• New Page
  • New Page
  • Blog
  • Archive
  • The Grand Retablo
  • Bio/Contact
  • Menu

Rector Emeritus

Rector Emeritus
  • New Page
  • New Page
  • Blog
  • Archive
  • The Grand Retablo
  • Bio/Contact
Blog RSS
Races.jpg

Reflection for the 23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time

September 04, 2021

My brothers and sisters, show no partiality
as you adhere to the faith in our glorious Lord Jesus Christ.
 

It has been said that our ‘original sin’ as citizens of this land of freedom and opportunity was the institution of slavery.  It is virtually inconceivable in the 21st Century for us to envision sisters and brothers in the human family to have been treated as property, bought and sold, families separated, all for profit.  It is shameful to think that even our founding ancestors who wrote and signed our Declaration of Independence that boldly proclaimed that all men are created equal were deceptively disingenuous as many, themselves, held in slavish bondage men, women and children as mere chattel. 

It took a Civil War and the inspired and courageous boldness of one of our greatest Presidents, Abraham Lincoln, to break this chain of bondage in his historic Emancipation Proclamation.  Yet even after so many deaths and with the law of the land freeing our sisters and brothers previously held in bondage, the sin of racism was sadly hard wired into the psyche of many.  From Jim Crow to the rise of the Ku Klux Klan to present day voter disenfranchisement, the sad remnants of America’s original sin continue to shadow the bright promise of this Land. 

Shamefully, the Catholic Church in our land was never completely freed from the taint of this sin.  From Jesuits owning slaves, segregation of ‘colored’ parishes, to refusing to admit ‘coloreds’ to seminaries and convents, no wonder the evangelization of our African American brothers and sisters into the Catholic Church was so anemic.  

While there were some glorious exceptions to this sad and all to often repeated pattern of racism, by and large the American Catholic Church and her leadership were followers rather than leaders in the Civil Rights Movement in our Country.  Sadly, the doctrine of the Church that proclaimed the inherent dignity of all the members of God’s family, was often filtered through the eyes of prejudice and racism.   

In the over 46 years of priesthood and celebrating the Sacrament of Penance, I can sadly count on, maybe, on both hands, the times when individuals confessed the sin of racism and prejudice toward their neighbor.  It seems that sins ‘between navel and knees’ gain the prize for the most confessed sins in our often-myopic moral vision.  This reality is despite the clarity of the Lord’s continuing call to reverence the dignity of our neighbor, whether it was the despised Samaritan, tax collector, leper, thief or prostitute.  Jesus saw through the prejudices of his time and every age to the dignity of a child of God worthy of his Father’s unconditional love and mercy. 

No wonder, then, that we hear in our Gospel today the Lord’s challenging message of showing no partiality as we reverence the dignity of all God’s children.  Let us pray for the courage to take up that challenge daily. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Taliban.jpg

Reflection for the 22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time

August 28, 2021

Jesus responded,
“Well did Isaiah prophesy about you hypocrites, as it is written:
    This people honors me with their lips,
        but their hearts are far from me;
    in vain do they worship me,
        teaching as doctrines human precepts.

You disregard God’s commandment but cling to human tradition.” 

With the recent fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban, religious fundamentalism and its insidious intolerance is once again in the news.  True religious belief invariably manifests itself in broadening the ‘tent’ of God’s mercy and love.  False religious belief invariably reflects more about human pathologies than having anything to do with the God of light and love. 

Down through the centuries, religious intolerance has marred and disfigured the true face of the living and eternal God, whether it was the Pharisees at the time of Jesus or our latter-day religious zealots who “kill in the name of God.” 

We would be naïve if we were to believe that such backward thinking is solely relegated to the caves of Afghanistan.  We need only peruse social media today to sadly realize that such attitudes are alive and well in our own country as its cancer metastasizes and attempts to strangle the meaning of true religion. 

True religion manifests itself in the fruit of God’s Spirit: peace, patience, loving-kindness, a non-judgmental heart, forbearance and forgiveness and integrity.  False religion glories in hypocrisy and in teaching as doctrines human precepts. 

The antidote to religious fundamentalism and the hypocrisy that it nurtures is the virtue of humility.  All that we are and have come from the loving hands of a gracious God, from whom all blessings flow.  True religious sentiments are grounded in the humble recognition that, together with all our sisters and brothers in the human family, we stand in awe and reverence before the God of unfailing goodness and unconditional love.  God is not made in our image, but we are fashioned in God’s divine image and are called to reflect that holy presence to the world.  Let us pray for that grace this day and every day of our lives.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

icon of last supper.jpg

Reflection for the 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time

August 21, 2021

Jesus then said to the Twelve, “Do you also want to leave?” 
Simon Peter answered him, “Master, to whom shall we go? 
You have the words of eternal life. 
We have come to believe
and are convinced that you are the Holy One of God.”
 

A wise retreat master many years ago shared the story of his Abbot who often told the monks of his Abbey, “The problem with the good news is that for many, it’s just too good to be true!” 

For the past weeks we have reflected on the 6th Chapter of St. John’s Gospel, known also as the “Bread of Life” discourse.  In this multi-layered Gospel, Jesus through the recollection of his beloved disciple, reveals the meaning of the Lord’s greatest gift to his Church, the gift of the Holy Eucharist. 

In the past Sundays, I have taken this timely opportunity to offer my own reflections on the meaning of the Eucharist against the background of my 46 years as a priest and pastor as well as a student of the Liturgy. 

With outstretched arms, the Lord from age to age extends his loving invitation to “Taste and See” the goodness of his living presence in the simple gifts of bread and wine now transformed by the power of his Spirit into the deepest reality of his presence.   

To some of his hearers in today’s Gospel, it was ‘just too good to be true’ and sadly, they walked away.  They were measuring the immensity of God’s unfailing love and presence by the often smallness and pettiness of our own humanity.  They were unwilling to surrender in vulnerability to the transforming power of love and preferred to stand back, in the false security of their little worlds of judgment and doubt. 

The God who knows our deepest secrets and is aware of all the shadows of our human heart, nevertheless, offers his living presence as food and drink for our pilgrimage to our eternal home.  He offers us the medicine of immortality to all those who humbly pray with the centurion of old, “Lord, I am not worthy….” 

So great a gift is, indeed, too good to be true, but it is true for all who are willing to surrender in faith to the Lord of life and love. 

My friends, rather than expending needless and exhausting energy on singling out those among us who are ‘unworthy’ of the Sacrament of Unity, and endless liturgy wars that, in my opinion, have far more to do with nostalgia, aesthetics and a spiritually dangerous ‘holier than thou’ attitude, let us simply listen anew to the words of Peter, the rock, who reminds us: “Master, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe and are convinced that you are the Holy One of God.”

 

 

 

 

Reflection for the 20th Sunday in Ordinary Time

August 14, 2021

(Since this year, the Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary replaces the 20th Sunday in Ordinary Time, I have nevertheless, provided a reflection for this Sunday in Ordinary time so that I can continue my reflection on the 6th Chapter of St. John’s Gospel, the Bread of Life Discourse)

Jesus said to the crowds:

“I am the living bread that came down from heaven;

Whoever eats this bread will live forever;

And the bread that I will give

Is my flesh for the life of the world.” 

I still remember the day of my First Communion as if it was yesterday.  It was an overcast morning yet, that did not tarnish the bright joy of this day for me.  Since I’m of an age when the first reception of the Eucharist was preceded by the stringent fast from all food and liquid, including water, from midnight until Communion, I was ever so careful in brushing my teeth that morning lest an errant drop of water would break my Eucharistic fast. 

In practicing for this all-important day, the good Sisters instructed us to let the host rest on our tongues and dissolve and, under no circumstances, were we to ‘chew the host’ lest ‘we hurt Jesus!’ 

All dressed up in my first suit and clutching my First Communion prayer book, I knelt reverently to receive the Lord, on the tongue, of course, since it would have been abhorrent to touch the consecrated host with my hands.  However, my mouth was extremely dry from no water and no sooner did the priest place the host on my tongue, it somehow got stuck to the roof of my mouth!  I panicked.  For the life of me, I could not maneuver my tongue to ‘unstick’ it.  I was frantic.  Finally, it began to dissolve, and I was able to swallow the Lord of Life filling my little heart with immense joy!  

As we continue our reflections on the 6th Chapter of St. John’s Gospel, also called the Bread of Life discourse, a common misunderstanding of the nature of the ‘Real Presence” of the Lord in the Eucharistic elements of bread and wine, is betrayed in that simple admonishment of the good Sisters prior to my First Communion, “don’t chew the host lest you hurt Jesus!” 

Last week as we reflected on the “What” and “Why” of the Eucharist, we focus our attention this week on the “How” question.  How is Jesus truly and really present in the Eucharist.  For the early Church the “How” question took a back seat to the “What” and “Why” questions concerning the Eucharist.  However, in time, theological inquiry began to focus on the “How” question as Christians wrestled with this central Mystery of Faith and tried to understand the precise nature of how Jesus is present in the Eucharistic elements of bread and wine. 

We owe a debt of gratitude to the theological genius of St. Thomas Aquinas who has left our theological musings on this question with the classic understanding of this question.   

Before we venture to unpack what St. Thomas wrote, a word of caution about all theology.  Another wise Dominican theologian and professor of mine in post-graduate school, used to remind us that all theology ‘merely describes the contours of mystery’ in human language.  St. Thomas understood well that his theological reflections on the ‘How’ of the Real Presence possessed limitations and in, no way, captured completely the august Mystery of Divine Presence within the consecrated bread and wine. 

To unpack the question of “How,” Aquinas did something that was ingenious to some and abhorrent to others of his time.  He utilized the philosophical categories of nature of one of the most preeminent philosophers of Greek antiquity, Aristotle, to attempt to plunge the depth of Eucharistic Real Presence. 

Aristotle posited that all created realty consisted of two essential elements:  substantial matter or the deepest ‘essence of a reality’ and ‘how’ that ‘deepest essence’ was presented to our human senses in its ‘form,’ the external qualities of that essence.  Perhaps, an example would be helpful.  We humans possess the deepest essence of being human beings and we share that ‘essence’ with all of humanity.  That substantial essence is made visible or concrete through our physical corporality.  These are ‘accidental’ qualities, i.e., height, weight, nationality, color of eyes, hair, etc., that make present to our human senses and localize in space our essential being as humans.  However, we are far more than our height and weight, our nationality and the color of eyes and hair.  What differentiates us as human beings from, let’s say, pigs or cows, is far deeper than the external ‘accidental’ qualities of our physicality.  We are essentially and substantially at the deepest core of our existence, human beings. 

Aquinas, utilizing these philosophical categories, applied them to attempt to ‘unpack’ the vexing question of:  How is Jesus present in the bread and wine?   

On the night before he died, Jesus left his Church a lasting legacy of his real presence in the meal that would anchor and shape our deepest identity as Christians down through the centuries.  Taking bread and wine, he said his now memorable words: This is my Body; This is my Blood.  In other words, these utterly simple elements of earthly nourishment would, somehow, became his lasting presence until he comes again in glory. 

Following the invocation of the Holy Spirit and the words remembering the Last Supper at every Mass, the bread and wine become the Real Presence of the Lord.  Utilizing the philosophical categories of Aristotle, Aquinas would say that while the ‘accidental’ qualities of bread and wine would remain – it still tastes like bread and wine, looks, and feels like bread and wine – something utterly unique in the world of nature has taken place.  The deepest reality of that bread and wine – it’s essential ‘being’ as bread and wine, has been transformed into the deepest reality of the Risen Lord, his substantial and real presence as the Second Person of the Divine Trinity whose life was given in loving sacrifice for us.  Hence, Aquinas coined the revered theological term, transubstantiation to denote this wonderous change – the substance of the bread and wine has changed into the deepest reality of the Risen Lord, not an empty symbol or merely a remembrance of so great a gift, but the very gift itself for the life of the world. 

The Eucharist is given to us as ‘food for our journey’ and, as such, we normally do not just let food ‘dissolve’in our mouths, we ‘eat’ it.  There is, of course, no risk of ‘hurting’ Jesus by chewing, since his presence is not one that is in the ‘accidents’ of bread and wine, that remain, but in the realm of ‘substance’ that has now been transformed into the real and true presence of Jesus.  Orthodox Catholic belief holds that this real presence is not contingent on the belief of the recipient and continues after the Eucharistic celebration.  It is for this reason that we Catholics have the venerable practice of reserving the consecrated bread in the tabernacle so that those unable to be present for Mass due to sickness or advanced age, may receive the Bread of Eternity as well as being the praise-worthy focus of our prayers of adoration. 

Theological words and their meaning remained the focus of St. Thomas Aquinas’ life particularly in his magnum opus, the Summa Theologiae.  As death neared, however, Aquinas realized that theological words pale in comparison to the reality that they pointed to in describing the contours of mystery.  Butler, in his famous Lives of the Saints, writes: 

On the feast of St. Nicholas [in 1273, Aquinas] was celebrating Mass when he received a revelation that so affected him that he wrote and dictated no more, leaving his great work the Summa Theologiae unfinished. To Brother Reginald’s (his secretary and friend) expostulations he replied, “The end of my labors has come. All that I have written appears to be as so much straw after the things that have been revealed to me.” When later asked by Reginald to return to writing, Aquinas said, “I can write no more. I have seen things that make my writings like straw.”  

We owe a debt of gratitude to Aquinas for helping us gain an insight into the “How” questions of the Real Presence.  But in the end, perhaps the Hymn that Aquinas himself wrote, Adoro te Devote, captures the essence of so great a mystery of our faith: 

I devoutly adore you, O hidden Deity,

Truly hidden beneath these appearances.

My whole heart submits to you,

And in contemplating you, It surrenders itself completely.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

tempImageozYfI6.gif

The Solemnity of the Assumption of Mary

August 14, 2021

“My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord;
        my spirit rejoices in God my Savior
        for he has looked with favor on his lowly servant.”
 

One of my most valued possessions is a magnificent Russian icon of the Dormition of the Blessed Virgin Mary.  It depicts what we in Western Christianity refer to as the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, the Feast we celebrate this day.  This icon is a lovely remembrance of my first visit to the Holy Land when I was a priest student pursuing my post-graduate studies in theology in Europe. 

