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"Fostering True Religious
Unity"
Regarding the subject of true
religious unity there is so much confusion and diabolical disorientation in the
minds of powerful and influential priests and bishops, even Cardinals in the
Vatican and elsewhere. The so-called ecumenical movement which promotes
religious "unity" even with pagans as well as infidels like the Moslems, as the
Rector of Fatima is doing, is clearly condemned by the constant, unchanging and
unchangeable, infallible Magisterium (not even Vatican II can change it) of the
One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.
Because Pope Pius XI explained it
so well, so briefly, so clearly and authoritatively we repeat here his
Encyclical Letter - Mortalium Animos. He also clarifies what is the only
true basis for Christian unity. It already exists as Christ willed it. But for
those individuals who do not yet enjoy that unity, this encyclical shows the
only basis to achieve it and maintain it.
We do know from the full Fatima
Message that true religious unity among all men and nations will only be
granted to mankind when the Holy Father actually obeys Our Lady of
Fatimas command that he consecrate Russia to Her Immaculate Heart in the
manner She prescribed.
Pope Pius XI to His Venerable
Brethren gives greeting and Apostolic Benediction.
1. Never perhaps in the past
have the minds of men been so engrossed as they are today with the desire to
strengthen and extend for the common good of mankind that tie of brotherhood
the result of our common origin and nature which binds us all so
closely together. The world does not yet fully enjoy the fruits of peace; on
the contrary, dissensions old and new in various lands still issue in
rebellions and conflict. Such disputes, affecting the tranquil prosperity of
nations, can never be settled without the combined and active good will of
those who are responsible for their government, and hence it is easy to
understand especially now that the unity of mankind is no longer called
into question the widespread desire that all nations, in view of this
universal kinship, should daily find closer union with one another.
2. It is with a similar motive that efforts
are being made by some, in connection with the New Law promulgated by Christ
our Lord. Assured that there exist few men who are entirely devoid of the
religious sense, they seem to ground on this belief a hope that all nations,
while differing indeed in religious matters, may yet without great difficulty
be brought to fraternal agreement on certain points of doctrine which will form
a common basis of the spiritual life.
For this reason congresses,
meetings, and addresses are arranged, attended by a large concourse of hearers,
where all without distinction, unbelievers of every kind as well as Christians,
even those who unhappily have rejected Christ and denied His divine nature or
mission, are invited to join in the discussion.
Now, such efforts can meet
with no kind of approval among Catholics. They presuppose the erroneous view
that all religions are more or less good and praiseworthy, inasmuch as all give
expression, under various forms, to that innate sense which leads men to God
and to the obedient acknowledgment of His rule. Those who hold such a view are
not only in error; they distort the true idea of religion, and thus reject it,
falling gradually into naturalism and atheism. To favor this opinion,
therefore, and to encourage such undertakings is tantamount to abandoning the
religion revealed by God.
3. Nevertheless, when there is a question
of fostering unity among Christians, it is easy for many to be misled by the
apparent excellence of the object to be achieved.
Is it not right, they ask, is
it not the obvious duty of all who invoke the name of Christ to refrain from
mutual reproaches and at last to be united in charity?
Dare anyone say that he loves
Christ, and yet not strive with all his might to accomplish the desire of Him
who asked His Father that His disciples might be "one" (John xvii.
21)?
Did not Christ will that
mutual charity should be the distinguishing characteristic of His disciples?
"By this shall all men know that you are My disciples, if you have love one for
another" (John xiii. 35). If only all Christians were "one," it
is contended, then they might so much more to drive out the pest of irreligion
which with its insidious and far-reaching advance is threatening to sap the
strength of the Gospel.
These and similar arguments,
with amplifications, are constantly on the lips of the "pan-Christians" who, so
far from being a few isolated individuals, have formed an entire class and
grouped themselves into societies of extensive membership, usually under the
direction of non-Catholics, who also disagree in matters of faith.
The energy with which this
scheme is being promoted has won for it many adherents, and even many Catholics
are attracted by it, since it holds out the hope of a union apparently
consonant with the wishes of Holy Mother Church, whose chief desire it is to
recall her erring children and to bring them back to her bosom. In reality,
however, these fair and alluring words cloak a most grave error, subversive of
the foundations of the Catholic faith.
