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PASCENDI DOMINICI GREGIS
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS X
ON THE DOCTRINES
OF THE MODERNISTS
To the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, Bishops
and other Local Ordinaries in Peace
and Communion with the Apostolic See.
Venerable Brethren, Health and Apostolic Benediction.
The office divinely committed to Us of feeding the Lord's flock has
especially this duty assigned to it by Christ, namely, to guard with the
greatest vigilance the deposit of the faith delivered to the saints,
rejecting the profane novelties of words and oppositions of knowledge
falsely so called. There has never been a time when this watchfulness of
the supreme pastor was not necessary to the Catholic body; for, owing to
the efforts of the enemy of the human race, there have never been
lacking "men speaking perverse things" (Acts xx. 30), "vain
talkers and seducers" (Tit. i. 10), "erring and driving into
error" (2 Tim. iii. 13). Still it must be confessed that the
number of the enemies of the cross of Christ has in these last days
increased exceedingly, who are striving, by arts, entirely new and full
of subtlety, to destroy the vital energy of the Church, and, if they
can, to overthrow utterly Christ's kingdom itself. Wherefore We may no
longer be silent, lest We should seem to fail in Our most sacred duty,
and lest the kindness that, in the hope of wiser counsels, We have
hitherto shown them, should be attributed to forgetfulness of Our
office.
Gravity of the Situation
2. That We make no delay in this matter is rendered necessary
especially by the fact that the partisans of error are to be sought not
only among the Church's open enemies; they lie hid, a thing to be deeply
deplored and feared, in her very bosom and heart, and are the more
mischievous, the less conspicuously they appear. We allude, Venerable
Brethren, to many who belong to the Catholic laity, nay, and this is far
more lamentable, to the ranks of the priesthood itself, who, feigning a
love for the Church, lacking the firm protection of philosophy and
theology, nay more, thoroughly imbued with the poisonous doctrines
taught by the enemies of the Church, and lost to all sense of modesty,
vaunt themselves as reformers of the Church; and, forming more boldly
into line of attack, assail all that is most sacred in the work of
Christ, not sparing even the person of the Divine Redeemer, whom, with
sacrilegious daring, they reduce to a simple, mere man.
3. Though they express astonishment themselves, no one can justly be
surprised that We number such men among the enemies of the Church, if,
leaving out of consideration the internal disposition of soul, of which
God alone is the judge, he is acquainted with their tenets, their manner
of speech, their conduct. Nor indeed will he err in accounting them the
most pernicious of all the adversaries of the Church. For as We have
said, they put their designs for her ruin into operation not from
without but from within; hence, the danger is present almost in the very
veins and heart of the Church, whose injury is the more certain, the
more intimate is their knowledge of her. Moreover they lay the axe not
to the branches and shoots, but to the very root, that is, to the faith
and its deepest fires. And having struck at this root of immortality,
they proceed to disseminate poison through the whole tree, so that there
is no part of Catholic truth from which they hold their hand, none that
they do not strive to corrupt. Further, none is more skilful, none more
astute than they, in the employment of a thousand noxious arts; for they
double the parts of rationalist and Catholic, and this so craftily that
they easily lead the unwary into error; and since audacity is their
chief characteristic, there is no conclusion of any kind from which they
shrink or which they do not thrust forward with pertinacity and
assurance. To this must be added the fact, which indeed is well
calculated to deceive souls, that they lead a life of the greatest
activity, of assiduous and ardent application to every branch of
learning, and that they possess, as a rule, a reputation for the
strictest morality. Finally, and this almost destroys all hope of cure,
their very doctrines have given such a bent to their minds, that they
disdain all authority and brook no restraint; and relying upon a false
conscience, they attempt to ascribe to a love of truth that which is in
reality the result of pride and obstinacy.
Once indeed We had hopes of recalling them to a better sense, and to
this end we first of all showed them kindness as Our children, then we
treated them with severity, and at last We have had recourse, though
with great reluctance, to public reproof. But you know, Venerable
Brethren, how fruitless has been Our action. They bowed their head for a
moment, but it was soon uplifted more arrogantly than ever. If it were a
matter which concerned them alone, We might perhaps have overlooked it:
but the security of the Catholic name is at stake. Wherefore, as to
maintain it longer would be a crime, We must now break silence, in order
to expose before the whole Church in their true colours those men who
have assumed this bad disguise.
Division of the Encyclical
4. But since the Modernists (as they are commonly and rightly called)
employ a very clever artifice, namely, to present their doctrines
without order and systematic arrangement into one whole, scattered and
disjointed one from another, so as to appear to be in doubt and
uncertainty, while they are in reality firm and steadfast, it will be of
advantage, Venerable Brethren, to bring their teachings together here
into one group, and to point out the connexion between them, and thus to
pass to an examination of the sources of the errors, and to prescribe
remedies for averting the evil.
ANALYSIS OF MODERNIST TEACHING
5. To proceed in an orderly manner in this recondite subject, it must
first of all be noted that every Modernist sustains and comprises within
himself many personalities; he is a philosopher, a believer, a
theologian, an historian, a critic, an apologist, a reformer. These
roles must be clearly distinguished from one another by all who would
accurately know their system and thoroughly comprehend the principles
and the consequences of their doctrines.
Agnosticism its Philosophical Foundation
6. We begin, then, with the philosopher. Modernists place the
foundation of religious philosophy in that doctrine which is usually
called Agnosticism. According to this teaching human reason is
confined entirely within the field of phenomena, that is to say,
to things that are perceptible to the senses, and in the manner in which
they are perceptible; it has no right and no power to transgress these
limits. Hence it is incapable of lifting itself up to God, and of
recognising His existence, even by means of visible things. From this it
is inferred that God can never be the direct object of science, and
that, as regards history, He must not be considered as an historical
subject. Given these premises, all will readily perceive what becomes of
Natural Theology, of the motives of credibility, of
external revelation. The Modernists simply make away with them
altogether; they include them in Intellectualism, which they call
a ridiculous and long ago defunct system. Nor does the fact that the
Church has formally condemned these portentous errors exercise the
slightest restraint upon them. Yet the Vatican Council has defined, "If
anyone says that the one true God, our Creator and Lord, cannot be known
with certainty by the natural light of human reason by means of the
things that are made, let him be anathema" (De Revel., can. I);
and also: "If anyone says that it is not possible or not expedient that
man be taught, through the medium of divine revelation, about God and
the worship to be paid Him, let him be anathema" (Ibid., can. 2);
and finally, "If anyone says that divine revelation cannot be made
credible by external signs, and that therefore men should be drawn to
the faith only by their personal internal experience or by private
inspiration, let him be anathema" (De Fide, can. 3). But how the
Modernists make the transition from Agnosticism, which is a state
of pure nescience, to scientific and historic Atheism, which is a
doctrine of positive denial; and consequently, by what legitimate
process of reasoning, starting from ignorance as to whether God has in
fact intervened in the history of the human race or not, they proceed,
in their explanation of this history, to ignore God altogether, as if He
really had not intervened, let him answer who can. Yet it is a fixed and
established principle among them that both science and history must be
atheistic: and within their boundaries there is room for nothing but
phenomena; God and all that is divine are utterly excluded. We shall
soon see clearly what, according to this most absurd teaching, must be
held touching the most sacred Person of Christ, what concerning the
mysteries of His life and death, and of His Resurrection and Acension
into heaven.
Vital Immanence
7. However, this Agnosticism is only the negative part of the
system of the Modernist: the positive side of it consists in what they
call vital immanence. This is how they advance from one to the
other. Religion, whether natural or supernatural, must, like every other
fact, admit of some explanation. But when Natural theology has been
destroyed, the road to revelation closed through the rejection of the
arguments of credibility, and all external revelation absolutely denied,
it is clear that this explanation will be sought in vain outside man
himself. It must, therefore, be looked for in man; and since religion is
a form of life, the explanation must certainly be found in the life of
man. Hence the principle of religious immanence is formulated.
Moreover, the first actuation, so to say, of every vital phenomenon, and
religion, as has been said, belongs to this category, is due to a
certain necessity or impulsion; but it has its origin, speaking more
particularly of life, in a movement of the heart, which movement is
called a sentiment. Therefore, since God is the object of
religion, we must conclude that faith, which is the basis and the
foundation of all religion, consists in a sentiment which originates
from a need of the divine. This need of the divine, which is experienced
only in special and favourable circumstances, cannot, of itself,
appertain to the domain of consciousness; it is at first latent within
the consciousness, or, to borrow a term from modern philosophy, in the
subconsciousness, where also its roots lies hidden and
undetected.
Should anyone ask how it is that this need of the divine which man
experiences within himself grows up into a religion, the Modernists
reply thus: Science and history, they say, are confined within two
limits, the one external, namely, the visible world, the other internal,
which is consciousness. When one or other of these boundaries has been
reached, there can be no further progress, for beyond is the
unknowable. In presence of this unknowable, whether it is
outside man and beyond the visible world of nature, or lies hidden
within in the subconsciousness, the need of the divine, according to the
principles of Fideism, excites in a soul with a propensity
towards religion a certain special sentiment, without any
previous advertence of the mind: and this sentiment possesses, implied
within itself both as its own object and as its intrinsic cause, the
reality of the divine, and in a way unites man with God. It is this
sentiment to which Modernists give the name of faith, and this it is
which they consider the beginning of religion.
8. But we have not yet come to the end of their philosophy, or, to
speak more accurately, their folly. For Modernism finds in this
sentiment not faith only, but with and in faith, as they understand
it, revelation, they say, abides. For what more can one require
for revelation? Is not that religious sentiment which is
perceptible in the consciousness revelation, or at least the beginning
of revelation? Nay, is not God Himself, as He manifests Himself to the
soul, indistinctly it is true, in this same religious sense, revelation?
And they add: Since God is both the object and the cause of faith, this
revelation is at the same time of God and from God; that
is, God is both the revealer and the revealed.
Hence, Venerable Brethren, springs that ridiculous proposition of the
Modernists, that every religion, according to the different aspect under
which it is viewed, must be considered as both natural and supernatural.
Hence it is that they make consciousness and revelation synonymous.
Hence the law, according to which religious consciousness is
given as the universal rule, to be put on an equal footing with
revelation, and to which all must submit, even the supreme authority of
the Church, whether in its teaching capacity, or in that of legislator
in the province of sacred liturgy or discipline.
Deformation of Religious History the Consequence
9. However, in all this process, from which, according to the
Modernists, faith and revelation spring, one point is to be particularly
noted, for it is of capital importance on account of the historico-critical
corollaries which are deduced from it. - For the Unknowable they
talk of does not present itself to faith as something solitary and
isolated; but rather in close conjunction with some phenomenon, which,
though it belongs to the realm of science and history yet to some extent
oversteps their bounds. Such a phenomenon may be an act of nature
containing within itself something mysterious; or it may be a man, whose
character, actions and words cannot, apparently, be reconciled with the
ordinary laws of history. Then faith, attracted by the Unknowable
which is united with the phenomenon, possesses itself of the whole
phenomenon, and, as it were, permeates it with its own life. From this
two things follow. The first is a sort of transfiguration of the
phenomenon, by its elevation above its own true conditions, by which it
becomes more adapted to that form of the divine which faith will infuse
into it. The second is a kind of disfigurement, which springs
from the fact that faith, which has made the phenomenon independent of
the circumstances of place and time, attributes to it qualities which it
has not; and this is true particularly of the phenomena of the past, and
the older they are, the truer it is. From these two principles the
Modernists deduce two laws, which, when united with a third which they
have already got from agnosticism, constitute the foundation of
historical criticism. We will take an illustration from the Person of
Christ. In the person of Christ, they say, science and history encounter
nothing that is not human. Therefore, in virtue of the first canon
deduced from agnosticism, whatever there is in His history suggestive of
the divine, must be rejected. Then, according to the second canon, the
historical Person of Christ was transfigured by faith; therefore
everything that raises it above historical conditions must be removed.
Lately, the third canon, which lays down that the person of Christ has
been disfigured by faith, requires that everything should be
excluded, deeds and words and all else that is not in keeping with His
character, circumstances and education, and with the place and time in
which He lived. A strange style of reasoning, truly; but it is Modernist
criticism.
