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Without revising Traditionis Custodes, Leo XIV multiplies the gestures that restore to the Roman rite its ancient solemnity. A response through liturgy to the doctrinal tensions of the moment.
We have been following, throughout the past few weeks, the double liturgical tension in which Leo XIV has taken root. On one side, Cardinal Raymond Burke publicly demands the revision of Traditionis Custodes and the creation of a dicastery dedicated to the Tridentine liturgy (Infovaticana, July 16, 2026). A few days earlier, Cardinal Sarah had declared that the Church lacks the authority to suppress the Latin Mass. On the other side, the Fraternity of Saint Pius X files its canonical appeal against the excommunication of July 2. La Croix, in its "à-vif" analysis of July 17, describes a pope who does not respond with a text but with a posture, and openly raises the question of his own manner.
The article in La Croix, signed in the "à-vif" column on July 17, 2026 under the title "Letter from the Vatican," is written from Castel Gandolfo, where Leo XIV has taken up residence exactly four hundred years after Urban VIII made it the summer residence of the popes. It is from this material continuity with Baroque Rome that the newspaper draws the question that gives its title to the chronicle: to what extent is this American pope truly traditional? The sketched answer is neither that of a formal return to the 1962 missal, nor that of an indistinct continuity with the previous pontificate. Traditionis Custodes (motu proprio of July 16, 2021) remains in force and no public project for a dicastery for the extraordinary form has leaked from the Vatican. What is moving at this stage is more a matter of Roman style than of law.
Sacrosanctum Concilium, the conciliar constitution on the liturgy (Vatican II, December 4, 1963), recalls in §36 that the use of the Latin language will be preserved in the Latin rites. The same document specifies in §116 that Gregorian chant, considered by the Church as the proper chant of the Roman liturgy, should occupy the first place in liturgical actions, all other things being equal. What Leo XIV shows in his pontifical style does nothing but restore what the Council itself had explicitly asked to be preserved, against the excesses of a reform read as a rupture. It is an hermeneutics of continuity (Benedict XVI, speech to the Curia on December 22, 2005) applied first to the manner rather than to the decree.
For the faithful attached to Tradition, the signal is twofold: liturgical restoration is not taboo in Rome, but it will not pass through a return to the extraordinary form within the current legal framework. For the supporters of the post-conciliar reform, Leo XIV's manner reminds us that Vatican II never wanted a clean slate, and therefore does not provide a pretext for a revolt against the pope. For the Curia, finally, the message is clear: the magisterium is also transmitted through the liturgy, even before the texts.
Leo XIV's method has its limits. Without a legal revision of Traditionis Custodes, bishops remain masters of strictly applying the restrictions, and communities attached to the traditional Mass benefit from no new canonical security. The Roman posture can nourish hope without translating doctrine into law. It does not appease the FSSPX, which pleads its appeal against excommunication, nor the cardinal camp which, with Burke, demands a structural challenge.
We will retain that the liturgical unity of the Church first passes through fidelity to the Council, read in its continuity with Tradition, not against it. Praying the Mass, whatever the missal, in the spirit of Sacrosanctum Concilium: neither rupture nor immobility, but living reception.
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Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.
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