Una Voce France organized a colloquy, "The Right to
Beauty", at the University of Strasbourg from 29-31 March. The
following contribution by Una Voce President Michael Davies
makes a radical, from the roots, examination of the nature of a right
within the Catholic Church. If the traditional Mass is truly
"the most beautiful thing this side of heaven" can it be
said to be the birthright of every Catholic of the Latin Church, or in
liturgical matters does only one right exist, that of the Pope to
allow the faithful to worship in the manner which he sees fit to
accord them? In other words, which should take precedence, the
will of the legislator or the good of those for whom he is
legislating?
The founders of the various Protestant
denominations were revolutionaries rather than reformers. Their
concern was not to reform the existing order but to introduce
a new one. Monsignor Philip Hughes, in his classic study, The
Reformation in England, notes that all revolutionaries are
motivated by a common spirit:
The principal author of the Anglican
liturgy was Thomas Cranmer, the apostate Archbishop of Canterbury.
His first communion service contained in the 1549 Book of Common
Prayer, "The Lord's Supper or Holy Communion, commonly called
the Mass", was of an ambiguous nature. This ambiguity is
stressed by Dr. Francis Clark in the most authoritative study
of the Eucharistic doctrines of the Protestant Reformers yet undertaken:
Dr. Clark also explains that:
There was little enthusiasm for
the changes among the mass of the faithful, and sometimes fierce
opposition. Commenting on the introduction of Cranmer's first
(1549) Prayer Book, the Anglican Dean of Bristol, Douglas Harrison,
admits:
Dr. Adrian Fortescue, England's
great historian of the Mass, notes that:
It would be impossible to exaggerate
the importance of Father Fortescue's insistence that in composing
new services the Protestant Reformers "broke away utterly
from all historic liturgical evolution". Referring to the
reform of Cranmer in 1898, in a defence of the Bull Apostolicae
Curae, the Catholic Bishops of the Province of Westminster
insisted that local churches are not entitled to devise new rites:
An accepted principle with regard to liturgical worship is that the doctrinal standpoint of a Christian body must necessarily be reflected in its worship. Liturgical rites should express what they contain. It is not necessary for the Catholic position to be expressly contradicted for a rite to become suspect; the suppression of prayers which had given liturgical expression to the doctrine behind the rite is more than sufficient to give cause for concern.
This principle is embodied in the phrase legem credendi lex statuat supplicandi ("let the law of prayer fix the law of faith"), in other words the liturgy of the Church is a sure guide to her teaching. This is usually presented in the abbreviated form of lex orandi, lex credendi, and can be translated freely as meaning that the manner in which the Church worships (lex orandi) must reflect what the Church believes (lex credendi).
Monsignor Hughes insists that the
1549 Prayer Book made it clear that a new religion was being imposed:
In other words, when for decades
the faithful were forced to worship as Protestants they became
Protestants. Their faith had been destroyed by liturgical reform.
Bossuet writes:
Professor James Hitchcock echoes
Bossuet's sentiments in formulating the principle that:
The response of Rome to the Protestant liturgical revolution is explained by Dr. Fortescue: "The Council of Trent (1545 1563), in opposition to the anarchy of these new services, wished the Roman Mass to be celebrated uniformly everywhere." In its eighteenth session the Council appointed a commission to examine the Missal, to revise it and to restore it "according to the custom and rite of the Holy Fathers", using for that purpose the best manuscripts and other documents. "They accomplished their task very well," comments Dr. Fortescue. "On 14th July, 1570, the Pope published the reformed Missal with the Bull Quo Primum. Its title was: Missale Romanum ex decreto ss. Concilii Tridentini restitutum." St. Pius is honoured by the Church as an instrument chosen by God ad conterendos Ecclesiae hostes et and divinum cultum reparandum.
