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Liturgical
Shipwreck
by
Michael
Davies
Part 8
The respect that we all owe to the
Vicar of
Christ cannot obscure the fact that the renewal he is describing here
is
a fantasy. When the Pope comments on a matter of fact, his words either
correspond to reality or they do not, and in this case they most
certainly
do not. Far from the vast majority of Catholics welcoming the reform
with
"joyful fervor," the vast majority of the faithful throughout the West
no longer assist at Mass at all. Those who were not assisting at Mass
before
the Council have not been brought back, and in country after country
many,
sometimes most, of those who were assisting before the Council no
longer
do so. In countries such as France and Holland, the percentage of
Catholics
at Mass each Sunday has declined to a single figure. In the U.S.A.
attendance
has declined from 71 % in 1963 to 25 % in 1993, a decline of 65 %. 36
If we consider this decline in terms of souls rather than bare
statistics,
it means that twenty-four million fewer Catholics in the U.S. attend
Mass
now than was the case before the Council. During that period there has
been a huge increase in the Catholic population of the United States,
and
so the picture is far worse than appears to be the case from these bare
statistics. The March, 1994 issue of the excellent Australian Catholic
journal, A.D. 2000, examines the manner in which a detailed
survey
of Mass attendance in the diocese of Townsville reflects the overall
picture
of a collapse of Catholic practice on that continent. The official
survey
examined in the article was actually entitled "Where have all the
people
gone." It reveals a figure of only 12% in 1993, which is likely to
decline
to about 6 % by the year 2000. Commenting on the survey, the A.D. 2000
columnist remarked:
Nowhere
in the document is there any hint that the "reforming" policies pursued
over the past 20 years in liturgy, religious education, seminary and
religious
life, biblical studies and moral teaching might be contributors to the
disaster represented by the Mass attendance statistics . . . Just how
much
further Mass attendances must decline in Townsville and elsewhere
before
botched reforms are halted and admissions of failure [are] forthcoming
is not yet clear, but we should not hold our breath.
Is
the Holy Father
correct
in suggesting that we should indeed give thanks to God for what he
terms
a movement of the Holy Spirit, but which A.D. 2000 correctly
terms
a disaster? Facts cannot be loyal or disloyal, and the facts
concerning
the collapse in Mass attendance are, alas, only too true! The
reform
was supposed to be of particular benefit to the young, but in Britain
nine
out of ten young high school Catholics who have been nourished by the
so-called
liturgical renewal have lapsed from the Faith before leaving school,
and
I am sure that the same dismal story is true of other countries. This
is
hardly an indication of radiant vitality. It would be interesting to
learn
precisely where these radiantly vital communities are located-----certainly
not in the Pope's own diocese of Rome, where less than eight
percent
of the faithful set foot in church on Sunday! Far from "the whole
of
humanity being called into the household of the Church;' as the Liturgy
Constitution expected, millions of Catholics are leaving the household
of the Church for heretical sects. In Brazil, for example, the country
with the world's largest Catholic population, there are now more
Protestants
worshiping in their chapels each Sunday than there are Catholics
assisting
at the allegedly radiantly vital new liturgy, which hardly indicates
joyful
fervor on the part of the Catholic faithful in Brazil, who are leaving
the Church for Protestant sects by the millions.
The only factually
accurate statement
in the Holy Father's praise of the reform is his quotation from the
final
report of the 1985 Synod of Bishops that "the liturgical reform is the
most visible fruit of the whole work of the Council." The liturgical revolution,
not "reform," has indeed been the most visible fruit of the Council, and
it has been a bad fruit, an effort that has failed disastrously----a
liturgical shipwreck-----to the detriment of
many
millions of souls!
"By their fruits you shall know them"-----Afructibus
eorum cognoscetis eos. "Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of
thistles? Even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit, and the
evil
tree bringeth forth evil fruit. A good tree cannot bring forth evil
fruit,
neither can an evil tree bring forth good fruit." [Matt. 7: 16-18]. The
assessment of the liturgical reform made by Msgr. Klaus Gamber is
radically
incompatible with that of the Holy Father, but does not the experience
of each of us in the past twenty- five disastrous years make it
impossible
to deny that Msgr. Gamber is right and the Pope is wrong? It is a
perverted
concept of loyalty, to which no Catholic is compelled to adhere, that
would
make us deny that we see what we see, hear what we hear and suffer what
we suffer. Msgr. Gamber insists, and correctly so, that what we have
experienced
is not a renewal but a debacle-----one that
worsens
with each passing year. He writes,
The
liturgical
reform, welcomed with so much idealism and hope by so many priests and
lay people alike, has turned out to be a liturgical destruction of
startling
proportions-----a debacle worsening with each
passing
year. Instead of the hoped-for renewal of the Church and of Catholic
life,
we are now witnessing a dismantling of the traditional values and piety
on which our faith rests. Instead of the fruitful renewal of the
liturgy,
what we see is a destruction of the forms of the Mass which had
developed
organically during the course of many centuries. 37
www.catholictradition.org/Eucharist/shipwreck8.htm
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