The
Three Attempts to Settle the “Pope Question”
Based
on a work entitled
“Resistance to the Changes &
Indefectibility”
by Rev. Donald J. Sanborn
Sacerdotium 1, Autumn 1991
At the root of nearly all of the
disputes among [traditional] Catholics is the question of the Church.
Where is the Church? Is the Catholic Faith to be identified with the
Novus Ordo? This question is thorny, since, if you answer
affirmatively, i.e., that the Novus Ordo is the Catholic Faith, then
resistance to it becomes schismatic and possibly heretical. On the
other hand, if the answer be negative, then there arises the problem of
the Catholic Church seeming to be without a visible hierarchy.
Thus the great dividing line between the diverse camps of
“traditionalists” is the issue of the Church. And because the pope is
the visible head of the Church, this controversy expresses itself
naturally in the terms of John Paul II’s “papacy”. The reason why so
many “traditionalists” see him as pope, indeed insist that he is the
pope, is not because they are enamored with his theology. Rather it is
because they see as a theological necessity the identification of the
Novus Ordo and the Roman Catholic Church. They see this as a necessity
because of the indefectibility of the Church, i.e., that it must endure
until the end of time with a visible hierarchy. From this they conclude
that, heretic or not, John Paul II and the college of Novus Ordo
bishops are the hierarchy of the Catholic Church, since they seem to
have been duly elected and nominated, and have succeeded to the sees of
their Catholic predecessors. Deny this, they say, and you deny the
Church. Repudiate this hierarchy, they say, and you are schismatic,
since you are cutting yourself off from the Catholic hierarchy.
In the other camp, however, indefectibility dictates the very opposite
conclusion. Vatican II is heretical. John Paul II is heretical. The
bishops are heretical. The new sacraments are non–catholic, and in most
cases are downright invalid. In the name of indefectibility, therefore,
this group declares that it is a theological necessity that the Novus
Ordo not be the Catholic Faith, and consequently the Novus Ordo
hierarchy not be the Catholic hierarchy.
This bitter disagreement, which ironically arises out of the same
principle of indefectibility, is the result of the fact that those
popes and bishops who have succeeded, by the normal means of
succession, to the places of the pre–conciliar Catholic popes and
bishops, have produced, through Vatican II and its subsequent reforms,
a religion which is not identifiable with the Catholic Faith of two
thousand years. Hence the question is: where does indefectibility lie?
Does it lie with the Faith? Or does it lie with visible succession of
popes and bishops to the time of the Apostles?
The answer is that the indefectibility of the Catholic Church lies with
both, and to deny one or the other would be a “grievous and pernicious
error”, to use the words of Pope Leo XIII.
If we consider the chief end of His Church and the proximate efficient
causes of salvation, it is undoubtedly spiritual; but in regard to
those who constitute it, and to the things which lead to these
spiritual gifts, it is external and necessarily visible.
For this reason the Church is so often called in Sacred Scripture a “
body”, and even the body of Christ — “Now you are the body of Christ”
(I Cor. xii., 27) — and precisely because it is a body is the Church
visible: and because it is the body of Christ is it living and
energizing, because by the infusion of His power Christ guards and
sustains it, just as the vine gives nourishment and renders fruitful
the branches united to it. And as in animals the vital principle is
unseen and invisible, and is evidenced and manifested by the movements
and action of the members, so the principle of supernatural life in the
Church is clearly shown in that which is done by it.
From this it follows that those who arbitrarily conjure up and picture
to themselves a hidden and invisible Church are in grievous and
pernicious error: as are also those who regard the Church as a human
institution which claims a certain obedience in discipline and external
duties, but which is without the perennial communication of the gift of
divine grace, and without all that which testifies by constant and
undoubted signs to the existence of that life which is drawn from God.
It is assuredly as impossible that the Church of Jesus Christ could be
the one or the other as that a man should be a body alone or a soul
alone. The connection and union of both elements is as absolutely
necessary to the true Church as the intimate union of soul and body is
to human nature. (Pope Leo XIII, encyclical Satis Cognitum, June 29,
1896)
The Doctrine of the Church’s
Indefectibility
The fundamental notion of indefectibility is that the Church must
endure until the end of time with the essential nature and qualities
with which Christ endowed it at its foundation. In other words, it is
impossible that the Catholic Church undergo a substantial change. It
may, indeed it must, undergo many accidental changes, especially in its
laws, in order to prudently react to differing circumstances in diverse
ages, but these accidental changes must never touch the substance of
Christ's foundation. This indefectibility is a certain sign of the
Church's supernatural origin and character, for no human organization
could traverse two thousand years and remain essentially the same. Its
indefectibility is ever more a sign of its divine origin and assistance
when one considers how many times and with what force the enemies of
the Church have tried to make her change essentially.
