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Traditional Catholic Faith => Crisis in the Church => Topic started by: Admin on August 31, 2019, 01:49:03 PM

Title: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Admin on August 31, 2019, 01:49:03 PM
It has been 50 years, and still no Traditional group has found the One Ring (argument) to rule them all.

That is to say, a collection of explanation(s) and argument(s) before which all the groups crumble, resulting in a state where the Wielder of this "One Ring" becomes Master of Tradition (as it were) and whoever is left in the various other Traditional groups is 100% bad willed, resisting the truth out of stubbornness only.

Because the arguments of this One Ring are so powerful that the only rebuttal is "I don't care about the truth", an ad-hominem, or some other logical fallacy.

But the reality of the Traditional Catholic world today suggests that this One Ring either doesn't exist, hasn't been found, or isn't available for men to find -- because the Traditional world is divided, with many conflicting opinions, each of which is flawed in some way, with no group managing to come out on top or achieve much dominance, much less mastery over the others. The nail in the coffin? All Traditional groups, and even some non-Traditional ones, have men of good will to be found in them. If there were a One Ring, it would convince *everyone* of good will who was interested in the Truth. There would be no rational or logical excuses to stay in the "wrong" group any longer; all the objections would be answered in a satisfactory manner.

My explanation is that God reserves this One Ring to Himself -- He has it right now with Him in heaven, and so none of us are going to be able to find it, much less wield it. God will choose to intervene at some point, at which point he will forge* and/or give said One Ring to his Great Monarch, Angelic Pope, etc. after a Chastisement or whenever He decides to end the Crisis.

* I say "forge" because part of the power of this hypothetical Ring might be God's own testimony, with miracles, etc. so in that sense, the Ring wouldn't exist before God intervenes and works those miracles and/or appears to various individuals.

(I'm a Lord of the Rings fan, re-reading it now actually for the first time in 18 years, so I'm using the Ring analogy here.)

To refresh your memory about what the One Ring is:
(NOTE: You have to watch it on Youtube.com; watching it embedded here on CathInfo doesn't work. Embed functionality has been turned off for this video)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhjDnrw34QA (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhjDnrw34QA)
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Admin on August 31, 2019, 02:02:00 PM
Good-willed Catholics currently exist in many groups. Below are the arguments that WOULD JUSTIFY a Catholic of good will attending any of these groups. There are other arguments, and I don't have all day, but I'm giving a quick sample so you know what I mean:

Conservative Novus Ordo: "We must stay within the authority and framework of the Catholic Church. Obedience is important. Christ promised perpetual successors to St. Peter. I do my best to do and believe everything a Catholic should. I obey my priest, bishop, and Pope unless they are clearly in error, which some of them are at times."

FSSP: "What Conservative Novus Ordo said, but also the New Mass is defective and dangerous at least. We will play it safe and only say the Tridentine Mass and use the Rites that were used before Vatican II. Vatican II was extremely problematic at best. We will train our priests in separate seminaries so they get a fully Traditional or pre-Vatican II formation. We're OK with the new Rites of consecration and ordination, however."

SSPX: "What FSSP said."  <----- Note how useless the SSPX is now, but I digress!

Resistance: "Vatican II is heretical and destructive of souls, and we have 50 years of evidence to prove it. We should stay away from the Modernist contagion, lest we ourselves become infected. It is permitted to disobey a Pope when he steps outside his authority. God expects us to save our souls, and we need the Sacraments to do so. We have the right to cling to the Catholic Faith as it was always taught. We don't need the Pope or anyone else to give us permission to stay Catholic. But we can keep the Faith and pre-Vatican II religion without denying the papacy of the current Pope. Besides, the Pope has been validly elected and universally accepted by the Catholic Church. Also, the idea of a 60 year interregnum (period between popes) is ludicrous."

Sedevacantists: "What Resistance said, except the stuff about the Pope. The Catholic Church can't promulgate a Mass noxious to souls. And what's the point of Our Lord's promise to St. Peter if his successor could actually be harmful to, and dismantle, the Catholic Church? The last several Popes aren't even Catholic, therefore they can't be heads of the Catholic Church. They are heretics. We know heresy when we see it."

Home Aloners: "I stopped going to Mass after 1970 when the Catholic Church embraced Modernism and error. Yes I've heard about so-called "Traditional Catholics" here and there, but they have no authority from the Pope to operate independent churches. They have no authority to say Mass, much less hear confessions or witness marriages. These groups are like cut-off branches not connected to the main tree, which means they are dead. You can't get life (grace) from dead branches. So I stay at home with my Rosary, and live like the Japanese "hidden Christians" praying for God to end this chastisement."
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on August 31, 2019, 02:25:56 PM
this One Ring either doesn't exist, hasn't been found, or isn't available for men to find

Well, clearly it does exist, objectively speaking ... as you stated latter in holding that God is keeping it to Himself.

And it's also possible that one group or another has it right.  Or at least has it 90% right, or whatever.  It's also possible that some men of good will have it 90% wrong, for sincerity and good will do not preclude material error.

Now the missing ingredient to having a 100% complete One Ring is in fact the authority of the teaching Church.  In times past when Catholics were divided on theological matters, the Church intervened, threw down the One Ring, and the matter was closed.  But that's not happening right now.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Admin on August 31, 2019, 02:47:10 PM
Indeed, the "who is right" can be argued about, and we can even reach moral certainty (enough to act on), but we don't have enough certainty OR AUTHORITY to be able to compel others, for example.

We're all hoping that when God comes down and solves the Crisis, the group we joined is the closest to the truth. While good will and prudence certainly enter into it, nevertheless right now we each have to "pick our poison" about which unanswerable question is the least disturbing to us. And which position will outfit us the best to rejoin the mainstream Catholic Church when the whole mess is sorted out -- or give us the best shot at going to Heaven, if we will die during the Crisis. (How many Catholics have died since 1970?)

I'll give you a hint: it probably isn't the home aloners. They believe the Traditional Movement is not legitimate, but also see the evils of the Novus Ordo. So they aren't used to attending Mass, so their children will probably all be apostate by the time the Crisis is sorted. "Religion is a habit of life."

God gave us Reason, with which we exercise the virtue of Prudence. If we love the truth, acknowledge and attack error, always call a spade a spade, and "give the devil his due", there shouldn't be any huge surprises in store for us. Nor any worries that we'll go full Old Catholic when the Church is restored.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Praeter on August 31, 2019, 03:33:54 PM
...right now we each have to "pick our poison" about which unanswerable question is the least disturbing to us.

Maybe I'm in the minority, but there's nothing about the crisis in the Church that perplexes me, and no unanswerable questions - i.e., apparent contradictions between Catholic doctrine and what is taking place - that disturb me.  Perhaps there are unanswerable questions that I just haven't thought of, and which would perplex me if I did?

I'm curious if most people here are struggling with such difficulties, and if so, what they are?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Last Tradhican on August 31, 2019, 03:40:55 PM
"By their deeds you shall know them".

Those seeking truth without seeking fortune, popularity, fame, accolades, relief from guilt of sin...….. will find truth and spiritual success in themselves and their children (their deeds), that is the sign I look for in groups like Novus Ordo, Indult, Fraternity, SSPX, Sedes.

The success % in the Novus Ordo is atrocious, like maybe 1%

The success in the Indult and Fraternity was considerable less than in the SSPX, but the SSPX today is going the way of the Fraternity, in a few years there will be no difference.

The success of the SSPX is less than the Sede groups.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: SeanJohnson on August 31, 2019, 03:45:01 PM
R&R is that ring.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: SimpleMan on August 31, 2019, 04:31:20 PM
FSSP: "What Conservative Novus Ordo said, but also the New Mass is defective and dangerous at least. We will play it safe and only say the Tridentine Mass and use the Rites that were used before Vatican II. Vatican II was extremely problematic at best. We will train our priests in separate seminaries so they get a fully Traditional or pre-Vatican II formation. We're OK with the new Rites of consecration and ordination, however."
Does the FSSP go that far?  I didn't think they were permitted to teach that the Novus Ordo is, as you put it, "defective and dangerous", nor that Vatican II was "extremely problematic".
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 01, 2019, 05:24:57 AM
R&R is that ring.
SSPX or Resistance? 
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Hodie on September 01, 2019, 06:11:03 AM
After Almighty God Himself, Archbishop Lefebvre holds "the ring." Every single traditional group who deviated from his guidance or never followed it in the first place, has compromised in some way with Vatican II/modernism. Sad.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 01, 2019, 06:18:24 AM
R&R is that ring.

False.  You're missing Matthew's point.  All you're saying is that you think the R&R position is right.  Matthew is talking about whether anyone has such a slam-dunk position that all people of good will would rally around it.  Lots of good Catholics think that R&R is completely misguided (those in the Novus Ordo and sedevacantists).  And, then, even among R&R you have division:  SSPX vs. Resistance.  So if even R&R is divided, where the Ring ... as Matthew described it?  You clearly didn't understand Matthew's post.

You make this post, and all someone has to do to respond is to post --
Quote
Sedeprivationism is that ring.

to negate what you said.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 01, 2019, 06:19:21 AM
SSPX or Resistance?

This response to SeanJohnson is all that's needed to negate what he wrote.  Even R&R is divided, so how can R&R be the Ring?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 01, 2019, 06:21:49 AM
After Almighty God Himself, Archbishop Lefebvre holds "the ring." Every single traditional group who deviated from his guidance or never followed it in the first place, has compromised in some way with Vatican II/modernism. Sad.

How have the sedevacantists compromised with Vatican II?  Again, if +Lefebvre had the Ring ... as Matthew explained it ... then there would not exist any Catholics of good will who did not follow him ... no Novus Ordo, no FFSP or motarians, no sedevacantists or sedeprivationists.  You missed Matthew's point also.  Some Catholics of good will think that they SHOULD "compromise with Vatican II".
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 01, 2019, 06:27:31 AM
Maybe I'm in the minority, but there's nothing about the crisis in the Church that perplexes me, and no unanswerable questions - i.e., apparent contradictions between Catholic doctrine and what is taking place - that disturb me.  Perhaps there are unanswerable questions that I just haven't thought of, and which would perplex me if I did?

I'm curious if most people here are struggling with such difficulties, and if so, what they are?

Seriously?  There's the core question of which is worse, a 60-year vacancy of the Holy See or a Magisterium and Universal Discipline of the Church that has gone completely off the rails and has been leading souls to hell for 60 years.  That's the chief fight between R&R and the sedevacantists.  R&R think the former is a worse problem for the Church's indefectibility, while the SVs think that the latter is the worse problem.  But both are absolutely a problem, and it takes a lot of arrogance to think that you're above it all.

It's a grave problem, as +Lefebvre puts it (he himself was perplexed):
Quote
…a grave problem confronts the conscience and the faith of all Catholics since the beginning of Paul VI’s pontificate: how can a pope who is truly successor of Peter, to whom the assistance of the Holy Ghost has been promised, preside over the most radical and far-reaching destruction of the Church ever known, in so short a time, beyond what any heresiarch has ever achieved? This question must one day be answered…

But I guess that you've succeeded in solving this problem where +Lefebvre failed.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 01, 2019, 06:30:45 AM
I sincerely believe that the following happend --

Masons/Communists/Modernists had been infiltrating the hierarchy for decades and even centuries prior to Vatican II.  In the 1958 Conclave, Cardinal Siri was elected, but the Communists/Masons forced him to step down.  Then they installed their agent Roncalli in his place, the "uncanonically elected" pope described by a prophesy of St. Francis.  Once the smoking gun proof for this comes to light, then we'll have our ring.

Then the Church will need to revisit the ecclesiological debates between R&R and the sedevacantists and settle those disputes as a matter of principle.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Quo vadis Domine on September 01, 2019, 07:27:39 AM
Seriously?  There's the core question of which is worse, a 60-year vacancy of the Holy See or a Magisterium and Universal Discipline of the Church that has gone completely off the rails and has been leading souls to hell for 60 years.  That's the chief fight between R&R and the sedevacantists.  R&R think the former is a worse problem for the Church's indefectibility, while the SVs think that the latter is the worse problem.  But both are absolutely a problem, and it takes a lot of arrogance to think that you're above it all.

It's a grave problem, as +Lefebvre puts it (he himself was perplexed):
But I guess that you've succeeded in solving this problem where +Lefebvre failed.
You put this well, but I don’t see it as a better or worse problem, rather an impossibility vs an enigma. 
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Quo vadis Domine on September 01, 2019, 07:34:34 AM
Good-willed Catholics currently exist in many groups. Below are the arguments that WOULD JUSTIFY a Catholic of good will attending any of these groups. There are other arguments, and I don't have all day, but I'm giving a quick sample so you know what I mean:

Conservative Novus Ordo: "We must stay within the authority and framework of the Catholic Church. Obedience is important. Christ promised perpetual successors to St. Peter. I do my best to do and believe everything a Catholic should. I obey my priest, bishop, and Pope unless they are clearly in error, which some of them are at times."

FSSP: "What Conservative Novus Ordo said, but also the New Mass is defective and dangerous at least. We will play it safe and only say the Tridentine Mass and use the Rites that were used before Vatican II. Vatican II was extremely problematic at best. We will train our priests in separate seminaries so they get a fully Traditional or pre-Vatican II formation. We're OK with the new Rites of consecration and ordination, however."

SSPX: "What FSSP said."  <----- Note how useless the SSPX is now, but I digress!

Resistance: "Vatican II is heretical and destructive of souls, and we have 50 years of evidence to prove it. We should stay away from the Modernist contagion, lest we ourselves become infected. It is permitted to disobey a Pope when he steps outside his authority. God expects us to save our souls, and we need the Sacraments to do so. We have the right to cling to the Catholic Faith as it was always taught. We don't need the Pope or anyone else to give us permission to stay Catholic. But we can keep the Faith and pre-Vatican II religion without denying the papacy of the current Pope. Besides, the Pope has been validly elected and universally accepted by the Catholic Church. Also, the idea of a 60 year interregnum (period between popes) is ludicrous."

Sedevacantists: "What Resistance said, except the stuff about the Pope. The Catholic Church can't promulgate a Mass noxious to souls. And what's the point of Our Lord's promise to St. Peter if his successor could actually be harmful to, and dismantle, the Catholic Church? The last several Popes aren't even Catholic, therefore they can't be heads of the Catholic Church. They are heretics. We know heresy when we see it."

Home Aloners: "I stopped going to Mass after 1970 when the Catholic Church embraced Modernism and error. Yes I've heard about so-called "Traditional Catholics" here and there, but they have no authority from the Pope to operate independent churches. They have no authority to say Mass, much less hear confessions or witness marriages. These groups are like cut-off branches not connected to the main tree, which means they are dead. You can't get life (grace) from dead branches. So I stay at home with my Rosary, and live like the Japanese "hidden Christians" praying for God to end this chastisement."
Good summary.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Admin on September 01, 2019, 09:10:47 AM
I sincerely believe that the following happend --

Masons/Communists/Modernists had been infiltrating the hierarchy for decades and even centuries prior to Vatican II.  In the 1958 Conclave, Cardinal Siri was elected, but the Communists/Masons forced him to step down.  Then they installed their agent Roncalli in his place, the "uncanonically elected" pope described by a prophesy of St. Francis.  Once the smoking gun proof for this comes to light, then we'll have our ring.

Then the Church will need to revisit the ecclesiological debates between R&R and the sedevacantists and settle those disputes as a matter of principle.

Obviously my best guess with the limited information I have (which is not exactly powerful, being only a guess) is that the One Ring has Latin text which glows when you cast it into a fire, which says something about R&R being correct. Or else I wouldn't be supporting that group.

Nevertheless, it's impossible to say what the One Ring says/looks like, since it's currently at the bottom of some river or in some hidden place of the world, possibly not even on earth. So I have no evidence or reason to reject or deny that you could be right.

God will either have to guide someone's hand to find it, or bring it to us Himself. (possibly by the hands of His Blessed Mother)

That person could be humble like a hobbit or one of the River Folk (e.g., Smeagol) -- that is to say a layman or Religious of low rank, or it could be a king, prince, theologian, or prelate. But as I said in my posts above, it's going to take something special. God will have to be involved in SOME way. A lot of human thought and effort has been given to the Crisis over the last 50 years, a lot of ink has been spilled, and yet still Tradition is divided with men of good will on ALL sides. I won't say equally divided among the groups, but there are at least confused men of good will to be found in each of the conflicting groups.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Admin on September 01, 2019, 09:11:37 AM
To refresh your memory about what the One Ring is:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhjDnrw34QA (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BhjDnrw34QA)

At this point I should point out, the analogy isn't perfect, since we're talking about a super evil ring, basically forged by the equivalent of lucifer in Tolkien's fantasy world. "Omnis comparatio claudicat nisi in puncto comparationis." Every comparison limps, except in the point of comparison.

The parts of the analogy I'm seeking to use: the fact that no one can withstand the power of the ring, when the master of the ring is wielding it. The only option is to go along with what it's making you do, or die (go into mortal sin, become of bad will, willfully reject or ignore the truth).

Even the "lesser rings" work in my analogy:

Each of the Trad groups has one (or more!) of these lesser rings, which compel men to follow them (by force of their arguments). The Ring of Papal Authority is one such ring, currently wielded by Conservative Novus Ordo. The Ring of Papal Authority and Tradition is wielded by the FSSP. And so on. The SSPX recently lost its ring, but they seek the Ring of Papal Authority and Tradition. There are lesser rings based on individuals too: the Ring of Archbishop Lefebvre. Treachery caused it to be lost to the SSPX, and now ever since then the Resistance and the SSPX are both dredging rivers as we speak to find this Ring. In the meantime, SSPX and ex-SSPX Catholics are left to their own prudence to decide which group +ABL would support today (SSPX or Resistance). So you see, the power dynamics change over time as Ring ownership changes.

Maybe there are some 3rd level rings, the least and weakest of them, which actually exist in multiple copies! So then we could have "The Ring of the Tridentine Mass" because several groups are using that Ring today to influence and bring in supporters.

But just as in LOTR, if the One Ring entered the scene, it would be all over. The One Ring contains the powers of, and controls, all the others.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 01, 2019, 10:27:01 AM
The Unifying factor of Tradition is the Faith.  It is the True Mass.  It is Orthodoxy, the Rosary and penance.  
.
All these other ridiculous debates (sedevacantism vs R&R, 1 Baptism vs 3) are distractions.  It’s as if the devil (ie Sauron) has tricked the Fellowship committee - to argue about how to defeat all the various orc armies and to debate which cities to defend the most - instead of them concentrating on the only thing that matters - destroying the ring (ie V2 and modernism).  Destroying the ring is all that matters.  Doing this and you destroy all the orcs and you keep all cities safe.  But most Trads have lost sight of the main problem.  And the blame is on the Fellowship committee alone (ie Trad Bishops/priests) who bicker endlessly.  
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 01, 2019, 10:33:50 AM
At this point I should point out, the analogy isn't perfect, ...

I have been resisting the temptation to throw down the old omnis comparatio claudicat ... before you go too far down the road comparing +Lefebvre to Gandalf and +Williamson to Frodo.   :laugh1:
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 01, 2019, 10:35:08 AM
The Unifying factor of Tradition is the Faith.  It is the True Mass.  It is Orthodoxy, the Rosary and penance.  
.
All these other ridiculous debates (sedevacantism vs R&R, 1 Baptism vs 3) are distractions.

No, these are not ridiculous debates, not in the least bit (that's going too far) ... BUT, when taken too far they can certainly distract from our core mission as lay people, to keep our faith and save our souls.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 01, 2019, 10:38:36 AM
The parts of the analogy I'm seeking to use: ...

Ah, and this speaks to the end of that phrase I cited earlier:  nisi in puncto comparationis.  Here you lay out that "point of comparison".  It was Bishop Williamson himself at STAS who introduced me to this maxim.  Strange how stuff he taught me sticks in my brain 30 years later.  That's the mark of a good teacher.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 01, 2019, 10:43:11 AM
I have been resisting the temptation to throw down the old omnis comparatio claudicat ... before you go too far down the road comparing +Lefebvre to Gandalf and +Williamson to Frodo.   :laugh1:
:laugh1:
I was beginning to think the same when he mentioned Smeagol.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 01, 2019, 10:43:42 AM
Quote
No, these are not ridiculous debates, not in the least bit (that's going too far) 
They are ridiculous in the sense that 100% of laypeople and 100% of priests have no theological training whatsoever.  Yet most act like their opinion matters.  They act like it can be figured out.  Even the Trad Bishops have had no normal seminary training, nor any extra training in theology.  Every Trad is self-taught in these areas.  NO Trad has any vocation, nor special calling, nor ecclesiastical permission to write books or articles in any way that comes to a conclusion or a solution.  So what's the point?  There is none, except for a distraction.  
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Admin on September 01, 2019, 11:04:29 AM
The Unifying factor of Tradition is the Faith.  It is the True Mass.  It is Orthodoxy, the Rosary and penance.  
.
Oh, so the world of Tradition must be united then! Nevermind, I thought we had a unity problem in the Traditional movement.
Because I could list several groups that

A) have the Catholic Faith
B) say/attend only the Tridentine Mass
C) Are certainly orthodox in beliefs (same as A)
D) say the Rosary as well as other pre-V2 practices for good measure
E) practice penance, go to confession frequently (whichever you meant)

If that is the source of Unity, then apparently the FSSP, SSPX, Resistance, all independent chapels, Sedevacantists, (and maybe even Fr. Pfeiffer) are all COMPLETELY united.

