The Ottaviani Intervention
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The Ottaviani Intervention



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	--  Breve Esame Critico del Nouvs Ordo Missae --

At the introduction of the Novus Ordo Missae, Cardinals Ottaviani
and Bacci wrote a letter to Pope Paul VI, containing a brief,
critical study of the New Order of the Mass. 

The Cardinals concluded that :

"To abandon a liturgical tradition which for four centuries was both 
the sign and the pledge of unity of worship (and to replace it with 
another which cannot but be a sign of division by virtue of the 
countless liberties implicitly authorized, and which teems with 
insinuations or manifest errors against the integrity of the Catholic 
religion) is, we feel in conscience bound to proclaim, an 
incalculable error. "

	A copy of this letter along with commentaries is published
by TAN BOOKS under the title " The Ottaviani Intervention " . The
letter is presented below :

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		THE    OTTAVIANI   INTERVENTION 
***************************************************************************

Rome 
25 September 1969

Most Holy Father:

	Having carefully examined and presented for the scrutiny of
others the New Order of Mass prepared by the experts of the Committee 
for the Implementation of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, and 
after lengthy prayer and reflection, we feel obliged before God and Your
Holiness to set forth the following considerations:

1.  The accompanying Critical Study is the work of a select group of
bishops, theologians, liturgists, and pastors of souls.  Despite its
brevity, the study shows quite clearly that the Novus Ordo
Missae--considering the new elements widely susceptible to widely
different interpretations which are implied or taken for
granted--represents, both as a whole and in its details, a striking
departure from the Catholic theology of the Mass as it was formulated in
Session 22 of the Council of Trent.  The "canons"  of the rite
definitively fixed at that time erected an insurmountable barrier 
against any heresy which might attack the integrity of the Mystery.

2.    The pastoral reasons put forth to justify such a grave break, even
if such reasons could still hold good in the face of doctrinal
considerations, do not seem sufficient.  The innovations in the Novus
Ordo and the fact that all that is of perennial value finds only a minor
place--if it subsists at all--could well turn into a certainty the
suspicion, already prevalent, alas in many circles, that truths which
have always been believed by the Christian people can be changed or
ignored without infidelity to that sacred deposit of doctrine to which
the Catholic faith is bound forever.  The recent reforms have amply
demonstrated that new changes in the liturgy could not be made without
leading to complete bewilderment on the part of the faithful, who 
already show signs of restiveness and an indubitable lessening of their 
faith.  Among the best of the clergy, the result is an agonizing crisis 
of conscience, numberless instances of which come to us daily.

3.    We are certain that these considerations, prompted by what we hear
from the living voice of shepherds and the flock, cannot but find an 
echo in the heart of Your Holiness, always so profoundly solicitous for 
the spiritual needs of the children of the Church.  The subjects for 
whose benefit a law is made have always had the right, nay the duty, to 
ask the legislator to abrogate the law, should it prove to be harmful.

       At a time, therefore, when the purity of the faith and the unity
of the Church suffer cruel lacerations and still greater peril, daily 
and sorrowfully echoed in the words of You, our common Father, we most
earnestly beseech Your Holiness not to deprive us of the possibility of
continuing to have recourse to the integral and fruitful Missal of St.
Pius V, so highly praised by Your Holiness, and so deeply venerated by
the whole Catholic world.

A. Card. Ottaviani
A.  Card. Bacci
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SHORT CRITICAL STUDY OF THE NEW ORDER OF MASS
5 June 1969
A Group of Roman Theologians

I.

	In October 1967, the Synod of Bishops which met in Rome was asked
to pass judgment on an experimental celebration of what was then called 
a "standard" or "normative" Mass.
	
	This Mass, composed by the Committee for Implementing the
Constitutions on the Sacred Liturgy (Consilium), aroused very serious
misgivings among the bishops present.  With 187 members voting, the
results revealed considerable opposition (43 Negative), many substantial
reservations (62 Affirmative with reservations) and four abstentions.
	The international press spoke of the Synod's "rejection" of the
proposed Mass, while the progressive wing of the religious press passed
over the event in silence.  A well-known periodical, aimed at bishops 
and expressing their teaching, summed up the new rite in these terms:

      "They wanted to make a clean slate of the whole theology of the
      Mass.  It ended up in substance quite close to the Protestant 
      theology which destroyed the sacrifice of the Mass."

	Unfortunately, we now find that the same "standard Mass", 
identical in substance, has reappeared as the New Order of Mass (Novus
Ordo Missae) recently promulgated by the Apostolic Constitution Missale
Romanum (3 April 1969).  In the two years that have passed since the
Synod, moreover, it appears that the national bishops' conferences (at
least as such) have not been consulted on the matter.  The Apostolic
Constitution states that the old Missal which St. Pius V promulgated on
19 July 1570--its greater part, in fact, goes back to St. Gregory the
Great and even remoter antiquity  (*1)  --was the standard for four
centuries whenever priests of the Latin Rite celebrated the Holy
Sacrifice.  The Constitution adds that this Missal, taken to every 
corner of the earth, "has been an abundant source of spiritual 
nourishment to so many people in their devotion to God."  Yet this same 
Constitution, which would definitively end the use of the old Missal, 
claims that the present reform is necessary because "a deep interest in 
fostering the liturgy has become widespread and strong among the 
Christian people."
	
	It seems that the last claim contains a serious equivocation.  If
the Christian people expressed anything at all, it was the desire 
(thanks to the great St. Pius X) to discover the true and immortal 
treasures of the liturgy.  They never, absolutely never, asked that the 
liturgy be changed or mutilated to make it easier to understand.  What 
the faithful did want was a better understanding of  a unique and 
unchangeable liturgy--a liturgy they had no desire to see changed.

	Catholics everywhere, priests and laymen alike, loved and
venerated the Roman Missal of St. Pius V.  It is impossible to 
understand how using this Missal, along with proper religious 
instruction, could prevent the faithful from participating in the 
liturgy more fully or understanding it more profoundly.  It is likewise 
impossible to understand why the old Missal, when its many outstanding 
merits are recognized, should now be deemed unworthy to continue to 
nourish the liturgical piety of the faithful.

	Since the "standard Mass" now reintroduced and reimposed as the
New Order of Mass was already rejected in substance at the Synod, since
it was never submitted to the collegial judgment of the national 
bishop's conferences, and since the faithful (least of all in mission 
lands) never asked for any reform of the Mass whatsoever, it is 
impossible to understand the reasons for the new legislation--
legislation which overthrows a tradition unchanged in the Church since 
the 4th and 5th centuries.  Since there are no reasons, therefore, for 
undertaking this reform, it appears devoid of any rational grounds to 
justify it and make it acceptable to the Catholic people.

	The Second Vatican Council did indeed ask that the Order of Mass
"be revised in a way that will bring out more clearly the intrinsic
nature and purpose of its several parts, as also the connection between
them."  (*2)  We shall now see to what extent the recently promulgated
Ordo responds to the Council's wishes--wishes now no more than a faint
memory.

	A point-by-point examination of the Novus Ordo reveals changes so
great that they confirm the judgment already made on the "standard
Mass"--for on many points it has much to gladden the heart of even the
most modernist Protestant.
 

