The Problem is not the Mass

WITH SO MUCH commentary on Traditionis custodes (TC) buzzing around the ether at the moment, it will not be hard for the reader to find examples ranging from those belligerently outraged by TC to those passionately pleased. The large middle ground is composed of those trying to make sense of a document so poorly composed, quite apart from the propriety of its intentions. With some of these commentaries in mind, as well as conversations with people both well-formed and well-informed, a few things seem to be settling into place, in my mind at least.

More and more it is clear that the problem is not the vetus ordo of the Mass per se. TC did not say a word against it. Of course, how could it, since it was this Mass, with small variations, that nourished the Church for over a millennium and a half. So what was the problem? If one accepts that TC is not a tissue of lies (as I do), notwithstanding its imperfections, inaccuracies, loaded terminology and “editorial bias,” then one must take it at its word:

the concord and unity of the Church…“[and the] ecclesial communion of those Catholics who feel attached to some earlier liturgical forms”

para 2

And in particular, regarding those so “attached,” of concern is a perceived tendency among some to:

deny the validity and the legitimacy of the liturgical reform, dictated by Vatican Council II and the Magisterium of the Supreme Pontiffs

ibid.

The Letter from Pope Francis to the world’s bishops, which accompanied TC and serves as a sort of interpretive lens for it, has a gentler and more expansive tone. For the sake of balance, it seems necessary to ensure that any analysis of TC includes this papal letter. The sixth paragraph of the Letter is, for me, crucial. In it Francis states that he is

saddened by abuses in the celebration of the liturgy on all sides. In common with Benedict XVI, I deplore the fact that “in many places the prescriptions of the new Missal are not observed in celebration, but indeed come to be interpreted as an authorization for or even a requirement of creativity, which leads to almost unbearable distortions”. But I am nonetheless saddened that the instrumental use of Missale Romanum of 1962 is often characterized by a rejection not only of the liturgical reform, but of the Vatican Council II itself, claiming, with unfounded and unsustainable assertions, that it betrayed the Tradition and the “true Church”…To doubt the Council is to doubt the intentions of those very Fathers who exercised their collegial power in a solemn manner cum Petro et sub Petro in an ecumenical council, [14] and, in the final analysis, to doubt the Holy Spirit himself who guides the Church.

TC is a juridical instrument, and one cannot expect too much from it by way of commentary or rationale. The Letter provides these. The issue central to TC, as Shaun Blanchard recognized, is the reception of Vatican II. For all their irreverent and secularising antics, “creative liturgists” nevertheless cite (however misguidedly) Vatican II as their authority, and they in no way deny the validity of the Council’s decrees. They might twist and distort them, misapply and misread them, but they accept them and the Council unquestioningly. Some will complain that the Council remains unfinished business, but in doing so they accept that its business as begun was valid. However doctrinaire or even strategic their appeal to Vatican II, their acceptance of it is not in doubt.

This is the thing that Pope Francis, in light of the bishops’ responses to the survey on the implementation of Benedict XVI’s Summorum pontificum (2007), finds too often absent at the other end of the liturgical spectrum. Now, many have (rightly) opined that the ordinary congregant at old Masses has no problem with the Council’s decrees, only their implementation, especially in the liturgical sphere. Most with any knowledge of the matter would agree.

The ordinary old Mass-goer is not the problem, clearly. Nor is the old Mass. What Francis is doing is distinguishing the pastoral provision of the old Mass to those who accept Vatican II but are “attached” to the old Mass, from the promotion of the old Mass, often by those who implicitly reject the conciliar reform as delivered, not in its validity (they would claim) but in its efficacy and legitimacy. These would assert that the new Mass is (barely?) valid but barren. A few go further and cast in doubt the very call for liturgical reform as envisaged by the Council Fathers.

Thus some who promote the Mass in use before the Council end up weaponizing it against the Mass that was promulgated as the conciliar reform. Paul VI, in his Agatha Christie indult, allowed continued celebration of the old Mass as adapted in light of the Council in the Ordo Missae of 1965 (OM65), further adapted in 1967. In 1988 the 1962 Missale Romanum was the instrument of a more generous accommodation of those troubled by the 1970 Missale Romanum as celebrated, and corrupted, in all too many places. Benedict XVI sought to regularise and integrate the growing number of adherents to the old Mass by clarifying the relationship of the old and new Masses within the one Roman Rite.

