Prefect of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, given in Santiago to the
Chilean bishops
In recent months, we have put a lot of work into the case of Lefebvre
with the sincere intention of creating for his movement a space within
the Church that would be sufficient for it to live. The Holy See has
been criticized for this. It is said that it has not defended the
Second Vatican Council with sufficient energy; that, while it has
treated progressive movements with great severity, it has displayed an
exaggerated sympathy with the traditionalist rebellion. The development
of events is enough to disprove these assertions. The mythical
harshness of the Vatican in the face of the deviations of the
progressives is shown to be mere empty words. Up until now, in fact,
only warnings have been published; in no case have there been strict
canonical penalties in the strict sense. And the fact that when the
chips were down Lefebvre denounced an agreement that had already been
signed, shows that the Holy See, while it made truly generous
concessions, did not grant him that complete license which he desired.
Lefebvre has seen that, in the fundamental part of the agreement, he
was being held to accept Vatican II and the affirmations of the
post-conciliar Magisterium, according to the proper authority of each
document.
There is a glaring contradiction in the fact that it is just the people
who have let no occasion slip to allow the world to know of their
disobedience to the Pope, and to the magisterial declarations of the
last 20 years, who think they have the right to judge that this
attitude is too mild and who wish that an absolute obedience to Vatican
II had been insisted upon. In a similar way they would claim that the
Vatican has conceded a right to dissent to Lefebvre which has been
obstinately denied to the promoters of a progressive tendency. In
reality, the only point which is affirmed in the agreement, following
Lumen Gentium 25, is the plain fact that not all documents of the
Council have the same authority. For the rest, it was explicitly laid
down in the text that was signed that public polemics must be avoided,
and that an attitude is required of positive respect for official
decisions and declarations.
It was conceded, in addition, that the Society of Saint Pius X would be
able to present to the Holy See—which reserves to itself the sole right
of decision—their particular difficulties in regard to interpretations
of juridical and liturgical reforms. All of this shows plainly that in
this difficult dialogue Rome has united generosity, in all that was
negotiable, with firmness in essentials. The explanation which Msgr.
Lefebvre has given, for the retraction of his agreement, is revealing.
He declared that he has finally understood that the agreement he signed
aimed only at integrating his foundation into the “Conciliar Church.”.
The Catholic Church in union with the Pope is, according to him, the
“Conciliar Church” which has broken with its own past. It seems indeed
that he is no longer able to see that we are dealing with the Catholic
Church in the totality of its Tradition, and that Vatican II belongs to
that.
Without any doubt, the problem that Lefebvre has posed has not been
concluded by the rupture of June 30th. It would be too simple to take
refuge in a sort of triumphalism, and to think that this difficulty has
ceased to exist from the moment in which the movement led by Lefebvre
has separated itself by a clean break with the Church. A Christian
never can, or should, take pleasure in a rupture. Even though it is
absolutely certain the fault cannot be attributed to the Holy See, it
is a duty for us to examine ourselves, as to what errors we have made,
and which ones we are making even now. The criteria with which we judge
the past in the Vatican II decree on ecumenism must be used—as is
logical—to judge the present as well.
One of the basic discoveries of the theology of ecumenism is that
schisms can take place only when certain truths and certain values of
the Christian faith are no longer lived and loved within the Church.
The truth which is marginalized becomes autonomous, remains detached
from the whole of the ecclesiastical structure, and a new movement then
forms itself around it. We must reflect on this fact: that a large
number of Catholics, far beyond the narrow circle of the Fraternity of
Lefebvre, see this man as a guide, in some sense, or at least as a
useful ally. It will not do to attribute everything to political
motives, to nostalgia, or to cultural factors of minor importance.
These causes are not capable of explaining the attraction which is felt
even by the young, and especially by the young, who come from many
quite different nations, and who are surrounded by completely distinct
political and cultural realities. Indeed they show what is from any
point of view a restricted and one-sided outlook; but there is no doubt
whatever that a phenomenon of this sort would be inconceivable unless
there were good elements at work here, which in general do not find
sufficient opportunity to live within the Church of today.
For all these reasons, we ought to see this matter primarily as the
occasion for an examination of conscience. We should allow ourselves to
ask fundamental questions, about the defects in the pastoral life of
the Church, which are exposed by these events. Thus we will be able to
offer a place within the Church to those who are seeking and demanding
it, and succeed in destroying all reason for schism. We can make such
schism pointless by renewing the interior realities of the Church.
There are three points, I think, that it is important to think about.
While there are many motives that might have led a great number of
people to seek a refuge in the traditional liturgy, the chief one is
that they find the dignity of the sacred preserved there. After the
Council there were many priests who deliberately raised
“desacralization” to the level of a program, on the plea that the New
Testament abolished the cult of the Temple: the veil of the Temple
which was torn from top to bottom at the moment of Christ’s death on
the cross is, according to certain people, the sign of the end of the
sacred. The death of Jesus, outside the City walls, that is to say, in
the public world, is now the true religion. Religion, if it has any
being at all, must have it in the nonsacredness of daily life, in love
that is lived. Inspired by such reasoning, they put aside the sacred
vestments; they have despoiled the churches as much as they could of
that splendor which brings to mind the sacred; and they have reduced
the liturgy to the language and the gestures of ordinary life, by means
of greetings, common signs of friendship, and such things.
