Cardinal Fernández has now publicly warned that the SSPX’s planned episcopal consecrations without papal mandate would constitute a “schismatic act” carrying automatic excommunication. Pope Leo XIV, we are told, is praying they reconsider. But many Catholics are confused as to why has Rome suddenly rediscovered the language of doctrinal clarity, ecclesial rupture and canonical consequences only when dealing with traditionalists? For years Catholics have watched open dissent, doctrinal ambiguity and liturgical chaos tolerated across vast parts of the Church with little serious discipline. Bishops publicly contradict settled Catholic teaching on sexuality, marriage and even the uniqueness of Christ with virtually no consequences. Yet when the SSPX moves to preserve apostolic succession for what it sees as a grave crisis in the Church, Rome suddenly speaks with absolute precision about obedience and unity. That inconsistency is precisely why this crisis resonates far beyond the SSPX itself. None of this changes the fundamental Catholic principle that bishops should not be consecrated against the express will of the Roman Pontiff. Archbishop Lefebvre’s 1988 consecrations wounded ecclesial unity and created decades of instability. Catholics loyal to Tradition should never dismiss the gravity of repeating such an act. But Rome also cannot endlessly ignore the deeper crisis which gave rise to the SSPX in the first place. The tragedy is that under Benedict XVI there briefly appeared a path toward genuine reconciliation: doctrinal seriousness, liturgical peace and patient theological engagement. Now we appear once again on the edge of mutual escalation and hardened positions .And many ordinary Catholics looking at the state of the Church today may quietly wonder whether the institutional Church has done enough moral and theological self-examination before threatening excommunications once more.
Source: Mark Lambert @AuditeInsulae




