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CONDEMNING CURRENT ERRORS
Encyclical of Pope
Pius IX promulgated on December 8, 1864.
To Our Venerable
Brethren, all Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, and Bishops having
favor and Communion of the Holy See.
Venerable Brethren,
Health and Apostolic Benediction.
With how great care
and pastoral vigilance the Roman Pontiffs, our predecessors,
fulfilling the duty and office committed to them by the Lord Christ
Himself in the person of most Blessed Peter, Prince of the Apostles,
of feeding the lambs and the sheep, have never ceased sedulously to
nourish the Lord’s whole flock with words of faith and with salutary
doctrine, and to guard it from poisoned pastures, is thoroughly known
to all, and especially to you, Venerable Brethren. And truly the same,
Our Predecessors, asserters of justice, being especially anxious for
the salvation of souls, had nothing ever more at heart than by their
most wise Letters and Constitutions to unveil and condemn all those
heresies and errors which, being adverse to our Divine Faith, to the
doctrine of the Catholic Church, to purity of morals, and to the
eternal salvation of men, have frequently excited violent tempests,
and have miserably afflicted both Church and State. For which cause
the same Our Predecessors, have, with Apostolic fortitude, constantly
resisted the nefarious enterprises of wicked men, who, like raging
waves of the sea foaming out their own confusion, and promising
liberty whereas they are the slaves of corruption, have striven by
their deceptive opinions and most pernicious writings to raze the
foundations of the Catholic religion and of civil society, to remove
from among men all virtue and justice, to deprave persons, and
especially inexperienced youth, to lead it into the snares of error,
and at length to tear it from the bosom of the Catholic Church.
2. But now, as is
well known to you, Venerable Brethren, already, scarcely had we been
elevated to this Chair of Peter (by the hidden counsel of Divine
Providence, certainly by no merit of our own), when, seeing with the
greatest grief of Our soul a truly awful storm excited by so many evil
opinions, and (seeing also) the most grievous calamities never
sufficiently to be deplored which overspread the Christian people from
so many errors, according to the duty of Our Apostolic Ministry, and
following the illustrious example of Our Predecessors, We raised Our
voice, and in many published Encyclical Letters and Allocutions
delivered in Consistory, and other Apostolic Letters, we condemned the
chief errors of this most unhappy age, and we excited your admirable
episcopal vigilance, and we again and again admonished and exhorted
all sons of the Catholic Church, to us most dear, that they should
altogether abhor and flee from the contagion of so dire a pestilence.
And especially in our first Encyclical Letter written to you on
November 9, 1846, and in two Allocutions delivered by us in
Consistory, the one on December 9, 1854, and the other on June 9,
1862, we condemned the monstrous portents of opinion which prevail
especially in this age, bringing with them the greatest loss of souls
and detriment of civil society itself; which are grievously opposed
also, not only to the Catholic Church and her salutary doctrine and
venerable rights, but also to the eternal natural law engraven by God
in all men’s hearts, and to right reason; and from which almost all
other errors have their origin.
3. But, although we
have not omitted often to proscribe and reprobate the chief errors of
this kind, yet the cause of the Catholic Church, and the salvation of
souls entrusted to us by God, and the welfare of human society itself,
altogether demand that we again stir up your pastoral solicitude to
exterminate other evil opinions, which spring forth from the said
errors as from a fountain. Which false and perverse opinions are on
that ground the more to be detested, because they chiefly tend to
this, that that salutary influence be impeded and (even) removed,
which the Catholic Church, according to the institution and command of
her Divine Author, should freely exercise even to the end of the
world—not only over private individuals, but over nations, peoples,
and their sovereign princes; and (tend also) to take away that mutual
fellowship and concord of counsels between Church and State which has
ever proved itself propitious and salutary, both for religious and
civil interests.1
For you well know,
venerable brethren, that at this time men are found not a few who,
applying to civil society the impious and absurd principle of
“naturalism,” as they call it, dare to teach that “the best
constitution of public society and (also) civil progress altogether
require that human society be conducted and governed without regard
being had to religion any more than if it did not exist; or, at least,
without any distinction being made between the true religion and false
ones.” And, against the doctrine of Scripture, of the Church, and of
the Holy Fathers, they do not hesitate to assert that “that is the
best condition of civil society, in which no duty is recognized, as
attached to the civil power, of restraining by enacted penalties,
offenders against the Catholic religion, except so far as public peace
may require.” From which totally false idea of social government
they do not fear to foster that erroneous opinion, most fatal in its
effects on the Catholic Church and the salvation of souls, called by
Our Predecessor, Gregory XVI, an “insanity,”2 viz.,
that “liberty of conscience and worship is each man’s personal
right, which ought to be legally proclaimed and asserted in every
rightly constituted society; and that a right resides in the citizens
to an absolute liberty, which should be restrained by no authority
whether ecclesiastical or civil, whereby they may be able openly and
publicly to manifest and declare any of their ideas whatever, either
by word of mouth, by the press, or in any other way.” But, while
they rashly affirm this, they do not think and consider that they are
preaching “liberty of perdition;”3 and that “if
human arguments are always allowed free room for discussion, there
