
To Our
Beloved Son, James Cardinal Gibbons,
Cardinal
Priest of the Title Sancta Maria, Beyond the Tiber, Archbishop of Baltimore:
Beloved
Son, Health and Apostolic Blessing:
We send to
you by this letter a renewed expression of that good will which we
have not failed during the course of our pontificate to manifest
frequently to you and to your colleagues in the episcopate and to the
whole American people, availing ourselves of every opportunity
offered us by the progress of your church or whatever you have done
for safeguarding and promoting Catholic interests. Moreover, we have
often considered and admired the noble gifts of your nation which
enable the American people to be alive to every good work which
promotes the good of humanity and the splendor of civilization.
Although this letter is not intended, as preceding ones, to repeat
the words of praise so often spoken, but rather to call attention to
some things to be avoided and corrected; still because it is
conceived in that same spirit of apostolic charity which has inspired
all our letters, we shall expect that you will take it as another
proof of our love; the more so because it is intended to suppress
certain contentions which have arisen lately among you to the
detriment of the peace of many souls.
It is
known to you, beloved son, that the biography of Isaac Thomas Hecker,
especially through the action of those who under took to translate or
interpret it in a foreign language, has excited not a little
controversy, on account of certain opinions brought forward
concerning the way of leading Christian life.
We,
therefore, on account of our apostolic office, having to guard the
integrity of the faith and the security of the faithful, are desirous
of writing to you more at length concerning this whole matter.
The
underlying principle of these new opinions is that, in order to more
easily attract those who differ from her, the Church should shape her
teachings more in accord with the spirit of the age and relax some of
her ancient severity and make some concessions to new opinions. Many
think that these concessions should be made not only in regard to
ways of living, but even in regard to doctrines which belong to the
deposit of the faith. They contend that it would be opportune, in
order to gain those who differ from us, to omit certain points of her
teaching which are of lesser importance, and to tone down the meaning
which the Church has always attached to them. It does not need many
words, beloved son, to prove the falsity of these ideas if the nature
and origin of the doctrine which the Church proposes are recalled to
mind. The Vatican Council says concerning this point: "For the
doctrine of faith which God has revealed has not been proposed, like
a philosophical invention to be perfected by human ingenuity, but has
been delivered as a divine deposit to the Spouse of Christ to be
faithfully kept and infallibly declared. Hence that meaning of the
sacred dogmas is perpetually to be retained which our Holy Mother,
the Church, has once declared, nor is that meaning ever to be
departed from under the pretense or pretext of a deeper comprehension
of them." Constitutio de Fide Catholica, Chapter iv.
We cannot
consider as altogether blameless the silence which purposely leads to
the omission or neglect of some of the principles of Christian
doctrine, for all the principles come from the same Author and
Master, "the Only Begotten Son, Who is in the bosom of the
Father."John i, 18. They are adapted to all times and all
nations, as is clearly seen from the words of our Lord to His
apostles: "Going, therefore, teach all nations; teaching them to
observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you, and behold, I am
with you all days, even to the end of the world."Matt.
xxviii, 19. Concerning this point the Vatican Council says: "All
those things are to be believed with divine and catholic faith which
are contained in the Word of God, written or handed down, and which
the Church, either by a solemn judgment or by her ordinary and
universal magisterium, proposes for belief as having been divinely
revealed."Const. de fide, Chapter iii.
Let it be
far from anyone's mind to suppress for any reason any doctrine that
has been handed down. Such a policy would tend rather to separate
Catholics from the Church than to bring in those who differ. There is
nothing closer to our heart than to have those who are separated from
the fold of Christ return to it, but in no other way than the way
pointed out by Christ.
The rule
of life laid down for Catholics is not of such a nature that it
cannot accommodate itself to the exigencies of various times and
places. (VOL. XXIV-13.) The Church has, guided by her Divine Master,
a kind and merciful spirit, for which reason from the very beginning
she has been what St. Paul said of himself: "I became all things
to all men that I might save all."
