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Traditional Catholic Faith => SSPX Resistance News => Topic started by: Centroamerica on March 06, 2016, 09:17:44 PM

Title: New Interview with Dom Toms.
Post by: Centroamerica on March 06, 2016, 09:17:44 PM
There's a new interview that I just translated. It's a little lengthy but informative. I'm not posting it here because I am too tired to go through separating lines, etc so that it can be legible on this host. Here's the link. Have at it...

1. Reverend Father, why is another Bishop needed for the Resistance? Does a state of necessity subsist in the Church? Aren’t the traditionalist bishops of the SSPX enough for the Church, as the SSPX states?

The Church needs Bishops because Our Lord wanted it like this. So, Tradition needs Bishops. The work that Bishop Williamson has done since 1988 is enormous. The help that Bishop Faure brings is indispensable, and a third bishop is not too much. Tradition came to count with seven bishops when Bishop Lazo from the Philippines came over to Tradition before the deaths of Archbishop Lefebvre and Bishop De Castro Mayer. The Resistance is nothing more than the continuance of Tradition.

2. Some people say that your consecration will constitute a schismatic act. What can you say in this regard?

Just like the 1988 consecrations did not constitute a schismatic act, in the same way, this one also will not.  The reason that motivated the first consecrations is the same that motivates the other ones, that is, the fact that Rome does not return to Tradition.

Evidently, this new consecration can receive criticism, just like the consecration of Bishop Faure, but for those that attentively consider the reasons, it concerns consecrations motivated by the very same motive of the 1988 ones: the fact that the Basilica of St. Peter is occupied by enemies of the Our Lord. It’s a painful fact, but it is fact. To deny it proves to be irrealism, an accusation made by Bishop Fellay to his three brothers of the episcopacy: Bishops Williamson, Tissier, and De Galarreta.
This new consecration is motivated by nothing more than the same motives that made Archbishop Lefebvre act, nothing more and nothing less. The only difference is the special circuмstance in relation to the authorities of the Society, but in relation to Rome and the crisis, the reasons are the same and are identical in every way.

3. Father, last year, motivated by the consecration of Bishop faqure, the SSPX said that the Resistance is sedevacantist and that that is demonstrated by consecrating bishops without the permission of the Roman authorities. What is your response to this other accusation?

In the very same way that Archbishop Lefebvre was not a sedevacantist, the Resistance is not sedevacantist, although within the Resistance there may be, just like in the SSPX there always were, sympathizers of this thesis.

4. Father, what is your position regarding sedevacantism?

I think that the position of Archbishop Lefebvre in this regards is the most sensible and the most prudent. The Pope cannot use his authority to destroy the Church, so we don’t obey him in this work. We refuse to have any part in the destruction of the Church. As far as deciding if the Pope has lost his pontificate because of this, it is a disputed issue. We don’t have the means of withdrawing a conclusion that eliminates all doubt. So then, with doubt, it is best to not affirm that the seat is vacant and continue to consider him the Pope.

5. Last year we asked Bishop Faure what he would do if he were invited to the Vatican by Pope Francis. Now we ask you the same question. Would you go? What would you say to Francis?

Go to Rome? Only if it were to ask if the Roman authorities accept Quanta Cura, Syllabus, Pascendi, etc., but for now I think that the answer was already given and it is negative.

6. Professor Carlos Nougué has posted a brief article about your life where he mentions the incident of the pressure you received from the authorities of the SSPX for having refused to sing the Te Deum in celebration of the motu proprio Summorum Pontificuм (July of 2007). Can you tell us anything about this and about other circuмstances when you were under pressure by the leaders of the SSPX?

What happened in Santa Cruz when Bishop De Galarreta was here suggesting to me that I leave the monastery is very complicated. Several factors come about. Only Bishop De Galarreta can say exactly what all the reasons were that moved him to make this suggestion to me. The doctrinal question could have been in play, but there is no certainty about that since Bishop De Galarreta was, in principle, against the deal. May be the liberty and independence of the monastery was unsettling to Bishop Fellay. Bishop De Galarreta gave as a motive the vocations of the monastery because while I was prior, the priests would not send vocations.

7. Reverend Father, did your experience in the monastery of Le Barroux serve to strengthen your opposition to the going astray of the accordista drift or rallié of the SSPX?

Yes, there is something similar in the admiration that Dom Gérard had for the then Cardinal Ratzinger and the admiration, or at least, consideration that Bishop Fellay has for Benedict XVI.