Could have fooled me!
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Admin on September 01, 2019, 11:10:48 AM
To continue my analogy:

The Catholic Church used to live in peace and unity, under the rule of the Pope, who had the One Ring of St. Peter, forged by Jesus Christ almost 2000 years ago.

But at the end of the last age (which ended in 1970), a great Council was called and many wicked men conspired to take over that Council. They mastered the will of the Council, which decided to throw the One Ring into the molten lava of the nearest volcano and destroy it. This was done. So the One Ring was thus destroyed, and ever since then chaos has reigned.

(Another limping point: the One Ring being destroyed would normally undo not only the creator of the Ring, but all the lesser rings. So the analogy breaks with LOTR there)

Some, like Pope Michael and others, have attempted to forge a new Master ring, but they don't have any power (authority) to pour into it. So although their rings were shiny and even looked like the original Ring of St. Peter in many ways, they didn't do squat. The chaos continued.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 01, 2019, 11:15:07 AM

Quote
If that is the source of Unity, then apparently the FSSP, SSPX, Resistance, all independent chapels, Sedevacantists, (and maybe even Fr. Pfeiffer) are all COMPLETELY united.
??  The FSSP and the new-SSPX aren't Trads - they don't believe the one ring (V2, new mass, modernism) should be destroyed.  
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Admin on September 01, 2019, 11:18:17 AM
??  The FSSP and the new-SSPX aren't Trads - they don't believe the one ring (V2, new mass, modernism) should be destroyed.  

Getting off topic a bit. Normally I do say that the FSSP is technically not Trad, because they deny the basic tenet of the Traditional Movement that we don't need anyone's permission to attend the Tridentine Mass or to stay Catholic. And I've also said that the SSPX is becoming the FSSP. But on the other hand, they are "pseudo-Trad" at least, and many people of good will use these groups for a source of the Sacraments.

So while you're not wrong, I didn't want to argue about the different Trad groups here. I purposely passed over it. My point in this thread is WHAT IT WOULD TAKE to END THE ARGUING :)
Arguing specifics about this or that Trad group is far below the cruising altitude of this thread.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 01, 2019, 11:22:48 AM
You’re the one that brought up the groups, not me
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Clemens Maria on September 01, 2019, 01:01:35 PM
You answered your own question, Matthew.  It’s the Fisherman’s ring.  The pope is the principle of Catholic unity.  Where Peter is, there is the Church.  We must always be united to the pope and when there is a sede vacante we must be united to the remaining Catholic hierarchy.  That’s why it is so important to correctly identify who is a member of the Catholic hierarchy.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Praeter on September 01, 2019, 02:08:12 PM
Seriously?  There's the core question of which is worse, a 60-year vacancy of the Holy See or ...

But there hasn’t been a 60 year vacancy of the Holy See.  Each time a pope died another was elected right away, and he was accepted as Pope by the entire episcopate.  If the last 6 pope had been false popes, the entire episcopate would have been united to a false head, formal apostolic succession would have ended years ago, and the visible Church would have defected. If that were the case, the gates of hell would have prevailed.  So that scenario is definitely false.


Quote
Ladislaus (https://www.cathinfo.com/index.php?topic=53227.msg665749#msg665749) a Magisterium and Universal Discipline of the Church that has gone completely off the rails and has been leading souls to hell for 60 years.


Nothing that has taken place in the Church over the past 60 years is contrary to disciplinary infallibility, and it is excessive to say the Magisterium has been leading souls to hell for 60 years.  There’s no doubt that Freemasons, Communists (and worse), began infiltrating the Church hundreds of years ago, and that some had risen to the highest levels of the Church by the end of the 19th century (e.g., Rampolla). But even today, my local ordinary, in spite of whatever errors or heresies he personally holds, has never taught anything heretical that I’m aware, which would have led the souls in my diocese to hell.  To be clear, I’m not denying that the Church is in a crisis, but what I am saying is it’s excessive to say “the Magisterium has been leading souls to hell for 60 years.”


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It's a grave problem, as +Lefebvre puts it (he himself was perplexed):

ABL: “…a grave problem confronts the conscience and the faith of all Catholics since the beginning of Paul VI’s pontificate: how can a pope who is truly successor of Peter, to whom the assistance of the Holy Ghost has been promised, preside over the most radical and far-reaching destruction of the Church ever known, in so short a time, beyond what any heresiarch has ever achieved? This question must one day be answered…    

But I guess that you've succeeded in solving this problem where +Lefebvre failed.


If, by “the assistance of the Holy Ghost,” ALB is referring to papal infallibility (which is likely), the answer is that this assistance is only guaranteed to prevent a Pope from erring when he defines a doctrine, ex cathedra.  Paul VI never defined an error; therefore the assistance understood in this sense was not contradicted during his papacy.  If ALB was referring to an ordinary assistance, the answer is that the Holy Ghost promises the same to every member of the episcopate, but this ordinary assistance, which is an actual grace, “assists” without preventing the possibility of error, or overriding the free will of the one being assisted.  So, the ordinary assistance would not have prevented Paul VI from overseeing a far-reaching destruction of the Church.

One of the primary reasons Catholics are unable to reconcile the crisis in the Church with Catholic doctrine, is because they have embraced an excessive idea of infallibility - the same excessive notion of infallibility that Cardinal Manning, Dr. Ward, Louis Veuillot, and numerous Jesuits defended in the years before Vatican I. It was this erroneous idea of papal infallibility, which any Catholic with a knowledge of history would have rejected (and did object), that lead to the opposite reaction by Dollinger and the other future Old Catholics.  

The public debate over infallibility in the years prior to Vatican I was between two opposing groups: those who defended an excessive notion of infallibility, and those who rejected it.  If you believed in papal infallibility you were considered to be with the former group; if you rejected the false notion of infallibility that they promoted, you fell in with the latter group.   In other words, the public debate presented two false choices, and with human nature as it is, each side became hardened in their position.    Those who believed in papal infallibility as it would be defined a few years later, were a silent and hesitant minority, who were being tossed back and forth between the two extreme positions.

When Vatican I defined papal infallibility, it did so within narrow conditions that would have likely satisfied both groups before the public debate began.  When the Council finally defined the dogma, however, it was too late.  By then, each side was already for or against papal infallibility, and the narrowly defined conditions did not satisfy those that had been arguing so vehemently against it for years.

The defenders of (the false notion of) infallibility were considered to have triumphed at Vatican I (even though they really didn’t), and most of the other group left the Church. This resulted in the founding of the heretical Old Catholics Church, whose apologists continued to use the same arguments to refute the papal infallibility as they did to refute the “defenders” of the dogma before it was defined.  In other words, the heretics were attacking a straw man, since Vatican I did not define papal infallibility as the “defenders” of the doctrine presented it prior to Vatican I.

But the problems didn’t end there.  The pre-Vatican I “defenders” of papal infallibility didn’t completely abandon the excessive idea of infallibility that they defended before the council. While they didn’t dare reject what Vatican I defined, their tendency was to stretch the infallibility of the pope beyond what was defined.  Just as the liberals reduced the dogma “outside the Church there is no salvation” to a “meaningless formula” so as to conform the dogma to what they believed, so too did the pre-Vatican I “defenders” of infallibility reduce the dogma of papal infallibility to a “meaningless formula” by treating every authoritative teaching of the Pope as infallible.

And since the pre-Vatican I “defenders” of papal infallibility were seen as the victors in the debate over infallibility, and since they held some of the highest positions in the Church, the excessive idea of papal infallibility that they continued to promote, was gradually embraced by most Catholics.  Overtime, most Catholics began to believe every word of the Pope was infallible.

The earlier quote you provided from ABL shows that he, too, had embraced the excessive view of Papal Infallibility, but later quotes show he abandoned that error.  For example, here is what he said in 1989:


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Archbishop Lefebvre: "It is a request of the litanies of the Saints, right? We ask to keep the Pope in the true religion… We ask that in the Litanies of the Saints! This proves that sometimes it can happen that unfortunately, well, maybe sometimes it happens that... well there have been hesitations, there are false steps, there are errors that are possible. We have too easily believed since Vatican I, that every word that comes from the mouth of the Pope is infallible. That was never said in Vatican I! The Council never said such a thing. Very specific conditions are required for the infallibility; very, very strict conditions. The best proof is that throughout the Council, Pope Paul VI himself said ‘There is nothing in this Council which is under the sign of infallibility’. So, it is clear, he says it himself! He said it explicitly. Then we must not keep this idea which is false, and which a number of Catholics, poorly instructed, poorly taught, believe!" (Retreat at St. Michel en Brenne, April 1, 1989).



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Ladislaus (https://www.cathinfo.com/index.php?topic=53227.msg665749#msg665749) “That's the chief fight between R&R and the sedevacantists.  R&R think the former is a worse problem for the Church's indefectibility, while the SVs think that the latter is the worse problem.


That’s because the sedevacantists have an entirely false notion of infallibility.  They are the Old Catholics 2.0.  They adhere to a false notion of papal infallibility that cannot be reconciled with the crisis in the Church.  The Old Catholics false understanding of papal infallibility caused them to reject the dogma, and the sedevacantists false understanding of papal infallibility causes them to reject the recent popes.  The result is that the Old Catholics say the Church defected at Vatican I, and the sedevacantists say it defected at Vatican II.  Same heresy, different date.


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Ladislaus (https://www.cathinfo.com/index.php?topic=53227.msg665749#msg665749) But both are absolutely a problem, and it takes a lot of arrogance to think that you're above it all.

I don’t arrogantly think “I’m above it all,” but what I do say is that nothing about the crisis causes me any difficulties at all.  And there are certainly no “unanswerable questions” that disturb me.  That is not arrogance, it is the truth.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: 2Vermont on September 01, 2019, 04:16:53 PM
You answered your own question, Matthew.  It’s the Fisherman’s ring.  The pope is the principle of Catholic unity.  Where Peter is, there is the Church.  We must always be united to the pope and when there is a sede vacante we must be united to the remaining Catholic hierarchy.  That’s why it is so important to correctly identify who is a member of the Catholic hierarchy.
And since there is no true pope, there is no unity
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: MadonnaDolorosa on September 01, 2019, 04:46:09 PM
But there hasn’t been a 60 year vacancy of the Holy See.  Each time a pope died another was elected right away, and he was accepted as Pope by the entire episcopate.  If the last 6 pope had been false popes, the entire episcopate would have been united to a false head, formal apostolic succession would have ended years ago, and the visible Church would have defected. If that were the case, the gates of hell would have prevailed.  So that scenario is definitely false.



Nothing that has taken place in the Church over the past 60 years is contrary to disciplinary infallibility, and it is excessive to say the Magisterium has been leading souls to hell for 60 years.  There’s no doubt that Freemasons, Communists (and worse), began infiltrating the Church hundreds of years ago, and that some had risen to the highest levels of the Church by the end of the 19th century (e.g., Rampolla). But even today, my local ordinary, in spite of whatever errors or heresies he personally holds, has never taught anything heretical that I’m aware, which would have led the souls in my diocese to hell.  To be clear, I’m not denying that the Church is in a crisis, but what I am saying is it’s excessive to say “the Magisterium has been leading souls to hell for 60 years.”



If, by “the assistance of the Holy Ghost,” ALB is referring to papal infallibility (which is likely), the answer is that this assistance is only guaranteed to prevent a Pope from erring when he defines a doctrine, ex cathedra.  Paul VI never defined an error; therefore the assistance understood in this sense was not contradicted during his papacy.  If ALB was referring to an ordinary assistance, the answer is that the Holy Ghost promises the same to every member of the episcopate, but this ordinary assistance, which is an actual grace, “assists” without preventing the possibility of error, or overriding the free will of the one being assisted.  So, the ordinary assistance would not have prevented Paul VI from overseeing a far-reaching destruction of the Church.

One of the primary reasons Catholics are unable to reconcile the crisis in the Church with Catholic doctrine, is because they have embraced an excessive idea of infallibility - the same excessive notion of infallibility that Cardinal Manning, Dr. Ward, Louis Veuillot, and numerous Jesuits defended in the years before Vatican I. It was this erroneous idea of papal infallibility, which any Catholic with a knowledge of history would have rejected (and did object), that lead to the opposite reaction by Dollinger and the other future Old Catholics. 

The public debate over infallibility in the years prior to Vatican I was between two opposing groups: those who defended an excessive notion of infallibility, and those who rejected it.  If you believed in papal infallibility you were considered to be with the former group; if you rejected the false notion of infallibility that they promoted, you fell in with the latter group.   In other words, the public debate presented two false choices, and with human nature as it is, each side became hardened in their position.    Those who believed in papal infallibility as it would be defined a few years later, were a silent and hesitant minority, who were being tossed back and forth between the two extreme positions.

When Vatican I defined papal infallibility, it did so within narrow conditions that would have likely satisfied both groups before the public debate began.  When the Council finally defined the dogma, however, it was too late.  By then, each side was already for or against papal infallibility, and the narrowly defined conditions did not satisfy those that had been arguing so vehemently against it for years.

The defenders of (the false notion of) infallibility were considered to have triumphed at Vatican I (even though they really didn’t), and most of the other group left the Church. This resulted in the founding of the heretical Old Catholics Church, whose apologists continued to use the same arguments to refute the papal infallibility as they did to refute the “defenders” of the dogma before it was defined.  In other words, the heretics were attacking a straw man, since Vatican I did not define papal infallibility as the “defenders” of the doctrine presented it prior to Vatican I.

But the problems didn’t end there.  The pre-Vatican I “defenders” of papal infallibility didn’t completely abandon the excessive idea of infallibility that they defended before the council. While they didn’t dare reject what Vatican I defined, their tendency was to stretch the infallibility of the pope beyond what was defined.  Just as the liberals reduced the dogma “outside the Church there is no salvation” to a “meaningless formula” so as to conform the dogma to what they believed, so too did the pre-Vatican I “defenders” of infallibility reduce the dogma of papal infallibility to a “meaningless formula” by treating every authoritative teaching of the Pope as infallible.

And since the pre-Vatican I “defenders” of papal infallibility were seen as the victors in the debate over infallibility, and since they held some of the highest positions in the Church, the excessive idea of papal infallibility that they continued to promote, was gradually embraced by most Catholics.  Overtime, most Catholics began to believe every word of the Pope was infallible.

The earlier quote you provided from ABL shows that he, too, had embraced the excessive view of Papal Infallibility, but later quotes show he abandoned that error.  For example, here is what he said in 1989:


That’s because the sedevacantists have an entirely false notion of infallibility.  They are the Old Catholics 2.0.  They adhere to a false notion of papal infallibility that cannot be reconciled with the crisis in the Church.  The Old Catholics false understanding of papal infallibility caused them to reject the dogma, and the sedevacantists false understanding of papal infallibility causes them to reject the recent popes.  The result is that the Old Catholics say the Church defected at Vatican I, and the sedevacantists say it defected at Vatican II.  Same heresy, different date.


I don’t arrogantly think “I’m above it all,” but what I do say is that nothing about the crisis causes me any difficulties at all.  And there are certainly no “unanswerable questions” that disturb me.  That is not arrogance, it is the truth.
Where to begin...
First of all, an extended Sede Vacante is not *exactly* a failure of the Church's mission--error being taught to the Universal Church is. And the Church still exists, materially, as per CT. The Church you describe has failed *formally* which means the gates of hell have prevailed. And it is excessive to say the Magisterium has been leading souls to hell for 60 years? If someone holds to the errors of Vatican II; he cannot be pleasing to God. Traditionalists agree on that point.

The next comment (referring to ++ABL) is against the very idea of the Papacy as Vatican I defined. Even Ordinary Magisterium cannot cause someone to embrace a false doctrine, nor should they ever refuse submission (oh, I don't know... if by submitting to the Magisterium I could come away with adultery being a venial sin, the Magisterium and Church would have defected). Another reason why this idea of the Papacy fails is because the Conciliar Pontiffs have done actions which the Church knows to be infallible. They've canonized Paul VI and other modernists, for example. The 1983 Code of Canon Law is supposed to be protected by the Church's secondary object of infallibility; but it allows altar girls and communion for non-Catholics, among other things. The idea that the Papacy can destroy the Church because they never used "Ex Cathedra" authority is, indeed, false--and fatuous, if you really think about it. Same with this idea that it can't be infallible if it doesn't "confirm" to Tradition. The entire point of infallibility is that it will be free from error, guaranteed. And, if Paul VI was a Pope--V2 is either UOM, or Extraordinary Magisterium, both of which are infallible, and any traditional dogmatic theology book will tell you so.

Sedevacantists are Old Catholics? Really now? R&R is now denying canonizations... but we are the Old Catholics. Right.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 01, 2019, 04:56:22 PM
Nothing that has taken place in the Church over the past 60 years is contrary to disciplinary infallibility, and it is excessive to say the Magisterium has been leading souls to hell for 60 years.  There’s no doubt that Freemasons, Communists (and worse), began infiltrating the Church hundreds of years ago, and that some had risen to the highest levels of the Church by the end of the 19th century (e.g., Rampolla). But even today, my local ordinary, in spite of whatever errors or heresies he personally holds, has never taught anything heretical that I’m aware, which would have led the souls in my diocese to hell.  To be clear, I’m not denying that the Church is in a crisis, but what I am saying is it’s excessive to say “the Magisterium has been leading souls to hell for 60 years.”
Ah yes, only in the R&R could 99% of masses being invalid and "blasphemous", along with the clergy and pope teaching universal salvation and communion for divorceés among many other heresies, not constitute leading souls to hell.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Matthew on September 01, 2019, 05:54:17 PM
Arguing within Tradition, including on this thread (jump to 1:43):

 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrJJ6ncp1fc&t=103)
Code: [Select]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrJJ6ncp1fc&t=103


 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrJJ6ncp1fc&t=103)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrJJ6ncp1fc&t=103 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrJJ6ncp1fc&t=103)
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 01, 2019, 06:41:43 PM

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One of the primary reasons Catholics are unable to reconcile the crisis in the Church with Catholic doctrine, is because they have embraced an excessive idea of infallibility 
Agree totally.  



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That’s because the sedevacantists have an entirely false notion of infallibility.  They are the Old Catholics 2.0.  They adhere to a false notion of papal infallibility that cannot be reconciled with the crisis in the Church.  The Old Catholics false understanding of papal infallibility caused them to reject the dogma, and the sedevacantists false understanding of papal infallibility causes them to reject the recent popes.  The result is that the Old Catholics say the Church defected at Vatican I, and the sedevacantists say it defected at Vatican II.  Same heresy, different date.
I don’t know much about Old Catholics, but I do agree that an excessive understanding of papal infallibility leads many (but not all) sedes into their excessive conclusions.  Their logic makes sense, but they start from a faulty premise.  
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Clemens Maria on September 01, 2019, 07:04:45 PM
Praetor, what’s the time limit for the sede vacante period?  Can you cite a Catholic source for it?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 01, 2019, 07:53:44 PM
Praetor, what’s the time limit for the sede vacante period?  Can you cite a Catholic source for it?

Well, my personal opinion is that it cannot go on for more than 14 years 6 months 35 days 2 hours 15 minutes and 23.5 seconds.  But some theologians hold that it's 15 minutes and 47.8 seconds.

Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: SeanJohnson on September 01, 2019, 08:03:37 PM
Nevertheless, 57 years and counting is problematic.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Praeter on September 01, 2019, 08:42:18 PM
Praetor, what’s the time limit for the sede vacante period?  Can you cite a Catholic source for it?

In Sacrae Theologiae Summa, 1B (lib 1, cap iii) , Salaverri answers this question in response to an objection that was raised against a teaching of Vatican I.   Here it the objection and reply:
 
Objection: The successor of St. Peter in the Primacy is like the foundation without which the Church cannot exist.  But without the Roman Pontiff, when the see is vacant, the Church exists. Therefore, the Roman Pontiff is not the successor of St. Peter in the Primacy.
 
