In Salutari Tuo: Imploring God’s Help

Did a colleague or friend ever walk up to you to praise you and your work, and point out also that you are generally a wonderful person and good friend—really a model and ideal? Your first thought is: ok, what does this guy want? Sure enough, most of the time, our instincts are right. Our friend wants something from us. Maybe it’s money. Maybe it’s that he seeks allies in some dispute. Maybe he wants us on “his side” for some reason. It’s not always the case, but it happens often enough.

Between the first statement about your glories and the following request for a favor, there is a change in tone, isn’t there? Well, the same scenario plays itself out in this Sunday’s communion chant, and the music beautifully illustrates the change in tone from the praise to the request to the final compelling beg.

We begin with a lovely and calming song, with words from Psalm 118. “In salutari tuo anima mea.” My soul aspires after your salvation.” Also, “et in verbum tuum speravi.” I hope in your word.

But then the chant shifts, with the speaker imploring God to do something about the persecution he is enduring. The rhythm is in the form of a recitation, with a particularly emphatic lift on “me.” “When will you judge those who persecute me?” the singer asks. Then he provides a repetitive emphasis with zealous fire on “persecuti”: The wicked are persecuting me.” This is highly subjected, but I sense an element of hysteria is just beneath the surface.

We end with the sound of weeping and imploring. “Adjuva me, Domine Deus meus.” You can sense the singer on his or her knees, begging “come to my assistance, Oh Lord my God.”

It is chants like these that help me sense an ancient sense of “story telling” inherent in some aspects of Gregorian chant. It might be too much to say that it shares a sensibility with “folk” music but the connection to a culture of audible learning and sharing, with the music there to ripen and intensive the text, seems hard to overlook. This is dramatic, evocative music, given to us not just to make worship and adoration more fitting but also to convey a meaning and illustrate a truth.

Rally ‘Round the Roman Missal

One year from this first Sunday of Advent, the Mass that we hear at our local parish is going to be very different, and what a blessing it will be. The words of the Mass will be a much closer reflection of the Latin original. There is a beautiful dignity to the text. The music of the Mass will be integral to the printed edition, making it far more easy to sing rather than just say the Mass. Long-standing problems with the old translation (such as poor and highly suspect paraphrases in crucial prayers) are washed away.

What this change amounts to is a new beginning for the Missal of Paul VI, a reparation of a botched translation with origins back to 1969, and a re-embrace of Catholic teaching, identity, and native liturgy. It is a fresh start for modern Catholicism as we know it. More precisely, what we will experience is a Catholicism as we haven’t known it but should have known it. This is much closer to what the Fathers of Vatican II originally imagined.

The whole of the Catholic world should be celebrating. I’m quite certain that Catholics in the pews, come Advent 2011, are going to feel a profound sense of relief. However, it is different in the world of published opinion. The early indication is that it’s going to be a rough year. Essentially the problem comes down to this: this new translation of the Missal has few defenders, people will to stand up and say without hesitation what I said above. The Missal itself is caught in the same trap that the revision after the Vatican II found itself in, with a few differences given the timing and the evolution of liturgical debate in the intervening years.

Here is a summary of the problem.
The most erudite, learned, and passionate among the defenders of the Roman Rite are these days mostly attached to what is called the “extraordinary form,” the ritual of the Mass as it stood in the 1962 Missal that Benedict XVI liberated three years ago in his motu proprio Summorum Pontificum.

By habit and temperament, these “traditionalists” have lost heart to engage the battle of the “Novus Ordo.” Quite frankly, they just don’t care that much about it. We all have limited time and theirs is invested elsewhere. They have their Mass or are looking to get their Mass in a form that they regard as obviously superior. An improvement on a Missal they regard as a hopeless failure is just not something that they can get too excited about. Still, these people should remember, as Fr. Z pointed out, that the ordinary form is the Catholic experience of the overwhelming majority (is it 80%? 90%); if you love the faith, you have to care to some extent about this issue.

Meanwhile, I’m beginning to realize that the group known as the “progressives” or the “left,” the adherents to a theory wrongly known as “liberalism,” appear to be conducting some kind of guerrilla warfare campaign against the new translation. They are pettifogging it to pieces. They complain about the process, the particulars of tiny changes, the printing, the tones used, the methods and approaches, the people involved, the timing of the release, the delays, and everything else one can possibly complain about. Complain, complain, complain — that’s all they seem to be able to do with regard to the 3rd edition of the Roman Missal in English.