What is this essential nature? What are these essential qualities?
The primary indefectibility of the Catholic Church is in doctrine.
Faith objectively considered, i.e., the deposit of sacred revealed
doctrine, is the foundation of the entire structure of the Catholic
Church. Similarly faith subjectively considered, i.e., the virtue of
faith, is the basis of the entire supernatural life of the soul. Hence
the most important way in which the Catholic Church cannot defect is in
teaching true doctrine. Since God is changeless, the doctrine of the
Church is therefore forever changeless, and it is a testimony of
Christ's assistance to the Church that her teaching has remained the
same and consistent throughout the two thousand years of her existence.
A single contradiction or inconsistency in her ordinary or
extraordinary magisterium would be sufficient to prove that the
assistance of God was not with her.
But her indefectibility is not limited to doctrine, but rather extends
to all those things which have been endowed to her by the Divine
Founder. We know that Christ endowed the Church with both structure and
power. He established the Church as a monarchy, placing all power in
the hands of Saint Peter. He also instituted bishops who, in union with
and subject to Saint Peter, would rule the Church in diverse
localities. To this structure He endowed the power to teach, to rule,
and to sanctify the entire human race. This power derives from the
apostolic mission, i.e., the act of being sent by Christ for the
purpose of saving souls. Therefore this structure and this mission to
the souls of mankind must endure throughout all ages unchanged. In
addition, the Church is endowed with the power of orders, by which
human beings are made into supernatural instruments of divine power to
effect the supernatural sanctification of men through the sacraments,
in particular the Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist.
Therefore the Church would be defective if:
(a) it ever changed its doctrine;
(b) it ever altered or abandoned a monarchical and hierarchical
structure;
(c) it ever lost, substantially changed, or abandoned the apostolic
mission of teaching, ruling and sanctifying souls;
(d) it ever lost, substantially changed, or abandoned the power of
orders.
The teaching of indefectibility is confirmed by ecclesiastical
documents. The first is the Bull Auctorem Fidei of Pope Pius VI (28
August 1794), which condemns
as heretical the following proposition of the Council of Pistoia:
The proposition which asserts “that
in these latter times there has been spread a general obscuring of the
more important truths pertaining to religion, which are the basis of
faith and of the moral teachings of Jesus Christ.” (Denz. 1501.)
The second is of Pope Leo XIII in his Encyclical Satis Cognitum. Having
first explained in what the Church is spiritual and in what she is
visible, and emphasizing the fact that these two things are absolutely
necessary for the true Church, analogous to the necessity of union of
body and soul for the human being, he then says:
Since the Church is such by divine will and institution, she must
remain such without any interruption until the end of time.
Furthermore the Vatican Council of 1870 states:
The eternal Pastor and Bishop of souls decreed to establish a holy
Church to perpetuate the saving work of salvation. (Denz. 1821.)
There are, furthermore, many texts of the Fathers which support
indefectibility, and it is the universal teaching of theologians.
The Problem: The state of the church
How does one reconcile the present state of what appears to be the
Catholic Church with indefectibility? This problem, with its diverse
answers, is at the root of most of the controversy among those who have
remained faithful to tradition. The problem poses itself more bluntly
this way: where is the Church? For no one can err in following the
Catholic Church, at least in her essential roles of teaching doctrine,
of leading souls to heaven through her general laws, and of sanctifying
souls by means of valid sacraments. In order to save one’s soul,
therefore, it simply suffices to know where the Church is. One can and
must, in all good conscience, follow the teaching and prescriptions of
the Church in order to save one’s soul, and to set oneself up against
these is to be heretical, schismatic, or at least gravely disobedient.
In any case one could not save his soul.
This particular question is highly problematic for the fact that no
matter how you answer concerning the Novus Ordo, i.e., yes or no that
it is the Catholic Faith, you end up in some deep problems with regard
to indefectibility. If you answer that the Novus Ordo is Catholic, then
you are in the immense problem of the defection of teaching, the
defection of the general legislation of the Church, and the defection
of sacraments. It also reduces to absurdity — not to mention the sin of
disobedience and schism — the systematic resistance to the Novus Ordo
which has been maintained by “traditionalists”. If, on the other hand,
you answer that the Novus Ordo is not Catholic, then you have what
seems to be a problem of finding the visible Church, since it would
seem that the entire Catholic hierarchy has defected into this new
non-Catholic sect. Thus the “yes” answer leads to the defection of the
essential spiritual qualities of the Church, whereas the “no” answer
seems to lead to the defection of the essential material qualities of
the Church. Put in another way, the “yes” answer seems lead to the
defection of the mission of the Church, whereas the “no” answer seems
to lead to a defection of the structure of the Church. Yet we know from
Pope Leo XIII that both are absolutely necessary for the Church, like
body and soul for the human nature, and that both must endure until the
end of time in order that the Church live up to its indefectibility.