I distinguish the major: The successor of St. Peter in the Primacy is like the primary foundation, principle and by his own right, without which the Church cannot exist, denied; he is like a secondary foundation, ministerial and with a vicarious right, I subdistinguish: without which [i.e., without a living Pope] and without the exigency together with the actual power arranged by him for the time of the vacant See, the Church cannot exist conceded; without which [without a living Pope], but with the exigency together with the actual power arranged for the time of the vacant See, the Church cannot exist, denied.”
 
 What he’s referring to when he speaks of those who were appointed by the prior Pope to govern the Church during the vacancy, are the Major Penitentiary, who has authority over the internal forum, such as granting absolution from excommunications that are reserved and giving dispensations, and the Camerlengo, who runs the Vatican state and handles the Church’s property and money during the vacancy. What he’s saying is that the Church cannot last after the death of a pope, and after the death of those he appointed to govern the Church during the vacancy. 

The exact number of years would obviously depend on how long they lived, but needless to say, those Pius XII and John XXIII appointed to run the Church after they died, have themselves been dead for many years.

Salaverri references Lucubratio theologica de Ecclesia et primatu Romani pontificis vacante Sede Apostolica: collata etiam Codicis Juris Canonici Doctrina (1919), by Antonio Maria Iannotta, as the authority for his position.  I have never read any theologian who denies this teaching of Salaverri and Ianotta.  
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Quo vadis Domine on September 01, 2019, 09:06:03 PM
Well, my personal opinion is that it cannot go on for more than 14 years 6 months 35 days 2 hours 15 minutes and 23.5 seconds.  But some theologians hold that it's 15 minutes and 47.8 seconds.
:laugh2:
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Praeter on September 01, 2019, 10:55:06 PM
Where to begin...
First of all, an extended Sede Vacante is not *exactly* a failure of the Church's mission--error being taught to the Universal Church is.


You might believe in a Church that would fail in its mission if it taught error to the universal Church, but if so, you definitely don’t believe in the Roman Catholic Church, since it has never taught such a thing.

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And the Church still exists, materially, as per CT. The Church you describe has failed *formally* which means the gates of hell have prevailed.

Does the material Church you believe in (not sure what CT refers to) have a hierarchy consisting of validly ordained bishops who received their jurisdiction from a true successor of St. Peter?  If not, this is another confirmation that your “Material Church” is not the true Church founded by Christ, since the Church Christ founded will continue to exist as He constituted and founded it, and He constituted and founded it with a legitimate hierarchy of bishop with authority.  

The true Church also has four marks, one of which (apostolicity) also requires legitimate hierarchy consisting of bishops with jurisdiction – that is, validly ordained bishops with the authority to carry out the mission that Christ entrusted to His Church.  So, if your Material Church doesn’t have a hierarchy of bishops with authority to carry out the mission Christ entrusted to his Church (and they can only receive the authority to carry out that mission from a Pope), then your Church lacks a mark that the true Church will always possess.  This is yet another confirmation that the Material Church you believe in a false Church.

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And it is excessive to say the Magisterium has been leading souls to hell for 60 years? If someone holds to the errors of Vatican II; he cannot be pleasing to God. Traditionalists agree on that point.

What’s worse, holding to an error of Vatican II, or rejecting the true Church founded by Christ and believing in a false Church (one without four marks)?    Blessed are those today who believe in the true Church AND reject the errors of Vatican II.

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The next comment (referring to ++ABL) is against the very idea of the Papacy as Vatican I defined.

You’ll have to explain what your “Material Church” thinks Vatican I defined concerning the Papacy, which contradicts what I wrote, or what ABL wrote (not sure which you're referring to).

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Even Ordinary Magisterium cannot cause someone to embrace a false doctrine, nor should they ever refuse submission (oh, I don't know... if by submitting to the Magisterium I could come away with adultery being a venial sin, the Magisterium and Church would have defected).

There’s a lot to unpack there, but suffice it to say that the Church founded by Christ has never taught that the Pope is unable to err in a magisterial teaching that is addressed to the universal Church.  Perhaps the problem is that you’ve been reading the writings of the Old Catholic heretics, or their post-Conciliar counterparts - the sedevacantist – who say this is what the true Church teaches?  If so, don’t let them fool you.    Heretics always distort the meaning of Catholics dogmas by presenting them in an extreme sense.  They then present their straw man “dogma” before inexperienced Catholics, as if it's the teaching of the Church, and easily refute it, thereby giving the appearance of having refuted what their Church teaches.  This is a tried and true method of heretics. There's always a certain number of Catholics who fall for this trick and end by leaving the Church. Cardinal Franzelin discussed this tactic used by heretics in his celebrated book, On Divine Tradition:


“As the Fathers often explain, whenever Catholic truth stands midway between two opposite errors, heretics always preserve the Catholic dogma only to distort it by presenting it in an extreme sense in one direction or the other.  Then, what the Catholic Church does not in the least teach, is placed in this [distorted] way before the inexperienced, as though it were Catholic dogma, which can then be easily attacked.” (Franzelin, De Divina Traditione)

Why did Franzelin mention this common tactic of heretics?  Because the heretics he was discussing in the book used the same tactic. And who were those heretics?  It was none other than the old Catholic heretics 1.0 – the Neo-Protestants of the 19th century.  Franzelin explains that the way these heretics attacked the dogma of papal infallibility, was through the use of sophisms and specious arguments that had the effect of eliminating the distinction between infallible ex cathedra papal teachings, and non-infallible teachings of the Pope’s ordinary Magisterium, in the hope of convincing Catholics that everything the Pope teaches must now be considered infallible, according to Vatican I.  He writes:

“… no Catholic has ever denied, or can deny the necessity of distinguishing between ex cathedra definitions and other declarations, even doctrinal ones, whether of the Popes themselves or of Pontifical Congregations.  Enemies of the Holy See and those impugning infallibility alone try to eliminate this necessary distinction, which itself is contained in the decree of the Vatican definition, and especially today the Neo-Protestants [i.e., Old Catholics] do the same. (…) the teacher of Neo-Protestantism, Freidrich Schulte, in order to defend heresy and attack the dogma of papal infallibility, chiefly exerted all his strength and constructed sophisms to bring it to pass that the distinction between a definition ex cathedra, and other public docuмents and declarations of the Popes, is hollow, even to the point that all the declarations which the Pope promulgated or promulgates by the force of his pastoral office, in whatever way he does so, must be held as infallible definitions by Catholics after the Vatican Council.” (Franzelin, De Divina Traditione)

It’s surprising how successful this tactic was.  Even though anyone could have read the dogma of papal infallibility for himself and seen right through the lies of these heretics, nevertheless, as usual, there was a certain caliber of ignorant Catholics who fell for it – just as there’s a certain caliber of ignorant Catholic today who has fallen for the identical tactic of the sedevacantist heretics - not to prove the dogma of papal infallibility false, but in an attempt to prove that the subject of the dogma - the Popes - are false..  One difference is that the Old Catholics 2.0 (today’s Sedevacantists) go further than their heretical 19th century counterparts, by claiming Vatican I also ruled out the possibility that a pope can fall into heresy.  Not surprisingly, the same dupes fall for that one as well.

I’ll respond to the rest of your reply later.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: MadonnaDolorosa on September 01, 2019, 11:42:39 PM

You might believe in a Church that would fail in its mission if it taught error to the universal Church, but if so, you definitely don’t believe in the Roman Catholic Church, since it has never taught such a thing.


Does the material Church you believe in (not sure what CT refers to) have a hierarchy consisting of validly ordained bishops who received their jurisdiction from a true successor of St. Peter?  If not, this is another confirmation that your “Material Church” is not the true Church founded by Christ, since the Church Christ founded will continue to exist as He constituted and founded it, and He constituted and founded it with a legitimate hierarchy of bishop with authority. 

The true Church also has four marks, one of which (apostolicity) also requires legitimate hierarchy consisting of bishops with jurisdiction – that is, validly ordained bishops with the authority to carry out the mission that Christ entrusted to His Church.  So, if your Material Church doesn’t have a hierarchy of bishops with authority to carry out the mission Christ entrusted to his Church (and they can only receive the authority to carry out that mission from a Pope), then your Church lacks a mark that the true Church will always possess.  This is yet another confirmation that the Material Church you believe in a false Church.


What’s worse, holding to an error of Vatican II, or rejecting the true Church founded by Christ and believing in a false Church (one without four marks)?    Blessed are those today who believe in the true Church AND reject the errors of Vatican II.

You’ll have to explain what your “Material Church” thinks Vatican I defined concerning the Papacy, which contradicts what I wrote, or what ABL wrote (not sure which you're referring to).

There’s a lot to unpack there, but suffice it to say that the Church founded by Christ has never taught that the Pope is unable to err in a magisterial teaching that is addressed to the universal Church.  Perhaps the problem is that you’ve been reading the writings of the Old Catholic heretics, or their post-Conciliar counterparts - the sedevacantist – who say this is what the true Church teaches?  If so, don’t let them fool you.    Heretics always distort the meaning of Catholics dogmas by presenting them in an extreme sense.  They then present their straw man “dogma” before inexperienced Catholics, as if it's the teaching of the Church, and easily refute it, thereby giving the appearance of having refuted what their Church teaches.  This is a tried and true method of heretics. There's always a certain number of Catholics who fall for this trick and end by leaving the Church. Cardinal Franzelin discussed this tactic used by heretics in his celebrated book, On Divine Tradition:


“As the Fathers often explain, whenever Catholic truth stands midway between two opposite errors, heretics always preserve the Catholic dogma only to distort it by presenting it in an extreme sense in one direction or the other.  Then, what the Catholic Church does not in the least teach, is placed in this [distorted] way before the inexperienced, as though it were Catholic dogma, which can then be easily attacked.” (Franzelin, De Divina Traditione)

Why did Franzelin mention this common tactic of heretics?  Because the heretics he was discussing in the book used the same tactic. And who were those heretics?  It was none other than the old Catholic heretics 1.0 – the Neo-Protestants of the 19th century.  Franzelin explains that the way these heretics attacked the dogma of papal infallibility, was through the use of sophisms and specious arguments that had the effect of eliminating the distinction between infallible ex cathedra papal teachings, and non-infallible teachings of the Pope’s ordinary Magisterium, in the hope of convincing Catholics that everything the Pope teaches must now be considered infallible, according to Vatican I.  He writes:

“… no Catholic has ever denied, or can deny the necessity of distinguishing between ex cathedra definitions and other declarations, even doctrinal ones, whether of the Popes themselves or of Pontifical Congregations.  Enemies of the Holy See and those impugning infallibility alone try to eliminate this necessary distinction, which itself is contained in the decree of the Vatican definition, and especially today the Neo-Protestants [i.e., Old Catholics] do the same. (…) the teacher of Neo-Protestantism, Freidrich Schulte, in order to defend heresy and attack the dogma of papal infallibility, chiefly exerted all his strength and constructed sophisms to bring it to pass that the distinction between a definition ex cathedra, and other public docuмents and declarations of the Popes, is hollow, even to the point that all the declarations which the Pope promulgated or promulgates by the force of his pastoral office, in whatever way he does so, must be held as infallible definitions by Catholics after the Vatican Council.” (Franzelin, De Divina Traditione)

It’s surprising how successful this tactic was.  Even though anyone could have read the dogma of papal infallibility for himself and seen right through the lies of these heretics, nevertheless, as usual, there was a certain caliber of ignorant Catholics who fell for it – just as there’s a certain caliber of ignorant Catholic today who has fallen for the identical tactic of the sedevacantist heretics - not to prove the dogma of papal infallibility false, but in an attempt to prove that the subject of the dogma - the Popes - are false..  One difference is that the Old Catholics 2.0 (today’s Sedevacantists) go further than their heretical 19th century counterparts, by claiming Vatican I also ruled out the possibility that a pope can fall into heresy.  Not surprisingly, the same dupes fall for that one as well.

I’ll respond to the rest of your reply later.

The indefectibility and spotless/blemish-free nature of the Church and Her teaching is nothing novel. In fact, why would I follow an unholy Church that can contradict itself in so many ways, obliterate the traditional Faith and enforce a religion of modernism? Our religion is then worthless and Christ is liar... which is impossible.
Pope St. Gelasius I, Decretal de recipiendis et non recipiendis libris, 495: “Accordingly, the see of Peter the Apostle of the Church of Rome is first, having neither spot, nor wrinkle, nor anything of this kind (Ephesians 5:27).”

CT refers to the Cassiciacuм Thesis, also known as sedeprivationism. There is a historical precedent for this position (Antipope cardinals being able to elect valid Popes) and the formal/material distinction is nothing novel. It was penned by Pius XII's confessor, and the man who helped with the Assumption dogma + Ottaviani intervention... so not exactly a nobody. Your point about Apostolicity is moot--none of the actual traditional/valid (Old Rite) Bishops have Ordinary Jurisdiction. But, we could even say Ordinary Jurisdiction still exists; because the Eastern Rite Bishops are valid. I believe in a false Church? I don't believe in a Catholic Church that can teach substantial error from an Ecuмenical Council. You do, likely because you will claim it was "pastoral"--that means nothing. Magisterium is teaching to the universal Church from a valid hierarchy. When all the Bishops teach in union with the Pope, it's infallible. The only explanation is that Paul VI did not have the assistance of the Holy Ghost.

You cannot say that Vatican II CAN come from the authority of the Church AND contain substantial error. It's then either Extraordinary Magisterium or Universal Ordinary Magisterium, both of which have to be infallible. If infallible teaching can contain error, the Catholic Church is not the Church of Jesus Christ. Please, point me to a traditional dogmatic theology book that teaches that an Ecuмenical Council/UOM can teach contrary to the Catholic faith; and so ignominiously that we have to REJECT it to remain Catholic!

the Church founded by Christ has never taught that the Pope is unable to err in a magisterial teaching addressed to the universal Church? Are you serious? Please, look into the traditional teaching of the Church.
https://tradicat.blogspot.com/2013/03/authority-of-papal-encyclicals.html

The ending of your post seems to be another R&R myth--that Magisterium is "subordinate" to Dogma... true, but the Magisterium is what a Catholic is supposed to follow. If I can't follow the Magisterium without believing in a false faith, the Church has defected. It's really not that hard to understand... all the R&R bloviating for the past 50 years is just misdirection and an avoidance of the issue... a defection of the Church if the Conciliar Popes are Catholic. I also forgot to say before, the idea that the Church can promulgate a defective rite is false.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 02, 2019, 12:06:48 AM
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The indefectibility and spotless/blemish-free nature of the Church and Her teaching is nothing novel.
Indefectibility means the Church, as an organization, will last til the end of time.  It has nothing to do with the purity of the Church's teachings, which is related to infallibility.  You can't mix and match these two characters.
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Quote
the Magisterium is what a Catholic is supposed to follow. If I can't follow the Magisterium without believing in a false faith, the Church has defected.
We are supposed to follow the UNIVERSAL magisterium (i.e. what has always been taught), not simply the current magisterium (which is fallible).  That's why it's called "Tradition" because it follows the maxim:  ubique, semper, et ab omnibus  (as St Vincent below explains).
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St. Vincent of Lerins - “Moreover, in the Church itself, all possible care must be taken that we hold that faith which has been believed everywhere, always, and by all.”
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If the current magisterium deviates from Tradition, they are anathema.  V2 is not imposed on any catholic under pain of sin; it is part of the ordinary/fallible magisterium.  This in no way impairs indefectibility because the continuance of the Church is not dependent upon the sanctity or orthodoxy of its Cardinals (including the hierarchy) but it depends on the organizational structure surviving which includes the lower clergy and laity.  As St Athanasius said during the Arian heresy, when 95% of the catholic world was heretical (including most of the hierarchy):
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"Even if Catholics faithful to Tradition are reduced to a handful, they are the ones who are the true Church of Jesus Christ."
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Currently, we are in the same predicament (and worse) than during the Arian crisis.  99% of the hierarchy/laity are heretics.  Those catholics who hold the pure, unblemished Faith are very few.  The Church still exists in these few, as Christ promised.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: MadonnaDolorosa on September 02, 2019, 01:37:39 AM
Indefectibility means the Church, as an organization, will last til the end of time.  It has nothing to do with the purity of the Church's teachings, which is related to infallibility.  You can't mix and match these two characters.
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We are supposed to follow the UNIVERSAL magisterium (i.e. what has always been taught), not simply the current magisterium (which is fallible).  That's why it's called "Tradition" because it follows the maxim:  ubique, semper, et ab omnibus  (as St Vincent below explains).
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St. Vincent of Lerins - “Moreover, in the Church itself, all possible care must be taken that we hold that faith which has been believed everywhere, always, and by all.”
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If the current magisterium deviates from Tradition, they are anathema.  V2 is not imposed on any catholic under pain of sin; it is part of the ordinary/fallible magisterium.  This in no way impairs indefectibility because the continuance of the Church is not dependent upon the sanctity or orthodoxy of its Cardinals (including the hierarchy) but it depends on the organizational structure surviving which includes the lower clergy and laity.  As St Athanasius said during the Arian heresy, when 95% of the catholic world was heretical (including most of the hierarchy):
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"Even if Catholics faithful to Tradition are reduced to a handful, they are the ones who are the true Church of Jesus Christ."
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Currently, we are in the same predicament (and worse) than during the Arian crisis.  99% of the hierarchy/laity are heretics.  Those catholics who hold the pure, unblemished Faith are very few.  The Church still exists in these few, as Christ promised.

Indefectibility means that the Church will, until the end of time, remain essentially what She is. Many principles of the Church come from indefectibility (Disciplinary Infallibility, for example). She will never give something contrary to the Deposit of Faith/Gospel. This is exactly why the idea of Magisterium having to "conform" to Tradition is strange + novel. If it came from the authority of the Church, it's already known that it cannot be contrary to the Faith. Vatican II expresses a neoteric modernist faith; and thus falls under Saint Paul's anathema. From the blogspot article I linked (the writing of Fenton)--it's clear that there is never a reason to not submit to Ordinary Magisterium, though fallible, because it's impossible that Magisterium could cause one to embrace anything false... and this derives from indefectibility. There is nothing contrary to indefectibility in saying that we haven’t had a pope since the death of Pope Pius XII in 1958 (It's absolutely specious to say that Vatican I condemns our theological position); and succession continues as CT posits. There were times during the Arian crisis, in which there were areas of Catholics without a non-heretical Bishop governing... the Church did not defect in its mission of teaching, governing and sanctifying then, because of the faithful remnant. But it *is* contrary to the indefectibility of the Catholic Church to say that true Popes could promulgate V2, officially endorse ecuмenism, promulgate the Novus Ordo, 1983 Canon Law, etc. And to concede that the Pope can be a heretic YET have ministry in the Church means that the gates of hell have prevailed:

Pope Vigilius, Second Council of Constantinople, 553: “… we bear in mind what was promised about the holy Church and Him who said the gates of Hell will not prevail against it (by these we understand the death-dealing tongues of heretics)…”

Pope St. Leo IX, Sept. 2, 1053: “The holy Church built upon a rock, that is Christ, and upon Peter… because by the gates of Hell, that is, by the disputations of heretics which lead the vain to destruction, it would never be overcome.”

St. Thomas Aquinas (+1262): “Wisdom may fill the hearts of the faithful, and put to silence the dread folly of heretics, fittingly referred to as the gates of Hell.” (Intro. To Catena Aurea.)

