Ascending
to Heaven Every Day
by
Thomas A. Droleskey
Today is the Solemnity
of Our Lord's Ascension to the Father's right hand in glory forty days
after His Resurrection on Easter Sunday. He has promised that He will
come in glory at the end of time to judge the living and the dead. Until
that time, however, each of us, who must be mindful of the fact that
this very day might be our last day in this vale of tears,
must work assiduously for the sanctification and salvation of our immortal
souls in cooperation with the graces won for us by the shedding of every
single drop of Our Lord's Most Precious Blood on the wood of the Holy
Cross. We must look to Heaven, keeping in mind the reality of the Particular
Judgment that will be rendered on our souls at the moment of our bodily
deaths, as we do the work here on earth by which we glorify the Blessed
Trinity in all of our words and actions, given freely as consecrated
slaves to the Immaculate Heart of Mary to be used as she sees fit.
Yes, we must
look Heaven-ward as we awake every day, which awakening is itself a
simile for the creation of the world by God at the beginning of time
and the re-creation of man by Our Lord on the wood of the Holy Cross
and manifested in His Easter victory over sin and death, until the moment
that we go to sleep which is an image of the sleep of the grave that
the body will know until the Last Day. Every one of thoughts and words
and actions must be undertaken with a thought to their eternal dimension.
We will be held account for everything we have done in our our lives,
which is why we must live penitentially, detached from the allurements
of the world and intent on offering all of the penances of daily living
to Our Lady's Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart. We would have no chance
of salvation if strict justice was administered to us. We must thus
trust in God's ineffable mercy to be extended to us in the Sacrament
of Penance during life and in the Sacrament of Extreme Unction at the
moment of death if we are blessed to have a sacramentally provided for
death, something we must pray for every day of our lives. Those who
partake of God's sacramental forgiveness in this life and who rely upon
Our Lady's maternal intercession to pray for them nunc et in hora
mortis nostrae will endeavor with each beat of their hearts to
conform their lives as befits people who are first citizens of Heaven
by means of their being baptized as members of the true Church Our Lord
founded upon the Rock of Peter, the Pope, before they are citizens of
any nation on earth.
Our heavenly
citizenship requires us to eschew all in this life that is in opposition
to the Deposit of Faith that Our Lord has entrusted solely to the Catholic
Church. We are not to seek remedies to individual and/or social problems
in this or that philosophy, in this or that ideology, in this or that
fad or fashion of the moment. We must hold firm to the authentic
Traditions of the Catholic Church, which Pope Saint Pius V, whose feast
day is superceded today in 2005 on this Feast of the Ascension, sought
to protect from the influences of Protestant doctrinal and liturgical
novelties and heresies when he promulgated the Missale Romanum
in 1570. Pope Saint Pius V wanted to protect the Immemorial Mass of
all ages from any possible taint of the errors of the day, which is
why he mandated the use of the Missal in all of the dioceses of the
world except those which could claim local usage dating back two hundred
years or more (placing those legitimate usages well before the advent
of the errors of John Hus and Martin Luther and John Calvin and Thomas
Cranmer, et al.). As he knew that most Catholics learned the
Faith through the offering of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, Pope Saint
Pius V wanted to make sure that the Heaven-ward orientation of the Roman
Rite of the Catholic Church remained intact and unstained by error,
thus helping souls to see in the Sacred Mysteries the very foretaste
of eternal glories that await the souls of the just in an unending Easter
Sunday of glory in Paradise. The Traditional Latin Mass is, after all,
the closest thing to Heaven we will experience here on earth.
Pope Leo XIII,
who reigned (and the word is reigned, triple tiara and all, symbolic
of Christ's Kingship over men and nations, both spiritually and temporally)
from 1878 to 1903, directed all of his pontificate to the promotion
of Catholicism as the only foundation of personal and social
order. He wanted men to live in this earth in such a way that the thought
of ascending body and soul into Heaven on the Last Day was uppermost
in their minds and hearts, consecrated as they must be to the Sacred
Heart of Jesus through the Immaculate Heart of Mary. I think it most
appropriate, therefore, to provide readers of this site on this Ascension
Thursday in 2005 with Pope Leo XIII's A Review of His Pontificate.
Those who take the time to read this marvelous reflection of a quarter
of a century of service as Vicar of Christ will see the contrast between
Pope Leo XIII's clear and unambiguously Catholic desire to see all of
the nations of the world return to absolute unity with the Catholic
Church and the studied ambiguity and nuance of the past forty-seven
years of conciliarist novelties and the utterly failed "opening
to the world," an unprecedented "opening" that has devastated
the Church in her human elements. A return to the nobility and certainty
of the Catholic clarity provided by Pope Leo XIII would be one of the
most effective ways, after the proper consecration of Russia to Our
Lady's Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart, that Pope Benedict XVI could
govern the Church and help to foster the restoration of the Traditional
Latin Mass and the Social Reign of Christ the King for the good of men
and their nations.
Our Lord commanded
the Eleven to go into the whole world and preach the Gospel, baptizing
all men in the Name of the Father, Son, and of the Holy Ghost. That
commandment is the same now as it was on the first Ascension Thursday,
May 5, 33 A.D. Pope Leo XIII understood this without any hestitation
or nuance. It is time for all those in eccelesiastical authority, including
Pope Leo's current successor, to do so themselves.
Have a blessed
feast day.
Our Lady, Help
of Christians, pray for us.
Pope Saint
Pius V, pray for us.
A
Review of His Pontificate
His
Holiness Pope Leo XIII
Having come
to the twenty-fifth year of Our Apostolic Ministry, and being astonished
Ourselves at the length of the way which We have travelled amidst painful
and continual cares, We are naturally inspired to lift Our thoughts
to the ever-blessed God, Who, with so many other favors, has deigned
to accord Us a Pontificate the length of which has scarcely been
surpassed in history. To the Father of all mankind, therefore;
to Him who holds in His Hands the mysterious secret of life, ascends,
as an imperious need of the heart, the canticle of Our thanksgiving.
