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As the countdown to July 1st approaches, a priest questions the legal validity of the excommunication threat issued by the Prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith against the faithful of the SSPX who attend their Masses.
LifeSite News reports that a priest has publicly challenged the canonical validity of the excommunication threat issued by Cardinal Victor Manuel Fernandez, Prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, against the faithful who attend Masses celebrated by priests of the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X (FSSPX).
The challenge concerns form and competence: excommunication is a severe canonical penalty, the application of which requires a precise procedure defined by the Code of Canon Law (canons 1317-1321). A "threat" issued through a dicastery declaration, without a formal canonical judgment, raises the question of its legal validity.
July 1, 2026, is the deadline set by Cardinal Fernandez for the FSSPX to regularize its canonical situation. The FSSPX responded by publishing a "Catholic profession of faith" addressed to Leo XIV and the cardinals (pub. #672), an act its supporters describe as an olive branch and its detractors as a challenge.
The canonical challenge is technically serious. The 1983 Code of Canon Law distinguishes between preceptive penalties (pronounced by judgment or decree) and latae sententiae penalties (incurred automatically by the mere fact of the act). Attending a Mass celebrated by an FSSPX priest is not listed among the causes of latae sententiae excommunication enumerated in canon 1364.
If Cardinal Fernandez's threat aimed to intimidate the faithful rather than initiate a formal canonical procedure, it has no binding value under Church law. The question this priest raises is therefore: is this a canonical penalty or a poorly worded pastoral declaration?
The distinction has concrete consequences: an invalid excommunication produces no effect in the conscience of the faithful who are aware of its formal defects.
The FSSPX question rests on a paradox that Leo XIV has yet to resolve: the Fraternity is not formally schismatic (its priests were not excommunicated since John Paul II's 1988 decree, and even that excommunication was lifted in 2009 by Benedict XVI), but it remains in a state of canonical irregularity. This irregularity concerns jurisdiction, not sacramental validity.
In his letter to bishops on March 10, 2009, Benedict XVI essentially explained that FSSPX priests do not yet have a canonical mission in the Church and that their ministry is therefore illicit—not invalid. This fundamental nuance lies at the heart of the current dispute: illicit means without jurisdictional authorization, not devoid of all sacramental effect.
With five days until July 1, three scenarios remain possible: a partial regularization (agreement on the validity of sacraments, silence on jurisdiction), a formal rupture (effective excommunication if the procedure is initiated), or a prolonged status quo, which is paradoxically the most likely scenario.
What is at stake goes beyond the FSSPX: it is the question of who defines the boundaries of Catholic communion, and by what procedure. Can a Pope or his representative intimidate the faithful with declarations whose canonical validity is contestable? The answer to this question will reveal much about the conception of authority in Leo XIV's Church.
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Si Rome menace sans respecter le droit canon, est-ce que ça a vraiment une valeur ? J’avoue que ça me laisse perplexe.
FSSPX : Léon XIV lance un dernier appel avant le 1er juillet