TEN YEARS OF THE MOTU PROPRIO ECCLESIA DEI
A lecture given at the Ergife
Palace Hotel, Rome on Saturday 24th October 1998
By His Eminence Joseph Ratzinger.
(Translated by Fr. Ignatius Harrison, Brompton Oratory, London)
Ten years after the publication
of the Motu proprio "Ecclesia Dei", what sort of balance-sheet can one
draw-up? I think this is above all an occasion to show our gratitude and to give
thanks. The divers communities that were born thanks to this pontifical text
have given the Church a great number of priestly and religious vocations who,
zealously, joyfully and deeply united with the Pope, have given their service to
the Gospel in our present era of history. Through them, many of the faithful
have been confirmed in the joy of being able to live the liturgy, and confirmed
in their love for the Church, or perhaps they have rediscovered both. In many
dioceses - and their number is not so small! - they serve the Church in
collaboration with the Bishops and in fraternal union with those faithful who do
feel at home with the renewed form of the new liturgy. All this cannot but move
us to gratitude today!
However, it would not be realistic if we were to pass-over in silence those
things which are less good. In many places difficulties persist, and these
continue because some bishops, priests and faithful consider this attachment to
the old liturgy as an element of division which only disturbs the ecclesial
community and which gives rise to suspicions regarding an acceptance of the
Council made "with reservations", and more generally concerning
obedience towards the legitimate pastors of the Church.
We ought now to ask the following question: how can these difficulties be
overcome? How can one build the necessary trust so that these groups and
communities who love the ancient liturgy can be smoothly integrated into the
life of the Church?
But there is another question underlying the first: what is the deeper reason
for this distrust or even for this rejection of a continuation of the ancient
liturgical forms?
It is without doubt possible that, within this area, there exist reasons which
go further back than any theology and which have their origin in the character
of individuals or in the conflict between different personalities, or indeed a
number of other circumstances which are wholly extrinsic. But it is certain that
there are also other deeper reasons which explain these problems. The two
reasons which are most often heard, are: lack of obedience to the Council which
wanted the liturgical books reformed, and the break in unity which must
necessarily follow if different liturgical forms are left in use. It is
relatively simple to refute these two arguments on the theoretical level. The
Council did not itself reform the liturgical books, but it ordered their
revision, and to this end, it established certain fundamental rules. Before
anything else, the Council gave a definition of what liturgy is, and this
definition gives a valuable yardstick for every liturgical celebration. Were one
to shun these essential rules and put to one side the normae generales which one
finds in numbers 34 - 36 of the Constitution De Sacra Liturgia (SL), in
that case one would indeed be guilty of disobedience to the Council! It is in
the light of these criteria that liturgical celebrations must be evaluated,
whether they be according to the old books or the new. It is good to recall here
what Cardinal Newman observed, that the Church, throughout her history, has
never abolished nor forbidden orthodox liturgical forms, which would be quite
alien to the Spirit of the Church. An orthodox liturgy, that is to say, one
which express the true faith, is never a compilation made according to the
pragmatic criteria of different ceremonies, handled in a positivist and
arbitrary way, one way today and another way tomorrow. The orthodox forms of a
rite are living realities, born out of the dialogue of love between the Church
and her Lord. They are expressions of the life of the Church, in which are
distilled the faith, the prayer and the very life of whole generations, and
which make incarnate in specific forms both the action of God and the response
of man. Such rites can die, if those who have used them in a particular era
should disappear, or if the life-situation of those same people should change.
The authority of the Church has the power to define and limit the use of such
rites in different historical situations, but she never just purely and simply
forbids them! Thus the Council ordered a reform of the liturgical books, but it
did not prohibit the former books. The criterion which the Council established
is both much larger and more demanding; it invites us all to self-criticism! But
we will come back to this point.
We must now examine the other argument, which claims that the existence of the
two rites can damage unity. Here a distinction must be made between the
theological aspect and the practical aspect of the question. As regards what is
theoretical and basic, it must be stated that several forms of the Latin rite
have always existed, and were only slowly withdrawn, as a result of the coming
together of the different parts of Europe. Before the Council there existed side
by side with the Roman rite, the Ambrosian rite, the Mozarabic rite of Toledo,
the rite of Braga, the Carthusian rite, the Carmelite rite, and best known of
all, the Dominican rite, and perhaps still other rites of which I am not aware.
No one was ever scandalized that the Dominicans, often present in our parishes,
did not celebrate like diocesan priests but had their own rite. We did not have
any doubt that their rite was as Catholic as the Roman rite, and we were proud
of the richness inherent in these various traditions. Moreover, one must say
this: that the freedom which the new order of Mass gives to creativity is often
taken to excessive lengths. The difference between the liturgy according to the
new books, how it is actually practiced and celebrated in different places, is
often greater than the difference between an old Mass and a new Mass, when both
these are celebrated according to the prescribed liturgical books.
An average Christian without specialist liturgical formation would find it
difficult to distinguish between a Mass sung in Latin according to the old
Missal and a sung Latin Mass according to the new Missal. However, the
difference between a liturgy celebrated faithfully according to the Missal of
Paul VI and the reality of a vernacular liturgy celebrated with all the freedom
and creativity that are possible - that difference can be enormous!
With these considerations we have already crossed the threshold between theory
and practice, a point at which things naturally get more complicated, because
they concern relations between living people.
