5 hours ago
Mr. Jackson's picture is incomplete - he passes over in silence those priests and laity of the True Resistance who have stood up to both the new conciliar-SSPX and the fake Resistance [which allows for many of the same doctrinal errors of the now conciliar-SSPX with respect to the New Mass, etc].
But his overall point is well made.
Chris Jackson via Hiraeth in Exile | July 21, 2025
Let’s stop pretending. If you’re still waiting for Rome to reward docility with doctrinal clarity or liturgical protections, it’s time to wake up. The evidence is in. The path to concessions, respect, and liturgical preservation doesn’t run through obedience. It runs through rupture.
No one wants to say that out loud, but the proof is right in front of us. Has it ever been clearer?
Orthodox in Schism, Orthodox Untouchable
Start with the Orthodox. Officially outside the Church for nearly a millennium. They reject Vatican I. They don’t believe in papal infallibility or universal jurisdiction. They’ve lit candles to mutual excommunications and walked away from reunion councils.
So what does Leo XIV do?
Smiles, embraces, ecumenical photo-ops. And now, this: “Rome and Constantinople are not called to vie for primacy.” That’s going beyond ecumenism to capitulation. It’s a pope publicly walking back what a prior pope defined as divinely revealed dogma.
And yet no one bats an eye.
Eastern Rite Catholics get their Divine Liturgy untouched. No guitars. No clown Masses. No inculturated dance processions. Their liturgical dignity was preserved for one reason and one reason only: the Orthodox Schism.
If Bugnini had gotten his hands on them without the Orthodox to flee to, they’d be reciting Eucharistic Prayer II in track suits by now. But Rome’s fear of these Catholics leaving for the Orthodox kept them safe. That’s the reality.
SSPX: Results Through Resistance
Now shift to the Society of St. Pius X. Excommunicated in 1988 or so we were told. For decades they were treated as pariahs, “not in full communion,” sniffed the bureaucrats. But what did the SSPX do in return?
They kept building chapels. Kept training priests. Kept publicly calling out the postconciliar popes for heresy, blasphemy, apostasy, you name it. Lefebvre’s spiritual sons were the last public voice of clarity in a Church drunk on aggiornamento.
And what happened?
Rome blinked.
We got the 1988 Indult. Then Ecclesia Dei. Then Summorum Pontificum. Then a sudden discovery: the Latin Mass had never been abrogated after all. Funny how that worked.
Doctrinal talks followed, and they weren’t just one-sided lectures. Rome conceded, at least implicitly, that some documents of Vatican II might not be binding. They told the SSPX, in essence, “You can come back without accepting everything.” Try saying that to a diocesan trad.
Resistance got results. Public confrontation made space for tradition. Everyone knows it even if they don’t want to admit it.
Then Came the Silence and the Collapse
But after 2012, something changed. The SSPX went quiet. In the last letter of Bishop Williamson to the faithful he quoted a priest who was leaving the SSPX with many of his congregation:
In effect, Francis took the Chair, and suddenly the firebrand critiques faded. The Society stopped calling out the daily scandals. No more public condemnations. No more naming the errors of the new regime.
And then what did Rome do?
They gave the new kinder, gentler SSPX its private pay-out: jurisdiction for confessions and marriages, ceased condemnations, no new charges of schism.
And what did the rest of us get?
Traditionis Custodes.
Diocesan Latin Masses shut down. FSSP priests cornered into ghettos. Public declarations that the Novus Ordo is now “the unique expression” of the Roman Rite. Summorum was torched, and with it, any illusion that good behavior earns you favor.
The SSPX’s silence bought them protection. Everyone else got crushed.
Obedience Is for the Outcasts
Let’s be blunt: Rome rewards disobedience. In practice, those who resist get courted. Those who submit get sidelined.
The Orthodox reject Rome outright? They don’t have to accept Roman primacy, Leo speaks of changing our Easter date to theirs, Rome allows Eastern Rite Catholics to revere schismatic Orthodox Saints locally, and Rome gives Eastern Rite Catholics zero interference in their liturgy for fear they will flee.
The SSPX loudly call out heresy for 18 years, illicitly ordain priests and consecrate bishops, invade the bishops’ dioceses and disobediently offer the Latin Mass and old sacraments to the faithful? Rome suddenly approves the FSSP to say the TLM and use the old sacraments, issues Ecclesia Dei opening up the diocesan TLM with bishop approval. Then 20 years later, after even more vocal SSPX resistance and growth, Rome offers to compromise on Vatican II, lifts the “excommunications,” admits the Latin Mass was “never abrogated,” and frees it for all Catholics.
You obediently attend the diocesan TLM, support your bishop, pray for the pope? You get locked doors, Mass cancellations, and a lecture on Vatican II.
