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Holy
Cross Seminary
Most
Asked Questions About the Society of Saint Pius X
APPENDIX V
CONSECRATION
SERMON
BY
ARCHBISHOP LEFEBVRE
On
the Occasion of his Sacerdotal Jubilee (September 23, 1979)
Your
Excellency, dear Bishop de Castro Mayer, my most dear friends, my
dear brethren,
Behold,
here we are gathered for a ceremony, which is certainly historic.
Let me, first of all, give you some information.
The
first might surprise you a little, as it did me. Yesterday evening,
a visitor came, sent from the Nunciature in Berne, with an envelope
containing an appeal from our Holy Father the Pope, who was putting
at my disposal a car which was supposed to take me to Rome yesterday
evening, so that I would not be able to perform these consecrations
today. I was told neither for what reason, nor where I had to go!
I leave you to judge for yourselves the timeliness and wisdom of
such a request.
I
went to Rome for many, many days during the past year, even for
weeks; the Holy Father did not invite me to come and see him. I
would certainly have been glad to see him if some agreement would
have been finalized. So here you have the information. I give it
to you simply, as I myself came to know it, through the letter from
the Nunciature.
Now,
some indications concerning the ceremony and some relevant documents
regarding its significance.
The
future bishops have already sworn in my hands the oath which you
find in the little booklet on the ceremony of consecration which
some of you have. Thus, this oath has already been pronounced, plus
the Anti-Modernist Oath, as it was formerly prescribed for the consecration
of bishops, plus the Profession of Faith. They have already taken
these oaths and this profession in my hands after the retreat which
took place at Sierre during these last days. Do not, therefore,
be surprised if the ceremony begins with the interrogations on the
Faith, the Faith which the Church asks from those to be consecrated.
I
also want to let you know that, after the ceremony, you will be
able to ask the blessing of the bishops and kiss their rings. It
is not the custom in the Church to kiss the hands of a bishop, as
one kisses the hands of a newly-ordained priest, as you did yesterday.
But the faithful may ask for their blessing and kiss their ring.
Lastly,
you have at your disposal at the bookstall some books and flyers
which contain all the elements necessary to help you better understand
why this ceremony, which is apparently done against the will of
Rome, is in no way a schism. We are not schismatics! If an excommunication
was pronounced against the bishops of China, who separated themselves
from Rome and put themselves under the Chinese government, one very
easily understands why Pope Pius XII excommunicated them.1
There is no question of us separating ourselves from Rome, nor of
putting ourselves under a foreign government, nor of establishing
a sort of parallel church as the Bishops of Palmar de Troya have
done in Spain. They have even elected a pope, formed a college of
cardinals
It is out of the question for us to do such things.
Far from us be this miserable thought of separating ourselves from
Rome!
On
the contrary, it is in order to manifest our attachment to Rome
that we are performing this ceremony. It is in order to manifest
our attachment to the Eternal Rome, to the Pope, and to all those
who have preceded these last Popes who, unfortunately since the
Second Vatican Council, have thought it their duty to adhere to
grievous errors which are demolishing the Church and the Catholic
Priesthood.
Thus
you will find among these flyers which are put at your disposal,
an admirable study done by Professor Georg May, President of the
Seminary of Canon Law in the University of Mayence in Germany, who
marvelously explains why we are in a case of necessity:2
necessity to come and help your souls, to help you! Your applause
a while ago was, I think, not a purely temporal manifestation; it
was rather a spiritual manifestation, expressing your joy to have
at last Catholic bishops and priests who are dedicated to the salvation
of your souls, to giving to your souls the Life of Our Lord Jesus
Christ, through good doctrine, through the Sacraments, through the
Faith, through the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. You need this Life
of Our Lord Jesus Christ to go to heaven. This Life of Our Lord
Jesus Christ is disappearing everywhere in the Conciliar Church.
They are following roads which are not Catholic roads: they simply
lead to apostasy.