II.
	Let us begin with the definition of the Mass.  In Article 7 of
the General Instruction which precedes the New Order of Mass, we 
discover the following definition:

      The Lord's Supper or Mass is the sacred assembly or congregation
      of the people of God gathering together, with a priest presiding,
      to celebrate the memorial of the Lord.  (*3)  For this reason
      Christ's promise applies supremely to a local gathering together 
      of the Church:  "Where two or three come together in my name, 
      there am I in their midst." (Mt. 18:20)  (*4)

The definition of the Mass is thus reduced to a "supper," a term which
the General Instruction constantly repeats.
	The Instruction further characterizes this "supper" as an
assembly, presided over by a priest and held as a memorial of the Lord 
to recall what He did on Holy Thursday.  None of this in the very least
implies:

	* The Real Presence
	* The reality of the Sacrifice
	* The sacramental function of the priest who consecrates
	* The intrinsic value of the Eucharistic Sacrifice independent of
	* The presence of the "assembly."  (*6)

	In a word, the Instruction's definition implies none of the
dogmatic values which are essential to the Mass and which, taken
together, provide its true definition.  Here, deliberately omitting 
these dogmatic values by "going beyond them" amounts, at least in 
practice, to denying them.  (*7)
	
	The second part of Article 7 makes this already serious
equivocation even worse.  It states that Christ's promise, ( "Where two
or three come together in my name, there am I in their midst") applies 
to this assembly supremely.
	
	Thus, the Instruction puts Christ's promise (which refers only to
His spiritual presence through grace) on the same qualitative level 
(save for greater intensity) as the substantial and physical reality of 
the sacramental Eucharistic sacrifice.
	
	The next Article of the Instruction divides the Mass into a
"Liturgy of the Word" and a "Liturgy of the Eucharist," and adds that 
the "table of God's Word" and the "table of Christ's Body" are prepared 
at Mass so that the faithful may receive "instruction and food."
	
	As we will see later, this statement improperly joins the two
parts of the Mass, as thought they possessed equal symbolic value.
	The Instruction uses many different names for the Mass, such as:

	* Action of Christ and the People of God.
	* Lord's Supper or Mass
	* Paschal Banquet
	* Common participation in the Table of the Lord
	* Eucharistic Prayer
	* Liturgy of the Word and Liturgy of the Eucharistic 

All these expressions are acceptable when used relatively--but when used
separately and absolutely, as they are here, they must be completely
rejected.
	It is obvious that the Novus Ordo obsessively emphasizes "supper"
and "memorial," instead of the unbloody renewal of the Sacrifice of the
Cross.
	Even the phrase in the Instruction describing the Mass as a
"memorial of the Passion and Resurrection" is inexact.  The Mass is the
memorial of the unique Sacrifice, redemptive in itself; whereas the
Resurrection is the fruit which follows from that sacrifice.  (*8) We
shall see later how such equivocations are repeated and reiterated both
in the formula for the Consecration and throughout the Novus Ordo as a
whole.

III.

	We now turn to the ends or purposes of the Mass--what it
accomplishes in the supernatural order.
	
	1.  ULTIMATE PURPOSE.  The ultimate purpose of the Mass is the
sacrifice of praise rendered to the Most Holy Trinity.  This end 
conforms to the primary purpose of the Incarnation, explicitly 
enunciated by Christ Himself:  "Coming into the world he saith: 
sacrifice and oblation thou wouldst not, but a body thou hast fitted 
me."  (*9)
	
	In the Novus Ordo, this purpose has disappeared:

	- From the Offertory, where the prayer "Receive, Holy Trinity,
this oblation" has been removed.

	- From the conclusion of Mass, where the prayer honoring the
Trinity, "May the Tribute of my Homage, Most Holy Trinity" has been 
eliminated.

	- From the Preface, since the Preface of the Most Holy Trinity,
formerly used on all ordinary Sundays, will henceforth  be used only on 
the Feast of the most Holy Trinity.

	2.  ORDINARY PURPOSE.  The ordinary purpose of the Mass is
propitiatory sacrifice--making satisfaction to God for sin.

	This end, too, has been compromised.  Instead of emphasizing
remission for sins for the living and the dead, the new rite stresses 
the nourishment and sanctification of those present. (*10)      

	At the Last Supper, Christ instituted the Blessed Sacrament and
thus placed Himself in It as Victim, in order to unite Himself to us as
Victim.  But this act of sacrificial immolation occurs before the 
Blessed Sacrament is consumed and possesses beforehand full redemptive 
value in relation to the bloody Sacrifice on Calvary.  The proof for 
this is that people who assist are not bound to receive Communion 
sacramentally. 
(*11)

	3. IMMANENT PURPOSE.  The immanent purpose of the Mass is
fundamentally that of sacrifice.

	It is essential that the Sacrifice, whatever its nature, be
pleasing to God and accepted by Him.  Because of original sin, however,
no sacrifice other than the Christ's Sacrifice can claim to be 
acceptable and pleasing to God in its own right.

	The Novus Ordo alters the nature of the sacrificial offering by
turning it into a type of exchange of gifts between God and man.  Man
brings the bread, and God turns it into "the bread of life"; man brings
the wine, and God turns it into "spiritual drink":

	Blessed are you, Lord God of all creation,
	for through your goodness
	we have this bread (or wine) to offer,
	fruit of the earth (vine) and work of human hands,
	It will become for us the bread of life (spiritual drink). (*12)

	The expressions "bread of life" and "spiritual drink," of course,
are utterly vague and could mean anything.  Once again, we come up
against the same basic equivocation:  According to the new definition of
the Mass, Christ is only spiritually present among His own; here, bread
and wine are only spiritually---and not substantially---changed.  (*13)

	In the Preparation of the Gifts, a similar equivocal game was
played.  The old Offertory contained two magnificent prayers, the "Deus
qui humanae" and the "Offerimus tibi":

	- The first prayer, recited at the preparation of the chalice,
begins:  "O God, by whom the dignity of human nature was wondrously
established and yet more wondrously restored."  It recalled man's
innocence before the Fall of Adam and his ransom by the blood of Christ,
and it summed up the whole economy of the Sacrifice from Adam to the
present day.

	- The second prayer, which accompanies the offering of the
chalice, embodies the idea of propitiation for sin:  it implores God for
His mercy as it asks that the offering may ascend with a sweet fragrance
in the presence of Thy divine majesty.  Like the first prayer, it
admirably stresses the economy of the Sacrifice.

	In the Novus Ordo, both these prayers have been eliminated.
	In the Eucharistic Prayers, moreover, the repeated petitions to
God that He accept the Sacrifice have also been suppressed; thus, there
is no longer any clear distinction between divine and human sacrifice.
	Having removed the keystone, the reformers had to put up
scaffolding.  Having suppressed the real purposes of the Mass, they had
to substitute fictitious purposes of their own.  This forced them to
introduce actions stressing the union between priest and faithful, or
among the faithful themselves--and led to the ridiculous attempt to
superimpose offerings for the poor and for the Church on the offering of
the host to be immolated.
	The fundamental uniqueness of the Victim to be sacrificed will
thus be completely obliterated.  Participation in the immolation of
Christ the Victim will turn into a philanthropists' meeting or a charity
banquet.