Unlike so many images of Mary in Western iconography where she is often depicted alone, Mary, in Eastern iconography would rarely if ever be portrayed without holding or caressing her beloved Son, Jesus.  In the East, Mary’s highest title of honor is that of Theotokos or “God-bearer” which was conferred on her by the Council of Ephesus in 431.  Hence, bearing Christ reflects the most profound theology about Mary in a visual form. 

One of the rare exceptions to this imagery are icons of the Dormition or the ‘falling asleep’ of Mary.  As the mother of the Lord, Mary, by a singular grace bestowed upon her by her Son, did not see death but ‘fell asleep’ in the Lord and was ‘assumed’ into heaven.  This is lovingly and poignantly imaged in the East by Christ now holding and caressing his mother, united for all eternity in heaven. 

The Solemnity of the Assumption reflects not only of Mary’s destiny in the unfolding of the History of Salvation in which she played a pivotal role but speaks a message of hope for all Christians.  We are all pilgrims in a strange land as we journey, like Mary, to our true homeland in heaven with all the Holy Ones.  Where Mary now is, we hope to follow.

 

 

 

 

Communion-Eucharist-2160x1282.jpg

Reflection for the 19th Sunday in Ordinary Time

August 07, 2021

“I am the living bread that came down from heaven;
whoever eats this bread will live forever;
and the bread that I will give is my flesh for the life of the world.” 

In August of 2019, a Pew Study was released that understandably created a tsunami of concern, particularly among the Bishops in our Church here in the United States.  The study examined a cross section of Catholics regarding their understanding of the central sacrament of our Church, the Holy Eucharist.  The study revealed that 69% of all self-identified Catholics said they believed the bread and wine used at Mass are not Jesus, but instead "symbols of the body and blood of Jesus Christ." The other 31% believed in the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist, known as transubstantiation. 

We see reverberations of the unsettling conclusions of this study today in the desire of the American Bishops to issue a pastoral teaching reiterating both the authentic meaning and central importance of this teaching in the life of the Church. 

Over the 47 years of my priesthood, I have often come to the sad conclusion that many, many of our adult Catholics have a woefully deficient and often grammar school understanding of their faith.  Hence, my ongoing belief that just as catechesis of our youth is critical for a vibrant faith, even more so is the critical need of adult faith formation in our parish communities. 

Unpacking the meaning of the Eucharist is a challenge, even for those trained in the history and intricacies of our Catholic theology.  No wonder, following the consecration of the bread and wine at every mass, the priest proclaims, “The Mystery of Faith.”  Indeed, we use that term, ‘mystery,’ not as a euphemism for ‘unknowable,’ but rather as an acknowledgement of a reality that in many ways transcends the simple logic of human discourse. 

Not unlike the reality of ‘love,’ human words fall short in plunging the depth and articulating perfectly the reality that defines so much of our humanity.  Even though we might not capture that reality completely in words, certainly does not mean it does not exist.   

Our Church teaches that in the Holy Eucharist, Christ is really and truly present, in his body and blood, soul and divinity.  The scriptures and Apostolic teaching proclaim the ‘what’ and ‘why’ of the Eucharist down through the ages.  Theologians and scholars down through our Christian millennia have wrestled with the question of ‘how’ – how is that real presence of Jesus in the bread and wine? 

It is important to note that the ‘what’ and ‘why’ questions and the Church’s response to those questions lie at the very heart of our doctrine about the Eucharist.  The simple yet profound verse that is found in the 6thchapter of St. John’s Gospel articulates in grace-filled simplicity, the answer to those questions: 

“I am the living bread that came down from heaven;
whoever eats this bread will live forever;
and the bread that I will give is my flesh for the life of the world.”
 

On the other hand, the question of ‘how,’ how is Christ present in the bread and wine continues to challenge theologians in attempting to articulate that ‘mystery of our faith.’ 

Next week we will explore that challenging question in the hope of deepening our appreciation for the Holy Eucharist in the life of the Church and in our own journey of faith.

 

 

 

 

 

Traditionis Custodes Was Never Merely About the Liturgy

August 02, 2021

Of the myriad of responses to the recent instruction issued on the personal initiative of Pope Francis (Motu Proprio) regarding major revisions and restrictions in the use of the pre-reformed Mass, aka, the Traditional Mass, the following article by Shaun Blanchard, a Senior Research Fellow at the National Institute for Newman Studies at the University of Notre Dame, appearing today in the “Church Life Journal “ of the University of Notre Name, brings a trenchant analysis as well as an historical perspective to this important issue.

He succinctly summarizes his thesis in the simple title of his article: “Traditionis Custodes was never Merely about the Liturgy.” By stepping back from the heated rhetoric of the present moment, the author goes to the heart of Pope Francis’ intention, safeguarding the integrity of the Second Vatican Council as the watershed moment in the authentic development of doctrine within the theological dynamic of the Church that is ‘ever ancient and ever young.’

Pope Francis, keenly aware that his statement would be the catalyst for controversy among those who look with a jaundiced eye on the Conciliar reforms and its impact on the pre-reformed rites in our liturgical tradition, understood well that all liturgy is ‘symbol’ pointing to a much deeper reality. In this case, one of the fullest expressions of the Conciliar vision of Church is to be found in the Missal of Paul VI that now anchors the “Lex Credendi” of the believing Church. While initial concessions to the old rite were permitted for the sake of elderly priests and then gradually broadened by subsequent Popes in the hope of reconciling those who rejected the new Mass and the Council itself, i.e., the followers of the schismatic Archbishop Lefevbre, such gestures never accomplished their hoped-for end.

In my opinion as a liturgist, the virtually unrestricted expansion of the use of old rites by Pope Benedict XVI in his own Motu Proprio, “Summorum Pontificum” and the development of the liturgical neologism of the ‘Extraordinary form,’ further eroded the liturgical integrity of the reformed rite, notwithstanding comments to the contrary by Benedict. Rather than a concession to a relatively small number of folks, we witnessed the development of the anomaly of “Extraordinary Form Parishes” and “Institutes of Priests” that refused by virtue of their Constitutions to celebrate or even concelebrate using the New Rite. Implicit in such gestures was, clearly, in the mind of the faithful, that something was deficient in the ‘Ordinary’ form that ‘Father would not celebrate it!” Francis, aware of the consequences of such thinking, took the bold step to reassert the normative nature of the Reformed Rites as the singular expression of the Roman Rite.

In conceding to Diocesan Bishops and Religious Ordinaries the right of overseeing the pastoral implementation of the Motu Proprio, from my perspective, it is disheartening to see what appears to be a disregard for the overall thrust of the Motu Proprio, by some Bishops, to vigorous rededication to the normative Rite of the Catholic Church, reformed and renewed by the Second Vatican Council. In their ‘sensitivity’ toward Catholics attached to the “Vetus Ordo” concessions that completely bypass the ‘spirit’ of the Motu Proprio are taking place.

On the surface, Pope Francis’ July 16 decree Traditionis Custodes (“Guardians of Tradition”) is all about the liturgy. This motu proprio, a kind of papal executive order, drastically curtails the celebration of the pre-conciliar form of the Mass (that is, before the Second Vatican Council of 1962–65, and often called the “Tridentine Mass” or the “Traditional Latin Mass”)[1] reversing the sweeping permissions Pope Benedict XVI extended in his own motu proprio of 2007, Summorum Pontificum.

Indeed, while certain provisions for the celebration of the pre-conciliar Mass remain, Pope Francis pretty clearly lays out a long game. Traditionis Custodes appears to envision eventually bringing all, or virtually all, Roman Catholics into the exclusive celebration of the conciliar Mass. This is evident in the striking statement of article 1, where the pope asserts that the liturgy according to the reformed Missal of Paul VI, that is, the conciliar form normally celebrated in the vernacular, is “the unique expression of the lex orandi of the Roman Rite.” This reverses Pope Benedict’s classification of two “forms” of one Roman Rite: one “ordinary” (conciliar) and one “extraordinary” (pre-conciliar). The implications of this decisive papal claim about the nature of the liturgy are worked out concretely in the provisions that follow.

Writing as a church historian, historically and descriptively, I want to show that Pope Francis’s motu propriois only superficially about the liturgy. It is not about Latin, as Robert Mickens and others have rightly stated. The “issue under the issues” is Vatican II.[2] If the lex orandi (law of prayer) is the lex credendi (law of belief), as the venerable old adage goes, then we should not be surprised that just beneath the surface of this liturgical decree lays the real concern of Francis’s striking intervention: the legacy of the Second Vatican Council and the contested lex credendi of the Catholic Church. Much more than a decree regulating liturgy, Traditionis Custodes is a decisive moment in the history of papal reception of Vatican II.

No single English word encapsulates the concept I am trying to convey, but thankfully the Germans have a word for everything. I believe Pope Francis’ motu proprio is the latest in a long series of papal assertions of Deutungshoheit over the legacy of Vatican II. Literally “interpretation-sovereignty,” to have Deutungshoheit means to have sovereignty over a narrative, which is the power to control meaning. Pope Francis’s many and virulent critics (my fellow Americans are especially numerous and sometimes vicious in this regard) typically see dangerous innovation and glaring discontinuities littered throughout his pontificate.

They cite everything from the provisions on receiving communion in Amoris Laetitia to the changed teaching on the death penalty to airplane interviews about gay Catholics. Whatever discontinuities are present in the Francis pontificate, I think we should actually see a document like Traditionis Custodes primarily in continuity with an established preoccupation of the postconciliar popes: controlling the narrative about Vatican II. In fact, controlling or attempting to control the reception, interpretation, and implementation ecumenical councils is a pivotal way (perhaps the pivotal way) in which the early modern and modern papacy has asserted its supremacy within the Catholic Church. Francis’s “bombshell” motu proprio should be seen in this long line of papal attempts to maintain Deutungshoheit vis-à-vis ecumenical councils. These assertions of interpretation-sovereignty stretch back at least six centuries from Vatican II and Vatican I (1870) to the councils of Trent (1545–63) and Constance (1414–18).

Pinpointing the “Issues Under the Issues”: Four Basic Reactions to Traditionis Custodes 

For most Catholics, even most devout practicing Catholics, the news from the Vatican on July 16 changed nothing about their day-to-day life. But for attendees of the preconciliar Mass and their sympathizers, as well as for those of us highly engaged with Church life for personal or professional reasons, that Friday morning initiated a blizzard of news, analysis, predictions, and hot takes. Reactions to Traditionis Custodes have been rapid-fire, ranging from quick crash courses on the history of the Roman Rite, to summaries of the post-Vatican II liturgy wars, to exhaustive parsing of the text, to canonical analysis, to raw and bitter cris de coeur.

For the sake of convenience, permit me to map the many diverse reactions, pro and con, under four basic headings. Supporters of Traditionis Custodes have generally either (1) “celebrated” the pope’s move, or (2) accepted it as a “sad necessity.” Opponents of the pope’s legislation have typically adopted postures I call (3) “mourn and move on” or (4) “reject and resist.” In addition to the words of the pope himself, these diverse reactions can help us dig deeper into the “issue under the issues”—the legacy and interpretation of Vatican II.

The first reaction, that of celebration, can be seen in headlines like the National Catholic Reporter’s, which gloated that the pope “pull[ed] off” the Latin Mass “Band-Aid.” Those celebrating Francis’s move praise him for “unifying the Roman Rite” and reversing Benedict’s mistake. The second posture, one of “sad necessity,” was bluntly expressed by an important ecclesial figure, Archbishop Augustine DiNoia OP. By no means a spirit-of-Vatican II progressive, DiNoia bemoaned that an anti-conciliar “TLM movement” had “gotten totally out of control” especially in the USA, England, and France (incredibly, though the USA is home to only 6% of the world’s Catholics, it hosts almost 40% of the locations which celebrate the pre-conciliar Mass worldwide).

This “movement,” which never should have been a movement, has “hijacked” Summorum Pontificum, in DiNoia’s words, and betrayed the goodwill extended by John Paul II and Benedict XVI. DiNoia’s stern evaluation of a “TLM movement” that he believes de facto rejects the Council are revealing: “The TLM movement promotes the rejection of that which the liturgical movement sought above all: active participation of the faithful in the liturgical celebration of the mysteries of Christ.” Against this “TLM movement” which erroneously claims that they offer “the true liturgy for the true church,” DiNoia sees Pope Francis’ legislation as protecting the legacy of Vatican II and the liturgical movement of the twentieth century. That movement:

Was recognized at Vatican II as the work of the Holy Spirit and became the basis for a massive overhaul of the liturgical life of the church . . . Pope Francis is right to see in the repristination of the pre-conciliar liturgy at best a form of nostalgic dalliance with the old liturgy and at worst a perverse resistance to the renewal inspired by the Holy Spirit and solemnly confirmed in the teaching of an ecumenical council.

Quite clearly, for DiNoia, a member of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (the Vatican’s doctrinal watchdog organization) under each of the last three popes, Francis’ motu proprio is more about protecting the legacy of Vatican II than about liturgy per se.

A number of prominent social media personalities, especially American, have advocated my fourth position, to “reject and resist” the pope. This is not the first such call, for many of them. Cardinal Burke, probably the most senior Catholic prelate who promotes the preconciliar Mass, has publicly challenged Pope Francis, appearing to assert that the Successor of Peter does not have the right to enact this liturgical legislation, a rather dubious assertion especially in light of Cardinal Burke’s sterling ultramontane credentials during the last two pontificates.

Many of those troubled by the motu proprio, however, are taking a posture of mourning, but moving on and hoping for a better future—whether that entails hoping that traditionalist Catholics will act as a liturgical and theological leaven in their new “Novus Ordo” communities, or hoping a future Pope Pius XIII or Benedict XVII reverses Francis’s reversal. A friend of mine referred to this possible dynamic as a motu rodeo. Some are noting, quite rightly, that a pope with universal jurisdiction, as proclaimed at Vatican I, cuts both ways, and that what is given by one Supreme Pontiff can be taken away by the next. As Adam DeVille incisively put it, “a papacy big enough to fulfill your wishes can also destroy them.”

