TEXT OF SUPREME PONTIFF'S MESSAGE
ON THE HOLY SEASON OF CHRISTMAS
AND SUFFERING HUMANITY!
(Christmas Message 1942)
From the book, "A World To Reconstruct"
by
Pope Pius XII on Peace and Reconstruction
by
GUIDO GONELLA
translated by
Rev. T. Lincoln Bouscaren, S.J.
Professor of Canon Law, West Baden College
Under the auspices of
The Bishops' Committee on the Pope's Peace Points
Copyright 1944
MOST REV. SAMUEL STRITCH, D.D.
ARCHBISHOP OF CHICAGO
APPENDIX II
The following is a complete English translation of the 1942 Christmas Message of His Holiness Pope Pius XII, entitled "The Holy Season of Christmas and Suffering Humanity."
My dear children of the whole world:
As the Holy Christmas Season comes
round each year, the message of Jesus, Who is light in the midst of darkness,
echoes once more from the Crib of Bethlehem in the ears of Christians and
re-echoes in their hearts with an ever new freshness of joy and piety.
It is a message which lights up with heavenly truth a world that is plunged
in darkness by fatal errors. It infuses exuberant and trustful joy
into mankind, torn by the anxiety of deep , bitter sorrow. It proclaims
liberty to the sons of Adam, shackled with the chains of sin and guilt.
It promises mercy, love, peace to the countless hosts of those in suffering
and tribulation who see their happiness shattered and their efforts broken
in the tempestuous strife and hate of our stormy days.
The Church Bells, which announce this
Message in every continent, not only recall the gift which God made to
mankind at the dawn of the Christian Era; they also announce and proclaim
a consoling reality of the present, a reality which is eternally young,
living and life-giving; it is the reality of the "True Light which enligtheneth
every man that cometh into this world," and which knows no setting.
The Eternal Word, Who is the Way, the Truth and the Life, began His mission
of saving and redeeming the human race by being born in the squalor of
a stable by thus ennobling and hallowing poverty.
He thus proclaimed and consecrated
a message which is still, today, the word of Eternal Life. That message
can solve the most tortuous questions, unsolved and insoluble to those
who bring to their investigations a mentality and an apparatus which are
ephemeral and merely human: and those questions stand up, bleeding, imperiously
demanding an answer, before the thought and the feelings of embittered
and exasperated mankind. The watchword "I have compassion on the
multitude" is for Us a sacred trust which may not be abused; it remains
strong and impelling in all times and in all human situations, as it was
the distinguishing mark of Jesus.
The Church would be untrue to herself,
ceasing to be a mother, if she turned a deaf ear to children's anguished
cries, which reach her from every class of the human family. She
does not intend to take sides for either of the particular forms of which
the several peoples and States arrive to solve the gigantic problems of
domestic order or international collaboration, as long as these forms conform
to the Law of God. But, on the other hand, as the "Pillar and Ground
of Truth" and guardian, by the Will of God and the mandate of Christ, of
the natural and supernatural order, the Church cannot renounce her right
to proclaim to her sons and to the whole world the unchanging basic laws,
saving them from every perversion, obfuscation, corruption, false interpretation
and error.
This is all the more necessary for
the fact that from the exact maintenance of these laws and not merely by
the effort of noble and courageous wills, depends in the last analysis
the solidity of any national and international order, so fervently desired
by all peoples.
We know the qualities of courage and
sacrifice of those peoples, and We also know their straitened conditions
and their sorrow; and in this hour of unspeakable trial and strife We feel
Ourselves bound to each and every one of them without exception, by a deep,
all-embracing, unmovable affection, and by an immense desire to bring them
every solace and help which is in any way at our command.
International Relations and Order Within the
Nations
Double Element of Sacred Life
Every society,
worthy of the name, has originated in a desire for peace, and hence aims
at attaining peace, that "tranquil living together in order" in which St.
Thomas finds the essence of peace.
Two primary elements, then, regulate
social life; a living together in order and a living together in tranquillity.