This campaign is so relentless, so petty, so pervasive that one begins to suspect an agenda at work here, namely, a goal to poison the atmosphere to such an extent that everyone will gain some kind of vague impression that the release of this vastly improved and corrected translation is some kind of disaster for the Church and the faith. One stands and looks at their blogs and listens to their words with amazement.

After all, the new Missal is a vast upgrade in every way one can imagine. This isn’t even a debatable point. And what is the choice? Are we really just supposed to continue forever to use the shag-carpet translation that was so wickedly foisted on us in 1970? The style is ridiculously childish by comparison – perhaps it accorded with the Sesame Street standards of the time but these do not wear well. The new Missal uses dignified, liturgical language. As incredible as it is to imagine, the “progressives” are giving the impression that they are as attached to this lame-duck anachronism as they are to the music and vestments of the period! And perhaps they are. Perhaps the goal is to discredit any further reforms made in the name of the new Missal – reforms such as….musical reform in which we sing propers instead of some guy’s songs.

There is a third party to consider: The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. This is the group that actually voted for the new translation. Surely the USCCB will lead the charge in rallying behind the new translation? Sadly, the answer is no. The problem is essentially one that is intrinsic to any bureaucracy: it can never admit a mistake. All change has to be presented as a change for the sake of change, but not an improvement or correction or reversal of error.

Thus, if you look at the USCCB’s elaborate website on the New Missal, and go to its frequently asked questions, you will find that the first question (a perfectly reasonable question) is: “Why was there a need for a new translation?” The answer begins with a lot of yada yada about history. And finally explains that there was a need for “prayers for the celebration of recently canonized saints, additional prefaces for the Eucharistic Prayers, additional Masses and Prayers for Various Needs and Intentions, and some updated and revised rubrics (instructions) for the celebration of the Mass.”

Huh? That explains why things are added to the Missal. But it does not explain why the entire Missal has been completely re-translated from top to bottom, to the point that virtually no parts of the lame-duck translation survive in tact. It’s like completely redecorating your three-story house, and when someone asks why you did it, you answer that it is because you have a new lamp. In other words, this answer makes no sense.

The published answer to the reasonable question continues with a final sentence that vaguely hints at but does not explain the real reason. Now, this is rather boring so don’t give up in your attempt to read it carefully: “To aid the process of translation of the Missale Romanum, editio typica tertia, the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments issued Liturgiam Authenticam, in 2001, an Instruction on the vernacular translation of the Roman Liturgy which outlines the principles and rules for translation. In 2007, the Congregation for Divine Worship issued the Ratio Translationis for the English Language, which outlined the specific rules for translation in English.”

Now, again, this is not a reason but it does explain the guidelines. Those guidelines came from Rome. You have to read between the lines, but it essentially comes down to this. The current translation was a disaster of such epic proportions that Rome had to intervene and explain in detail how to translate a Latin Missal into an English one, and enforce those rules so that something could be done to give the people back their faith!

Years ago, I worked on a series of articles that compared the existing translation to the Latin text. Even with my rudimentary knowledge of Latin, I was so shocked at what I found. I had planned to write a series of pieces, but I had to stop after the second article, simply because I could not mentally handled what I was finding. It was too alarming to actually face in its full reality. It would have been bad enough if the translation had been merely incompetent, but that was not the problem. The problem was fundamentally theological. Distinctive Catholic teaching had been bypassed. Words were changed to eliminate doctrines. Issues of divine importance had been systematically swept away. Studying this material was as destabilizing an experience as I had ever been through.

One year from now, all of this will be history. I’m so incredibly grateful. At long last, Catholicism will speak in English, at our own parishes, in a manner that actually reflects what is in the real Missal. It might take generations to figure out how it came to be otherwise. Something really went haywire. But we can let the historians figure that out. What is fantastic is that our long period of captivity is nearly at an end.

Who will rally around the new Missal? We can’t count on the “progressives.” The “traditionalists” long ago lost interest. The big bureaucracies are caught up in their own issues, and fear even so much as admitting that this Missal will be an improvement. Whom does that leave to celebrate and defend our new Catholic reality one year from now? You and me.

