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Offline Matthew

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The Triduum is upon us!
« on: April 16, 2014, 09:09:12 PM »
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  • I hope everyone on CathInfo has a blessed Triduum and a happy Easter!

    I hope each of you can attend as much of the Holy Week Liturgy as possible.

    Holy Week Liturgy is like a time capsule in the Church. Things have been added to the Church's Liturgy (organically developed) over the years, but Holy Week has things that go back to the earliest days of the Church.

    For example, on Holy Thursday at the Agnus Dei we don't say "Dona nobis pacem" after the 3rd Agnus Dei, because that was added at some point. The Holy Week Liturgy just doesn't get updated. There is no Last Gospel for the same reason.

    And on Good Friday you have the "Hagios Theos" -- Notice that each Greek phrase is "translated" into Latin for those in the cheap seats! (Which made sense at the time -- the 300s) There aren't many Greek phrases found in the Liturgical Year today. Besides the Kyrie, I think that's about it.

    How many Protestants (or Novus Ordo Catholics) will be attending Liturgy this week that dates back to the 4th Century?

    Yes, I drive 45 minutes to go to Holy Week services, because the Traditional Holy Week Liturgy is the only thing worth going to during Holy Week. Everything else being offered is sentimental man-made crap.

    When most of our Catholic Liturgy was written, America was a vast wilderness. In fact, some parts of it were written when the Roman Empire was alive and well. And some parts came from Our Lord Himself, or one of His twelve Apostles.

    Talk about worth something!

    I understand why so many apostate Catholics become "nothing" when they leave the Faith. Once you've experienced the depth of the Catholic Faith, everything else is a joke. Now it does happen that some "give up" or give in to a life of pleasure, etc. but that doesn't mean that they become stupid enough to settle for protestantism (getting up on Sunday and listen to some layman's views on the Bible), etc.

    It really makes sense to me -- it's Catholicism, or nothing.

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    Offline Matto

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #1 on: April 16, 2014, 09:11:48 PM »
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  • Quote from: Matthew
    Yes, I drive 45 minutes to go to Holy Week services, because the Traditional Holy Week Liturgy is the only thing worth going to during Holy Week. Everything else being offered is sentimental man-made crap.

    Are you going to a traditional Holy Week, or the Bugnini Holy Week?
    R.I.P.
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    Offline Matthew

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #2 on: April 16, 2014, 09:39:28 PM »
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  • Quote from: Matto
    Quote from: Matthew
    Yes, I drive 45 minutes to go to Holy Week services, because the Traditional Holy Week Liturgy is the only thing worth going to during Holy Week. Everything else being offered is sentimental man-made crap.

    Are you going to a traditional Holy Week, or the Bugnini Holy Week?


    The Holy Week was revised in the 1950s; that is what the SSPX uses; if you eliminate the SSPX you're talking rare Sacraments, if at all, for the majority of Traditional Catholics. (As an aside: There's a reason why the the fall of the SSPX is a big deal. It IS the largest, most influential group of Traditional Catholics by far. In terms of numbers and influence, it would be "gold" where CMRI would be "silver". Gold is $1300/ounce; Silver is $20/ounce.)

    Everything I said above applies to the Holy Week you'd experience at any SSPX chapel.

    Do you even know what changed? Maybe I should go ahead and put you on the spot here.
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    Offline Matto

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #3 on: April 16, 2014, 10:03:00 PM »
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  • Quote from: Matthew
    Do you even know what changed? Maybe I should go ahead and put you on the spot here.

    I have never been to either holy week so I am not sure what the changes were. All I know is that in 1955 the holy week was changed and that Bugnini was one of the men who was in charge of changing the holy week. I know that some traditional Catholics celebrate the Holy week as it was celebrated before 1955 but that most, including most of the SSPX priests celebrate the Holy week as it was in the 1962 missal after the changes.

    I watched a video where Father Hesse talked about the changes and explained why he uses the pre-1955 missal, but I do not remember much about what the changes were.
    R.I.P.
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    Offline Cantarella

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #4 on: April 16, 2014, 10:07:47 PM »
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  • Have a blessed and grace-filled Triduum, and a glorious Easter, CI members!

    "But if Christ is preached as raised from the dead, how can some among you say there is no resurrection of the dead? If there is no resurrection of the dead, then neither has Christ been raised.

    And if Christ has not been raised, then empty (too) is our preaching; empty, too, your faith.

    Then we are also false witnesses to God, because we testified against God that he raised Christ, whom he did not raise if in fact the dead are not raised.

    For if the dead are not raised, neither has Christ been raised,

    and if Christ has not been raised, your faith is vain; you are still in your sins.

    Then those who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished.

    If for this life only we have hoped in Christ, we are the most pitiable people of all.
    "(1 Corinthians 15:12-19)

    If anyone says that true and natural water is not necessary for baptism and thus twists into some metaphor the words of our Lord Jesus Christ" Unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Spirit" (Jn 3:5) let him be anathema.


    Offline Matthew

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #5 on: April 16, 2014, 10:17:49 PM »
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  • Quote from: Matto
    Quote from: Matthew
    Do you even know what changed? Maybe I should go ahead and put you on the spot here.

    I have never been to either holy week so I am not sure what the changes were. All I know is that in 1955 the holy week was changed and that Bugnini was one of the men who was in charge of changing the holy week. I know that some traditional Catholics celebrate the Holy week as it was celebrated before 1955 but that most, including most of the SSPX priests celebrate the Holy week as it was in the 1962 missal after the changes.

    I watched a video where Father Hesse talked about the changes and explained why he uses the pre-1955 missal, but I do not remember much about what the changes were.


    You know, Matto, you gave a classic Traditional Catholic response -- and I don't mean that in a good way. If someone were trying to mock Trad Catholics, they couldn't do better.

    My OP was lofty in scope, full of why it's good to be a Catholic, admiring Catholic liturgy --

    And then you come in with your opinion, nitpicking, etc.

    Another example would be a lofty post about Scripture, and then some crusty Trad coming in with, "Yeah, yeah...but are you reading the Douay Rheims, original 1600's version?"

