Traditionalist Catholic and Traditional Catholic are terms used to refer to Roman Catholics who want to see the worship and customs of the general body of Roman Catholics return to those prevailing before the reforms of the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s.
Many of them claim that, since then, the presentation and the understanding of the Church's teaching have changed, at least in emphasis, to an unacceptable degree; some exclude from the meaning of the two terms those whose views on this matter are more liberal.
While no organization links all or even a majority of traditionalist Catholics, many of them associate with a particular priestly society. Some traditionalist societies enjoy cordial relations with the Church authorities and are recognised by them as fully canonically regular. These include the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter, the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest, and the Personal Apostolic Administration of Saint John Mary Vianney. Other societies exist in a state of dispute with or separation from Rome, though they maintain that their canonical position is entirely legitimate. The Society of St. Pius X is the best-known of these institutions. Other societies hold that the Holy See is currently vacant, and that the pontiffs who have reigned since the 1960s have been neither true Catholics nor true popes. Such "sedevacantist" groups include the Society of St. Pius V, the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen and the Orthodox Roman Catholic Movement. Some groups, such as the True Catholic Church and the Palmarian Catholic Church, have elected or recognised popes of their own. In addition, small local groups of traditionalist Catholics sometimes form around an individual priest who has broken with his diocese or religious institute.
There is a certain level of dispute among the various traditionalist groups at the official level, but traditionalist Catholic laypeople generally enjoy good relations with each other (though there is some tension between sedevacantists and non-sedevacantists). A traditionalist Catholic might have strong opinions for or against worshiping at Masses celebrated without official approval; alternatively, he might worship without qualm at Masses celebrated by more than one of the above-mentioned groups.
Most traditionalists view the Second Vatican Council as a valid, albeit problematic, Ecumenical Council of the Catholic Church, though most sedevacantists regard it as wholly invalid. Traditionalists tend to categorize the Council as a "pastoral" Council, which did not purport to define infallibly any of its teachings as part of the Catholic Faith. Support for this view is sought in Pope John XXIII's Opening Address to the Council, Pope Paul VI's closing address, the lack of formal definitions and anathemas in the Council's sixteen documents, and the alleged ambiguity of those documents.
Pope Benedict XVI has contrasted the "interpretation of discontinuity and rupture" which Traditionalists apply to the Council with the interpretation of "reform and continuity" proposed by the Church authorities. This latter interpretation has its roots in John XXIII's Opening Address to the Council, in which the Pope stated that the Council "wisheto transmit [Catholic doctrine, pure and integral, without any attenuation or distortion", and added:
By contrast, most Traditionalist Catholics believe that errors have crept into the presentation and understanding of Catholic teaching since John XXIII spoke those words. The blame for this is variously attributed by Traditionalists of different tendencies to liberal interpretations of the conciliar documents, to harmful post-conciliar pastoral decisions, to the conciliar documents themselves, or to some combination of these.
A number of criticisms are made of the traditionalist position by mainstream Catholics:
None of these practices or exercises is peculiar to traditionalist Catholics. Perhaps the only clear distinguishing mark of certain - not all* - traditionalist Catholics in this field is their non-acceptance of the five Luminous mysteries that Pope John Paul II added to Joyful, Sorrowful and Glorious "mysteries" of the Rosary.
As for the disciplinary practices mentioned above, most episcopal conferences have, since the Second Vatican Council, allowed other penitential practices to take the place of Friday abstinence, at least outside of Lent, and the Catholic Bishops' Conference of India has allowed abstinence from meat to be reckoned a penitential exercise only for those for whom meat is a normal part of their diet; Pope Pius XII, several years before that Council, reduced the obligatory fast before Holy Communion at three hours, which Traditionalists accept, but not the further reduction by Pope Paul VI in the course of the Second Vatican Council; and, even before the Council, a head covering for women in church was not considered obligatory in every country.
The website of the traditionalist International Federation Una Voce provides an international list, with addresses and other contact information, of priestly societies and religious institutes in good standing with the Church authorities that are dedicated to preserving the older rite of Mass.