Catholic Romaphobia: Just What is the Vatican Doing Messing Around in Everything?

British Catholic journalist Damian Thompson, described as either a “blood-crazed ferret” or “intrepid defender of the faith” given your point of view, has apparently coined a new term: Romophobe. Unfortunately, the Urban Dictionary declares the word to mean a fear of Dallas Cowboys quaterback Tony Romo (and as fan myself, I say, “You should be afraid – very, very afraid!”

But Damian Thompson uses it to refer to the hysterical critics of Pope Benedict XVI and the Catholic Church who made themselves look positively irrational during the surprisingly (surprising for whom, exactly?) successful state visit of the Roman Pontiff. That there exists Romaphobia, anti-Catholicism, or whatever you want to call it, no one in the Church doubts. But Romaphobia is not exclusive to those outside of the Church; on the contrary, it is alive and well within the Catholic Church!

Faithful Catholics have rightfully bemoaned the seeming inability of the media to “get the facts straight” when talking about the Church. Many Catholics and non-Catholics, whose opinions are formed by the media instead of by the Church, have very confused notions about how the Church actually works. Even when the media report accurately particularly salacious events surrounding members of the hierarchy, they often ascribe responsibility for those members and their actions to the wrong people. Other times the word of “a senior Vatican official” is made out to be the deposit of faith, and people base their entire view of the Church on the random musings of someone whose real identity could be a Cardinal Prefect of a Congregation of the Roman Curia, or a barely literate Carabiniere whose beat is Piazza San Pietro.

This Romaphobia among Catholics is particularly manifest in the comment sections of blogs. The anonymity of the internet allows people to make unchecked claims all the time, and the momentum of Romaphobic comments grows as other like-minded birds of a feather flock together to air their grievances against the Catholic Church, which they generally reduce to their hatred of the hierarchy, and encapsulate in the four-letter word, “Rome,” even if they also use “Vatican” as a synonym. One has the impression reading articles, books and blog comments of reading nineteenth century Protestant polemic in the style of Maria Monk or the colorful phrases of Martin Luther on a very bad day rather than vehement protests of faithful Catholics who actually love their Church.

Why has this state of affairs come about? Just what is Rome and the Vatican, anyway, and what role does the Pope, Rome, the Catholic Church and the Vatican (words that are used as if they were interchangeable) have in saying anything to anyone?

One of the most perplexing presuppositions of many Romophobes is that the Catholic Church is a highly organized machine, not unlike a cult, which demands and exacts unflinching obedience from its billions of automaton followers who are homogenized into accepting every word of the Pope as divinely revealed. The Pope, then, is responsible for every action of every single one of these automatons, much like a computer programmer is responsible for the error messages that creep up on your computer screen when something has gone wrong. There are many Catholic Romophobes who know that this a caricature of the truth, that even the slightest glance at history could disprove it, but they still feel that behind the caricature there is, not a grain, but a grain silo, of truth. They then view their “faithful dissent” as prophetic witness in changing the Church so that she (or it) is no longer the object of the caricature. So where do the Catholic Romophobes feel justified in their protest? Let us look at four areas.

Sacred Liturgy

When a liturgical reform is imposed inorganically by committee, it is impossible to escape the criticism of those who are upset they were not on the committee or that their opinion was not followed by the committee. Every Catholic, especially if he serves on a self-styled Liturgy Committee, has an opinion on what the liturgy should look like. The fact that the liturgy is a gift from the Church to be received and celebrated has been transformed into the notion that the liturgy is really nothing more than a human action that can be manipulated at will. Romophobes take the historical development of the liturgy to be proof that it has always been manipulated by human beings, and cry out when someone besides themselves manipulates the liturgy. They are particularly vexed when someone who happens to live in or around Rome says anything about the liturgy which does not square with how they think the liturgy should be.

