Rorate Caeli

Sacrosanctum Concilium: A Lawyer Examines the Loopholes

The following essay, a forensic look at SC written by an attorney, appeared in The Latin Mass magazine in 2005 and is republished here with permission of its author, Christopher Ferrara, Esq., of the American Catholic Lawyers Association. His conclusions were subsequently confirmed in Yves Chiron’s biography of Bugnini, where we learn that the latter, who was the chief compiler of SC, openly stated to his collaborators before the Council that he intended to push through a revolutionary agenda by describing it in harmless-sounding generalities. And with the recent publication of the first-ever biography of Michael Davies, Ferrara’s article also serves as a reminder of how much we owe that man. — PAK

For decades, traditionalists have listened to “conservatives” argue that the postconciliar devastation of the Roman Rite has nothing whatsoever to do with language of Sacrosanctum Concilium, the Second Vatican Council’s document on the sacred liturgy. (I shall refer to this document throughout as SC)

As we know, most “conservatives” are constitutionally incapable of recognizing that Vatican II opened the way to the greatest debacle in the history of the Catholic Church, producing a state of affairs which makes the Arian heresy look like a Catholic revival by comparison. To this day, the “conservatives” steadfastly maintain that Vatican II - with its peculiar “pastoral” purpose and its strangely fuzzy documents, the likes of which no other Council had ever produced - did not in any way cause the unprecedented ecclesial crisis which followed. Sure.

This denial of reality is why “conservatives” continue to insist that if only SC were implemented “as the Council intended,” why then we would have an “authentic reform of the liturgy” in the “true spirit of Vatican II.” But “conservatives” have little to say about Paul VI’s declarations in November 1969, echoed by John Paul II on the 25th anniversary of SC, that the New Mass is precisely what SC authorized and therefore precisely what the Council intended. This fact is very difficult for “conservatives” to acknowledge. For if both Paul VI and John Paul II agree that the provisions of SC warranted creation of a new vernacular rite of Mass, then the “conservatives” must either agree with the Popes’ reading of SC - in which case the “authentic reform” of the liturgy has already occurred - or they must accuse two Popes of erring gravely in their authoritative interpretation of a Conciliar document. Quite a quandary.

A few years ago, having grown tired of hearing the “conservative” line on SC, I did what I should have done long before: I sat down and read the document - line-by-line, word-by-word. It was a classic jaw-dropping experience. Anyone with a modicum of perspicuity can see (at least in retrospect) that SC was designed by its principal draftsman, Annibale Bugnini, to authorize a liturgical revolution, while giving the appearance of liturgical continuity. It is a nest of deadly ambiguities which the Council Fathers can only have approved in the confidence that the liturgical tradition of the Roman Rite could not possibly suffer a dramatic rupture, because it had never happened before.

A lawyer knows that the dangers in a contract from his client’s perspective lie not so much in what the terms of the contract provide as in what they permit the other party to do. The danger is in the loopholes. Quite simply, SC permits all manner of drastic things to be done to the Roman liturgy. It is one long collection of loopholes. If a lawyer entrusted with the task of protecting the Roman liturgy from harmful innovation had drafted this document, he would be guilty of gross malpractice.

It is amazing that anyone who claims to have read SC thoroughly could still maintain that its “true” interpretation precludes the liturgical innovations which have been inflicted upon us. Paul VI and John Paul II certainly did not think so. Neither did I, once I had actually studied the document instead of simply accepting the “conservative” line at face value. Ladies and gentlemen, we’ve been had. And so was the Council.

The following, then, is a brief discussion of what can be called the “conservative” and “liberal” norms of SC. This discussion does not pretend to be authoritative; it represents only a commonsensical analysis of the document from the perspective of a prudently skeptical reader, looking for loopholes and trying to figure out the real intention of its draftsman - in this case, Bugnini, who was also given the task of supervising SC’s implementation as Secretary of Paul VI’s Consilium.

Two Themes

I ask the reader to focus on the two themes of the SC which are apparent from the quoted provisions: (a) open-ended authorization for liturgical reform on what is potentially a vast scale, but without requiring that any particular reform of the liturgy be enacted or avoided; and (b) “democratization” of the liturgy by ceding effective liturgical control to the “ecclesiastical territorial authority” of each country, and the liturgy commissions to be established in each diocese. These two themes are couched in language which seems to inhibit the scope of potential reform in the light of tradition, but does so in a way which always admits of immediate exceptions to suit local needs, conditions and circumstances as determined by “territorial ecclesiastical authority,” subject only to Rome’s approval or ex post facto confirmation - which has rarely been withheld. The playing out of these two themes over the past 30 years has meant nothing less than what Msgr. Klaus Gamber (with Cardinal Ratzinger’s approbation) called “the real destruction of the Roman Rite,” with the consequent loss of unity of cult in the Western Church. The results speak for themselves.

The prudently skeptical reader of SC can readily see that SC is composed of both “conservative” and “liberal” norms, the latter serving to undermine and negate the former. In reading the “liberal” norms of SC, the reader will no doubt wonder how the Council Fathers, including the late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, could have been induced to approve such an open-ended document. As Msgr. Gamber observed in Reform of the Roman Liturgy: ”The Council Fathers, when publishing the Constitution on Sacred Liturgy, simply did not expect to see the avalanche they had started, crushing under it all traditional forms of liturgical worship, even the new liturgy they themselves had created . . .” [p. 21] As we have seen, today’s “conservatives” evince a similar blindness, even though they, unlike the Council Fathers, have had the benefit of seeing the document interpreted and implemented by two Popes, with manifestly disastrous results.

