What I copy below is from Sileri non possum’s English commentary on Pope Leo’s elocution to an organization of Eastern Catholics. You can read the entire English commentary HERE.
What I highlight in red below, though, is the most important part of the Pope’s talk in my book and His Holiness has said similar things in the past about the East.
Under Pope Benedict’s Summorum Pontificum, His Holiness showed clearly the similarity between the “united, yet not uniform” two forms of the one Roman Rite, the Ancient Order and the Bugnini Order.
But Pope Leo XIV brings in a new dimension, that of spiritual and theological diversity that enriches each other, another type of “united, yet not uniform”
This can clearly be applied to the FSSPX!
For example, in the East, there is a completely different emphasis on the purification that takes place after death, the anthropology of the sacraments, and in many Eastern Rites, they join with Eastern Orthodoxy in saying that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father, not the Father and the Son as the West has emphasized. And this is in their liturgical Creed! They also have their own Code of Canon Law.
In our own Western or one Latin Rite, it is obvious that the FSSPX disagree with the liturgical reform carried out by Bugnini and approved by St. Pope Paul VI.
They also reject Vatican II’s religious liberty document, ecumenical dialogue with other Christian Communions and dialogue with non-Christian religions and even non-believers.
I believe that the Eastern Rites reject much more about Vatican II than the FSPPX and also many other ecumenical Councils since the Great Schism, yet they are in full Communion with the Pope and the Holy See.
The Eastern Rites are the model to promote true unity in the Church and full Communion—and that is what Pope Leo is saying in the remarks I paste below:
Formation and identity: “supporting a Church does not merely mean providing it with material means”
…the Pope expressed his appreciation for the particular richness of the Eastern Catholic communities, guardians of traditions they share with the Orthodox Churches. He dwelt on the image of a Church “united, yet not uniform”, whose “fertile womb has given birth to various spiritual and theological traditions, as well as different rites and disciplines, which enrich one another”. In support of this, he cited the Second Vatican Council, which taught that the different theological formulations of East and West “are often to be considered complementary rather than conflicting”.
The Christian East, he warned, “can only be preserved if it is understood: to lose that understanding is to impoverish the Church”. To know and love it, however, there must be investment in formation — a need already indicated by John Paul II in Orientale lumen, from which Leo XIV took up the invitation “to deepen … knowledge of the spiritual traditions of the Fathers and Doctors of the Christian East” and to offer appropriate teaching on these subjects in seminaries and theological faculties.
To this bond between knowledge and charity, between “open minds and working hands”, the Pope added the need for a spiritual foundation: the spiritual life, constancy in prayer and participation in the sacraments. Good works, he recalled, referring to the Letter of James, bear no lasting fruit unless they are nourished at their source, which is God; and if “faith without works is also dead”, it is equally true that works, without a living faith, remain fruitless.























