Posted on 10/24/2017 7:14:50 PM PDT by ebb tide
Seminarians, calling themselves The Dameans, set liturgical music to guitars in the 1970s. Photo credit: thecatholiccommentator.org
What might be the repercussions of Pope Francis public letter to Cardinal Robert Sarah, the Vaticans liturgy chief, correcting him for seeking to rein in the Popes new liturgical decentralization?
To gain perspective on the significance and potential impact of the Popes letter to the cardinal, we spoke with Dr. Peter Kwasniewski, a prolific writer and international lecturer on the liturgy, as well as a cantor, conductor, and composer of sacred music.
LifeSite: Dr. Kwasniewski, what in your view is the most significant aspect of Pope Francis letter to Cardinal Sarah?
Dr. Kwasniewski: The most significant aspect by far is the rather blunt setting aside of key provisions of Liturgiam Authenticam, which was the fruit of years of responding to egregious difficulties and errors on the part of many vernacular translations. The original ICEL translation of the Roman Missal and other books was a pathetic travesty of the source texts and led to the entrenchment of numerous bad mental and liturgical habits. (As a bishop once said to a member of the original ICEL team: I see the dynamism, but wheres the equivalency?) The process that led to the new English translation, while certainly not perfect from any number of viewpoints, at least ensured a substantial correspondence in the lex orandi or law of prayer. I still notice when attending OF Masses [Novus Ordo] how much richer and more Catholic the texts are, in spite of their remaining defects in comparison with the traditional Roman Missal. In the Popes letter to Cardinal Sarah, it is clear that the principles for which Wojtyla and Ratzinger fought are being retired or sidelined so that we can go back to the 1970s always backwards, never forwards seems to be the motto of the liturgical progressives, who are nostalgically stuck in a certain spirit of Vatican II mentality and cannot advance beyond the narrow agenda characteristic of that phase.
Can you please explain for readers what principles of Liturgiam Authenticam have been changed?
Liturgiam Authenticam seems to have been an attempt to halt the balkanization and banalization of worship that had taken over in almost every language, with the exalted beauty of liturgical texts being reduced to cartoon caricatures (e.g., he took the cup instead of he took this precious chalice in his holy and venerable hands). Liturgiam Authenticam had maintained that it was absolutely necessary for the Holy See to retain ultimate governance over translations of liturgical books, and that the Vatican can and should have final review of the texts, with the authority to change the texts. Magnum Principium and this new clarification at least open the door to a reversal of that long-overdue course correction.
As the Church prays, so she believes. What long-term effects could these changes have on peoples faith?
When we see the phrase legitimate adaptations, we should recognize it as code language for experimental inculturation that breaks apart the substantial unity of the Roman Rite. Indeed, this has already been done by the hundreds of vernacular translations already in existence as well as the plethora of options in the new liturgical books, but in recent moves we are seeing an acceleration of regionalism and pluralism.
The episcopal conferences already have far too much power, which has taken away from the role and responsibility of individual bishops and of the Pope. It is not in keeping with the principle of subsidiarity because each bishop is supreme in his diocese, and the Pope is supreme over the whole Church; episcopal conferences are mere bureaucratic mechanisms having no inherent office, authority, or responsibility. One might compare them to the difference between individual sovereign nations and the United Nations. Already at the Second Vatican Council, when some of the Fathers expressed a desire that greater authority, independent of Rome, be vested in national episcopacies, other Fathers strongly countered, saying it would fragment the Church in her expressions of faith.
More deeply, the calling into question of Liturgiam Authenticam, n. 80 in particular is a continuation of the Popes novel explanation of doctrinal development, where he sets aside the perennial principle of St. Vincent of Lerins, often cited by earlier Popes, that whenever something new is said and we could consider a liturgical translation to be a new thing being said it should always be in eodem dogmate, eodem sensu, eademque sententia expressing the same doctrine, the same meaning, the same judgment. This is not at all the way progressives think about dogmatic definitions, moral teachings, or liturgical texts. All of these, for them, are permanently adaptable, changeable, even contradictable, depending on the supposed progress of society, culture, and mentality. It is an inherently evolutionist point of view, indebted to Hegel and Darwin, where one can get a fowl from a fish. Whether or not this is true about the natural world, it has never been believed to be true of sacred doctrine.
Dr. Kwasniewski, you have written extensively on the liturgical fallout after Vatican II. What do you anticipate might be the repercussions of the Popes letter and its contents?
