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Fr. Eugene Heidt and Archbishop Levada (A diocesan priest's experience)
Priest Where Is Thy Mass, Mass Where Is Thy Priest? | January 2004

Posted on 05/13/2005 9:57:43 PM PDT by Canticle_of_Deborah

Fr. Eugene Heidt and Archbishop Levada

Excerpted from “Priest Where Is Thy Mass, Mass Where Is Thy Priest.”

Q: So obedience is not really an objection against saying the traditional Mass, when you consider that it’s not forbidden by the Church?

Fr. H: Correct. There is no question of disobedience involved here, no way.

Q: How did your convictions about the old Mass sit with the Chancery?

Fr. H: Things just got worse. A couple of years before, I had written a letter about what they called the “Stewardship Council.” That was a program that they used to raise money for the operation of the Archdiocese. I told the people in the parish that we couldn’t contribute to that. I black-balled the “Stewardship Council”!

Q: Why did you black-ball it?

Fr. H: Because of the immoral causes that they were promoting. I named some of them in the letter I wrote. But I have to go back a little bit to explain some of this. It all came to a head with this question of the money for the “Stewardship Council” – that’s what really got Archbishop Levada going. I remember coming home from meeting with him on one of those occasions. I said, “You know, that man isn’t Catholic. The Archbishop is not Catholic!” I was telling the whole parish this. No wonder he got so angry with me, in the end of it all!

When Archbishop Levada had first come to the Archdiocese, I was the first one to have an appointment with him after he was installed. I went in there for an hour and a half, and I poured out my heart to him, because I was told he was a good, traditional, orthodox bishop, and that he was going to straighten this Archdiocese out. So I really churned my heart out to him, and he just sat there. He was like an episcopal vacuum cleaner, sucking all this stuff up and listening to it. I told him about the homosexuality in the Church, and I said “I can name six or seven homosexual priests in the diocese. They call themselves the ‘altar society.’” He said, “You’ve come in here with a bunch of rumors, and I’m not going to listen to that.” I said, “Well, one day, somebody is going to have to pay!” But he wouldn’t listen.

Every time I went to see him, I’d go in and argue with him. I think there is only one pastoral letter he wrote, supposedly on the Mass and the Eucharist. I read the thing and I took it to his office, and I said, “Did you write this? Is this supposed to be a complete treatise on the Eucharist and the Mass? How did you manage to get through this whole thing without once mentioning Transubstantiation?” “Well, that’s such a long and difficult term anyway,” he said, “and we don’t use that term anymore.”

I said, “I don’t think that’s the correct estimate of that word. When I was in the first grade and our good little Benedictine Sister was preparing us for First Holy Communion, I can remember her putting that up on the board. She put ‘trans,’ and then she put a line. Then she put ‘substantiation,’ and then she went through and explained what each of those things meant. She was able to put it in terms we could understand, so that we knew that the Bread and the Wine are substantially different from what they were before the Consecration.” He just repeated “That’s such a confusing term!” So, I said, “Let’s go on to the next item.”

The “next item” was his having gone to Our Lady of Atonement Parish – that’s what they called a “Catholic-Lutheran joint parish,” where they have a priest on one end of the altar and a Lutheran minister on the other, and they go back and forth. I asked, “What did you do over there?” and he answered, “We concelebrated liturgy.” “What does that mean?” I asked, “Did you and the Lutheran minister say Mass together? What did you do?” He just wouldn’t discuss it any more.

And then, one night during all this “Stewardship” business, the Archbishop really got angry. He called me up, it was after hours, 5:05 pm! He was supposed to be on his way home, but he stopped and called me. He was SO livid, he could hardly talk on the phone. He said, “You be in my office at ten o’clock tomorrow morning before the diocesan consulters and the other bishops of the diocese. Plead your case there!” I said, “Well, all right, I will be glad to come in and do that, but I haven’t got any time to document all this.” He said, “That’s okay, just come on in and tell us what’s on your mind.”

