From The Remnant
By Hilary White
I suppose most of the Remnant’s audience will not be under any illusions about the health of the Church in “traditionally Catholic” Italy. But I wonder if people know in detail how bad it really is. I’ve observed that among North Americans, and lately even Brits, there is a kind of consumer mentality growing, even in the Traddie world. If you don’t like the silly guitars and bongos of your local Novus Ordo, just go to the local Traditional Mass, or at least “choose a parish” that does the NO “more reverently.”
In a recent exchange on Twitter, in response to a post I made rather unmanfully complaining about the poor quality of our local village Novus Ordo Mass, a woman said, essentially, “Why don’t you just go to the local TLM?” I’m pleased to say that I successfully refrained from responding, “Sure, I’ll just have a little cake instead of bread…”
Some years ago, while I was scouring the Umbrian landscape to find a new home after the 2016 earthquakes, I met a nice American traditionalist Catholic family on the train. They were heading to Assisi and it was fun to point out to the kids the real castles up on their craggy perches as we passed along the densely populated line of medieval towns and villages between Spoleto and Perugia.
When they asked where I was going, I explained and said that I was looking for a place that was both close enough to be in shouting distance of Norcia and that had access to the traditional Mass. I said that those criteria, together with my need for a place that wasn’t in a major urban centre (rentals in cities range from twice to three times what they are in rural areas), had me scurrying up and down the region. At that time there were about 22,000 other displaced “terremotati” also looking for rental accommodations close to home and my added liturgical priority had narrowed things down to nearly nothing.
My travelling companions expressed their surprise at my difficulty, saying, “But the traditional Mass is on the rise, isn’t it? It’s available everywhere.” In the winter of 2016 there were five Mass locations listed on the Italian Traddie websites for the region[1] of Umbria. But when I physically investigated on the ground, it turned out there were only three; and one of them was in Norcia.
What is not understood by many is that there are no alternatives. Even the concept of alternatives does not exist. Mass, all Masses, are accompanied by a guitar “folk” choir; it has always been thus and always shall be for much the same reason that we have always been at war with Eastasia. There is no such thing as a “reverent” Novus Ordo in Italy as we think of it in Angloland because there is no such thing as a “conservative” tier of Catholicism. There is “mainstream” Novusordoist Catholicism, which always involves the guitars, clapping and shenanigans Americans associate with “liberalism” and there is a tiny, persecuted or ignored fringe of traditionalists; effectively the Italian Church is trapped forever in the amber of 1976. The easiest way to learn that the category of “conservative” Catholicism is a politically generated phantom is to spend some time living in Italy. In reality there is Novusordoism, which is “liberal” by its nature, and there is Catholicism which cannot be grafted onto the New Paradigm.
The division between the two, and their inherent incompatibility becomes clear when you see what is being done to the remnants of Catholicism by the Novusordoist establishment here: it’s being hounded out of existence. Since 2016 those Traddie websites have been updated and a glance will show a dismal picture, with about half the Masses listed as “suspended,” “suppressed,” “abolished,” “deleted” or “cancelled” across the country. As of now, Umbrian TLMs: Norcia, daily; Perugia, almost weekly except in the summers when they are entirely cancelled; and a convent of sisters affiliated with the SSPX in the countryside vaguely in the vicinity of Narni[2]. There is still rumoured to be a Mass available twice a month in Orvieto, but I haven’t confirmed this[3]. And that’s it. The earthquakes and the suppression of the FFIs – who often brought the traditional Mass to rural areas and small towns – have resulted in the effective suppression of the traditional Mass in Umbria – the “green heart of Italy” barely beats.
“Reverent Novus Ordo” a political and economic construct
The nice young American family on the train had no idea that things were different here, or how different. This casual insouciance among “conservative” and traditionalist Catholics from the Anglo world is based on a secular political reality that doesn’t really exist anywhere outside the Anglo bubble. In our time in most North American dioceses there is at least one – usually more – traditional Mass, but more than that, there are usually at least a few places where a “reverent Novus Ordo” is offered with some of the trappings of the past, a certain air of “conservative” respectability. This situation is what is now considered “normal” and is broadly taken for granted.
