I am not referring to the continued assault on my lovely parish: an embarrassingly obsessive campaign that has generated a reaction of incredulity and dismay from many Catholic priests and laity who have no particular view on the usus antiquior. I refer rather to the policy of dissent from Papal teaching that has characterised the Tablet for longer than the lifetime of many Catholic bloggers and readers. This policy of dissent is the root cause for the astonishing attack on Blackfen and is a much more important issue.Founded in 1840, the Tablet has been through various different hands, being owned by the hierarchy for several decades, sold to a group of laity by Cardinal Hinsley in 1935, and taken on by "The Tablet Trust" in 1976. Its greatest period was under Douglas Woodruff who edited the paper from 1936 to 1967. Reading through some back numbers from 1967-1968, it is evident that there was increasing pressure for a change in the Church's teaching regarding the morality of contraception; but the issue of 3 August 1968 marked the definitive break.
In a front page leader entitled "Crisis in the Church", the paper essentially rejected the teaching of Humanae Vitae. The opening paragraphs are redolent of the kind of high-blown rhetoric that is still evident in the paper's polemic forty years on:
GAUDIUM ET SPES, the famous pastoral constitution of Vatican II, is more frequently cited and any other authoritative document in the Pope's encyclical on birth control, Humanae Vitae. We must honestly confess that neither joy nor hope can we derive from the Encyclical itself. It is not necessarily a criticism. This nation, in an hour of trial, was once offered "blood, sweat and tears" as the only prospect in waging war; there is not a chapter in spiritual writing from the Epistles onwards that does not offer the same for the final victory over the forces of evil. All this is accepted and endured by convinced Christians the world over. In their trials, indeed, they could find their exemplar in Pope Paul himself: his mortified, self-spending life is totally dedicated to the service of God and mankind, Every call, then, in his Encyclical for a deepening of dedication in married life will be understood and welcomed.The leader makes much of the Commission which had been set up to study the subject and the widespread expectation that Pope Paul would go along with its recommendations. It then observes:
The Experience of Marriage
To many married people, however, there is a betrayal of their dedication precisely in indiscriminate child bearing on the one hand or the alternative of calendar-spaced love-making or total abstinence on the other. These alternatives are more repugnant to a human couple in love than artificial devices, they are less natural in the sense of being less consonant with their continuing close relationship.
All of this developing situation has now been set at nought. the known views of such senior Cardinals as those of Vienna, Utrecht and Malines, of many bishops throughout the world, of the Papal Commission, of moral theologians of the highest repute from such widely differing schools as those of the Gregorianum in Rome and Maynooth in Ireland, of the laity expressed at the lay Congress in Rome last year, have been put down as of no account.The reference to Cardinals König, Willebrands, and Suenens puts one in mind of the words of Christ to St Peter:
Simon, Simon, behold Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat: but I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not: and thou, being once converted, confirm thy brethren.(Lk 22.31-32)The "you" here refers to the apostles in the plural. Our Lord personally guarantees that in such a situation, he will confirm Peter in the faith. There could scarcely be a clearer example in history than the lonely voice of Pope Paul VI in 1968.
The Tablet leader closes with a note of defiance that was to mark its policy from then to now in relation to the teaching of the papal magisterium, especially in matters of morals:
Loyalty to the faith and to the whole principle of authority now consists in this: to speak out about this disillusion of ours, not to be silenced by fear. We who are of the household of the faith and can think of no other have the right to question, complain and protest, when conscience impels. We have the right and we have the duty - out of love for the brethren. Quis nos separabit?(Answer: vosmetipsi)
It was this leader that first gave rise to the paper's nickname "The Pill." Sadly it remains apposite to this day. By way of illustration, I will be posting occasional articles documenting the Tablet's response, over the past forty years, to the exercise of the Petrine office and to key events in the life of the Catholic Church. This paper has no place in any Catholic home, parish Church, or Cathedral.
Tabula delenda est.
42 comments:
I think the Catholic Herald also rejected Humanae Vitae initially--but then the Herald has had a number of mood swings.
"Tabula delenda est."
I must admit that's its been a while since high school latin, but it would seem you are trying to pull from Cato the Elder's playbook.
My Latin is hopeless but, 'Tabula delenda est' I understand! Somehow Fr Tim, I don't think they do and perhaps never will, but does anyone actually care? The Catholic blogosphere has done a pretty good and neat hatchet job on 'The Pill' and at the same time has defended you to the hilt. The Tabletistas can't cry foul because they started it, so a legitimate case of self defense in this instance and by far the 'best man' has won!!!!!