Living Together in Order
Order, which is fundamental in an association
of men (of beings, that is, who strive to attain an end appropiate to their
nature) is not a merely external linking up of parts which are numerically
distinct. It is rather, and must be, a tendency and an ever more
perfect approach to an internal union; and this does not exclude differences
founded in fact and sanctioned by the will of God or by supernatural standard.
A clear understanding of the genuine
fundamentals of all social life has a capital importance today as never
before, when mankind, impregnated by the poison of error and social aberrations,
tormented by the fever of discordant desires, doctrines and aims, is excitedly
tossing about in the destructive force of false ideas, that disregard the
Law of God or are opposed to it. And since disorder can only be overcome
by an order which is not merely superimposed and fictitious (just as darkness
with its fearful and depressing effects can only be driven away by light
and not by will o' the wisps); so security, reorganizations, progressive
improvement cannot be expected and cannot be brought about unless by a
return of large and influential sections to correct notions about society.
It is a return which calls for the
Grace of God in large measure, and for a resolute will, ready and prepared
for sacrifice on the part of good and farseeing men. From these influential
circles who are more capable of penetrating and appreciating the beauty
of just social norms, there will pass on and inflitrate into the masses
the clear knowledge of the true, divine, spiritual origin of social life.
Thus the way will be cleared for the reawakening, the growth and the fixing
of those moral principles without which even the proudest achievements
create but a babel in which the citizens, though they live inside the same
walls, speak different and incoherent languages.
God, the First Cause and Ultimate Foundation
of Individual and Social Life
From individual and social life we
should rise to God, the First Cause and Ultimate Foundation, as He is the
Creator of the first conjugal society, from which we have the society which
is the family, and the society of peoples and of nations. As an image,
albeit imperfect, of its Exemplar, the One and Triune God, Who through
the Mystery of the Incarnation redeemed and raised human nature, life in
society, in its ideals and in its end, possesses by the light of reason
and of revelation a moral authority and an absoluteness which transcend
every temporal change.
It has a power of attraction that
far from being weakened or lessened by delusions, errors, failures, draws
irresistibly the noblest and most faithful souls to the Lord, to take up
with renewed energy, with added knowledge, with new studies, methods and
means, the enterprises which in other times and circumstances were tried
in vain.
Development and Perfection of the
Human Person
The origin and the primary scope of
social life is the conservation, development and perfection of the human
person, helping him to realize accurately the demands and values of religion
and culture set by the Creator for every man and for all mankind, both
as a whole and in its natural ramifications. A social teaching or
a social reconstruction program which denies or prescinds from this internal
essential relation to God of everything that regards man, is on a false
course; and while it builds up with one hand, it prepares with the other
the materials which sooner or later will undermine and destroy the whole
fabric. And when it disregards the respect due to the human person
and to the life which is proper to that person, and gives no thoght to
it in its organization, in legislative and executive activity, then instead
of serving society, it harms it; instead of encouraging and stimulating
social thought, instead of realizing its hopes and expectations, it strips
it of all real value and reduces it to a utilitarian formula which is openly
rejected by constantly increasing groups.
If social life implies intrinsic unity,
it does not, at the same time, excluude differences which are founded in
fact and nature. When we hold fast to God, the Supreme Controller
of all that relates to man, then the similarities no less than the differences
of men find their allotted place in the fixed order of being, of values,
and hence also of morality.
When, however, this foundation is
removed, there is a dangerous lackof cohesion in the various spheres of
culture; the frontier of true values becomes uncertain and shifting even
to the point where mere external factors, and often blind instincts come
to determine, according to the prevalent fashion of the day, who is to
have control of this or that direction. After the fateful economy
of the past decades, during which the lives of all citizens were subordinated
to the stimulus of gain, there now succeeds another and no less fateful
policy which, while it considers everybody and everything with reference
to the State, excludes all thought of ethics or religon. This is
a fatal masquerade, a fatal error. It is calculated to bring about
incalculable consequences for social life, which is never nearer to losing
its noblest prerogatives than when it thinks it can deny or forget with
impunity the eternal source of its own dignity; God.