    Let's just say it's a tendency I've seen many times among Trads -- the impression of negative, obsessed about insignificant details, party pooper (in a bad sense), etc.
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    Offline Ambrose

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #6 on: April 16, 2014, 10:51:33 PM »
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  • Quote from: Matto
    Quote from: Matthew
    Yes, I drive 45 minutes to go to Holy Week services, because the Traditional Holy Week Liturgy is the only thing worth going to during Holy Week. Everything else being offered is sentimental man-made crap.

    Are you going to a traditional Holy Week, or the Bugnini Holy Week?


    For myself, I go to the lawful Holy Week of the Church approved by Pope Pius XII.  I will not judge the consciences of the lawbreakers, but it is objective disobedience.
    The Council of Trent, The Catechism of the Council of Trent, Papal Teaching, The Teaching of the Holy Office, The Teaching of the Church Fathers, The Code of Canon Law, Countless approved catechisms, The Doctors of the Church, The teaching of the Dogmatic

    Offline Neil Obstat

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #7 on: April 17, 2014, 12:28:30 AM »
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  • .

    Holy Week should be an opportunity for us all to become



    MORE HOLY          





    The Sacred Triduum is the nexus of the Catholic Faith.  It is what the early Christians lived EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR before the Church had any Liturgical Year.  That gives us an opportunity to set aside all our differences and concerns about what's wrong or who's wrong.  

    IF WE CAN'T BE ONE WITH THE CHURCH NOW THEN WE'RE IN REAL TROUBLE.


    Let's follow Matthew's lead here and get behind the spirit of the Sacred Triduum, the holiest of the holy days.  





    (Notice: Jєωιѕн "high holy days" are on the other side of the calendar from this.)





    Quote from: Matthew
    My OP was lofty in scope, full of why it's good to be a Catholic, admiring Catholic liturgy -- And then you come in with your opinion, nitpicking, etc.  Another example would be a lofty post about Scripture, and then some crusty Trad coming in with, "Yeah, yeah...but are you reading the Douay Rheims, original 1600's version?"  Let's just say it's a tendency I've seen many times among Trads -- the impression of negative, obsessed about insignificant details, party pooper (in a bad sense), etc.





    There is a marvelous new book that goes into lots of wonderful content in the Apostolic origins of Holy Week, and how it actually grew into the whole Liturgical Year.  It took many centuries.  We are well advised to know what practices were as far back as possible, for as Scripture says, "Therefore every scribe instructed in the kingdom of heaven, is like to a man that is a householder, who bringeth forth out of his treasure new things and old" (Matt. xiii. 52).

    The old things are a treasure, as well as the new things.


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    Offline Neil Obstat

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #8 on: April 17, 2014, 02:18:07 AM »
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  • .

    Speaking of the loftiness of the OP.................


    Quote from: Matthew
    I hope everyone on CathInfo has a blessed Triduum and a happy Easter!

    I hope each of you can attend as much of the Holy Week Liturgy as possible.

    Holy Week Liturgy is like a time capsule in the Church. Things have been added to the Church's Liturgy (organically developed) over the years, but Holy Week has things that go back to the earliest days of the Church.



    Holy Week, especially the Sacred Triduum, is the time capsule of all time capsules.  Organic development has been a necessary and natural thing, from the very start.  Much of it is evidenced in Scripture, but most of it is not.  We have to search far and wide for nuances and explanations.  If anything good has come of this abominable upheaval of Newchurch, it is a renewed and intense interest in researching what might otherwise be lost, before it's too late.  How did the Apostles commemorate the first anniversary of Resurrection Sunday?  We don't know a lot, but we do know some very informative things.


    Quote
    For example, on Holy Thursday at the Agnus Dei we don't say "Dona nobis pacem" after the 3rd Agnus Dei, because that was added at some point. The Holy Week Liturgy just doesn't get updated. There is no Last Gospel for the same reason.



    Something that has been a big help for me is the inherent differences from our usual routine, and these things have been building up during Lent.  Each Mass has been ending with the "Prayer over the People," in which the priest says, in Latin, "Let us pray. Bow down your heads before God..."  ("Oremus.  Humilitate capita vestra Deo...")  When is another time in the year you see that?  Well, it happens close to 40 times here in this season, and a list of all these prayers would be a study in itself.  

    But as the Triduum approaches, it's kind of like the stars and planets and sun and moon being rolled up like a scroll. (A.k.a. the end of the world.)  Things that we're used to seeing every week, or every day if you go to daily Mass, are dropped, one by one.  We don't have the Prayers at the Foot of the altar for Requiem Masses, but here in the Triduum, it's like what?  Is this a Requiem all of a sudden?  Jesus is still alive, at the Last Supper, but no Prayers at the Foot of the altar???  No Gloria Patri???  Palm Sunday has the blessing of palms and a procession, and a Gospel as long as your arm.  ("Options" to make it shorter were almost always used under Pius XII, so now, even the CMRI has a two-minute Passion according to St. Matthew, instead of 17 minutes.  Check out the Bach orchestral version:  3-1/2 hours -- and people sit still for that!  It's "entertainment.")  

    The chaos reminds us that this is the time when the Apostles suffered their whole world being torn asunder.  It begins on Passion Sunday when all the statues and the Crucifix are shrouded for two weeks in the liturgical color violet, which is for penance.  After the Gloria in excelsis of Maundy Thursday Mass, the organ goes silent and there is no more bells until the Gloria of the Mass on Holy Saturday.  In the absence of altar bells on Good Friday, a clapper is used instead.  After Mass on Thursday the altar is stripped, and the Host of the Presanctified is taken to the Altar of Repose..

    In some rare parishes, a special canopy with a Holy Ghost embroidery in the center is used to cover the priest as he processes to the Altar of Repose.  That used to be in EVERY parish before Vat.II.

    Now, we have many hosts being taken there because there is Holy Communion on Good Friday, but that is a recent change.  Not too long ago, the priest alone would have Communion on Good Friday, and the faithful took their 'FAST' to the ultimate extreme, of no Blessed Sacrament, for one day in the year.  Before Pius X daily Communion was almost unheard of.  

    Many, many years ago (centuries) there were 3 Masses on Maundy Thursday, kind of like our present All Souls' Day and Christmas Day.  The first was for the reconciliation of public penitents, the second for the consecration of the holy oils, and the third for a special commemoration of the institution of the Holy Eucharist at the Last Supper.  There used to be a curtain that enclosed the entire sanctuary during the Triduum.  Apparently some of the Eastern Orthodox churches still keep that curtain year-round.  I know the Coptics do.


