roman Church that are known to us, which had been handed on by St. Peter. St.
Basil, who through his studies in Athens was certainly familiar with the Western
tradition, says regarding the forms of all the sacraments that they had not been
written down in the well-known holy writings of the apostles and their
successors and pupils because of the discipline of secrecy that then prevailed,
on the ground of which the most holy mysteries of the Church should not be
betrayed to pagans. He says expressly, as do all Christian witnesses, who reveal
the same conviction, that in addition to the written teachings handed down to us
we also have ones that in mysteria tradita sunt and that date from the tradition
of the apostles; he says both have the same value and no one may contradict
either. As an example he expressly cites the words through which the Eucharistic
bread and the Chalice of Salvation are confected: which of the saints has handed
them down to us in writing?
All subsequent periods of history expressly attest to
this historical inheritance in the Eucharistic consecration formula: the
Gelasian sacramentary-the oldest Mass book of the Roman Church-has in the
Vatican codex in the original text, not as a later addition, the words
"mysterium fidei."
People have always wondered about the origin of these
words. In 1202, the emeritus Archbishop John of Lyons posed to Pope Innocent
III, whose liturgical knowledge was well known, the question of whether one must
believe that the words of the Canon of the Mass, which do not come from the
gospels, were passed down by Christ and the apostles to their successors. The
Pope answered in a long letter in December of that year that these words, which
are not from the gospels, are to be believed as if the apostles received them
from Christ and their successors received them in turn. The fact that this
decretal, included in the collection of decretal letters of Innocent III, which
were combined by Raymond von Penafort by order of Pope Gregory IX, was not
excluded as were other outdated ones but rather was passed on, proves that
prolonged value was given to this statement of the great Pope.
St. Thomas speaks clearly about our subject in the
Summa Theologiae III, q. 78, art. 3, which deals with the words of the
consecration of the wine. Explaining the necessary arcane discipline of the
ancient Church, he says that the words "mysterium fidei" come from divine
tradition, which was given to the Church by the apostles, making particular
reference to 1 Cor. 10[11]:23 and 1 Tim. 3:9. A commentator refers to DD Gousset
in the 1939 Marietti edition: "sarebbe un grandissimo errore sostituire un'altra
forma eucharistica a quella del Missale Romano…die sopprimere ad esempio la
parola aeterni e quella mysterium fidei che abbiamo dalla tradizione." The
Council of Florence also, in the bull of union with the Jacobites, expressly
adds the consecration formula of Holy Mass, which the Roman Church has always
used on the foundation of the teaching and authority of the apostles Peter and
Paul.
One wonders about the supremely cavalier way in which
the colleagues of Cardinal Lercaro and Fr. Bugnini disregarded the obligation of
undertaking a detailed historical and theological investigation in the case of
so fundamental a change. If such a thing took place in this case, how might they
have discharged this fundamental obligation before making other changes?
The Eucharist is not only the unique mystery of our
faith; it is also an everlasting one, of which we should always remain
conscious. Our everyday Eucharistic life requires a medium that fully embraces
this mystery-above all in the modern age, in which the autonomy and
self-glorification of modern man resist every concept that goes beyond human
knowledge, that reminds him of his limitations. Every theological concept
becomes a problem for him, and the liturgy especially as a support of the Faith
turns into a permanent object of demystification, that is, of humanizing to the
point of making it absolutely understandable. For this reason, the banishing of
mysterium fidei from the Eucharistic formula becomes a powerful symbol of
demythologization, a symbol of the humanizing of the center of divine worship,
of holy Mass.
With that, we come to the various false
interpretations--and equally false implementations--of a central demand of the
reformers: a fervent, active participation of the faithful in the celebration of
the Mass. The main purpose of their participation is what the Council expressly
says: the worship of the majesty of God. The heart and soul of the participant
must therefore first and foremost be raised to God. (This does not exclude the
possibility that participation also becomes activated within the community.)