In retrospect we can now see quite clearly that the unprecedented language of SC permitted the unprecedented reforms which followed. Again, we were reminded of this fact by Pope John Paul II’s address on the 25th anniversary of SC, in which he praised the document and “the reforms which it has made possible,” noting that “the liturgical reform is the most visible fruit of the whole work of the Council.” As the Holy Father’s remarks should make clear, SC can no longer be made to serve any agenda but that of its drafters, which agenda has been carried out. Given the past 25 years of liturgical reform, all of it approved by the Holy See as consistent with SC, any search for an “authentic” interpretation of the document which differs from the Holy See’s constant reading of it must now be abandoned as quite pointless. If our Latin liturgical tradition is restored, it will not be restored under some newly discovered interpretation of SC.

The “Conservative” Norms

Art. 4 – “. . . Holy Mother Church holds all lawfully recognized rites to be of equal right and dignity; that she wishes to preserve them in the future and to foster them in every way.

Undoubtedly this norm went a long way toward persuading the Council Fathers to adopt SC, despite the swarm of “liberal” norms which follow in the document. Assuming SC is still operative, the traditionalists are certainly entitled to rely on this norm to support a return to the traditional liturgy by preserving and fostering the traditional rite of Mass, still untouched by the reform, in every way.

Art. 23 - “. . .[T]here must be no innovations unless the good of the Church genuinely and certainly requires them, and care must be taken that any new forms adopted should in some way grow organically from forms already existing . . .”

To say that there will be no innovations “unless” means, of course, that there will be innovations. This “conservative” norm introduces two unprecedented concepts into the liturgical discipline of the Church: “innovations” in the liturgy and the adoption of entirely “new forms” of liturgy, as opposed to the gradual, almost imperceptible liturgical refinements of the preceding centuries. The requirement that “any new forms adopted should in some way grow organically from already existing forms” opens the way to a new liturgy whose resemblance to the preceding immemorial form is minimal.

To follow the language of this “conservative” norm: Is not the Mass of Paul VI an “innovation” which he deemed to be “genuinely and certainly required” for the good of the Church; a “new form adopted” which grew “in some way” from the existing form of the Mass? At least that is how Pope Paul VI presented it to the faithful, citing this very norm in explanation.

Of course, this norm can also be given a strict interpretation, prohibiting any revisions to the preconciliar Mass whatsoever; and traditionalists are certainly entitled to promote this strict interpretation as against the “conservative” interpretation, which assumes the existence of some hypothetical “authentic reform” yet to be discovered. This assumes, of course, that SC is still an operative document. After all, now that two Popes have told us that SC has been faithfully implemented, why even discuss the document any further? The return to liturgical tradition need not even refer to SC, since SC has “merged” (to use a legal term) into the New Mass, so that replacement of the New Mass by restoration of the traditional liturgy would also be a replacement of SC.

Art. 36 - “. . . (1) The use of the Latin language, with due respect to particular law, is to be preserved in the Latin rites.”

The “conservatives” constantly argue that this norm has been “violated” by a “liberal faction” of reformers in the Church, and by some liberal bishops - by which they mean to say (but do not have the candor to say), two Popes and nearly the entire hierarchy.

But has Art. 36 really been violated by the postconciliar reforms? As two Popes have told us: not at all.

In the first place, the norm provides only that use of the Latin language is to be preserved, not the traditional Latin Mass or even the Roman Canon. More important, this qualified protection for the Latin liturgy is undermined by the phrase “due respect to particular law.” The framework of “particular law” erected by the following norms completely negated this “conservative” norm ab initio by permitting extended use of the vernacular in the Mass and adaptation of the liturgy to local customs and conditions, as deemed “useful” by “territorial ecclesiastical authority.”

Regarding this disastrous effect of SC, the omnipresent Bugnini declared in triumph:

“For four centuries all power has been reserved to the Holy See in liturgical matters (Canon 1257). The bishops’ role was limited to seeing that the liturgical laws were observed . . . The Constitution has broken down this centuries-old barrier. The Church is now in the process of restoring to the competent territorial authorities - the word ‘territorial’ is decidedly elastic - many problems pertaining to the liturgy, including . . . the introduction, the use and the limits to the use of the vernacular in certain rites.” [quoted in Pope Paul’s New Mass, by Michael Davies, at p. 25]

In 1964, only a year after SC was enacted, Pope Paul VI issued his motu proprio entitled Sacram Liturgiam. Article 9 of Sacram Liturgiam authorized all national hierarchies to approve vernacular translations of the Mass, subject only to Rome’s ex post facto approval, which was given in every case. So much for the “use of Latin” in the Roman liturgy. The “particular law” exception swallowed up this much-vaunted “conservative” norm within a year, as Bugnini clearly knew it would. Anyone who says that Article 36 of SC has been “violated” and the Council “disobeyed” by reason of the all-vernacular new liturgy has never read SC in its entirety, or is pretending that two Popes and nearly the entire hierarchy have not already shown us that SC authorizes (even if it does not mandate) Mass entirely in the vernacular.

