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To Our Well-beloved Sons, Francois Marie Richard, Cardinal Archbishop of Paris;
Victor Lucien Lecot, Cardinal Archbishop of Bordeaux; Pierre Hector Couillie,
Cardinal Archbishop of Lyons; Joseph Guillaume Laboure, Cardinal Archbishop of
Rennes; and to all Our Venerable Brethren, the Archbishops and Bishops, and to
all the Clergy and People of France.
Venerable Brethren, Well Beloved Sons, Health and the Apostolic
Benediction.
Our soul is full of sorrowful solicitude and Our heart
overflows with grief, when Our thoughts dwell upon you. How, indeed, could it
be otherwise, immediately after the promulgation of that law which, by
sundering violently the old ties that linked your nation with the Apostolic
See, creates for the Catholic Church in France a situation unworthy of her and
ever to be lamented? That is, beyond question, an event of the gravest import,
and one that must be deplored by all the right-minded, for it is as disastrous
to society as it is to religion; but it is an event which can have surprised
nobody who has paid any attention to the religious policy followed in France of
late years. For you, Venerable Brethren, it will certainly have been nothing
new or strange, witnesses as you have been of the many dreadful blows aimed
from time to time by the public authority at religion. You have seen the sanctity
and the inviolability of Christian marriage outraged by legislative acts in
formal contradiction with them; the schools and hospitals laicized; clerics
torn from their studies and from ecclesiastical discipline to be subjected to
military service; the religious congregations dispersed and despoiled, and
their members for the most part reduced to the last stage of destitution. Other
legal measures which you all know have followed: the law ordaining public
prayers at the beginning of each Parliamentary Session and of the assizes has
been abolished; the signs of mourning traditionally observed on board the ships
on Good Friday suppressed; the religious character effaced from the judicial
oath; all actions and emblems serving in any way to recall the idea of religion
banished from the courts, the schools, the army, the navy, and in a word from
all public establishments. These measures and others still which, one after
another really separated the Church from the State, were but so many steps
designedly made to arrive at complete and official separation, as the authors
of them have publicly and frequently admitted.
2. On
the other hand the Holy See has spared absolutely no means to avert this great
calamity. While it was untiring in warning those who were at the head of
affairs in France, and in conjuring them over and over again to weigh well the
immensity of the evils that would infallibly result from their separatist
policy, it at the same time lavished upon France the most striking proofs of
indulgent affection. It has then reason to hope that gratitude would have
stayed those politicians on their downward path, and brought them at last to
relinquish their designs. But all has been in vain - the attentions, good
offices, and efforts of Our Predecessor and Ourself. The enemies of religion
have succeeded at last in effecting by violence what they have long desired, in
defiance of your rights as a Catholic nation and of the wishes of all who think
rightly. At a moment of such gravity for the Church, therefore, filled with the
sense of Our Apostolic responsibility, We have considered it Our duty to raise
Our voice and to open Our heart to you, Venerable Brethren, and to your clergy
and people - to all of you whom We have ever cherished with special affection
but whom We now, as is only right, love more tenderly than ever.
3. That
the State must be separated from the Church is a thesis absolutely false, a
most pernicious error. Based, as it is, on the principle that the State must
not recognize any religious cult, it is in the first place guilty of a great
injustice to God; for the Creator of man is also the Founder of human
societies, and preserves their existence as He preserves our own. We owe Him,
therefore, not only a private cult, but a public and social worship to honor
Him. Besides, this thesis is an obvious negation of the supernatural order. It
limits the action of the State to the pursuit of public prosperity during this
life only, which is but the proximate object of political societies; and it
occupies itself in no fashion (on the plea that this is foreign to it) with
their ultimate object which is man's eternal happiness after this short life
shall have run its course. But as the present order of things is temporary and
subordinated to the conquest of man's supreme and absolute welfare, it follows
that the civil power must not only place no obstacle in the way of this
conquest, but must aid us in effecting it. The same thesis also upsets the
order providentially established by God in the world, which demands a
harmonious agreement between the two societies. Both of them, the civil and the
religious society, although each exercises in its own sphere its authority over
them. It follows necessarily that there are many things belonging to them in
common in which both societies must have relations with one another. Remove the
agreement between Church and State, and the result will be that from these
common matters will spring the seeds of disputes which will become acute on both
sides; it will become more difficult to see where the truth lies, and great
confusion is certain to arise. Finally, this thesis inflicts great injury on
society itself, for it cannot either prosper or last long when due place is not
left for religion, which is the supreme rule and the sovereign mistress in all
questions touching the rights and the duties of men. Hence the Roman Pontiffs
have never ceased, as circumstances required, to refute and condemn the
doctrine of the separation of Church and State. Our illustrious predecessor,
Leo XIII, especially, has frequently and magnificently expounded Catholic
teaching on the relations which should subsist between the two societies.