One then easily sees the causes of the bitter controversy, since each
side perceives itself to be a veritable savior of the Church, the one
side, those who say yes to the catholicity of the Novus Ordo, see
themselves as maintaining the visible structure of the Church against
those who would abandon it, whereas the other side, the no’s, see
themselves as maintaining the spiritual and doctrinal purity of the
Church against those who would sully her by association with the Novus
Ordo. And because it is a battle for the Church itself here, the
“traditionalists” fight much more bitterly against one another than
against the Novus Ordo.
The Three Solutions
There are essentially three solutions proposed to deal with this
question: (a) the Ecclesia Dei solution, (b) the Lefebvrist solution,
and (c) the sedevacantist solution. One would think that because there
are only two principles at stake here, i.e., the material integrity of
the Church one the one hand, and the spiritual on the other, that there
would be only two solutions. But as we shall see later, the Lefebvrist
solution is a hybrid of both, combining into a salad virtually all the
elements of the other two systems. Let us examine each of these systems
in detail.
A. The Ecclesia Dei Solution
On May 5, 1988, Archbishop Lefebvre signed the much talked about
Protocol, in which he entered into a preliminary agreement with the
Novus Ordo hierarchy. This agreement called for the recognition of the
Society of Saint Pius X as an institute of pontifical right in exchange
for certain reassurances from the Society, among them that they
accepted Vatican II, the New Code of Canon Law, the validity of all the
new sacramental rites, and the legitimacy of John Paul II. This
agreement was subsequently (the next day) broken by Archbishop Lefebvre
for the reasons that he did not like the appointees to the “tradition
commission”, and because he did not like the date of consecration set
by John Paul II. Archbishop Lefebvre thus consecrated four bishops
without the mandate from John Paul II, and was immediately
excommunicated in a document issued by John Paul II entitled, of all
things, Ecclesia Dei. In the wake of this, a significant number of
priests and seminarians of the Lefebvrist group split off and accepted
the Vatican’s terms originally contained in the Protocol. The Society
of Saint Peter was thus established, and the Ecclesia Dei Commission
was set up to oversee it, whence derives the name for this solution.
Those who adhere to this solution accept the Novus Ordo hierarchy as
the Catholic hierarchy, and accept Vatican II and all of the official
reforms made in consequence of Vatican II. They have been granted the
right by the modernists to retain the John XXIII Mass, and to operate a
seminary and institute according to more or less pre-Vatican II lines.
Their solution, then, is to adhere to tradition under the auspices of
and in obedience to the Novus Ordo hierarchy. Their adherence to
tradition, therefore, is not seen as a defense of the Faith against
modernists, but rather as a preference, something like the High Church
in the Anglican sect. It should be of no surprise, then, that they
invite well-known Novus Ordo potentates ( like suit-and-tie-at-Vatican
II Ratzinger ) to say Mass for them.
B. The Lefebvrist Solution
The Lefebvrist solution, simply stated, is this: to recognize the
authority of John Paul II, but not to follow him in his errors.
Although it is very difficult to pin down the Lefebvrists to a
permanent and somewhat coherent statement of position, their activity
and statements taken collectively produce the above description.
Archbishop Lefebvre was insistent that all within the Society of Saint
Pius X regard John Paul II as pope, and purged from the Society
everyone who publicly held that he was not. He always dealt with the
Roman modernists as if they had authority, seeking from them approval
for his Society. He saw as the solution for the modernist crisis a
popular traditional movement which would, in every diocese of the
world, clamor for traditional priests, and reject modernist ones. He
surmised that the sedevacantist solution would wreck such a popular
movement, since he thought that saying John Paul II was not the pope
was too much for the average person to bear.
To the obvious obedience problem which his position posed, Archbishop
Lefebvre replied that no authority, including that of the pope, has the
right to tell us to do something wrong. But the Novus Ordo is wrong.