Arts. 114-116 - “[114] . . . The treasury of sacred music is to be preserved and cultivated with great care.” [Art. 116] - “. . . other things being equal [Gregorian chant] should be given pride of place in liturgical services . . .”

The phrase “other things being equal” partially undermines the phrase “pride of place,” and the remaining provisions of SC (discussed below) complete the undermining by vesting “territorial ecclesiastical authority” with total control over the adaptation of church music to “local needs,” along with the rest of the liturgy.

The “Liberal” Norms

Art. 1 - “The sacred Council has set out to impart an ever-increasing vigor to the Christian life of the faithful; to adapt more closely to the needs of our age those institutions which are subject to change; to foster whatever we can to promote union among all those who believe in Christ . . . Accordingly, it sees cogent reasons for undertaking a reform . . . of the liturgy.”

This norm actually cites “Christian unity” and adapting Church institutions to the “needs of our age” - whatever that means - as “cogent reasons” for revising the immemorial and hitherto sacrosanct liturgy of the Roman Rite. That the Council authorized unspecified reforms to our 1,500 year-old rite of Mass for these reasons is almost incredible. It is reported that Paul VI later confided to Guitton that the new rite he had promulgated was specifically designed to resemble as closely as possible a Calvinist communion service, evidently with this norm in mind.

Art. 4 - “ . . . The Council also desires that, where necessary, the rites be revised carefully in the light of sound tradition, and that they be given new vigor to meet present-day circumstances and needs.

As Michael Davies has noted, the Council did not explain how a rite can be revised “in the light of tradition” when all tradition is against revision of our ancient rites, especially the rite of Mass.[*Note 2] Nor did the Council give the slightest indication of what are the “present day circumstances and needs” which would suggest a revision of the liturgy, as opposed to the “circumstances and needs” of any other time in Church history.

Art. 14 - “. . . In the restoration and promotion of the sacred liturgy the full and active participation by all the people is the aim to be considered before all else, for it is the primary and indispensable source from which the faithful are to derive the true Christian spirit.”

This norm exalts participation by the people above every other consideration in the Mass. Although this norm does not relate to liturgical revision as such, but rather to the “promotion and restoration” of the liturgy, its elevation to the paramount concern in the liturgy certainly impacts on those norms governing liturgical reform at Article 21, et seq. [*Note 1]

Art. 21 - “In order that the Christian people may more certainly derive an abundance of graces from the sacred liturgy, holy Mother Church desires to undertake with great care a general restoration of the liturgy itself. For the liturgy is made up of unchangeable elements divinely instituted, and of elements subject to change. These latter not only may be changed but ought to be changed with the passage of time, if they have suffered from the intrusion of anything out of harmony with the inner nature of the liturgy or have become less suitable. In this restoration both texts and rites should be drawn up so as to express more clearly the holy things which they signify.

The phrases “general restoration of the liturgy” and “texts and rites should be drawn up” imply that the “experts” to be “employed” under Article 25 are to undertake an unprecedented and completely unspecified wholesale revision of the Roman liturgy, “drawing up” new texts and rites as they see fit. This is precisely what the Consilium did, giving us a new Mass and rites for the other sacraments, all with the full approval of Pope Paul VI.

This norm clearly implies that the reason for the “general restoration” and the drawing up of new texts and rites is that the existing rites for the Mass and sacraments in the Roman Rite do not express clearly enough “the holy things which they signify.” It also suggests constant adaptation of the liturgy whenever any of its elements becomes “less suitable” - but “less suitable,” like all the other terms in SC, receives no definition whatsoever.

Art. 25 -The liturgical books are to be revised as soon as possible. Experts are to be employed on this task, and bishops from various parts of the world are to be consulted.”

This norm, for the first time in Church history, authorizes the simultaneous revision of all the liturgical books of the Roman Rite by unknown “experts,” without providing any specific guidelines whatsoever for their work. The “experts,” with the full approval of the Pope, quickly proceeded to do exactly what the Council had permitted with this open-ended license - revise all the liturgical books in consultation with the bishops of the world. The bishops then proceeded to ruin the Roman liturgy with the vernacular translations and other local adaptations they were empowered to make under the following norms of SC.

Art. 34 - ...“The rites should be distinguished by a noble simplicity. They should be short, clear, and free from useless repetitions. They should be within the peoples’ powers of comprehension, and normally should not require much explanation.

Does not this norm imply that the Damasian-Gregorian-Tridentine liturgy of 1,500 years’ standing - the Roman Rite’s greatest treasure - was too long and complicated and should be “simplified” in some completely unspecified manner? (This is not to mention the rites for the other sacraments.) What is meant by such terms as “noble simplicity,” “short” and “clear”? Which repetitions are “useless”? The Council defined absolutely nothing in this “time-bomb” of a norm; it simply delegated “experts” in Article 25 to interpret these terms after the Council.

Also, what was to be done to the Mass to bring it within the “peoples’ powers of comprehension,” given that Pius XII had taught only fifteen years earlier, in his clearly definitive encyclical Mediator Dei, that those who could not comprehend the Roman Missal could still actively and fruitfully participate at Mass by praying the rosary or engaging in other prayers and devotions? The Council did not answer this question either. The “experts” did answer it, by giving us the new, stripped-down, easily comprehended Mass of Paul VI.