IV.

	We now consider the essence of the Sacrifice.  The New Order of
Mass no longer explicitly expresses the mystery of the Cross.  It is
obscured, veiled, imperceptible to the faithful. (*14)  Here are some of
the main reasons:

	1.   THE MEANING OF THE TERM "EUCHARISTIC PRAYER."
	The meaning the Novus Ordo assigns to the so-called "Eucharistic
	Prayer" is as follows:

	"The entire congregation joins itself to Christ in acknowledging
	      the great things God has done and in offering the sacrifice."  (*15)
	
	Which sacrifice does this refer to?  Who offers the sacrifice? 

		No answer is given to these questions.

	The definition the Instruction provides for the "Eucharistic Prayer" 
	reduces it to the following:
	
     "The center and summit of the entire celebration begins:  the
      Eucharistic Prayer, a prayer of thanksgiving and sanctification."  (*16)

	The effects of the prayer thus replace the causes.
	
	And of the causes, moreover, not a single word is said.  The
explicit mention of the purpose of the sacrificial offering, made in the
old rite with the prayer "Receive, Most Holy Trinity, This Oblation," 
has been suppressed--and replaced with *nothing.*  The change in the 
formula reveals the change in doctrine.

	2.   OBLITERATION OF THE ROLE OF THE REAL PRESENCE.
	The reason why the Sacrifice is no longer explicitly mentioned is
simple:  the central role of the Real Presence has been suppressed.  It
has been removed from the place it so resplendently occupied in the old
liturgy.
	
	In the General Instruction, the Real Presence is mentioned just
once--and that in a footnote which is the only reference to the Council
of Trent.  Here again, the context is that of nourishment.  (*17)  The
real and permanent presence of Christ in the transubstantiated
Species--Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity--is never alluded to.  The very
word transubstantiation is completely ignored.
	
The invocation of the Holy Ghost in the Offertory--the prayer
"Come, Thou Sanctifier"--has likewise been suppressed, with its petition
that He descend upon the offering to accomplish the miracle of the 
Divine Presence again, just as he once descended into the Virgin's womb.  
This suppression is one more in a series of denials and degradations of 
the Real Presence, both tacit and systematic.

	Finally, it is impossible to ignore how ritual gestures and
usages expressing faith in the Real Presence have been abolished or
changed.  The Novus Ordo eliminates:

- Genuflections.  No more than three remain for the priest, and
(with certain exceptions) one of the faithful at the moment of the Consecration

- Purification of the priest's fingers over the chalice

- Preserving the priest's fingers from all profane contact after the Consecration

- Purification of sacred vessels, which need not be done
  immediately nor made on the corporal      

- Protecting the contents of the chalice with the pall

- Gilding for the interior of sacred vessels

- Solemn consecration for movable altars

- Consecrated stones and relics of the saints in the movable altar
  or on the "table" when Mass is celebrated outside a sacred place.  (The
  latter leads straight to "eucharistic dinners" in private houses.)

- Three cloths on the altar--reduced to one

- Thanksgiving for the Eucharist made kneeling, now replaced by
  the grotesque practice of the priest and people sitting to make their
  thanksgiving--a logical enough accompaniment to receiving Communion
  standing.

- All the ancient prescriptions observed in the case of a host
  which fell, which are now reduced to a single, nearly sarcastic
  direction:  "It is to be picked up reverently."  (*18)
	
	All these suppressions only emphasize how outrageously faith in
		the dogma of the Real Presence is implicitly repudiated.

	3.  THE ROLE OF THE MAIN ALTAR.
	The altar is nearly always called the table:  (*19)  "...the altar 
or the Lord's table, which is the center of the whole eucharistic 
liturgy..."  (*20)  The altar must now be detached from the back wall so 
that the priest can walk around it and celebrate Mass facing the people.  
(*21)  The Instruction states that the altar should be at the center of 
the assembled faithful, so that their attention is spontaneously drawn 
to it.  Comparing this Article with another, however, seems to exclude 
outright the reservation of the Blessed Sacrament on the altar where 
Mass is celebrated.  (*22)  This will signal an irreparable dichotomy 
between the presence of Christ the High Priest in the priest celebrating 
the Mass and Christ's sacramental Presence.  Before, they were one and 
the same Presence.  Before, they were one and the same Presence.  (*23)
	
The Instruction recommends that the Blessed Sacrament now be kept
in a place apart for private devotion--as though It were some sort of
relic.  Thus, on entering a church, one's attention will be drawn not to
a tabernacle, but to a table stripped bare.  Once again, private piety 
is set up against liturgical piety, and altar is set up against altar.

	The Instruction urges that hosts distributed for Communion be
ones consecrated at the same Mass.  It also recommends consecrating a
large wafer,  (*24)  so that the priest can share a part of it with the
faithful.
	It is always the same disparaging attitude towards both the
tabernacle and every form of Eucharistic piety outside of Mass.  This
constitutes a new and violent blow to faith that the Real Presence
continues as long as the consecrated Species remain.  (*25)
	
	4.  THE FORMULAS FOR THE CONSECRATION.
	The old formula for the Consecration was a *sacramental* formula, 
properly speaking, and not merely a *narrative*.  This was shown above 
by three things:

	A.  The Text Employed.  The Scripture text was not used
word-for-word as the formula for the Consecration in the old Missal.  
St. Paul's expression, the "Mystery of Faith," was inserted into the 
text as an immediate expression of the priest's faith in the mystery 
which the Church makes real through the hierarchical priesthood.

	B.  Typography and Punctuation.  In the old Missal, a period and
a new paragraph separated the words "Take ye all of this and eat" from
the words of the sacramental form, "This is My Body."  The period and 
the new paragraph marked the passage from a merely *narrative* mode to a
*sacramental* and *affirmative* mode which is proper to a true
sacramental action.

	The words of Consecration in the Roman Missal, moreover, were
printed in larger type in the center of the page.  Often a different
color ink was used.

	All these things clearly detached the words from a merely
historical context, and combined to give the formula of Consecration a
proper and autonomous value.

	C.  The Anamnesis.  The Roman Missal added the words "As often
as ye shall do these things, ye shall do them in memory of Me" after the
formula of Consecration.

	This formula referred not merely to remembering Christ or a past
event, but to Christ acting in the here and now.  It was an invitation 
to recall not merely His Person or the Last Supper, but *to do* what He 
did *in the way* that He did it.  

	In the Novus Ordo, the words of St. Paul, "Do this in memory of
Me," will now replace the old formula and be daily proclaimed in the
vernacular everywhere.  This will inevitably cause hearers to 
concentrate on the remembrance of Christ as the end of the Eucharistic 
action, rather than as its beginning.  The idea of commemoration will 
thus soon replace the idea of the Mass as a sacramental action.  (*26)

	The General Instruction emphasizes the narrative mode further
when it describes the Consecration as the "Institution Narrative"  (*27) 
and when it adds that, "in fulfillment of the command received from
Christ...the Church keeps his memorial."  (*28)
	
	All this, in short, changes the modus significandi of the words
of Consecration--how they show forth the sacramental action taking 
place.
	The priest now pronounces the formulas for Consecration as part of 
an historical narrative, rather than as Christ's representative issuing 
the affirmative judgment "This is My Body."  (*29)

	Furthermore, the people's Memorial Acclamation which immediately
follows the Consecration--"Your holy death, we proclaim, O Lord...until
you come"--introduces the same ambiguity about the Real Presence under
the guise of an allusion to the Last Judgment.  Without so much as a
pause, the people proclaim their expectation of Christ at the end of
time, just at the moment when He is *substantially present* on the
altar--as if Christ's real coming will occur only at the end of time,
rather than there on the altar itself.

