
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, Jul 2, 2025 / 14:51 pm (CNA).
The Vatican has granted a parish in Texas an exemption from restrictions to the Traditional Latin Mass (TLM) imposed by Pope Francis' encyclical Traditionis Custodes.
The exemption, requested by Bishop Michael Sis on Feb. 6, was granted to St. Margaret of Scotland Parish in the Diocese of San Angelo, Texas.
No other such exemption by Pope Leo XIV has been reported since the start of his pontificate.
"The Dicastery for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments informed me in a decree of May 28, 2025, that my request has been granted for a further two years for a dispensation from article 3§2 of the motu proprio Traditionis Custodes, so that Mass according to the 'Missale Romanum' of 1962 may be celebrated in the parish church of St. Margaret of Scotland in San Angelo," Sis, who previously served as a member of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on Doctrine, said in a statement he shared with CNA.
"Just as before," he added, "the granting of this dispensation is based upon an ongoing effort to promote the full appreciation and acceptance of the liturgical books renewed by decree of the Second Vatican Council and promulgated by popes St. Paul VI and St. John Paul II."
Sis noted further that when he submitted his request for the extension to the Vatican, he did so "with a spirit of total openness to whatever is the will of God."
He continued: "I trust the judgment of our Holy Father Pope Leo and those who assist him in his ministry of unity through the various dicasteries of the Holy See."
The exemption was originally announced in a June 27 social media post by the diocese's director of vocations, Father Ryan Rojo.
I'm grateful to @Pontifex and to the Dicastery for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments for allowing the TLM to continue to exist in our parish church, extending permission for another two years. We look forward to shepherding them to heaven with love and care. pic.twitter.com/NBKUU0TRY4
— Fr. Ryan Rojo ???????????? (@FrRyanRojo) June 27, 2025
"I'm grateful to @Pontifex and to the Dicastery for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments for allowing the TLM to continue to exist in our parish church, extending permission for another two years," Rojo wrote in the June 27 post.
St. Margaret's pastor, Father Freddy Perez, told CNA: "Now that we have the permission, the attitude is one of relief; I saw a lot of relief this past weekend." Although the Vatican's approval was dated May 28, Perez said he did not receive notification of the approval from his bishop until last week.
Perez revealed that the letter from the Vatican praised St. Margaret's for the steps it took to follow the Holy Father's motu proprio. The Vatican "commended our efforts and our 'pastoral concern to instill a clear appreciation for the Church as unique, lex orandi,'" Perez told CNA, adding: "That's a direct quote from the letter we were sent."
Though the pastor noted some negativity from parishioners about having to ask permission to celebrate the TLM, his approach is to explain that "this is where the Church is right now, and is where we have to be obedient."
Beyond the two-year extension, Perez said, "my hopes are just to continue to bring a positive experience of the liturgy to all of my people, to try to bring them into the Gospel, into the teachings of the Church, as we're taught, and to try to teach them that the Mass gets us ready for heaven."
Though the parish experienced uncertainty over whether it would be allowed to continue celebrating the TLM, Perez said the advice of Auxiliary Bishop Mario Avilés helped guide him. "The advice he gave me was very simple," the pastor recalled. "He said: 'Just be obedient, son."
"And I think just putting my eyes on the Lord has satisfied everything that I wouldn't be able to do through my own spirit of protest or my spirit of just being angry about not getting my way, by conforming my will to the will of Our Lord," Perez reflected. "We're in this world temporarily, and at the end of the day, we are asked to be faithful to Our Lord Jesus Christ and his holy mother Church."
According to Perez, St. Margaret's has been offering the TLM for just over five years, currently on Sunday afternoons and Thursday mornings.
The TLM community, he said, consists mostly of young families as well as curious people who are interested in experiencing the liturgy. The small parish consists of about 200 families, he said, noting that attendance at the TLM is usually on the larger side for the parish, with about 140 to 200 people each week.
News of St. Margaret's exemption comes after the Archdiocese of Detroit announced earlier this month that non-parish churches in the archdiocese will be allowed to continue celebrating the TLM despite an earlier statement saying that most of the TLM celebrated in the area would be suspended.
The archdiocese reported that permissions given to parish church priests to carry out the TLM would expire and they could not be renewed, but Detroit Archbishop Edward Weisenburger said he would recognize at least four non-parish locations in the archdiocese where the TLM could still be celebrated.
Cardinal Raymond Burke, a champion of the traditional liturgy, has said he asked Pope Leo to remove measures restricting the celebration of TLM, stating at a conference in London recently: "It is my hope that he will, as soon as is reasonably possible, take up the study of this question."