Therefore the pope cannot oblige us to accept the Novus Ordo. This
reasoning led to the need to sift the Novus Ordo for Catholicism. Like
the man panning for the grains of gold hidden in the mud, so the
Catholic had to sift Paul VI’s and John Paul II’s magisterium and
decrees for grains of the true faith. Whatever turned up traditional
would be accepted, whatever modernist, rejected. And since Archbishop
Lefebvre was the most prominent of those adhering to tradition, his
word became the proximate norm of belief and obedience for hundreds of
priests and tens of thousands of Catholics. Thus John Paul II’s
supposed authority was not sufficient to move the minds and wills of
Catholics faithful to tradition, but had to be augmented by Archbishop
Lefebvre’s approval. This role of sifter which the Society acquired was
jealously guarded, and anyone who dared to ignore it was considered a
subversive and ultimately expelled.
To the steaming hot question of whether the Novus Ordo is Catholic,
Archbishop Lefebvre and his followers have given answers that please
both sides. It is very difficult to tell what they think about it.
During the “hot summer” of 1976, Archbishop Lefebvre referred to the
New Mass as a “bastard mass” and to Vatican II as a schismatic council,
and the Conciliar Church as a schismatic church. On the other hand,
they have been very careful to say that the New Mass is not
intrinsically evil, and that all of the new sacraments are certainly
valid. This line of reasoning indicates that they see a necessity that
the Novus Ordo be considered intrinsically good and valid, since they
understand that it is impossible that the Catholic Church produce evil
or invalid rites. This insistence that the new rites be good and valid
shows that they really do see the Novus Ordo as the Catholic Faith.
Despite this, they make statements which are completely incompatible
with the position that the Novus Ordo is the Catholic Faith. For
example, on the occasion of the consecrations of 1988, they issued the
following statement, signed by Fr. Schmidberger and many superiors of
their group: “We have never wished to belong to this system which calls
itself the Conciliar Church, and identifies itself with the Novus Ordo
Missae...The faithful indeed have a strict right to know that the
priests who serve them are not in communion with a counterfeit
church...” But is not John Paul II the head of this counterfeit
“church” which identifies itself with the Novus Ordo Missae? Are we to
conclude that they are not in communion with John Paul II? If not, then
why do they insist that he is the pope? How can you not be in communion
with the pope?
They feel that they save indefectibility by recognizing the Novus Ordo
hierarchy as the Catholic hierarchy, and by recognizing Vatican II and
its reforms as only extrinsically bad, i.e., subject to poor
interpretation or in some way misleading. One of them recently said in
a letter to benefactors: “That is why we insist on recognizing the
Papacy and the hierarchy despite the fact that we do not at all feel
ourselves one with them”. This sentence is most descriptive of their
position, which combines two things which are intrinsically
incompatible, i.e., to recognize John Paul II as pope, but not to be
one with him in the same church. The reader must understand that the
doings and sayings of the Lefebvrists over the years have not, to say
the least, followed a consistent line, and that it is, therefore,
difficult to determine exactly what they think. By applying a certain
hermeneutic, however, I think that it is fair to say that they regard
John Paul II to be at the head of two churches, the one the Catholic
Church, the other the Conciliar Church. As head of the Catholic Church,
they are loyal to him; as head of the Conciliar Church they oppose him.
It was ultimately Archbishop Lefebvre who decided what was Catholic in
John Paul II’s decrees, and what was conciliar, and therefore what was
to be accepted, and what was to be rejected. Now that he has passed
away, there does not seem to be any clear figure emerging who will be
able to harness the loyalties of their followers the way the Archbishop
did, a loyalty which is essential to their unity.
C. The Sedevacantist Solution
The fundamental principle of this solution is that it is impossible to
identify the Novus Ordo and the Catholic Church. It is impossible, they
say, because of the indefectibility of the Church in matters of faith,
morals, worship and discipline. If one admits that the Novus Ordo
changes in these matters proceed from the Catholic Church, then one
must admit that the Catholic Church has defected. For these changes
substantially contradict the faith, morals, worship and discipline of
the Catholic Church. But it is impossible that the Catholic Church
defect. Therefore it is impossible that these changes proceed from the
Catholic Church. Therefore it is impossible that those who have enacted
these changes (viz. John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul I, & John Paul
II) enjoy the jurisdiction of the Catholic Church, the mission from
Christ to rule the faithful. If they did enjoy this jurisdiction, they
would have enjoyed infallibility in these matters, as it is impossible
for this authority to teach something false or to prescribe something
sinful for the Church. The sedevacantist therefore insists that one
cannot regard the modernist hierarchy as the Catholic hierarchy, since
otherwise one would be associating heresy, sacrilege, invalid
sacraments, error, and sinful laws with the Immaculate Spouse of
Christ, making absurd the words of Christ, “he who hears you, hears
Me”. In a word, the sedevacantist position is that the modernist
hierarchy cannot possess the Catholic authority which they claim to
possess, because the Catholic authority is preserved by the assistance
of the Holy Ghost from doing what these modernists have done.