Assuredly the eye of man cannot pierce all the depths of the designs
of God in thus prolonging Our old age beyond the limits of hope: here
We can only be silent and adore. But there is one thing which We do
well understand; namely, that as it has pleased Him, and still pleases
Him, to preserve Our existence, a great duty is incumbent on Us--to
live for the good and the development of His Immaculate Spouse, the
Holy Church; and far from losing courage in the midst of cares and pains,
to consecrate to Him the remainder of Our strength unto Our last sigh.
After paying a just tribute of gratitude to Our Heavenly Father, to
Whom be honor and glory for all eternity, it is most agreeable to Us
to turn Our thoughts and address Our words to you, Venerable Brothers,
who, called by the Holy Ghost to govern the appointed portions of the
flock of Jesus Christ, share thereby with Us in the struggle and triumph,
the sorrows and joys, of the ministry of pastors. No, they shall never
fade from Our memory, those frequent and striking testimonials of religious
veneration which you have lavished upon Us during the course of Our
Pontificate, and which you still multiply with emulation full of tenderness
in the present circumstances. Intimately united with you already by
Our duty and Our paternal love, We are more closely drawn by those proofs
of your devotedness, so dear to Our hearts, less for what was personal
in them in Our regard than for the inviolable attachment which they
denote to this Apostolic See, center and mainstay of all the sees of
Catholicity. If it has always been necessary that, according to the
different grades of the Ecclesiastical hierarchy, all the children of
the Church should be sedulously united by the bonds of mutual charity
and by the pursuit of the same objects, so as to form but one heart
and one soul, this union is become in our day more indispensable than
ever. For who can ignore the vast conspiracy of hostile forces which
aims today at destroying and making disappear the great work of Jesus
Christ, by endeavoring, with a fury which knows no limits, to rob man,
in the intellectual order, of the treasure of Heavenly Truths, and,
in the social order, to obliterate the most Holy, the most salutary
Christian institutions. But by all this you yourselves
are impressed everyday. You who, more than once, have poured out to
Us your anxieties and anguish, deploring the multitude of prejudices,
the false systems and errors which are disseminated with impunity amongst
the masses of the people. What snares are set one very side for
the souls of those who believe! What obstacles are multiplied to weaken,
and if possible to destroy the beneficent action of the Church!
And, meanwhile, as if to add derision to injustice, the Church herself
is charged with having lost her pristine vigor, and with being powerless
to stem the tide of overflowing passions which threaten to carry everything
away.
We would wish, Venerable Brothers, to entertain you with subjects less
sad and more in harmony with the great and auspicious occasion which
induces Us to address you. But nothing suggests such tenor of discourse--neither
the grievous trials of the church which call with instance for prompt
remedies; nor the conditions of contemporary society which, already
undermined from a moral and material point of view, tend toward a
yet more gloomy future by the abandonment of the great Christian traditions;
a Law of Providence, confirmed by history, proving that the great Religious
Principles cannot be renounced without shaking at the same time the
foundations of order and social prosperity. In those circumstances,
in order to allow souls to recover, to furnish them with a new provision
of faith and courage, it appears to Us opportune and useful to weigh
attentively, in its origin, causes, and various forms, the implacable
war that is waged against the Church; and in denouncing its pernicious
consequences to indicate a remedy. May Our words, therefore, resound
loudly, though they but recall truths already asserted; may they be
hearkened to, not only by the children of Catholic unity, but also by
those who differ from Us, and even by the unhappy souls who have no
longer anyfaith; for they are all children of one Father, all destined
for the same supreme good: may Our words, finally, be received as the
testament which, at the short distance that separates Us from eternity,
We would wish to leave to the people as a presage of the salvation which
We desire for all.
During the whole course of her history the Church of Christ has had
to combat and suffer for Truth and Justice. Instituted by the Divine
Redeemer Himself to establish throughout the world the Kingdom of God,
she must, by the light of the Gospel law, lead fallen humanity to its
immortal destinies; that is, to make it enter upon the possession of
the Blessings without end which God has promised us, and to which our
unaided natural power could never rise--a Heavenly mission in the pursuit
of which the church could not fail to be opposed by the countless passions
begotten of man's primal fall and consequent corruption--pride, cupidity,
unbridled desire of material pleasures; against all the vices and disorders
springing from those poisonous roots the Church has ever been the most
potent means of restraint. Nor should we be astonished at the persecutions
which have arisen, in consequence, since the Divine Master foretold
them, and they must continue as long as this world endures. What
words did He address to His Disciples when sending them to carry the
treasure of His doctrines to all nations? They are familiar to us all:
"You will be persecuted from city to city: you will be hated and despised
for My Name's sake: you will be dragged before the tribunals, and condemned
to extreme punishment." nd wishing to encourage them for the hour
of trail, He proposed Himself as their example: if the world hate
you, know ye that it hath hated Me before you. (Jn.15:18)
Certainly, no one who takes a just and unbiased view of things can explain
the motive of this hatred. What offence was ever committed, what
hostility deserved by the Divine Redeemer? Having come down amongst
men through an impulse of Divine Charity, He had taught a doctrine that
was blameless, consoling, most efficacious to unite mankind in a brotherhood
of peace and Love; He had coveted neither earthly greatness nor honor;
He had usurped no one's right; on the contrary, He was full of pity
for the weak, the sick, the poor, the sinner, and the oppressed: hence
His life was but a passage to distribute with munificent hand His benefits
amongst men. We must acknowledge, in consequence, that it was simply
by an excess of human malice, so much the more deplorable because unjust,
that, nevertheless, He became, in truth, according to the prophecy of
Simeon, "a sign to be contradicted."
