SATIS COGNITUM
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE LEO XIII ON THE UNITY OF THE CHURCH
To Our Venerable Brethren, the Patriarchs,
Primates, Archbishops, Bishops, and other Ordinaries in Peace and
Communion with the Apostolic See.
Venerable Brethren, Health, and Benediction.
It is sufficiently well known unto you that
no small share of Our thoughts and of Our care is devoted to Our endeavour to
bring back to the fold, placed under the guardianship of Jesus Christ, the
Chief Pastor of souls, sheep that have strayed. Bent upon this, We have
thought it most conducive to this salutary end and purpose to describe the
exemplar and, as it were, the lineaments of the Church. Amongst these the most
worthy of Our chief consideration is Unity. This the Divine Author impressed
on it as a lasting sign of truth and of unconquerable strength. The essential
beauty and comeliness of the Church ought greatly to influence the minds of
those who consider it. Nor is it improbable that ignorance may be dispelled by
the consideration; that false ideas and prejudices may be dissipated from the
minds chiefly of those who find themselves in error without fault of theirs;
and that even a love for the Church may be stirred up in the souls of men,
like unto that charity wherewith Christ loved and united himself to that
spouse redeemed by His precious blood. "Christ
loved the Church, and delivered Himself up for it" (Eph. v., 25).
If those about to come back to their most loving Mother (not
yet fully known, or culpably abandoned) should perceive that their return
involves, not indeed the shedding of their blood (at which price nevertheless
the Church was bought by Jesus Christ), but some lesser trouble and labour,
let them clearly understand that this burden has been laid on them not by the
will of man but by the will and command of God. They may thus, by the help of
heavenly grace, realize and feel the truth of the divine saying, "My yoke
is sweet and my burden light" (Matt. xi., 30).
Wherefore,
having put all Our hope in the "Father of lights," from whom
"cometh every best gift and every perfect gift" (Ep. James
i., 17) - from Him, namely, who alone "gives the increase" (I Cor.
iii., 6) - We earnestly pray that He will graciously grant Us the power of
bringing conviction home to the minds of men.
Human Co-operation
2. Although God can do by His own power all
that is effected by created natures, nevertheless in the counsels of His
loving Providence He has preferred to help men by the instrumentality of men.
And, as in the natural order He does not usually give
full perfection except by means of man's work and action, so also He makes use
of human aid for that which lies beyond the limits of nature, that is to say,
for the sanctification and salvation of souls. But it is obvious that nothing
can be communicated amongst men save by means of external things which the
senses can perceive. For this reason the Son of God assumed human
nature-"who being in the form of God.... emptied himself, taking the form
of a servant, being made in the likeness of man" (Philipp. ii.,
6,7)-and thus living on earth He taught his doctrine and gave His laws,
conversing with men.
The Church Always Visible
3. And, since it was necessary that His
divine mission should be perpetuated to the end of rime, He took to Himself
Disciples, trained by himself, and made them partakers of His own authority.
And, when He had invoked upon them from Heaven the Spirit of Truth, He bade
them go through the whole world and faithfully preach to all nations, what He
had taught and what He had commanded, so that by the profession of His
doctrine, and the observance of His laws, the human race might attain to
holiness on earth and never-ending happiness in Heaven. In this wise, and on
this principle, the Church was begotten. If we consider the chief end of His
Church and the proximate efficient causes of salvation, it is undoubtedly
spiritual; but in regard to those who constitute it, and to the things which
lead to these spiritual gifts, it is external and necessarily visible. The
Apostles received a mission to teach by visible and audible signs, and they
discharged their mission only by words and acts which certainly appealed to
the senses. So that their voices falling upon the ears of those who heard them
begot faith in souls-"Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the words
of Christ" (Rom. x., 17). And faith itself - that is assent given to
the first and supreme truth - though residing essentially in the intellect, must
be manifested by outward profession-"For with the heart we believe unto
justice, but with the mouth confession is made unto salvation" (Rom.
x., 10). In the same way in man, nothing is more internal than heavenly grace
which begets sanctity, but the ordinary and chief means of obtaining grace are
external: that is to say, the sacraments which are administered by men
specially chosen for that purpose, by means of certain ordinances.
Jesus
Christ commanded His Apostles and their successors to the end of time to teach
and rule the nations. He ordered the nations to accept their teaching and obey
their authority. But his correlation of rights and duties in the Christian
commonwealth not only could not have been made permanent, but could not even
have been initiated except through the senses, which are of all things the
messengers and interpreters.
For this reason the Church
is so often called in Holy Writ a body, and even the body of Christ - "Now
you are the body of Christ" (I Cor. xii., 27)-and precisely
because it is a body is the Church visible: and because it is the body of
Christ is it living and energizing, because by the infusion of His power
Christ guards and sustains it, just as the vine gives nourishment and renders
fruitful the branches united to it. And as in animals the vital principle is
unseen and invisible, and is evidenced and manifested by the movements and
action of the members, so the principle of supernatural life in the Church is
clearly shown in that which is done by it.
