Part II is devoted to reviewing the evidence establishing the continuity of the Roman liturgy preceding Vatican II with the Roman Mass of antiquity, the perfection of this Mass, and the minor nature of the reforms from the Gregorian Reform up until the Bugnini Mass of 1969. The balance of this second installment is spent on illustrating the revolutionary nature of the Bugnini 'reform', and examining the question of the canonical and moral right of the faithful to the traditional rite. Here he spends some time reviewing the arguments of St. Thomas Aquinas placing the onus against the sovereign who wishes to introduce changes in civil or ecclesiastical law that do not clearly conform to the demands of reason or appear to have an effect that is both good and to the benefit to those for whom it is intended. Quoting the Decretals, Thomas writes: "It is absurd, and a detestable shame, that we should suffer those traditions to be changed which we have received from the fathers of old"; and he adds that the very fact of changing a law, even for the better, "is of itself prejudicial to the common good: because custom avails much for the observance of laws, seeing that what is done contrary to general custom even in slight matters is looked upon as grave." (ST, II, I, Q. 97, art. 2) Davies notes that this principle was echoed in Sacrosanctum Concilium of Vatican II, which commanded that "there must be no innovations unless the good of the Church genuinely and certainly requires them" (Article 23). The conclusion he draws may be summed up thus: "law must never be changed unless it is certain that the common good will find in the modification at least adequate compensation for the harm done by way of derogating a custom." Points to ponder.
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