What wonder, then, if the Catholic Church, which continues His Divine
mission, and is the incorruptible depositary of His truths, has inherited
the same lot. The world is always consistent in its way. Near the sons
of God are constantly present the satellites of that great adversary
of the human race, who, a rebel from the beginning against the Most
High, is named in the Gospel the prince of this world. It is on this
account that the spirit of the world, in the presence of the law of
Him who announces it in the Name of God, swells with the measureless
pride of an independence that ill befits it. Alas, how often, in more
stormy epochs, with unheard of cruelty and shameless injustice, and
to the evident undoing of the whole social body, have the adversaries
banded themselves together for the foolhardy enterprise of dissolving
the work of God! And not succeeding with one manner
of persecution, they adopted others. For three long centuries,
the Roman Empire, abusing its brute force, scattered the bodies of martyrs
through all its provinces, and bathed with their blood every foot of
ground in this Sacred City of Rome; while heresy, acting in concert,whether
hidden beneath a mask or with open effrontery, with sophistry and snare,
endeavored to destroy at least the harmony and unity of Faith. Then
were set loose, like a devastating tempest, the hordes of barbarians
from the north, and the Moslems from the south, leaving in their wake
only ruins in a desert. So has been transmitted from age to age
the melancholy heritage of hatred by which the Spouse of Christ has
been overwhelmed. There followed a Caesarism as suspicious, as powerful,
jealous of all other power, no matter what development it might itself
have thence acquired, which incessantly attacked the Church, to usurp
her rights and tread her liberties under foot. The heart bleeds to see
this mother so often oppressed with anguish and woes unutterable. However,
triumphing over every obstacle, over all violence and all tyrannies,
she pitched her peaceful tents more and more widely; she saved from
disaster the glorious patrimony of arts, history, science, and letters;
and imbuing deeply the whole body of society with the Spirit of the
Gospel, she created Christian civilization--that civilization to which
the nations, subjected to its beneficent influence, owe the equity of
their Laws, the mildness of their manners, the protection of the weak,
pity for the afflicted and the poor, respect for the rights and dignity
of all men and thereby, as far as it is possible amidst the fluctuations
of human affairs, the calm of social life which springs from the just
and prudent alliance between justice and liberty.
Those proofs of the intrinsic excellence of the Church are as striking
and sublime as they have been enduring. Nevertheless, as in the
Middle Ages and during the first centuries, so in those nearer our own,
we see the Church assailed more harshly, in a certain sense at least,
and more distressingly than ever. Through a series of well-known historical
causes, the pretended Reformation of the sixteenth century raised the
standard of revolt; and, determining to strike out straight into the
heart of the Church, audaciously attacked the Papacy. It broke the precious
link of the ancient unity of faith and authority, which, multiplying
a hundredfold power, prestige, and glory, thanks to the harmonious pursuit
of the same objects, united all nations under one staff and one
shepherd. This Unity being broken, a pernicious principle of disintegration
was introduced amongst all ranks of Christians.
We do not, indeed, hereby pretend to affirm that from the beginning
there was a set purpose of destroying the principle of Christianity
in the heart of society; but by refusing, on the one hand, to acknowledge
the Supremacy of the Holy See, the effective cause and bond of unity,
and by proclaiming, on the other, the principle of private
judgment, the Divine structure of Faith was shaken to its deepest Foundations
and the way was opened to infinite variations, to doubts and denials
of the most important things, to an extent which the innovators themselves
had not foreseen. The way was opened. Then came the contemptuous
and mocking philosophism of the eighteenth century, which advanced farther.
It turned to ridicule the Sacred Canon of the Scriptures and rejected
the entire system of revealed Truths, with the purpose of being able
ultimately to root out from the conscience of the people all Religious
belief and stifling within it the last breath of the Spirit of Christianity.
It is from this source that have flowed rationalism, pantheism, naturalism,
and materialism--poisonous and destructive systems which, under different
appearances, renew the ancient errors triumphantly refuted by the Fathers
and Doctors of the Church; so that the pride of modern times, by excessive
confidence in its own lights, was stricken with blindness; and, like
paganism, subsisted thenceforth on fancies, even concerning the attributes
of the human soul and the immortal destinies which constitute our glorious
heritage.
The struggle against the Church thus took on a more serious character
than in the past, no less because of the vehemence of the assault than
because of its universality. Contemporary unbelief does not confine
itself to denying or doubting articles of Faith. What it combats is
the whole body of principles which Sacred Revelation and sound philosophy
maintain; those fundamental and holy principles which teach man the
Supreme object of his earthly life, which keep him in the performance
of his duty, which inspire his heart with courage and resignation, and
which, in promising him incorruptible justice and perfect happiness
beyond the tomb, enable him to subject time to eternity, earth to Heaven.
But what takes the place of these principles which form the incomparable
strength bestowed by Faith? A frightful skepticism, which chills
the heart and stifles in the conscience every magnanimous aspiration.
This system of practical atheism must necessarily cause, as in point
of fact it does, a profound disorder in the domain of morals; for, as
the greatest philosophers of antiquity have declared, religion is the
chief foundation of justice and virtue. When the bonds are broken which
unite man to God, Who is the Sovereign Legislator and Universal Judge,
a mere phantom of morality remains; a morality which is purely civic
and, as it is termed, independent, which, abstracting from the Eternal
Mind and the laws of God, descends inevitably till it reaches the ultimate
conclusion of making man a law unto himself. Incapable, in consequence,
of rising on the wings of Christian hope to the goods of the world beyond,
man will seek a material satisfaction in the comforts and enjoyments
of life. There will be excited in him a thirst for pleasure, a desire
of riches, and an eager quest of rapid and unlimited wealth, even at
the cost of Justice. There will be enkindled in him every ambition and
a feverish and frenzied desire to gratify them even in defiance of law,
and he will be swayed by a contempt for right and for public authority,as
well as by licentiousness of life which, when the condition becomes
general, will mark the real decay of society.
Perhaps We may be accused of exaggerating the sad consequences of the
disorders of which We speak. No; for the reality is before our eyes
and warrants but too truly Our forebodings. It is manifest that if there
is not some betterment soon, the bases of society will crumble and drag
down with them the great and eternal principles of law and morality.