Up to the time of St. Pius V the
history of the Roman rite had been one of natural and gradual
development. It was regulated not by written legislation but by
customary usage. Father David Knowles, Britain's most distinguished
Catholic scholar until his death in 1974, explained that:
There have been revisions since
the reform of St. Pius V but, as Dr. Fortescue explains, up to
his time (1917) these had been intended to keep the Missal in
line with the reform of 1570. By the time of Clement VIII (15921605)
printers had corrupted the text in several ways. "The work
of the commission appointed by Clement VIII "was only to
correct these corruptions. They did not in any way modify the
Mass . . . Benedict XIV (1740l758), who did so much for
the reform of the liturgy did not revise the Missal." Dr.
Fortescue deals with all the subsequent revisions up to his time
in detail and concludes that:
The Reforms of Pius XII did go farther
than this, notably in regard to the Holy Week services. But any
objective assessment of his reforms will find that they were enacted
"according to the custom and rite of the Holy Fathers",
and with a profound respect for tradition. To quote Dr. Fortescue
again:
And again:
The antiquity of the Roman Mass
is a point which needs to be stressed. There is what Dr. Fortescue
describes as a "prejudice that imagines that everything Eastern
must be old." This is a mistake and there is no existing
Eastern liturgy with a history of continual use stretching back
as far as that of the Roman Mass.
It is scarcely possible to exaggerate the importance of the Roman Missal from any standpoint. A. Baumstark, perhaps the greatest liturgical scholar of this century, expressed this well when he wrote that every worshipper taking part in this liturgy, "feels himself to be at the point which links those who before him, since the very earliest days of Christianity, have offered prayer and sacrifice with those who in time to come will be offering the same prayer and the same sacrifice, long after the last fragment of his mortal" remains have crumbled into dust."
It is natural that the Church, the
steward of these holy mysteries, should clothe them with the most
solemn and beautiful rites and ceremonies possible. It is equally
natural that the book containing these rites should appropriate
to itself some of the wonder and veneration evoked by the mysteries
themselves. There can be do doubt that the leaders of the authentic
liturgical movement in this century regarded the Missal of St.
Pius V with much veneration. This veneration for the Missal is
well expressed by Dom Cabrol:
In the Middle Ages every kind of art was lavished upon it. It was adorned with delicate miniatures, with the most beautifully executed writing and lettering and bound between sheets of ivory, or even silver and gold and was studded with jewels like a precious reliquary.
The Missal has come into being gradually through the course of centuries always carefully guarded by the Church lest any error should slip into it. It is a summary of the authentic teaching of the Church, it reveals the true significance of the mystery which is accomplished in the Mass, and of the prayers which the Church uses.
Dom Cabrol also pays tribute to
the incomparable beauty of the Missal from the literary and aesthetic
point of view. He stresses that this is not a question of art
for art's sake:
The beauty, the worth, the perfection
of the Roman liturgy of the Mass, so universally acknowledged
and admired, was described by Fr. Faber as "the most beautiful
thing this side of heaven." He continues:
Cardinal Gasquet rightly remarks
that:
Liturgical laws, although coming
within the category of ecclesiastical law, must be governed by
the same principles by which any human law can be judged. The
prayers in the Mass and the rubrics governing its celebration
are generally the codification of practices already established
by custom. "Liturgies are not made, they grow in the devotion
of centuries," notes Professor Owen Chadwick in his history
of the Reformation. Until the post-Vatican II liturgical revolution
only heretics ever attempted any radical reform of the Liturgy,
and it cannot be denied that the reform of Pope Paul VI "broke
away utterly from all historic liturgical evolution". Msgr.
Klaus Gamber insists in his book on the post-conciliar reform,
which has been endorsed by three cardinals, that:
And again:
This brings us at last to the question of the right to beauty. Do we have a true right to the traditional Mass, to "the most beautiful thing this side of heaven"? If the traditional Mass the birthright of every Catholic of the Roman rite or do we have a right only to what the Pope feels inclined to grant us, to the reform which Msgr. Gamber states "did not provide the people with bread, but with stones".
During this century, as a reaction to Modernism, there has evolved among many of the most loyal, the most orthodox Catholics, a totally untraditional and uncatholic concept of the papacy in which, to all intents and purposes, the Pope is envisaged as a dictator whose merest whim is law, and whose subjects do can have a genuine right only to what he sees fit to accord them.