But for any of this to work, it has to cost Rome something. One man resisting doesn’t move the dial. A dozen priests in exile doesn’t either. What forces Rome’s hand is numbers: mass defections from the pews, entire families fleeing to chapels outside diocesan control, vocations drying up, donations vanishing. In other words: Rome only notices when a rival center of gravity starts pulling people, and legitimacy, away from the Conciliar machine. That’s what the Orthodox have. That’s what the old SSPX built. A competing brand Rome could reclaim, but only by rolling back its own revolution. And the only way to make them consider that? Be big enough that ignoring you becomes a liability.
This is the reward structure. It works. That’s all Rome seems to care about.
A Note to the Silent Sons of Archbishop Lefebvre
There are still priests in the Society who know all this. They were formed in the days when calling out Rome’s heresies wasn’t controversial, it was the daily apostolate. They remember when the SSPX was feared by the Vatican, not flattered. They know that Summorum Pontificum wasn’t the result of compromise, it was the fruit of confrontation.
So here’s the question: if LifeSite News can be reclaimed by its faithful after an attempted coup, why can’t the Society reclaim its original mission?
The men who took back LifeSite didn’t wait for permission. They saw the direction things were going, softness, silence, strategic surrender, and said: not on our watch. And they acted. Traditions don’t defend themselves. And neither will the legacy of Archbishop Lefebvre, unless his sons decide it’s time to start fighting again.
If they do, they won’t be alone.
But his overall point is well made.
Rome Only Blinks When You Push
Turns out Rome doesn’t reward loyalty, it rewards leverage.
![[Image: https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.ama...x1080.jpeg]](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/%24s_!BIBH!,w_1456,c_limit,f_webp,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F66b3f5be-4256-42f3-a101-d1758b8e62d6_1920x1080.jpeg)
Turns out Rome doesn’t reward loyalty, it rewards leverage.
![[Image: https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.ama...x1080.jpeg]](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/%24s_!BIBH!,w_1456,c_limit,f_webp,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F66b3f5be-4256-42f3-a101-d1758b8e62d6_1920x1080.jpeg)
Chris Jackson via Hiraeth in Exile | July 21, 2025
Let’s stop pretending. If you’re still waiting for Rome to reward docility with doctrinal clarity or liturgical protections, it’s time to wake up. The evidence is in. The path to concessions, respect, and liturgical preservation doesn’t run through obedience. It runs through rupture.
No one wants to say that out loud, but the proof is right in front of us. Has it ever been clearer?
Orthodox in Schism, Orthodox Untouchable
Start with the Orthodox. Officially outside the Church for nearly a millennium. They reject Vatican I. They don’t believe in papal infallibility or universal jurisdiction. They’ve lit candles to mutual excommunications and walked away from reunion councils.
So what does Leo XIV do?
Smiles, embraces, ecumenical photo-ops. And now, this: “Rome and Constantinople are not called to vie for primacy.” That’s going beyond ecumenism to capitulation. It’s a pope publicly walking back what a prior pope defined as divinely revealed dogma.
And yet no one bats an eye.
Eastern Rite Catholics get their Divine Liturgy untouched. No guitars. No clown Masses. No inculturated dance processions. Their liturgical dignity was preserved for one reason and one reason only: the Orthodox Schism.
If Bugnini had gotten his hands on them without the Orthodox to flee to, they’d be reciting Eucharistic Prayer II in track suits by now. But Rome’s fear of these Catholics leaving for the Orthodox kept them safe. That’s the reality.
SSPX: Results Through Resistance
Now shift to the Society of St. Pius X. Excommunicated in 1988 or so we were told. For decades they were treated as pariahs, “not in full communion,” sniffed the bureaucrats. But what did the SSPX do in return?
They kept building chapels. Kept training priests. Kept publicly calling out the postconciliar popes for heresy, blasphemy, apostasy, you name it. Lefebvre’s spiritual sons were the last public voice of clarity in a Church drunk on aggiornamento.
And what happened?
Rome blinked.
We got the 1988 Indult. Then Ecclesia Dei. Then Summorum Pontificum. Then a sudden discovery: the Latin Mass had never been abrogated after all. Funny how that worked.
Doctrinal talks followed, and they weren’t just one-sided lectures. Rome conceded, at least implicitly, that some documents of Vatican II might not be binding. They told the SSPX, in essence, “You can come back without accepting everything.” Try saying that to a diocesan trad.
Resistance got results. Public confrontation made space for tradition. Everyone knows it even if they don’t want to admit it.