    Quote
    And on Good Friday you have the "Hagios Theos" -- Notice that each Greek phrase is "translated" into Latin for those in the cheap seats! (Which made sense at the time -- the 300s {the fourth century = A.D. 301-400}) There aren't many Greek phrases found in the Liturgical Year today. Besides the Kyrie, I think that's about it.

    How many Protestants (or Novus Ordo Catholics) will be attending Liturgy this week that dates back to the 4th Century?


    Good point.  How many of them have much of ANYTHING that dates back to the fourth century?  Maybe some of the Bible readings, but other than that?

    NovusOrdo liturgy has ripped out the altar bells all year, so who needs the clapper on Good Friday?  I've done remodeling in old churches where I saw parish priests MAKING JOKES about throwing away the clapper, and the like:  "What's this for?  Oh, right, in case there's a fly buzzing around you whack him with this thing."  

    Quote
    Yes, I drive 45 minutes to go to Holy Week services, because the Traditional Holy Week Liturgy is the only thing worth going to during Holy Week. Everything else being offered is sentimental man-made crap.


    As a cold slap in the face, pagans and neo-pagans (which fill our colleges and houses of "learning") are entertaining themselves for "Spring Break" by getting drunk and carousing in Florida and Mexican and other Caribbean beaches and the like.  

    Quote
    When most of our Catholic Liturgy was written, America was a vast wilderness. In fact, some parts of it were written when the Roman Empire was alive and well. And some parts came from Our Lord Himself, or one of His twelve Apostles.

    Talk about worth something!

    I understand why so many apostate Catholics become "nothing" when they leave the Faith. Once you've experienced the depth of the Catholic Faith, everything else is a joke. Now it does happen that some "give up" or give in to a life of pleasure, etc., but that doesn't mean that they become stupid enough to settle for protestantism (getting up on Sunday and listen to some layman's views on the Bible), etc.

    It really makes sense to me -- it's Catholicism, or nothing.

     

    Yes, once you've become aware, to the best of your ability, of what the Church teaches and what the depth of the mysteries are (no one really knows their demensions -- Eph. iii. 18), there isn't any turning back.  


    Overall, it seems to me that the more one knows about how Holy Week has changed over the centuries, the more one appreciates everything we still have.  There may come a time in the near future when some of these things are restored, so it could be helpful to know about them in advance.  


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    Offline Neil Obstat

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #9 on: April 17, 2014, 12:21:21 PM »
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  • .

    This chant was added sometime in the fourth century, and has been sung at Lauds (morning office) in three installments, Maundy Thursday (today), Good Friday (tomorrow) and Holy Saturday.  The words of the Spanish version are most beautiful and well worth memorizing.  This is also the Gradual for Mass on Holy Thursday:


    Christus factus est pro nobis obediens usque ad mortem, mortem autem crucis.  
    Propter quod et Deus exaltavit illum, et dedit illi nomen, quod est super omne nomen.


    CHRIST became obedient for us unto death, even to the death of the Cross;
    For which cause, God also hath exalted Him, and hath given him a name which is above all names.

    Cristo se hizo obediente por nostros hasta la muerte y muerte de cruz.
    Por lo cual Dios tambien lo exalto, y le dijo un nombre sobre todo nombre.




    At Lauds, the Maundy Thursday chant is as follows:
    CHRIST became obedient for us unto death...

    At Lauds on Good Friday, the second installment is appended:
    CHRIST became obedient for us unto death, even to the death of the Cross...

    At Lauds on Holy Saturday, the third installment is appended, and in some places the Good Friday version is repeated at the end:
    CHRIST became obedient for us unto death, even to the death of the Cross;
    For which cause, God also hath exalted Him, and hath given Him a name which is above all names.  
    CHRIST became obedient for us unto death, even to the death of the Cross.



    Note:  this proposition derives from St. Paul's Epistle to the Philippians ii. 8-9:

    "8He humbled himself, becoming obedient unto death, even to the death of the cross. 9For which cause God also hath exalted him, and hath given him a name which is above all names."


    [youtube]https://www.youtube.com/embed/UOGS5XpiRPg[/youtube]


    There is a list of comments after this video, including the following, demonstrating the universal appeal of this art form -- you can be a pagan and still get something out of it!  So it must be more than just the religious aspect, eh?   It would seem that Gregorian Chant has the power to draw in anyone who has an ear to hear...


    Aunt K
    2 years ago
     
    I don't think I've ever heard a more beautiful chant in my life. My heart swelled and it brought me to tears. Thank you so much for posting.

     ·
    Francesca Baio
    1 year ago
     
    Canto Bellissimo!!!! e altrettanto difficile, visto che faccio parte di un coro amatoriale di gregoriano, ne so qualcosa!!!!

     ·
    Raven Young
    2 months ago
     
    I'm not religious or anything, but I listen to monk chants all the time, despite their religious aspects. But that's because I find chants beautiful, calming, and soothing; they're great for meditation.
    Reply
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    Offline Matto

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #10 on: April 17, 2014, 12:43:49 PM »
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  • Quote from: Matthew
    You know, Matto, you gave a classic Traditional Catholic response -- and I don't mean that in a good way. If someone were trying to mock Trad Catholics, they couldn't do better.

    I am sorry you didn't like my response. Was there anything untrue in my posts or did you just not like them?
    R.I.P.
    Please pray for the repose of my soul.


    Offline Matthew

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #11 on: April 17, 2014, 01:13:44 PM »
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  • Quote from: Matto
    Quote from: Matthew
    You know, Matto, you gave a classic Traditional Catholic response -- and I don't mean that in a good way. If someone were trying to mock Trad Catholics, they couldn't do better.

    I am sorry you didn't like my response. Was there anything untrue in my posts or did you just not like them?


    I don't mean to pick on you in particular -- I'm taking this to a pretty fundamental level here.

    Being a "Traditional Catholic" is about protesting the norm and holding to something older in order to preserve the Faith.

    Unfortunately, some take that "sticking to the old" a bit too far, and/or they lose sight of what they're trying to preserve -- the Catholic Faith.

    It's hard to pick an extreme example (because the best parodies of Trads are real-life examples!) but suppose a man made an issue out of which hand-missal you used. "All hand-missals are modernist/heretical, except for the St. Joseph Daily Missal."