History
proves clearly that the Apostolic See, to which has been entrusted
the mission not only of teaching but of governing the whole Church,
has continued "in one and the same doctrine, one and the same
sense, and one and the same judgment,"Const. de fide,
Chapter iv.
But in
regard to ways of living she has been accustomed to so yield that,
the divine principle of morals being kept intact, she has never
neglected to accommodate herself to the character and genius of the
nations which she embraces.
Who can
doubt that she will act in this same spirit again if the salvation of
souls requires it? In this matter the Church must be the judge, not
private men who are often deceived by the appearance of right. In
this, all who wish to escape the blame of our predecessor, Pius the
Sixth, must concur. He condemned as injurious to the Church and the
spirit of God who guides her the doctrine contained in proposition
lxxviii of the Synod of Pistoia, "that the discipline made and
approved by the Church should be submitted to examination, as if the
Church could frame a code of laws useless or heavier than human
liberty can bear."
But,
beloved son, in this present matter of which we are speaking, there
is even a greater danger and a more manifest opposition to Catholic
doctrine and discipline in that opinion of the lovers of novelty,
according to which they hold such liberty should be allowed in the
Church, that her supervision and watchfulness being in some sense
lessened, allowance be granted the faithful, each one to follow out
more freely the leading of his own mind and the trend of his own
proper activity. They are of opinion that such liberty has its
counterpart in the newly given civil freedom which is now the right
and the foundation of almost every secular state.
In the
apostolic letters concerning the constitution of states, addressed by
us to the bishops of the whole Church, we discussed this point at
length; and there set forth the difference existing between the
Church, which is a divine society, and all other social human
organizations which depend simply on free will and choice of men.
It is
well, then, to particularly direct attention to the opinion which
serves as the argument in behalf of this greater liberty sought for
and recommended to Catholics.
It is
alleged that now the Vatican decree concerning the infallible
teaching authority of the Roman Pontiff having been proclaimed that
nothing further on that score can give any solicitude, and
accordingly, since that has been safeguarded and put beyond question
a wider and freer field both for thought and action lies open to each
one. But such reasoning is evidently faulty, since, if we are to come
to any conclusion from the infallible teaching authority of the
Church, it should rather be that no one should wish to depart from
it, and moreover that the minds of all being leavened and directed
thereby, greater security from private error would be enjoyed by all.
And further, those who avail themselves of such a way of reasoning
seem to depart seriously from the over-ruling wisdom of the Most
Highwhich wisdom, since it was pleased to set forth by most
solemn decision the authority and supreme teaching rights of this
Apostolic Seewilled that decision precisely in order to
safeguard the minds of the Church's children from the dangers of
these present times.
These
dangers, viz., the confounding of license with liberty, the passion
for discussing and pouring contempt upon any possible subject, the
assumed right to hold whatever opinions one pleases upon any subject
and to set them forth in print to the world, have so wrapped minds in
darkness that there is now a greater need of the Church's teaching
office than ever before, lest people become unmindful both of
conscience and of duty.
We,
indeed, have no thought of rejecting everything that modern industry
and study has produced; so far from it that we welcome to the
patrimony of truth and to an ever-widening scope of public well-being
whatsoever helps toward the progress of learning and virtue. Yet all
this, to be of any solid benefit, nay, to have a real existence and
growth, can only be on the condition of recognizing the wisdom and
authority of the Church.
Coming now
to speak of the conclusions which have been deduced from the above
opinions, and for them, we readily believe there was no thought of
wrong or guile, yet the things themselves certainly merit some degree
of suspicion. First, all external guidance is set aside for those
souls who are striving after Christian perfection as being
superfluous or indeed, not useful in any sensethe contention
being that the Holy Spirit pours richer and more abundant graces than
formerly upon the souls of the faithful, so that without human
intervention He teaches and guides them by some hidden instinct of
His own. Yet it is the sign of no small over-confidence to desire to
measure and determine the mode of the Divine communication to
mankind, since it wholly depends upon His own good pleasure, and He
is a most generous dispenser 'of his own gifts. "The Spirit
breatheth whereso He listeth."John iii, 8.
