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If
you’re a Catholic who’s faithful to the Church’s
teaching Magisterium, you’ve probably met up with
followers of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre’s 1988
schism, known as the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX).
They’re filled with devotion to the Blessed Mother,
extremely conservative with regard to most moral
issues afflicting the Western world today, and
quite reverent before the Blessed Sacrament during
their old Latin liturgies. In short, on the surface,
adherents to Archbishop Lefebvre’s schism appear
to be devout Catholics
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It’s
easy to sympathize with these folks since most of them
have joined the SSPX after being scandalized by contemporary
abuses in doctrine and liturgy in some of our Catholic
churches in North America. In fact, it was precisely
because of such sympathies, as well as the beauty of
the Tridentine Mass, that I found myself frequenting
SSPX chapels about eight years ago. Like most SSPX adherents,
at the time I thought that my separation from Rome was
merely temporary.
I failed to realize, however, that at the root of every
schism, as the present Code of Canon Law explains, “is
the withdrawal of submission to the Supreme Pontiff
or from communion with the members of the Church subject
to him” (Can. 751). Such ruptures from communion with
the Church, the Catechism of the Catholic Church points
out, “wound the unity of Christ’s Body” (CCC 817). For
that reason, at the heart of my journey back to full
communion with Rome lay many questions about the unity
of the Church as an institution founded by Christ.
What follows is a practical reflection on questions
concerning Catholic Tradition that troubled my conscience
during my sojourn in the SSPX schism. The answers to
these questions eventually led me to conclude that Sacred
Tradition can only be fully actualized in communion
with Rome. My conclusions draw upon eight years of personal
experience within the Traditionalist Movement — the
last five after being reconciled to Rome. In addition,
during the last two years I’ve pursued a licentiate
in canon law from the Church, studies that have culminated
in the publication of a major research paper entitled
“A Canonical History of Archbishop Lefebvre’s Schism.”
Here’s a brief account of what I learned that led to
my reconciliation with Rome.
Who
Was Archbishop Lefebvre?
Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre was ordained a Spiritan Missionary
and later became the first Archbishop of Dakar, Africa.
In this capacity he founded many missionary dioceses
in Africa, and in fact under Pope Pius XII he was appointed
the papal legate to French-speaking Africa.
Before retiring in Rome just after the Second Vatican
Council, he also served as Superior General of Spiritan
Missionaries.
Certain problems, however, began to arise in the French
seminaries during this time, and many young seminarians
became disenchanted by the confusion that had arisen
within their program of formation. Thus they approached
Archbishop Lefebvre in 1970 and coaxed him out of retirement
in Rome. Concerned with the lack of discipline that
had overtaken many French seminaries and the many doctrinal
weaknesses in the formation program of seminarians,
in 1969 Lefebvre founded a House of Studies, which soon
evolved into both a seminary and his Priestly Society
of St. Pius X (SSPX).
Both these institutions received canonical approval
on an experimental basis near Econe, Switzerland. However,
Lefebvre’s continued use of the Tridentine Mass eventually
became an issue with the Vatican. By 1974 the controversy
had become so heated that Lefebvre made a famous declaration
within Traditionalist circles calling into question
the validity and orthodoxy of the Second Vatican Council.
Finding this declaration problematical, Pope Paul VI
canonically suppressed the SSPX and its seminary in
1975. Yet Lefebvre ignored the canonical suppression
and began illicitly ordaining his seminarians to holy
orders, an action which led to the suspension of his
faculties later on in the same year. Over the next thirteen
years, Lefebvre continued to operate illicitly and expand
the SSPX, while negotiations continued on and off again
with Rome.
Relations between Rome and the SSPX remained rather
static until May 5, 1988. On this day, agreement was
finally reached between the SSPX and Rome, reconciling
the SSPX to the Church. The protocol agreement was signed
by both Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger and Archbishop Lefebvre.
Neverthless, a few days afterwards, Archbishop Lefebvre
retracted his signature and announced his intention
to consecrate bishops without Rome’s permission.