    And say this man made everything else secondary -- how he treats his fellow-parishioners, how he prays, how he lives a Catholic life, etc.

    Wouldn't he be guilty of the classic "can't see the forest for the trees"?

    The example seems extreme, but real-life examples just as bizarre happen every day in the Trad world. Trads find countless ways to divide themselves and prevent themselves from getting along perfectly with each other. In their quest for doctrinal (and other kinds of) purity, they end up behaving worse than many protestants, and chase away countless souls who might have otherwise looked into the (Traditional) Catholic Faith.

    That is what I'm complaining about in this thread. The tendency of many Trads to be unable to put the "fight" on pause once in a while, and just enjoy the Catholicism!

    And I thought that your original comment "Are you going to a traditional Holy Week, or the Bugnini Holy Week?" was typical of that short-sightedness, that's all.
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    Offline Matto

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #12 on: April 17, 2014, 01:15:45 PM »
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  • Thanks for explaining.  :dancing-banana:
    R.I.P.
    Please pray for the repose of my soul.

    Offline soulguard

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #13 on: April 17, 2014, 02:48:45 PM »
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  • Good attitude Matthew and good points. We must not become pharisees. I dont think Matto is a pharisee, but some trads I met seem to think it is all about doctrine and that is all. The faith is more than doctrine, it is the love that goes with and which created doctrine. Doctrine is an expression of God's love. If we reduce it to a regimen without conforming ourselves to the love inherent in it, then we are pharisees. We must keep the truth, but love it also.
     :incense:

    Offline bvmknight

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    The Triduum is upon us!
    « Reply #14 on: April 17, 2014, 04:36:21 PM »
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  • After leaving our SSPX chapel last year, we have been extremely blessed to find a traditional chapel and holy priest who does everything from before the Bugnini changes.  I wasn't sure what all of the differences were, but I found this most helpful.  Perhaps some of you will, too.

    traditionalmass.org | Traditional Latin Mass Resources

    Articles: Liturgy: John XXIII/Pius XII changes

    Liturgical Revolution
    Rev. Francesco Ricossa

    The New Mass just was the final stage of a long process.

     

    "The Liturgy, considered as a whole, is the collection of symbols, chants and acts by means of which the Church expresses and manifests its religion towards God."

    In the Old Testament, God Himself, so to speak, is the liturgist: He specifies the most minute details of the worship which the faithful had to render to Him. The importance attached to a form of worship which was but the shadow of that sublime worship in the New Testament which Christ the High Priest wanted His Church to continue until the end of the world. In the Liturgy of the Catholic Church, everything is important, everything is sublime, down to the tiniest details, a truth which moved St. Teresa of Avila to say: "I would give my life for the smallest ceremony of Holy Church."

          The reader, therefore, should not be surprised at the importance we will attach to the rubrics of the Liturgy, and the close attention we will pay to the "reforms" which preceded the Second Vatican Council.

          In any case, the Church's enemies were all too well aware of the importance of the Liturgy — heretics corrupted the Liturgy in order to attack the Faith itself. Such was the case with the ancient Christological heresies, then with Lutheranism and Anglicanism in the 16th century, then with the Illuminist and Jansenist reforms in the 18th century, and finally with Vatican II, beginning with its Constitution on the Liturgy and culminating in the Novus Ordo Missae.

          The liturgical "reform" desired by Vatican II and realized in the post-Conciliar period is nothing short of a revolution. No revolution has ever come about spontaneously. It always results from prolonged attacks, slow concessions, and a gradual giving way. The purpose of this article is to show the reader how the liturgical revolution came about, with special reference to the pre-Conciliar changes in 1955 and 1960.

          Msgr. Klaus Gamber, a German liturgist, pointed out that the liturgical debacle pre-dates Vatican II. If, he said, "a radical break with tradition has been completed in our days with the introduction of the Novus Ordo and the new liturgical books, it is our duty to ask ourselves where its roots are. It should be obvious to anyone with common sense that these roots are not to be looked for exclusively in the Second Vatican Council. The Constitution on the Liturgy of December 4, 1963 represents the temporal conclusion of an evolution whose multiple and not all homogenous causes go back into the distant past."

     
    Illuminism

          According to Mgr Gamber. "The flowering of church life in the Baroque era (the Counter-Reformation and the Council of Trent) was stricken towards the end of the eighteenth century, with the blight of Illuminism. People were dissatisfied with the traditional liturgy, because they felt it did not correspond with the concrete problems of the times." Rationalist Illuminism found the ground already prepared by the Jansenist heresy, which, like Protestantism, opposed the traditional Roman Liturgy.

          Emperor Joseph II, the Gallican bishops of France, and of Tuscany in Italy, meeting together for the Synod of Pistoia, carried out reforms and liturgical experiments "which resemble to an amazing extent the present reforms; they are just as strongly orientated towards Man and social problems."..."We can say, therefore, that the deepest roots of the present liturgical desolation are grounded in Illuminism."

          The aversion for tradition, the frenzy for novelty and reforms, the gradual replacement of Latin by the vernacular, and of ecclesiastical and patristic texts by Scripture alone, the diminution of the cult of the Blessed Virgin and the saints, the suppression of liturgical symbolism and mystery, and finally the shortening of the Liturgy, it judged to be excessively and uselessly long and repetitive — we find all these elements of the Jansenist liturgical reforms in the present reforms, and see them reflected especially in the reforms of John XXIII. In the most serious cases the Church condemned the innovators: thus, Clement IX condemned the Ritual of the Diocese of Alet in 1668, Clement XI condemned the Oratorian Pasquier Quesnel (1634-1719) in 1713, Pius VI condemned the Synod of Pistoia and Bishop Scipio de' Ricci in his bull Auctorem Fidei in 1794.

     
    The Liturgical Movement

          "A reaction to the llluminist plague," says Mgr. Gamber. "is represented by the restoration of the nineteenth century. There arose at this time the great French Benedictine abbey of Solesmes, and the German Congregation of Beuron." Dom Prosper Gueranger (1805-1875), Abbot of Solesmes, restored the old Latin liturgy in France.

          His work led to a movement, later called the "Liturgical Movement," which sought to defend the traditional liturgy of the Church, and to make it loved. This movement greatly benefited the Church up to and throughout the reign of St. Pius X, who restored Gregorian Chant to its position of honor and created an admirable balance between the Temporal Cycle (feasts of Our Lord, Sundays, and ferias) and the Sanctoral Cycle (feasts of the saints).