So, as the provision of the pre-conciliar liturgy was ever more generously extended, and its adherents called in from the peripheries of the Church, the expected decrease in agitation against the Council did not materialize. As Francis, and apparently many bishops, saw it, the Church’s generous provision of the old Mass was met with increasing promotion of it, to the detriment of the new Mass. The more zealous promoters of the old Mass derided, or at least devalued, those who were advocating a “reform of the reform” in order to establish a reformed liturgy faithful both to the Council and to the Tradition leading up to the Council. For the zealous promoters, it was 1962 or bust.

In fact, the zealous were not content with 1962. Soon came calls for a restoration of the Holy Week liturgy prior to the reform of the mid-1950s under Pius XII. And indeed, this has been celebrated in the last few years, with indults from a generous Prefect for Divine Worship. The Divine Office/Liturgy of the Hours has also been subject to the same influences, with the zealous promoting the breviary in use use prior to the reforms decreed by Pius X, in 1911. The Sarum Missal, which fell out of use in the wake of the Council of Trent, is now being adopted by some.

Thus, it seems that Francis, and apparently a goodly number of bishops, are worried by the tendency of some promoters of the pre-conciliar liturgy to go further and further back in time for an ever more pristine liturgy, untouched by the grubby fingers of the Reformation, the Enlightenment, the Liturgical Movement, Annibale Bugnini or the Consilium. Perhaps accurately, they discern in this the activity of an Unquiet Heart that will never be satisfied. The irony is that this reaching back further into Christian history for a pristine liturgy is the same dynamic behind the conciliar reforms.

Please do not get me wrong. I remain troubled by TC, which appears too readily as a sledgehammer aimed at cracking a nut. There is in it the ulterior motive, not often noted, of controlling the collegiality of the bishops by a centralizing papacy, even down to the selection of seminarians and the granting of liturgical permissions to young clergy. This is a lens, to be sure, by which synodality mania needs to be viewed. If allowed its head, bishops will be the big losers, a centralising papacy the winner.

It is all too easy to enjoin greater humility on others, while disregarding one’s own need for humility. This reservation notwithstanding, perhaps the more zealous promoters of the pre-conciliar liturgy might need to employ a little humility in reflecting on their promotion of the old Mass, and to assess honestly whether there has not been in it a vein, intended or not, of conciliar repudiation, and even for some a sense of superiority over those who slog along obediently with the new Mass. In short, have the promoters of the old Mass too often overplayed their hand?

This desire to contain the zealous and indiscreet promotion of the old Mass while maintaining its provision for the ordinary faithful who adhere to it is repeated near the end of the Letter. There is here, too, an implicit encouragement to those who seek to reform the reform, not overturn it, and to constrain those who abuse the reformed liturgy with their own personal adaptations and interpretations, often creating what is in essence an altogether new rite:

Indications about how to proceed in your dioceses are chiefly dictated by two principles: on the one hand, to provide for the good of those who are rooted in the previous form of celebration and need to return in due time to the Roman Rite promulgated by Saints Paul VI and John Paul II, and, on the other hand, to discontinue the erection of new personal parishes tied more to the desire and wishes of individual priests than to the real need of the “holy People of God.” At the same time, I ask you to be vigilant in ensuring that every liturgy be celebrated with decorum and fidelity to the liturgical books promulgated after Vatican Council II, without the eccentricities that can easily degenerate into abuses. Seminarians and new priests should be formed in the faithful observance of the prescriptions of the Missal and liturgical books, in which is reflected the liturgical reform willed by Vatican Council II.

