My dear brethren,
I would like to speak to you today
on three things in particular: first, a little bit about the
general situation of the Church, next a few words on the
spirituality of the priesthood, and finally, a few thoughts on the
decree which has just appeared.
First, I would like to give you a
little overview of the general situation of the Church, and
particularly of Rome, especially the pope, because it is the pope,
I would say, who leaves his particular influence on the actual
state of the Church. In our present epoch it is difficult to deny
that we find the Church in a painful state - for nearly twenty
years - because the principles of Liberalism have penetrated the
Church.
Journalists often say to me: “But,
Your Excellency, you should have better relations with Pope John
Paul II because he is a traditionalist. He stresses the importance
of the cassock or religious habit; he is very devoted to the
Blessed Virgin Mary; he wants discipline in the seminaries. He
gives the impression of 'reacting' against the changes of Paul VI
- you should certainly have better relations with him!”
It is indeed true that on some
particular points Pope John Paul II does desire a certain return
to the old discipline in the seminaries, in religious life, in
certain exterior aspects of the Church. Unfortunately, however, we
would not be correctly judging the mind of the Holy Father were we
to judge only by these kinds of things, which are certainly
secondary. It cannot be denied, and he himself said it, that one
of the principal goals of his pontificate would be religious
liberty - he himself says it - and ecumenism as well, He said it
again in Canada when he was there. He said it to the World Council
of Churches: "Ecumenism cannot be turned back, thus we must
continue towards this end," and, for him, as he often repeats,
it is one of the principal ends of his pontificate. One can see it
also in his discourses published in Documentation Catholique:
"One of the goals of my pontificate is ecumenism, and religious
liberty."
Ecumenism, such as it is actually
practiced, and religious liberty, are principles, which come from
the Declaration of the Rights of Man. It is written in the
constitution of the Rights of Man that every man has the right to
his religion according to his conscience, and thus he has the
right to express and publicly practice it according to his
conscience. It is one of the rights contained in the Declaration
of the Rights of Man, condemned by Pope Pius VI (1775-1799).
Now, it is clear that it is the
Freemasons who drew up this document, against the Ten Commandments
- their own answer, as it were, to the Ten Commandments - against
the will of God, against the authority of God. It is, for all
that, a very serious thing to believe, and rightly so, that it was
the idea of the Liberals to introduce that into the Church. And
when the head of the Church himself begins to propagate these
ideas - and he has frequently praised the principles found in the
Constitution of the Rights of Man; he did it at Berne before all
the members of the Swiss government - that is serious, very
serious, because that goes absolutely against the rights of Our
Lord Jesus Christ.
We are not "free" in religious
matters any more than we are free in moral questions; we do not
have the right to follow whatever morality our conscience
suggests; we do not have the right to follow whatever kind of
faith conforms to our temperament and way of thinking. Faith and
morals are imposed upon us by God, and Our Lord Jesus Christ is
God. It is thus inadmissible to give the impression that all
religions are equally good, that all moral teachings are equal.
We must not forget that the
conciliar reforms of the liturgy, the reforms of the Bible, the
changes in the internal structure of the Church, of the
constitution of the Church - all these things are a result of the
ecumenical spirit. That is clear, since Protestants were present
for the changes in the Mass - six Protestant ministers were
photographed with Pope Paul VI who thanked them for having come to
participate in the liturgical commission, which transformed our
Catholic Mass! Everything was done in this ecumenical spirit:
liturgical reforms, catechetical reforms, an ecumenical Bible - which is sold in the bookstore at the Vatican. There was then, a
considerable Protestant influence.
And the pope himself says that he is
the spiritual son of Pope Paul VI, that he must continue the
Council, to put the Council into practice. He has repeated this
more than once.
Well, the consequence of all this is
that the abuses start to appear as, for example, catechetics in
France. When it becomes too obvious that the consequences are
disastrous, the pope takes notice. He sends Cardinal Ratzinger to
stop, to finally put a limit, a certain limit, to this destruction
of the catechism. But since the principles are still there - the
principles behind this catechetical reform have not changed - they
find themselves in an ongoing contradiction. They do not have the
courage to go to the logical conclusion. They ought to have
suppressed these new catechisms, but since they, themselves, said
that a change was necessary, to transform these things according
to the modern spirit, to modern man's way of thinking, they are
caught in contradiction.