will never be wanting men who will dare to resist truth, and to trust
in the flowing speech of human wisdom; whereas we know, from the very
teaching of our Lord Jesus Christ, how carefully Christian faith and
wisdom should avoid this most injurious babbling.”4
4. And, since where
religion has been removed from civil society, and the doctrine and
authority of divine revelation repudiated, the genuine notion itself
of justice and human right is darkened and lost, and the place of true
justice and legitimate right is supplied by material force, thence it
appears why it is that some, utterly neglecting and disregarding the
surest principles of sound reason, dare to proclaim that “the people’s
will, manifested by what is called public opinion or in some other
way, constitutes a supreme law, free from all divine and human
control; and that in the political order accomplished facts, from the
very circumstance that they are accomplished, have the force of
right.” But who, does not see and clearly perceive that human society,
when set loose from the bonds of religion and true justice, can have,
in truth, no other end than the purpose of obtaining and amassing
wealth, and that (society under such circumstances) follows no other
law in its actions, except the unchastened desire of ministering to
its own pleasure and interests? For this reason, men of the kind
pursue with bitter hatred the Religious Orders, although these have
deserved extremely well of Christendom, civilization and literature,
and cry out that the same have no legitimate reason for being
permitted to exist; and thus (these evil men) applaud the calumnies of
heretics. For, as Pius VI, Our Predecessor, taught most wisely, “the
abolition of regulars is injurious to that state in which the
Evangelical counsels are openly professed; it is injurious to a method
of life praised in the Church as agreeable to Apostolic doctrine; it
is injurious to the illustrious founders, themselves, whom we venerate
on our altars, who did not establish these societies but by God’s
inspiration.”5 And (these wretches) also impiously
declare that permission should be refused to citizens and to the
Church, “whereby they may openly give alms for the sake of Christian
charity”; and that the law should be abrogated “whereby on certain
fixed days servile works are prohibited because of God’s worship;” and
on the most deceptive pretext that the said permission and law are
opposed to the principles of the best public economy. Moreover, not
content with removing religion from public society, they wish to
banish it also from private families. For, teaching and professing the
most fatal error of “Communism and Socialism,” they assert that
“domestic society or the family derives the whole principle of its
existence from the civil law alone; and, consequently, that on civil
law alone depend all rights of parents over their children, and
especially that of providing for education.” By which impious opinions
and machinations these most deceitful men chiefly aim at this result,
viz., that the salutary teaching and influence of the Catholic Church
may be entirely banished from the instruction and education of youth,
and that the tender and flexible minds of young men may be infected
and depraved by every most pernicious error and vice. For all who have
endeavored to throw into confusion things both sacred and secular, and
to subvert the right order of society, and to abolish all rights,
human and divine, have always (as we above hinted) devoted all their
nefarious schemes, devices and efforts, to deceiving and depraving
incautious youth and have placed all their hope in its corruption. For
which reason they never cease by every wicked method to assail the
clergy, both secular and regular, from whom (as the surest monuments
of history conspicuously attest), so many great advantages have
abundantly flowed to Christianity, civilization and literature, and to
proclaim that “the clergy, as being hostile to the true and beneficial
advance of science and civilization, should be removed from the whole
charge and duty of instructing and educating youth.”
5. Others
meanwhile, reviving the wicked and so often condemned inventions of
innovators, dare with signal impudence to subject to the will of the
civil authority the supreme authority of the Church and of this
Apostolic See given to her by Christ Himself, and to deny all those
rights of the same Church and See which concern matters of the
external order. For they are not ashamed of affirming “that the
Church’s laws do not bind in conscience unless when they are
promulgated by the civil power; that acts and decrees of the Roman
Pontiffs, referring to religion and the Church, need the civil power’s
sanction and approbation, or at least its consent; that the Apostolic
Constitutions,6 whereby secret societies are condemned
(whether an oath of secrecy be or be not required in such societies),
and whereby their frequenters and favorers are smitten with
anathema—have no force in those regions of the world wherein
associations of the kind are tolerated by the civil government; that
the excommunication pronounced by the Council of Trent and by Roman
Pontiffs against those who assail and usurp the Church’s rights and
possessions, rests on a confusion between the spiritual and temporal
orders, and (is directed) to the pursuit of a purely secular good;
that the Church can decree nothing which binds the conscience of the
faithful in regard to their use of temporal things; that the Church
has no right of restraining by temporal punishments those who violate
her laws; that it is conformable to the principles of sacred theology
and public law to assert and claim for the civil government a right of
property in those goods which are possessed by the Church, by the
Religious Orders, and by other pious establishments.” Nor do they
blush openly and publicly to profess the maxim and principle of
heretics from which arise so many perverse opinions and errors. For
they repeat that the “ecclesiastical power is not by divine right
distinct from, and independent of, the civil power, and that such
distinction and independence cannot be preserved without the civil
power’s essential rights being assailed and usurped by the Church.”