It is in consequence of this condition of things that the social body,
beginning with the family, is suffering such serious evils. For the
lay State, forgetting its limitations and the essential object of the
authority which it wields, has laid its hands on the marriage bond to
profane it and has stripped it of its religious character; it has dared
as much as it could in the matter of that natural right which parents
possess to educate their children, and in many countries it has destroyed
the stability of marriage by giving a legal sanction to the licentious
institution of divorce. All know the result of these attacks. More than
words can tell they have multiplied marriages which are prompted only
by shameful passions, which are speedily dissolved, and which, at times,
bring about bloody tragedies, at others the most shocking infidelities.
We say nothing of the innocent offspring of these unions, the children
who are abandoned or whose morals are corrupted on one side by the bad
example of the parents, on the other by the poison which the officially
lay State constantly pours into their hearts.
Along with the family, the political and social order is also endangered
by doctrines which ascribe a false origin to authority, and which have
corrupted the genuine conception of government. For if sovereign authority
is derived formally from the consent of the people and not from God,
Who is the supreme and eternal Principle of all power, it loses in the
eyes of the governed its most august characteristic and degenerates
into an artificial sovereignty which rests on unstable and shifting
bases, namely, the will of those from whom it is said to be derived.
Do we not see the consequences of this error in the carrying out of
our laws? Too often these laws instead of being sound reason formulated
in writing are but the expression of the power of the greater number
and the will of the predominant political party. It is thus that the
mob is cajoled in seeking to satisfy its desires; that a loose rein
is given to popular passion, even when it disturbs the laboriously acquired
tranquility of the State, when the disorder in the last extremity can
only be quelled by violent measures and the shedding of blood.
Consequent upon the repudiation of those Christian principles which
had contributed so efficaciously to unite the nations in the bonds of
brotherhood, and to bring all humanity into one great family, there
has arisen little by little, in the international order, a system of
jealous egoism, in consequence of which the nations now watch each other,
if not with hate, at least with the suspicion of rivals. Hence,
in their great undertakings they lose sight of the lofty principles
of morality and Justice and forget the protection which the feeble and
the oppressed have a right to demand. In the desire by which they
are actuated to increase their National riches, they regard only the
opportunity which circumstances afford, the advantages of successful
enterprises, and the tempting bait of an accomplished fact, sure that
no one will trouble them in the name of right or the respect which right
can claim. Such are the fatal principles which have consecrated
material power as the Supreme Law of the world, and to them is to be
imputed the limitless increase of military establishments and that armed
peace which in many respects is equivalent to a disastrous war.
This lamentable confusion in the realm of ideas has produced restlessness
among the people, outbreaks, and the general spirit of rebellion.
From these have sprung the frequent popular agitations and disorders
of our times which are only the preludes of much more terrible disorders
in the future. The miserable condition, also, of a large part of the
poorer classes, who assuredly merit our assistance, furnishes an admirable
opportunity for the designs of scheming agitators, and especially of
socialist factions, which hold out to the humbler classes the most extravagant
promises and use them to carry out the most dreadful projects.
Those who start on a dangerous descent are soon hurled down in spite
of themselves into the abyss. Prompted by an inexorable logic, a society
of veritable criminals has been organized, which, at its very first
appearance, has, by its savage character, startled the world. Thanks
to the solidarity of its construction and its international ramifications,
it has already attempted its wicked work, for it stands in fear of nothing
and recoils before no danger. Repudiating all union with society,
and cynically scoffing at law, religion, and morality, its adepts have
adopted the name of Anarchists, and propose to utterly subvert the actual
conditions of society by making use of every means that a blind and
savage passion can suggest. And as society draws its unity and its life
from the Authority which governs it, so it is against Authority that
anarchy directs its efforts. Who does not feel a quiver of horror,
indignation, and pity at the remembrance of the many victims that of
late have fallen beneath its blows, emperors, empresses, kings, presidents
of powerful republics, whose only crime was the Sovereign Power with
which they were invested?
In presence of the immensity of the evils which overwhelm society and
the perils which menace it, Our Duty compels Us to again warn all men
of good will, especially those who occupy exalted positions, and to
conjure them as We now do, to devise what remedies the situation calls
for and with prudent energy to apply them without delay .
First of all, it behooves them to inquire what remedies are needed,
and to examine well their potency in the present needs. We have extolled
liberty and its advantages to the skies, and have proclaimed it as a
sovereign remedy and an incomparable instrument of peace and prosperity
which will be most fruitful in good results. But facts have clearly
shown us that it does not possess the power which is attributed to it.
Economic conflicts, struggles of the classes are surging around us like
a conflagration on all sides, and there is no promise of the dawn of
the day of public tranquility. In point of fact, and there is no one
who does not see it, liberty as it is now understood, that is to say,
a liberty granted indiscriminately to truth and to error, to good and
to evil, ends only in destroying all that is noble, generous, and holy,
and in opening the gates still wider to crime, to suicide, and to a
multitude of the most degrading passions.
The doctrine is also taught that the development of public instruction,
by making the people more polished and more enlightened, would suffice
as a check to unhealthy tendencies and to keep man in the ways of uprightness
and probity. But a hard reality has made us feel every day more
and more of how little avail is instruction without religion and morality.
As a necessary consequence of inexperience, and of the promptings of
bad passions, the mind of youth is enthralled by the perverse teachings
of the day. It absorbs all the errors which an unbridled press
does not hesitate to sow and broadcast which depraves the mind and the
will of youth and foments in them that spirit of pride and insubordination
which so often trouble the peace of families and cities.
So also was confidence reposed in the progress of science. Indeed the
century which has just closed, has witnessed progress that was great,
unexpected, stupendous But is it true that it has given us all
the fullness and healthfulness of fruitage that so many expected from
it? Doubtless the discoveries of science have opened new horizons
to the mind; it has widened the empire of man over the forces of matter,
and human life has been ameliorated in many ways through its instrumentality.