On the contrary, where there is a question of rights, it is the rights of the subject rather than those of the legislator that must take precedence. St. Thomas accepts the classical definition of justice as rendering to each one what is his right or due, and explains that a man is said to be just because he respects the right of others. Every legislator in Church and State has an absolute obligation to rule justly, and this obligation is not simply binding upon the Pope, but it is clear that in his capacity as the Vicar, the earthly representative of Our Lord Jesus Christ, who is the source of all justice, this obligation binds the Pope more than any other ruler. He is the supreme shepherd charged with guiding his flock to heaven, and if, through harsh or unjust treatment on his part, even one of them should be driven from the fold he would bear a heavy responsibility. He has the duty to emulate his divine master and guide his flock to green pastures and clear refreshing waters (Psalm 22). What appears to be the virtually unlimited juridical authority possessed by the Pope is restricted by moral considerations. What is legally valid is not necessarily morally licit. An evident example of legally valid but morally illicit papal legislation was the all too frequent practice of nepotism in which benefices established for the salvation of souls were used by popes as no more than a source of income for their relations. Karl Rahner, who was most certainly not a traditional Catholic, wrote an interesting study in 1965 on the distinction between legally valid but morally illicit papal legislation, and used the liturgy to illustrate his thesis. The Pope, he explained, is legally entitled to impose the Roman rite upon the eastern rites, but to do so would be a totally immoral act which would inevitably result in a schism for which the Pope would be responsible.
In his book L'Eglise du Verbe
Incarné, Cardinal Journet quotes Cajetan as follows:
An examination of any form of human law, common law, liturgical law, laws relating to games, or the laws of grammar, makes it clear that they have no intrinsic value in themselves but are simply a means to an end, and that end is the common good of those for whom the laws are ordained. There is no intrinsic merit in driving on the left side of the road or on the right, but it is clearly in the common interest of all motorists that in any particular country they should all drive on the same side. St. Thomas defines a law as "An ordinance of reason for the common good, made by him who has care of the community, and promulgated."
The consensus of Catholic authorities agrees with St. Thomas in his exposition of the nature of human law, namely, that whether civil or ecclesiastical it is an act of public authority having the right to demand obedience, but which itself must conform to the demands of reason and be seen to have an effect that is both good and to the benefit to those for whom it is intended. St. Thomas, followed by other authorities, warns that any change in existing legislation must be made only with extreme caution, particularly where it might involve changes in any longstanding customs. In support of this contention he cites the Decretals: "It is absurd, and a detestable shame, that we should suffer those traditions to be changed which we have received from the fathers of old." He adds that the very fact of changing a law, even for a better one, "is of itself prejudicial to the common good: because custom avails much for the for the observance of laws, seeing that what is done contrary to general custom even in slight matters is looked upon as grave."
Professor Hitchcock states that:
In discussing the question of the mutation of laws, St. Thomas lays down the premise that there are two remote reasons which can lead to a just change in the laws. The first resides in the nature of man who, being a rational being, is gradually led by his reason from what is less perfect to what is more perfect. The second reason must be found in the actions which are being subjected to the regulation of law, and which can change according to the various circumstances in which men find themselves and in which they must work. Every change in law must be determined by an evident necessity of the common good since law is rightly changed only insofar as this change manifestly contributes to the welfare of the community. The principle was echoed in the Liturgy Constitution of the Second Vatican Council which commanded that "there must be no innovations unless the good of the Church genuinely and certainly requires them" (Article 23).
"It is well known," writes
Louis Salleron, "that a tried and tested revolutionary technique
for overthrowing established societies is the call for a return
to its origins. It is no longer a question of pruning the tree
so that it will bear better fruit; it must be sawn down at its
very base under the pretext of reinvigorating the roots."