And again, V2 is either UOM or Extraordinary Magisterium--infallible if Paul VI was Pope. It does not matter how many statements we can find of its alleged "pastoral" nature. We cannot invent a new theology of the Church just to acknowledge Francis. If we entertain that we can somehow reject it while it coming from the authority of the Church, we still have the problem of canonizations/NOM/errors in the 1983 Canon Law--they're supposed to be protected as a secondary object of the Church's infallibility.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 02, 2019, 03:05:26 AM
Argument 1
1.  If a teaching/promulgation is not binding either a) under pain of sin, or b) with certainty of faith, 
        then the Church's doctrine hasn't changed and this "teaching"/promulgation has nothing to do with infallibility/indefectibility. 
2.  V2 & the new mass do not have to be accepted 1) under pain of sin, or 2) with certainty of faith.
     a.  V2 = theological speculation/quasi-heresy. 
     b.  New Mass = quasi-heretical liturgy.
3.  Ergo, V2 and the new mass have nothing to do with infallibility/indefectibility, because the Church does not force anyone to accept/attend them.
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Argument 2
4.  Scripture, Tradition and Doctrine are binding on all Catholics, 1) under pain of sin and with 2) certainty of faith.
5.  Scripture, Tradition and Doctrine, as explained/taught by the Church, are 100% required for salvation.
6.  V2 and the new mass are optional and not required for salvation.
7.  V2 and the new mass are not part of the Church's official theology or Her official liturgy.
8.  Ergo, these novelties have nothing to do with infallibility/indefectibility, because the Church does not force anyone to accept/attend them.
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Argument 3a
9.   Quo Primum's law is still in force, as confirmed by Pope Benedict in 2007.
10.  QP commands all of the latin rite to use its missal (1962).  QP does not allow anyone to revise its missal.  Both of these commands under pain of grave sin.
11.  The new mass is illegal to attend because it violates QP.
12.  The new mass is not approved by the Church, no matter how many V2 popes use the new missal or promote it publicly. 
13.  A pope can violate Quo Primum, just like any Catholic.  A pope is not above the law, and he must abide by it, if he fails to change it.
14.  Since no pope has changed QP, all popes who say, attend or promote the new mass are promoting an illegal and sinful act. 
15.  The new mass' existence is not a violation of indefectibilty because it is, and always has been, illegal and therefore sinful.
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Argument 3b
17.  All doctrines/dogma are binding on all catholics with a "certainty of faith" and "under pain of sin".
18.  V2 proposes ideas that are contrary to Scripture, Tradition and defined doctrines.  V2 does not teach with a "certainty of faith" nor "under pain of sin". 
19.  All of V2's quasi-heresies and novel theology has been condemned by previous ecuмenical councils, if not directly, then indirectly.
20.  V2 is not a violation of infallibility/indefectibility because its "teachings" have been condemned and its teaching authority is non-existent.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 02, 2019, 07:16:24 AM
Ah yes, only in the R&R could 99% of masses being invalid and "blasphemous", along with the clergy and pope teaching universal salvation and communion for divorceés among many other heresies, not constitute leading souls to hell.
People will *not* be lead at all to where they do not want to go, at least not for very long. To put it another way, people will only be led to where they want to go - that is simply the nature of our free will, that's how free will works - we do whatever it is we want to do.  

Why is it that *you* don't believe the errors and heresies taught by the clergy and conciliar popes, but (figuratively speaking) everyone else does?

This question is a core question as relates the title of this thread.

No power on earth will get *you* to follow the heresies taught by the pope and clergy against your will, no power on earth will get you to attend the NO service against your will, no power on earth can make you sin against your will, and no power on earth can lead your soul to hell unless you make a conscience decision of your own free will that you're content to go there - so why is it that you believe everyone else (figuratively speaking) can be led to hell by the conciliar popes and clergy, but not *you*?

Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 02, 2019, 08:19:43 AM
To defect is to "abandon one's cause for an opposing one". In the context of the Church, indefectibility refers to the "gates of Hell" never prevailing against Her. So the Church would defect if it surrendered to or was taken over by the gates of Hell. If the doctrine simply meant that the Church would always exist in some form, even if it had defected to heretics and abandoned its mission, then it wouldn't be called indefectibility and Matthew 16:18 wouldn't have promised us that the gates of Hell would not prevail. 

It is because of that above that the Catholic Encyclopedia 1917 explains it:

Quote
By this term is signified, not merely that the Church will persist to the end of time, but further, that it will be preserved unimpaired in its essential characteristics. The Church can never undergo any constitutional change, which will make it, as a social organism, something different from what it was originally. It can never become corrupt in faith or in morals; nor can it ever lose the Apostolic hierarchy, or the Sacraments through which Christ communicates grace to men." 
I'd have considered the Mass an essential characteristic. And surely telling souls to attend a blasphemous and invalid mass, while teaching them heresies on salvation, and ordering the holy Eucharist to be given to adulterers, is corrupt in faith and morals? 

People will *not* be lead at all to where they do not want to go, at least not for very long. To put it another way, people will only be led to where they want to go - that is simply the nature of our free will, that's how free will works - we do whatever it is we want to do.

The Church's mission is the salvation of souls. If the Church is leading people away from salvation by ordering them(under pain of mortal sin) to attend blasphemous and invalid masses, all while it teaches them heresies, then it has completely defected in its mission.

I'm not here right now to argue for sedevacantism - the 60 year vacancy is just as problematic for the Church's indefectibility. But from what I've seen, every position has its own problems and apparent impossibilities, and that's what makes the Crisis a mystery and why I agree with Matthew that there's no "one ring" discovered at present. This idea that 99% of masses said in Catholic Churches being invalid and every level of clergyman teaching blatant heresies doesn't pose any issues for the Church's indefectibility whatsoever is just ridiculous. Praeter would go even further and have you believe there's nothing wrong or unusual about now at all - it's perfectly fine to have a heretical pope who you ignore on 100% of what he says, who celebrates an invalid and blasphemous rite of mass that 99% of Catholics attend.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 02, 2019, 08:32:53 AM
Argument 1
1.  If a teaching/promulgation is not binding either a) under pain of sin, or b) with certainty of faith,
        then the Church's doctrine hasn't changed and this "teaching"/promulgation has nothing to do with infallibility/indefectibility.
2.  V2 & the new mass do not have to be accepted 1) under pain of sin, or 2) with certainty of faith.
     a.  V2 = theological speculation/quasi-heresy.
     b.  New Mass = quasi-heretical liturgy.
3.  Ergo, V2 and the new mass have nothing to do with infallibility/indefectibility, because the Church does not force anyone to accept/attend them.

The vast majority of Catholics are told must attend the NO under pain of mortal sin(no NO clergyman will tell you that you can stay at home as long as there's no Latin mass nearby). So yes, the attendance of the new mass is binding under pain of sin.

Argument 2
4.  Scripture, Tradition and Doctrine are binding on all Catholics, 1) under pain of sin and with 2) certainty of faith.
5.  Scripture, Tradition and Doctrine, as explained/taught by the Church, are 100% required for salvation.
6.  V2 and the new mass are optional and not required for salvation.
7.  V2 and the new mass are not part of the Church's official theology or Her official liturgy.
8.  Ergo, these novelties have nothing to do with infallibility/indefectibility, because the Church does not force anyone to accept/attend them.

Ecuмenical Councils are absolutely not optional, for one. The new mass being optional is your personal layman opinion which completely contradicts what the pope or any NO clergyman have said.

Argument 3a
9.   Quo Primum's law is still in force, as confirmed by Pope Benedict in 2007.
10.  QP commands all of the latin rite to use its missal (1962).  QP does not allow anyone to revise its missal.  Both of these commands under pain of grave sin.
11.  The new mass is illegal to attend because it violates QP.
12.  The new mass is not approved by the Church, no matter how many V2 popes use the new missal or promote it publicly.
13.  A pope can violate Quo Primum, just like any Catholic.  A pope is not above the law, and he must abide by it, if he fails to change it.
14.  Since no pope has changed QP, all popes who say, attend or promote the new mass are promoting an illegal and sinful act.
15.  The new mass' existence is not a violation of indefectibilty because it is, and always has been, illegal and therefore sinful.

QP does not forbid the pope to revise the missal, popes have done it many time before - it's order to not revise the missal is directed at bishops and priests to ensure the mass wasn't being altered in any individual dioceses/parishes.

Popes can of course violate canon law, but not when they're making laws. New laws override old laws.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 02, 2019, 08:57:30 AM
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The vast majority of Catholics are told must attend the NO under pain of mortal sin(no NO clergyman will tell you that you can stay at home as long as there's no Latin mass nearby). So yes, the attendance of the new mass is binding under pain of sin.
Novus ordo catholics are told this by their bishops/priests, not rome.  None of the V2 popes, nor any Vatican official has ever declared this.  In fact, as I said previously, Benedict XVI said in his "motu" that Quo Primum is still in force and that all priests have a legal right to say the True Mass.  This is confirmation, directly from the pope/rome, that anyone can attend the latin mass and they do not have to attend the novus ordo.
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Quote
QP does not forbid the pope to revise the missal, popes have done it many time before
Agree but no pope since John XXIII in 1962 has revised, or attempted to revise, QP.  John Paul II's commission to study the matter, which led to the indult mass in the early 80s, shows that Paul VI's novus ordo liturgy/law was not a revision but a new liturgy/law.
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Quote
Popes can of course violate canon law, but not when they're making laws. New laws override old laws.
New laws can override old laws, they also cannot.  It depends what they say.  We know for a FACT that Paul VI's new liturgy/law in 1969 did not override or revise QP because of Benedict's "motu".  He confirmed this in 2007 when he said that QP was "not abrogated" and that the True Mass "was always allowed".
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Further, QP orders that ALL latin rite catholics ONLY say/attend the True Mass and they aren't allowed to use/attend any other missal.  Paul VI's liturgy/law could've revised this part, in order to allow a new/2nd missal.  This was within Paul VI's authority to do so...but he did not.  Therefore QP's command is still in force and even though the new mass legally exists, those who say/use it commit a grave sin by using an illicit missal.  The missal is legal, but to use it is illegal.  Ah, what a diabolically clever situation the devil hath created!  But the legalities are clear as day since the "motu".  We can thank Benedict for that (and not much else).
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 02, 2019, 09:11:31 AM
The Church's mission is the salvation of souls. If the Church is leading people away from salvation by ordering them(under pain of mortal sin) to attend blasphemous and invalid masses, all while it teaches them heresies, then it has completely defected in its mission.

I'm not here right now to argue for sedevacantism - the 60 year vacancy is just as problematic for the Church's indefectibility. But from what I've seen, every position has its own problems and apparent impossibilities, and that's what makes the Crisis a mystery and why I agree with Matthew that there's no "one ring" discovered at present. This idea that 99% of masses said in Catholic Churches being invalid and every level of clergyman teaching blatant heresies doesn't pose any issues for the Church's indefectibility whatsoever is just ridiculous. Praeter would go even further and have you believe there's nothing wrong or unusual about now at all - it's perfectly fine to have a heretical pope who you ignore on 100% of what he says, who celebrates an invalid and blasphemous rite of mass that 99% of Catholics attend.
To say that the Church is leading people away from salvation is to say that Christ is leading people away from salvation. You cannot separate Christ from the Church, that's exactly what Protestants do.    

The Church's indefectibility has never been compromised nor will it ever. The pope and hierarchy is not indefectible because the they are not the Church, Christ is the Church - Christ and the Church are one and the same.


You do not like answering questions but I will ask you once again:
Why is it that *you* don't believe the errors and heresies taught by the clergy and conciliar popes, but (figuratively speaking) everyone else does?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 02, 2019, 09:34:07 AM
The Church's indefectibility has never been compromised nor will it ever.

It most certainly has in your view of things.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Praeter on September 02, 2019, 09:36:09 AM
The indefectibility and spotless/blemish-free nature of the Church and Her teaching is nothing novel.

The Church Triumphant is without spot or wrinkle, not the Church Militant, as St. Augustine explained to the Donatist heretics.   Regarding the teachings of the Church Militant, they are indeed “without spot or wrinkle” when they have been proposed definitively, not merely taught authoritatively.  


Quote
Pope St. Gelasius I, Decretal de recipiendis et non recipiendis libris, 495: “Accordingly, the see of Peter the Apostle of the Church of Rome is first, having neither spot, nor wrinkle, nor anything of this kind (Ephesians 5:27).”


That applies to definitive teachings of the Pope, not everything a pope teaches authoritatively.


Quote
CT refers to the Cassiciacuм Thesis, also known as sedeprivationism.


Oh, the heresy of Guerard des Lauriers, which is being perpetuated by Bishop Sanborn.  The heresy that says the pope and bishops legally hold office, but lack the authority of the office they legally hold because – are you ready for this one – they had the intention to harm the faith when they were elected/appointed.  Try finding a precedent for that one before Vatican II.


Quote
Your point about Apostolicity is moot--none of the actual traditional/valid (Old Rite) Bishops have Ordinary Jurisdiction.


All that means is they are not legitimacy successors of the apostles, but that doesn’t change the fact that a hierarchy of legitimate successors of the apostles will always exist in the true Church.

Quote
“But, we could even say Ordinary Jurisdiction still exists; because the Eastern Rite Bishops are valid.

Being validly ordained does not equate to having ordinary jurisdiction. Bishops receive their jurisdiction from a Pope; and even conceding that an antipope can validly appoint/confer jurisdiction, due to common error (which is an argument the members of your religion use in an attempt to escape the heretical conclusion that follows from their erroneous premises), the Eastern bishops would have immediately lost their jurisdiction if they adhered a false Church, i.e., “the Vatican II sect”.  Why?  Because a cleric who joins or publicly adheres to a non-Catholic sect is considered to have tacitly resigned (c. 2314.3) and loses his office, ipso facto, without a declaration (c. 188.4).    So, either you believe the “unholy Church that can contradict itself in so many ways, obliterate the traditional Faith and enforce a religion of modernism,” is the true Church, or you believe it's a false Church.  If it’s the true Church, you can’t be saved without belonging to it; if it’s a false Church, none of the Easter Bishop who have publicly adhered to it - and that's all of them - can possess jurisdiction.


Quote
I believe in a false Church? I don't believe in a Catholic Church that can teach substantial error from an Ecuмenical Council.

Then that proves you believed in a false Church. The Ecuмenical Council of Florence taught that the matter for ordination is the conferral of the chalice and paten. That was a common belief at the time, but is certainly false.  Pius XII rightly taught that the mater for Holy Orders is the laying on of hands, which the Council of Florence didn’t even mention (the only thing the Council of Florence said was the matter was the conferring of the chalice and paten).

Now, since you admit that you don’t believe in “a Catholic Church” that can teach error in an Ecuмenical Council, you have once again proven that the Material Church you believe in is a false Church, since the true Catholic Church can, and indeed has taught an error in an Ecuмenical Council.  

The Church you believe in does not exist in material reality and it never has.  It's a Church that is more perfect, and less able to err, than the Church founded by Jesus Christ.


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You cannot say that Vatican II CAN come from the authority of the Church AND contain substantial error.


Sounds like you’ve been reading the writings of the heretic Bishops Sanborn, who equates authority with infallibility.  Try reconciling that with the Council of Florence’s error regarding the matter of Holy Orders.


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It's then either Extraordinary Magisterium or Universal Ordinary Magisterium, both of which have to be infallible.


Neither the ordinary nor the extraordinary Magisterium are, per se, infallible.  They are only infallible when they teach definitively.  Vatican II and the Council of Florence were both exercises of the Church’s extraordinary magisterium.  Both erred, but neither did so when teaching definitively.


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the Church founded by Christ has never taught that the Pope is unable to err in a magisterial teaching addressed to the universal Church? Are you serious?

I realize that will come as a surprise to an Old Catholic, or a sedevacantist, but the Church has never taught such a thing.  The true Church (as opposed to the Material Church you believe in) teaches that the Pope is infallible when he defines a doctrine, ex cathedra, not when he writes something in a docuмent addressed to the universal Church.  

The Church you believe in exists only in your imagination.  What you refer to as a “Material Church” is actually a phantasm that does not and has never existed in material reality.   It is a "Church" in which infallibility extends well beyond that of the true Church founded by Christ.  Unfortunately, you're never going to find a Church in material reality that corresponds to the Church that exists as a phantasm in your imagination.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 02, 2019, 09:44:43 AM
It most certainly has in your view of things.
No, it most certainly hasn't.

My view is easily understood because I fully understand that God would not establish a Church (or anything else for that matter) that could defeat God. Not possible, not really even worth discussing. The only Catholics who worry about such a thing, are those with little faith in God - and/or those who see the crisis but think the pope is the Church or God - which is basically  the same problem, but that's not me. 
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 02, 2019, 09:45:57 AM
To say that the Church is leading people away from salvation is to say that Christ is leading people away from salvation. You cannot separate Christ from the Church, that's exactly what Protestants do.    

The Church's indefectibility has never been compromised nor will it ever. The pope and hierarchy is not indefectible because the they are not the Church, Christ is the Church - Christ and the Church are one and the same.

:facepalm: That's the whole point. If the Church is leading people away from salvation, then it has defected. But the Church cannot defect. Ergo the Church cannot lead people away from salvation. Ergo an organisation that leads people away from salvation CANNOT be the Church.

You do not like answering questions but I will ask you once again:
Why is it that *you* don't believe the errors and heresies taught by the clergy and conciliar popes, but (figuratively speaking) everyone else does?

I used my own judgement to determine that their teachings were contrary to Church dogma and therefore heresy, and yes, like I know you'll bring up now, any Catholic can do that. But the fact that an educated and well-informed Catholic can determine that the hierarchy is teaching heresy, doesn't mean the hierarchy teaching heresy is not a problem. It doesn't change the fact that the Conciliar Church is actively leading souls to heresy and encouraging them to sin(e.g telling remarried "couples" they can go to communion). Leading souls to heresy and sin is the opposite of saving souls, it's the opposite of the Church's mission. So not only is the Conciliar Church failing in its mission, it's actually achieving the exact opposite. Leading souls away from salvation. Therefore the Conciliar Church has defected - it has embraced heresy(and indeed theologians in the past have said the "gates of Hell" refers to heretics/heresy) and it is leading souls astray. If the Conciliar Church has defected, and the Catholic Church can never defect, that would mean necessarily mean the Conciliar Church is not Catholic Church.

So don't try telling me that R&R doesn't have the same issue with indefectibility as sedevacantism has. In sedevacantism, we're without a pope for 60 years and soon to be without any hierarchy at all. In R&R we have a pope and hierarchy actively leading souls away from salvation, and a Church without the Mass(i.e one of the essential elements the CE says the Church cannot lose) - and also, if you're one of the R&R who say the new rite of ordination is doubtful(and I think most of them do), then we'd soon be without a hierarchy anyway.

From that I assert that neither position can fully explain the Crisis and that both positions have serious problems. You can argue that the sedevacantist position has more serious problems, but the assertion that the R&R position is without problems and can explain everything is just ridiculous and easily falsifiable.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 02, 2019, 09:52:25 AM
Novus ordo catholics are told this by their bishops/priests, not rome.  None of the V2 popes, nor any Vatican official has ever declared this.  In fact, as I said previously, Benedict XVI said in his "motu" that Quo Primum is still in force and that all priests have a legal right to say the True Mass.  This is confirmation, directly from the pope/rome, that anyone can attend the latin mass and they do not have to attend the novus ordo.
Rome asserts that the new mass is a valid and licit mass. Therefore if a Catholic lived too far to go to a Latin mass, he is required to attend the new mass to fulfil his mass obligation. That requirement is under the pain of mortal sin.

Agree but no pope since John XXIII in 1962 has revised, or attempted to revise, QP.  John Paul II's commission to study the matter, which led to the indult mass in the early 80s, shows that Paul VI's novus ordo liturgy/law was not a revision but a new liturgy/law.

New laws can override old laws, they also cannot.  It depends what they say.  We know for a FACT that Paul VI's new liturgy/law in 1969 did not override or revise QP because of Benedict's "motu".  He confirmed this in 2007 when he said that QP was "not abrogated" and that the True Mass "was always allowed".
Did Quo Primum prohibit the promulgation of new rites? Honest question, I actually can't recall.

Further, QP orders that ALL latin rite catholics ONLY say/attend the True Mass and they aren't allowed to use/attend any other missal.  Paul VI's liturgy/law could've revised this part, in order to allow a new/2nd missal.  This was within Paul VI's authority to do so...but he did not.  Therefore QP's command is still in force and even though the new mass legally exists, those who say/use it commit a grave sin by using an illicit missal.  The missal is legal, but to use it is illegal.  Ah, what a diabolically clever situation the devil hath created!  But the legalities are clear as day since the "motu".  We can thank Benedict for that (and not much else).
QP orders they all attend authorised missals. It did away with every missal that was under 200 years old, but it allowed Catholics to continue to attend the ancient rites. Paul VI clearly authorised the new mass, so it's authorised in the same way the ancient ones are.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 02, 2019, 10:12:18 AM
:facepalm: That's the whole point. If the Church is leading people away from salvation, then it has defected. But the Church cannot defect. Ergo the Church cannot lead people away from salvation. Ergo an organisation that leads people away from salvation CANNOT be the Church.
That's right, the conciliar church is not "The Church". So you should stop saying it is. The pope is not the Church either, neither is the hierarchy.


Quote
I used my own judgement to determine that their teachings were contrary to Church dogma and therefore heresy, and yes, like I know you'll bring up now, any Catholic can do that. But the fact that an educated and well-informed Catholic can determine that the hierarchy is teaching heresy, doesn't mean the hierarchy teaching heresy is not a problem. It doesn't change the fact that the Conciliar Church is actively leading souls to heresy and encouraging them to sin......
Are you saying that you figured that we're in this mess via the use of your own wits? Do you not admit that you must have felt something was wrong and corresponded to graces that were offered to you? Do you think that God does not offer those same graces to every human creature? Certainly you agree that most people reject those graces - *those* are the ones who are content to go to hell while foolishly relying on the the popes authority to excuse them from their own sins.