     
    The Movement's Deviations

          After St. Pius X, little by little, the so called "Liturgical Movement" strayed from its original path, and came full circle to embrace the theories which it had been founded to combat. All the ideas of the anti-liturgical heresy — as Dom Guéranger called the liturgical theories of the 18th century — were now taken up again in the 1920s and 30s by liturgists like Dom Lambert Beauduin (1873-1960) in Belgium and France, and by Dom Pius Parsch and Romano Guardini in Austria and Germany.

          The "reformers" of the 1930s and 1940s introduced the "Dialogue Mass," because of their "excessive emphasis on the active participation of the faithful in the liturgical functions." In some cases — in scout camps, and other youth and student organizations — the innovators succeeded in introducing Mass in the vernacular, the celebration of Mass on a table facing the people, and even concelebration. Among the young priests who took a delight in liturgical experiments in Rome in 1933 was the chaplain of the Catholic youth movement, a certain Father Giovanni Battista Montini.

          In Belgium, Dom Beauduin gave the Liturgical Movement an ecuмenical purpose, theorizing that the Anglican Church could be "united [to the Catholic Church] but not absorbed." He also founded a "Monastery for Union" with the Eastern Orthodox Churches, which resulted in many of his monks "converting" to the eastern schism. Rome intervened: the Encyclical against the Ecuмenical Movement, Mortalium Animos (1928) resulted in Dom Beauduin being discreetly recalled, a temporary diversion. The great protector of Beauduin was Cardinal Mercier, founder of "Catholic" ecuмenism, and described by the anti-modernists of the time as the "friend of all the betrayers of the Church."

          In the 1940s liturgical saboteurs had already obtained the support of a large part of the hierarchy, especially in France (through the CPL — Center for Pastoral Liturgy) and in Germany.

     
    A Warning from Germany

          On January 18, 1943, the most serious attack against the Liturgical Movement was launched by an eloquent and outspoken member of the German hierarchy, the Archbishop of Freiburg, Conrad Grober. In a long letter addressed to his fellow bishops, Grober gathered together seventeen points expressing his criticisms of the Liturgical Movement. He criticized the theology of the charismatics, the Schoenstatt movement, but above all the Liturgical Movement, involving implicitly also Theodor Cardinal Innitzer of Vienna.

          Few people know that Fr. Karl Rahner, SJ, who then lived in Vienna, wrote a response to Grober. We shall meet Karl Rahner again as the German hierarchy's conciliar “expert” at the Second Vatican Council, together with Hans Küng and Schillebeeckx.

     
    Mediator Dei

          The dispute ended up in Rome. In 1947 Pius Xll's Encyclical on the liturgy, Mediator Dei, ratified the condemnation of the deviating Liturgical Movement.

          Pius XII "strongly espoused Catholic doctrine, but the sense of this encyclical was distorted in the commentaries made on it by the innovators and Pius XII, even though he remembered the principles, did not have the courage to take effective measures against those responsible; he should have suppressed the French CPL and prohibited a good number of publications. But these measures would have resulted in an open conflict with the French hierarchy".

          Having seen the weakness of Rome, the reformers saw that they could move forward: from experiments they now passed to official Roman reforms.

     
    Underestimating the Enemy

          Pius XII underestimated the seriousness of the liturgical problem: "It produces in us a strange impression," he wrote to Bishop Grober, "if, almost from outside the world and time, the liturgical question has been presented as the problem of the moment."

          The reformers thus hoped to bring their Trojan Horse into the Church, through the almost unguarded gate of the Liturgy, profiting from the scant attention of Pope Pius XII paid to the matter, and helped by persons very close to the Pontiff, such as his own confessor Agostino Bea, future cardinal and "super-ecuмenist."

          The following testimony of Annibale Bugnini is enlightening:

    "The Commission (for the reform of the Liturgy instituted in 1948) enjoyed the full confidence of the Pope, who was kept informed by Mgr. Montini, and even more so, weekly, by Fr. Bea, the confessor of Pius Xll. Thanks to this intermediary, we could arrive at remarkable results, even during the periods when the Pope's illness prevented anyone else getting near him."

     
    The Revolution Begins

          Fr. Bea was involved with Pius XII's first liturgical reform, the new liturgical translation of the Psalms, which replaced that of St. Jerome's Vulgate, so disliked by the protestants, since it was the official translation of the Holy Scripture in the Church, and declared to be authentic by the Council of Trent. (Motu proprio, In cotidianis precibus, of March 24, 1945.) The use of the New Psalter was optional, and enjoyed little success.

          After this reform, came others which would last longer and be more serious:

          • May 18, 1948: establishment of a Pontifical Commission for the Reform of the Liturgy, with Annibale Bugnini as its secretary January 6, 1953: the Apostolic Constitution Christus Dominus on the reform of the Eucharistic fast.

          • March 23, 1955: the decree cuм hac nostra aetate, not published in the Acta Apostolica Sedis and not printed in the liturgical books, on the reform of the rubrics of the Missal and Breviary.

          • November 19, 1955: the decree Maxima Redemptionis, new rite of Holy Week, already introduced experimentally for Holy Saturday in 1951.

          The following section will discuss the reform of Holy Week. Meanwhile, what of the rubrical reforms made in 1956 by Pius XII ? They they were an important stage in the liturgical reforms, as we will see when we examine the reforms of John XXIII. For now it is enough to say that the reforms tended to shorten the Divine Office and diminish the cult of the saints. All the feasts of semidouble and simple ranks became simple commemorations; in Lent and Passiontide one could choose between the office of a saint and that of the feria; the number of vigils was diminished and octaves were reduced to three. The Pater, Ave and Credo recited at the beginning of each liturgical hour were suppressed; even the final antiphon to Our Lady was taken away, except at Compline. The Creed of St. Athanasius was suppressed except for once a year.

          In his book, Father Bonneterre admits that the reforms at the end of the pontificate of Pius XII are "the first stages of the self-destruction of the Roman Liturgy." Nevertheless, he defends them because of the "holiness" of the pope who promulgated them.

