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DECLARATION ON CHRISTIAN EDUCATION
GRAVISSIMUM
EDUCATIONIS PROCLAIMED BY
HIS HOLINESS POPE PAUL VI ON OCTOBER 28,
1965
INTRODUCTION
The Sacred Ecumenical Council has considered with care how extremely
important education is in the life of man and how its influence ever grows in
the social progress of this age.(1)
Indeed, the circumstances of our time have made it easier and at once more
urgent to educate young people and, what is more, to continue the education of
adults. Men are more aware of their own dignity and position; more and more they
want to take an active part in social and especially in economic and political
life.(2) Enjoying more leisure, as they sometimes do, men find that the
remarkable development of technology and scientific investigation and the new
means of communication offer them an opportunity of attaining more easily their
cultural and spiritual inheritance and of fulfilling one another in the closer
ties between groups and even between peoples.
Consequently, attempts are being made everywhere to promote more education.
The rights of men to an education, particularly the primary rights of children
and parents, are being proclaimed and recognized in public documents.(3) As the
number of pupils rapidly increases, schools are multiplied and expanded far and
wide and other educational institutions are established. New experiments are
conducted in methods of education and teaching. Mighty attempts are being made
to obtain education for all, even though vast numbers of children and young
people are still deprived of even rudimentary training and so many others lack a
suitable education in which truth and love are developed together.
To fulfill the mandate she has received from her divine founder of
proclaiming the mystery of salvation to all men and of restoring all things in
Christ, Holy Mother the Church must be concerned with the whole of man's life,
even the secular part of it insofar as it has a bearing on his heavenly
calling.(4) Therefore she has a role in the progress and development of
education. Hence this sacred synod declares certain fundamental principles of
Christian education especially in schools. These principles will have to be
developed at greater length by a special post-conciliar commission and applied
by episcopal conferences to varying local situations.
1. The Meaning of the Universal Right to an Education
All men of every race, condition and age, since they enjoy the dignity of a
human being, have an inalienable right to an education (5) that is in keeping
with their ultimate goal,(6) their ability, their sex, and the culture and
tradition of their country, and also in harmony with their fraternal association
with other peoples in the fostering of true unity and peace on earth. For a true
education aims at the formation of the human person in the pursuit of his
ultimate end and of the good of the societies of which, as man, he is a member,
and in whose obligations, as an adult, he will share.
Therefore children and young people must be helped, with the aid of the
latest advances in psychology and the arts and science of teaching, to develop
harmoniously their physical, moral and intellectual endowments so that they may
gradually acquire a mature sense of responsibility in striving endlessly to form
their own lives properly and in pursuing true freedom as they surmount the
vicissitudes of life with courage and constancy. Let them be given also, as they
advance in years, a positive and prudent sexual education. Moreover they should
be so trained to take their part in social life that properly instructed in the
necessary and opportune skills they can become actively involved in various
community organizations, open to discourse with others and willing to do their
best to promote the common good.
This sacred synod likewise declares that children and young people have a
right to be motivated to appraise moral values with a right conscience, to
embrace them with a personal adherence, together with a deeper knowledge and
love of God. Consequently it earnestly entreats all those who hold a position of
public authority or who are in charge of education to see to it that youth is
never deprived of this sacred right. It further exhorts the sons of the Church
to give their attention with generosity to the entire field of education, having
especially in mind the need of extending very soon the benefits of a suitable
education and training to everyone in all parts of the world.(7)
2. Christian Education
Since all Christians have become by rebirth of water and the Holy Spirit a
new creature(8) so that they should be called and should be children of God,
they have a right to a Christian education. A Christian education does not
merely strive for the maturing of a human person as just now described, but has
as its principal purpose this goal: that the baptized, while they are gradually
introduced the knowledge of the mystery of salvation, become ever more aware of
the gift of Faith they have received, and that they learn in addition how to
worship God the Father in spirit and truth (cf. John 4:23) especially in
liturgical action, and be conformed in their personal lives according to the new
man created in justice and holiness of truth (Eph. 4:22-24); also that they
develop into perfect manhood, to the mature measure of the fullness of Christ
(cf. Eph. 4:13) and strive for the growth of the Mystical Body; moreover, that
aware of their calling, they learn not only how to bear witness to the hope that
is in them (cf. Peter 3:15) but also how to help in the Christian formation of
the world that takes place when natural powers viewed in the full consideration
of man redeemed by Christ contribute to the good of the whole society.(9)
Wherefore this sacred synod recalls to pastors of souls their most serious
obligation to see to it that all the faithful, but especially the youth who are
the hope of the Church, enjoy this Christian education.(10)
3. The Authors of Education
Since parents have given children their life, they are bound by the most
serious obligation to educate their offspring and therefore must be recognized
as the primary and principal educators.(11) This role in education is so
important that only with difficulty can it be supplied where it is lacking.