Nevertheless, every one feels and many admit that the results have not
corresponded to the hopes that were cherished. It cannot be denied,
especially when we cast our eyes on the intellectual and moral status
of the world as well as on the records of criminality, when we hear
the dull murmurs which arise from the depths, or when we witness the
predominance which might has won over right. Not to speak of the
throngs who are a prey to every misery, a superficial glance at the
condition of the world will suffice to convince us of the indefinable
sorrow which weighs upon souls and the immense void which is in
human hearts. Man may subject nature to his sway, but matter cannot
give him what it has not, and to the questions which most deeply affect
our gravest interests human science gives no reply. The thirst
for Truth, for good, for the Infinite, which devours us, has not been
slaked, nor have the joys and riches of earth, nor the increase of the
comforts of life ever soothed the anguish which tortures the heart.
Are we then to despise and fling aside the advantages which accrue from
the study of Science, from civilization and the wise and sweet use of
our liberty? Assuredly no. On the contrary, we must hold them in the
highest esteem, guard them and make them grow as a treasure of great
price, for they are means which of their nature are good, designed by
God Himself, and ordained by the Infinite goodness and wisdom for the
use and advantage of the human race. But we must subordinate the use
of them to the intentions of the Creator, and so employ them as never
to eliminate the Religious element in which their real advantage resides,
for it is that which bestows on them a special value and renders them
really fruitful. Such is the secret of the problem. When an organism
perishes and corrupts, it is because it had ceased to be under the action
of the causes which had given it its form and constitution. To make
it healthy and flourishing again it is necessary to restore it to the
vivifying action of those same causes. So society in its foolhardy
effort to escape from God has rejected the Divine order and Revelation;
and it is thus withdrawn from the salutary efficacy of Christianity
which is manifestly the most solid guarantee of order, the strongest
bond of fraternity, and the inexhaustible source of all public and private
virtue. This sacrilegious divorce has resulted in bringing about the
trouble which now disturbs the world. Hence it is the pale of
the Church which this lost society must re-enter, if it wishes to recover
its well-being, its repose, and its salvation.
Just as Christianity cannot penetrate into the soul without making it
better, so it cannot enter into public life without establishing order.
With the idea of a God Who governs all, Who is infinitely wise, good,
and just, the idea of duty seizes upon the consciences of men.
It assuages sorrow, it calms hatred, it engenders heroes. If it has
transformed pagan society--and that transformation was a veritable resurrection--for
barbarism disappeared in proportion as Christianity extended its sway,
so, after the terrible shocks which unbelief has given to the world
in our days, it will be able to put that world again on the true road,
and bring back to order the States and peoples of modern times. But
the return of Christianity will not be efficacious and complete if it
does not restore the world to a sincere love of the one Holy Catholic
and Apostolic Church. In the Catholic Church Christianity is Incarnate. It
identifies itself with that perfect, spiritual, and, in its own order,
sovereign society, which is the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ and which
has for Its visible head the Roman Pontiff, successor of the Prince
of the Apostles. It is the continuation of the mission of the Savior,
the daughter and the heiress of His Redemption. It has preached
the Gospel, and has defended it at the price of Its blood, and strong
in the Divine Assistance and of that immortality which has been promised
It, It makes no terms with error but remains faithful to the commands
which It has received, to carry the doctrine of Jesus Christ to the
uttermost limits of the world and to the end of time, and to protect
It in Its inviolable integrity. Legitimate dispenser of the Teachings
of the Gospel It does not reveal Itself only as the consoler and Redeemer
of souls, but It is still more the internal source of Justice and Charity,
and the Propagator as well as the Guardian of True Liberty, and of that
equality which alone is possible here below. In applying the doctrine
of its Divine Founder, It maintains a wise equilibrium and marks the
True Limits between the rights and privileges of society. The equality
which it proclaims does not destroy the distinction between the different
social classes It keeps them intact, as nature itself demands,
in order to oppose the anarchy of reason emancipated from Faith, and
abandoned to its own devices. The liberty which it gives in no wise
conflicts with the rights of Truth, because those rights are superior
to the demands of liberty. Not does it infringe upon the rights
of Justice, because those rights are superior to the claims of mere
numbers or power. Nor does it assail the rights of God because they
are superior to the rights of humanity.
In the domestic
circle, the Church is no less fruitful in good results. For not only
does it oppose the nefarious machinations which incredulity resorts
to in order to attack the life of the family, but it prepares and protects
the union and stability of marriage, whole honor, fidelity, and Holiness
it guards and develops. At the same time it sustains and cements the
civil and political order by giving on one side most efficacious aid
to Authority, and on the other by showing itself favorable to the wise
reforms and the Just aspirations of the classes that are governed; by
imposing respect for rulers and enjoining whatever obedience is due
to them, and by defending unwaveringly the imperceptible rights of the
human conscience. And thus it is that the people who are subject
to her influence have no fear of oppression because she checks in their
efforts the rulers who seek to govern as try ants.
Fully aware
of this Divine power, We, from the very beginning of Our Pontificate,
have endeavored to place in the clearest light the benevolent designs
of the Church and to increase as far as possible, along with the Treasures
of her Doctrine the field of her salutary action. Such has been
the object of the principal acts of Our Pontificate, notably in the
Encyclicals on Christian Philosophy, on Human Liberty,
on Christian Marriage, on Freemasonry, on The
Powers of Government, on The Christian Constitution of States,
on Socialism, on the Labor Question, and the
Duties of Christian Citizens and other analogous subjects.
But the ardent desire of Our souls has not been merely to illumine the
mind. We have endeavored to move and to purify hearts by making
use of all Our Powers to cause Christian virtues to flourish among the
peoples. For that reason We have never ceased to bestow encouragement
and Counsel in order to elevate the minds of men to the goods of the
world beyond; to enable them to subject the body to the soul; their
earthly life to the Heavenly one; man to God. Blessed by the Lord,
Our word has been able to increase and to strengthen the convictions
of a great number of men; to throw light on their minds in the difficult
questions of the day; to stimulate their zeal and to advance the various
works which have been undertaken.
It is especially for the disinherited classes that these works
have been inaugurated, and have continued to grow in every country,
as is evident from the increase of Christian Charity which has always
found in the midst of the people its favorite field of action.
