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MIT BRENNENDER SORGE
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS XI ON THE CHURCH AND THE GERMAN REICH
TO THE VENERABLE BRETHREN
THE ARCHBISHOPS AND BISHOPS OF GERMANY AND OTHER ORDINARIES
IN PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE
Venerable Brethren, Greetings, and
Apostolic Blessing.
It is with deep anxiety and growing
surprise that We have long been following the painful trials of the Church
and the increasing vexations which afflict those who have remained loyal
in heart and action in the midst of a people that once received from St.
Boniface the bright message and the Gospel of Christ and God's Kingdom.
2. And what the representatives of the
venerable episcopate, who visited Us in Our sick room, had to tell Us, in
truth and duty bound, has not modified Our feelings. To consoling and
edifying information on the stand the Faithful are making for their Faith,
they considered themselves bound, in spite of efforts to judge with
moderation and in spite of their own patriotic love, to add reports of
things hard and unpleasant. After hearing their account, We could, in
grateful acknowledgment to God, exclaim with the Apostle of love: "I
have no greater grace than this, to hear that my children walk in
truth" (John iii. 4). But the frankness indifferent in Our
Apostolic charge and the determination to place before the Christian world
the truth in all its reality, prompt Us to add: "Our pastoral heart
knows no deeper pain, no disappointment more bitter, than to learn that
many are straying from the path of truth."
3. When, in 1933, We consented, Venerable
Brethren, to open negotiations for a concordat, which the Reich Government
proposed on the basis of a scheme of several years' standing; and when, to
your unanimous satisfaction, We concluded the negotiations by a solemn
treaty, We were prompted by the desire, as it behooved Us, to secure for
Germany the freedom of the Church's beneficent mission and the salvation
of the souls in her care, as well as by the sincere wish to render the
German people a service essential for its peaceful development and
prosperity. Hence, despite many and grave misgivings, We then decided not
to withhold Our consent for We wished to spare the Faithful of Germany, as
far as it was humanly possible, the trials and difficulties they would
have had to face, given the circumstances, had the negotiations fallen
through. It was by acts that We wished to make it plain, Christ's
interests being Our sole object, that the pacific and maternal hand of the
Church would be extended to anyone who did not actually refuse it.
4. If, then, the tree of peace, which we
planted on German soil with the purest intention, has not brought forth
the fruit, which in the interest of your people, We had fondly hoped, no
one in the world who has eyes to see and ears to hear will be able to lay
the blame on the Church and on her Head. The experiences of these last
years have fixed responsibilities and laid bare intrigues, which from the
outset only aimed at a war of extermination. In the furrows, where We
tried to sow the seed of a sincere peace, other men - the
"enemy" of Holy Scripture - oversowed the cockle of distrust,
unrest, hatred, defamation, of a determined hostility overt or veiled, fed
from many sources and wielding many tools, against Christ and His Church.
They, and they alone with their accomplices, silent or vociferous, are
today responsible, should the storm of religious war, instead of the
rainbow of peace, blacken the German skies.
5. We have never ceased, Venerable
Brethren, to represent to the responsible rulers of your country's
destiny, the consequences which would inevitably follow the protection and
even the favor, extended to such a policy. We have done everything in Our
power to defend the sacred pledge of the given word of honor against
theories and practices, which it officially endorsed, would wreck every
faith in treaties and make every signature worthless. Should the day ever
come to place before the world the account of Our efforts, every honest
mind will see on which side are to be found the promoters of peace, and on
which side its disturbers. Whoever had left in his soul an atom of love
for truth, and in his heart a shadow of a sense of justice, must admit
that, in the course of these anxious and trying years following upon the
conclusion of the concordat, every one of Our words, every one of Our
acts, has been inspired by the binding law of treaties. At the same time,
anyone must acknowledge, not without surprise and reprobation, how the
other contracting party emasculated the terms of the treaty, distorted
their meaning, and eventually considered its more or less official
violation as a normal policy. The moderation We showed in spite of all
this was not inspired by motives of worldly interest, still less by
unwarranted weakness, but merely by Our anxiety not to draw out the wheat
with the cockle; not to pronounce open judgment, before the public was
ready to see its force; not to impeach other people's honesty, before the
evidence of events should have torn the mask off the systematic hostility
leveled at the Church. Even now that a campaign against the confessional
schools, which are guaranteed by the concordat, and the destruction of
free election, where Catholics have a right to their children's Catholic
education, afford evidence, in a matter so essential to the life of the
Church, of the extreme gravity of the situation and the anxiety of every
Christian conscience; even now Our responsibility for Christian souls
induces Us not to overlook the last possibilities, however slight, of a
return to fidelity to treaties, and to any arrangement that may be
acceptable to the episcopate. We shall continue without failing, to stand
before the rulers of your people as the defender of violated rights, and
in obedience to Our Conscience and Our pastoral mission, whether We be
successful or not, to oppose the policy which seeks, by open or secret
means, to strangle rights guaranteed by a treaty.