10. Therefore the religious sentiment, which through the
agency of vital immanence emerges from the lurking places of the
subconsciousness, is the germ of all religion, and the explanation of
everything that has been or ever will be in any religion. The
sentiment, which was at first only rudimentary and almost formless,
gradually matured, under the influence of that mysterious principle from
which it originated, with the progress of human life, of which, as has
been said, it is a form. This, then, is the origin of all religion, even
supernatural religion; it is only a development of this religious
sentiment. Nor is the Catholic religion an exception; it is quite on
a level with the rest; for it was engendered, by the process of vital
immanence, in the consciousness of Christ, who was a man of the
choicest nature, whose like has never been, nor will be. - Those who
hear these audacious, these sacrilegious assertions, are simply shocked!
And yet, Venerable Brethren, these are not merely the foolish babblings
of infidels. There are many Catholics, yea, and priests too, who say
these things openly; and they boast that they are going to reform the
Church by these ravings! There is no question now of the old error, by
which a sort of right to the supernatural order was claimed for the
human nature. We have gone far beyond that: we have reached the point
when it is affirmed that our most holy religion, in the man Christ as in
us, emanated from nature spontaneously and entirely. Than this there is
surely nothing more destructive of the whole supernatural order.
Wherefore the Vatican Council most justly decreed: "If anyone says that
man cannot be raised by God to a knowledge and perfection which
surpasses nature, but that he can and should, by his own efforts and by
a constant development, attain finally to the possession of all truth
and good, let him be anathema" (De Revel., can. 3).
The Origin of Dogmas
11. So far, Venerable Brethren, there has been no mention of the
intellect. Still it also, according to the teaching of the Modernists,
has its part in the act of faith. And it is of importance to see how. -
In that sentiment of which We have frequently spoken, since
sentiment is not knowledge, God indeed presents Himself to man, but in a
manner so confused and indistinct that He can hardly be perceived by the
believer. It is therefore necessary that a ray of light should be cast
upon this sentiment, so that God may be clearly distinguished and set
apart from it. This is the task of the intellect, whose office it is to
reflect and to analyse, and by means of which man first transforms into
mental pictures the vital phenomena which arise within him, and then
expresses them in words. Hence the common saying of Modernists: that the
religious man must ponder his faith. - The intellect, then,
encountering this sentiment directs itself upon it, and produces in it a
work resembling that of a painter who restores and gives new life to a
picture that has perished with age. The simile is that of one of the
leaders of Modernism. The operation of the intellect in this work is a
double one: first by a natural and spontaneous act it expresses its
concept in a simple, ordinary statement; then, on reflection and deeper
consideration, or, as they say, by elaborating its thought, it
expresses the idea in secondary propositions, which are derived
from the first, but are more perfect and distinct. These secondary
propositions, if they finally receive the approval of the supreme
magisterium of the Church, constitute dogma.
12. Thus, We have reached one of the principal points in the
Modernists' system, namely the origin and the nature of dogma. For they
place the origin of dogma in those primitive and simple formulae, which,
under a certain aspect, are necessary to faith; for revelation, to be
truly such, requires the clear manifestation of God in the
consciousness. But dogma itself they apparently hold, is contained in
the secondary formulae.
To ascertain the nature of dogma, we must first find the relation
which exists between the religious formulas and the religious
sentiment. This will be readily perceived by him who realises that
these formulas have no other purpose than to furnish the believer with a
means of giving an account of his faith to himself. These formulas
therefore stand midway between the believer and his faith; in their
relation to the faith, they are the inadequate expression of its object,
and are usually called symbols; in their relation to the
believer, they are mere instruments.
Its Evolution
13. Hence it is quite impossible to maintain that they express
absolute truth: for, in so far as they are symbols, they are the
images of truth, and so must be adapted to the religious sentiment in
its relation to man; and as instruments, they are the vehicles of
truth, and must therefore in their turn be adapted to man in his
relation to the religious sentiment. But the object of the religious
sentiment, since it embraces that absolute, possesses an
infinite variety of aspects of which now one, now another, may present
itself. In like manner, he who believes may pass through different
phases. Consequently, the formulae too, which we call dogmas, must be
subject to these vicissitudes, and are, therefore, liable to change.
Thus the way is open to the intrinsic evolution of dogma. An
immense collection of sophisms this, that ruins and destroys all
religion. Dogma is not only able, but ought to evolve and to be changed.
This is strongly affirmed by the Modernists, and as clearly flows from
their principles. For amongst the chief points of their teaching is this
which they deduce from the principle of vital immanence; that
religious formulas, to be really religious and not merely theological
speculations, ought to be living and to live the life of the religious
sentiment. This is not to be understood in the sense that these
formulas, especially if merely imaginative, were to be made for the
religious sentiment; it has no more to do with their origin than with
number or quality; what is necessary is that the religious sentiment,
with some modification when necessary, should vitally assimilate them.
In other words, it is necessary that the primitive formula be accepted
and sanctioned by the heart; and similarly the subsequent work from
which spring the secondary formulas must proceed under the guidance of
the heart. Hence it comes that these formulas, to be living, should be,
and should remain, adapted to the faith and to him who believes.
Wherefore if for any reason this adaptation should cease to exist, they
lose their first meaning and accordingly must be changed. And since the
character and lot of dogmatic formulas is so precarious, there is no
room for surprise that Modernists regard them so lightly and in such
open disrespect. And so they audaciously charge the Church both with
taking the wrong road from inability to distinguish the religious and
moral sense of formulas from their surface meaning, and with clinging
tenaciously and vainly to meaningless formulas whilst religion is
allowed to go to ruin. Blind that they are, and leaders of the
blind, inflated with a boastful science, they have reached that
pitch of folly where they pervert the eternal concept of truth and the
true nature of the religious sentiment; with that new system of theirs
they are seen to be under the sway of a blind and unchecked passion
for novelty, thinking not at all of finding some solid foundation of
truth, but despising the holy and apostolic traditions, they embrace
other vain, futile, uncertain doctrines, condemned by the Church, on
which, in the height of their vanity, they think they can rest and
maintain truth itself.
The Modernist as Believer:
Individual Experience and Religious Certitude
14. Thus far, Venerable Brethren, of the Modernist considered as
Philosopher. Now if we proceed to consider him as Believer, seeking to
know how the Believer, according to Modernism, is differentiated from
the Philosopher, it must be observed that although the Philosopher
recognises as the object of faith the divine reality, still this
reality is not to be found but in the heart of the Believer, as being an
object of sentiment and affirmation; and therefore confined within the
sphere of phenomena; but as to whether it exists outside that sentiment
and affirmation is a matter which in no way concerns this Philosopher.
For the Modernist .Believer, on the contrary, it is an established and
certain fact that the divine reality does really exist in itself and
quite independently of the person who believes in it. If you ask on what
foundation this assertion of the Believer rests, they answer: In the
experience of the individual. On this head the Modernists differ
from the Rationalists only to fall into the opinion of the Protestants
and pseudo-mystics. This is their manner of putting the question: In
the religious sentiment one must recognise a kind of
intuition of the heart which puts man in immediate contact with the very
reality of God, and infuses such a persuasion of God's existence and His
action both within and without man as to excel greatly any scientific
conviction. They assert, therefore, the existence of a real experience,
and one of a kind that surpasses all rational experience. If this
experience is denied by some, like the rationalists, it arises from the
fact that such persons are unwilling to put themselves in the moral
state which is necessary to produce it. It is this experience
which, when a person acquires it, makes him properly and truly a
believer.
How far off we are here from Catholic teaching we have already seen
in the decree of the Vatican Council. We shall see later how, with such
theories, added to the other errors already mentioned, the way is opened
wide for atheism. Here it is well to note at once that, given this
doctrine of experience united with the other doctrine of
symbolism, every religion, even that of paganism, must be held to be
true. What is to prevent such experiences from being met within every
religion? In fact that they are to be found is asserted by not a few.
And with what right will Modernists deny the truth of an experience
affirmed by a follower of Islam? With what right can they claim true
experiences for Catholics alone? Indeed Modernists do not deny but
actually admit, some confusedly, others in the most open manner, that
all religions are true. That they cannot feel otherwise is clear. For on
what ground, according to their theories, could falsity be predicated of
any religion whatsoever? It must be certainly on one of these two:
either on account of the falsity of the religious sentiment or on
account of the falsity of the formula pronounced by the mind. Now the
religious sentiment, although it may be more perfect or less
perfect, is always one and the same; and the intellectual formula, in
order to be true, has but to respond to the religious sentiment
and to the Believer, whatever be the intellectual capacity of the
latter. In the conflict between different religions, the most that
Modernists can maintain is that the Catholic has more truth because it
is more living and that it deserves with more reason the name of
Christian because it corresponds more fully with the origins of
Christianity. That these consequences flow from the premises will not
seem unnatural to anybody. But what is amazing is that there are
Catholics and priests who, We would fain believe, abhor such enormities
yet act as if they fully approved of them. For they heap such praise and
bestow such public honour on the teachers of these errors as to give
rise to the belief that their admiration is not meant merely for the
persons, who are perhaps not devoid of a certain merit, but rather for
the errors which these persons openly profess and which they do all in
their power to propagate.
Religious Experience and Tradition
15. But this doctrine of experience is also under another
aspect entirely contrary to Catholic truth. It is extended and applied
to tradition, as hitherto understood by the Church, and destroys
it. By the Modernists, tradition is understood as a communication to
others, through preaching by means of the intellectual formula, of an
original experience. To this formula, in addition to its
representative value, they attribute a species of suggestive efficacy
which acts both in the person who believes, to stimulate the religious
sentiment should it happen to have grown sluggish and to renew the
experience once acquired, and in those who do not yet believe, to awake
for the first time the religious sentiment in them and to produce
the experience. In this way is religious experience propagated
among the peoples; and not merely among contemporaries by preaching, but
among future generations both by books and by oral transmission from one
to another. Sometimes this communication of religious experience takes
root and thrives, at other times it withers at once and dies. For the
Modernists, to live is a proof of truth, since for them life and truth
are one and the same thing. Hence again it is given to us to infer that
all existing religions are equally true, for otherwise they would not
live.
Faith and Science
16. Having reached this point, Venerable Brethren, we have sufficient
material in hand to enable us to see the relations which Modernists
establish between faith and science, including history also under the
name of science. And in the first place it is to be held that the object
of the one is quite extraneous to and separate from the object of the
other. For faith occupies itself solely with something which science
declares to be unknowable for it. Hence each has a separate field
assigned to it: science is entirely concerned with the reality of
phenomena, into which faith does not enter at all; faith on the contrary
concerns itself with the divine reality which is entirely unknown to
science. Thus the conclusion is reached that there can never be any
dissension between faith and science, for if each keeps on its own
ground they can never meet and therefore never be in contradiction. And
if it be objected that in the visible world there are some things which
appertain to faith, such as the human life of Christ, the Modernists
reply by denying this. For though such things come within the category
of phenomena, still in as far as they are lived by faith and in
the way already described have been by faith transfigured and
disfigured, they have been removed from the world of sense and
translated to become material for the divine. Hence should it be further
asked whether Christ has wrought real miracles, and made real
prophecies, whether He rose truly from the dead and ascended into
heaven, the answer of agnostic science will be in the negative and the
answer of faith in the affirmative - yet there will not be, on that
account, any conflict between them. For it will be denied by the
philosopher as philosopher, speaking to philosophers and considering
Christ only in His historical reality; and it will be affirmed by the
speaker, speaking to believers and considering the life of Christ as
lived again by the faith and in the faith.
Faith Subject to Science
17. Yet, it would be a great mistake to suppose that, given these
theories, one is authorised to believe that faith and science are
independent of one another. On the side of science the independence is
indeed complete, but it is quite different with regard to faith, which
is subject to science not on one but on three grounds. For in the first
place it must be observed that in every religious fact, when you take
away the divine reality and the experience of it which the
believer possesses, everything else, and especially the religious
formulas of it, belongs to the sphere of phenomena and therefore
falls under the control of science. Let the believer leave the world if
he will, but so long as he remains in it he must continue, whether he
like it or not, to be subject to the laws, the observation, the
judgments of science and of history. Further, when it is said that God
is the object of faith alone, the statement refers only to the divine
reality not to the idea of God. The latter also is subject to
science which while it philosophises in what is called the logical order
soars also to the absolute and the ideal. It is therefore the right of
philosophy and of science to form conclusions concerning the idea of
God, to direct it in its evolution and to purify it of any extraneous
elements which may become confused with it. Finally, man does not suffer
a dualism to exist in him, and the believer therefore feels within him
an impelling need so to harmonise faith with science, that it may never
oppose the general conception which science sets forth concerning the
universe.
