Ah Love! could thou and I with fate conspire
To grasp this sorry Scheme of Things entire,
Would we not shatter it to bits -
and then
Re-mould it nearer to the Heart's Desire!
In some such terms
- if less
poetic than Omar's - we may imagine one Modernist prelate greeting
another in the caffetteria of the Council chamber, Even if
they have got rather less than their heart's desire, their
conspiracy against the Catholic scheme of things has had more
success than anyone could have thought possible.
The palmy days of Vatican
the Second (well in advance of 1984 [in reference to the scenario
presented in George Orwell’s novel - Ed.] produced an
ecclesiastical Doublethink or Newspeak, with a spate of slogan
words, of doubtful or ambiguous meaning, which are still throwing
dust into the eyes of the unwary: words like "ecumenism" which is
what used to be called syncretism or religious indifference; or
"renewal" which turns out to mean an orgy of destruction; or
"pluralism," which is an honorific synonym for the tabooed word
"heresy"; or "charismatic" to describe behavior which would
formerly have been called corybantic. Another of these changeling
words is "collegiality." Close inspection reveals it as something
between a tautology, a time-bomb, and an October revolution.
As a tautology,
"collegiality" is innocent enough, if not very useful. If you
belong to a college, you possess collegiality
- just as you need
only exist to possess existence. Any further meaning depends on,
what kind of college you belong to and what are its constitutions
and rights. As a time-bomb, it is one of those delayed explosives
which the experts planted in the Council texts for the purpose of
subsequently blowing up the old religion. Whether it amounts in
fact to an October revolution will be considered in due course. We
must first take a brief look at the past history of the idea.[1]
Collegiality was no problem
in the early days of the Church. Our Lord gave to His Church a
paternal and monarchical constitution. He was its divine Head, and
His vicar, St. Peter and his successors, was to have supreme
authority over the Church on earth. The local bishops, like the
Apostles, were to have a similar monarchical authority, each in
his allotted territory, but subordinate to that of the pope. The
Latin word collegium, meaning a collection of
persons united in one body for a common purpose, was applied to
the Apostles, under St. Peter as their head. Their purpose was to
preach the gospel to the whole world, and to instruct, organize
and minister to the faithful. They were succeeded by the College
of Bishops, to whom they passed on their order and authority. But
this college was not identical with that of the Apostles, for the
Apostles; having been directly and personally chosen by Christ to
lay the foundations of His Church, enjoyed certain extraordinary
privileges which were not handed on: their personal infallibility
in preaching the gospel, their universal mission and full power to
establish local churches, and the charisma of miracles to
prove their authority. It was only St. Peter who was to hand on
his full powers as Vicar of Christ to his successors. The later
bishops only shared in the collective infallibility of the
Church's magisterium, ordinary or (in council)
extraordinary. Bishops have the powers of order and of
jurisdiction, the former directly through their consecration,
the latter indirectly through the sovereign pontiff, in accordance
with the monarchical constitution of the Church. This regime,
being divine and supernatural, worked very well through the ages,
preserving in the Church a uniformity of belief, worship and
discipline that was a standing wonder to the world.
It was not until the
Renaissance period that any notable school of thought in the
Church wished to change this God-given constitution. Some
dissidents among the hierarchy then began to seek a new
interpretation of their "collegial" status, by way of pooling
their authority on secular lines and at the same time extending it
so as to encroach on the universal jurisdiction of the pope. The
monarchy was to become an oligarchy: the bishops in committee were
to rule the Church, with the Bishop of Rome as little more than
their mouthpiece, a primus inter pares (first among
equals).
The councils held at Pisa,
Constance and Basel in the early fifteenth century were convoked
for the urgent purpose of ending the Great Schism and restoring
order in the Church. They were only in part orthodox and
acceptable (oecumenical in the original sense of this much abused
word). In other respects they showed a persistent desire to
curtail the papal powers in favor of the bishops and to place the
authority of a general council above that of the pope. This was
the beginning of the trouble now known as "collegiality." Its
further historical stages were Gallicanism, Febroianism and
Josephinism in France, Germany and Austria respectively.
Gallicanism of course takes
it name from the Eldest Daughter of the Church, who was not always
as dutiful to her mother as she might have been ("Exhibeamus no
Gallos, et non gallinas!"). It had already cropped up in the
middle ages in a form more political than dogmatic, appealing to
certain alleged privileges of the medieval French bishops and
kings which limited the pope's jurisdiction in their favor. The
bishops claimed that papal decisions must be confirmed by
themselves before they could have force of law in their territory;
and the kings denied the pope's right to intervene in temporal
matters or to depose temporal rulers. Even in religious matters
the French kings showed a chronic tendency to usurp authority,
claiming the right to appoint bishops and forbidding publication
of papal bulls in France without their consent, But these
political tensions were not confined to France.