On June 30, 1988, Archbishop Lefebvre proceeded with
this intention in violation of canon law, incurring
an automatic excommunication under the law. The following
day, Cardinal Bernadin Gantin of the Congregation of
Bishops declared Lefebvre’s excommunication. In a papal
motu proprio on July 2, 1988, the Holy Father John Paul
II also confirmed Lefebvre’s excommunication for schism
and for having consecrated bishops despite the Holy
See’s warnings not to do so.
Sadly, Lefebvre passed away in Econe in March of 1991,
without having formally reconciled with the Church.
Today, the SSPX includes approximately four hundred
priests in over twenty-seven countries representing
all five continents. Most estimates place the number
of adherents to Archbishop Lefebvre’s schism at the
one million mark.
Pope
St. Pius V and Quo Primum Tempore
The first argument I ever encountered by an SSPX apologist,
in fact the very argument that led me into their schism,
was a citation of Pope St. Pius V’s sixteenth-century
papal bull Quo Primum Tempore. In a nutshell, the SSPX
proponent claimed that St. Pius V promulgated the Tridentine
Mass in perpetuity, meaning for all time. The SSPX claimed
— and I found the claim convincing at the time — that
every priest has the right to use the Roman Missal codified
by St. Pius V in Quo Primum Tempore, and that this right
cannot be taken away from him.
As I later discovered, however, the problem with the
Quo Primum Tempore argument is a failure to take into
account canonical Tradition. First, this argument does
not distinguish between the doctrine and the discipline
of the Catholic Church. Yet that distinction is critical.
Briefly put, a dogma is a doctrine the Church declares
with certitude to be infallible. Take, for example,
the dogma of the Blessed Mother’s assumption into heaven.
Pope Pius XII didn’t suddenly declare it as a new truth
in 1950 that Mary was assumed into heaven; this truth,
after all, had come into existence nearly two millennia
before when Mary was assumed. Rather, the pope declared
this dogma because the Church had come to know for certain
Mary that was assumed into heaven.
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At
the root of every schism, as the present Code
of Canon Law explains, “is the withdrawal of submission
to the Supreme Pontiff or from communion with
the members of the Church
subject to him” (Can. 751). Such ruptures from
communion with the Church, the Catechism of the
Catholic Church points out, “wound the unity of
Christ’s Body.”
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At
that point, our Lady’s assumption was thus no longer
a matter of theological speculation for Catholics. Once
declared, a dogma must be believed by the Catholic faithful,
and cannot be reneged upon — although the Church may
always clarify her understanding of a dogma.
A mere discipline of the Faith, on the other hand, is
a law, a custom or practice originating from the Church
as a means of safeguarding the good order of the Church.
To establish ecclesiastical discipline, the Church must
ask herself: What is the most practical way of protecting
the doctrine of the Church here and now?
Consequently, discipline is subject to change depending
upon the present needs of the Church. Furthermore, mere
disciplines of the Faith need not be applied in the
same manner throughout the entire Church, and they may
always be dispensed from, since the pastoral needs of
one particular grouping of the faithful may differ from
the pastoral needs of another. For example, the discipline
of celibacy is imposed upon Catholic priests in the
Latin Church, whereas this discipline is optional for
Catholic priests in the Eastern Catholic churches.
Through this insight I first came to see the weakness
of the SSPX’s claims. If Quo Primum Tempore had indeed
been promulgated as a dogmatic declaration, then the
SSPX would be correct in stating that every priest and
bishop has a right in perpetuity to use the Tridentine
Missal codified by St. Pius V. Nevertheless, within
the very text of Quo Primum Tempore stood a clause by
St. Pius V granting an exception to the declaration:
All priests and bishops who said Mass using liturgical
missals more than two hundred years old were not obliged
to use this codified version of the Roman Missal. So
even from the beginning of its promulgation, Quo Primum
Tempore never applied to every Catholic priest.