If the harvest has not been more abundant, Venerable Brothers,
let us adore God who is mysteriously Just and beg Him, at the same time,
to have pity on the blindness of so many souls, to whom unhappily the
terrifying word of the Apostle may be addressed: The god of this
world has blinded the minds of unbelievers, that the light of the Gospel
of the glory of Christ, Who is the Image of God, should not shine to
them. (2 Cor. 4:4.)
The more the Catholic Church devotes itself to extend its zeal
for the moral and material advancement of the peoples, the more the
children of darkness arise in hatred against it and have recourse to
every means in their power to tarnish its Divine beauty and paralyze
its action of life-giving reparation. How many false reasonings
have they not made and how many calumnies have they not spread against
it! Among their most perfidious devices is that which consists
in repeating to the ignorant masses and to suspicious governments that
the Church is opposed to the progress of science, that it is hostile
to liberty, that the rights of the State are usurped by it and that
politics is a field which it is constantly invading. Such are
the mad accusations that have been a thousand times repudiated and a
thousand times refuted by sound reason and by history and, in fact,
by every man who has a heart for honesty and a mind for truth.
The Church the enemy of knowledge and instruction! Without
doubt she is the vigilant guardian of revealed dogma, but it is this
very vigilance which prompts her to protect science and to favor the
wise cultivation of the mind. No! in submitting his mind to the Revelation
of the Word, Who is the Supreme Truth from Whom all truths must flow,
man will in no wise contradict what reason discovers. On the contrary,
the light which will come to him from the Divine Word will give more
power and more clearness to the human intellect, because it will preserve
it from a thousand uncertainties and errors. Besides, nineteen centuries
of a glory achieved by Catholicism in all the branches of learning amply
suffice to refute this calumny. It is to the Catholic Church that
we must ascribe the merit of having propagated and defended Christian
philosophy, without which the world would still be buried in the darkness
of pagan superstitions and in the most abject barbarism. It has preserved
and transmitted to all generations the precious treasure of literature
and of the ancient sciences. It has opened the first schools for the
people and crowded the universities which still exist, or whose glory
is perpetuated even to our own days. It has inspired the loftiest, the
purest, and the most glorious literature, while it has gathered under
its protection men whose genius in the arts has never been eclipsed.
The Church the enemy of liberty! Ah, how they travesty the idea of liberty
which has for its object one of the most precious of God's Gifts when
they make use of its name to justify its abuse and excess! What
do we mean by liberty? Does it mean the exemption from all Laws; the
deliverance from all restraint, and as a corollary, the right to take
man's caprice as a guide in all our actions? Such liberty the
Church certainly reproves, and good and honest men reprove it likewise.
But do they mean by liberty the rational faculty to do good, magnanimously,
without check or hindrance and according to the rules which eternal
Justice has established? That liberty which is the only liberty worthy
of man, the only one useful to society, none favors or encourages or
protects more than the Church. By the force of its doctrine and the
efficaciousness of its action the Church has freed humanity from the
yoke of slavery in preaching to the world the great law of equality
and human fraternity. In every age it has defended the feeble
and the oppressed against the arrogant domination of the strong. It
has demanded liberty of Christian conscience while pouring out in torrents
the blood of its martyrs; it has restored to the child and to the woman
the dignity and the noble prerogatives of their nature in making them
share by virtue of the same right that reverence and justice which is
their due, and it has largely contributed, both to introduce and maintain
civil and political liberty in the heart of the nations.
The Church the usurper of the rights of the State! The Church
invading the political domain! Why, the Church knows and teaches that
her Divine Founder has commanded us to give to Caesar what is Caesar's
and to God what is God's, and that He has thus sanctioned the immutable
Principle of an enduring distinction between those two powers which
are both sovereign in their respective spheres, a distinction which
is most pregnant in its consequences and eminently conducive to the
development of Christian civilization. In its spirit of Charity it is
a stranger to every hostile design against the State. It aims
only at making these two powers go side by side for the advancement
of the same object, namely, for man and for human society, but by different
ways and in conformity with the noble plan which has been assigned for
its Divine mission. Would to God that its action were received without
mistrust and without suspicion. It could not fail to multiply the numberless
benefits of which We have already spoken. To accuse the Church
of ambitious views is only to repeat the ancient calumny, a calumny
which its powerful enemies have more than once employed as a pretext
to conceal their own purposes of oppression.
Far from oppressing the State, history clearly shows when it
is read without prejudice, that the Church like its Divine Founder has
been, on the contrary, most commonly the victim of oppression and injustice. The
reason is that its power rests not on the force of arms but on the strength
of thought and of truth.
It is therefore assuredly with malignant purpose that they
hurl against the Church accusations like these. It is a pernicious and
disloyal work, in the pursuit of which above all others a certain sect
of darkness is engaged, a sect which human society these many years
carries within itself and which like a deadly poison destroys its happiness,
its fecundity, and its life. Abiding personification of the revolution,
it constitutes a sort of retrogressive society whose object is to exercise
an occult suzerainty over the established order and whose whole purpose
is to make war against God and against His Church. There is no need
of naming it, for all will recognize in these traits the society of
Freemasons, of which We have already spoken, expressly in Our Encyclical
Humanum Genus of the twentieth of April, 1884. While denouncing
its destructive tendency, its erroneous teachings, and its wicked purpose
of embracing in its far-reaching grasp almost all nations, and uniting
itself to other sects which its secret influence puts in motion, directing
first and afterwards retaining its members by the advantages which it
procures for them, bending governments to its will, sometimes by promises
and sometimes by threats, it has succeeded in entering all classes of
society, and forms an invisible and irresponsible state existing within
the legitimate state. Full of the spirit of Satan who, according to
the words of the Apostle, knows how to transform himself at need into
an angel of light, it gives prominence to its humanitarian object,
but it sacrifices everything to its sectarian purpose and protests that
it has no political aim, while in reality it exercises the most profound
action on the legislative and administrative life of the nations, and
while loudly professing its respect for authority and even for religion,
has for its ultimate purpose, as its own statutes declare, the destruction
of all authority as well as of the priesthood, both of which it holds
up as the enemies of liberty.