The same is true of liberation
theology. Liberation theology is Marxism pure and simple - communism, and that frightens the pope a little. Yet, what is this
liberation theology if not the conclusion, the putting into
practice, of the Rights of Man; it is the Constitution of the
Rights of Man that liberates him, liberates him from all
authority, from the authority of God, from the authority of the
States, from the authority of parents, of godparents... And so the
pope, on the one hand, praises the Rights of Man and, on the other
hand, opposes liberation theology. He finds himself in a
contradiction, and that is why one gets a strong impression that
he conducts this battle against liberation theology without a firm
conviction, and thus he does not follow through on it. All you
need is for a few bishops to stand up and say: No, no, liberation
theology is not that bad; besides, we must support the people, the
rights of the people, the rights of man, etc., and the pope backs
off.
It is the same thing with the new
catechetics in France. The bishops stood up, showed their
displeasure, and Cardinal Ratzinger backed off as well. Why?
Because they don't have real conviction, they are using false
principles to combat the errors of liberalism, and so they are in
a constant inconsistency. Until they go back to the principles of
tradition, they will not succeed in stopping the progress and the
consequences of the Council and the conciliar reforms.
There is also another aspect of the
situation of the Church which is very serious, an idea which is
spread far and wide within the Church, the concept of the
salvation of man: salvation which from now on is for all men in
all religions. That is no longer the old conception of the Church,
which demands Baptism, which restores the soul, which takes away
Original Sin and provides a remedy for souls, which have fallen
sick. The Holy Ghost comes as a remedy to save us, and the
sacraments are to help us save ourselves, and give us health of
soul. That is no longer what they believe, but rather, the
Protestant notion is little by little entering the Church, the
idea that the whole world is saved. Just look at the burial rites
now: they are joyful ceremonies, the soul is evidently saved,
there are no prayers said for it; instead they have chants of
thanksgiving to God, or praise, etc. No more purgatory - that
doesn't exist anymore.
And they no longer have the notion
of asceticism, of a spiritual combat. The idea of a spiritual
combat has practically disappeared in the Church, and they have
done away with all the prayers, which made mention of the enemies
of the Church, or enemies of our souls. All that has been
suppressed in the liturgical prayers, or any notion of contempt
for the world, for example: "contemnere terrestria et amare
caelestia - to despise earthly things and to love heavenly
things." That has been eliminated from the orations as if to say
that we must not despise the world, that it is an error to eschew
the world. Now in the spirit of the Church, to take no heed of the
world is in the same spirit as Our Savior, Who said that He did
not pray for "the world" since the world is under the influence of
Satan. It was in this spirit that the Church spoke that way. All
these things have been changed; now there is a completely
different attitude.
You may have noticed this in the
pope's Wednesday conferences - I don't know if you read them - but, if you read them, you can see: for well-nigh five years
almost ad nauseam, he has spoken of the theology of the
human body; we have really had our fill of it, we must say. There
is no ascetical theology in it, and for him it seems that marriage
will be sublimated right up to heaven and become, I don't know,
some sort of celestial mysticism. Incredible! Incomprehensible!
I don't think anybody understands
what he says; so mysterious is all this theology of the human
body. One searches in vain for the old asceticism. All he does is
praise marriage, praise the union according to the flesh, without
a single mention of concupiscence, it's unbelievable, since we
must never forget that even after receiving Baptism, as St. Thomas
says, we still have four profound wounds in our soul. He calls
them the fomes peccati (remains of sin), which are:
ignorance, malice, weakness and concupiscence; these are the four
wounds which remain in us and of which we stand in need of a cure,
and for this cure we need the merits of Our Lord. Well, all that
is over with, finished. They say Baptism remits our sins and, most
importantly, makes us members of the Christian community. There it
is, exactly like the Protestants.
Now this different vision of
Christian spirituality is exceedingly grave because it excludes
once and for all the Cross, it excludes sacrifice, it casts aside
the Cross and the Sacrifice and the Redemption of Our Savior.
Another grave problem now
undermining the Church is found in the new Canon Law. The new
Canon Law is very serious for it goes much further than the
Council itself.
