A guy who goes by the nickname "SPB" read my paper, Syllabus of 60 "Traditionalist" Errors, Fallacies, and False Principles (written in 2000) and wrote the following in a thread devoted to me:
Syllabus of Errors for Traditionalists - 60 errors! I must say, there are some things here, many things, I do agree with. Others seem to be laughable and outright fallacies. Others again I am on the fence about, and others I agree with one sentence and the next I disagree. Overall, this man has done a huge amount of work - not only in this whole document but also in other areas. I will post the page he has dedicated to trads. He basically has around 40 essays dedicated to the traditionalists.
One thing I do find... odd, I guess, is that he constantly berates traditionalists for using "rhetoric" by calling themselves traditionalists... and then he goes on to constantly point out that he is a positively "orthodox" Catholic. Oh, and prepare yourself for a few straw-men and red-herrings along the way; the most prominent being the accusation that no traditionalists have ever pointed out any examples of the difficulties they have trouble with, and only moan about things [though, I take this to be half true, as I also tend to agree that most trads that aren't scholars/clergy moan a lot].
I found this interesting, and it has given me a lot to think about. Overall, I found myself to be more and more sure that I personally must disengage with these arguments. Some are called to the fight, as it were. I believe such people are the clergy and lay theologians. Not me. I found this and I thanked God after reading it. I am not at all qualified enough, or in any position, to start talking about most of these things. Which is not to say I don't hold some of the same positions that I have always held.
First of all, most of my criticisms are directed towards what I would call "radtrads": not all self-described Catholic traditionalists. For clarification's sake, anyone wondering about my own general position should read the lengthy disclaimers and explanations at the top of my web page, Radical (Barely Catholic) "Traditionalism".
Secondly, SPB wrote:
. . . he goes on to constantly point out that he is a positively "orthodox" Catholic.
This must be understood in context. I don't habitually call myself an "orthodox Catholic." I only do so in order to clarify, when I am being classified as a "conservative" or "Novus Ordo Catholic" or (far worse) a "neo-Catholic." When that happens, I make the point that we shouldn't need to have to use qualifiers like "traditionalist" or "conservative": that the only useful qualifier is "orthodox": in order to show that there is a "correct belief" in Catholicism and heretical, dissident ones. Thus, if I call myself an "orthodox Catholic" I am saying that I fully, wholeheartedly accept all that the Church teaches. I laid out my opinion on this in detail, in a 2005 paper:
I am content to simply call both you and myself "Catholic." If I must make distinctions due to liberal or far-right rot in the Church, then I use the qualifier "orthodox" as well, to indicate that I accept all the teachings of the Catholic Church. You and others want to call yourselves "traditionalists."
Well, there is a right and wrong usage of that term. If one accepts notions that go contrary to orthodox Catholicism, and uses the term, I must object, because "Tradition" is a good Catholic word which must not be trifled with (and those who reject some of it ought not to be allowed to co-opt the term to themselves as if they actually exemplify a particular devotion to "tradition" as they themselves define it). Even if you are orthodox, but insist on using the term, then it must be because it is being used to distinguish yourself from the likes of me, who has supposedly somehow become simultaneously "liberal" and "orthodox" (by the application of the silly term "neo-Catholic").
So it is still attempting to create division in the Church and separate Catholic believers into a superior-subordinate relationship, with the "traditionalists" being the ones who "get it" and the "neo-Catholics" being dupes and fellow travelers of their liberal overlords in the lower hierarchies of the Church. Either way, it stinks to high heaven.
SPB's view was not the majority feeling in the thread (to put it mildly, and with a big smile on my face!). The first reaction (by "CollegeCatholic") was (I edited out the worst of it, as we are in "mixed company"):
Absolutely useless and a waste of my time. . . . let's just all pray alongside heretics like St. Pope John Paul the Great the Beloved and the Bestest Ever did.
SPB replied:
I apologize for wasting your time. I only post what I myself find interesting, I can't cover everybody else unfortunately. I also post what I hope will help people become better Catholics in some way or another. This has helped me. I am sorry it didn't do the same for you! . . . I know that he's got a soft spot for Blessed JP II, and this is evident in his writing, but look past your clear dislike for Bl. JPII and his supporters and pay attention to what he says. To brush him off because he liked Bl. JP II is just as fallacious as some of the arguments he gives. He brushes you off for hero worship of Archbishop Lefebvre.. and you brush him off for hero worship of Bl. JPII! Stalemate. In any case, what I take from that paragraph I have always held to be true: that among trads there is a cult of personality, and hero worship of Archbishop Lefebvre. This is only my observation, but I see it a lot, and it mirrors a lot of what trads accuse neocons of doing.
If the things he says do nothing for you, give you nothing to ponder over, that is perfectly fine. God bless you on your way.
Someone else ("CrusaderKing") wrote:
Armstrong . . . usually gives the same old worn out, tired canards that the neo Caths are noted for. I wish I'd have saved on my Notepad the exchange between him and [Name], who used to blog under the name of [nickname], as [Name] schooled him big time, albeit politely.
I had a great discussion with the person above, whose name I removed, because he asked me to remove his name from our discussions, for important personal reasons. It was a five-part discussion (one / two / three / four / five). Make up your own mind who gave a better case. But we got along fine, as I do with most "traditionalists" who are not radtrads, and who are able to discuss issues calmly and rationally without name-calling and hyper-rhetoric. It is quite possible. But this is assuredly not the case with almost all radtrads.
"TrentCath" goes after one of my 60 points:
53. That ecumenism undermines, and is contrary to, evangelism and apologetics.
It does not at all - the two goals being distinct and complementary endeavors, not contradictory ones. I rejoice in the truths which I share with my Protestant or Orthodox brothers and sisters in Christ; at the same time, I try my best to convince them that the Catholic Church is the fullness of the faith. John Paul II operates from the same presuppositions.
