six men standing in a circle in a dark stone walled room illuminated by candle light all dressed in white robes, one man holding an eight foot tall staff with a crucifix on top.

These devout young Catholics are embracing the old ways

The movement embraces some Old World traditions that even the Church has referred to as backwards.

Before proceeding into Mass, Rev. James Schultz and altar servers gather in the narthex, or entryway, of Transfiguration of Our Lord Parish in Syracuse, New York. Traditionalist Catholics defy modern life—and the wishes of mainstream Church authorities—by embracing ancient rites they feel connect them to a deeper, more profound faith.
ByMatthew Teague
Photographs byRyan Brady
October 26, 2023
11 min read

In the spring of 2021 at Syracuse University, senior Ryan Brady finished his final project as an advertising major: a marketing campaign for shampoo. The bottle had a pleasing shape. The campaign had Gen Z appeal. A Fortune 100 client selected his ad strategy. But it was “complete nonsense,” he says. Not just the shampoo, but everything it represented: superficial, manipulative work. A life of consumption and extraction. An empty life. A modern life.

As a boy in Connecticut, Brady had roamed vast Wickham Park across from his family home. He couldn’t articulate it as a child, but in the woods he had felt connected with something ancient and numinous, something larger than himself. As years passed, he lost that connection.

a woman in a dark church holding a candel and shielding it with one hand, she is wearing a thin white veil over her hair as she walks in precession.
A traditionalist worshipper wears a mantilla, or veil, as a sign of reverence during a Candlemas service at Transfiguration of Our Lord Parish in Syracuse. Traditionalists embrace old-fashioned gender and marriage roles as time-tested scaffolding for family and community.
the inside of a large church with decorative ceiling and walls as a young man walks across the front aisle in between the pews.
The altar inside the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle in Washington, D.C., draws the eyes of the observant heavenward. Traditional Catholics believe antiquated liturgies do much the same.

“You pick up your phone and it’s this black touchscreen and you’re staring into the void, and it’s almost not real,” he says. “I wanted things to do that weren’t so intellectual and abstracted.”

Brady had occasionally attended a Catholic church, and he had recently heard about a new movement among some Catholics who were rebelling against modernity by worshipping in old ways, ways that centuries ago defined the faith but had almost faded from existence. So he took up his camera and headed toward a nearby church that offered the ancient Latin Mass, or what traditionalists call the Extraordinary Form.

What he discovered as he made the photographs in this gallery often encouraged him, and sometimes unnerved him. But above all, he says, his experience was “otherworldly.”

a priest in all black cloak shielding his face from the snow as is falls sideways in the wind as he stand on top of a large snow pile with a church in the background.
Rev. James Schultz climbs a snowbank in front of Our Lady of the Cape shrine during a pilgrimage to Quebec, Canada. He and young people from his Buffalo parish visited shrines, churches, and miracle sites in the traditionally Catholic region.
an outstretched hand fingers tight together moves over an unlit candle.
Rev. Schultz motions toward a candle he blessed at St. Mary’s church in Oswego, New York. Traditionalists seek blessings on items and events throughout their lives, viewing the blessing as a way to dedicate its object, and its user, to God.
a small collection of objects on a table, some religious in nature and some are everyday objects like a pencil sharpener and roll of paper.
Small icons and other articles lie on shelves in the basement at Transfiguration Parish. They are dusty artifacts from a previous era when the church was mainstream but dying. An influx of younger, traditionalist believers revived it.

In a counter-reformation of sorts, devout Americans are flocking to Old World traditions and beliefs. The shift seems to have surprised even the larger Catholic church itself. Last spring, Pope Francis privately told a group of Jesuits he worries the traditionalists’ “reaction against the modern” is indietrismo: backwardness.

Mainstream Catholics considered questions of backwardness and progress resolved after the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s. Following its reforms, priests turned to face congregations, said the Mass in common languages, and some churches offered contemporary music. The new, more accessible style became so dominant that traditionalists now see their practices as emergent and subversive.

a large opne room is filled with long rectangular tables in parallel and the room is completely full of people moving around and sitting down.
The family of Patrick Fallon, a young parishioner at Transfiguration, host a church dinner in gratitude for prayers after he recovered from a serious car accident. In a society where research demonstrates a crisis of loneliness, traditionalists regard church as a communal answer.

And they’re spreading: Each week traditionalists gather at more than 1,200 sites, mostly in the United States. They embrace a version of religious life that had drifted out of fashion—the “smells and bells” of previous generations—and reach for symbols and language that bewilder the outside world, and which the congregants themselves may not fully understand.