In the Council they succeeded, for
example, in avoiding the creation of two supreme powers in the
Church: the pope on the one hand, and on the other hand, the pope
and the bishops as two ordinary powers in the Church, which is
contrary to the doctrine of the Church. There is only one supreme
ordinary power in the Church and that is the pope. The pope
communicates his supreme power in extraordinary cases like a
council, but the pope and the bishops are not an ordinary power in
Holy Church. Besides, it is contradictory because the bishops
could claim this power from the pope if the pope acts alone,
saying: "We also have supreme power with you, therefore you
must consult us." The pope could say, "But I alone have the
power" - "Yes, but we have it with you," and thus he
would be in continual conflict with the bishops. That is
inadmissible. Our Lord did not found the Holy Church in such a way
that there would be a continual conflict between the pope and the
bishops.
Then another thing, which is very
seriously flawed in the new Canon Law, is the definition of the
Church. For me, that is perhaps what best characterizes the new
theories of the Church since the Council: the Church is the
"people of God." The Church no longer consists of clerics and the
laity, with only the clergy exercising the ministry from which all
the graces are communicated to the laity , while the laity must
receive these graces from their ministry. No, now it is all one
"people of God," everyone is admitted, according to his function,
according to his capacities, to different ministries, as if there
were no more distinction between the clergy and the laity.
This is extremely serious. It is,
fundamentally, the destruction of the Church. Now one could say, "No,
look at the following chapter and there is, all the same, a
distinction made between the clergy and the laity." Yes, but
that does not take away the contradiction. The error exists. It is
there even if later on it is more or less "corrected" by an
affirmation of the distinction between clerics and laypeople.
Notice however that it is precisely this which becomes the leit
motif of the following chapters, when they speak of the
munus docendi - in the chapter on the Church's Teaching Office
- the Teaching Office is given to the People of God, it is not
given to the priests; the mission of sanctifying is given to the
People of God; it is incredible! What power will they leave to the
priests then? There remains only the power of jurisdiction; that
is a little more difficult to change; so they published an article
in L'Osservatore Romano on the powers which the laity now
has in the new Canon Law, in which they said: you may have taken
notice of the fact that the Teaching Office and the mission of
sanctifying have been attributed to the People of God; as for the
power of jurisdiction, that is a bit more delicate, what they say
about that is less precise. There you are! These are grave errors.
For example, with the Teaching Office and the mission of
sanctifying, they make an absolute link between the role of a
parent with respect to his children, and the role of the priest.
The priest has a role: the Teaching Office and the mission of
sanctifying with regard to his parish. The father of a family has
a role: a teaching office and mission of sanctifying of his
family. All this comes from a false vision of the Church. It will
mean the definitive disappearance of the essential distinction
between the priesthood of the faithful and the sacramental
priesthood.
The priest has received a sacrament,
the Sacrament of Holy Orders, which confers a character on the
priest and which gives him alone the power to pardon sins, the
power to pronounce the words of consecration at the Holy Sacrifice
of the Mass, and the power to administer the sacraments. It is
really unbelievable to have made this kind of comparison between
the priests and the faithful.
There is also more and more of this
democratic spirit in the Church. You are aware of all the councils
they have - although they are only "consultative" - but they still
have them all the same: a parish council, a bishops' council - at
least two councils in the parish and one or two for the bishop - there is the Synod of Bishops at Rome, which is now a recognized
institution in Canon Law, so that the authorities, in practice,
are obliged to take them into account, and it is no easy thing to
govern when one is continually obliged to seek the counsel of a
majority vote, or to hold a vote to see what the assembly thinks.
Those in authority have their hands tied. Not that there was no
such thing as consultation in the old Code of Canon Law, there
were certain consultations which the bishop had to make, but they
were much more discreet, much more reasonable than now. Now it has
become an institution, which really limits the powers of the
bishop.
All this means that the new Code of
Canon Law, to my way of thinking, goes considerably further than
the Council itself.
The giving of Holy Communion to
Protestants - eucharistic hospitality, as they call it - is a
dogmatic error. One does not have the right to give Communion to
someone who does not have the Catholic Faith, that is a real
rupture with what has always been most precious in the Church: the
Body and Blood of Our Lord, and faith in Our Lord Jesus Christ.