Dom Gérard used to say that Archbishop Lefebvre stayed in his corner in order to refuse to come in contact with the Roman representatives and that Cardinal Ratzinger was a man that it would be possible to deal with. Dom Gerérd did not know the Cardinal and did not want to learn from the experience of Archbishop Lefebvre. I think that Bishop Fellay has committed the same error. The advice and views of elders is something fundamental in life. Saint Thomas, when speaking about docility, points to this disposition of the soul that we must have with elders. It is worth reading article 3 of the question 49 of 11a IIae. It is very instructive. Dom Gerárd did not take into account the advice and warnings of Archbishop Lefebvre. Bishop Fellay would act very differently if he also contemplated this, I believe. This question deserves an entire study regarding the attitudes of Dom Gerard and Bishop Fellay. I think that both were lacking in t he prudence of Archbishop Lefebvre.

8. Can you tell us how the split came about between your monastery and the SSPX in 2012?

The separation between our monastery and the Society was gradual due to another incident. But in 2012, when Brother Arsenio as well as myself wrote to them about the dealings with Rome, and moreover when Bishop Williamson was in our monastery and received our total support, the rupture was made.

Nevertheless, we maintain good relations with some members of the SSPX that see the problem, although they believe that it is better to remain in the SSPX for now.

9. Father, you knew Archbishop Lefebvre. Can you tell us something about him?

Archbishop Lefebvre possessed the strength and the tranquility of those that are certain about the well founded principles of what they are doing, and this was united to a great readiness to attend to souls. His tranquility came from the robustness of his Faith and his common sense. Certitude generates tranquility, so the certitude of Faith is superior to everything else. From this we can see the total tranquility that Archbishop Lefebvre presented in every occasion. He was a true bishop, as Saint Paul describes it, who acted in a way to save his own soul and the souls of others that listened to his words and counsel. His motto from his coat of arms summed up his attitude and his action: Credidimus Caritati.

10. How would you explain the change that has been done in the SSPX regarding a practical agreement with Rome and what do you think with happen to the Society?
I think that there are members of the Society that want an agreement and have been working in this sense for many years.

Maybe Bishop Tissier and Bishop De Galerreta accepted the change from what had been decided in the 2006 General Chapter in order to save from the Society from an internal division.
Only God knows what will happen with the Society. I pray that it returns to its past fervor, but it will be difficult to return as things once were.

Not being together with the Society, I have difficulty in giving a fundamental opinion. From what I have heard and read, I believe that the Society will try to arrive at an unstable equilibrium composed of legality and fidelity. But they will fight on the turf chosen by the enemy. From a tactical perspective, it’s not very smart. The liberty to preach against the Holy See will remain (and is) paralyzed. Even more so, Bishop Fellay seems to think differently from Archbishop Lefebvre, despite his denial of this. This is fatal for the SSPX.

11. Reverend Father, can we speak of a true and actual liberalism within the SSPX or would that be an exaggeration?

In bringing oneself closer to Rome, there is no way of avoiding liberalism.

12. Father, how would you define the resistance and how do you see its future?

I would define the resistance as fidelity to Archbishop Lefebvre and Bishop De Castro Mayer. The resistance is Tradition, or is the most sane part of Tradition or, at least, the part of Tradition that clearly rejects the idea of a practical agreement without Rome having returned to Tradition.
The future of the Resistance is the fidelity to Archbishop Lefebvre and Bishop De Castro Mayer, or in other words, the teachings of the infallible Magisterium of the Church. Thank God that we have Bishop Williamson and Bishop Faure with us because they were chosen by Archbishop Lefebvre and were always faithful disciples of the founder of the Society of St. Pius X.

13. What will be your priorities as bishop?

To give the Sacraments and assure the preaching of the Faith.

14. What will be the motto of your coat of arms and its meaning?

The motto will be “Veritatem Dilexisti” (Thou hast loved Truth) taken from Psalm 50. The coat of arms is the backside of a miraculous medal with the 12 stars (the 12 articles of the Creed and the 12 Apostles), the Cross, the “M” of the Most Blessed Virgin Mary, and the Sacred Hearts.
In the beginning, Brazil had the name of the “Land of the Holy Cross”. This is also the name of our monastery.

Our congregation was dedicated to the Most Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary by our founder, Rev. Fr. Jean Baptiste Muard, in the 19th century.