Pope John Paul II also agrees with kissing the Koran, allowing altars to have budhhas on them, praying with false religions and allowing others to pray to false Gods in a city dedicated to the one true God and a whole host of other heterodox ideas, I suppose he would suggest that we agree and do all this too? Aside from 'Pope John Paul II does it so it must be right' he doesn't even attempt to provide another argument, its almost a relief as it would most likely have been as absurd as what we see coming from Rome as regards the dialogue with the SSPX.
This paper was written in 2000. It doesn't represent my final or most elaborated-upon opinion on everything. Brief points were obviously neither encyclopedic nor comprehensive in nature. I have an entire web page about ecumenism (that was present in 2000 on my website). On that page I have two papers about the Assisi conferences (one / two). I also have two lengthy treatments of the Koran-kissing incident (one / two).
TrentCath continues, caricaturing my expressed opinions, then giving his own:
I agree there's a crisis and its due to a modernism but everything's going to be alright... so I don't have to do anything . . . thanks be to God that we can actually see what is going on rather than obstinately denying it.
I guess that's why I have a web page about theological liberalism, too, and half of one of my books devoted to it. Odd, if in fact I am supposedly denying the modernist crisis. I am so far from denying it, that I wrote in my #13: the very one being commented on here:
I have "justified" no such thing. I have ignored nothing, either. My own opinion (directly influenced by Fr. John Hardon -- who has insanely been called a "modernist" by "traditionalist" friends of mine) is that the present crisis is the most serious the Church has ever faced, per Pope St. Pius X's summation of the evils of modernism.
But because I refuse to descend to despair, and remain optimistic that God is in control of His Church, and have a firm belief in its indefectibility because of God's supervision, I get accused of "obstinately denying" modernism. This is the pathetic radtrad mentality. Then this character who goes by "The Dying Flutchman" (heaven forbid anyone use a real name!) wrote:
I know many Novus Ordo Catholics that have made JPII the 4th member of the trinity despite the fact he was probably the worst pope of the last 200 years. . . . it was hard not to come to the conclusion that the Church after the late 60's professed a different religion than the one of the late 1950's.
What's wrong with this person's faith in God? It's just like the anti-Catholics. Instead of the Church dying with Constantine or Pope Gregory the Great or with the Inquisition or Trent (all equally arbitrary and historically and doctrinally absurd dividing-points), instead it was taken out by the devil in the late 60s. "Vincentius" then gives us his pearls of wisdom:
Like most new Evangelical converts to the Catholic faith, Armstrong is anti-traditionalist, and ranks along with the most prominent one, Mark Shea and a slew of others who have brought along their baggage of protestantism along with them as they crossed the Tiber.
"Spooky" adds the profundity: ". . . it appeals to their Protestant leanings with a sheer veil of Catholicism."
Right. This is the tired old canard of "converts are still half-Protestant." I've directly dealt with this absurd charge at least twice (one / two). Isn't it interesting that this false accusation invariably comes from one of two sources: radtrads and anti-Catholic Protestants. It's completely ridiculous to assert this, seeing that I am utterly despised by anti-Catholic Protestants and am regularly insulted in public by them, with every conceivable calumny and lie. I get accused now and then of being "anti-Calvinist" and "anti-Lutheran" and "anti-Protestant."
I have extensive web pages (containing many hundreds of papers) critiquing and disagreeing with Calvin, Calvinism, Luther, Lutheranism, Anti-Catholic Protestantism, Contra-Catholicism, and Protestant historical intolerance and persecution. I have written books critiquing Luther and Calvin and Protestantism generally. I have written two books (one / two) against sola Scriptura: one of the two "pillars" of the so-called "Reformation," and another mostly devoted to refuting "faith alone": the other pillar.
All this, yet I am accused of being in bed with Protestantism and remaining half or more Protestant (as if my conversion story is a big pack of lies). I have critiqued Protestantism and helped bring more people out of it than, I highly suspect, all of these loudmouthed critics of mine put together. I receive letters all the time reporting conversions and reversions, largely or partially as a result of my writings.
[Later added note: I am now being unfairly blasted about the above paragraph in a second thread devoted to me, mentioned in the combox below. The gist of it is that I am supposedly full of myself, filled to the brim with spiritual pride, and so woefully ignorant that I don't understand that it is God Who gives the increase and brings about conversions and not the bearer of the message. Examples:
I find it interesting how he makes a point of boasting about how many people he's converted (exact wording, I don't remember). Seems like a rather big ego to me.
Last time I checked it's God who converts the sinner, not men. Men are just His instruments. Armstrong might want to re-check the gospel.
It's not a Catholic thing to take credit nor a tally of "wins" as Ned Flanders from the Simpsons would describe it. Catholicism is not the standard, the testimony of untested Protestants and converts both for and against Dave's writings on the Church. You don't prove your Catholicism with yourself as the standard.
I converted from protestantism and was led by the Holy Spirit and nothing else.
This, of all the charges leveled against me in these threads, is perhaps 1) the most ridiculous of all, and 2) the one most easy to disprove from any rudimentary search of my writings. Here is just one example of what I am sure is many dozens that could be found:
For all these reasons I don't get weary, because I'm not trying to convert the world. Technically, I'm not trying to convert anyone personally, through my own efforts. I'm simply passing along the reasons I have come to believe, for why Catholicism is the fullness of Christian truth. If that helps someone else, great, but their (possible) conversion is not ultimately my responsibility at all. It is the Holy Spirit's and their own. I'm just trying to be a good steward of the gifts that God has given me; to play my role in the whole process, which is an extraordinary privilege: to be able to be used by God in any way whatsoever. I believe everyone has a vocation from God (including every occupation in the world); this is mine.