For other attendees of the pre-conciliar liturgy and their supporters, the pope’s legislation is an “atom bomb” that threatens to annihilate much more than a preferred form of worship. Many traditionalist Catholics see this liturgical bomb exploding with some very dangerous theological and ecclesio-political shrapnel. Normally North American or European, they see the curtailing or elimination of the pre-conciliar liturgy as a threat to carefully curated socio-cultural traditionalist havens (parishes, schools, social networks, online communities), where the putative rot of “modernity” or “the culture” and the errors or even heresies rampant in the post-conciliar Catholic Church can be held at bay, ideally to be eventually reversed.

Pope Francis and most of the bishops are, to put it mildly, not generally seen as protagonists among these communities and networks. There is real danger that the pope’s actions will push such communities, either due to manufactured martyr-complexes, a genuine sense of alienation and betrayal, or a combination of the two, into more adversarial and combative stances vis-à-vis the rest of the church, the pope, and Vatican II. There are quite strong and troubling precedents for such a possibility in the papacy’s (mis-)handling of the Jansenist crisis with heavy-handed documents like Unigenitus.

Pope Francis on the Link Between Pre-Conciliar Liturgy and Anti-Conciliar Theology

Pope Francis has judged whatever risks are present to be worth taking. His own words, in a very revealing cover letter that accompanied the motu proprio, make crystal clear what he believes is at stake. First, he judges that the “opportunity offered” by Benedict XVI in liberalized permission to say the pre-conciliar Mass has been “exploited to widen the gaps, reinforce the divergences, and encourage disagreements that injure the Church, block her path, and expose her to the peril of division.”

This is not a theological judgment but a historical one, which Francis implies is backed up by the survey of the world episcopacy conducted by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Presumably it is also the opinion of some of his closest advisors. The nature of this “peril” is not the existence of different liturgical forms and languages, calendars, or traditions—the various “rites” are accepted and celebrated in contemporary Catholicism. Rather, the “peril” that Pope Francis sees is in the cover that the pre-conciliar Mass provides for a theological rejection of Vatican II:

I am nonetheless saddened that the instrumental use of [the pre-conciliar Mass] 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.”

The pope then cites Dei Verbum §8, the seminal Vatican II text on doctrinal development.[3] This passage was principally authored by the ressourcement theologian Yves Congar, himself deeply influenced by St. John Henry Newman’s (1801–90) theory of doctrinal development.[4] The American Jesuit John Courtney Murray, one of the key figures behind Vatican II’s massive shift in teaching on religious liberty and Church-state relations, rightly pointed to development of doctrine as the “issue under the issues” at Vatican II.[5]John O’Malley summarizes the nature of this debate at Vatican II as one over “the circumstances under which change in the Church is appropriate and the arguments with which it can be justified.”[6]

Pope Benedict’s often misunderstood “hermeneutic of reform,” which he laid out brilliantly in a 2005 speech, was an attempt to explain the presence of obvious discontinuities amongst a greater and deeper continuity in Church teaching (he spoke of Vatican II reform as “continuity and discontinuity on different levels”).Whatever else it is, we should see Traditionis Custodes as a decisive contribution by Pope Francis to the continued debate not just over Vatican II specifically, but over a broader postconciliar Catholic debate regarding the nature of doctrinal development.

Especially germane for an institution that exercises plenitudo potestatis is the connection between changes in teaching and discipline and the papal and conciliar authorities that authorize them. It is thus critically important to note that Francis links rejection of Vatican II (whether de facto or explicit) to a broader rejection of doctrinal development and, crucially, of the conciliar and papal authorities under which such developments are formally sanctioned. To doubt such a process and the authorities who sanction it, according to Francis, is in fact to doubt the Holy Spirit:

A recent stage of this dynamic was constituted by Vatican Council II where the Catholic episcopate came together to listen and to discern the path for the Church indicated by the Holy Spirit. 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[7] in an ecumenical council,[8] and, in the final analysis, to doubt the Holy Spirit himself who guides the Church.

These are weighty words, with implications far beyond the immediate reception of discrete doctrinal or disciplinary ideas in the text of Vatican II. For Francis, the Council did something holistic: it discerned “the [not “a”] path for the Church” that the Holy Spirit was indicating. From this conception, the interminable debates in some quarters over the precise doctrinal weight of Nostra Aetate or Dignitatis Humanae are missing the point. Pope Francis is also, rather explicitly, defending the postconciliar papacy in general, which has tied its own authority ever more tightly and irrevocably to the legacy of Vatican II. This is one of the most important developments in modern Catholicism, and a fact not without irony given the long history of tension between pope and council. The canonizations of the pope who called the council (John XXIII), who led the implementation of it (Paul VI), and who celebrated and defended it throughout his long pontificate (John Paul II) are merely ornaments of a strategy and agenda that the modern papacy has deeply internalized.[9]

This trajectory was not inevitable, even after the First Vatican Council linked the conciliar process to ultramontanism through the ironic act of a council voting for papal infallibility and jurisdictional supremacy. Nevertheless, there is a certain logic to the modern papacy linking its own authority so tightly to Vatican II as it seeks to govern a global Church that is incredibly diverse culturally, politically, and theologically. Indeed, though the Council was undoubtedly papally-centered, it was also global and had a kind of quasi-representative element through the world episcopate.

Following from this defense of the postconciliar papacy in general, I think Francis is also implicitly seeking to defend his own magisterial legacy: from Amoris Laetitia’s liberalization of norms regarding the reception of Holy Communion, to the death penalty change, to what might be the most significant act of his entire pontificate in Traditionis Custodes. The accent in the block quote above, then, should be placed on cum Petro et sub Petro. In granting the permissions in Summorum Pontificum, Pope Benedict very clearly wished to sever the link between pre-conciliar liturgy and anti-conciliar theology, a problem no one can doubt he takes gravely seriously. Francis has now judged that project a failure, and Traditionis Custodes implies the incongruity of clinging to pre-conciliar liturgy while accepting conciliar theology.

The Continuities of Papal Deutungshoheit

The debates sparked by Traditionis Custodes, like the document itself, are at the messy boundary of pastoral prudence, historical judgments, and theological commitments. Some of the statements in Pope Francis’s motu proprio might seem shocking to Catholics who came of age during the pontificate of Benedict XVI, when the pre-conciliar Mass recovered so much ground, especially in certain Catholic enclaves. I was a high school senior when Ratzinger was elected pope in 2005, and the distinction between an “extraordinary” and “ordinary” form was soon a talking point in most of the US and UK Catholic circles I have travelled in. The official line from clergy was usually that they were equally valid and equally encouraged, but often in devout circles there was a clear preference for “the traditional Mass” (or “the real Mass” as several of my graduate school colleagues called it) as a kind of inner sanctum of holiness and unadulterated tradition, even among those who did not impugn Vatican II or the postconciliar popes. 

We should recall, however, that Francis is in many ways returning to the policy and rhetoric of Paul VI (pope from 1963–1978), who reigned during the final three sessions of the Council, and oversaw the first long phase of conciliar implementation. When the philosopher Jean Guitton asked Pope Paul why he did not grant the use of the preconciliar Mass to SSPX founder Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre and his followers, the pope replied:

Never. This Mass . . . becomes the symbol of the condemnation of the council. I will not accept, under any circumstances, the condemnation of the council through a symbol. Should this exception to the liturgy of Vatican II have its way, the entire council would be shaken. And, as a consequence, the apostolic authority of the council would be shaken.[10]

Just as I highlighted Francis’s evocation of the adage cum Petro et sub Petro, I think the key to understanding Pope Paul’s statement here lies in his concern that “apostolic authority” not be “shaken.” Lefebvre’s resistance was a direct challenge to the pope, and Paul VI feared that the pre-conciliar Mass had become or would become a shibboleth for the rejection not just of the authority of Vatican II, but that of the popes who sanctioned it.

Pope Francis’s break with Summorum Pontificum, then, should not be interpreted as an act of stark discontinuity, but as a return in many ways to a prior state of affairs. There is precedent for such papal action long before Paul VI and Vatican II. For example, Pius IX’s suppression of Gallican liturgies in the mid-nineteenth-century lead up to Vatican I[11] was about papal supremacy and ultramontane theology much more than about liturgy.

I have also argued that Pope Francis’s motu proprio is continuous with a consistent papal preoccupation with asserting Deutungshoheit over the interpretation, implementation, and legacy of ecumenical councils. In the case of Vatican II there is a further layer of irony beyond the combative history of Catholic conciliarism. Many of the Vatican II reforms that Traditionis Custodes sees itself as defending—vernacular proclamation of scripture and prayers, active liturgical participation of the faithful, modernizing (or primitivist) liturgical forms—were once concerns strongly associated with enemies of papalism like Jansenists and certain Gallicans and Catholic Enlightenment figures. The memory of anti-ultramontane Catholic reformers like Scipione de’ Ricci (1741–1810) is now even more complicated. A longue durée approach to doctrinal development must revisit and account for moments in church history like Ricci’s Synod of Pistoia (1786), an event which anticipated so much of Vatican II reform, and which Archbishop Viganò and other extreme traditionalists often evoke in rebuke of the Council and postconciliar Catholicism.        

Conclusion: Guardians of Tradition 

Francis’s motu proprio—indeed, his entire pontificate—is inexplicable without taking into account his understanding of doctrinal development. There is an integral connection, I would suggest, between Traditionis Custodes and a number of other acts of Francis’s pontificate, including Amoris Laetitia and the death penalty amendment. Appeals to doctrinal development—initially baptized as, among other things, ultramontane weapons against Jansenists and Gallicans[12]—are now being employed explicitly by the papacy not only in retroactive defense of the council but as a vanguard in justification of new teachings or reforms.

If Traditionis Custodes is a rebuke of the wild conspiracy theories of an Archbishop Viganò and the anti-Vatican II polemics of an Archbishop Schneider, it is also a fairly clear rejection of the rigid and static view of “continuity” espoused by figures like Cardinal Burke. Indeed, it is no coincidence that Burke, probably the most senior ecclesiastical advocate for the pre-conciliar Mass, also denies Francis’s authority to amend the catechism regarding the death penalty and to teach what Francis has clarified he is in fact teaching in Amoris Laetitia.

The eponymous “guardians of tradition” are the bishops of the Catholic Church, charged with executing the pope’s motu proprio. If my analysis is correct, however, it would be more germane to conceive of the Traditionis Custodes as the postconciliar popes. They have so tightly linked their own authority, theology, and ecclesio-political agenda to Vatican II that loyalty to the papacy and loyalty to Vatican II have become, for all intents and purposes, inseparable.

[1] Discussing the two forms of the liturgy in question can be complex, wordy, and can carry ideological baggage. In this article, I will refer to the “conciliar” liturgy (Missal of Paul VI) and the “pre-conciliar” liturgy (Missal of John XXIII), in keeping with my thesis that the issue for Pope Francis is Vatican II. Referring to a “Latin Mass” is not helpful, since the conciliar liturgy can be celebrated in Latin, and in fact is sometimes done so by Pope Francis. The language of Pope Benedict XVI in Summorum Pontificum (“ordinary” and “extraordinary” forms of the one Roman Rite) is no longer germane. The essential background is that the Second Vatican Council (1962–65) initiated a reform of the “Roman Rite” (the form in which Roman Catholics celebrate Mass) a process fully implemented with the publication of the Missal of Pope Paul VI in 1970. The “Traditional Latin Mass” refers to Mass celebrated according to the Missal of John XXIII, published in 1962. This Missal is in strong continuity with the Missal of St. Pius V, promulgated in 1570, which was a codification and streamlining of the Roman Rite after the counter-Reformation Council of Trent (1545–63). It was not, however, used universally by Roman Catholics, though ultramontane centralization in the nineteenth century eliminated some of this diversity.

[2]  On the “issues under the issues” at Vatican II, see the important overview of John O’Malley, What Happened at Vatican II (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008), esp. 8–12 and 298–313. O’Malley uses this phrase to illuminate the subtext of a number of debates. The American Jesuit John Courtney Murray, one of the chief architects of the Council’s teaching on religious liberty, used it in discussion of tensions over doctrinal development specifically (8).

[3] On this point Francis writes that “the path of the Church must be seen within the dynamic of Tradition ‘which originates from the Apostles and progresses in the Church with the assistance of the Holy Spirit’ (Dei Verbum §8).”

[4] See Andrew Meszaros, “‘Haec Traditio proficit’: Congar's Reception of Newman in Dei Verbum, Section 8,” New Blackfriars 92 (2011): 247–54. On Newman and doctrinal development see the classic Owen Chadwick, From Bossuet to Newman (Cambridge, 1957) and the recent corrective from C. Michael Shea, Newman's Early Roman Catholic Legacy, 1845–1854 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).

[5] O’Malley, What Happened at Vatican II, 8.

[6] Ibid. 

[7] “With Peter and under Peter”; that is, the pope.

[8] Francis here footnotes Lumen gentium §23.

[9] The last millennium has seen only seven popes canonized as saints, and four of these died after 1900 (the three cited above, and Pius X).

[10] Cited in Massimo Faggioli, True Reform: Liturgy and Ecclesiology in Sacrosanctum Concilium (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2012), 150.

[11] See Austin Gough, Paris and Rome: The Gallican Church and the Ultramontane Campaign, 1848–1853 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996); John O’Malley, Vatican I: The Council and the Making of the Ultramontane Church (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2018) 73–79; 92–94.

[12] See the magisterial account of Bruno Neveu, L'erreur et son juge. Remarques sur les censures doctrinales à l'époque moderne (Naples: Bibliopolis, 1993). The more mature nineteenth-century theories were anticipated in the eighteenth century by figures like the Italian Scotist Ignazio Como, who appealed to an inchoate theory of development in his debate with Lodovico Muratori on the Immaculate Conception in the 1740s. See Pietro Stella, Il giansenismo in Italia, vol. 2: Il movimento giansenista e la produzione libraria (Rome: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, 2006), 294.

Featured Image: Photo by Servus Tuus,  Traditional Latin Mass celebrated by a priest of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter in Zagreb, Croatia, taken on 2 April 2017; Source: Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0.

On the surface, Pope Francis’ July 16 decree Traditionis Custodes (“Guardians of Tradition”) is all about the liturgy. This motu proprio, a kind of papal executive order, drastically curtails the celebration of the pre-conciliar form of the Mass (that is, before the Second Vatican Council of 1962–65, and often called the “Tridentine Mass” or the “Traditional Latin Mass”)[1] reversing the sweeping permissions Pope Benedict XVI extended in his own motu proprio of 2007, Summorum Pontificum.

