Top traditional liturgy returns to St. Peter’s under new pope’s nod
Traditional Latin chants echoed through St. Peter’s as a top American cardinal took up the chalice—in a scene many thought the Vatican had shelved indefinitely.
With the newly elected Pope Leo XIV’s direct approval, Cardinal Raymond Burke led a pre-Vatican II Latin Mass in the heart of the Catholic world, marking a potential turning point in the Church’s long-standing liturgical divide, as Breitbart reports.
Cardinal Burke, a well-known defender of Catholic tradition, celebrated the Latin Mass on Saturday, October 25, before a crowd of pilgrims in St. Peter’s Basilica—a move made possible after receiving explicit permission from Pope Leo XIV himself.
Pilgrims had journeyed to Rome as part of a Holy Year event, seeking not just spiritual reflection but recognition after years of marginalization under restrictive Vatican policy.
A day earlier, Cardinal Matteo Zuppi hosted a vespers service for the same group, suggesting there may be broader cooperation at play under the new pontificate.
Pope Leo Signals Shift From Predecessor’s Line
Unlike his predecessor Pope Francis, who imposed sweeping restrictions on the use of the old rite in 2021, Pope Leo XIV appears to be steering things in a direction less adversarial to Catholic traditionalists.
Pope Francis had reined in the Latin Mass out of concern that it was creating division and aligning too neatly with American conservatism—a concern seemingly lost on many outside the Vatican bubble.
Under those rules, bishops required direct Vatican approval to allow the Latin form, creating bureaucratic roadblocks that left many parishes and faithful stranded.
In stark contrast, Pope Leo’s personal involvement was far from perfunctory. After receiving a letter from French organizer Christian Marquant—signed by 70 traditionalist groups—Cardinal Burke personally brought the request to the pope in an August meeting.
Traditional Catholics Heard After Years of Silence
Pope Leo didn’t pass it off to a committee or bury it in a drawer. He picked up the phone and instructed the basilica’s archpriest, Cardinal Mauro Gambetti, to allow the Mass.
This isn’t just symbolism—it’s shockingly practical in a papacy where silence or delay had become the typical protocol in such matters.
“We are orphans,” said Marquant, summing up years of sidelining under the prior pontificate. Now, tradition seems to have a seat at the table once again.
The reality on the ground had long contradicted Vatican suspicion. Leaked documents from a 2020 Vatican survey, published in July 2025, revealed most bishops globally were content with the Latin Mass and cautioned further restrictions could do more damage than good.
The New Pontiff’s Style: Quiet Latitude
Critically, Pope Leo XIV has not immediately dismantled Pope Francis' policies—but he appears willing to ease their chokehold without saying so aloud.
“My guess is Leo may try to do a lot by not doing a lot publicly," said James Rodio, a psychiatrist from Cleveland who has attended Latin Mass for nearly 30 years.
Rodio’s own diocese just secured a two-year extension to keep two churches celebrating the old rite, giving him and others hope that these moves signal not mere tolerance, but a thawing of the post-Traditionis Custodes frost.
“Behind it all, there was a sadness,” he added, noting the sudden backpedaling from centuries of tradition. “How could any organization have an approach for 16 or 17 centuries and then say it wasn’t valid anymore?”
Balancing Inclusion With Sacred Tradition
The Latin Mass isn’t some political statement or nostalgia trip, as some in progressive circles claim. For many faithful Catholics, it is the deeply reverent, theologically rich expression of the faith handed down across generations.
This point was underscored years earlier by Pope Benedict XVI, who reminded the Church that “what earlier generations held as sacred remains sacred and great for us too.”
Now, with Pope Leo XIV—the first American pope—occupying the Chair of St. Peter, traditionalists are hearing something they hadn’t in years: the sound of their own language, in the heart of the Church.