If someone compliments me for helping them become a Catholic, I'll accept it and say "thanks" but then I always try to remember to say "all glory to God" and "it's all by His grace." I absolutely believe those things. It all goes back to God. All of us are mere leaky vessels and greatly flawed messengers at best. But God uses us poor miserable sinners for His purposes, which is the amazing thing.
(Q & A on Catholic Apologetics: Why I Do What I Do {As My Vocation}, 2-25-09)
The fact is that I am constantly; constantly giving all glory to God, for any conversions or success of my writings. Anyone who follows my writing at all (here or on Facebook or in my books) knows this. Here I happened to not mention the thing I have a million and a half times. But nothing here "proves" that I don't believe it. Note also that I did qualify my remarks. I wrote that I "helped bring more people out" of Protestantism. Nothing wrong with that at all. I did participate. It's a true statement. I didn't claim it was just me or some such ludicrous thing; as if I were the sole cause, but rather, that it was "largely or partially as a result of my writings".
So, for example, if someone writes to me (as many have), saying that my writings were the main reason they became persuaded of Catholicism (just as Cardinal Newman's writings were in my own case, and one particular friend of mine whom God used to help convert me), that is a true description of a factual occurrence. It doesn't follow at all that either they or I are denying that God was the primary cause. I was the instrument God used (as one critic pointed out: as if I don't know that already).
The Bible (that these people claim I am ignorant of in this regard) even says that we are God's "co-workers": "we are God's fellow workers" (1 Cor 3:9: RSV); "I worked harder than any of them, though it was not I, but the grace of God which is with me" (1 Cor 15:10; cf. Rom 15:17-18); "be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that in the Lord your labor is not in vain" (1 Cor 15:58); "Working together with him"(2 Cor 6:1; cf. Eph 2:10; Phil 2:12-13).
Moreover, the Bible (usually St. Paul) uses the language of people "making converts" with the implicit background understanding that it is working with God (per the above examples). It's not necessary to mention God every time: "I magnify my ministry in order to make my fellow Jews jealous, and thus save some of them" (Rom 11:13-14); "Wife, how do you know whether you will save your husband? Husband, how do you know whether you will save your wife?" (1 Cor 7:16); "I have become all things to all men, that I might by all means save some" (1 Cor 9:22); "by so doing you will save both yourself and your hearers" (1 Tim 4:16); "I endure everything for the sake of the elect, that they also may obtain salvation" (2 Tim 2:10); "whoever brings back a sinner from the error of his way will save his soul from death" (Jas 5:20); "that some, though they do not obey the word, may be won without a word by the behavior of their wives" (1 Pet 3:1).
All this being the case, I have written nothing whatsoever that is improper or scandalous or denying any glory to God. The point in context (that I made very clear, above) was that I am being accused of being compromised with Protestantism. Thus I turned the tables and noted that I am helping to cause Protestants to become Catholics by the scores. Why would that be if I am supposedly so compromised with it? Is it even plausible? Of course it is not at all. This is a completely relevant point and refutation of the charge (among many). That was the context. And the point has not been overthrown by this ludicrous false accusation that I allegedly think I am bringing any of that about apart from God, on my own, in some idiotic spiritually prideful sense.
To close this note, here is an actual response I made exactly a week ago to someone who sent me a private message in Facebook. He was an Episcopalian who became a Catholic in 2004. He wrote to encourage my work, and said that during his conversion process, my "website was the first place I normally went for answers." My reply was altogether typical of how I answer letters like this: "Thank you very much for your warm, kind letter. Praise God that He chose to use this poor sinner to help you on your journey a bit. . . . I appreciate the encouragement and may God abundantly bless you!" That is my spirit. I try to give glory to God at every turn, even if someone compliments me.]
These quasi-schismatic radtrads and SSPX devotees, on the other hand, spend their time (many of them, but not all) bashing Holy Mother Church and popes (precisely as both anti-Catholic Protestants and liberal Catholics do: groups that radtrads highly resemble in many key ways), while I defend her and critique the errors and sins of her professed enemies. Radtrads and self-important "more-Catholic-and-reverent-than-thou" self-proclaimed pseudo-experts don't have time to defend the Church against calumnies, while I devote my life to it. The contrast couldn't be any more stark than it is.
Nor am I "anti-traditionalist." I am anti-radtrad. I attend an extremely traditional (and beautiful German Gothic revival) parish in downtown Detroit (St. Joseph's), where the liturgy is very reverent and the doctrine completely orthodox. Our cluster is one of the few in metro Detroit that offer the Tridentine Mass, and I have attended it on several occasions, though (gasp!!!) I dare to prefer the Novus Ordo Latin Mass.
"INPEFESS" chimed in with more ludicrosities in the "Bash Armstrong and Neo-Catholics" thread:
They act as though there was no Catholic Church before the council, or that the Catholic Church began in the 1960's. If you ever listen to EWTN or read any post-conciliar authors, they almost exclusively reference the Second Vatican Council and the post-conciliar popes: "as the Second Vatican Council taught . . .;" "as Blessed John Paul II once said . . .;" "as Mother Theresa [sic] used to say . . ."
It's as though the entire 2000-year history of the Catholic Church simply disappeared.
I don't know who the intended target of this nonsense is (though the thread is about yours truly, after all). It's certainly not an accurate description of me, seeing as I have web pages about the Church fathers, G. K. Chesterton, Blessed John Henry Cardinal Newman, and in the past hosted web pages (for several years) devoted to St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Augustine and Medieval and Renaissance Culture. I have edited a book of Chesterton quotations (he died in 1936), and will soon have one published of Cardinal Newman quotations (he died in 1890). I wrote a book devoted to the Church fathers as well. Currently I am working on editing a book called Classic Catholic Biblical Apologetics: 1525-1925: my fourth volume where I have collected materials of great Catholics: all of whom lived prior to 1936. It really sounds like I am exclusively stuck in the post-Vatican II era, doesn't it?