From this it
follows that those who arbitrarily conjure up and picture to themselves a
hidden and invisible Church are in grievous and pernicious error: as also are
those who regard the Church as a human institution which claims a certain
obedience in discipline and external duties, but which is without the
perennial communication of the gifts of divine grace, and without all that
which testifies by constant and undoubted signs to the existence of that life
which is drawn from God. It is assuredly as impossible that the Church of
Jesus Christ can be the one or the other, as that man should be a body alone
or a soul alone. The connection and union of both elements is as absolutely
necessary to the true Church as the intimate union of the soul and body is to
human nature. The Church is not something dead: it is the body of Christ
endowed with supernatural life. As Christ, the Head and Exemplar, is not
wholly in His visible human nature, which Photinians and Nestorians assert,
nor wholly in the invisible divine nature, as the Monophysites hold, but is
one, from and in both natures, visible and invisible; so the mystical body of
Christ is the true Church, only because its visible parts draw life and power
from the supernatural gifts and other things whence spring their very nature
and essence. But since the Church is such by divine will and constitution,
such it must uniformly remain to the end of time. If it did
nor, then it would not have been founded as perpetual, and the end set before
it would have been limited to some certain place and to some certain period of
time; both of which are contrary to the truth. The union consequently of
visible and invisible elements because it harmonizes with the natural order
and by God's will belongs to the very essence of the Church, must necessarily
remain so long as the Church itself shall endure. Wherefore Chrysostom writes:
"Secede not from the Church: for nothing is stronger than the Church. Thy
hope is the Church; thy salvation is the Church; thy refuge is the Church. It
is higher than the heavens and wider than the earth. It never grows old, but
is ever full of vigour. Wherefore Holy Writ pointing to its strength and
stability calls it a mountain" (Hom. De capto Eutropio, n. 6).
Also Augustine says: "Unbelievers think that the Christian
religion will last for a certain period in the world and will then disappear.
But it will remain as long as the sun - as long as the sun rises and sets: that
is, as long as the ages of time shall roll, the Church of God - the true body of
Christ on earth - will not disappear" (In Psalm. lxx., n. 8). And in
another place: "The Church will totter if its foundation shakes; but how
can Christ be moved?...Christ remaining immovable, it (the Church), shall
never be shaken. Where are they that say that the Church has disappeared from
the world, when it cannot even be shaken?" (Enarratio in Psalm. ciii.,
sermo ii., n. 5).
He who seeks the truth must be guided
by these fundamental principles. That is to say, that Christ the Lord
instituted and formed the Church: wherefore when we are asked what its nature
is, the main thing is to see what Christ wished and what in fact He did.
Judged by such a criterion it is the unity of the Church which must be
principally considered; and of this, for the general good, it has seemed
useful to speak in this Encyclical. ,
How Christ Made His Church
4. It is so evident from the clear and
frequent testimonies of Holy Writ that the true Church of Jesus Christ is one,
that no Christian can dare to deny it. But in judging and determining the
nature of this unity many have erred in various ways. Not the foundation of
the Church alone, but its whole constitution, belongs to the class of things
effected by Christ's free choice. For this reason the entire case must be
judged by what was actually done. We must consequently investigate not how the
Church may possibly be one, but how He, who founded it, willed that it should
be one.
But when we consider what was actually done we
find that Jesus Christ did not, in point of fact, institute a Church to
embrace several communities similar in nature, but in themselves distinct, and
lacking those bonds which render the Church unique and indivisible after that
manner in which in the symbol of our faith we profess: "I believe in one
Church."
"The Church in respect of its unity
belongs to the category of things indivisible by nature, though heretics try
to divide it into many parts...We say, therefore, that the Catholic Church is
unique in its essence, in its doctrine, in its origin, and in its
excellence...Furthermore, the eminence of the Church arises from its unity, as
the principle of its constitution - a unity surpassing all else, and having
nothing like unto it or equal to it" (S. Clemens Alexandrinus, Stronmatum
lib. viii., c. 17). For this reason Christ, speaking of the mystical edifice,
mentions only one Church, which he calls His own-"I will build my
church;" any other Church except this one, since it has not been founded
by Christ, cannot be the true Church. This becomes even more evident when the
purpose of the Divine Founder is considered. For what did Christ, the Lord,
ask? What did He wish in regard to the Church founded, or about to be founded?
This: to transmit to it the same mission and the same mandate which He had
received from the Father, that they should be perpetuated. This He clearly
resolved to do: this He actually did. "As the Father bath sent me, I also
send you" (John xx., 21). "Ad thou bast sent Me into the
world I also have sent them into the world" (John xvii., 18).
But the mission of Christ is to save that which had perished:
that is to say, not some nations or peoples, but the whole human race, without
distinction of time or place. "The Son of Man came that the world might
be saved by Him" (John iii., 17). "For there is no other name under
Heaven given to men whereby we must be saved" (Acts iv., 12). The Church,
therefore, is bound to communicate without stint to all men, and to transmit
through all ages, the salvation effected by Jesus Christ, and the blessings
flowing there from. Wherefore, by the will of its Founder, it is necessary that this Church should be one
in all lands and at all times. to justify the existence of more than one
Church it would be necessary to go outside this world, and to create a new
and unheard - of race of men.
