[From the December 1, 2005 edition of The Wanderer]
Providence Brings Bishop Rifan to Una Voce Conference
By BRIAN MERSHON
 PROVIDENCE, R.I. -- Amidst buzz in Catholic circles about the 
possibility of an imminent freeing of the classical Roman rite of Mass, Bishop 
Fernando Rifan offered a Solemn Pontifical Mass from the throne and 
delivered the keynote address, highlighting the tenth anniversary 
conference of Una Voce America in Providence, R.I., November 18-20. And on Saturday morning, he treated Mass attendees with his musical 
playing ability by slipping down from his chair near the altar to play 
the organ during the communion of the faithful, as well as for the 
recessional -- to the delight of those assisting at Holy Mass.
 Bishop Rifan is currently the sole bishop in the world with the 
permission from the Holy See for his diocesan priests to offer the Holy Mass 
and sacraments exclusively according to the Missal of 1962. He said 
that the cause of tradition was very hopeful in the new pontificate of 
Pope Benedict XVI and is currently much brighter in the U.S. than perhaps 
many realize.
 "You have four bishops who allow all their diocesan priests to offer 
the Traditional Mass [privately] at any time," Bishop Rifan said. He 
specifically cited Archbishop Raymond Burke of St. Louis, Bishop Fabian 
Bruskewitz of Lincoln, Neb.; Bishop Thomas Doran of Rockford, Ill.; and 
Bishop Alvaro Corrada, SJ, of Tyler, Texas, who have been generous in 
the Ecclesia Dei indult application, as requested and emphasized 
repeatedly by the late Pope John Paul II.
 A spokesperson from the Diocese of Lincoln explained that Bishop 
Bruskewitz requests a "courtesy" from his priests prior to offering the Mass 
publicly, as it is traditional for the bishop to have jurisdiction over 
the Masses offered in his diocese. For instance, Spanish, Vietnamese, 
and all regularly scheduled public liturgies must be offered with the 
bishop's knowledge and consent.
 Bishop Rifan, the superior of St. John Mary Vianney Apostolic 
Administration in Campos, Brazil, offered the Holy Sacrifice from the throne 
with the permission of Bishop Thomas Tobin, and gave encouragement to Una 
Voce leaders from all over the U.S. and Canada who attended the 
three-day conference at Holy Name of Jesus Church in downtown Rhode Island.
 "Una Voce is a force in the Church now," Bishop Rifan said to an 
audience of 200 laymen and women and 10 priests in his keynote address on 
Saturday, November 19. "We have many hopes with the new Pope, and we must 
pray for the Pope," Rifan said.
 And perhaps due to the uptick in rumors about a possible pending 
universal indult for all priests to offer the classical Roman rite, Bishop 
Rifan emphasized the need for patience. He said that sometimes bishops 
know things, but the laity must understand they cannot disclose 
everything confided to them by the Pope.
 "I will defend you always, especially Una Voce, when I speak to the 
Pope," Bishop Rifan said.
 The newly elected president of Una Voce International, Fra Fredrik 
Chrichton-Stuart, president of Una Voce Holland, gave attendees reason for 
additional hope. He said that Bishop Rifan meets with the Pope often to 
discuss the concerns and spiritual needs of traditional Catholics, and 
quoted Msgr. Camille Perl, secretary of the Ecclesia Dei Commission, 
who recently told Una Voce International leaders:
 "There is a new wind blowing in the Church," with Pope Benedict XVI in 
office. Msgr. Perl also told the Una Voce leadership in an October 
meeting in Rome that the Ecclesia Dei Commission has been shown a new level 
of respect since the new Pope has been in office. 
 Fra Chrichton-Stuart also added that he is aware of many younger 
priests in the Church who are attracted to the classical Roman rite of Mass. 
But he also emphasized the need for patience and for praying for the 
Pope during these early stages of his pontificate.