Some things never change. You can't successfully defend falsehood by lying about or severely distorting what others believe (nor by any other method). This thread provided lots of unsubstantiated rhetoric and polemics and calumnies. I respond with facts and true Catholic principles and activities and beliefs.
If these folks wanna throw more mud and raise a big ruckus, let them. I can't stop them. Back to your regularly scheduled program and back to my work. The harvest is ready; the laborers are few (we Christians -- even us Catholics, sadly -- are too busy name-calling and fighting each other to care about the souls on the way to hell).
* * *




40 comments:
I know many Novus Ordo Catholics that have made JPII the 4th member of the trinity despite the fact he was probably the worst pope of the last 200 years. . .
Most "NO" Catholics I know regard him as a mixed bag. I happen to think his beatification a bit too speedy but tolerable, but at least the booze has worn off and I haven't really seen any serious John Paul the Great stuff any more.
Even if they did do this (which of course they did not), that's a heck of a lot better than making yourself the 4th member of the Trinity, or the pope . . .
It is unfair to use a single thread and a few posters posts on that thread to say anything about an entire forum.
The blog of Fisheaters has a post called The Errors of Traditional Catholics in fact. Why make a big deal out of a forum having typical forum behaviour?
It doesn't make much sense to categorize a forum as having a "feeding frenzy" and "despising" anything rather than it just being another thread on which some people made comments. The majority of the people on that forum seem concerned with living their own lives in the Church and will obviously be resistant to any perceived attack on what they have found to be spiritually wholesome. The people on that thread, called out in this blog post, are just ordinary people who have families, jobs, and such who sometimes have conversations on a forum. Singularly immortalizing their posts on a public blog post like this is a bit unfair. Yes, forum threads are public, but they are passing. The blog post they were discussing was perceived as an attack and people discussed it for a while.
Thanks for the mention, the only reason I didn't go through all 60 points (though I did read them) was because they simply weren't worth the time. I did however criticise three or four of your points, not just one.
Anyway thanks for the mention!
Have to say your invention of the term RadTrad is pretty amusing, if you knew much about the traditionalist community you'd know that sedes are RadTrads and no one on that forum said anything 'radical', they mostly just expressed the common traditionalist opinions.
Hi Dave, I appreciate some of your books, such as one on the Biblical bases for Catholicism. This is a valuable book.
I'd like to point you to another valuable book. It's new. Here:
http://www.philotheapress.com/store/work-of-human-hands/
I point you to this book because I notice on your site that you characterize one's decision to assist at a Novus Ordo or a traditional Mass as a matter of preference. Unfortunately, this indicates that you're indeed tainted by the Modernist infection. Go to that page, scroll down, and read the provided excerpts to better understand this charge.
Pax Domini sit semper vobiscum.
On a related note, I would also urge you watch this most excellent series of new videos:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JdfUm_c8gCs&context=C3bbe833ADOEgsToPDskJQoLFm2a4lTyADQwrp-iPR
Also, Dave, I want to let you know that on multiple occasions I too have been a victim of that forum owner's arbitrary cruelty. The lacerations I've received from her unhinged tyranny are too traumatizing for me to recount to you here, but the fact of my brutalization remains.
Have to say your invention of the term RadTrad is pretty amusing . . .
Thanks for the compliment. But I must reveal to the world that I didn't invent the term myself. It's been in use for some time now . . .
I'm about as modernist as I am the man in the moon, Alphonsus.
As to you being abused on a forum, I'm sorry to hear that. Unfortunately, this is extremely common. I completely gave up on Internet forums over eight years ago, and announced it on my website, giving detailed reasons why:
http://socrates58.blogspot.com/2006/06/why-i-am-fed-up-with-internet.html
I have a very strong aversion to wasting my time. That's not to say that I think all Internet discussion boards are utterly worthless or that no good discussion ever ever takes place on them, but it was sufficiently wearisome and obnoxious to me after seven long years of experience, for me to decide that the negatives far outweighed the positives, so that I concluded that it was a futile, unjustifiable use of my time, which I try to devote to defending Holy Mother Church and Christianity generally.
Hello Dave, I go by the name SPB on the website. [SPB has nothing to do with wanting to hide my identity, it's just a forum name]
I'm sorry you got treated badly over there - I just wanted them to see some of your stuff in case it helped them somehow (I know many struggle with a sort of 'traditionalism shock' sometimes and there is an unfair amount of trad leaning stuff on there, I thought balance may be good). I meant what I wrote, and I do think you have much good to say. It's not my place, or my job, or my authority, to start writing out where and how you are wrong (and yes, I believe on balance you are wrong about traditionalism). My views, and yours, will either be vindicated one day or they won't. In either case, I just want us to both be very good, happy Catholics.
I think I agree with Mr. O'Neill - yes, it is a public forum, but hey people take criticism badly! I'm the worst at taking criticism. I think it would be great if you could register on the forum and perhaps have a kind of one-on-one debate with some people and publish it on your blog, or let Fish Eaters publish it on their blog. Clearly we all have a lot to say to each other, and if done charitably and with God in mind I think it would be fruitful. That's just an idea.
Thanks for the website. God Bless!
Hi Tom,
Thanks for your cordial comment. Not interested in a "debate," that would obviously end up as a three-ring circus, given all the rampant personal attacks and almost ubiquitous misrepresentations and outright gross caricatures (along with shoddy logic and dismissal of factual accuracy throughout) being presented now in a second thread, about what I supposedly believe and don't believe. It's a big yawner.
