Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

Wednesday 18 October 2023

Total Restoration Of The Tridentine Rite. Exalting Tradition And Refuting Rupture.





Peter Kwasniewski announces the launch of his latest book: “The Once And Future Roman Rite. Returning To The Traditional Latin Liturgy After Seventy Years Of Exile”.




Peter Kwasniewski writes:

I am pleased to announce to readers the release of my latest book, The Once and Future Roman Rite: Returning to the Traditional Latin Liturgy after Seventy Years of Exile (TAN Books, 2022).

Although it was initially conceived as a response to the fiftieth anniversary of the Novus Ordo (1969-2019), it developed over time into a full-on response to the numerous errors and lies of progressive liturgists as we find them regurgitated in Traditionis Custodes and its accompanying letter.

The fruit of decades of research, experience, reflection, and debate, Once and Future Roman Rite argues that the guiding principle for all authentic Christian liturgy is sacred Tradition, which originates from Christ and is unfolded theologically and liturgically by The Holy Spirit throughout the life of The Church, in each age and across the ages.



The prominent identifying traits of all traditional rites, Eastern and Western—including, of course, the classical Roman Rite—are markedly and designedly absent from or optional in the Novus Ordo, estranging it from their company and making it impossible to call it “the Roman rite” at all.

Paul VI’s new liturgical books, drafted in unseemly haste by an audacious committee of arrogant men, who placed themselves above and outside of the stream of tradition as its jury, judge, and executioner, visited upon the long-suffering Roman Catholic Faithful a hasty and far-reaching reform permeated with nominalism, voluntarism, Protestantism, rationalism, antiquarianism, hyperpapalism, and other modern errors.

But this much is always true and will always be true: man is not master over divine liturgy; rather, all of us, from the lowest-ranking Layman to the Pope, himself, are called to be stewards of God’s best and choicest gifts. This law, in turn, imposes genuine moral and ecclesial duties upon us and bestows corresponding rights.



The only possible Catholic response to this crisis of rupture is a full return to the Roman rite in its robust perennial richness as codified after The Council of Trent (i.e., the pre-1955 form of the rite: hence “Seventy Years of Exile”).

No special permission is or could ever be needed to embrace this heritage and to hand it down to future generations. Fidelity to the traditional Latin Liturgy is, at its root, fidelity to The Roman Church as such and to Christ, Himself, Who has inspired the growth and perfection of our religious rites for two thousand years.

In addition to its preface, twelve chapters, and epilogue, the book contains a foreword by Martin Mosebach, nine reproduced artworks, several diagrams, an appendix of (highly revealing) texts by Paul VI on the liturgical reform, a topical bibliography, and a detailed index.

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