One of the byproducts of the hermeneutic of rupture has been that the Roman Rite has in practice been divorced from the reality of the local Church in Rome. Whereas before the Council of Trent, many local Churches had their own liturgy, many bishops sent people to Rome to study the liturgy as celebrated in Rome with a view to integrating the Roman ars celebrandi, or adopting it wholesale, into their own liturgical practice. At Trent, many of these local liturgies were abandoned in favour of the Roman liturgy and others were heavily Romanised. No Romophobes these legitimate liturgists. While they did not go to the extreme of Dom Prosper Gueranger who looked forward to the day when no liturgy that was not Roman would exist, they all had a real deference to Rome on liturgical matters even when they preserved their own customs. In the present situation, the Romophobes argue that any intervention from the competent Roman congregation for liturgical matters is contrary to the Second Vatican Council, and such interventions are resisted with the force of the last stand against the Romans at Masada. “Rome” is continually criticized because “they” do not take into account the opinions of those who feel the right to be consulted.

One is reminded of the invocation of the Litany of Humility of Cardinal Merry Del Val, one of those figures of recent ecclesiastical history the Romophobes despise, “from the desire of being consulted, deliver me, O LORD.”

The angst over the new translation of the Roman Missal into English shows just how deep this Romaphobia runs. The publication of Liturgiam authenticam governing principles of translation has not only not been received by the Romophobes, it has been treated as if it were the death knell of language and literature itself. As the arduous process of correcting the translation of the English edition of the missal (by means of wide consultation over a span of many years, unlike the process by which the first translations were foisted upon the Church) unfolded, the Romophobes capitalized upon it to express their fear that, because the initiative was supposed to have come from Rome (as if now three generations of Catholic faithful have not complained for forty years of insipid translations), this was proof that Rome was “rolling back the clock to before Vatican II.”

This visceral reaction, which has been in reality not so much as to the language of the liturgy as much as it has been to the fact that Pope Benedict XVI has made it very clear that the liturgy is not ours to manipulate as we please, has manifested another byproduct of the hermeneutic of rupture: the distortion of the sensus fidelium. The participants at a certain liturgy conference, the members of a liturgy committee of a certain parish, a certain bishop and his chancery staff, are all unanimously agreed that Latin is dead, the Extraordinary Form is for old people who can’t get with it, and that the new translation of the Roman Missal is a pastoral nightmare waiting to happen. The people have spoken. They have exercised their ministry of prophecy. They protest in their “faithful dissent.” Ergo, the Spirit must be inspiring them and they are voice of the faithful; they are expressing the sense of the faithful.

The facts that the sensus fidelium is a much broader concept, one which also takes into account the sense of the faithful throughout all the world and all of history, and those who work in Vatican congregations also happen to be part of the fideles, does not occur to them. The manipulation of the media by propagating angry voices at the Roman contravention of the “spirit of Vatican II” and sensus fidelium only increases the impression that the Romophobes are in the majority. When someone also publicly decries the new translation of the Roman Missal as contrary to Vatican II (effectively denying the canonical principle that the Roman Pontiff has universal jurisdiction, not only over the liturgy, but over all of the Church, and, if you are Boniface VIII, over all creation), Romaphobia reaches a fever pitch and the folks in the pews can be excused for thinking that maybe there is something wrong. In fact, what is wrong is not that the Roman Curia and the Pope are exercising their ministry of protecting the sacred deposit of faith; what is wrong is that many have exchanged their own opinions on how the liturgy should be celebrated for living what the liturgy symbolizes: the Church, gathered around the apostles, in prayer and unity. And that unity can never be guaranteed by committee or by refusing to pray with the Roman Church.

Theologians

There has always existed in the Church a rich theological pluralism. Many times that theological pluralism has brought about discussions, which were more acrimonious than charitable, but those same discussions have succeeded in clarifying important aspects of the Revelation of God in His Church. Nowadays, however, theological pluralism has degenerated into little more than doctrinal confusion. The Roman Church “which presides in charity over all the churches” is particularly solicitous for preserving the deposit of faith. While the deposit of faith, the content of Revelation, is distinct from theology, which is the intellectual exercise of understanding that content, theology veers off the right path if it distorts or denies that Revelation. The Magisterium, which can best be understood as the Church in her office of teaching, has as its duty to evaluate theology vis-à-vis that Revelation of which it is the custodian.

Many theologians today are very concerned with what they call “academic freedom.” It is true that theologians must be free from all coercion to pursue their investigation, formulate their conclusions, and propose their ideas. But if theology is to be anything more than an academic discipline pertaining to scholars in universities, and is to be of service to the universal Church, theology must be done, to use Von Balthasar’s phrase, “on our knees.” Theology cannot be divorced from life in the Church. And since life in the Church is principally a communio sanctorum, a communion of holy people, places, things and ideas, theology cannot operate outside of the sphere of the Magisterium whose task is to evaluate the idoneity of theology with Revelation.

