The following lecture was given at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church in Littleton, Colorado, on July 31, 2021. The video had been posted at YouTube earlier, but was removed as part of an overall reconfiguration of the parish channel. I am therefore making it available here on my channel. In the talk, my goal, in the wake of "Traditionis Custodes," is to refute the all-too-plentiful Catholic apologists who — proof-texting magisterial documents the way their Protestant counterparts proof-text St. Paul — maintain that the pope has absolute executive, legislative, and judicial power over the liturgy. I argue, in contrast, that papal power exists within an historical, ecclesial context that conditions and limits its legitimate exercise, and therefore also grounds the right of the faithful to resist egregious violations of immemorial custom and venerable tradition. In short, this is a defense of the very foundations of the traditionalist movement in the Catholic Church.
Full text may be found here: https://rorate-caeli.blogspot.com/2021/08/the-popes-boundenness-to-tradition-as.html
The Pope's Boundedness to Tradition as Legislative Limit