1-24-2009
Dear
faithful,
As
I announce in the attached press
release,
the excommunication of
the bishops consecrated by His Grace Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, on
June 30, 1988, which had been declared by the Congregation for Bishops
in a decree dated July 1, 1988, and which
we had always contested, has been withdrawn by another
decree mandated by Benedict XVI and issued by the same Congregation on
January 21, 2009.
It
was the prayer intention I had entrusted to you in Lourdes, on the
feast of Christ the King 2008. Your response exceeded our
expectations, since one million seven hundred and three thousand
rosaries were said to obtain through the intercession of Our Lady that
an end be put to the opprobrium which, beyond the persons of the
bishops of the Society, rested upon all those who were more or less
attached to Tradition. Let us not forget to thank the Most Blessed
Virgin who has inspired the Holy Father with this unilateral,
benevolent, and courageous act to. Let us assure him of our fervent
prayers.
Thanks
to this gesture, Catholics attached to Tradition throughout the world
will no longer be unjustly stigmatized and condemned for having kept
the Faith of their fathers. Catholic Tradition is no longer
excommunicated. Though it never was in itself, it was often
excommunicated and cruelly so in day to day events. It is just as the
Tridentine Mass had never been abrogated in itself, as the Holy Father
has happily recalled in the motu
proprio, Summorum Pontificum
of July 7, 2007.
The
decree of January 21 quotes the letter dated December 15, 2008 to
Cardinal Castrillon-Hoyos in which I expressed our attachment “to the Church of Our Lord Jesus-Christ which is the Catholic Church,”
re-affirming there our acceptation of its two thousand year old
teaching and our faith in the Primacy of Peter. I reminded him that we
were suffering much from the present situation of the Church in which
this teaching and this primacy were being held to scorn. And I added:
“We are ready to write the Creed with our own blood, to sign the
anti-modernist oath, the profession of faith of Pius IV, we accept and
make our own all the councils up to the First Vatican Council. Yet we
can but express reservations concerning the Second Vatican Council,
which intended to be council “different from the others (cf.
Addresses by Popes John XXIII and Paul VI).” In all this, we are
convinced that we remain faithful to the line of conduct indicated by
our founder, Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, whose reputation we hope to
soon see restored.
Consequently,
we wish to begin these “talks”
- which the decree acknowledges to be
necessary - about the
doctrinal issues which are opposed to the Magisterium of all time. We
cannot help noticing the unprecedented crisis which is shaking the
Church today: crisis of vocations, crisis of religious practice, of
catechism, of the reception of the sacraments… Before us, Paul VI
went so far as to say that “from some fissure the smoke of Satan had entered the Church”, and
he spoke of the “self-destruction
of the Church”. John Paul II did not hesitate to say that
Catholicism in Europe was, as it were, in a state of “silent
apostasy.”
Shortly
before his election to the Throne of Peter, Benedict XVI compared the
Church to a “boat taking in
water on every side.” Thus, during these discussions with the
Roman authorities we want to examine the deep causes of the present
situation, and by bringing the appropriate remedy, achieve a lasting
restoration of the Church.
Dear
faithful, the Church is in the hands of her Mother, the Most Blessed
Virgin Mary. In Her we place our confidence. We have asked from her
the freedom of the Mass of all time everywhere and for all. We have
asked from her the withdrawal of the decree of excommunications. In
our prayers, we now ask from her the necessary doctrinal
clarifications which confused souls so much need.
Menzingen,
January 24, 2009
+Bernard
Fellay
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