Guest Editorial on the Liturgical Movement:(
Society of St. John --Part IV of IV)
To read Part III of this editorial thread, please go HERE. To start from the beginning of this editorial thread, please go HERE. #######
PART IV: THE LONG ROAD BACKIn our last article we considered the importance of the teaching of Vatican II on the liturgy, and the lamentable liturgical crisis that followed in the wake of the Council, trying to indicate some of the reasons for that crisis. In this article, we will consider some of the progress made, during the pontificate of Pope John Paul II, towards a 'new liturgical movement' and eventual solution of the liturgical crisis.
What happened to the liturgical movement after the Council is intimately bound up with what happened to the Church after the Council. This is because the liturgy itself is fundamental to the life of the Church. In order to understand the one we must understand the other. So what did happened to the Church after the Council? Answering this question is a difficult and intellectually perilous undertaking, an undertaking in which appearances are easily mistaken for reality.
If we judge according to appearances, the times before the Council might seem like times of unparalleled orthodoxy and discipline, times when the Church was on the move with the prestige and organization of a major corporation. Many who lament the intellectual, moral and liturgical chaos that followed the Council look back to the days before the Council as an ideal time, one to which those who would restore the Church's glories may look to for guidance. But before we can judge whether a particular time is exemplary we have to have a standard by which to judge. By what standard can we judge the health or sickness of the Church? While organization, prestige, and the number of vocations may be signs of health, are they enough in themselves to determine health or sickness? Is it possible that the Church, like any other organism can give the appearance of health while her interior reserves of vitality have been on the wane for some time?
It is not difficult to find the standard by which the life of the Church is to be judged. The Church herself has told us:
"The liturgy is ... the font from which all her power flows." This insight, proclaimed at the Second Vatican Council, was the fruit of many years of research and reflection by the leaders of the Liturgical Movement. Indeed the very existence of the Liturgical Movement testifies that the font from which the life of the Church flows had lost some of its force and vigor. One does not start a movement to restore something until it is in need of restoration. In fact one may not even take notice of the thing until it starts to fall apart. Just as water is taken for granted until a drought, and food until a famine, so the liturgy was taken for granted until it began to wilt in the wasteland of modernity.
As we saw in the first article of this series, the liturgical movement was born in reaction to modernity, a modernity that seeks to subject every mystery of God and man to the bar of a constricted human reason. The baneful influence of this rationalism is still with us today. its influence can be seen in attempts to reform the Church primarily through some product of human reason. It is vital to see that the liturgy is prior to philosophy, theology, and every other science, art, and artifact that explains, adorns or celebrates the living contact with God that the liturgy makes possible. Therefore any attempt to reform the Church by reforming these areas will fail unless it also aims at restoring the liturgy. This is because before man can carry out any creative activity at all he must come into contact with the divine source of creativity. It is the living and life-giving presence of God, mediated to man through the liturgy, which quickens every art and science. It is not art and science that found the liturgy, but the liturgy that found art and science. The Church herself was born from the side of Christ as he expired in the life-giving death that the liturgy makes present. "The world turns while the cross stands." It is the fruit of the tree of the cross that the liturgy offers for the life of the world.
If then the liturgy is the primary indicator as well as the source of the Church's life, and the liturgy has been suffering from neglect, misunderstanding, and rationalization since at least the founding of the liturgical movement, then it is perhaps an oversimplification to blame the Church's current illness on the Second Vatican Council. The life of the Church must have been ailing long before the Council. It is important to remember that any diagnosis of the Church's illness must be pursued with love, subtlety and a determination to see the "big picture". It is possible to err from stubborn conviction that the Council is to blame for everything as well as an unwillingness to see the real deficiencies of the Church's policies vis-a-vis modernity. But above all two things must be kept in mind: First the Church is not a human institution, but the body of Christ journeying through time to her final perfection with Christ in eternity. As such she is a mystery, a "work-in-progress" that is being molded by the hand of the divine artist and only he knows perfectly her current state. Secondly, even in the case of purely human institutions it is difficult to judge without the distance time provides.