Above all, this actuosa participatio was demanded as a result of the frequently
lamented apathy of Mass-goers of the pre-Conciliar period. If it extends itself
into an endless talking and doing, which allows all to become active in a kind
of hustle and bustle which are intrinsic to every external human assembly, even
the most holy moment of the individual's encounter with the Eucharistic God-Man
becomes the most talkative and distracted. The contemplative mysticism of the
encounter with God and His worship, to say nothing of the reverence which must
always accompany it, instantly dies: the human element kills the divine, and
fills heart and soul with emptiness and disappointment. Here a further important
point must be mentioned, a decree of the Council not only misunderstood but also
completely denied: the language of worship. I am very well acquainted with the
argument. As an expert on the commission for the seminaries, I was entrusted
with the question of the Latin language. It proved to be brief and concise and
after lengthy discussion was brought to a form which complied with the wishes of
all members and was ready for presentation in the Council hall. Then, in an
unexpected solemnity, Pope John XXIII signed the Apostolic Letter Veterum
Sapientia on the altar of St. Peter. According to the opinion of the
commission, that made superfluous the Council's declaration on Latin in the
Church. (In the document not only the relationship of the Latin language to the
liturgy, but also all its other functions in the life of the Church, were
pronounced upon.)
As the subject of the language of worship was
discussed in the Council hall over the course of several days, I followed the
process with great attention, as well as later the various wordings of the
Liturgy Constitution until the final vote. I still remember very well how after
several radical proposals a Sicilian bishop rose and implored the fathers to
allow caution and reason to reign on this point, because otherwise there would
be the danger that the entire Mass might be held in the language of the
people-whereupon the entire hall burst into uproarious laughter.
'I could therefore
never understand how Archbishop Bugnini could write, regarding the radical and
complete transition from the prescribed Latin to the exclusively vulgar language
of worship, that the Council had practically said that the vernacular in the
entire Mass was a pastoral necessity (op. cit., pp. 108-121; I am quoting from
the original Italian edition). To the contrary, I can attest to the fact that
regarding the wording of the Council Constitution on this question, in the
general part (art. 36) as well as in the special regulations for the Sacrifice
of the Mass (art. 54) the Council fathers maintained a practically unanimous
agreement--above all in the final vote: 2152 votes in favor and only four
against."
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I could therefore never understand how Archbishop
Bugnini could write, regarding the radical and complete transition from the
prescribed Latin to the exclusively vulgar language of worship, that the Council
had practically said that the vernacular in the entire Mass was a pastoral
necessity (op. cit., pp. 108-121; I am quoting from the original Italian
edition).
To the contrary, I can attest to the fact that
regarding the wording of the Council Constitution on this question, in the
general part (art. 36) as well as in the special regulations for the Sacrifice
of the Mass (art. 54) the Council fathers maintained a practically unanimous
agreement--above all in the final vote: 2152 votes in favor and only four
against. In my research for the Council decree about the Latin language, I
became aware of the concurring opinion of the entire tradition: up to Pope John
XXIII, a clearly unfriendly attitude had been taken toward all preceding efforts
to the contrary. Consider in particular the cases of the statement of the
Council of Trent, sanctioned by anathema, against Luther and Protestantism; of
Pius VI against Bishop Ricci and the Synod of Pistoia; and of Pius XI, who
deemed the Church's language of worship as "non vulgaris." Yet this tradition is
not at all a question only of ritual, although that is the aspect always
emphasized; rather, it is important because the Latin language acts as a
reverent curtain against profanation (instead of the iconostasis of the
Easterners, behind which the anaphora takes place) and because of the danger
that through the vulgar language the whole action of the liturgy might be
profaned, which in fact often happens today. The precision of the Latin
language, moreover, uniquely does justice to the didactic and dogmatically
precise contents of the liturgy, protecting the truth from obfuscation and
adulteration. Finally, the universality of Latin both represents and fosters the
unity of the whole Church.
Because of its practical importance, I would like
especially to go into both of the last-mentioned, with examples. A good friend
has the Deutsche Tagespost sent to me regularly. I always read the next-to-last
page, on which the editorial staff, very laudably, gives readers the opportunity
in letters to the editor to express opposing views. A continuing series of such
letters dealt in detail with the "pro multis" of the Latin text of the formula
of consecration and with its translation as "for all." Again and again philology
was engaged, which often becomes the ruler instead of being merely the handmaid
of theology. Monsignor Johannes Wagner says in his Liturgiereformerinnerungen
(1993) that the Italians first introduced this translation, although he himself
would have been for the literal translation of "many." Unfortunately, I have
never found an appeal to an argument of the first order that is at once
theologically decisive and extremely important pastorally; it is contained in
the Roman Tridentine Catechism. Here the theological distinction is clearly
emphasized: The "pro omnibus" indicates the force that the Redemption has "for
all." If one takes into consideration, however, the actual fruit that is
allocated to men from it, the Blood of Christ is effective not for all, but
rather only for "many," namely for those who draw benefits from it. It is
therefore correct that here not for "all" is said, since in this passage only
the fruits of the suffering of Christ are spoken of, which come only to the
chosen. Here application can be found for what the Apostle said in Heb. 9:28,
that Christ sacrificed Himself once to take away the sins of "many," and for
Christ's own distinction: "I pray for them; I pray not for the world, but for
them whom Thou hast given me, because they are thine." In all these words of
consecration many secrets are contained that shepherds should recognize through
study and with the help of God.