Art. 36 (2) - “But since the use of the vernacular whether in the Mass, the administration of the sacraments, or in other parts of the liturgy, may frequently be of great advantage to the people, a wider use may be made of it, especially in [but not limited to!] readings, directives and in some prayers and chants . . . [I]t is for the competent territorial ecclesiastical authority mentioned . . . to decide whether, and to what extent, the vernacular language is to be used. Its decrees have to be approved, that is, confirmed, by the Apostolic See.”

This norm gave the bishops the power to introduce as much vernacular into the Mass as they liked, subject only to Rome’s confirmation after the fact. This norm is reflected in Article 9 of Sacram Liturgiam, under which Rome soon approved the all-vernacular national liturgies we now have, which shattered unity of liturgical cult in the Roman Rite.

Art. 38-40 - “[38] Provided that the substantial unity of the Roman rite is preserved, provision shall be made, when revising the liturgical books, for legitimate variations and adaptations to different groups, regions and peoples, especially [but, again, not limited to!] in mission countries. This should be borne in mind when drawing up the rites and determining rubrics. [39] Within the limits set by the typical editions of the liturgical books, it shall be for the competent territorial ecclesiastical authority to specify adaptations, especially in the case of the sacraments, the sacramentals, processions, liturgical language, sacred music, and the arts; but according to the fundamental norms laid down in this Constitution. [40] In some places and circumstances, however, an even more radical adaptation of the liturgy is needed . . .

These norms flung open the door to the winds of change in the Roman Rite. They authorized a complete transformation of the face of Catholic worship by “adaptation” of the liturgy - even radical adaptation - to suit local customs and preferences, as the bishops saw fit. They empowered the bishops to alter virtually every aspect of the liturgy, including the “liturgical language” to be used in celebrating Mass.

Has not the Holy See approved this radical transformation of the liturgy at every step of the way, according to the “fundamental norms” of SC? - norms which posed no real impediment to what Gamber called the “avalanche they [the Council Fathers] had started.”

Art. 40 (1), (2) - “. . . (1) The competent territorial ecclesiastical authority mentioned in Article 22:2, must in this matter, carefully and prudently consider which elements from the traditions and cultures of individual peoples might appropriately be admitted into divine worship. Adaptations which are considered useful or necessary should then be submitted to the Holy See, by whose consent they may be introduced. (2) To ensure that adaptations may be made with all the circumspection necessary, the Apostolic See will grant power to this same territorial ecclesiastical authority to permit and to direct, as the case requires, the necessary preliminary experiments over a determined period of time among certain groups suitable for the purpose.”

This norm clearly cedes to the bishops plenary authority to inculturate the liturgy in any way they deem “useful,” and even to experiment with various novelties, subject only to Rome’s approval - including an all-vernacular Mass. And has not Rome approved the innumerable resulting local adaptations of the liturgy?

Arts. 44-46 - “[44.] It is desirable that the competent territorial ecclesiastical authority... set up a liturgical commission to be assisted by experts in liturgical Science, sacred music, art and pastoral practice. As far as possible the commission should be aided by some kind of Institute for Pastoral Liturgy, consisting of people who are eminent in these matters, not excluding laymen if circumstances so demand. It will be the task of this commission, under the direction of the above-mentioned competent territorial ecclesiastical authority ... to regulate pastoral liturgical action throughout the territory. . . [45.] For the same reason every diocese is to have a commission on the sacred liturgy, under the direction of the bishop, for promoting the liturgical apostolate. [46.] In addition to the commission on sacred liturgy, every diocese, as far as possible, should have commissions for sacred music and sacred art.

These norms institutionalized an ongoing reform of the liturgy and ended unity of liturgical cult in the Roman Rite by decentralizing control of the liturgy, placing it into the hands of diocesan liturgical commissions, which are to include laymen. Are not these commissions, launched by SC, among the prime causes of the destruction of the Roman Rite and its replacement by a vernacular, inculturated liturgy, constantly being adapted to the “present-day circumstances and needs” referred to in Art. 4?

Art. 50 - “The rite of the Mass is to be revised in such a way that the intrinsic nature and purpose of its several parts, as well as the connection between them, may be more clearly manifested, and that devout and active participation by the faithful may be more easily achieved . . . For this purpose the rites are to be simplified, due care being taken to preserve their substance. Parts which with the passage of time came to be duplicated, or were added with little advantage, are to be omitted. Other parts which suffered loss through accidents of history are to be restored to the vigor they had in the days of the holy Fathers, as may seem useful or necessary ...”

How exactly does the traditional liturgy of the Roman Rite fail to manifest clearly the nature and purpose of its parts and the connection between them? Which parts of the Mass have been “added with little advantage” over the past 2,000 years? Which parts are “duplicated” - any part involving a repeated prayer or gesture, or only some repeated prayers or gestures? Which parts have “suffered loss” or must be restored to “vigor”? And what is the “substance” of the rites which should be preserved during all the revisions suggested, but not specified, by this norm?

The Council provided no answers to these questions. It simply turned the Roman liturgy over to the Article 25 “experts” for their decision, as approved by the Pope. The only standard given for their work is, incredibly, whatever “may seem useful or necessary”. The result, of course, was the Mass of Paul VI.