It becomes more evident day by day that it is to the inspiration
and the assistance of the sect that we must attribute in great measure
the continual troubles with which the Church is harassed, as well as
the recrudescence of the attacks to which it has recently been subjected.
For the simultaneousness of the assaults in the persecutions which have
so suddenly burst upon us in these later times, like a storm from a
clear sky, that is to say without any cause proportionate to the effect;
the uniformity of means employed to inaugurate this persecution, namely,
the press, public assemblies, theatrical productions ; the employment
in every country of the same arms, to wit, calumny and public uprisings,
all this betrays clearly the identity of purpose and a program drawn
up by one and the same central direction. All this is only a simple
episode of a prearranged plan carried out on a constantly widening field
to multiply the ruins of which We speak. Thus they are endeavoring
by every means in their power first to restrict and then to completely
exclude religious instruction from the schools so as to make the rising
generation unbelievers or indifferent to all religion; as they are endeavoring
by the daily press to combat the morality of the Church, to ridicule
its practices and its solemnities. It is only natural, consequently,
that the Catholic priesthood, whose mission is to preach religion and
to administer the sacraments, should be assailed with a special
fierceness. In taking it as the object of their attacks this sect
aims at diminishing in the eyes of the people its prestige and its authority.
Already their
audacity grows hour by hour in proportion as it flatters itself that
it can do so with impunity. It puts a malignant interpretation on all
the acts of the clergy, bases suspicion upon the slenderest proofs and
overwhelms it with the vilest accusations. Thus new prejudices are added
to those with which the clergy are already overwhelmed, such for example
as their subjection to military service, which is such a great obstacle
for the preparation for the priesthood, and the confiscation of the
ecclesiastical patrimony which the pious generosity of the faithful
had founded.
As regards the religious orders and religious congregations,
the practice of the Evangelical Counsels made them the glory of society
and the glory of religion. These very things rendered them more culpable
in the eyes of the enemies of the Church and were the reasons why they
were fiercely denounced and held up to contempt and hatred. It
is a great grief for Us to recall here the odious measures which were
so undeserved and so strongly condemned by all honest men by which the
members of religious orders were lately overwhelmed. Nothing was of
avail to save them, neither the integrity of their life which their
enemies were unable to assail, nor the right which authorizes all natural
associations entered into for an honorable purpose, nor the favor of
the people who were so grateful for the precious services rendered in
the arts, in the sciences, and agriculture, and for the Charity which
poured itself out upon the most numerous and poorest classes of society.
And hence it is that these men and women who themselves had sprung from
the people and who had spontaneously renounced all the joys of family
to consecrate to the good of their fellow men, in those peaceful associations,
their youth, their talent, their strength, and their lives, were treated
as malefactors as if they had formed criminal Associations, and have
been excluded from the common and prescriptive rights at the very time
when men are speaking loudest of liberty. We must not be astonished
that the most beloved children are struck when the father himself, that
is to say the Head of Catholicity, the Roman Pontiff, is no better treated.
The facts are known to all. Stripped of the temporal sovereignty and
consequently of that independence which is necessary to accomplish his
universal and Divine mission; forced in Rome itself to shut himself
up in his own dwelling because the enemy has laid siege to him on every
side, he has been compelled in spite of the derisive assurances of respect
and of the precarious promises of liberty to an abnormal condition of
existence which is unjust and unworthy of his exalted ministry. We know
only too well the difficulties that are each instant created to thwart
his intentions and to outrage his dignity. It only goes to prove what
is every day more and more evident that it is the spiritual power of
the Head of the Church which little by little they aim at destroying
when they attack the temporal power of the Papacy . Those who are the
real authors of this spoliation have not hesitated to confess it.
Judging by the consequences which have followed this action
was not only impolite, but was an attack on society itself; for the
assaults that are made upon religion are so many blows struck at the
very heart of society .
In making man a being destined to live in society, God in His
Providence has also founded the Church, which as the Holy Text expresses
it, He has established on Mount Zion in order that it might be a light
which, with its life-giving rays, would cause the principle of life
to penetrate into the various degrees of human society by giving it
Divinely inspired laws, by means of which society might establish itself
in that order which would be most conducive to its welfare. Hence in
proportion as society separates itself from the Church, which is an
important element in its strength, by so much does it decline, or its
woes are multiplied for the reason that they are separated whom God
wished to bind together.
As for Us, We never weary as often as the occasion presents
itself to inculcate these great truths, and We desire to do so once
again and in a very explicit manner on this extraordinary occasion.
May God grant that the faithful will take courage from what We say and
be guided to unite their efforts more efficaciously for the common good;
that they may be more enlightened and that Our adversaries may understand
the injustice which they commit in persecuting the most loving mother
and the most faithful benefactress of humanity.
We would not wish that the remembrance of these afflictions
should diminish in the souls of the faithful that full and entire confidence
which they ought to have in the Divine assistance. For God, in His own
hour and in His mysterious ways, will bring about a certain victory.
As for Us, no matter how great the sadness which fills Our heart, We
do not fear for the immortal destiny of the Church. As We have said
in the beginning, persecution is its heritage, because in trying and
in purifying its children, God thereby obtains for them greater and
more precious advantages. And in permitting the Church to undergo
these trials He manifests the Divine Assistance which He bestows upon
it, for He provides new and unlooked-for means of assuring the support
and the development of His Work, while revealing the futility of the
powers which are leagued against it. Nineteen centuries of a life passed
in the midst of the ebb and flow of all human vicissitudes teach us
that the storms pass by without ever affecting the foundations of the
Church. We are able all the more to remain unshaken in this confidence,
as the present time affords indications which forbid depression. We
cannot deny that the difficulties that confront us are extraordinary
and formidable, but there are also facts before our eyes which give
evidence, at the same time, that God is fulfilling His promises with
admirable Wisdom and Goodness.