From this fact alone I was able to draw the conclusion
that Quo Primum Tempore was merely disciplinary rather
than dogmatic in nature. For a dogmatic definition,
by its very nature, binds the entire Church, while Quo
Primum Tempore contains exceptions among the Catholic
faithful in its application. Thus I was forced to conclude
that the document could be legally changed or revoked
by a future Roman Pontiff such as Pope Paul VI.
Yet even if this were not the case, and future Roman
Pontiffs were forbidden from reforming the Missal codified
by St. Pius V, I couldn’t deny that this papal bull
merely granted the right to celebrate Mass according
to the Tridentine Missal. Quo Primum Tempore did not
extend the right to bishops — upon their own authority
and against the expressed wishes of the Roman Pontiff
— to ordain priests and consecrate bishops as Archbishop
Lefebvre had done. In other words, using a certain liturgical
Missal to offer the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is not
the same action as consecrating bishops without permission
of the Roman Pontiff; even if one consecrates bishops
in order to provide a source of ordination for priests
who will say the Tridentine liturgy.
A
State of Necessity?
The second point raised by the SSPX in defense of their
schism that initially convinced me of their position
was based upon canons 1323:4° and 1324 §1:5°
of the present Code of Canon Law — the canons pertaining
to state of necessity. According to these canons, in
an emergency situation, certain laws of the Church that
normally apply cease to do so. Under such conditions,
a penalty that can be attached to the transgression
of the law will either be lessened or cease to apply
completely.
For example, normally a priest must be in good standing
with the Church and have permission from his bishop
before hearing confessions. However, if an excommunicated
priest came across a car accident on the side of the
road, and found a seriously injured Catholic party,
the Catholic Church would automatically provide the
excommunicated priest with the power of hearing the
injured person’s confession, as long as a serious danger
of death existed. In other words, the Church does not
punish, because of the crime of a priest, an injured
person in desperate need of absolution; for it’s more
important that the Church absolve the penitent’s sin
in danger of death than it is to enforce the priest’s
punishment. Therefore, under the state of necessity
canons mentioned above, the Church allows exceptions
to many of her laws in certain unforeseen circumstances.
Archbishop Lefebvre insisted that his irregular consecration
of bishops without Rome’s permission was carried out
in a state of necessity. However, the Holy See foresaw
the situation in which the archbishop found himself
before he consecrated the bishops, yet still denied
him permission to proceed with such an action. As Cardinal
Gantin, on behalf of the Holy See, wrote in a letter
to Lefebvre dated June 17, 1988: “Since . . . you stated
that you intended to ordain four priests to the episcopate
without having obtained the mandate of the Supreme Pontiff
as required by canon 1013 of the Code of Canon Law,
I myself convey to you this public canonical warning,
confirming that if you should carry out your intention
as stated above, you yourself and also the bishops ordained
by you shall incur ipso facto [by that very fact] excommunication
latae sententiae [imposed automatically] reserved to
the Apostolic See in accordance with canon 1382.”
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A
mere discipline of the Faith, is a law, a custom
or practice originating from the Church as a means
of safeguarding the good order of the Church.
To establish ecclesiastical
discipline, the Church must ask herself: What
is the most practical way of protecting the doctrine
of the Church
here and now?
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In essence, the Holy See did not agree with Lefebvre’s
analysis of the situation in the Catholic Church, namely
that a sufficient emergency existed to warrant the consecration
of bishops without Rome’s approval. This is an important
point in resolving the dispute between Archbishop Lefebvre
and Pope John Paul II, for where there exists a difference
in interpreting the application of canon law, canon
16 states clearly: “Laws are authentically interpreted
by the legislator and by that person to whom the legislator
entrusts the power of authentic interpretation.”
In Lefebvre’s situation, he knew in advance that his
interpretation of canon law in this case was not acceptable
to the Roman Pontiff, who is the highest legislator.
So even though Lefebvre disagreed with the Roman Pontiff’s
interpretation of canon law, it nevertheless remained
up to Pope John Paul II to interpret that law authoritatively.