Then Came the Silence and the Collapse
But after 2012, something changed. The SSPX went quiet. In the last letter of Bishop Williamson to the faithful he quoted a priest who was leaving the SSPX with many of his congregation:
Quote:What we came to realize was that, for all practical purposes, the Society of St. Pius X had become in effect the tenth religious Congregation to have rallied to the Conciliar Church. Even if no deal has yet been signed, the principle of such a deal was adopted by the July 2012 General Chapter. For indeed, however few or many conditions the SSPX leaders might insist on for such an eventual deal, they decided that the Society could henceforth sign a pact with those who are relentlessly changing the Catholic Faith…
The present management of the Society is stamping out dissent and expelling critics…
And if we ask when we can fully trust the SSPX again, the answer is the same: when all SSPX leaders and priests of the Society who have promoted the new line will be demoted; when the texts of the 2012 Chapter will be properly condemned; when the faithful priests will be vindicated by the new management; when a book on the history of this crisis will be published and read yearly in our communities; when a new General Chapter will abjure any contact with Conciliar authorities, until Rome has cleaned up its mess.
Let us merely do our duty, give glory to God, and let Him deal with our former colleagues who are in danger of compromising. We pray and sacrifice for their conversion, sure enough. But compromise, and put ourselves in harm’s way? Never! Nevertheless, let us remain united with them in prayer.
In effect, Francis took the Chair, and suddenly the firebrand critiques faded. The Society stopped calling out the daily scandals. No more public condemnations. No more naming the errors of the new regime.
And then what did Rome do?
They gave the new kinder, gentler SSPX its private pay-out: jurisdiction for confessions and marriages, ceased condemnations, no new charges of schism.
And what did the rest of us get?
Traditionis Custodes.
Diocesan Latin Masses shut down. FSSP priests cornered into ghettos. Public declarations that the Novus Ordo is now “the unique expression” of the Roman Rite. Summorum was torched, and with it, any illusion that good behavior earns you favor.
The SSPX’s silence bought them protection. Everyone else got crushed.
Obedience Is for the Outcasts
Let’s be blunt: Rome rewards disobedience. In practice, those who resist get courted. Those who submit get sidelined.
The Orthodox reject Rome outright? They don’t have to accept Roman primacy, Leo speaks of changing our Easter date to theirs, Rome allows Eastern Rite Catholics to revere schismatic Orthodox Saints locally, and Rome gives Eastern Rite Catholics zero interference in their liturgy for fear they will flee.
The SSPX loudly call out heresy for 18 years, illicitly ordain priests and consecrate bishops, invade the bishops’ dioceses and disobediently offer the Latin Mass and old sacraments to the faithful? Rome suddenly approves the FSSP to say the TLM and use the old sacraments, issues Ecclesia Dei opening up the diocesan TLM with bishop approval. Then 20 years later, after even more vocal SSPX resistance and growth, Rome offers to compromise on Vatican II, lifts the “excommunications,” admits the Latin Mass was “never abrogated,” and frees it for all Catholics.
You obediently attend the diocesan TLM, support your bishop, pray for the pope? You get locked doors, Mass cancellations, and a lecture on Vatican II.
But for any of this to work, it has to cost Rome something. One man resisting doesn’t move the dial. A dozen priests in exile doesn’t either. What forces Rome’s hand is numbers: mass defections from the pews, entire families fleeing to chapels outside diocesan control, vocations drying up, donations vanishing. In other words: Rome only notices when a rival center of gravity starts pulling people, and legitimacy, away from the Conciliar machine. That’s what the Orthodox have. That’s what the old SSPX built. A competing brand Rome could reclaim, but only by rolling back its own revolution. And the only way to make them consider that? Be big enough that ignoring you becomes a liability.
This is the reward structure. It works. That’s all Rome seems to care about.
A Note to the Silent Sons of Archbishop Lefebvre
There are still priests in the Society who know all this. They were formed in the days when calling out Rome’s heresies wasn’t controversial, it was the daily apostolate. They remember when the SSPX was feared by the Vatican, not flattered. They know that Summorum Pontificum wasn’t the result of compromise, it was the fruit of confrontation.
So here’s the question: if LifeSite News can be reclaimed by its faithful after an attempted coup, why can’t the Society reclaim its original mission?
The men who took back LifeSite didn’t wait for permission. They saw the direction things were going, softness, silence, strategic surrender, and said: not on our watch. And they acted. Traditions don’t defend themselves. And neither will the legacy of Archbishop Lefebvre, unless his sons decide it’s time to start fighting again.
If they do, they won’t be alone.
"So let us be confident, let us not be unprepared, let us not be outflanked, let us be wise, vigilant, fighting against those who are trying to tear the faith out of our souls and morality out of our hearts, so that we may remain Catholics, remain united to the Blessed Virgin Mary, remain united to the Roman Catholic Church, remain faithful children of the Church."- Abp. Lefebvre