ATHEISTIC COMMUNISM
(Divini Redemptiori)
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, on the feast of St. Joseph,
Patron of the Universal Church,
March 19, 1937
THE TRIPLE CROWN
OR TIARA
THE POPE'S OFFICIAL HEADDRESS
To the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, Bishops
and other Ordinaries in Peace and Communion
with the Apostolic See on Atheistic Communism.
Venerable Brethren
Health and Apostolic Benediction
The promise of a Redeemer brightens the first page
of the history of mankind, and the confident hope aroused by this promise
softened the keen regret for a paradise which had been lost. It was
this hope that accompanied the human race on its weary journey, until in
the fullness of time the expected Savior came to begin a new universal
civilization, the Christian civilization, far superior even to that which
up to this time had been laboriously achieved by certain more privileged
nations.
2. Nevertheless, the struggle between good and evil
remained in the world as a sad legacy of the original fall. Nor has
the ancient tempter ever ceased to deceive mankind with false promises.
It is on this account that one convulsion following upon another has marked
the passage of the centuries, down to the revolution of our own days.
This modern revolution, it may be said, has actually broken out or threatens
everywhere, and it exceeds in amplitude and violence anything yet experienced
in the preceeding persecutions launched against the Church. Entire
peoples find themselves in danger of falling back into a barbarism worse
than that which oppressed the greater part of the world at the coming of
the Redeemer.
3. This all too imminent danger, Venerable Brethren,
as you have already surmised, is bolshevistic and atheistic communism,
which aims at upsetting the social order and at undermining the very foundations
of Christian civilization.
I
ATTITUDE OF THE CHURCH
TOWARDS COMMUNISM
Previous Condemnations
4. In the face of such a threat the Catholic Church could not and does not remain silent. This Apostolic See, above all, has not refrained from raising its voice,for it knows that its proper and special mission is to defend truth, justice and all those eternal values which communism ignores or attacks. Ever since the days when groups of "intellectuals" were formed in an arrogant attempt to free civilization from the bonds of morality and religion, Our Predecessors overtly and explicitly drew the attention of the world to the consequences of the dechristianization of human society. With reference to communism, Our Venerable Predecessor, Pius IX, of holy memory, as early as 1846 pronounced a solemn condemnation, which he confirmed in the words of the Syllabus directed against "that infamous doctrine of so-called communism which is absolutely contrary to the natural law itself, and if once adopted would utterly destroy the rights, property and possessions of all men, and even society itself." (Encycl. Qui pluribus, Nov. 9, 1846 [Acta Pii IX, vol. 1, p. 13]. Cf. Syllabus, S IV, [A. A. S., vol. III, p. 170]. ) Later on, another of Our Predecessors, the immortal Leo XIII, in his Encyclical Quod Apostolici Muneris defined communism as "the fatal plague which insinuates itself into the very marrow of human society only to bring about its ruin". (Encycl. Quod Apostolici Muneris, Dec. 28, 1878 [Acta Leonis XIII,vol. I, p. 46].) With clear intuition he pointed out that the atheistic movements existing among the masses of the Machine Age had their origin in that school of philosophy which for centuries had sought to divorce science from the life of the faith and of the Church.
Acts of Present Pontificate
5. During Our Pontificate We too have frequently and with urgent insistence denounced the current trend to atheism which is alarmingly on the increase. In 1924 when Our relief-mission returned from the Soviet Union We condemned communism in a special Allocution (Dec. 18, 1924: A. A. S., vol. XVI [1924], pp. 494, 495.) which We addressed to the whole world. In Our encyclicals Miserentissimus Redemptor, (May 8, 1928: A. A. S., XX [1928], pp. 165-178.) Quadragesimo Anno, (May 15, 1931: A. A. S. vol. XXIII [1931], pp. 177-228.) Caritate Christi, (May 3, 1932: A. A. S., vol. XXIV [1932], pp. 177-194.) Acerba Animi, (Sept. 29, 1932: A. A. S., vol. XXIV [1932[, pp. 321-332.) Dilectissima Nobis, (June 3, 1933: A. A. S., vol. XXV [1933], pp. 261-274.) We raised a solemn protest against the persecutions unleashed in Russia, in Mexico and now in Spain. Our two Allocutions of last year, the first on the occasion of the opening of the International Catholic Press Exposition, and the second during Our audience to the Spanish refugees, along with Our message of last Christmas, have evoked a world-wide echo which is not yet spent. In fact, the most persistent enemies of the Church, who from Moscow are directing the struggle against Christian civilization, themselves bear witness, by their unceasing attacks in word and act, that even to this hour the Papacy has continued faithfully to protect the sanctuary of the Christian religion, and that it has called public attention to the perils of communism more frequently and more effectively than any other public authority on earth.
Need of Another Solemn Pronouncement
6. To Our great satisfaction, Venerable Brethren,
you have, by means of individual and even joint pastoral Letters, accurately
transmitted and explained to the Faithful these admonitions. Yet
despite Our frequent and paternal warnings the peril only grows greater
from day to day because of the pressure exerted by clever agitators.
Therefore We believe it to be Our duty to raise Our voice once more, in
a still more solemn missive, in accord with the tradition of this Apostolic
See, the Teacher of Truth, and in accord with the desire of the whole
Catholic world, which makes the appearance of such a document but natural.
We trust that the echo of Our voice will reach every mind free from prejudice
and every heart sincerely desirous of the good of mankind. We wish
this the more because Our words are now receiving sorry confirmation from
the spectacle of the bitter fruits of subversive ideas, which We foresaw
and foretold, and which are in fact multiplying fearfully in the countries
already stricken, or threatening every other country of the world.
7. Hence We wish to expose once more in a brief
synthesis the principles of atheistic communism as they are manifested
chiefly in bolshevism. We wish also to indicate its method of action
and to contrast with its false principles the clear doctrine of the Church,
in order to inculcate anew and with greater insistence the means by which
Christian civilization, the true civitas humana, can be saved
from the satanic scourge, and not merely saved, but better developed for
the well-being of human society.
II
COMMUNISM IN THEORY AND PRACTICE
Doctrine
Marxist Evolutionary Materialism
9. The doctrine of modern communism, which is often
concealed under the most seductive trappings, is in substance based on
the principles of dialectical and historical materialism previously advocated
by Marx, of which the theoreticians of bolshevism claim to possess the
only genuine interpretation. According to this doctrine there is
in the world only one reality, matter, the blind forces of which evolve
into plant, animal and man. Even human society is nothing but a phenomenon
and form of matter, evolving in the same way. By a law of inexorable
necessity and through a perpetual conflict of forces, matter moves towards
the final synthesis of a classless society. In such a doctrine, as
is evident, there is no room for the idea of God; there is no difference
between matter and spirit, between soul and body; there is neither survival
of the soul after death nor any hope in a future life. Insisting
on the dialectical aspect of their materialism, the communists claim that
the conflict which carries the world towards its final synthesis can be
accelerated by man. Hence they endeavor to sharpen the antagonisms
which arise between the various classes of society. Thus the class-struggle
with its consequent violent hate and destruction takes on the aspect of
a crusade for the progress of humanity. On the other hand, all other
forces whatever, as long as they resist such systematic violence, must
be annihilated as hostile to the human race.