Keeping all of this in mind, we may ask if the situation prevailing in the Church now is not in a certain way better than that which preceded it. Given that a patient is sick, isn't it better that the illness is in plain sight so that it can be diagnosed and cured rather than incubating below the surface? Before the Council the Church presented a face of unanimity in philosophy, theology, and liturgy. Today pluralism reigns in all these areas. However this pluralism has two aspects: Firstly it denotes heterodoxy and as such it is a cancer that weakens the body of Christ and destroys souls. But secondly it denotes a legitimate variety in areas where the Church has not traditionally demanded uniformity. The first of these is an evil, the second a good. But before the council the legitimate and illegitimate pluralism were intertwined so that it was necessary for both to surface if they were to be untangled. With these words as an introduction, let us now attempt to trace, however tentatively, the path of the recent efforts at genuine liturgical reform within the Church.
In the 1970's the liturgical life of the Church began to spin out of control. As this happened the proponents of the liturgical movement tended to go in one of three directions: some led the liturgical rebellion into ever greater excesses; others continued their scholarly work, shaking their heads at the abuses, but rejoicing in and praising the new liturgy; still others, shocked by what they saw began to raise questions about the work done and the principles that had been applied.
Throughout this period, however, there were small groups and communities who celebrated the new liturgy with care and reverence. The Abbey of Solesmes celebrated the new liturgy in Latin, and maintained its traditions of Gregorian chant. The Abbey of Fontgombault, in a spirit of generous obedience, adopted the new liturgy for many years. There were also some new active orders that always maintained care and reverence in the liturgy. Among these two stand out: the French Congregation of St. John, and the rapidly growing Legionaries of Christ. As early as 1975, Latin Liturgy Association was founded in the midst of the growing chaos to promote the use of Latin in the liturgy. Nevertheless, these seemed but isolated efforts and tiny voices in the midst of a growing clamor of dissent and rebellion on all sides.
Many in the Church in the western industrialized countries showed every sign of losing the Faith. In June of 1972 Pope Paul VI made his famous speech in which he spoke of the smoke of Satan having entered the Church as through some crack or fissure. Later in the same year he said,
"Something supernatural has come into the world to destroy and strangle the very fruits of the Ecumenical Council and to stop the Church from breaking out into a hymn of joy, by sowing doubt, uncertainty, problems, unrest, and discontent."When Pope John Paul II was elected he attempted, first of all, to strengthen the interior attitudes of faith, hope, and charity. His approach can be likened, in many ways, to our Lord's in Nazareth, where being unable to work any miracles because of the lack of faith, He instead went about the villages of the area teaching. In his first Encyclical Letter, Redemptor Hominis, the Pope addressed the problem of faith and hope in order to combat the "doubt, uncertainty, problems, unrest, and discontent" spoken of by Pope Paul VI. In that Encyclical he reaffirmed the Church's traditional faith in the reality of the Eucharistic sacrifice and the real presence. But above all he emphasized the greatness of the mystery, seeking to instill a renewed sense of awe and reverence in the presence of these mysteries. He insisted that all that is said about the Eucharist, whether by the Magisterium of the Church or by theologians, ascetics, or mystics, reaches no more than the threshold of the mystery. Men are
"incapable of grasping and translating into words what the Eucharist is in all its fullness, what is expressed by it and what is actuated by it. Indeed, the Eucharist is the ineffable sacrament!" (20)Consequently, in the celebration of the Eucharist,
"the full magnitude of the divine mystery must be respected, as must the full meaning of this sacramental sign in which Christ is really present." While this is
"the source of the duty to carry out rigorously the liturgical rules" the emphasis is on the interior spirit that must animate our worship, a spirit of gratitude that returns 'love for love' since
"in this sacramental sign He entrusts Himself to us with limitless trust, as if not taking into consideration our human weakness, our unworthiness, the force of habit, routine, or even the possibility of insult." In order to restore this interior attitude, the Pope citing the words of St. Paul,
"Let a man examine himself, and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup", gives great emphasis to the importance of the sacrament of penance as a means of preparation for the Eucharist.
