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1.
A sense of the dignity of the human person has been impressing itself more and
more deeply on the consciousness of contemporary man,1 and the demand
is increasingly made that men should act on their own judgment, enjoying and
making use of a responsible freedom, not driven by coercion but motivated by a
sense of duty. The demand is likewise made that constitutional limits should be
set to the powers of government, in order that there may be no encroachment on
the rightful freedom of the person and of associations. This demand for freedom
in human society chiefly regards the quest for the values proper to the human
spirit. It regards, in the first place, the free exercise of religion in
society. This Vatican Council takes careful note of these desires in the minds
of men. It proposes to declare them to be greatly in accord with truth and
justice. To this end, it searches into the sacred tradition and doctrine of the
Church-the treasury out of which the Church continually brings forth new things
that are in harmony with the things that are old.
First,
the council professes its belief that God Himself has made known to mankind the
way in which men are to serve Him, and thus be saved in Christ and come to
blessedness. We believe that this one true religion subsists in the Catholic
and Apostolic Church, to which the
Lord Jesus committed the duty of spreading it abroad among all men. Thus He
spoke to the Apostles: "Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have enjoined upon you"
(Matt. 28: 19-20). On their part, all men are bound to seek the truth,
especially in what concerns God and His Church, and to embrace the truth they
come to know, and to hold fast to it.
This
Vatican Council likewise professes its belief that it is upon the human
conscience that these obligations fall and exert their binding force. The truth
cannot impose itself except by virtue of its own truth, as it makes its entrance
into the mind at once quietly and with power.
Religious
freedom, in turn, which men demand as necessary to fulfill their duty to
worship God, has to do with immunity from coercion in civil society. Therefore
it leaves untouched traditional Catholic doctrine on the moral duty of men and
societies toward the true religion and toward the one Church of Christ.
Over and
above all this, the council intends to develop the doctrine of recent popes on the
inviolable rights of the human person and the constitutional order of society.
2.
This Vatican Council declares that the human person has a right to religious
freedom. This freedom means that all men are to be immune from coercion on the
part of individuals or of social groups and of any human power, in such wise
that no one is to be forced to act in a manner contrary to his own beliefs,
whether privately or publicly, whether alone or in association with others,
within due limits.
The council
further declares that the right to religious freedom has its foundation in the
very dignity of the human person as this dignity is known through the revealed
word of God and by reason itself.2 This right of the human person to
religious freedom is to be recognized in the constitutional law whereby society
is governed and thus it is to become a civil right.
It is in
accordance with their dignity as persons-that is, beings endowed with reason
and free will and therefore privileged to bear personal responsibility-that all
men should be at once impelled by nature and also bound by a moral obligation
to seek the truth, especially religious truth. They are also bound to adhere to
the truth, once it is known, and to order their whole lives in accord with the
demands of truth However, men cannot discharge these obligations in a manner in
keeping with their own nature unless they enjoy immunity from external coercion
as well as psychological freedom. Therefore the right to religious freedom has
its foundation not in the subjective disposition of the person, but in his very
nature. In consequence, the right to this immunity continues to exist even in
those who do not live up to their obligation of seeking the truth and adhering
to it and the exercise of this right is not to be impeded, provided that just
public order be observed.
3.
Further light is shed on the subject if one considers that the highest norm of
human life is the divine law-eternal, objective and universal-whereby God orders,
directs and governs the entire universe and all the ways of the human community
by a plan conceived in wisdom and love. Man has been made by God to participate
in this law, with the result that, under the gentle disposition of divine
Providence, he can come to perceive ever more fully the truth that is
unchanging. Wherefore every man has the duty, and therefore the right, to seek
the truth in matters religious in order that he may with prudence form for
himself right and true judgments of conscience, under use of all suitable
means.
Truth,
however, is to be sought after in a manner proper to the dignity of the human
person and his social nature. The inquiry is to be free, carried on with the
aid of teaching or instruction, communication and dialogue, in the course of
which men explain to one another the truth they have discovered, or think they
have discovered, in order thus to assist one another in the quest for truth.
Moreover,
as the truth is discovered, it is by a personal assent that men are to adhere
to it.