This
is why we do this ceremony. Far be it from me to set myself up as
pope! I am simply a bishop of the Catholic Church who is continuing
to transmit Catholic doctrine. I think, and this will certainly
not be too far off, that you will be able to engrave on my tombstone
these words of Saint Paul: "Tradidi quod et accepi I
have transmitted to you what I have received," nothing
else. I am just the postman bringing you a letter. I did not write
the letter, the message, this Word of God. God Himself wrote it;
Our Lord Jesus Christ Himself gave it to us. As for us, we just
handed it down, through these dear priests here present and through
all those who have chosen to resist this wave of apostasy in the
Church, by keeping the Eternal Faith and giving it to the faithful.
We are just carriers of this Good News, of this Gospel which Our
Lord Jesus Christ gave to us, as well as of the means of sanctification:
the Holy Mass, the true Holy Mass, the true Sacraments which truly
give the spiritual life.
It
seems to me, my dear brethren, that I am hearing the voices of all
these Popes since Gregory XVI, Pius IX, Leo XIII, Saint Pius
X, Benedict XV, Pius XI, Pius XII telling us:
"Please,
we beseech you, what are you going to do with our teachings, with
our preaching, with the Catholic Faith? Are you going to abandon
it? Are you going to let it disappear from this earth? Please,
please, continue to keep this treasure which we have given you.
Do not abandon the faithful, do not abandon the Church! Continue
the Church! Indeed, since the Council, what we condemned in the
past the present Roman authorities have embraced and are professing.
How is it possible? We have condemned them: Liberalism, Communism,
Socialism, Modernism, Sillonism.3
All the errors which we have condemned are now professed, adopted
and supported by the authorities of the Church. Is it possible?
Unless you do something to continue this Tradition of the Church
which we have given to you, all of it shall disappear. Souls shall
be lost."
Thus,
we find ourselves in a case of necessity. We have done all we could,
trying to help Rome to understand that they had to come back to
the attitudes of the holy Pius XII and of all his predecessors.
Bishop de Castro Mayer and myself have gone to Rome, we have spoken,
we have sent letters, several times to Rome. We have tried by these
talks, by all these means, to succeed in making Rome understand
that, since the Council and since aggiornamento, this change
which has occurred in the Church is not Catholic, is not in conformity
to the doctrine of all times. This ecumenism and all these errors,
this collegiality all this is contrary to the Faith of the
Church, and is in the process of destroying the Church.
This
is why we are convinced that, by the act of these consecrations
today, we are obeying the call of these Popes and as a consequence
the call of God, since they represent Our Lord Jesus Christ in the
Church.
"And
why, Archbishop, have you stopped these discussions which seemed
to have had a certain degree of success?" Well, precisely
because, at the same time that I gave my signature to the Protocol,
the envoy of Cardinal Ratzinger gave me a note in which I was asked
to beg pardon for my errors. But if I am in error, if I teach error,
it is clear that I must be brought back to the truth in the minds
of those who sent me this note to sign. "That I might recognize
my errors" means that, "if you recognize your errors
we will help you to return to the truth." What is this
truth for them, if not the truth of Vatican II, the truth of the
Conciliar Church? Consequently, it is clear that the only truth
that exists today for the Vatican is the conciliar truth, the spirit
of the Council, the spirit of Assisi. That is the truth of today.
But we will have nothing to do with this for anything in the world!
That
is why, taking into account the strong will of the present Roman
authorities to reduce Tradition to nought, to gather the world to
the spirit of Vatican II and the spirit of Assisi, we have preferred
to withdraw ourselves and to say that we could not continue. It
was not possible. We would have evidently been under the authority
of Cardinal Ratzinger, President of the Roman Commission, which
would have directed us; we were putting ourselves into his hands,
and consequently putting ourselves into the hands of those who wish
to draw us into the spirit of the Council and the spirit of Assisi.
This was simply not possible.