Thus it is evident that science is to be entirely independent of
faith, while on the other hand, and notwithstanding that they are
supposed to be strangers to each other, faith is made subject to
science. All this, Venerable Brothers, is in formal opposition with the
teachings of Our Predecessor, Pius IX, where he lays it down that: In
matters of religion it is the duty of philosophy not to command but to
serve, but not to prescribe what is to be believed but to embrace what
is to be believed with reasonable obedience, not to scrutinise the
depths of the mysteries of God but to venerate them devoutly and humbly.
The Modernists completely invert the parts, and to them may be
applied the words of another Predecessor of Ours, Gregory IX., addressed
to some theologians of his time: Some among you, inflated like
bladders with the spirit of vanity strive by profane novelties to cross
the boundaries fixed by the Fathers, twisting the sense of the heavenly
pages . . .to the philosophical teaching of the rationals, not for the
profit of their hearer but to make a show of science . . . these,
seduced by strange and eccentric doctrines, make the head of the tail
and force the queen to serve the servant.
The Methods of Modernists
18. This becomes still clearer to anybody who studies the conduct of
Modernists, which is in perfect harmony with their teachings. In the
writings and addresses they seem not unfrequently to advocate now one
doctrine now another so that one would be disposed to regard them as
vague and doubtful. But there is a reason for this, and it is to be
found in their ideas as to the mutual separation of science and faith.
Hence in their books you find some things which might well be expressed
by a Catholic, but in the next page you find other things which might
have been dictated by a rationalist. When they write history they make
no mention of the divinity of Christ, but when they are in the pulpit
they profess it clearly; again, when they write history they pay no heed
to the Fathers and the Councils, but when they catechise the people,
they cite them respectfully. In the same way they draw their
distinctions between theological and pastoral exegesis and scientific
and historical exegesis. So, too, acting on the principle that science
in no way depends upon faith, when they treat of philosophy, history,
criticism, feeling no horror at treading in the footsteps of Luther,
they are wont to display a certain contempt for Catholic doctrines, or
the Holy Fathers, for the Ecumenical Councils, for the ecclesiastical
magisterium; and should they be rebuked for this, they complain that
they are being deprived of their liberty. Lastly, guided by the theory
that faith must be subject to science, they continuously and openly
criticise the Church because of her sheer obstinacy in refusing to
submit and accommodate her dogmas to the opinions of philosophy; while
they, on their side, after having blotted out the old theology,
endeavour to introduce a new theology which shall follow the vagaries of
their philosophers.
The Modernist as Theologian:
His Principles, Immanence and Symbolism
19. And thus, Venerable Brethren, the road is open for us to study
the Modernists in the theological arena - a difficult task, yet one that
may be disposed of briefly. The end to be attained is the conciliation
of faith with science, always, however, saving the primacy of science
over faith. In this branch the Modernist theologian avails himself of
exactly the same principles which we have seen employed by the Modernist
philosopher, and applies them to the believer: the principles of
immanence and symbolism. The process is an extremely simple
one. The philosopher has declared: The principle of faith is immanent;
the believer has added: This principle is God; and the theologian
draws the conclusion: God is immanent in man. Thus we have
theological immanence. So too, the philosopher regards as certain
that the representations of the object of faith are merely symbolical;
the believer has affirmed that the object of faith is God in Himself;
and the theologian proceeds to affirm that: The representations of
the divine reality are symbolical. And thus we have theological
symbolism. Truly enormous errors both, the pernicious character of
which will be seen clearly from an examination of their consequences.
For, to begin with symbolism, since symbols are but symbols
in regard to their objects and only instruments in regard to the
believer, it is necessary first of all, according to the teachings of
the Modernists, that the believer do not lay too much stress on the
formula, but avail himself of it only with the scope of uniting himself
to the absolute truth which the formula at once reveals and conceals,
that is to say, endeavours to express but without succeeding in doing
so. They would also have the believer avail himself of the formulas only
in as far as they are useful to him, for they are given to be a help and
not a hindrance; with proper regard, however, for the social respect due
to formulas which the public magisterium has deemed suitable for
expressing the common consciousness until such time as the same
magisterium provide otherwise. Concerning immanence it is not
easy to determine what Modernists mean by it, for their own opinions on
the subject vary. Some understand it in the sense that God working in
man is more intimately present in him than man is in even himself, and
this conception, if properly understood, is free from reproach. Others
hold that the divine action is one with the action of nature, as the
action of the first cause is one with the action of the secondary cause,
and this would destroy the supernatural order. Others, finally, explain
it in a way which savours of pantheism and this, in truth, is the sense
which tallies best with the rest of their doctrines.
20. With this principle of immanence is connected another
which may be called the principle of divine permanence. It
differs from the first in much the same way as the private experience
differs from the experience transmitted by tradition. An example
will illustrate what is meant, and this example is offered by the Church
and the Sacraments. The Church and the Sacraments, they say, are not to
be regarded as having been instituted by Christ Himself. This is
forbidden by agnosticism, which sees in Christ nothing more than a man
whose religious consciousness has been, like that of all men, formed by
degrees; it is also forbidden by the law of immanence which rejects what
they call external application; it is further forbidden by the
law of evolution which requires for the development of the germs a
certain time and a certain series of circumstances; it is, finally,
forbidden by history, which shows that such in fact has been the course
of things. Still it is to be held that both Church and Sacraments have
been founded mediately by Christ. But how? In this way: All
Christian consciences were, they affirm, in a manner virtually included
in the conscience of Christ as the plant is included in the seed. But as
the shoots live the life of the seed, so, too, all Christians are to be
said to live the life of Christ. But the life of Christ is according to
faith, and so, too, is the life of Christians. And since this life
produced, in the courses of ages, both the Church and the Sacraments, it
is quite right to say that their origin is from Christ and is divine. In
the same way they prove that the Scriptures and the dogmas are divine.
And thus the Modernistic theology may be said to be complete. No great
thing, in truth, but more than enough for the theologian who professes
that the conclusions of science must always, and in all things, be
respected. The application of these theories to the other points We
shall proceed to expound, anybody may easily make for himself.
Dogma and the Sacraments
21. Thus far We have spoken of the origin and nature of faith. But as
faith has many shoots, and chief among them the Church, dogma, worship,
the Books which we call "Sacred," of these also we must know what is
taught by the Modernists. To begin with dogma, we have already indicated
its origin and nature. Dogma is born of the species of impulse or
necessity by virtue of which the believer is constrained to elaborate
his religious thought so as to render it clearer for himself and others.
This elaboration consists entirely in the process of penetrating and
refining the primitive formula, not indeed in itself and
according to logical development, but as required by circumstances, or
vitally as the Modernists more abstrusely put it. Hence it
happens that around the primitive formula secondary
formulas gradually continue to be formed, and these subsequently grouped
into bodies of doctrine, or into doctrinal constructions as they prefer
to call them, and further sanctioned by the public magisterium as
responding to the common consciousness, are called dogma. Dogma is to be
carefully distinguished from the speculations of theologians which,
although not alive with the life of dogma, are not without their utility
as serving to harmonise religion with science and remove opposition
between the two, in such a way as to throw light from without on
religion, and it may be even to prepare the matter for future dogma.
Concerning worship there would not be much to be said, were it not that
under this head are comprised the Sacraments, concerning which the
Modernists fall into the gravest errors. For them the Sacraments are the
resultant of a double need - for, as we have seen, everything in their
system is explained by inner impulses or necessities. In the present
case, the first need is that of giving some sensible manifestation to
religion; the second is that of propagating it, which could not be done
without some sensible form and consecrating acts, and these are called
sacraments. But for the Modernists the Sacraments are mere symbols or
signs, though not devoid of a certain efficacy - an efficacy, they tell
us, like that of certain phrases vulgarly described as having "caught
on," inasmuch as they have become the vehicle for the diffusion of
certain great ideas which strike the public mind. What the phrases are
to the ideas, that the Sacraments are to the religious sentiment - that
and nothing more. The Modernists would be speaking more clearly were
they to affirm that the Sacraments are instituted solely to foster the
faith - but this is condemned by the Council of Trent: If anyone say
that these sacraments are instituted solely to foster the faith, let him
be anathema.
The Holy Scriptures
22. We have already touched upon the nature and origin of the Sacred
Books. According to the principles of the Modernists they may be rightly
described as a collection of experiences, not indeed of the kind
that may come to anybody, but those extraordinary and striking ones
which have happened in any religion. And this is precisely what they
teach about our books of the Old and New Testament. But to suit their
own theories they note with remarkable ingenuity that, although
experience is something belonging to the present, still it may derive
its material from the past and the future alike, inasmuch as the
believer by memory lives the past over again after the manner of
the present, and lives the future already by anticipation. This
explains how it is that the historical and apocalyptical books are
included among the Sacred Writings. God does indeed speak in these books
- through the medium of the believer, but only, according to Modernistic
theology, by vital immanence and permanence. Do we inquire
concerning inspiration? Inspiration, they reply, is distinguished only
by its vehemence from that impulse which stimulates the believer to
reveal the faith that is in him by words or writing. It is something
like what happens in poetical inspiration, of which it has been said:
There is God in us, and when he stirreth he sets us afire. And it is
precisely in this sense that God is said to be the origin of the
inspiration of the Sacred Books. The Modernists affirm, too, that there
is nothing in these books which is not inspired. In this respect some
might be disposed to consider them as more orthodox than certain other
moderns who somewhat restrict inspiration, as, for instance, in what
have been put forward as tacit citations. But it is all mere
juggling of words. For if we take the Bible, according to the tenets of
agnosticism, to be a human work, made by men for men, but allowing the
theologian to proclaim that it is divine by immanence, what room is
there left in it for inspiration? General inspiration in the Modernist
sense it is easy to find, but of inspiration in the Catholic sense there
is not a trace.
The Church
23. A wider field for comment is opened when you come to treat of the
vagaries devised by the Modernist school concerning the Church. You must
start with the supposition that the Church has its birth in a double
need, the need of the individual believer, especially if he has had some
original and special experience, to communicate his faith to others, and
the need of the mass, when the faith has become common to many, to form
itself into a society and to guard, increase, and propagate the common
good. What, then, is the Church? It is the product of the collective
conscience, that is to say of the society of individual consciences
which by virtue of the principle of vital permanence, all depend
on one first believer, who for Catholics is Christ. Now every society
needs a directing authority to guide its members towards the common end,
to conserve prudently the elements of cohesion which in a religious
society are doctrine and worship.
Hence the triple authority in the Catholic Church, disciplinary,
dogmatic, liturgical. The nature of this authority is to be gathered
from its origin, and its rights and duties from its nature. In past
times it was a common error that authority came to the Church from
without, that is to say directly from God; and it was then rightly held
to be autocratic. But his conception had now grown obsolete. For
in the same way as the Church is a vital emanation of the collectivity
of consciences, so too authority emanates vitally from the Church
itself. Authority therefore, like the Church, has its origin in the
religious conscience, and, that being so, is subject to it. Should it
disown this dependence it becomes a tyranny. For we are living in an age
when the sense of liberty has reached its fullest development, and when
the public conscience has in the civil order introduced popular
government. Now there are not two consciences in man, any more than
there are two lives. It is for the ecclesiastical authority, therefore,
to shape itself to democratic forms, unless it wishes to provoke and
foment an intestine conflict in the consciences of mankind. The penalty
of refusal is disaster. For it is madness to think that the sentiment of
liberty, as it is now spread abroad, can surrender. Were it forcibly
confined and held in bonds, terrible would be its outburst, sweeping
away at once both Church and religion. Such is the situation for the
Modernists, and their one great anxiety is, in consequence, to find a
way of conciliation between the authority of the Church and the liberty
of believers.