    "Pius XII," he writes, "undertook these reforms with complete purity of intention, reforms which were rendered necessary by the need of souls. He did not realize — he could not realize — that he was shaking discipline and the liturgy in one of the most crucial periods of the Church's history; above all, he did not realize that he was putting into practice the program of the straying liturgical movement."

    Jean Crete comments on this:

    "Fr. Bonneterre recognizes that this decree signaled the beginning of the subversion of the liturgy, and yet seeks to excuse Pius XIl on the grounds that at the time no one, except those who were party to the subversion, was able to realize what was going on. I can, on the contrary, give a categorical testimony on this point. I realized very well that this decree was just the beginning of a total subversion of the liturgy, and I was not the only one. All the true liturgists, all the priests who were attached to tradition, were dismayed.

    "The Sacred Congregation of Rites was not favorable toward this decree, the work of a special commission. When, five weeks later, Pius XII announced the feast of St. Joseph the Worker (which caused the ancient feast of Ss. Philip and James to be transferred, and which replaced the Solemnity of St Joseph, Patron of the Church), there was open opposition to it.

    “For more than a year the Sacred Congregation of Rites refused to compose the office and Mass for the new feast. Many interventions of the pope were necessary before the Congregation of Rites agreed, against their will, to publish the office in 1956 — an office so badly composed that one might suspect it had been deliberately sabotaged. And it was only in 1960 that the melodies of the Mass and office were composed — melodies based on models of the worst taste.

    "We relate this little-known episode to give an idea of the violence of the reaction to the first liturgical reforms of Pius XII".

     
    The 1955 Holy Week: Anticipating the New Mass

          "The liturgical renewal has clearly demonstrated that the formulae of the Roman Missal have to be revised and enriched. The renewal was begun by the same Pius XII with the restoration of the Easter Vigil and the Order of Holy Week, which constituted tile first stage of the adaptation of the Roman Missal to the needs of our times."

          These are the very words of Paul VI when he promulgated the New Mass on April 3, 1969. This clearly demonstrates how the pre-Conciliar and post-Conciliar changes are related. Likewise, Msgr. Gamber wrote that

    "The first Pontiff to bring a real and proper change to the traditional missal was Pius XII, with the introduction of the new liturgy of Holy Week. To move the ceremony of Holy Saturday to the night before Easter would have been possible without any great modification. But then along came John XXIII with the new ordering of the rubrics. "Even on these occasions, however, the Canon of the Mass remained intact. [Also John XXIII introduced the name of St. Joseph into the Canon during the council, violating the tradition that only the names of martyrs be mentioned in the Canon.] It was not even slightly altered. But after these precedents, it is true, the doors were opened to a radically new ordering of the Roman Liturgy."

          The decree, Maxima Redemptionis, which introduced the new rite in 1955, speaks exclusively of changing the times of the ceremonies of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday, to make it easier for the faithful to assist at the sacred rites, now transferred after centuries to the evenings those days.

          But no passage in the decree makes the slightest mention of the drastic changes in the texts and ceremonies themselves. In fact, the new rite of Holy Week was a nothing but a trial balloon for post-Conciliar reform which would follow. The modernist Dominican Fr. Chenu testifies to this:

    "Fr. Duploye followed all this with passionate lucidity. I remember that he said to me one day, much later on. 'If we succeed in restoring the Easter Vigil to its original value, the liturgical movement will have won; I give myself ten years to achieve this.' Ten years later it was a fait accompli."

          In fact, the new rite of Holy Week, is an alien body introduced into the heart of the Traditional Missal. It is based on principles which occur in Paul VI's 1965 reforms.

          Here are some examples:

          • Paul VI suppressed the Last Gospel in 1965; in 1955 it was suppressed for the Masses of Holy Week.

          • Paul VI suppressed the psalm Judica me for the Prayers at the Foot of the Altar; the same had been anticipated by the 1955 Holy Week.

          • Paul VI (following the example of Luther) wanted Mass celebrated facing the people; the 1955 Holy Week. initiated this practice by introducing it wherever possible (especially on Palm Sunday).

          • Paul VI wanted the role of the priest to be diminished, replaced at every turn by ministers; in 1955 already, the celebrant no longer read the Lessons, Epistles, or Gospels (Passion) which were sung by the ministers --even though they form part of the Mass. The priest sat down, forgotten, in a corner.

          • In his New Mass, Paul VI suppresses from the Mass all the elements of the "Gallican liturgy (dating from before Charlemagne), following the wicked doctrine of "archaeologism" condemned by Pius Xll. Thus, the offertory disappeared (to the great joy of protestants), to be replaced by a Jєωιѕн grace before meals. Following the same principle, the New Rite of Holy Week had suppressed all the prayers in the ceremony of blessing the palms (except one), the Epistle, Offertory and Preface which came first, and the Mass of the Presanctified on Good Friday.

          • Paul VI, challenging the anathemas of the Council of Trent, suppressed the sacred order of the subdiaconate; the new rite of Holy Week, suppressed many of the subdeacon's functions. The deacon replaced the subdeacon for some of the prayers (the Levate on Good Friday) the choir and celebrant replaced him for others (at the Adoration of the Cross).

     
    The 1955 Holy Week: Other Innovations

    Here is a partial list of other innovations introduced by the new Holy Week:

          • The Prayer for the Conversion of Heretics became the "Prayer for Church Unity"

          • The genuflection at the Prayer for the Jєωs, a practice the Church spurned for centuries in horror at the crime they committed on the first Good Friday.

          • The new rite suppressed much medieval symbolism (the opening of the door of the church at the Gloria Laus for example).

          • The new rite introduced the vernacular in some places (renewal of baptismal promises).

          • The Pater Noster was recited by all present (Good Friday).

          • The prayers for the emperor were replaced by a prayer for those governing the republic, all with a very modern flavor.

          • In the Breviary, the very moving psalm Miserere, repeated at all of the Office, was suppressed.

          • For Holy Saturday the Exultet was changed and much of the symbolism of its words suppressed.

          • Also on Holy Saturday, eight of the twelve prophecies were suppressed.

          • Sections of the Passion were suppressed, even the Last Supper disappeared, in which our Lord, already betrayed, celebrated for the first time in history the Sacrifice of the Mass.

          • On Good Friday, communion was now distributed, contrary to the tradition of the Church, and condemned by St. Pius X when people had wanted to initiate this practice

          • All the rubrics of the 1955 Holy Week rite, then, insisted continually on the "participation" of the faithful, and they scorned as abuses many of the popular devotions (so dear to the faithful) connected with Holy Week.