Parents are the ones who must create a family atmosphere animated by love and
respect for God and man, in which the well-rounded personal and social education
of children is fostered. Hence the family is the first school of the social
virtues that every society needs. It is particularly in the Christian family,
enriched by the grace and office of the sacrament of matrimony, that children
should be taught from their early years to have a knowledge of God according to
the faith received in Baptism, to worship Him, and to love their neighbor. Here,
too, they find their first experience of a wholesome human society and of the
Church. Finally, it is through the family that they are gradually led to a
companionship with their fellowmen and with the people of God. Let parents,
then, recognize the inestimable importance a truly Christian family has for the
life and progress of God's own people.(12)
The family which has the primary duty of imparting education needs help of
the whole community. In addition, therefore, to the rights of parents and others
to whom the parents entrust a share in the work of education, certain rights and
duties belong indeed to civil society, whose role is to direct what is required
for the common temporal good. Its function is to promote the education of youth
in many ways, namely: to protect the duties and rights of parents and others who
share in education and to give them aid; according to the principle of
subsidiarity, when the endeavors of parents and other societies are lacking, to
carry out the work of education in accordance with the wishes of the parents;
and, moreover, as the common good demands, to build schools and
institutions.(13)
Finally, in a special way, the duty of educating belongs to the Church, not
merely because she must be recognized as a human society capable of educating,
but especially because she has the responsibility of announcing the way of
salvation to all men, of communicating the life of Christ to those who believe,
and, in her unfailing solicitude, of assisting men to be able to come to the
fullness of this life.(14) The Church is bound as a mother to give to these
children of hers an education by which their whole life can be imbued with the
spirit of Christ and at the same time do all she can to promote for all peoples
the complete perfection of the human person, the good of earthly society and the
building of a world that is more human.(15)
4. Various Aids to Christian Education
In fulfilling its educational role, the Church, eager to employ all suitable
aids, is concerned especially about those which are her very own. Foremost among
these is catechetical instruction,(16) which enlightens and strengthens the
faith, nourishes life according to the spirit of Christ, leads to intelligent
and active participation in the liturgical mystery(17) and gives motivation for
apostolic activity. The Church esteems highly and seeks to penetrate and ennoble
with her own spirit also other aids which belong to the general heritage of man
and which are of great influence in forming souls and molding men, such as the
media of communication,(18) various groups for mental and physical development,
youth associations, and, in particular, schools.
5. The Importance of Schools
Among all educational instruments the school has a special importance.(19) It
is designed not only to develop with special care the intellectual faculties but
also to form the ability to judge rightly, to hand on the cultural legacy of
previous generations, to foster a sense of values, to prepare for professional
life. Between pupils of different talents and backgrounds it promotes friendly
relations and fosters a spirit of mutual understanding; and it establishes as it
were a center whose work and progress must be shared together by families,
teachers, associations of various types that foster cultural, civic, and
religious life, as well as by civil society and the entire human community.
Beautiful indeed and of great importance is the vocation of all those who aid
parents in fulfilling their duties and who, as representatives of the human
community, undertake the task of education in schools. This vocation demands
special qualities of mind and heart, very careful preparation, and continuing
readiness to renew and to adapt.