 Both Pope Benedict XVI and Dario Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos, prefect of 
the Congregation of Clergy and president of the Ecclesia Dei 
Commission, have told Bishop Rifan that traditional Catholics such as the Campos 
apostolic administration, priests and lay faithful, as well as Una Voce 
members, are seen as a model for the rest of the Church.
 "You are the example in preserving the tradition in full communion 
with the Holy See," Bishop Rifan stated Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos told 
him.
 Bishop Rifan said that Catholics had the right to criticize certain 
problems with the new rite of Mass, and developments after Vatican II, 
but "with charity and from within the Church." He also cautioned against 
a tendency toward over-criticism, especially toward bishops, who 
represent the apostles and are vested with authority from Jesus Christ.
The Search For Holiness
 Fr. Joseph Wilson, associate pastor from St. Luke's Church of the 
Diocese of Brooklyn, began the conference with some hard-hitting analysis 
and questions. "Forty years ago, there were a lot of optimistic books 
looking for the golden age of the future," he said. "If the past 40 years 
has been a renewal, I would really like to see what a disaster looks 
like," he said.
 Fr. Wilson explained that perhaps in the pursuit of attempting to 
become more palatable to the world, the Church lost track of its primary 
mission. He suggested that self-affirmation and the search for sexual 
autonomy replaced the search for holiness, then this helped to contribute 
to the current crisis in the Church.
 "The Orthodox fast for nearly half the year," he said. "We have taken 
many traditions and have decided to ignore them -- to take the easy way 
out," he said. He recommended a return to reading the fathers of the 
Church, and to recapture many of these lost traditions, which the 
Orthodox have maintained. "We decided the old wisdom no longer applied," he 
said.
 He explained that the Church leaders, many laity, priests, bishops 
appear to "have lost the ability of self-reflection." The "signs of the 
times" that Gaudium et Spes emphasizes, have not been read well in the 
past 40 years, according to Fr. Wilson. He encouraged people to read an 
article headlined "The End of Gaudium et Spes," by Dr. James Hitchcock, 
from a previous issue of Catholic World Report.
 "How did we lose the ability to criticize ourselves?" he asked. He 
also said that an accurate reading of "the signs of the times" is 
necessary in order for the Church to find its way out of the current crisis.
 Bishop Rifan indicated that in recent meetings with both Pope Benedict 
XVI and Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos, he stressed the importance of 
providing Catholics the full use of the traditional sacraments and devotions 
so they could conserve the traditional Catholic way of life. "Personal 
parishes [traditional] are needed," Bishop Rifan said.
Become A Saint
 Other highlights of the conference included Bishop Rifan outlining 
numerous points on what it means to be a traditional Catholic, as well as 
an emphasis on the centrality of devotion to the Holy Eucharist. He 
repeatedly stressed the theological virtue of charity.
 Reaffirming the proper and rightful place of traditional Catholics 
within the Church, Bishop Rifan quoted Pope Benedict XVI from the Cologne 
World Youth Day: "Only saints can restore mankind. The Church does not 
need reformers -- it needs saints! We will reform the Church by 
becoming saints," he said.
 "Martin Luther tried to be a reformer," he said. "St. Athanasius was a 
saint," and through the process of becoming one, he reformed the 
Church.
 He also cautioned attendees from paying too much attention to rumors 
and conspiracy theories. "In my 30 years in the priesthood," Bishop 
Rifan said, "I have offered only the Traditional Latin Mass." He said that 
because he is a bishop in the Universal Church, he sometimes must 
attend Masses offered using the Missal of Pope Paul VI.
 "However, just because I attend these Masses occasionally, does not 
mean that I necessarily agree with everything that goes on," he said.
 This may be a reference to some Catholics associated with Society of 
St. Pius X, currently in dialogue with the Holy See in order to possibly 
resolve their canonical irregularities (but "not in formal schism," 
according to Cardinal Castrillon Hoyos). Some Catholics and web sites 
sympathetic to the Society of St. Pius X have repeatedly accused Bishop 
Rifan of "selling out" traditional Catholics due to his occasional 
attendance at concelebrated Masses with other priests and bishops.
