You should reread chonak's earlier response, quoted here for convenience.Chonak offers evidence that attending an SSPX mass will fulfill one's Sunday obligation but that one should not make a regular practice of doing so. How is this different from attending an Orthodox mass in an emergency, but not as a regular practice? Both have valid orders. Both, being separated brethren, are in the same relationship with Rome.
Now, I know of instances where Orthodox and other Eastern schismatics are allowed to celebrate Liturgies in Catholic churches on a regular basis, but these are in no way presented as being Catholic services. They are not authorized to hear the confessions of Catholics, to officiate at the marriages of Catholics without a dispensation, or to adjudicate matters of Catholic canon law. Catholics can be present at non-Catholic worship with good reason but may not participate. This is divine law, not some arbitrary Church rule. Rome has acknowledged that Catholics may not only participate in SSPX Masses but even go to Communion.Are you unaware of the measures taken in recent years by the Church to give authorization to the SSPX for certain types of ministry? They are now authorized by Pope Francis to hear confessions; they are authorized to conduct weddings; in a few rare dioceses, SSPX priests have been invited by bishops to celebrate Mass publicly on a regular basis; and the superior of the SSPX has been appointed by the Pope to act as an ecclesiastical judge in certain cases.
So now we're in a period of gradual reconciliation and gradual authorization of SSPX ministry. There is no benefit in pretending that relations are still at their worst, as in 1989.
...I really hate the rancor this forum can degenerate into...
Indeed it is. The key concerns of the SSPX are modernism, religious liberty, ecumenism, collegiality, and liturgical abuses. Note that liturgy is last on the list. Is this a case of "last but not least," or are the concerns listed in order of importance? You decide.And now I have checked the SSPX website and that list is more or less still there. https://sspx.org/en/about/major-concern
Some of those who put themselves forward as great defenders of the Council also need to be reminded that Vatican II embraces the entire doctrinal history of the Church. Anyone who wishes to be obedient to the Council has to accept the faith professed over the centuries, and cannot sever the roots from which the tree draws its life.
I'm not promoting silent prayer during Mass any more than I would suggest that the EF requires "participation" (whatever that may mean for a given individual). I AM suggesting that the Faith provides for both Marthas and Marys.
The fresco was laid bare by the Liturgical Movement and, in a definitive way, by the Second Vatican Council. For a moment its colors and figures fascinated us.
From the time of Pius V's codification of the Latin Mass onwards (until the coming of the NOM, of course), Every. Single. Change. to the Roman Missal was spelled out on a page at the very front of every. single. printing.
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