Indeed, while certain provisions for the celebration of the pre-conciliar Mass remain, Pope Francis pretty clearly lays out a long game. Traditionis Custodes appears to envision eventually bringing all, or virtually all, Roman Catholics into the exclusive celebration of the conciliar Mass. This is evident in the striking statement of article 1, where the pope asserts that the liturgy according to the reformed Missal of Paul VI, that is, the conciliar form normally celebrated in the vernacular, is “the unique expression of the lex orandi of the Roman Rite.” This reverses Pope Benedict’s classification of two “forms” of one Roman Rite: one “ordinary” (conciliar) and one “extraordinary” (pre-conciliar). The implications of this decisive papal claim about the nature of the liturgy are worked out concretely in the provisions that follow.

Writing as a church historian, historically and descriptively, I want to show that Pope Francis’s motu propriois only superficially about the liturgy. It is not about Latin, as Robert Mickens and others have rightly stated. The “issue under the issues” is Vatican II.[2] If the lex orandi (law of prayer) is the lex credendi (law of belief), as the venerable old adage goes, then we should not be surprised that just beneath the surface of this liturgical decree lays the real concern of Francis’s striking intervention: the legacy of the Second Vatican Council and the contested lex credendi of the Catholic Church. Much more than a decree regulating liturgy, Traditionis Custodes is a decisive moment in the history of papal reception of Vatican II.

No single English word encapsulates the concept I am trying to convey, but thankfully the Germans have a word for everything. I believe Pope Francis’ motu proprio is the latest in a long series of papal assertions of Deutungshoheit over the legacy of Vatican II. Literally “interpretation-sovereignty,” to have Deutungshoheit means to have sovereignty over a narrative, which is the power to control meaning. Pope Francis’s many and virulent critics (my fellow Americans are especially numerous and sometimes vicious in this regard) typically see dangerous innovation and glaring discontinuities littered throughout his pontificate.

They cite everything from the provisions on receiving communion in Amoris Laetitia to the changed teaching on the death penalty to airplane interviews about gay Catholics. Whatever discontinuities are present in the Francis pontificate, I think we should actually see a document like Traditionis Custodes primarily in continuity with an established preoccupation of the postconciliar popes: controlling the narrative about Vatican II. In fact, controlling or attempting to control the reception, interpretation, and implementation ecumenical councils is a pivotal way (perhaps the pivotal way) in which the early modern and modern papacy has asserted its supremacy within the Catholic Church. Francis’s “bombshell” motu proprio should be seen in this long line of papal attempts to maintain Deutungshoheit vis-à-vis ecumenical councils. These assertions of interpretation-sovereignty stretch back at least six centuries from Vatican II and Vatican I (1870) to the councils of Trent (1545–63) and Constance (1414–18).

Pinpointing the “Issues Under the Issues”: Four Basic Reactions to Traditionis Custodes 

For most Catholics, even most devout practicing Catholics, the news from the Vatican on July 16 changed nothing about their day-to-day life. But for attendees of the preconciliar Mass and their sympathizers, as well as for those of us highly engaged with Church life for personal or professional reasons, that Friday morning initiated a blizzard of news, analysis, predictions, and hot takes. Reactions to Traditionis Custodes have been rapid-fire, ranging from quick crash courses on the history of the Roman Rite, to summaries of the post-Vatican II liturgy wars, to exhaustive parsing of the text, to canonical analysis, to raw and bitter cris de coeur.

For the sake of convenience, permit me to map the many diverse reactions, pro and con, under four basic headings. Supporters of Traditionis Custodes have generally either (1) “celebrated” the pope’s move, or (2) accepted it as a “sad necessity.” Opponents of the pope’s legislation have typically adopted postures I call (3) “mourn and move on” or (4) “reject and resist.” In addition to the words of the pope himself, these diverse reactions can help us dig deeper into the “issue under the issues”—the legacy and interpretation of Vatican II.

The first reaction, that of celebration, can be seen in headlines like the National Catholic Reporter’s, which gloated that the pope “pull[ed] off” the Latin Mass “Band-Aid.” Those celebrating Francis’s move praise him for “unifying the Roman Rite” and reversing Benedict’s mistake. The second posture, one of “sad necessity,” was bluntly expressed by an important ecclesial figure, Archbishop Augustine DiNoia OP. By no means a spirit-of-Vatican II progressive, DiNoia bemoaned that an anti-conciliar “TLM movement” had “gotten totally out of control” especially in the USA, England, and France (incredibly, though the USA is home to only 6% of the world’s Catholics, it hosts almost 40% of the locations which celebrate the pre-conciliar Mass worldwide).

This “movement,” which never should have been a movement, has “hijacked” Summorum Pontificum, in DiNoia’s words, and betrayed the goodwill extended by John Paul II and Benedict XVI. DiNoia’s stern evaluation of a “TLM movement” that he believes de facto rejects the Council are revealing: “The TLM movement promotes the rejection of that which the liturgical movement sought above all: active participation of the faithful in the liturgical celebration of the mysteries of Christ.” Against this “TLM movement” which erroneously claims that they offer “the true liturgy for the true church,” DiNoia sees Pope Francis’ legislation as protecting the legacy of Vatican II and the liturgical movement of the twentieth century. That movement:

Was recognized at Vatican II as the work of the Holy Spirit and became the basis for a massive overhaul of the liturgical life of the church . . . Pope Francis is right to see in the repristination of the pre-conciliar liturgy at best a form of nostalgic dalliance with the old liturgy and at worst a perverse resistance to the renewal inspired by the Holy Spirit and solemnly confirmed in the teaching of an ecumenical council.

Quite clearly, for DiNoia, a member of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (the Vatican’s doctrinal watchdog organization) under each of the last three popes, Francis’ motu proprio is more about protecting the legacy of Vatican II than about liturgy per se.

A number of prominent social media personalities, especially American, have advocated my fourth position, to “reject and resist” the pope. This is not the first such call, for many of them. Cardinal Burke, probably the most senior Catholic prelate who promotes the preconciliar Mass, has publicly challenged Pope Francis, appearing to assert that the Successor of Peter does not have the right to enact this liturgical legislation, a rather dubious assertion especially in light of Cardinal Burke’s sterling ultramontane credentials during the last two pontificates.

Many of those troubled by the motu proprio, however, are taking a posture of mourning, but moving on and hoping for a better future—whether that entails hoping that traditionalist Catholics will act as a liturgical and theological leaven in their new “Novus Ordo” communities, or hoping a future Pope Pius XIII or Benedict XVII reverses Francis’s reversal. A friend of mine referred to this possible dynamic as a motu rodeo. Some are noting, quite rightly, that a pope with universal jurisdiction, as proclaimed at Vatican I, cuts both ways, and that what is given by one Supreme Pontiff can be taken away by the next. As Adam DeVille incisively put it, “a papacy big enough to fulfill your wishes can also destroy them.”

For other attendees of the pre-conciliar liturgy and their supporters, the pope’s legislation is an “atom bomb” that threatens to annihilate much more than a preferred form of worship. Many traditionalist Catholics see this liturgical bomb exploding with some very dangerous theological and ecclesio-political shrapnel. Normally North American or European, they see the curtailing or elimination of the pre-conciliar liturgy as a threat to carefully curated socio-cultural traditionalist havens (parishes, schools, social networks, online communities), where the putative rot of “modernity” or “the culture” and the errors or even heresies rampant in the post-conciliar Catholic Church can be held at bay, ideally to be eventually reversed.

Pope Francis and most of the bishops are, to put it mildly, not generally seen as protagonists among these communities and networks. There is real danger that the pope’s actions will push such communities, either due to manufactured martyr-complexes, a genuine sense of alienation and betrayal, or a combination of the two, into more adversarial and combative stances vis-à-vis the rest of the church, the pope, and Vatican II. There are quite strong and troubling precedents for such a possibility in the papacy’s (mis-)handling of the Jansenist crisis with heavy-handed documents like Unigenitus.

Pope Francis on the Link Between Pre-Conciliar Liturgy and Anti-Conciliar Theology

Pope Francis has judged whatever risks are present to be worth taking. His own words, in a very revealing cover letter that accompanied the motu proprio, make crystal clear what he believes is at stake. First, he judges that the “opportunity offered” by Benedict XVI in liberalized permission to say the pre-conciliar Mass has been “exploited to widen the gaps, reinforce the divergences, and encourage disagreements that injure the Church, block her path, and expose her to the peril of division.”

This is not a theological judgment but a historical one, which Francis implies is backed up by the survey of the world episcopacy conducted by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Presumably it is also the opinion of some of his closest advisors. The nature of this “peril” is not the existence of different liturgical forms and languages, calendars, or traditions—the various “rites” are accepted and celebrated in contemporary Catholicism. Rather, the “peril” that Pope Francis sees is in the cover that the pre-conciliar Mass provides for a theological rejection of Vatican II:

I am nonetheless saddened that the instrumental use of [the pre-conciliar Mass] 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.”

The pope then cites Dei Verbum §8, the seminal Vatican II text on doctrinal development.[3] This passage was principally authored by the ressourcement theologian Yves Congar, himself deeply influenced by St. John Henry Newman’s (1801–90) theory of doctrinal development.[4] The American Jesuit John Courtney Murray, one of the key figures behind Vatican II’s massive shift in teaching on religious liberty and Church-state relations, rightly pointed to development of doctrine as the “issue under the issues” at Vatican II.[5]John O’Malley summarizes the nature of this debate at Vatican II as one over “the circumstances under which change in the Church is appropriate and the arguments with which it can be justified.”[6]

Pope Benedict’s often misunderstood “hermeneutic of reform,” which he laid out brilliantly in a 2005 speech, was an attempt to explain the presence of obvious discontinuities amongst a greater and deeper continuity in Church teaching (he spoke of Vatican II reform as “continuity and discontinuity on different levels”).Whatever else it is, we should see Traditionis Custodes as a decisive contribution by Pope Francis to the continued debate not just over Vatican II specifically, but over a broader postconciliar Catholic debate regarding the nature of doctrinal development.

Especially germane for an institution that exercises plenitudo potestatis is the connection between changes in teaching and discipline and the papal and conciliar authorities that authorize them. It is thus critically important to note that Francis links rejection of Vatican II (whether de facto or explicit) to a broader rejection of doctrinal development and, crucially, of the conciliar and papal authorities under which such developments are formally sanctioned. To doubt such a process and the authorities who sanction it, according to Francis, is in fact to doubt the Holy Spirit:

A recent stage of this dynamic was constituted by Vatican Council II where the Catholic episcopate came together to listen and to discern the path for the Church indicated by the Holy Spirit. 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[7] in an ecumenical council,[8] and, in the final analysis, to doubt the Holy Spirit himself who guides the Church.

These are weighty words, with implications far beyond the immediate reception of discrete doctrinal or disciplinary ideas in the text of Vatican II. For Francis, the Council did something holistic: it discerned “the [not “a”] path for the Church” that the Holy Spirit was indicating. From this conception, the interminable debates in some quarters over the precise doctrinal weight of Nostra Aetate or Dignitatis Humanae are missing the point. Pope Francis is also, rather explicitly, defending the postconciliar papacy in general, which has tied its own authority ever more tightly and irrevocably to the legacy of Vatican II. This is one of the most important developments in modern Catholicism, and a fact not without irony given the long history of tension between pope and council. The canonizations of the pope who called the council (John XXIII), who led the implementation of it (Paul VI), and who celebrated and defended it throughout his long pontificate (John Paul II) are merely ornaments of a strategy and agenda that the modern papacy has deeply internalized.[9]

This trajectory was not inevitable, even after the First Vatican Council linked the conciliar process to ultramontanism through the ironic act of a council voting for papal infallibility and jurisdictional supremacy. Nevertheless, there is a certain logic to the modern papacy linking its own authority so tightly to Vatican II as it seeks to govern a global Church that is incredibly diverse culturally, politically, and theologically. Indeed, though the Council was undoubtedly papally-centered, it was also global and had a kind of quasi-representative element through the world episcopate.

Following from this defense of the postconciliar papacy in general, I think Francis is also implicitly seeking to defend his own magisterial legacy: from Amoris Laetitia’s liberalization of norms regarding the reception of Holy Communion, to the death penalty change, to what might be the most significant act of his entire pontificate in Traditionis Custodes. The accent in the block quote above, then, should be placed on cum Petro et sub Petro. In granting the permissions in Summorum Pontificum, Pope Benedict very clearly wished to sever the link between pre-conciliar liturgy and anti-conciliar theology, a problem no one can doubt he takes gravely seriously. Francis has now judged that project a failure, and Traditionis Custodes implies the incongruity of clinging to pre-conciliar liturgy while accepting conciliar theology.

The Continuities of Papal Deutungshoheit

The debates sparked by Traditionis Custodes, like the document itself, are at the messy boundary of pastoral prudence, historical judgments, and theological commitments. Some of the statements in Pope Francis’s motu proprio might seem shocking to Catholics who came of age during the pontificate of Benedict XVI, when the pre-conciliar Mass recovered so much ground, especially in certain Catholic enclaves. I was a high school senior when Ratzinger was elected pope in 2005, and the distinction between an “extraordinary” and “ordinary” form was soon a talking point in most of the US and UK Catholic circles I have travelled in. The official line from clergy was usually that they were equally valid and equally encouraged, but often in devout circles there was a clear preference for “the traditional Mass” (or “the real Mass” as several of my graduate school colleagues called it) as a kind of inner sanctum of holiness and unadulterated tradition, even among those who did not impugn Vatican II or the postconciliar popes. 

We should recall, however, that Francis is in many ways returning to the policy and rhetoric of Paul VI (pope from 1963–1978), who reigned during the final three sessions of the Council, and oversaw the first long phase of conciliar implementation. When the philosopher Jean Guitton asked Pope Paul why he did not grant the use of the preconciliar Mass to SSPX founder Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre and his followers, the pope replied:

Never. This Mass . . . becomes the symbol of the condemnation of the council. I will not accept, under any circumstances, the condemnation of the council through a symbol. Should this exception to the liturgy of Vatican II have its way, the entire council would be shaken. And, as a consequence, the apostolic authority of the council would be shaken.[10]

Just as I highlighted Francis’s evocation of the adage cum Petro et sub Petro, I think the key to understanding Pope Paul’s statement here lies in his concern that “apostolic authority” not be “shaken.” Lefebvre’s resistance was a direct challenge to the pope, and Paul VI feared that the pre-conciliar Mass had become or would become a shibboleth for the rejection not just of the authority of Vatican II, but that of the popes who sanctioned it.

