Selling Out the Faith for a 1988 Big Wheel
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Selling Out the Faith for a 1988 Big Wheel
How Burke and Trad Inc are trading twenty years of silence for the privilege of parking the old Mass back in the bishop’s garage


Chris Jackson via Hiraeth in Exile | Nov 14, 2025


The Day the Resistance Threw a Party

Michael Matt logged on today to tell us the good news.

Latin Mass on side altars in St Peter’s. Rumors of Leo “allowing bishops to decide for themselves” about the TLM. The Remnant followed up with an editorial trumpeting the return of the Mass to “the Pope’s basilica” as the beginning of a glorious loosening of restrictions. Keep praying. Keep hoping. The Mass will not be denied.

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If you just woke up from a coma that started in 1970, you might think you were reading The Remnant circa 1988. Rome grants a carefully controlled indult, keeps all the doctrinal novelties, and the house journal of conservative resistance declares a step in the right direction.

The only problem is that it is not 1988. It is 2025, Fran­cis is canonized and enthroned as Leo’s patron saint, Amoris and Fiducia are in force, Tucho runs doctrine, and bishops who bless sodomy and toy with women’s ordination are promoted while traditional communities are expelled from dioceses.

And in that context, the “traditional” media class is preparing to sell the last of its credibility for the same miserable indult it once denounced.


The Big Wheel From 1988

Back in the day, Ecclesia Dei gave us what traditionalists now remember as the 1988 indult. In reality it was not a sports car, it was a plastic Big Wheel. Bishops could, at their discretion, let you pedal the old rite in carefully fenced-off corners of the diocese, so long as you rang your little bell and promised fidelity to the Council and the new ecclesiology. SSPX Superior General, Fr Davide Pagliarani, has explained the deal with brutal clarity: the old Mass was tolerated as a kind of homeopathic dose of tradition, administered precisely in order to reconcile dissenters to the postconciliar project. The “privilege” was instrumental.

Summorum Pontificum briefly upgraded the vehicle. Instead of begging the local ordinary, priests could simply offer the Mass of their ordination and watch as young families flocked in. For a moment it felt as if the Ferrari had finally rolled into the driveway. The old rite looked like it might actually be treated as the family car again, not a toy dragged out for special occasions.

Then Traditionis Custodes and Roche’s letters slammed that garage door shut. They told us in plain language what was always true in principle: the Tridentine Mass cannot be celebrated as an expression of a different ecclesiology or a different faith. If you are allowed to use it, it is only on the condition that you accept Vatican II, the new theology, and the Novus Ordo as the “unique expression” of the Roman Rite.

Now, after this entire drama, we are supposed to cheer because Leo may graciously hand us back the 1988 Big Wheel. Under Benedict you finally had the Ferrari in the driveway: the old Mass acknowledged in law, keys in the ignition. Francis and Leo confiscated it and locked the garage. Now, if you promise to zip it for 20 years, Leo hints he might rummage in the Vatican attic, drag out the sun-faded Big Wheel, dust it off, wrap it up, and roll it out with a ribbon on the handlebars.

And Michael Matt is telling you this is a Christmas miracle.

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The Script They Are Now Acting Out

On June 14 I wrote that Leo would probably “take a middle road and reinstate the 1988 indult, leaving permission for the TLM entirely up to the local bishop since that is basically what is happening in practice anyway.”

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It was not prophecy. It was reading the room. Leo wants continuity with Francis without looking like Francis’s prison warden. Left-wing bishops want the TLM dead. “Conservative” cardinals want a fig leaf so they can tell their flocks they “saved the Latin Mass” while leaving Bergoglian theology intact.

So you craft a middle way.

Side altars in St Peter’s. Some permissions in safe dioceses. A new framework that looks like mercy and decentralization but leaves everything in the hands of the same bishops who have already shown what they intend to do.