The Relations Between Church and State
24. But it is not with its own members alone that the Church must
come to an amicable arrangement - besides its relations with those
within, it has others outside. The Church does not occupy the world all
by itself; there are other societies in the world, with which it must
necessarily have contact and relations. The rights and duties of the
Church towards civil societies must, therefore, be determined, and
determined, of course, by its own nature as it has been already
described. The rules to be applied in this matter are those which have
been laid down for science and faith, though in the latter case the
question is one of objects while here we have one of ends.
In the same way, then, as faith and science are strangers to each other
by reason of the diversity of their objects, Church and State are
strangers by reason of the diversity of their ends, that of the Church
being spiritual while that of the State is temporal. Formerly it was
possible to subordinate the temporal to the spiritual and to speak of
some questions as mixed, allowing to the Church the position of
queen and mistress in all such, because the Church was then regarded as
having been instituted immediately by God as the author of the
supernatural order. But his doctrine is today repudiated alike by
philosophy and history. The State must, therefore, be separated from the
Church, and the Catholic from the citizen. Every Catholic, from the fact
that he is also a citizen, has the right and the duty to work for the
common good in the way he thinks best, without troubling himself about
the authority of the Church, without paying any heed to its wishes, its
counsels, its orders - nay, even in spite of its reprimands. To trace
out and prescribe for the citizen any line of conduct, on any pretext
whatsoever, is to be guilty of an abuse of ecclesiastical authority,
against which one is bound to act with all one's might. The principles
from which these doctrines spring have been solemnly condemned by our
predecessor Pius VI. in his Constitution Auctorem fidei.
The Magisterium of the Church
25. But it is not enough for the Modernist school that the State
should be separated from the Church. For as faith is to be subordinated
to science, as far as phenomenal elements are concerned, so too
in temporal matters the Church must be subject to the State. They do not
say this openly as yet - but they will say it when they wish to be
logical on this head. For given the principle that in temporal matters
the State possesses absolute mastery, it will follow that when the
believer, not fully satisfied with his merely internal acts of religion,
proceeds to external acts, such for instance as the administration or
reception of the sacraments, these will fall under the control of the
State. What will then become of ecclesiastical authority, which can only
be exercised by external acts? Obviously it will be completely under the
dominion of the State. It is this inevitable consequence which impels
many among liberal Protestants to reject all external worship, nay, all
external religious community, and makes them advocate what they call,
individual religion. If the Modernists have not yet reached this
point, they do ask the Church in the meanwhile to be good enough to
follow spontaneously where they lead her and adapt herself to the civil
forms in vogue. Such are their ideas about disciplinary
authority. But far more advanced and far more pernicious are their
teachings on doctrinal and dogmatic authority. This is
their conception of the magisterium of the Church: No religious society,
they say, can be a real unit unless the religious conscience of its
members be one, and one also the formula which they adopt. But his
double unity requires a kind of common mind whose office is to find and
determine the formula that corresponds best with the common conscience,
and it must have moreover an authority sufficient to enable it to impose
on the community the formula which has been decided upon. From the
combination and, as it were fusion of these two elements, the common
mind which draws up the formula and the authority which imposes it,
arises, according to the Modernists, the notion of the ecclesiastical
magisterium. And as this magisterium springs, in its last analysis, from
the individual consciences and possesses its mandate of public utility
for their benefit, it follows that the ecclesiastical magisterium must
be subordinate to them, and should therefore take democratic forms. To
prevent individual consciences from revealing freely and openly the
impulses they feel, to hinder criticism from impelling dogmas towards
their necessary evolutions - this is not a legitimate use but an abuse
of a power given for the public utility. So too a due method and measure
must be observed in the exercise of authority. To condemn and prescribe
a work without the knowledge of the author, without hearing his
explanations, without discussion, assuredly savours of tyranny. And
thus, here again a way must be found to save the full rights of
authority on the one hand and of liberty on the other. In the meanwhile
the proper course for the Catholic will be to proclaim publicly his
profound respect for authority - and continue to follow his own bent.
Their general directions for the Church may be put in this way: Since
the end of the Church is entirely spiritual, the religious authority
should strip itself of all that external pomp which adorns it in the
eyes of the public. And here they forget that while religion is
essentially for the soul, it is not exclusively for the soul, and that
the honour paid to authority is reflected back on Jesus Christ who
instituted it.
The Evolution of Doctrine
26. To finish with this whole question of faith and its shoots, it
remains to be seen, Venerable Brethren, what the Modernists have to say
about their development. First of all they lay down the general
principle that in a living religion everything is subject to change, and
must change, and in this way they pass to what may be said to be, among
the chief of their doctrines, that of Evolution. To the laws of
evolution everything is subject - dogma, Church, worship, the Books we
revere as sacred, even faith itself, and the penalty of disobedience is
death. The enunciation of this principle will not astonish anybody who
bears in mind what the Modernists have had to say about each of these
subjects. Having laid down this law of evolution, the Modernists
themselves teach us how it works out. And first with regard to faith.
The primitive form of faith, they tell us, was rudimentary and common to
all men alike, for it had its origin in human nature and human life.
Vital evolution brought with it progress, not by the accretion of new
and purely adventitious forms from without, but by an increasing
penetration of the religious sentiment in the conscience. This progress
was of two kinds: negative, by the elimination of all foreign
elements, such, for example, as the sentiment of family or nationality;
and positive by the intellectual and moral refining of man, by
means of which the idea was enlarged and enlightened while the religious
sentiment became more elevated and more intense. For the progress of
faith no other causes are to be assigned than those which are adduced to
explain its origin. But to them must be added those religious geniuses
whom we call prophets, and of whom Christ was the greatest; both because
in their lives and their words there was something mysterious which
faith attributed to the divinity, and because it fell to their lot to
have new and original experiences fully in harmony with the needs of
their time. The progress of dogma is due chiefly to the obstacles which
faith has to surmount, to the enemies it has to vanquish, to the
contradictions it has to repel. Add to this a perpetual striving to
penetrate ever more profoundly its own mysteries. Thus, to omit other
examples, has it happened in the case of Christ: in Him that divine
something which faith admitted in Him expanded in such a way that He was
at last held to be God. The chief stimulus of evolution in the domain of
worship consists in the need of adapting itself to the uses and customs
of peoples, as well as the need of availing itself of the value which
certain acts have acquired by long usage. Finally, evolution in the
Church itself is fed by the need of accommodating itself to historical
conditions and of harmonising itself with existing forms of society.
Such is religious evolution in detail. And here, before proceeding
further, we would have you note well this whole theory of necessities
and needs, for it is at the root of the entire system of the
Modernists, and it is upon it that they will erect that famous method of
theirs called the historical.
27. Still continuing the consideration of the evolution of doctrine,
it is to be noted that Evolution is due no doubt to those stimulants
styled needs, but, if left to their action alone, it would run a great
risk of bursting the bounds of tradition, and thus, turned aside from
its primitive vital principle, would lead to ruin instead of progress.
Hence, studying more closely the ideas of the Modernists, evolution is
described as resulting from the conflict of two forces, one of them
tending towards progress, the other towards conservation. The conserving
force in the Church is tradition, and tradition is represented by
religious authority, and this both by right and in fact; for by right it
is in the very nature of authority to protect tradition, and, in fact,
for authority, raised as it is above the contingencies of life, feels
hardly, or not at all, the spurs of progress. The progressive force, on
the contrary, which responds to the inner needs lies in the individual
consciences and ferments there - especially in such of them as are in
most intimate contact with life. Note here, Venerable Brethren, the
appearance already of that most pernicious doctrine which would make of
the laity a factor of progress in the Church. Now it is by a species of
compromise between the forces of conservation and of progress, that is
to say between authority and individual consciences, that changes and
advances take place. The individual consciences of some of them act on
the collective conscience, which brings pressure to bear on the
depositaries of authority, until the latter consent to a compromise,
and, the pact being made, authority sees to its maintenance.
With all this in mind, one understands how it is that the Modernists
express astonishment when they are reprimanded or punished. What is
imputed to them as a fault they regard as a sacred duty. Being in
intimate contact with consciences they know better than anybody else,
and certainly better than the ecclesiastical authority, what needs exist
- nay, they embody them, so to speak, in themselves. Having a voice and
a pen they use both publicly, for this is their duty. Let authority
rebuke them as much as it pleases - they have their own conscience on
their side and an intimate experience which tells them with certainty
that what they deserve is not blame but praise. Then they reflect that,
after all there is no progress without a battle and no battle without
its victim, and victims they are willing to be like the prophets and
Christ Himself. They have no bitterness in their hearts against the
authority which uses them roughly, for after all it is only doing its
duty as authority. Their sole grief is that it remains deaf to their
warnings, because delay multiplies the obstacles which impede the
progress of souls, but the hour will most surely come when there will be
no further chance for tergiversation, for if the laws of evolution may
be checked for a while, they cannot be ultimately destroyed. And so they
go their way, reprimands and condemnations notwithstanding, masking an
incredible audacity under a mock semblance of humility. While they make
a show of bowing their heads, their hands and minds are more intent than
ever on carrying out their purposes. And this policy they follow
willingly and wittingly, both because it is part of their system that
authority is to be stimulated but not dethroned, and because it is
necessary for them to remain within the ranks of the Church in order
that they may gradually transform the collective conscience - thus
unconsciously avowing that the common conscience is not with them, and
that they have no right to claim to be its interpreters.
28. Thus then, Venerable Brethren, for the Modernists, both as
authors and propagandists, there is to be nothing stable, nothing
immutable in the Church. Nor indeed are they without precursors in their
doctrines, for it was of these that Our Predecessor Pius IX wrote:
These enemies of divine revelation extol human progress to the skies,
and with rash and sacrilegious daring would have it introduced into the
Catholic religion as if this religion were not the work of God but of
man, or some kind of philosophical discovery susceptible of perfection
by human efforts. On the subject of revelation and dogma in
particular, the doctrine of the Modernists offers nothing new - we find
it condemned in the Syllabus of Pius IX., where it is enunciated in
these terms: Divine revelation is imperfect, and therefore subject to
continual and indefinite progress, corresponding with the progress of
human reason; and condemned still more solemnly in the Vatican
Council: The doctrine of the faith which God has revealed has not
been proposed to human intelligences to be perfected by them as if it
were a philosophical system, but as a divine deposit entrusted to the
Spouse of Christ to be faithfully guarded and infallibly interpreted.
Hence the sense, too, of the sacred dogmas is that which our Holy Mother
the Church has once declared, nor is this sense ever to be abandoned on
plea or pretext of a more profound comprehension of the truth. Nor
is the development of our knowledge, even concerning the faith, impeded
by this pronouncement - on the contrary it is aided and promoted. For
the same Council continues: Let intelligence and science and wisdom,
therefore, increase and progress abundantly and vigorously in
individuals and in the mass, in the believer and in the whole Church,
throughout the ages and the centuries - but only in its own kind, that
is, according to the same dogma, the same sense, the same acceptation.
The Modernist as Historian and Critic
29. After having studied the Modernist as philosopher, believer and
theologian, it now remains for us to consider him as historian, critic,
apologist, reformer.
30. Some Modernists, devoted to historical studies, seem to be
greatly afraid of being taken for philosophers. About philosophy, they
tell you, they know nothing whatever - and in this they display
remarkable astuteness, for they are particularly anxious not to be
suspected of being prejudiced in favour of philosophical theories which
would lay them open to the charge of not being objective, to use the
word in vogue. And yet the truth is that their history and their
criticism are saturated with their philosophy, and that their
historico-critical conclusions are the natural fruit of their
philosophical principles. This will be patent to anybody who reflects.