Confirmation of what you write was the 7th Feb issue of the Pill, an attack on our dear Pope Benedict that made the attack on Blackfen look positively kind.It was very noticeable in this period how resounding was the applause of the 10s of thousands who flock to Rome to attend his audiences and Angelus addresses.The real Church is with Benedict while the Tabletistas sit at the end of their lonely branch sawing away at it!
Baron Korf - indeed, that great preserver of Roman tradition. The fuller version is "Ceterum autem censeo, Carthaginem esse delendam." ("furthermore I think that Carthage should be destroyed.")
He used to put this at the end of his speech, whatever he had been talking about. I don't think I'll follow his example entirely by putting "Ceterum autem censeo, Tabulam esse delendam" at the end of every post. But it is tempting :-)
Tabula Delenda Est! We're behind you Father!
But what a tragic waste. The Tablet could have been such a force of good in the Church in difficult times. I suppose everything got polarized after that iconoclastic year of 1968, and issues that could and should have been debated legitimately were squeezed out??
"Ceterum autem censeo, Tabulam esse delendam" - yes indeed tempting, but no need Fr Tim, for they will be be the cause of their own undoing. As Colmcille2 says and I have to stifle a good laugh, 'The real Church is with Benedict while the Tabletistas sit at the end of their lonely branch sawing away at it!' Oh, that's very funny.
I've been in St Peter's Square on many occassions for the Angelus address and the roar of love and approval for our wonderful Pope Benedict from the thousands in the crowds from all over the world is just unbelievable! Gives me 'goosebumps' just to think about it!
V:Tabula delenda est
R:Deus vult!
I initially thought your last sentence was great. That you had hit them for six.
Then I saw on another blog some really clever Latinists questioning the accuracy of the Latin you had written.
So please put us all right as to how we are to read and understand what you have written.
That is very interesting background to The Tablet, of which many of us were probably unaware, particularly the strident position against Humanae Vitae. I put my hands up to being an occasional Tablet reader, so thank you for alerting me to the historical background. In what sense, then, is this a Catholic publication? I also wonder what future it should have in seminary libraries?
...and don't forget to salt the ground, Father!
Dear Father: do be careful!
I asked my PP to stop stocking the Suppository (the Pill which is a pain ...) and he refused outright. I could be very hysterical and refuse to go to his Church, but I shan't.
Could you help us with the economics of the Tablet in churches? How much does the parish have to pay for copies sold? Does it have to send unsold copies back? Who would pay if a parish's copies were removed from the rack before they could do any harm?
This paper has no place in any Catholic home, parish Church, or Cathedral.
Disappointing to read a comment like that. The Tablet promotes intelligent and critical reflection concerning both our faith and our Church, and the Church would be vastly poorer without it.
I think the Catholic Herald also rejected Humanae Vitae initially.
There was a time when the London Oratory refused to sell the Catholic Herald because it was deemed liberal. Those were the days when Peter Stanford was the editor in charge and Fr. Napier was the provost. I once found a highly amusing piece by Damian Thompson, written way back in 1991, which reported an attack on the Oratory by one of its former novices (incidentally the organ player at a well-known church in South London).
Another funny story, was when the Catholic Truth Society went through a liberal phase following the council. Michael Davis covers this extensively in his pamphlets at how the CTS published silly tracts in favour of religous liberty, ecumenical dialogue, communion in the hand and other nonsense. During the late 70s, when the CTS were collecting donations outside the Oratory on a Sunday, Fr Taylor got up on the pulpit to preach a sermon at the 11am. He began his sermon saying, "The Catholic Truth Society are collecting money outside the Oratory but one is not obliged to give to them because they are neither Catholic, nor do they preach the truth!" !!!
What is even more interesting was how the Bitter Pill reported on the whole affair to do with Archbishop Lefebvre in the 70s right up to the 1988 consecrations. Would you believe that the likes of Clifford Longlely was vaguely sympathetic to the SSPX back then?!
Fr: I doubt that you would bother (for various reasons) but if you're ever in Preston, do try and check the newspaper archives at the SSPX priory house there. They have all the paper clippings with everything to do with traditionalist matters reported in the Times, Tablet, Catholic Herald, Telegraph, Spectator etc dating back to the late 60s.
Yes, Father, I liked your bits of Latin, not just the "tabula delenda est" but the answer to The Tablet's question "Quis nos separabit?"
"Who will separate us (from the Church)?"
"vosmetipsi"
"yourselves".
That, indeed, they have done.
I agree with George that the Catholic blogosphere has done a neat hatchet job on "The Pill" and it is well deserved.
JARay
The pills quote gives me an idea. Loyalty to the faith and to the whole principle of authority now consists in this: to speak out about this disillusion of ours, not to be silenced by fear of any ruptured hermeneutic. We who are of the household of the faith and can think of no other have the right to question, complain and protest, when manifold liturgical abuse impels. We have the right and we have the duty - out of love for the brethren. We will speak the truth in love in obedience to B16's MP. Brick by brick.