Art. 54 -A suitable place may be allotted to the vernacular in Masses which are celebrated with the people, especially in the readings and “the common prayer,” and also, as local conditions may warrant, in those parts which pertain to the people, according to the rules laid down in Article 36 of this Constitution... Wherever a more extended use of the vernacular in the Mass seems desirable, the regulation laid down in Article 40 of this Constitution is to be observed . . .”

This norm opened the way to “a more extended use of the vernacular” than simply the readings and “common prayer,” so long as it “seems” desirable to the “territorial ecclesiastical authority” under Article 40. Did not Rome, under this norm and the previously cited norms, and Sacram Liturgiam, which proceeded from these norms, soon approve the decision of each national hierarchy that it would be “desirable” to extend the vernacular to the entire Mass?

Art. 63 - “Because the use of the vernacular in the administration of the sacraments and sacramental can often be of very great help to the people, this use is to be extended according to the following norms: (a) In the administration of the sacraments and sacramental the vernacular may be used according to the norm of Article 36. The competent territorial ecclesiastical authority... shall forthwith prepare, in accordance with the new edition of the Roman Ritual, local rituals adapted linguistically and otherwise to the needs of the different regions. These rituals, on authentication by the Apostolic See, are to be followed in the regions in question...”

This norm opened the way to vernacular rites for the other sacraments to go along with the all-vernacular Mass, with both to be adapted to local customs and needs as the local bishops see fit.

Art. 81 - “Funeral rites should express more clearly the paschal character of Christian death, and should correspond more closely to the circumstances and traditions found in various regions. This also applies to the liturgical color to be used.”

This norm suggests the very inculturated funeral Masses we see today, in which a white-vested priest assures us that the departed soul is a saint who will have a glorious resurrection like Our Lord’s.

Art. 107 -The liturgical year is to be revised so that the traditional customs and discipline of the sacred seasons shall be preserved or restored to suit the conditions of modern times . . . If certain adaptations are necessary because of local conditions, they are to be made in accordance with the provisions of Articles 39 and 40.”

This norm authorized revision of the liturgical calendar but provided absolutely no guidance on how it was to be done. It opened the way to destruction of the traditional liturgical calendar and the cycle of readings of over 1,300 years standing - to “suit the conditions of modern times.” And, like all other aspects of the liturgy, the liturgical year was subjected to local variations under Article 40. Was not the loss of the traditional liturgical year, an integral part of our liturgical homeland, a prime cause of the confusion and loss of faith after the Council, as Gamber notes in Reform of the Roman Liturgy?

Art. 119 – “In certain countries, especially in mission lands, there are people who have their own musical tradition, and this plays a great part in their religious and social life. For this reason their music should be held in proper esteem and a suitable place is to be given to it, not only in forming their religious sense but also in adapting worship to their native genius. . .

This norm permits the introduction of folk music into the sacred liturgy of the Mass, and the “adaptation” of the Mass to such music, in any country with “its own musical tradition” and “native genius.” Is the “folk Mass” not exactly what this norm produced in practice? With good reason did Pope St. Pius X forbid any secular music whatsoever at Holy Mass. This norm casts off that wise proscription and invites the songs of the world into the sacred liturgy.

Art. 120 – “ . . . But other instruments [besides the traditional pipe organ] also may be admitted for use in divine worship, in the judgment and with the consent of the competent territorial authority...

This norm opened the way to the introduction of pianos, guitars and other profane instruments into the sacred liturgy, as long as the newly-empowered “competent territorial authority” judges them acceptable. Has not the result been “lounge music” during Holy Mass? This norm casts off the explicit proscriptions on the use of profane musical instruments such as guitars (as opposed to bowed instruments) which were found in the Holy See’s preconciliar instructions on sacred music, up to and including the pontificate of Pius XII.

Art. 123 – “ . . .The art of our own times from every race and country shall also be given free scope in the Church, provided it bring to the task the reverence and honor due to the sacred buildings and rites . . .”

This norm encouraged the intrusion of modern art into the sanctuary, including grotesquely distorted images of Our Lord and the detested felt banners. The foremost example of this is the utterly hideous “Resurrection of Christ” by Pericle Fazzini, which disfigures the stage of the Paul VI Audience Hall at the Vatican.

Art. 128 –The canons and ecclesiastical statutes which govern the provision of external things which pertain to sacred worship should be revised as soon as possible, together with the liturgical books . . . These laws refer especially to the worthy and well-planned construction of sacred buildings, the shape and construction of altars, the nobility, placing, and security of the Eucharistic tabernacle, the suitability and dignity of the baptistery, the proper ordering of sacred images, and scheme of decoration and embellishment. Laws which seem less suited to the reformed liturgy should be amended or abolished . . . In this matter, especially as regards the material and form of sacred furnishings and vestments. . . powers are given to territorial episcopal conferences to adapt such things to the needs and customs of their different regions.

Notice how this norm anticipates a massive liturgical upheaval, which Bugnini was already planning before the Council. This norm is a “catch-all” provision opening the way to an iconoclastic revision of every Church law regarding the externals of Catholic worship. This norm gave the territorial bishops’ conferences complete authority (subject only to Rome’s rubber stamp) to adapt all of the ancient, traditional externals to “the needs and customs of their different regions,” and to abolish all traditional tabernacles, altars, vestments, statues, church furnishings and church structures if they merely seem “less suited to the reformed liturgy” - which reformed liturgy was not even specified to begin with!