It is not difficult to see here extraordinarily
important pastoral truths contained in these dogmatic contents of the Latin
language of worship, which unconsciously (or even consciously) are covered up in
an inaccurate translation.
A second, even larger source of pastoral
misfortune-again, against the explicit will of the Council-results from giving
up the Latin language of worship. Latin plays the role of a universal language
that unifies the Church's public worship without offending any vernacular
tongue. It holds particular importance today, at a time when the developing
concept of the Church highlights the entire People of God of the one Mystical
Body of Christ, underlined elsewhere in the reform. By introducing the exclusive
use of the vernacular, the reform makes out of the unity of the Church a variety
of little churches, separated and isolated. Where is the pastoral possibility
for Catholics across the whole world to find their Mass, to overcome racial
differences through a common language of worship, or even, in an increasingly
small world, simply to be able to pray together, as the Council explicitly calls
for? Where is the pastoral practicability now for every priest to exercise the
highest priestly act-Holy Mass-everywhere, above all in a world that is short of
priests?
In the Conciliar Constitution the introduction of a
three-year Lectionary is nowhere spoken of. Through it the reform commission
made itself guilty of a crime against nature. A simple calendar year would have
been sufficient for all wishes of change. The Consilium could have stuck to a
yearly cycle, enriching the readings with as many and as varied a choice of
collection as one would want without breaking up the natural yearly course.
Instead, the old order of readings was destroyed and a new one introduced, with
a great burden and expense of books, in which as many texts as possible could be
accommodated, not only from the world of the Church but also-as was widely
practiced-from the profane world. Apart from the pastoral difficulties for
parishioners' understanding of texts demanding special exegesis, it turned out
also as an opportunity-which was seized-to manipulate the retained texts in
order to introduce new truths in place of the old. Pastorally unpopular
passages-often of fundamental theological and moral significance-were simply
eliminated. A classic example is the text from 1 Cor. 11:27-29: here, in the
narrative of the institution of the Eucharist, the serious concluding
exhortation about the grave consequences of unworthy reception has been
consistently left out, even on the Feast of Corpus Christi. The pastoral
necessity of that text in the face of today's mass reception without confession
and without reverence is obvious.
That blunders could be made in the new readings,
above all in the choice of their introductory and concluding words, is
exemplified by Klaus Gamber's note on the end of the reading on the first Sunday
in Lent of the Reading Cycle for Year A, which speaks of the consequences of
Original Sin: "Then the eyes of both of them were opened, and they knew that
they were naked." Whereupon the people, performing their duty of lively and
active participation, must answer: "Thanks be to God."
Furthermore, why was the alteration of the sequence
of the sacred feasts necessary? If any caution were needed it was here, in
pastoral concern and awareness regarding the people's attachment to their local
Church feasts, whose temporal disarrangement had to have a very negative
influence on popular piety. For these considerations the implementers of the
reform appear to have had no great sympathy at all, despite articles 9, 12, 13
and 37 of the Liturgy Constitution.
A brief word must still be said about the realization
of the Council regulations regarding liturgical music. Our reformers certainly
did not share the great praise for the Gregorian chant that was being regarded
more and more highly by secular observers and enthusiasts. The radical abolition
(above all through the creation of new choral parts of the Mass) of the Introit,
Gradual, Tract, Alleluia, Offertory, Communion (and this especially as a prayer
of the community), in favor of others of considerably greater length was a
silent death sentence for the wonderful variable Gregorian melodies, with the
exception only of the simple melodies for the fixed parts of the Mass, namely
the Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus/Benedictus and Agnus Dei-and that only for few
Masses. The instructions of the Council for the protection and fostering of this
ancient Roman liturgical singing met a practically deadly epidemic.