One does not give the Body and Blood of Our Lord except to someone
who truly has the Catholic Faith, faith in Our Lord Jesus Christ,
and not simply faith in the Real Presence while he perhaps denies
the divinity of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
Before passing to
the second point, which will be somewhat shorter than this one, I
would like to make a little comparison between the preceding and
what Archbishop Bugnini said. Last year there appeared an enormous
book of his on the liturgical reform, published posthumously, by
one of his confreres. I recommend, if you ever come across this
book, that you read the general principles. They are very
instructive, and absolutely incredible - right in these general
principles Archbishop Bugnini says, this liturgical reform is a
profound one, aiming at restoring to its true place - for him,
according to what he says - the People of God. It is very curious
to find here this notion of the People of God, which is in the new
Code of Canon Law, published after the death of Archbishop Bugnini.
He could not have gotten it from the new Code, so these ideas must
have been around well before it. It is stupefying to read in the
Documentation Catholique that the Lutheran - Catholic
Commission of the Secretariat for Christian Unity, and thus an
official Roman commission, said in effect that numerous points in
the Council were drawn from the teachings of Luther, one of them
being the notion of the People of God. They say it explicitly; so
with this doctrine of the People of God, they are restoring the
assembly to its true place, to give it an important role in the
liturgy, implying that before the assembly did not exist, or that
its role was minimal, that there was no participation; and that,
now, thanks to the new liturgy, there is finally participation.
There comes to mind an objection
made by a certain Benedictine abbot at the conference which
Archbishop Bugnini gave before twenty-four Superiors of Religious
Orders - I myself was present at this conference - at Rome, before
the publication of the New Mass. When he introduced to us his
"Normative Mass," Archbishop Bugnini spoke to us precisely about
this participation of the faithful, active participation, as if
before Vatican II the faithful had never participated in the Mass.
And so an Abbot got up and said, "Father, if I understand
correctly, we should not say private Masses any more, since there
is no congregation, and thus no participation by the people in our
Masses." The response was, "Quite truthfully, we have not
envisioned that." Incredible! As he himself said, this idea
has inspired the liturgical reform, an idea which reverses the
roles, giving the greater role to the assembly, and no longer to
the priest and the sacrifice, the Sacrifice of Our Lord.
I have been asked to give you a few
reflections on the spirituality of the priest. I cannot very well
separate the spirituality of the priest from the Holy Sacrifice of
the Mass.
To my mind there are not two
different kinds of priestly spirituality, there is only one: that
of his Mass, that of the Sacrifice of Our Lord, because the priest
is essentially the man of sacrifice. I would say there is a
transcendental relation between the priest and the sacrifice, and
between the sacrifice and the priest. One cannot imagine sacrifice
without a priest, and the priesthood without sacrifice. And so
there is a relation there that is more than essential,
transcendental really, a relation that goes beyond even the
essence of the priest. So, we must go back to the idea of the
Sacrifice. One can say that our sacrifice, the sacrifice which Our
Lord has put into our hands, the sacrifice which Our Lord has left
us, is a thing without limit, inexpressible, so divine and
mysterious is it, that it surpasses everything we can imagine.
To think that we are really "other
Christs," and that it is His words, His words that produce His
presence, that we recite these words each morning, that it is not
simply a narrative but also an action, and that we say, "This
is My Body," we do not say, "This is the Body of Jesus
Christ." But we say, "This is My Body," "This is the
chalice of My Blood" - it is we ourselves who pronounce it!
Consequently we are truly in the Person of Christ, it is truly
Christ that we represent. It is no longer we who speak; it is Our
Lord Who makes use of our lips, Who makes use of us to pronounce
these words anew. There it is, I truly believe, the great program
of the priest, the program of priestly life: his Mass. That is why
the Mass is so important. And this program, it is not really
complicated, it is very simple.
The first part of the Mass consists
in teaching: "to teach all nations," that is our role. We
have to teach precisely because we have the Teaching Office. Our
Lord said to us, to priests, "Teach all nations." He did
not say that to just anybody, He said that to His Apostles, and so
we have this role and we must teach. That is what we do in the
first part of the Mass, more especially than in the other parts.
May we be solicitous that our teaching truly be the teaching of
the faith, that our teaching truly be the teaching of the Church!
And may I point out that the faith is essentially connected with
Revelation, and Revelation is essentially connected with
Tradition: Faith, Revelation, Tradition! And that is why, when we
say we are traditionalists, we are right. We must be
traditionalists; there can be no Catholics who are not
traditionalists. Tradition is part of our faith. We should not
forget that there was a time of prophecy, as St. Thomas says.