In September I said out loud what everyone with a pulse could see. The Fatima centennial novena pushed by Cardinal Burke, complete with nine weeks of carefully branded prayers, looked very much like stage-setting. You prime traditional Catholics for a big “answer” from Our Lady. You line up the conservative media to explain the miracle when the answer arrives. Then Leo grants an indult-style loosening and the talking points write themselves:

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Our Lady heard us. Leo listened. The good cardinals were prudent. See? Silence works.

It is liturgical theater used to sanctify a political bargain.


From Bashing Benedict to Loving Leo

Michael Matt’s new editorial reads like self-parody if you remember the actual history of his own newspaper. We do not have to infer what he once thought about the very arrangement he is now begging Leo to resurrect. He wrote it down. At length.

Go back to 2006. Benedict is on the throne. John Paul’s Ecclesia Dei indult is still fully in force. The FSSP, the Institute of Christ the King, diocesan indult Masses: the whole 1988 regime Matt now treats as a lost paradise is not theoretical, it is the air he is breathing.

And in that world, Michael Matt co-authors a blistering joint statement with John Vennari: “On Rome and the Society of St. Pius X.”

What do they say?

They say Benedict’s “first allegiance has always been to the modernist New Theology.” They say he is the same Ratzinger who praised Vatican II as a “counter-Syllabus,” who insisted “there must be no return to the Syllabus,” and whose December 22 speech is “nothing on which to pin much hope” because it doubles down on conciliar religious liberty and “healthy secularity.”

They say Rome has given “no clear proof of its attachment to the Rome of yesterday,” no actions that show “there must be no innovations outside of Tradition.” They say the crisis is “beyond” anything the Church has seen, that Vatican II is “largely a pile of flawed documents” drawn up by revolutionaries, and that nothing short of divine intervention will fix the wreckage.

Most importantly, they warn the SSPX in plain language that any deal with “present-day Rome” would be suicidal. The phrase they use for a regularization under Benedict’s Vatican is “the devil’s tail.” They speak of a “juridical trap.” They compare the whole thing to Ostpolitik: just as John XXIII agreed not to condemn Communism in exchange for a few observers at the Council, so modern Rome will happily give traditionalists canonical papers and an indult niche, provided they shut up about Vatican II and the new Mass.

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They point to Campos and the Fraternity of Saint Peter as cautionary tales. The pattern, they say, is always the same. Bring a traditional group inside. Keep the 1988 framework. Give them just enough canonical status and just enough access to the old rite to keep them grateful and nervous. Then lean on them. Tell them they must “show unity” by concelebrating the new rite. Forbid public criticism of the Council. Punish any “spirit of rebellion.” Let them keep their Latin as long as they stop attacking the revolution.

And they call that bargain immoral. Trading silence on the central errors of the age for a safe little apostolate is described as a betrayal of the Church’s militant duty. They mock the idea that priests could be allowed to celebrate the old Mass as long as they never mention the elephant in the sanctuary: the Council, the new theology, the false ecumenism.

Remember the context. Benedict, for all his defects, is still a hundred times more friendly to tradition than Leo. The 1988 indult is intact. Rome tolerates traditional institutes. Some bishops grant Latin Masses precisely out of fear of the SSPX. The situation, bad as it is, is miles better than the scorched-earth regime Leo inherited from Francis and chose to keep.

And in that relatively softer landscape, Michael Matt’s Remnant is telling the SSPX: do not touch this with a ten-foot pole. The indult system is a trap. The regularization is a trap. Being folded into the “ecclesial reality of today” under Vatican II is a trap. Better to remain on the margins, canonically “irregular,” than to sell your voice for a place at the table.

Now fast-forward to 2025.

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Bergoglian moral theology has been written into the Catechism. Amoris and Fiducia are in the bloodstream. The TLM has been expelled from parish churches by decree. Traditional communities have been slapped, gutted, or exiled. Leo praises Francis, canonizes his program, and sprinkles a few side-altar permissions like birdseed before the cameras.