Quote
So don't try telling me that R&R doesn't have the same issue with indefectibility as sedevacantism has. In sedevacantism, we're without a pope for 60 years and soon to be without any hierarchy at all. In R&R we have a pope and hierarchy actively leading souls away from salvation, and a Church without the Mass(i.e one of the essential elements the CE says the Church cannot lose) - and also, if you're one of the R&R who say the new rite of ordination is doubtful(and I think most of them do), then we'd soon be without a hierarchy anyway.
So you're without a pope for 60 years now - how much longer till you agree that you really have never needed a pope at all? 10 more years? 60 more years? 100 more years?

Why is it that you even need a pope?



Quote
From that I assert that neither position can fully explain the Crisis and that both positions have serious problems. You can argue that the sedevacantist position has more serious problems, but the assertion that the R&R position is without problems and can explain everything is just ridiculous and easily falsifiable.

Well I agree that your reasoning can never explain the crisis. So that much we agree on.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 02, 2019, 10:36:46 AM
Quote
Rome asserts that the new mass is a valid and licit mass.
The new mass can be valid, it also cannot be.  Depends on the priest, and depends on the canon prayers used.  But validity does equal legal.
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Rome has never said the new mass is legal to attend/say.  It has only said it legally exists.  You might say this is a technicality, but the pharisees ruled the world through technicalities when Christ was alive.  And the devil rules the world now through technicalities through his many satanic lawyers.
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It has also said that QP is still in force, which disallows any other missal to be used.  Paul VI's law only created a missal; it does not give anyone permission to use it.  Ergo, QP supercedes Paul VI's law because QP is specific in its rules, while Paul VI's law is general and non-specific.  The law with more clarity always takes precedent.
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Quote
Did Quo Primum prohibit the promulgation of new rites?
No, but it prohibits the use of any new rites, it prohibits any changes to the QP rite, and any pressure/command to use a new rite or an altered QP rite.
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Quote
QP orders they all attend authorised missals. It did away with every missal that was under 200 years old, but it allowed Catholics to continue to attend the ancient rites.
Agree.  And those rites which were 200 years old at the time of 1500s were very, VERY similar to the Tridentine rite (i.e. Benedictine and Dominican rites are 99% the same, save for the addition of St Benedict and St Dominic in certain prayers and other non-essential rubrics).
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Paul VI clearly authorised the new mass, so it's authorised in the same way the ancient ones are.
Yes, he created a new missal, since QP did not forbid this (technically).  No, you cannot use it, because it violates QP.  Nowhere in Paul VI's law does he:
1.  Order anyone to use/attend the new mass
2.  Place a penalty for ignoring the new mass
3.  Specifically allow anyone to use this missal.
.
All Paul VI's constitution says is: "Here is my new missal, which I am creating by this new law.  Here are the changes in the new missal.  I wish this law go into effect on the 1st Sunday of Advent."  All his law does is create a new missal.  The use of it violates QP.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 02, 2019, 10:53:31 AM
Look, this thread was not intended to blow up into a full R&R vs. SV debate.  Just stop already.

I lean sedeprivationist, but I readily admit that ALL the sides have issues.  SPism is the side I find to be the least problematic.  This is precisely the point of Matthew's post.

R&R rely on the fact that not everything the Pope teaches is infallible ... but then stretch it to the limits of credibility.  It's one thing for an isolated statement in an Encyclical to be wrong, but quite another for the entire Magisterium and Universal Discipline to go corrupt with Modernism, and to be actively leading souls to hell.  If people can lose their souls by adhering to the Magisterium, then the Church's mission has failed.

SVs rely on the fact that vacancies of the Holy See exist and that the Magisterium does not thereby go defunct.  Again, on their side, 60 years does stretch the limits of credibility.

SPs actual hold an in-between position, that the organs of the Magisterium continue to endure but they have gone dormant (in so many words).

But all sides are stretching the limits of credibility, because, to be perfectly frank, this entire crisis stretches the limits of Catholic credibility.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 02, 2019, 10:56:30 AM
This thread was derailed by one clown in particular (Praeter) who claims that he holds the One Ring and that the nature of this crisis is perfectly clear.  Hogwash.  As Matthew rightly stated, if it were perfectly clear, then you would not have sincere Catholics of good will who profess the faith and still clearly have the faith who do not rally around this magical explanation.

I'm sorry, but if you claim that the nature of this crisis is perfectly clear, then you're little more than an arrogant buffoon.  Bishop Guerard de Laurier was a top Church theologian before Vatican II, who drafted the Ottaviani intervention, was personal confessor to Pope Pius XII, and helped draft the dogmatic declaration on the Assumption.  To claim in your uninformed undeducated arrogance that this man brazenly adopted and promoted heresy (which just somehow he didn't notice) is the height of arrogance.  It's much more likely that you are an idiot who runs his mouth but has no earthly idea what he's talking about.  Bishop Guerard had decades of formal education in Catholic theology.  What are your credentials, loudmouth?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 02, 2019, 11:05:02 AM
All Paul VI's constitution says is: "Here is my new missal, which I am creating by this new law.  Here are the changes in the new missal.  I wish this law go into effect on the 1st Sunday of Advent."  All his law does is create a new missal.  The use of it violates QP.
Spot on. This revolution is probably the only revolution in the history of the world where the enemy took over the fort without so much as a drop of blood ever having been shed. Initially, the people had "the Church", they had the faith, they had everything far as that goes -  and most (not all) abandoned it all of their own free will using authority as an excuse to do so - this much I was an eye witness to - they then handed that loss of faith down to the following generations so that today, this is what is.

"The Ring" is simply truth, Divine Truth found only within and taught by the Catholic Church. Could not one of the reasons  that "The Ring" does not assume authority or control, is because the whole truth is not accepted as such by everyone?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 02, 2019, 11:06:59 AM
Both sides would benefit from a bit of humility.

Is the fact that the Pope who is supposed to be guided by the Holy Spirit did more damage to the Church than any heresiarch a problem?  +Lefebvre, the hero of all R&R, admitted that it was.

Is the fact that a vacancy would go on for 60 years a problem?  Of course it's a problem.

If both sides admitted that no solution is perfect, then a lot more progress can be made in the spread of Tradition.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 02, 2019, 11:08:28 AM
Spot on.

Oh, shut up already.  This is what you've chosen to believe.  Duly noted.  Myriad other Traditional Catholics think you're an idiot.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 02, 2019, 11:11:30 AM
"The Ring" is simply truth, Divine Truth found only within and taught by the Catholic Church.

Of course, objectively, the Divine Truth is the Ring.  Question is not whether the ring exists, but who's in possession of it.  You have many Catholics on the Novus Ordo side who claims that the teaching of Vatican II is not inconsistent with said Divine Truth.  In your philosophy, you, Stubborn, have the authority to sift through what is taught by the Magisterium and decide what is and what is not in conformity with said truth (your ridiculous redefinition of Magsiterium notwithstanding).
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 02, 2019, 11:11:51 AM
Both sides would benefit from a bit of humility.

Is the fact that the Pope who is supposed to be guided by the Holy Spirit did more damage to the Church than any heresiarch a problem?  +Lefebvre, the hero of all R&R, admitted that it was.

Is the fact that a vacancy would go on for 60 years a problem?  Of course it's a problem.

If both sides admitted that no solution is perfect, then a lot more progress can be made in the spread of Tradition.
Dear Mr. Humble,
The pope in fact IS guided by the Holy Ghost when he defines a doctrine ex cathedra. Try to always remember that amongst your "universal discipline" and your "magisterium that went off the rails".
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 02, 2019, 11:15:15 AM
Dear Mr. Humble,
The pope in fact IS guided by the Holy Ghost when he defines a doctrine ex cathedra. Try to always remember that amongst your "universal discipline" and your "magisterium that went off the rails".

I just laid this out, idiot.  You rely on the fact that not everything the Pope teaches or institutes is infallible ... and stretch this to the limits of credibility ... and beyond.

Unlike yourself, +Lefebvre had the humility to admit that this is a problem with R&R, and this constantly had him questioning the legitimacy of the V2 papal claimants:
Quote
…a grave problem confronts the conscience and the faith of all Catholics since the beginning of Paul VI’s pontificate: how can a pope who is truly successor of Peter, to whom the assistance of the Holy Ghost has been promised, preside over the most radical and far-reaching destruction of the Church ever known, in so short a time, beyond what any heresiarch has ever achieved? This question must one day be answered…

You could learn a little bit from +Lefebvre.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 02, 2019, 11:16:11 AM
You know, the biggest problem with the Traditional movement comes from the dogmatic idiots on both sides.  Much has been made of dogmatic sedevacantism, but dogmatic R&R, as preached by Praeter and Stubborn, is every bit as pernicious.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 02, 2019, 11:18:12 AM
Dear Mr. Humble,
The pope in fact IS guided by the Holy Ghost when he defines a doctrine ex cathedra. Try to always remember that amongst your "universal discipline" and your "magisterium that went off the rails".

While slightly off color, this meme could hardly be more appropriate than in response to this post ...

(https://pics.me.me/see-this-shit-stop-it-30507868.png)
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 02, 2019, 11:21:21 AM
Of course, objectively, the Divine Truth is the Ring.  Question is not whether the ring exists, but who's in possession of it.  You have many Catholics on the Novus Ordo side who claims that the teaching of Vatican II is not inconsistent with said Divine Truth.  In your philosophy, you, Stubborn, have the authority to sift through what is taught by the Magisterium and decide what is and what is not in conformity with said truth (your ridiculous redefinition of Magsiterium notwithstanding).
The Church is always in possession of it, we access that truth through the Church, these days through one or more of the Church's faithful priests who are concerned only with the truth, not whether they guess right or not.

There is no need debating the definition of Magisterium. I embrace Pope Pius IX's definition of what the Church's Magisterium is. You call that a ridiculous redefinition.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 02, 2019, 11:21:31 AM
Quote
If both sides admitted that no solution is perfect, then a lot more progress can be made in the spread of Tradition.
I'm not offering a solution between R&R and Sedevacantism.  I'm simply pointing out what Church law says on V2 and the new mass.  My point is that the V2 popes could be anti-popes because of their heresies (which only a future Church hierarchy can decide), but not because of disciplinary, infallibility or indefectibility violations.  
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 02, 2019, 11:23:23 AM
While slightly off color, this meme could hardly be more appropriate than in response to this post ...
Not off color for you, not in the least. I did not expect you to agree - heaven forbid!
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 02, 2019, 11:28:28 AM
You know, the biggest problem with the Traditional movement comes from the dogmatic idiots on both sides.  Much has been made of dogmatic sedevacantism, but dogmatic R&R, as preached by Praeter and Stubborn, is every bit as pernicious.
Only when you give the pope an authority and infallibility he does not possess. Funny how for as smart as you think you are, you cannot fathom the reason so many went the way of the NO, is because they all actually believed he had the same infallibility as you say he has. Except of course, they proved it by going along with him - which is to say if you actually believed half the crap you talk, you would have never left the NO.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 02, 2019, 11:53:38 AM
That's right, the conciliar church is not "The Church". So you should stop saying it is. The pope is not the Church either, neither is the hierarchy.

If the entire hierarchy can apostasise and lead the faithful to Hell without it being considered a defection, then the principle of indefectibility would be entirely meaningless. You won't find any theologian or authority suggesting such rot as the true hierarchy could ever lead souls to Hell.

Are you saying that you figured that we're in this mess via the use of your own wits? Do you not admit that you must have felt something was wrong and corresponded to graces that were offered to you? Do you think that God does not offer those same graces to every human creature? Certainly you agree that most people reject those graces - *those* are the ones who are content to go to hell while foolishly relying on the the popes authority to excuse them from their own sins.

I can't comment on what graces I've been given, only God knows. If the Trad position is correct, then yes NOers must be ignoring some of God's graces, as if one corresponds to all of God's graces He would never leave them wallow in error. But whether they are rejecting graces or not, it does not change the fact that the hierarchy is guiding them to Hell. Trads ignore the hierarchy for exactly this reason. The fact that man must listen to the hierarchy doesn't lessen the significance of what they are doing. It's like if a father teaches his child to sin, the child has free will to reject his father's errors, but that doesn't absolve the father of his guilt.

So you're without a pope for 60 years now - how much longer till you agree that you really have never needed a pope at all? 10 more years? 60 more years? 100 more years?

Why is it that you even need a pope?

Why is it that you even need a pope when you ignore him and everything he does anyway?

It's honestly baffling to me that you can agree that the hierarchy are leading souls to Hell and yet you don't think that poses any issue whatsoever with indefectibility. From the Catholic Encyclopedia once more:

Quote
By this term is signified, not merely that the Church will persist to the end of time, but further, that it will preserve unimpaired its essential characteristics. The Church can never undergo any constitutional change which will make it, as a social organism, something different from what it was originally. It can never become corrupt in faith or in morals; nor can it ever lose the Apostolic hierarchy, or the sacraments through which Christ communicates grace to men. The gift of indefectibility is expressly promised to the Church by Christ, in the words in which He declares that the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. It is manifest that, could the storms which the Church encounters so shake it as to alter its essential characteristics and make it other than Christ intended it to be, the gates of hell, i.e. the powers of evil, would have prevailed. It is clear, too, that could the Church suffer substantial change, it would no longer be an instrument capable of accomplishing the work for which God called it in to being. He established it that it might be to all men the school of holiness. This it would cease to be if ever it could set up a false and corrupt moral standard.

Sedevacantism would be a defection by loss of Apostolic hierarchy. R&R have a hierarchy, but one that is corrupted in faith and morals and has ceased to be a school of holiness as it teaches heresy and sin instead of true dogma, as well as having an invalid and blasphemous mass replace the true mass in 99% of parishes. Even their pope was ordained in a false rite.

So it's clear that sedevacantism cannot explain the Crisis, but neither can R&R as that position still violates the principle of indefectibility.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 02, 2019, 12:11:52 PM
The entire hierarchy hasn’t apostatized (you’re over exaggerating) but they have been infected (in various degrees) with modernism and the V2 heresies.  +ABL didn’t apostatize did he?  St Athanasius didn’t apostatize, did he?  We’re in a similar situation as Arianism.  Confusion and error abounds but Church doctrine remains pure because none of the confusion/error is imposed on any catholic.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 02, 2019, 12:14:41 PM
The new mass can be valid, it also cannot be.  Depends on the priest, and depends on the canon prayers used.  But validity does equal legal.
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Rome has never said the new mass is legal to attend/say.  It has only said it legally exists.  You might say this is a technicality, but the pharisees ruled the world through technicalities when Christ was alive.  And the devil rules the world now through technicalities through his many satanic lawyers.

Any mass Rome promulgates is legal to attend by virtue of that very fact. And the priests were ordered to say it, see the quote at the end of this post.

It has also said that QP is still in force, which disallows any other missal to be used.  Paul VI's law only created a missal; it does not give anyone permission to use it.  Ergo, QP supercedes Paul VI's law because QP is specific in its rules, while Paul VI's law is general and non-specific.  The law with more clarity always takes precedent.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe Benedict XVI only said John XXIII's missal was never abrogated, and more specifically never abrogated as an extraordinary form. If he said more specifically that Quo Primum wasn't abrogated, please link me the quote, I honestly haven't seen it. Anyway, the reason I think that distinction is important is because saying "it was never abrogated, as an extraordinary form" just means that the rite, in its new and updated state, still exists and is within use in the Church. But that does not necessarily confirm that all the details of Quo Primum remained in place, or that the rite is still the ordinary form.

No, but it prohibits the use of any new rites, it prohibits any changes to the QP rite, and any pressure/command to use a new rite or an altered QP rite.

Such commands were directed at the clergy, I don't think one pope can limit the authority of future popes. For example, QP was altered many times by popes - even if they were only minor changes it still proves that QP's strict order to not alter the rite does not apply to them.

Agree.  And those rites which were 200 years old at the time of 1500s were very, VERY similar to the Tridentine rite (i.e. Benedictine and Dominican rites are 99% the same, save for the addition of St Benedict and St Dominic in certain prayers and other non-essential rubrics).

There were also for example the Byzantine and Mozarabic rites, which are quite different(although not as much as the NO, to be fair).

Yes, he created a new missal, since QP did not forbid this (technically).  No, you cannot use it, because it violates QP.  Nowhere in Paul VI's law does he:
1.  Order anyone to use/attend the new mass
2.  Place a penalty for ignoring the new mass
3.  Specifically allow anyone to use this missal.
.
All Paul VI's constitution says is: "Here is my new missal, which I am creating by this new law.  Here are the changes in the new missal.  I wish this law go into effect on the 1st Sunday of Advent."  All his law does is create a new missal.  The use of it violates QP.

Er, he kind of did. He ordered that it be used and he ordered it go into effect on the first Sunday of Advent that year.

Quote from: Missale Romanum, 1969
In conclusion, we wish to give the force of law to all that we have set forth concerning the new Roman Missal. In promulgating the official edition of the Roman Missal, Our predecessor, St. Pius V, presented it as an instrument of liturgical unity and as a witness to the purity of the worship the Church. While leaving room in the new Missal, according to the order of the Second Vatican Council, "for legitimate variations and adaptations,"(15) we hope nevertheless that the Missal will be received by the faithful as an instrument which bears witness to and which affirms the common unity of all. Thus, in the great diversity of languages, one unique prayer will rise as an acceptable offering to our Father in heaven, through our High-Priest Jesus Christ, in the Holy Spirit.

We order that the prescriptions of this Constitution go into effect November 30th of this year, the first Sunday of Advent.

There's no specific penalty specified that I can see, but ignoring the missal would still be disobedience for priests, so the penalty is sort of built-in in that respect.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 02, 2019, 12:25:11 PM
The entire hierarchy hasn’t apostatized (you’re over exaggerating) but they have been infected (in various degrees) with modernism and the V2 heresies.  +ABL didn’t apostatize did he?  St Athanasius didn’t apostatize, did he?  We’re in a similar situation as Arianism.  Confusion and error abounds but Church doctrine remains pure because none of the confusion/error is imposed on any catholic.
St. Athanasius' day still had a pope and plenty of bishops, even if they were outnumbered massively by the Arians. +ABL did not, sure, but he's not enough to say there's still a faithful hierarchy in the same way some sedevacantist Thuc-line bishop isn't enough. You need the pope. SVism presents you with no hierarchy, spare a few scattered bishops and priests. R&Rism presents you with a hierarchy that has abandoned their mission and been corrupted, again spare a few scattered bishops and priests. I don't think either position can explain the situation we're in without violating indefectibility. I think there is an explanation for it all somewhere out there, that maybe God will reveal to us when time comes, but for now I haven't found one that explains it all without issue or contraction.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 02, 2019, 12:32:51 PM
If the entire hierarchy can apostasise and lead the faithful to Hell without it being considered a defection, then the principle of indefectibility would be entirely meaningless. You won't find any theologian or authority suggesting such rot as the true hierarchy could ever lead souls to Hell.
So the entire hierarchy defects, so what, they are not the Church.


Quote
 I can't comment on what graces I've been given, only God knows. If the Trad position is correct, then yes NOers must be ignoring some of God's graces, as if one corresponds to all of God's graces He would never leave them wallow in error. But whether they are rejecting graces or not, it does not change the fact that the hierarchy is guiding them to Hell. Trads ignore the hierarchy for exactly this reason. The fact that man must listen to the hierarchy doesn't lessen the significance of what they are doing. It's like if a father teaches his child to sin, the child has free will to reject his father's errors, but that doesn't absolve the father of his guilt.

Yes, the hierarchy is leading them to where they want to go. They choose to follow because they rejected the very same graces you did not reject, the same graces you corresponded to and are corresponding with, they want nothing to do with, they're content to sin - they choose to reject grace and follow the hierarchy, each and every one of them. You are not unique here, we all, every last one of us at some point(s) in life has to make the same choice. So while you place all the blame on the pope and hierarchy, you ignore the reality that the people being led into the pit, chose to be led into the pit and ultimately in eternity, will not be able to blame anyone except themselves.

Quote
Why is it that you even need a pope when you ignore him and everything he does anyway?

It's honestly baffling to me that you can agree that the hierarchy are leading souls to Hell and yet you don't think that poses any issue whatsoever with indefectibility. From the Catholic Encyclopedia once more:
I don't need a pope like that, no one does. Our duty before God is to pray every day for the pope, that is what Catholics must do. Whether a holy pope or a conciliar pope, if he never teaches anything at all during his entire reign, or if he teaches heresies every time he teaches, it is the same difference - but until or unless he defends or teaches something we need to know, no one needs a pope to get to heaven.



Quote
Sedevacantism would be a defection by loss of Apostolic hierarchy. R&R have a hierarchy, but one that is corrupted in faith and morals and has ceased to be a school of holiness as it teaches heresy and sin instead of true dogma, as well as having an invalid and blasphemous mass replace the true mass in 99% of parishes. Even their pope was ordained in a false rite.