On his
part, man perceives and acknowledges the imperatives of the divine law through
the mediation of conscience. In all his activity a man is bound to follow his
conscience in order that he may come to God, the end and purpose of life. It
follows that he is not to be forced to act in manner contrary to his
conscience. Nor, on the other hand, is he to be restrained from acting in
accordance with his conscience, especially in matters religious. The reason is
that the exercise of religion, of its very nature, consists before all else in
those internal, voluntary and free acts whereby man sets the course of his life
directly toward God. No merely human power can either command or prohibit acts
of this kind.3 The social nature of man, however, itself requires that
he should give external expression to his internal acts of religion: that he
should share with others in matters religious; that he should profess his
religion in community. Injury therefore is done to the human person and to the
very order established by God for human life, if the free exercise of religion
is denied in society, provided just public order is observed.
There is
a further consideration. The religious acts whereby men, in private and in
public and out of a sense of personal conviction, direct their lives to God
transcend by their very nature the order of terrestrial and temporal affairs.
Government therefore ought indeed to take account of the religious life of the
citizenry and show it favor, since the function of government is to make
provision for the common welfare. However, it would clearly transgress the
limits set to its power, were it to presume to command or inhibit acts that are
religious.
4.
The freedom or immunity from coercion in matters religious which is the
endowment of persons as individuals is also to be recognized as their right
when they act in community. Religious communities are a requirement of the
social nature both of man and of religion itself.
Provided
the just demands of public order are observed, religious communities rightfully
claim freedom in order that they may govern themselves according to their own
norms, honor the Supreme Being in public worship, assist their members in the
practice of the religious life, strengthen them by instruction, and promote
institutions in which they may join together for the purpose of ordering their
own lives in accordance with their religious principles.
Religious
communities also have the right not to be hindered, either by legal measures or
by administrative action on the part of government, in the selection, training,
appointment, and transferral of their own ministers, in communicating with
religious authorities and communities abroad, in erecting buildings for
religious purposes, and in the acquisition and use of suitable funds or
properties.
Religious
communities also have the right not to be hindered in their public teaching and
witness to their faith, whether by the spoken or by the written word. However,
in spreading religious faith and in introducing religious practices everyone
ought at all times to refrain from any manner of action which might seem to
carry a hint of coercion or of a kind of persuasion that would be dishonorable
or unworthy, especially when dealing with poor or uneducated people. Such a
manner of action would have to be considered an abuse of one's right and a
violation of the right of others.
In
addition, it comes within the meaning of religious freedom that religious
communities should not be prohibited from freely undertaking to show the
special value of their doctrine in what concerns the organization of society
and the inspiration of the whole of human activity. Finally, the social nature
of man and the very nature of religion afford the foundation of the right of
men freely to hold meetings and to establish educational, cultural, charitable
and social organizations, under the impulse of their own religious sense.
5.
The family, since it is a society in its own original right, has the right
freely to live its own domestic religious life under the guidance of parents.
Parents, moreover, have the right to determine, in accordance with their own
religious beliefs, the kind of religious education that their children are to
receive. Government, in consequence, must acknowledge the right of parents to
make a genuinely free choice of schools and of other means of education, and
the use of this freedom of choice is not to be made a reason for imposing
unjust burdens on parents, whether directly or indirectly. Besides, the right
of parents are violated, if their children are forced to attend lessons or
instructions which are not in agreement with their religious beliefs, or if a
single system of education, from which all religious formation is excluded, is
imposed upon all.
6.
Since the common welfare of society consists in the entirety of those
conditions of social life under which men enjoy the possibility of achieving
their own perfection in a certain fullness of measure and also with some
relative ease, it chiefly consists in the protection of the rights, and in the
performance of the duties, of the human person.4 Therefore the care of
the right to religious freedom devolves upon the whole citizenry, upon social
groups, upon government, and upon the Church and other religious communities,
in virtue of the duty of all toward the common welfare, and in the manner
proper to each.
The
protection and promotion of the inviolable rights of man ranks among the
essential duties of government.5 Therefore government is to assume the
safeguard of the religious freedom of all its citizens, in an effective manner,
by just laws and by other appropriate means.
Government
is also to help create conditions favorable to the fostering of religious life,
in order that the people may be truly enabled to exercise their religious
rights and to fulfill their religious duties, and also in order that society
itself may profit by the moral qualities of justice and peace which have their
origin in men's faithfulness to God and to His holy will. 6
If, in
view of peculiar circumstances obtaining among peoples, special civil
recognition is given to one religious community in the constitutional order of
society, it is at the same time imperative that the right of all citizens and
religious communities to religious freedom should be recognized and made
effective in practice.