"Between them," he says, "there must necessarily be a suitable
union, which may not improperly be compared with that existing between body and
soul. - Quaedam intercedat necesse est ordinata colligatio (inter illas)
quae quidem conjunctioni non immerito comparatur, per quam anima et corpus in
homine copulantur."He proceeds: "Human societies cannot, without
becoming criminal, act as if God did not exist or refuse to concern themselves
with religion, as though it were something foreign to them, or of no purpose to
them.... As for the Church, which has God Himself for its author, to exclude
her from the active life of the nation, from the laws, the education of the
young, the family, is to commit a great and pernicious error. - Civitates
non possunt, citra scellus, gerere se tamquam si Deus omnino non esset, aut
curam religionis velut alienam nihilque profuturam abjicere.... Ecclesiam vero,
quam Deus ipse constituit, ab actione vitae excludere, a legibus, ab
institutione adolescentium, a societate domestica, magnus et perniciousus est
error."1
4. And
if it is true that any Christian State does something eminently disastrous and
reprehensible in separating itself from the Church, how much more deplorable is
it that France, of all nations in the world, would have entered on this policy;
France which has been during the course of centuries the object of such great
and special predilection on the part of the Apostolic See whose fortunes and
glories have ever been closely bound up with the practice of Christian virtue
and respect for religion. Leo XIII had truly good reason to say: "France
cannot forget that Providence has united its destiny with the Holy See by ties
too strong and too old that she should ever wish to break them. And it is this
union that has been the source of her real greatness and her purest glories....
To disturb this traditional union would be to deprive the nation of part of her
moral force and great influence in the world."2
5. And
the ties that consecrated this union should have been doubly inviolable from
the fact that they were sanctioned by sworn treaties. The Concordat entered
upon by the Sovereign Pontiff and the French Government was, like all treaties
of the same kind concluded between States, a bilateral contract binding on both
parties to it. The Roman Pontiff on the one side and the Head of the French
Nation on the other solemnly stipulated both for themselves and their
successors to maintain inviolate the pact they signed. Hence the same rule
applied to the Concordat as to all international treaties, viz., the law of
nations which prescribes that it could not be in any way annulled by one alone
of the contracting parties. The Holy See has always observed with scrupulous
fidelity the engagements it has made, and it has always required the same
fidelity from the State. This is a truth which no impartial judge can deny. Yet
today the State, by its sole authority, abrogates the solemn pact it signed.
Thus it violates its sworn promise. To break with the Church, to free itself
from her friendship, it has stopped at nothing, and has not hesitated to
outrage the Apostolic See by this violation of the law of nations, and to
disturb the social and political order itself - for the reciprocal security of
nations in their relations with one another depends mainly on the inviolable
fidelity and the sacred respect with which they observe their treaties.
6. The
extent of the injury inflicted on the Apostolic See by the unilateral
abrogation of the Concordat is notably aggravated by the manner in which the
State has effected this abrogation. It is a principle admitted without
controversy, and universally observed by all nations, that the breaking of a
treaty should be previously and regularly notified, in a clear and explicit
manner, to the other contracting party by the one which intends to put an end
to the treaty. Yet not only has no notification of this kind been made to the
Holy See, but no indication whatever on the subject has been conveyed to it.