I have expressed my more than eight-year-old resolve to avoid discussion forums, in the post before yours. Obviously, you overlooked it. :-)
Almost needless to say, there is virtually no substantive, sustained, rational interaction in either thread at Fish Eaters with what I actually wrote, save for one semi-substantive post, that at least attempted some measure of direct reply, though still peppered with many errors of fact and bad logic and misrepresentation: such that I won't waste my time on it.
If he had actually taken the trouble to learn what I actually think about issues he pontificates on (and this is true generally of both threads), -- and this is not that difficult to do, given the volume of my writing -- perhaps I would be interested (at least over here, one-on-one), but not under those ridiculous conditions.
Here is the URL of the new follow-up thread over there:
http://catholicforum.fisheaters.com/index.php/topic,3448095.0.html
I did very much enjoy my five-part exchange with a "traditionalist" who later asked me to remove his name for legitimate work-related reasons. Fish Eaters has not respected his request, since they keep mentioning his name even after reading my announcement that he wanted it removed. But that's their business, not mine.
I have several "traditionalist" friends (NOT radtrads): some of whom I even work with in order to oppose some ridiculous viewpoints that we both decry. Others follow my web pages regularly.
For those "traditionalists" who actually read what I write and learn what I believe and what I am opposing, oftentimes they see that we have a lot more in common than what divides us, and they see that I am rock-solid orthodox and someone they can agree with for the most part.
Just one point I'd like to clarify, out of many dozens of inaccuracies that I could spend time correcting:
"Warrenton" wrote in Reply #23 in the new thread:
I am not convinced, based on what I read, that he really understands the nature of Catholic traditionalism. He emphasizes the "flashpoints" at the expense of the main thesis, which is that we seek recognition of the right to worship as Latin Catholics have done since time immemorial.
This is completely uncontroversial to me, since I have believed it from the time I became a Catholic, in 1990, and have stated as much many times on my sites. I have always advocated for the freedom of Catholics to worship as they please. If they want to attend a Tridentine Mass: more power to them. I was always in favor of that: had not the slightest objection to it (as long as it is not in a schismatic church).
Yet this guy seems to think I misunderstand or disagree with this: the thing he regards as the quintessence of "traditionalism" as he understands it. It's simply not true, and couldn't possibly be any more false than it is.
I've attended an extremely reverent, traditional Novus Ordo Latin Mass (communion on the tongue, altar rails, no altar girls, no nonsense, great traditional music and architecture, genuflecting, bowing) for almost 21 years now in my parish.
My parish cluster, as I noted before, is one of the few in the archdiocese of Detroit that offers the Tridentine Mass (until a few years ago, the only one), and I have attended it. I prefer the Novus Ordo.
These people don't like that? They can lump it. I don't buy the arguments. I allow them to worship as they please, and as the Holy Father allows and encourages. I urge them to treat others the same and drop the divisive nonsense about one being objectively inferior to the other.
I added the following note to the post itself: in response to a particularly unjust and baseless charge, based on the original portion in italics:
I have critiqued Protestantism and helped bring more people out of it than, I highly suspect, all of the members of the Fish Eaters forum put together. I receive letters all the time reporting conversions and reversions, largely or partially as a result of my writings.
[Later added note: I am now being unfairly blasted about the above paragraph in a second thread devoted to me, mentioned in the combox below. The gist of it is that I am supposedly full of myself, filled to the brim with spiritual pride, and so woefully ignorant that I don't understand that it is God Who gives the increase and brings about conversions and not the bearer of the message. This, of all the charges leveled against me in these threads, is perhaps 1) the most ridiculous of all, and 2) the one most easy to disprove from any rudimentary search of my writings. Here is just one example of what I am sure is many dozens that could be found:
For all these reasons I don't get weary, because I'm not trying to convert the world. Technically, I'm not trying to convert anyone personally, through my own efforts. I'm simply passing along the reasons I have come to believe, for why Catholicism is the fullness of Christian truth. If that helps someone else, great, but their (possible) conversion is not ultimately my responsibility at all. It is the Holy Spirit's and their own. I'm just trying to be a good steward of the gifts that God has given me; to play my role in the whole process, which is an extraordinary privilege: to be able to be used by God in any way whatsoever. I believe everyone has a vocation from God (including every occupation in the world); this is mine.
If someone compliments me for helping them become a Catholic, I'll accept it and say "thanks" but then I always try to remember to say "all glory to God" and "it's all by His grace." I absolutely believe those things. It all goes back to God. All of us are mere leaky vessels and greatly flawed messengers at best. But God uses us poor miserable sinners for His purposes, which is the amazing thing.
(Q & A on Catholic Apologetics: Why I Do What I Do {As My Vocation}, 2-25-09)
[continued in next post]
The fact is that I am constantly; constantly giving all glory to God, for any conversions or success of my writings. Anyone who follows my writing at all (here or on Facebook or in my books) knows this. Here I happened to not mention the thing I have a million and a half times. But nothing here "proves" that I don't believe it. Note also that I did qualify my remarks. I wrote that I "helped bring more people out" of Protestantism. Nothing wrong with that at all. I did participate. It's a true statement. I didn't claim it was just me or some such ludicrous thing; as if I were the sole cause, but rather, that it was "largely or partially as a result of my writings".
So, for example, if someone writes to me (as many have), saying that my writings were the main reason they became persuaded of Catholicism (just as Cardinal Newman's writings were in my own case, and one particular friend of mine whom God used to help convert me), that is a true description of a factual occurrence. It doesn't follow at all that either they or I are denying that God was the primary cause. I was the instrument God used (as one critic pointed out: as if I don't know that already).
The Bible (that these people claim I am ignorant of in this regard) even says that we are God's "co-workers": "we are God's fellow workers" (1 Cor 3:9: RSV); "I worked harder than any of them, though it was not I, but the grace of God which is with me" (1 Cor 15:10; cf. Rom 15:17-18); "be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that in the Lord your labor is not in vain" (1 Cor 15:58); "Working together with him"(2 Cor 6:1; cf. Eph 2:10; Phil 2:12-13).