Man and Family Under Communism
10. Communism, moreover, strips man of his liberty,
robs human personality of all its dignity, and removes all the moral restraints
that check the eruptions of blind impulse. There is no recognition
of any right of the individual in his relations to the collectivity; no
natural right is accorded to human personality, which is a mere cog-wheel
in the communist system. In man's relations with other individuals,
besides, communists hold the principle of absolute equality, rejecting
all hierarchy and divinely-constituted authority, including the authority
of parents. What men call authority and subordination is derived
from the community as its first and only font. Nor is the individual
granted any property rights over material goods or the means of production,
for inasmuch as these are the source of further wealth, their possession
would give one man power over another. Precisely on this score, all
forms of private property must be eradicated, for they are at the origin
of all economic enslavement.
11. Refusing to human life any sacred or spiritual
character, such a doctrine logically makes of marriage and the family a
purely artificial and civil institution, the outcome of a specific economic
system. There exists no matrimonial bond of a juridico-moral nature
that is not subject to the whim of the individual or of the collectivity.
Naturally, therefore, the notion of an indissoluble marriage-tie is scouted.
Communism is particularly characterized by the rejection of any link that
binds woman to the family and the home, and her emancipation is proclaimed
as a basic principle. She is withdrawn from the family and the care
of her children, to be thrust instead into public life and collective production
under the same conditions as man. The care of home and children then
devolves upon the collectivity.
Finally, the right of education is denied to parents,
for it is conceived as the exclusive prerogative of the community, in whose
name and by whose mandate alone parents may exercise this right.
Communist Society
12. What would be the condition of a human society
based on such materialistic tenets? It would be a collectivity with
no other hierarchy than that of the economic system. It would have
only one mission: the production of material things by means of collective
labor, so that the goods of this world might be enjoyed in a paradise where
each would "give according to his powers" and would "receive according
to his needs." Communism recognizes in the collectivity the right,
or rather, unlimited discretion, to draft individuals for the labor of
the collectivity with no regard for their personal welfare; so that even
violence could be legitimately exercised to dragoon the recalcitrant against
their wills. In the communistic commonwealth morality and law would
be nothing but a derivation of the existing economic order, purely earthly
in origin and unstable in character. In a word, the communists claim
to inaugurate a new era and a new civilization which is the result of blind
evolutionary forces culminating in a "humanity without God".
13. When all men have finally acquired the collectivist
mentality in this Utopia of a really classless society, the political State,
which is now conceived by communists merely as the instrument by which
the proletariat is oppressed by the capitalists, will have lost all
reason for its existence and will "wither away." However, until that
happy consummation is realized, the State and powers of the State furnish
communism with the most efficacious and most extensive means for the achievement
of its goal.
14. Such, Venerable Brethren, is the new gospel
which bolshevistic and atheistic communism offers the world as the glad
tidings of deliverance and salvation! It is a system full of errors
and sophism. It is in opposition both to reason and to divine Revelation.
It subverts the social order, because it means the destruction of its foundations;
because it ignores the true origin and purpose of the State; because it
denies the rights, dignity and liberty of human personality.
Spread of Communism Explained
Liberalism Prepares the Way
16. If we would explain the blind acceptance of
communism by so many thousands of workmen, we must remember that the way
had been already prepared for it by the religious and moral destitution
in which wage-earners had been left by liberal economics. Even on
Sundays and holy-days, labor-shifts were given no time to attend to their
essential religious duties. No one thought of building churches within
convenient distance of factories, nor of facilitating the work of the Priest.
On the contrary, laicism was actively and persistently promoted, with the
result that we are now reaping the fruits of the errors so often denounced
by Our Predecessors and by Ourselves. It can surprise no one that
the communistic fallacy should be spreading in a world already to a
large extent dechristianized.
Shrewd and Widespread Propaganda
17. There is another explanation for the rapid diffusion
of the communistic ideas now seeping into every nation, great and small,
advanced and backward, so that no corner of the earth is free from them.
This explanation is to be found in a propaganda so truly diabolical
that the world has perhaps never witnessed its like before. It is
directed from one common center. It is shrewdly adapted to the
varying conditions of diverse people. It has at its disposal great
financial resources, gigantic organizations, international congresses,
and countless trained workers. It makes use of pamphlets and reviews,
of cinema, theater and radio, of schools and even universities. Little
by little it penetrates into all classes of the people and even reaches
the better-minded groups of the community, with the result that few are
aware of the poison which increasingly pervades their minds and hearts.
Silence of the Press
18. A third powerful factor in the diffusion of
communism is the conspiracy of silence on the part of a large section
of the non-Catholic press of the world. We say conspiracy, because
it is impossible otherwise to explain how a press usually so eager to exploit
even the little daily incidents of life has been able to remain silent
for so long about the horrors perpetrated in Russia, in Mexico and even
in a great part of Spain; and that it should have relatively so little
to say concerning a world organization as vast as Russian communism.
This silence is due in part to short-sighted political policy, and is favored
by various occult forces which for a long time have been working for the
overthrow of the Christian Social Order.
Sad Consequences
Horrors of Communism in Spain
20. Even where the scourge of communism has not
yet had time enough to exercise to the full its logical effect, as witness
Our beloved Spain, it has, alas, found compensation in the fiercer violence
of its attack. Not only this or that church or isolated monastery
was sacked, but as far as possible every church and every monastery
was destroyed. Every vestige of the Christian religion was eradicated,
even though intimately linked with the rarest monuments of art and science!
The fury of communism has not confined itself to the indiscriminate slaughter
of Bishops, of thousands of Priests and Religious of both sexes; it searches
out above all those who have been devoting their lives to the welfare of
the working-classes and the poor. But the majority of its victims
have been laymen of all conditions and classes. Even up to the present
moment, masses of them are slain almost daily for no other offense than
the fact that they are good Christians or at least opposed to atheistic
communism. And this fearful destruction has been carried out with
a hatred and a savage barbarity one would not have believed possible in
our age. No man of good sense, nor any statesman conscious of
his responsibility can fail to shudder at the thought that what is happening
today in Spain may perhaps be repeated tomorrow in other civilized countries.
Logical Result of System
21, Nor can it be said that these atrocities are
a transitory phenomenon, the usual accompaniment of all great revolutions,
the isolated excesses common to every war. No, they are the natural
fruit of a system which lacks all inner restraint. Some restraint
is necessary for man considered either as an individual or in society.
Even the barbaric peoples had this inner check in the natural law written
by God in the heart of every man. And where this natural law
was held in higher esteem, ancient nations rose to a grandeur that still
fascinates -- more than it should! -- certain superficial students of human
history. But tear the very idea of God from the hearts of men,
and they are necessarily urged by their passions to the most atrocious
barbarity.