The obvious objection to this position from a non-sedevacantist is that
the mass defection of the hierarchy creates a state of universal
vacancy of the sees, and thus destroys the visibility of the Church.
The sedevacantist replies that the vacancy of the papal or episcopal
see is not incompatible with the visibility of the Church, as the
Church remains visible during the vacancies which have occurred at the
death of every incumbent. While the length of the vacancy certainly
puts the Church in turmoil, there is nothing intrinsically contrary to
the nature of the Church in the vacancy of the see. He would further
respond that to identify the modernists with the Catholic hierarchy
does nothing for the visibility of the Catholic Church, but rather
simply maintains the visibility of a heretical church. In other words,
indefectibility is not saved by a theory which identifies the modernist
hierarchy with the Catholic Church, but rather is destroyed by such a
theory. For the Faith, they would argue, is much more important than
the visibility of the structure of the Church, i.e., there is a
dependence of the visibility of the Church on the Faith of the Church,
and therefore it is not sufficient for the Church’s visibility that
merely any structure be visible, but rather a structure which professes
the Catholic Faith. To have some visible organization which does not
profess the Catholic Faith may be a visible organization, but it is not
the Catholic Church.
Some sedevacantists hold to the materialiter/formaliter theory which
simply states that although the modernist hierarchy does not enjoy
jurisdiction, the formal aspect of authority, they do, nevertheless,
carry on the material succession of the Roman and episcopal sees. The
holders of this theory would therefore say that although John Paul II
is not the pope, he is nonetheless in possession of a valid election
which puts him in a position to become the pope, should he remove the
obstacles to his reception of the authority. The obstacle to the
acceptance of papal authority is his adherence to Vatican II, which, if
accepted, would place an essential disorder in the Catholic Church,
inasmuch as Vatican II contradicts the teaching of the Church. He is
also, they would add, in a position to have the election removed from
him by some authoritative act, for example, by a conclave of Catholic
cardinals, or even, à la rigueur, a council of a few
jurisdictional bishops, however small it may be. This theory, they say,
saves both the indefectibility of the Church in matters of faith,
morals, worship and discipline, and the permanence of the hierarchy of
the Church inasmuch as it calls for its material continuity through the
crisis.
Then we have the absolute sedevacantist, who says that due to the
public profession of heresy, manifested both by word and by deed, John
Paul II and the Novus Ordo hierarchy in general have publicly defected
from the Catholic Faith, and have therefore tacitly resigned from their
offices, in accordance with at least the spirit of Canon 188, no. 4.
Others invoke Pope Paul IV’s Cum ex Apostolatus, which states that even
if a heretic should be elected to the papacy by the unanimous consent
of the Cardinals, and even if he should have in appearance acceded to
the papacy he would still not be the pope.
Critique of the Various Systems
A. Fundamental Principles.
1. The Novus Ordo is either Catholic
or it is non-Catholic, but it cannot be both.
The Catholic Faith does not admit of degrees. It is by nature integral,
since it proceeds from the authority of God and is believed on the
authority of God. It therefore cannot admit of exceptions. If there is
the slightest taint of heresy in a doctrinal or moral teaching, in
worship, or in discipline, then it is not Catholic.
The practice of the Church has always been the same, as is shown by the
unanimous teaching of the Fathers, who were wont to hold as outside
Catholic communion, and alien to the Church, whoever would recede in
the least degree from any point of doctrine proposed by her
authoritative Magisterium. (Pope Leo XIII, Satis Cognitum).
To somehow predicate both Catholic and non-Catholic of the Novus Ordo
would be an absurd contradiction, not to mention blasphemy. And it
should be understood here that by the term “Novus Ordo”, I mean that
system — for it is an ordo, an order — of doctrines, moral teachings,
worship and discipline which is the product of Vatican II and the
post-Vatican II reforms.
2. If the Novus Ordo is Catholic, it
must be accepted; but if it is not Catholic, it must be rejected; there
is no middle ground.