4. Conscious, therefore, of Our Apostolic
office, which warns Us not to allow the flock of Christ to be led astray by
harmful fallacies, We invoke your zeal, Venerable Brethren, to avert this evil.
We feel confident that each of you, by written and spoken word, will explain
clearly to the people the principles and arguments that We are about to set
forth, so that Catholics may know what view and what course of action they
should adopt regarding schemes for the promiscuous union into one body of all
who call themselves Christians.
5. God, the Creator of all things, made us
that we might know Him and serve Him; to our service, therefore, He has a full
right. He might indeed have been contented to prescribe for mans
government the natural law alone, that is, the law which in creation He has
written upon mans heart, and have regulated the progress of that law by
His ordinary Providence. He willed, however, to make positive laws which we
should obey, and progressively, from the beginnings of the human race until the
coming and preaching of Jesus Christ, He Himself taught mankind the duties
which a rational creature owes to His Creator. "God, Who at sundry times and in
diverse manners spoke in times past to the Fathers by the prophets, last of all
in these days hath spoken to us by His Son" (Heb. i. 1, seq.).
Evidently, therefore, no religion can be true save that which rests upon the
revelation of God, a revelation begun from the very first, continued under the
Old Law, and brought to completion by Jesus Christ Himself under the New.
Now, if God has spoken
and it is historically certain that He has in fact spoken then it is
clearly mans duty implicitly to believe His revelation and to obey His
commands. That we might rightly do both, for the glory of God and for our own
salvation, the only-begotten Son of God founded His Church on earth. None, we
think, of those who claim to be Christians will deny that a Church, and one
sole Church, was founded by Christ.
On the further question,
however, as to what in the intention of its Founder was to be the precise
nature of that Church, there is not the same agreement. Many of them, for
example, deny that the Church of Christ was intended to be visible and
manifest, at any rate in the sense that it was to be visibly the one body of
the faithful, agreeing in one and the same doctrine under one teaching and
governing authority. They conceive the visible Church as nothing more than a
federation of the various Christian communities, even though these may hold
different and mutually exclusive doctrines.
The truth is that Christ
founded His Church as a perfect society, of its nature external and perceptible
to the senses, which in the future should carry on the work of the salvation of
mankind under one head, with a living teaching authority, administering the
sacraments which are the sources of heavenly grace (John iii. 5, vi 48-59,
xx. 22 seq.; cf. Matt. xviii. 18, etc.). Wherefore He compared His Church
to a kingdom (Matt. xiii), to a house (cf. Matt. xvi. 18), to a
sheepfold (John x. 16), and to a flock (John xxi. 15-17).
The Church thus wondrously
instituted could not cease to exist with the death of its Founder and of the
Apostles, the pioneers of its propagation; for its mission was to lead all men
to salvation, without distinction of time or place: "Going therefore, teach ye
all nations" (Matt. xxviii. 19). Nor could the Church ever lack the
effective strength necessary for the continued accomplishment of its task,
since Christ Himself is perpetually present with it, according to His promise:
"Behold, I am with you all days, even to the consummation of the world"
(Matt. xxviii. 20).
Hence not only must the Church
still exist today and continue always to exist, but it must ever be exactly the
same as it was in the days of the Apostles. Otherwise we must say which
God forbid that Christ has failed in His purpose, or that He erred when
He asserted of His Church that the gates of hell should never prevail against
it (Matt. xvi. 18).
6. And here it will be opportune to expound
and to reject a certain false opinion which lies at the root of this question
and of that complex movement by which non-Catholics seek to bring about the
union of Christian churches.
Those who favor this view
constantly quote the words of Christ, "That they may be one ... And there shall
be one fold and one shepherd" (John xvii. 21, x. 16), in the sense that
Christ thereby merely expressed a desire or a prayer which as yet has not been
granted.
For they hold that the unity
of faith and government which is a note of the one true Church of Christ has up
to the present time hardly ever existed, and does not exist today.