Do we not have today precisely what this norm permitted? - a liturgy nearly devoid of traditional sacred images, vestments, music and rubrics; the marble high altar replaced by a table because an old, ornate altar “seems less suited to the reformed liturgy” in the judgment of the bishops; the tabernacle relegated to the side of the sanctuary or to a different room altogether, under their authority to determine its “placing;” and the sanctuary itself subject to gutting at the architectural pleasure of each bishop, with the Holy See upholding the bishop’s decisions in every case.

Conclusion

No one who reads SC carefully in the light of our experience since the Council can deny that it constitutes a “blank check” for liturgical reform, with the amount to be filled in depending entirely upon who is wielding the pen. The few “conservative” norms which seem to limit the possibility of liturgical change are clearly overwhelmed by the far more numerous and pervasive “liberal” norms which create an almost unlimited potential for destruction of the liturgy.

Yet, except for restoring the prayer of the faithful in Article 53, SC does not actually mandate a single specific change in the text or rubrics of the traditional Order of Mass. This would appear to be the main reason the Council Fathers were induced to vote for the document, since it did not threaten any apparent harm to the Latin liturgical tradition. And it is also the reason neither the “conservatives” nor anyone else can determine “the authentic reform desired by the Council” from a reading of SC.

While SC opened the way to all manner of possible liturgical reforms, the simple truth of the matter is that it mandated no particular reform of the liturgy. SC is, quite simply, silent about what kind of reformed liturgy the Council Fathers had in mind, if indeed the Council majority shared any common conception at all about the matter. In practice, however, SC unquestionably served as the license for a vast project of liturgical reform and the ceding of effective control over the liturgy to the national hierarchies, with calamitous results.

The emergence of “conservative” demands for an “authentic reform” of the liturgy demonstrate that unless SC is reconsidered, along with the disastrous changes it engendered, the liturgical crisis in the Roman Rite will never end. The demands for “renewal” by liberals on the one hand, and for “authentic renewal” by conservatives on the other, will continue to revolve around this utterly problematical document so long as it continues to serve as a warrant for the liturgical-reformist mentality, which the Council unwittingly unleashed upon the Church.

The only way to restrain that mentality and restore liturgical sanity in the Roman Rite is full restoration of our Latin liturgical tradition—taken from us overnight, over half a century ago. 


[*Note 1: It must be acknowledge that this "before all else" is a mistranslation of what SC actually says. See Gregory DiPippo, "Historical Falsehoods about Active Participation: A Response to Dr Brant Pitre (Part 1)," New Liturgical MovementWednesday, December 18, 2024. -PAK]

[*Note 2: This statement, as it stands, is too exceptionless. Revisions have indeed always occurred; e.g., the Vexilla Regis, which is a beautiful moment in the pre-55 Mass of the Presanctified, was not present in the Roman rite as given in the Ordinale of Innocent III in 1200, and remained absent from other uses such as the Carmelite Rite; it was therefore added at some point. Rather, the question must be about what kind of revisions and what volume of them. In regard to both criteria, the postconciliar "reforms" were unprecedented and destructive of the Roman Rite. -PAK]

Vatican Blocks Continuity of Procedure of Beatification and Canonization of Argentine Bishop -- no new Satanellis

 One of the most shocking forced beatifications of the Francis pontificate was that of Bishop Angelelli, a terrorist-supporting Bishop from Argentina, who died in an automobile accident, but was deemed a martyr. He was so liberal, so cruel against orthodox Catholics, and so against any orthodox causes in his lifetime, that serious Catholics in Argentina mocked him by calling him "Satanelli" during his own lifetime.


Another extreme liberal bishop, Jorge Novak, of Quilmes, was also placed by Francis on a fast track to beatification and canonization. Thankfully, with the new pontificate, the fast tracking is being reexamined, and, in Novak's case, at least one serious impediment has been found: his lax conduct regarding the case of at least one abusive priest under his care.


The announcement of the Vatican derailment of the cause was made public yesterday by the local diocese:


Communiqué on the Cessation of the Canonical Cause for the Beatification and Canonization of the Servant of God Father Bishop Jorge Novak SVD, First Bishop of Quilmes (1976–2001)

A Giant Leap: The meaning of Cardinal Eijk’s Pontifical High Mass and the Rebirth of Dutch Catholicism


by Serre Verweij


Cardinal Willem Jacobus Eijk, the Archbishop of Utrecht in the Netherlands, celebrated on March 15th, 2026, a Pontifical High Mass for the first time. It somehow ended up being a huge event that was talked about internationally and still receives attention weeks later. As a Catholic from the Archdiocese of Utrecht, I was surprised a little (though very pleasantly) that the cardinal decided to do this. It was clearly a new experience for him, yet, when I attended, I could see he truly enjoyed it. This was despite the fact that he had recently received hospital treatment due to significant health problems, and he was still recovering somewhat. It was a positive event for this Dutch shepherd and for the many young Catholics, including converts and young parents with a large numbers of kids, who were present. 