So it's clear that sedevacantism cannot explain the Crisis, but neither can R&R as that position still violates the principle of indefectibility.
But you just said what is - namely, that the hierarchy is corrupt, including the popes. There isn't anything to explain about that - they are not the Church. We can say as you just said about the hierarchy, we can say by all accounts, they have defected from the faith, defected from the Church and are bunch of scandalous bastards, but we cannot say the Church has defected because that is an impossibility.

If in fact the Church has defected or ever does defect, then by what means do we have to get to heaven? None. Which is to say if the Church defects, salvation is absolutely unattainable. 
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 02, 2019, 12:44:14 PM
So the entire hierarchy defects, so what, they are not the Church.

But you just said what is - namely, that the hierarchy is corrupt, including the popes. There isn't anything to explain about that - they are not the Church. We can say as you just said about the hierarchy, we can say by all accounts, they have defected from the faith, defected from the Church and are bunch of scandalous bastards, but we cannot say the Church has defected because that is an impossibility. 
If they have defected from the Church, then they are not the hierarchy. The hierarchy of the Catholic Church must be within the Church, by definition. If the hierarchy were to defect in their mission and leads their flock to Hell, then according to the Catholic Encyclopedia and every other writer on the subject of indefectibility, then that would mean the Church defects - but the Church cannot defect, so in such a scenario the "hierarchy" would in fact be a false hierarchy and not the true hierarchy of the Church. 
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: songbird on September 02, 2019, 12:54:39 PM
Could it be possible that the 5th Column Jєωs have reign.  What they have always wanted since Christ's death?  Sure!  It is of the Syngoge of Satan!  Can a pope, whoever, a Jєω be a pope?  No!  Proof?  The New Order Mess! That is their creation.  Their Manifest/outward fruits.  You will know them(enemy) by their fruits.  
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Praeter on September 02, 2019, 01:09:18 PM
I just laid this out, idiot.  You rely on the fact that not everything the Pope teaches or institutes is infallible ... and stretch this to the limits of credibility ... and beyond.

Vatican I defined that the pope speaks infallibly when he defines a doctrine, ex cathedra. That's it.  It never said a pope is unable to err when he does not meet the precise conditions contained in the dogmatic definition.  If you accepted the dogma as it is defined, you wouldn't have nearly as much trouble finding a "solution" to the problem in the Church.
 
But according to Pope Ladislaus, the Church's definition unduly restricts the infallibility of the pope "to the limits of credibility and beyond," so you came up with your own version of the doctrine.  What harm could possibly come from that?

Certainly, no one can force you to accept the Church's dogma of papal infallibility, but don't be surprised if persistent adherence to your more "credible" version prevents you from finding a solution to the problem in the Church.  
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 02, 2019, 02:14:27 PM
R&Rism presents you with a hierarchy that has abandoned their mission and been corrupted, again spare a few scattered bishops and priests. I don't think either position can explain the situation we're in without violating indefectibility. I think there is an explanation for it all somewhere out there, that maybe God will reveal to us when time comes, but for now I haven't found one that explains it all without issue or contraction.

THIS ^^^
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Admin on September 02, 2019, 03:23:25 PM
1. I see the debaters in this thread (about specifics of the Crisis) aren't ready to concede to the other side.

2. Further, each of these sides has thousands of other Catholics backing up every word that was posted in these arguments.

3. There are only 3 possible conclusions:
A) There is no One Ring in play yet, i.e., a compelling argument which forces all Catholics of good will to join a single side, united under a single banner (an individual with authority, or the one wielding the One Ring)
B) The One Ring has been wielded in this thread, but all the thousands of Catholics faced with it have chosen rather to kill themselves (go into mortal sin, become bad-willed, willfully rejecting the truth) than to obey its command.
C) The One Ring has been wielded in this thread, but all the thousands of Catholics faced with it have an IQ of 70 or less, literally retarded, and so they can't mentally grasp the logic and arguments. Therefore they aren't compelled by the Ring, neither are they forced into mortal sin or a state of bad will (willful rejection of the truth).

Again, the arguing in this thread is evidence that no one has a compelling argument that answers ALL objections. The One Ring is still hidden and waiting to be given to us or found, with God's help.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=103&v=TrJJ6ncp1fc
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: JezusDeKoning on September 02, 2019, 03:51:15 PM
THIS ^^^
This is the answer, or closest thing to an answer in regards to the Crisis that I've found. 
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Praeter on September 02, 2019, 07:26:21 PM
1. I see the debaters in this thread (about specifics of the Crisis) aren't ready to concede to the other side.

2. Further, each of these sides has thousands of other Catholics backing up every word that was posted in these arguments.

3. There are only 3 possible conclusions:
A) There is no One Ring in play yet, i.e., a compelling argument which forces all Catholics of good will to join a single side, united under a single banner (an individual with authority, or the one wielding the One Ring)
B) The One Ring has been wielded in this thread, but all the thousands of Catholics faced with it have chosen rather to kill themselves (go into mortal sin, become bad-willed, willfully rejecting the truth) than to obey its command.
C) The One Ring has been wielded in this thread, but all the thousands of Catholics faced with it have an IQ of 70 or less, literally retarded, and so they can't mentally grasp the logic and arguments. Therefore they aren't compelled by the Ring, neither are they forced into mortal sin or a state of bad will (willful rejection of the truth).

Again, the arguing in this thread is evidence that no one has a compelling argument that answers ALL objections. The One Ring is still hidden and waiting to be given to us or found, with God's help.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=103&v=TrJJ6ncp1fc
Another factor to consider is that each Catholic is viewing the crisis through their own lens, and seeking to understand it in light of the doctrinal beliefs they hold, and the personal opinions/conclusions they have drawn.  
 
If someone believes conciliar infallibility guarantees that a council cannot teach error, or that everything a pope promulgates authoritatively will necessarily be infallible, these doctrinal errors will have a profound effect on which of the differing explanations they accept, or at least which ones they will rule out.  So too will their opinion about the validity of the new rite of episcopal consecration, and dozens of other issues.
 
Their judgment about the severity of the crisis is another factor.  Is Vatican II "full of heresies", and does it teach an entirely different religion, or does it merely contain theological errors, ambiguities, and time bombs, which have been exploited by the Modernists and used by them to spread their false religious system within the walls of Holy Mother Church?  The former is objectively far worse than the latter.  Is the New Mass, as published by Paul VI, an invalid, blasphemous, sacrilege, or is it a valid Mass with a watered-down liturgy and ambiguous prayers, which has been made far worse by the indults, innovations, and abuses that have accompanied it?  Has the entire hierarchy apostatized (Forlorn), or are the bishops more or less infected by the modern errors (Pax Vobis); has the Church completely abandoned the mission entrusted to it by Christ (Forlorn), or are most of the bishops just failing in their duty to carry it out (Praeter)? 
 
 
Since all these individual judgments, personal opinions, and doctrinal beliefs, have an effect on which "solution" people will embrace, it’s not reasonable to expect that One Ring will convince everyone.  
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 02, 2019, 08:04:27 PM
Since all these individual judgments, personal opinions, and doctrinal beliefs, have an effect on which "solution" people will embrace, it’s not reasonable to expect that One Ring will convince everyone.  

Correct.  There are dozens of data points that feed into one's position on the crisis ... all of which end up being interpreted, the end of the day, by fallible human beings using their private judgement.  Only when God restores the Church to intervene authoritatively will the One Ring be known and accepted by all.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 03, 2019, 12:00:14 PM
Quote
Any mass Rome promulgates is legal to attend by virtue of that very fact. And the priests were ordered to say it, see the quote at the end of this post.
Under normal circuмstances, with no wolves in the Vatican, you'd be correct in that assumption.  But the law says what the law says and since Trads are aware of the infiltration, we can't just judge all promulgations as being equal.  We have to look at what the law says.  The conspirators often use our assumptions and naivety against us.  The fact is that the law promulgates/legalizes the creation of a missal, but does not legalize the use of it, nor does the law require use of it.
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Quote
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe Benedict XVI only said John XXIII's missal was never abrogated, and more specifically never abrogated as an extraordinary form. If he said more specifically that Quo Primum wasn't abrogated, please link me the quote, I honestly haven't seen it.
A law cannot be separated from the purpose of the law.  Quo Primum's purpose was to create a uniform/universal latin missal.  The 1962 missal is the missal of QP.  If the 1962 missal isn't abrogated, then QP isn't either.  They go hand in hand, because the 1962 missal is just a REVISION of the ORIGINAL St Pius V missal of QP.  Benedict did not directly say that QP wasn't abrogated because he, as a conspirator, doesn't want to draw attention to QP.  But he also doesn't have to, because it's understood in a legal sense.
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For example:  If you signed a lease to an apartment, this gives you the right to piece of real estate.  If the lease ends, you can't use the apartment anymore.  If you are paying rent, then the lease still exists.  You can't use an apartment without a lease and (normally) you don't pay rent unless you can use the apartment.  ...You can't have the 1962 missal without QP.  If QP is abrogated, then so is the 1962 missal.
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The "ordinary/extraordinary" form in the motu, was Benedict's spin to explain how the 1962 missal should co-exist with the new mass.  There is no legal basis for these terms, because they are neither mentioned in QP or in Paul VI's law.  They are more novelties.
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Quote
Anyway, the reason I think that distinction is important is because saying "it was never abrogated, as an extraordinary form" just means that the rite, in its new and updated state, still exists and is within use in the Church. But that does not necessarily confirm that all the details of Quo Primum remained in place, or that the rite is still the ordinary form.
"it was never abrogated, as an extraordinary form" - This phrase was never used, nor hinted at. 
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Quote
(QP's) commands were directed at the clergy, I don't think one pope can limit the authority of future popes. For example, QP was altered many times by popes - even if they were only minor changes it still proves that QP's strict order to not alter the rite does not apply to them.
Paul VI had all the power in the world to abrogate QP, but he didn't.  He could've revised the 1962 missal and morphed that into the new mass, so that the 1962 missal would cease to exist.  But he didn't.  He left the 1962 missal and QP as is, and created a new liturgy, which is separate from QP.  He did not revise, edit or add to QP, thus, this law is still 100% in force, in all its details.
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Those popes who revised the missal after the creation of QP only revised non-essential elements of the law (i.e. minor changes to the missal).  They did not revise or overturn QP's commands, prohibitions and allowances.  And every time there was a new missal, the new law mentions that they are non-essentially revising QP's missal.  QP is the parent law, and all these revisions are related to it.
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To continue the apartment lease analogy, if you signed a lease which ends on Dec 31 but you agree with the landlord to live there another 6 months, he could ask you to sign an addendum (i.e. a revision) which says you promise to lease for another 6 months.  You wouldn't need to sign a brand-new lease; you would sign a 1 page docuмent which refers back to the original lease.  ...In the same way, when all these revised missals were created, they all referenced QP.  There is a legal chain-link from 1962 all the way back to the 1570s.
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Paul VI's missal was a brand new law, a brand new missal.  It has no connection with QP, and Benedict makes this clear.  Benedict only argues that the new mass is a different "usage of the same rite".  I don't even know if canon law has a definition for "usage" when it comes to rites.  This sounds made up (the Modernists love to make up new words).  QP does not allow the use/attendance of any other missals or "usages", under pain of sin.
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(
Quote
Paul VI) ordered that it be used and he ordered it go into effect on the first Sunday of Advent that year.
In conclusion, we wish to give the force of law to all that we have set forth concerning the new Roman Missal. In promulgating the official edition of the Roman Missal,
...We order that the prescriptions of this Constitution go into effect November 30th of this year, the first Sunday of Advent.
No, Paul VI did not order anyone to use his missal.  He said "we give the force of law to all that we have set forth concerning the new missal"...what did he set forth?  He created a new missal, he explained the changes in it and that's it.  He did not say who was to use it, who HAD to use it, nor if there were penalties for NOT using it. 
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"We order that the prescriptions (commands) of this Constitution go into effect Nov 30..."  What are the commands of this law?  Only that a new missal be created.  Nothing more.
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Modernists knew they could not legally force people to attend a new mass while QP was in force.  They knew that they could not revise QP with the new mass, because such changes were essential changes and God would not allow the Church to pass a law which forces sin.  They knew that they could not abrogate QP and replace it with a theologically anti-Catholic liturgy.  So what did they do?  They created a new missal and let everyone assume that they had to attend, even if the law said otherwise.  They knew the pope could not force people to attend, but the bishops/priests could, because rogue/evil bishops are not protected by infallibility.  The bishops/priests are the ones who forced the new mass on the people, not rome/pope.  The V2 popes have certainly supported and said the new mass, but they did so in a non-official, non-legal manner.  They sinned in their personal capacity.  They did not force the new mass on anyone by law or by penalty of sin.
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Quote
There's no specific penalty specified that I can see, but ignoring the missal would still be disobedience for priests, so the penalty is sort of built-in in that respect.
QP specifically says that no clergy (and by extension the laity) can be forced to say any other missal, other than QP's (1962).  Even if the order comes from bishops, cardinals or any other official.  QP clearly gives all priests the permission (and in another section, it is a command) to say the latin mass "in perpetuity".  Benedict's XVI's motu confirms this permission and reiterates that all priests have the right to the latin mass, because it was never abrogated and consequently "always permitted".
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Ergo, this confirms that all the evil Bishops/priests/superiors of the 70s, 80s, 90s were legally wrong and that those who "disobeyed" to stick with Tradition did correctly.  They obeyed the pope (St Pius V) and the law when their superiors commanded sin.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Matto on September 03, 2019, 12:06:14 PM
Pax Vobis. Your post makes sense to me. It is a sticky web we have weaved.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Praeter on September 04, 2019, 06:54:11 PM
Modernists knew they could not legally force people to attend a new mass while QP was in force.  They knew that they could not revise QP with the new mass, because such changes were essential changes and God would not allow the Church to pass a law which forces sin.  They knew that they could not abrogate QP and replace it with a theologically anti-Catholic liturgy.  So what did they do?  They created a new missal and let everyone assume that they had to attend, even if the law said otherwise.  They knew the pope could not force people to attend, but the bishops/priests could, because rogue/evil bishops are not protected by infallibility.  The bishops/priests are the ones who forced the new mass on the people, not rome/pope.  The V2 popes have certainly supported and said the new mass, but they did so in a non-official, non-legal manner.

Great post Pax.  That is exactly how the Modernists operated.  Pius X said their goal was to reform the Church based on the errors he condemned in Pascendi, and that is what they are doing, but they can only do so by operating below the level of infallibility.  So they use trickery, deceit, ambiguity and whatever else Christ permits, in their efforts to destroy the Church, but they will never succeed in doing so.  Everything that is taking place is part of the Divine Plan, and in the Divine Plan none of Christ's promises will be broken.  

Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: ByzCat3000 on September 06, 2019, 04:12:21 PM
Look, this thread was not intended to blow up into a full R&R vs. SV debate.  Just stop already.

I lean sedeprivationist, but I readily admit that ALL the sides have issues.  SPism is the side I find to be the least problematic.  This is precisely the point of Matthew's post.

R&R rely on the fact that not everything the Pope teaches is infallible ... but then stretch it to the limits of credibility.  It's one thing for an isolated statement in an Encyclical to be wrong, but quite another for the entire Magisterium and Universal Discipline to go corrupt with Modernism, and to be actively leading souls to hell.  If people can lose their souls by adhering to the Magisterium, then the Church's mission has failed.

SVs rely on the fact that vacancies of the Holy See exist and that the Magisterium does not thereby go defunct.  Again, on their side, 60 years does stretch the limits of credibility.

SPs actual hold an in-between position, that the organs of the Magisterium continue to endure but they have gone dormant (in so many words).

But all sides are stretching the limits of credibility, because, to be perfectly frank, this entire crisis stretches the limits of Catholic credibility.
I have read the entire thread, up till this comment.  I haven't read the rest.

But I find the last sentence the most interesting.

The OP deals with a variety of options a Catholic of good will could take to deal with this crisis.

But it seems like a *person* of good will could just as much conclude any of the following.

"Maybe this crisis with the magisterium shows that magisteriums are defectible, and that Eastern Orthodoxy (a Church that is much less reliant on magisterium as a source of authority) is really the Church that Christ founded.

"Maybe neither side was right in 1054, and Rome and Eastern Orthodoxy are actually branches of the true Church."

"Maybe all this stuff really points to the idea that Sola Scriptura has to be true, because all other authorities have failed."

I'm wondering, and I'm especially curious for the OP's imput here, but also anyone else's, will a person of good will even necessarily be lead to one of the Catholic positions, and if so, why?

(To be clear, I obviously think Catholicism is correct or I wouldn't be here, but I have a hard time believing that everyone of good will ends up there, doubly so in the current situation.)
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 06, 2019, 04:39:19 PM
I have read the entire thread, up till this comment.  I haven't read the rest.

But I find the last sentence the most interesting.

The OP deals with a variety of options a Catholic of good will could take to deal with this crisis.

But it seems like a *person* of good will could just as much conclude any of the following.

"Maybe this crisis with the magisterium shows that magisteriums are defectible, and that Eastern Orthodoxy (a Church that is much less reliant on magisterium as a source of authority) is really the Church that Christ founded.

"Maybe neither side was right in 1054, and Rome and Eastern Orthodoxy are actually branches of the true Church."

"Maybe all this stuff really points to the idea that Sola Scriptura has to be true, because all other authorities have failed."

I'm wondering, and I'm especially curious for the OP's imput here, but also anyone else's, will a person of good will even necessarily be lead to one of the Catholic positions, and if so, why?

(To be clear, I obviously think Catholicism is correct or I wouldn't be here, but I have a hard time believing that everyone of good will ends up there, doubly so in the current situation.)
Yeah idk, the Crisis has left us in a real mess. It's impossible to try and convert people to Catholicism when I basically have to claim to be more Catholic than the pope, which they (fairly) consider to be utterly ridiculous. I also have to try and explain why the Church post-V2 is contradicting itself and its pre-V2 tradition, and how that doesn't contradict indefectibility when I'm not even certain on the answer to that myself.

Someone could quite fairly call me a hypocrite - saying that I can't even explain my own position fully. And I can't. But for me it's really a case of, even during the confusion and absurdity of the Crisis, I still think Catholicism has less problems in its positions than Orthodoxy or Protestantism, or any other religion for that matter. Protestants can't even explain how they know the Bible is infallible - it was the Church that decided which books were gospel, which books were apocryphal, etc. Protestants can't tell you why the Gospel of Thomas isn't in their Bible but the Gospel of John is. Orthodoxy can't tell you how they know a council is ecuмenical or not. They quite literally can't even explain their rules of faith. At least we can still explain how we know what is gospel and what isn't, and what is dogma and what isn't.

Of course, attacking logical problems with other denominations while being unable to explain all the problems with my own is not conducive to successful conversion. In my own mind I chalk the problems with the Crisis to - "We're on the eve of either the Great Chastisement or the End Times, it's meant to be a time of confusion and apostasy where nothing goes as normal" and hope that I live long enough to see the problems resolved and explained, but that's a lame and unconvincing explanation to give to a non-Catholic in a debate.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: ByzCat3000 on September 06, 2019, 04:44:32 PM
Yeah idk, the Crisis has left us in a real mess. It's impossible to try and convert people to Catholicism when I basically have to claim to be more Catholic than the pope, which they (fairly) consider to be utterly ridiculous. I also have to try and explain why the Church post-V2 is contradicting itself and its pre-V2 tradition, and how that doesn't contradict indefectibility when I'm not even certain on the answer to that myself.

Someone could quite fairly call me a hypocrite - saying that I can't even explain my own position fully. And I can't. But for me it's really a case of, even during the confusion and absurdity of the Crisis, I still think Catholicism has less problems in its positions than Orthodoxy or Protestantism, or any other religion for that matter. Protestants can't even explain how they know the Bible is infallible - it was the Church that decided which books were gospel, which books were apocryphal, etc. Protestants can't tell you why the Gospel of Thomas isn't in their Bible but the Gospel of John is. Orthodoxy can't tell you how they know a council is ecuмenical or not. They quite literally can't even explain their rules of faith. At least we can still explain how we know what is gospel and what isn't, and what is dogma and what isn't.

Of course, attacking logical problems with other denominations while being unable to explain all the problems with my own is not conducive to successful conversion. In my own mind I chalk the problems with the Crisis to - "We're on the eve of either the Great Chastisement or the End Times, it's meant to be a time of confusion and apostasy where nothing goes as normal" and hope that I live long enough to see the problems resolved and explained, but that's a lame and unconvincing explanation to give to a non-Catholic in a debate.
I more or less agree with your explanation, I go back and forth on the crisis to some degree, but even if hermeneutic of continuity is the correct answer, that's gonna be more like Cardinal Burke than Pope Francis (And yes, I'm aware I'm one of the least "consistently" traditional person on this forum, I've humorously said only Poche is more liberal than me, lol), but I have a hard time believing all the Orthodox (especially the Orthodox, less so with Protestants but there's truth there as well) are just of bad will and just stubborn, *especially* when this is the situation we have to deal with.  That probably plays into, though its not my only reason for, disagreeing with Feeney.