The Novus Ordo has been promulgated with the full authority of what is
said to be “the Catholic Church”. No Catholic could therefore assume to
disregard these teachings, worship, and discipline. There is,
furthermore, no reason to resist the changes of Vatican II if they are
Catholic. If its teachings, worship, and discipline are Catholic, then
the belief and observance of these things are causative of the
salvation of our souls. But if you can save your soul in the Novus
Ordo, why go to the bother of retaining the traditional? The adherence
to tradition in this case would be motivated by nostalgia or
preference, and would in no way be justified if it were against the
will of the hierarchy. On the other hand, if the Novus Ordo is a
substantial change of the Church’s doctrines, worship, and discipline,
it is obvious that the Catholic must fight it as he would have fought
Arianism or Protestantism, preferring death to compromise.
3. It is impossible to recognize the
authority of the pope without at the same time recognizing the
prerogatives of his authority.
Papal authority is infallible in teaching faith and morals, even in the
exercise of the ordinary universal magisterium, and is infallible in
matters of worship and discipline, inasmuch as it cannot prescribe
anything sinful, heretical, or harmful to souls in these matters. The
recognition of papal authority in Paul VI or John Paul II involves
automatically the recognition that Vatican II is free from doctrinal
error, and that the Novus Ordo liturgy and sacraments, as well as the
1983 Code of Canon Law contain no doctrinal error nor anything which is
sinful or harmful to souls. The worst that could be said about these
things, if they are admitted to have proceeded from true papal
authority, is that they may be imprudent, perhaps less aesthetic, or in
some way extrinsically repugnant. They must be admitted to be
intrinsically Catholic, perfect, and conducive to eternal salvation.
Pope Pius VI declared “false, rash, scandalous, pernicious, offensive
to pious ears, injurious to the Church and to the Spirit of God, by
Whom it is ruled, at least erroneous,” the proposition that the Church
could prescribe some discipline which would be false or harmful (Denz.
1578). Pope Pius IX excoriated those who would recognize his authority
on the one hand, but ignore his discipline on the other:
What good is it to proclaim aloud the dogma of the supremacy of St.
Peter and his successors? What good is it to repeat over and over the
declarations of faith in the Catholic Church and of obedience to the
Apostolic See when actions give the lie to these fine words? Moreover,
is not rebellion rendered all the more inexcusable by the fact that
obedience is regarded as a duty? Again, does not the authority of the
Holy See extend, as a sanction, to the measures which We have been
obliged to take, or is it enough to be in communion of faith with this
See without adding the submission of obedience, — a thing which cannot
be maintained without damaging the Catholic Faith? In fact, Venerable
Brothers and beloved Sons, it is a question of recognizing the power
(of this See), even over your churches, not merely in what pertains to
faith, but also in what concerns discipline. He who would deny this is
a heretic; he who recognizes this and obstinately refuses to obey is
worthy of anathema. ( Pope Pius IX, Quae in Patriarchatu, Sept. 1,
1876, to the clergy and faithful of the Chaldean rite)
These principles now stated, let us proceed to the critique of the
various systems.
B. Application of Principles to the
Various Systems
1. The Ecclesia Dei Solution.
From the forgoing principles, the reader will easily determine that
this is not a solution at all. Since they have accepted the Novus Ordo
as Catholic, they have reduced their adherence to tradition to a
“nostalgia trip”. They have become a High Church within an extremely
Broad Church, one that even admits of the worship of snakes, of Shiva,
of the Great Thumb and Buddha, the praise of heresiarchs such as Martin
Luther, not to mention topless female lectors. Indeed the name which
ought to be given to this idea is the Ecclesia Diaboli solution. But
one thing must be said in favor of those who follow this, and that is
that they are at least consistent and logical in their thinking,
inasmuch as they see that one cannot accept John Paul II as pope and at
the same time ignore his doctrine and disciplinary authority. But it is
absolutely deplorable that these people could permit themselves to be
so blind so as to be in communion, i.e., in the same church as the
likes of these modernists, whom Saint Pius X said “ought to be beaten
with fists”.
2. The Lefebvrist Solution. If
we accept as basically accurate the description given above of their
position, namely that they see John Paul II as the head of two
churches, the one Catholic, the other Conciliar, then it is immediately
evident that their position involves labyrinthic contradictions from
the point of view of Catholic ecclesiology. In the first place, they
somehow see the Novus Ordo as both Catholic and non-Catholic, and for
this reason they “sift” its teachings and disciplines in order to glean
from the rotten mass whatever happens to be Catholic in it. They
therefore associate the Novus Ordo with the Catholic Church. They
consider the Novus Ordo hierarchy to be the Catholic hierarchy, as
having the authority of Christ to teach, rule, and sanctify the
faithful. Yet at the same time they are excommunicated by this very
authority, since they act as though it does not exist, going so far as
to consecrate bishops in defiance of a direct “papal” order.