6. The Duties and Rights of Parents
Parents who have the primary and inalienable right and duty to educate their
children must enjoy true liberty in their choice of schools. Consequently, the
public power, which has the obligation to protect and defend the rights of
citizens, must see to it, in its concern for distributive justice, that public
subsidies are paid out in such a way that parents are truly free to choose
according to their conscience the schools they want for their children.(20)
In addition it is the task of the state to see to it that all citizens are
able to come to a suitable share in culture and are properly prepared to
exercise their civic duties and rights. Therefore the state must protect the
right of children to an adequate school education, check on the ability of
teachers and the excellence of their training, look after the health of the
pupils and in general, promote the whole school project. But it must always keep
in mind the principle of subsidiarity so that there is no kind of school
monopoly, for this is opposed to the native rights of the human person, to the
development and spread of culture, to the peaceful association of citizens and
to the pluralism that exists today in ever so many societies.(21)
Therefore this sacred synod exhorts the faithful to assist to their utmost in
finding suitable methods of education and programs of study and in forming
teachers who can give youth a true education. Through the associations of
parents in particular they should further with their assistance all the work of
the school but especially the moral education it must impart.(22)
7. Moral and Religious Education in all Schools
Feeling very keenly the weighty responsibility of diligently caring for the
moral and religious education of all her children, the Church must be present
with her own special affection and help for the great number who are being
trained in schools that are not Catholic. This is possible by the witness of the
lives of those who teach and direct them, by the apostolic action of their
fellow-students,(23) but especially by the ministry of priests and laymen who
give them the doctrine of salvation in a way suited to their age and
circumstances and provide spiritual aid in every way the times and conditions
allow.
The Church reminds parents of the duty that is theirs to arrange and even
demand that their children be able to enjoy these aids and advance in their
Christian formation to a degree that is abreast of their development in secular
subjects. Therefore the Church esteems highly those civil authorities and
societies which, bearing in mind the pluralism of contemporary society and
respecting religious freedom, assist families so that the education of their
children can be imparted in all schools according to the individual moral and
religious principles of the families.(24)
8. Catholic Schools
The influence of the Church in the field of education is shown in a special
manner by the Catholic school. No less than other schools does the Catholic
school pursue cultural goals and the human formation of youth. But its proper
function is to create for the school community a special atmosphere animated by
the Gospel spirit of freedom and charity, to help youth grow according to the
new creatures they were made through baptism as they develop their own
personalities, and finally to order the whole of human culture to the news of
salvation so that the knowledge the students gradually acquire of the world,
life and man is illumined by faith.(25) So indeed the Catholic school, while it
is open, as it must be, to the situation of the contemporary world, leads its
students to promote efficaciously the good of the earthly city and also prepares
them for service in the spread of the Kingdom of God, so that by leading an
exemplary apostolic life they become, as it were, a saving leaven in the human
community.
Since, therefore, the Catholic school can be such an aid to the fulfillment
of the mission of the People of God and to the fostering of the dialogue between
the Church and mankind, to the benefit of both, it retains even in our present
circumstances the utmost importance. Consequently this sacred synod proclaims
anew what has already been taught in several documents of the magisterium,(26)
namely: the right of the Church freely to establish and to conduct schools of
every type and level. And the council calls to mind that the exercise of a right
of this kind contributes in the highest degree to the protection of freedom of
conscience, the rights of parents, as well as to the betterment of culture
itself.
But let teachers recognize that the Catholic school depends upon them almost
entirely for the accomplishment of its goals and programs.(27) They should
therefore be very carefully prepared so that both in secular and religious
knowledge they are equipped with suitable qualifications and also with a
pedagogical skill that is in keeping with the findings of the contemporary
world. Intimately linked in charity to one another and to their students and
endowed with an apostolic spirit, may teachers by their life as much as by their
instruction bear witness to Christ, the unique Teacher. Let them work as
partners with parents and together with them in every phase of education give
due consideration to the difference of sex and the proper ends Divine Providence
assigns to each sex in the family and in society. Let them do all they can to
stimulate their students to act for themselves and even after graduation to
continue to assist them with advice, friendship and by establishing special
associations imbued with the true spirit of the Church. The work of these
teachers, this sacred synod declares, is in the real sense of the word an
apostolate most suited to and necessary for our times and at once a true service
offered to society. The Council also reminds Catholic parents of the duty of
entrusting their children to Catholic schools wherever and whenever it is
possible and of supporting these schools to the best of their ability and of
cooperating with them for the education of their children.(28)
9. Different Types of Catholic Schools
To this concept of a Catholic school all schools that are in any way
dependent on the Church must conform as far as possible, though the Catholic
school is to take on different forms in keeping with local circumstances.(29)
Thus the Church considers very dear to her heart those Catholic schools, found
especially in the areas of the new churches, which are attended also by students
who are not Catholics.