6. Different, however, Venerable Brethren,
is the purpose of this letter. As you affectionately visited Us in Our
illness, so also We turn to you, and through you, the German Catholics,
who, like all suffering and afflicted children, are nearer to their
Father's heart. At a time when your faith, like gold, is being tested in
the fire of tribulation and persecution, when your religious freedom is
beset on all sides, when the lack of religious teaching and of normal
defense is heavily weighing on you, you have every right to words of truth
and spiritual comfort from him whose first predecessor heard these words
from the Lord: "I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not: and
thou being once converted, confirm thy brethren" (Luke xxii.
32).
7. Take care, Venerable Brethren, that
above all, faith in God, the first and irreplaceable foundation of all
religion, be preserved in Germany pure and unstained. The believer in God
is not he who utters the name in his speech, but he for whom this sacred
word stands for a true and worthy concept of the Divinity. Whoever
identifies, by pantheistic confusion, God and the universe, by either
lowering God to the dimensions of the world, or raising the world to the
dimensions of God, is not a believer in God. Whoever follows that
so-called pre-Christian Germanic conception of substituting a dark and
impersonal destiny for the personal God, denies thereby the Wisdom and
Providence of God who "Reacheth from end to end mightily, and
ordereth all things sweetly" (Wisdom viii. 1). Neither is he a
believer in God.
8. Whoever exalts race, or the people, or
the State, or a particular form of State, or the depositories of power, or
any other fundamental value of the human community - however necessary and
honorable be their function in worldly things - whoever raises these
notions above their standard value and divinizes them to an idolatrous
level, distorts and perverts an order of the world planned and created by
God; he is far from the true faith in God and from the concept of life
which that faith upholds.
9. Beware, Venerable Brethren, of that
growing abuse, in speech as in writing, of the name of God as though it
were a meaningless label, to be affixed to any creation, more or less
arbitrary, of human speculation. Use your influence on the Faithful, that
they refuse to yield to this aberration. Our God is the Personal God,
supernatural, omnipotent, infinitely perfect, one in the Trinity of
Persons, tri-personal in the unity of divine essence, the Creator of all
existence. Lord, King and ultimate Consummator of the history of the
world, who will not, and cannot, tolerate a rival God by His side.
10. This God, this Sovereign Master, has
issued commandments whose value is independent of time and space, country
and race. As God's sun shines on every human face so His law knows neither
privilege nor exception. Rulers and subjects, crowned and uncrowned, rich
and poor are equally subject to His word. From the fullness of the
Creators' right there naturally arises the fullness of His right to be
obeyed by individuals and communities, whoever they are. This obedience
permeates all branches of activity in which moral values claim harmony
with the law of God, and pervades all integration of the ever-changing
laws of man into the immutable laws of God.
11. None but superficial minds could
stumble into concepts of a national God, of a national religion; or
attempt to lock within the frontiers of a single people, within the narrow
limits of a single race, God, the Creator of the universe, King and
Legislator of all nations before whose immensity they are "as a drop
of a bucket" (Isaiah xI, 15).
12. The Bishops of the Church of Christ,
"ordained in the things that appertain to God (Heb. v, 1) must
watch that pernicious errors of this sort, and consequent practices more
pernicious still, shall not gain a footing among their flock. It is part
of their sacred obligations to do whatever is in their power to enforce
respect for, and obedience to, the commandments of God, as these are the
necessary foundation of all private life and public morality; to see that
the rights of His Divine Majesty, His name and His word be not profaned;
to put a stop to the blasphemies, which, in words and pictures, are
multiplying like the sands of the desert; to encounter the obstinacy and
provocations of those who deny, despise and hate God, by the never-failing
reparatory prayers of the Faithful, hourly rising like incense to the
All-Highest and staying His vengeance.
13. We thank you, Venerable Brethren, your
priests and Faithful, who have persisted in their Christian duty and in
the defense of God's rights in the teeth of an aggressive paganism. Our
gratitude, warmer still and admiring, goes out to those who, in
fulfillment of their duty, have been deemed worthy of sacrifice and
suffering for the love of God.
14. No faith in God can for long survive
pure and unalloyed without the support of faith in Christ. "No one
knoweth who the Son is, but the Father: and who the Father is, but the Son
and to whom the Son will reveal Him" (Luke x. 22). "Now
this is eternal life: That they may know thee, the only true God, and
Jesus Christ whom thou has sent" (John xvii. 3). Nobody,
therefore, can say: "I believe in God, and that is enough religion
for me," for the Savior's words brook no evasion: "Whosoever
denieth the Son, the same hath not the Father. He that confesseth the Son
hath the Father also" (1 John ii. 23).