"And
to each one of us grace is given according to the measure of the
giving of Christ."Eph. iv, 7.
And shall
any one who recalls the history of the apostles, the faith of the
nascent church, the trials and deaths of the martyrsand, above
all, those olden times, so fruitful in saintsdare to measure
our age with these, or affirm that they received less of the divine
outpouring from the Spirit of Holiness? Not to dwell upon this point,
there is no one who calls in question the truth that the Holy Spirit
does work by a secret descent into the souls of the just and that He
stirs them alike by warnings and impulses, since unless this were the
case all outward defense and authority would be unavailing. "For
if any persuades himself that he can give assent to saving, that is,
to gospel truth when proclaimed, without any illumination of the Holy
Spirit, who give's unto all sweetness both to assent and to hold,
such an one is deceived by a heretical spirit."From the
Second Council of Orange, Canon 7.
Moreover,
as experience shows, these monitions and impulses of the Holy Spirit
are for the most part felt through the medium of the aid and light of
an external teaching authority. To quote St. Augustine. "He (the
Holy Spirit) co-operates to the fruit gathered from the good trees,
since He externally waters and cultivates them by the outward
ministry of men, and yet of Himself bestows the inward
increase."De Gratia Christi, Chapter xix. This, indeed,
belongs to the ordinary law of God's loving providence that as He has
decreed that men for the most part shall be saved by the ministry
also of men, so has He wished that those whom He calls to the higher
planes of holiness should be led thereto by men; hence St. Chrysostom
declares we are taught of God through the instrumentality of
men.Homily I in Inscrib. Altar. Of this a striking example is
given us in the very first days of the Church.
For though
Saul, intent upon blood and slaughter, had heard the voice of our
Lord Himself and had asked, "What dost Thou wish me to do?"
yet he was bidden to enter Damascus and search for Ananias. Acts ix:
"Enter the city and it shall be there told to thee what thou
must do."
Nor can we
leave out of consideration the truth that those who are striving
after perfection, since by that fact they walk in no beaten or
well-known path, are the most liable to stray, and hence have greater
need than others of a teacher and guide. Such guidance has ever
obtained in the Church; it has been the universal teaching of those
who throughout the ages have been eminent for wisdom and
sanctityand hence to reject it would be to commit one's self to
a belief at once rash and dangerous.
A thorough
consideration of this point, in the supposition that no exterior
guide is granted such souls, will make us see the difficulty of
locating or determining the direction and application of that more
abundant influx of the Holy Spirit so greatly extolled by innovators
To practice virtue there is absolute need of the assistance of the
Holy Spirit, yet we find those who are fond of novelty giving an
unwarranted importance to the natural virtues, as though they better
responded to the customs and necessities of the times and that having
these as his outfit man becomes more ready to act and more strenuous
in action. It is not easy to understand how persons possessed of
Christian wisdom can either prefer natural to supernatural virtues or
attribute to them a greater efficacy and fruitfulness. Can it be that
nature conjoined with grace is weaker than when left to herself?
Can it be
that those men illustrious for sanctity, whom the Church
distinguishes and openly pays homage to, were deficient, came short
in the order of nature and its endowments, because they excelled in
Christian strength? And although it be allowed at times to wonder at
acts worthy of admiration which are the outcome of natural
virtueis there anyone at all endowed simply with an outfit of
natural virtue? Is there any one not tried by mental anxiety, and
this in no light degree? Yet ever to master such, as also to preserve
in its entirety the law of the natural order, requires an assistance
from on high These single notable acts to which we have alluded will
frequently upon a closer investigation be found to exhibit the
appearance rather than the reality of virtue. Grant that it is
virtue, unless we would "run in vain" and be unmindful of
that eternal bliss which a good God in his mercy has destined for us,
of what avail are natural virtues unless seconded by the gift of
divine grace? Hence St. Augustine well says: "Wonderful is the
strength, and swift the course, but outside the true path." For
as the nature of man, owing to the primal fault, is inclined to evil
and dishonor, yet by the help of grace is raised up, is borne along
with a new greatness and strength, so, too, virtue, which is not the
product of nature alone, but of grace also, is made fruitful unto
everlasting life and takes on a more strong and abiding character.
