The Marcel Lefebvre reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Marcel Lefebvre

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Marcel Lefebvre (November 29, 1905 - March 25, 1991) was a leader of Catholics opposed to the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, especially the abolition of the Tridentine Mass and the saying of Mass in the vernacular.

Lefebvre was born in Tourcoing, France. By the early 1960s, he had risen to high office within the Roman Catholic Church, including Archbishop, Assistant to the Papal Throne and Roman Count, and General Superior of the Holy Ghost Fathers, when in 1962 he was appointed by the Pope to the Preparatory Commission for the Second Vatican Council. There, he became opposed to the reformist plans of the other members of the Commission, many of which would later be adopted by the Council.

After the Second Vatican Council, he became increasingly opposed to the direction that the Church was taking; and for this opposition he was being progressively sidelined and removed from his positions of authority within the church. In 1970 he opened a small seminary in Fribourg, Switzerland, convinced that the other existing Catholic seminaries were falling into heresy, and established there the "Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X", which became the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX).

After the promulgation of the Novus Ordo Mass by the Pope in 1969, Lefebvre established a group of theologians to criticize it; however, although their criticisms received the support of several Cardinals, the Vatican did not respond to it, and the majority of the Church hierarchy became increasingly opposed to Lefebvre's actions. In 1971, Lefebvre announced to his seminarians his rejection of the Novus Ordo liturgy.

The Vatican and Lefebvre engaged in dialogues but reached no consensus. In 1975 an attempt was made to prohibit the SSPX, and then in 1976 the Pope publicly condemned Lefebvre for his refusal to the accept the Novus Ordo Mass. Finally, later that same year, Lefebvre was forbidden from saying Mass.

Meanwhile, the SSPX opened seminaries in a number of countries around the world, and Lefebvre gained for himself a large following of traditionalist Catholics. Lefebvre and the Vatican engaged in dialogue, with Lefebvre meeting first with Paul VI and then with John Paul II. This dialogue did not, however, overcome their disagreements.

Finally, in 1988, Lefebvre consecrated four bishops, without permission from Rome. In response, the Vatican declared him excommunicated by virtue of performing a schismatic act.

Lefebvre died in 1991 in Martigny, Switzerland.

Lefebvre was renowned for his role in revitalizing the Chevaliers de Notre Dame (de Sion), a Christian military order first established in 1099 under Godfrey de Bouillon as the True Knights of God for the purpose of bringing Christian rule to Middle Eastern areas recognized by Christians as the Holy Land.

Of the four bishops Lefebvre consecrated without Papal permission, Bishop Richard Williamson became controversial after he appeared in a video-tape directed at Catholics titled Christian Separatists and Traditionalists. Advertisements for the videos promoted Williamson as having endorsed the views of Ernst Zundel. A prominant advocate of the defunct Third Reich, Zundel was charged in Canadian court for racial crimes related to his publishing claims that denied the mass murder of ethnic groups by German authorities during WWII.

Among the many priests Lefebvre ordained was Juan Fernandez Krohn, who tried to stab the Pope at the shrine in Fatima in May, 1982. The attack was motivated by lingering hostility over Vatican II reforms. Krohn had left the SSPX in 1979, but following the attack, Lefebvre purged the ranks of the SSPX of those whose ideals aligned with Krohn's, including nine American priests.

See also: Traditional Catholic, St. Mary's College