This opinion piece will not be tactfully phrased. Many essays in the past few days have tried to balance both positive and negative views of Traditionis Custodes, the new motu proprio issued by Pope Francis concerning the traditional Latin Mass. This article reflects my experience from the trenches. (I was my diocese’s vicar for clergy when Benedict issued Summorum Pontificum.) It may  help some understand the issues that motivated Francis.

In 2007, when Summorum Pontificum was issued, it looked like the golden days of Tridentine Masses were back. Pope Benedict really wanted to help heal wounds that stemmed from the Vatican II Council’s reform of the liturgy and allow people who had a special affinity for the traditional Latin Mass some relief at their sense of loss of a liturgy that meant so much to them.

He was well intentioned, but his effort simply didn’t work. Here are four reasons why.

Little Growth and Glory Not Found

The TLM is not widely popular and growing by leaps and bounds. The TLM is often heralded as the form of prayer that will save the Church. I’m sorry, but until I see statistics to the contrary, I’m going to call that fake news. We originally had two sites in our diocese where the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest celebrated that liturgy. One closed down shortly after opening because of a lack of attendees. The other is an oratory and consistently gets about 200 people at a Sunday liturgy. That’s it.

There are no other celebrations of the TLM in our diocese. Two hundred people consistently want the Latin Mass in a diocese of 400,000 Catholics. That is hardly a groundswell of support and evidence of need.

Radical traditionalists use the TLM to try and return the Church to its glory days. The “RadTrads” see the Catholic Church limping to extinction because of its love of “modernism.” It has capitulated to the culture and sowed the seeds of its own demise. The TLM is one hinge of the door that will allow Catholics to return to some semblance of true religion.

They freely claim that the TLM is superior to the Novus Ordo, the ordinary form for celebrating the liturgy in Roman Catholicism. They despise the pope and his authority and sound very much like the early Lutherans during the Reformation. They snarl at our attempts to serve the supposedly less informed Catholics of the parish instead of bowing to their demands.

They may even have lapsed into heresy, creating a form of Gnosticism where they have the secret formula or knowledge that will invigorate the Church once again. If only we had communion rails, no communion in the hand, forms of morality more rigid than the teaching of the Catholic Church, pious devotions that eclipse the study of Scriptures, a much more solid emphasis on Fatima and its promises, as well as an apocalyptic outlook that heralds great punishment for sinners because of the evils of this world, etc., the Catholic Church would rise from its corruption and once again take its rightful place in the world.

Clericalism and False Hopes

Some priests used Summorum Pontificum to advance clericalism and elitism. Clericalism is the overemphasis of the status of a priest with a wish to be placed on a pedestal. Unfortunately, this seemed to be one of the underlying hopes of some who sought to celebrate the TLM.

Some younger priests, who had never experienced that liturgy, knew no Latin, nor had anyone to teach them the rubrics, ran and grabbed a biretta and maniple and presented themselves as ready to celebrate the Eucharist with a liturgy they knew little about. They liked the garments, the smells and bells, and the mystery they felt surrounded that form of worship. It made them feel strong and powerful and … well … elite.

In order to allow them to celebrate the Mass, the bishop had only one requirement. They had to be able to know what they were saying. Every one of them failed that simple test. He didn’t even require them to translate the liturgy; he simply asked them to summarize the content. They could not.

People with no lived experience of the TLM see it as the launchpad of a new reform.  Obviously, not everyone who supports the TLM is like this. But one has to ask why a liturgy that most Catholics now alive never grew up with, said in a language they do not understand, captures their imagination and serves to anchor their Catholic faith.

The answer many give back is that the TLM restores the mystery and grandeur of the liturgy. That’s fake news too. The older folks who did grow up with the TLM have many stories about how sloppily it was often done, with little understanding from either the priest or people. Most folks simply prayed their rosary or said other prayers while they attended a Mass they really didn’t comprehend.

There was a reason why Vatican II called for a reform of the liturgy. The Council Fathers knew that the Mass was failing the salient point of liturgy: namely, giving the people a chance to worship God with understanding and knowledge. The mystery the liturgy should cause ought to lift people to the heights of heaven, not befuddle their minds because of a language they cannot understand.

Pope Francis’s Response

In response, Pope Francis issued Traditionis Custodes to fight the disunity and divisiveness caused by an inappropriate use of the TLM. His document which basically revokes much of Summorum Pontificum. The outcry has been immense, the majority of it critical.

But don’t be fooled by that. His decision is one that popes must often make for the good of the people. He saw the disunity, the division, the growing controversies, and decided that a new approach must be attempted. The TLM is not going to be a parallel rite with the ordinary form of the Mass. There will still be times it will be celebrated, but it will never be the hinge upon which the catholicity of the Church swings.

That outrages some people and the opprobrium cast upon the pope simply shows where the allegiance of these people lies. It is not with the teaching of the Church nor the respect that should be shown to the successor of St. Peter.

Will there be a schism? Will some leave the Church over this? Possibly. But no real Catholic deprives the pope of his authority to regulate the liturgy and worship of the people. It’s why we have popes. It is what popes do.

Kudos to Pope Francis for understanding the need of the Church to fully embrace the liturgical reform called for by Vatican II. Thank God we have a pope who has the courage to brave the condemnation of those who put their own needs and wants ahead of what is best for the Church of Jesus Christ.

For more on this subject, see Peter Wolfgang’s Twelve quick thoughts on Pope Francis dropping his long-expected bomb; David Mills’ Free the Latin Mass (written before Francis’s ruling); Fr Alcuin Reid’s Summorum Pontificum a restoration after a gross impoverishment (a From the Archives feature from 2007); his response to Benedict’s election, What Benedict XVI thought about liturgical changeCNA’s Cardinal Müller critiques Pope Francis; and Robert P. George’s Francis could do what he did.

 

Monsignor Eric Barr is a priest of the Diocese of Rockford, Illinois. In his thirty-seven years of priesthood, he has been pastor, principal, teacher, university professor, Vicar for Clergy, and Vicar General. He is a former associate editor of a newspaper and a novelist. He speaks on Celtic Theology and Current Catholic Issues.

 

Photo credit: Pope Francis kissing an figure of the Christ child at the Epiphany Mass at St Peter’s Basilica in 2020 (Vincenzo Pinto/AFP via Getty Images).

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