	The second optional Memorial Acclamation brings this out even
more strongly:

	"When we eat this bread and drink this cup,
	we proclaim your death, Lord Jesus,
	until you come in glory."

	The juxtaposition of entirely different realities--immolation and
eating, the Real Presence and Christ's Second Coming--brings ambiguity 
to a new height.  (*30)


V. 

    We now consider the question of who performs the Sacrifice.  In
the old rite, these were, in order:  Christ, the priest, the Church and
the faithful.

	1.  The Role of the Faithful in the New Rite.  In the New Mass,
the role attributed to the faithful is autonomous, absolute--and hence
completely false.  This is obvious not only from the new definition of
the Mass ("...the sacred assembly or congregation of the people 
gathering together..."), but also from the General Instruction's 
observation that the priest's opening Greeting is meant to convey to the 
assembled community the presence of the Lord:

	Then through his greeting the priest declares to the assembled
community that the Lord is present.  This greeting and response express 
the mystery of the gathered Church.  (*31)

	Is this the true presence of Christ?  Yes, but only a spiritual 
presence.  A mystery of the Church?  Certainly--but only insofar as the 
assembly manifests and asks for Christ's presence.
	This new notion is stressed over and over again by:


- Obsessive references to the communal character of the Mass. (*32)
	
- The unheard of distinction between "Mass with a Congregation"
   and "Mass without a Congregation."  (*33)

- The description of the Prayer of the Faithful as a part of the
  Mass where "the people exercising their priestly office, intercede for 
  all humanity."  (*34)

	The faithful's "priestly office is presented equivocally, as if it 
were autonomous, by omitting to mention that it is subordinated to the 
priest, who, as consecrated mediator, presents the people's petitions to 
God during the Canon of the Mass.

	The Novus Ordo's Eucharistic Prayer III addresses the following
prayers to the Lord:

	From age to age you gather a people to yourself,
	*so that* from east to west
	a perfect offering may be made to the glory of your name.

	The "so that" in the passage makes it appear that the people,
rather than the priest, are the indispensable element in the 
celebration.

	Since it is never made clear, even here, who offers the sacrifice, 
the people themselves appear as possessing autonomous priestly powers. 
(*35)  From this step, it would not be surprising if, before long, the 
people were permitted to join with the priest if pronouncing the words 
of Consecration.  Indeed, in some places this has already happened.

	2.  The Role of the Priest in the New Rite.  The role of the
priest is minimized, changed, and falsified:

- In relation to the people, he is now a mere president or
brother, rather than the consecrated minister who celebrates Mass "in 
the person of Christ."

- In relation to the Church, the priest is now merely one member
among others, someone taken from the people.  In its treatment of the
invocation to the Holy Ghost in the Eucharistic Prayer (the epiclesis),
the General Instruction attributes the petitions anonymously to the
Church. (*36)  The priest's part has vanished.

- In the new Penitential Rite which begins the mass, the Confiteor
has now become collective; hence the priest is no longer judge, witness
and intercessor before God.  It is logical therefore that he no longer
recites the prayer of absolution which followed it and has now been
suppressed.  The priest is now "integrated" with his brothers; even the
altar boy who serves at a "Mass without a Congregation" calls the priest
"brother." 

- Formerly, the priest's Communion was ritually distinct from the
people's Communion.  The Novus Ordo suppresses this important
distinction.  This was the moment when Christ the Eternal High Priest 
and the priest who acts in the person of Christ came together in closest
union and completed the Sacrifice.

- Not a word is said, moreover, about the priest's power as
"sacrificer," his consecratory action or how as intermediary he brings
about the Eucharistic presence.  he now appears to be nothing more than 
a Protestant minister.

- By abolishing or rendering optional many of the priestly
vestments--in some cases only an alb and stole are now required (*37)
--the new rite obliterates the priest's conformity to Christ even more. 
The priest is no longer clothed with Christ's virtues.  He is now a mere
"graduate" with one or two tokens that barely separate him from the 
crowd (*38)--"a little more a man than the rest," to quote from a modern
Dominican's unintentionally humorous definition.  (*39)  Here, as when
they set up altar against altar, the reformers separated that which was
united:  the one Priesthood of Christ from the Word of God.
	
3.  The Role of the Church in the New Rite.  Finally, there is
the Church's position in relation to Christ.
In only one instance--in its treatment of the form of the Mass
without a Congregation--does the General Instruction admit that the Mass
is "the action of Christ and the Church."  (*40)

	In the case of Mass with a Congregation, however, the only object
the Instruction hints as it "remembering Christ" and sanctifying those
present.  "The priest celebrant,"  it says, "...joins the people to
himself in offering the sacrifice through Christ in the Spirit to the
Father"  (*41) --instead of saying that the people join themselves to
Christ who offers Himself through the Holy Ghost to the Father.
	
In this context, the following points should likewise be noted:

- The many grave omissions of the phrase "through Christ Our
Lord," a formula which guarantees that God will hear the Church's 
prayers in every age.  (*42)

- An all-pervading "paschalism" --an obsessive emphasis on Easter
and the Resurrection--almost as if there were no other aspects of the
communication of grace, which, while quite different, are nevertheless
equally important.

- The strange and dubious "eschatologism" --a stress upon Christ's
Second Coming and the end of time--whereby the permanent and eternal
reality of the communication of grace is reduced to something within the
bonds of time.  We hear of a people of God on the march, a pilgrim
Church--a Church no longer *Militant* against the powers of darkness, 
but one which, having lost its link with eternity, marches to a future
envisioned in purely temporal terms.

	In Eucharistic Prayer IV the Church--as One, Holy, Catholic, and
Apostolic--is abased by eliminating the Roman Canon's petition for all
orthodox believers who keep the Catholic and Apostolic faith.  These are
now merely all who seek you with a sincere heart.

	The Memento of the Dead in the Canon, moreover, is offered not as
before for those who are gone before us with the sign of faith, but
merely for those who have died in the peace of Christ.  To this
group--with further detriment to the notion of the Church's unity and
visibility--Eucharistic Prayer IV adds the great crowd of "all the dead
whose faith is known to You alone."