15. In Jesus Christ, Son of God made Man,
there shone the plentitude of divine revelation. "God, who at sundry
times and in divers manners, spoke in times past to the fathers by the
prophets last of all, in these days hath spoken to us by His Son" (Heb.
i. 1). The sacred books of the Old Testament are exclusively the word of
God, and constitute a substantial part of his revelation; they are
penetrated by a subdued light, harmonizing with the slow development of
revelation, the dawn of the bright day of the redemption. As should be
expected in historical and didactic books, they reflect in many
particulars the imperfection, the weakness and sinfulness of man. But side
by side with innumerable touches of greatness and nobleness, they also
record the story of the chosen people, bearers of the Revelation and the
Promise, repeatedly straying from God and turning to the world. Eyes not
blinded by prejudice or passion will see in this prevarication, as
reported by the Biblical history, the luminous splendor of the divine
light revealing the saving plan which finally triumphs over every fault
and sin. It is precisely in the twilight of this background that one
perceives the striking perspective of the divine tutorship of salvation,
as it warms, admonishes, strikes, raises and beautifies its elect. Nothing
but ignorance and pride could blind one to the treasures hoarded in the
Old Testament.
16. Whoever wishes to see banished from
church and school the Biblical history and the wise doctrines of the Old
Testament, blasphemes the name of God, blasphemes the Almighty's plan of
salvation, and makes limited and narrow human thought the judge of God's
designs over the history of the world: he denies his faith in the true
Christ, such as He appeared in the flesh, the Christ who took His human
nature from a people that was to crucify Him; and he understands nothing
of that universal tragedy of the Son of God who to His torturer's
sacrilege opposed the divine and priestly sacrifice of His redeeming
death, and made the new alliance the goal of the old alliance, its
realization and its crown.
17. The peak of the revelation as reached
in the Gospel of Christ is final and permanent. It knows no retouches by
human hand; it admits no substitutes or arbitrary alternatives such as
certain leaders pretend to draw from the so-called myth of race and blood.
Since Christ, the Lord's Anointed, finished the task of Redemption, and by
breaking up the reign of sin deserved for us the grace of being the
children God, since that day no other name under heaven has been given to
men, whereby we must be saved (Acts iv. 12). No man, were every
science, power and worldly strength incarnated in him, can lay any other
foundation but that which is laid: which is Christ Jesus (1 Cor.
iii 11). Should any man dare, in sacrilegious disregard of the essential
differences between God and His creature, between the God-man and the
children of man, to place a mortal, were he the greatest of all times, by
the side of, or over, or against, Christ, he would deserve to be called
prophet of nothingness, to whom the terrifying words of Scripture would be
applicable: "He that dwelleth in heaven shall laugh at them" (Psalms
ii. 3).
18. Faith in Christ cannot maintain itself
pure and unalloyed without the support of faith in the Church, "the
pillar and ground of the truth" (1 Tim. iii. 15); for Christ
Himself, God eternally blessed, raised this pillar of the Faith. His
command to hear the Church (Matt. xviii. 15), to welcome in the
words and commands of the Church His own words and His own commands (Luke
x. 16), is addressed to all men, of all times and of all countries. The
Church founded by the Redeemer is one, the same for all races and all
nations. Beneath her dome, as beneath the vault of heaven, there is but
one country for all nations and tongues; there is room for the development
of every quality, advantage, task and vocation which God the Creator and
Savior has allotted to individuals as well as to ethnical communities. The
Church's maternal heart is big enough to see in the God-appointed
development of individual characteristics and gifts, more than a mere
danger of divergency. She rejoices at the spiritual superiorities among
individuals and nations. In their successes she sees with maternal joy and
pride fruits of education and progress, which she can only bless and
encourage, whenever she can conscientiously do so. But she also knows that
to this freedom limits have been set by the majesty of the divine command,
which founded that Church one and indivisible. Whoever tampers with that
unity and that indivisibility wrenches from the Spouse of Christ one of
the diadems with which God Himself crowned her; he subjects a divine
structure, which stands on eternal foundations, to criticism and
transformation by architects whom the Father of Heaven never authorized to
interfere.
19. The Church, whose work lies among men
and operates through men, may see her divine mission obscured by human,
too human, combination, persistently growing and developing like the
cockle among the wheat of the Kingdom of God. Those who know the Savior's
words on scandal and the giver of scandals, know, too, the judgment which
the Church and all her sons must pronounce on what was and what is sin.