Pope John XXIII is carried ceremoniously to St. Peter's Basilica for the inauguration of the 21st Ecumenical Council, the Second Vatican Council, on a throne lifted above the shoulders of many men in the courtyard of the Vatican.
Pope John XXIII is carried to St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome for the inauguration of the Second Vatican Council on October 15, 1962. The pope said the purpose of the Council was the “modernization of the church after 20 centuries of life.”
Photograph by Bettmann, Getty images

“It’s more of a mystery, and more that is veiled,” says Stephanie Wigton, a 32-year-old traditionalist who attends Transfiguration of Our Lord Parish in Syracuse. She means it in a literal sense; she and other women wear veils during services.

“We love Pope Francis. We continually pray for him,” she says. But, “We are benefiting from what we’ve learned from the past.”

a group of people congregating around a small wooden house in an open field surrounded by forest.
Members of the Catholic Land Movement gather for midday prayers at a cabin on Michael Guidice’s farm in Sharon Springs, New York. Guidice looks back centuries to an era when believers “harmonized with both the natural order and divine order.”

Grounded in the transcendent

While many traditionalists are drawing closer to God by revisiting the past, others are finding faith by reconnecting with creation.

Michael Guidice, a Catholic farmer in upstate New York, works a parcel of land between the Adirondack and Catskill mountains. “It was mysterious for me as it was happening,” he says, “but being on the landscape evoked in me a religious experience.” He started teaching other Catholic families homesteading skills and discovered widespread interest. “It’s growing,” he says.

a long row of fifteen or so young men walk along the side of a road in a wooded are while a few individuals hold flags.
Traditionalists from Syracuse march on a short pilgrimage toward Oswego alongside members of a Catholic ministry group called Hard as Nails. The group describes itself as “a community of Catholic lay evangelizers and young adult missionaries.”
three young men with backpacks walk next to eachother on the side of the road while one holds a large flag over his shoulder.
Young men from Transfiguration walk together on a 20-mile pilgrimage to Oswego. Traditionalists regard acts of penance and suffering as a means to cleanse themselves of sin and draw closer to God.

The impulses beneath that growth—a reaction against modernity, a yearning for something immutable—transcend Catholicism. “In the Kingdom of Man,” writes Paul Kingsnorth, an Orthodox poet living in Ireland, “the seas are ribboned with plastic, the forests are burning, the cities bulge with billionaires and tented camps, and still we kneel before the idol of the great god Economy as it grows and grows like a cancer cell. And what if this ancient faith is not an obstacle after all, but a way through?”

three young men in t-shirts standing by a group of benches and facing one another are seen holding boxing stances.
Three young traditionalists practice boxing moves during a pilgrimage. “Trads” look to the past but often through the modern lens of social media, potentially distorting the view of ideas like masculinity, Christian nationalism, and even science.
two shirtless young men wade waist deep into a lake.
Matt Faiola (left) and Matt Klemenz wade into the 40-degree waters of Lake Ontario after Mass. The Sunday “ice swims” serve as a healthful penance, and as a remembrance of rebirth through baptism.

The real and the ethereal

Ryan Brady’s own “way through” started with a small step. During college he took a summer job as a ranger back at Wickham Park, where he spent his days walking among the same trees that had enchanted him as a child. He found himself yearning for something no shampoo could provide: transcendence.

In early 2022, after his disillusionment with advertising, Brady visited Transfiguration Parish. Right away he noticed something strange, a tension between old and new. There were many young adults who embraced veiling and old rites but who had started attending traditionalist services as part of a YouTube challenge. Some at Transfiguration joked that they had been “converted by meme.”

Traditional Catholicism is still a small segment of the world’s largest religion, and its adherents are geographically scattered, so it seemed natural to Brady that they’re finding each other through technology. “But some of the traditionalism gets a little poisoned by ideological bents,” he says. Social media figures—“tradcath” influencers—use the church as a baroque backdrop for selfies. Right-wing politicians exploit conservative customs. “It doesn’t seem to fit with a truly religious, traditional worldview at all,” Brady says. “It seems shockingly unreal.”

a veiling woman is kneeling before a hand receiving the Eucharist, a small circular piece of bread or cracker as candle light is seen behind her.
A veiled woman receives the Eucharist. Traditionalists hold to a literal understanding of transubstantiation, the belief that the bread and wine of communion become Christ’s body and blood.

But when he first entered the sanctuary at Transfiguration, he felt awestruck. Only candles lit the room, and technology faded from view. The reverence for the Eucharist, the kneeling postures, the Latin intonations all felt solemn and enchanted in a way that brought him back to his childhood in the forest.

“It felt mystical,” he says. “It felt real.”

a group of well dressed people converge to enter the open doors of a church where inside there is no visible light.
The night before Easter at St. Mary’s in Oswego, worshippers follow a single candle into the dark church at the beginning of a Vigil Mass. The candle represents Jesus’ time in the tomb, and the Catholic willingness to follow in suffering until eternal glory.