I've been reading The Panther and the Hind: a theological history of Anglicanism, and I came across this wonderful excerpt about the 1921 Girton Conference:
The Tablet, then in the Neo-Ultramontane phase of that Catholic periodical's ideologically chequered history, reported:
'Our very seperated bretheren the Anglicans, have been holding a feast of infidelity.'
A Neo-Ultramontane Tablet imagine that!
Whatever happened to turning the other cheek? The Tablet article was not all bad even if you don't agree with everything in it. I thought it included parishoners from both sides and the final comment 'perhaps there will be more Blackfens' suggested that maybe you a pioneering what will soon become more established. Surely you can take some criticsm and tolerate differing perspectives to your own? The difficulties that have been raised will need to be sensitively addressed if your project is going to be successful in the long-term and rolled out further afield. Even various traditional priests have publically commented that they do not agree completely with the way the TLM has been introduced as the principal sunday mass in your parish. Are you going to start a campaign against them too? I have to ask, is this how you respond to parishoners who do not see eye-to-eye with everything you say or do? It strikes as passive-aggressive and an over-reaction which is fuelling a nasty streak throughout trad webland. Don't hold a grudge, it's not worth it. You had a chance to submit a right to reply and you chose not to use it (although I'm sure it's still not too late).
Maybe all you need is a better PR strategy!
Oh yes, it had an ultramontane period.
"Tabula delenda est" - I'll do a post on that tomorrow. It is an allusion to Marcus Porcius Cato.
Remember, like Cato, you've got to end every post like that!
big benny - This is no longer about the TLM in my parish but about the place of the Tablet in the Church in England and Wales. Somebody should have taken this up a long time ago. I'm taking it up now. Alea iacta est.
Ah, Father!
So will you now end every post with it?
Splendid!
I read "The Tablet" from cover to cover. It is essential reading for an English Catholic. When we start banning periodicals from seminaries and church porches where will it all end? Burning books and people too?
When we start banning periodicals from seminaries and church porches where will it all end? Burning books and people too?
Please give us back old time religion!!! Kyrie Elesion!
We have a somewhat worse situation here in the States, I think, with The National Catholic Reporter. It's a schismatic and heretical rag with one redeeming feature- John Allen.
It promotes, among other things, women priests, married priests, militant feminism, artifical contraception and resentment against the hierarchy..all the while with "Catholic" in the masthead. Moreover, last time I looked, it was carrying a lot of advertisements from dioceses and religious orders. As someone else said, it makes The Tablet look like Osservatore Romano. The thing is a disgrace on any level.
I fervently wish some prominent Catholic-priest blogger here would- while saying the black and doing the red-undertake a campaign for its annihilation as well.
Deliver us from these embarrassments, O Lord...
The Tablet is an anti-catholic newspaper promoting a secularist agenda. I don't see it as any worse than the Guardian or the Times in that respect. I simply cannot see how it is in any shape or form "essential reading for every English Catholic."
Good to see Big Benny admitting that the Tablet's original article was intended as a blow against Fr Finigan (why else the reference to turning the other cheek?).
I always thought that the Tablet's coverage of Asia and the Americas was very good, but that was balanced by syncretism, a deeply reactionary attitude to liturgy (1968 was a long time ago) and an attitude towards the successor of Peter that would embarass a Calvinist.
I see no reason that the Church should promote a periodical so inimical to the Faith: it might as well be argued that the Church should stock copies of the British Humanist Society's paper.
To answer John the Organist: we should not ban or burn the Pill, but equally I see no reason fir us to sponsor or support it by giving it a sales outlet in our churches either - let it compete for space at WH Smiths!
This is so obviously the work of the enemy, he knows that God's work can only be 'sown in peace'. The devil wants to get us upset with one another to steal our peace, then he can gain control of us and confuse us. Thank you Father for dealing with this matter with such love and composure. You are an example to us all.
"If a pastor remains silent when he sees God insulted and souls going astray, woe to him! If he does not want to be damned, and if there is some disorder in his parish, he must trample upon human respect and the fear of being despised or hated."
-- Saint John Vianney
Now my latin is very weak, if not non existent. So please translate the latin you quote (in brackets) on the blog.
Going on the offensive huh?
Good for you.
This is the usury issue of modern times. And now that we actually have usury from Visa...where is the Pope.