But if, besides these reprehensible discrepancies be between faith and
life, acts and words, exterior conduct and interior feelings, however
numerous they be, anyone overlooks the overwhelming sum of authentic
virtues, of spirit of sacrifice, fraternal love, heroic efforts of
sanctity, he gives evidence of deplorable blindness and injustice. If
later he forgets to apply the standard of severity, by which he measures
the Church he hates, to other organizations in which he happens to be
interested, then his appeal to an offended sense of purity identifies him
with those who, for seeing the mote in their brother's eye, according to
the Savior's incisive words, cannot see the beam in their own. But however
suspicious the intention of those who make it their task, nay their vile
profession, to scrutinize what is human in the Church, and although the
priestly powers conferred by God are independent of the priest's human
value, it yet remains true that at no moment of history, no individual, in
no organization can dispense himself from the duty of loyally examining
his conscience, of mercilessly purifying himself, and energetically
renewing himself in spirit and in action. In Our Encyclical on the
priesthood We have urged attention to the sacred duty of all those who
belong to the Church, chiefly the members of the priestly and religious
profession and of the lay apostolate, to square their faith and their
conduct with the claims of the law of God and of the Church. And today we
again repeat with all the insistency We can command: it is not enough to
be a member of the Church of Christ, one needs to be a living member, in
spirit and in truth, i.e., living in the state of grace and in the
presence of God, either in innocence or in sincere repentance. If the
Apostle of the nations, the vase of election, chastised his body and
brought it into subjection: lest perhaps, when he had preached to others,
he himself should become a castaway (1 Cor. ix. 27), could anybody
responsible for the extension of the Kingdom of God claim any other method
but personal sanctification? Only thus can we show to the present
generation, and to the critics of the Church that "the salt of the
earth," the leaven of Christianity has not decayed, but is ready to
give the men of today - prisoners of doubt and error, victims of
indifference, tired of their Faith and straying from God - the spiritual
renewal they so much need. A Christianity which keeps a grip on itself,
refuses every compromise with the world, takes the commands of God and the
Church seriously, preserves its love of God and of men in all its
freshness, such a Christianity can be, and will be, a model and a guide to
a world which is sick to death and clamors for directions, unless it be
condemned to a catastrophe that would baffle the imagination.
20. Every true and lasting reform has
ultimately sprung from the sanctity of men who were driven by the love of
God and of men. Generous, ready to stand to attention to any call from
God, yet confident in themselves because confident in their vocation, they
grew to the size of beacons and reformers. On the other hand, any
reformatory zeal, which instead of springing from personal purity, flashes
out of passion, has produced unrest instead of light, destruction instead
of construction, and more than once set up evils worse than those it was
out to remedy. No doubt "the Spirit breatheth where he will" (John
iii. 8): "of stones He is able to raise men to prepare the way to his
designs" (Matt. iii. 9). He chooses the instruments of His
will according to His own plans, not those of men. But the Founder of the
Church, who breathed her into existence at Pentecost, cannot disown the
foundations as He laid them. Whoever is moved by the spirit of God,
spontaneously adopts both outwardly and inwardly, the true attitude toward
the Church, this sacred fruit from the tree of the cross, this gift from
the Spirit of God, bestowed on Pentecost day to an erratic world.
21. In your country, Venerable Brethren,
voices are swelling into a chorus urging people to leave the Church, and
among the leaders there is more than one whose official position is
intended to create the impression that this infidelity to Christ the King
constitutes a signal and meritorious act of loyalty to the modern State.
Secret and open measures of intimidation, the threat of economic and civic
disabilities, bear on the loyalty of certain classes of Catholic
functionaries, a pressure which violates every human right and dignity.
Our wholehearted paternal sympathy goes out to those who must pay so
dearly for their loyalty to Christ and the Church; but directly the
highest interests are at stake, with the alternative of spiritual loss,
there is but one alternative left, that of heroism. If the oppressor
offers one the Judas bargain of apostasy he can only, at the cost of every
worldly sacrifice, answer with Our Lord: "Begone, Satan! For it is
written: The Lord thy God shalt thou adore, and Him only shalt thou
serve" (Matt. iv. 10). And turning to the Church, he shall
say: "Thou, my mother since my infancy, the solace of my life and
advocate at my death, may my tongue cleave to my palate if, yielding to
worldly promises or threats, I betray the vows of my baptism." As to
those who imagine that they can reconcile exterior infidelity to one and
the same Church, let them hear Our Lord's warning: - "He that shall
deny me before men shall be denied before the angels of God" (Luke
xii. 9).