          This brief examination of the reform of Holy Week should allow the reader to realize how the "experts" who would come up with the New Mass fourteen years later had used and taken advantage of the 1955 Holy Week rites to test their revolutionary experiments before applying them to the whole liturgy.

     
    Roncalli: Modernist Connections.

          Pius XII succeeded by John XXIII. Angelo Roncalli. Throughout his ecclesiastical career, Roncalli was involved in affairs that place his orthodoxy under a cloud. Here are a few facts:

          As professor at the seminary of Bergamo, Roncalli was investigated for following the theories of Msgr. Duchesne, which were forbidden under Saint Pius X in all Italian seminaries. Msgr Duchesne's work, Histoire Ancienne de l'Eglise, ended up on the Index.

          While papal nuncio to Paris, Roncalli revealed his adhesion to the teachings of Sillon, a movement condemned by St. Pius X. In a letter to the widow of Marc Sagnier, the founder of the condemned movement, he wrote: The powerful fascination of his [Sagnier's] words, his spirit, had enchanted me; and from my early years as a priest, I maintained a vivid memory of his personality, his political and social activity."

          Named as Patriarch of Venice, Msgr.Roncalli gave a public blessing to the socialists meeting there for their party convention. As John XXIII, he made Msgr. Montini a cardinal and called the Second Vatican Council. He also wrote the Encyclical Pacem in Terris. The Encyclical uses a deliberately ambiguous phrase, which foreshadows the same false religious liberty the Council would later proclaim.

     
    The Revolution Advances

          John XXIII's attitude in matters liturgical, then, comes as no surprise. Dom Lambert Beauduin, quasi-founder of the modernist Liturgical Movement, was a friend of Roncalli from 1924 onwards. At the death of Pius XII, Beauduin remarked: "If they elect Roncalli, everything will be saved; he would be capable of calling a council and consecrating ecuмenism..."'

          On July 25, 1960, John XXIII published the Motu Proprio Rubricarum Instructum. He had already decided to call Vatican II and to proceed with changing Canon Law. John XXIII incorporates the rubrical innovations of 1955–1956 into this Motu Proprio and makes them still worse. "We have reached the decision," he writes, "that the fundamental principles concerning the liturgical reform must be presented to the Fathers of the future Council, but that the reform of the rubrics of the Breviary and Roman Missal must not be delayed any longer."

          In this framework, so far from being orthodox, with such dubious authors, in a climate which was already "Conciliar," the Breviary and Missal of John XXIII were born. They formed a "Liturgy of transition" destined to last — as it in fact did last — for three or four years. It is a transition between the Catholic liturgy consecrated at the Council of Trent and that heterodox liturgy begun at Vatican II.

     
    The "Antiliturgical Heresy" in the John XXIII Reform

          We have already seen how the great Dom Guéranger defined as "liturgical heresy" the collection of false liturgical principles of the 18th century inspired by Illuminism and Jansenism. I should like to demonstrate in this section the resemblance between these innovations and those of John XXIII.

          Since John XXIII's innovations touched the Breviary as well as the Missal, I will provide some information on his changes in the Breviary also. Lay readers may be unfamiliar with some of the terms concerning the Breviary, but I have included as much as possible to provide the "flavor" and scope of the innovations.

     

    1.   Reduction of Matins to three lessons. Archbishop Vintimille of Paris, a Jansenist sympathizer, in his reform of the Breviary in 1736, "reduced the Office for most days to three lessons, to make it shorter." In 1960 John XXIII also reduced the Office of Matins to only three lessons on most days. This meant the suppression of a third of Holy Scripture, two-thirds of the lives of the saints, and the whole of the commentaries of the Church Fathers on Holy Scripture. Matins, of course, forms a considerable part of the Breviary.

     

    2.   Replacing ecclesiastical formulas style with Scripture. "The second principle of the anti-liturgical sect," said Dom Guéranger, "is to replace the formulae in ecclesiastical style with readings from Holy Scripture." While the Breviary of St. Pius X had the commentaries on Holy Scripture by the Fathers of the Church, John XXIII's Breviary suppressed most commentaries written by the Fathers of the Church. On Sundays, only five or six lines from the Fathers remains.

     

    3.   Removal of saints' feasts from Sunday. Dom Gueranger gives the Jansenists' position: "It is their [the Jansenists'] great principle of the sanctity of Sunday which will not permit this day to be 'degraded' by consecrating it to the veneration of a saint, not even the Blessed Virgin Mary. A fortiori, the feasts with a rank of double or double major which make such an agreeable change for the faithful from the monotony of the Sundays, reminding them of the friends of God, their virtues and their protection — shouldn't they be deferred always to weekdays, when their feasts would pass by silently and unnoticed?"

          John XXIII, going well beyond the well-balanced reform of St. Pius X, fulfills almost to the letter the ideal of the Janenist heretics: only nine feasts of the saints can take precedence over the Sunday (two feasts of St. Joseph, three feasts of Our Lady, St. John the Baptist, Saints Peter and Paul, St. Michael, and All Saints). By contrast, the calendar of St. Pius X included 32 feasts which took precedence, many of which were former holydays of obligation. What is worse, John XXIII abolished even the commemoration of the saints on Sunday.

     

    4.   Preferring the ferial office over the saint’s feast. Dom Guéranger goes on to describe the moves of the Jansenists as follows: "The calendar would then be purged, and the aim, acknowledged by Grancolas (1727) and his accomplices, would be to make the clergy prefer the ferial office to that of the saints. What a pitiful spectacle! To see the putrid principles of Calvinism, so vulgarly opposed to those of the Holy See, which for two centuries has not ceased fortifying the Church's calendar with the inclusion' of new protectors, penetrate into our churches!"

          John XXIII totally suppressed ten feasts from the calendar (eleven in Italy with the feast of Our Lady of Loreto), reduced 29 feasts of simple rank and nine of more elevated rank to mere commemorations, thus causing the ferial office to take precedence. He suppressed almost all the octaves and vigils, and replaced another 24 saints' days with the ferial office. Finally, with the new rules for Lent, the feasts of another nine saints, officially in the calendar, are never celebrated. In sum, the reform of John XXIII purged about 81 or 82 feasts of saints, sacrificing them to "Calvinist principles."