Neevertheless, I do agree with you.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Alcuin on September 09, 2019, 08:13:08 PM
Look, this thread was not intended to blow up into a full R&R vs. SV debate.  Just stop already.

I lean sedeprivationist, but I readily admit that ALL the sides have issues.  SPism is the side I find to be the least problematic.  This is precisely the point of Matthew's post.

R&R rely on the fact that not everything the Pope teaches is infallible ... but then stretch it to the limits of credibility.  It's one thing for an isolated statement in an Encyclical to be wrong, but quite another for the entire Magisterium and Universal Discipline to go corrupt with Modernism, and to be actively leading souls to hell.  If people can lose their souls by adhering to the Magisterium, then the Church's mission has failed.

SVs rely on the fact that vacancies of the Holy See exist and that the Magisterium does not thereby go defunct.  Again, on their side, 60 years does stretch the limits of credibility.

SPs actual hold an in-between position, that the organs of the Magisterium continue to endure but they have gone dormant (in so many words).

But all sides are stretching the limits of credibility, because, to be perfectly frank, this entire crisis stretches the limits of Catholic credibility.
It would explain why people are looking for explanations other than those presented above.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Hermenegild on September 10, 2019, 12:53:00 AM
God gave us Reason, with which we exercise the virtue of Prudence. If we love the truth, acknowledge and attack error, always call a spade a spade, and "give the devil his due", there shouldn't be any huge surprises in store for us. Nor any worries that we'll go full Old Catholic when the Church is restored.
Haven't we gone full Old Catholic already?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Clemens Maria on September 10, 2019, 07:20:39 AM
Haven't we gone full Old Catholic already?
Maybe the r&r is more like the Eastern Orthodox position?  The pope doesn’t have the primacy, he has the semi-primacy where we obey him only when he is conforming to what we think is Catholic.  And when he doesn’t conform we only recognize him.  But if Bergoglio isn’t the pope then r&r is merely confused about Catholic theology and they have no obligation to obey a non-Catholic heretic. So it completely depends on whether or not Bergoglio is objectively the pope.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 10, 2019, 07:20:58 AM
Quote
It's impossible to try and convert people to Catholicism when I basically have to claim to be more Catholic than the pope, which they (fairly) consider to be utterly ridiculous.
Forlorn, I agree that it’s almost impossible to convert novus ordo Catholics today.  However our chapel has had 20+ converts in the last few years alone (with 5 taking classes).  They are Protestants and atheists.  We’ve lost about 30 people in the last 5 years to the indult (all 30 people grew up Trad).  It’s a real shame. But the way that these new people found out about Catholicism and our chapel is truly miraculous.  God took the graces from those Trads who rejected it and gave it to others who would appreciate it.  Deo Gratias!
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 10, 2019, 11:44:20 AM
Maybe the r&r is more like the Eastern Orthodox position?  The pope doesn’t have the primacy, he has the semi-primacy where we obey him only when he is conforming to what we think is Catholic.  And when he doesn’t conform we only recognize him.  But if Bergoglio isn’t the pope then r&r is merely confused about Catholic theology and they have no obligation to obey a non-Catholic heretic. So it completely depends on whether or not Bergoglio is objectively the pope.
Actually, "r&r" is the Catholic position. We accept that the pope has the primacy per Pope Pius X, who said that upon his election, "he is instantly the true pope and he acquires and can exercise full and absolute jurisdiction over the whole world."

R&R are loyal to this Catholic truth as decreed by St. Pius X. R&R continue to obey him as the pope in all those religious matters which fall within the ambit of his authority, unless he should command something which is sinful. Never forget: "First we are under obedience to God, only then under obedience to man."

This is Catholic.

What is not Catholic is to believe that we cannot know what sin is, or right from wrong, or Catholic from not Catholic without a saint sitting on the throne of St. Peter. If that's EO or not I do not know, but whatever it is, it's certainly not Catholic. 

Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on September 10, 2019, 01:10:30 PM
Actually, "r&r" is the Catholic position.

And yet many Catholics completely disagree ... as per the point Matthew's making.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Stubborn on September 10, 2019, 02:39:20 PM
And yet many Catholics completely disagree ... as per the point Matthew's making.
Catholics (R&R) are doing nothing more than simply applying: "First we are under obedience to God, only then under obedience to man." Without this most fundamental of Catholic principles, all Catholics have a supreme problem. But with this principle, aside from praying for the pope, Catholics actually don't do anything in regards to the conciliar popes..

Also, Catholics, by virtue of their free will, may choose to completely disagree, but to what end? Disagreeing with this principle only leaves them with a problem which has no solution by their own choosing.


Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Praeter on September 10, 2019, 05:45:00 PM
Maybe the r&r is more like the Eastern Orthodox position?  The pope doesn’t have the primacy, he has the semi-primacy where we obey him only when he is conforming to what we think is Catholic.  And when he doesn’t conform we only recognize him.  But if Bergoglio isn’t the pope then r&r is merely confused about Catholic theology and they have no obligation to obey a non-Catholic heretic. So it completely depends on whether or not Bergoglio is objectively the pope.

It is usually conceded that R&R's disobey the Pope, but when do they actually do so?  Before this is conceded, I think we need some examples that demonstrate it.

And let's not forget that most sedevacantists disobey/reject the revise Holy Week liturgies that were promulgated by Pius XII, the last pope they accept. How is that not recognizing and resisting Pius XII?   And every sedevacantist bishop is guilty of rejecting the teaching of Pius XII, who forbade bishops to be consecrated without a mandate.  It was already forbidden in the 1917 code.  Pius XII just attached the more sever penalty of excommunication to those broke the law.  If everything contained in an encyclical "demands assent," as the sedes always say (quoting Pius XII in Humani Generis), why did every single sede bishop, without exception, refuse to give his assent to Pius XII teaching in Ad Apostolorum Principis, which forbade bishops to be consecrated without a mandate?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: songbird on September 10, 2019, 06:19:03 PM
Who cares about the "ring"!  Where is the "Tiara"?  Who was the last one to be crowned with the Tiara?  Why was the Tiara let go of?  Is the Tiara in a museum?  So, who has the authority?  Very sad!  IF the pope was truly sorry, say like St. Paul, would the fruits not show?  Yes, and are those fruits showing?  No!

Our Lady warned us that the enemy Satan, would see the dogmas destroyed.  We must be on our guard to pray the mysteries of the Rosary, the Apostles Creed and etc.
If there is a fruit to be had, to support a true pope with authority, he would say and demand the Mass, the Mass Christ said.

It is true, that any man can be in the popes position, question is do they have authority, and the answer right now is NO.  Their fruits publicly show this.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Bataar on September 11, 2019, 04:08:13 PM
It is usually conceded that R&R's disobey the Pope, but when do they actually do so?  Before this is conceded, I think we need some examples that demonstrate it.

And let's not forget that most sedevacantists disobey/reject the revise Holy Week liturgies that were promulgated by Pius XII, the last pope they accept. How is that not recognizing and resisting Pius XII?   And every sedevacantist bishop is guilty of rejecting the teaching of Pius XII, who forbade bishops to be consecrated without a mandate.  It was already forbidden in the 1917 code.  Pius XII just attached the more sever penalty of excommunication to those broke the law.  If everything contained in an encyclical "demands assent," as the sedes always say (quoting Pius XII in Humani Generis), why did every single sede bishop, without exception, refuse to give his assent to Pius XII teaching in Ad Apostolorum Principis, which forbade bishops to be consecrated without a mandate?
According to canon law, if a church law ceases to be working for the good of the church, that law ceases to be valid. The Holy Week changes were obviously made as a stepping stone toward the new mass. Pope Pius XII was very sick at the time as well. Put those together and it doesn't take much to say that the law is doing or did more harm than good and that we're better off going back to the old Holy Week. 
As to bishops being consecrated without a mandate, that goes back to the same canon law. According to SVs, the church lives on through them as the NO is a new/separate church. If they did not have the ability to consecrate bishops, the church would definitely end so that law is definitely doing harm, not good so it's invalid. 
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Praeter on September 11, 2019, 04:58:29 PM
According to canon law, if a church law ceases to be working for the good of the church, that law ceases to be valid. The Holy Week changes were obviously made as a stepping stone toward the new mass. Pope Pius XII was very sick at the time as well. Put those together and it doesn't take much to say that the law is doing or did more harm than good and that we're better off going back to the old Holy Week.
As to bishops being consecrated without a mandate, that goes back to the same canon law. According to SVs, the church lives on through them as the NO is a new/separate church. If they did not have the ability to consecrate bishops, the church would definitely end so that law is definitely doing harm, not good so it's invalid.

Okay, just to make sure I understand what you saying.  You believe Catholics are permitted to "sift" the laws of the Church to determine for themselves which are good and which are not, and are only required to obey those that they believe are beneficial for the Church?

And can you cite the canon from the 1917 or 1983 Code that you are referring to?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on September 11, 2019, 07:08:53 PM
Quote
The Holy Week changes were obviously made as a stepping stone toward the new mass. Pope Pius XII was very sick at the time as well. Put those together and it doesn't take much to say that the law is doing or did more harm than good and that we're better off going back to the old Holy Week.
The Holy Week changes are not evil and they aren't good.  They just are.  The intent behind them is irrelevant, if the changes themselves aren't anti-catholic.  Example: Susan holds a grudge against her sister-in-law, Judy.  She makes a cherry pie for Judy's party, knowing that Judy is allergic to cherries and she wants to make Judy mad.  Susan's INTENTION is sinful but the cherry pie itself is not.  It's just a pie.  In the same way, the Holy Week changes were INTENDED to be a stepping stone towards modernism, so the intention is a sin.  But I don't think the changes crossed the line into anti-catholic theology or a protestant liturgy.  So the sin of intention is far greater than the actual changes.  As such, the arguments against them are over-blown.  Same goes for the 1962 missal.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Incredulous on September 11, 2019, 09:56:10 PM




The Church in the 1940's under Pope Pius XII's papacy, was similar to Toledo Spain in 711.

(https://proxy.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.papalartifacts.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2016%2F03%2Fmontini-and-pius-xii.jpg&f=1&nofb=1)

Like the Jєωs living within the Catholic city, the Pope "opened the gates" and internal attack against our Church has yet to cease.


Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Bataar on September 12, 2019, 12:04:21 AM
Okay, just to make sure I understand what you saying.  You believe Catholics are permitted to "sift" the laws of the Church to determine for themselves which are good and which are not, and are only required to obey those that they believe are beneficial for the Church?

And can you cite the canon from the 1917 or 1983 Code that you are referring to?
Whoops, it's not canon law. My mistake there. I'm referring to the principle of Epikeia. The third aspect of it states:

When particular circuмstances unforeseen by the legislator would indicate that it was not his mind or intention to bind the subject, epikeia may be used.

This is the position used  by Sedevacantists. They believe that when the law was passed requiring Papal approval for bishops to be ordained, the legislator (pope) was not aware that at this time, there would be no pope to ordain bishops so under the principle of Epikeia, this law is no longer binding. There's also the case after the western schism when bishops were appointed during the time period where there was much uncertainty of the actual pope. When Pope Gregory X (I believe it was him) came to power, he declared that all bishop ordinations were valid during the preceding time period when there was no pope or uncertainty of who the actual pope was.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: forlorn on September 12, 2019, 06:15:12 AM
Forlorn, I agree that it’s almost impossible to convert novus ordo Catholics today.  However our chapel has had 20+ converts in the last few years alone (with 5 taking classes).  They are Protestants and atheists.  We’ve lost about 30 people in the last 5 years to the indult (all 30 people grew up Trad).  It’s a real shame. But the way that these new people found out about Catholicism and our chapel is truly miraculous.  God took the graces from those Trads who rejected it and gave it to others who would appreciate it.  Deo Gratias!
Good to hear, I'm surprised you're getting so many. Shame about the indults though. Are they FSSP or NO? 
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Matthew on May 21, 2020, 01:48:29 PM
At Vatican II, the Freemasons successfully conspired to throw the One Ring into the Tiber, after which it has been lost to this day. 

God will have to produce it (or forge another) in His own good time.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: fatimarevelation23 on May 21, 2020, 08:31:11 PM
At Vatican II, the Freemasons successfully conspired to throw the One Ring into the Tiber, after which it has been lost to this day.

God will have to produce it (or forge another) in His own good time.
The Freemasons not only did that. But, they also got rid of the St. Michael's Prayer. The short form version is only prayed at some churches. But, the freemasons don't want you to know about the Long Form St. Michael's Prayer. It sure is an eye-opener.
https://www.traditioninaction.org/religious/b009rpMichael.htm (https://www.traditioninaction.org/religious/b009rpMichael.htm)
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: 2Vermont on May 22, 2020, 07:02:43 AM
The Ring=a True Pope
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: ByzCat3000 on May 22, 2020, 05:15:58 PM
Good-willed Catholics currently exist in many groups. Below are the arguments that WOULD JUSTIFY a Catholic of good will attending any of these groups. There are other arguments, and I don't have all day, but I'm giving a quick sample so you know what I mean:

Conservative Novus Ordo: "We must stay within the authority and framework of the Catholic Church. Obedience is important. Christ promised perpetual successors to St. Peter. I do my best to do and believe everything a Catholic should. I obey my priest, bishop, and Pope unless they are clearly in error, which some of them are at times."

FSSP: "What Conservative Novus Ordo said, but also the New Mass is defective and dangerous at least. We will play it safe and only say the Tridentine Mass and use the Rites that were used before Vatican II. Vatican II was extremely problematic at best. We will train our priests in separate seminaries so they get a fully Traditional or pre-Vatican II formation. We're OK with the new Rites of consecration and ordination, however."

SSPX: "What FSSP said."  <----- Note how useless the SSPX is now, but I digress!

Resistance: "Vatican II is heretical and destructive of souls, and we have 50 years of evidence to prove it. We should stay away from the Modernist contagion, lest we ourselves become infected. It is permitted to disobey a Pope when he steps outside his authority. God expects us to save our souls, and we need the Sacraments to do so. We have the right to cling to the Catholic Faith as it was always taught. We don't need the Pope or anyone else to give us permission to stay Catholic. But we can keep the Faith and pre-Vatican II religion without denying the papacy of the current Pope. Besides, the Pope has been validly elected and universally accepted by the Catholic Church. Also, the idea of a 60 year interregnum (period between popes) is ludicrous."

Sedevacantists: "What Resistance said, except the stuff about the Pope. The Catholic Church can't promulgate a Mass noxious to souls. And what's the point of Our Lord's promise to St. Peter if his successor could actually be harmful to, and dismantle, the Catholic Church? The last several Popes aren't even Catholic, therefore they can't be heads of the Catholic Church. They are heretics. We know heresy when we see it."

Home Aloners: "I stopped going to Mass after 1970 when the Catholic Church embraced Modernism and error. Yes I've heard about so-called "Traditional Catholics" here and there, but they have no authority from the Pope to operate independent churches. They have no authority to say Mass, much less hear confessions or witness marriages. These groups are like cut-off branches not connected to the main tree, which means they are dead. You can't get life (grace) from dead branches. So I stay at home with my Rosary, and live like the Japanese "hidden Christians" praying for God to end this chastisement."
I don’t believe the “official line” of the fssp is that the new mass is defective and dangerous.  I’m sure there’s some overlap among priests, but I suspect that’s a key difference between the groups.  Sspx thinks it’s “defective and dangerous”.  Fssp thinks it’s just not ideal.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Matthew on February 01, 2021, 05:11:19 AM
Bump!
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Papa Pius V on February 03, 2021, 07:47:35 PM
Both R&R and Sedevacantism/Sedeprivationism have problems.

However I prefer R&R because it has some semblance of prior application whereas Sedevacantism/Sedeprivationism have only been theoretical until this point in time i.e for 2000 years. I just don't feel spiritually comfortable with that. But I do not think Sedevacantists/Sedeprivationists are schismatics or heretics either.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Matthew on February 04, 2021, 02:11:31 AM
I’m sure there’s some overlap among priests, but I suspect that’s a key difference between the groups.  Sspx thinks it’s “defective and dangerous”.  Fssp thinks it’s just not ideal.
See, that is a problem right there. If the New Mass is simply "not ideal" then you attend sometimes when you're on-the-go and don't have other options. Kind of like eating at McDonald's. You know you shouldn't, you know it's bad for you, but hey the kids just got out of practice and we're starving. "I know, I'm a bad mom!"

Who doesn't feed their kid(s) junk food once in a while? If the New Mass is just junk food, you'll probably eat of it quite a bit! It's more convenient, and it tastes great!

On the contrary, if you have principles and believe it's dangerous and even sinful, akin to a man going in to a strip bar, "not intending to sin" -- then you probably won't go ever.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Nishant Xavier on February 04, 2021, 06:48:58 AM
Yes, one of the questions to consider carefully, on which the whole future of the traditional movement depends, is (1) Is the New Mass invalid, like a Protestant service? (2) Is it blasphemous, even if valid, like a Black Mass?, or is it (3) the New Mass is only inferior, like a truncated Mass would be? The Truth is certainly in Tradition, and one of these positions must certainly be true, but there is debate among us as to which it is. I would argue for (3). Latin Mass Society has a comparison of the texts here https://lms.org.uk/missals

One of the most problematic aspects of the New Mass is the watered-down, ambiguous Offertory Prayers. A beautiful prayer like "P: Receive, O Holy Father, almighty and eternal God, this spotless host, which I, Thine unworthy servant, offer unto Thee, my living and true God, for my countless sins, trespasses, and omissions; likewise for all here present, and for all faithful Christians, whether living or dead, that it may avail both me and them to salvation, unto life everlasting. Amen." got replaced by a watered-down, "P: Blessed are you, Lord God of all creation, for through your goodness we have received the bread we offer you: fruit of the earth and work of human hands, it will become for us the bread of life.", which can be taken in a Catholic sense, but also in a heterodox sense. 

In spite of this and other manifest problems in the New Mass, most who have examined it conclude it is valid, and contains no heresy. That conclusion also follows from observing that the only words changed in the Words of Consecration are "Mysterium Fidei", the Mystery of Faith. Now, that removal will surely lessen reverence, especially in the Priest, but it will not invalidate the Sacrament. Fr. Garrigou Lagrange, writing before the Second Vatican Council, said those words are not essential to validity. One of Father's theological proofs of the same are that those words are not found in Eastern Liturgies like those of the Greek Church that are valid.

Now, if it is valid, and contains no heresy, as even Bp. Williamson has argued recently, then it confers grace ex opere operato. I would say a valid Mass, celebrated in the Catholic Church, always obtains at least some graces, and a valid Communion, distributed in the Catholic Church, always confers at least some graces on those who receive them properly disposed (in a State of Grace). Let's say it obtains 5% of the graces obtained by the Traditional Latin Mass, which is the Complete, Full and Integral Mass. A truncated Mass with some prayers changed arguably does not have no grace at all, but neither does it contain the plenitude of grace as the true Mass does.

Of course, with regard to Holy Communion, another aspect must be considered. The traditional Mass has so many safeguards against sacrilegious Communions also, while in the New Mass, especially with the abolition of many important prayers, without Altar rails, and with the lax and sinful distribution of Communion in the hand etc, sacrileges have multiplied. That also has to be taken into account. 

Ladislaus, about Eucharistic Miracles etc, I do not use it as a standalone matter or as the only definitive proof. I use it, as also Bp. Williamson does, as part of a cuмulative case. It constitutes at least significant evidence that must be taken into account, however you wish to argue about it. Scientists have said Eucharistic Miracles cannot so easily be faked: https://dowym.com/voices/5-incredible-eucharistic-miracles-from-the-last-25-years/ Likewise, with Dr. Marshall's or other conversions etc; sure, that's not an absolute proof, and other explanations, like those you gave, are possible. It is part of the ongoing examination/study on the fruits of the New Mass that must be taken into account. I believe if the New Mass is celebrated reverently, versus Deum, with the Roman Canon (Eucharistic Prayer I in the New Mass), with Altar Rails, Communion kneeling and only on the tongue etc, at least 20% of the Graces of the TLM will return.

Yes, we agree there have been horrible loss of graces in the last 50 years, and no doubt the Mass is at the centre of that. But it can also be explained by an inferior Mass, imo, and not only by an invalid Mass, or one blasphemous/ heretical etc. One final thing. It is said that when Anti-Christ finally comes, the Mass will be abolished for about 3 1/2 years. And that will be the worst crisis of all. Doesn't that itself suggest that, at no point before then, the Mass will be completely abolished? Bp. Williamson said graces are "strangled" at the NM.