Pascal notes that custom is the whole of equity for the sole
reason that it is accepted and that anyone who tries to trace
it back to its first principles will destroy it:
Even where a change in the law carries an evident benefit it will be accompanied by some harm to the common good as any change in the law abandons a custom, and custom is always a great help and support in the observance of laws. Any change in an individual law diminishes the force and respect paid to Law because a custom is taken away. Reference has already been made to the importance attached by St. Thomas Aquinas to maintaining existing customs unless changing them is demanded by some overwhelming necessity. With profound psychological insight he adds that this is true even when the innovations contrary to custom are minor ones, for, even though minor in themselves, they may appear important in the common estimation. From this he draws a general conclusion: law must never be changed unless it is certain that the common good will find in the modification at least adequate compensation for the harm done by way of derogating a custom. A principle enunciated by Professor Hitchcock is that: "The decline of a sense of tradition in the Church severely weakens not only its continuity with the ages past but also its coherence in the present age."
Professor Johannes Wagner, Director
of the Liturgical Institute of Trier, reached the same conclusion
when he stated:
Suarez, another great authority, insists that for his law to be considered reasonable, a legislator must not simply refrain from demanding something his subjects will find impossible to carry out, but that the law must not even be too difficult, distressing or disagreeable, taking account of human frailty. On no account should it contradict any reasonable custom because custom is a kind of "second nature" and what it finds abhorrent "is considered to be morally impossible." He also lays great stress on the necessity for laws to be permanent, not in the sense that they can never be abrogated, but that this shall only occur if changing circumstances make it quite clear that they are no longer just. If legislation is to work in the common interest it must aim at stability and uniformity within the community.
Where there is the least doubt
that the benefits of a change in the laws are likely to outweigh
considerably the harm that will result from a change of custom
then it is better to conserve the existing legislation rather
than change it. Being the accepted practice, it has, so to speak,
the right of possession and, in a case of doubt, it is the right
of possession which is the stronger. Another principle stated
by Professor Hitchcock is that:
In his Apostolic Constitution Auctorem Fidei (28 August, l794) Pope Pius VI condemned the pseudo Synod of Pistoia for its desire to return to what it claimed were more primitive sources by simplifying the rites, using the vernacular, and saying the entire Mass in an audible tone. The Pope laid particular stress on the fact that this Synod had suggested a conflict between the principles which should govern the celebration of the Liturgy and the order currently in use, accepted and approved by the Church. The proposed changes were condemned as "false, disturbing the prescribed order of the celebration of the mysteries, and easily productive of many evils."
The history of the various Christian denominations is replete with instances of disruption and even schisms concerning changes in established customs, changes which many modern commentators might regard as trivial matters. The secession of the Old Believers from the Russian Orthodox Church is a typical example. What such incidents prove is the accuracy of St. Thomas's insight into the harmful effects of changing the status quo without overwhelming reasons for doing so.
"Sacred rituals, " notes
Professor Hitchcock,"cannot be reformed substantially without
serious dislocation in the society whose symbols they are."
He expresses well the total incompatibility of any radical reform
of the Catholic liturgy with the ethos and traditions of the Church:
What Professor Hitchcock describes
here is precisely what Mgr. Gamber considers to be the result
of the reform of Pope Paul VI:
Salus animarum suprema est lex
- "The good of souls is the supreme law". It is a law
which binds all Christians and binds above all the Holy Father
who, we can be sure, wishes to be bound by it. Did he not decree
in his Apostolic Constitution Ecclesia Dei that by virtue
of his apostolic authority "respect must everywhere be shown
for the feelings of all those who are attached to the Latin liturgical
tradition"? We have a right to what is essential for the
good of our souls. We have a right to beauty, and therefore a
right to the traditional Mass of the Roman rite, "the most
beautiful thing this side of heaven."
Some of the sources referred to in
the notes have been abbreviated as follows:
ESR F. Clark, Eucharistic Sacrifice
and the Reformation (Devon, 1980).
RIE P. Hughes, The Reformation
in England, 3 volumes (London, 1950).
RRL K. Gamber, The Reform of the
Roman Liturgy (New York, 1993).
RS J. Hitchcock, The Recovery
of the Sacred (New York, 1974).
ST Summa Theologica.
TM A. Fortescue, The Mass: A
Study of the Roman Liturgy (London, 1917).
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