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Pope opens talks with Latin Mass
renegades
From
Richard Owen in Rome
POPE BENEDICT XVI, who reached out
to Muslims and Jews last week on his first trip to his native Germany since his
election, is preparing to mend an enduring schism within the Roman Catholic
Church
Vatican sources say that the Pope is
planning to lift the excommunication of a group of renegade
ultra-traditionalists by his predecessor, John Paul II, 17 years ago.
In an unprecedented move, the Pope
is to receive Bishop Bernard Fellay, the Superior General of the Society of St
Pius X, for conciliation talks at his summer residence at Castelgandolfo today.
The society (or brotherhood) was set
up in 1969 by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, of France, who gathered around him
right-wing traditionalists opposed to the reforms of the Second Vatican Council
and established a seminary at Econe in Switzerland.
Archbishop
Lefebvre and his followers claimed that the reforms had dissolved traditional
Catholicism. The reforms were designed to bring Church rituals closer to
ordinary people by introducing everyday language into the liturgy in place of
the traditional Tridentine or Latin Mass. The Latin Mass, established by the
Council of Trent in the 16th century, is not banned but can be used only with
the permission of a local bishop and with approval from Rome.
The ultra-traditionalists’ relations
with the Vatican frayed to breaking point in 1976 when Archbishop Lefebvre
accused Catholic modernists - including Pope Paul VI - of heresy. In response,
Paul VI banned the Archbishop and his followers from saying Mass or taking the
sacraments.
John Paul II, after his election as
Pope in 1978, sought to mend the rift but excommunicated Archbishop Lefebvre in
1988 for ordaining four bishops at Ecône despite repeated warnings that he was
no longer in communion with the Pope
Archbishop Lefebvre died in 1991 but
his breakaway group continues to operate worldwide, with 4 bishops, 460 priests,
7 seminaries and nearly 500 churches, all using the Latin Mass.
Andrea Tornielli, a papal
biographer, said that Benedict XVI - formerly the guardian of Vatican tradition
as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger - was well placed to mend the rift since he had
himself shown a preference for the Latin Mass.
Four years ago, when still John Paul
II’s right-hand man, Benedict referred to the followers of Archbishop Lefebvre
as “our brothers and sisters”, adding “we must do whatever is possible to
attract them back. It is better to heal our wounds within the Church rather than
letting them fester outside it.”
Vatican sources said that the Pope
hoped to build on Ecclesia Dei - the pontifical commission that was created by
John Paul II to monitor the Lefebvrists - by creating a body that would
supervise the arch-traditionalists under the Pope’s direct control.
The Lefebvrists, in turn, are
seeking the lifting of their excommunication and the right to hold Latin Masses
without first seeking the approval of the Vatican.
Richard Williamson, one of the four
bishops created by Archbishop Lefebvre and a noted hardliner, said that the
hopes surrounding Bishop Fellay’s meeting with the Pope were unrealistically
optimistic. Bishop Williamson, a British Catholic convert from Anglicanism, who
was one Archbishop Lefebvre’s earliest recruits, said that the “web of deceit”
had been “spun by the Vatican for too long. It is a case of ‘welcome to my
parlour, said the spider to the fly’.”
He thought it unlikely that the Pope
would give his “unconditional blessing” to the Lefebvrists, adding: “The war
goes on between the friends and enemies of the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
He warned Bishop Fellay to beware of Vatican duplicity |