Thus the French Government has not hesitated to treat the Apostolic See without
ordinary respect and without the courtesy that is never omitted even in dealing
with the smallest States. Its officials, representatives though they were of a
Catholic nation, have heaped contempt on the dignity and power of the Sovereign
Pontiff, the Supreme Head of the Church, whereas they should have shown more
respect to this power than to any other political power - and a respect all the
greater from the fact that the Holy See is concerned with the eternal welfare
of souls, and that its mission extends everywhere.
7. If We
now proceed to examine in itself the law that has just been promulgated, We
find, therein, fresh reason for protesting still more energetically. When the
State broke the links of the Concordat, and separated itself from the Church,
it ought, as a natural consequence, to have left her independence, and allowed
her to enjoy peacefully that liberty, granted by the common law, which it
pretended to assign to her. Nothing of the kind has been done. We recognize in
the law many exceptional and odiously restrictive provisions, the effect of
which is to place the Church under the domination of the civil power. It has
been a source of bitter grief to Us to see the State thus encroach on matters
which are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Church; and We bewail this
all the more from the fact that the State, dead to all sense of equity and
justice, has thereby created for the Church of France a situation grievous,
crushing, and oppressive of her most sacred rights.
8. For
the provisions of the new law are contrary to the constitution on which the
Church was founded by Jesus Christ. The Scripture teaches us, and the tradition
of the Fathers confirms the teaching, that the Church is the mystical body of
Christ, ruled by the Pastors and Doctors (I Ephes. iv. II
sqq.) - a society of men containing within its own fold chiefs who have full
and perfect powers for ruling, teaching and judging (Matt. xxviii.
18-20; xvi. 18, 19; xviii. 17; Tit. ii. 15; 11. Cor. x. 6; xiii.
10. & c.) It follows that the Church is essentially an unequal
society, that is, a society comprising two categories of per sons, the Pastors
and the flock, those who occupy a rank in the different degrees of the
hierarchy and the multitude of the faithful. So distinct are these categories
that with the pastoral body only rests the necessary right and authority for
promoting the end of the society and directing all its members towards that
end; the one duty of the multitude is to allow themselves to be led, and, like
a docile flock, to follow the Pastors. St. Cyprian, Martyr, expresses this
truth admirably when he writes: "Our Lord, whose precepts we must revere
and observe, in establishing the episcopal dignity and the nature of the
Church, addresses Peter thus in the gospel: Ego dico tibi, quia tu es
Petrus, etc. Hence, through all the vicissitudes of time and circumstance,
the plan of the episcopate and the constitution of the Church have always been
found to be so framed that the Church rests on the Bishops, and that all its
acts are ruled by them. - Dominus Noster, cujus praecepta metuere et servare
debemus, episcopi honorem et ecclesiae suae rationem disponens, in evangelio
loquitur et dicit Petro: Ego dico tibi quia tu es Petrus, etc.... Inde per
temporum et successionum vices Episcoporum ordinatio et Ecclesiae ratio
decurrit, ut Ecclesia super Episcopos constituatur et omnis actus Ecclesiae per
eosdem praepositos gubernetur" (St. Cyprian, Epist. xxvii.-xxviii. ad
Lapsos ii. i.) St. Cyprian affirms that all this is based on Divine law, divina
lege fundatum.The Law of Separation, in opposition to these principles,
assigns the administration and the supervision of public worship not to the
hierarchical body divinely instituted by Our Savior, but to an association
formed of laymen. To this association it assigns a special form and a juridical
personality, and considers it alone as having rights and responsibilities in
the eyes of the law in all matters appertaining to religious worship. It is
this association which is to have the use of the churches and sacred edifices,
which is to possess ecclesiastical property, real and personal, which is to
have at its disposition (though only for a time) the residences of the Bishops
and priests and the seminaries; which is to administer the property, regulate
collections, and receive the alms and the legacies destined for religious
worship. As for the hierarchical body of Pastors, the law is completely silent.