Attention should be paid to the needs of today in establishing and directing
Catholic schools. Therefore, though primary and secondary schools, the
foundation of education, must still be fostered, great importance is to be
attached to those which are required in a particular way by contemporary
conditions, such as: professional(30) and technical schools, centers for
educating adults and promoting social welfare, or for the retarded in need of
special care, and also schools for preparing teachers for religious instruction
and other types of education.
This Sacred Council of the Church earnestly entreats pastors and all the
faithful to spare no sacrifice in helping Catholic schools fulfill their
function in a continually more perfect way, and especially in caring for the
needs of those who are poor in the goods of this world or who are deprived of
the assistance and affection of a family or who are strangers to the gift of
Faith.
10. Catholic Colleges and Universities
The Church is concerned also with schools of a higher level, especially
colleges and universities. In those schools dependent on her she intends that by
their very constitution individual subjects be pursued according to their own
principles, method, and liberty of scientific inquiry, in such a way that an
ever deeper understanding in these fields may be obtained and that, as questions
that are new and current are raised and investigations carefully made according
to the example of the doctors of the Church and especially of St. Thomas
Aquinas,(31) there may be a deeper realization of the harmony of faith and
science. Thus there is accomplished a public, enduring and pervasive influence
of the Christian mind in the furtherance of culture and the students of these
institutions are molded into men truly outstanding in their training, ready to
undertake weighty responsibilities in society and witness to the faith in the
world.(32)
In Catholic universities where there is no faculty of sacred theology there
should be established an institute or chair of sacred theology in which there
should be lectures suited to lay students. Since science advances by means of
the investigations peculiar to higher scientific studies, special attention
should be given in Catholic universities and colleges to institutes that serve
primarily the development of scientific research.
The sacred synod heartily recommends that Catholic colleges and universities
be conveniently located in different parts of the world, but in such a way that
they are outstanding not for their numbers but for their pursuit of knowledge.
Matriculation should be readily available to students of real promise, even
though they be of slender means, especially to students from the newly emerging
nations.
Since the destiny of society and of the Church itself is intimately linked
with the progress of young people pursuing higher studies,(33) the pastors of
the Church are to expend their energies not only on the spiritual life of
students who attend Catholic universities, but, solicitous for the spiritual
formation of all their children, they must see to it, after consultations
between bishops, that even at universities that are not Catholic there should be
associations and university centers under Catholic auspices in which priests,
religious and laity, carefully selected and prepared, should give abiding
spiritual and intellectual assistance to the youth of the university. Whether in
Catholic universities or others, young people of greater ability who seem suited
for teaching or research should be specially helped and encouraged to undertake
a teaching career.
11. Faculties of Sacred Sciences
The Church expects much from the zealous endeavors of the faculties of the
sacred sciences.(34) For to them she entrusts the very serious responsibility of
preparing her own students not only for the priestly ministry, but especially
for teaching in the seats of higher ecclesiastical studies or for promoting
learning on their own or for undertaking the work of a more rigorous
intellectual apostolate. Likewise it is the role of these very faculties to make
more penetrating inquiry into the various aspects of the sacred sciences so that
an ever deepening understanding of sacred Revelation is obtained, the legacy of
Christian wisdom handed down by our forefathers is more fully developed, the
dialogue with our separated brethren and with non-Christians is fostered, and
answers are given to questions arising from the development of doctrine.(35)
Therefore ecclesiastical faculties should reappraise their own laws so that
they can better promote the sacred sciences and those linked with them and, by
employing up-to-date methods and aids, lead their students to more penetrating
inquiry.