Pope, President of USCCB appeal for Peace

 


Pope Leo XIV spoke today on the urgent need for peace when leaving Castel Gandolfo; declarations made available on Vatican News:


The Pope said he wished simply to say, once again, what he had said in his Urbi et Orbi message on Sunday, "asking all people of goodwill to always search for peace and not violence, to reject war—especially a war which many people have said is unjust, which is continuing to escalate and which is not resolving anything."

A Grave Moment in History - the Words of Pius XII for Peace


 The Lord gave His Church a gentle yet firm pastor during the grave days of the last world war: Pius XII.


In the current grave and sad moment of history, let us recall his words of peace and admonishment.


Our high office We deem it necessary to reiterate this grave statement today, when to Our profound grief We see at times the deformed, the insane, and those suffering from hereditary disease deprived of their lives, as though they were a useless burden to Society; and this procedure is hailed by some as a manifestation of human progress, and as something that is entirely in accordance with the common good. Yet who that is possessed of sound judgment does not recognize that this not only violates the natural and the divine law written in the heart of every man, but that it outrages the noblest instincts of humanity? The blood of these unfortunate victims who are all the dearer to our Redeemer because they are deserving of greater pity, "cries to God from the earth."

Continuity, Rupture, or Both? Vatican II and the SSPX

Continuity, Rupture or Both? Vatican II and the SSPX

Guest article by James Baresel

Twenty years ago, Pope Benedict XVI gave his well-known address on interpreting Vatican II with a “hermeneutic of continuity” rather than a “hermeneutic of rupture.” Welcome as that seemed, details were never explained, distinctions never made, ways that forms of rupture can exist beside forms of continuity ignored.

At the most obvious level, any infallible teachings promulgated by Vatican II must be in continuity with tradition. (No dogmatic definitions infallible in and of themselves were promulgated.) The continuity of non-infallible teachings must be considered probable. Were that the beginning and end of the matter, the Society of Saint Pius X’s condemnation of Vatican II as a break with tradition would constitute a simple refusal to give its teachings due submission.

But there is much more to it.

Emmaus: An Easter Reflection

 by Father Konrad zu Loewenstein


"In that time two of them went, the same day, to a town which
was sixty furlongs from Jerusalem, named Emmaus." (Easter Monday Gospel)


‘Was not our heart burning...’




Our Blessed Lord appears to-day to two of His disciples: Cleophas and another, perhaps his wife Maria who had stood at the foot of the Cross. When they looked back at the encounter later, what motives would they not have found for amazement and the deepest reverence? -their beloved Master Who had suffered and died in a manner so atrocious and cruel, was in truth the Messiah of the Ancient Covenant, the Glory of the Chosen People, indeed God Himself; He had risen from the dead and appeared before them in person in the form of an unknown travelling companion; He had come to their house, celebrated the Holy Eucharist for them, then vanished from their sight.

EX ORIENTE LUX
- Dominica Paschæ in Resurrectione Domini
- A Meditation of Saint Alphonsus on Paradise

Osanna, Sanctus Deus Sabaoth,
superillustrans claritate tua
felices ignes horum malacoth!

L'anima d'ogne bruto e delle piante
di complession potenziata tira
lo raggio e il moto delle luci sante;

ma vostra vita sanza mezzo spira

la Somma Beninanza, e la innamora
di sé sì che poi sempre la disira.

E quinci puoi argomentare ancora

vostra resurrezion, se tu ripensi
come l'umana carne fessi allora

che li primi parenti intrambo fensi.*


Commedia, Paradiso (c. VII)

A VERY HAPPY AND HOLY EASTER TO ALL OUR READERS! 
Salve, Festa Dies: Hail, O Festive Day!

__________________________________


A MEDITATION ON PARADISE
for the Paschal Festivity

“Behold His wounds when hanging, His Blood when dying, His value when dying, His scars when rising, His head bent down to kiss, His heart opened to love, His arms extended to embrace, His whole body exposed to redeem.”

        


A synthesis of the commentary of Cornelius à Lapide' (1567 1637) on the Passion of Our Lord from St. Matthew's Gospel compiled by a priest and friend of Rorate Caeli. (from Chapter XXVII).  



THE CRUXIFIXION

A Sermon for Good Friday

 

by Fr. Richard Cipolla


We just heard the Passion Gospel sung, and on Good Friday it is always the Passion from the gospel according to John. You notice the text was sung not said,  You have all heard of and perhaps some of you have seen the famous Passion Play in Oberammergau in Germany, or perhaps one of the local Passion plays that are part of this time leading to Good Friday and Easter.  These are dramatic attempts to depict the events we celebrate in Holy Week from Palm Sunday to Good Friday. But these plays are not liturgical; they have little to do with what we just heard sung as the Passion Gospel.  

Meditations for Holy Week: Gethsemane - PART 2 " Tarry ye here, and watch with Me"

A synthesis of the commentary of Cornelius à  Lapide' (1567 1637) on the Passion of Our Lord from St. Matthew's Gospel compiled by a priest and friend of Rorate Caeli.