Pope Francis’s break with Summorum Pontificum, then, should not be interpreted as an act of stark discontinuity, but as a return in many ways to a prior state of affairs. There is precedent for such papal action long before Paul VI and Vatican II. For example, Pius IX’s suppression of Gallican liturgies in the mid-nineteenth-century lead up to Vatican I[11] was about papal supremacy and ultramontane theology much more than about liturgy.

I have also argued that Pope Francis’s motu proprio is continuous with a consistent papal preoccupation with asserting Deutungshoheit over the interpretation, implementation, and legacy of ecumenical councils. In the case of Vatican II there is a further layer of irony beyond the combative history of Catholic conciliarism. Many of the Vatican II reforms that Traditionis Custodes sees itself as defending—vernacular proclamation of scripture and prayers, active liturgical participation of the faithful, modernizing (or primitivist) liturgical forms—were once concerns strongly associated with enemies of papalism like Jansenists and certain Gallicans and Catholic Enlightenment figures. The memory of anti-ultramontane Catholic reformers like Scipione de’ Ricci (1741–1810) is now even more complicated. A longue durée approach to doctrinal development must revisit and account for moments in church history like Ricci’s Synod of Pistoia (1786), an event which anticipated so much of Vatican II reform, and which Archbishop Viganò and other extreme traditionalists often evoke in rebuke of the Council and postconciliar Catholicism.        

Conclusion: Guardians of Tradition 

Francis’s motu proprio—indeed, his entire pontificate—is inexplicable without taking into account his understanding of doctrinal development. There is an integral connection, I would suggest, between Traditionis Custodes and a number of other acts of Francis’s pontificate, including Amoris Laetitia and the death penalty amendment. Appeals to doctrinal development—initially baptized as, among other things, ultramontane weapons against Jansenists and Gallicans[12]—are now being employed explicitly by the papacy not only in retroactive defense of the council but as a vanguard in justification of new teachings or reforms.

If Traditionis Custodes is a rebuke of the wild conspiracy theories of an Archbishop Viganò and the anti-Vatican II polemics of an Archbishop Schneider, it is also a fairly clear rejection of the rigid and static view of “continuity” espoused by figures like Cardinal Burke. Indeed, it is no coincidence that Burke, probably the most senior ecclesiastical advocate for the pre-conciliar Mass, also denies Francis’s authority to amend the catechism regarding the death penalty and to teach what Francis has clarified he is in fact teaching in Amoris Laetitia.

The eponymous “guardians of tradition” are the bishops of the Catholic Church, charged with executing the pope’s motu proprio. If my analysis is correct, however, it would be more germane to conceive of the Traditionis Custodes as the postconciliar popes. They have so tightly linked their own authority, theology, and ecclesio-political agenda to Vatican II that loyalty to the papacy and loyalty to Vatican II have become, for all intents and purposes, inseparable.

[1] Discussing the two forms of the liturgy in question can be complex, wordy, and can carry ideological baggage. In this article, I will refer to the “conciliar” liturgy (Missal of Paul VI) and the “pre-conciliar” liturgy (Missal of John XXIII), in keeping with my thesis that the issue for Pope Francis is Vatican II. Referring to a “Latin Mass” is not helpful, since the conciliar liturgy can be celebrated in Latin, and in fact is sometimes done so by Pope Francis. The language of Pope Benedict XVI in Summorum Pontificum (“ordinary” and “extraordinary” forms of the one Roman Rite) is no longer germane. The essential background is that the Second Vatican Council (1962–65) initiated a reform of the “Roman Rite” (the form in which Roman Catholics celebrate Mass) a process fully implemented with the publication of the Missal of Pope Paul VI in 1970. The “Traditional Latin Mass” refers to Mass celebrated according to the Missal of John XXIII, published in 1962. This Missal is in strong continuity with the Missal of St. Pius V, promulgated in 1570, which was a codification and streamlining of the Roman Rite after the counter-Reformation Council of Trent (1545–63). It was not, however, used universally by Roman Catholics, though ultramontane centralization in the nineteenth century eliminated some of this diversity.

[2]  On the “issues under the issues” at Vatican II, see the important overview of John O’Malley, What Happened at Vatican II (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008), esp. 8–12 and 298–313. O’Malley uses this phrase to illuminate the subtext of a number of debates. The American Jesuit John Courtney Murray, one of the chief architects of the Council’s teaching on religious liberty, used it in discussion of tensions over doctrinal development specifically (8).

[3] On this point Francis writes that “the path of the Church must be seen within the dynamic of Tradition ‘which originates from the Apostles and progresses in the Church with the assistance of the Holy Spirit’ (Dei Verbum §8).”

[4] See Andrew Meszaros, “‘Haec Traditio proficit’: Congar's Reception of Newman in Dei Verbum, Section 8,” New Blackfriars 92 (2011): 247–54. On Newman and doctrinal development see the classic Owen Chadwick, From Bossuet to Newman (Cambridge, 1957) and the recent corrective from C. Michael Shea, Newman's Early Roman Catholic Legacy, 1845–1854 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).

[5] O’Malley, What Happened at Vatican II, 8.

[6] Ibid. 

[7] “With Peter and under Peter”; that is, the pope.

[8] Francis here footnotes Lumen gentium §23.

[9] The last millennium has seen only seven popes canonized as saints, and four of these died after 1900 (the three cited above, and Pius X).

[10] Cited in Massimo Faggioli, True Reform: Liturgy and Ecclesiology in Sacrosanctum Concilium (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2012), 150.

[11] See Austin Gough, Paris and Rome: The Gallican Church and the Ultramontane Campaign, 1848–1853 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996); John O’Malley, Vatican I: The Council and the Making of the Ultramontane Church (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2018) 73–79; 92–94.

[12] See the magisterial account of Bruno Neveu, L'erreur et son juge. Remarques sur les censures doctrinales à l'époque moderne (Naples: Bibliopolis, 1993). The more mature nineteenth-century theories were anticipated in the eighteenth century by figures like the Italian Scotist Ignazio Como, who appealed to an inchoate theory of development in his debate with Lodovico Muratori on the Immaculate Conception in the 1740s. See Pietro Stella, Il giansenismo in Italia, vol. 2: Il movimento giansenista e la produzione libraria (Rome: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, 2006), 294.

Featured Image: Photo by Servus Tuus,  Traditional Latin Mass celebrated by a priest of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter in Zagreb, Croatia, taken on 2 April 2017; Source: Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0.

Reflection for the 18th Sunday in Ordinary Time

July 31, 2021

So they said to him,
“Sir, give us this bread always.” 
Jesus said to them,
“I am the bread of life;
whoever comes to me will never hunger,
and whoever believes in me will never thirst.” 

In the great reform and renewal of our liturgy mandated by the Second Vatican Council and more specifically, by its first of sixteen documents, The Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, promulgated in 1963, the Council fathers called for a richer opening of the Sacred Scriptures in the Sunday and daily Eucharistic celebrations. 

The pre-reformed Eucharistic celebration, commonly known as the Tridentine Mass, about which much has been written today in light of Pope Francis’ recent appropriate restrictions in its celebration, there was a highly limited selection of Epistles and Gospels in a cycle that repeated each year.  The revised and reformed lectionary of Mass readings provided for a three-year cycle on Sundays and a two-year cycle for first reading in the daily Eucharistic celebrations. 

Our Jewish sisters and brothers are often referred to as ‘people of the Book,’ and so it should be for us as Catholic Christians.  Our faith is rooted in the person of Christ whose living Word is found in the Sacred Scriptures.  It is impossible to know Christ without a living understanding of and appreciation for the Sacred Scriptures, especially the Christian Scriptures that enshrine his words and the memory of his saving actions for us. 

Every three years in the “B” cycle of Sunday readings falling during the summer months, the Church places before us selections from the 6th chapter of St. John’s Gospel, often referred to as the “Bread of Life” discourse.  This provides the opportunity for us to understand and appreciate anew the greatest gift that the Lord left as a lasting legacy of himself to the Church, the gift of the Eucharist. 

It is all together fitting that we focus our attention on this saving mystery of our faith considering the front-page news that the Eucharist and those “worthy or unworthy” of so great a gift has gained attention amid the lively controversy surrounding the United States Bishops’ future pastoral statement on the Holy Eucharist. 

In the coming Sundays, as has been my custom every three years since my ordination, I will offer my own reflections on this central Sacrament of our Faith, as mirrored through the prism of God’s Word, historical tradition, our venerable theology and the great Conciliar teaching of our Church. 

It is a sad commentary on the Sacrament of Unity, that it has become the ideological pretext for ‘liturgy wars’ and contentious debate over who should be ‘barred’ from the Sacrament rather than an invitation to the healing mercy and unfailing and unconditional love that it signifies. 

So they said to him,
“Sir, give us this bread always.” 
Jesus said to them,
“I am the bread of life;
whoever comes to me will never hunger,
and whoever believes in me will never thirst.”

 

 

 

 

 

Loaves & Fishes.jpg

Reflection for the 17th Sunday in Ordinary Time

July 24, 2021

When they had had their fill, he said to his disciples,
“Gather the fragments left over,
so that nothing will be wasted.” 
So they collected them,
and filled twelve wicker baskets with fragments 
from the five barley loaves
that had been more than they could eat.
 

Generosity is a virtue to be admired.  We all know generous persons from our experience who never count the cost, who are always ready to lend a helping hand no matter how inconvenient it might be. 

This past week, we read about the extraordinary generosity of Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, who gave $ 100 million each to CNN contributor, Van Jones, and chef José Andres.  The gift was given with no strings attached and in recognition of both Jones and Andres work as ‘unifiers and not villifiers’ in our world today.  Both men are known for trying to bring people together in understanding.  In a politically fractured world, Jones attempts to bring reconciliation and healing.  In a world of unexpected disasters, chef Andres brings food to those whose lives have been turned upside down through earthquakes and hurricanes.   

My friends, the familiar story today, taken from John’s Gospel, tells of the miraculous feeding of the multitudes who came to hear the good news of the Lord.  Like sheep without a shepherd, the Lord in his unfailing mercy, love and generosity, transformed the few loaves and fishes to feed the multitude with leftovers to spare! 

These stories cannot but challenge us to examine our own lives through the prism of generosity.  Lurking within the underbelly of our society and culture is a rampant narcissism that was sadly exacerbated by our last President.  Narcissism is the antithesis of generosity.  For the narcissist, everything pathologically revolves around the mantra, What’s in it for ME?  For the narcissist, generosity is for the naïve, suckers and losers.   

As Christians, we glory in a God of generosity – a God who in his Son, Jesus, is prodigal in his mercy and forgiveness.  No wonder then, that St. Paul urges us today to emulate the virtues of a generous God as we strive to be humble, gentle and patient with one another for the sake of the solidarity and unity to which we are called as the Body of Christ. 

In the end, the spiritual antidote for narcissism is generosity that is rich in mercy, kindness and forgiveness.  

Biden & Pelosi.jpg

'Coherence' & Coercion

July 23, 2021

Many commentaries, essays and opinion pieces have appeared regarding the recent debate among the American Bishops in their June virtual meeting relative to drafting a document on the Eucharist. While the Bishops have stated that the eventual draft of the document will not single out individuals, e.g., politicians, unworthy of the reception of the Eucharist, nevertheless, individual Bishops have forcefully spoken out on this neuralgic issue in the American Church. The following article by Austen Ivereigh that appeared in the July 21, 2021, issue of Commonweal, is one of the best and balanced assessments of this issue, in my opinion. I hope readers of my Blog will find it helpful:

“Of all the instruments to use to coerce a politician…the Eucharist!” My friend, a senior Vatican official from Latin America, blurted out his shock as we discussed the majority vote at the U.S. bishops’ meeting in June in favor of a document on “eucharistic coherence.” My friend was scandalized that the Eucharist could be deployed as a weapon of persuasion or coercion—or indeed, any kind of weapon—against politicians. He saw it as a power move, all the more repellent because, he said, it was born of frustration at the Church’s failure to persuade the culture at large of its pro-life message.

The next day the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops insisted its document would not, after all, be aimed at any politicians in particular, or even in general. The USCCB made clear that the “Document on the Meaning of the Eucharist in the Life of the Church” was in fact intended to “reignite Eucharistic faith in our country” in the face of evidence of declining belief and understanding among the faithful, and would contain “no national policy on withholding Communion from politicians.” On his blog, Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston explained that bishops who had originally envisaged the document as “dealing with public figures and the reception of the Eucharist” had, “in light of instructions from the Holy See,” changed their focus to “the question of preparedness and Eucharistic consistency.”

The “instructions” had come a few weeks earlier, when the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith expressed his concerns, urging caution and time to build consensus. This inspired a letter from sixty-seven U.S. bishops, who proposed that the USCCB postpone discussion of it until they could meet in person. But the USCCB’s president, Archbishop José Gomez, disagreed, and the bishops voted overwhelmingly at the June 16–18 online meeting to proceed with writing the document.

The claim that it will not target politicians is hard to square with the speeches in its favor. More than one bishop had stood up to deplore Joe Biden and Nancy Pelosi by name, and other bishops who voted in favor of the document have since made clear this is precisely what it is about. A full month after the USCCB walk-back, for example, Bishop David Konderla of Tulsa issued a letter to his flock explaining why a politician who professes to be Catholic and “supports the evil of abortion” should be denied Communion. It is, of course, a matter of record that in January a document on “eucharistic coherence” was proposed by a USCCB working group precisely in response to the election of a pro-choice Catholic to the nation’s highest office. The document that emerges in November may claim that its purpose is not to discipline politicians, but few doubt that it will be used to do so. And because it will be used in this way, the proposed document threatens to overturn a core plank of the Church’s engagement with public life since the Second Vatican Council—namely, the freedom of the politician’s conscience.