And if it does prescribe that the associations of worship are to be constituted
in harmony with the general rules of organization of the cult whose existence
they are designed to assure, it is none the less true that care has been taken
to declare that in all disputes which may arise relative to their property the
Council of State is the only competent tribunal. These associations of worship
are therefore placed in such a state of dependence on the civil authority that
the ecclesiastical authority will, clearly, have no power over them. It is
obvious at a glance that all these provisions seriously violate the rights of
the Church, and are in opposition with her Divine constitution. Moreover, the
law on these points is not set forth in clear and precise terms, but is left so
vague and so open to arbitrary decisions that its mere interpretation is well
calculated to be productive of the greatest trouble.
9. Besides,
nothing more hostile to the liberty of the Church than this Law could well be
conceived. For, with the existence of the associations of worship, the Law of
Separation hinders the Pastors from exercising the plenitude of their authority
and of their office over the faithful; when it attributes to the Council of
State supreme jurisdiction over these associations and submits them to a whole
series of prescriptions not contained in the common law, rendering their
formation difficult and their continued existence more difficult still; when,
after proclaiming the liberty of public worship, it proceeds to restrict its exercise
by numerous exceptions; when it despoils the Church of the internal regulation
of the churches in order to invest the State with this function; when it
thwarts the preaching of Catholic faith and morals and sets up a severe and
exceptional penal code for clerics - when it sanctions all these provisions and
many others of the same kind in which wide scope is left to arbitrary ruling,
does it not place the Church in a position of humiliating subjection and, under
the pretext of protecting public order, deprive peaceable citizens, who still
constitute the vast majority in France, of the sacred right of practicing their
religion? Hence it is not merely by restricting the exercise of worship (to
which the Law of Separation falsely reduces the essence of religion) that the
State injures the Church, but by putting obstacles to her influence, always a
beneficent influence over the people, and by paralyzing her activity in a
thousand different ways. Thus, for instance, the State has not been satisfied
with depriving the Church of the Religious Orders, those precious auxiliaries
of hers in her sacred mission, in teaching and education, in charitable works,
but it must also deprive her of the resources which constitute the human means
necessary for her existence and the accomplishment of her mission.
10. In
addition to the wrongs and injuries to which we have so far referred, the Law
of Separation also violates and tramples under foot the rights of property of
the Church. In defiance of all justice, it despoils the Church of a great
portion of a patrimony which belongs to her by titles as numerous as they are
sacred; it suppresses and annuls all the pious foundations consecrated, with
perfect legality, to divine worship and to suffrages for the dead. The
resources furnished by Catholic liberality for the maintenance of Catholic
schools, and the working of various charitable associations connected with
religion, have been transferred to lay associations in which it would be idle
to seek for a vestige of religion. In this it violates not only the rights of
the Church, but the formal and explicit purpose of the donors and testators. It
is also a subject of keen grief to Us that the law, in contempt of all right,
proclaims as property of the State, Departments or Communes the ecclesiastical
edifices dating from before the Concordat. True, the Law concedes the
gratuitous use, for an indefinite period, of these to the associations of
worship, but it surrounds the concession with so many and so serious reserves
that in reality it leaves to the public powers the full disposition of them.
Moreover, We entertain the gravest fears for the sanctity of those temples, the
august refuges of the Divine Majesty and endeared by a thousand memories to the
piety of the French people. For they are certainly in danger of profanation if
they fall into the hands of laymen.
11. When
the law, by the suppression of the Budget of Public Worship, exonerates the
State from the obligation of providing for the expenses of worship, it violates
an engagement contracted in a diplomatic convention, and at the same time
commits a great injustice. On this point there cannot be the slightest doubt,
for the documents of history offer the clearest confirmation of it. When the
French Government assumed in the Concordat the obligation of supplying the
clergy with a revenue sufficient for their decent subsistence and for the
requirements of public worship, the concession was not a merely gratuitous one
- it was an obligation assumed by the State to make restitution, at least in
part, to the Church whose property had been confiscated during the first
Revolution. On the other hand when the Roman Pontiff in this same Concordat
bound himself and his successors, for the sake of peace, not to disturb the
possessors of property thus taken from the Church, he did so only on one
condition: that the French Government should bind itself in perpetuity to endow
the clergy suitably and to provide for the expenses of divine worship.