Finally, a sop to my own intuition and obsession: in the Letter as in TC itself, there is a similar wideness of scope as to what constitutes the ordinary expression of the liturgy reformed by mandate of the Council (emphases mine):

[in light of the Council] a reform of the liturgy was undertaken, with its highest [n.b., not exclusive] expression in the Roman Missal, published in editio typica by St. Paul VI [20] and revised by St. John Paul II…

…[I] declare that the liturgical books promulgated by the saintly Pontiffs Paul VI and John Paul II, in conformity with the decrees of Vatican Council II, constitute the unique expression of the lex orandi of the Roman Rite…[n.b. this definition includes OM65, promulgated under Paul VI]

I ask you to be vigilant in ensuring that every liturgy be celebrated with decorum and fidelity to the liturgical books promulgated after Vatican Council II, without the eccentricities that can easily degenerate into abuses. Seminarians and new priests should be formed in the faithful observance of the prescriptions of the Missal and liturgical books, in which is reflected the liturgical reform willed by Vatican Council II. [n.b. O65 is permissible within the scope of this admonition]

The candle in the apparent darkness for me is that in restricting the promotion of the pre-conciliar liturgy, promotion of all the post-conciliar liturgy is enabled, including the Ordo Missae 1965, which is recognisably both traditional and conciliar.

Mass in 1968

If “this unity I [i.e. Francis] intend to re-establish throughout the Church of the Roman Rite” is founded on the “liturgical books promulgated after Vatican Council II,” then it seems entirely consistent for those who wish to be manifestly in unity with the Church and to celebrate the liturgy in a way that is worthy, conciliar and traditional, then the use of the OM65 within the context of celebration according to the Roman Missal of 1970/2008 seems both legitimate and desirable wherever it can be done.

Perhaps OM65 needs to be reprinted and made available again.

**N.B. there are rumours that clarifications on TC will be issued imminently. These may scupper the scope for OM65 found at present in TC!**

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  1. You rather downplay the bit about those “ who need to return in due course” to the NO. The aim is abolition.

    1. Don’t forget the bit about the Novus Ordo being the “unique expression” of the Roman Rite’s lex orandi.

      Of course, if this is true, then either the Roman Rite had no lex orandi before 1969 (which is clearly absurd), or the Church’s lex orandi changed in 1969, such that is no longer expressed by the pre-1969 Missal (which is precisely the “rad trad” position which Fr. Hugh thinks need suppressing).

  2. The one this about our Church is that everyone can worship with whatever spiritual level they are at. This topic I think the Pope brought up though to distract from all he is doing with climate change, which is a more hot topic than this …

    1. Well, climate change is a burning issue, but for people of faith the eternal life is a far more burning issue. Perhaps literally!

  3. As ever, you make many excellent points here, Father. The Reform of the Reform has stalled in recent years. That may in some places be an unfortunate by-product of Summorum Pontificum, but perhaps not for the most part. Rather, I suspect that in many places it is the result of so much parish liturgy being stuck in the mindset of baby boomers for whom it is forever 1971. Musicians who try to do what the Council really said and introduce chant into parish liturgy can have such a hard time of it that they are driven to the EF by default. There are some hopeful sings, however. I notice that young clergy, even if they do not celebrate the Traditional Mass themselves, have been positively influenced by it and are more careful about the ars celebrandi in the new rite than are many of their boomer elders.

    It would be salutary for everyone to reread Sacrosanctum Concilium carefully. I refer here not just to the overlooked directions about chant and Latin, but more to the underlying theology. In SC, the liturgy is not about self affirmation by the community (as too much so-called ‘spirit of Vatican II’ talk seems to assume) but about participation in the Paschal Mystery of Our Lord. That is, of course, eminently traditional. And if we all made that our starting point, our differences might prove much easier to bridge.

    1. Yes, he was a good egg. All those years in Australia as a young pup of a missioner monk, doncha’ know. 😉

  4. More and more it is clear that the problem is not the vetus ordo of the Mass per se. TC did not say a word against it. Of course, how could it, since it was this Mass, with small variations, that nourished the Church for over a millennium and a half.

    He denied its standing as a valid expression of the Church’s lex orandi. That’s… a pretty big thing to say against it.

    In it Francis states that he is saddened by abuses in the celebration of the liturgy on all sides. In common with Benedict XVI, I deplore the fact that “in many places the prescriptions of the new Missal are not observed in celebration, but indeed come to be interpreted as an authorization for or even a requirement of creativity, which leads to almost unbearable distortions”.