The Pope returned to the subject again in Dominicae Coenae his Lenten letter of 1980 to the Bishops. Again, his focus was not on the liturgical rite, but on restoring Eucharistic faith.
"It is better," he writes,
"that we should now concentrate on what is essential and immutable in the Eucharistic Liturgy." (8)He called for an attitude of worship given to the Holy Trinity, permeating the Eucharistic liturgy and extending beyond the hours of the Mass (3). Again he emphasized the relation between the Sacrament of Penance and the Holy Eucharist. He also called upon bishops and priests to examine themselves regarding their own handling of the sacred species, citing the words of the Pontificale,
"Receive the sacrifice to be offered on behalf of the holy people of God; recognize what you are doing, imitate what you handle, and conform your whole life to the mystery of the Lord's cross."As he brought the letter to a conclusion he issued a startling plea for forgiveness, on his own behalf and the behalf of the entire episcopate,
"For everything which, for whatever reason, through whatever human weakness, impatience or negligence, and also through the at times partial, one-sided and erroneous application of the directives of the Second Vatican Council, may have caused scandal and disturbance concerning the interpretation of the doctrine and the veneration due to this great sacrament."(12) His final words, however, are an impassioned plea for the Church to unite around the sacrament of unity lest it become
"a point of division and a source of distortion of thought and behaviour."(13)While the Pope was seeking to shore up the Eucharistic faith of the Church, Cardinal Ratzinger worked in a complementary manner to open up a renewed and frank discussion of the liturgy. Since the time when he was no more than a professor of theology the Cardinal had lamented the banality and lack of artistic standards that had invaded the post-conciliar liturgy and was openly critical of the degradation of the liturgy
"to the level of a parish tea party and the intelligibility of the popular newspaper". As Prefect for the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, he criticized the abundant liturgical abuses in his well-known interview with the Italian journalist Vittorio Messori, published in 1985 under the title, The Ratzinger Report.
In that interview he pointed out
"the contrast between what the authentic text of Vatican II says and the way in which it has been understood and applied." He directed strong remarks against the way in which the liturgy has tended to become a show:
"The liturgy is not a show, a spectacle, requiring brilliant producers and talented actors. The life of the liturgy does not consist in 'pleasant' surprises and attractive 'ideas' but in solemn repetitions. It cannot be an expression of what is current and transitory, for it expresses the mystery of the Holy." He went on to critique a one-sided understanding of the Council's teaching on active participation, saying,
"It was forgotten that the Council also included silence under actuosa participatio, for silence facilitates a really deep, personal participation, allowing us to listen inwardly to the Lord's word." He lambasted the impoverishment of the liturgy through the wholesale abandonment of Gregorian chant and the rejection of solemnity, saying
"In the solemnity of the worship, the Church expressed the glory of God, the joy of faith, the victory of truth and light over error and darkness. The richness of the liturgy is not the richness of some priestly caste: it is the wealth of all, including the poor, who in fact long for it and do not at all find it a stumbling block."Previously public discussion within the Church had, by and large, been restricted to enthusiastic praises of the reformed liturgy, but with Cardinal Ratzinger's high placed criticisms the doors opened for a more frank and honest discussion of the liturgy. The Cardinal began to speak of a "reform of the reform" and a renewal of the liturgical movement. He himself brought into the limelight the work of the Msgr. Klaus Gamber, a liturgical scholar who, though he died unexpectedly in 1989, had called into question many of the premises upon which the actual reform had been built. Other scholars, such as Fr. Aidan Nichols, OP, the author of "Looking at the Liturgy", began publishing works that were critical of the reforms and began to explore possible solutions to the liturgical crisis.