22. Faith in the Church cannot stand pure
and true without the support of faith in the primacy of the Bishop of
Rome. The same moment when Peter, in the presence of all the Apostles and
disciples, confesses his faith in Christ, Son of the Living God, the
answer he received in reward for his faith and his confession was the word
that built the Church, the only Church of Christ, on the rock of Peter (Matt.
xvi. 18). Thus was sealed the connection between the faith in Christ, the
Church and the Primacy. True and lawful authority is invariably a bond of
unity, a source of strength, a guarantee against division and ruin, a
pledge for the future: and this is verified in the deepest and sublimest
sense, when that authority, as in the case of the Church, and the Church
alone, is sealed by the promise and the guidance of the Holy Ghost and His
irresistible support. Should men, who are not even united by faith in
Christ, come and offer you the seduction of a national German Church, be
convinced that it is nothing but a denial of the one Church of Christ and
the evident betrayal of that universal evangelical mission, for which a
world Church alone is qualified and competent. The live history of other
national churches with their paralysis, their domestication and subjection
to worldly powers, is sufficient evidence of the sterility to which is
condemned every branch that is severed from the trunk of the living
Church. Whoever counters these erroneous developments with an
uncompromising No from the very outset, not only serves the purity of his
faith in Christ, but also the welfare and the vitality of his own people.
23. You will need to watch carefully,
Venerable Brethren, that religious fundamental concepts be not emptied of
their content and distorted to profane use. "Revelation" in its
Christian sense, means the word of God addressed to man. The use of this
word for the "suggestions" of race and blood, for the
irradiations of a people's history, is mere equivocation. False coins of
this sort do not deserve Christian currency. "Faith" consists in
holding as true what God has revealed and proposes through His Church to
man's acceptance. It is "the evidence of things that appear not"
(Heb. ii. 1). The joyful and proud confidence in the future of
one's people, instinct in every heart, is quite a different thing from
faith in a religious sense. To substitute the one for the other, and
demand on the strength of this, to be numbered among the faithful
followers of Christ, is a senseless play on words, if it does not conceal
a confusion of concepts, or worse.
24. "Immortality" in a Christian
sense means the survival of man after his terrestrial death, for the
purpose of eternal reward or punishment. Whoever only means by the term,
the collective survival here on earth of his people for an indefinite
length of time, distorts one of the fundamental notions of the Christian
Faith and tampers with the very foundations of the religious concept of
the universe, which requires a moral order.
25. "Original sin" is the
hereditary but impersonal fault of Adam's descendants, who have sinned in
him (Rom. v. 12). It is the loss of grace, and therefore of eternal
life, together with a propensity to evil, which everybody must, with the
assistance of grace, penance, resistance and moral effort, repress and
conquer. The passion and death of the Son of God has redeemed the world
from the hereditary curse of sin and death. Faith in these truths, which
in your country are today the butt of the cheap derision of Christ's
enemies, belongs to the inalienable treasury of Christian revelation.
26. The cross of Christ, though it has
become to many a stumbling block and foolishness (1 Cor. i. 23)
remains for the believer the holy sign of his redemption, the emblem of
moral strength and greatness. We live in its shadow and die in its
embrace. It will stand on our grave as a pledge of our faith and our hope
in the eternal light.
27. Humility in the spirit of the Gospel
and prayer for the assistance of grace are perfectly compatible with
self-confidence and heroism. The Church of Christ, which throughout the
ages and to the present day numbers more confessors and voluntary martyrs
than any other moral collectivity, needs lessons from no one in heroism of
feeling and action. The odious pride of reformers only covers itself with
ridicule when it rails at Christian humility as though it were but a
cowardly pose of self-degradation.
28. "Grace," in a wide sense, may
stand for any of the Creator's gifts to His creature; but in its Christian
designation, it means all the supernatural tokens of God's love; God's
intervention which raises man to that intimate communion of life with
Himself, called by the Gospel "adoption of the children of God."
"Behold what manner of charity the Father hath bestowed on us, that
we should be called and should be the sons of God" (1 John
iii. 1). To discard this gratuitous and free elevation in the name of a
so-called German type amounts to repudiating openly a fundamental truth of
Christianity. It would be an abuse of our religious vocabulary to place on
the same level supernatural grace and natural gifts. Pastors and guardians
of the people of God will do well to resist this plunder of sacred things
and this confusion of ideas.