Therefore, because the idea of a state of necessity
in Lefebvre’s circumstances was rejected by Pope John
Paul II, I came to realize that I could not legitimately
invoke the state of necessity canons in defense of Lefebvre’s
consecration of bishops without Rome’s permission.
The
Novus Ordo Missae: Intrinsically Evil?
A common argument now put forward by the SSPX is that
the revised liturgy of Pope Paul VI is intrinsically
evil, or at the least poses a proximate danger to the
Catholic faith. This would mean that the post-Vatican
II liturgy is in and of itself contrary to the law of
God. How individual Lefebvrites approach this issue
will often vary, but they typically insist that the
new Mass contains heresy, blasphemy or ambiguity. In
resolving this question, I came to the personal conclusion
that Christ has a sense of humor, since the same text
from Catholic Tradition the SSPX quotes in defense of
this claim is the very text that refutes it.
A preliminary observation is in order. The Mass has
not changed since Christ instituted this sacrament on
the night before His crucifixion. In essence, there
is neither an “old” Mass nor a “new” Mass, but only
the Mass. In fact what changed after the Second Vatican
Council was not the Mass, but the liturgy.
This means that while the “accidents” (to use a classical
theological term) differ somewhat between the pre-Vatican
II liturgy and the reformed liturgy of Pope Paul VI,
their essence remains the same: the Body, Blood, Soul
and Divinity of Jesus Christ transubstantiated into
the Eucharist. This central mystery of the Mass takes
place regardless of whether the priest celebrates according
to the liturgical books in use before the Second Vatican
Council or according to the liturgical books revised
by Pope Paul VI. In fact, both sets of liturgical books
are usages of the same Roman liturgical rite.
When I was associated with the SSPX, to defend the claim
that the reformed liturgy is intrinsically evil I used
to quote the seventh canon on the Sacrifice of the Mass
from the Council of Trent. This canon states: “If anyone
says that the ceremonies, vestments and outward signs
which the Catholic Church makes use of in the celebration
of Masses are incentives to impiety, rather than offices
of piety; let him be anathema.”
Let’s look at this more closely. Since the definition
of intrinsic evil is “something which in and of itself
is evil,” we see from the Council of Trent that an approved
liturgy of the Church cannot be such. For something
that is intrinsically evil is naturally an incentive
to impiety, while the Council of Trent declares dogmatically
that the approved liturgical ceremonies of the Catholic
Church cannot be incentives to impiety.
But wait a second: Wasn’t the revised liturgy of Pope
Paul VI an approved liturgy of the Church? Of course!
So according to the Tradition of the Church as dogmatically
defined at the Ecumenical Council of Trent, I could
only conclude that the reformed liturgy of Pope Paul
VI cannot be an incentive to impiety. It necessarily
follows, then, that neither could it be intrinsically
evil. Thus in my defense of the schismatic position
I stood refuted by the very Catholic Tradition from
the Council of Trent that I was seeking to preserve
through adherence to the SSPX schism.
Illicit
Consecration of Bishops: An Act of Schism?
One argument commonly presented within SSPX circles
is that the act of consecrating bishops without papal
permission is an act of disobedience, but not an act
of schism. Although I didn’t give much thought to this
argument, either before or after my involvement in the
SSPX, nevertheless it should be addressed because it’s
frequently made among schismatic ranks. The SSPX folks
generally claim that they have not withdrawn subjection
to the Roman Pontiff. Rather, they refuse obedience
in some matters.
We should reiterate here that canon 752 defines schism
as “the withdrawal of submission to the Supreme Pontiff
or from communion with the members of the Church subject
to him.” Notice that the canon does not distinguish
between degrees of withdrawal of submission to the Roman
Pontiff. In other words, a person need not completely
withdraw submission to the Roman Pontiff to enter into
a state of schism. Rather, partial withdrawal of obedience
in certain matters — and consecrating bishops without
papal mandate is a serious matter — remains an act through
which a person withdraws submission to the Roman Pontiff.
