Hopes for an agreement between the Vatican and the Priestly Society
of Saint Pius X (SSPX) were dashed after a meeting between
the prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF) and
Father Davide Pagliarani.
On Thursday, Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández and Fr. Pagliarani, the
superior general of the SSPX, met in Rome for what the Vatican’s media
chief, Matteo Bruni, had described on February 5 as “an opportunity for
an informal and personal dialogue.”
However, a communique released after the meeting
revealed that Fernández threatened Pagliarani and the SSPX with the
crime of “schism” if the episcopal consecrations announced by the
Society go ahead.
The
message noted that Fernández offered Pagliarani the initiation of a
dialogue on several contentious issues, including whether God willed the
plurality of religions, and the degree of the binding authority of the
documents of the Second Vatican Council.
However, this dialogue would
presuppose the suspension of the SSPX’s intention to create bishops
without papal sanction. According to the document:
It was reiterated by the Holy See that the ordination of
bishops without the mandate of the Holy Father, who holds supreme
ordinary power, which is full, universal, direct, and immediate, and
direct (cf. CDC, can. 331; Dogmatic Constitution Pastor aeternus, chaps.
I and III), would imply a decisive rupture of ecclesial communion
(schism) with grave consequences for the Fraternity as a whole (JOHN
PAUL II, Apostolic Letter Ecclesia Dei, July 2, 1988, nos. 3 and 5c; PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR 1 LEGISLATIVE TEXTS, Explanatory Note, August 24, 1996,
no. 1). Therefore, the possibility of carrying out this dialogue
presupposes that the Fraternity suspend the decision of the announced
episcopal ordinations.
The communique reported that Fernández had, after clarifying
theological points on which the SSPX and the DDF have disagreed,
proposed “a path of specifically theological dialogue, with a
well-defined methodology.”
He also “proposed to address a series of
issues listed by the FSSPX in a letter dated January 17, 2019.”
This dialogue would contain the carrot of a clear canonical status for the Society.
“The purpose of this process would be to highlight, among the issues
under discussion, the minimum requirements for full communion with the
Catholic Church and, consequently, to outline a canonical statute for
the Fraternity, along with other aspects to be further explored,” the
communique stated.
According to the DDF, Pagliarani will now “present the proposal to
his Council and give his response to the Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith.
In the event of a positive response, the steps, stages, and procedures to be followed will be established by mutual agreement.”
“The whole Church is asked to accompany this journey, especially in
the coming days, with prayer to the Holy Spirit. He is the principal
architect of the true ecclesial communion desired by Christ,” the
statement concluded.
This
morning’s meeting, proposed by Fernández, followed the Society’s
February 2 announcement that they would consecrate new bishops this July
1.
The late founder of the Society, Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre,
famously ordained four bishops without the permission of Pope John Paul
II on June 30, 1988. He took this step to ensure that Catholic
Tradition, as he and the SSPX understood it, would survive in the post
Vatican II-era Church.
Lefebvre, together with the new
bishops Bernard Fellay, Bernard Tissier de Mallerais, Richard
Williamson, and Alfonso de Galarreta, were subsequently declared
excommunicated latae sententiae by
the pope.
The excommunications of the four bishops were lifted by Pope
Benedict on January 21, 2009; Lefebvre had died on March 25, 1991. As of
today, only two of those prelates are still living: Fellay and De
Galaretta.
In its February 2 communique, the SSPX explained that Pagliarani had approached the Vatican on the subject of consecrating new bishops in August:
Last August, he sought the favour of
an audience with the Holy Father, making known his desire to present to
the Holy Father, in a filial manner, the current situation of the
Priestly Society of Saint Pius X.
In a second letter, he explicitly
expressed the particular need of the Society to ensure the continuation
of the ministry of its bishops, who have been travelling the world for
nearly 40 years to respond to the many faithful attached to the
Tradition of the Church and desirous, for the good of their souls, that
the sacraments of Holy Orders and Confirmation be conferred.
However, despite the support and encouragement the Society had been
offered by his late predecessor Francis, who had explicitly permitted
SSPX priests to hear confessions and officiate at weddings, Pope Leo
apparently did not give the Society permission to ordain new bishops.
As
the communique continues, Pagliarani decided to plan new episcopal
consecrations anyway:
After having long matured his reflection in prayer, and
having received from the Holy See, in recent days, a letter which does
not in any way respond to our requests, Father Pagliarani, in harmony
with the unanimous advice of his Council, judges that the objective
state of grave necessity in which souls find themselves requires such a
decision.
This clearly follows Lefebvre’s precedent, and the SSPX quoted their late founder in explaining Pagliarani’s rationale:
The Society [of Saint Pius X] is not
primarily seeking its own survival. It primarily seeks the good of the
Universal Church and, for this reason, the Society is, par excellence,
a work of the Church, which, with unique freedom and strength, responds
adequately to the specific needs of an unprecedentedly tragic era.
This single goal is still ours today, just as it
was 50 years ago. “That is why, without any spirit of rebellion,
bitterness, or resentment, we pursue our work of forming priests, with
the timeless Magisterium as our guide. We are persuaded that we can
render no greater service to the Holy Catholic Church, to the Sovereign
Pontiff and to posterity (Abp. Lefebvre, Declaration of 21 November 1974).”
It is yet unknown who the candidates for the SSPX’s planned episcopal consecrations are.