This
over-esteem of natural virtue finds a method of expression in
assuming to divide all virtues in active and passive, and it is
alleged that whereas passive virtues found better place in past
times, our age is to be characterized by the active. That such a
division and distinction cannot be maintained is patentfor
there is not, nor can there be, merely passive virtue.
"Virtue," says St. Thomas Aquinas, "designates the
perfection of some faculty, but end of such faculty is an act, and an
act of virtue is naught else than the good use of free will,"
acting, that is to say, under the grace of God if the act be one of
supernatural virtue.
He alone
could wish that some Christian virtues be adapted to certain times
and different ones for other times who is unmindful of the apostle's
words: "That those whom He foreknew, He predestined to be made
conformable to the image of His Son." Romans viii, 29.
Christ is the teacher and the exemplar of all sanctity, and to His
standard must all those conform who wish for eternal life. Nor does
Christ know any change as the ages pass, "for He is yesterday
and today and the same forever."Hebrews xiii, 8. To the
men of all ages was the precept given: "Learn of Me, because I
am meek and humble of heart."Matt. xi, 29.
To every
age has He been made manifest to us as obedient even unto death; in
every age the apostle's dictum has its force: "Those who are
Christ's have crucified their flesh with its vices and
concupiscences." Would to God that more nowadays practiced these
virtues in the degree of the saints of past times, who in humility,
obedience and self-restraint were powerful "in word and in
deed" to the great advantage not only of religion, but of
the state and the public welfare.
From this
disregard of the angelical virtues, erroneously styled passive, the
step was a short one to a contempt of the religious life which has in
some degree taken hold of minds. That such a value is generally held
by the upholders of new views, we infer from certain statements
concerning the vows which religious orders take. They say vows are
alien to the spirit of our times, in that they limit the bounds of
human liberty; that they are more suitable to weak than o
strong minds; that so far from making for human perfection and the
good of human organization, they are hurtful to both; but that this
is as false as possible from the practice and the doctrine of the
Church is clear, since she has always given the very highest approval
to the religious method of life; nor without good cause, for those
who under the divine call have freely embraced that state of life did
not content themselves with the observance of precepts, but, going
forward to the evangelical counsels, showed themselves ready and
valiant soldiers of Christ. Shall we judge this to be a
characteristic of weak minds, or shall we say that it is useless or
hurtful to a more perfect state of life?
Those who
so bind themselves by the vows of religion, far from having suffered
a loss of liberty, enjoy that fuller and freer kind, that liberty,
namely, by which Christ hath made us free. And this further view of
theirs, namely, that the religious life is either entirely useless or
of little service to the Church, besides being injurious to the
religious orders cannot be the opinion of anyone who has read the
annals of the Church. Did not your country, the United States, derive
the beginnings both of faith and of culture from the children of
these religious families? to one of whom but very lately, a thing
greatly to your praise, you have decreed that a statue be publicly
erected. And even at the present time wherever the religious families
are found, how speedy and yet how fruitful a harvest of good works do
they not bring forth! How very many leave home and seek strange lands
to impart the truth of the gospel and to widen the bounds of
civilization; and this they do with the greatest cheerfulness amid
manifold dangers! Out of their number not less, indeed, than from the
rest of the clergy, the Christian world finds the preachers of God's
word, the directors of conscience, the teachers of youth and the
Church itself the examples of all sanctity.