They consider that this unity
is indeed to be desired and may even, by cooperation and good will, be actually
attained, but that meanwhile it must be regarded as a mere ideal. The Church,
they say, is of its nature divided into sections, composed of several churches
or distinct communities which still remain separate, and although holding in
common some articles of doctrine, nevertheless differ concerning the remainder;
that all these enjoy the same rights; and that the Church remained one and
undivided at the most only from the Apostolic age until the first Ecumenical
Councils.
Hence, they say, controversies
and long-standing differences, which today still keep asunder the members of
the Christian family, must be entirely set aside, and from the residue of
doctrines a common form of faith drawn up and proposed for belief, in the
profession of which all may not only know but also feel themselves to be
brethren. If the various churches or communities were united in some kind of
universal federation, they would then be in a position to oppose resolutely and
successfully the progress of irreligion.
Such, Venerable Brethren, is
the common contention. There are indeed some who recognize and affirm that
Protestantism has with inconsiderate zeal rejected certain articles of faith
and external ceremonies which are in fact useful and attractive, and which the
Roman Church still retains. But they immediately go on to say that the Roman
Church, too, has erred, and corrupted the primitive religion by adding to it
and proposing for belief doctrines not only alien to the Gospel but contrary to
its spirit. Chief among these they count that of the primacy of jurisdiction
granted to Peter and to his successors in the See of Rome.
There are actually some,
though few, who grant to the Roman Pontiff a primacy of honor and even a
certain power or jurisdiction; this, however, they consider to arise not from
the divine law but merely from the consent of the faithful. Others, again, even
go so far as to desire the Pontiff himself to preside over their mixed
assemblies. For the rest, while you may hear many non-Catholics loudly
preaching brotherly communion in Jesus Christ, yet not one will you find to
whom it even occurs with devout submission to obey the Vicar of Jesus Christ in
his capacity of teacher or ruler. Meanwhile they assert their readiness to
treat with the Church of Rome, but on equal terms, as equals with an equal. But
even if they could so treat, there seems little doubt that they would do so
only on condition that no pact into which they might enter should compel them
to retract those opinions which still keep them outside the one fold of
Christ.
7. This being so, it is clear that the
Apostolic See can by no means take part in these assemblies, nor is it in any
way lawful for Catholics to give such enterprises their encouragement or
support. If they did so, they would be giving countenance to a false
Christianity quite alien to the one Church of Christ.
Shall we commit the iniquity
of suffering the truth, the truth revealed by God, to be made a subject for
compromise?
For it is indeed a question of
defending revealed truth. Jesus Christ sent His Apostles into the whole world
to declare the faith of the Gospel to every nation, and, to save them from
error, He willed that the Holy Ghost should first teach them all truth. Has
this doctrine, then, disappeared, or at any time been obscured, in the Church
of which God Himself is the ruler and guardian?
Our Redeemer plainly said that
His Gospel was intended not only for the apostolic age but for all time. Can
the object of faith, then, have become in the process of time so dim and
uncertain that today we must tolerate contradictory opinions?
If this were so, then we
should have to admit that the coming of the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles, the
perpetual indwelling of the same Spirit in the Church, nay, the very preaching
of Jesus Christ, have centuries ago lost their efficacy and value. To affirm
this would be blasphemy.
The only-begotten Son of God
not only bade His representatives to teach all nations; He also obliged all men
to give credence to whatever was taught them by "witnesses preordained by God"
(Acts x. 41). Moreover, He enforced His command with this sanction: "He
that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; he that believeth not shall be
condemned" (Mark xvi. 16).
These two commands, the one to
teach, the other to believe for salvation, must be obeyed. But they cannot even
be understood unless the Church proposes an inviolate and clear teaching, and
in proposing it is immune for all danger of error. It is also false to say
that, although the deposit of truth does indeed exist, yet it is to be found
only with such laborious effort and after such lengthy study and discussion,
that a mans life is hardly long enough for its discovery and attainment.
This would be equivalent to saying that the most merciful God spoke through the
prophets and through His only-begotten Son merely in order that some few men,
and those advanced in years, might learn what He had revealed, and not in order
to inculcate a doctrine of faith and morals by which man should be guided
throughout the whole of his life.