The more dogmatic phase of
Gallicanism began towards the end of the sixteenth century, with
Edmond Richer[2] and his school, and took the form of a
sharp struggle against "Ultramontanism" (that is, the centralized
authority of Rome) and its champions, the Jesuits, The feud grew
more intense under Louis XIV, who persisted in claiming the right
to appoint all bishops in his kingdom and to appropriate the
revenues of vacant sees. He was opposed with equal vigor by Pope
Innocent XI, who refused to confirm his nominations. He proceeded
then to summon an Assembly of the French Clergy to issue a
Declaration of Gallican Liberties. This they did in 1682, on
the lines of a similar declaration in 1663 by the Sorbonne. It was
in four articles, to the effect that:
-
the pope has no divine
authority to interfere in temporal affairs,
-
the authority of a general
council is superior to that of the pope,
-
the ancient liberties of
the Gallican Church are to be held sacred, and
-
papal decisions are not
infallible without the consent of the Church.
This declaration, drawn up
by Bishop Bossuet and imposed as a test on all theological
schools and graduates, served only to aggravate the dispute with
Rome, and it was withdrawn by the king himself in 1693. However it
became a kind of charter of Gallican patriotism, and was revived
in the Constitution civile du Clerge of 1790 - the
schismatic, collegial, secularized and short-lived counter-church
of the Revolution.[3]. Shortly afterwards it was
incorporated in Napoleon's statutes.
Meanwhile the Gallican
ideology had been moving into the Low Countries and Germany. The
canonist Van Espen was advocating it at Louvain, and his disciple
Johann Nikolaus von Hontheim, auxiliary bishop of Prier, carried
it very much further. Under the pseudonym "Justinus Febronius" he
published in 1763 a book On the Constitution of the Church and
the Lawful Power of the Roman Pontiff ...towards the Reunion of
Christians separated in Religion. It was promptly condemned by
Pope Clement XIII, who directed the German bishops to suppress it.
But a second edition appeared in 1765, followed by supplementary
volumes and translations into modem languages. In fact it was a
huge success, answering as it did to the spirit of the age, the
age of patriotic nationalism and emancipation all round.
Febronius held that the
power of the keys was given to the Church as a whole, which
administered it through the bishops, with the pope as their
primate, but subordinate to the Church. He is the center of unity,
and may propose laws for the Church's acceptance, but has no
jurisdiction over it - no monarchical authority, He is not
infallible, and cannot make binding decisions without the consent
of a general council or the entire episcopate. An oecumenical
council is the final court of appeal, and is superior to the pope.
All bishops have equal rights and do not receive their power of
jurisdiction from the Holy See. This, said Febronius, was the
original constitution of the Church, but since the ninth century
it has been completely changed, under the influence particularly
of the False Decretals. Papal authority has been vastly and
unjustly extended at the expense of the bishops. It is now a
question of restoring the original order, by a general council, by
holding national synods, and by the action of secular rulers in
resisting papal decrees.
Although the author was
fairly well known, it was not until 1778 that Rome demanded a
retraction from him. After much discussion this was given and
accepted by Pius VI with some emendation. But Hontheim had not
really changed his mind, for he now published a Commentary on
his Retractation by way of appeasing his followers, and
Febronianism continued to flourish. It found favor with the German
prince-bishops (who were in those days more princely than
pastoral), and even more favor with the secular rulers, since it
paved the way for national churches, amenable to control by the
state. The leading archbishop-electors held two conferences, at
Coblenz in 1769, and at Ems in 1786, at which they stated their
grievances against the Roman Curia, and especially against the
"interference" of papal nuncios in German diocesan affairs,
calling for redress and reform on Febronian lines. The latter
conference drew up, in 23 points, a document known as the
Punctuation of Ems; but nothing came of these pronouncements.
The movement had a brief
fling in Italy, with the Synod of Pistoia in 1786. This diocesan
synod was planned jointly by Scipione de'Ricci, Bishop of Pistoia
and Prato, and the Grand Duke Leopold of Tuscany, younger brother
of the Emperor Joseph II and a partner of the latter's mania for
controlling and reforming the Church. The bishop and the grand
duke held similar views - Jansenist, regalist and Febronian
- and
were equally dictatorial in their methods. The bishop received
little support from his clergy and Tuscan colleagues, but made up
for that by importing from elsewhere a number of like-minded
experts into this synod. With their help he pushed through a
comprehensive program of liberal and heterodox edicts, including
even the Four Gallican Articles of 1682, and some Jansenist
speculations, already condemned by Rome, on grace. Pius VI replied
with the bull Auctorem Fidei (1794), condemning in detail
85 propositions of the synod and declaring it null and void. Among
these condemned propositions were some attempted reforms of the
liturgy: there was to be one altar only in each church, with no
relics or flowers; Mass was to be said aloud and in the vernacular
(the bishop himself had actually taken to saying it in Italian);
and many popular devotions, such as the Sacred Heart and the
rosary, were to be suppressed. It rather looks as though the
wreckers who were let loose on the Church after Vatican II may
have taken their cue from this conciliabulum!