Nor can we pass over in silence the audacity of those who, not
enduring sound doctrine, contend that “without sin and without any
sacrifice of the Catholic profession assent and obedience may be
refused to those judgments and decrees of the Apostolic See, whose
object is declared to concern the Church’s general good and her rights
and discipline, so only it does not touch the dogma of faith and
morals.” But no one can be found not clearly and distinctly to see and
understand how grievously this is opposed to the Catholic dogma of the
full power given from God by Christ our Lord Himself to the Roman
Pontiff of feeding, ruling and guiding the Universal Church.
6. Amidst,
therefore, such great perversity of depraved opinions, we, well
remembering our Apostolic Office, and very greatly solicitous for our
most holy Religion, for sound doctrine and the salvation of souls
which is entrusted to us by God, and (solicitous also) for the welfare
of human society itself, have thought it right again to raise up our
Apostolic voice. Therefore, by our Apostolic authority, we reprobate,
proscribe, and condemn all the singular and evil opinions and
doctrines severally mentioned in this letter, and will and command
that they be thoroughly held by all children of the Catholic Church as
reprobated, proscribed and condemned.
7. And besides
these things, you know very well, Venerable Brethren, that in these
times the haters of truth and justice and most bitter enemies of our
religion, deceiving the people and maliciously lying, disseminate
sundry and other impious doctrines by means of pestilential books,
pamphlets and newspapers dispersed over the whole world. Nor are you
ignorant also, that in this our age some men are found who, moved and
excited by the spirit of Satan, have reached to that degree of impiety
as not to shrink from denying our Ruler and Lord Jesus Christ, and
from impugning His Divinity with wicked pertinacity. Here, however, we
cannot but extol you, venerable brethren, with great and deserved
praise, for not having failed to raise with all zeal your episcopal
voice against impiety so great.
8. Therefore, in
this our letter, we again most lovingly address you, who, having been
called unto a part of our solicitude, are to us, among our grievous
distresses, the greatest solace, joy and consolation, because of the
admirable religion and piety wherein you excel, and because of that
marvelous love, fidelity, and dutifulness, whereby bound as you are to
us. and to this Apostolic See in most harmonious affection, you strive
strenuously and sedulously to fulfill your most weighty episcopal
ministry. For from your signal pastoral zeal we expect that, taking up
the sword of the spirit which is the word of God, and strengthened by
the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, you will, with redoubled care,
each day more anxiously provide that the faithful entrusted to your
charge “abstain from noxious verbiage, which Jesus Christ does not
cultivate because it is not His Father’s plantation.”7
Never cease also to inculcate on the said faithful that all true
felicity flows abundantly upon man from our august religion and its
doctrine and practice; and that happy is the people whose God is their
Lord.8 Teach that “kingdoms rest on the foundation of the
Catholic Faith;9 and that nothing is so deadly, so
hastening to a fall, so exposed to all danger, (as that which exists)
if, believing this alone to be sufficient for us that we receive free
will at our birth, we seek nothing further from the Lord; that is, if
forgetting our Creator we abjure his power that we may display our
freedom.”10 And again do not fail to teach “that the royal
power was given not only for the governance of the world, but most of
all for the protection of the Church;”11 and that there is
nothing which can be of greater advantage and glory to Princes and
Kings than if, as another most wise and courageous Predecessor of
ours, St. Felix, instructed the Emperor Zeno, they “permit the
Catholic Church to practice her laws, and allow no one to oppose her
liberty. For it is certain that this mode of conduct is beneficial to
their interests, viz., that where there is question concerning the
causes of God, they study, according to His appointment, to subject
the royal will to Christ’s Priests, not to raise it above theirs.”12
9. But if always,
venerable brethren, now most of all amidst such great calamities both
of the Church and of civil society, amidst so great a conspiracy
against Catholic interests and this Apostolic See, and so great a mass
of errors, it is altogether necessary to approach with confidence the
throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace in timely
aid. Wherefore, we have thought it well to excite the piety of all the
faithful in order that, together with us and you, they may unceasingly
pray and beseech the most merciful Father of light and pity with most
fervent and humble prayers, and in the fullness of faith flee always
to Our Lord Jesus Christ, who redeemed us to God in his blood, and
earnestly and constantly supplicate His most sweet Heart, the victim
of most burning love toward us, that He would draw all things to
Himself by the bonds of His love, and that all men inflamed by His
most holy love may walk worthily according to His heart, pleasing God
in all things, bearing fruit in every good work. But since without
doubt men’s prayers are more pleasing to God if they reach Him from
minds free from all stain, therefore we have determined to open to
Christ’s faithful, with Apostolic liberality, the Church’s heavenly
treasures committed to our charge, in order that the said faithful,
being more earnestly enkindled to true piety, and cleansed through the
sacrament of Penance from the defilement of their sins, may with
greater confidence pour forth their prayers to God, and obtain His
mercy and grace.