Reason, enlightened by faith, assigns
to individuals and to particular societies in the social organization a
definite and exalted place. It knows, to mention only the most important,
that the whole political and economic activity of the State is directed
to the permanent realization of the common good. In a conception
of society which is pervaded and sanctioned by religious thought, the influence
of enconomics and of every other sphere of cultural activity represents
a universal and most exalted center of activity, very rich in its variety
and coherent in its harmony, in which men's intellectual equality and diversity
of occupation come into their own and secure adequate expression.
When this is not so, work is depreciated,
and the worker is belittled.
Juridical Order of Society and its Aims
That social life, such as God willed
it, may attain its scope it needs a juridical order to support it from
without, to defend and protect it. The function of this juridical
order is not to dominate but to serve, to help the development and increase
of society's vitality in the rich multiplicity of its ends, leading all
the individual energies to their perfection in peaceful competition, and
defending them with appropriate and honest means against all that may militate
against their full development. Such an order, that it may safeguard
the equilibrium, the safety and the harmony of society, has also the power
of coercion against those who only by this means can be held within the
noble discipline of social life. But in the just fulfillment of this
right, an authority which is truly worthy of the name will always be painfully
conscious of its responsibility in the sight of the Eternal Judge, before
Whose Tribunal every wrong judgment, and especially every revolt against
the order established by God, will receive without fail its sasnction and
its condemnation.
The precise, bedrock, basic rules
that govern society cannot be prejudiced by the intervention of human agency.
They can be denied, overlooked, despised, transgressed. But they
can never be overthrown with legal validity. It is true indeed that,
as time goes on, conditions of life change. But there is never a
complete break or a complete discountinuity between the law of yesterday
and that of today. Between the disappearance of old powers and constitutions
and the appearance of a new order.
In any case, whatever be the change
or transformation, the scope of every social life remains indentical, sacred,
obligatory: it is the development of the personal values of man as the
image of God; and the obligation remains with every member of the human
family to realize his unchangeable destiny whosoever be the legislator
and the authority whom he obeys..
In consequence, there always remains,
too, his inalienable right, which no opposition can nullify--a right which
must be respected by friend and foe--to a legal order and practice which
appreciate and understand that it is their essential duty to serve the
common good.
The juridical order has, besides,
the high and difficult scope of insuring harmonious relations both between
individuals and between societies, and within these. This scope will
be reached if legislators will abstain from following those perilous theories
and practices, so harmful to communities and to their spirit of union,
which derive their origin and promulgation from false postulates.
Among such postulates We must count
the juridical positivism which attributes a deceptive majesty to the setting
up of purely human laws, and which leaves the way open for a fatal divorce
of law from morality; there is, besides, the conception which claims for
particular nations, or races, or classes, the juridical instinct as the
final imperative and the norm from which there is no appeal; finally, there
are those various theories which, differing among themselves, and deriving
from opposite ideologies, agree in considering the State, or a group which
represents it, as an absolute and supreme entity, excmpt from control and
from criticism even when its theoreetical and practical postulates result
in, and offend by, their open denial of essential tenets of the human and
Christian conscience.
Anyone who considers with an open
and penetrating mind the vital connection between social order and a genuine
juridical order, and who is conscious of the fact that internal order in
all its complexity depends on the predominance of spiritual forces, on
the love of society and of its God-given ends, cannot wonder at the sad
effects of juridical conceptions which, far from the royal road of truth,
proceed on the insecure ground of materialist postulates. But he
will realize at once the urgent need of a return to a conception
of law which is spiritual and ethical, serious and profound, vivified by
the warmth of true humanity and illumined by the splendor of the Christian
Faith, which bids us seek in the juridical order an outward refraction
of the social order willed by God, a luminous product of the spirit of
man which is in turn the image of the Spirit of God.
On this organic conceptio which alone
is living, in which the noblest humanity and the most genuine Christian
spirit flourish in harmony, there is marked the scripture thought expounded
by the great Aquinas: Opus Justitiae Pax-- The work
of justice shall be peace--a thought which is as applicable to the internal
as to the external aspect of social life. It admits of neither contrast
nor alternative such as expressed in the disjunction, love or right, but
the fruitful synthesis, love and right.