Many other groups and individual priests celebrate the Tridentine Mass in a situation of schism or separation from the Church. There is a registry of scheduled old-rite Masses in the United States which includes those celebrated by these groups. The best known such group is the Society of St. Pius X, which offers Mass according to the 1962 Missal in its own Mass centres, maintaining that Catholic priests do not require any permission to celebrate the Tridentine rite. It rejects the conditions laid down in Quattuor abhinc annos, teaches that "the Indult Mass ... is not for traditional Catholics",and takes the view that "those who are only near Masses 'of Pope Paul VI' or to traditional Masses said under the 'Indult'" are excused from the obligation of attending Sunday Mass.*
Others, rejecting the 1962 Missal, offer Mass according to earlier editions, especially sedevacantist groups who do not recognize Pope John XXIII as Pope. They include the Society of St. Pius V and the Congregation of Mary Immaculate Queen. It is debatable whether these groups are Catholic at all (in the sense of being part of the Roman Catholic Church, which they claim to be), as while theoretically they profess their obedience to the Papacy, they do not practically recognize the Pope nor any means of electing a new Pope (see also Great Apostasy and anti-Catholicism).
Those who worship independently of the diocesan bishops justify their position on the grounds that they must do so in order to ensure they are able to administer or receive all of the Sacraments - including, but not limited to, the Eucharist - in the traditional way, and to be able to give or hear sermons on controversial matters (e.g. ecumenism, evangelism, liberalism, sin, Hell, political issues) without fear of reprisal from disapproving bishops.
Some traditionalist Catholics do not dispute the lawfulness or doctrinal soundness of decisions taken by the Holy See in recent decades - for example, on the revision of the Mass liturgy. They do, however, question the wisdom of those decisions.
Other traditionalist Catholics reject as illegitimate and even doctrinally erroneous certain recent declarations and decrees of the Holy See (see above, Allegations of discontinuity and rupture). One criticism that is levelled at some of them is that they appear to treat the decisions of the Pope and senior churchmen (to whom they may refer using expressions such as "Vatican hierarchs") as little more than the opinions of individuals.
Finally, in denying the legitimacy of the recent popes, sedevacantists also deny the authority of the decrees that they, and the Holy See in general, have issued.
The Holy See views as schismatic both sedevacantists and many other individual traditionalist Catholics - in particular, many of those involved with organizations in which priests act in complete independence of the Holy See and the diocesan bishops, even in matters for which a link with those bishops is normally a condition for validity of the act.The personal situation of such individuals is therefore distinguished from that of the associations to which they may belong: for instance, the situation of the Society of Saint Pius X has been described as a "situation of separation ... even if it was not a formal schism."[http://www.30giorni.it/us/articolo_stampa.asp?id=9360
On the other hand, the Holy See recognizes as fully legitimate the preference for "the Latin liturgical tradition" shown by those traditionalist Catholics who do not dispute the authority of the Holy See.* While the Pontifical Commission "Ecclesia Dei" normally leaves the decision to the local bishops, who have the advantage of direct knowledge of the situation in their dioceses, it recommends them to grant permission generously for the celebration of "Tridentine" Mass. The Personal Apostolic Administration of Saint John Mary Vianney and the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter are examples of associations of traditionalist Catholics that operate as a normal part of the Catholic Church in harmony with "the successor of Peter and the bishops in communion with him."(Lumen Gentium, 8).
The Holy See considers as having no legal effect the consecration ceremony conducted by Archbishop Ngô Đình Thục for the then Carmelite Order of the Holy Face at midnight of 31 December 1975. The Holy See refrained from pronouncing on the validity of those consecrations. The same explicitly applies to later ordinations by those bishops as well, for "as for those who have already thus unlawfully received ordination or any who may yet accept ordination from these, whatever may be the validity of the orders (quidquid sit de ordinum validitate), the Church does not and will not recognize their ordination (ipsorum ordinationem), and will consider them, for all legal effects, as still in the state in which they were before, except that the ... penalties remain until they repent" (Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Decree Episcopi qui alios of 17 September 1976 - Acta Apostolicae Sedis 1976, page 623).
With regard to the episcopal consecrations that Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre and Bishop Antônio de Castro Mayer conferred without papal mandate, the Holy See explicitly recognizes their validity, but sees the bishops involved as automatically excommunicated. It views the priests of the Society of St Pius X whom these bishops ordain as validly ordained, but, in accordance with canon 1383 of the Code of Canon Law, "suspended from the order received", i.e. prohibited from exercising it (canon 1333). The Ecclesia Dei Commission has stated that attendance at Masses offered by these priests is "morally illicit" for Catholics in normal circumstances, but that attendance at such Masses is not, of itself, an act subject to ecclesiastical penalties such as excommunication.***
The episcopal ordination of some other traditionalist clergymen is also considered to be valid, though unlawful.
Catholic traditionalism | Conservatism | Second Vatican Council | Traditionalist Catholics
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