12. Finally,
there is another point on which We cannot be silent. Besides the injury it
inflicts on the interests of the Church, the new law is destined to be most
disastrous to your country. For there can be no doubt but that it lamentably
destroys union and concord. And yet without such union and concord no nation
can live long or prosper. Especially in the present state of Europe, the
maintenance of perfect harmony must be the most ardent wish of everybody in
France who loves his country and has its salvation at heart. As for Us,
following the example of Our Predecessor and inheriting from him a special
predilection for your nation, We have not confined Ourself to striving for the
preservation of full rights of the religion of your forefathers, but We have
always, with that fraternal peace of which religion is certainly the strongest
bond ever before Our eyes, endeavored to promote unity among you. We cannot,
therefore, without the keenest sorrow observe that the French Government has
just done a deed which inflames on religious grounds passions already too
dangerously excited, and which, therefore, seems to be calculated to plunge the
whole country into disorder.
13. Hence,
mindful of Our Apostolic charge and conscious of the imperious duty incumbent
upon Us of defending and preserving against all assaults the full and absolute
integrity of the sacred and inviolable rights of the Church, We do, by virtue
of the supreme authority which God has confided to Us, and on the grounds above
set forth, reprove and condemn the law voted in France for the separation of
Church and State, as deeply unjust to God whom it denies, and as laying down
the principle that the Republic recognizes no cult. We reprove and condemn it
as violating the natural law, the law of nations, and fidelity to treaties; as
contrary to the Divine constitution of the Church, to her essential rights and
to her liberty; as destroying justice and trampling underfoot the rights of
property which the Church has acquired by many titles and, in addition, by
virtue of the Concordat. We reprove and condemn it as gravely offensive to the
dignity of this Apostolic See, to Our own person, to the Episcopacy, and to the
clergy and all the Catholics of France. Therefore, We protest solemnly and with
all Our strength against the introduction, the voting and the promulgation of
this law, declaring that it can never be alleged against the imprescriptible
rights of the Church.
14. We
had to address these grave words to you, Venerable Brethren, to the people of
France and of the whole Christian world, in order to make known in its true
light what has been done. Deep indeed is Our distress when We look into the
future and see there the evils that this law is about to bring upon a people so
tenderly loved by Us. And We are still more grievously affected by the thought
of the trials, sufferings and tribulations of all kinds that are to be visited
on you, Venerable Brethren, and on all your clergy. Yet, in the midst of these
crushing cares, We are saved from excessive affliction and discouragement when
Our mind turns to Divine Providence, so rich in mercies, and to the hope, a
thousand times verified, that Jesus Christ will not abandon His Church or ever
deprive her of His unfailing support. We are, then, far from feeling any fear
for the Church. Her strength and her stability are Divine, as the experience of
ages triumphantly proves. The world knows of the endless calamities, each more
terrible than the last, that have fallen upon her during this long course of
time - but where all purely human institutions must inevitably have succumbed,
the Church has drawn from her trials only fresh strength and richer
fruitfulness. As to the persecuting laws passed against her, history teaches,
even in recent times, and France itself confirms the lesson, that though forged
by hatred, they are always at last wisely abrogated, when they are found to be
prejudicial to the interests of the State. God grant those who are at present
in power in France may soon follow the example set for them in this matter by
their predecessors. God grant that they may, amid the applause of all good
people, make haste to restore to religion, the source of civilization and
prosperity, the honor which is due to her together with her liberty.
