Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rift over liturgy still roils church

- NICOLE WINFIELD

VATICAN CITY — Fans of the old Latin Mass descended on Rome on Thursday for their annual pilgrimage, facing indifferen­ce to their cause, if not outright resistance, from none other than Pope Francis.

Ten years after Pope Benedict XVI passed a law allowing greater use of the Latin Mass, Francis seems to be doing everything possible to roll it back or simply pretend it never happened.

In recent weeks, he has affirmed with “magisteria­l authority” that the reforms of the 1960s allowing for Mass to be celebrated in the vernacular rather than Latin were “irreversib­le.” Last week he gave local bishops conference­s authority to oversee those translatio­ns, rather than the Vatican.

The moves underscore­d that the age-old liturgy wars in the Catholic Church are very much alive and provide a microcosm view of the battle lines that have been drawn between conservati­ve, traditiona­list Catholics and Francis ever since he declined to wear the traditiona­l mozzetta cape for his first public appearance as pontiff in 2013.

The indifferen­ce seems reciprocal.

At a conference Thursday marking the 10th anniversar­y of Benedict’s decree liberalizi­ng use of the Latin Mass, the meeting organizer, the Rev. Vincenzo Nuara, didn’t even mention Francis in his opening remarks. The current pope was mentioned in passing by the second speaker, and was not mentioned by the third.

The front-row participan­ts honoring retired pope Benedict and his 2007 decree were also telling: Cardinal Raymond Burke, a leading critic of the current pope whom Francis removed as the Vatican’s supreme court judge in 2014; Cardinal Gerhard Mueller, recently axed by Francis as the Vatican’s doctrine chief; and Cardinal Robert Sarah, appointed by Francis as head of the Vatican’s liturgy office but effectivel­y sidelined by his deputy.

Francis’ new law is a “pretty clear course correction from Pope Benedict’s line,” said the Rev. Anthony Ruff, associate professor of theology at Saint John’s University in Minnesota.

The program for the 10-year anniversar­y pilgrimage began with chanted hymn at the start of the conference and ended with vespers Thursday evening celebrated by Benedict’s longtime secretary, Monsignor Georg Ganswein. Also on tap were a religious procession through the streets of Rome and multiple Masses. Conspicuou­sly absent from the four-day program was an audience with Francis.

The current pope, though, let his thoughts be known during a recent speech to an Italian liturgical society. He said there was no need to rethink the decisions that led to the liturgy reforms from the Second Vatican Council, the 196265 meetings that modernized the Catholic Church.

“We can affirm with security and magisteria­l authority that the liturgical reforms are irreversib­le,” he said in one of his longest and most articulate speeches to date on the liturgy. It made no mention, in the text or the footnotes, of Benedict’s liturgical decree on the Latin Mass.

Nuara, the conference organizer, denied sensing any resistance to traditiona­lists from Francis, saying that the current pope recognizes all the good that the old liturgy has given the church.

Timothy O’Malley, director of the University of Notre Dame’s Center for Liturgy, said Francis’ main beef with Latin Mass afficionad­os is with those “who see that this form of the liturgy must win at the expense of” the Mass in the vernacular.

But he said he saw no indication that Francis would do away with Benedict’s decree liberalizi­ng use of the old rite, known by its Latin name Summorum Pontificum.

“He’ll continue to rail against those who think the (vernacular) Mass is invalid, but I don’t see him taking away Summorum Pontificum,” he said.

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