There was a prophetical epoch which began with the first prophets,
continuing right up to the Prophet Who is Our Lord Jesus Christ:
He is the Prophet, there is none greater, none holier, none more
perfect, than this Prophet.
Thus the prophetical epoch continued
right up to Our Lord Jesus Christ. The Apostles were joined with
Our Lord Jesus Christ to announce the Gospel. After the death of
the last Apostle, the prophetical epoch came to a close, was
finished; there is no other prophet, there can be no other prophet
after Our Lord. Who could surpass Our Lord? Who could say: "I
come after Our Lord to complete what Our Lord said"? Who could
say such a thing? God Himself has come, who can make himself
greater than God? There are no more prophets; the time of prophecy
is finished, terminated.
St. Thomas goes on to say: "Then
followed the dogmatic epoch," the time of definitions, that
is, the time in which the contents of Revelation were defined,
that which was revealed, that which is in the deposit of faith.
And the popes have no other role than to define what is in the
deposit of Revelation - not to add a single truth, but simply to
say: "This is in the deposit of revelation." That is where
Tradition comes in: Tradition, from generation to generation, from
pope to pope, from council to council, the tradition of the Faith,
of what has been defined, and to the extent to which it is defined
it is untouchable, one can no longer touch this truth, it is
defined for all times.
When a pope uses his infallibility,
it is the deposit of faith, the treasure of our faith, there is
thus a tradition, which we cannot avoid, which we must keep, hence
the importance for us to always refer to the past, to refer back
to what the Church had always taught. Now, this is the great error
of Cardinal Ratzinger, the great error of those who are in the
Church today, who say to us: "The Church is a living body and
so it evolves, always changing, always in evolution, the Church is
not a corpse." Truth is always the same. When I said to
Cardinal Ratzinger, "Look, religious liberty and Quanta Cura
are incompatible," "Oh," he said, "we are no longer
in the times of Quanta Cura." We are no longer in the
times of Quanta Cura, then tomorrow we will no longer be in
the times of their own new truths - this is not possible!
Now in this first part of the Mass,
which, I would say, is the model for our own teaching, we must
refer back to that, to Tradition. The essence of what St. Paul
said is: "Tradidi vos quod et accepi - I have passed on
to you what I have myself received." Already in his time he
said that, and he said: "If an angel himself says the contrary
of what I have handed on to you, or if I say the contrary of what
I have passed on to you, may I be anathema!" And that is
serious! And so neither do we have the right to deny what was
handed down to us.
There are two other parts of Holy
Mass, the part with the consecration, the Sacrifice, and then the
part where the priest communicates, which are united because we
are united to our Victim, Our Lord.
First, the Sacrifice. I now make a
distinction between gratia sanans (grace healing) and
gratia elevans (grace elevating), the grace which Our Lord
gives us in Baptism, which He also gives us in the Sacrifice of
the Mass. The augmentation of this grace has the aspect of
"healing" and "elevating.” - Grace healing that is the
sacrificial, penitential aspect, of compunction for our faults, of
everything that heals us. It is the Blood of Our Lord, it is in
the Sacraments, in the Sacrament of Penance... then, there is
"grace elevating” which lifts us up, the Holy Ghost Who elevates
us with Our Lord Jesus Christ in contemplation, in the love of the
Father, in the love of the Holy Trinity. In the Sacrifice of the
Mass we find ourselves as it were on the Cross again with Our
Lord. That is the sacrificial and penitential aspect, the healing
aspect, but also the aspect of love, of charity, of the
contemplation of Our Lord.
Next comes the third part: the
communion of the faithful. Fundamentally we cannot give them more
than Our Lord Jesus Christ, but we must prepare them, precisely by
teaching, and then we are the doctors of their souls by the
Sacrament of Penance, by the advice we can give. We must do this
in such a way that souls receive Our Lord Jesus Christ under the
best conditions, so that they can receive this gratia sanans
and gratia elevans, and unite themselves with Our Lord the
Victim, Our Lord Who praises His Father for eternity.
These are, in summary, the different
aspect of the Most Holy Sacrifice, which are very important,
essential, and which are an entire program of life, this is
practically our entire program of priestly life. I wish that we
could always gain a deeper understanding of the Holy Sacrifice of
the Mass. There you can see the change on the perspective on the
Mass: if one insists only on the meal, as the progressives do now,
on the meat the table, the table of the eucharistic banquet the
sharing of bread, the sharing of the word - they leave aside the
aspect of the Cross, the sacrificial aspect which lifts us up to
heaven. Let us not separate the aspect of Our Lord which lifts us
right up to the bosom of the Trinity, in the midst of praise, the
propitiatory aspect of sacrifice which covers us with the Blood of
Our Lord, which heals us of out maladies, precisely this "healing
grace." We ought not to forget that there is "healing grace" and
"elevating grace" - there are these two aspects of grace.