    Francis broke the Maundy Thursday rubrics, revised them to make what he did permissible, and then broke the revised rubrics. I think it takes a quite determined amount of self-deception or naivete to think that Francis actually cares about liturgical abuses.

    For all their irreverent and secularising antics, “creative liturgists” nevertheless cite (however misguidedly) Vatican II as their authority, and they in no way deny the validity of the Council’s decrees. They might twist and distort them, misapply and misread them, but they accept them and the Council unquestioningly.

    If they twist and distort Vatican 2 to suit their own agendas, they don’t accept it “unquestioningly”.

    As Francis, and apparently many bishops, saw it, the Church’s generous provision of the old Mass was met with increasing promotion of it, to the detriment of the new Mass.

    What’s wrong with people promoting liturgical practices which they find spiritually helpful?

    What Francis is doing is distinguishing the pastoral provision of the old Mass to those who accept Vatican II but are “attached” to the old Mass, from the promotion of the old Mass, often by those who implicitly reject the conciliar reform as delivered, not in its validity (they would claim) but in its efficacy and legitimacy. These would assert that the new Mass is (barely?) valid but barren.

    This is a double standard. The people who created the Novus Ordo thought that the Vetus Ordo was “valid but barren” — that’s why they changed so much! — as did the liberal wing of the Church, who waged a decades-long campaign against traditional Catholic spirituality and liturgy without ever receiving a TC-style smackdown. The idea that all rites are equally efficacious and it’s Just Not On to say otherwise is one that only ever gets deployed against traditionalists.

    A few go further and cast in doubt the very call for liturgical reform as envisaged by the Council Fathers.

    Calls for liturgical reform aren’t infallible, even if made by Council Fathers, so I don’t see why we shouldn’t be able to doubt them.

    In fact, the zealous were not content with 1962. Soon came calls for a restoration of the Holy Week liturgy prior to the reform of the mid-1950s under Pius XII. And indeed, this has been celebrated in the last few years, with indults from a generous Prefect for Divine Worship. The Divine Office/Liturgy of the Hours has also been subject to the same influences, with the zealous promoting the breviary in use use prior to the reforms decreed by Pius X, in 1911. The Sarum Missal, which fell out of use in the wake of the Council of Trent, is now being adopted by some.

    Another double standard. You yourself say that “this reaching back further into Christian history for a pristine liturgy is the same dynamic behind the conciliar reforms”, but it’s only traditionalists who have to suffer for this (alleged) character flaw. (And BTW, I’d love to hear just how many Catholics have actually started adopting the Sarum Missal; if the total number, including laymen as well as priests, is in triple figures, I’d be very surprised.)

    Thus, it seems that Francis, and apparently a goodly number of bishops, are worried by the tendency of some promoters of the pre-conciliar liturgy to go further and further back in time for an ever more pristine liturgy, untouched by the grubby fingers of the Reformation, the Enlightenment, the Liturgical Movement, Annibale Bugnini or the Consilium. Perhaps accurately, they discern in this the activity of an Unquiet Heart that will never be satisfied.

    This is your attempt to find a plausible motivation for Francis, not something Francis himself has said. TC makes no mention of the pre-1955 Holy Week (nor has Francis done anything to stop parishes celebrating it, which he easily could), nor of the Sarum Rite, 1911 Breviary, or anything else you mention.

    This reservation notwithstanding, perhaps the more zealous promoters of the pre-conciliar liturgy might need to employ a little humility in reflecting on their promotion of the old Mass, and to assess honestly whether there has not been in it a vein, intended or not, of conciliar repudiation, and even for some a sense of superiority over those who slog along obediently with the new Mass.

    “Sure, your husband beats you up, but maybe you should reflect on whether you haven’t been too lippy towards him.”

    1. A quick reply; today has been exhausting. Working in the order they appear on my screen in the blog dashboard.

      I do not advocate “suppressing” any “position” but rather advocate a discretion that too often, but not always, has been lacking in some.

      TC did not say anything explicitly against 1962. I agree, however, that it was implied. But in law, implications have much less power than the explicit letter. And TC is law, not teaching.