[continued in next comment]
Moreover, the Bible (usually St. Paul) uses the language of people "making converts" with the implicit background understanding that it is working with God (per the above examples). It's not necessary to mention God every time: "I magnify my ministry in order to make my fellow Jews jealous, and thus save some of them" (Rom 11:13-14); "Wife, how do you know whether you will save your husband? Husband, how do you know whether you will save your wife?" (1 Cor 7:16); "I have become all things to all men, that I might by all means save some" (1 Cor 9:22); "by so doing you will save both yourself and your hearers" (1 Tim 4:16); "I endure everything for the sake of the elect, that they also may obtain salvation" (2 Tim 2:10); "whoever brings back a sinner from the error of his way will save his soul from death" (Jas 5:20); "that some, though they do not obey the word, may be won without a word by the behavior of their wives" (1 Pet 3:1).
All this being the case, I have written nothing whatsoever that is improper or scandalous or denying any glory to God. The point in context (that I made very clear, above) was that I am being accused of being compromised with Protestantism. Thus I turned the tables and noted that I am helping to cause Protestants to become Catholics by the scores. Why would that be if I am supposedly so compromised with it? Is it even plausible? Of course it is not at all. This is a completely relevant point and refutation of the charge (among many). That was the context. And the point has not been overthrown by this ludicrous false accusation that I allegedly think I am bringing any of that about apart from God, on my own, in some idiotic spiritually prideful sense.]
[END of note added to the paper]
I made the following comment on this whole farce on my Facebook page:
I felt led to respond to this today because there were so many (and such varied) whoppers: truly ridiculous charges, that I saw it as a great opportunity to clarify and make clear my views on a number of fronts. But attacks will not cease, because lots of people couldn't care less about studying or documenting that which they detest (or I should say, a gross caricature of views that they probably wouldn't detest if they took trouble to correctly understand them).
I also wrote about another attack something that also applies to this one and all such attacks:
These stupid attacks don't bother me as a person at all. My utter intellectual derision of them should never be mistaken for "taking it personally" or being "hurt" or suchlike. Nothing could be further from the truth. I think this stuff is high comedy. It's sad on another level, but you gotta laugh at it . . .
What bothers me is error and sin and how people are taken in and corrupted and led astray by them. We all must be vigilant at all times to avoid the errors of unbelief and theological heterodoxy.
I added the following to the end of the new note on the post:
***
To close this note, here is an actual response I made exactly a week ago to someone who sent me a private message in Facebook. He was an Episcopalian who became a Catholic in 2004. He wrote to encourage my work, and said that during his conversion process, my "website was the first place I normally went for answers." My reply was altogether typical of how I answer letters like this: "Thank you very much for your warm, kind letter. Praise God that He chose to use this poor sinner to help you on your journey a bit. . . . I appreciate the encouragement and may God abundantly bless you!" That is my spirit. I try to give glory to God at every turn, even if someone compliments me.
Hello again Dave. I offer a few more quick points.
1) You say this: "I have always advocated for the freedom of Catholics to worship as they please." This anthropocentrism is thoroughly Modernist. We're not to worship as WE please, but as GOD pleases. Please study the Ottaviani Intervention, along with that book I linked to above. You'll then come to see that the Novus Ordo (whether in Latin or not) is not worship that pleases God. This is because the Novus Ordo Missae is a Protestantized abomination.
This is a fundamental point. We traditional Catholics don't reject the Novus Ordo out of nostalgia, antiquarianism, aestheticism, or love of Latin. We reject it because of the rank Protestantism and anthropocentrism at its core, while we simultaneously never forget Joseph Ratzinger's characterization of the Novus Ordo as a committee-fabricated, banal on-the-spot product.
2) Your very willingness to participate in a Novus Ordo - ANY Novus Ordo - is proof that you've imbibed of Modernism. This is because participation in any Novus Ordo is absolutely unthinkable to those who totally, fully, wholly, completely, utterly, and unequivocally reject Modernism and all of its rancid soul-crushing fruits.
3) You've again characterized your participation in the Novus Ordo as a preference. Please do read the excerpts of that book I alluded to above. You'll then see that framing it as a preference was/is part of the Modernist strategy.
4) Please read this:
http://rorate-caeli.blogspot.com/2012/01/who-is-traditionalist.html#more
Sheer nonsense. I have defended the Novus Ordo Mass at great length:
http://socrates58.blogspot.com/2008/06/apologia-for-mass-of-pope-paul-vi-with.html
I've heard all the "trad" arguments on this a million times. I utterly reject them.
It was stated that I didn't understand the essence of "traditionalism" to have the right to worship at the Tridentine Mass. I clarified that I have always agreed with this, so no issue there.
But because so many trads despise the Novus Ordo Mass so much, that's not good enough. They have to keep bashing. I'm supposedly a modernist now (or have that influence) as well as a hybrid Protestantized Catholic. The silliness never ends. It always has to come back to that, and this is one of the distinctives of "traditionalism" that I have consistently opposed for 20 years.
Greetings again, Dave. It's a pleasure to write to you once more, especially on this beautiful day.
I have no doubt that you're a man of good will. This is why I write to you, because like you, I don't like wasting time in such discussions. This is because I find that too often people are entrenched in their positions – but not on the basis of truth. Usually, sentimentality is the basis of their entrenchment. I don't think this is true of you though. I think you're open to the truth. If I may be so bold, I suggest that for you it's just a question of prayerfully learning more.