15. Finally, Reverend Father, would you like to send a message to traditionalists, in particular, to the Resistance?

A message? Study the works of Archbishop Lefebvre and learn from his examples. Archbishop Lefebvre is another Fr. Le Floch and Fr. Le Floch is the Magisterium; he is the love of the Magisterium of the Church. Only in this way can liberalism and Modernism be overcome.

Moreover, read and search for understanding in the great anti-liberal authors, especially those that understand the errors of the modern world, like Bishop De castro Mayer, Archbishop Lefebvre and also Bishop Tissier who expounds upon the strange theology of Benedict XVI with precision and who gave us the biography of Archbishop Lefebvre, not to mention the ancient authors, whose list would be too lengthy here. Remember Bishop Vital, the great Brazilian bishop and friend of Mgr. Ségur, who vigorously combated masonry and because of this was incarcerated and probably poisoned because he died a little after having been released from prison due to serious digestive problems. Remember also Mgr. Pie and, for Brazilians, Gustavo Corção, whose book, “O Século do Nada” (The Age of Nothing), should be known by all. Corção understood the evil of the times very well: the lie, since he said that the 20th century could be called the age of the the lie. The remedy to this is in its opposite: “Veritatem dilexisti”.


Dear Father, we give enormous thanks to God, His Most Holy Mother, Saint Jospeh Protector of the Church, and Saint Benedict for the great blessing that the Resistance receives with your consecration. We ask God to give you a highly fruitful episcopacy. We give many thanks to you for having accepted such an important responsibility and to Bishop Williamson and Bishop Faure because they will consecrate you as a successor of the Apostles. Deo grátias!

http://brasildogmadafe.blogspot.com.br/2016/03/an-interview-with-dom-tomas.html
Title: New Interview with Dom Toms.
Post by: St Ignatius on March 06, 2016, 09:28:39 PM
Quote from: Centroamerica

There's a new interview that I just translated. It's a little lengthy but informative. I'm not posting it here because I am too tired to go through separating lines, etc so that it can be legible on this host. Here's the link. Have at it...

http://brasildogmadafe.blogspot.com.br/2016/03/an-interview-with-dom-tomas.html


Thank you Centroamerica, it nice reading your translations rather than relying on Google translate.
Title: New Interview with Dom Toms.
Post by: Pax Vobis on March 06, 2016, 10:36:13 PM
I like this guy...philosophical yet clear and to the point.  He would have shredded that guy that interview Fellay.
Title: New Interview with Dom Toms.
Post by: Centroamerica on March 07, 2016, 03:46:16 AM
Quote from: Dom Tomás


From what I have heard and read, I believe that the Society will try to arrive at an unstable equilibrium composed of legality and fidelity. But they will fight on the turf chosen by the enemy.


This is the same fatal blow that all the Ecclesia Dei groups have dealt themselves. Bishop Fellay is not ignorant to that. He probably thinks that it will be different. For him to have the freedom from the other bishops is entirely possible if he were, say, the "cardinal of Ecclesia Dei"... Far from ever happening, but what else could he see as a solution in his favor?
Title: New Interview with Dom Toms.
Post by: Sbyvl on March 07, 2016, 07:22:17 AM
His answer to the fourth question is plain wrong.  If one establishes the existence of a positive doubt vis-à-vid the legitimacy of a particular papal claimant, one would not remain in communion with him.

A doubtful pope is no pope, just as a doubtful sacrament is no sacrament, practically speaking.
Title: New Interview with Dom Toms.
Post by: Centroamerica on March 07, 2016, 08:17:06 AM
Quote from: Sbyvl
His answer to the fourth question is plain wrong.  If one establishes the existence of a positive doubt vis-à-vid the legitimacy of a particular papal claimant, one would not remain in communion with him.

A doubtful pope is no pope, just as a doubtful sacrament is no sacrament, practically speaking.


The ability to doubt any papal claimant could exist if it has not been declared a Dogma that such and such named person is a pope. If the mere shred of evidence of a doubt exists then this means that such and such person is not a pope? I am sorry, but your reasoning goes against all common sense ever and smacks of Modernism. Cogito ergo sum. Your religious reality depends on what your mind creates for you. If you have created doubt then the reality comes from you. Is this not a classic case of vital immanence? Sure sounds pretty close to it.