It seems to me that the dislikes we have mentioned are as great as they are
because the two forms of celebration are seen as indicating two different
spiritual attitudes, two different ways of perceiving the Church and the
Christian life. The reasons for this are many. The first is this: one judges the
two liturgical forms from their externals and thus one arrives at the following
conclusion: there are two fundamentally different attitudes. The average
Christian considers it essential for the renewed liturgy to be celebrated in the
vernacular and facing the people; that there be a great deal of freedom for
creativity; and that the laity exercise an active role therein. On the other
hand, it is considered essential for a celebration according to the old rite to
be in Latin, with the priest facing the altar, strictly and precisely according
to the rubrics, and that the faithful follow the Mass in private prayer with no
active role. From this viewpoint, a particular set of externals [phénoménologie]
is seen as essential to this or that liturgy, rather than what the liturgy
itself holds to be essential. We must hope for the day when the faithful will
appreciate the liturgy on the basis of visible concrete forms, and become
spiritually immersed in those forms; the faithful do not easily penetrate the
depths of the liturgy.
The contradictions and oppositions which we have just enumerated originate
neither from the spirit nor the letter of the conciliar texts. The actual
Constitution on the Liturgy does not speak at all about celebration facing the
altar or facing the people. On the subject of language, it says that Latin
should be retained, while giving a greater place to the vernacular "above
all in readings, instructions, and in a certain number of prayers and
chants" (SL 36:2). As regards the participation of the laity, the Council
first of all insists on a general point, that the liturgy is essentially the
concern of the whole Body of Christ, Head and members, and for this reason it
pertains to the whole Body of the Church "and that consequently it [the
liturgy] is destined to be celebrated in community with the active participation
of the faithful". And the text specifies "In liturgical celebrations
each person, minister or lay faithful, when fulfilling his role, should carry
out only and wholly that which pertains to him by virtue of the nature of the
rite and the liturgical norms"(SL 28). "To promote active
participation, acclamations by the people are favoured, responses, the chanting
of the psalms, antiphons, canticles, also actions or gestures and bodily
postures. One should also observe a period of sacred silence at an appropriate
time" (SL 30).
These are the directives of the Council; they can provide everybody with
material for reflection. Amongst a number of modern liturgists there is
unfortunately a tendency to develop the ideas of the Council in one direction
only. In acting thus, they end up reversing the intentions of the Council. The
role of the priest is reduced, by some, to that of a mere functionary. The fact
that the Body of Christ as a whole is the subject of the liturgy is often
deformed to the point where the local community becomes the self-sufficient
subject of the liturgy and itself distributes the liturgy's various roles. There
also exists a dangerous tendency to minimalize the sacrificial character of the
Mass, causing the mystery and the sacred to disappear, on the pretext, a pretext
that claims to be absolute, that in this way they make things better understood.
Finally, one observes the tendency to fragment the liturgy and to highlight in a
unilateral way its communitarian character, giving the assembly itself the power
to regulate the celebration.
Fortunately however, there is also a certain disenchantment with an all too
banal rationalism, and with the pragmatism of certain liturgists, whether they
be theorists or practitioners, and one can note a return to mystery, to
adoration and to the sacred, and to the cosmic and eschatological character of
the liturgy, as evidenced in the 1996 "Oxford Declaration on the
Liturgy". On the other hand, it must be admitted that the celebration of
the old liturgy had strayed too far into a private individualism, and that
communication between priest and people was insufficient. I have great respect
for our forefathers who at Low Mass said the "Prayers during Mass"
contained in their prayer books, but certainly one cannot consider that as the
ideal of liturgical celebration! Perhaps these reductionist forms of celebration
are the real reason that the disappearance of the old liturgical books was of no
importance in many countries and caused no sorrow. One was never in contact with
the liturgy itself. On the other hand, in those places where the Liturgical
Movement had created a certain love for the liturgy, where the Movement had
anticipated the essential ideas of the Council, such as for example, the
prayerful participation of all in the liturgical action, it was those places
where there was all the more distress when confronted with a liturgical reform
undertaken too hastily and often limited to externals. Where the Liturgical
Movement had never existed, the reform initially raised no problems. The
problems only appeared in a sporadic fashion, when unchecked creativity caused
the sense of the sacred mystery to disappear.
This is why it is very important to observe the essential criteria of the
Constitution on the Liturgy, which I quoted above, including when one celebrates
according to the old Missal! The moment when this liturgy truly touches the
faithful with its beauty and its richness, then it will be loved, then it will
no longer be irreconcilably opposed to the new Liturgy, providing that these
criteria are indeed applied as the Council wished.
Different spiritual and theological emphases will certainly continue to exist,
but there will no longer be two contradictory ways of being a Christian; there
will instead be that richness which pertains to the same single Catholic faith.
When, some years ago, somebody proposed "a new liturgical movement" in
order to avoid the two forms of the liturgy becoming too distanced from each
other, and in order to bring about their close convergence, at that time some of
the friends of the old liturgy expressed their fear that this would only be a
stratagem or a ruse, intended to eliminate the old liturgy finally and
completely.
Such anxieties and fears really must end! If the unity of faith and the oneness
of the mystery appear clearly within the two forms of celebration, that can only
be a reason for everybody to rejoice and to thank the good Lord. Inasmuch as we
all believe, live and act with these intentions, we shall also be able to
persuade the Bishops that the presence of the old liturgy does not disturb or
break the unity of their diocese, but is rather a gift destined to build-up the
Body of Christ, of which we are all the servants.
So, my dear friends, I would like to encourage you not to lose patience, to
maintain your confidence, and to draw from the liturgy the strength needed to
bear witness to the Lord in our own day.