And this is the moment when the same Michael Matt who once told the SSPX that the 1988–Ecclesia Dei arrangement was the “devil’s tail” suddenly starts pining for… the 1988–Ecclesia Dei arrangement.

Back then, the indult was a dangerous pacifier for those willing to trade their tongue for a niche. Today, the indult is the prize. Back then, Benedict’s Rome was too modernist to be trusted even with an already-existing, relatively generous framework. Today, Leo’s Rome is somehow trustworthy enough that we are supposed to pray, stay quiet, and hope he restores that same framework on even worse terms.

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Yesterday’s Michael Matt told you that taking an indult deal under a Council-loyal pope would neuter the resistance. Today’s Michael Matt tells you that not taking an indult deal under a worse Council-loyal pope is ungrateful and shortsighted.

The theology of the Council has not improved. The moral landscape has not improved. The treatment of tradition has not improved. The only thing that has changed is who is riding the Big Wheel and who is cheering from the curb.


What the Bargain Really Buys: Silence as the New Obedience

Back in September I wrote that the new strategy being sold to traditional families is simple enough to summarize on a bumper sticker.

Stop criticizing Leo. Stop naming the errors. Tone down the public opposition.

In return, you will get more stable access to the old rite.

It is, as I put it, truth on the shelf in exchange for Mass on the calendar.

The unwritten enforcement mechanism is fear. If a priest under the shiny new indult ever preaches directly against Fiducia, Amoris, synodality, the Abu Dhabi mindset, or Leo’s ecumenical theatrics, the bishop can pull his permission in a single afternoon. The same bishops who already shut down Masses in Charlotte, Knoxville, Detroit, and a dozen other dioceses will not suddenly grow brave once Rome tells them TLM policy is “up to you.”

So the sermons will become soft. The homilies will become “balanced.” The hardest truths will be expressed in euphemisms or not at all. Young families will drive an hour for the old rite and hear the same bromides about accompaniment, conscience, and journeying together they would have heard at the 9am guitar Mass, just wrapped in lace.

After twenty years of that regime, the young adults in those pews will have never once heard a priest denounce Amoris by name or explain why Fiducia is an insult to the martyrs of purity. They will never have heard a serious critique of Vatican II’s ecumenism or the new understanding of religious liberty. The external form will be traditional. The internal formation will be Bergoglian.

That is the real price tag of this indult. It is not just a piece of paper from Rome. It is the gradual silencing of an entire generation of priests and laity by the constant threat of losing the only Mass they have left.


Pagliarani’s Inconvenient Truth

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You do not need to agree with every position the SSPX takes to acknowledge that Superior General, Fr. Davide Pagliarani told the truth about the structure of the indult game.

He reminded everyone that Ecclesia Dei and Summorum Pontificum were built on a false premise: that the old rite and the new rite are simply “two forms of the one Roman Rite,” happily coexisting as different styles within the same theological framework. That premise requires you to accept religious liberty, ecumenism, collegiality, the new anthropology, and the whole apparatus of “living Tradition.”

When Benedict tried to let both rites sit side by side, hoping the traditional liturgy would slowly “enrich” the reformed one, history proved him wrong. The doctrinal machine behind the new rite kept grinding forward, and once Francis got tired of the experiment he tore up the motu proprio and reinstated the original deal: you may have the old Mass only if you explicitly accept the Council and the legitimacy of the reform.

Roche wrote it down in black and white. If you want the 1962 books, you must embrace the 1970 theology.

Any new indult will only reinforce that premise. It does not matter whether the permission is managed from Rome or devolved to bishops’ conferences. The structure is the same: the old Mass is a tolerated exception within a new religion that treats its own novelties as binding.

Pagliarani’s point is simply that you cannot win by operating inside that framework. You cannot “out-indult” the revolution. You either reject the underlying error or you will be digested by it.


What Kind of Faith Does an Indult Buy?