12. Coordination to be Fostered in Scholastic Matters
Cooperation is the order of the day. It increases more and more to supply the
demand on a diocesan, national and international level. Since it is altogether
necessary in scholastic matters, every means should be employed to foster
suitable cooperation between Catholic schools, and between these and other
schools that collaboration should be developed which the good of all mankind
requires.(36) From greater coordination and cooperative endeavor greater fruits
will be derived particularly in the area of academic institutions. Therefore in
every university let the various faculties work mutually to this end, insofar as
their goal will permit. In addition, let the universities also endeavor to work
together by promoting international gatherings, by sharing scientific inquiries
with one another, by communicating their discoveries to one another, by having
exchange of professors for a time and by promoting all else that is conducive to
greater assistance.
CONCLUSION
The sacred synod earnestly entreats young people themselves to become aware
of the importance of the work of education and to prepare themselves to take it
up, especially where because of a shortage of teachers the education of youth is
in jeopardy. This same sacred synod, while professing its gratitude to priests,
Religious men and women, and the laity who by their evangelical self-dedication
are devoted to the noble work of education and of schools of every type and
level, exhorts them to persevere generously in the work they have undertaken
and, imbuing their students with the spirit of Christ, to strive to excel in
pedagogy and the pursuit of knowledge in such a way that they not merely advance
the internal renewal of the Church but preserve and enhance its beneficent
influence upon today's world, especially the intellectual world.
NOTES
1. Among many documents illustrating the importance of education confer above
all apostolic letter of Benedict XV, Communes Litteras, April 10, 1919:
A.A.S.
11 (1919) p. 172. Pius XI's apostolic encyclical,
Divini Illius Magistri, Dec.
31, 1929: A.A.S. 22 (1930) pp. 49-86. Pius XII's allocution to the youths of
Italian Catholic Action, April 20, 1946: Discourses and Radio Messages, vol. 8,
pp. 53-57. Allocution to fathers of French families, Sept. 18, 1951: Discourses
and Radio Messages, vol. 13, pp. 241-245. John XXIII's 30th anniversary message
on the publication of the encyclical letter,
Divini Illius Magistri, Dec. 30,
1959: A.A.S. 52 (1960) pp. 57-S9. Paul VI's allocution to members of Federated
Institutes Dependent on Ecclesiastic Authority, Dec. 30, 1963: Encyclicals and
Discourses of His Holiness Paul VI, Rome, 1964, pp. 601-603. Above all are to be
consulted the Acts and Documents of the Second Vatican Council appearing in the
first series of the ante-preparatrory phase. vol. 3. pp. 363-364; 370-371;
373-374.
2. Cf. John XXIII's encyclical letter
Mater et Magistra, May 15, 1961:
A.A.S.
53 (1961) pp. 413-415; 417-424; Encyclical letter,
Pacem in Terris, April 11,
1963: A.A.S. 55 (1963) p. 278 ff.
3. Declaration on the Rights of Man of Dec. 10, 1948, adopted by the General
Assembly of the United Nations, and also cf. the Declaration of the Rights of
Children of Nov. 20 1959; additional protocol to the Convention Safeguarding the
Rights of Men and Fundamental Liberties, Paris, March 20, 1952; regarding that
universal profession of the character of human laws cf. apostolic letter
Pacem in Terris, of John XXIII of April 11, 1963:
A.A.S. 55 (1963) p. 295 ff.
4. Cf. John XXIII's encyclical letter,
Mater et Magistra, May 15, 1961:
A.A.S. 53 (1961) p. 402. Cf. Second Vatican Council's
Dogmatic Constitution on
the Church, no. 17: A.A.S. 57 (1965) p. 21, and schema on the
Pastoral
Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, 1965.
5. Pius XII's radio message of Dec. 24, 1942: A.A.S. 35 (1943) pp. 12-19, and
John XXIII's encyclical letter,
Pacem in Terris
April 11, 1963: A.A.S. 55 (1963)
p. 259 ff. Also cf. declaration cited on the rights of man in footnote 3.
