Posted on 04/01/2016 8:13:50 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o
April 1, 2016 (LifeSiteNews) -- Of all the people many would assume to be Pope Francis greatest enemy, the head of the Society of Saint Pius X would likely hit the top of many lists. Bishop Bernard Fellay, the head of the SSPX, however has made some remarkably hopeful statements about the Pope, revealing what he sees as Francis own embrace of the SSPX.
Rumors of reunification effort have been circulating since Pope Francis surprise announcement that the priests of the SSPX would be given permission to hear confessions of all Catholics during the Year of Mercy. Those rumors were proven well founded this week as Bishop Fellay said the negotiations with Rome are moving forward.
The Pope must have someone else in mind when he speaks of fundamentalist, closed, authoritarian, or restorationist Catholics, Bishop Fellay says, because Pope Francis attitude toward the SSPX is you are welcome in the Church. And if it seems confusing, it is no less so to Fellay and the SSPX community itself.
This is really a paradox, almost an attempt to combine opposites, he says. It is clear that Pope Francis wants to let us live and survive. He even said to anyone who cares to listen that he would never do the Society any harm. The SSPX head recounts that Pope Francis said that we are Catholics refusing to condemn us for causing a schism, saying: They are not schismatics, they are Catholics.
The bishop says too that Francis has read and re-read the biography of SSPX founder Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre.
Fellay describes the benevolence of Pope Francis toward the Society as paradoxical since they are themselves alarmed by Francis in many ways. In Pope Francis we do not see that attachment either to the liturgy or to the old discipline. We could even say, quite the opposite, he said. The Pope, he added, seems to want to advance toward we might almost say Vatican III, in the worst sense that could be given to that expression.
Fellay said he sees a growing confusion in the Church that results precisely from contradictory elements, from the dilution of doctrine, morality and discipline. He added, Today we see profound disagreement between the bishops and even in Rome on these questions.
He rules out ecumenism as the source of the Holy Fathers desire for reconciliation with the SSPX. Just look at the general attitude of the bishops on this subject of ecumenism: they have their arms wide open to everybody except us! he explained.
Both Popes Benedict XVI and Francis have worked toward unity, without which, says Fellay, rather than being given a new permission to hear confessions we would already be laboring once again under penalties, censures, excommunication, the declaration of schism, and that whole attempt to eliminate a bothersome group.
For Pope Benedict, suggests Bishop Fellay, the benevolence toward the Society lay in his love for the old liturgy, his respect for the previous discipline in the Church. But for Francis that does not apply.
For Francis, Fellay suggests, one explanation is the Holy Fathers preference for anything that is marginalized, what he calls the peripheries of life. I would not be surprised if he considered us as one of these peripheries. In addition, the SSPX leader says he and his confreres have always been very frank with Pope Francis, hiding nothing not even their disagreements. I think that [Pope Francis] likes that. Advertisement
Additionally, the SSPX head suggests the Pope sees in the Society an evangelical spirit lacking in the mainstream Church. Bishop Fellay sees the Pope rather constantly critiquing the establishment Churchreproaching the Church for being self-satisfied, a Church that no longer looks for the lost sheep, the one that is in trouble, at all levels. This concern, says Fellay, is beyond the material. We see very well that when he says poverty he includes also spiritual poverty, the poverty of souls that are in sin, that should be brought out of it and led back to the Dear Lord.
And from this perspective, says Fellay, [the Pope] sees in the Society a community that is very activeespecially when compared to the situation in the establishmentvery active. In other words it seeks and goes out seeking souls, it has this concern about the spiritual welfare of souls, and is ready to roll up its sleeves and work for it.
As to the future of the Societys reconciliation with Rome, Bishop Fellay remains cautiously optimistic but uncertain. He attributes ultimately to Divine Providence the paradox of the current situation, which has the Society closer to being recognized than ever before. He wonders however if the Pope will have the final say on the matter. In 2012, when Pope Benedict had forged an agreement with the Society, the agreement was altered at the last minute by a higher authority, but not the Pope. Which led Bishop Fellay to wonder: Who is governing the Church? I would say that it is a very interesting question that remains unanswered. There are undefined forces .
Watch Bishop Fellay's comments on Pope Francis:
OK, wow, I guess this in not an April Fool’s joke. Of course all of this good stuff that is now happening is due almost exclusively to P.E. Benedict. The preparation was going on before he was elected Pope, and the path is now laid and 98% to the door but for Fellay’s own refusal to step over the threshold.
Fellay is wrong if he really believes Benedict opened the door for some sentimental reasons of attachment to the ‘old’ liturgy. For Pete’s sake (pun intended?!), Benedict was one of those who ushered in the changes. Benedict has a vast vision Fellay will never comprehend in his wildest dreams. One is a good man and one is a great man. Benedict’s goal is unity, not restoration per se.
Without restoration, unity is kind of pointless.
Maybe I did not explain myself well. Restoration is not de facto unity. But unity will lead to restoration.
Actually, a brilliant move by the Marxist strategist.
Bergoglio knows that his REAL enemies are those that do think more like Archbishop Lefevre who left room for the possibility of Sedevacantism (the only healthy albeit unpopular way to interpret the anti-pope, “Francis”).
Because Bergoglio has found a man, Bishop Bernard Fellay, who claims to be a follower of Lefevre but unlike Lefevre denies the possibility of post-VII (anti-) popes not having papal authority, Bergoglio is seizing the opportunity, just as a crime syndicate would if they could plant or discover a weak police captain in the city law enforcement community, who would legitimize and protect the syndicates in their works of crime.
As the relationship deepens, “Francis” will have a sharp, strong, tool with which, he thinks, to demolish the sedevacantists principally due to the fact that SSPX uses Latin and numerous traditional practices.
Whenever, however, sedevacantism finally takes hold, “Francis” will be judged with the other VII anti-popes to be a criminal anti-pope, and the Church will be glorified on the earth as it increases its visibility and activity in winning souls to Christ through Mary as it had for centuries prior to VII.
If Francis is no closer to addressing the doctrinal issues in Vatican II, I’m not sure how +Fellay/the SSPX can even consider “reunification”. Despite this fact, +Fellay does seem to be cozying up with the Modernists in the Vatican. This is decisively NOT a good thing.
Do you think that SSPX’s issues pertain only to the liturgy? Because your post sure sounds like you do.
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