          Dom Gueranger also notes that the Jansenists suppressed the feasts of the saints in Lent. John XXIII did the same, keeping only the feasts of first and second class. Since they always fall during Lent, the feasts of St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Gregory the Great. St. Benedict, St. Patrick, and St. Gabriel the Archangel would never be celebrated.

     

    5.   Excising miracles from the lives of the Saints. Speaking of the principle of the Illuminist liturgists, Dom Gueranger notes: "the lives of the saints were stripped of their miracles on the one hand, and of their pious stories on the other."

          We have seen that the reform of 1960 suppresses two out of three lessons of the Second Nocturn of Matins, in which the lives of the saints are read. But this was not enough. As we mentioned, eleven feasts were totally suppressed by the preconciliar rationalists. For example, St. Vitus, the Invention of the Holy Cross, St. John before the Latin Gate, the Apparition of St. Michael on Mt. Gargano, St. Anacletus, St. Peter in Chains, the Finding of St. Stephen, Our Lady of Loreto ("A flying house! How can we believe that in the twentieth century!"); among the votive feasts, St. Philomena (the Cure of Ars was so "stupid" to have believed in her).

          Other saints were were eliminated more discreetly: Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Our Lady of Ransom, St. George, St. Alexis, St. Eustace, the Stigmata of St. Francis — these all remain, but only as a commemoration on a ferial day.

          Two popes are also removed, seemingly without reason: St. Sylvester (was he too triumphalistic?) and St. Leo II (the latter, perhaps, because he condemned Pope Honorius.)

          We note finally a "masterwork" which touches us closely. From the prayer to Our Lady of Good Counsel, the 1960 reform removed the words which speak of the miraculous apparition of her image, if the House of Nazareth cannot fly to Loreto, how can we imagine that a picture which was in Albania can fly to Genzzano?

     

    6.   Anti-Roman Spirit. The Jansenists suppressed one of the two feasts of the Chair of St. Peter (January 18), and also the Octave of St. Peter. Identical measures were taken by John XXIII.

     

    7.   Suppression of the Confiteor before Communion. The suspect Missal of Trojes suppressed the Confiteor. John XXIII did the same thing in 1960.

     

    8.   Reform of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday. and Holy Saturday. This happened in 1736, with the suspect Breviary of Vintimille ("a very grave action, and what is more, most grievous for the piety of the faithful," said Dom Gueranger.) John XXIII had his precedent here, as we have seen!

     

    9.   Suppression of Octaves. The same thing goes for the suppression of nearly all the octaves (a usage we find already in the Old Testament, to solemnize the great feasts over eight days), anticipated by the Jansenists in 1736 and repeated in 1955-1960.

     

    10. Make the Breviary as short as possible and without any repetition. This was the dream of the renaissance liturgists (the Breviary of the Holy Cross, for example, abolished by St. Pius V), and then of the illuminists. Dom Gueranger said that the innovators wanted a Breviary "without those complicated rubrics which oblige the priest to make a serious study of the Divine Office; moreover, the rubrics themselves are traditions, and it is only right they should disappear. Without repetitions...and as short as possible... They want a short Breviary. They will, have it; and it will be up to the Jansenists to write it."

          These three principles will be the public boast of the reform of 1955 and 1960: the long petitions in the Office called Preces disappear; so too, the commemorations, the suffrages, the Pater, Ave, and Credo, the antiphons to Our Lady, the Athanasian Creed, two-thirds of Matins, and so on.

     
    11. Ecuмenism in the Reform of John XXIII. The Jansenists hadn't thought of this one. The reform of 1960 suppresses from the prayers of Good Friday the Latin adjective perfidis (faithless) with reference to the Jєωs, and the noun perfidiam (impiety) with reference to Judaism. It left the door open for John Paul II's visit to the ѕуηαgσgυє.
          Number 181 of the 1960 Rubrics states: "The Mass against the Pagans shall be called the Mass for the Defense of the Church. The Mass to Take Away Schism shall be called the Mass for the Unity of the Church."

          These changes reveal the liberalism, pacifism, and false ecuмenism of those who conceived and promulgated them.

     

    12. The Office becomes “private devotional reading.”         One last point, but one of the most serious: The Ottaviani Intervention rightly declared that "when the priest celebrates without a server the suppression of all the salutations (i.e., Dominus Vobiscuм, etc.) and of the final blessing is a clear attack on the dogma of the communion of the saints." The priest, even if he is alone, when celebrating Mass or saying his Breviary, is praying in the name of the whole Church, and with the whole Church. This truth was denied by Luther.

          Now this attack on dogma was already included in the Breviary of John XXIII it obliged the priest when reciting it alone to say Domine exaudi orationem meam (O Lord, hear my prayer) instead of Dominus vobiscuм (The Lord be with you). The idea, "a profession of purely rational faith." was that the Breviary was not the public prayer of the Church any more, but merely private devotional reading.

     
    A Practical Conclusion

          Theory is of no use to anyone, unless it is applied in practice. This article cannot conclude without a warm invitation, above all to priests. to return to the liturgy "canonized" by the Council of Trent, and to the rubrics promulgated by St. Pius X.

          Msgr Gamber writes: "Many of the innovations promulgated in the last twenty-five years — beginning with the decree on the renewal of the liturgy Holy Week of February 9, 1951 [still under Pius XII] and with the new Code of rubrics of July 25, 1960, by continuous small modifications, right up to the reform of the Ordo Missae of April 3. 1969 — have been shown to be useless and dangerous to their spiritual life."

          Unfortunately, in the "traditionalist" camp, confusion reigns: one stops at 1955; another at 1965 or 1967. Archbishop Lefebvre's followers, having first adopted the reform of 1965, returned to the 1960 rubrics of John XXIII even while permitting the introduction of earlier or later uses! There, in Germany, England, and the United States, where the Breviary of St. Pius X had been, recited, the Archbishop attempted to impose the changes of John XXIII. This was not only for legal motives, but as a matter of principle; meanwhile, the Archbishop's followers barely tolerated the private recitation of the Breviary of St. Pius X.

          We hope that this and other studies will help people understand that these changes are part of the same reform and that all of it must be rejected if all is not accepted. Only with the help of God — and clear thinking — will a true restoration of Catholic worship be possible.

    (The Roman Catholic, February–April 1987).