The “scandal” some of the bishops seek to address is that President Biden, a practicing Catholic, appears to be at odds with the USCCB on the one issue it has described as “pre-eminent.” To be clear: Biden does not question the Church’s moral teaching on abortion, and says that he is personally pro-life. But he does not support the criminalization of abortion. This is not very unusual. Many politicians might like to legislate against something they find morally abhorrent, but know they can’t. This is probably not the only issue where President Biden’s Catholic convictions do not readily translate into government policies. But abortion is the only issue the bishops in favor of banning Biden from Communion seem to care about, despite Cardinal Ladaria’s letter to Archbishop Gomez warning that accountability on Catholic moral and social teaching cannot be reduced to that issue alone. (The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith said the same thing back in 1994, in its doctrinal “note” on the participation of Catholics in public life. “The Christian faith is an integral unity, and thus it is incoherent to isolate some particular element to the detriment of the whole of Catholic doctrine,” it warned.)

Betwixt the world that is and the world that should be lies the gap that must be prudently negotiated through a process of discernment.

According to Ross Douthat of the New York Times, the reason for excluding pro-choice Catholic politicians from the Eucharist is both “political” and “pastoral.” Politically, it “establishes that the church takes abortion as seriously as it claims—seriously enough to actually use one of the few disciplinary measures that it has at its disposal.” Pastorally, “the politicians in question are implicated in a uniquely grave and public sin,” from which they need to be saved. The first point seems doubtful. Is there anyone in the United States unaware of the Catholic Church’s opposition to abortion? And does denying Communion on that one issue alone imply that the Church does not take as seriously as it claims all the other issues it says it cares about? As to saving politicians’ souls, Bishop Konderla believes that “such a denial is actually charitable, intended for the salvation of a misguided soul who refuses to acknowledge the evil of abortion.” Yet he does not say how this acknowledgement is to be made. Does a Catholic politician have to bring it up on the campaign trail? Does silence signal approval of abortion? Is it enough to claim opposition to abortion in principle, or to call for the overturning of Roe v. Wade, or does a politician have to promise to do something in particular—and, if so, what? Should the bishops also withhold Communion from Catholic politicians who, in their judgment, have not tried hard enough to ban abortion, whatever their official position on the issue? Or from Catholic Supreme Court justices who have not taken every opportunity to overturn Roe?

Bishops such as Thomas Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois, and Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone of San Francisco demand, in effect, that Catholic Democrats choose between Church and party. But they do not demand that Catholic Republicans who support the death penalty or free access to guns do the same, despite the clear meaning of the passage they quote from John Paul II’s 1995 encyclical Evangelium vitae that “those who are directly involved in lawmaking have a ‘grave and clear obligation to oppose’ any law that attacks human life.” They say this message is obviously about abortion. As George Weigel, rejecting Cardinal Ladaria’s intervention, put it: “What is there to ‘discuss’?”

Quite a lot, it turns out. It is impossible to draw a straight line between the general rule that “the support of pro-choice legislation is not compatible with Catholic teaching”—as the letter to Archbishop Gomez from Cardinal Ladaria puts it—and the claim that every Catholic politician must demand that abortion be criminalized, regardless of political circumstances or constraints. The Church cannot simply demand that a democratic country outlaw what a majority of its citizens do not consider criminal.

Catholic bishops in Europe and most of Latin America understand that no politician, however committed to her faith, can advocate the total criminalization of abortion and expect to be elected. Abortion law in most Western countries operates within a general consensus that abortion should be legal but time-restricted. Hence, few bishops or Catholic politicians call for full criminalization, arguing instead that the laws should be less permissive. They advocate for shortening the period during which abortion is permitted, or for restricting the grounds for abortion. Aware of the political limits of their time and place, they settle for “limiting the harm done by such a law,” as John Paul II put it in Evangelium vitae. In my experience of Catholic politicians in the United Kingdom, they weigh these interventions very carefully, often in consultation with their bishops and spiritual directors.

The Catholic Church cannot support legalized abortion any more than it can support the death penalty, euthanasia, embryonic stem-cell research, nuclear weapons, the small-arms trade, or indeed anything that disrespects the value of human life. If “choice” involves the wanton destruction of human beings, it is not a freedom that should be enshrined in law. But often it already is, and it is not simple, given this fact, to determine what Catholic politicians can or must do (or not do) in the particular circumstances of their office. The U.S. bishops’ electoral document, “Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship,” notes that “the process of framing legislation to protect life is subject to prudential judgment and ‘the art of the possible.’” Betwixt the world that is (the earthly city) and the world that should be (a society transformed by the values of the Gospel) lies the gap that must be prudently negotiated through a process of discernment. The place of that discernment is conscience. And conscience must be free to search for and find God’s will in its own particular circumstances. These may be very far from ideal. As the U.S. bishops themselves say in “Faithful Citizenship,” “the Church’s guidance on these matters is an essential resource for Catholics as they determine whether their own moral judgments are consistent with the Gospel and with Catholic teaching” (italics mine).

As Christianity progressively loses its hold on the laws of Western countries, the Church’s mission to evangelize culture is becoming ever more pressing. This is what Pope Francis has been urging on the Church since Evangelii gaudium, which reformulated Paul VI’s call in Evangelii nuntiandii (1975) to penetrate the culture with the values of the Gospel. The danger, as Pope Francis told the Curia in 2019, is failing to grasp that “Christendom no longer exists,” that “we are no longer living in a Christian world.” The risk is to rely on simple declaration and condemnation, reducing the Gospel to a political project, as Paul VI warned, leaving the Church vulnerable to “monopolization and manipulation by ideological systems and political parties.” Abortion will need to become unthinkable to most citizens—not only to most Catholics—before the Church can credibly seek to make it again illegal.

In the meantime, no Catholic politician in the West will find an electable party that reflects Catholic teaching in its entirety. If Catholics are to continue to be part of political life, therefore, their discernment must expand beyond the ideal but currently impossible. Discernment is not an esoteric practice of an elect group, nor is it just a fancy way of “ignoring the rules,” as some suspect. It is integral to every true Christian life. Discernment, as Pope Francis says in Let Us Dream, “is as old as the Church” and “follows from the promise Jesus made to his disciples that after he was gone the Spirit ‘will guide you into all the truth’ (John 16:13).”

Politicians are elected to exercise their own consciences, not anyone else’s. They are not the tools of their constituents, nor of bishops.

Discernment takes place in and through our relationship with God in the intimacy of our conscience, what Dignitatis humanae calls “man’s most secret core and his sanctuary,” where “he is alone with God whose voice echoes in his depths.” Properly understood, conscience is a way not of evading responsibility, but of assuming it. Discernment is what all good Catholic politicians need when they must choose between, on the one hand, staying and compromising in the hope of effecting change and, on the other, resigning to preserve their integrity. Most know there is a line they will have to draw, but the best of them stretch as far they can before getting there, in the hope of getting something done.

A former politician I admire, Ruth Kelly, served in the Labour governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. She is a Catholic and a member of Opus Dei. When the Labour government in 1996–1997 introduced laws making it illegal to refuse adoption rights to same-sex couples, she stayed in cabinet, securing permission to be absent from the vote. Inside the system, Kelly says, she just had to do “the best I could to limit the damage that I see in any particular piece of legislation.” In this case, she stayed to argue for exempting the thirteen or so Catholic adoption agencies, and only resigned when the vote went against her and Blair. Dr. Kelly took the view, made famous by a speech by Edmund Burke, that politicians are elected to exercise their own consciences, not anyone else’s. They are not the tools of their constituents, nor of bishops.

A politician can exercise her conscience only if she is living in the gap between the starting-point principle and the concrete choices she faces on the ground. Part of the Church’s mission in contemporary Western society is to create that gap: to proclaim fearlessly what the Kingdom of God demands. This is what bishops must do, while at the same time understanding that the conscience of Catholic politicians must be given freedom to determine how and when to act. As Pope Francis notes in Amoris laetitia: “We find it hard to make room for the consciences of the faithful, who very often respond as best they can to the Gospel amid their limitations, and are capable of carrying out their own discernment in complex situations.” Priests and bishops, he writes, “have been called to form consciences, not to replace them.”

Gaudium et spes asks laypeople to use their “well-formed Christian conscience to see that the divine law is inscribed in the life of the earthly city,” and to “penetrate the world with a Christian spirit.” It asks priests and bishops, meanwhile, to so “preach the news of Christ that all the earthly activities of the faithful will be bathed in the light of the Gospel.” Active citizenship is a virtue, voting an obligation, politics a high form of charity. The teaching Church helps form consciences, and laypeople are asked to use them in the hurly-burly of political life, to discern what is possible and prudent, to apply the principle in the here-and-now. For it is in reality, not in the idea, that the Kingdom of God is born.

Any threat to deny the Eucharist to “disobedient” Catholic politicians, however deeply buried in the document to be voted on by bishops in November, would encroach on the freedom necessary for discernment and indeed good governance. St. Thomas Aquinas made clear that not all sins are crimes, nor all crimes sins. A government is not obliged to prohibit or punish all evils, but only those the conscience of the people recognizes (Summa theologiae, I-II q. Q.96 a.2).

It is true that law has an important pedagogic function, but a law introduced without sufficient popular backing can badly backfire, making it harder, not easier, to bring about the good. Indeed, an important part of the judgement of any legislator is to understand when something has matured in the conscience of the people to the point where a good law can “nudge” citizens in the right direction. In politics, timing is all: what can be all but impossible at one time suddenly becomes possible at another. A good politician knows how to wait, biding his time until the propitious moment. A Catholic politician might conclude that to press for a particular policy in accord with Church teaching right now will not only fail but make it harder to press for in the future.

That conclusion may be misguided. But we can only get to truth through conscience. That’s why, as the Church teaches, a person must always follow their conscience, even when it is wrong: coscientia erronea obligat.

The moral theologian James Keenan, SJ, suggests that Americans may find this harder to accept than Europeans because of their contrasting experience of fascism and war. In Europe, shocking evidence of the acquiescence and passivity of Catholics led to an awakening of the vital role of conscience through remorse. In the United States, by contrast, there was no such crisis of conscience “because Americans, including their theologians, believed they were on the right side.” Appeals to conscience in postwar America instead came to be associated not with assuming ultimate responsibility but with individual opt-outs from laws and rules.

If there is a silver lining to the U.S. bishops’ painfully divisive debate, it is perhaps this: the chance for a recovery of the true meaning of the conscience of politicians. In Amoris laetitia, Pope Francis summarizes St. Thomas Aquinas’s explanation that “general rules set forth a good which can never be disregarded or neglected, but in their formulation they cannot provide absolutely for all particular situations.” The work of conscience is to identify those situations when such a general rule must be obeyed directly, and other situations where the general rule doesn’t apply, or doesn’t apply directly.

The Church teaches not just that we must follow our consciences, but also that we are responsible for the state our conscience is in. A malformed conscience will yield bad judgments. The bishops’ job is to remind us all, including politicians, what the Church teaches and what the Gospel demands, and to challenge us to avoid the corrosion of conscience by the surrounding culture. With freedom comes responsibility and accountability: politicians must obey their consciences, and voters must hold them to account for their choices. The Church’s task is to walk with them, assisting and guiding them. That means keeping open the channels of grace—not sending Catholic politicians away from the Communion rail but holding them close.

Austen Ivereigh is a regular contributor to Commonweal and a Fellow in Contemporary Church History at the Jesuit-run Campion Hall at the University of Oxford. His most recent book is Pope Francis’s Let Us Dream: A Path to a Better World. Conversations with Austen Ivereigh (Simon & Schuster).

Francis.jpg

Reflection for the 16th Sunday in Ordinary Time

July 17, 2021

When he disembarked and saw the vast crowd,
his heart was moved with pity for them,
for they were like sheep without a shepherd;
and he began to teach them many things.
 

Of all the historic and exalted titles that are given to the Pope, Successor of St. Peter, Vicar of Christ, Supreme Pontiff, Patriarch of the West, Servant of the Servants of God, Bishop of Rome, the title that most beautifully expresses his ministry within our Church from my perspective is that of Universal Pastor. 

From St. Peter, the first to be entrusted with the special ministry of unity in the Body of Christ by the Lord himself, 260 individuals have been privileged to be entrusted with this special task of being the universal shepherd of the Church of Christ.  While we are keenly aware that among them were incredibly saintly men as well as notoriously wicked ones, yet, even amidst their all too human weaknesses, the power of Christ and His Spirit continued to shine, maintaining the Church in the truth of the Gospel. 

We have been particularly blessed in recent times with Popes that providentially were the ‘right men for the times’ they were elected.  Pope Pius XII led the Church bravely through the ravages of a World War and the insidious rise of totalitarian regimes. Good St. Pope John XXIII courageously called for the Church’s reform and renewal in the Great Second Vatican Council that led to a new Springtime in our Church.  Pope St. Paul VI insightfully led the Church to implement the Conciliar renewal in the Church, often a thankless and onerous challenge. Pope St. John Paul II whose long pontificate saw him visit virtually every continent in our world with his clarion reminder to ‘not be afraid,’ as he ushered in a ‘new evangelization.’  Pope Benedict brought a theologian’s mind to wrestle bravely with the questions of a new century and with great humility, resigned the papacy, setting the precedent for future popes.  Pope Francis, the first Pope from the Americas and the first Jesuit, unsettles many by his bold simplicity and his constant refrain of recalling God’s mercy and healing. 

While it may be facile for some to level incessant criticism on these Servants of God as they strive to be good and compassionate shepherds of the Church especially in the echo chambers of social media, their ministry is a distinctive element of the Church we call Catholic. 

On the night before his passion, the Lord prayed for unity that ‘all may be one.’  That unity is a fragile reality in our fractious world.  It is to the successor of St. Peter, our Universal Shepherd that such an important and pivotal ministry is entrusted. 

No wonder, then, that in every Eucharist celebrated throughout the world, we pray in our Eucharistic Prayer for “Francis our Pope…”.  No wonder, then, that the constant refrain of Pope Francis on meeting people is “Pray for me…”.  

As Catholics and all people of good will, let us lift our voices in solidarity as we pray for Francis as he shepherds the Church with unfailing love, mercy and grace.

 

 

Prodigal Son.jpg

Reflection for the 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time

July 10, 2021

In love he destined us for adoption to himself through Jesus Christ,
in accord with the favor of his will,
for the praise of the glory of his grace
that he granted us in the beloved.
 