Struggle against all that is Divine
22. This, unfortunately, is what we now behold.
For the first time in history we are witnessing a struggle, cold-blooded
in purpose and mapped out to the least detail between man and "all that
is called God." (Cf. Thessalonians, 2, 4.) Communism
is by its nature anti-religious. It considers religion as "the opiate
of the people" because the principles of religion which speak of a life
beyond the grave dissuade the proletariat from the dream of a soviet paradise
which is of this world.
Terrorism
23. But the law of nature and its
Author cannot be flouted with impunity. Communism has not been able,
and will not be able, to achieve its objectives even in the merely economic
sphere. It is true that in Russia it has been a contributing factor
in rousing men and materials from the inertia of centuries, and in obtaining
by all manner of means, often without scruple, some measure of material
success. Nevertheless We know from reliable and even very recent
testimony that not even there, in spite of slavery imposed on millions
of men, has communism reached its promised goal. After all, even
the sphere of economics needs some morality, some moral sense of responsibility,
which can find no place in a system so thoroughly materialistic as communism.
Terrorism is the only possible substitute, and it is terrorism that reigns
today in Russia, where former comrades in revolution are exterminating
each other. Terrorism, having failed despite all to stem the tide
of moral corruption, cannot even prevent the dissolution of society itself.
Fatherly Concern for Oppressed Russians
24. In making these observations it is no part of Our intention to condemn en masse the peoples of the Soviet Union. For them We cherish the warmest paternal affection. We are well aware that not a few of them groan beneath the yoke imposed on them by men who in very large part are strangers to the real interests of the country. We recognize that many others were deceived by fallacious hopes. We blame only the system, with its authors and abettors who considered Russia the best-prepared fields for experimenting with a plan elaborated decades ago, and who from there continue to spread it from one end of the world to the other.
III
DOCTRINE OF THE CHURCH
25. We have exposed the errors and the violent, deceptive tactics of bolshevistic and atheistic communism. It is now time, Venerable Brethren, to contrast with it the true notion, already familiar to you, of the civitas humana or human society, as taught by reason and Revelation through the mouth of the Church, Magistra Gentium.
God the Supreme Reality
26. Above all other reality there exists one supreme Being: God, the omnipotent Creator of all things, the all-wise and just Judge of all men. This supreme reality, God, is the absolute condemnation of the impudent falsehoods of communism. In truth, it is not because men believe in God that He exists; rather because He exists do all men whose eyes are not deliberately closed to the truth believe in Him and pray to Him.
Man and Family according to Reason and Faith
27. In the Encyclical on Christian Education (Encycl.
Divini Illius Magistri, Dec. 31, 1929 [A. A. S., vol. XXII,
1930, pp. 49-86].) We explained the fundamental doctrine concerning
man as it may be gathered from reason and Faith. Man has a spiritual
and immortal soul. He is a person, marvelously endowed by His Creator
with gifts of body and mind. He is a true "microcosm", as the ancients
said, a world in miniature, with a value far surpassing that of the vast
inanimate cosmos. God alone is his last end, in this life and the
next. By sanctifying grace he is raised to the dignity of a son of
God, and incorporated into the Kingdom of God in the Mystical Body of Christ.
In consequence he has been endowed by God with many and varied prerogatives:
the right to life, to bodily integrity, to the necessary means of existence;
the right to tend toward his ultimate goal in the path marked out for him
by God; the right of association and the right to possess and use property.
28. Just as matrimony and the right to its
natural use are of divine origin, so likewise are the constitution and
fundamental prerogatives of the family fixed and determined by the Creator.
In the Encyclical on Christian Marriage (Encycl. Casti
Connubii, Dec. 31, 1930 [ A. A. S., vol. XXII,
1930, pp. 539-592].) and in Our other Encyclical on Education,
cited above, we have treated on these topics at considerable length.
Nature of Society
Social-Economic Order
31. The directive principles concerning the social-economic
order have been expounded in the social Encyclical of Leo XIII on the question
of labor. (Encycl. Rerum Novarum, May 15, 1891 [Acta
Leonis XIII, vol. IV, pp. 177-209].) Our own Encyclical
on the Reconstruction of the Social Order (Encycl. Quadragesimo
Anno, May 15, 1931 [A. A. S., vol. XXIII, 1931, pp. 177-228].)
adapted these principles to present needs. Then, insisting anew on
the age-old doctrine of the Church concerning the individual and social
character of private property, We explained clearly the right and dignity
of labor, the relations of mutual aid and collaboration which should exist
between those who possess capital and those who work, the salary due in
strict justice to the worker for himself and for his family.
32. In this same Encyclical of Ours We have shown
that the means of saving the world of today from the lamentable ruin into
which amoral liberalism has plunged us, are neither the class-struggle
nor terror, nor yet the autocratic abuse of State power, but rather
the infusion of social justice and the sentiment of Christian love into
the social-economic order. We have indicated how a sound prosperity
is to be restored according to the true principles of a sane corporative
system which respects the proper hierarchic structure of society; and how
all the occupational groups should be fused into an harmonious unity inspired
by the principle of the common good. And the genuine and chief function
of public and civil authority consists precisely in the efficacious furthering
of this harmony and coordination of all social forces.
Social Hierarchy and State Prerogatives
33. In view of this organized common effort towards
peaceful living, Catholic doctrine vindicates to the State the dignity
and authority of a vigilant and provident defender of those divine
and human rights on which the Sacred Scriptures and the Fathers of the
Church insist so often. It is not true that all have equal rights
in civil society. It is not true that there exists no lawful social
hierarchy. Let it suffice to refer to the Encyclicals of Leo XIII
already cited, especially to that on State Power, (Encycl.
Diuturnum Illud, June 20, 1881 [Acta Leonis XIII, vol. I,
pp. 210-222].) and to the other on the Christian Constitution
of States. (Encycl. ImmortaleDei, Nov. 1, 1885 [Acta
Leonis XIII, vol. II, pp. 146-168].) In these documents
the Catholic will find the principles of reason and the Faith clearly explained
and these principles will enable him to defend himself against the errors
and perils of a communistic conception of the State. The enslavement
of man despoiled of his rights, the denial of the transcendental origin
of the State and its authority, the horrible abuse of public power in the
service of a collectivistic terrorism, are the very contrary of all that
corresponds with natural ethics and the will of the Creator. Both
man and civil society derive their origin from the Creator, Who has mutually
ordained them one to the other. Hence neither can be exempted from
their correlative obligations, nor deny or diminish each other's rights.
The Creator Himself has regulated this mutual relationship in its fundamental
lines, and it is by an unjust usurpation that communism arrogates to itself
the right to enforce, in place of the divine law based on the immutable
principles of truth and charity, a partisan political program which derives
from the arbitrary human will and is replete with hate.