Their three first laws are contained in those three principles of their
philosophy already dealt with: the principle of agnosticism, the
principle of the transfiguration of things by faith, and the
principle which We have called of disfiguration. Let us see what
consequences flow from each of them. Agnosticism tells us that
history, like ever other science, deals entirely with phenomena, and the
consequence is that God, and every intervention of God in human affairs,
is to be relegated to the domain of faith as belonging to it alone. In
things where a double element, the divine and the human, mingles, in
Christ, for example, or the Church, or the sacraments, or the many other
objects of the same kind, a division must be made and the human element
assigned to history while the divine will go to faith. Hence we have
that distinction, so current among the Modernists, between the Christ of
history and the Christ of faith, between the sacraments of history and
the sacraments of faith, and so on. Next we find that the human element
itself, which the historian has to work on, as it appears in the
documents, has been by faith transfigured, that is to say raised above
its historical conditions. It becomes necessary, therefore, to eliminate
also the accretions which faith has added, to assign them to faith
itself and to the history of faith: thus, when treating of Christ, the
historian must set aside all that surpasses man in his natural
condition, either according to the psychological conception of him, or
according to the place and period of his existence. Finally, by virtue
of the third principle, even those things which are not outside the
sphere of history they pass through the crucible, excluding from history
and relegating to faith everything which, in their judgment, is not in
harmony with what they call the logic of facts and in character
with the persons of whom they are predicated. Thus, they will not allow
that Christ ever uttered those things which do not seem to be within the
capacity of the multitudes that listened to Him. Hence they delete from
His real history and transfer to faith all the allegories found
in His discourses. Do you inquire as to the criterion they adopt to
enable them to make these divisions? The reply is that they argue from
the character of the man, from his condition of life, from his
education, from the circumstances under which the facts took place - in
short, from criteria which, when one considers them well, are purely
subjective. Their method is to put themselves into the position and
person of Christ, and then to attribute to Him what they would have done
under like circumstances. In this way, absolutely a priori and
acting on philosophical principles which they admit they hold but which
they affect to ignore, they proclaim that Christ, according to what they
call His real history, was not God and never did anything divine,
and that as man He did and said only what they, judging from the time in
which he lived, can admit Him to have said or done.
Criticism and its Principles
31. And as history receives its conclusions, ready-made, from
philosophy, so too criticism takes its own from history. The critic, on
the data furnished him by the historian, makes two parts of all his
documents. Those that remain after the triple elimination above
described go to form the real history; the rest is attributed to
the history of the faith or as it is styled, to internal history.
For the Modernists distinguish very carefully between these two kinds of
history, and it is to be noted that they oppose the history of the faith
to real history precisely as real. Thus we have a double Christ: a real
Christ, and a Christ, the one of faith, who never really existed; a
Christ who has lived at a given time and in a given place, and a Christ
who has never lived outside the pious meditations of the believer - the
Christ, for instance, whom we find in the Gospel of St. John, which is
pure contemplation from beginning to end.
32. But the dominion of philosophy over history does not end here.
Given that division, of which We have spoken, of the documents into two
parts, the philosopher steps in again with his principle of vital
immanence, and shows how everything in the history of the Church is
to be explained by vital emanation. And since the cause or
condition of every vital emanation whatsoever is to be found in some
need, it follows that no fact can ante-date the need which produced it -
historically the fact must be posterior to the need. See how the
historian works on this principle. He goes over his documents again,
whether they be found in the Sacred Books or elsewhere, draws up from
them his list of the successive needs of the Church, whether relating to
dogma or liturgy or other matters, and then he hands his list over to
the critic. The critic takes in hand the documents dealing with the
history of faith and distributes them, period by period, so that they
correspond exactly with the lists of needs, always guided by the
principle that the narration must follow the facts, as the facts follow
the needs. It may at times happen that some parts of the Sacred
Scriptures, such as the Epistles, themselves constitute the fact created
by the need. Even so, the rule holds that the age of any document can
only be determined by the age in which each need had manifested itself
in the Church. Further, a distinction must be made between the beginning
of a fact and its development, for what is born one day requires time
for growth. Hence the critic must once more go over his documents,
ranged as they are through the different ages, and divide them again
into two parts, and divide them into two lots, separating those that
regard the first stage of the facts from those that deal with their
development, and these he must again arrange according to their periods.
33. Then the philosopher must come in again to impose on the
historian the obligation of following in all his studies the precepts
and laws of evolution. It is next for the historian to scrutinise his
documents once more, to examine carefully the circumstances and
conditions affecting the Church during the different periods, the
conserving force she has put forth, the needs both internal and external
that have stimulated her to progress, the obstacles she has had to
encounter, in a word everything that helps to determine the manner in
which the laws of evolution have been fulfilled in her. This done, he
finishes his work by drawing up in its broad lines a history of the
development of the facts. The critic follows and fits in the rest of the
documents with this sketch; he takes up his pen, and soon the history is
made complete. Now we ask here: Who is the author of this history? The
historian? The critic? Assuredly, neither of these but the philosopher.
From beginning to end everything in it is a priori, and a
priori in a way that reeks of heresy. These men are certainly to be
pitied, and of them the Apostle might well say: They became vain in
their thoughts. . . professing themselves to be wise they became fools
(Rom. i. 21, 22); but, at the same time, they excite just
indignation when they accuse the Church of torturing the texts,
arranging and confusing them after its own fashion, and for the needs of
its cause. In this they are accusing the Church of something for which
their own conscience plainly reproaches them.
How the Bible is Dealt With
34. The result of this dismembering of the Sacred Books and this
partition of them throughout the centuries is naturally that the
Scriptures can no longer be attributed to the authors whose names they
bear. The Modernists have no hesitation in affirming commonly that these
books, and especially the Pentateuch and the first three Gospels, have
been gradually formed by additions to a primitive brief narration - by
interpolations of theological or allegorical interpretation, by
transitions, by joining different passages together. This means,
briefly, that in the Sacred Books we must admit a vital evolution,
springing from and corresponding with evolution of faith. The traces of
this evolution, they tell us, are so visible in the books that one might
almost write a history of them. Indeed this history they do actually
write, and with such an easy security that one might believe them to
have with their own eyes seen the writers at work through the ages
amplifying the Sacred Books. To aid them in this they call to their
assistance that branch of criticism which they call textual, and
labour to show that such a fact or such a phrase is not in its right
place, and adducing other arguments of the same kind. They seem, in
fact, to have constructed for themselves certain types of narration and
discourses, upon which they base their decision as to whether a thing is
out of place or not. Judge if you can how men with such a system are
fitted for practising this kind of criticism. To hear them talk about
their works on the Sacred Books, in which they have been able to
discover so much that is defective, one would imagine that before them
nobody ever even glanced through the pages of Scripture, whereas the
truth is that a whole multitude of Doctors, infinitely superior to them
in genius, in erudition, in sanctity, have sifted the Sacred Books in
every way, and so far from finding imperfections in them, have thanked
God more and more the deeper they have gone into them, for His divine
bounty in having vouchsafed to speak thus to men. Unfortunately, these
great Doctors did not enjoy the same aids to study that are possessed by
the Modernists for their guide and rule, - a philosophy borrowed from
the negation of God, and a criterion which consists of themselves.
We believe, then, that We have set forth with sufficient clearness
the historical method of the Modernists. The philosopher leads the way,
the historian follows, and then in due order come internal and textual
criticism. And since it is characteristic of the first cause to
communicate its virtue to secondary causes, it is quite clear that the
criticism We are concerned with is an agnostic, immanentist, and
evolutionist criticism. Hence anybody who embraces it and employs
it, makes profession thereby of the errors contained in it, and places
himself in opposition to Catholic faith. This being so, one cannot but
be greatly surprised by the consideration which is attached to it by
certain Catholics. Two causes may be assigned for this: first, the close
alliance, independent of all differences of nationality or religion,
which the historians and critics of this school have formed among
themselves; second, the boundless effrontery of these men. Let one of
them but open his mouth and the others applaud him in chorus,
proclaiming that science has made another step forward; let an outsider
but hint at a desire to inspect the new discovery with his own eyes, and
they are on him in a body; deny it - and you are an ignoramus; embrace
it and defend it - and there is no praise too warm for you. In this way
they win over any who, did they but realise what they are doing, would
shrink back with horror. The impudence and the domineering of some, and
the thoughtlessness and imprudence of others, have combined to generate
a pestilence in the air which penetrates everywhere and spreads the
contagion. But let us pass to the apologist.
The Modernist as Apologist
35. The Modernist apologist depends in two ways on the philosopher.
First, indirectly, inasmuch as his theme is history - history
dictated, as we have seen, by the philosopher; and, secondly,
directly, inasmuch as he takes both his laws and his principles from
the philosopher. Hence that common precept of the Modernist school that
the new apologetics must be fed from psychological and historical
sources. The Modernist apologists, then, enter the arena by proclaiming
to the rationalists that though they are defending religion, they have
no intention of employing the data of the sacred books or the histories
in current use in the Church, and composed according to old methods, but
real history written on modern principles and according to
rigorously modern methods. In all this they are not using an
argumentum ad hominem, but are stating the simple fact that they
hold, that the truth is to be found only in this kind of history. They
feel that it is not necessary for them to dwell on their own sincerity
in their writings - they are already known to and praised by the
rationalists as fighting under the same banner, and they not only plume
themselves on these encomiums, which are a kind of salary to them but
would only provoke nausea in a real Catholic, but use them as an offset
to the reprimands of the Church.
But let us see how the Modernist conducts his apologetics. The aim he
sets before himself is to make the non-believer attain that
experience of the Catholic religion which, according to the system,
is the basis of faith. There are two ways open to him, the objective
and the subjective. The first of them proceeds from agnosticism.
It tends to show that religion, and especially the Catholic religion, is
endowed with such vitality as to compel every psychologist and historian
of good faith to recognise that its history hides some unknown
element. To this end it is necessary to prove that this religion, as it
exists today, is that which was founded by Jesus Christ; that is to say,
that it is the product of the progressive development of the germ which
He brought into the world. Hence it is imperative first of all to
establish what this germ was, and this the Modernist claims to be able
to do by the following formula: Christ announced the coming of the
kingdom of God, which was to be realised within a brief lapse of time
and of which He was to become the Messiah, the divinely-given agent and
ordainer. Then it must be shown how this germ, always immanent
and permanent in the bosom of the Church, has gone on slowly
developing in the course of history, adapting itself successively to the
different mediums through which it has passed, borrowing from them by
vital assimiliation all the dogmatic, cultural, ecclesiastical forms
that served its purpose; whilst, on the other hand , it surmounted all
obstacles, vanquished all enemies, and survived all assaults and all
combats. Anybody who well and duly considers this mass of obstacles,
adversaries, attacks, combats, and the vitality and fecundity which the
Church has shown throughout them all, must admit that if the laws of
evolution are visible in her life they fail to explain the whole of her
history - the unknown rises forth from it and presents itself
before us. Thus do they argue, never suspecting that their determination
of the primitive germ is an a priori of agnostic and evolutionist
philosophy, and that the formula of it has been gratuitously invented
for the sake of buttressing their position.
36. But while they endeavour by this line of reasoning to secure
access for the Catholic religion into souls, these new apologists are
quite ready to admit that there are many distasteful things in it. Nay,
they admit openly, and with ill-concealed satisfaction, that they have
found that even its dogma is not exempt from errors and contradictions.
They add also that this is not only excusable but - curiously enough -
even right and proper. In the Sacred Books there are many passages
referring to science or history where manifest errors are to be found.
But the subject of these books is not science or history but religion
and morals. In them history and science serve only as a species of
covering to enable the religious and moral experiences wrapped up in
them to penetrate more readily among the masses. The masses understood
science and history as they are expressed in these books, and it is
clear that had science and history been expressed in a more perfect form
this would have proved rather a hindrance than a help. Then, again, the
Sacred Books being essentially religious, are consequently necessarily
living. Now life has its own truth and its own logic, belonging as they
do to a different order, viz., truth of adaptation and of proportion
both with the medium in which it exists and with the end towards which
it tends. Finally the Modernists, losing all sense of control, go so far
as to proclaim as true and legitimate everything that is explained by
life.
We, Venerable Brethren, for whom there is but one and only truth, and
who hold that the Sacred Books, written under the inspiration of the
Holy Ghost, have God for their author (Conc. Vat., De Revel.,
c. 2) declare that this is equivalent to attributing to God Himself the
lie of utility or officious lie, and We say with St. Augustine: In an
authority so high, admit but one officious lie, and there will not
remain a single passage of those apparently difficult to practise or to
believe, which on the same most pernicious rule may not be explained as
a lie uttered by the author wilfully and to serve a purpose. (Epist.