The invoking of comprehension of the [liturgical] text by the recipients risks reintroducing the kind of rationalism that has made a wasteland out of Catholic liturgy. The liturgy, as a divine mystery and the work of God in our midst, cannot be comprehended by any man or even any angel. There are various ways into the liturgy, through the five senses and the intellect, and of course it should offer the faithful handles they can grasp in order to follow the unfolding rites. But a liturgy that aims to be simply and immediately understood is doomed to impoverishment, superficiality, and boredom. There is nothing to fascinate, bewilder, challenge, delight, or reward the participant. In the liturgy we aspire to put on the mind of Christ, which is the work of a lifetime. We have to go through darkness and light, ideas and feelings, silence, emptiness, self-discipline, suffering, buoyed up by the rich resources of our 2,000-year old tradition. The reduction of liturgy to a commonplace, horizontal, tidy, and effortless understanding is the great error and scourge of the past 50 years.
On the other hand, some claim and I do not know how strong their claim is that the new process put into place by Pope Francis will make it more difficult to secure a new translation, because it will require the unanimous consent of an entire bishops conference, rather than being in the hands of a steering committee working in tandem with the Congregation for Divine Worship to secure the latters approval. If this is true, it will make local change more difficult, which is probably a good thing at this point. Frankly, I cannot imagine the US bishops in general wanting to do another translation, or a substantial modification of the current translation, so soon after this was promulgated as the end result of an absurdly long process. I dont imagine well see changes right away. The real matter for concern, it seems to me, is how this is one more element in a larger campaign to undo the reformatory work of John Paul II and Benedict XVI, which was, in many ways, too little and too late, but is nonetheless the object of bitter hatred on the part of those who could never stomach the conservatism or even traditionalism of Wojtyla and Ratzinger.
Is there anything else you would like to add?
It occurs to me that there something important that needs saying. As you know, Cardinal Marx said that Magnum Principium frees up episcopal conferences and makes Liturgiam Authenticam a dead letter. (see here) Cardinal Sarah publicly disagreed with Marx on this point and now Pope Francis is transmitting the signal that he is taking the side of Marx rather than Sarah, just as he has endorsed Cardinal Kaspers position on communion for the divorced and remarried. In this way, the Pope is making it clearer all the time that he essentially stands with the German hierarchy, known to be one of the most liberal in the world, on the hot-button questions of the day.
As Pope BXVI said before his forced retirement: the future Church will be smaller and more vibrant. Left out of his commentary was the fact that the Church will be more traditional and not likely associated with Rome or the existing hierarchy.
I wish Jesus had said something specifically about bongo drums.
Bishop or Karl?
Both!
This pontifical sponsored/inspired secularization of the Catholic Church is worse than the changes of Vatican II. And I do remember the occasional “folk Mass” that was held at St. Joseph’s College of Indiana that I attended. It was interestingly different, but happened only once or twice a month at most. This was during the latter half of the 1960’s.
<< “ As Pope BXVI said before his forced retirement: the future Church will be smaller and more vibrant. Left out of his commentary was the fact that the Church will be more traditional and not likely associated with Rome or the existing hierarchy. “ >>
That is the way I see it, as well.
However, there is Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, an odd event to have two popes again. Benedict XVI lives and breathes, and prays for us I’m just sure. Pope Benedict also suffers. And, we for him. He was after all, but a man, and he erred in turning us over to the wolf in the Shepherd’s cloak, but our Lord permitted this great suffering to be laid upon us, for our Purification, I pray. We slept for decades and we earned this suffering, I think.
The only thing the marxists got right was the decadence of the west. Witness the Faith is alive and well in Africa and Poland where the Rosary at their borders was met with rainbows in the sky.
Oh, I know. My heart yearns for the company of such courageous Catholic brothers and sisters, such as Poland raises up in spite of the many odds against it. And Africa! And, reportedly India as well.
In times like this, we are strengthened only by the holy and humble at our side, with their great faith, Trust, and their fearless, martyr-made souls. May God save us who have no earthly holy Shepherd, or pasture in which to feed, or still waters from which to drink.
I object to folk Masses on the grounds that any folk music is just awful music.
Yet in the Psalms it does speak of music played on the “strings or pipes”. So music done by either guitar or organ.
Organ? You mean flute?
So either music by either strings or pipes is blessed.
Same grouping.
They’ll get smaller, poorer, and holier no matter what they want.
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