Beauty of Church Doctrine
34. In teaching this enlightening doctrine the Church
has no other intention than to realize the glad tidings sung by the Angels
above the cave of Bethlehem at the Redeemer's birth: "Glory to God... and...
peace to men.... " (St. Luke 2, 14.) true
peace and true happiness, even here below as far as is possible, in preparation
for the happiness of heaven -- but to men of good will. This
doctrine is equally removed from all extremes of error and all exaggerations
of parties or systems which stem from error. It maintains a constant
equilibrium of truth and justice, which it vindicates in theory and applies
and promotes in practice, bringing into harmony the rights and duties of
all parties. Thus authority is reconciled with liberty, the dignity
of the individual with that of the State, the human personality of the
subject with the divine delegation of the superior; and in this way a balance
is struck between the due dependence and well-ordered love of a man for
himself, his family and country, and his love of other families and other
peoples, founded on the love of God, the Father of all, their first principle
and last end. The Church does not separate a proper regard for temporal
welfare from solicitude for the eternal. If she subordinates the
former to the latter according to the words of her divine Founder.
"Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and His justice, and all these things
shall be added unto you," (St. Matthew, 6, 33.)
she is nevertheless so far from being unconcerned with human affairs, so
far from hindering civil progress and material advancement, that she actually
fosters and promotes them in the most sensible and efficacious manner.
Thus even in the sphere of social-economics, although the Church has never
proposed a definite technical system, since this not her field, she had
nevertheless clearly outlined the guiding principles which, while susceptible
of varies concrete applications according to the diversified conditions
of times and places and peoples, indicate the safe way of securing the
happy progress of society.
35. The wisdom and supreme utility of this doctrine
are admitted by all who really understand it. With good reason outstanding
statesmen have asserted that, after a study of various social systems,
they have found nothing sounder than the principles expounded in the Encyclicals
Rerum Novarum and Quadragesimo Anno.
In non-Catholic, even in non-Christian countries, men recognize the great
value to society of the social doctrine of the Church. Thus, scarcely
a month ago, an eminent political figure of the Fat East, a non-Christian,
did not hesitate to affirm publicly that the Church, with her doctrine
of peace and Christian brotherhood, is rendering a signal contribution
to the difficult task of establishing and maintaining peace among the nations.
Finally, We know from reliable information that flows into this Center
of Christendom from all parts of the world, that the communists themselves,
where they are not utterly depraved, recognize the superiority of the social
doctrine of the Church, when once explained to them, over the doctrines
of their leaders and their teachers. Only those blinded by passion
and hatred close their eyes to the light of truth and obstinately struggle
against it.
Alleged Conflict between Doctrine and Practice
36. But the enemies of the Church, though
forced to acknowledge the wisdom of her doctrine, accuse her of having
failed to act in conformity with her principles, and from this conclude
to the necessity of seeking other solutions. The utter falseness
and injustice of this accusation is shown by the whole-history of Christianity.
To refer only to a single typical trait, it was Christianity that first
affirmed the real and universal brotherhood of all men of whatever race
and condition. This doctrine she proclaimed by a method, and with
an amplitude and conviction, unknown to preceding centuries; and with it
she potently contributed to the abolition of slavery. Not bloody
revolution, but the inner force of her teaching made the proud Roman matron
see in her slave a sister in Christ. It is Christianity that adores
the son of God, made Man for love of man, and become not only the "Son
of a Carpenter" but Himself a "Carpenter." (Cf. St. Matthew,
13, 55; St. Mark, 6, 3.) It was Christianity that raised manual
labor to its true dignity, whereas it had hitherto been so despised that
even the moderate Cicero did not hesitate to sum up the general opinion
of his time in words of which any modern sociologist would be ashamed:
"All artisans are engaged in sordid trades, for there can be nothing ennobling
about a workshop." (Cicero, De Officiis, Bk. I, c.
42.)
37. Faithful to these principles,
the Church has given new life to human society. Under her influence
arose prodigious charitable organizations, great guilds of aritsans and
workingmen of every type. These guilds, ridiculed as "medieval" by
the liberalism of the last century, are today claiming the admiration of
our contemporaries in many countries who are endeavoring to revive them
in some modern form. And when other systems hindered her work and
raised obstacles to the salutary influence of the Church, she was never
done warning them of their error. We need but recall with what constant
firmness and energy Our Predecessor, Leo XIII, vindicated for the workingman
the right to organize, which the dominant liberalism of the more powerful
States relentlessly denied him. Even today the authority of this
Church doctrine is greater than it seems; for the influence of ideas in
the realm of facts, though invisible and not easily measured, is surely
of predominant importance.
38. It may be said in all truth that the Church,
like Christ, goes through the centuries doing good to all. There
would be today neither socialism nor communism if the rulers of the nations
had not scorned the teachings and maternal warnings of the Church.
On the bases of liberalism and laicism they wished to build other social
edifices which, powerful and imposing as they seemed at first, all too
soon revealed the weakness of their foundations, and today are crumbling
one after another before our eyes, as everything must crumble that is not
grounded on the one corner stone which is Christ Jesus.
IV
DEFENSIVE AND CONSTRUCTIVE
PROGRAM
Urgent Need for Action
39. This, Venerable Brethren, is the doctrine of
the Church, which alone in the social as in all other fields can offer
real light and assure salvation in the face of communistic ideology.
But this doctrine must be consistently reduced to practice in every-day
life, according to the admonition of St. James the Apostle: "Be ye doers
of the word and not hearers only, deceiving your own selves." (St.
James, 1, 22.) The most urgent need of the present day is
therefore the energetic and timely application of remedies which will effectively
ward off the catastrophe that daily grows more threatening. We cherish
the firm hope that the fanaticism with which the sons of darkness work
day and night at their materialistic and atheistic propaganda will at least
serve the holy purpose of stimulating the sons of light to a like and even
greater zeal for the honor of the Divine Majesty.
40. What then must be done, what remedies must be
employed to defend Christ and Christian civilization from this pernicious
enemy? As a father in the midst of his family, We should like to
speak quite intimately of those duties which the great struggle of our
day imposes on all the children of the Church; and We would address Our
paternal admonition even to those sons who have strayed far from her.
Renewal of Christian Life
Detachment from Worldly Goods
44. And here We wish, venerable Brethren, to insist
more particularly on two teachings of Our Lord which have a special bearing
on the present condition of the human race: detachment from earthly goods
and the precept of charity. "Blessed are the poor in spirit" were
the first words that fell from the lips of the Divine Master in His sermon
on the mount. (St. Matthew, 5, 3.)
This lesson is more than ever necessary in these days of materialism athirst
for the goods and pleasures of this earth. All Christians, rich or
poor, must keep their eye fixed on heaven, remembering that "we have not
here a lasting city, but we seek one that is to come." (Hebrews,
13, 14.) The rich should not place their happiness in things
of earth nor spend their best efforts in the acquisition of them.
Rather, considering themselves only as stewards of their earthly goods,
let them be mindful of the account they must render of them to their Lord
and Master, and value them as precious means that God has put into their
hands for doing good; let them not fail, besides, to distribute of their
abundance to the poor, according to the evangelical precept. (St.Luke,
11, 41.) Otherwise there shall be verified of them and their
riches the harsh condemnation of St. James the Apostle: "Go to now, ye
rich men; weep and howl in your miseries which shall come upon you.
