The Liturgical Movement: Francis and the Rollback
In 2021, Traditionis Custodes reversed Benedict’s reconciliation and placed the traditional Mass under severe restriction. Understanding it honestly — the pope’s stated reasons and the real cost — is the test of a Catholic who loves both the old rite and the Church.
On 16 July 2021 Pope Francis issued Traditionis Custodes, declaring the reformed liturgical books “the unique expression of the lex orandi of the Roman Rite” and reversing the settlement of Summorum Pontificum. He made the diocesan bishop the sole regulator of the 1962 Missal, barred its celebration in parish churches and the formation of new groups, and required newly ordained priests to seek the Apostolic See’s consent. Francis explained that a survey of bishops had convinced him the concession was being “exploited” to reject the Council and divide the Church. The restrictions tightened further in 2021–2023 — and fell, in practice, hardest on faithful communities in full communion who had done nothing wrong.
The Liturgical Movement: Francis and the Rollback
On 16 July 2021 Pope Francis issued Traditionis Custodes, declaring the reformed liturgical books “the unique expression of the lex orandi of the Roman Rite” and reversing the settlement of Summorum Pontificum. He made the diocesan bishop the sole regulator of the 1962 Missal, barred its celebration in parish churches and the formation of new groups, and required newly ordained priests to seek the Apostolic See’s consent. Francis explained that a survey of bishops had convinced him the concession was being “exploited” to reject the Council and divide the Church. The restrictions tightened further in 2021–2023 — and fell, in practice, hardest on faithful communities in full communion who had done nothing wrong.
For fourteen years, Summorum Pontificum governed the traditional Mass, and under it the old rite quietly flourished. Then, on July 16, 2021, that settlement was reversed — not modified, but reversed — by a single document. Traditionis Custodes is the most consequential act against the traditional liturgy since 1969, and it is the hinge on which the present moment turns.
This chapter must be handled with particular care. The temptation, for one who loves the old Mass, is to answer a hard act with a hard heart. But the editorial standard of this whole series — and the duty of any Catholic — is to remain in communion: to render the reigning pontiff his due respect and to state his reasons fairly, even while grieving honestly what was done and counting its cost. Both are required. Neither may be sacrificed to the other.
Traditionis Custodes
Traditionis Custodes — “Guardians of the Tradition” — took effect the day it was published. Where Benedict had spoken of two forms of one Roman Rite, both legitimate, Francis reversed the framing in his very first article:The Pope’s Stated Reasons
Francis set out his reasons in an accompanying letter to the bishops of the world, and fairness requires that they be stated as he gave them. He had, he wrote, instructed the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to survey the world’s bishops on how Summorum Pontificum was working in practice; the responses, he said, revealed “a situation that preoccupies and saddens me.” (The survey’s actual contents were never published, and how representative the responses were of the world’s bishops remains contested — a fair reader should hold the pope’s characterization of them, and his critics’ doubts about them, side by side.) His central charge was that a generous concession had been abused:The Cost
And yet the remedy fell hardest not on the disobedient few but on the faithful many. The communities most affected by Traditionis Custodes were overwhelmingly those in full, unquestioned communion with Rome — the families, the young priests, the converts, the Ecclesia Dei parishes that had accepted the Council, affirmed the validity of the new Mass, prayed for the pope by name, and asked only to worship as their grandparents had. They were punished, in effect, for the sins of others, and the wound was real. Nor did it stop with the motu proprio. A Responsa ad dubia from the Congregation for Divine Worship in December 2021 tightened the screws further; a rescript of February 21, 2023 reserved to the Holy See itself the power to permit the use of parish churches and to authorize newly ordained priests — removing even those discretions from local bishops. And across the United States the restrictions came down diocese by diocese: in Arlington and Washington in 2022, the traditional Mass confined to a handful of approved sites; in Detroit, where in 2025 permission to use parish churches was allowed to expire; in Charlotte, where in 2025 the old Mass was restricted from four parishes to a single chapel after a public outcry forced a delay. Whatever one makes of the policy, its human texture is not in dispute: devout Catholics, guilty of nothing, found the Mass they loved pushed to the margins of the Church’s life — to a single chapel, an inconvenient hour, a basement, a gymnasium — by the authority they were striving to obey.A Wound, Honestly Named
How should a Catholic hold this? Not with rupture, and not with rage. The validity of the new Mass is not in question; the authority of the papal office is not in question; the duty of respect and obedience to lawful authority is not suspended because a law is painful. The sedevacantist exit — declaring the see vacant, the pope no pope — is a false one, and this series has rejected it from the first page. Validity is the floor; communion is not negotiable. But communion does not require pretending that nothing was lost. It is possible — it is necessary — to hold two things at once: filial respect for the office of Peter, and honest grief at a decision that contradicted, in tone and substance, Benedict’s assurance that “what earlier generations held as sacred, remains sacred and great for us too.” The traditional Catholic’s task under Traditionis Custodes was the hardest kind of fidelity: to suffer a wound from a father’s hand without ceasing to honor the father, and without ceasing to love the inheritance. That was where the matter stood when the pontificate ended. In April 2025, Pope Francis died — and the question he had reopened passed, unresolved, to his successor.CONTINUE THE SERIES: POPE LEO XIV AND THE PRESENT MOMENT
With the death of Pope Francis and the election of Pope Leo XIV in May 2025, the conversation frozen under Traditionis Custodes reopened. Where the question stands now — amid cautious signs of a thaw and an escalating crisis with the SSPX — is the subject of the final chapter, told as it stands as of this writing.