The widely beloved Church instrument of the pipe
organ experienced a similar fate through the abundant substitution of
instruments, whose enumeration and characterization I can leave to your rich
personal experience, with the sole remark that they have prepared the way in not
a few cases for the entry of diabolical elements into Church music.
The latitude allowed for innovation represents a
last, important subject of this account of the practical elements of the reform.
This latitude is present in the original Latin Roman Order of Mass. Among the
various national orders, the German Order of Mass stands out through many
further concessions of this kind. It practically eliminates the strict, absolute
ban of §3, art. 22 of the Conciliar Constitution-namely that no one, not even a
priest, may on his own authority add, leave out or alter anything. The
violations in the entire course of the Mass that are escalating more and more
against this ban of the Council are becoming the cause of resounding disorder,
which the old Latin Ordo, with its much-lamented rigidity, so successfully
prevented. The new guarantor of order thus contributes to disorder, and one may
not, therefore, wonder when again and again he discovers that in every parish a
different Ordo seems to be in force.
With that we have arrived at the public, if also
limited, negative statements about the reform of the Mass. Archbishop Bugnini
himself discusses them with commendable honesty on pages 108-121 of his memoirs
of the reform, without being able to contradict them. In his memoir and in Msgr.
Wagner's, the insecurity of the Consilium is obvious over the reform they so
hastily carried out. There also appears little sensibility towards the prior
"theological, historical, pastoral" research ordained by the Council as
necessary to any alteration. For example, the expert capacities of Msgr. Gamber,
the German historian of the liturgy, were completely ignored. The
incomprehensible rush with which the reform was hammered into shape and made
obligatory actually caused influential bishops who were anything but attached to
tradition to reconsider. A monsignor who had accompanied Cardinal Döpfner as
secretary to Salzburg for the passing of a resolution of the German-speaking
bishops for the activation of the new Order of Mass in their countries told me
that the Cardinal was very reticent on the return journey to Munich. He then
briefly expressed his fear that a delicate pastoral matter had been dealt with
too hastily.
In order to avoid any misunderstanding, I would like
to emphasize that I have never cast in doubt the dogmatic or juridical validity
of the Novus Ordo Missae-although in the case of the juridical question serious
doubts have come to me in view of my intensive work with the medieval canonists.
They are of the unanimous opinion that the popes may change anything with the
exception of what the Holy Scriptures prescribe or what concerns previously
enacted doctrinal decisions of the highest level, and the status ecclesiae.
There is no perfect clarity with regard to this concept. This attachment to
tradition in the case of fundamental things which have conclusively influenced
the Church in the course of time certainly belongs to this fixed, unchanging
status, over which even the Pope has no right of disposal. The meaning of the
liturgy for the entire concept of the Church and its development, which was also
especially emphasized by Vatican II as unchangeable in nature, leads us to
believe that it in fact should belong to the status ecclesiae.
It must nevertheless be said that these regrettable
misuses, which above all are consequences of the discrepancy between the
Conciliar Constitution and the Novus Ordo, do not occur when the new liturgy is
reverently celebrated-as is always the case, for example, when the Holy Father
offers Mass. It cannot, however, escape experts of the old liturgy what a great
distinction exists between the corpus traditionum, which was alive in the old
Mass, and the contrived Novus Ordo-to the decided disadvantage of the latter.
Shepherds, scholars, and lay faithful have noticed it, of course; and the
multitude of opposing voices increased with time. Thus the reigning Holy Father
himself, in his Apostolic Letter Dominicae Cenae of February 24, 1980, regarding
the mystery and worship of the Eucharist, pointed out that questions concerning
the liturgy, above all of the Eucharist, should never be the occasion for
dividing Catholics and seeing the unity of the Church sundered; it is, he said,
indeed the "sacrament of piety, the symbol of unity, and the bond of charity."
In his Apostolic Letter on the twenty-fifth
anniversary of the approval of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy on
December 4, 1963, which was published on December 4, 1988, after praising the
renewal in the line of tradition, the Pope deals with the concrete application
of the reform: he points to the difficulties and the positive results, but also
in detail to incorrect applications. He also says expressly that it is the duty
of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments to
protect the great principles of the Catholic liturgy, as illustrated and
developed in the Liturgy Constitution, and to be mindful of the responsibilities
of the bishops' conferences and the bishops.