Thus, with a mind refusing to allow any prejudice against sources to obscure your vision of truth, I'd like to recommend that you embark on a new study program. You may have read some of these things before. That's fine. Please read them again, but with new eyes:
1) Open Letter to Confused Catholics, by Abp. Marcel Lefebvre
2) Iota Unum: A Study of Changes in the Catholic Church in the Twentieth Century, by Romano Amerio. Amerio was a peritus at Vatican II, and has been described by Italian Vaticanista Sandro Magister as one of the 20th century's greatest traditionalist thinkers.
3) The Rhine Flows Into the Tiber, by Rev. Ralph Wiltgen
4) One Hundred Years of Modernism: A Genealogy of the Principles of the Second Vatican Council, by Rev. Dominique Bourmaud
5) The Ottaviani Intervention
6) Work of Human Hands: A Theological Critique of the Mass of Paul VI, by Rev. Anthony Cekada
7) The Catechism of the Crisis in the Church, by Rev. Matthias Gaudron
Unfortunately, immersion in such a study program may present the temptation of losing one's peace of soul. As you know, we shan't yield to this temptation. For as St. Francis de Sales tells us, aside from sin, anxiety is the greatest disaster for the soul. Thus I recommend three additional books:
1) Peace of Soul, by Bp. Fulton Sheen
2) Searching for and Maintaining Peace: A Small Treatise on Peace of Heart, by Rev. Jacques Philippe
3) Light and Peace, R. P. Quadrupani
Also, it would be very profitable go to audiosancto.org, type this word in the search box, and then listen: PEACE
Pax Domini sit semper vobiscum!
I understand why one would forsake forums. I have greatly changed my use of forums for probably similar reasons (I did not read the post about it) and sometimes left them completely, however, it is the Internet and avoiding forums and then recreating the same issues in a blog and its comment system is not really an improvement.
Why is there such a big deal about forum discussion? The entire basis for the forum thread was probably a perceived attack, rather than any particular part of the post. The use of name calling and accusations probably resulted in such a defensive attitude. In my own writings, on Fisheaters and even the Fisheaters Blog, I have attacked elements associated with "traditional Catholics" which were decidedly unCatholic. I did not have to resort to accusing others of calumny, engaging in a "feeding frenzy", and calling anyone "radtrads" or the like. One can play that game all day. Someone could make a post about "Cafeteria Catholic Blogger Goes Berserk Over a Forum Discussion". That doesn't make it true.
But the post and the many comments and revisiting the issue just keeps it alive and accomplishes nothing.
If you think the threads at Fish Eaters are hunky dory and contain no lies, personal attacks, ludicrous assertions about the faith or about "neo-Catholics" or a host of imaginary beliefs that some gross caricature of "Dave Armstrong" supposedly believes, I'm very happy for you. I wish I could say the same.
Rational discussion could have been had if anyone over there had chosen to interact intelligently minus gratuitous insults every other line, with my clarifications on just a few of the myriad of errors.
The rationale for exposing it is the same as always, when I deal with folly and error: it shows the mentality of radtrads for what it is: making it utterly unappealing to anyone on the fence who could possibly be attracted to such a ridiculous viewpoint.
That's the job of the apologist: to defend truth and refute error. This afforded me an opportunity to do a great deal of that. If someone doesn't understand that, it has no bearing on what I do or not do. I decide that, as a steward of my time under God. It's not based on a head count of any given group of people. Sometimes apologists do very unpopular things that need to be done.
Dave,
You write:
_____
30. That Pope John Paul II is a higher critic of the Scriptures.
I would have to see that demonstrated. And - since many "traditionalists" ' reading of Holy Scripture apparently disallows, e.g., any possibility of the evolutionary hypothesis -, I would suspect that they may be overly-literal in methodology (as with fundamentalists) in the first place. In other words, their "standard" and conception of proper biblical interpretation may be off the mark to begin with. Just speculating, though, I confess. The point here is that these charges are cavalierly thrown around, but rarely documented.
____
I don't know much about JP II, but I have read a fair amount by the current pope. In this book on Genesis he accepts the documentary hypothesis (JEPD) and doesn't find much historical in the opening chapters of Genesis.
In other books he states that there are multiple Isaiahs, Daniel was written hundred years later than it claims, and that Paul didn't write the Pastorals.
Are these appropriate views for a pope to hold?
I think there is a certain latitude since most of that doesn't involve dogma. We have to believe, e.g., that Isaiah is inspired. Whether the book was written or compiled by more than one person is a separate, less important issue. Many of these theories I believe to be outdated and misguided 19th-century liberal ideas.
One can only go so far in denying the literalism in Genesis. All Catholics must believe that Adam and eve were the primal pair and they they fell (original sin).
In my own opinion, I think it's bad if anyone does because I think these methods are faulty (and even popes can be unduly influenced by a bad strain or school of scholarship), but I was discussing in my previous comment the aspect of whether this involved Catholic dogma or not. Many things involved in this do not deny Catholic dogma.
Is it liberal to adopt the documentary hypothesis? Dogmatically, I don't think so, from a Catholic perspective.
In my #59 of the 150 Reasons I was talking specifically about a destructive liberalism that would deny the inspiration of the Bible. There are degrees to these things. Some utilize particular theories to undermine biblical authority and end up doctrinally heterodox (e.g., Hans Kung, Richard McBrien, Raymond Brown). Others may use some of them to some extent, but maintain traditional Catholic dogma, as I believe the present Holy Father does.
Dave,
How much contemporary Catholic Bible scholarship have you read?
I'm just a little surprised that you would make your jab against evangelicalism* when even a moderate Evangelical such as Witherington is to the right of people such as Brown, Meier and Fitzmyer.
The current pope speaks favorably of Meier in his books on Jesus even though he is to the left of Brown.
____
*"59. Liberal Protestantism, and evangelicalism increasingly, have accepted "higher critical" methods of biblical interpretation . . ."