The Cardinal, by his willingness to speak out, gave encouragement to many of the faithful who were grieved by what they saw happening to the sacred liturgy. He also inspired new efforts to make known the problems with the liturgy and to find avenues for an eventual solution. In 1995 the Adoremus Society for the Renewal of the Sacred Liturgy, citing Pope John Paul II and Cardinal Ratzinger as sources of inspiration, was born. Adoremus'goal was to rediscover and restore
"the beauty, the holiness, the power of the Church's rich liturgical tradition while remaining faithful to an organic, living process of renewal." In the same year Msgr. Francis Mannion, then Rector of the Cathedral in Salt Lake City, founded the Society for Catholic Liturgy, an association of Catholic pastors, teachers, and scholars
"committed to promoting the scholarly study and authentic renewal of the church's liturgy." In early 2000 Cardinal George of Chicago chose Msgr. Mannion to head up a new liturgical institute located at the Archdiocese's Mundelein Seminary.
The publication in 1996 of Oxford Declaration on the Liturgy, which was praised by Cardinal Ratzinger, was another significant step in the development of a new liturgical movement. The Oxford Declaration accepts, in principle, the conciliar reform of the liturgy, and recognizes as positive fruits
"the introduction of the vernacular, the opening up of the treasury of the Sacred Scriptures, increased participation in the liturgy and the enrichment of the process of Christian initiation." All the same, it decries the frustration of the manifest intentions of the Council by
"powerful contrary forces, which could be described as bureaucratic, philistine and secularist." Lamenting the near universal disappearance of the Gregorian chant, the declaration states,
"Our liturgical heritage is not a superficial embellishment of worship but should properly be regarded as intrinsic to it, as it is also to the process of transmitting the Catholic faith in education and evangelization." It calls for a
"revival of the liturgical movement" which would be concerned with
"the enrichment, correction and resacralization of Catholic liturgical practice." Looking to the Christian East for inspiration, it calls for a pluralism of rites and uses, and a period of ressourcement and reflection. The declaration further calls on
"those who love the Catholic tradition in its fullness" to
"strive to work together in charity, bearing each other's burdens in the light of the Holy Spirit, and persevering in prayer with Mary the Mother of Jesus." Recognizing that
"the glory of the Paschal Mystery... shines through every Catholic liturgy for those who have eyes to see", the authors of the declaration wait in hope for
"the return of spring".Paralleling these developments, the use of the old Roman Missal was permitted once again. In 1984 the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith published the document Quattuor Abhinc Annos giving diocesan bishops the power to grant, by way of an indult to certain priests and faithful, the permission to make use of the Roman Missal of 1962. Already in Dominicae Coenae, the Pope had given indications of this direction when he wrote in regard to the use of the Latin language:
"There are also those people who, having been educated on the basis of the old liturgy in Latin, experience the lack of this 'one language', which in all the world was an expression of the unity of the Church and through its dignified character elicited a profound sense of the Eucharistic Mystery. It is therefore necessary to show not only understanding, but also full respect towards these sentiments and desires. As far as possible these sentiments and desires are to be accommodated." (10) This expression anticipates the language that the Pope was to use eight years later in the "motu proprio" Ecclesia Dei:
"To all those Catholic faithful who feel attached to some previous liturgical and disciplinary forms of the Latin tradition, I wish to manifest my will to facilitate their ecclesial communion by means of the necessary measures to guarantee respect for their aspirations... respect must everywhere be shown for the feelings of all those who are attached to the Latin liturgical tradition."Was this indult merely condescension towards an obscure group of the faithful who were living on the margins of the life of the Church, or did the Pope and Cardinal Ratzinger see a wider role for the pre-conciliar liturgy in their efforts to bring about an authentic renewal of the Church's liturgical life? Last year, the Pope, in addressing the plenary Assembly of the Congregation for Divine Worship, made a reference to the Missal of Pius V, that indicates it has an important and ongoing role to play in the life of the Church:
"The people of God need to see in their priests and deacons a conduct filled with reverence and dignity, which is able to help them penetrate things which are invisible, even without many words and explanations. In the Roman Missal of St. Pius V, as in many Eastern Rites, there are beautiful prayers through which the priest expresses the most profound sense of humility and reverence for the sacred mysteries: these reveal the very substance of every liturgy."The recurring complaint about the reformed liturgy as it is generally celebrated is the lack of a sense of mystery, reverence, and worship. In both Redemptor Hominis and Dominicae Coenae the Holy Father urged a spirit of faith and worship regarding the Holy Eucharist, while Cardinal Ratzinger gave high ranking support to the criticisms of prevailing liturgical practice. No doubt, in opening the door anew for the celebration of the pre-conciliar liturgy they saw its positive importance for restoring within the Church a renewed sense of mystery, reverence, and worship.
