Thursday, September 04, 2008

SSPX

The Society of Saint Pius X have a chapel in Arcadia that I pass every morning on my way to work. Just before Summorum Pontificum went into effect, when the only licit traditional Latin Mass I knew of was quite far away, I kept thinking about the nice reverent (though illicit) TLMs that were probably being offered right in my backyard. I asked one of the priests at my parish about it: "You know the SSPX? So, not a good idea to go to their Masses?" "Not a good idea," he agreed. "Although they have a valid Eucharist and their Masses fulfill the Sunday obligation, the danger is that you'd be drawn away from the Church by their teaching. But if you want a traditional Latin Mass, we're going to start one here soon."

They did and I went every Sunday and it was lovely. I remained curious about the SSPX chapel, though. Lure of the forbidden and all, and their church was bound to be beautiful inside, and furthermore, when do I ever get to surround myself with people who'd think of me as a soft-headed liberal?

So yesterday I figured I'd just pop in on my way to work-- Mass would be finished, I could wander around and see the place...

Instead I found the parking lot jam packed, and inside the Mass had lasted an hour already and wasn't nearly over. It was a solemn High Mass! Priest, deacon, subdeacon, a whole flock of altar boys, uniformed schoolgirls in the back reeling off one chant after another, lots and lots of people there in the required dress (shirts and ties for the men, skirts and veils for the women), and all this for a simple weekday morning!

They were just finishing the consecration rite when I entered, so I knelt quietly in a corner through the rest of the Mass. It all looked beautiful but felt discordant, as if the people were quietly breathing out defiance to Rome with every mea culpa. No doubt this reaction came mostly from within me and it feels much different to the SSPXers themselves.

I didn't take out my 1962 missal to try to follow the Latin, since there was so much else to look at. So I didn't realize something until later. You know what day it was on the old calendar, the calendar the SSPX follows? It was the feast of Pope Saint Pius X! The Society's titular feast-- no wonder they pulled out all the stops. How funny that I ended up there on that day of all days!

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

any pictures?

Heather said...

I have the same weird sense of timing. When I was in Houston, I decided to go to the local Six Flags park to see what it was like. I do so love roller coasters. The traffic around the park was INSANE, and I soon learned that Six Flags shares a parking lot with the local sports arena, where some huge, important football game was being played that day.

I finally got inside the park, and the lines were massive. Also, people were talking about the park closing early that day. I was confused. Why would the park close so early (mid-afternoon) when it was obviously so popular?

It wasn't until I had been at the park for a couple hours that I learned the park was closing and that was its last day of operation, explaining both the crowds and the early closing time. I had accidentally shown up for a rather monumental occasion! I felt special. :)

Rachel said...

You showed up on closing day?? That is pretty funny.

Ado, I didn't dare pull out a camera and reveal myself as a foreigner.

Joe of St. Thérèse said...

Funny how timing works out like that...I've passed there on my way to my parish sometimes (when I take the back way)

Anonymous said...

I would have thought otherwise...seeing how you, and your camera are inseparable these days.

Anonymous said...

You do know that the 1962 rite is not the Traditional Latin Mass?

It's a common misperception - perpetrated mostly by the SSPX, actually. The TLM is the oldest rite in the Church, goes back to the first few centuries, and was codified at the Council of Trent by Pope St Pius V. (Hence "Tridentine" rite.)

That was always the rite in use in the west, until '62 and the new rite that was insituted as the crossover to the Novus Ordo. SSPX use their own rite based on that one. Most people had no clue about this until very recently when the SSPX Ember Days were different than the traditional ones (see the first link above for some news on that).

You should look for an independent priest or check the Latin Mass directory for a more traditional site. You'll love it!