Finally,
government is to see to it that equality of citizens before the law, which is
itself an element of the common good, is never violated, whether openly or
covertly, for religious reasons. Nor is there to be discrimination among
citizens.
It
follows that a wrong is done when government imposes upon its people, by force
or fear or other means, the profession or repudiation of any religion, or when
it hinders men from joining or leaving a religious community. All the more is
it a violation of the will of God and of the sacred rights of the person and
the family of nations when force is brought to bear in any way in order to
destroy or repress religion, either in the whole of mankind or in a particular
country or in a definite community.
7.
The right to religious freedom is exercised in human society: hence its
exercise is subject to certain regulatory norms. In the use of all freedoms the
moral principle of personal and social responsibility is to be observed. In the
exercise of their rights, individual men and social groups are bound by the moral
law to have respect both for the rights of others and for their own duties
toward others and for the common welfare of all. Men are to deal with their
fellows in justice and civility.
Furthermore,
society has the right to defend itself against possible abuses committed on the
pretext of freedom of religion. It is the special duty of government to provide
this protection. However, government is not to act in an arbitrary fashion or
in an unfair spirit of partisanship. Its action is to be controlled by juridical
norms which are in conformity with the objective moral order. These norms arise
out of the need for the effective safeguard of the rights of all citizens and
for the peaceful settlement of conflicts of rights, also out of the need for an
adequate care of genuine public peace, which comes about when men live together
in good order and in true justice, and finally out of the need for a proper
guardianship of public morality.
These
matters constitute the basic component of the common welfare: they are what is
meant by public order. For the rest, the usages of society are to be the usages
of freedom in their full range: that is, the freedom of man is to be respected
as far as possible and is not to be curtailed except when and insofar as
necessary.
8.
Many pressures are brought to bear upon the men of our day, to the point where
the danger arises lest they lose the possibility of acting on their own
judgment. On the other hand, not a few can be found who seem inclined to use
the name of freedom as the pretext for refusing to submit to authority and for
making light of the duty of obedience. Wherefore this Vatican Council urges
everyone, especially those who are charged with the task of educating others,
to do their utmost to form men who, on the one hand, will respect the moral
order and be obedient to lawful authority, and on the other hand, will be
lovers of true freedom-men, in other words, who will come to decisions on their
own judgment and in the light of truth, govern their activities with a sense of
responsibility, and strive after what is true and right, willing always to join
with others in cooperative effort.
Religious
freedom therefore ought to have this further purpose and aim, namely, that men
may come to act with greater responsibility in fulfilling their duties in
community life.
9.
The declaration of this Vatican Council on the right of man to religious
freedom has its foundation in the dignity of the person, whose exigencies have
come to be are fully known to human reason through centuries of experience.
What is more, this doctrine of freedom has roots in divine revelation, and for
this reason Christians are bound to respect it all the more conscientiously.
Revelation does not indeed affirm in so many words the right of man to immunity
from external coercion in matters religious. It does, however, disclose the
dignity of the human person in its full dimensions. It gives evidence of the
respect which Christ showed toward the freedom with which man is to fulfill his
duty of belief in the word of God and it gives us lessons in the spirit which
disciples of such a Master ought to adopt and continually follow. Thus further
light is cast upon the general principles upon which the doctrine of this
declaration on religious freedom is based. In particular, religious freedom in
society is entirely consonant with the freedom of the act of Christian faith.
10.
It is one of the major tenets of Catholic doctrine that man's response to God
in faith must be free: no one therefore is to be forced to embrace the
Christian faith against his own will.8 This doctrine is contained in
the word of God and it was constantly proclaimed by the Fathers of the
Church.7 The act of faith is of its very nature a free act. Man,
redeemed by Christ the Savior and through Christ Jesus called to be God's
adopted son,9 cannot give his adherence to God revealing Himself
unless, under the drawing of the Father,10 he offers to God the
reasonable and free submission of faith. It is therefore completely in accord
with the nature of faith that in matters religious every manner of coercion on
the part of men should be excluded. In consequence, the principle of religious
freedom makes no small contribution to the creation of an environment in which
men can without hindrance be invited to the Christian faith, embrace it of
their own free will, and profess it effectively in their whole manner of life.
11.