	None of the three new Eucharistic Prayers, moreover, alludes to a
suffering state for those who have died; none allows the priest to make
special Mementos for the dead.  All this necessarily undermines faith in
the propitiatory and redemptive nature of the sacrifice.  (*43)

	Everywhere desacralizing omissions debase the mystery of the
Church.  Above all, the Church's nature as a sacred hierarchy is
disregarded.  The second part of the new collective Confiteor reduces 
the Angels and the Saints to anonymity in the first part, in the person 
of St. Michael the Archangel, they have disappeared as witnesses and 
judges.  (*44)

	In the Preface for Eucharistic Prayer II--and this is
unprecedented--the various angelic hierarchies have disappeared.  Also
suppressed, in the third prayer of the old Canon, is the memory of the
holy Pontiffs and Martyrs on whom the Church in Rome was founded; 
without a doubt, these were the saints who handed down the apostolic 
tradition finally completed under Pope St. Gregory as the Roman Mass.  
The prayer after the Our Father, the "Libera Nos," now suppresses the 
mention of the Blessed Virgin, the holy apostles and all the Saints; 
their intercession is thus no longer sought, even it times of danger.

	Everywhere except in the Roman Canon, the Novus Ordo eliminates
not only the names of the Apostles Peter and Paul, founders of the 
Church in Rome, but also the names of the other Apostles, the foundation 
and mark of the one and universal Church.  This intolerable omission,
extending even to the three new Eucharistic Prayers, compromises the
unity of the Church.

	The New Order of Mass further attacks the dogma of the Communion
of Saints by suppressing the blessing and the salutation "The Lord Be
with You" when the priest says Mass without a server.  It also 
eliminates the "Ite Missa Est," even in Masses celebrated with a server.  (*45)
	
    The double Confiteor at the beginning of the Mass showed how the
priest, vested as Christ's minister and bowing profoundly, acknowledged
himself unworthy of both is sublime mission and the "tremendous mystery"
he was to enact.  Then, in the prayer "Take Away Our Sins," he
acknowledged his unworthiness to enter the Holy of Holies, recommending
himself with the prayer "We Beseech Thee, O Lord" to the merits and
intercession of the martyrs whose relics were enclosed in the altar. 
Both prayers have been suppressed.  What was said previously about
elimination of the two-fold Confiteor and Communion rite is equally
relevant here.

	The outward setting of the Sacrifice, a sign of its sacred
character, has been profaned.  See, for example, the new provisions for
celebrating Mass outside a church:  a simple table, containing neither a
consecrated altar-stone nor relics and covered with a single cloth, is
allowed to suffice for an altar.  (*46)  Here too, all we have said
previously in regard to the Real Presence applies--disassociation of the
"banquet" and the Sacrifice of the supper from the Real Presence itself.

	The process of desacralization is made complete, thanks to the
new and grotesque procedure for the Offertory Procession, the reference
to ordinary (rather than unleavened) bread, and allowing servers (and
even lay people, when receiving Communion under both Species) to handle
sacred vessels.  (*47)  then there is the distracting atmosphere created
in the church:  the ceaseless comings and goings of priest, deacon,
subdeacon, cantor, commentator--the priest himself becomes a 
commentator, constantly encouraged to "explain" what he is about to do--
of lectors (men and women), of servers or laymen welcoming people at the 
door and escorting them to their places, while others carry and sort 
offerings.  And in an era of frenzy for a "return to Scripture," we now 
find, in contradiction of both the Old Testament and St. Paul, the 
presence of a "suitable woman" who for the first time in the Church's 
history is authorized to proclaim the Scripture readings and "perform 
other ministries outside the sanctuary."  (*48)  Finally, there is the 
mania for concelebration, which will ultimately destroy the priest's
Eucharistic piety by overshadowing the central figure of Christ, sole
priest and Victim, and by dissolving Him into the collective presence
presence of concelebrants.  (*49)


VI.

	We have limited ourselves above to a short study of the Novus
Ordo where it deviates most seriously from the theology of the Catholic
Mass.  Our observations touch upon deviations which are typical.  To
prepare a complete study of all the pitfalls, dangers, and
psychologically and spiritually destructive elements the new rite
contains, whether in texts, rubrics, or instructions, would be a vast
undertaking.

	We have taken no more than a passing glance at the three new
Eucharistic Prayers, since they have already come in for repeated and
authoritative criticism.  The second gave immediate scandal to the
faithful due to its brevity.  (*50)  Of Eucharistic Prayer II it has 
well been said that a priest who no longer believed in either
Transubstantiation or the sacrificial character of the Mass could recite
it with perfect tranquillity of conscience, and that a Protestant
minister, moreover, could use it in his own celebrations just as well.

	The new Missal was introduced in Rome as an "abundant resource
for pastoral work," as "a text more pastoral than juridical," which
national bishops' conferences could adapt, according to circumstances, 
to the "spirit" of different peoples.  Section One of the new 
Congregation for Divine Worship, moreover, will now be responsible "for 
the publication and *constant revision* of liturgical books."
	
	This idea was echoed recently in the official newsletter of the
Liturgical Institutes of Germany, Switzerland and Austria:

- The Latin texts must now be translated into the languages of
different nations.

- The "Roman style" must be adapted to the individuality of each
local Church.

- That which was conceived in a timeless state must now be
transposed into the changing context of concrete situations, and into 
the constant flux of the universal Church and its myriad congregations.  (*51)

	The Apostolic Constitution itself, in promulgating the Novus Ordo
Missae, deals a deathblow to the Church's universal language
when--contrary to the express wish of the Second Vatican Council--it
unequivocally states that "in great diversity of languages, one [?] and
the same prayer will ascend, more fragrant than incense."
	
The demise of Latin may therefore be taken for granted, Gregorian
chant--which Vatican II recognized as a distinctive characteristic of 
the Roman liturgy, decreeing that it "be given pride of place in 
liturgical services"  (*52)--will logically follow, given, among other 
things, the freedom of choice permitted in choosing texts for the 
Introit and the Gradual.

	From the outset, therefore, the new rite was pluralistic and
experimental, bound to time and place.  Since unity of worship has been
shattered once and for all, what basis will exist for the unity of the
faith which accompanied it and which, we were told, was always to be
defended without compromise?

	It is obvious that the New Order of Mass has no intention of
presenting the Faith taught by the Council of Trent.  But it is to this
Faith that the Catholic conscience is bound forever.  Thus, with the
promulgation of the New Order of Mass, the true Catholic is faced with a
tragic need to choose.


VII.

	The Apostolic Constitution explicitly mentions the riches of
piety and doctrine the Novus Ordo supposedly borrows from the Eastern
Churches.  But the result is so removed from, and indeed opposed to the
spirit of the Eastern liturgies that it can only leave the faithful in
those rites revolted and horrified.

	What do these ecumenical borrowings amount to?  Basically, to
introducing multiple texts for the Eucharistic Prayer (the
anaphora)--none of which approaches their Eastern counterparts'
complexity or beauty--and to permitting Communion Under Both Species and
the use of deacons.

	Against this, the New Order of Mass appears to have been
deliberately shorn of every element where the Roman liturgy came closest
to the Eastern Rites.  (*53)  At the same time, by abandoning its
unmistakable and immemorial Roman character, the Novus Ordo cast off 
what was spiritually precious of its own.  In place of this are elements 
which bring the new rite closer to certain Protestant liturgies, not 
even those closest to Catholicism.  At the same time, these new elements 
degrade the Roman liturgy and further alienate it from the East, as did 
the reforms which preceded the Novus Ordo.

	In compensation, the new liturgy will delight all those groups
hovering on the verge of apostasy who, during a spiritual crisis without
precedent, now wreak havoc in the Church by poisoning Her organism and 
by undermining Her unity in doctrine, worship, morals and discipline.


