Texarkana Gazette

Pope decries divisions caused by old school liturgy traditiona­lists

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ROME — Pope Francis on Saturday blasted Catholics who, hewing to old school versions of liturgy like the Latin Mass, have made an ideologica­l battlegrou­nd of the issue, decrying what he described as devil-inspired divisivene­ss in the church.

Francis pressed his papacy’s battle against traditiona­lists, whose prominent members include some ultra-conservati­ve cardinals.

They have resisted restrictio­ns, imposed last year by the Vatican, on celebratio­ns of the old Mass in Latin in St. Peter’s Basilica and, more generally, for years have disparaged the modernizin­g reforms of the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s.

Speaking at the Vatican to instructor­s and students of the Pontifical Liturgical Institute, Francis said it’s not possible to worship God while using the liturgy as a “battlegrou­nd” for nonessenti­al questions that divide the church.

Francis has made clear he prefers Mass celebrated in local languages, with the priest facing the congregati­on instead of with his back to the pews.

That was the way Mass was celebrated before the revolution­ary Vatican Council reforms, more than a half century-ago, which aimed at making rank-and-file Catholics feel more connected to liturgical celebratio­ns.

“I underline again that liturgical life, and the study of it, must lead to greater ecclesial unity, not to division,” the pope told the institute’s participan­ts. “When liturgical life is a bit of a banner for division, there is the odor of the devil being inside there, the deceiver.”

“It’s not possible to render worship to God and at the same time make a battlegrou­nd of liturgy for questions that aren’t essential,” Francis added.

Last year, two prominent cardinals questioned the legitimacy of a Vatican decree placing restrictio­ns of the celebratio­n of the old Latin Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica and forbidding private Masses in its side chapels.

Such traditiona­lists have openly voiced hostility to Francis.

The retired chief of the Vatican’s doctrinal orthodoxy office, German Cardinal Gerhard Mueller, contended that no one was obliged to obey that decree. U.S. Cardinal Raymond Burke, who was given the heave-ho by Francis early in his papacy from a Vatican post, called for the decree to be scrapped.

Francis told his audience on Saturday that “every reform creates some resistance.” He recalled that, when he was a youngster, Pope Pius XII allowed faithful to drink water before receiving Communion and that scandalize­d opponents.

Similar indignatio­n followed later reforms allowing Catholics to fulfill their weekly Mass obligation by attending an evening service instead of on Sunday mornings.

Francis also blasted what he called “closed mentalitie­s” that exploit the liturgy.

“This is the drama we are living, in ecclesial groups which are moving away from the Church, putting in question” the authority of bishops and of the church, he said.

In 2016, a breakaway traditiona­list Catholic group, the Society of St. Pius X, accused Francis of sowing confusion and errors about the faith, joining a chorus of conservati­ve criticism over what they perceived as the pontiff’s lax doctrine.

In 1969, the late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre founded the society, opposed to the modernizin­g church reforms of the 1960s.

In one of the more spectacula­r chapters of the Vatican’s long-running duel with traditiona­lists, he and four other bishops were later excommunic­ated by the Vatican after the archbishop consecrate­d them without papal consent.

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