God calls men to serve Him in spirit and in truth, hence they are bound in
conscience but they stand under no compulsion. God has regard for the dignity
of the human person whom He Himself created and man is to be guided by his own
judgment and he is to enjoy freedom. This truth appears at its height in Christ
Jesus, in whom God manifested Himself and His ways with men. Christ is at once
our Master and our Lord11 and also meek and humble of heart.12
In attracting and inviting His disciples He used patience.13 He wrought
miracles to illuminate His teaching and to establish its truth, but His
intention was to rouse faith in His hearers and to confirm them in faith, not
to exert coercion upon them.14 He did indeed denounce the unbelief of
some who listened to Him, but He left vengeance to God in expectation of the
day of judgment.15 When He sent His Apostles into the world, He said to
them: "He who believes and is baptized will be saved. He who does not
believe will be condemned" (Mark 16:16). But He Himself, noting that the
cockle had been sown amid the wheat, gave orders that both should be allowed to
grow until the harvest time, which will come at the end of the world.16
He refused to be a political messiah, ruling by force:17 He preferred to
call Himself the Son of Man, who came "to serve and to give his life as a
ransom for the many" (Mark 10:45). He showed Himself the perfect servant
of God,18 who "does not break the bruised reed nor extinguish the
smoking flax" (Matt. 12:20).
He acknowledged
the power of government and its rights, when He commanded that tribute be given
to Caesar: but He gave clear warning that the higher rights of God are to be
kept inviolate: "Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's and to God
the things that are God's" (Matt. 22:21). In the end, when He completed on
the cross the work of redemption whereby He achieved salvation and true freedom
for men, He brought His revelation to completion. For He bore witness to the
truth,19 but He refused to impose the truth by force on those who spoke
against it. Not by force of blows does His rule assert its claims.20 It
is established by witnessing to the truth and by hearing the truth, and it
extends its dominion by the love whereby Christ, lifted up on the cross, draws
all men to Himself.21
Taught by
the word and example of Christ, the Apostles followed the same way. From the
very origins of the Church the disciples of Christ strove to convert men to
faith in Christ as the Lord; not, however, by the use of coercion or of devices
unworthy of the Gospel, but by the power, above all, of the word of
God.22 Steadfastly they proclaimed to all the plan of God our Savior,
"who wills that all men should be saved and come to the acknowledgment of
the truth" (1 Tim. 2:4). At the same time, however, they showed respect
for those of weaker stuff, even though they were in error, and thus they made
it plain that "each one of us is to render to God an account of
himself" (Romans 14:12),23 and for that reason is bound to obey
his conscience. Like Christ Himself, the Apostles were unceasingly bent upon
bearing witness to the truth of God, and they showed the fullest measure of
boldness in "speaking the word with confidence" (Acts 4:31)
24 before the people and their rulers. With a firm faith they held that
the Gospel is indeed the power of God unto salvation for all who
believe.25 Therefore they rejected all "carnal weapons:26
they followed the example of the gentleness and respectfulness of Christ and
they preached the word of God in the full confidence that there was resident in
this word itself a divine power able to destroy all the forces arrayed against
God27 and bring men to faith in Christ and to His service.28 As
the Master, so too the Apostles recognized legitimate civil authority.
"For there is no power except from God," the Apostle teaches, and
thereafter commands: "Let everyone be subject to higher authorities.... He
who resists authority resists God's ordinance" (Romans 13:1-5).29
At the same time, however, they did not hesitate to speak out against governing
powers which set themselves in opposition to the holy will of God: "It is
necessary to obey God rather than men" (Acts 5:29).30 This is the
way along which the martyrs and other faithful have walked through all ages and
over all the earth.
12.
In faithfulness therefore to the truth of the Gospel, the Church is following
the way of Christ and the apostles when she recognizes and gives support to the
principle of religious freedom as befitting the dignity of man and as being in
accord with divine revelation. Throughout the ages the Church has kept safe and
handed on the doctrine received from the Master and from the apostles. In the
life of the People of God, as it has made its pilgrim way through the
vicissitudes of human history, there has at times appeared a way of acting that
was hardly in accord with the spirit of the Gospel or even opposed to it.
Nevertheless, the doctrine of the Church that no one is to be coerced into
faith has always stood firm.
Thus the
leaven of the Gospel has long been about its quiet work in the minds of men,
and to it is due in great measure the fact that in the course of time men have
come more widely to recognize their dignity as persons, and the conviction has
grown stronger that the person in society is to be kept free from all manner of
coercion in matters religious.
13.