In the one as in the other, since
both radiate from the same Spirit of God, we read the program and the seal
of the human spirit; they complement one another, give each other life
and support, walk hand in hand along the road of concord and pacification,
while right clears the way for love and love makes right less stern, and
gives it a higher meaning. Both elevate human life to that social
atmosphere where, even amid the failings, the obstacle and the difficulties
of this earth a fraternal community of life is made possible.
But once let the baneful spirit of
materialist ideas predominate; let the urge for power and for predominance
take in its rough hands the direction of affairs; you shall then find its
disruptive effects appearing daily in greater measure; you shall see love
and justice disappear, all this as the sad foretaste of the catastrophies
that menace society when it abandons God.
Living Together in Tranquillity
The second fundamental element of peace,
towards which every human society tends almost instinctively, is tranquillity.
O blessed tranquillity, thou hast
nothing in common with the spirit of holding fixedly and obstinately, unrelentingly
and with childish stubbornness, to things as they are; nor yet with the
reluctance--child of cowardice and selfishness--to put one's mind to the
solution of problems and questions which the passage of time and the succession
of generations with their different needs and progress, make actual, and
bring up as burning questions of the day. But, for a Christian who
is conscious of his responsibilities even towards the least of his brethren,
there is no such thing as slothful tranquillity; nor is there question
of flight, but of struggle, of action against every inaction and desertion
in the great spiritual combat where the stakes are the construction, nay
the very soul, of the society of tomorrow.
Harmony Between Tranquillity and Activity
In the mind of Aquinas, tranquillity
and feverish activity are not opposed, but rather form a well-balanced
pair for him who is inspired by the beauty and the urgency of the spiritual
foundations of society, and of the nobility of its ideals.
To you, young people, who are wont to turn your backs on the past, and
to rely on the future for your aspirations and your hopes, We address Ourselves
with ardent love and fatherly anxiety; enthusiasm and courage do not of
themselves suffice, if they be not, as they should be, placed in the service
of good and of a spotless cause.
It is vain to agitate, to weary youselves,
to bustle about without ever resting in God and His eternal law.
You must be inspired with the conviction that you are fighting for truth,
that you are sacrificing in the cause of truth your own tastes and energies,
wishes and sacrifices; that you are fighting for the eternal laws of God,
for the dignity of the human person, and for the attainment of its destiny.
When mature men and young men, while
remaining always at anchor in the sea of the eternally active tranquillity
of God, coordinate their differences of temperament and activity in a genuine
Christian spirit, then if the propelling element is joined in the refraining
element, the natural differences between the generations will never become
dangerous and will even conduct vigorously to the enforcement of the eternal
laws of God in the changing course of times and of conditions of life.
The World of Labor
In one field of social life, where
for a whole century there was agitation and bitter conflict, there is today
a calm, at least on the surface. We speak of the vast and evergrowing
world of labor, of the immense army of workers, of breadwinners and dependents.
If we consider the present with its wartime exigencies, as an admitted
fact, then this calm may be called a necessary and reasonable demand; of
justice, and with reference to a legitimately regulated labor movement,
then the tranquillity will remain only apparent, until the scope of such
a movement be attained.
Always moved by religious motives,
the Church has condemned the various forms of Marxist Socialism; and she
condemns them today, because it is her permanent right and duty to safeguard
men from currents of thought and influences that jeopardize their external
salvation. But the Church, cannot ignore or overlook the fact that
the worker in his efforts to better his lot, is opposed by a machinery
which is not only not in accordance with nature, but is at variance with
God's plan and with the purpose He had in creating the goods of earth.
In spite of the fact that the ways they followed were and are false and
to be condemned, what man, and especially what Priest or Christian, could
remain deaf to the cries that rise from the depths and call for justice
and a spirit of brotherly collaboration in the world ruled by a just God?