So, I was in there probably an hour altogether, and those priests were lined up in a big horseshoe, you know, and I was at the table on the end by myself. I had my tape recorder, which I set up beside me, and, as I was trying to plug it in, I heard a voice up at the other end: “Hey, you can’t use a recorder in here!” I turned around, and it was the archbishop. I asked, “Why not?” He said, “We don’t record this kind of meeting.” And I said, “Oh, all right, but I’ll plug it in while I’m talking and unplug it while you’re talking, how’s that?” Then I set up a chair beside me, and one of the bishops, who used to be a very good friend of mine, asked what the chair was for. They were waiting for an attorney to come in, I suppose. I said “Well, that’s for my Guardian Angel.” And these priests looked at me like I was kind of crazy, you know.

At the end of my little speech, the Archbishop said, “Okay, I agree with you on everything except for the question of homosexuality in the Seminary. We took care of that a couple of weeks ago. Of course, you wouldn’t know about that meeting, but it’s already been taken care of.” But he sided with me on the rest of the other complaints that I had.

Afterwards, he got on my case, and he finally told me to take a sabbatical. He said, “You can take you sabbatical if you want, and you are free to write up a proposal of what you want to do.” I agreed, and I took a month to get my plan together and brought it back to him.

I told him that I wanted to spend five months or so studying the Council of Trent, Vatican I, Vatican II, and all of the papal encyclicals from the last two hundred years. But he said, “No, No, That’s non-productive. You will go to the University and take their ‘Credo’ course” (which was an updating in theology). But I said “No, No.” I said, like the boys said when it was time to go to Vietnam: “Hell no, I won’t go! No thanks.” So he said, “Then I’ll send you to a monastery for your sabbatical, and I will draw up a course of studies for you. You will have a private mentor.” I said, “No, I do not need a guru.” Finally, he told me to go ahead and do what I wanted.

I said then that I wanted to spend the last couple of weeks of my sabbatical in Fatima, to talk all this stuff over with our Blessed Lady, and then I would come back. And he agreed. Well, I never got to Fatima, but in the meantime this place came up for sale, and I knew I had been had by that time. When I went back to see him, after the sabbatical was over, he told me that, because I had said the Latin Mass in “excommunicated” chapels, mainly Portland and Veneta [Oregon], he could no longer use my services. So I said, “Okay. You do what you have to do. But you’re going to have to tie me up in chains to stop me from offering the Latin Mass.” He threatened to suspend me if I didn’t stop.

A month or so went by, and I got a letter from him telling me to get an attorney so that we could have a hearing in Portland. I thought it was over, and I decided that, no matter who I got, the result would be the same. In conscience, no Novus Ordo priest could defend me, and, if I got one of the Society of St. Pius X priests, they wouldn’t listen to him. So I wrote back to him and asked him to appoint an attorney for me. I sent this priest the whole case, and he read it and sent it back to me. He said to go back to the Archbishop and tell him that I was sorry and then submit and obey the Archbishop. And then, at the end of the letter, he said, “Besides, the traditional Latin Mass is a thing of the past, and within ten years it will be nothing more than a footnote in the history of the Church.” And so I get nowhere with that. The next thing I knew, the Archbishop sent me a letter of suspension. I never did have a hearing.

I moved up here in 1988, the very weekend that Archbishop Lefebvre ordained the four Bishops. Then, I asked Fr. Laisney if I could help him out in the chapels in Portland and Venata, and he said, “Welcome aboard!” And I have been doing it ever since.

Q: So you’re a renegade because you won’t give up the traditional idea of the priesthood and the Mass. How would you describe the new idea of the priest? What do they think the priest is, in those theological updating courses, for instance?

Fr. H: I don’t know because I never went.

Q: You never went to a seminar?

Fr. H: No, I stopped that right in the beginning. They used to have three-day seminars, once a year. I went to the first one, and I stayed the first morning. At mid-morning, we met with the Archbishop, and we could ask him any kind of questions that we wanted. Well, the Archbishop started out with one of the directives that came from Rome, and he said that the Masses of priests who use anything other than unleavened bread and sacramental wine are to be questioned. But the Archbishop himself was pooh-poohing the idea. So these priest go the idea that they could go ahead and use pita bread, cookie dough, whatever. You could go down to Safeway and get a jug of wine or even grape juice! It didn’t seem to make too much difference to him.