Among the things that concern the good of the Church and indeed the welfare of
society here on earth-things therefore that are always and everywhere to be
kept secure and defended against all injury-this certainly is preeminent,
namely, that the Church should enjoy that full measure of freedom which her
care for the salvation of men requires.31 This is a sacred freedom,
because the only-begotten Son endowed with it the Church which He purchased
with His blood. Indeed it is so much the property of the Church that to act
against it is to act against the will of God. The freedom of the Church is the
fundamental principle in what concerns the relations between the Church and
governments and the whole civil order.
In human
society and in the face of government the Church claims freedom for herself in
her character as a spiritual authority, established by Christ the Lord, upon
which there rests, by divine mandate, the duty of going out into the whole
world and preaching the Gospel to every creature.32 The Church also
claims freedom for herself in her character as a society of men who have the
right to live in society in accordance with the precepts of the Christian
faith.33
In turn,
where the principle of religious freedom is not only proclaimed in words or
simply incorporated in law but also given sincere and practical application,
there the Church succeeds in achieving a stable situation of right as well as
of fact and the independence which is necessary for the fulfillment of her
divine mission.
This
independence is precisely what the authorities of the Church claim in
society.34 At the same time, the Christian faithful, in common with all
other men, possess the civil right not to be hindered in leading their lives in
accordance with their consciences. Therefore, a harmony exists between the
freedom of the Church and the religious freedom which is to be recognized as
the right of all men and communities and sanctioned by constitutional law.
14.
In order to be faithful to the divine command, "teach all nations"
(Matt. 28:19-20), the Catholic Church must work with all urgency and concern
"that the word of God be spread abroad and glorified" (2 Thess. 3:1).
Hence the Church earnestly begs of its children that, "first of all,
supplications, prayers, petitions, acts of thanksgiving be made for all men....
For this is good and agreeable in the sight of God our Savior, who wills that
all men be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth" (1 Tim. 2:1-4).
In the formation of their consciences, the Christian faithful ought carefully
to attend to the sacred and certain doctrine of the Church.35 For the
Church is, by the will of Christ, the teacher of the truth. It is her duty to
give utterance to, and authoritatively to teach, that truth which is Christ
Himself, and also to declare and confirm by her authority those principles of
the moral order which have their origins in human nature itself. Furthermore,
let Christians walk in wisdom in the face of those outside, "in the Holy
Spirit, in unaffected love, in the word of truth" (2 Cor. 6:6-7), and let
them be about their task of spreading the light of life with all
confidence36 and apostolic courage, even to the shedding of their
blood.
The
disciple is bound by a grave obligation toward Christ, his Master, ever more
fully to understand the truth received from Him, faithfully to proclaim it, and
vigorously to defend it, never-be it understood-having recourse to means that
are incompatible with the spirit of the Gospel. At the same time, the charity
of Christ urges him to love and have prudence and patience in his dealings with
those who are in error or in ignorance with regard to the faith.37 All
is to be taken into account-the Christian duty to Christ, the life-giving word
which must be proclaimed, the rights of the human person, and the measure of
grace granted by God through Christ to men who are invited freely to accept and
profess the faith.
15.
The fact is that men of the present day want to be able freely to profess their
religion in private and in public. Indeed, religious freedom has already been
declared to be a civil right in most constitutions, and it is solemnly
recognized in international documents.38 The further fact is that forms
of government still exist under which, even though freedom of religious worship
receives constitutional recognition, the powers of government are engaged in
the effort to deter citizens from the profession of religion and to make life
very difficult and dangerous for religious communities.
This
council greets with joy the first of these two facts as among the signs of the
times. With sorrow, however, it denounces the other fact, as only to be
deplored. The council exhorts Catholics, and it directs a plea to all men, most
carefully to consider how greatly necessary religious freedom is, especially in
the present condition of the human family. All nations are coming into even
closer unity. Men of different cultures and religions are being brought
together in closer relationships. There is a growing consciousness of the
personal responsibility that every man has. All this is evident. Consequently,
in order that relationships of peace and harmony be established and maintained
within the whole of mankind, it is necessary that religious freedom be
everywhere provided with an effective constitutional guarantee and that respect
be shown for the high duty and right of man freely to lead his religious life
in society.
May the
God and Father of all grant that the human family, through careful observance
of the principle of religious freedom in society, may be brought by the grace
of Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit to the sublime and unending and
"glorious freedom of the sons of God" (Rom. 8:21).
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