I will finish this talk with a few
words on the new decree which has just come out. Is it a boon, or
not? It would be difficult to say that it is not a good thing,
since many people have asked Rome for this liberty, that those who
say the Old Mass not be persecuted. I myself also during these
years have not ceased asking of Rome: leave us this liberty!
And so, faced with the insistence of many people, and mine also,
they finally decided to do something. Unfortunately however they
have added to it incredible conditions. It's absolutely
unimaginable, after all this, to be interrogating people on their
opinion: Do you reject the New Mass? If you reject the New Mass,
then you don't have the right to say the old one. That surpasses
the imagination. For as I said to my confreres, if one of you were
asked, or, if for example, we take the Abbey of Fontgombault in
France, the Benedictines, they like the Old Mass, but they have
accepted the New Mass out of "obedience." Now they will surely ask
for the Old Mass again. And they could ask them: "Why do you
opt for the Old Mass?" "Ah, because we prefer the Old Mass.
You see, the New Mass has certain features..." "Ah! You
don't like the New Mass! Neither then shall you have the Old!"
That is ridiculous, because if we
choose the Old Mass it is because we find it better than the new
one. If you reject the new one, you don't have the right to the
old one! They could quibble back and forth like that.
To my mind, this decree is a typical
example of the present mentality at Rome, the progressive
mentality. This is a progressive decree; it is not a traditional
decree where Rome would act out of consideration for the holiness
of the Mass, for the holiness of the faithful, for the apostolate
and good of souls, the glory of God. No, it's not that. It's pure
politics. They conducted a referendum... a poll... to see who were
in agreement; because there was still a small group holding out,
they decided to make a concession, but to also add some
conditions. That is politics, the same kind they practice in
democracies - it's not supernatural at all. Be that as it may, I
think Providence has willed this nevertheless for now we have a
foot in the door and never again will they be able to shut it! The
old era is finished, now we have a foothold, and I think that the
good God will permit, little by little, that there will be a
return to Tradition. It has triggered the common sense of many of
the faithful who say, "Finally this business is over with! Finally
we can go to the Old Mass! Finally the dispute is over!"
They aren't really taking the
conditions into account. There was even a radio station in
Switzerland that said, "Pope Paul VI condemned Archbishop
Lefebvre and now John Paul II has condemned Paul VI." That is
not altogether accurate, but that is the impression the faithful
will get from this decree.
Will we, in our priories, in our
traditional groups, will we lose much support? Personally, I don't
think so; on the contrary. For one thing, we must say, this decree
will unfortunately be difficult for those priests who have charge
of a parish, for example, to have the Old Mass when their faithful
are divided. Some want the Old Mass, some want the New; some want
Communion in the hand, some don't want Communion in the hand; some
want Mass facing the people, some don't want Mass facing the
people. That will cause interminable divisions. Thus it will be
very difficult to have the Old Mass in this environment. And so I
believe that many of our faithful, even if they were accustomed to
going to an environment like that, where they see the faithful
receive Communion in the hand, where they see the priest celebrate
the Old Mass facing the people, they will say: No, no, we will go
to those who keep Tradition in its entirety. I don't believe that
we will suffer losses. If that is what they figured, I believe
they are mistaken. If they calculated beforehand: we will isolate
the Society, we will isolate their priests, we will drive the
faithful from them - for my part, I believe they are mistaken; I
believe, on the contrary, that we will have more support than
ever. Already some have said to us, "Oh, now we will be able to
come to you." Before they were afraid and thought it would be
disobedience to the priests, to the bishops who said to them: "You
disobey if you go to those Masses." Now that issue of
disobedience is over, so now we can go there, the faithful
believe.
That is why, after all is said and
done, we must look beyond the actual text of the decree, and the
divisions it will cause, and the difficulties it will cause with
the bishops: look at it as the good God sees it. I believe it is
providential, a first step on the road back to Tradition and so, I
hope, God will see to it that other steps will follow.