It has been said that one of the most undiagnosed psychological illnesses among men is cyclic and chronic depression.  Its insidiousness has a way of robbing so many of the peace that God wants for us in our lives. 

So often this cyclic or chronic depression has its roots in the feelings of unworthiness or uselessness in life.  Invariably, such seeds were often planted in early childhood where, tragically, an unloving or uncaring parent laid the hardwiring that led to later feelings of worthlessness. 

The antidote to such psychologically and spiritually depleting feelings, is knowing that we are indeed loved and valued in life.  In functional families, that begins with the loving care of parents and siblings.  For those who, sadly, grew up in dysfunctional families where such unconditional love was absent, later healing can take place when one finds a person in life whose friendship and love brings healing, wholeness and peace to our souls. 

It is into these broken and fractured lives that the Lord of life in unwavering love sent his eternal Son.  That, my friends, is the powerful good news of St. Paul’s letter to the Ephesians.  Despite the brokenness of our lives, despite whatever feelings of unworthiness, God adopts us as his own in his Son, Jesus.  And with that adoption, you and I possess a dignity and value that is inestimable.   

Love indeed transforms and makes new.  God’s love for us knows no boundaries.  His love is everlasting.  

64ADFE41-020E-4984-BD52-421650DCE1B2.jpeg

An old controversy illuminates the US bishops' Biden gambit

July 08, 2021

Much ink has been spilled to date on the decision by the American Bishops at their recent virtual meeting to proceed with drafting a document on the Eucharist in the life of the Church. Controversy has surrounded the insistence by some vocal Bishops that the document include a chapter on the question of the criteria of “worthiness” for its reception with the specific focus of Catholic politicians who publicly support the laws that uphold a woman’s ‘right’ to such an act contrary to Catholic teaching.

While press reports indicate that the Bishops are now distancing themselves from making such an issue the focus of their document, nevertheless, a number of prominent Bishops, e.g., Archbishop Cordileone of San Francisco, adamantly hold to withholding the Eucharist from Catholic politicians, i.e., President Biden, who do not publicly support Catholic teaching in the pluralistic society in which we live.

In my opinion, the following excellent article by Professor John Thiel presents a fascinating historical critique of this issue. It appeared in both a recent issue of Commonweal and La Croix International.

At their June meeting, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) voted to finalize a teaching on the Eucharist that will include the disciplinary action of withholding the sacrament from Catholic politicians who are unwilling to take a public stand against Roe v. Wade. 

The bishops will vote at their November meeting on the teaching they issue. 

Although their concerned rhetoric in debate was directed at "Catholic politicians," it is clear that their disciplinary action is leveled at Joe Biden, the second Roman Catholic president of the United States. 

How times have changed. 

I was only nine years old when John F. Kennedy was elected as the first Catholic president in 1960, but I can recall vividly the deep pride that Catholics, still tied to the sensibilities of an immigrant Church, felt at his election to high office. 

Now, a rather large swath of the American bishops feel no such pride at the election of our second Catholic president. Instead, they seem intent on making him a negative example to the American Catholic faithful. 

This initiative is especially striking because President Biden is a practicing Catholic, a palpably good man who speaks readily about how his deep faith has been a source of comfort in facing the tragedies that have beset his life. 

One might think in a time when Catholics have left the Church in droves—so many in disgust at the astonishing moral failure of bishops to protect children from priestly predators—that the election of a Catholic president who wears his piety on his sleeve would be a moment to celebrate in the American Catholic Church. 

Instead, the bishops—or, to make a fair distinction, a surprising number of them—make Biden their target with the same single-mindedness as the right-wing ideologues on the Fox News evening line-up.

To refuse the Eucharist to a believing Catholic, to excommunicate him at least sacramentally, is to brand him a grievous sinner who by virtue of his sin has alienated himself from the Church. 

In the judgment of the bishops, Biden's sin seems to be that, as a Catholic politician, he has not taken a public, political stand against abortion. 

Biden has stated many times that he considers abortion to be a moral evil. This is his Catholic belief. But, like many Catholics who believe the same, he finds that his personal belief conflicts with the beliefs of other citizens and with the law in a democracy that affirms the First Amendment. 

Moreover, Biden affirms a woman's right to make her own choices regarding reproduction, even if he personally believes that some of these choices, however tragically contextualized, might be choices for moral evil. 

As I noted, many American Catholics hold the same position as Biden, as, I should say, do I.

In many respects, this position is informed both by Catholic belief and by a recognition that one lives in a constitutional republic in which a dizzying pluralism of often conflicting beliefs is protected by a political contract responsible for what order American society offers its citizens. 

So, one might ask, why would the bishops make Biden's political stance on abortion, and not his personal belief about the evil of abortion, a grievous sin worthy of their proposed action? 

And, given that Biden's political stance on abortion is one held by millions of American Catholics—lay people, clergy, and perhaps even a number of bishops—why would the bishops make Biden's stance on abortion a grievous sin worthy of his separation from the sacramental community? 

I propose that the Donatist controversy of the fourth and fifth centuries can shed some light on our present, troubling moment. I will explain this controversy about the nature of the Church briefly so that it can serve its illustrative purpose here.

The Donatists imagined the Church as Noah's Ark

Christianity was an illegal and persecuted religion in the late Roman Empire during the first three centuries of its history. 

In the late 200s and early 300s, Christians in Roman North Africa faced devastating persecution that often resulted in their deaths. The heroism of these martyrs led believers to venerate them as the first saints. 

Local Roman governors who pressed the persecution of the Church were often content to release arrested and imprisoned Christians from a death sentence if only they would renounce their faith in public. 

One way of doing so was for the compromising Christian to "hand over" (Latin: tradere) the Church's sacred books to Roman officials as a sign of their renunciation, and the traditores (English: traitors) who handed over the sacred books were sometimes bishops. 

Permitted to live, the compromising bishops presented a problem to the Church after the Edict of Milan put an end to the persecution of Christians in 313 CE.

By betraying the faith, in the judgment of all an extraordinarily grievous sin, had the traditor bishop invalidated his baptism and so proved undeserving of a continuing ministerial role in the Church? 

Followers of a North African Christian named Donatus believed that the answer to this question was a resounding yes, since the purity of the Church and the graceful efficacy of its sacraments would otherwise be polluted by the sinfulness of its pastors. 

The Donatist solution was that lapsed bishops needed to be re-baptized and by that sacramental act reintegrated into the Church's purity, which they defined in opposition to a hostile world's vehement persecution, even as the time of persecution passed.

Nearly one hundred years later, in the early 400s, this Donatist sensibility was still quite strong in many North African Christian communities.

In one respect this was surprising, since this sensibility was stirred by the heroism of the martyrs and the scandal of episcopal betrayal during the time of persecution, which by now was long past. 

Yet, the Donatist sensibility inspired an enduring ecclesiology—a view of the Church as a community of the saints, purged of sinners and defined by the blatant holiness of its members. 

According to the historian Peter Brown, the Donatists imagined the Church as Noah's Ark, as a sheltered community of the saved tossed about in a world inundated by the floodwaters of sin.

It was this Donatist understanding of the Church that the North African Catholic bishop Augustine of Hippo (354-430 CE) judged to be heretical.

In a number of treatises written in the early fifth century, Augustine condemned the Donatist position and articulated an understanding of the Church that finally was adopted as the orthodox Catholic teaching. 

For Augustine, the Church is not constituted by the moral purity of its members and certainly not by the moral purity of its pastors. 

The Church is a community composed of both saints and sinners, and, given the broader context of his later theology, Augustine assumed that the Church was predominantly a community of the fallen, of those desperately in need of the grace mediated through the Church to believers.

The Church is not a gathering place for the saved but a refuge for sinners, above all. 

Augustine insisted that the graceful efficacy of the sacraments did not depend on the personal holiness of those who administered them, as the Donatists maintained.

The sacraments possessed a supernatural power that brought sinners to salvation even when administered by priestly sinners. 

The Church was founded by Christ not to be a gathering for those set apart by their moral purity but to be a graceful means for sinners to be brought to eternal life. St. Augustine's understanding of the Church remains Catholic teaching to this day.

God's gift of grace

How does the Donatist controversy shed light on the bishops' recent disciplinary gambit? 

The bishops seem to see the Church as the Donatists did. 

Those of them who argue that President Biden is required to hold a public, political position on abortion that directly reflects his personal belief in order to be worthy of the Eucharist appear to have made the judgment that the Church is characterized by a purity that cannot abide the sinful pollution of Biden's political behavior. 

Judging Biden to be a sinner in what they consider to be his unrepresentative Catholic behavior, the bishops have not then found him to be worthy of the Church's graceful offices. 

The Donatist binary of the purity of the Church versus the impurity of a hostile, extra-ecclesial world shows itself in the bishops' implicit judgment that sin, and in this case Biden's sin, remains outside the Church where it belongs. 

Pope Francis urged the American bishops not to vote as they did at their June meeting, and perhaps had their initiative in mind when he preached a few days earlier on the feast of Corpus Christi that the Eucharist "is not the reward of saints but the bread of sinners."

These words express the orthodox Catholic ecclesiology that Augustine defined in the Donatist controversy.

If the bishops' intended exclusion of what they have judged to be Biden's sinfulness is an expression of the Donatist sensibility, it is yet Donatism in a new key, its newness defined by the rather odd ways that the bishops have reconfigured the pure/impure binary. 

The ancient Donatists focused their concerns about moral failure on episcopal leaders who represented their congregations. The American bishops have shown no sign of such reflexive critique. 

There has been no talk on their part, for example, of withholding the Eucharist from bishops who were complicit in the sexual abuse of children. Nor, as I have argued here, should there have been. 

Instead, the bishops are portraying the most prominent American Catholic as impure—not because he does not believe with the Church but because he holds a political position with which they disagree. 

Could this typically Donatist tactic of foisting impurity outside the Church's holiness be a strange way for the bishops to regain an imagined moral purity publicly lost in the past two decades? 

Though theologically misguided, the ancient Donatists applied their ethics of purity consistently throughout the Church to all its members. 

Why have the bishops begun an initiative that would withhold the Eucharist from Biden—and perhaps from a handful of other Catholic politicians?

Why not issue a teaching that would withhold the sacrament from the millions of American Catholics who hold the same position on abortion as the president? 

Doing so, of course, would utterly fragment what's left of the American Church, spiritually and—the word needs to be pronounced—financially. 

The bishops might consider that, in a Church that understands itself to be the one body of Christ, many Catholics will see the bishops' judgment on Biden to be a judgment on them and that that judgment will cause far more ecclesial harm than their single-minded fixation on the second Catholic president ever allowed them to imagine.

Ancient Donatism and the new Donatism are deficient practices of the Church because they forget that it is God's gift of grace, mediated by the sacraments of the Church and not by its pastors, that brings the Church to resurrected life. 

Occasionally that grace brings believers to a moral heroism that is a sign of God's grace and that, as such, inspires the Church. 

But there is no moral heroism, and certainly not the taking of a self-described prophetic stance, in disciplining a faithful Catholic on the basis of a political position held by very many American Catholics.

This is all the more so when the purported prophetic discipline curries the favor of a certain quarter of the Catholic donor class. 

One hopes that when the bishops finally vote on this matter at their November meeting, the desire for a false purity through discipline will yield to the Gospel's message of grace and mercy, a message that can only be truly received by those with a deep sense for the shared sinfulness of the Church.

John E. Thiel is professor of religious studies at Fairfield University. He is the author of Senses of Tradition: Development and Continuity in Catholic Faith (Oxford, 2000) and Icons of Hope: The "Last Things" in Catholic Imagination (University of Notre Dame, 2013).



Florida condo rescue.jpg

Reflection for the 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time

July 03, 2021

Hard of face and obstinate of heart
    are they to whom I am sending you. 
But you shall say to them: Thus says the LORD GOD! 
And whether they heed or resist—for they are a rebellious house—
    they shall know that a prophet has been among them
. 

 Profiles in Courage is a 1956 volume of short biographies describing acts of bravery and integrity by eight United States Senators. Then-Senator John F. Kennedy won the Pulitzer Prize for the work.  The book profiles senators who defied the opinions of their party and constituents to do what they felt was right and suffered severe criticism and losses in popularity because of their actions. 

Those Senators were not unlike the Prophets of the Hebrew Scriptures whose courageous exploits are enshrined in God’s revealed word.  Ezekiel, as the conscience of his people, heard his divine mandate from the Lord himself as he was commissioned to speak the Lord’s word of truth to those ‘obstinate of heart.’ 

Each of us, I’m confident can name contemporary profiles in courage drawn from the daily news.  These are the women and men who are grounded in the truth and whose essential raison d’etre is not fame or fortune, career advancement or holding tenaciously to positions of power or authority, but rather are shaped by integrity and a passion for the truth.   

I cannot help but think of those police officers who, though outnumbered by insurrectionists, bravely and courageously fought to defend our elected officials and the symbol of our democracy, the Capitol Building, on January 6th. 

I cannot help but think of the countless first responders who have toiled in Seaside Park, Florida, hour after hour, searching the rubble of the collapsed condominium as fading hope pushes them in their search of victims, living or dead. 

I cannot help but think of the few members of Congress whose party leadership have ostracized them for standing up to the lies that are undermining the very foundations of our Nation. 

My friends, Jesus said it best when he challenged his hearers with the timeless truth, “What does it profit a person to gain the whole world but loses his soul in the end.” 

As we celebrate today our Nation’s Independence, an independence gained by countless men and women of self-less courage, let us pray for the grace, strength and wisdom to be that Prophetic witness in our world today:  telling people what they need to hear rather than what they want to hear as we speak the truth in love.

 

 

 

 

Anointing.jpg

Reflection for the 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time

June 26, 2021

“My daughter is at the point of death.
Please, come lay your hands on her
that she may get well and live.”
 

This past week I was blessed to anoint a beautiful 100-year-old woman who is nearing the final and most glorious chapter in her life of faith.  In the 47 years of my priesthood, this poignant scene has been repeated a thousand graced times.  Despite its ministerial familiarity, it never ceases to both amaze and humble me. Using the timeless gesture of Jesus himself, I lay my hands on the sick and dying, pray for healing and then surrender this moment and this vulnerable life to the unfailing love and mercy of the Lord of unending life. 