 Among other suggestions to Una Voce leaders, he encouraged them to 
defend "correct ecumenism." According to Bishop Rifan, this means that 
with charity in our contacts with non-Catholics, we should "ask them to 
return" to Christ's Church, and also pray for their conversions. He said 
that in Campos, as part of the New Evangelization, his priests and 
laity engage in door-to-door missions while handing out tracts, and they 
politely invite those they encounter to consider the truth of Jesus 
Christ through His Church.
Focus On The Supernatural
 Msgr. Michael Schmitz, the U.S. vicar general and provincial for the 
Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest, gave a rousing closing 
talk Sunday afternoon on the importance of tradition. "Many times people 
have come to me and told me, 'Father, I know I must become Catholic 
because I have been to Mass'," he said.
 Msgr. Schmitz also agreed with Bishop Rifan's positive assessment of 
tradition in the United States. "American society is much more 
traditional than European society," he said. "In Europe, the traditions have 
been almost destroyed."
 "Tradition in the Church is supernatural, and therefore, we should not 
speak of the Traditional Latin Mass," he said. Instead, "we should 
speak of the Mass because it is God's Mass; it is the Mass God wants us to 
celebrate," Msgr. Schmitz said.
 "Many believe that tradition is something dusty -- that the word 
should be avoided," he said.
 He explained that all people, regardless of their religious, or even 
political, leanings, have a routine, a custom, a tradition they follow 
on a daily, weekly, and even monthly basis.
 Simply speaking, according to Msgr. Schmitz, tradition is "some 
worthwhile learning that is received by us by someone who gives it." This 
"handing on," is traditio -- the Latin root for tradition. All learning 
takes place through the use of tradition.
 "Education at every level is traditional -- even if sometimes the 
contents are not worthwhile," he said. But when tradition is applied to 
divine Revelation, then tradition's importance is increased -- "in the 
realm of God." Msgr. Schmitz said that Catholics should try to permeate 
their daily life with tradition through the use of sacramentals, 
devotions, holy water, and other things to keep the focus on the supernatural.
 With regard to Tradition and divine Revelation: "Everything is 
reception. Everything is gift. Everything is Tradition," Msgr. Schmidt said.
 Bishop Rifan emphasized this same theme during his keynote address the 
previous evening. "To be a traditionalist means to defend the doctrine 
of Christ as King!" Bishop Rifan declared. "To be a traditionalist 
means to be attached to the Traditional Latin Mass because it better 
expresses the Catholic doctrine on the Holy Eucharist," he said "To be a 
traditionalist is a Catholic way of life: It is not just the Mass," he 
said.
The Reform Of The Reform
 Fr. Thomas Kocik, from the Diocese of Fall River, Mass., and author of 
The Reform of the Reform, published by Ignatius Press, said he believed 
the 1962 Missal must be the starting point for any reform of the 1970 
Missal of Pope Paul VI. "When you are doing a complicated math problem, 
and it comes out wrong, you go back to the original place where you 
began to go wrong," he said. Fr. Kocik said he believed the coexistence of 
the classical rite of Mass was vital for a proper reform of the current 
normative rite of Mass.
 Fr. Kocik also raised the question as a possibility of the Campos, 
Brazil, apostolic administration being used as a model diocese, and 
possibly eventually applied to traditional Catholics throughout the entire 
Church.
 When asked if he thought Pope Benedict XVI would publicly offer the 
classical Roman rite as Pope in St. Peter's Basilica, he said he "did not 
know." When asked if he thought the Pope should offer it, he said that 
based upon the Pope's own positive previous writings about the 
classical rite, "I think he should."
Brian Mershon holds a Master's degree in Theology.
 