In short, the Holy Father told Archbishop Lefebvre not
to consecrate bishops without Rome’s permission, and
Archbishop Lefebvre refused to submit.
I never paid this argument much attention during my
time in the SSPX chapels. But afterward I realized that
the SSPX claim — that they haven’t withdrawn submission
to the Roman Pontiff, but rather have merely temporarily
suspended their obedience to him in certain matters
— could not be sustained by Catholic Tradition. For
such an act of disobedience in a serious matter remains
at least a temporary withdrawal of submission to the
Roman Pontiff. Therefore, with sufficient moral certitude
I could only conclude that Archbishop Lefebvre’s act
of consecrating bishops against Pope John Paul II’s
stated wishes was an act of schism according to canon
law.
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A
person need not completely withdraw submission
to the Roman Pontiff to enter into a state of
schism. Rather, partial withdrawal of obedience
in certain matters - and consecrating bishops
without papal mandate is
a serious matter - remains anact through which
a person withdraws submission to the Roman Pontiff.
In short, the Holy Father told Archbishop Lefebvre
not to consecrate bishops without Rome’s permission,
and Archbishop Lefebvre refused to submit.
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Pope
Liberius
Probably the most common claim I came across within
SSPX circles was the claim that Pope Liberius (reigned
A.D. 352-366) was a heretic, sympathetic to Arianism,
who falsely excommunicated St. Athanasius. For this
reason, the SSPX claims, Pope Liberius became the first
pope in the history of the Church not be recognized
as a saint. Of course, by analogy the SSPX considers
Archbishop Lefebvre a modern St. Athanasius and Pope
John Paul II a modern Pope Liberius.
Their argument is that if it happened once, it can happen
again. And yet, as our Lord showed me in a rather amusing
fashion, such claims have little basis in Catholic Tradition.
Convinced the SSPX claims pertaining to this situation
were true, I was reading my copy of Henri Denzinger’s
Sources of Catholic Dogma one day when I noticed that
Denzinger listed Pope Liberius as “St. Liberius.” To
say I was surprised would be an understatement — ironically
enough, the SSPX had sold me the particular edition
of Denzinger I was reading, since they held all subsequent
editions as suspect. Yet this portion of Denzinger clearly
did not accord with what was being preached from our
local SSPX pulpit. So I simply dismissed this listing
as a probable typesetting error and continued reading.
A mere ten pages later, I came across a papal epistle
authored by Pope St. Anastasius subtitled “The Orthodoxy
of Pope Liberius.” In it, Pope St. Anastasius clearly
states: “The heretical African faction [of the Arian
heresy] was not able by any deception to introduce its
baseness because, as we believe, our God provided that
that holy and untarnished faith be not contaminated
through any vicious blasphemy of slanderous men — that
faith which had been discussed and defended at the meeting
of the synod of Nicea by the holy men and bishops now
placed in the resting place of the saints” (see art.
93 of the thirtieth edition).
So far, so good; God had clearly preserved the Church
from Arianism through the actions and prayer of holy
men. But who were these holy men, and how does this
relate to Pope Liberius? I wondered. To my surprise,
Pope St. Anastasius answered the question in the subsequent
paragraph this way: “For this faith those who were then
esteemed as holy bishops gladly endured exile, that
is . . . Liberius, bishop of the Roman Church.”
I was stunned by this pope’s answer, for clearly there
was a contradiction here: Was I to believe Archbishop
Lefebvre and his followers as the authentic teaching
from Catholic Tradition? Or was I to believe the teaching
of Anastasius in his papal epistle Dat mihi plurimum
— the claim of one who was a saint, a pope, and a writer
much closer to the time the Arian heresy took place?
When my local SSPX priest failed to provide an adequate
solution for this quandary, I could only accept the
claim of Pope St. Anastasius as the authentic voice
of Catholic Tradition.