Nor should
any difference of praise be made between those who follow the active
state of life and those others who, charmed with solitude, give
themselves to prayer and bodily mortification. And how much, indeed,
of good report these have merited, and do merit, is known surely to
all who do not forget that the "continual prayer of the just
man" avails to placate and to bring down the blessings of heaven
when to such prayers bodily mortification is added.
But if
there be those who prefer to form one body without the obligation of
the vows let them pursue such a course. It is not new in the Church,
nor in any wise censurable. Let them be careful, however, not to set
forth such a state above that of religious orders. But rather, since
mankind are more disposed at the present time to indulge themselves
in pleasures, let those be held in greater esteem "who having
left all things have followed Christ."
Finally,
not to delay too long, it is stated that the way and method hitherto
in use among Catholics for bringing back those who have fallen away
from the Church should be left aside and another one chosen, in which
matter it will suffice to note that it is not the part of prudence to
neglect that which antiquity in its long experience has approved and
which is also taught by apostolic authority. The scriptures teach us
that it is the duty of all to be solicitous for the salvation of
one's neighbor, according to the power and position of each. The
faithful do this by religiously discharging the duties of their state
of life, by the uprightness of their conduct, by their works of
Christian charity and by earnest and continuous prayer to God. On the
other hand, those who belong to the clergy should do this by an
enlightened fulfillment of their preaching ministry, by the pomp and
splendor of ceremonies especially by setting forth that sound form of
doctrine which Saint Paul inculcated upon Titus and Timothy. But if,
among the different ways of preaching the word of God that one
sometimes seems to be preferable, which directed to non-Catholics,
not in churches, but in some suitable place, in such wise that
controversy is not sought, but friendly conference, such a method is
certainly without fault. But let those who undertake such ministry be
set apart by the authority of the bishops and let them be men whose
science and virtue has been previously ascertained. For we think that
there are many in your country who are separated from Catholic truth
more by ignorance than by ill-will, who might perchance more easily
be drawn to the one fold of Christ if this truth be set forth to them
in a friendly and familiar way.
From the
foregoing it is manifest, beloved son, that we are not able to give
approval to those views which, in their collective sense, are called
by some "Americanism." But if by this name are to be
understood certain endowments of mind which belong to the American
people, just as other characteristics belong to various other
nations, and if, moreover, by it is designated your political
condition and the laws and customs by which you are governed, there
is no reason to take exception to the name. But if this is to be so
understood that the doctrines which have been adverted to above are
not only indicated, but exalted, there can be no manner of doubt that
our venerable brethren, the bishops of America, would be the first to
repudiate and condemn it as being most injurious to themselves and to
their country. For it would give rise to the suspicion that there are
among you some who conceive and would have the Church in America to
be different from what it is in the rest of the world.
But the
true church is one, as by unity of doctrine, so by unity of
government, and she is catholic also. Since God has placed the center
and foundation of unity in the chair of Blessed Peter, she is rightly
called the Roman Church, for "where Peter is, there is the
church." Wherefore, if anybody wishes to be considered a real
Catholic, he ought to be able to say from his heart the selfsame
words which Jerome addressed to Pope Damasus: "I, acknowledging
no other leader than Christ, am bound in fellowship with Your
Holiness; that is, with the chair of Peter. I know that the church
was built upon him as its rock, and that whosoever gathereth not with
you, scattereth."
We having
thought it fitting, beloved son, in view of your high office, that
this letter should be addressed specially to you. It will also be our
care to see that copies are sent to the bishops of the United States,
testifying again that love by which we embrace your whole country, a
country which in past times has done so much for the cause of
religion, and which will by the Divine assistance continue to do
still greater things. To you, and to all the faithful of America, we
grant most lovingly, as a pledge of Divine assistance, our apostolic benediction.
Given at
Rome, from St. Peter's, the 22nd day of January, 1899, and the
thirty-first of our pontificate.