God Bless. 

Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Incredulous on February 04, 2021, 08:43:49 AM
Quick reply:

1. Quoting Bp Tissier and Father Wathen, the new mass is a “bastard, sacrilege”.

2. Bp. Williamson contradicted himself on the new mass and is just plain wrong to say partial graces are coming from it.

3. The “ring” is the Tridentine Mass, codified by St. Pope Pius V to insure our Catholic unity for the highest form of Worship taught by the Our Lord, Jesus Christ
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Matthew on February 04, 2021, 09:16:41 AM
Quick reply:

3. The “ring” is the Tridentine Mass, codified by St. Pope Pius V to insure our Catholic unity for the highest form of Worship taught by the Our Lord, Jesus Christ

Even the Tridentine Mass itself is the source of some of the DEEPEST divisions among Traditional Catholics. Should the Mass be offered una cuм the current Pontiff? Which Missale should be used? 1962, 1955, or earlier? and if we're in Holy Week, which version of Holy Week should be used? How many hours should we fast before Communion? Which version of the Good Friday prayers should be used? There are several. And heaven help us -- should the Faithful give any responses during the Mass (a la the Dialogue Mass)

These are divisions specifically among Traditional Catholics -- 100% of whom claim allegiance and devotion to the Tridentine Mass.

So no, the Tridentine Mass is most certainly not the Ring of my analogy. Or there would be zero division among Traditional Catholics today! Is that truly what you observe?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Papa Pius V on February 04, 2021, 09:33:16 AM
Even the Tridentine Mass itself is the source of some of the DEEPEST divisions among Traditional Catholics. Should the Mass be offered una cuм the current Pontiff? Which Missale should be used? 1962, 1955, or earlier? and if we're in Holy Week, which version of Holy Week should be used? How many hours should we fast before Communion? Which version of the Good Friday prayers should be used? There are several. And heaven help us -- should the Faithful give any responses during the Mass (a la the Dialogue Mass)

These are divisions specifically among Traditional Catholics -- 100% of whom claim allegiance and devotion to the Tridentine Mass.

So no, the Tridentine Mass is most certainly not the Ring of my analogy. Or there would be zero division among Traditional Catholics today! Is that truly what you observe?
Exactly. The "One Ring" simply isn't known right now (if it even exists at this time).
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Minnesota on February 04, 2021, 10:24:05 AM
I have a feeling that more than a few FSSP priests share the Society's view of the New Mass... Being that they rely on a diocese for bishops and more, they probably can't say it publicly.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Incredulous on February 04, 2021, 10:25:47 AM
Exactly. The "One Ring" simply isn't known right now (if it even exists at this time).

The “divisions” in the codified Holy Sacrifice were introduced and propagated by the enemies of the Church. They are extraneous distractions.

Transubstantiation of the Holy Sacrifice has abrogated judaism.  
It is our unifying ring.

If you don’t believe in it, you’re clearly outside looking in.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Papa Pius V on February 04, 2021, 11:22:31 AM
The “divisions” in the codified Holy Sacrifice were introduced and propagated by the enemies of the Church. They are extraneous distractions.

Transubstantiation of the Holy Sacrifice has abrogated judaism.  
It is our unifying ring.

If you don’t believe in it, you’re clearly outside looking in.
How does that unify Traditional Catholics?
We HAVE the Holy Sacrifice and look? Do you see unity?
We have some clowns who go as far as to claim that Pius X was a heretic for his liturgical and breviary reformations.
Unity? I think not.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Nishant Xavier on February 05, 2021, 08:19:25 AM
Hi Incredulous. I agree the traditional Mass unites us. It gives us Unity of Worship, which Unites us in Faith, because Lex Orandi, Lex Credendi. There are, as we know, Two Bonds in the Mystical Body of Christ that unite all the faithful, the Bond of Faith and the Communion of Charity. We are united because we believe in and love Jesus and Mary, and because we love one another in Christ's Body. But there are and have always been wounds to unity, like apostasy, heresy and schism, by which the Unity of the Church is attacked by those who should be Her members. Among traditional Catholics, we should love God and love each other very strongly, to keep the Bonds of Unity strong, and so that we may all grow in Grace day by day, both individual members and the whole Church. 

Regarding the New Mass, I will cite an article on some of Archbishop Lefebvre's statements about it: 

From: https://sspx.org/en/what-archbishop-lefebvre-said-about-new-mass

"It is true that prudence might suggest to this or that priest “not to refuse the new Ordo for fear of scandalizing the faithful” by their witnessing his apparent disobedience to the bishop.[40] Such a priest should, however, “keep the Roman Canon which is still permitted, and say the words of consecration in a low voice according to the old form, which is still allowed.”[41] When Archbishop Lefebvre was absent on a Sunday, the seminarians would go and assist at Mass together at the Bernadine convent of La Maigrauge where an old monk celebrated the New Mass in Latin. The archbishop was not a man to rush souls. He allowed himself time to seethe fruits more clearly in order to pass better judgment on the tree. He also wanted to hear the opinions of his colleagues in the episcopate, and find a consensus among his friends ...

At the time, Archbishop Lefebvre’s position was not quite as categorical. He considered that the New Mass was not heretical, but as Cardinal Ottaviani had said, it represents serious dangers; thus in the course of time, “Protestant ideas concerning the Supper would be unconsciously accepted by the Catholics.” This was why children had to be taught the fundamental notions about the Mass. However, “it is an exaggeration to say that most of these Masses are invalid.” One should not hesitate to go a little further to have Mass according to the Roman Ordo; but “if one does not have the choice and if the priest celebrating Mass according to the Novus Ordo is faithful and worthy, one should not abstain from going to Mass.”[44] ...
The problem of assisting at the New Mass

Some priests were torn between the need to keep the Faith as expressed by the traditional Mass and a desire to be obedient as they saw it. In the early days of the reforms, Archbishop Lefebvre advised them to keep at least the traditional Offertory and Canon and to say them in Latin. His advice to the seminarians as to the faithful was remarkably moderate in tone for one who was first to step up to the breach to repel the New Mass.
He exhorted them:
Quote
Make every effort to have the Mass of St. Pius V, but if it is impossible to find one within forty kilometers and if there is a pious priest who says the New Mass in as traditional a way as possible, it is good for you to assist at it to fulfill your Sunday obligation."
 
One can counter the dangers for the Faith through solid catechism:
Quote
Should all the world’s churches be emptied? I do not feel brave enough to say such a thing. I don’t want to encourage atheism."[10]
 

... [please see the link for more]

These statements are incompatible with the view that the NOM never obtains any graces, or Communion there distributes no graces.

God Bless.  
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Matthew on June 03, 2021, 12:30:37 PM
Bump!
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on June 03, 2021, 02:19:14 PM

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"It is true that prudence might suggest to this or that priest “not to refuse the new Ordo for fear of scandalizing the faithful” by their witnessing his apparent disobedience to the bishop.[40] Such a priest should, however, “keep the Roman Canon which is still permitted, and say the words of consecration in a low voice according to the old form, which is still allowed.”[41] When Archbishop Lefebvre was absent on a Sunday, the seminarians would go and assist at Mass together at the Bernadine convent of La Maigrauge where an old monk celebrated the New Mass in Latin.

Xavier, you may have already read the rebuttal/explanation for the above quote (and also the FULL quote) from Sean's thread a few weeks ago.  Here is a summary of what and why +ABL said above:
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1) He was speaking of the time of 1980ish, when many of the novus ordo priests WERE UNQUESTIONABLY PRIESTS, having been ordained in the old rite.
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2) He was telling such valid, novus ordo priests to say mass using the TRADITIONAL canon and using the OLD FORM.  The quote keeps going, wherein +ABL told such priests to also use the TRADITIONAL offertory prayers and the TRADITIONAL communion (i.e. not communion in the hand).  In other words, +ABL was telling novus ordo priests to say a TLM mass.
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3) It follows then, according to the above qualifications, that in the early 1980s, it was possibly allowed to attend such a mass, as it was said by a valid priest and was as close to traditional as possible, and was essentially a TLM.
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At the time, Archbishop Lefebvre’s position was not quite as categorical. He considered that the New Mass was not heretical,

When the new mass is said using the TRADITIONAL prayers of the offertory, canon and communion, yes, it's not heretical.
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as Cardinal Ottaviani had said, it represents serious dangers

This is a gross underestimation and falsification of what +Ottaviani said.  He condemned the new mass, in its purest/theoretical form.
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However, “it is an exaggeration to say that most of these Masses are invalid.”

At the time...in the early 1980s...when priests were valid and if using the TRADITIONAL prayers, then this is why +ABL said the above.
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“if one does not have the choice and if the priest celebrating Mass according to the Novus Ordo is faithful and worthy, one should not abstain from going to Mass.”

Faithful priest = one who says mass using the TRADITIONAL prayers (i.e. is faithful to Tradition/doctrine).
Worthy priest = one is unquestionably valid, having been ordained in the pre-V2 rite, by a pre-V2 bishop.
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Quote
These statements are incompatible with the view that the NOM never obtains any graces, or Communion there distributes no graces.

You are trying to apply early 1980s validity and traditional use of liturgical prayers to now, over 50 years later, when the % of valid priests who say the new mass are next to 0% and the use of the TRADITIONAL prayers in a novus ordo mass is also 0%.  Your comparisons of these 2 eras as similar is both dishonest and illogical.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Yeti on June 03, 2021, 02:38:56 PM
1) He was speaking of the time of 1980ish, when many of the novus ordo priests WERE UNQUESTIONABLY PRIESTS, having been ordained in the old rite.

Worthy priest = one is unquestionably valid, having been ordained in the pre-V2 rite, by a pre-V2 bishop.
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Quick question. Does the Resistance have an official position -- either explicitly stated or at least existing de facto -- on the new rites of ordination and consecration? Do they require that any priest who works for them be ordained in the old rite, and come from an unbroken line of bishops ordained and consecrate in the old rite?
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And do they tell the faithful to only receive the sacraments from such priests?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on June 03, 2021, 03:04:21 PM
I have no idea what +Williamson’s views are.  Being that he’s a little slippery on the new mass, he may also be slippery on the new ordinations.  In my view, the resistance is so scared of being labeled sedevacant, that their knee-jerk reaction is to disagree with many of the sede theological lines-in-the-sand (even those which have nothing to do with the papacy).  I hope I’m wrong but I don’t know. 
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: ByzCat3000 on June 03, 2021, 09:14:57 PM
I have no idea what +Williamson’s views are.  Being that he’s a little slippery on the new mass, he may also be slippery on the new ordinations.  In my view, the resistance is so scared of being labeled sedevacant, that their knee-jerk reaction is to disagree with many of the sede theological lines-in-the-sand (even those which have nothing to do with the papacy).  I hope I’m wrong but I don’t know.
I know we've talked about this before, but I think this is more related than you think.

Like I get that there are some complex material/formal distinctions, but honestly, if he's not a bishop he can't be the Pope.

Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on June 03, 2021, 09:40:29 PM
Even if he’s not a bishop, he could be a valid pope-elect (theoretically).  Any unmarried, catholic male over a certain age, can be validly elected pope.  You don’t have to be a cleric at all. 
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on June 04, 2021, 05:52:08 AM
Even if he’s not a bishop, he could be a valid pope-elect (theoretically).  Any unmarried, catholic male over a certain age, can be validly elected pope.  You don’t have to be a cleric at all.

He could be a valid pope-elect, and presumably could do things like make appointments, but he has no teaching authority, since only bishops are part of the Ecclesia Docens.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: SeanJohnson on June 04, 2021, 09:20:34 AM
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Quick question. Does the Resistance have an official position -- either explicitly stated or at least existing de facto -- on the new rites of ordination and consecration? Do they require that any priest who works for them be ordained in the old rite, and come from an unbroken line of bishops ordained and consecrate in the old rite?
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And do they tell the faithful to only receive the sacraments from such priests?
No:
Because there is no institutionally monolithic Resistance, there is no official Resistance position on anything.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Ladislaus on June 04, 2021, 09:33:24 AM
No:
Because there is no institutionally monolithic Resistance, there is no official Resistance position on anything.

As far as I can tell "The Resistance" is more of an idea than any kind of concrete organization.  If anyone might "morally" speak for the Resistance, it would be Bishop Williamson.  I believe there was some scandal created when Bishop Williamson did confirmations for some Feeneyite group.  Bishop Williamson, if I recall, also did ordinations for the Traditionalist Ukrainian Catholics.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: SeanJohnson on June 04, 2021, 09:46:25 AM
As far as I can tell "The Resistance" is more of an idea than any kind of concrete organization.

Initially (ie., prior to +Williamson’s entrance into the Resistance), it was not so.  The plan was to prepare for an “SSPX 2B” to replace the old one if it sold out.  But the bishop’s idea of “independent pockets” of Resistance made this situation inevitable.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Yeti on June 04, 2021, 10:08:12 AM
No:
Because there is no institutionally monolithic Resistance, there is no official Resistance position on anything.
Thanks. I figured you would be the most likely person to know.
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But is there a de facto position? I.e. do most Resistance priests go one way or the other?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Matthew on June 04, 2021, 10:48:44 AM
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Quick question. Does the Resistance have an official position -- either explicitly stated or at least existing de facto -- on the new rites of ordination and consecration? Do they require that any priest who works for them be ordained in the old rite, and come from an unbroken line of bishops ordained and consecrate in the old rite?
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And do they tell the faithful to only receive the sacraments from such priests?

Ok, since my fellow ex-seminarians utterly failed to answer this question for you, I will:

DE FACTO the Resistance does have a position on this. Priests from the Novus Ordo are to be conditionally re-ordained. And the Resistance only makes use of known good or "certainly valid" bishops -- such as +Lefebvre-line.

All priests working in the Resistance are either conditionally ordained by a +Lefebvre line bishop, or they were already ordained by one in the SSPX.
Seems pretty straightforward to me. Classic SSPX position, once again.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Yeti on June 04, 2021, 10:53:40 AM
Ok, since my fellow ex-seminarians utterly failed to answer this question for you, I will:

DE FACTO the Resistance does have a position on this. Priests from the Novus Ordo are to be conditionally re-ordained. And the Resistance only makes use of known good or "certainly valid" bishops -- such as +Lefebvre-line.

All priests working in the Resistance are either conditionally ordained by a +Lefebvre line bishop, or they were already ordained by one in the SSPX.
Seems pretty straightforward to me. Classic SSPX position, once again.
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Thank you. Validity of sacraments is extremely important. And changes made to the form of Holy Orders by modernists should not be used by anybody. That's just not something you should take a chance on.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: SeanJohnson on June 04, 2021, 11:12:56 AM
Well, Fr. Voigt began working with Fr. Pfeiffer before he was conditionally ordained (this was before the conflict between Pfeiffer and Williamson), and when I started squawking about it on CI, Pfeiffer had him conditionally ordained by +Williamson.

So not sure if that counts.

But at least as regards the Resistance allied with the 4 bishops today, I am not aware of any clergy who were not at least conditionally ordained.

The faithful are rightfully intolerant of even the slightest doubts regarding priestly validity.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Comrade on June 04, 2021, 11:16:57 AM
Ok, since my fellow ex-seminarians utterly failed to answer this question for you, I will:

DE FACTO the Resistance does have a position on this. Priests from the Novus Ordo are to be conditionally re-ordained. And the Resistance only makes use of known good or "certainly valid" bishops -- such as +Lefebvre-line.

All priests working in the Resistance are either conditionally ordained by a +Lefebvre line bishop, or they were already ordained by one in the SSPX.
Seems pretty straightforward to me. Classic SSPX position, once again.

Is that really the Classic SSPX position? We know of NO priests that were not conditionally ordained even during +Lefebvre timeline. Also, I personally know of an NO priest, who was conditionally ordained by +Williamson, even though there was no positive doubt and it was done because people complained. 

If the Resistance require conditional ordination, how does that apply to Francis? If there is a sacramental theological reason to doubt all NO priests, then we could easily come to the conclusion that Francis is at best a deacon or worst a layman.

Side note concerning conditional sacraments: I have been finding that more protestant converts to NO church never had their protestant baptism investigated. And as they move to tradition, the neo-SSPX  does not investigate it either.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Matto on June 04, 2021, 11:21:03 AM
Side note concerning conditional sacraments: I have been finding that more protestant converts to NO church never had their protestant baptism investigated. And as they move to tradition, the neo-SSPX  does not investigate it either.
I find it interesting that they perform conditional confirmations on demand to all who ask, but don't perform conditional baptisms or ordinations.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: ByzCat3000 on June 05, 2021, 01:08:36 PM
Ok, since my fellow ex-seminarians utterly failed to answer this question for you, I will:

DE FACTO the Resistance does have a position on this. Priests from the Novus Ordo are to be conditionally re-ordained. And the Resistance only makes use of known good or "certainly valid" bishops -- such as +Lefebvre-line.

All priests working in the Resistance are either conditionally ordained by a +Lefebvre line bishop, or they were already ordained by one in the SSPX.
Seems pretty straightforward to me. Classic SSPX position, once again.
Didn't Lefebvre himself sometimes abstain from conditional ordinations?  I admittedly don't remember the details on this so maybe I'm wrong.  I'll see if I can find proof tomorrow or the next day.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Comrade on June 05, 2021, 02:24:45 PM
Didn't Lefebvre himself sometimes abstain from conditional ordinations?  I admittedly don't remember the details on this so maybe I'm wrong.  I'll see if I can find proof tomorrow or the next day.
I asked the same question earlier, with no response.. Why would it take an ex seminarians to answer it?
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: ByzCat3000 on June 05, 2021, 03:09:11 PM
I asked the same question earlier, with no response.. Why would it take an ex seminarians to answer it?
And this is why I sometimes wonder if the difference between SSPV and resistance isn't as large as some may think.  Not that that's the worst thing in the world.  Lefebvre wasnt perfect and it's certainly better to be SSPV than liberal 
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Hermes on July 23, 2021, 09:06:44 PM
Hermeneutic of Continuity


RIP
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Matthew on July 24, 2021, 12:02:02 AM
Didn't Lefebvre himself sometimes abstain from conditional ordinations?  I admittedly don't remember the details on this so maybe I'm wrong.  I'll see if I can find proof tomorrow or the next day.

Irrelevant. +ABL died in 1991. Star Trek: TNG was only on Season 4. Bill Clinton wasn't even elected yet. The radio stations still played Eighties music, as most Nineties music hadn't been written or sung yet. My family finally bought their first computer (IBM clone "Laser") in 1992. Cost about $1200. 16 MHz 386, 2 MB RAM, 100 MB hard drive, VGA video card, dot matrix printer, 14" CRT monitor, 3.5" and 5" floppy drives, no sound card, no CD-ROM, modem had to be configured with jumpers and installed by user.

We were only 20 years into a 50+ year Crisis. Perhaps there were more validly consecrated bishops at that point? Maybe more bishops could be expected to have the proper training and intention "to do what the Church does", and had the correct concept of what the Priesthood is?

It's difficult to compare +ABL's prudential decisions in a DIFFERENT TIME about DIFFERENT MEN ordained by A DIFFERENT GENERATION OF BISHOPS. Not much in common there.

The main idea is to be certain about an ordination. Not necessarily to conditionally ordain everyone, early and often. If the name of the game were to get as many conditional ordinations as possible to "increase certainty", then that would be a custom among priests and bishops. Priests would collect "conditional ordinations" from dozens of bishops like Pokemon or some kind of role-playing card game.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on July 24, 2021, 12:05:37 AM

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Didn't Lefebvre himself sometimes abstain from conditional ordinations?
Yes, because in the 70s and 80s, there were still priests alive who were ordained in the old rite.  There were still Bishops alive who were valid Bishops.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Matthew on July 24, 2021, 12:10:39 AM
Yes, because in the 70s and 80s, there were still priests alive who were ordained in the old rite.  There were still Bishops alive who were valid Bishops.

Yeah, this thread got me thinking -- I only missed the first 7 years of the Crisis. With some basic addition, I can easily calculate how long the Crisis has gone on.

When I was 15, I could remember 10 years of a 22 year Crisis. Less than 50%.

Today, I can remember 40 years of a 50 year Crisis. That's over 80%.  Those first 7 years I wasn't born yet, and the next 5 years I was oblivious to the world, are becoming a smaller and smaller % of the Crisis, the longer the Crisis drags on.
Title: Re: Is there a One Ring in Tradition, to rule them all?
Post by: Pax Vobis on July 24, 2021, 12:15:56 AM
Yes, historical context matters (in any topic).  If you don’t have the it, then many things don’t make sense.