Traditional
Rome vs. Modernist Rome
The question of Rome eventually weighed in on my conscience,
as it should for anyone who leaves the Church. Given
what Catholic Tradition consistently teaches concerning
faithfulness to Rome, how could I justify my separation
from the Roman Pontiff? In fact, even five years after
reconciling myself to Rome, the question of communion
with Rome and the local Bishop remains the catalyst
for much of my theological and canonical exploration.
While I was with the SSPX, however, I accepted their
solution to this problem. The SSPX claimed that the
questionable behavior of the post-Vatican II popes had
divided the faithful into two camps. One camp, the institutional
Church, was faithful to contemporary Rome, which the
SSPX claims has been infiltrated by modernists and liberals.
In the other camp rests the SSPX, who naturally are
faithful to Traditional Rome.
Nevertheless, I was unable to deceive my conscience.
So I kept wondering whether Catholic Tradition actually
sustained the argument that a Catholic could be faithful
to Traditional Rome, without remaining faithful to temporal
Rome.
“Our hearts are restless, O Lord, until they rest in
You,” remarks St. Augustine at the opening of his Confessions.
My heart was spiritually restless because it didn’t
rest in full communion with Christ’s Mystical Body,
the Church. Yet Christ also promises us in the Gospels
that if we seek the truth, we will find it (see Matt.
7:7).
In my case, the truth lay in the back room of my parents’
basement. There I found an abandoned box full of old
papal encyclicals left over from my father’s college
days. At the bottom of this box was Pope Pius XII’s
masterful papal encyclical Mystici Corporis.
Curious as to the content, I immediately opened this
work to the following passage: “We think, how grievously
they err who arbitrarily claim that the Church is something
hidden and invisible, as they also do who look upon
her as a mere human institution possessing a certain
disciplinary code and external ritual, but lacking power
to communicate supernatural life” (par. 64). This theological
discovery from Catholic Tradition as expressed by the
pre-Vatican II popes astounded me even more than my
previous St. Anastasius discovery in Denzinger.
Here, from the Church’s Tradition, was the teaching
that we cannot separate the Church into a mere spiritual
communion as opposed to a mere human institution. In
short, the Rome of Tradition and the Rome of Today were
the same Rome. Everything suddenly made sense to me
about Catholic ecclesiology. Just as at the Incarnation
Christ was fully human and fully divine, without sacrificing
either nature, so too must the Church, as Christ’s Mystical
Body, be a perfect union of the visible and the invisible.
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I
remembered that St. Paul had asked somewhere in his
epistles the question “Is Christ divided?” (see 1 Cor.
1:13). Of course, the answer was no. Therefore, why
in the name of Catholic Tradition was I dividing Christ’s
Mystical Body into a spiritual communion and a human
communion?
Furthermore, in frequenting the Holy Sacrifice of the
Mass outside the visible communion of the Church, why
was I dividing Christ’s Sacramental Body (Body, Soul
and Divinity) in the Eucharist from Christ’s Mystical
Body, the Church? For didn’t expressions such as “Body
of Christ” and “Communion” carry this double meaning:
the first sacramental, meaning the sacrament of the
Holy Eucharist, and the second ecclesiological, meaning
the sacred unity of the Church?
Captivated by these questions forming in my conscience,
I kept reading Mystici Corporis and came across the
following section:
But
we must not think that He rules only in a hidden or
extraordinary manner. On the contrary, our Redeemer
also governs His Mystical Body in a visible and normal
way through His Vicar on earth. . . . Since He was
all-wise He could not leave the body of the Church
He had founded as a human society without a visible
head. . . . That Christ and His Vicar constitute one
only Head is the solemn teaching of Our predecessor
of immortal memory Boniface VIII in the Apostolic
Letter Unam Sanctam; and his successors have never
ceased to repeat the same (par. 40).
Of
course, I said to myself; the Roman Pontiff and Jesus
Christ form but one head of the Catholic Church. The
word “tradition,” which I recalled from so many homilies
in SSPX chapels, comes from the Latin verb tradere,
which means “to hand down.” Ultimately, I reasoned,
there must be a source from which Tradition was first
passed down, and that source is Jesus Christ. In the
end I realized that Tradition is a Person — the Second
Person of the Holy Trinity who incarnated Himself in
the womb of an immaculately conceived Virgin.