I poked the priest sitting to one side of me and said, “Hey did you hear what he just said?” He said yes. I poked the one on the other side (he was a classmate of mine), and I said, “Did you hear what he just said?” He said yes. I said, “Well, in my book that’s unacceptable!” and I got up and walked out the door and went home. And that’s the last one I attended. I don’t know what they say anymore about the priesthood, the sacraments, or whatever. I just don’t pay any attention to them.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Ecumenism; History; Ministry/Outreach; Prayer; Religion & Culture; Theology; Worship
KEYWORDS: catholic; cdf; levada
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To: Wessex
I would say one of the hallmarks of Modernism, the pick and choose mentality, is well entrenched in the SSPX.

If you consider that every Priest there is a vagus, and knows that are not incardinated, but they continue to operate irregularly. Without that they have no means to offer absolution, yet none of the faithful are told this before confession.

Yes, we can pick and choose in order to keep the doors open.
221 posted on 05/16/2005 1:02:55 PM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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To: Dominick

"If you consider that every Priest there is a vagus, and knows that are not incardinated, but they continue to operate irregularly. Without that they have no means to offer absolution, yet none of the faithful are told this before confession."


Obedience has its limitations. You obviously don't think so. Rules and regulations employed to curtail traditional practice in favour of passing fads and damage limitation exercises are now bypassed by a growing number of priests who prefer the straight and narrow. We are in a dark era where cardinals are chosen for their heretical credentials, bishops are chosen for their close familiarity with corruption and priests emerge from the sewers of society. We are extremely indebted to the likes of Father Heidt in once again revealing the sickness that passes for the Church of today though some of us wish to remain blind to it.


222 posted on 05/16/2005 3:14:57 PM PDT by Wessex
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To: Dominick

Pope Benedict XVI, when he was still Cardinal Ratzinger, did not see the SSPX as being in schism, as well as other canonists.


223 posted on 05/16/2005 4:01:29 PM PDT by Quo Vadis Petre
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To: Dominick

So if he "sees fit" to try and confuse as many Catholics as possible. To let theologians spouting heresy go wild, allow sex abuse to tarnish the reputation of the Church. To promote indifferentism by his actions. That's all fine and dandy to you? And if he tells you not to resist any of these non-binding policies, you think you can obey him with impunity? Interesting.


224 posted on 05/16/2005 4:04:44 PM PDT by Gerard.P (The lips of liberals drip with honey while their hands drip with blood--Bishop Williamson)
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To: Quo Vadis Petre

Cardinal Ratzinger used the term Schismatic Mentality.


225 posted on 05/16/2005 6:33:19 PM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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To: Quo Vadis Petre

Cardinal Ratzinger used the term Schismatic Mentality.


226 posted on 05/16/2005 6:33:21 PM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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To: Dominick

"Cardinal Ratzinger used the term Schismatic Mentality."

A convenient fence-sitting term. A lot of us could apply the term Heretical Mentality in his direction!



227 posted on 05/17/2005 4:12:52 AM PDT by Wessex
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To: Dominick
Cardinal Ratzinger used the term Schismatic Mentality.

Which has never been defined officially to my knowledge. Sure many people have tried to give me what they think it means, but no one can point to a specific, defined official definition. It is a meaningless term.

228 posted on 05/17/2005 4:43:53 AM PDT by murphE (These are days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed but his own. --G.K. Chesterton)
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Comment #229 Removed by Moderator

To: Oeconomiste
supporters of those who are destroying the Church by undermining her teachings

As opposed to those who destroy the unity of the Church, by breaking from Rome by a positive disobedient action?

Maybe, if it please Him, God can use us somehow as humble tools to help turn this Barque around.

Like I said, the Pope is the Captain, and you are pledging mutiny. The same penalty applies, except the Royal Navy could only hang you, in Catholic Mutiny you hang yourself, for eternity.

Dominick and others on here encourage us to eat for our good.

You have no idea how I pray what Mass I prefer, except I shall not leave the Barque of Peter for the leaky rowboat of dissension and modernism of Lefebvre. Others pick and choose what part of the Magestarium the shall follow, for me, I submit my will to God, and follow the Church God provides for me.

Oeconomiste (Extra Ecclesiam Nulla Salus!)

