Generally, there are two groups that frequently criticize the SSPX in the most unflattering terms. The first group is unsurprising. They are Catholics who have fully embraced the hermeneutic of discontinuity. Some of these are the outright progressives in the Church who are determined to change the Church’s teaching on the critical pelvic topics, and generally deny the existence of hell and any real concept of sin. For them, the Church started for real in 1965 and just about everything that came before that, including all manner of doctrine, worship, and piety is rejected as part of the Church’s dark ages. These are the full-on hermeneutic of discontinuity folks. They exist within the Church in a state of pleasant comfortableness generally referred to as “full communion”. In their wake, they carry with them a whole bunch of people who don’t put as much rebellious thought into it as the above, but pay no attention to whatever happened in the Church before they happened along into it, mindlessly accepting the old church/new church dichotomy. These are the practical hermeneutic of discontinuity folks. They generally hold many heterodox positions, but nobody in the hierarchy of the Church seems to mind much. Again, they are comfortably numb in full communion. It should come as no surprise that these folks regularly ridicule and lambast the SSPX, as they hold all the Church’s perennial teaching, worship, and piety in disdain or indifference.
But another more surprising group regularly engages in vehement criticism of the SSPX. These are Catholics who embrace the hermeneutic of continuity. They understand that the Church is 2,000 years old and cannot ever contradict her own teaching, that proper worship is critically important, and regularly pray with beads in a pre-1965 manner.
In fairness, many of these Catholics looked upon the 1988 episcopal consecrations without papal mandate of Archbishop Lefebvre as a grave act of disobedience and a “schismatic act.” Whether or not you accept Archbishop Lefebvre’s justification for the act, one must recognize the great danger to unity that this act engendered.
Before I move on, let me be clear that I have never assisted mass at an SSPX chapel. In the pre-Summorum Pontificum days, I would travel 50 miles to attend the diocesan-approved Ecclesia Dei Traditional Latin mass even though the SSPX had a chapel just minutes from my home. I was and am that concerned about unity and obedience.
At the same time, it does nothing to diminish the seriousness of Archbishop Lefebvre’s actions to acknowledge that I would likely not even have had the option of a diocesan-approved traditional mass were it not for Archbishop Lefebvre and the SSPX. In fact, there might not have even been an SSPX hadn’t the Church in large part acted most ungenerously toward those rightfully attached to tradition and in a way contrary to the truth expressed in Pope Benedict’s letter accompanying Summorum Pontificum that, “What earlier generations held as sacred, remains sacred and great for us too, and it cannot be all of a sudden entirely forbidden or even considered harmful.” and that the “[1962] Missal was never juridically abrogated and, consequently, in principle, was always permitted.”
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Further, it is almost undoubtedly true that we would not have had Summorum Pontificum were it not for the stalwartness SSPX and the intransigent and ungenerous response of most Bishop’s to Pope St. John Paul’s call for a “generous response of Bishops towards the “legitimate aspirations” of the faithful.”
Yet, as a consequence of episcopal consecrations, Pope John Paull II excommunicated Archbishop Lefebvre and the four new Bishops. For years, many hermeneutic of continuity type Catholics cited this excommunication as the principle or sole reason to view the entirety of the SSPX in schism, even though the Church herself never formally declared them to be so.
But this is all a moot point now as Pope Benedict lifted these excommunications in 2009. All that remains is for the Church to grant the SSPX a proper canonical standing. In no way do I wish to minimize the seriousness of the situation the SSPX is currently in or the necessity of proper faculties for distribution of the sacraments. But yet, among many Catholics who embrace the hermeneutic of continuity, their vehemence in declaring the SSPX in schism has remained and in some cases increased. But only doctrinal issues remain unresolved before the SSPX preventing proper canonical standing.
But among those who thoroughly embrace a hermeneutic of continuity we continue to see a sweaty vehemence among some declaring the SSPX in schism. With the excommunications lifted, they declare the “doctrinal issues” between the Church and the SSPX to now be the great divide.
All acknowledge a divide between the SSPX and the Church on how to express the immutable truths declared by the Church. Yet, truth requires context.
The SSPX acknowledge the Second Vatican Council as a legitimate council. They also agree that large parts of the documents of Vatican II fairly state perennial Catholic teaching. But there are certain documents and certain parts of documents that do not obviously express continuous Catholic teaching, particularly in the areas of ecumenism, religious liberty, and collegiality.
Implicitly acknowledged by all who promote a “hermeneutic of continuity” is that the Council’s writings do not obviously or easily reconcile with prior magisterium on these topics. Otherwise, why would promotion of such a hermeneutical lens even be necessary?
The hermeneutic of continuity calls on us to understand any of these confusing statements in a way consistent with all the prior magisterium Council on these topics.
Any fair-minded person must admit that the Society’s positions on the topics of ecumenism, religious liberty, and collegiality at any time prior to 1960 were completely humdrum and uncontroversial restatements of obvious Catholic teaching. Is it possible a humdrum and uncontroversial statement of immutable teaching in 1960 is now controversial and even heretical in 1970 or 2015? How can we promote a hermeneutic of continuity on the one hand and on the other say that a formerly fine presentation of Catholic teaching (within living memory of many) should now be forbidden and considered harmful or even heretical?
It seems to me that you cannot have it both ways. You cannot truly accept a hermeneutic of continuity and consider such views as harmful or heretical. It also suggests that the doctrinal problems that currently prevent canonical recognition are not entirely on the side of the society. Clearly, the Church needs to work through some issues herself.
None of this minimizes the seriousness of the canonical situation of the Society or seeks to justify every statement or action of the SSPX. Yet, I think it makes clear that truth is not served by referring to the SSPX as heretical and thus obviously in schism, for to do so is to embrace a hermeneutic of rupture.