28). And thus it will come about, the holy Doctor continues, that
everybody will believe and refuse to believe what he likes or dislikes.
But the Modernists pursue their way gaily. They grant also that certain
arguments adduced in the Sacred Books, like those, for example, which
are based on the prophecies, have no rational foundation to rest on. But
they will defend even these as artifices of preaching, which are
justified by life. Do they stop here? No, indeed, for they are ready to
admit, nay, to proclaim that Christ Himself manifestly erred in
determining the time when the coming of the Kingdom of God was to take
place, and they tell us that we must not be surprised at this since even
Christ was subject to the laws of life! After this what is to become of
the dogmas of the Church? The dogmas brim over with flagrant
contradictions, but what matter that since, apart from the fact that
vital logic accepts them, they are not repugnant to symbolical truth.
Are we not dealing with the infinite, and has not the infinite an
infinite variety of aspects? In short, to maintain and defend these
theories they do not hesitate to declare that the noblest homage that
can be paid to the Infinite is to make it the object of contradictory
propositions! But when they justify even contradiction, what is it that
they will refuse to justify?
Subjective Arguments
37. But it is not solely by objective arguments that the non-believer
may be disposed to faith. There are also subjective ones at the
disposal of the Modernists, and for those they return to their doctrine
of immanence. They endeavour, in fact, to persuade their
non-believer that down in the very deeps of his nature and his life lie
the need and the desire for religion, and this not a religion of any
kind, but the specific religion known as Catholicism, which, they say,
is absolutely postulated by the perfect development of life. And
here We cannot but deplore once more, and grievously, that there are
Catholics who, while rejecting immanence as a doctrine, employ it
as a method of apologetics, and who do this so imprudently that they
seem to admit that there is in human nature a true and rigorous
necessity with regard to the supernatural order - and not merely a
capacity and a suitability for the supernatural, order - and not merely
a capacity and a suitability for the supernatural, such as has at all
times been emphasized by Catholic apologists. Truth to tell it is only
the moderate Modernists who make this appeal to an exigency for the
Catholic religion. As for the others, who might be called
intergralists, they would show to the non-believer, hidden away in
the very depths of his being, the very germ which Christ Himself bore in
His conscience, and which He bequeathed to the world. Such, Venerable
Brethren, is a summary description of the apologetic method of the
Modernists, in perfect harmony, as you may see, with their doctrines -
methods and doctrines brimming over with errors, made not for
edification but for destruction, not for the formation of Catholics but
for the plunging of Catholics into heresy; methods and doctrines that
would be fatal to any religion.
The Modernist as Reformer
38. It remains for Us now to say a few words about the Modernist as
reformer. From all that has preceded, some idea may be gained of the
reforming mania which possesses them: in all Catholicism there is
absolutely nothing on which it does not fasten. Reform of philosophy,
especially in the seminaries: the scholastic philosophy is to be
relegated to the history of philosophy among obsolete systems, and the
young men are to be taught modern philosophy which alone is true and
suited to the times in which we live. Reform of theology; rational
theology is to have modern philosophy for its foundation, and positive
theology is to be founded on the history of dogma. As for history, it
must be for the future written and taught only according to their modern
methods and principles. Dogmas and their evolution are to be harmonised
with science and history. In the Catechism no dogmas are to be inserted
except those that have been duly reformed and are within the capacity of
the people. Regarding worship, the number of external devotions is to be
reduced, or at least steps must be taken to prevent their further
increase, though, indeed, some of the admirers of symbolism are disposed
to be more indulgent on this head. Ecclesiastical government requires to
be reformed in all its branches, but especially in its disciplinary and
dogmatic parts. Its spirit with the public conscience, which is not
wholly for democracy; a share in ecclesiastical government should
therefore be given to the lower ranks of the clergy, and even to the
laity, and authority should be decentralised. The Roman Congregations,
and especially the index and the Holy Office, are to be reformed. The
ecclesiastical authority must change its line of conduct in the social
and political world; while keeping outside political and social
organization, it must adapt itself to those which exist in order to
penetrate them with its spirit. With regard to morals, they adopt the
principle of the Americanists, that the active virtues are more
important than the passive, both in the estimation in which they must be
held and in the exercise of them. The clergy are asked to return to
their ancient lowliness and poverty, and in their ideas and action to be
guided by the principles of Modernism; and there are some who, echoing
the teaching of their Protestant masters, would like the suppression of
ecclesiastical celibacy. What is there left in the Church which is not
to be reformed according to their principles?
Modernism and All the Heresies
39. It may be, Venerable Brethren, that some may think We have dwelt
too long on this exposition of the doctrines of the Modernists. But it
was necessary, both in order to refute their customary charge that We do
not understand their ideas, and to show that their system does not
consist in scattered and unconnected theories but in a perfectly
organised body, all the parts of which are solidly joined so that it is
not possible to admit one without admitting all. For this reason, too,
We have had to give this exposition a somewhat didactic form and not to
shrink from employing certain uncouth terms in use among the Modernists.
And now, can anybody who takes a survey of the whole system be surprised
that We should define it as the synthesis of all heresies? Were one to
attempt the task of collecting together all the errors that have been
broached against the faith and to concentrate the sap and substance of
them all into one, he could not better succeed than the Modernists have
done. Nay, they have done more than this, for, as we have already
intimated, their system means the destruction not of the Catholic
religion alone but of all religion. With good reason do the rationalists
applaud them, for the most sincere and the frankest among the
rationalists warmly welcome the modernists as their most valuable
allies.
For let us return for a moment, Venerable Brethren, to that most
disastrous doctrine of agnosticism. By it every avenue that leads
the intellect to God is barred, but the Modernists would seek to open
others available for sentiment and action. Vain efforts! For, after all,
what is sentiment but the reaction of the soul on the action of the
intelligence or the senses. Take away the intelligence, and man, already
inclined to follow the senses, becomes their slave. Vain, too, from
another point of view, for all these fantasias on the religious
sentiment will never be able to destroy common sense, and common sense
tells us that emotion and everything that leads the heart captive proves
a hindrance instead of a help to the discovery of truth. We speak, of
course, of truth in itself - as for that other purely subjective
truth, the fruit of sentiment and action, if it serves its purpose for
the jugglery of words, it is of no use to the man who wants to know
above all things whether outside himself there is a God into whose hands
he is one day to fall. True, the Modernists do call in experience
to eke out their system, but what does this experience add to
sentiment? Absolutely nothing beyond a certain intensity and a
proportionate deepening of the conviction of the reality of the object.
But these two will never make sentiment into anything but sentiment, nor
deprive it of its characteristic which is to cause deception when the
intelligence is not there to guide it; on the contrary, they but confirm
and aggravate this characteristic, for the more intense sentiment is the
more it is sentimental. In matters of religious sentiment and religious
experience, you know, Venerable Brethren, how necessary is prudence and
how necessary, too, the science which directs prudence. You know it from
your own dealings with sounds, and especially with souls in whom
sentiment predominates; you know it also from your reading of ascetical
books - books for which the Modernists have but little esteem, but which
testify to a science and a solidity very different from theirs, and to a
refinement and subtlety of observation of which the Modernists give no
evidence. Is it not really folly, or at least sovereign imprudence, to
trust oneself without control to Modernist experiences? Let us for a
moment put the question: if experiences have so much value in their
eyes, why do they not attach equal weight to the experience that
thousands upon thousands of Catholics have that the Modernists are on
the wrong road? It is, perchance, that all experiences except those felt
by the Modernists are false and deceptive? The vast majority of mankind
holds and always will hold firmly that sentiment and experience alone,
when not enlightened and guided by reason, do not lead to the knowledge
of God. What remains, then, but the annihilation of all religion, -
atheism? Certainly it is not the doctrine of symbolism - will
save us from this. For if all the intellectual elements, as they call
them, of religion are pure symbols, will not the very name of God or of
divine personality be also a symbol, and if this be admitted will not
the personality of God become a matter of doubt and the way opened to
Pantheism? And to Pantheism that other doctrine of the divine
immanence leads directly. For does it, We ask, leave God distinct
from man or not? If yes, in what does it differ from Catholic doctrine,
and why reject external revelation? If no, we are at once in Pantheism.
Now the doctrine of immanence in the Modernist acceptation holds and
professes that every phenomenon of conscience proceeds from man as man.
The rigorous conclusion from this is the identity of man with God, which
means Pantheism. The same conclusion follows from the distinction
Modernists make between science and faith. The object of science they
say is the reality of the knowable; the object of faith, on the
contrary, is the reality of the unknowable. Now what makes the
unknowable unknowable is its disproportion with the intelligible - a
disproportion which nothing whatever, even in the doctrine of the
Modernist, can suppress. Hence the unknowable remains and will eternally
remain unknowable to the believer as well as to the man of science.
Therefore if any religion at all is possible it can only be the religion
of an unknowable reality. And why this religion might not be that
universal soul of the universe, of which a rationalist speaks, is
something We do see. Certainly this suffices to show superabundantly by
how many roads Modernism leads to the annihilation of all religion. The
first step in this direction was taken by Protestantism; the second is
made by Modernism; the next will plunge headlong into atheism.
THE CAUSE OF MODERNISM
40. To penetrate still deeper into Modernism and to find a suitable
remedy for such a deep sore, it behoves Us, Venerable Brethren, to
investigate the causes which have engendered it and which foster its
growth. That the proximate and immediate cause consists in a perversion
of the mind cannot be open to doubt. The remote causes seem to us to be
reduced to two: curiosity and pride. Curiosity by itself, if not
prudently regulated, suffices to explain all errors. Such is the opinion
of Our Predecessor, Gregory XVI., who wrote: A lamentable spectacle
is that presented by the aberrations of human reason when it yields to
the spirit of novelty, when against the warning of the Apostle it seeks
to know beyond what it is meant to know, and when relying too much on
itself it thinks it can find the fruit outside the Church wherein truth
is found without the slightest shadow of error (Ep. Encycl.
Singulari nos, 7 Kal. Jul. 1834).
But it is pride which exercises an incomparably greater sway over the
soul to blind it and plunge it into error, and pride sits in Modernism
as in its own house, finding sustenance everywhere in its doctrines and
an occasion to flaunt itself in all its aspects. It is pride which fills
Modernists with that confidence in themselves and leads them to hold
themselves up as the rule for all, pride which puffs them up with that
vainglory which allows them to regard themselves as the sole possessors
of knowledge, and makes them say, inflated with presumption, We are
not as the rest of men, and which, to make them really not as other
men, leads them to embrace all kinds of the most absurd novelties; it is
pride which rouses in them the spirit of disobedience and causes them to
demand a compromise between authority and liberty; it is pride that
makes of them the reformers of others, while they forget to reform
themselves, and which begets their absolute want of respect for
authority, not excepting the supreme authority. No, truly, there is no
road which leads so directly and so quickly to Modernism as pride. When
a Catholic laymen or a priest forgets that precept of the Christian life
which obliges us to renounce ourselves if we would follow Jesus Christ
and neglects to tear pride from his heart, ah! but he is a fully ripe
subject for the errors of Modernism. Hence, Venerable Brethren, it will
be your first duty to thwart such proud men, to employ them only in the
lowest and obscurest offices; the higher they try to rise, the lower let
them be placed, so that their lowly position may deprive them of the
power of causing damage. Sound your young clerics, too, most carefully,
by yourselves and by the directors of your seminaries, and when you find
the spirit of pride among any of them reject them without compunction
from the priesthood. Would to God that this had always been done with
the proper vigilance and constancy.
41. If we pass from the moral to the intellectual causes of
Modernism, the first which presents itself, and the chief one, is
ignorance. Yes, these very Modernists who pose as Doctors of the Church,
who puff out their cheeks when they speak of modern philosophy, and show
such contempt for scholasticism, have embraced the one with all its
false glamour because their ignorance of the other has left them without
the means of being able to recognise confusion of thought, and to refute
sophistry. Their whole system, with all its errors, has been born of the
alliance between faith and false philosophy.
Methods of Propagandism
42. If only they had displayed less zeal and energy in propagating
it! But such is their activity and such their unwearying capacity for
work on behalf of their cause, that one cannot but be pained to see them
waste such labour in endeavouring to ruin the Church when they might
have been of such service to her had their efforts been better employed.