Your riches are corrupted, and your garments are moth-eaten; your gold
and silver is cankered; and the rust of them shall be for a testimony against
you and shall eat your flesh like fire. You have stored up to yourselves
wrath against the last days." (St. James, 5, 1-3.)
45. But the poor too, in their turn, while engaged,
according to the laws of charity and justice, in acquiring the necessities
of life and also in bettering their condition, should always remain "poor
in spirit", (St. Matthew, 5, 3.) and hold spiritual
goods in higher esteem than earthly property and pleasures. Let them
remember that the world will never be able to rid itself of misery, sorrow
and tribulation, which are the portion even of those who seem most prosperous.
Patience, therefore, is the need of all, that Christian patience which
comforts the heart with the divine assurance of eternal happiness.
"Be patient, therefore, brethren", we repeat with St. James, "until the
coming of the Lord. Behold the husbandman waiteth for the precious
fruit of the earth, patiently bearing until he receive the early and the
later rain. Be you therefore also patient and strengthen your hearts,
for the coming of the Lord is at hand." (St. James, 5, 7,
8.) Only thus will be fulfilled the consoling promise of the
Lord: "Blessed are the poor!" These words are no vain consolation,
a promise as empty as those of the communists. They are the words
of life, pregnant with a sovereign reality. They are fully verified
here on earth, as well as in eternity. Indeed, how many of the poor,
in anticipation of the Kingdom of Heaven already proclaimed their own:
"for yours is the Kingdom of Heaven", (St. Luke, 6, 20.)
find in these words a happiness which so many of the wealthy, uneasy with
their riches and ever thirsting for more, look for in vain!
Christian Charity
46. Still more important as a remedy for the evil
we are considering, or certainly more directly calculated to cure it, is
the precept of charity. We have in mind that Christian charity, "patient
and kind", (I Corinthians, 13, 4.) which avoids
all semblance of demeaning paternalism, and all ostentation; that charity
which from the very beginning of Christianity won to Christ the poorest
of the poor, the slaves. And We are grateful to all those members
of charitable associations, from the conferences of St. Vincent de Paul
to the recent great relief-organizations, which are perseveringly practicing
the spiritual and corporal works of mercy. The more the workingmen
and the poor realize what the spirit of love animated by the virtue of
Christ is doing for them, the more readily will they abandon the false
persuasion that Christianity has lost its efficacy and that the Church
stands on the side of the exploiters of their labor.
47. But when on the one hand We see thousands of
the needy, victims of real misery for various reasons beyond their control,
and on the other so many round about them who spend huge sums of money
on useless things and frivolous amusements, We cannot fail to remark with
sorrow not only that justice is poorly observed, but that the precept of
charity also is not sufficiently appreciated, is not a vital thing in daily
life. We desire therefore, Venerable Brethren, that this divine precept,
this precious mark of identification left by Christ to His true disciples,
be ever more fully explained by pen and word of mouth; this precept which
teaches us to see in those who suffer Christ Himself, and would have us
love our brothers as Our Divine Savior has loved us, that is, even at the
sacrifice of ourselves, and, if need be, of our very life. Let all
then frequently meditate on those words of the final sentence, so consoling
yet so terrifying, which the Supreme Judge will pronounce on the day of
the Last Judgment: "Come, ye blessed of My Father... for I was hungry and
you gave Me to eat; I was thirsty and you gave Me to drink... Amen, I say
to you, as long as you did it to one of these my least brethren you did
it to Me." (St. Matthew, 25, 34-40.) And the
reverse: "Depart from Me, you cursed, into everlasting fire... for I was
hungry and you gave Me not to eat; I was thirsty and you gave Me not to
drink... Amen, I say to you, as long as you did it not to one ot these
least, neither did you do it to Me." (St. Matthew, 25, 41-45.)
48. To be sure of eternal life, therefore, and to
be able to help the poor effectively, it is imperative to return to a more
moderate way of life, to renounce the joys, often sinful, which the world
today holds out in such abundance; to forget self for love of the neighbor.
There is a divine regenerating force in this "new precept" (as Christ called
it) of Christian charity. (St. John,
13, 34.) Its faithful observance will pour into the heart
an inner peace which the world knows not, and will finally cure the ills
which oppress humanity.
Duties of Strict Justice
49. But charity will never be true charity unless
it takes justice into constant account. The Apostle teaches that
"he that loveth his neighbor hath fulfilled the law" and gives the reason:
"For, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt
not steal... and if there be any other commandment, it is comprised
in this word: Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." (Romans,
13, 8, 9.) According to the Apostle, then, all the commandments,
including those which are of strict justice, as those which forbid us to
kill or to steal, may be reduced to the single precept of true charity.
From this it follows that a "charity" which deprives the workingman of
the salary to which he has a strict title in justice, is not charity at
all, but only its empty name and hollow semblance. The wage-earner
is not to receive as alms what is his due in justice. And let no
one attempt with trifling charitable donations to exempt himself from the
great duties imposed by justice. Both justice and charity often dictate
obligations touching on the same subject-matter, but under different aspects;
and the very dignity of the workingman makes him justly and acutely sensitive
to the duties of others in his regard.
50. Therefore We turn again in a special way to
you, Christian employers and industrialists, whose problem is often so
difficult for the reason that you are saddled with the heavy heritage of
an unjust economic regime whose ruinous influence has been felt through
many generations. We bid you be mindful of your responsibility.
It is unfortunately true that the manner of acting in certain Catholic
circles has done much to shake the faith of the working-classes in the
religion of Jesus Christ. These groups have refused to understand
that Christian charity demands the recognition of certain rights due to
the workingman, which the Church has explicitly acknowledged. What
is to be thought of the action of those Catholic employers who in one place
succeeded in preventing the reading of Our Encyclical Quadragesimo
Anno in their local churches? Or of those Catholic industrialists
who even to this day have shown themselves hostile to a labor movement
that We Ourselves recommended? Is it not deplorable that the right
of private property defended by the Church should so often have been used
as a weapon to defraud the workingman of his just salary and his social
rights?
Social Justice
51. In reality, besides commutative justice, there
is also social justice with its own set obligations, from which neither
employers nor workingmen can escape. Now it is of the very essence
of social justice to demand from each individual all that is necessary
for the common good. But just as in the living organism it is impossible
to provide for the good of the whole unless each single part and each individual
member is given what it needs for the exercise of its proper functions,
so it is impossible to care for the social organism and the good of society
as a unit unless each single part and each individual member -- that is
to say, each individual man in the dignity of his human personality --
is supplied with all that is necessary for the exercise of his social functions.
If social justice be satisfied, the result will be an intense activity
in economic life as a whole, pursued in tranquillity and order. This
activity will be proof of the health of the social body, just as the health
of the human body is recognized in the undisturbed regularity and perfect
efficiency of the whole organism.