The academic freedom of the religious thinker is subordinate to the higher goal of communion with the Church. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith at the Vatican is the principal organ, although it is by no means the only one, by which the Roman Pontiff assures communion among Christians by assuring theology’s consonance with Revelation. The Romophobe feels his autonomy as a thinker challenged by the very existence of the Magisterium and the authority it claims to exercise in assuring the continuity, not just of one theologian’s thought with Revelation, but of all theology with the deposit of faith. Yet, the theologian’s freedom is ordered to the higher good, not of intellectual progress, but of communion within the Church.

The Romaphobic cries out that poor, unsuspecting theologians are hauled into the Vatican to be intellectually (and in former time, physically) tortured, for their beliefs. The very existence of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and any other Vatican congregation, for that matter, is an outrage against human freedom and dignity. How dare they question anyone on what they believe? The reality is that the relatively few theologians whose work is analysed by CDF are not casualties of an all-out witch hunt to enforce conformism to the Roman machine. The process of investigation, discovery and evaluation, which CDF takes up in dialogue with some theologians, is initiated precisely because the hierarchy takes seriously the intellectual capacities of certain men and women to contribute to communion of the Church. One is reminded that even saints were examined by the Inquisition, the predecessor of the CDF, and as a result of such examination had the rightness of their convictions confirmed by the Church. The work of dialogue between the Roman Curia and theologians throughout the world exists first of all to ascertain what is good and helpful. It also carefully engages in fraternal correction, where necessary. Where the interventions of the Roman Curia are portrayed as obscurantist pogroms, the phantasms of Romaphobia can be discerned lurking the background, phantasms which essentially prize freedom at the expense of communion, and often, at the expense of truth.

The Appointment of Bishops

Nobody can seriously deny the evidence that the process for the selection and the appointment of bishops is very different today than it has been for most of history. The Romophobe sees the popular election of St Ambrose as Bishop of Milan from his status as a catechumen as proof of American-style populist democracy in the ancient Church. The Romophobe sees the election of bishops by cathedral chapters and, sometimes even by abbesses, in the Middle Ages and the appointment of every bishop from Rome today and thinks there must be something wrong with the process of today, if for most of history it was done differently. In short, the Romophobe is convinced that the present system testifies to the power-grabbing mania which he takes to characterize Rome, and often declares that this lust for power is precisely what drives people out of the Church.

The history of bishop-making is complicated indeed. But it is complicated partly because of the continued interference of civil leaders in the process. After 2000 years, the Church has extricated herself in large part, although not entirely, from state interference in the selection of bishops. If the Church teaches the principle of subsidiarity, namely, that decisions should be made “as close to home as possible,” then is it not logical for such a process to be as free from the interference of the Roman Curia as it is from the State?

In reality, this presupposition is not Romophobic at all. But it comes up against the sad reality of the fallen nature of man as homo politicus. The wisdom of the ancient Fathers and Doctors of the Church held that no man should ever want to become a bishop. But the type of popular election at the local level of bishops would inevitably cause the rise of careerist priests spending their time electioneering at the expense of their spiritual duties, and of men who might be worthy of the episcopacy being marginalized for not “playing the game.” Such a popular election mires the episcopal office invariably in local church politics.

Even many Romophobes are surprised, when they come across the Vatican’s procedure for the nomination of candidates to the episcopacy, of just how much consultation at the local level is asked for. In practice, the nuncios, the Vatican ambassadors whose job includes the synthesizing of this information to send to the Congregation for Bishops in the Vatican, do not always consult as they should. But the method is there. The fact that such nominees are “vetted” at several levels, even as far as the desk of the Holy Father himself, makes it a more consultative and inclusive decision making process than that of the election of many important positions in civil society.

The increased Roman centralization of the appointment of bishops has to be seen in the context of the increased localization of the information gathered to appoint them. It also serves to put forward candidates who might be excluded by local politics, it identifies candidates from one milieu whose talents might be just the right thing for another milieu, and it underscores the universality of the Church which goes over and above the merely local.