This
is why I sent a letter to the Pope, saying to him very clearly:
"We simply cannot (accept this spirit and proposals),
despite all the desires which we have to be in full union with
you. Given this new spirit which now rules in Rome and which you
wish to communicate to us, we prefer to continue in Tradition; to
keep Tradition while waiting for Tradition to regain its place at
Rome, while waiting for Tradition to re-assume its place in the
Roman authorities, in their minds." This will last for
as long as the Good Lord has foreseen.
It
is not for me to know when Tradition will regain its rights at Rome,
but I think it is my duty to provide the means of doing that which
I shall call "Operation Survival," operation survival
for Tradition. Today, this day, is Operation Survival. If
I had made this deal with Rome, by continuing with the agreements
we had signed, and by putting them into practice, I would have performed
"Operation Suicide." There was no choice, we must
live! That is why today, by consecrating these bishops, I am convinced
that I am continuing to keep Tradition alive, that is to say, the
Catholic Church.
You
well know, my dear brethren, that there can be no priests without
bishops. When God calls me this will certainly not be long
from whom would these seminarians receive the Sacrament of
Orders? From conciliar bishops, who, due to their doubtful intentions,
confer doubtful sacraments? This is not possible. Who are the bishops
who have truly kept Tradition and the Sacraments such as the Church
has conferred them for twenty centuries until Vatican II? They are
Bishop de Castro Mayer and myself. I cannot change that. That is
how it is. Hence, many seminarians have entrusted themselves to
us, they sensed that here was the continuity of the Church, the
continuity of Tradition. And they came to our seminaries, despite
all the difficulties that they have encountered, in order to receive
a true ordination to the Priesthood, to say the true Sacrifice of
Calvary, the true Sacrifice of the Mass, and to give you the true
Sacraments, true doctrine, the true catechism. This is the goal
of these seminaries.
So
I cannot, in good conscience, leave these seminarians orphaned.
Neither can I leave you orphans by dying without providing for the
future. That is not possible. It would be contrary to my duty.
This
is why we have chosen, with the grace of God, priests from our Society
who have seemed to us to be the most apt, whilst being in circumstances
and in functions which permit them more easily to fulfill their
episcopal ministry, to give Confirmation to your children, and to
be able to confer ordinations in our various seminaries. Thus I
believe that with the grace of God, we, Bishop de Castro Mayer and
myself, by these consecrations, will have given to Tradition the
means to continue, given the means to Catholics who desire to remain
within the Church of their parents, their grandparents, of their
ancestors. They built churches with beautiful altars, often destroyed
and replaced by a table, thus manifesting the radical change which
has come about since the Council regarding the Holy Sacrifice of
the Mass which is the heart of the Church and the purpose of the
priesthood. Thus we wish to thank you for having come in such numbers
to support us in the accomplishment of this ceremony.
We
turn to the Blessed Virgin Mary. You well know, my dear brethren,
you must have been told of Leo XIII's prophetic vision revealing
that one day "the See of Peter would become the seat of iniquity."
He said it in one of his exorcisms, called "The Exorcism
of Leo XIII." Has it come about today? Is it tomorrow?
I do not know. But in any case it has been foretold. Iniquity may
quite simply be error. Error is iniquity: to no longer profess the
Faith of all time, the Catholic Faith, is a grave error. If there
ever was an iniquity, it is this. And I really believe that there
has never been a greater iniquity in the Church than Assisi, which
is contrary to the First Commandment of God and the First Article
of the Creed. It is incredible that something like that could have
ever taken place in the Church, in the eyes of the whole Church
how humiliating! We have never undergone such a humiliation!
You will be able to find all of this in Fr. LeRoux's booklet which
has been especially published in order to give you information on
the present situation in Rome.
It
was not only the good Pope Leo XIII who said these things, but Our
Lady prophesied them as well. Just recently, the priest who takes
care of the Society priory in Bogota, Colombia, brought me a book
concerning the apparition of Our Lady of "Buen Suceso,"
of "Good Fortune," to whom a large church
in Quito, Ecuador, was dedicated. They were received by a nun shortly
after the Council of Trent, so you see, quite a few centuries ago.