While so many powers conspire against the Church and while
she is progressing on her way deprived of all human help and assistance,
is she not in effect carrying on her gigantic Work in the world and
is she not extending her action in every clime and every nation? Expelled
by Jesus Christ, the prince of this world can no longer exercise his
proud dominion as heretofore; and although doubtless the efforts of
Satan may cause us many a woe they will not achieve the object at which
they aim. Already a supernatural tranquility due to the Holy Ghost Who
provides for the Church and Who abides in it, reigns not only in the
souls of the faithful but also throughout Christianity; a tranquility
whose serene development we witness everywhere, thanks to the union
ever more and more close and affectionate with the Apostolic See; a
union which is in marvelous contrast with the agitation, the dissension
and the continual unrest of the various sects which disturb the peace
of society. There exists also between bishops and clergy a union which
is fruitful in numberless works of zeal and Charity. It exists likewise
between the Clergy and laity who, more closely knit together and more
completely freed from human respect than ever before, are awakening
to a new life and organizing with a generous emulation in defense of
the sacred cause of religion. It is this union which We have so often
recommended and which We recommend again, which We bless that it may
develop still more and may rise like an impregnable wall against the
fierce violence of the enemies of God.
There is nothing more natural that that, like the branches
which spring from the roots of the tree, these numberless associations
which we see with joy flourish in our days in the bosom of the Church
should arise, grow strong and multiply. There is no form of Christian
piety which has been omitted whether there is question of Jesus Christ
Himself, or His adorable mysteries, or His Divine Mother, or the Saints
whose wonderful Virtues have illumined the world. Nor has any kind of
charitable work been forgotten. On all sides there is a zealous endeavor
to procure Christian instruction for youth; help for the sick; moral
teaching for the people and assistance for the classes least favored
in the goods of this world. With what remarkable rapidity this
movement would propagate itself and what precious fruits it would bear
if it were not opposed by the unjust and unfriendly efforts with which
it finds itself so often in conflict. God, Who gives to the Church such
great vitality in civilized countries where it has been established
for so many centuries, consoles us besides with other hopes. These hopes
we owe to the zeal of Catholic missionaries. Not permitting themselves
to be discouraged by the perils which they face; by the privations which
they endure; by the sacrifices of every kind which they accept, their
numbers are increasing and they are gaining whole countries to the Gospel
and to civilization. Nothing can diminish their courage, although after
the manner of their Divine Master they receive only accusations and
calumnies as the reward of their untiring labors.
Thus our sorrows are tempered by the sweetest consolations,
and in the midst of the struggles and the difficulties which are our
portion we have wherewith to refresh our souls and to inspire us with
hope. This ought to suggest useful and wise reflections to those who
view the world with intelligence, and who do not permit passions to
blind them; for it proves that God has not made man independent in what
regards the last end of life, and just as He has spoken to him in the
past so He speaks again in our day by His Church, which is visibly sustained
by the Divine Assistance and which shows clearly where salvation and
Truth can be found. Come what may, this eternal assistance will inspire
our hearts with an incredible hope and persuade us that at the hour
marked by Providence and in a future which is not remote, Truth will
scatter the mists in which men endeavor to shroud it and will shine
forth more brilliantly than ever. The Spirit of the Gospel will spread
life anew in the heart of our corrupted society and in its perishing
members .
In what concerns Us, Venerable Brethren, in order to hasten
the day of Divine Mercy, We shall not fail in Our Duty to do everything
to defend and develop the Kingdom of God upon earth. As for you, your
Pastoral solicitude is too well known to Us to exhort you to do the
same. May the ardent flame which burns in your hearts be transmitted
more and more to the hearts of all your Priests. They are in immediate
contact with the people. If, full of the Spirit of Jesus Christ and
keeping themselves above political passion, they unite their action
with yours they will succeed with the blessing of God in accomplishing
marvels. By their word they will enlighten the multitude; by their sweetness
of manners they will gain all hearts, and in succoring with Charity
their suffering brethren, they will help them little by little to better
the condition in which they are placed.
The clergy will be firmly sustained by the active and intelligent cooperation
of all men of good will. Thus the children who have tasted the sweetness
of the Church will thank her for it in a worthy way, vis., by gathering
around her to defend her honor and her Glory. All can contribute to
this work which will be so splendidly meritorious for them; literary
and learned men, by defending her in books or in the daily press, which
is such a powerful instrument now made use of by her enemies; fathers
of families and teachers, by giving a Christian education to children;
magistrates and representatives of the people, by showing themselves
firm in the principles which they defend as well as by the integrity
of their lives and in the profession of their faith without any vestige
of human respect. Our age exacts lofty ideals, generous designs, and
the exact observance of the Laws. It is by a perfect submission
to the directions of the Holy See that this discipline will be strengthened,
for it is the best means of causing to disappear or at least of diminishing
the evil which party opinions produce in fomenting divisions; and it
will assist us in uniting all our efforts for attaining that higher
end, namely, the Triumph of Jesus Christ and His Church. Such is the
Duty of Catholics. As for her final triumph she depends upon Him Who
watches with wisdom and love over His Immaculate Spouse, and of Whom
it is written, Jesus Christ, yesterday, today and the same forever.
( Heb. 13:8)
It is therefore to Him, that at this moment we should lift
our hearts in humble and ardent prayer, to Him Who, loving with an infinite
love our erring humanity, has wished to make Himself an expiatory
Victim by the sublimity of His martyrdom; to Him Who, seated although
unseen in the Mystical Bark of His Church, can alone still the tempest
and command the waves to be calm and the furious winds to cease. Without
doubt, Venerable Brethren, you with Us will ask this Divine Master for
the cessation of the evils which are overwhelming society, for the repeal
of all hostile law, for the illumination of those who more perhaps through
ignorance than through malice, hate and persecute the religion of Jesus
Christ; and also for the drawing together of all men of good will in
close and holy union.
May the Triumph of Truth and of Justice be thus hastened in the world,
and for the great family of men may better days dawn; days of tranquility
and of peace.
Meanwhile as a pledge of the most precious and Divine favor may the
Benediction which We give you with all Our heart, descend upon you and
all the faithful committed to your care.