Congratulating them on their 25th anniversary, Pope Francis has
expressed his appreciation for the devotion to the Bishop of Rome
exhibited by the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter.
“It was in a moment of great trial for the Church that the Priestly
Fraternity of Saint Peter was born,” read an Oct. 28 letter from
Archbishop Luigi Ventura, apostolic nuncio to France, to Fr. Vincent
Ribeton, French district superior of the fraternity.
“The Holy Father encourages them to pursue their mission of
reconciliation among all the faithful, whatever may be their
sensibility, and this to work so that all welcome one another in the
profession of the same faith and the bond of an intense fraternal
charity.”
The letter, translated into English at Rorate Caeli, opened by stating
that “Pope Francis joins the thanksgiving of her members for the work
accomplished in this quarter-century spent at the service of ecclesial
communion 'with Peter and under Peter'.”
“In a great spirit of obedience and hope, her founders turned with
confidence to the Successor of Peter so as to offer the faithful
attached to the Missal of 1962 the possibility of living their faith in
the full communion of the Church.”
The Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter was founded in 1988 by 12 priests
of the Society of St. Pius X.
The founders left the Society of St. Pius
X to establish the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter after the society's
leader, Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, consecrated four bishops without
the permission of Blessed John Paul II.
The Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter forms priests for the use of the
extraordinary form of the Roman Rite, and having formed them, deploys
priests in parishes for the service of the Church.
The letter from Archbishop Ventura continued, noting the importance of the FSSP in the work of the Second Vatican Council.
“By the celebration of the sacred Mysteries according to the
extraordinary form of the Roman Rite and by the orientations of the
Constitution on the Liturgy Sacrosanctum Concilium, as well as by
passing on the apostolic faith as it is presented in the Catechism of
the Catholic Church, may they contribute, in fidelity to the living
Tradition of the Church, to a better comprehension and implementation of
the Second Vatican Council.”
The nuncio noted that Pope Francis “exhorts them, according to their own
charism, to take an active part in the mission of the Church in the
world of today through the testimony of a holy life, a firm faith, and
an inventive and generous charity.”
The letter concluded by noting that Pope Francis granted “with an open
heart” an apostolic blessing upon pilgrims who visited Lourdes or St.
Sulpice parish in Paris for the fraternity's 25th anniversary.