As Christ and His vicar constitute but one Head of the
Church, then the voice of Tradition must speak through
St. Peter and his lawful successors in the Roman Primacy.
Therefore, I had to make a choice to follow Catholic
Tradition and embrace the Rock upon whom Christ founded
His Mystical Body here and now.
Like the prodigal son, I realized my error in following
Archbishop Lefebvre into schism, and I was now making
my way home to Holy Mother Church. Through his generous
papal indult in Ecclesia Dei Adflicta, John Paul II
was exactly like the father in Christ’s parable: He
was living up to his title “Pope,” which means “Father,”
by welcoming into the Church his Traditionalist sons
and daughters who in 1988 had followed Archbishop Lefebvre
out of the vineyard of authentic Catholic Tradition.
Was
Archbishop Lefebvre Excommunicated?
The last argument I consistently came across within
SSPX circles is more of a technical one that never affected
my decision to reconcile with the Church. In fact, I
myself never thought about researching an answer to
this question, but rather stumbled across the answer
accidentally while researching my thesis. Even so, the
argument is made often enough to deserve mention. It’s
the claim that the Church never actually excommunicated
Archbishop Lefebvre, but rather informed him that he
was automatically excommunicated by virtue of canon
law itself.
The Church can excommunicate an individual in two ways.
The first is by means of latae sententiae excommunication.
This means that the offender is automatically excommunicated
by virtue of the law itself, and thus the sentence need
not be imposed by a judge within the Church. However,
in order for such an excommunication to be enforced
by canon law, a legitimate Church authority must still
declare that the excommunication has taken place.
The second method of imposing an excommunication is
by ferendae sententiae. This refers to the decision
of a judge in a Church tribunal.
Archbishop Lefebvre was excommunicated by virtue of
the law, and not by any penalty imposed by a judge.
However, Lefebvre’s apologists fail to note in making
this argument that his excommunication was subsequently
declared by the Church. Cardinal Gantin, in a decree
from the Congregation for Bishops dated July 1, 1988,
declared on behalf of the Church the excommunication
of Archbishop Lefebvre as follows:
Monsignor
Marcel Lefebvre, Archbishop-Bishop Emeritus of Tulle,
notwithstanding the formal canonical warning of 17
June last and the repeated appeals to desist from
his intention, has performed a schismatic act by the
episcopal consecration of four priests, without pontifical
mandate and contrary to the will of the Supreme Pontiff,
and has therefore incurred the penalty envisaged by
Canon 1364, paragraph 1, and canon 1382 of the Code
of Canon Law. . . . Having taken account of all the
juridical effects, I declare that the above-mentioned
Archbishop Lefebvre, and Bernard Fellay, Bernard Tissier
de Mallerais, Richard Williamson and Alfonso de Galarreta
have incurred ipso facto excommunication latae sententiae
reserved to the Apostolic See.
Without
getting into all the canonical particulars, we can nevertheless
clearly establish in this statement that the Church
has excommunicated Archbishop Lefebvre. Rome has clearly
spoken as the voice of Catholic Tradition, and thus
the case is now closed.
The
Substance of Catholic Tradition
In my journey back to the Church, through the grace
of God I’ve been led from the mere “accidents” of Catholic
Tradition to the substance of Catholic Tradition. Although
I enjoy the reformed liturgy of Pope Paul VI, which
I now recognize as the normative liturgy of the Latin
Church, I’m as firmly committed to preservation of the
1962 liturgical missal today as I was during my time
in the Lefebvre movement. However, I realize that our
liturgical tradition as Catholics cannot be preserved
apart from John Paul II and all the other legitimate
successors of St. Peter. For his voice is the voice
of Catholic Tradition in the Church today — a Tradition
that has been passed down to him by Christ and the Apostles.
Cleck
here to View Envoy's "Canon
Law 101" for explanations of of some of the terms
in this article
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