Quote from: St. Pius X

It must, therefore, be looked for in man; and since religion is a form of life, the explanation must certainly be found in the life of man. Hence the principle of religious immanence is formulated. Moreover, the first actuation, so to say, of every vital phenomenon, and religion, as has been said, belongs to this category, is due to a certain necessity or impulsion; but it has its origin, speaking more particularly of life, in a movement of the heart, which movement is called a sentiment.


I feel that there is doubt...I feel it, therefore...he is not Pope...

Move along, please.
Title: New Interview with Dom Toms.
Post by: hollingsworth on March 07, 2016, 11:11:13 AM
Centro:
Quote
I feel that there is doubt...I feel it, therefore...he is not Pope...

Move along, please.


Do we understand this correctly, that folks like Fr. Cekada, and probably most of the other "nine,"
set up shop in 1983 outside the Society because of certain feelings which they had at the time?

Quote
Salza writes for CFN: Nevertheless, as ridiculous as Cekada’s latest video is, it does provide some very revealing information about why he personally embraced Sedevacantism, which helps to explain why he cannot defend his position theologically. Specifically, in the video, Fr. Cekada admits that as a seminarian he embraced Sedevacantism as an emotional, not a theological, response to the crisis in the Church; he even admits that he could not explain his decision in “formal, theological terms” (even though the question of whether a Pope is a true Pope is, first and foremost, a most profound theological question). No, Cekada based his decision on what he calls “the Catholic sense he possessed,” in other words, a feeling or emotion (which, ironically, is just how the Modernists operate).

 http://www.cfnews.org/page88/files/e9bf948e085338a2a48eaaf815d6153c-544.html

 Say what?  All this SV stuff over the way Fr. Cekada and his other emotional compadres, (gulp!) felt?  Seems I remember that Cekada, Dolan and Sanborn tried to hang many of their woes and misgivings around the neck of then Fr. Williamson.  It was Williamson, the "spy," the "enforcer," sent over from England, with whom these priests took great umbrage- or so I thought.

Well, since that time, both Frs. Sanborn and Cekada, (or are they both bishops now?) have tried to appear very theological.  Wessex, or some other deep thinking forum member, needs to come forward with new arguments that might help us refocus are attentions upon the real culprit, the "ambitious" Fr. Williamson, who was at that time considered to be a major author of unrest.  Some of us need to have our earlier notions reinforced. :shocked:
Title: New Interview with Dom Toms.
Post by: Sbyvl on March 07, 2016, 03:30:38 PM
Quote from: Centroamerica
Quote from: Sbyvl
His answer to the fourth question is plain wrong.  If one establishes the existence of a positive doubt vis-à-vid the legitimacy of a particular papal claimant, one would not remain in communion with him.

A doubtful pope is no pope, just as a doubtful sacrament is no sacrament, practically speaking.


The ability to doubt any papal claimant could exist if it has not been declared a Dogma that such and such named person is a pope. If the mere shred of evidence of a doubt exists then this means that such and such person is not a pope? I am sorry, but your reasoning goes against all common sense ever and smacks of Modernism. Cogito ergo sum. Your religious reality depends on what your mind creates for you. If you have created doubt then the reality comes from you. Is this not a classic case of vital immanence? Sure sounds pretty close to it.

Quote from: St. Pius X

It must, therefore, be looked for in man; and since religion is a form of life, the explanation must certainly be found in the life of man. Hence the principle of religious immanence is formulated. Moreover, the first actuation, so to say, of every vital phenomenon, and religion, as has been said, belongs to this category, is due to a certain necessity or impulsion; but it has its origin, speaking more particularly of life, in a movement of the heart, which movement is called a sentiment.


I feel that there is doubt...I feel it, therefore...he is not Pope...

Move along, please.


Clearly, you are unfamiliar with what constitutes a positive doubt.  I respectfully suggest you look into the concept before proceeding further.

Nevertheless, that is only the bare standard.

There is overwhelming and public evidence that these claimants to the papacy do not profess the Catholic Faith.

There is also overwhelming and publix evidence that Vatican II taught doctrinal error, which no true ecuмenical council can ever do.

Logically, this makes the conclusion inescapable.
Title: New Interview with Dom Toms.
Post by: Centroamerica on March 07, 2016, 03:42:02 PM
Quote from: Sbyvl
Quote from: Centroamerica
Quote from: Sbyvl
His answer to the fourth question is plain wrong.  If one establishes the existence of a positive doubt vis-à-vid the legitimacy of a particular papal claimant, one would not remain in communion with him.