Such silence would be culpable and unjustifiable before God, and contrary
to the inspired teaching of the Apostle, who, while he inculcates the need
of resolution in the fight against error, also knows that we must be full
of sympathy for those who err, and open-minded in our understanding of
their aspirations, hopes and motives.
When He blessed our first parents,
God said: "Increase and multiply and fill the earth, and subdue it."
And to the first father of a family, He said later: "In the sweat of thy
face shalt thou eat bread."
The dignity of the human person, then,
requires normally as a natural foundation of life the right to the use
of the goods of the earth. To this right corresponds the fundamental
obligation to grant private ownership of property if possible, to all.
Positive legislation regulating private ownership may change and more or
less restrict its use. But if legislation is to play its part in
the pacification of the community, it must prevent the worker, who is or
will be a father of a family, from being condemned to an economic dependence
and slavery which is irreconciliable with his rights as a person.
Whether this slavery arises from the
exploitation of private capital or from the power of the state, the result
is the same. Indeed, under the pressure of a State which dominates
all and controls the whole field of public and private life, even going
into the realm of ideas and beliefs and of conscience, this lack of liberty
can have the more serious consequences, as experience shows and proves.
Five Fundamental Points for the Order and
Pacification of Human Society
Anyone who considers in the light of
reason and of faith the foundations and the aims of social life, which
we have traced in broad outline, and contemplates them in their purity
and moral sublimity, and in their benefits in every sphere of life, cannot
but be convinced of the powerful contribution to order and pacification
which efforts directed towards great ideals and resolved to face difficulties,
could present, or better, could restore to a world which is intellectual
and juridical barriers, created by prejudice, errors, indifference, and
by a long tradition of secularization of thought, feeling, action which
succeeded in detaching and subtracting the earthly city from the light
and force of the City of God.
Today, as never before, the hour has
come for reparation, for rousing the conscience of the world from the heavy
torpor into which the drugs of false ideas, widely diffused, have sunk
it. This is all the more so because in this hour of material and
moral disintegration the appreciation of the emptiness and inconsistency
of every purely human order is beginning to disillusion even those who,
in days of apparent happiness, were not conscious of the need of contact
with the eternal in themselves or in society, and did not look upon its
absence as an essential defect in their constitutions. What was clear
to the Christian, who in his deeply founded faith was painted by the ignorance
of others, is now presented to us in dazzling clearness by the din of appalling
catastrophe which the present upheaval brings to man and which portrays
all the terrifying lineaments of a general judgment even for the tepid,
the indifferent, the frivolous. It is indeed an old truth which comes
out in even new forms and thunders through the ages and through the nations
from the mouth of the Prophet: "All that forsake Thee shall be confounded;
they who depart from Thee, shall be written in the earth: because they
have foresaken the Lord, the Vein of Living Waters."
The call of the moment is not lamentation
but action: not lamentation over what has been, but reconstruction of what
is to arise and must arise for the good of society. It is for the
best and most distinguished members of the Christian family, filled with
the enthusiasm of Crusaders, to unite in the spirit of truth, justice and
love to the call: God wills it, ready to serve, to sacrifice themselves,
like the Crusaders of old.
If the issue was then the liberation
of the land hallowed by the life of the Incarnate Word of God, the call
today is, if We may so express Ourselves, to traverse the sea of errors
of our day and to march on to free the holy land of the spirit, which is
destined to sustain in its foundations the unchangeable norms and laws
on which will arise a social construction of solid internal consistency.
With this lofty purpose before Us,
We turn from the crib of the Prince of Peace, confident that His grace
is diffused in all hearts, to you, beloved children, who recognize and
adore in Christ your Savior; We turn to all those who are united with Us
at least by the bond of faith in God; We turn, finally, to all those who
would be free of doubt and error, and who desire light and guidance; and
We exhort you with suppliant, paternal insistence not only to realize fully
the dreadful gravity of this hour, but also to mediate upon the vistas
of good and supernatural benefit which it opens up, and to unite and collaborate
towards the renewal of society in spirit and truth.