29. It is on faith in God, preserved pure
and stainless, that man's morality is based. All efforts to remove from
under morality and the moral order the granite foundation of faith and to
substitute for it the shifting sands of human regulations, sooner or later
lead these individuals or societies to moral degradation. The fool who has
said in his heart "there is no God" goes straight to moral
corruption (Psalms xiii. 1), and the number of these fools who
today are out to sever morality from religion, is legion. They either do
not see or refuse to see that the banishment of confessional Christianity,
i.e., the clear and precise notion of Christianity, from teaching and
education, from the organization of social and political life, spells
spiritual spoliation and degradation. No coercive power of the State, no
purely human ideal, however noble and lofty it be, will ever be able to
make shift of the supreme and decisive impulses generated by faith in God
and Christ. If the man, who is called to the hard sacrifice of his own ego
to the common good, loses the support of the eternal and the divine, that
comforting and consoling faith in a God who rewards all good and punishes
all evil, then the result of the majority will be, not the acceptance, but
the refusal of their duty. The conscientious observation of the ten
commandments of God and the precepts of the Church (which are nothing but
practical specifications of rules of the Gospels) is for every one an
unrivaled school of personal discipline, moral education and formation of
character, a school that is exacting, but not to excess. A merciful God,
who as Legislator, says - Thou must! - also gives by His grace the power
to will and to do. To let forces of moral formation of such efficacy lie
fallow, or to exclude them positively from public education, would spell
religious under-feeding of a nation. To hand over the moral law to man's
subjective opinion, which changes with the times, instead of anchoring it
in the holy will of the eternal God and His commandments, is to open wide
every door to the forces of destruction. The resulting dereliction of the
eternal principles of an objective morality, which educates conscience and
ennobles every department and organization of life, is a sin against the
destiny of a nation, a sin whose bitter fruit will poison future
generations.
30. Such is the rush of present-day life
that it severs from the divine foundation of Revelation, not only
morality, but also the theoretical and practical rights. We are especially
referring to what is called the natural law, written by the Creator's hand
on the tablet of the heart (Rom. ii. 14) and which reason, not
blinded by sin or passion, can easily read. It is in the light of the
commands of this natural law, that all positive law, whoever be the
lawgiver, can be gauged in its moral content, and hence, in the authority
it wields over conscience. Human laws in flagrant contradiction with the
natural law are vitiated with a taint which no force, no power can mend.
In the light of this principle one must judge the axiom, that "right
is common utility," a proposition which may be given a correct
significance, it means that what is morally indefensible, can never
contribute to the good of the people. But ancient paganism acknowledged
that the axiom, to be entirely true, must be reversed and be made to say:
"Nothing can be useful, if it is not at the same time morally
good" (Cicero, De Off. ii. 30). Emancipated from this oral
rule, the principle would in international law carry a perpetual state of
war between nations; for it ignores in national life, by confusion of
right and utility, the basic fact that man as a person possesses rights he
holds from God, and which any collectivity must protect against denial,
suppression or neglect. To overlook this truth is to forget that the real
common good ultimately takes its measure from man's nature, which balances
personal rights and social obligations, and from the purpose of society,
established for the benefit of human nature. Society, was intended by the
Creator for the full development of individual possibilities, and for the
social benefits, which by a give and take process, every one can claim for
his own sake and that of others. Higher and more general values, which
collectivity alone can provide, also derive from the Creator for the good
of man, and for the full development, natural and supernatural, and the
realization of his perfection. To neglect this order is to shake the
pillars on which society rests, and to compromise social tranquillity,
security and existence.
31. The believer has an absolute right to
profess his Faith and live according to its dictates. Laws which impede
this profession and practice of Faith are against natural law.
Parents who are earnest and conscious of their educative duties, have a
primary right to the education of the children God has given them in the
spirit of their Faith, and according to its prescriptions. Laws and
measures which in school questions fail to respect this freedom of the
parents go against natural law, and are immoral. The Church, whose mission
it is to preserve and explain the natural law, as it is divine in its
origin, cannot but declare that the recent enrollment into schools
organized without a semblance of freedom, is the result of unjust
pressure, and is a violation of every common right.
32. As the Vicar of Him who said to the
young man of the Gospel: "If thou wilt enter into life, keep the
commandments" (Matt. xix. 17), We address a few paternal words
to the young.
33. Thousands of voices ring into your ears
a Gospel which has not been revealed by the Father of Heaven. Thousands of
pens are wielded in the service of a Christianity, which is not of Christ.
Press and wireless daily force on you productions hostile to the Faith and
to the Church, impudently aggressive against whatever you should hold
venerable and sacred. Many of you, clinging to your Faith and to your
Church, as a result of your affiliation with religious associations
guaranteed by the concordat, have often to face the tragic trial of seeing
your loyalty to your country misunderstood, suspected, or even denied, and
of being hurt in your professional and social life. We are well aware that
there is many a humble soldier of Christ in your ranks, who with torn
feelings, but a determined heart, accepts his fate, finding his one
consolation in the thought of suffering insults for the name of Jesus (Acts
v. 41). Today, as We see you threatened with new dangers and new
molestations, We say to you: If any one should preach to you a Gospel
other than the one you received on the knees of a pious mother, from the
lips of a believing father, or through teaching faithful to God and His
Church, "let him be anathema" (Gal. i. 9). If the State
organizes a national youth, and makes this organization obligatory to all,
then, without prejudice to rights of religious associations, it is the
absolute right of youths as well as of parents to see to it that this
organization is purged of all manifestations hostile to the Church and
Christianity. These manifestations are even today placing Christian
parents in a painful alternative, as they cannot give to the State what
they owe to God alone.
