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Six days before the deadline of July 1 set by Rome, a renowned theologian directly addresses Leo XIV on the FSSPX dossier. Between a call for peace and canonical pressure, the countdown is on.
We had followed Pope Leo XIV's latest call to the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X before the July 1st deadline. Six days away from this date, the debate is no longer confined to the institutional framework: a leading Roman theologian, Father Nicola Bux, has entered the discussion with a direct appeal to the Sovereign Pontiff.
Father Nicola Bux, a consultant to several Roman dicasteries under Benedict XVI and a recognized author on liturgy and the sacraments, published an appeal asking Pope Leo XIV to "do everything possible" to overcome the disagreements that still separate the SSPX from Rome. The appeal comes at a time of maximum pressure: according to a Vatican source, "the door is closed for a generation" if July 1st passes without an agreement. The Fraternity, for its part, has recently made public a profession of Catholic faith, a gesture of doctrinal clarification rather than canonical openness.
Father Bux's approach is part of a tradition of patient mediation between Rome and the heirs of Archbishop Lefebvre. It implicitly recalls what Benedict XVI wrote in his letter of March 10, 2009, to bishops worldwide: "The real question (...) is that of reconciliation and the unity of the Church." Canon 209 of the Code of Canon Law reminds all the faithful of their duty to maintain communion with the Church. But communion is not primarily a juridical act: it is sacramental and doctrinal. The crux remains the hermeneutics of Vatican II, which the SSPX refuses to accept according to the official interpretation.
Father Bux's appeal reveals a fault line within the traditionalist camp: between those who still believe a doctrinal agreement based on truth is possible and those who resign themselves to it out of prudence or discouragement. For the hundreds of thousands of faithful who regularly attend SSPX chapels in France, the stakes are immediately concrete: the legitimacy of the sacraments received, the canonical status of priests, and full belonging to the visible Church.
As sincere as Father Bux's appeal may be, it does not remove the main obstacle: the SSPX does not accept a reception of Vatican II that includes the texts on religious freedom (Dignitatis Humanae) and ecumenical dialogue (Unitatis Redintegratio) as interpreted by the post-conciliar magisterium. A purely canonical agreement—personal status, chapters, bishops—without resolving these doctrinal points would be fragile and likely to generate a new crisis within less than a generation.
"Where Peter is, there is the Church" (Saint Ambrose, Explanatio Psalmorum XII, 40). May Catholics attached to Tradition pray fervently in these days that the Holy Spirit guide both Leo XIV and the leaders of the SSPX toward full and entire truth—the only path to an authentic communion that is not a doctrinal surrender.
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Six jours, c'est vraiment serré... Mais si ça peut éviter une nouvelle fracture, ça mérite d'essayer, non ?
Six jours, c'est trop court pour régler ça sérieusement. On dirait qu'on veut juste cocher une case avant les vacances.
FSSPX : Léon XIV lance un dernier appel avant le 1er juillet