My emails contained a copy of a letter written by Fr. F. Ockerse addressed to his parishioners. It began as follows:-
"It is with a certain sadness that I learnt that some of you have been caught up in the effervescence of the revolt against the legitimate superiors of SSPX spearheaded by Bp. Williamson."
Then a paragraph was devoted to a passage from St. Francis de Sales' work Chapter XXIII 'Introduction to the devout Life.' introduced with the words:
It is needful to put away all inclination for Useless and Dangerous Things
A long paragraph follows quoting the Saint and ending with the words:
Therefore, dear child, I would have you cleanse your heart from all such tastes, remembering that while the acts themselves are not necessarily incompatible with a devout life, all delight in them must be harmful
.
After quoting several passages Fr.O asks: "And what is the will of the Father? ..Can anyone honestly find the will of God the Father in all the disobedience, calumnies, deceits and half truths brandished by the members of 'the resistance'? I do not call it the resist-ance (which sounds very much like protest-ants) but rather a revolt, like the 'non serviam' tantrum of old, against the Holy Will of God as expressed by the legitimate superiors given to us by God's providence......
"Do not forget that when Archbishop LeFebvre consecrated the 4 SSPX bishops he made it clear
that they have no jurisdiction what so ever as only the pope could delegate them any 'word of the law' (jurisdiction). If they claimed any jurisdiction, the excommunication would have been valid according to Canon Law
(cjc.1382). They were entirely under the authority of the Superior General and they could not exercise those things pertaining to their espiscopacy (conferring confirmations and ordaining priests) except under orders from the Superior General.
[...] At present the only bishop that has any jurisdiction is B.Fellay, and that not because he is bishop, but because he is legitimate Superior General of the SSPX, a society with legitimately set up constitutions and therefore a living branch of the only true Church of Christ.Another long passage follows saying ABL set it up that way...then all about the vine and the branches...
Fr. O continues:
At the moment Bp. Williamson and all the other priests of the revolt have no legitimate jurisdictional attachment to the vine not having any attachment to a legitimate superior incardinating or ingrafting them into the vine of the Church They therefore are but a parallel church no different to any Protestant sect but just with a Traditional Catholic Flavour.[/color]
..and so it goes on for four full pages.
What I want to know is how does the above statement regarding jurisdiction fit into this official statement made by the SSPX in its book entitled:
MOST ASKED QUESTIONS about the SOCIETY OF SAINT PIUS XMost asked questions about the power of Orders, that of Society of Saint Pius XQUESTION 9
Do Traditional Priests have jurisdiction?
In virtue of his ordination, a priest can bless all things and even consecrate bread and win in such wise that they become the very Body and Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ. But whenever in his ministry he has to deal authoritatively with people, he needs over and above the power of Orders , that of Jurisdiction, which empowers him to judge and rule his flock. Jurisdiction is, moreover, necessary for the validity itself of the sacraments of penance and matrimony.
Now, the sacraments were given by Our Lord as the ordinary and principal means of salvation and sanctification. The Church therefore, whose supreme law is the salvation of souls (1983 Code of Canon Law, canon 1752) wants the ready availability of these sacraments, and especially penance (canon 968). The Church wants priests (canon 1026) and empowers them liberally to hear confessions (canon 976..2). This jurisdiction to hear confessions is to be revoked only for a grave reason (canon 974..1).
Jurisdiction is ordinarily given by mandate from the Pope or diocesan Bishop, or perhaps delegated by the parish priest. The priests of the SSPX do not have jurisdiction in this way. Extraordinarily, however, the Church supplies jurisdiction without passing by (being passed by) the constituted authorities.
[......]
Therefore, the Church, wanting the ready availability of penance, extraordinarily supplies jurisdiction in view of the needs of her children, and it is granted all the more liberally the greater the need.
Now, the nature of the present crisis in the Church is such that the faithful can on good grounds feel it a moral impossibility to approach priests having ordinary jurisdiction . And so, whenever the faithful need the graces of penance and want to receive them from priests whose judgment and advice they can trust,
THEY CAN DO SO, (Emphasis in original text.) even if the priests do not have ordinaryily have jurisdictional. Even a suspended priest can do this for the faithful who ask: “for any just cause whatsoever” (canon 1335). This is even more the case if a faithful Catholic can foresee his being deprived of the true sacrament of penance from priests with ordinary jurisdiction until he dies. Only God know when this crisis will end.
[....]
Even if one were to consider the above arguments as only probable, then jurisdiction would still be certainly supplied by the church (canon 144).
And so we must answer affirmatively, Traditional priests do have a jurisdiction that is neither territorial nor personal but supplied in view of the needs of the faithful.[/I]
........................................................................................................................
Finally, I would be grateful if anyone would point me to a quote from ABL dealing with this matter of jurisdiction. I found it strange that when I went in search of the Church's official teaching, three SSPX websites came up. I clicked them on one after the other but on the SSPX website, each time, a notice came up to say page
could not be found. I think it was the newly branded site.