34. No one would think of preventing young
Germans establishing a true ethnical community in a noble love of freedom
and loyalty to their country. What We object to is the voluntary and
systematic antagonism raised between national education and religious
duty. That is why we tell the young: Sing your hymns to freedom, but do
not forget the freedom of the children of God. Do not drag the nobility of
that freedom in the mud of sin and sensuality. He who sings hymns of
loyalty to this terrestrial country should not, for that reason, become
unfaithful to God and His Church, or a deserter and traitor to His
heavenly country. You are often told about heroic greatness, in lying
opposition to evangelical humility and patience. Why conceal the fact that
there are heroisms in moral life? That the preservation of baptismal
innocence is an act of heroism which deserves credit? You are often told
about the human deficiencies which mar the history of the Church: why
ignore the exploits which fill her history, the saints she begot, the
blessing that came upon Western civilization from the union between that
Church and your people? You are told about sports. Indulged in with
moderation and within limits, physical education is a boon for youth. But
so much time is now devoted to sporting activities, that the harmonious
development of body and mind is disregarded, that duties to one's family,
and the observation of the Lord's Day are neglected. With an indifference
bordering on contempt the day of the Lord is divested of its sacred
character, against the best of German traditions. But We expect the
Catholic youth, in the more favorable organizations of the State, to
uphold its right to a Christian sanctification of the Sunday, not to
exercise the body at the expense of the immortal soul, not to be overcome
by evil, but to aim at the triumph of good over evil (Rom. xii. 21)
as its highest achievement will be the gaining of the crown in the stadium
of eternal life (1 Cor. ix. 24).
35. We address a special word of
congratulation, encouragement and exhortation to the priests of Germany,
who, in difficult times and delicate situations, have, under the direction
of their Bishops, to guide the flocks of Christ along the straight road,
by word and example, by their daily devotion and apostolic patience.
Beloved sons, who participate with Us in the sacred mysteries, never tire
of exercising, after the Sovereign and eternal Priest, Jesus Christ, the
charity and solicitude of the Good Samaritan. Let your daily conduct
remain stainless before God and the incessant pursuit of your perfection
and sanctification, in merciful charity towards all those who are confided
to your care, especially those who are more exposed, who are weak and
stumbling. Be the guides of the faithful, the support of those who fail,
the doctors of the doubting, the consolers of the afflicted, the
disinterested counselors and assistants of all. The trials and sufferings
which your people have undergone in post-War days have not passed over its
soul without leaving painful marks. They have left bitterness and anxiety
which are slow to cure, except by charity. This charity is the apostle's
indispensable weapon, in a world torn by hatred. It will make you forget,
or at least forgive, many an undeserved insult now more frequent than
ever.
36. This charity, intelligent and
sympathetic towards those even who offend you, does by no means imply a
renunciation of the right of proclaiming, vindicating and defending the
truth and its implications. The priest's first loving gift to his
neighbors is to serve truth and refute error in any of its forms. Failure
on this score would be not only a betrayal of God and your vocation, but
also an offense against the real welfare of your people and country. To
all those who have kept their promised fidelity to their Bishops on the
day of their ordination; to all those who in the exercise of their
priestly function are called upon to suffer persecution; to all those
imprisoned in jail and concentration camps, the Father of the Christian
world sends his words of gratitude and commendation.
37. Our paternal gratitude also goes out to
Religious and nuns, as well as Our sympathy for so many who, as a result
of administrative measures hostile to Religious Orders, have been wrenched
from the work of their vocation. If some have fallen and shown themselves
unworthy of their vocation, their fault, which the Church punishes, in no
way detracts from the merit of the immense majority, who, in voluntary
abnegation and poverty, have tried to serve their God and their country.
By their zeal, their fidelity, their virtue, their active charity, their
devotion, the Orders devoted to the care of souls, the service of the sick
and education, are greatly contributing to private and public welfare. No
doubt better days will come to do them better justice than the present
troublous times have done. We trust that the heads of religious
communities will profit by their trials and difficulties tO renew their
zeal, their spirit of prayer, the austerity of their lives and their
perfect discipline, in order to draw down God's blessing upon their
difficult work.
38. We visualize the immense multitudes of
Our faithful children, Our sons and daughters, for whom the sufferings of
the Church in Germany and their own have left intact their devotion to the
cause of God, their tender love for the Father of Christendom, their
obedience to their pastors, their joyous resolution to remain ever
faithful, happen what may, to the sacred inheritance of their ancestors.