52. but social justice cannot be said to have been
satisfied as long as workingmen are denied a salary that will enable them
to secure proper sustenance for themselves and for their families; as long
as they are denied the opportunity of acquiring a modest fortune and forestalling
the plague of universal pauperism; as long as they cannot make suitable
provision through public or private insurance for old age, for periods
of illness and unemployment. In a word, to repeat what has been said
in Our Encyclical Quadragsimo Anno: "Then only will the economic
and social order be soundly established and attain its ends, when it offers,
to all and to each, all those goods which the wealth and resources of nature,
technical science and the corporate organization of social affairs can
give. These goods should be sufficient to supply all necessities
and reasonable comforts, and to uplift men to that higher standard of life
which, provided it be used with prudence, is not only not a hindrance but
is of singular help to virtue." (Encycl. Quadragesimo
Anno, May 15, 1931 [A. A. S., vol. XXIII, 1931, p. 202].)
53. It happens all too frequently, however, under
the salary system, that individual employers are helpless to ensure justice
unless, with a view to its practice, they organize institutions the object
of which is to prevent competition incompatible with fair treatment for
the workers. Where this is true, it is the duty of contractors and
employers to support and promote such necessary organizations as normal
instruments enabling them to fulfill their obligations of justice.
But the laborers too must be mindful of their duty to love and deal fairly
with their employers, and persuade themselves that there is no better means
of safe-guarding their own interests.
54. If, therefore, We consider the whole structure
of economic life, as We have already pointed out in Our Encyclical Quadragesimo
Anno, the reign of mutual collaboration between justice and charity
in social-economic relations can only be achieved by a body of professional
and inter-professional organizations, built on solidly Christian foundations,
working together to effect, under forms adapted to different places and
circumstances, what has been called the Corporation.
Social Study and Propaganda
55. To give to this social activity a greater efficacy,
it is necessary to promote a wider study of social problems in the light
of the doctrine of the Church and under the aegis of her constituted authority.
If the manner of acting of some Catholics in the social economic field
has left much to be desired, this has often come about because they have
not known and pondered sufficiently the teachings of the Sovereign Pontiffs
on these questions. Therefore, it is of the utmost importance to
foster in all classes of society an intensive program of social education
adapted to the varying degrees of intellectual culture. It is necessary
with all care and diligence to procure the widest possible diffusion of
the teachings of the Church, even among the workig-classes. The minds
of men must be illuminated with the sure light of Catholic teaching, and
their wills must be drawn to follow and apply it as the norm of right living
in the conscientious fulfillment of their manifold social duties.
Thus they will oppose that incoherence and discontinuity in Christian life
which We have many times lamented. For there are some who, while
exteriorly faithful to the practice of their religion, yet in the field
of labor and industry, in the professions, trade and business, permit a
deplorable cleavage in their conscience, and live a life too little in
conformity with the clear principles of justice and Christian charity.
Such lives are a scandal to the weak, and to the malicious a pretext to
discredit the Church.
56. In this renewal the Catholic Press can play
a prominent part. Its foremost duty is to foster in various attractive
ways an ever better understanding of social doctrine. It should,
too, supply accurate and complete information on the activity of the enemy
and the means of resistance which have been found most effective in various
quarters. It should offer useful suggestions and warn against the
insidious deceits with which communists endeavor, all too successfully,
to attract even men of good faith.
Distrust of Communist Tactics
57. On this point We have already insisted in Our
Allocution of May 12th of last year, but We believe it to be a duty of
special urgency, Venerable Brethren, to call your attention to it once
again. In the beginning communism showed itself for what it was in
all its perversity but very soon it realized that it was thus alienating
the people. It has therefore changed its tactics, and strives to
entice the multitudes by trickery of various forms, hiding its real designs
behind ideas that in themselves are good and attractive. Thus, aware
of the universal desire for peace, the leaders of communism pretend to
be the most zealous promoters and propagandists in the movement for world
amity. Yet at the same time they stir up a class-warfare which causes
rivers of blood to flow, and, realizing that their system offers no internal
guarantee of peace, they have recourse to unlimited armaments. Under
various names which do not suggest communism, they establish organizations
and periodicals with the sole purpose of carrying their ideas into quarters
otherwise inaccessible. They try perfidiously to worm their way
even into professedly Catholic and religious organizations. Again,
without receding an inch from their subversive principles, they invite
Catholics to collaborate with them in the realm of so-called humanitarianism
and charity, and at times even make proposals that are in perfect harmony
with the Christian spirit and the doctrine of the Church. Elsewhere
they carry their hypocrisy so far as to encourage the belief that communism,
in countries where faith and culture are more strongly entrenched, will
assume another and much milder form. It will not interfere with the
practice of religion. It will respect liberty or conscience.
There are some even who refer to certain changes recently introduced into
soviet legislation as a proof that communism is about to abandon its program
of war against God.
58. See to it, Venerable Brethren, that the Faithful
do not allow themselves to be deceived! Communism is intrinsically
wrong, and no one who would save Christian civilization may collaborate
with it in any undertaking whatsoever. Those who permit themselves
to be deceived into lending their aid towards the triumph of communism
in their own country, will be the first to fall victims of their error.
And the greater the antiquity and grandeur of the Christian civilization
in the regions where communism successfully penetrates, so much more devastating
will be the hatred displayed by the Godless.
Prayer and Penance
59. But "unless the Lord keep the city, he watcheth in vain that keepeth it." (Psalms 126, 1.) And so, as a final and most efficacious remedy, We recommend, Venerable Brethren, that in your dioceses you use the most practical means to foster and intensify the spirit of prayer joined with Christian penance. When the Apostles asked the Savior why they had been unable to drive the evil spirit from a demoniac, Our Lord answered: "This kind is not cast out but by prayer and fasting." (St. Matthew, 17, 20.) So, too, the evil which today torments humanity can be conquered only by a world-wide holy crusade of prayer and penance. We ask especially the contemplative orders, men and women, to redouble their prayers and sacrifices to obtain from heaven efficacious aid for the Church in the present struggle. Let them implore also the powerful intercession of the Immaculate Virgin who, having crushed the head of the serpent of old, remains the sure protectress and invincible "Help of Christians."
V
MINISTERS AND CO-WORKERS IN
CATHOLIC SOCIAL ACTION
Priests
60. To apply the remedies thus briefly indicated
to the task of saving the world as We have traced it above, Jesus Christ,
our Divine King, has chosen Priests as the first line ministers and messengers
of His Gospel. Theirs is the duty, assigned to them by a special
vocation, under the direction of their Bishops and in filial obedience
to the Vicar of Christ on earth, of keeping alight in the world the torch
of Faith, and of filing the hearts of the Faithful with that supernatural
trust which has aided the Church to fight and win so many other battles
in the name of Christ: "This is the victory which overcometh the
world, our Faith." (1 Epist. St. John, 5, 4.)
61. To Priests in a special way We recommend anew
the oft-repeated counsel of Our Predecessor, Leo XIII, to go to the workingman.