GETHSEMANE part 2

A Sign of Continuity with the Pre-Francis Papacy: Pope to Wash Feet of Twelve Priests

 


Since 2012 (that is, the last washing of the feet of the papacy of Benedict XVI), this had not happened: tomorrow, Maundy Thursday, Leo XIV will return to the papal tradition of washing the feet of twelve priests -- which is very adequate, as Christ instituted the washing of the feet on the same day he instituted the priesthood of his twelve Apostles. The ceremony will take place in the Cathedral of Rome, the Lateran Basilica:

SSPX, the Lepers

 


One of the most poignant documents of the Benedict XVI pontificate was his letter justifying himself to the global elites for the lifting of the excommunications of the bishops consecrated for the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) in 1988.


The 2009 letter included this remarkable paragraph:

Meditations for Holy Week: Gethsemane

 A synthesis of the commentary of Cornelius à  Lapide' (1567 1637) on the Passion of Our Lord from St. Matthew's Gospel compiled by a priest and friend of Rorate Caeli.

 

 

Gethsemane

La Croix: Will France be the Papal Setting for the End of Restrictions to the Latin Mass?

 


The semi-official daily of the Catholic Church in France, La Croix, published today a long piece developing some points about the papal message to the bishops of France on the Traditional Latin Mass.


Will France, through Cardinal Aveline, be chosen by Pope Leo XIV as the training ground of how he plans to proceed with Traditionis custodes in the rest of the world?


Due to the relevance of the whole piece, we have tried to present it as faithfully as possible below:


Tridentine Mass: Will France Find the Solution to the "Traditional Question" in the Church?

How Pope Leo is Reshuffling the Curia - Part II: the new Sostituto; and Clergy and the Law

by Serre Verweij


It is official. As predicted, Archbishop Rudelli, the relatively conservative nuncio in Colombia, is replacing the scandal-ridden Archbishop Peña Parra as "Sostituto" at the Secretariat of State. Peña Parra has been exiled from the Curia and appointed nuncio to Italy. Rudelli now takes his place as the second most powerful figure in the Secretariat, right under Cardinal Parolin. While he drew some criticism for using boilerplate synodal language during his time in Colombia, Rudelli has otherwise been firmly conservative — his doctoral thesis was on the theology of marriage, and in it he defended both its indissolubility and its openness to life. 

Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem: “Today Jesus weeps once more …”


Meditation for Palm Sunday at Gethesmane

Jerusalem, March 29, 2026 

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, 
may the Lord give you peace. 

Meditations for Holy Week: 1.The Horrible Atrocity of Judas


Over the next few days in this Holy Week, we would like to offer our Readers a few meditations focussing on the Betrayal of Our Lord Jesus and  His Agony in the Garden of Gethsemane. These  are a synthesis  of the commentary of Cornelius à  Lapide' (1567 1637) on the Passion of Our Lord from St. Matthew's Gospel and  were compiled by a priest and friend of Rorate Caeli.

Palm Sunday: Israeli Police Prevent Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Cardinal Pizzaballa, and the Custos of the Holy Land from entering the Holy Sepulchre


The news is astounding, and an insult to Catholics worldwide: for the first time in living memory, the Latin Patriarch was prevented from entering the Holy Sepulchre.

 

This morning, the Israeli Police prevented the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, His Beatitude Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, Head of the Catholic Church in the Holy Land, together with the Custos of the Holy Land, the Most Reverend Fr. Francesco Ielpo, OFM, the official Guardian of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, from entering the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, as they made their way to celebrate the Palm Sunday Mass.

 

 The full press release of the unbelievable incident is from the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem itself, in a joint statement with the Custody of the Holy Land:

Christ, "King of Peace": An Urgent Call to Peace on Palm Sunday


Brothers and sisters, this is our God: Jesus, King of Peace, who rejects war, whom no one can use to justify war. He does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war, but rejects them, saying: “Even though you make many prayers, I will not listen: your hands are full of blood” (Is 1:15).


As we set our gaze upon him who was crucified for us, we can see a crucified humanity. In his wounds, we see the hurts of so many women and men today. In his last cry to the Father, we hear the weeping of those who are crushed, who have no hope, who are sick and who are alone. Above all, we hear the painful groans of all those who are oppressed by violence and are victims of war.


Christ, King of Peace, cries out again from his cross: God is love! Have mercy! Lay down your weapons! Remember that you are brothers and sisters!


Leo XIV
Palm Sunday, 2026

Full text of homily below:

Leo XIV Praises Catholicism as State Religion in Monaco

 


In a brief visit today to the second smallest European state, Monaco (the smallest being the Vatican itself), Pope Leo XIV had many interesting remarks, including the following:


You are among the few countries in the world to have the Catholic faith as a state religion.

How Pope Leo is Reshuffling the Curia: Musical Chairs and Power Games

How Pope Leo is Reshuffling the Curia: Musical Chairs and Power Games

Randazzo named Prefect for Legislative Texts as modernists are sidelined


by Serre Verweij


Pope Leo XIV has appointed Bishop Anthony Randazzo, formerly the Bishop of Broken Bay, as the new Prefect of the Dicastery for Legislative Texts. He succeeds Archbishop Iannone, who was recently promoted to Prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops—a role previously held by Pope Leo himself. Both Pope Leo and Iannone are seasoned canon lawyers with a history of opposing the German "Synodal Path" and resisting progressive attempts to undermine canon law in Rome. Randazzo appears to be a perfect fit for this emerging orthodox team.