A doubtful pope is no pope, just as a doubtful sacrament is no sacrament, practically speaking.


The ability to doubt any papal claimant could exist if it has not been declared a Dogma that such and such named person is a pope. If the mere shred of evidence of a doubt exists then this means that such and such person is not a pope? I am sorry, but your reasoning goes against all common sense ever and smacks of Modernism. Cogito ergo sum. Your religious reality depends on what your mind creates for you. If you have created doubt then the reality comes from you. Is this not a classic case of vital immanence? Sure sounds pretty close to it.

Quote from: St. Pius X

It must, therefore, be looked for in man; and since religion is a form of life, the explanation must certainly be found in the life of man. Hence the principle of religious immanence is formulated. Moreover, the first actuation, so to say, of every vital phenomenon, and religion, as has been said, belongs to this category, is due to a certain necessity or impulsion; but it has its origin, speaking more particularly of life, in a movement of the heart, which movement is called a sentiment.


I feel that there is doubt...I feel it, therefore...he is not Pope...

Move along, please.


Clearly, you are unfamiliar with what constitutes a positive doubt.  I respectfully suggest you look into the concept before proceeding further.

Nevertheless, that is only the bare standard.

There is overwhelming and public evidence that these claimants to the papacy do not profess the Catholic Faith.

There is also overwhelming and publix evidence that Vatican II taught doctrinal error, which no true ecuмenical council can ever do.

Logically, this makes the conclusion inescapable.


My point was that according to your reasoning, inconclusive doubts, (whether positive or negative, practical or theoretical) is what dethrones a Pontiff. Doubt is exactly that...A state in which the mind is suspended between two contradictory propositions and unable to assent to either of them. We are not talking about your "inescapable conclusions". Doubt is inconclusive...quite the opposite of a conclusion. If you say that it is your feeling of doubt that undoes the papacy, you remain a Modernist.

Title: New Interview with Dom Toms.
Post by: Sbyvl on March 07, 2016, 05:28:10 PM
Quote from: Centroamerica
Quote from: Sbyvl
Quote from: Centroamerica
Quote from: Sbyvl
His answer to the fourth question is plain wrong.  If one establishes the existence of a positive doubt vis-à-vid the legitimacy of a particular papal claimant, one would not remain in communion with him.

A doubtful pope is no pope, just as a doubtful sacrament is no sacrament, practically speaking.


The ability to doubt any papal claimant could exist if it has not been declared a Dogma that such and such named person is a pope. If the mere shred of evidence of a doubt exists then this means that such and such person is not a pope? I am sorry, but your reasoning goes against all common sense ever and smacks of Modernism. Cogito ergo sum. Your religious reality depends on what your mind creates for you. If you have created doubt then the reality comes from you. Is this not a classic case of vital immanence? Sure sounds pretty close to it.

Quote from: St. Pius X

It must, therefore, be looked for in man; and since religion is a form of life, the explanation must certainly be found in the life of man. Hence the principle of religious immanence is formulated. Moreover, the first actuation, so to say, of every vital phenomenon, and religion, as has been said, belongs to this category, is due to a certain necessity or impulsion; but it has its origin, speaking more particularly of life, in a movement of the heart, which movement is called a sentiment.


I feel that there is doubt...I feel it, therefore...he is not Pope...

Move along, please.


Clearly, you are unfamiliar with what constitutes a positive doubt.  I respectfully suggest you look into the concept before proceeding further.

Nevertheless, that is only the bare standard.

There is overwhelming and public evidence that these claimants to the papacy do not profess the Catholic Faith.

There is also overwhelming and publix evidence that Vatican II taught doctrinal error, which no true ecuмenical council can ever do.

Logically, this makes the conclusion inescapable.


My point was that according to your reasoning, inconclusive doubts, (whether positive or negative, practical or theoretical) is what dethrones a Pontiff. Doubt is exactly that...A state in which the mind is suspended between two contradictory propositions and unable to assent to either of them. We are not talking about your "inescapable conclusions". Doubt is inconclusive...quite the opposite of a conclusion. If you say that it is your feeling of doubt that undoes the papacy, you remain a Modernist.



Well, not exactly.

What prevents the claimant from actually being pope is his status as a Non-Catholic, for the pope must, amongst other requirements, profess the Catholic Faith.

If I establish a positive doubt as to whether or not he is in fact a Catholic, then I am not obligated to submit to his authority, for a doubtful pope is no pope at all, practically speaking.