10. By these
Letters, therefore, in virtue of our Apostolic authority, we concede
to all and singular the faithful of the Catholic world, a Plenary
Indulgence in the form of Jubilee, during the space of one month only
for the whole coming year 1865, and not beyond; to be fixed by you,
venerable brethren, and other legitimate Ordinaries of places, in the
very same manner and form in which we granted it at the beginning of
our supreme Pontificate by our Apostolic Letters in the form of a
Brief, dated November 20, 1846, and addressed to all your episcopal
order, beginning, Arcano Divinae Providentiae consilio, and
with all the same faculties which were given by us in those Letters.
We will, however, that all things be observed which were prescribed in
the aforesaid Letters, and those things be excepted which we there so
declared. And we grant this, notwithstanding anything whatever to the
contrary, even things which are worthy of individual mention and
derogation. In order, however, that all doubt and difficulty be
removed, we have commanded a copy of said Letters be sent you.
11. “Let us
implore,” Venerable Brethren, “God’s mercy from our inmost
heart and with our whole mind; because He has Himself added, ‘I will
not remove my mercy from them.’ Let us ask and we shall receive; and
if there be delay and slowness in our receiving because we have
gravely offended, let us knock, because to him that knocketh it shall
be opened, if only the door be knocked by our prayers, groans and
tears, in which we must persist and persevere, and if the prayer be
unanimous… let each man pray to God, not for himself alone, but for
all his brethren, as the Lord hath taught us to pray.”13
But in order that God may the more readily assent to the prayers and
desires of ourselves, of you and of all the faithful, let us with all
confidence employ as or advocate with Him the Immaculate and most holy
Virgin Mary, Mother of God, who has slain all heresies throughout the
world, and who, the most loving Mother of us all, “is all sweet…
and full of mercy… shows herself to all as easily entreated; shows
herself to all as most merciful; pities the necessities of all with a
most large affection;”14 and standing as a Queen at the
right hand of her only begotten Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, in gilded
clothing, surrounded with variety, can obtain from Him whatever she
will. Let us also seek the suffrages of the Most Blessed Peter, Prince
of the Apostles, and of Paul, his Fellow-Apostle, and of all the
Saints in Heaven, who having now become God’s friends, have arrived at
the heavenly kingdom, and being crowned bear their palms, and being
secure of their own immortality are anxious for our salvation.
12. Lastly,
imploring from our great heart for You from God the abundance of all
heavenly gifts, we most lovingly impart the Apostolic Benediction from
our inmost heart, a pledge of our signal love towards you, to
yourselves, venerable brethren, and to all the clerics and lay
faithful committed to your care.
Given at Rome, from
St. Peter’s, the 8th day of December, in the year 1864, the tenth from
the Dogmatic Definition of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin
Mary, Mother of God.
In the nineteenth
year of Our Pontificate.
Footnotes
1. Gregory XVI,
encyclical
Mirari vos, August 15, 1832.
2.
Ibid.
3. St. Augustine,
epistle 105 (166).
4. St. Leo, epistle
14 (133), sect. 2, edit. Ball.
5. Letter to
Cardinal De la Rochefoucault, March 10, 1791.
6. Clement XII,
In eminenti; Benedict XIV, Providas Romanorum; Pius VII,
Ecclesiam; Leo XII, Quo graviora.
7. St. Ignatius M.
to the Philadelphians, 3.
8. Ps 143.
9. St. Celestine,
epistle 22 to Synod. Ephes. apud Const., p. 1200.
10. St. Innocentus
I, epistle 29 ad Episc. conc. Carthag. apud Coust., p. 891.
11. St. Leo, epistle
156 (125).
12. Pius VII,
encyclical epistle Diu satis, 15 May 1800.
13. St. Cyprian,
epist. 11.
14. St. Bernard,
Serm.
“de duodecim praerogativis B. M. V. ex verbis
Apocalyp.” |