“Generous Inclusion” or Liturgical Containment?

A Vatican Letter, a Manufactured Narrative, and the Unresolved Crisis of the Roman Rite

In recent days, headlines have circulated asserting that Pope Leo XIV has called for the “generous inclusion” of Catholics attached to the Traditional Latin Mass. To many readers—especially those wearied by years of liturgical restriction and controversy—such language suggests a turning point: a softening of policy, a restoration of balance, perhaps even the beginning of reconciliation.

The reality, now verifiable from the original French text itself, is at once more precise and more troubling. A letter has indeed been issued. The phrase “inclure généreusement” does indeed appear. But the meaning of that phrase—its limits, its conditions, and its implications—has been widely misunderstood, and in some cases, actively reshaped.

What is at stake: the liturgy and the identity of the Church
The question at the heart of this controversy is not merely liturgical preference, but ecclesial identity. The Traditional Latin Mass—often referred to as the Vetus Ordo, or “older form”—is not simply an alternative style of worship. It is the form of the Roman Rite that developed organically over centuries, reaching a stable expression after the Council of Trent and remaining substantially unchanged until the reforms that followed the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965). Those reforms introduced a new form of the Mass, commonly called the Novus Ordo, which is now the standard liturgy used in Catholic churches worldwide.

The tension between these two forms has intensified in recent years, particularly after Pope Francis issued Traditionis Custodes in 2021. That document did not merely regulate the older liturgy; it explicitly sought to reorient the faithful toward the reformed one. It instructed bishops not only to restrict the use of the earlier Missal, but also to ensure that those attached to it should be guided toward the Novus Ordo as the normative expression of the Church’s worship.¹ The aim was not coexistence, but transition.

It is within this already strained and directive framework that the recent Vatican letter must be read.

The document itself: origin, structure, and authority
The letter in question originates from the Apostolic Nunciature in Paris and transmits a message composed by Pietro Parolin, acting in the name of the Pope, to the French bishops gathered for their plenary assembly in Lourdes between 23 and 27 March 2026.² It is important to state clearly what this document is—and what it is not. It is a pastoral and diplomatic communication, addressed to a specific episcopal conference. It is not a papal decree, nor a legislative act, nor a universal instruction binding the Church.

The crucial passage—and its full meaning
The line that has generated the current narrative appears in the final section of the letter:

“…inclure généreusement les personnes sincèrement attachées au Vetus Ordo, dans le respect des orientations voulues par le Concile Vatican II en matière de Liturgie.”³

Translated:

“to generously include those sincerely attached to the Vetus Ordo, in accordance with the guidelines established by the Second Vatican Council regarding the liturgy.”

At first reading, this appears conciliatory. But the governing clause—“in accordance with the guidelines established by the Second Vatican Council”—defines its limits. This is not an invitation to restore the older liturgy as a coequal expression of the Roman Rite. It is an instruction to accommodate its adherents within a framework that already presumes the primacy—and eventual normativity—of the reformed liturgy.

When read alongside Traditionis Custodes, the meaning becomes clearer still.

A wound acknowledged—but not explained
The letter recognises that a “painful wound” exists in the Church regarding the celebration of the Mass, described as the “sacrament of unity.”⁴ This is a striking admission. Yet the cause of that wound is not identified. There is no reference to the restrictions imposed in 2021, nor to the theological claim that the reformed liturgy is the “unique expression” of the Roman Rite. The division is acknowledged, but its origin is left unexamined.

From document to headline: the construction of a narrative
Reporting by Michael Haynes, particularly through The Pelican, has presented this letter as evidence of a developing shift in Vatican policy. The phrase “generous inclusion” is elevated, its condition softened, and its context narrowed. From this, a narrative of change is constructed.

Yet nothing in the document itself supports such a conclusion. The juridical framework remains intact. The restrictions remain in force. The theological premises remain unchanged.

By contrast, Diane Montagna has consistently distinguished between text and interpretation, resisting the temptation to project policy where none has been articulated. Her approach highlights the deeper issue at work: not merely disagreement over liturgy, but divergence in how ecclesial reality is reported and understood.

The theology of “inclusion”: a modern category imposed on tradition
The language of “inclusion” itself signals a shift in ecclesial thinking. To speak of including those attached to the Traditional Latin Mass implies that they stand outside the normative life of the Church and must be reintegrated. This is not how the Church has historically understood her liturgy.

In Quo Primum, the Roman Missal is promulgated as a stable and enduring norm:

“Missale ipsum… in perpetuum valere ac vigere mandamus.”
“We decree that this Missal is to remain valid and in force in perpetuity.”

Likewise, Mediator Dei describes the liturgy as the public worship of the entire Mystical Body of Christ, not the expression of competing communities.⁶

Even in the modern period, Summorum Pontificum did not speak of inclusion, but of continuity:

“What earlier generations held as sacred remains sacred and great for us.”⁷

The shift from continuity to inclusion marks a shift from ontology to administration—from what the liturgy is to how it is managed.

Containment under the appearance of generosity
When the Parolin letter is read in full, and in context, its purpose becomes clear. It does not propose a restoration of liturgical continuity. It does not challenge the framework established by Traditionis Custodes. It seeks instead to manage the tensions created by that framework.

Traditional Catholics are to be “included”—but within limits, under conditions, and with an implicit expectation of conformity to the post-conciliar liturgical order.

This is not reconciliation. It is containment.

Conclusion: tone without transformation
Nothing in the letter alters the current law of the Church. Nothing restores the prior freedom of the Traditional Latin Mass. Nothing resolves the theological contradiction at the heart of the present situation.

What has changed is tone.

But tone, however carefully calibrated, cannot substitute for clarity. Nor can it heal a wound whose cause remains unacknowledged.

Until the Church speaks plainly about the continuity of her liturgical tradition—and the implications of having denied it—the language of “generous inclusion” will remain what it is: a gesture suspended between concession and control, offering the appearance of unity without addressing its absence.


¹ Pope Francis, Traditionis Custodes (2021), Art. 3 §6: bishops are to ensure that groups attached to the earlier liturgy “do not exclude the validity and legitimacy of the liturgical reform” and are to guide them toward the reformed liturgy.
https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/motu_proprio/documents/20210716-motu-proprio-traditionis-custodes.html
² Apostolic Nunciature in France, covering letter (Prat. N. 7672/26), Paris, 20 March 2026.
³ Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Message to the Conference of Bishops of France, 18 March 2026 (French original text).
⁴ Ibid.: “une douloureuse blessure… concernant la célébration de la Messe, le sacrement même de l’unité.”
⁵ Pope St Pius V, Quo Primum (1570).
https://www.papalencyclicals.net/pius05/p5quopri.htm
⁶ Pope Pius XII, Mediator Dei (1947), §20.
https://www.vatican.va/content/pius-xii/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xii_enc_20111947_mediator-dei.html
⁷ Pope Benedict XVI, Summorum Pontificum (2007), Letter to Bishops.
https://www.vatican.va/content/benedict-xvi/en/letters/2007/documents/hf_ben-xvi_let_20070707_lettera-vescovi.html

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