6. Cf. Pius XI's encyclical letter,
Divini Illius Magistri, Dec. 31, 1929:
A.A.S. 22 (1930) p. 50 ff.
7. Cf. John XXIII's encyclical letter,
Mater et Magistra, May 15 1961:
A.A.S.
53 (1961) p. 441 ff.
8. Cf. Pius XI's encyclical letter,
Divini Illius Magistri
1, p. 83.
9. Cf. Second Vatican Council's
Dogmatic Constitution on
the Church, no. 36:
A.A.S. 57 (1965) p. 41 ff.
10. Cf. Second Vatican Council's schema on the
Decree on the Lay Apostolate
(1965), no. 12.
11. Cf. Pius XI's encyclical letter
Divini Illius Magistri, 1, p. 59 ff.,
encyclical letter Mit Brennender Sorge, March 14, 1937: A.A.S. 29; Pius XII's
allocution to the first national congress of the Italian Catholic Teachers'
Association, Sept. 8, 1946: Discourses and Radio Messages, vol. 8, p. 218.
12. Cf. Second Vatican Council's
Dogmatic Constitution on
the Church, nos. 11
and 35: A.A.S. 57 (1965) pp. 16, 40 ff.
13. Cf. Pius XI's encyclical letter
Divini Illius Magistri, 1, p. 63 ff. Pius
XII's radio message of June 1, 1941: A.A.S. 33 (1941) p. 200; allocution to the
first national congress of the Association of Italian Catholic Teachers, Sept 8,
1946: Discourses and Radio Messages, vol. 8, 1946: Discourses and Radio
Messages, vol. 8 p. 218. Regarding the principle of subsidiarity, cf. John
XXIII's encyclical letter,
Pacem in Terris, April 11, 1963:
A.A.S. 55 (1963) p.
294.
14. Cf. Pius XI's encyclical letter,
Divini Illius Magistri, 1 pp. 53 ff. and
56 ff.; Encyclical letter,
Non Abbiamo Bisogno June 29, 1931:
A.A.S. 23 (1931)
p. 311 ff. Pius XII's letter from Secretariat of State to 28th Italian Social
Week, Sept. 20, 1955; L'Osservatore Romano, Sept. 29, 1955.
15. The Church praises those local, national and international civic
authorities who, conscious of the urgent necessity in these times, expend all
their energy so that all peoples may benefit from more education and human
culture. Cf. Paul VI's allocution to the United Nations General Assembly, Oct.
4, 1965: L'Osservatore Romano, Oct. 6, 1965.
16. Cf. Pius XI's motu proprio. Orbem Catholicum, June 29 1923: A.A.S. 15
(1923) pp. 327-329; decree, Provide Sane, Jan. 12, 1935: A.A.S. 27 (1935) pp.
145-152. Second Vatican Council's Decree on Bishops and Pastoral Duties, nos. 13
and 14.
17. Cf. Second Vatican Council's Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, no. 14:
A.A.S. 56 (1964) p. 104.
18. Cf. Second Vatican Council's Decree on Communications Media, nos. 13 and
14: A.A.S. 56 (1964) p. 149 ff.
19. Cf. Pius XI's encyclical letter,
Divini Illius Magistri, 1, p. 76; Pius
XII's allocution to Bavarian Association of Catholic Teachers, Dec. 31, 1956:
Discourses and Radio Messages, vol. 18, p. 746.
20. Cf. Provincial Council of Cincinnati III, a. 1861: Collatio Lacensis,
III, col. 1240, c/d; Pius XI's encyclical letter,
Divini Illius Magistri, 1, pp.
60, 63 ff.
21. Cf. Pius XI's encyclical letter,
Divini Illius Magistri, 1, p. 63;
encyclical letter,
Non Abbiamo Bisogno, June 29, 1931:
A.A.S. 23 (1931) p. 305,
Pius XII's letter from the Secretary of State to the 28th Italian Social Week,
Sept. 20, 1955: L'Osservatore Romano, Sept. 29, 1955. Paul VI's allocution to
the Association of Italian Christian Workers, Oct. 6, 1963: Encyclicals and
Discourses of Paul VI, vol. 1, Rome, 1964, p. 230.