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Suppose the bargain goes through.

Your diocese, if you are lucky, gets a Sunday TLM at 2:30pm in a former broom closet. The priest wears Roman vestments, uses the old calendar, and puts out a Latin-English missalette printed by the same people who told you to “keep praying” and “stay hopeful.”

Can he preach that Amoris is objectively in contradiction with the perennial discipline of the Church?

Can he tell his flock that Fiducia is a blasphemous attempt to cloak sin in liturgical language?

Can he explain from the pulpit why Leo is wrong to praise schismatics as saints and to act as if doctrine can be rewritten once “attitudes” are softened?

Can he tell the teenagers in the front pew that the new synodal process is a weapon designed to ratify whatever the world demands next?

Everyone knows the answer. He might hint. He might allude. But the day he names it clearly, a chancery official will remind him who holds the leash.

That is why I said in September that this bargain turns the old rite into a museum exhibit attached to the new theology. It gives you the externals of tradition strapped onto the engine of modernism. The vestments are Tridentine. The ecclesiology is Abu Dhabi.

What good is it to gain the whole external world of traditional rites and lose the faith in the process?


The Forgotten Flock: Places the Indult Will Not Reach

There is another obscenity lurking in this arrangement.

Even if Leo restores a full 1988-style regime, it will do nothing for the dioceses that have already used every available weapon to crush the old Mass. The bishops of Charlotte, Knoxville, Johnson City, Chattanooga, Detroit, and a growing list of other sees have already made their position plain. Given the choice between having the TLM and not having it, they choose not.

Handing decisions back to them is not mercy. It is abdication.

So while Remnant editors and Fatima novena organizers toast the “return” of the Latin Mass to St Peter’s side altars, entire regions will remain sacramentally exiled. Families expelled from dioceses by bishops drunk on Traditionis Custodes will watch the same men keep the ban in place while Rome and Trad Inc declare victory.

Their suffering is the down payment on this bargain. Their abandonment is the price paid so that others can enjoy carefully managed pockets of nostalgia.

And the most galling part is that the very people celebrating the deal are the ones who loudly told those families that “Rome watches” Catholic media, so we all must keep quiet and trust the process. They are negotiating our silence and our exile without ever asking our consent.


Refusing to Sign the Death Warrant

Here is the point.

If Michael Matt and company want to cash in their own history of resistance for a Big Wheel from 1988, they are free to do so. They can rebrand their decades of warnings about the Council and the new Mass as a kind of youthful excess. They can pretend that getting back to the status quo under John Paul II is a miracle, even as Leo pushes beyond Francis in canonizing the revolution.

What they cannot do is sign the rest of us up for their deal.

Some of us remember why the indult system was never enough. Some of us still believe that doctrine is more important than access, that the faith of our children is more important than an approved Sunday schedule. Some of us are not interested in helping Leo stabilize Bergoglian theology by providing him with a quiet, well-behaved Latin-Mass wing that will never again say publicly what it actually believes.

If that means fewer Masses in official diocesan structures, so be it. God has preserved the Church in far worse circumstances than this. Japanese Catholics survived centuries without priests by clinging to baptism and the catechism. Our forefathers in penal times risked their lives for clandestine Masses rather than attend state-approved liturgies that came with poisoned doctrine.

We are being asked to do the opposite: attend state-approved old rites while pretending not to notice that the doctrine preached from Rome contradicts the faith of our fathers.

No thank you.

Better to endure hardship now, to support priests and communities willing to speak clearly, to seek out chapels and missions where the pulpit is not muzzled, than to sign away twenty years of truth for the privilege of hearing the old Mass in a basilica whose authorities bless sin outside the sanctuary.

Trad Inc may sell their birthright for a 1988 bowl of soup. They may call their surrender “prudence” and their silence “strategy.”

But do not let them tell you this is victory. It is not an olive branch. It is a death warrant written in Latin.
"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
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