It's simple. This Pope should write an ex cathedra encyclical on this issue and he will not for the same reason that John Paul II did not: they are not as sure as you are. Indeed remember that break in Vatican opacity when it was reported that Benedict was having one office in the Vatican looking into condoms and HIV probably due to it being a controversy in Africa. Soon the Vatican went silent on it. But it shows that Popes are not quite as sure as the non Vatican papal cheerers. In short, produce an ex cathedra encyclical on it or admit that it remains in the ordinary and supreme ordinary but not the universal ordinary since it now lacks diachronic and probably synchronic consensus. If you can use fancy words, so can I.
I agree totally with the comment by dayraven.
If people want to read The Tablet, let them buy it from a newsagent. Why any priest would want to sell it in his church is beyond my comprehension.
To answer John the Organist: we should not ban or burn the Pill, but equally I see no reason fir us to sponsor or support it by giving it a sales outlet in our churches either - let it compete for space at WH Smiths!
Aye. Call me weird, but I think there is lots of middle ground between formally supporting a paper full of crabby brickbat hurling at the Church and burning people.
Those that reject Humanae Vitae also reject chastity in the married state. I have always found mutual support from faithful priest for practising natural family planning. It has to be said that when you accept the Church's teaching you should also realise you cannot achieve this alone you will need regular confession. The Church's teaching is demanding but so is turning the other cheek - perhaps the Tablet would like to demand vengeance because turning the other cheek is too demanding. The example parents set their children can return to them. In my case my Catholic mother was profoundly uncomfortable with our assent to Church teaching in humanae vitae. She had lived her reproductive years in quite a different way. How can we expect chastity in young people if parents do not practice it and give example? How can we expect chaste priests if we reject chastity in our life. I don't believe that Jesus ever said salvation was easy but it sure is worth it. Perhap the tablet would like to reject salvation because it imposes "unnecessary" demands and restrictions.
Further reading of the comments promopts me to say. The Tablet is a mouth piece of pseudo intellectuals that believe they have something more to say than the Magisterium of the Church. It's comments on JPII over the years were vile and unacceptable. Or course it has a place in our society BUT not as an organ to undermine the Catholic faith in our Churches and Catholic institutions. I wonder what the readership is for L'Oservatorre Romano - if this was placed in all Catholic Churches you would see clearly what the agenda of the Catholic Church is and not listen to the nonsense in the Tablet. The Tablet also advertises conferences for promoting shism i.e. priestesses - how very Catholic of them!
Fr F: This is no longer about the TLM in my parish but about the place of the Tablet in the Church in England and Wales. Somebody should have taken this up a long time ago. I'm taking it up now. Alea iacta est.
It's just a coincidence then that you decided to take up this crusade immediately after there was an article about your parish? C'mon Father, I don't think anyone is buying that explanation!
Well yes, the Tablet article has provided me with the necessary motivation and determination.
But since you have said elsewhere that you are not an insider in the Tablet, I hope it won't worry you too much personally.
Well, Big Benny, Father Tim faces an interesting dilemma ...
Tablet, or not Tablet:
that is the question:
Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous Pepinster,
Or to take arms against a sea of calumnies,
And by opposing end them?
To die: to sleep; No more;
and by a fight to say we end
The confusion and the thousand natural heresies
That dissent is heir to,'tis a consummation
Devoutly to be wish'd.
For my own part, I wish the Bard of Blackfen all the best in his Crusade, and say to the Tabletistas:
"Hence, horrible villain, or I'll spurn thine eyes like balls before me; I'll unhair thy head, Thou shalt be whipp'd with wire, and stew'd'in brine, smarting in lingering pickle"
Ceterum autem censeo, Tabulam esse delendam
Perhaps "tabula convertenda est" would be a more conciliatory war aim. But not using the RICIA, rather instruction from Fr Corapi.
It is tragic that L'Osservatore Romano cannot be found on sale in a single English Catholic church. It used to be sold in St James Spanish Place under Mgr Myles. It should be on sale in EVERY catholic church. I must renew my long lapsed subscription. Maybe that is good way to make up for Pope Benedict's just expressed sadness that even catholics had attacked him with open hostility.
PS My gerunds/ gerundives are extremely rusty and I stand open to correction..
What would be the best way to end the sale of this rag in our local churches? Every time I see it I get upset. I agree with you Fr - this rag has no place in our homes or churches. It propagates and perpetuates error and dissent to the already dazzlingly confused sheeps.
Dear Father Tim,
In case you fancy a giggle, please read this: Mary Honeyball's latest
In May she wrote This
Please share her words of wisdom with the world on your blog!
Men used to say, "I only read Playboy for the articles." The days are gone when one can say "I only read the Tablet for the articles." Yes, fifth the Tablet has always contained many worthwhile articles. But now the anticipation of a good intellectualfeast requires at least sinful material cooperation in the evil of dissent. If you can't beat them, starve them of fund!s
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