Sorry to bump in on the comments here, but you cut off comments on the post I quoted, so, just to inform you:
Answering a site that ridicules Church Fathers on Geocentrism
http://triv7quadriv.blogspot.com/2012/01/answering-site-that-ridicules-church.html
Obviously the abbreviation of the title in the url for the post is not my work. In some I shortened title in first publishing before writing out acronym as cagasuamfobdis spells Creationism and Geocentrism Are Sometimes Used As Metaphors For Obsolete, Because Disproven, Incorrect Science
http://hglsfbwritings.blogspot.com/2011/04/cagasuamfobdis.html
(By the way, does it show over at your computer? On this library computer it seems to be blocked like Google blocked some contents in China a few years ago, only Paris is not China.)
Thanks for the notice. I informed the two authors of the paper critiqued (hosted on my site but not written by me).
They may perhaps have a counter-reply which I would again co-host on this web page.
Whether they host it on mine or yours or on their own, it is welcome.
You might know that CSL was "starved on intelligent discussion" - and that is how I feel too.
I'm sympathetically inclined toward traditionalism, but I find it hard to read too much at Fisheaters. I tend to come away feeling like I need a month-long retreat just to regain some balance.
Really, the relevant portion is that you prefer the Latin Novus Ordo. So do I. I grew up in Novus Ordo done right. In practice, this is the exception.
In my area, the only Mass I can count on to be orthodox is the Tridentine Mass. It's also the only one which recognizes chant as the patrimony of the Church, &c., but these reasons are what we can only call soft reasons, and that, say, the FSSP provides consistently sound homiletics not awash with sentimentalism is not an "objective" case for the Trindentine Mass as such. I consider "objectively" to imply a de jure case rather than a de facto case.
I do believe there is one very serious, solid case for the Tridentine Mass being objectively better, though I hesitate to promulgate it for reasons which become clear after the paragraph:
The Ordinary Form has no ordinary. That is to say, while it technically does have a set of prayers to choose from, that there is a choice for even the briefest options makes it impractical and almost impossible to follow along and "pray the Mass."
My objection: Theoretically, in practical terms, this could easily be countered on the parish level by some pastor publishing his local Ordinary of the Ordinary for the faithful to pick up as they desire. It could be done on the level of the diocese, for that matter.
However, this does require positive action by someone in charge --- which, until the very recent HHS debacle, was something I thought dioceses in this country, as a rule of thumb, were incapable of. So Dolan et. al. reacting as they did provoked a triumphantly happy surprise.
*response, not "surprise," and "et" is not an abbreviation so it requires no period. Could you please edit this, sir? (Then delete this comment.)
I bring my reply to your comment back in the proper thread:
I think the gloss here is the difference between valid and good. Just as without denying that handing a homeless man a sandwich is bad we can say that handing him a sandwich and a hot cup of coffee is better, so we can approach alternate expressions of that which surrounds the Eucharistic Sacrifice. Knowing that we need not impugn the validity of a Mass by saying one liturgy which surrounds the Sacrifice is better than another in leading to that Sacrifice, we can get to the question of whether or not having a stable Ordinary is better for the laity in leading to that Sacrifice.
I posit:
1. "Pray the Mass," being a teaching of Pope Saint Pius X, is to some degree sound. (Whether or not it is magisterial is difficult for me to say because it has become such a meme that the source is obscured.)
2. Without an ordinary Ordinary, it becomes difficult to pray the Mass.
3. As the Ordinary Form lacks an ordinary Ordinary, it becomes difficult to pray the Mass and therefore to follow the advice of Pope Saint Pius X.
Praying along during the Mass being vital to best practice of lay participation in the prayers leading to the sacrifice, and the Extraordinary Form allowing this at every point and even during the music, the Extraordinary Form allows this participation better and is, de jure, superior by this metric.
QED.
If the "Pray the Mass" meme is in fact magisterial, this argument becomes far more authoritative.
The more I think about this, the more I'm convinced that in a significant if small way the Extraordinary Form is superior to the Ordinary Form. Better stop me now before I go all clone on you, eh?
If you think it is better, then go to it. More power to you. I'm in favor of liturgical freedom. That's always been my position as a Catholic.
I'm not interested in fighting a bunch of battles about superiority and inferiority. I defended the Novus Ordo Mass (in one large paper) against charges that it is "bad" or invalid. That's enough for me.
Fair enough. I suppose similar arguments may be made between Rites and miss the common bedrock, adding more heat than light.
Naturally, as I said earlier, the Latin Novus Ordo is the best of all of them, and even moreso if celebrated with the hermeneutic of continuity. Having one nearby must be quite a blessing.
As a point of order, how magisterial is "Pray the Mass?"
Dunno. I know relatively less about liturgical matters than various apologetics topics that I have studied and written about.
Dave Armstrong has a point.
Sub utraque specie and vernacular are not bad in and of themselves.
Versus Populum and Hand Communion are not the Ordo of Paul VI, just dispensations attached to it.
But so has the trad. The Council never decided even replacing Latin with vernacular, except for readings. It had no direct connexion at all with versus populum or hand communion.
And Participatio Actuosa translates rather as Act-Full than as Active participation. Active as opposed to passive or reactive or mirroring et c. (which is the precise excuse for versus populum and hand communion) would be activa. Actuosa means actful as opposed to inert, untouched. I do not have the text Sacrosanctum Concilium before my eyes, so I do not know the context.
And if a Trad would want to remind me that Eucharistic miracles involving spilling of Sacred Blood were behind the sub una specie practise, I remind that a recent Eucharistic miracle was a host that fell to the floor and was then drenched in holy water "to dissolve", which did not happen.
On the other hand such mishandling might have been avoided without Hand Communion.
I do not know if you know Tom Zimmer (wrote Hope 84, to Honour Our Lady's Assumption), but his two hates outside Communist Tyrannies are abortion and hand communion. And, he is Novus Ordo.
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