15. Meanwhile,
and as long as oppressive persecution continues, the children of the Church, putting
on the arms of light, must act with all their strength in defense of Truth
and justice - it is their duty always, and today more than ever. To this holy
contest you, Venerable Brethren, who are to be the teachers and guides, will
bring all the force of that vigilant and indefatigable zeal of which the French
Episcopate has, to its honor, given so many well-known proofs. But above all
things We wish, for it is of the greatest importance, that in all the plans you
undertake for the defense of the Church, you to endeavor to ensure the most
perfect union of hearts and wills. It is Our firm intention to give you at a
fitting time practical instructions which shall serve as a sure rule of conduct
for you amid the great difficulties of the present time. And We are certain in
advance that you will faithfully adopt them. Meanwhile continue the salutary
work you are doing; strive to kindle piety among the people as much as
possible; promote and popularize more and more the teaching of Christian
doctrine; preserve the souls entrusted to you from the errors and seductions
they meet on all sides; instruct, warn, encourage, console your flocks, and
perform for them all the duties imposed on you by your pastoral office. In this
work you will certainly find indefatigable collaborators in your clergy. They
are rich in men remarkable for piety, knowledge, and devotion to the Holy See,
and We know that they are always ready to devote themselves unreservedly under
your direction to the cause of the triumph of the Church and the eternal
salvation of souls. The clergy will also certainly understand that during the
present turmoil they must be animated by the sentiments professed long ago by
the Apostles, rejoicing that they are found worthy to suffer opprobrium for the
name of Jesus, "Gaudentes quoniam digni habiti sunt pro nomine Jesu
contumeliam pati" (Rom. xiii. 12). They will therefore stoutly
stand up for the rights and liberty of the Church, but without offense to
anybody. Nay more, in their earnestness to preserve charity, as the ministers
of Jesus Christ are especially bound to do, they will reply to iniquity with
justice, to outrage with mildness, and to ill-treatment with benefits.
16. And
now We turn to you, Catholics of France, asking you to receive Our words as a
testimony of that most tender affection with which We have never ceased to love
your country, and as comfort to you in the midst of the terrible calamities
through which you will have to pass. You know the aim of the impious sects
which are placing your heads under their yoke, for they themselves have
proclaimed with cynical boldness that they are determined to "de
Catholicise" France. They want to root out from your hearts the last
vestige of the faith which covered your fathers with glory, which made your
country great and prosperous among nations, which sustains you in your trials,
which brings tranquillity and peace to your homes, and which opens to you the
way to eternal happiness. You feel that you must defend this faith with your
whole souls. But be not deluded - all labor and effort will be useless if you
endeavor to repulse the assaults made on you without being firmly united.
Remove, therefore, any causes of disunion that may exist among you. And do what
is necessary to ensure that your unity may be as strong as it should be among
men who are fighting for the same cause, especially when this cause is of those
for the triumph of which everybody should be willing to sacrifice something of
his own opinions. If you wish, within the limits of your strength and according
to your imperious duty, to save the religion of your ancestors from the dangers
to which it is exposed, it is of the first importance that you show a large
degree of courage and generosity. We feel sure that you will show this
generosity; and by being charitable towards God's ministers, you will incline
God to be more and more charitable toward yourselves.
17. As
for the defense of religion, if you wish to undertake it in a worthy manner,
and to carry it on perseveringly and efficaciously, two things are first of all
necessary: you must model yourselves so faithfully on the precepts of the
Christian law that all your actions and your entire lives may do honor to the
faith you profess, and then you must be closely united with those whose special
office it is to watch over religion, with your priests, your bishops, and above
all with this Apostolic See, which is the pivot of the Catholic faith and of
all that can be done in its name. Thus armed for the fray, go forth fearlessly
for the defense of the Church; but take care that your trust is placed entirely
in God, for whose cause you are working, and never cease to pray to Him for
help.
18. For
Us, as long as you have to struggle against danger, We will be heart and soul
in the midst of you; labors, pains, sufferings - We will share them all with
you; and pouring forth to God, who has founded the Church and ever preserves
her, Our most humble and instant prayers, We will implore Him to bend a glance
of mercy on France, to save her from the storms that have been let loose upon
her, and, by the intercession of Mary Immaculate, to restore soon to her the
blessings of calm and peace.
19. As a
pledge of these heavenly gifts and a proof of Our special predilection, We
impart with all Our heart the Apostolic Benediction to you, Venerable Brethren,
to your clergy and to the entire French people.
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, on February 11 in the year 1906, the third
of Our Pontificate.
PIUS X
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