This mentality of liturgical consumer choices, whether we celebrate or decry it, comes not only from the Bugnini catastrophe but from a political and cultural history unique to Anglo-land. Partly it grew from the alliance of US Catholic and Protestant political “conservatives” in the Culture Wars in the ‘80s and’90s that created a market within the Church for the at least Catholic-looking externals we associate with “conservative” Novus Ordo liturgy. The category of “conservative” Catholicism as a kind of middle ground between “liberal” and “Traditionalist” was more or less created out of whole cloth by the political Culture Wars in North America.
But it also came out of the American culture’s devotion to consumer choice – the idea that where there is demand there must eventually be goods and services to fill it – mixed together with the old English jurisprudential idea of civil liberties, that a citizen or subject can do as he likes within the law. In the old world of continental Europe, by contrast, the populace, the lower order, gets what they’re given and learns to like it.[4]
In Italy – a nation that has been ruled by left-liberal socialism since at least the end of World War II – that mentality of the consumer culture does not exist in or out of the Church. Tourists from the US will especially notice the difference in shops and other businesses; the customer is decidedly not king here. Businesses don’t actually exist to provide goods and services; they exist to provide employment for one’s family, the provision of goods or services considered an unfortunate necessity to make the main goal happen. If this could be accomplished without all those annoying customers making demands, it certainly would be. The ubiquity of the market mentality in the US makes it difficult for people who live in that atmosphere to understand how omnipresent it is; until it’s not there anymore.
In this country it’s different. If there is a demand for a Traditional Mass, that demand has to be squashed by any means available – the Italian bishops reacted with violent opposition to Summorum Pontificum and have done everything possible to either ignore or undermine it to death[5]. And more recently, the bolder episcopal voices are starting to denounce it openly[6]. The idea that it would be a good thing to provide something to fill the demand, just because there’s a demand,will never cross the mind of any Italian bishop, “conservative” or otherwise.
No “conservatism” but plenty of “Cattocommunismo”
“In the last days of the illness, cared for and accompanied by family and many friends, I went to see him at home. As always he was happy and grateful for the meeting, serene and at times playful. In his room on one side the image of the Madonna, on the other side the window on the port. We could say the two presences of his life as a priest and as a man. Between these two poles he walked: love in Genoa, and love for the Holy Virgin, to the son Jesus, to the Gospel and to the Church.”
“Cardinal Bagnasco is a person too intelligent not to have calculated what the implicit consequences would have been in his decision. To celebrate the funeral of Fr. Gallo meant, first of all, to accept in advance an abusive liturgical scenario, more like a political-revolutionary demonstration than the sacrifice of Christ. And, punctually, came the verbal disputes addressed to the prelate by not a few people present: a prince of the church dragged into a worthless and avoidable uproar.“But there is something else. The archbishop who celebrates that funeral explicitly tells public opinion that, for the Catholic Church, Don Gallo represented a legitimate interpretation of the priesthood.“…On balance, the suspicion arises that at the funeral of Don Gallo the cardinal went, not despite the mass media, but precisely because of their presence.”
“We are sorry to inform that the archiepiscopal curia of Genoa has asked the priests responsible for the churches below to cancel the scheduled public reparation times. We therefore invite the faithful interested in making reparation to pray elsewhere, in spiritual communion.”
“What was intended to be an event of fight against discrimination, translated into a discriminatory event against the Christian people. Here is the need to repair what has been broken and to clean what has been soiled, which, from Jesus Christ onwards, constitutes the mission proper to the Church and to us Christians.… Dear brothers and sisters, the Christian style does not claim anything with pride. Rather, it is a style that continually seeks to conform to the austere message of Fatima: doing penance, praying, believing in the Gospel, converting. That of Fatima is a profoundly evangelical message; it is a message that invites us to live the Gospel; it is a message that urges us to follow Christ who is our salvation.”
Someone pull the handle, Catholicism has been pretty much flushed. It is a thin specter, and is anyone sure it can be revived. Too many evil interpretations, too much leeway given to too many, and now there is no core, only splinter groups. Hang on to Jesus. Hang on to Scripture. Hang on to Our Lady and the Rosary. The rest is vapor, waiting for someone to just blow it away.
ReplyDelete