In 1988, in the wake of a failed attempt to prevent the schism of the Society of Pius X, the Holy Father, though deeply pained by the schism, promulgated his "motu proprio" Ecclesia Dei, in which he called upon the Bishops to make
"a wide and generous application" of the permissions previously granted in 1984. There is no doubt that the "motu proprio" marked the beginning of a tremendous increase in the celebration and availability of the traditional mass, although many would like to see a more generous response to the Pope's request on the part of the Bishops.
Before the promulgation of Ecclesia Dei the French Abbey of Fontgombault, a daughter house of the Abbey of Solesmes, availing itself of the 1984 indult, returned to the use of the traditional liturgy. Following the promulgation of Ecclesia Dei a group of priests left the Society of St. Pius X, seeking to avail themselves of the Holy See's offer of reconciliation that Archbishop Lefebvre had refused. This led to the founding of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter. The French monastery at Le Barroux, which had been closely associated with Archbishop Lefebvre, refused to follow him into schism and regularized its position with the Church. Soon other priestly communities making use of the traditional liturgy came into being, such as the Institute of Christ the King and the Fraternity of St. Vincent Ferrer.
The French abbeys of Fontgombault, together with its daughter houses, and Le Barroux, are particular noteworthy because monasteries have traditionally been reference points for the celebration of the liturgy. Their daily solemnization of the liturgy in a monastic setting is providing the Church with a badly needed example in this time of liturgical confusion. When the liturgical reform began, Pope Paul VI explicitly asked the Benedictine monasteries not to abandon their heritage of the Gregorian chant, but only a few monasteries heeded his wish. Those few monasteries that do preserve this treasure render and an invaluable service to the whole Church.
In the summer of 2001 the Abbey of Fontgombault became the center of what may one day be seen as a decisive event in the growth and development of the new liturgical movement. Cardinal Ratzinger himself attended this meeting, together with a number of important figures of the Church in Europe. Also attending were the superiors of some of the clerical institutes that make use of the traditional liturgy, as well as important representatives of groups that situate themselves in the current of the post-conciliar reform. In seeking to establish the necessary and solid foundations of a second liturgical movement, this meeting did not formulate short-term policies or purely juridical measures to counter liturgical abuses. Rather, it was a symposium where a vigorous discussion took place in order to prepare lasting and organic solutions to the liturgical crisis.
With the promulgation of a new "General Instruction for the Roman Missal", and the recent document on liturgical translation, "Liturgiam Authenticam" the Holy See has, in the past two years, begun to take a stronger and more active hand in restoring order to liturgical practice. Cardinal Ratzinger has remained active in his concern for the authentic renewal of the liturgy. The publication of his masterwork "The Spirit of the Liturgy", completed in September 1999, and published in English in the year 2000 has opened up for many the full meaning and riches of the liturgical life.
Looking back over the more than twenty years of this pontificate we can see that tremendous progress has been made since the time when the Pope could do little more than call the attention of the Church to the eucharistic foundations of her faith. Recent years have seen the development of many positive liturgical initiatives within the Church, as well as new initiatives on the part of the Holy See. All this at times seems small in the face of the ongoing and ever deepening disintegration of the liturgy in many places. Nevertheless, looking back at the progress that has been made over these past years we can begin to appreciate the farsighted patience of Pope John Paul II and Cardinal Ratzinger and take hope that, though we may still have a long road ahead, the bark of Peter is slowly navigating through stormy and dangerous waters toward calmer seas.
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