We make this advice Our own, and, faithful to the teachings of Jesus Christ
and His Church, We thus complete it: "Go to the workingman, especially
where he is poor; and in general, to the poor." The poor are obviously
more exposed than others to the wiles of agitators who taking advantage
of their extreme need, kindle their hearts to envy of the rich and urge
them to seize by force what fortune seems to have denied them unjustly.
If the Priest will not go to the workingman and to the poor, to warn them
or to disabuse them of prejudice and false theory, they will become an
easy prey for the apostles of communism.
62. Indisputably much has been done in this direction,
especially after the publication of the Encyclicals Rerum Novarum
and Quadragesimo Anno. We are happy to voice
Our paternal approval of the zealous pastoral activity manifested by so
many Bishops and Priests who have with due prudence and caution been planning
and applying new methods of apostolate more adapted to modern needs.
But for the solution of our present problem, all this effort is still inadequate.
When our country is in danger, everything not strictly necessary, everything
not bearing directly on the urgent matter of unified defense, takes second
place. So we must act in today's crisis. Every other enterprise,
however attractive and helpful, must yield before the vital need of protecting
the very foundation of the Faith and of Christian civilization. Let
our parish Priests, therefore, while providing of course for the normal
needs of the Faithful, dedicate the better part of their endeavors and
their zeal to winning back the laboring masses to Christ and to His Church.
Let them work to infuse the Christian spirit into quarters where it is
least at home. The willing response of the masses, and results far
exceeding their expectations, will not fail to reward them for their strenuous
pioneer labor. This has been and continues to be our experience in
Rome and in other capitals, where zealous parish communities are being
formed as new churches are built in the suburban districts, and real miracles
are being worked in the conversion of people whose hostility to religion
has been due solely to the fact that they did not know it.
63. But the most efficacious means of apostolate
among the poor and lowly is the Priests' example, the practice of all those
sacerdotal virtues which We have described in Our Encyclical Ad Catholici
Sacerdotii. (Dec. 20, 1935: A. A. S., vol.
XXVIII [1936], pp. 5-53.) Especially needful, however, for
the present situation is the shining example of a life which is humble,
poor and disinterested, in imitation of a Divine Master who could say to
the world with divine simplicity: "The foxes have holes and the birds of
the air nests, but the Son of Man hath not where to lay His head." (St.
Matthew, 8, 20.) A Priest who is really poor and disinterested
in the Gospel sense may work among his flock marvels recalling a Saint
Vincent de Paul, a Cure of Ars, a Cottolengo, a Don Bosco and so many others;
while an avaricious and selfish Priest, as We have noted in the above-mentioned
Encyclical, even though he should not plunge with Judas to the abyss of
treason, will never be more than empty "sounding brass" and useless "tinkling
cymbal." (1 Corinthians, 13, 1.) Too often,
indeed, he will be a hindrance rather than an instrument of grace in the
midst of his people. Furthermore, where a secular Priest or Religious
is obliged by his office to administer temporal property, let him remember
that he is not only to observe scrupulously all that charity and justice
prescribe, but that he has a special obligation to conduct himself in very
truth as a father of the poor.
Catholic Action
64. After this appeal to the Clergy, We extend
Our paternal invitation to Our beloved sons among the laity who are doing
battle in the ranks of Catholic Action. On another occasion (May12,
1936.) We have called this movement so dear to Our heart "a
particularly providential assistance" in the work of the Church during
these troublous times. Catholic Action is in effect a social
apostolate also, inasmuch as its object is to spread the Kingdom
of Jesus Christ not only among individuals, but also in families and in
society. It must, therefore, make it a chief aim to train its members
with special care and to prepare them to fight the battles of the Lord.
This task of formation, now more urgent and indispensable than ever, which
must always precede direct action in the field, will assuredly be served
by study-circles, conferences, lecture-courses and the various other activities
undertaken with a view to making known the Christian solution of the social
problem.
65. The militant leaders of Catholic Action, thus
properly prepared and armed, will be the first and immediate apostles of
their fellow workmen. They will be an invaluable aid to the Priest
in carrying the torch of truth, and in relieving grave spiritual and material
suffering, in many sectors where inveterate anti-clerical prejudice or
deplorable religious indifference has proved a constant obstacle to the
pastoral activity of God's ministers. In this way they will collaborate,
under
the direction of especially qualified Priests, in that work of spiritual
aid to the laboring classes on which We set so much store, because it is
the means best calculated to save these, Our beloved children, from the
snares of communism.
66. In addition to this individual apostolate which,
however useful and efficacious, often goes unheralded, Catholic Action
must organize propaganda on a large scale to disseminate knowledge of the
fundamental principles on which, according to the Pontifical documents,
a Christian Social Order must build.
Auxiliary Organizations
67. Ranged with Catholic Action are the groups which We have been happy to call its auxiliary forces. With paternal affection We exhort these valuable organizations also to dedicate themselves to the great mission of which We have been treating, a cause which today transcends all others in vital importance.
Homogeneous Groups
68. We are thinking likewise of those associations
of workmen, farmers, technicians, doctors, employers, students and others
of like character, groups of men and women who live in the same cultural
atmosphere and share the same way of life. Precisely these groups
and organizations are destined to introduce into society that order which
We have envisaged in Our Encyclical Quadragesimo Anno, and
thus to spread in the vast and various fields of culture and labor the
recognition of the Kingdom of Christ.
69. Even where the State, because of changed
social and economic conditions, has felt obliged to intervene directly
in order to aid and regulate such organizations by special legislative
enactment's, supposing always the necessary respect for liberty and private
initiative, Catholic Action may not urge the circumstance as an excuse
for abandoning the field. Its members should contribute prudently
and intelligently to the study of the problems of the hour in the
light of Catholic doctrine. They should loyally and generously
participate in the formation of the new institutions, bringing to
them the Christian spirit which is the basic principle of order wherever
men work together in fraternal harmony.
Appeal to Catholic Workers
70. Here We should like to address a particularly affectionate word to Our Catholic workingmen, young and old. They have been given, perhaps as a reward for their often heroic fidelity in these trying days, a noble and an arduous mission. Under the guidance of their Bishops and Priest, they are to bring back to the Church and to God those immense multitudes of their brother-workmen who, because they were not understood or treated with the respect to which they were entitled, in bitterness have strayed far from God. Let Catholic workingmen show these their wandering brethren by word and example that the Church is a tender Mother to all those who labor and suffer, and that she has never failed, and never will fail. in her sacred maternal duty of protecting her children. If this mission, which must be fulfilled in mines, in factories, in shops, wherever they may be laboring, should at times require great sacrifices, Our workmen will remember that the Savior of the world has given them an example not only of toil but of self-immolation.