The grand duke had tried to
convoke a synod of the whole province to confirm the Pistorian
decrees, but the Tuscan bishops would have none of it; and in 1790
he succeeded to the imperial throne on the death of his brother.
So the bishop, deprived of his patron, was left out on a limb, and
had no choice but to submit and retire from the field.
The Gallican-Febronian
campaign to republicanize the Church reached its redllctio ad
absurdum in the Josephinism of Joseph II. This took place in
the decade 1780-1790, while the Terror was brewing in France.
Until 1780, Joseph had been co-regent with his pious and
conservative mother, the Empress Maria Theresa. Her death removed
the restraining influence, and he could now give full rein to his
"enlightened despotism." In his remaining ten years he was to make
over 60,000 new laws and regulations for Church and state. Like so
many of his contemporaries of the Aujklärung, only more so,
he was possessed by the idea of a national church, owning no
allegiance beyond its political boundaries, and functioning as a
department of the state; and he proceeded to reform the Church in
this direction, using "Febronius" for his textbook. The result was
catastrophic. He imposed on the bishops an oath of allegiance
which made them servants of the state, and forbade them to
communicate with, or receive faculties from, the Holy See. He
likewise forbade the religious orders to communicate with their
superiors abroad. He suppressed all the diocesan seminaries and
founded new ones independent of the bishops, which he staffed with
"liberal" [cf.
the article from The Catholic Encyclopedia on the
secular-political nature of this error, that later developed into
theological error - Ed.] professors. He suppressed
all contemplative orders as "useless," disbanding and throwing on
the dole about 10,000 monks and nuns, and confiscating their
endowments and all other ecclesiastical funds in order to form a
central "Church Fund", administered by the state. Not content with
these depredations, he reformed the divine services according to
his own ideas, making minute regulations about the number of
candles and the length and content of sermons, forbidding
Benediction with the monstrance and ordering the removal of
"superfluous" altars, vestments and images.
Even the extraordinary
démarche of a papal visit to Vienna by Pius VI failed to win
any respite for the Church, and further aggressions brought the
emperor to the verge of excommunication. A few years later the
people's patience under these and a similar load of civil reforms
came to breaking point. The threat of revolt in Austria and
Hungary, and its actual outbreak in Belgium, forced the Josephine
juggernaut to a halt, and eventually into reverse. The
disenchanted reformer died prematurely in 1790.
This imperial rampage is of
course a case of Caesar-opapism[4] rather than
collegiality, but it was directly inspired by ill-conceived
collegial theories. It was an object-lesson to the Church on the
kind of thing she can expect if she yields to the temptation to
reform her Divine constitution. The yoke of Christ is sweet and
His burden light, to the faithful who will trust and obey Him; but
the "liberties" imposed by Caesar are apt to weigh heavy on his
subjects. There is no worse tyranny than enforced liberalism.
Europe was about to receive an even severer lesson at the
forth-coming dawn of "liberty, equality, fraternity" - with the
tumbrel and the guillotine.
Ecclesiastical politics were
submerged for a while under the horrors and miseries of the French
Revolution and the Napoleonic wars. When the Church began to
revive, the old heresies too began to show their heads again, and
in France, it seems, the majority of the bishops and clergy were
(as before) more or less Gallican. The most eminent champion of
Roman orthodoxy in that period was the unhappy Felicite de
Lamennais, who afterwards went to the opposite extreme of liberal
rationalism and republican socialism and left the Church.
Pius IX's long pontificate
(1846-1878) was an unremitting struggle against the mental climate
of the nineteenth century - its liberalism, rationalism, socialism
and all the cognate heresies. It became increasingly clear that a
General Council would be needed to reinforce the supreme authority
and prerogatives of the Holy See and to put an end in particular
to the Gallican pretensions —just as the Council of Trent had been
summoned to recapitulate and reassert the Catholic faith in
response to the growing menace of Protestantism.
