Vatican tightens screws on conservatives over traditional Latin Mass
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[December 18, 2021]
By Philip Pullella
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - The Vatican on
Saturday warned conservative Roman Catholics who have balked at Pope
Francis' decision to restrict the old traditionalist Latin Mass that
they were sowing division and engaging in "sterile polemics".
The Vatican department overseeing sacraments and liturgy issued a
directive in response to bishops' requests for clarification following a
document in July in which Francis overturned decisions by his two
predecessors and tightened access to the Mass.
Since July some conservatives, including bishops, have openly defied the
pope, resulting in the latest chapter of what some have dubbed the
Church's "liturgy wars".
Religious conservatives in the United States in particular have used the
Latin Mass debate to align with politically conservative media outlets
to criticise the pope over a host of other issues such as climate
change, immigration and social justice.
"As pastors we must not lend ourselves to sterile polemics, capable only
of creating division, in which the ritual (the Mass) itself is often
exploited by ideological viewpoints," Archbishop Arthur Roche, head of
the department, wrote in an introductory letter to the responses to 11
questions.
Saturday's document said conservatives who favour the Latin Mass cannot
use such a sacred part of Catholicism to deny the "validity and
legitimacy" of the reforms of the 1962-1965 Second Vatican Council,
which included an opening to the modern world and dialogue with other
religions, particularly Judaism.
It also made clear that pre-Vatican II Latin rites should not be used
for other sacraments, such as baptism and confirmation.
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Pope Francis leaves after holding an ecumenical prayer with migrants
at the Parish Church of the Holy Cross, in Nicosia, Cyprus, December
3, 2021. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane
Before the Council, Catholic Mass was an elaborate ritual led in
Latin by a priest facing east with his back to the congregation.
Vatican II modernised the liturgy, including more active
participation by the congregation, and had the priest face the
faithful to pray in their local language.
Traditionalists, who are a small but very vocal minority in the 1.3
billion-member Church, have rejected the new Mass, which is known as
the Novus Ordo and entered into general use in the early 1970s. Many
missed the Latin rite’s sense of mystery and awe and the
centuries-old sacred music that went with it.
Both former Pope Benedict and Pope John Paul II had relaxed
restrictions on the Latin Mass in an olive branch to conservatives.
In re-introducing the restrictions in July, Francis said his
predecessors' leniency, while well-intentioned, had been "exploited"
for ideological reasons.
(Reporting by Philip Pullella; Editing by Frances Kerry)
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