Need of Unity Among Catholics
71. To all Our children, finally, of every social rank and every nation, to every religious and lay organization in the Church, We make another and more urgent appeal for union. Many times Our paternal heart has been saddened by the divergencies -- often idle in their causes, always tragic in their consequences -- which array in opposing camps the sons of the same Mother Church. Thus it is that the radicals, who are not so very numerous, profiting by this discord are able to make it more acute, and end by pitting Catholics one against the other. In view of the events of the past few months, Our warning must seem superfluous. We repeat it nevertheless once more, for those who have not understood, or perhaps do not desire to understand. Those who make a practice of spreading dissension among Catholics assume a terrible responsibility before God and the Church.
Invitation to all Believers
72. But in this battle joined by the powers of darkness against the very idea of Divinity, it is Our fond hope that, besides the host which glories in the name of Christ, all those -- and they comprise the overwhelming majority of mankind -- who still believe in God and pay Him homage may take a decisive part. We therefore renew the invitation extended to them five years ago in Our Encyclical Caritate Christi, invoking their loyal and hearty collaboration "in order to ward off from mankind the great danger that threatens all alike." Since, as We then said, "belief in God is the unshakable foundation of all social order and of all responsibility on earth, it follows that all those who do not want anarchy and terrorism ought to take energetic steps to prevent the enemies of religion from attaining the goal they have so brazenly proclaimed to the world." (Encycl. Caritate Christi, May 3, 1932 [A. A. S., vol. XXIV, p. 184].)
Duties of the Christian State
Provision for the Common Good
75. It must likewise be the special care of the
State to create those material conditions of life without which an orderly
society cannot exist. The State must take every measure necessary
to supply employment, particularly for the heads of families and for the
young. To achieve this end demanded by the pressing needs of the
common welfare, the wealthy classes must be induced to assume those burdens
without which human society cannot be saved nor they themselves remain
secure. However, measures taken by the State with this end in view
ought to be of such a nature that they will really affect those who actually
possess more than their share of capital resources, and who continue to
accumulate them to the grievous detriment of others.
Prudent and Sober Administration
76. The State itself, mindful of its responsibility
before God and society, should be a model of prudence and sobriety in the
administration of the commonwealth. Today more than ever the acute
world crisis demands that those who dispose of immense funds, built
up on the sweat and toil of millions, keep constantly and singly in
mind the common good. State functionaries and all employees are obliged
in conscience to perform their duties faithfully and unselfishly, imitating
the brilliant example of distinguished men of the past and of our own day,
who with unremitting labor sacrificed their all for the good of their country.
In international trade-relations let all means be sedulously employed for
the removal of those artificial barriers to economic life which are the
effects of distrust and hatred. All must remember that
the peoples of the earth form but one family in God.
Unrestricted Freedom for the Church
77. At the same time the State must allow the Church
full liberty to fulfill her divine and spiritual mission, and this in itself
will be an effectual contribution to the rescue of nations from the dread
torment of the present hour. Everywhere today there is an anxious
appeal to moral and spiritual forces; and rightly so, for the evil we must
combat is at its origin primarily an evil of the spiritual order.
From this polluted source the monstrous emanations of the communistic system
flow with satanic logic. Now, the Catholic Church is undoubtedly
preeminent among the moral and religious forces of today. Therefore
the very good of humanity demands that her work be allowed to proceed unhindered.
78. Those who act otherwise, and at the same time
fondly pretend to attain their objective with purely political or economic
means, are in the grip of a dangerous error. When religion
is banished from the school, from education and from public life, when
the representatives of Christianity and its sacred rites are held up to
ridicule, are we not really fostering the materialism which is the fertile
soil of communism? Neither force, however well organized it be, nor
earthly ideals however lofty or noble, can control a movement whose roots
lie in the excessive esteem for the goods of this world.
79. We trust that those rulers of nations, who are
at all aware of the extreme danger threatening every people today, may
be more and more convinced of their supreme duty not to hinder the Church
in the fulfillment of her mission. This is the more imperative since,
while this mission has in view man's happiness in heaven, it cannot but
promote his true felicity in time.
The Erring Recalled
80. We cannot conclude this Encyclical Letter without addressing some words to those of Our children who are more or less tainted with the communist plague. We earnestly exhort them to hear the voice of their loving Father. We pray the Lord to enlighten them that they may abandon the slippery path which will precipitate one and all to ruin and catastrophe, and that they recognize that Jesus Christ, Our Lord is their only Savior: "For there is no other name under heaven given to man, whereby we must be saved." (Acts, 4, 12.)
CONCLUSION
Saint Joseph, Model and Patron
81. To hasten the advent of that "peace of
Christ in the kingdom of Christ" (Encycl. Ubi Arcano,
Dec. 23, 1922 [A. A. S., vol. XIV, 1922, p. 691].)
so ardently desired by all, We place the vast campaign of the Church against
world communism under the standard of St. Joseph, her mighty Protector.
He belongs to the working-class, and he bore the burdens of poverty
for himself and the Holy Family, whose tender and vigilant head he was.
To him was entrusted the Divine Child when Herod loosed his assassins against
Him. In a life of faithful performance of every-day duties, he
left an example for all those who must gain their bread by the toil of
their hands. He won for himself the title of the Just, serving
thus as a living model of that Christian justice which should reign in
social life.
82. With eyes lifted on high, our Faith sees the
new heavens and the new earth described by Our first Predecessor, St. Peter.
(2 Epis. St. Peter, 3, 13; cf. Isaias,
65, 17 and 66, 22; Apoc., 21, 1.) While the promises
of the false prophets of this earth melt away in blood and tears, the great
apocalyptic prophecy of the Redeemer shines forth in heavenly splendor:
"Behold, I make all things new." (Apoc., 21, 5.)
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, on the feast of St. Joseph, Patron of the Universal Church, the nineteenth day of March, in the year 1937, the sixteenth of Our Pontificate.
POPE PIUS XI
DESCRIPTION OF MAGNIFICENT
PAPAL CORONATION
As Peter was given a new name so does the new Supreme
Pontiff become known by another. After the election he extends his
first blessing to the people -- a Benediction which was not given in the
open for years until Pope Pius XI established the custom.
The Coronation, one of the most magnificent of
Vatican Ceremonies, takes place shortly after the election. With
the Pope carried high in a golden chair and attended by brilliantly attired
chamberlains and soldiers, the Coronation Mass is an unrivaled spectacle
of beauty, dignity, and ancient pageantry. At the Coronation, in
the midst of the pomp and splendor, a master of ceremonies recites in Latin:
"Holy Father, thus does the glory of the world pass away." As the
first Cardinal Deacon places the three-crowned Tiara on the head of the
Pope, he says: "Receive the three-crowned Tiara, and know that thou art
the Father of Princes and Kings, the Pastor of the earth, and Vicar of
Jesus Christ, to whom be honor and glory forever. amen."
The CORONATION of Pope Pius XII took place on
the balcony of St. Peter's in March, 1939. (From the book "The
Vatican and Holy Year" by Stephen S. Fenichell & Phillip Andrews. --
1950 edition.)
(Tradition is an equal part [with the Bible] of the authoritative teaching of the Church -- From the book "The Immaculate Way" by Brian Farrelly, S.M.M. -- 1963 edition.)
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