      I am not exonerating anyone of liturgical abuse, but the purpose of the article is not to name-and-shame. Moreover, I encourage you to read for the nuance that is revealed in the mere mention of something, even if without explicit editorial comment. The same goes for my comments about pristine liturgy as a goal for both ends of the liturgical spectrum. Of course there has been an inconsistency in practice as to who gets the favourable hearing and indulgence.

      Because I am a priest in the trenches—with far less scope and freedom to shoot from the lip—it behoves the reader to look for clues and inferences to be drawn. Because I exhort the more extreme end of the traditionalist wing to embrace discretion, it does not imply that I, or they, devalue their position. It is because shouting and rancour rarely work, and they will not work with this pope. Likewise, constant sniping about the motives of the Council is counter-productive and offers ammunition for the opposition.

      One priest advertised his purchase of a reprinted Sarum Missal online, and there have been some who have called for its regular celebration. My point is not about the numbers using it (more Anglicans than Catholics do I am sure) but that it offers an example of how far the unquiet liturgical heart will journey into liturgical history to find liturgical shangri-la.

      A reason liturgical innovators and abusers have escaped recent censure (though not all censure: Paul VI and John Paul II both condemned abuses) is that they have the nous to invoke the Council. If the trads want to win back some ground and ensure a fairer hearing they would do well to invoke the Council themselves. In fact, they have far greater scope to do so: they can cite abundant text rather than a nebulous ”spirit” bolstered by selective quotation of ambiguous phrases in conciliar documents, molehills on which they build mountains.

      Anyway, disagree with me all you want. I am not infallible. Nor are you. We struggle on nevertheless.

  5. I’ve long been drawn to the 1965 version of Mass, so I’ve been looking for an excuse to try it out – and TC seems to have opened up a small window of opportunity! I’m a diocesan priest in a parish, but I didn’t have a public Mass today so I dusted down the 1965 Altar Missal and gave it a go – and I’m really impressed! I’ve celebrated the EF regularly since my ordination and 1965 is more or less the same thing as 1962 with just a few small simplifications.

    Where it wins out for me is the flexibility in terms of language and rubrics (for the record today I celebrated ad orientem and I didn’t use the chair or ambo but I did use the maximum amount of English allowed with the approved 1965 translation for Ireland).

    Having tried unsuccessfully to draw normal Mass-going Catholics to the traditional rite in the past, I see 1965 as a bridge – you can use enough vernacular to help people feel at home, you could say the Mass at a modern altar much more easily (even facing the people if necessary). There is much more flexibility with 1965 and that is really important if you want the older liturgy to be seen and appreciated by more people. It is also very obviously in harmony with Sacrosanctum Concilium. I hope and pray that the 1965 OM will be formally approved before too long!

    1. Your sentiments and experience are a tonic and an encouragement. Keep trying and get more and more familiar with 65. You’ve encouraged me further to do the same.
      Pax!

  6. I certainly hope that the rumoured clarifications do not scupper OM(65). Indeed my hope is that the wording of the MP distinguishing the 1962 Missal from “the Missal antecendent to 1970” is preparation that it will be imposed, with the amendments of Tres Abhinc Annos which were after all what we enjoyed for six years from 1967 to 1973. :-
    In the audience granted April 13, 1967 to the undersigned Cardinal Arcadio Maria Larrona, Prefect of the Congregation of Rites, Pope Paul VI approved and confirmed by his authority the present instruction as a whole and in all its parts, ordering its publication and its faithful observance by all concerned, beginning June 29, 1967.

    1. Indeed, I am waiting the rumoured clarifications with bated breath. If the interim rite door is slammed shut I shall be far from gruntled!

  7. At a slight tangent, is there anything to the suggestions I have seen on line that Libreria Editrice Vaticana has decided not to reprint the 2002 Missale Romanum in Latin and is denying other publishers the right to do so? If so, it will be something of a joke to keep referring to the Latin Rite. After all, the Latin version is supposed to be the norm and is still used in the Roman basilicas and Brompton Oratory among other places.

    Or for that matter should we still call ourselves the Roman Rite, given that the Roman Canon is hardly ever used in parishes and that EP II – Bouyer and Botte’s eleventh-hour rescue job in a Trastevere trattoria on the pseudo-Hippolytan prayer produced by Bugnini’s consilium – seems to be used 95 times out of a hundred?

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