8. These pan-Christians who strive for the
union of the churches would appear to pursue the noblest of ideals in promoting
charity among all Christians. But how should charity tend to the detriment of
faith?
Everyone knows that John
himself, the Apostle of love, who seems in his Gospel to have revealed the
secrets of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, and who never ceased to impress upon the
memory of his disciples the new commandment "to love one another," nevertheless
strictly forbade any familiar social communication with those who professed a
mutilated and corrupt form of Christs teaching: "If any man come to you,
and bring not this doctrine, receive him not into the house, nor say to him,
God speed you" (2 John 10).
Therefore, since the
foundation of charity is faith pure and inviolate, it is chiefly by the bond of
one faith that the disciples of Christ are to be united.
A federation of Christians,
then, is inconceivable in which each member retains his own opinions and
private judgment in matters of faith, even though they differ from the opinions
of all the rest.
How can men with opposite
convictions belong to one and the same federation of the faithful: those who
accept sacred Tradition as a source of revelation and those who reject it;
those who recognize as divinely constituted the hierarchy of bishops, priests,
and ministers in the Church, and those who regard it as gradually introduced to
suit the conditions of the time; those who adore Christ really present in the
Most Holy Eucharist through that wonderful conversion of the bread and wine,
transubstantiation, and those who assert that the body of Christ is there only
by faith or by the signification and virtue of the sacrament; those who in the
Eucharist recognize both sacrament and sacrifice, and those who say that it is
nothing more than the memorial of the Lords supper; those who think it
right and useful to pray to the Saints reigning with Christ, especially to Mary
the Mother of God, and to venerate their images, and those who refuse such
veneration as derogatory to the honor due Jesus Christ, "the one mediator of
God and men" (cf. I Tim. ii. 5)?
How so great a variety of
opinions can clear the way for the unity of the Church, We know not. That unity
can arise only from one teaching authority, one law of belief, and one faith of
Christians.
But we do know that from such
a state of affairs it is but an easy step to the neglect of religion or
"indifferentism," and to the error of the modernists, who hold that dogmatic
truth is not absolute but relative, that is, that it changes according to the
varying necessities of time and place and the varying tendencies of the mind;
that it is not contained in an immutable tradition, but can be altered to suit
the needs of human life.
Furthermore, it is never
lawful to employ in connection with articles of faith the distinction invented
by some between "fundamental" and "non-fundamental" articles, the former to be
accepted by all, the latter being left to the free acceptance of the faithful.
The supernatural virtue of faith has as its formal motive the authority of God
revealing, and this allows of no such distinction.
All true followers of Christ,
therefore, will believe the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of the Mother of
God with the same faith as they believe the mystery of the august Trinity, the
infallibility of the Roman Pontiff in the sense defined by the Ecumenical
Vatican Council with the same faith as they believe the Incarnation of our
Lord.
That these truths have been
solemnly sanctioned and defined by the Church at various times, some of them
even quite recently, makes no difference to their certainty, nor to our
obligation of believing them. God has revealed them all.
The teaching authority of the
Church in the divine wisdom was constituted on earth in order that the revealed
doctrines might remain for ever intact and might be brought with ease and
security to the knowledge of men. This authority is indeed daily exercised
through the Roman Pontiff and the Bishops who are in communion with him; but it
has the further office of defining some truth with solemn decree whenever it is
opportune, and whenever this is necessary either to oppose the errors or the
attacks of heretics, or again to impress the minds of the faithful with a
clearer and more detailed explanation of the articles of sacred doctrine.
But in the use of this
extraordinary teaching authority no fresh invention is introduced, nothing new
is ever added to the number of those truths which are at least implicitly
contained within the deposit of Revelation divinely committed to the Church;
but truths which to some perhaps may still seem obscure are rendered clear, or
a truth which some may have called into question is declared to be of
faith.
9. Thus, Venerable Brethren, it is clear
why this Apostolic See has never allowed its subjects to take part in the
assemblies of non-Catholics. There is but one way in which the unity of
Christians may be fostered, and that is by furthering the return to the one
true Church of Christ of those who are separated from it; for from that one
true Church they have in the past fallen away.