To illustrate this confusion, let me cite an issue (August 1991) of The
Angelus, which is their official organ, in which we read these alarming
words:
The Church abandoned the protective tradition of Christ. The Church
abandoned the Mass, the Sacraments, the teaching of sound doctrine in
schools, even the prayer to St. Michael to protect us from “the
wickedness and the snares of the devil.”
While the author may have merely expressed his thoughts improperly,
nevertheless, as it stands, this sentence explicitly declares the
defection of the Catholic Church.
In the same issue, we read these words with equal alarm on the
editorial page
That the Holy Father refuses them [the bishops consecrated by Abp.
Lefebvre] jurisdiction and consequently the authority to govern a
portion of the flock is certainly unfortunate. But it is hardly more
than accidental with respect to their more fundamental role in
preserving the Faith and the Sacraments in the Church, especially when
the false notion of collegiality has effectively paralyzed or destroyed
the exercise of authority and hierarchy in the Church.
Such a statement reduces the apostolic mission of the Church, confided
to Saint Peter, to something “hardly more than accidental”. But it is
this very authority, and the legitimate possession and transmission
thereof, which makes the Catholic Church Catholic. It is the form of
the Catholic Church, i.e., that by which it is what it is. Nothing
could be more substantial to the Catholic Church than this authority.
It should be furthermore pointed out that to exercise one’s power of
orders without the approval of the hierarchy of the Catholic Church is
a very grave mortal sin, and smacks of schism when done in a systematic
and permanent fashion. One may only lay claim to the principle of
Ecclesia supplet when there is doubt as to whether one has
jurisdiction; to use this principle against the very authority which
possesses this jurisdiction makes a shambles of the whole Catholic
Church. It is to sink into Protestantism, where each minister gets his
power “directly from God”. Why have a hierarchy, why have jurisdiction,
if everyone can decide that he has a right to exercise his orders on
his own assumption that the Church supplies it directly to him? In such
a case, the hierarchy would be purely accidental, effectively what
Protestant ministers are to Protestant belief, worship, and sacraments.
The Lefebvrist position is a completely inconsistent position, and it
makes mincemeat of the indefectibility of the Catholic Church, since it
identifies with the Catholic Church the doctrinal and disciplinary
defection of Vatican II and its subsequent reforms. For if these are
not a defection, then why are they resisting them? If these are not a
defection, then what would possibly justify the consecration of four
bishops in defiance of the order of that person whom they say is the
representative of Christ on earth? The only thing which justifies the
position of the “traditionalists” in their systematic refusal of
Vatican II and its reforms is the fact that these reforms are not
Catholic, and lead to the destruction of souls. But if they are not
Catholic, then those who have promulgated them cannot possibly be
bearers of Catholic authority, since, if they were, they would have
been incapable of promulgating such a thing for the Catholic Church.
Hence the Lefebvre group is in the impossible position of resisting the
authority of the Catholic Church in matters of doctrine, discipline,
and worship, which are the effects of the three essential functions of
the Catholic hierarchy, i.e., the function of teaching, ruling and
sanctifying, and which are the basis of the threefold unity of the
Catholic Church, the unity of faith, the unity of government, and the
unity of communion. To resist the Catholic Church in these matters is a
spiritual suicide, since adherence to the Catholic Church is necessary
for salvation. If it is permissible to resist the Church in doctrine,
discipline and worship, then in what is the Church to be obeyed? What
is the authority of Saint Peter, if it can be ignored in these matters?
This “solution” therefore violates all three of the principles which I
enunciated above, for (1) they hold that the Novus Ordo is a type of
mixture of Catholic and non-Catholic; (2) they hold that although the
Novus Ordo is intrinsically Catholic, one may still resist it and
reject it, and (3) they recognize the authority of John Paul II, but at
the same time reject the prerogatives of his authority. In this last
matter they are unfortunately likened to Gallicans, Jansenists, and
other eastern rite sects who did exactly the same thing, i.e., who
“filtered” the doctrines and decrees of the Roman Pontiffs according to
their liking.
Thus, while I think that those who are involved in the Lefebvre group
are of good will and desire wholeheartedly the good of the Church, they
nevertheless are laboring under some grave speculative and practical
errors. They are also involved in deep inconsistency, and it is of
little wonder that there are reportedly many crypto-sedevacantists
among them, as well as Ecclesia Dei sympathizers.
3. The Sedevacantist Solution.
There is a very serious problem with the materialiter/formaliter
theory: a Catholic cannot hold it. By stating that there is, somehow, a
separation between a popes office as Vicar of Christ and the
functioning of his jurisdiction, the Church has taught:
Pope Pius IX, Vatican I, (Denz. 1827): " If anyone thus speaks, that the Roman
Pontiff has only the office of inspection or direction, but not the
full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the universal church... let
him be anathema."