This is funny from someone promoting Schism.
230 posted on 05/17/2005 6:59:39 AM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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Comment #231 Removed by Moderator

To: Oeconomiste
Why don't you be a man and cut with the sniping insults?

OK. I think you are simply a troll. I also didnt direct my comments at you, but at your suppositions. If I may quote you:

Traditional Catholics on this board jamming the confusion

Domonick ... avid (some might say pathological) supporters

destroying the Church by undermining

trying to play the part of "conservative".

over this saccharine substitute Dominick

drink the poison cool-aid you foolians!


So who is the man? Who is the troll?
232 posted on 05/17/2005 7:07:12 AM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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Comment #233 Removed by Moderator

To: Oeconomiste
I've been watching you Dom. Your sarcastic reposte's are really irritating and show a real lack of charity toward fellow Catholics.

No actually I usually post a link, along with my thoughts on the matter. You simply don't get it, and I do not post to please you, I post how I see the Church, as it pleases me. I am responsible for my writings, and I am sure Christ has a long list of complaints about them. Like most of us, I do not deserve such a Savior, it is an act of mercy to be allowed into purgatory.

So why are you usurping his authority by calling us something not even he dares to do?

I am permitted my opinion, unlike the Cardinal, who has to submit his will to the greater good of the Church. I am doing just like you are permitted to do. Fellay does not hold your view, that implies the Novus Ordo and the Holy See are un-Catholic. Fellay is appearing to work to reunite the SSPX in some form to the Church. In actuality, I suspect he is a prisoner of his own circumstances, as I expect many in the SSPX are never going to return to Catholic Unity.

You are off topic.

This is about one disobedient Priest tarring the name of a Archbishop. Some have taken this chance to to substantiate these claims but to heap on the unsupported insult that he has more sinister sins. Telling your congregation that the Bishop is not Catholic should have earned him more than what happened.

I have been looking for heterodox writings or statements by Levada, and I have found none. Every one that has been offered has fallen flat. Posting links of unknown authorship from such a spurious organization of the Diocese of SF, does not prove the Archbishop has any problems, in fact, the removal of such items shows the appearance that he is heterodox may have been hasty.

Use the tools God gave you, and hunt for something substantial and on topic about Levada.
234 posted on 05/17/2005 7:39:55 AM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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Comment #235 Removed by Moderator

To: Quo Vadis Petre
Pope Benedict XVI, when he was still Cardinal Ratzinger, did not see the SSPX as being in schism, as well as other canonists.

Want to substantiate this?

Without any doubt, the problem that Lefebvre has posed has not been concluded by the rupture of June 30. It would be too simple to take refuge in a sort of triumphalism, and to think that this difficulty has ceased to exist from the moment in which the movement led by Lefebvre has separated itself by a clean break with the Church. ... If once again we succeed in pointing out and living the fullness of the Catholic religion with regard to these points, we may hope that the schism of Lefebvre will not be of long duration. (Cardinal Ratzinger, Remarks to the Bishops of Chile, June 13, 1988)

236 posted on 05/17/2005 8:01:11 AM PDT by gbcdoj (Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life.)
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To: Oeconomiste
Anyway, I'm not off topic to point out your false obedience, after all, Dom, what is it that we do which is schismatic anyway?

Off topic, like I said, the SSPX isn't the issue it is Levada and his unfitness.

Sheesh, the pink elephant is in the room.

Prove it. That is what I have been asking and all people in your particular Barque can do is cast doubt, without proof. Repeated requests have gone unanswered. This is not justice, as a Catholic understands it. I asked for links, it is easy to claim someone is a homosexual, it is also a grave sin to spread a lie.

Maybe you work in Laverda's communications office and have your degree from some dubiously catholic institution like CUA or Fordham? Maybe it is also true that you wouldn't mind attending one of Bishop Laverda's continuing education seminars?

At this point you are baiting me. I am sorry, did you say be a man and quit making insults?
237 posted on 05/17/2005 8:08:04 AM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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Comment #238 Removed by Moderator

To: Oeconomiste; Admin Moderator
I've been watching you Dom.

Oeconomiste
Since May 17, 2005
IP check please...
239 posted on 05/17/2005 8:13:14 AM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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Comment #240 Removed by Moderator


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