The discretion the Church asks of those involved in the laborious process of consultation is offered as evidence of the “cloak-and-dagger” mentality of Rome, when it serves to protect the peace of the candidates involved, as well as to keep out undue influences from the media or from other purely local political factors. The Romophobe, in his obsession with “transparency” actually would turn the whole life of the Church into an eternal campaign; this obsession Rome wisely resists.

It is not a perfect system, and the consultative process could always be larger, but in effect, it works.

The Diplomatic Mission of the Holy See

The Romophobes outside of the Church protested loudly the Holy Father’s visit to the United Kingdom in September 2010 on the ground that they felt they should not have to pay for the state visit of a man who was a religious leader, and not a true head of state. Particularly against the background of the sexual abuse crisis, calls abounded for the Pope to be arrested and handed over to the justice of the State, although no one was clear which State that would be. In fact, whether the Romophobes like it or not, the Pope is the head of a state known as Vatican City State and which is styled The Holy See as its diplomatic name, and as such, he and his ambassadors, the nuncios, are granted the rights and privileges of diplomatic immunity as are any other heads of state and their diplomatic corps.

Theological opinion on the relationship between the spiritual and temporal power of the Church, particularly as it resides in the person of the Holy Father, has varied widely through the ages. The all but complete loss of temporal power in the form of territory at the takeover of the Papal States by the Italian Unification completed in 1871 made such a discussion an academic one for the most part. The 1929 Lateran Treaty, and its subsequent reconfirmations in diplomatic law since then, guaranteed the Pope a spiritual freedom which was actually enhanced by the loss of temporal power and the establishment of the Holy See’s diplomatic mission in its present form.

The Romophobe sees this special status of the Holy See as a fiction. Again, against the backdrop of the sexual abuse crisis, it seems nothing more than a convenient way of escaping the law and empowering immoral behavior. Yet, the handing over of clerics to the civil authorities for punishment of civil crimes is not at variance with the diplomatic mission of the Holy See. The Romophobe, who buys into the aggrandizement of the State as the only legitimate authority (because at least in theory, it is based on representative government, whereas the Church is a hierarchy with an infallible pope and a monarchical episcopate who call the Church a communion), wants to see the humbling of the Church before and by the State for its sins. The Romophobe wants to see the erasing of any vestige of temporal power, in a misguided attempt to restore a purely spiritual power to the Church. How he does not learn from the lesson of Henry VIII, who purported to do exactly the same in England, and ending up just despoiling the Church of her legitimate possessions and enriching himself, remains a mystery.

Here we see again a refusal to see the Church as she is and make the necessary distinctions. The Church is sinless, and made up of sinning members, as the paradox goes. That just punishment, in civil and canon law, for errant clerics and their protectors, must be had for the Church to regain the confidence of many, no one sane can deny. But using the sad story of crisis and cover-up as a pretext for the destruction of the Holy See’s diplomatic mission would be a grave offense against justice and humanity.

For one, the Holy See, precisely because of its unique status, can be above nationalism and local politics. The diplomatic service of the Holy See is actually in service, not just of the interests of the Catholic Church, but of religion in general and for all true human rights precisely because it is not the usual kind of state. While it is not unforeseeable that the current culture wars may result in stripping the Holy See of that state, a victory the Romophobes within and without the Church will celebrate, such a pyrrhic victory would remove from the public square a unique but powerful voice of conscience.

So where does all of this Romaphobia come from?

The acerbic, and not entirely unjustified, reaction to the sexual abuse crisis understandably feeds anti-Catholicism. But it also feeds Romaphobia. In part, Romaphobia is a positive reaction against those in the Church who do not practice what they preach, and is a call for coherence of life among those who hold the office of teaching, governing and sanctifying in the Church. However, Romaphobia among Catholics also points to the fact that many people no longer think with the Church. The Romophobe reasons that, if there are so many who do not think with the Church, then maybe the Church needs to think again. Yet such reasoning does not have as its reference point anything other than private judgment and individual contempt for the communion of the Church. Our individual struggle with the teaching of Christ and life in His Church, which is at the same time unified and broken, cannot remain at the level of reaction against Rome. That struggle must be lived in the communion of believers.

