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Pope Benedict XVI. January 6th, 2009.
Pier Paolo Cito / AP
Benedict XVI revoked the excommunication of four schismatic bishops, including one who had made comments denying the Holocaust.
RELIGION

Rome’s Reconciliation

Did the Pope heal, or deepen, the Lefebvrist schism?

 

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What do the Cardinal Richelieu and King Louis XVI, the Bastille and the Reign of Terror, the Bourbons and Robespierre, the revolutionary depredations in the Vendée, the Dreyfus Affair, the anti-clericalism of the French Third Republic, and the World War II Vichy regime have to do with the schismatic movement that the late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre led out of the Roman Catholic Church in 1988—a movement that Pope Benedict XVI is now trying to move toward reconciliation by lifting the excommunications of its four illegally ordained bishops on Jan. 21?

In a word: everything.

There are, of course, many different kinds of people in the Lefebvrist movement; the great majority of them are men and women who find the older forms of Catholic piety—especially the Latin Mass celebrated in the Tridentine form—more spiritually beneficial than the reformed liturgy that followed the Vatican Council II (1962-1965). And it is also true that Archbishop Lefebvre, one of the leaders of the anti-reformist faction at Vatican Council II, was very unhappy with what was done to the Church's liturgy after the council.

But Lefebvre was also a man formed by the bitter hatreds that defined the battle lines in French society and culture from the French Revolution to the Vichy regime. Thus his deepest animosities at the council were reserved for another of Vatican Council II's reforms: the council's declaration that "the human person has a right to religious freedom," which implied that coercive state power ought not be put behind the truth-claims of the Catholic Church or any other religious body. This, to Lefebvre, bordered on heresy. For it cast into serious question (indeed, for all practical purposes it rejected) the altar-and-throne arrangements Lefebvre believed ought to prevail—as they had in France before being overthrown in 1789, with what Lefebvre regarded as disastrous consequences for both church and society.

Marcel Lefebvre's war, in other words, was not simply, or even primarily, against modern liturgy. It was against modernity, period. For modernity, in Lefebvre's mind, necessarily involved aggressive secularism, anti-clericalism, and the persecution of the church by godless men. That was the modernity he knew, or thought he knew (Lefebvre seems not to have read a fellow Frenchman's reflections on a very different kind of modernity, Alexis de Tocqueville's "Democracy in America"); it was certainly the modernity he loathed. And to treat with this modernity—by, for example, affirming the right of religious freedom and the institutional separation of church and state—was to treat with the devil.

The conviction that the Catholic Church had in fact entered into such a devil's bargain by preemptively surrendering to the modern world at Vatican Council II became the ideological keystone of Lefebvre's movement. And the result was dramatic: Lefebvrists came to understand themselves as the beleaguered repository of authentic Catholicism—or, as the movement is wont to put it, the Tradition (always with a capital "T"). For 10 years, Pope John Paul II tried to convince the recalcitrant Archbishop Lefebvre otherwise; he got nowhere. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger then tried to mediate. But at the end of the day, Marcel Lefebvre hated modernity more than he loved Rome. So in 1988, rejecting the personal pleas of John Paul II and Ratzinger (men who could hardly be accused, reasonably, of preemptive concessions to modernity), an aging Lefebvre ordained four bishops to carry on his work, without the requisite authorization from Rome. Those four bishops (whose orders, while illegally conferred under church law, are nonetheless valid sacraments in the church's eyes) automatically incurred excommunication by participating in a schismatic act—an act in conscious defiance of church authority that cuts one off from the full communion of the church. It is those excommunications that have now been lifted by Benedict XVI, in an effort to move the Lefebvrist movement toward reconciliation with Rome and toward the restoration of full communion.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: Nosmanic @ 03/06/2009 1:43:48 AM

    That's the point jlskey is a 'true' Catholic with other things believes that the Pope is the closest to God and is infallible.

  • Posted By: catspaw @ 02/18/2009 11:54:40 AM

    RaulO, he put this on 3 different religions blogs. He didn't even read the articles.

  • Posted By: RaulO @ 02/09/2009 5:57:27 AM

    @ martialguy:

    A few things for you to consider:

    1. The whole "flat earth" belief was a result of a distortion of a piece of scripture describing the greatness of the Judeo-Christian God's domain. The reality is that the whole idea of persons of the Abrahamic faiths actually believing such a thing was manufactured by Washington Irving and others as part of a way of "selling" the Conflict Thesis.

    2. The whole "dinosaurs and young earth" statement you referred to, is actually only applicable to YECs (Young Earth Creationists). Most Christians (and ALL Catholics according to their doctrine). readily embrace evolution and in fact, many of Darwin's early supporters were Catholics who defended his "Origin of the Species" from detractors--both religious and secular.

    3. What in the world does anything YOU just said have to do with the topic at hand?

    Now with this in mind, I hope you will think very carefully before you click the "send" button. Lest, you make yourself look like a fool again.

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