Pope Pius IX, Vatican I, (Denz. 1829): "... We renew the definition of
the Ecumenical Council of Florence, by which all the faithful of Christ
must believe that the Apostolic See and the Roman Pontiff hold the
primacy over the whole world... Furthermore We teach and declare that
the Roman Church, by disposition of the Lord, holds the sovereignty of
ordinary power over all others, and that this power of jurisdiction of
the Roman Pontiff, which is truly episcopal, is immediate.... This is
the doctrine of Catholic truth from which no one can deviate and keep
his faith and salvation."
Pope Pius IX, Vatican I (Denz. 1824): "Therefore, whoever succeeds
Peter in this chair, he according to the institution of Christ himself,
holds the primacy over the whole Church."
So, you see, one cannot separate the
office of pope from his authority to govern as pope. The best
“explanation” for the present situation, therefore, is offered only by
the position of the absolute sedevacantist.
While sedevacantism maintains all of the essential elements of the
Church’s indefectibility, it is nonetheless at a loss as to how to
explain the mystery of the iniquity of the Novus Ordo, that is, how the
prolonged vacancy of the Apostolic See will ultimately serve the glory
of God, and how the Church will one day overcome the terrible problem.
But in asserting that the Apostolic See is vacant, sedevacantism will
not attempt to assert contradictory things: either (1) that the Novus
Ordo religion and the Catholic faith are the same thing, (the
contradiction of the Ecclesia Dei adherents), or (2) that the Catholic
Church has promulgated teachings, rites and disciplines which are
contrary to faith and harmful to souls.
The point of departure for the sedevacantist is the principle that
there is a substantial difference between the Novus Ordo and the
Catholic Faith. This difference is most evident in the virtual
word-for-word contradiction between Dignitatis Humanae and Quanta Cura,
but is also plain for all to see in the New Mass and sacraments, the
1983 Code of Canon Law, the new disciplines, the new catechisms, the
new ordinary universal magisterium. These two religions are
incompatible, and cannot coexist in the same church. But if the Novus
Ordo is substantially different from the Catholic Faith, they reason,
then it cannot be Catholic. But if it is not Catholic, they further
reason, then it is impossible that such a thing be promulgated by the
authority of the Church, since the authority of the Church cannot err
in such matters as doctrine, worship, and discipline. Therefore, they
conclude, it is impossible that those who promulgate the Novus Ordo
have the authority of the Catholic Church. It is therefore impossible
that John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul I, or John Paul II be popes.
These principles which have led to this conclusion are absolutely
ironclad. They are supported either by philosophy or the teaching of
the Church. They are unassailable, and do logically lead to their
conclusion. The indefectibility of the Church is thus saved in this
system, since it refuses to associate with the Immaculate Spouse of
Christ this abomination of modernism which is the work of the devil.
But then where is the visible Church? It is realized in those who
publicly adhere to the Catholic Faith, and who at the same time look
forward to the election of a Roman Pontiff. Sedevacantism does not
intrinsically alter the nature of the Catholic Church, but leaves to
the Providence of God the restoration of order. Those systems, on the
other hand, which are fearful of cutting themselves off from the
modernist hierarchy for their inability to see a solution without it,
actually combine the Catholic Church with the defection of modernism,
which are two things absolutely incompatible, as incompatible as God
and the devil. Those systems cannot possibly be correct which recognize
the papacy of conciliar “popes”. Sedevacantism may lead you to mystery,
but it does not lead you to contradiction.
Conclusion
As stated earlier, the fundamental notion of the indefectibility of the
Catholic Church is that it must endure until the end of time with the
essential nature and qualities with which Christ endowed it at its
foundation. The Church’s most important essential quality is its Faith,
and it is for the Faith that the visible structure exists. If the Novus
Ordo is Catholic, then there is no problem of defection, and it makes
no sense to carry on the traditional movement. If the Novus Ordo is not
Catholic, then it does involve defection, and it would be blasphemous
to in any way combine the Catholic Church and the Novus Ordo. There is
no possible third way, just as there is no possible substantial
alteration, augmentation or diminution of the deposit of revelation.
The Novus Ordo is either Catholic or it is not. One must firmly hold
that it is not Catholic, and therefore hold that any system which
claims that the Novus Ordo has been given to us by the authority of
Christ to be objectively blasphemous and ruinous of the Church’s
indefectibility.
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