I remember as if it was yesterday the first person I ever anointed with the sacrament of healing and mercy.  It was an elderly gentleman who lived across the street from the rectory.  I had been a priest for all of a couple of weeks.  When the call came in, I got my Holy Oils, stole and ran across the street.  Ever so peaceful, the man was surrounded by his loved ones as I nervously opened the ritual book to pray the prayers of anointing.  As I traced the cross on his forehead and hands and prayed the ancient sacramental prayers of healing, a wonderful sense of grace suffused this moment.  The Lord was undoubtedly present, as ‘two or three gathered in his name…’ to do what he did so often in his earthly ministry.   

My friends, whether we are sick in body or sick in our soul, all of us are in need of the healing presence of the Lord of life.  All of us yearn for the human touch that so often mediates the life-giving presence of the Holy in our lives.  All of us thirst for the waters that will never leave us thirsty again or the food that will satisfy our deepest hangars. 

To these multiple vulnerabilities in life, it is the same Jesus who healed the synagogue official’s daughter, who touched and healed the woman with the hemorrhage, that is present still in our world, our society, our church and in our lives, who stands ready to make all things new.  For that incomparable grace, let us humbly give thanks.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reflection for the 12th Sunday in Ordinary Time

June 19, 2021

He woke up,
rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, “Quiet!  Be still!”
The wind ceased and there was great calm.
Then he asked them, “Why are you terrified?
Do you not yet have faith?”
They were filled with great awe and said to one another,
“Who then is this whom even wind and sea obey?”
 

In his public ministry, Jesus often used images to help his listeners come to understand the inner meaning of the Good News that he came to proclaim.  The Kingdom of God was compared to a mustard seed that in time would grown into a great tree.   

The Church, imitating this penchant of the Lord, continues to use images to help us explore and unpack the mystery of its inner meaning.  The Church as the ‘barque of Peter’ sailing on the seas of life was a favorite image inspired by the Scriptures themselves that is both ancient as relevant today. 

There is no question that within the history of the ‘barque of Peter,’ that ship has encountered turbulent seas.  From the early controversies surrounding the pondering of the question: “Who is this Christ?’ onward to the Reformation controversies to our present-day crisis with the abhorrent sexual abuse crisis on the party of the clergy, the bark of the Church has not been impervious to storms and headwinds. 

This past week we have witnessed, once again, the barque of Peter tossed by the headwinds of controversy as the Bishops in the United Stated debated the merits of moving forward with drafting a document on the centrality of the Eucharist in the life of the Church.  While that topic appears to be relatively uncontroversial, it is the element of ‘worthiness’ for the reception of communion, especially among political leaders who profess to be Catholic yet are faced with the conundrum of living and leading in a pluralistic country whose legal structures support laws that are contrary to the ethical teachings of our Church – that has raised tension and controversy. 

While Rome has cautioned the bishops to tread lightly and go slowly, urging consultation with other Episcopal Conferences around the world, least the unity that the Lord desires for his Church is compromised by an expedient desire to ‘build walls of exclusion’ in the name of orthodoxy rather than ‘bridges of understanding, mercy and forgiveness,’ undoubtedly much ink will be spilled by commentators as the document is eventually written and debated. 

While the headwinds of controversy are not new for the Body of Christ, they are, nevertheless, unsettling as we continue to strive to be that presence of the living Christ to a world that is fractured by so much hate, anger and recrimination. 

That is why we need to hear the words of Christ, anew, with fresh ears and heart:   

He woke up,
rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, “Quiet!  Be still!”
The wind ceased and there was great calm.
Then he asked them, “Why are you terrified?
Do you not yet have faith?”
They were filled with great awe and said to one another,
“Who then is this whom even wind and sea obey?”
 

My friends, to this Christ who holds even the tensions and controversies of the present moment in his hands, let us surrender our trust and confidence to him – “Who…even wind and sea obey!”

 

 

 

 

 

The Martyrdom of St. Ignatius of Antioch

Reflection for the Solemnity of the Body & Blood of Christ

June 05, 2021

While they were eating,
he took bread, said the blessing,
broke it, gave it to them, and said,
"Take it; this is my body."
Then he took a cup, gave thanks, and gave it to them,
and they all drank from it.
He said to them,
"This is my blood of the covenant,
which will be shed for many. 

One of the earliest and most significant of the early Church Fathers, those seminal writers who hold a pivotal role in the development of the Christian theological tradition, was Ignatius of Antioch.  Ignatius lived in the 2nd century and tradition has it that he was a disciple of St. John the beloved disciple.  In other words, he heard the Good News from one of the original apostles of the Lord! 

The bulk of our knowledge of Ignatius comes from the inspiring letters of encouragement that he wrote to the early Christian communities en route to his eventual martyrdom in Rome.  These letters form the eventual foundation for what we refer to as ‘ecclesiology’ or our theology of what it means to be ‘Church.’  He speaks eloquently of the role of the Bishop as the ‘icon’ or image of Christ the Good Shepherd, gently and courageously guiding the ‘flock of Christ’ with the Good News.  However, it is in his letter to the early Christians at Ephesus that he coins a phrase about the Eucharist that has been pivotal in my understanding of this central mystery of our faith.  He writes that the Eucharist is: the medicine of immortality, and the antidote to prevent us from dying, but which causes that we should live forever in Jesus Christ. 

I am reminded of this beautiful quote as we gather and reflect on the centrality of the Eucharist on this Solemnity of the Body and Blood of the Lord.  Undoubtedly, the central Sacrament of our Church wherein the ‘body and blood, soul and divinity’ of the living Christ is really and truly present under the sacramental signs of bread and wine, continue to be the life-blood of the Body of Christ in this and every age until the Lord comes again in Glory. 

I am touched by St. Ignatius’ insistence on the healing and renewing dimension of this wondrous Sacrament.  This beautifully parallels with the image of our Holy Father, Pope Francis, when he speaks of the Church as the ‘field hospital’ for Christians in need of constant healing, renewal and conversion.  For the very ‘medicine’ that sustains and heals our weak and so often broken lives is the Eucharistic food.   

With this in mind, it is a sad reality that in our present moment there are some among us who hold the office of Bishop in our Country who seek to continually bar some from the Eucharistic Table.  While our Church rightly teaches that we bring to this moment of ‘Holy Communion’ our best selves, yet, the Eucharist has never been a ‘reward’ for the perfect but always ‘medicine’ for the weak, the sick and broken who humbly know their daily need for the Lord of mercy and unconditional love.  In the end, the Eucharist is not a weapon to be wielded by the hyper-orthodox but rather a healing balm for the broken, the sick of heart and those who live on the margins because of our lack of love and mercy! No wonder then that before we approach the Holy Table, we pray “Lord, I am not worthy…” 

As we give thanks this day for ‘so great a gift,’ may self-righteous judgmentalism give way to a humility as we pray with both saints and sinners down through the ages: 

“Lord, I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof, but only say the word and my soul shall be healed.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

RubilevTrinity.jpg

Reflection for the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity

May 29, 2021

Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit… 

It is a veritable truth of nature that we come to know persons through their personality.  A person who lives and exemplifies a kind and caring heart, is compassionate and understanding, quick to forgive and slow to anger, is the kind of person that attracts and is sought after as a trusted friend.  A person who is meanspirited, narcissistic in every way, a liar and a cheat, a bully and quick-tempered is the kind of person bereft of true friends and intimates.  Yes, persons are perceived by their personality, for good or ill. 

One of the most profound mysteries of the Christian faith has to do with the very person of the one whom we call, “God.”  Hardwired into our human psyche is our thirst for the divine.  Down through the ages, in every culture and setting known to humanity, there has been the inner need that has haunted the human heart, acknowledging a supernatural presence, a divine spirit, beckoning humanity to rise able the question of: Is this all there is? And lifting our hearts to a richer and broader horizon that what we just perceive around us. 

To that longing of the human heart for ‘more,’ the God who has revealed himself to Jews, Christians and Moslems, through the sacred texts of these ancient traditions, is the Creator, the God of Loving-Kindness, the Merciful.  While being a pure spirit, God’s attributes have come to be powerfully known in God’s actions of creation and liberation.  For Jews and Christians, God spoke through the Prophets of Old, a searing message of care for widows and orphans, bringing down the powerful from their thrones and raising up the lowly. 

In the still-point moment in human history, God the Creator became one with us through his Incarnate Son, Jesus, who, ‘bone of our bone, and flesh of our flesh,’ would radiate the very face of God to all humanity.  No longer content to just be the God of the past, Jesus would reveal the redeeming love of God the Father through all ages. 

Completing his earthly mission, Jesus, the Lord, continues his earthly presence in the Spirit, who now and for all ages, empowers the followers of Christ, to be His Presence in our world today, until he comes in Glory. 

Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifier – persons are known by their personality.  The God of endless ages, radically one in God’s most profound inner being yet experienced down through the ages as Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifier – Holy Trinity – be with us now and unto the ages unending.  Amen.

 

pentecost-duccio.jpg

Reflection for Pentecost

May 22, 2021

And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit
and began to speak in different tongues,
as the Spirit enabled them to proclaim.
 

This past Friday, President Biden conferred his first Congressional Medal of Honor, on a 94 years old veteran of the Korean War, Col. Ralph Puckett Jr., 70 years after the courageous heroism that garnered our grateful Nation’s highest military award.  

Leading his men to take Hill 205 in the bitter cold, Puckett, though injured, unfailingly braved the enemy to continue to check on his men in the fierce battle.  Without a thought of himself and motivated by his love for country and his men, he selflessly risked his own life so that others might live and the prize of victory would be won. 

My friends, as we gather to mark and celebrate the great Christian feast of Pentecost, at its heart, we remember the empowering gift of the Holy Spirit on that small band of Christians, filling them with courage and motivated by love to proclaim the Good News of the Savior. 

It is virtually impossible as we think of courage not to reflect on love that makes all courage possible.  The courage of military men and women to risk their lives for the sake of others, is motivated by love.  The courage of medical doctors and nurses to bring healing and comfort to the dying during our recent pandemic, is motivated by love.  The courage of a spouse, who faithfully is present to their husband or wife, who may not even recognize them through the ravages of late-stage Alzheimer’s disease, is motivated by love. 

Hovering in fear of the unknown in that upper-room on the First Pentecost, the disciples felt the searing presence of the Spirit, inflaming their hearts and minds as fear was transformed into bold courage, as they broke forth to make ‘holy trouble’ for the Lord. 

From that first Pentecost and down through the centuries since, the small seed of the Good News, planted and lovingly nurtured by saints and holy ones through the ages is now handed to us as we are empowered by that same Spirit to continue to do the same.  

With courage, may we be open to that same Spirit of Love.

 

 

 

 

 

Ascension mss.jpg

Reflection for the Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord

May 15, 2021

…But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you,
and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem,
throughout Judea and Samaria,
and to the ends of the earth.”
 

On January 20th, 1961, after a long fought political campaign, the first Catholic President, John F. Kennedy was inaugurated on the steps of the Capitol Building.  As a 13-year-old impressionable very young teenager, I was enthralled by the stirring words that Kennedy spoke that day in his now historic inaugural address.  Master orator that he was, the address came to a dramatic crescendo with these memorable words: 

With a good conscience our only sure reward, with history the final judge of our deeds, let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God's work must truly be our own. 

Yes, my friends, God’s work must truly be our own!  That is precisely the meaning of the great Solemnity that the Christian Church celebrates this day.  While many of us remember the Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord associated with Thursday, some years ago the Bishops of many parts of the United States transferred the celebration of this central feast in the Christian calendar to the Seventh Sunday of Easter.  Why?  So that many more of the faithful could gather to give thanks for the wonder of this day. 

With the earthly mission and ministry of the Lord having been completed, he now returns to the Father. However, that mission and ministry of Jesus is now entrusted to all the Baptized who have been made new and empowered by the Spirit whose fullness we commemorate next Sunday in the Solemnity of Pentecost. 

Down through the centuries, the measure of our authentic embrace of the Gospel has always been our willingness to truly make God’s work our own.  As we look back over the expanse of the centuries since that mandate was first handed to us, we can, indeed, take pride in the saints and Holy Ones who have truly made God’s work their own.  Yet, our history, sadly narrates the story of Christians who have failed to take up and live this noble task. 

My mind today goes to the tragedy that is unfolding in the land made ‘Holy’ by the Lord himself, once again torn by hatred and war.  How paradoxical that Jew and Arab who pride themselves with their ancient greeting of “Shalom” and “Salam” – peace - should so often fail to make God’s work, their own.  Doing God’s work, of course, is living the demanding task of surrendering the narcissism and ego of a ‘me first’ mentality and making God’s mind and heart our own.

As has often been said, God has no other voice, hands and heart today but our own.  May the Ascension of the Lord renew our commitment to be that voice in our world today so that at the end of our days we can rest peacefully, knowing that God’s work has truly been our own in the life we have lived.

 

 

 

Prev / Next

msgr. Arthur a. holquin, s.t.L.

Msgr. Art was ordained to the priesthood on May 25, 1974 for service in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. Shortly after the creation of the new Diocese of Orange in 1976, he completed post-graduate work at the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium, obtaining an S.T.L. in Sacramental Theology and an M.A. in Religious Studies. He has served the Diocese in a number of ministerial capacities:  Director for the Office of Worship, Director for the Office of Evangelization, Rector of Holy Family Cathedral and finally, Pastor and Rector of Mission Basilica San Juan Capistrano. In 2009 he contracted a rare neurological condition (Primary Lateral Sclerosis) that gradually impacted his walking and speech. In 2014 he was named Rector Emeritus of the Basilica parish. Msgr. Art’s favorite quotation is from Blessed Henry Cardinal Newman: To live is to change and to be perfect is to have changed often.


Featured Posts

Featured
IMG_2447.JPG
Jul 20, 2019
Reflections on the Dedication of Christ Cathedral
Jul 20, 2019
Jul 20, 2019
fullsizeoutput_2955.jpeg
Jul 15, 2019
From Crystal to Christ - A Guide to the Nation's newest Cathedral
Jul 15, 2019
Jul 15, 2019
UNADJUSTEDNONRAW_thumb_8e3.jpg
Mar 19, 2018
Progress Report on Christ Cathedral Renovation
Mar 19, 2018
Mar 19, 2018
Life is about Change
Mar 19, 2017
Life is about Change
Mar 19, 2017
Mar 19, 2017