Dr Shaw rebuts the hit piece in the Fishwrap, which seems to be made of lies, slanders, and calumnies, with a generous portion of fiction from a sick and twisted imagination.
From LifeSiteNews
By Dr Joseph Shaw
November 6, 2019 (LifeSiteNews)
– A certain Zita Ballinger Fletcher, writing in the National ‘Catholic’
Reporter (a notoriously not-very-Catholic publication) has written
an unintentionally hilarious article attacking the traditional Mass. It
alternates between statements of the obvious, presented as though they
were horrifying revelations — the Latin Mass is said in Latin! The
priest celebrates facing away from the people! — with bizarre non
sequiturs: this form of the Mass is sexist, oppressive, and clericalist.
And worst of all, people aren’t allowed to wear red.
Fletcher is worried about division in the Church — at least, this is
presumably the point of talking about the Latin Mass creating ‘sects’ —
but it is she, not Catholics attached to the ancient liturgical
tradition, who is causing divisions with this article. Her embittered
and rather personal attack contrasts very much with the attitude of her
victims. Traditional Catholics do not fill their leisure hours attacking
the character of Catholics who attend the ‘Ordinary Form’. They
commonly share churches and parishes with them, nearly always as the
junior partner, and want nothing but to live in peace and charity. We
can have theological discussions without thinking our opponents are bad
people, but this is a trick Fletcher doesn’t seem to have mastered.
Although the article is itself absurd in many ways, the link Fletcher
strives to establish between the traditional Latin Mass and clericalism
is a familiar enough theme to warrant a response. I leave aside the
question of sexism, which seems more an angry accusation against the
women who attend the traditional Mass than against the men. Fletcher
seems scared of the ladies wearing veils in church and writes of a
female friend: ‘I still don’t understand why she wanted to associate
with that group, or why she decided to give in to oppression.’ Shrieking
at women that they are self-hating misogynists is a really bad look.
Fletcher does not actually explain the connection between the ancient
Latin Mass and clericalism; it seems to come down to an association of
ideas. The priest wears nice vestments, he has his back to the people,
he prays in Latin, and — whoosh! — he has somehow acquired power. This
liturgy ‘places all power in the hands of the priest’; it is used to
‘wield control over believers’. Is it a magic spell? It certainly sounds
like it. The altar rail, Fletcher tells us, is ‘a barrier that gives
him privileges’. How does it do that? Like a magic wand?
At one point she writes that ‘the priest is at the centre of the
spectacle’. Perhaps this is how she thinks it works. But isn’t the
priest at the centre of any celebration of Mass? It has often been
pointed out that the fact that, after the liturgical reform, the priest
can look at the people and engage with them, with eye-contact, ex tempore
prayers, and informal asides, means that the Ordinary Form is far more
affected by the personality of the priest than the Extraordinary Form.
Pope Benedict made this point about the celebration of Mass facing the
people in his The Spirit of the Liturgy. The temptation for a
priest who has personal charisma to use that to draw people in can be
powerful in the context of the Novus Ordo. This is problematic because
the priest’s personality can obscure the message of the liturgy itself.
It could even, in extreme cases, be part of a personality cult. A priest
who celebrates anonymously, using only the words of the liturgy, facing
away from the congregation, and wearing formal vestments that any other
priest in the parish might wear is in less danger here.
Many of Fletcher’s claims are comical. She says that when they
receive Holy Communion, the people kneel at the priest’s feet. To whom,
then, does the priest kneel when he genuflects before so much as picking
up the Consecrated Host in the Traditional Mass? To whom, again, does
he make repeated confession of his sinfulness, a far more prominent
feature of the older Mass than of the newer? It is not a human being who
is worshipped in the Mass, but God.
Even her observation about people kneeling at Mass is bizarre. She
asserts, with apparent horror, ‘all the people inside the church are
expected to kneel on cue at various points’. Are there not rubrics for
the laity in the Ordinary Form? As a matter of fact, these are more
formalised and demanding than those in the Traditional Mass, which are
no more than local customs. People are far more likely to find
themselves being corralled into actions with which they are not entirely
comfortable, whether it be shaking hands with an overly friendly neighbour or going up to Communion, at the Ordinary Form.
And what is this about not being allowed to wear red at Mass? I
confess I am completely baffled. The most charitable interpretation I
can give is that with this Fletcher has, as with so many things, got the
wrong end of the stick, but of what could have been the source of this
particular misconception I have no idea.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments are subject to deletion if they are not germane. I have no problem with a bit of colourful language, but blasphemy or depraved profanity will not be allowed. Attacks on the Catholic Faith will not be tolerated. Comments will be deleted that are republican (Yanks! Note the lower case 'r'!), attacks on the legitimacy of Pope Francis as the Vicar of Christ (I know he's a material heretic and a Protector of Perverts, and I definitely want him gone yesterday! However, he is Pope, and I pray for him every day.), the legitimacy of the House of Windsor or of the claims of the Elder Line of the House of France, or attacks on the legitimacy of any of the currently ruling Houses of Europe.