VIII.

	St. Pius V had the Roman Missal drawn up (as the present
Apostolic Constitution now recalls) as an instrument of unity among
Catholics.  In conformity with the injunctions of the Council of Trent,
the Missal was to exclude all dangers, either to liturgical worship or 
to the faith itself, then threatened by the Protestant Revolt.  The 
grave situation fully justified--and even rendered prophetic--the 
saintly Pontiff's solemn warning given in 1570 at the end of the Bull
promulgating his Missal:

	Should anyone presume to tamper with this, let him know 
	that he shall incur the wrath of God Almighty and His holy
	Apostles Peter and Paul.  (*54)

	When the Novus Ordo was presented at the Vatican Press Office, it
was impudently asserted that conditions which prompted the decrees of 
the Council of Trent no longer exist.  Not only do these decrees still 
apply today, but conditions now are infinitely worse.  It was precisely 
to repel those snares which in every age threaten the pure Deposit of 
Faith, (*55) that the Church, under divine inspiration, set up dogmatic
definitions and doctrinal pronouncements as her defenses.  These in turn
immediately influenced her worship, which became the most complete
monument to her faith.  Trying to return this worship to the practices 
of Christian antiquity and recreating artificially the original 
spontaneity of ancient times is to engage in that "unhealthy 
archaeologism" Pius XII so roundly condemned. (*56)  It is, moreover, to 
dismantle all the theological ramparts erected for the protection of the 
rite and to take away all the beauty which enriched it for centuries.  
(*57)  And all this at one of the most critical moments--if not the most 
critical moment--in the Church's history!

	Today, division and schism are officially acknowledged to exist
not only outside the Church, but within her as well.  (*58)  The 
Church's unity is not only threatened, but has already been tragically
compromised.  (*59)  Errors against the Faith are not merely insinuated,
but are--as has been likewise acknowledged--now forcibly imposed through
liturgical abuses and aberrations.  

	To abandon a liturgical tradition which for four centuries stood
as a sign and pledge of unity in worship, (*60) and to replace it with
another liturgy which, due to the countless liberties it implicitly
authorizes, cannot but be a sign of division--a liturgy which teems with
insinuations or manifest errors against the integrity of the Catholic
Faith--is, we feel bound in conscience to proclaim, an incalculable
error.

Corpus Domini
5 June 1969

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FOOTNOTES


ABBREVIATIONS

DB:  Denziger-Bannwart.  "Enchrindion Symbolorum."  32nd edition.  
Barcelona, Frieburg and Rome:  Herder, 1957.

DOL:  "Documents on the Liturgy, 1963-1979:  Conciliar,
Papal, and Curial Texts."  Translated, compiled, and arranged by the 
International Committee on English in the Liturgy.  Collegeville, MN:  
Liturgical Press, 1982

GI:  General Instruction on the Roman Missal.  "Institutio Generalis 
Missalis Romani."  1st edition, 6 April 1969.  In Paul VI, "Missale 
Romanum...Pauli VI Promulgatum:  Ordo Missae,"  12-76.  2nd edition. 
March 1970.  Translated in DOL 1391-1731, with variants between 1975
"editio typica altera" and 1st edition provided in footnotes.
	
PTL:  "Papal Teachings:  The Liturgy," selected and
arranged by the Benedictine Monks of Solesmes, translated by the 
Daughters of St. Paul.  Boston:  St. Paul Editions, 1962.
	
SC:  Vatican Council II.  Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy 
"Sacrosanctum Consilium,"  4 December 1963.  Translated in DOL 1-131.


1.  "The prayers of Our Canon are found in the treatise "De Sacramentis" 
(4th, 5th centuries)...Our Mass goes back without essential changes to
the epoch in which it developed for the first time from the most ancient
common liturgy.  It still preserves the fragrance of that primitive
liturgy, in times when Caesar governed the world and hoped to extinguish
the Christian faith' times when our forefathers would gather together
before dawn to sing a hymn to Christ as their God...There is not in all
Christendom a rite so venerable as that of the Roman Missal."  (Rev.
Adrian Fortescue).  "The Roman Canon, such as it is today, goes back to
St. Gregory the Great.  Neither in East nor West is there any 
Eucharistic prayer remaining in use today that can boast such antiquity.  
For the Roman Church to throw it overboard would be tantamount, in the 
eyes not only of the Orthodox, but also of the Anglicans and even 
Protestants having still to some extent a sense of tradition, to a 
denial of all claim any more to be the true Catholic Church."  (Rev. 
Louis Bouyer)

2.   SC 50, DOL 50.

3.  A footnote in the Instruction refers us to two texts of Vatican II. 
But nothing in the texts justifies the new definition, as it is evident
from the following:  "Through the ministry of the bishop, God 
consecrates priests...In exercising sacred functions they therefore act 
as the ministers of him who in the liturgy continually fulfill his 
priestly office on our behalf....By the celebration of Mass people 
sacramentally offer the sacrifice of Christ."  Decree on the Ministry 
and Life of Priests "Presbyterum Ordinis,"  7 December 1965, Section 5, 
DOL 260.  "For in the liturgy God is speaking to his people and Christ 
is still proclaiming his Gospel.  And the people are responding to God 
both by song and prayer.  Moreover, the prayers addressed to God *by the 
priest,* who presides over the assembly *in the person of Christ,* are 
said in the name of the entire holy people and of all present."  SC 33, 
DOL 33.  One is at a loss to explain how the Instruction's definition 
could have been drawn from these texts.  We note too how the new 
definition of the Mass alters what Vatican II laid down in Presbyterum 
Ordinis Section 5:  "The Eucharistic assembly is the center of the 
congregation of the faithful."  Since the center in the New Order of the 
Mass has been fraudulently spirited away, the congregation has now 
usurped its place.