The one Church of Christ is
visible to all, and will remain, according to the will of its Author, exactly
the same as He instituted it. The mystical Spouse of Christ has never in the
course of centuries been contaminated, nor in the future can she ever be, as
Saint Cyprian bears witness: "The Bride of Christ cannot become false to her
Spouse; she is inviolate and pure. She knows but one dwelling and chastely and
modestly she guards the sanctity of the nuptial chamber" (De Cath. Ecclesiae
unitate, 6). The same holy martyr marveled that anyone could believe that
"this unity of the Church built upon a divine foundation, knit together by
heavenly sacraments, could ever be rent asunder by the conflict of wills"
(ibid.).
For since the Mystical Body of
Christ, like His physical Body, is one (I Cor. xii. 12), compactly and
fitly joined together (Eph. iv. 15), it were foolish to say that the
Mystical Body is composed of disjointed and scattered members. Whosoever
therefore is not united with the body is no member thereof, neither is he in
communion with Christ its head.
10. Furthermore, in this one Church of
Christ no man can be or remain who does not accept, recognize, and obey the
authority and supremacy of Peter and his legitimate successors. Did not the
ancestors of those who are now entangled in the errors of Photius and of the
Reformers obey the Bishop of Rome, the chief shepherd of souls? Their children,
alas! have left the home of their fathers; but that house did not therefore
fall to the ground and perish for ever, for it was supported by God.
Let them, then, return to
their Father, who, forgetting the insults in the past heaped upon the Apostolic
See, will accord them a most loving welcome. If, as they constantly say, they
long to be united with Us and Ours, why do they not hasten to enter the Church,
"the mother and mistress of all Christs faithful."? (Conc. Lateran,
iv. c. 5).
Let them heed the words of
Lactantius: "The Catholic Church is alone in keeping the true worship. This is
the fount of truth, this is the house of faith, this is the temple of God; if
any man enter not here, or if any man go forth from it, he is a stranger to the
hope of life and salvation. Let none delude himself with obstinate wrangling.
For life and salvation are here concerned, and these will be lost forever
unless their interests be carefully and assiduously kept in mind" (Divin.
Inst. lv. 30, 11-12).
11. Let our separated children, therefore,
draw nigh to the Apostolic See, set up in the City which Peter and Paul,
Princes of the Apostles, consecrated by their blood; to the See which is "the
root and womb whence issues the Church of God" (Cypr. Ep. 48 ad
Cornelium, 3); and let them come, not with any intention or hope that
"the Church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth" (I Tim.
iii. 15), will cast aside the integrity of the faith and tolerate their
errors, but to submit themselves to its teaching and government.
Would that the happy lot,
denied to so many of Our Predecessors, might at last be Ours, to embrace with
fatherly affection those children whose unhappy separation from Us We now
bewail.
Would that God our Savior,
"Who will have all men to be saved, and to come to the knowledge of the truth"
(I Tim. ii. 4), might hear our humble prayer and vouchsafe to
recall to the unity of the Church all that are gone astray.
To this all-important end We
implore, and We desire that others should implore, the intercession of the
Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of Divine Grace, Help of Christians, victorious
over all heresies, that She may entreat for Us the speedy coming of that
longed-for day, when all men shall hear the voice of Her divine Son, and shall
be "careful to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace" (Eph. iv.
3).
12. You, Venerable Brethren, know how dear
to Our heart is this desire, and We wish that Our children also should know,
not only those belonging to the Catholic fold, but also those separated from
Us. If these will humbly beg light from Heaven, there is no doubt but that they
will recognize the one true Church of Jesus Christ, and entering therein, will
at last be united with Us in perfect charity. In the hope of this fulfillment,
and as a pledge of Our fatherly good will, We impart most lovingly to you,
Venerable Brethren, and to your clergy and people, the Apostolic
Benediction.
Given at St. Peters,
Rome, on the 6th day of January, the Feast of the Epiphany of our
Lord Jesus Christ in the year 1928, the sixth of Our Pontificate.
Pius PP. XI
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