22. Cf. John XXIII's message on the 30th anniversary of the encyclical
letter,
Divini Illius Magistri, Dec. 30, 1959:
A.A.S. 52 (1960) p. 57.
23. The Church considers it as apostolic action of great worth also when
Catholic teachers and associates work in these schools. Cf. Second Vatican
Council's schema of the
Decree on the Lay Apostolate
(1965), nos. 12 and 16.
24. Cf. Second Vatican Council's schema on the
Declaration on Religious
Liberty (1965), no. 5.
25. Cf. Provincial Council of Westminster I, a. 1852: Collatio Lacensis III,
col. 1334, a/b; Pius XI's encyclical letter,
Divini Illius Magistri, 1, p. 77
ff.; Pius XII's allocution to the Bavarian Association of Catholic Teachers,
Dec. 31, 1956: Discourses and Radio Messages, vol. 18, p. 746; Paul VI's
allocution to the members of Federated Institutes Dependent on Ecclesiastic
Authority, Dec. 30, 1963: Encyclicals and Discourses of Paul VI, 1, Rome, 1964,
602 ff.
26. Cf. especially the document mentioned in the first note; moreover this
law of the Church is proclaimed by many provincial councils and in the most
recent declarations of very many of the episcopal conferences.
27. Cf. Pius XI's encyclical letter,
Divini Illius Magistri, 1 p. 80 ff.;
Pius XII's allocution to the Catholic Association of Italian Teachers in
Secondary Schools, Jan. 5, 1954: Discourses and Radio Messages, 15, pp. 551-55B;
John XXIII's allocution to the 6th Congress of the Associations of Catholic
Italian Teachers Sept. 5, 1959: Discourses, Messages, Conversations, 1,
Rome,1960, pp. 427-431.
28. Cf. Pius XII's allocution to the Catholic Association of Italian Teachers
in Secondary Schools, Jan. 5, 1954, 1, p. 555.
29. Cf. Paul VI's allocution to the International Office of Catholic
Education, Feb. 25, 1964: Encyclicals and Discourses of Paul VI, 2, Rome, 1964,
p. 232.
30. Cf. Paul VI's allocution to the Christian Association of Italian Workers,
Oct. 6, 1963: Encyclicals and Discourses of Paul VI, 1, Rome, 1964, p. 229.
31. Cf. Paul VI's allocution to the International Thomistic Congress, Sept.
10, 1965: L'Osservatore Romano, Sept. 13-14, 1965.
32. Cf. Pius XII's allocution to teachers and students of French Institutes
of Higher Catholic Education, Sept. 21, 1950: Discourses and Radio Messages, 12,
pp. 219-221; letters to the 22nd congress of Pax Romana, Aug. 12, 1952:
Discourses and Radio Messages, 14, pp. 567-569; John XXIII's allocution to the
Federation of Catholic Universities, April 1, 1959: Discourses, Messages and
Conversations, 1, Rome, 1960, pp. 226-229; Paul VI's allocution to the Academic
Senate of the Catholic University of Milan, April 5, 1964: Encyclicals and
Discourses of Paul VI, 2, Rome, 1964, pp. 438-443.
33. Cf. Pius XII's allocution to the academic senate and students of the
University of Rome, June 15, 1952: Discourses and Radio Messages, 14, p. 208:
"The direction of today's society principally is placed in the mentality and
hearts of the universities of today."
34. Cf. Pius XII's apostolic constitution, Deus Scientiarum Dominus, May 24,
1931: A.A.S. 23 (1931) pp. 245-247.
35. Cf. Pius XII's encyclical letter,
Humani Generis Aug. 12, 1950
A.A.S. 42
(1950) pp. 568 ff. and 578; Paul VI's encyclical letter,
Ecclesiam Suam, part
III Aug. 6, 1964; A.A.S. 56 (1964) pp. 637-659; Second Vatican Council's
Decree
on Ecumenism: A.A.S. 57 (1965) pp. 90-107.
36. Cf. John XXIII's encyclical letter,
Pacem in Terris, April 11, 1963:
A.A.S. 55 (1963) p. 284 and elsewhere.
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