The essential aim of this necessary
and holy crusade is that the Star of Peace, the Star of Bethlehem, may
shine out again over the whole of mankind in all its brilliant splendor
and reassuring consolation as a pledge and augury of a future better, more
fruitful and happier.
It is true that the road from night
to full day will be long; but of decisive importance are the first steps
on the path, the first five milestones of which bear chiselled on them
the following maxins.
1. Dignity and Rights of the Human Person
He who would have the star of peace
shine out and stand over society should cooperate for his part in giving
back to the human person the dignity given to it by God from the very beginnings;
should oppose the excessive herding of men, as if they were a mass withut
a soul; their economic, social, political, intellectual and moral inconsistency;
their dearth of solid principles and strong convictions, their surfeit
of instinctive, sensible excitement and their fickleness.
He should favor, by every lawful means,
in every sphere of life, social institutions in which a full personal responsibility
is assured and guaranteed both in the earthly and the eternal order of
things.
He should uphold respect for and the
practical realization of the following fundamental personal rights: the
right to maintain and develop one's corporal, intellectual and moral life
and especially the right to religious formation and education;; the right
to worship God in private and public and to carry on religious works of
charity; the right to marry and to achieve the aim of married life; the
right to conjugal and domestic society; the right to work as the indispensable
means towards the maintenance of family life; the right to free choice
of a state of life and hence, too, of the Priesthood or Religious Life;
the right to the use of material goods, in keeping with his duties and
social limitations.
2. Defense
of Social Unity and Especially of the
Family in Principle
He who would have the star of Peace
shine out and stand over society should reject every form of materialism
which sees in the people only a herd of individuals who, divided and without
any internal cohesion, are considered as a mass to be lorded over and treated
arbitrarily; he should strive to understand society as an intrinsic unity,
which has grown up and matured under the guidance of Providence, a unity
which--within the bounds assigned to it and according to its own peculiar
gifts--tends, with the collaboration of the various classes and professions,
towards the eternal and even new aims of culture and religion.
He should
defend the indissolubility of matrimony; he shuld give to the family--that
unique cell of the people--space, light and air so tht it may attend to
its mission of perpetuating new life, and of educating children in a spirit
corresponding to its own true religious convictions, and that it may preserve,
fortify and reconstitute, according to its powers, its proper economic,
spiritual, moral and juridic unity.
He should
take care that the material and spiritual advantages of the family be shared
by the domestic servants; he shuld strive to secure for every family a
dwelling where a materially and morally healthy family life may be seen
in all its vigor and worth; he should take care that the place of work
be not so separated from the home as to make the head of the ramily and
educator of the children a virtual stranger to his own household; he should
take care above all that the bond of trust and mutual help shold be reestablished
between the family and the public school, that bond which in other times
gave such happy results, but which now has been replaced by mistrust where
the school, influenced and controlled by the spirit of materialism, corrupts
and destroys what the parents have instilled into the minds of the children.
3. Dignity and Prerogatives of Labor
He who would have the star of peace
shine out and stand over society should give to work the place assigned
to it by God from the beginning.
As an indispensable means towards
gaining over the world that mastery which God wishes, for His glory, all
work has an inherent dignity and at the same time a close connection with
the perfection of the person; this is the noble dignity and privilege of
work which is not in any way cheapened by the fatigue and the burden, which
have to be borne as the effect of Original Sin, in obedience and submission
to the will of God.
Those who are familiar with the great
Encyclicals of Our Predecessors and Our Own previous messages know well
that the Church does not hesitate to draw the practical conclusions which
are derived from the moral nobility of work and to give them all the support
of Her Authority. These exigencies include, besides a just wage which
covers the needs of the worker and his family, the conservation and perfection
of a social order which will make possible an assured, even if modest,
private property for all classes of society, which will promote higher
education for the children of the working class who are especially endowed
with intelligence and good will, will promote the care and the practice
of the social spirit in one's immediate neighborhood, in the district,
the province, the people and the nation, a spirit which, by smoothing over
friction arising from privileges or class interests removes from the workers
the sense of isolation through the assuring experience of a genuinely human,
and fraternally Christian, solidarity.
