You can look it up. If they received the Order of Subdiaconate, Diaconate, or Priesthood, prior to that they made this solemn vow in their Oath of Fidelity:
"...Lastly, I sincerely promise, according to Canon Law, to obey with docility all that my superiors or the discipline of the Church command, ready to give, in word and in act the example of virtue in order to merit to be rewarded by God for having received such an office.
I thus promise, I thus vow, I thus swear. May God help me and these Holy Gospels that I touch."
Evidently the definition of a
solemn vow that Elwin was attempting to articulate has gone right over your head ... as do most things apparently. What this amounts to is a simple promise.
Whatever happened to the R&R dogmatic dictum that "faith is greater than obedience"? Catholics are SOLEMNLY bound to obey the Vicar of Christ on earth, but I guess if your "conscience" tells you, it's OK to break communion with him and refuse submission. But somehow +Lefebvre > Vicar of Christ. If "faith" can permit you to refuse obedience to a pope,
a fortiori it can permit you to refuse obedience to a bishop who lacks any jurisdiction whatsoever.
So, what if +Lefebvre had decided to impose an annual concelebration of the NOM on the priests of the SSPX? Were they still bound by this alleged "solemn" vow?
I'm not sure how much I can suffer of the people here who are bereft of any capacity for logic.
There's no difference whatsoever, despite the purely-emotional claims to the contrary, between what The Nine did "in principle" vis-a-vis +Lefebvre back in the early 1980s and what the Resistance did in the early 2010s vis-a-vis +Lefebvre. You might note that the vow cited above refers to obedience to "my superiors" and wasn't directed to +Lefebvre specifically, so this vow applied to the Resistance's relationship with +Fellay, who was their "superior" at the time.
In the early 1980s, +Lefebvre was in an optimistic phase, since his nemesis Montini was gone, and he had hopes for some reconciliation with Wojtyla ... and so he was cozying up with Rome, asking to make the "experiment of Tradition" within the Conciliar pantheon, and ready to make compromises. That's precisely what +Fellay has been doing and what the Resistance has been objecting to.
Now, the manner in which the Nine conducted themselves is a separate matter altogether, and is hardly beyond criticism, but what they did in principle, objecting to a cozying up with Rome, and the "seeking" of some practical agreement (without one ever having actually materialized) differs not a lick from what the Resistance has done.
This reminds me of the contention that the as-yet-to-happen SSPX consecration of a bishop or bishops would render the SSPX hypocritical for having criticized the Resistance for consecrating bishops, where there's really no substantial difference other than a difference in "attitude" where the SSPX claim "well, we tried our best" vs. the Resistance are of the mindset "we don't care whether we have permission".