The hierarchy of the Church must be a model of communion if the lay faithful are going to find such a communion credible. The public accusations of cardinal vs. cardinal, bishop vs. bishop we read in the news today may at first seem like the fight between Saint Peter and Saint Paul in the New Testament, where a prophetic voice challenges Roman authority to truth and justice. But often our hierarchs can be lone rangers, waging their own battles with their own agendas in mind, without that discussion with the Roman Church and the Pope which makes dialogue flourish in communion. The continuous calls of some priests and bishops to “rethink” Church teaching on a variety of questions, from clerical celibacy and liturgical translations to same-sex marriage and global warming, plays right into the logic of Romophobia and does not edify the faithful. These calls give the impression that there is no authority in the Church, or that it is arbitrary, and they always make Rome out to be the villain. That certain men who have occupied the Chair of St Peter and worked in the Vatican have not always lived up to the Gospel as they should have is undeniable. But the same holds for those who occupy the pulpits and altars of Catholic churches all over the world, and those who sit in their pews.

To love Christ and His Church is not to hold back from constructive criticism at the right time, in the right place and in the right way, of those who err, but such criticism must be neither hatred nor fear of Rome, the Vatican, the Pope, or the Catholic Church. It must be offered from the standpoint of the eternal truth of Revelation lived joyfully in communion with the Church, with and under Peter.

Father Christopher Smith is a priest of the Diocese of Charleston, South Carolina and a graduate of the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. He is currently pursuing doctoral studies at the University of Navarre in Pamplona, Spain.

Fantastic News from Baltimore

This entire parish is going Roman Catholic and maintaining Anglican Use, with music centered on the wonderful Palmer-Burgess Gradual, books that can be used in any ordinary form parish. It’s English chant set to Gregorian melodies. They are certainly worth owning. They are very affordable. Get them here.

And think of this. With the magnificently corrected Roman Missal coming out this time next year (that’s a long time of nights sleepless with anticipation), the now far-apart worlds of the ordinary form and the Anglican Use will draw more closely together. We are looking more and more at the lovely ecumenism we should all favor, namely a universal sound and feel of the Roman Rite, whether the ordinary form, extraordinary form, or Anglican Use.

The Banished Heart

Geoffrey Hull’s argument in The Banished Heart (expanded and refined from the 1995 edition) is a complex one, with a vast apparatus that is difficult to summarize. The book jacket says the following, just to intrigue the reader: “he present mainstream Catholic Church, with its modernistic and secular aura, grew directly from the official conservatism of the Church as it was before the Council.”

How so? I’m reading it now, so I can provide more information later, but my quick summary is as follows. Long before the Second Vatican Council, and developing even from the time of Trent and after, two forces came alive within the conservative camp: rationalism and imperialism. Imperialism is the assumption that the center must always dictate to the outer edges what should take place in liturgy, and hence any deviation from the appointed rubrics and style must bear the burden of proving its orthodoxy. The rationalist assumption is related: it presumes that everything that takes place in liturgy must have some reason for happening that can be explained by virtue of argumentation hence comprehended from the point of view of logic or history or theology. Lacking such a basis, practices come under grave suspicion.

When you transfer these two proclivities to a secular time, in a world of pop media and intellectual hubris, you set up a disaster-in-waiting for any liturgical structure of ancient origin. The imperialist assumption guarantees that whatever happens occurs universally. There can be no local experimentation with reform. Reform is an all-or-nothing, everywhere-or-nowhere proposition. The rationalist assumption is also a special problem for a liturgy that developed over many generations and hundreds of years, something that cannot be comprehended by a single intellectual, committee, or even one generation.

Hull’s argument is that it as the conservatives at Vatican II who carried around the baggage of both points of view, without understanding the dangers that lurked therein. Once the process of reform was opened up, there was no longer any possibility that it could be contain to one region or affect just one part of the liturgy. The entire structure went through upheaval all over the world. Professor Hull recounts this history by way of showing how it came to be that the Council documents would say one thing while the practice ten years later came to be precisely the opposite.

It is a provocative argument, one that he argues with great erudition and understanding. Even if you initially do not accept the thesis and even if you resist the thesis to the end, you can certainly learn from the detailed history he present here. It’s my own view that the book can do great good in helping conservatives and traditionalists question their own assumptions about what went wrong and why. Incidentally, he seems very optimistic about the manner in which the current Pope is undertaking reform: with liberality and with studied attention to the need for the Roman Rite to always remain connected with the micro-culture in which it exists.