There is no doubt that, with these theories and practices, they have
entirely disregarded the true connection between the Old and the New
Testaments: It is forgotten that this world is not the Kingdom of God,
and that the “Holy One of God” (John 6:69) continues to exist in
contradiction to this world; that we have need of purification before
we draw near to Him; that the profane, even after the death and the
Resurrection of Jesus, has not succeeded in becoming “the holy”. The
Risen One has appeared, but to those whose heart has been opened to
Him, to the Holy; He did not manifest Himself to everyone. It is in
this way a new space has been opened for the religion to which all of
us would now submit; this religion which consists in drawing near to
the community of the Risen One, at whose feet the women prostrated
themselves and adored Him. I do not want to develop this point any
further now; I confine myself to coming straight to this conclusion: we
ought to get back the dimension of the sacred in the liturgy. The
liturgy is not a festivity; it is not a meeting for the purpose of
having a good time. It is of no importance that the parish priest has
cudgeled his brains to come up with suggestive ideas or imaginative
novelties. The liturgy is what makes the Thrice-Holy God present
amongst us; it is the burning bush; t is the Alliance of God with man
in Jesus Christ, who has died and risen again. The grandeur of the
liturgy does not rest upon the fact that it offers an interesting
entertainment, but in rendering tangible the Totally Other, whom we are
not capable of summoning. He comes because He wills. In other words,
the essential in the liturgy is the mystery, which is realized in the
common ritual of the Church; all the rest diminishes it. Men experiment
with it in lively ashion, and find themselves deceived, when the
mystery is transformed into distraction, when the chief actor in the
liturgy is not the Living God but the priest or the liturgical director.
Aside from the liturgical questions, the central points of conflict at
present are Lefebvre’s attack on the decree which deals with religious
liberty, and on the so-called spirit of Assisi. Here is where Lefebvre
fixes the boundaries between his position and that of the Catholic
Church today.
I need hardly say in so many words that what he is saying on these
points is unacceptable. Here we do not wish to consider his errors,
rather we want to ask ourselves where there is lack of clarity in
ourselves. For Lefebvre what is at stake is the warfare against
ideological liberalism, against the relativization of truth. Obviously
we are not in agreement with him that—understood according to the
Pope’s intentions—the text of the Council or the prayer of Assisi were
relativizing.
It is a necessary task to defend the Second Vatican Council against
Msgr. Lefebvre, as valid, and as binding upon the Church. Certainly
there is a mentality of narrow views that isolate Vatican II and which
has provoked this opposition. There are many accounts of it which give
the impression that, from Vatican II onward, everything has been
changed, and that what preceded it has no value or, at best, has value
only in the light of Vatican II.
The Second Vatican Council has not been treated as a part of the entire
living Tradition of the Church, but as an end of Tradition, a new start
from zero. The truth is that this particular Council defined no dogma
at all, and deliberately chose to remain on a modest level, as a merely
pastoral council; and yet many treat it as though it had made itself
into a sort of “super-dogma” which takes away the importance of all the
rest.
This idea is made stronger by things that are now happening. That which
previously was considered most holy—the form in which the liturgy was
handed down—suddenly appears as the most forbidden of all things, the
one thing that can safely be prohibited. It is intolerable to criticize
decisions which have been taken since the Council; on the other hand,
if men make question of ancient rules, or even of the great truths of
the Faith—for instance, the corporal virginity of Mary, the bodily
resurrection of Jesus, the immortality of the soul, etc.—nobody
complains or only does so with the greatest moderation. I myself, when
I was a professor, have seen how the very same bishop who, before the
Council, ad fired a teacher who was really irreproachable, for a
certain crudeness of speech, was not prepared, after the Council, to
dismiss a professor who openly denied certain fundamental truths of the
Faith.
All this leads a great number of people to ask themselves if the Church
of today is really the same as that of yesterday, or if they have
changed it for something else without telling people. The one way in
which Vatican II can be made plausible is to present it as it is; one
part of the unbroken, the unique Tradition of the Church and of her
faith.
In the spiritual movements of the post-concilar era, there is not the
slightest doubt that frequently there has been an obliviousness, or
even a suppression, of the issue of truth: here perhaps we confront the
crucial problem for theology and for pastoral work today.
The “truth” is thought to be a claim that is too exalted, a
“triumphalism” that cannot be permitted any longer. You see this
attitude plainly in the crisis that troubles the missionary ideal and
missionary practice. If we do not point to the truth in announcing our
faith, and if this truth is no longer essential for the salvation of
Man, then the missions lose their meaning. In effect the conclusion has
been drawn, and it has been drawn today, that in the future we need
only seek that Christians should be good Christians, Moslems good
Moslems, Hindus good Hindus, and so forth. If it comes to that, how are
we to know when one is a “good” Christian, or a “good” Moslem?
The idea that all religions are—if you talk seriously—only symbols of
what ultimately is incomprehensible is rapidly gaining ground in
theology, and has already penetrated into liturgical practice. When
things get to this point, faith is left behind, because faith really
consists in the fact that I am committing myself to the truth so far as
it is known. So in this matter also there is every motive to return to
the right path.
If once again we succeed in pointing out and living the fullness of the
Catholic religion with regard to these points, we may hope that the
schism of Lefebvre will not be of long duration.
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