Cardinal Ratzinger, the protector of the Faith (and
of the worship connected with it) closest to the Pope, has repeatedly commented
on the post-Conciliar liturgical reform, and with a singular profundity and
clarity has subjected its theological and pastoral problems to constructive
criticism. I remind you only of the book The Feast of Faith (1981), of the
prologue to the French translation of the short, basic book by Klaus Gamber, and
finally of the references in his recent books, Salt of the Earth and his
autobiography, La mia vita, both published in 1997.
Among the German-speaking bishops the one responsible
for the liturgy in the Austrian bishops' conference pointed out in 1995 that the
Council had intended no revolution but a reform of the liturgy faithful to
tradition. Instead, he said, a worship of spontaneity and improvisation bears a
share of the blame for the declining number of people at Mass. Lastly, the
Primate of Belgium, Cardinal Daneels, who certainly cannot be called a
stick-in-the-mud, has subjected the entire reform to devastating criticism:
there has been a 180-degree turn, he says, with the transition from an obedience
to rubrics to their free manipulation, through which one himself makes use of
the liturgy in order to rearrange the service and worship of God into a creative
people's assembly, into a real "happening," into a discourse in which the
individual wants to play a role instead of the Son of God, Jesus Christ, in
whose house he is a guest. Man's desire to understand the service, Daneels says,
should lead not to a subjective human creativity, but to a penetration of the
mysteries of God. One would not have to explain the liturgy, but live it as a
window to the invisible.
When we climb lower rungs of the ladder of the people
of God, we find even among the members of the Consilium a colleague indicated as
critical by Archbishop Bugnini: P.L. Boujer, who has not been silent in the
meantime.
In Italy the hard-hitting criticism The Torn
Tunic (1967), by the high-profile lay writer Tito Casini, with a prologue by
Cardinal Bacci, made a sensation. Slowly more and more growing lay groups, to
which many intellectuals of high standing belonged, organized themselves into
national movements, above all in Europe and North America, and were connected in
Europe and beyond in the international organization Una Voce; the problems of
the reform were also discussed in journals, among which the German Una Voce
Korrespondenz stands out. In a characteristic summary, the Canadian Precious
Blood Banner of October 1995 says that it is becoming clearer and clearer that
the radicalism of the post-Conciliar reformers did not consist of renewing the
Catholic liturgy from its roots, but in tearing it from its traditional soil. It
did not rework the Roman rite, which it was asked to do by the Liturgy
Constitution of Vatican II, but uprooted it. Shortly before his death, the
well-known Prior of Taize, Max Thurian, a Catholic convert who was previously a
Calvinist, expounded his view of the reform in a long article entitled "The
Liturgy as Contemplation of the Mystery" in L'Osservatore Romano (May 27-28,
1996, p. 9). After an understandable expression of praise for the Council and
for the Liturgy Commission, which were supposed to bring forth the most
admirable fruits, he says expressly that the entire contemporary celebration
often takes place as a dialogue in which there is no place for prayer,
contemplation and silence. The constant opposing of the celebrants and the
faithful isolates the community within itself. A healthy celebration, on the
other hand, which gives the altar a privileged position, conveys the duty of the
celebrant, that is, to orient all toward the Lord and the worship of His
presence, which is represented in the symbols and realized in the Sacrament.
This conveys to the liturgy that contemplative breath without which it becomes
an awkward religious discussion, an empty communal activity and a kind of
prattle.
Thurian makes a number of personal proposals for
authority in the event of a revision of the "Principles and norms for the use of
the Missale Romanum" (one sees that he nourishes the hope that it could be
possible), which clearly demonstrate dissatisfaction with the present
principles. Under the title of "The Priest in the Service of the Liturgy," he
gives a series of distinguished criticisms of the present situation, which share
practically all the severe reproaches of our account, and which merit individual
examination….
I would like briefly to add, as an ecumenical
reference, two experiences with the Eastern Churches. During a visit at the end
of the Council…representatives of the Patriarchate of Constantinople said in
personal conversations that they did not understand why the Roman Church
insisted on changing the liturgy; one should not do such a thing. The Eastern
Church, they said, owed its retention of the Faith to its faithfulness to
liturgical tradition and to the liturgy's healthy development. I also heard
somewhat similar things from members of the Patriarchate of Moscow, who looked
after the Vatican Historical Commission during the International Historical
Congress in Moscow in 1970.
