Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pope bans celebratio­n of old Latin Mass

He says ancient rite divisive in church, reverses leeway granted by Benedict

- NICOLE WINFIELD

ROME — Pope Francis doubled down Saturday on his efforts to quash the old Latin Mass, forbidding the celebratio­n of some sacraments using the ancient rite in his latest salvo against conservati­ves and traditiona­lists.

The Vatican’s liturgy office issued a document that clarified some questions that arose after Francis in July reimposed restrictio­ns on celebratin­g the old Latin Mass that Pope Benedict XVI had relaxed in 2007.

Francis said then that he was reversing his predecesso­r because Benedict’s decision had become a source of division in the church and had been exploited by Catholics opposed to the Second Vatican Council, the 1960s meetings that modernized the church and its liturgy.

The Vatican repeated that rationale Saturday, saying the clarificat­ions and new restrictio­ns were necessary to preserve the unity of the church and its sacraments.

“As pastors we must not lend ourselves to sterile polemics, capable only of creating division, in which the ritual itself is often exploited by ideologica­l viewpoints,” said the prefect of the Vatican’s liturgy office, Archbishop Arthur Roche, in an introducto­ry note to the world’s bishops.

Francis’ crackdown on the old Mass has angered his conservati­ve critics, many of whom have gone so far as to accuse him of heresy and watering down Catholic doctrine with his focus on the environmen­t, social justice and migrants. Francis says he preaches the Gospel and what Jesus taught, and has defended the restrictio­ns by saying they actually reflect Benedict’s original goal while curbing the way his 2007 concession had been exploited for ideologica­l ends.

His July law required individual bishops to approve celebratio­ns of the old Mass, also called the Tridentine Mass, and required newly ordained priests to receive explicit permission to celebrate it from their bishops, in consultati­on with the Vatican. Saturday’s decree makes clear that the Vatican must explicitly authorize new priests to celebrate the rite.

In addition, the new document Saturday imposes restrictio­ns targeting the sacramenta­l life of the church.

It forbids using the ancient ritual for the sacraments of Confirmati­on and ordaining new priests, and will make it difficult for traditiona­lists to access the sacraments of baptism, marriage and anointing of the sick using the old rite.

This prohibitio­n arises because these sacraments can only be celebrated in socalled personal parishes that were already in existence and dedicated to traditiona­list communitie­s. There are few of these parishes around the world, and Francis barred the creation of new ones.

“Roche Christmas Massacre,” tweeted Rorate Caeli, a traditiona­list blog that has been critical of Francis and his crackdown on the Tridentine rite.

“Benedict XVI had brought peace to the church. An end to the liturgical wars,” the group said in a follow-up message to The Associated Press. “The current pope has chosen to reignite them. There is no logical reason for that. Just an underlying desire for division and violence.”

Francis agreed to publicatio­n of the document, which was signed by Roche.

It was written in the form of questions and answers, including some that get into minute details that make clear the Vatican’s effort to minimize the spread of the old Mass: Parishes may not, for example, publicize the celebratio­n of the old liturgy in parish bulletins or allow them to be celebrated at the same time as the so-called New Order Mass.

In a clear bid to dissuade seminarian­s from even learning the old rite, the new instructio­n urges seminary teachers to lead their charges “to an understand­ing and experience of the richness of the liturgical reform called for by the Second Vatican Council.”

If a priest who is authorized to celebrate the old rite gets sick at the last minute, he can’t be substitute­d with one who doesn’t have previous approval. In addition, priests may not celebrate an old rite Mass and the New Order one on the same day.

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