4.  GI 7, DOL 1937 fn.

5.  GI 8, DOL 1398; GI 48, DOL 1438 fn. GI 55.d, DOL 1445 fin; GI 56, 
DOL 1446.

6.  The Council of Trent reaffirms the Real Presence in the following
words:  "To begin with, the holy council teaches and openly and
straightforwardly professes that in the blessed Sacrament of the Holy
Eucharist, after the consecration of the bread and wine, our Lord Jesus
Christ, true God and man, is truly, really and substantially contained
under the perceptible species of bread and wine."  DB 874.  Session 22
which interests us directly in nine canons (DB 937a-956):  1) The Mass 
is not a mere symbolic  representation, but rather a true, visible
sacrifice, instituted "to re-present the bloody sacrifice which [Christ]
accomplished on the cross once and for all.  It was to perpetuate his
memory until the end of the world.  Its salutary strength was to be
applied for the remission of the sins that we daily commit."  DB 938.  
2) "Declaring himself constituted a priest forever according to the 
order of Melchisedech, [Our Lord] offered his body and blood under the 
species of bread and wine to God the Father and he gave his body and 
blood under the same species to the apostles to receive, making them 
priests of the New Testament at that time...He ordered the apostles and 
their successors in the priesthood to offer this sacrifice when he said, 
'Do this in remembrance of me,' as the Catholic Church has always 
understood and taught."  DB 938.  The celebrant, offerer and sacrificer 
is the ordained priest, and not the people of God or the assembly:  "If 
anyone says that by the words, 'Do this in remembrance of me,' Christ 
did not make the apostles priests, or that he did not decree that they 
and other priests should offer his body and blood:  let him be 
anathema."  Canon 2, DB 949.  The Sacrifice of the Mass is a true 
propitiatory sacrifice, and not a simple memorial of the sacrifice 
offered on the cross:  "If anyone says that the Sacrifice of the Mass is 
merely an offering of praise and of thanksgiving, or that it is a simple 
memorial of the sacrifice offered on the cross, and not propitiatory, or 
that it benefits only those who communicate; and that it should not be 
offered for the living and the dead, for sins, punishments, 
satisfaction, and other necessities:  let him be anathema."  Canon 3, DB 
950.  Canon 6 should likewise be kept in mind:  "If anyone says that 
there are errors in the Canon of the Mass and that it should therefore 
be done away with:  let him be anathema."  DB 953.  Likewise Canon 8:  
"If anyone says that Masses in which the priest alone communicates 
sacramentally are illicit and should be done away with:  let him be 
anathema."  DB 955.

7.  It is perhaps superfluous to recall that, if a single defined dogma
were denied, all dogma would fall ipso facto, insofar as the principle 
of the infallibility of the supreme hierarchical magisterium, whether
conciliar or papal, would thereby be destroyed.

8.  In light of the first prayer after the Consecration in the Roman
Canon (Unde et memores), the Ascension could also be added.  The Unde et
memores, however, does not lump different realities together.  It makes 
a clear and fine distinction:  "calling to mind...the blessed passion, 
and also His rising from the dead and His glorious Ascension into 
Heaven."

9.  Ps.  50:7-9, in Heb. 10:5.

10.  GI 54, DOL 1444.

11.  This shift of emphasis occurs in the three new Eucharistic Prayers,
which eliminate the Memento of the Dead and any mention of souls
suffering in Purgatory, to whom the propitiatory Sacrifice is applied.

12.  See "Mysterium Fidei," in which Paul VI condemns the errors of
symbolism together with the new theories of "transignification: and
"transfinalization":  "...it is not allowable...to stress the sign value
of the sacrament as if the symbolism, which to be sure all acknowledge 
in the Eucharist, expresses fully and exhaustively the meaning of 
Christ's presence; or to discuss the mystery of transubstantiation 
without mentioning the marvelous changing of the whole substance of the 
bread into the body and of the whole substance of the wine into the 
blood of Christ, as stated by the Council of Trent, so that only what is 
called 'transignification' or 'transfinalization' is involved."  
Encyclical "Mysterium Fidei" on the doctrine and worship of the 
Eucharist, 3 September 1965, Section 11, DOL 1155.

13.  "Mysterium Fidei" amply denounces and condemns introducing new
formulas or expressions which, though occurring in texts of the Fathers,
the Councils, and the Church's magisterium, are used in a univocal sense
that is not subordinated to the substance of doctrine with which they
form an inseparable whole (e.g., "spiritual nourishment," "spiritual
food," "spiritual drink," etc.):  "Not only the integrity of the faith,
but also its proper mode of expression must be safeguarded, lest, God
forbid, by the careless use of words we introduce false notions about 
the most sublime realities."  He quotes St. Augustine:  " 'We, however, 
have the obligation to speak according to a definite norm, lest the
carelessness of our words give rise to impious ideas about the very
realities signified by these words.' " He continues:  "We must
religiously respect the rule of terminology; after centuries of effort
and under the protection of the Holy Spirit the Church has established 
it and confirmed it by the authority of councils; that norm often became 
the watchword and the banner of orthodox belief.  Let no one arbitrarily 
or under the pretext of new science presume to change it...In like 
manner we must not put up with anyone's personal wish to modify the 
formulas in which the Council of Trent set forth the mystery of the 
Eucharist for belief."  Sections 23, 24;  DOL 1167-8.

14.  Contradicting what Vatican II prescribed.  (Cf. SC 48, DOL 48).

15.  GI 54, DOL 1444.

16.  GI 54, DOL 1444.

17.  GI 241 fn. 69, DOL 1630.

18.  GI 129, DOL 1629.

19.  The Instruction recognizes the altar's primary function only once: 
"At the altar, the sacrifice of the cross is made present under
sacramental signs."  GI 259, DOL 1649.  This single reference seems
insufficient to remove the equivocation resulting from the other, more
frequently used term.

20.  GI 49, DOL 1489.  Cf.  GI 262, DOL 1652.

21.  GI 262, DOL 1652.

22.  GI 262, DOL 1652, and GI 276, DOL 1666.
23.  
23.  "To separate tabernacle from altar is to separate two things which
by their origin and nature should remain united."  Pius XII, "Allocution
to the International Congress on Pastoral Liturgy."  22 September 1956,
PTL 817.  See also Pius XII, Encyclical "Mediator Dei,"  20 November
1947, PTL 550, quoted below.

24.  Rarely does the Novus Ordo use the word hostia.  In liturgical 
books this traditional term has a precise meaning:  "victim."  Again we
encounter a systematic attempt to emphasize only "supper" and "food."

25.  Following their customary practice of substituting one thing for
another, the reformers made Christ's presence in the proclaimed  word
equal to the Real Presence.  (See GI 7, 54; DOL 1397, 1444).  But
Christ's presence when Scripture is proclaimed is of a different nature
and has no reality except when it is taking place (in usu).  Christ's
Real Presence in the consecrated Host, on the other hand, is objective,
permanent and independent of the reception of the Sacrament.  The
formulae "God is speaking to his people," and "Christ is present to the
faithful through his own word"  (GI 33, DOL 1423) are typically
Protestant.  Strictly speaking, they have no meaning, since God's
presence in the word is mediated, bound to an individual's spiritual act
or condition, and only temporary.  This formula leads to a tragic error: 
the conclusion, expressed or implied, that the Real Presence continues
only as long as the Sacrament is in the process of being used--received
at Communion time, for instance--and that the Real Presence ends when 
the use ends.

26.  As the General Instruction describes it, the sacramental action
originated at the moment Our Lord gave the Apostles His Body and Blood
"to eat" under the appearances of bread and wine.  The sacramental 
action thus no longer consists in the consecratory action and the 
mystical separation of the Body from the Blood--the very essence of 
Eucharistic Sacrifice.  See "Mediator Dei," esp. Part II, Chapter I, PTL 
551, ff.

27.  GI 55.d, DOL 1445 fn..

28.  GI 55.d, DOL 1445.

29.  As they appear in the context of the Novus Ordo, the words of
Consecration could be valid in virtue of the priest's intention.  But
since their validity no longer comes from the force of the sacramental
words themselves (ex vi verborum)--or more precisely, from the meaning
(modus significandi) the old rite of the Mass gave to the formula--the
words of Consecration in the New Order of Mass could also not be valid. 
Will priests in the near future, who receive no traditional formation 
and who rely on the Novus Ordo for the intention of "doing what the 
Church does," validly consecrate at Mass?  One may be allowed to doubt 
it.