Two more significant reports from the world of the
ordinary and the uneducated, which best express the genuine sensus fidei of the
children of God: Two young boy scouts of ten and twelve from the Siena area, who
assist at the so-called Tridentine Mass every Saturday, based on the privilege
granted by the Archbishop of Siena, answered my provocative question as to which
Mass they liked better, that since they attended the old Mass they no longer
enjoyed the new.
"He arrived at the conclusion that today we stand
before the ruins of a 2,000-year tradition, and that it is to be feared that as
a result of the countless reforms the tradition is now in such a vandalized mess
that it may be difficult to revive it."
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A simple, elderly farmer, who comes from a poor area
of Molise, told me spontaneously that he always goes only to the six o'clock
Tridentine Mass because he considers the change to the liturgy to be a change of
the Faith that he wanted to retain. Msgr. Klaus Gamber, an outstanding expert I
have already mentioned, has published strictly academic accounts, above all his
summary The Reform of the Roman Liturgy: Its Problems and Background,* that were
more or less silenced by the official specialist literature, but are being
rediscovered now for their penetrating clarity and insight. He arrived at the
conclusion that today we stand before the ruins of a 2,000-year tradition, and
that it is to be feared that as a result of the countless reforms the tradition
is now in such a vandalized mess that it may be difficult to revive it. One
hardly dares any longer to pose the question whether after this dismantling a
reconstruction of the old order may come.
Still, one should not give up hope. Concerning the
dismantling, we see how it is reflected in the orders given by the Council. They
say: no innovation may be introduced unless the real and certain benefit of the
Church demands it, and then only after a precise theological, historical and
pastoral investigation. Moreover, any change must be made in such a way that the
new forms always arise organically from those already existing. Whether this
happened, my recollections can give you only a limited picture. They should
show, however, whether the essential theological and ecclesiological
requirements were fulfilled in the reform, namely whether the liturgy, above all
its heart, Holy Mass, ordered the human to the divine and subordinated the
former to the latter, the visible to the invisible, the active to the
contemplative, the present to the eternity to come; or whether the reform has,
on the contrary, frequently subordinated the divine to the human, the invisible
mystery to what is visible, the contemplative to active participation, the
eternity to come to the mundane human present. But precisely the ever-clearer
recognition of the real situation strengthens the hope for a possible
reconstruction, which Cardinal Ratzinger sees in a new liturgical movement that
resurrects the true inheritance of the Vatican Council to new life (La mia vita,
1997, p. 113).
Let me close with a comforting prospect: the reigning
Holy Father, John Paul II, in his distinctive pastoral sensibility, articulated
his concern in a 1980 appeal regarding the problems that the change of the
liturgy created in the Catholic Church, but he met with no response from the
bishops. That is why he decided, certainly not with a light heart, in 1984 to
issue an apostolic indult for all who felt attached to the old liturgy for
reasons I have emphasized, above all because of the liturgical innovations
which, far from decreasing, are still escalating. Because he had understandably
given it to the bishops, but only under narrow conditions and at their good
pleasure, it had only very limited pastoral success.
After the unauthorized
consecration of bishops by Archbishop Lefebvre, certainly with the intention of
avoiding an extensive schism, he issued on July 2, 1988, a new motu proprio,
Ecclesia Dei adflicta, in which he not only assured members of the Society of
St. Pius X willing to be reconciled in the Fraternity of St. Peter of the
possibility of remaining faithful to the ancient liturgical tradition, but he
also now gave the bishops a very generous privilege, which was supposed to
fulfill the legitimate desires of the faithful. He recommended specially to the
bishops to imitate his generosity to the faithful who feel attached to the fixed
forms of the old liturgy and discipline, and stated that one must respect all
those who feel attached to the ancient liturgical tradition. The text-designed
very generously this time for the bishops-gives us justifiable confidence that
the Pope, in his efforts to re-establish unity and peace, not only will not
relent, but rather will continue to tread the path shown in numbers 5 and 6 of
the 1988 motu proprio, in order to bring about the legitimate reconciliation
between the indispensable tradition and time-bound development.