This apparition is thoroughly recognized by Rome and the ecclesiastical
authorities; a magnificent church was built for the Blessed Virgin
Mary wherein the faithful of Ecuador venerate with great devotion
a picture of Our Lady, whose face was made miraculously. The artist
was in the process of painting it when he found the face of the
Holy Virgin miraculously formed. And Our Lady prophesied for the
twentieth century, saying explicitly that during the nineteenth
century and most of the twentieth century, errors would become more
and more widespread in Holy Church, placing the Church in a catastrophic
situation. Morals would become corrupt and the Faith would disappear.
It seems impossible not to see it happening today.
I
excuse myself for continuing this account of the apparition, but
she speaks of a prelate who will absolutely oppose this wave of
apostasy and impiety saving the priesthood by forming good
priests. I do not say that prophecy refers to me. You may draw your
own conclusions. I was stupefied when reading these lines but I
cannot deny them, since they are recorded and deposited in the archives
of this apparition.
Of
course, you well know the apparitions of Our Lady at La Salette,
where she says that Rome will lose the Faith, that there will be
an "eclipse" at Rome; an eclipse, see what Our Lady means
by this.
And
finally, closer to us, the secret of Fatima. Without a doubt, the
Third Secret of Fatima must have made an allusion to this darkness
which has invaded Rome, this darkness which has invaded the world
since the Council. And surely it is because of this, without a doubt,
that John XXIII judged it better not to publish the Secret: it would
have been necessary to take measures, such steps as he possibly
felt himself incapable of doing, e.g., completely changing the orientations
which he was beginning to take in view of the Council, and for the
Council.
There
are the facts upon which, I think, we can lean.
We
place ourselves in God's providence. We are convinced that God knows
what He is doing. Cardinal Gagnon visited us twelve years after
the suspension: after twelve years of being spoken of as outside
of the communion of Rome, as rebels and dissenters against the Pope,
his visit took place. He himself recognized that what we have been
doing is just what is necessary for the reconstruction of the Church.
The Cardinal even assisted pontifically at the Mass which I celebrated
on December 8, 1987, for the renewal of the promises of our seminarians.
I was supposedly suspended and, yet, after twelve years, I was practically
given a clean slate. They said we have done well. Thus we did well
to resist! I am convinced that we are in the same circumstances
today. We are performing an act which apparently
and
unfortunately the media will not assist us in the good sense. The
headlines will, of course, be "Schism," "Excommunication!"
to their heart's content and, yet, we are convinced that all
these accusations of which we are the object, all penalties of which
we are the object, are null, absolutely null and void, and of which
we will take no account. Just as I took no account of the suspension,
and ended up by being congratulated by the Church and by progressive
churchmen, so likewise in several years I do not know how
many, only the Good Lord knows how many years it will take for Tradition
to find its rights in Rome we will be embraced by the Roman
authorities, who will thank us for having maintained the Faith in
our seminaries, in our families, in civil societies, in our countries,
and in our monasteries and our religious houses, for the greater
glory of God and the salvation of souls.
In
the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.
FOOTNOTES
1.
The media and especially the Catholic diocesan papers all conveniently
forgot this schism of the national Chinese Church, which was the
occasion at which an excommunication was put for episcopal consecrations
without papal mandate. They claimed that the so-called schism of
Archbishop Lefebvre was the first since the schism of Döllinger
and the "Old Catholics" after Vatican I. This claim is
inaccurate and their parallel does not stand in the face of history.
However, comparing 1988 with the Chinese Church would have shown
the dissimilarity, as Archbishop Lefebvre does here.
2.
See Part II, 19 June 1988.
3.
Please note that many reporters have misunderstood the Archbishop
who did not say "Zionism" but "Sillonism," an
error condemned by Saint Pius X in 1910.
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