To all of them We send Our paternal greetings. And first to the members of
those religious associations which, bravely and at the cost of untold
sacrifices, have remained faithful to Christ, and have stood by the rights
which a solemn treaty had guaranteed to the Church and to themselves
according to the rules of loyalty and good faith.
39. We address Our special greetings to the
Catholic parents. Their rights and duties as educators, conferred on them
by God, are at present the stake of a campaign pregnant with consequences.
The Church cannot wait to deplore the devastation of its altars, the
destruction of its temples, if an education, hostile to Christ, is to
profane the temple of the child's soul consecrated by baptism, and
extinguish the eternal light of the faith in Christ for the sake of
counterfeit light alien to the Cross. Then the violation of temples is
nigh, and it will be every one's duty to sever his responsibility from the
opposite camp, and free his conscience from guilty cooperation with such
corruption. The more the enemies attempt to disguise their designs, the
more a distrustful vigilance will be needed, in the light of bitter
experience. Religious lessons maintained for the sake of appearances,
controlled by unauthorized men, within the frame of an educational system
which systematically works against religion, do not justify a vote in
favor of non-confessional schools. We know, dear Catholic parents, that
your vote was not free, for a free and secret vote would have meant the
triumph of the Catholic schools. Therefore, we shall never cease frankly
to represent to the responsible authorities the iniquity of the pressure
brought to bear on you and the duty of respecting the freedom of
education. Yet do not forget this: none can free you from the
responsibility God has placed on you over your children. None of your
oppressors, who pretend to relieve you of your duties can answer for you
to the eternal Judge, when he will ask: "Where are those I confided
to you?" May every one of you be able to answer: "Of them whom
thou hast given me, I have not lost any one" (John xviii. 9).
40. Venerable Brethren, We are convinced
that the words which in this solemn moment We address to you, and to the
Catholics of the German Empire, will find in the hearts and in the acts of
Our Faithful, the echo responding to the solicitude of the common Father.
If there is one thing We implore the Lord to grant, it is this, that Our
words may reach the ears and the hearts of those who have begun to yield
to the threats and enticements of the enemies of Christ and His Church.
41. We have weighed every word of this
letter in the balance of truth and love. We wished neither to be an
accomplice to equivocation by an untimely silence, nor by excessive
severity to harden the hearts of those who live under Our pastoral
responsibility; for Our pastoral love pursues them none the less for all
their infidelity. Should those who are trying to adapt their mentality to
their new surroundings, have for the paternal home they have left and for
the Father Himself, nothing but words of distrust, in gratitude or insult,
should they even forget whatever they forsook, the day will come when
their anguish will fall on the children they have lost, when nostalgia
will bring them back to "God who was the joy of their youth," to
the Church whose paternal hand has directed them on the road that leads to
the Father of Heaven.
42. Like other periods of the history of
the Church, the present has ushered in a new ascension of interior
purification, on the sole condition that the faithful show themselves
proud enough in the confession of their faith in Christ, generous enough
in suffering to face the oppressors of the Church with the strength of
their faith and charity. May the holy time of Lent and Easter, which
preaches interior renovation and penance, turn Christian eyes towards the
Cross and the risen Christ; be for all of you the joyful occasion that
will fill your souls with heroism, patience and victory. Then We are sure,
the enemies of the Church, who think that their time has come, will see
that their joy was premature, and that they may close the grave they had
dug. The day will come when the Te Deum of liberation will succeed
to the premature hymns of the enemies of Christ: Te Deum of triumph
and joy and gratitude, as the German people return to religion, bend the
knee before Christ, and arming themselves against the enemies of God,
again resume the task God has laid upon them.
43. He who searches the hearts and reins (Psalm
vii. 10) is Our witness that We have no greater desire than to see in
Germany the restoration of a true peace between Church and State. But if,
without any fault of Ours, this peace is not to come, then the Church of
God will defend her rights and her freedom in the name of the Almighty
whose arm has not shortened. Trusting in Him, "We cease not to pray
and to beg" (Col. i. 9) for you, children of the Church, that
the days of tribulation may end and that you may be found faithful in the
day of judgment; for the persecutors and oppressors, that the Father of
light and mercy may enlighten them as He enlightened Saul on the road of
Damascus. With this prayer in Our heart and on Our lips We grant to you,
as a pledge of Divine help, as a support in your difficult resolutions, as
a comfort in the struggle, as a consolation in all trials, to You, Bishops
and Pastors of the Faithful, priests, Religious, lay apostles of Catholic
Action, to all your diocesans, and specially to the sick and the
prisoners, in paternal love, Our Apostolic Benediction.
Given at the Vatican on Passion Sunday,
March 14, 1937.
PIUS XI
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