The Council of the Vatican
(Vatican I) therefore assembled in 1869, and was adjourned sine
die in the following year because of the occupation of Rome by
the hostile forces of Piedmont - but not until it had made these
two momentous definitions:
-
If anyone therefore should
say that the Roman Pontiff has only the office of inspecting or
directing, and not the full and supreme power of jurisdiction
over the whole Church, not only in matters of faith and morals,
but also in matters concerning the discipline and rule of the
Church throughout the world; or that he has merely the principal
part and not the full plenitude of this supreme power; or that
his power is not ordinary and immediate, whether over each and
all the churches, or over each and all the pastors and faithful:
let him be anathema. (De Ecclesia Christi, can. 3.)
-
We,
therefore, adhering faithfully to the tradition received from
the beginning of the Christian faith, for the glory of God our Savior, for the exaltation of the Catholic religion and the
salvation of the Christian people, teach and define, as a
divinely revealed dogma, that the Roman Pontiff, when he speaks
ex cathedra, that is, when, discharging his office as
pastor of all Christians, in virtue of his supreme authority, he
defines a doctrine concerning faith or morals to be held by the
whole Church, he then, by the divine assistance promised to him
in Blessed Peter, enjoys that infallibility by which the divine
Redeemer wished His Church to be endowed when defining a
doctrine of faith or morals; and that therefore such definitions
of the Roman Pontiff are irreformable of themselves, and not by
the consent of the Church. Wherefore, if anyone should presume
to contradict - which God forbid - let him be anathema. (De
Romani Pontificis infallibili magisterio, cap. 4, can. 4.)
There had been no lack of
opposition, inside and outside the Council, especially to the
definition of papal infallibility, which many otherwise faithful
Catholics regarded as "inopportune." But once the definition was
made, loyalty and good sense prevailed and opposition ceased - except only for the partisans of Dollinger in Germany, who left
the Church and organized themselves as the Old Catholic sect.
Vatican I marked the end of
Gallicanism as such, which henceforth could only be seen as a
condemned heresy, In fact, what remained of it was eventually
absorbed into Modernism, that dustbin of all heresies.
The Church now embarked on a
remarkable run of well-being and prestige, under the guidance of a
series of wise and devoted popes, from Pius IX to Pius XII. There
was an attack of Modernism around the turn of the century, but it
was routed and driven underground by the resolute action of St.
Pius X. There it remained until the day when a fateful opportunity
and a monstrous conspiracy would deliver the whole structure of
the Church into Modernist hands.
There were two occasions
during this period when a further General Council, to complete the
interrupted agenda of Vatican I, was proposed and discussed. At a
consistory held on May 23, 1923 Pope Pius XI consulted a number of
cardinals (including Cardinals Merry del Val, Gasparri and Billot)
on the desirability of calling a General Council. The cardinals
were solidly against the proposal, and gave their reasons. Among
these was the existence of modernist views, among some of the
bishops and clergy, which might lead them to introduce motions and
methods adverse to Catholic tradition. Some warned against a
prevalent "mania for innovation," others against the danger that
certain bishops would claim for themselves rights which would
undermine papal authority under the pretext that Rome was
"centralizing" too much. Cardinal Billot in particular feared that
the council would be "maneuvered by the Church's worst enemies.
the modernists," who were already preparing a revolution in the
Church, "a new 1789." Cardinal Merry del Val added a warning
against the new peril of journalists, penetrating and spying
everywhere, who would certainly cause trouble and dissension
within the council itself. In any case, was there any need to
summon a council, at vast expense and inconvenience, given the
definition of papal infallibility, the recent Code of Canon Law
[1917], and the dogmatic encyclicals of recent popes? What
advantages might be expected from a council could be obtained, at
much less risk, without a council.[5].
These considerations caused
the proposal to be abandoned. It was revived again in 1948, under
Pius XII, with a similar result after three years of preliminary
study, the preparatory commissions having failed to agree on the
agenda and the logistics for an assembly of 2,000 or more Council
Fathers. The overriding consideration for deciding once more
against a council may well have been the serious danger to the
Church involved in summoning a general council which was not
absolutely necessary for dealing with some definite grave and
urgent crisis: the traditional view saw this as a kind of
challenge to divine providence. But those days of wisdom and
prudence were soon to run out.
Pope John [XXIII], it
appears, had no such inhibitions. The idea of a council came to
him as a brainwave - and not for the purpose of expounding the
Church's doctrine, but for that of ingratiating the Church with
the modern world and the separated brethren. He took it as a
divine inspiration and, without consulting anyone, announced to a
group of cardinals at San Lorenzo fuori le Mura on January
25, 1959, that he was going to call a General Council. The
cardinals, flabbergasted, received the bomb-shell in silence. Nor
can they have been less perturbed to hear that the Council would
be an aggiornamento or "up-dating" of the Church, and would
be "ecumenical" and "pastoral" rather than dogmatic. Some of them
at least may have had a foreboding of coming perils.