Their articles to delude men's minds are of two kinds, the first to
remove obstacles from their path, the second to devise and apply
actively and patiently every instrument that can serve their purpose.
They recognise that the three chief difficulties for them are scholastic
philosophy, the authority of the fathers and tradition, and the
magisterium of the Church, and on these they wage unrelenting war. For
scholastic philosophy and theology they have only ridicule and contempt.
Whether it is ignorance or fear, or both, that inspires this conduct in
them, certain it is that the passion for novelty is always united in
them with hatred of scholasticism, and there is no surer sign that a man
is on the way to Modernism than when he begins to show his dislike for
this system. Modernists and their admirers should remember the
proposition condemned by Pius IX: The method and principles which
have served the doctors of scholasticism when treating of theology no
longer correspond with the exigencies of our time or the progress of
science (Syll. Prop. 13). They exercise all their ingenuity in
diminishing the force and falsifying the character of tradition, so as
to rob it of all its weight. But for Catholics the second Council of
Nicea will always have the force of law, where it condemns those who
dare, after the impious fashion of heretics, to deride the
ecclesiastical traditions, to invent novelties of some kind . . . or
endeavour by malice or craft to overthrow any one of the legitimate
traditions of the Catholic Church; and Catholics will hold for law,
also, the profession of the fourth Council of Constantinople: We
therefore profess to conserve and guard the rules bequeathed to the Holy
Catholic and Apostolic Church by the Holy and most illustrious Apostles,
by the orthodox Councils, both general and local, and by every one of
those divine interpreters the Fathers and Doctors of the Church.
Wherefore the Roman Pontiffs, Pius IV. and Pius IX., ordered the
insertion in the profession of faith of the following declaration: I
most firmly admit and embrace the apostolic and ecclesiastical
traditions and other observances and constitutions of the Church.
The Modernists pass the same judgment on the most holy Fathers of the
Church as they pass on tradition; decreeing, with amazing effrontery
that, while personally most worthy of all veneration, they were entirely
ignorant of history and criticism, for which they are only excusable on
account of the time in which they lived. Finally, the Modernists try in
every way to diminish and weaken the authority of the ecclesiastical
magisterium itself by sacrilegiously falsifying its origin, character,
and rights, and by freely repeating the calumnies of its adversaries. To
all the band of Modernists may be applied those words which Our
Predecessor wrote with such pain: To bring contempt and odium on the
mystic Spouse of Christ, who is the true light, the children of darkness
have been wont to cast in her face before the world a stupid calumny,
and perverting the meaning and force of things and words, to depict her
as the friend of darkness and ignorance, and the enemy of light,
science, and progress (Motu-proprio, Ut mysticum, 14 March,
1891). This being so, Venerable Brethren, no wonder the Modernists vent
all their gall and hatred on Catholics who sturdily fight the battles of
the Church. But of all the insults they heap on them those of ignorance
and obstinacy are the favourites. When an adversary rises up against
them with an erudition and force that render him redoubtable, they try
to make a conspiracy of silence around him to nullify the effects of his
attack, while in flagrant contrast with this policy towards Catholics,
they load with constant praise the writers who range themselves on their
side, hailing their works, excluding novelty in every page, with
choruses of applause; for them the scholarship of a writer is in direct
proportion to the recklessness of his attacks on antiquity, and of his
efforts to undermine tradition and the ecclesiastical magisterium; when
one of their number falls under the condemnations of the Church the rest
of them, to the horror of good Catholics, gather round him, heap public
praise upon him, venerate him almost as a martyr to truth. The young,
excited and confused by all this glamour of praise and abuse, some of
them afraid of being branded as ignorant, others ambitious to be
considered learned, and both classes goaded internally by curiosity and
pride, often surrender and give themselves up to Modernism.
43. And here we have already some of the artifices employed by
Modernists to exploit their wares. What efforts they make to win new
recruits! They seize upon chairs in the seminaries and universities, and
gradually make of them chairs of pestilence. From these sacred chairs
they scatter, though not always openly, the seeds of their doctrines;
they proclaim their teachings without disguise in congresses; they
introduce them and make them the vogue in social institutions. Under
their own names and under pseudonyms they publish numbers of books,
newspapers, reviews, and sometimes one and the same writer adopts a
variety of pseudonyms to trap the incautious reader into believing in a
whole multitude of Modernist writers - in short they leave nothing
untried, in action, discourses, writings, as though there were a frenzy
of propaganda upon them. And the results of all this? We have to lament
at the sight of many young men once full of promise and capable of
rendering great services to the Church, now gone astray. And there is
another sight that saddens Us too: that of so many other Catholics, who,
while they certainly do not go so far as the former, have yet grown into
the habit, as though they had been breathing a poisoned atmosphere, of
thinking and speaking and writing with a liberty that ill becomes
Catholics. They are to be found among the laity, and in the ranks of the
clergy, and they are not wanting even in the last place where one might
expect to meet them, in religious institutes. If they treat of biblical
questions, it is upon Modernist principles; if they write history, it is
to search out with curiosity and to publish openly, on the pretext of
telling the whole truth and with a species of ill-concealed
satisfaction, everything that looks to them like a stain in the history
of the Church. Under the sway of certain a priori rules they destroy as
far as they can the pious traditions of the people, and bring ridicule
on certain relics highly venerable from their antiquity. They are
possessed by the empty desire of being talked about, and they know they
would never succeed in this were they to say only what has been always
said. It may be that they have persuaded themselves that in all this
they are really serving God and the Church - in reality they only offend
both, less perhaps by their works themselves than by the spirit in which
they write and by the encouragement they are giving to the extravagances
of the Modernists.
REMEDIES
44. Against this host of grave errors, and its secret and open
advance, Our Predecessor Leo XIII., of happy memory, worked strenuously
especially as regards the Bible, both in his words and his acts. But, as
we have seen, the Modernists are not easily deterred by such weapons -
with an affectation of submission and respect, they proceeded to twist
the words of the Pontiff to their own sense, and his acts they described
as directed against others than themselves. And the evil has gone on
increasing from day to day. We therefore, Venerable Brethren, have
determined to adopt at once the most efficacious measures in Our power,
and We beg and conjure you to see to it that in this most grave matter
nobody will ever be able to say that you have been in the slightest
degree wanting in vigilance, zeal or firmness. And what We ask of you
and expect of you, We ask and expect also of all other pastors of souls,
of all educators and professors of clerics, and in a very special way of
the superiors of religious institutions.
I. - The Study of Scholastic Philosophy
45. In the first place, with regard to studies, We will and ordain
that scholastic philosophy be made the basis of the sacred sciences. It
goes without saying that if anything is met with among the scholastic
doctors which may be regarded as an excess of subtlety, or which is
altogether destitute of probability, We have no desire whatever to
propose it for the imitation of present generations (Leo XIII. Enc.
Aeterni Patris). And let it be clearly understood above all
things that the scholastic philosophy We prescribe is that which the
Angelic Doctor has bequeathed to us, and We, therefore, declare that all
the ordinances of Our Predecessor on this subject continue fully in
force, and, as far as may be necessary, We do decree anew, and confirm,
and ordain that they be by all strictly observed. In seminaries where
they may have been neglected let the Bishops impose them and require
their observance, and let this apply also to the Superiors of religious
institutions. Further let Professors remember that they cannot set St.
Thomas aside, especially in metaphysical questions, without grave
detriment.
46. On this philosophical foundation the theological edifice is to be
solidly raised. Promote the study of theology, Venerable Brethren, by
all means in your power, so that your clerics on leaving the seminaries
may admire and love it, and always find their delight in it. For in
the vast and varied abundance of studies opening before the mind
desirous of truth, everybody knows how the old maxim describes theology
as so far in front of all others that every science and art should serve
it and be to it as handmaidens (Leo XIII., Lett. ap. In Magna,
Dec. 10, 1889). We will add that We deem worthy of praise those who with
full respect for tradition, the Holy Fathers, and the ecclesiastical
magisterium, undertake, with well-balanced judgment and guided by
Catholic principles (which is not always the case), seek to illustrate
positive theology by throwing the light of true history upon it.
Certainly more attention must be paid to positive theology than in the
past, but this must be done without detriment to scholastic theology,
and those are to be disapproved as of Modernist tendencies who exalt
positive theology in such a way as to seem to despise the scholastic.
47. With regard to profane studies suffice it to recall here what Our
Predecessor has admirably said: Apply yourselves energetically to the
study of natural sciences: the brilliant discoveries and the bold and
useful applications of them made in our times which have won such
applause by our contemporaries will be an object of perpetual praise for
those that come after us (Leo XIII. Alloc., March 7, 1880).
But this do without interfering with sacred studies, as Our Predecessor
in these most grave words prescribed: If you carefully search for the
cause of those errors you will find that it lies in the fact that in
these days when the natural sciences absorb so much study, the more
severe and lofty studies have been proportionately neglected - some of
them have almost passed into oblivion, some of them are pursued in a
half-hearted or superficial way, and, sad to say, now that they are
fallen from their old estate, they have been dis figured by perverse
doctrines and monstrous errors (loco cit.). We ordain, therefore,
that the study of natural science in the seminaries be carried on under
this law.
II - Practical Application
48. All these prescriptions and those of Our Predecessor are to be
borne in mind whenever there is question of choosing directors and
professors for seminaries and Catholic Universities. Anybody who in any
way is found to be imbued with Modernism is to be excluded without
compunction from these offices, and those who already occupy them are to
be withdrawn. The same policy is to be adopted towards those who favour
Modernism either by extolling the Modernists or excusing their culpable
conduct, by criticising scholasticism, the Holy Father, or by refusing
obedience to ecclesiastical authority in any of its depositaries; and
towards those who show a love of novelty in history, archaeology,
biblical exegesis, and finally towards those who neglect the sacred
sciences or appear to prefer to them the profane. In all this question
of studies, Venerable Brethren, you cannot be too watchful or too
constant, but most of all in the choice of professors, for as a rule the
students are modelled after the pattern of their masters. Strong in the
consciousness of your duty, act always prudently but vigorously.
49. Equal diligence and severity are to be used in examining and
selecting candidates for Holy Orders. Far, far from the clergy be the
love of novelty! God hates the proud and the obstinate. For the future
the doctorate of theology and canon law must never be conferred on
anybody who has not made the regular course of scholastic philosophy; if
conferred it shall be held as null and void. The rules laid down in 1896
by the Sacred Congregation of Bishops and Regulars for the clerics, both
secular and regular, of Italy concerning the frequenting of the
Universities, We now decree to be extended to all nations. Clerics and
priests inscribed in a Catholic Institute or University must not in the
future follow in civil Universities those courses for which there are
chairs in the Catholic Institutes to which they belong. If this has been
permitted anywhere in the past, We ordain that it be not allowed for the
future. Let the Bishops who form the Governing Board of such Catholic
Institutes or Universities watch with all care that these Our commands
be constantly observed.
III. - Episcopal Vigilance Over Publications
50. It is also the duty of the bishops to prevent writings infected
with Modernism or favourable to it from being read when they have been
published, and to hinder their publication when they have not. No book
or paper or periodical of this kind must ever be permitted to
seminarists or university students. The injury to them would be equal to
that caused by immoral reading - nay, it would be greater for such
writings poison Christian life at its very fount. The same decision is
to be taken concerning the writings of some Catholics, who, though not
badly disposed themselves but ill-instructed in theological studies and
imbued with modern philosophy, strive to make this harmonize with the
faith, and, as they say, to turn it to the account of the faith. The
name and reputation of these authors cause them to be read without
suspicion, and they are, therefore, all the more dangerous in preparing
the way for Modernism.