The progress and the extent of urgent
social reforms depend on the economic possibilities of single nations.
It is only through an intelligent and generous sharing of forces between
the strong and the weak that it will be possible to effect a universal
pacification in such wise as not to leave behind centers of conflagration
and infection from which new disasters may come. There are evident
signs which go to show that, in the ferment of all the prejudices and feelings
of hate, those inevitable but lamentable offsprings of the war psychosis,
there is still aflame in the peoples the consciousness of their intimate
mutual dependence for good or for evil, nay, that this consciousness is
more alive and active.
Is it not true that deep thinkers
see ever more clearly in the renunciation of egoism and national isolation,
the way to general salvation, ready as they are to demand of their peoples
a heavy participation in the sacrifices necessary for social well being
in other peoples?
May this Christmas message of Ours,
addressed to all those who are animated by a good will and a generous heart,
encourage and increase the legions of these social crusades in every nation.
And may God deign to give to their peaceful cause the victory of which
their noble enterprise is worthy.
4. The Rehabilitation of Juridic Order
He who would have the star of peace
shine out and stand over social life should collaborate towards a complete
rehabilitation of the juridical order.
The juridic sense of today is often
altered and overturned by the profession and the practice of a positivisim
and a utilitarianism which are subjected and bound to the service of determined
groups, classes and movements, whose programs direct and determine the
course of legislation and the practices of the courts.
The cure for this situation becomes
feasible when we awaken again the consciousness of an order which stretches
forth its arm, in protection or punishment, over the unforgettable rights
of man and protects them against the attacks of every human power.
From the juridic order, as willed
by God, flows man's inalienable right in juridical security, and by this
very fact to a definite sphere of rights, immune from all arbitrary attack.
The relations of man to man, of the
individual to society, to authority, to civil duties; the relations of
society and of authority to the individual, should be placed on a firm
juridic footing and be guarded, when the need arises, by the authority
of the courts.
This supposes (A) A tribunal and a
judge who take their directions from a clearly formulated and defined right;
(B) clear juridical norms which may not be overturned by unwarranted appeals
to a supposed popular sentiment or by merely utilitarian considerations;
(C) The recognition of the principle that even the State and the functionaries
and organizations dependent on it are obliged to repair and to withdraw
measures which are harmful to the liberty, property, honor, progress of
health of the individuals.
5. The
Conception of the State According to
the Christian Spirit
He who would have the star of peace
shine out and stand over human society should cooperate towards the setting
up of a State conception and practice founded on reasonable discipline,
exalted kindliness and a responsible Christian spirit.
He should help to restore the State
and its power to the service of human society, to the full recognition
of the respect due to the human person and his efforts to attain his eternal
destiny.
He should apply and devote himself
to dispelling the errors which aim at causing the State and its authority
to deviate from the path of morality, at severing them from the eminently
ethical bond which links them to individual and social life, and at making
them deny or in practice ignore their essential dependence on the will
of the Creator. He shold work for the recognition and diffusion of
the truth which teaches, even in matters of this world, that the deepest
meaning, the ultimate moral basis and the universal validity of "reigning"
lies in "serving."
Considerations on the World War and
the Renovation of Society
Beloved children, may God grant that
while you listen to Our voice your heart may be profoundly stirred and
moved by the deeply felt seriousness, the loving solicitude, the unremitting
insistence, with which We drive home these thoughts, which are meant as
an appeal to the conscience of the world, and a rallying cry to all those
who are ready to ponder and weigh the grandeur of their mission and responsibility
by the vastness of this universal disaster.
A great part of mankind, and, let
Us not shirk from saying it, not a few who call themselves Christians,
have to some extent their share in the collective responsibility for the
growth of error and for the harm and the lack of moral fiber in the society
of today.
What is this world war, with all its
attendant circumstances, whether they be remote or proximate causes, its
progress and material, legal and moral effects? What is it but the
crumbling processs, not expected, perhaps, by the thoughtless but seen
and deprecated by those whose gaze penetrated into the realities of a social
order which--behind a deceptive exterior or the mask of conventional shibboleths--hid
its mortal weakness and its unbridled lust for gain and power?