30.  Let it not be said, following the methods of Protestant biblical
scholarship, that these phrases being in the same Scriptural context. 
The Church always avoided superimposing and juxtaposing the texts,
precisely in order to avoid confusing the different realities they
express.

31.  GI 28, DOL 1418

32.  GI 74-152, DOL 1464-1542.

33.  GI 209-231, DOL 1599-1621.

34.  GI 45, DOL 1435.

35.  Against the Lutherans and Calvinists who teach that all Christians
are priests and offerers of the Lord's Supper, see A. Tanquerey,
"Synopsis Theologiae Dogmaticae," (Paris, Tournai, Rome:  Desclee, 
1930), v. III:  "Each and every priest is, strictly speaking, a 
secondary minister of the Sacrifice of the Mass.  Christ Himself is the 
principal minister.  The faithful offer *through the intermediary of the 
priest, but not in a strict sense*."  Cf. Council of Trent, Session 22, 
Canon 2, DB 949.

36.  GI 55, DOL 1445. 

37.  GI 298, DOL 1688 fn..

38.  We note in passing an unthinkable innovation which will have
disastrous psychological effects; employing *red* vestments on Good
Friday instead of black (GI 308.b, DOL 1698)--as if Good Friday were the
commemoration of just another martyr, instead of the day on which the
whole Church mourns for her Founder. (Cf. Mediator Dei, PTL 550, quoted
below.)

39.  Rev. A. M. Rouget, OP, speaking to the Dominican Sisters of Bethany
at Plessit-Chenet.

40.  GI 4, DOL 1394.  Cf. "Presbyterum Ordinis," Section 13, DOL 265.

41.  GI 60, DOL 1450 fn.

42.  See Jn. 14:13-16, 23-24.

43.  In some translations of the Roman Canon, the phrase a place of
refreshment, light and peace was rendered as a simple state: 
"blessedness, light, peace."  What can be said then of the disappearance
of every explicit reference to the Church Suffering?

44.  Amidst this flurry of omissions, only one element has been added: 
the mention in the Confiteor of "what I have failed to do."

45.  At the press conference introducing the Novus Ordo, Rev. Joseph
Lecuyer, CSSp, professing a purely rationalist faith, discussed changing
the priest's salutations in Mass without a Congregation from plural to
singular ("Pray, brother," for example, replaces "Pray, brethren.")  His
reason was "so that there would be nothing [in the Mass] which does not
correspond with the truth."

46.  GI Section 260, 265; DOL 1650, 1655.

47.  GI 244.C, DOL 1634.

48.  GI 70, DOL 1460, fn.

49.  It now seems lawful for priest to receive Communion under both
species at a concelebration, even when they are obliged to celebrate 
Mass alone before or after concelebrating.

50.  It has been presented as "The Canon of Hippolytus," but only a few
traces of that original text remain in the new rite.

51.  Gottesdienst no. 9 (14 May 1969).

52.  SC 116, DOL 116.

53.  Consider the following elements found in the Byzantine rite: 
lengthy and repeated penitential prayers; solemn vesting rites for the
celebrant and deacon; the preparation of the offerings at the
"proscomidia," a complete rite in itself; repeated invocations, even in
the prayers of offering, to the Blessed Virgin and the Saints;
invocations of the choirs of Angels at the Gospel as "invisible
concelebrants," while the choir identifies itself with the angelic 
choirs in the "Cherubicon;" the sanctuary screen (iconostasis) 
separating the sanctuary from the rest of the church and the clergy from 
the people; the hidden Consecration, symbolizing the divine mystery to 
which the entire liturgy alludes; the position of the priest who 
celebrates facing God, and never facing the people; Communion given 
always and only by the celebrant; the continual marks of adoration 
toward the Sacred Species; the essentially contemplative attitude of the 
people.  The fact that these liturgies, even in their less solemn forms, 
last for over an hour and are constantly defined as "awe-inspiring, 
unutterable...heavenly, life-giving mysteries" speaks for itself.  
Finally, we note how in both the Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom 
and the Liturgy of St. Basil, the concept of "supper" or "banquet" 
appears clearly subordinate to the concept of sacrifice --just as it was 
in the Roman Mass.

54.  Bull "Quo Primum," 13 July 1570.  In Session 23 (Decree on the Most
Holy Eucharist), the Council of Trent announced its intention to "uproot
completely the cockle of the damnable errors and schism which in these
fateful times of ours and enemy has sown (see Matt. 13:25) in the
teaching of the faith about the Holy Eucharist and about the use and
worship of the Eucharist.  In addition to his other purpose, our Saviour
left the Eucharist in his Church as a symbol of unity and love which he
desired to unify and unite all Christians."  DB 873.

55.  "Keep that which is committed to thy trust, avoiding the profane
novelties of words."  (1 Tim. 6:20)

56.  "Assuredly it is a wise and most laudable thing to return in spirit
and affection to the sources of the Sacred Liturgy.  For research in 
this field of study, by tracing it back to its origins, contributes 
valuable assistance towards a more thorough and careful investigation of 
the texts and sacred ceremonies employed on their occasion.  But it is 
neither wise nor laudable to reduce everything to antiquity by every 
possible device.  Thus, to cite some instances, one would be straying 
from the right path were he to wish the altar restored to its primitive 
table form; were he to want black excluded as a color for liturgical 
vestments; were he to forbid the use of sacred images and statues in 
Churches; were he to order the crucifix so designed that the Divine 
Redeemer's Body shows no trace of His cruel sufferings...This way of 
acting bids fair to revive the exaggerated and senseless antiquarianism 
to which the illegal Synod of Pistoia gave rise.  It likewise attempts 
to reinstate a series of errors which were responsible for the calling 
of that meeting as well as for those resulting from it, with grievous 
harm to souls, and which the Church, the ever watchful guardian of the 
"depositum fidei" committed to her charge by her Divine Founder, had 
every right and reason to condemn."  "Mediator Dei," I.5, PTL 548, 549.

57.  "Let us not deceive ourselves with the suggestion that the Church,
which has become great and majestic for the glory of God as a 
magnificent temple of His, must be brought to its original and smallest 
proportions, as though they were the only true ones, the only good 
ones."  Paul VI, Encyclical "Ecclesiam Suam," 6 August 1964.

58.  "A practically schismatic ferment divides, subdivides, splits the
Church."  Paul VI, Homily "In Coena Domini,"  3 April 1969.
59.  "There are also among us those "schisms" and "separations" which 
St. Paul sadly denounces in I Corinthians."  Paul VI, ibid.

60.  It is well-known how Vatican II is now being repudiated by the very
men who once gloried in being its leaders.  While the Pope declared at
the Council's end that it had changed nothing, these men came away
determined to "explode" the Council's teachings in the process of
actually applying it.  Unfortunately the Holy See, with inexplicable
haste, approved and even seemingly encouraged through Consilium an
every-increasing infidelity to the Council.  This infidelity went from
changes in mere form (Latin, Gregorian Chant, suppression of the ancient
rites, etc.) all the way to changes in substance which the Novus Ordo
sanctions.  To the disastrous consequences we have attempted to point 
out here, we must add those which, with an even greater effect
psychologically, will affect the Church's discipline and teaching
authority by undermining the respect and docility owed the Holy See.


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