51. To give you some more general directions, Venerable Brethren, in
a matter of such moment, We bid you do everything in your power to drive
out of your dioceses, even by solemn interdict, any pernicious books
that may be in circulation there. The Holy See neglects no means to put
down writings of this kind, but the number of them has now grown to such
an extent that it is impossible to censure them all. Hence it happens
that the medicine sometimes arrives too late, for the disease has taken
root during the delay. We will, therefore, that the Bishops, putting
aside all fear and the prudence of the flesh, despising the outcries of
the wicked, gently by all means but constantly, do each his own share of
this work, remembering the injunctions of Leo XIII. in the Apostolic
Constitution Officiorum: Let the Ordinaries, acting in this
also as Delegates of the Apostolic See, exert themselves to prescribe
and to put out of reach of the faithful injurious books or other
writings printed or circulated in their dioceses. In this passage
the Bishops, it is true, receive a right, but they have also a duty
imposed on them. Let no Bishop think that he fulfils this duty by
denouncing to us one or two books, while a great many others of the same
kind are being published and circulated. Nor are you to be deterred by
the fact that a book has obtained the Imprimatur elsewhere, both
because this may be merely simulated, and because it may have been
granted through carelessness or easiness or excessive confidence in the
author as may sometimes happen in religious Orders. Besides, just as the
same food does not agree equally with everybody, it may happen that a
book harmless in one may, on account of the different circumstances, be
hurtful in another. Should a Bishop, therefore, after having taken the
advice of prudent persons, deem it right to condemn any of such books in
his diocese, We not only give him ample faculty to do so but We impose
it upon him as a duty to do so. Of course, it is Our wish that in such
action proper regard be used, and sometimes it will suffice to restrict
the prohibition to the clergy; but even in such cases it will be
obligatory on Catholic booksellers not to put on sale books condemned by
the Bishop. And while We are on this subject of booksellers, We wish the
Bishops to see to it that they do not, through desire for gain, put on
sale unsound books. It is certain that in the catalogues of some of them
the books of the Modernists are not unfrequently announced with no small
praise. If they refuse obedience let the Bishops have no hesitation in
depriving them of the title of Catholic booksellers; so too, and with
more reason, if they have the title of Episcopal booksellers, and if
they have that of Pontifical, let them be denounced to the Apostolic
See. Finally, We remind all of the XXVI. article of the abovementioned
Constitution Officiorum: All those who have obtained an
apostolic faculty to read and keep forbidden books, are not thereby
authorised to read books and periodicals forbidden by the local
Ordinaries, unless the apostolic faculty expressly concedes permission
to read and keep books condemned by anybody.
IV. - Censorship
52. But it is not enough to hinder the reading and the sale of bad
books - it is also necessary to prevent them from being printed. Hence
let the Bishops use the utmost severity in granting permission to print.
Under the rules of the Constitution Officiorum, many publications
require the authorisation of the Ordinary, and in some dioceses it has
been made the custom to have a suitable number of official censors for
the examination of writings. We have the highest praise for this
institution, and We not only exhort, but We order that it be extended to
all dioceses. In all episcopal Curias, therefore, let censors be
appointed for the revision of works intended for publication, and let
the censors be chosen from both ranks of the clergy - secular and
regular - men of age, knowledge and prudence who will know how to follow
the golden mean in their judgments. It shall be their office to examine
everything which requires permission for publication according to
Articles XLI. and XLII. of the above-mentioned Constitution. The Censor
shall give his verdict in writing. If it be favourable, the Bishop will
give the permission for publication by the word Imprimatur, which
must always be preceded by the Nihil obstat and the name of the
Censor. In the Curia of Rome official censors shall be appointed just as
elsewhere, and the appointment of them shall appertain to the Master of
the Sacred Palaces, after they have been proposed to the Cardinal Vicar
and accepted by the Sovereign Pontiff. It will also be the office of the
Master of the Sacred Palaces to select the censor for each writing.
Permission for publication will be granted by him as well as by the
Cardinal Vicar or his Vicegerent, and this permission, as above
prescribed, must always be preceded by the Nihil obstat and the
name of the Censor. Only on very rare and exceptional occasions, and on
the prudent decision of the bishop, shall it be possible to omit mention
of the Censor. The name of the Censor shall never be made known to the
authors until he shall have given a favourable decision, so that he may
not have to suffer annoyance either while he is engaged in the
examination of a writing or in case he should deny his approval. Censors
shall never be chosen from the religious orders until the opinion of the
Provincial, or in Rome of the General, has been privately obtained, and
the Provincial or the General must give a conscientious account of the
character, knowledge and orthodoxy of the candidate. We admonish
religious superiors of their solemn duty never to allow anything to be
published by any of their subjects without permission from themselves
and from the Ordinary. Finally We affirm and declare that the title of
Censor has no value and can never be adduced to give credit to the
private opinions of the person who holds it.
Priests as Editors
53. Having said this much in general, We now ordain in particular a
more careful observance of Article XLII. of the above-mentioned
Constitution Officiorum. It is forbidden to secular priests,
without the previous consent of the Ordinary, to undertake the direction
of papers or periodicals. This permission shall be withdrawn from
any priest who makes a wrong use of it after having been admonished.
With regard to priests who are correspondents or collaborators
of periodicals, as it happens not unfrequently that they write matter
infected with Modernism for their papers or periodicals, let the Bishops
see to it that this is not permitted to happen, and, should they fail in
this duty, let the Bishops make due provision with authority delegated
by the Supreme Pontiff. Let there be, as far as this is possible, a
special Censor for newspapers and periodicals written by Catholics. It
shall be his office to read in due time each number after it has been
published, and if he find anything dangerous in it let him order that it
be corrected. The Bishop shall have the same right even when the Censor
has seen nothing objectionable in a publication.
V. - Congresses
54. We have already mentioned congresses and public gatherings as
among the means used by the Modernists to propagate and defend their
opinions. In the future Bishops shall not permit Congresses of priests
except on very rare occasions. When they do permit them it shall only be
on condition that matters appertaining to the Bishops or the Apostolic
See be not treated in them, and that no motions or postulates be allowed
that would imply a usurpation of sacred authority, and that no mention
be made in them of Modernism, presbyterianism, or laicism. At Congresses
of this kind, which can only be held after permission in writing has
been obtained in due time and for each case, it shall not be lawful for
priests of other dioceses to take part without the written permission of
their Ordinary. Further no priest must lose sight of the solemn
recommendation of Leo XIII.: Let priests hold as sacred the authority
of their pastors, let them take it for certain that the sacerdotal
ministry, if not exercised under the guidance of the Bishops, can never
be either holy, or very fruitful or respectable (Lett. Encyc.
Nobilissima Gallorum, 10 Feb., 1884).
VI - Diocesan Watch Committees
55. But of what avail, Venerable Brethren, will be all Our commands
and prescriptions if they be not dutifully and firmly carried out? And,
in order that this may be done, it has seemed expedient to Us to extend
to all dioceses the regulations laid down with great wisdom many years
ago by the Bishops of Umbria for theirs.
"In order," they say, "to extirpate the errors already propagated and
to prevent their further diffusion, and to remove those teachers of
impiety through whom the pernicious effects of such dif fusion are being
perpetuated, this sacred Assembly, following the example of St. Charles
Borromeo, has decided to establish in each of the dioceses a Council
consisting of approved members of both branches of the clergy, which
shall be charged the task of noting the existence of errors and the
devices by which new ones are introduced and propagated, and to inform
the Bishop of the whole so that he may take counsel with them as to the
best means for nipping the evil in the bud and preventing it spreading
for the ruin of souls or, worse still, gaining strength and growth"
(Acts of the Congress of the Bishops of Umbria, Nov. 1849, tit 2, art.
6). We decree, therefore, that in every diocese a council of this kind,
which We are pleased to name "the Council of Vigilance," be instituted
without delay. The priests called to form part in it shall be chosen
somewhat after the manner above prescribed for the Censors, and they
shall meet every two months on an appointed day under the presidency of
the Bishop. They shall be bound to secrecy as to their deliberations and
decisions, and their function shall be as follows: They shall watch most
carefully for every trace and sign of Modernism both in publications and
in teaching, and, to preserve from it the clergy and the young, they
shall take all prudent, prompt and efficacious measures. Let them combat
novelties of words remembering the admonitions of Leo XIII. (Instruct.
S.C. NN. EE. EE., 27 Jan., 1902): It is impossible to approve in
Catholic publications of a style inspired by unsound novelty which seems
to deride the piety of the faithful and dwells on the introduction of a
new order of Christian life, on new directions of the Church, on new
aspirations of the modern soul, on a new vocation of the clergy, on a
new Christian civilisation. Language of this kind is not to be
tolerated either in books or from chairs of learning. The Councils must
not neglect the books treating of the pious traditions of different
places or of sacred relics. Let them not permit such questions to be
discussed in periodicals destined to stimulate piety, neither with
expressions savouring of mockery or contempt, nor by dogmatic
pronouncements, especially when, as is often the case, what is stated as
a certainty either does not pass the limits of probability or is merely
based on prejudiced opinion. Concerning sacred relics, let this be the
rule: When Bishops, who alone are judges in such matters, know for
certain the a relic is not genuine, let them remove it at once from the
veneration of the faithful; if the authentications of a relic happen to
have been lost through civil disturbances, or in any other way, let it
not be exposed for public veneration until the Bishop has verified it.
The argument of prescription or well-founded presumption is to have
weight only when devotion to a relic is commendable by reason of its
antiquity, according to the sense of the Decree issued in 1896 by the
Congregation of Indulgences and Sacred Relics: Ancient relics are to
retain the veneration they have always enjoyed except when in individual
instances there are clear arguments that they are false or suppositions.
In passing judgment on pious traditions be it always borne in mind that
in this matter the Church uses the greatest prudence, and that she does
not allow traditions of this kind to be narrated in books except with
the utmost caution and with the insertion of the declaration imposed by
Urban VIII, and even then she does not guarantee the truth of the fact
narrated; she simply does but forbid belief in things for which human
arguments are not wanting. On this matter the Sacred Congregation of
Rites, thirty years ago, decreed as follows: These apparitions and
revelations have neither been approved nor condemned by the Holy See,
which has simply allowed that they be believed on purely human faith, on
the tradition which they relate, corroborated by testimonies and
documents worthy of credence (Decree, May 2, 1877). Anybody who
follows this rule has no cause for fear. For the devotion based on any
apparition, in as far as it regards the fact itself, that is to say in
as far as it is relative, always implies the hypothesis of the
truth of the fact; while in as far as it is absolute, it must always be
based on the truth, seeing that its object is the persons of the saints
who are honoured. The same is true of relics. Finally, We entrust to the
Councils of Vigilance the duty of overlooking assiduously and diligently
social institutions as well as writings on social questions so that they
may harbour no trace of Modernism, but obey the prescriptions of the
Roman Pontiffs.
VII - Triennial Returns
56. Lest what We have laid down thus far should fall into oblivion,
We will and ordain that the Bishops of all dioceses, a year after the
publication of these letters and every three years thenceforward,
furnish the Holy See with a diligent and sworn report on all the
prescriptions contained in them, and on the doctrines that find currency
among the clergy, and especially in the seminaries and other Catholic
institutions, and We impose the like obligation on the Generals of
Religious Orders with regard to those under them.
57. This, Venerable Brethren, is what we have thought it our duty to
write to you for the salvation of all who believe. The adversaries of
the Church will doubtless abuse what we have said to refurbish the old
calumny by which we are traduced as the enemy of science and of the
progress of humanity. In order to oppose a new answer to such
accusations, which the history of the Christian religion refutes by
never failing arguments, it is Our intention to establish and develop by
every means in our power a special Institute in which, through the
co-operation of those Catholics who are most eminent for their learning,
the progress of science and other realms of knowledge may be promoted
under the guidance and teaching of Catholic truth. God grant that we may
happily realise our design with the ready assistance of all those who
bear a sincere love for the Church of Christ. But of this we will speak
on another occasion.
58. Meanwhile, Venerable Brethren, fully confident in your zeal and
work, we beseech for you with our whole heart and soul the abundance of
heavenly light, so that in the midst of this great perturbation of men's
minds from the insidious invasions of error from every side, you may see
clearly what you ought to do and may perform the task with all your
strength and courage. May Jesus Christ, the author and finisher of our
faith, be with you by His power; and may the Immaculate Virgin, the
destroyer of all heresies, be with you by her prayers and aid. And We,
as a pledge of Our affection and of divine assistance in adversity,
grant most affectionately and with all Our heart to you, your clergy and
people the Apostolic Benediction.
Given at St. Peter's, Rome, on the 8th day of September, 1907, the
fifth year of our Pontificate.
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