That which is peacetime lay coiled
up, broke loose at the outbreak of war in a sad succession of acts at variance
with the human and Christian sense. International agreements to make
war less inhuman by confining it to the combatants, to regulate the procedure
of occupation and the imprisonment of the conquered remained in various
places a dead lettter. And who can see the end of this progressive
demoralization of the people, who can wish to watch impotently this disastrous
progress? Should they not rather, over the ruins of a social order
which has given such tragic proof of its ineptitude as a factor for the
good of the people, gather together the hearts of all those who are magnanimous
and upright in the solemn vow not to rest until and in all peoples and
all nations of the earth a vast legion shall be formed of those handfuls
of men who, bent on bringng back society to its center of gravity, which
is the law of God, aspire to the service of the human person and of his
common life ennobled in God?
Mankind owes that vow to the countless
dead who lie buried on the field of battle: the sacrifice of their lives
in the fulfillment of their duty is a holocaust offered for a new and better
social order.
Mankind owes that vow to the innumerable
sorrowing host of mothers, widows and orphans who have seen the light,
the solace and the support of their lives wrenched from them.
Mankind owes that vow to those numberless
exiles whom the hurricane of war has torn from their native land and scattered
in the land of the stranger; who can make their own the lament of the Prophet:
"our inheritance is turned to aliens: our house to strangers."
Mankind owes that vow to the hundreds
of thousands of persons who, without any fault on their part, sometimes
only because of their nationality or race, have been consigned to death
or to a slow decline.
Mankind owes that vow to the many
thousands of noncombatants, women, children, sick and aged, from whom aerial
warfare--whose horrors we have from the beginning frequently denounced--has,
without discrimination or through inadequate precautions, taken life, goods,
health, home, charitable refuge, or house of prayer.
Mankind owes that vow to the flood
of tears and bitterness to the accumulation of sorrow and suffering, emanating
from the murderous ruin of the dreadful conflict and crying to heaven to
send down the Holy Ghost to liberate the world from the inundation of violence
and terror. And where could you with greater assurance and trust
and with more efficacious faith place this vow for the renewal of society
than at the feet of the "Desired of all Nations" Who lies before us in
the Crib with all the charm of His sweet humanity as a babe, but also in
the dynamic attraction of His incipient mission as Redeemer?
Where could this noble and holy crusade
for the cleansing and renewal of society have a more significant consecration
or find a more potent inspiration than at Bethlehem where the new Adam
appears in the adorable mystery of the Incarnation? For it is at
His fountains of truth and grace that mankind should find the water of
life if it is not to perish in the desert of this life: "of His fullness
we all have received." His fullness of grace and truth flows as fresh
today as it has for twenty centuries on the world. His light can
overcome the darkness, the rays of His love can conquer the icy egoism
which holds so many back from becoming great and conspicuous in their higher
life.
Do you, crusader volunteers of a distinguished
new society, lift up the new call for moral and Christian rebirth, declare
war on the darkness which comes from deserting God, on the coldness that
comes from strife between brothers. It is a fight for the human
race, which is gravely ill and must be healed in the name of conscience
ennobled by Christianity.
Invocation of the Redeemer of the World
May Our Blessing and Our Paternal good wishes and encouragement go with your generous enterprise, and may they remain with all those who do not shirk hard sacrifices--those weapons which are more potent than any steel to combat the evil from which society suffers. Over your crusade for a social, human and Christian ideal may there shine out as a consolation and an inspiration the star that stands over the Grotto of Bethlehem, the first and the perennial star of the Christian era. From the sign of it every faithful heart drew, draws and ever will draw strength: "If armies in camp should stand against me, my heart shall not fear." Where that star shines, there is Christ. "With Him for leader we shall not wander; through Him let us go to Him, that with the Child that is born today we may rejoice forever."
The True
Answer To World Peace
Triumph
Of The Church