That the one Church should
embrace all men everywhere and at all times was seen and foretold by Isaiah,
when looking into the future he saw the appearance of a mountain conspicuous
by its all surpassing altitude, which set forth the image of "The House
of the Lord" - that is, of the Church, "And in the last days the
mountain of the House of the Lord shall be prepared on the top of the
mountains" (Isa. ii., 2).
But this
mountain which towers over all other mountains is one; and the House of the
Lord to which all nations shall come to seek the rule of living is also one.
"And all nations shall flow into it. And many people shall go, and say:
Come, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, and to the House of the
God of Jacob, and He will teach us His ways, and we will walk in His
paths" (Ibid., ii., 2-3).
Explaining this
passage, Optatus of Milevis says: "It is written in the prophet Isaiah:
'from Sion the law shall go forth and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem.'
For it is not on Mount Sion that Isaiah sees the valley, but on the holy
mountain, that is, the Church, which has raised itself conspicuously
throughout the entire Roman world under the whole heavens....The Church is,
therefore, the spiritual Sion in which Christ has been constituted King by
God the Father, and which exists throughout the entire earth, on which there
is but one Catholic Church" (De Schism. Donatist., lib. iii., n.
2). And Augustine says: "What can be so manifest as a mountain, or so
well known? There are, it is true, mountains which are unknown because they
are situated in some remote part of the earth.....But this mountain is not
unknown; for it has filled the whole face of the world, and about this it is
said that it is prepared on the summit of the mountains" (In Ep. Joan.,
tract i., n. 13).
Christ the Head of the Church
5. Furthermore, the Son of God decreed
that the Church should be His mystical body, with which He should be united
as the Head, after the manner of the human body which He assumed, to which
the natural head is physiologically united. As He took to Himself a mortal
body, which He gave to suffering and death in order to
pay the price of man's redemption, so also He has one mystical body in which
and through which He renders men partakers of holiness and of eternal
salvation. God "hath made Him (Christ) head over all the Church, which
is His body" (Eph. i., 22-23). Scattered and separated members
cannot possibly cohere with the head so as to make one body. But St. Paul
says: "All members of the body, whereas they are many, yet are one
body, so also is Christ" (I Cor. xii., 12). Wherefore this
mystical body, he declares, is "compacted and fitly jointed together.
The head, Christ: from whom the whole body, being compacted and fitly
jointed together, by what every joint supplieth according to the operation
in the measure of every part" (Eph. iv., 15-16). And so
dispersed members, separated one from the other, cannot be united with one
and the same head. "There is one God, and one Christ; and His Church is
one and the faith is one; and one the people, joined together in the solid
unity of the body in the bond of concord. This unity cannot be broken, nor
the one body divided by the separation of its constituent parts" (S.
Cyprianus, De Cath. Eccl. Unitate, n. 23). And to set forth more
clearly the unity of the Church, he makes use of the illustration of a
living body, the members of which cannot possibly live unless united to the
head and drawing from it their vital force. Separated from the head they
must of necessity die. "The Church," he says, "cannot be
divided into parts by the separation and cutting asunder of its members.
What is cut away from the mother cannot live or breathe apart" (Ibid.).
What similarity is there between a dead and a living body? "For no man
ever hated his own flesh, but nourisheth and cherisheth it, as also Christ
doth the Church: because we are members of His body, of His flesh, and of
His bones" (Eph. v., 29-30).
Another head
like to Christ must be invented - that is, another Christ - if besides the one
Church, which is His body, men wish to set up another. "See what you
must beware of - see what you must avoid - see what you must dread. It happens
that, as in the human body, some member may be cut off - a hand, a finger, a
foot. Does the soul follow the amputated member? As long as it was in the
body, it lived; separated, it forfeits its life. So the Christian is a
Catholic as long as he lives in the body: cut off from it he becomes a
heretic - the life of the spirit follows not the
amputated member" (S. Augustinus, Sermo cclxvii., n. 4).
The
Church of Christ, therefore, is one and the same for ever; those who leave
it depart from the will and command of Christ, the Lord - leaving the path of
salvation they enter on that of perdition. "Whosoever is separated from
the Church is united to an adulteress. He has cut himself off from the
promises of the Church, and he who leaves the Church of Christ cannot arrive
at the rewards of Christ....He who observes not this unity observes not the
law of God, holds not the faith of the Father and the Son, clings not to
life and salvation" (S. Cyprianus, De Cath. Eccl. Unitate, n.
6).
Unity in Faith
6. But He, indeed, Who made this one
Church, also gave it unity, that is, He made it such that all who are to
belong to it must be united by the closest bonds, so as to form one society,
one kingdom, one body - "one body and one spirit as you are called in one
hope of your calling (Eph. iv., 4). Jesus Christ, when His death was
nigh at hand, declared His will in this matter, and solemnly offered it up,
thus addressing His Father: "Not for them only do I pray, but for them
also who through their word shall believe in Me...that they also may be one
in Us...that they may be made perfect in one" (John xvii., 20-21
23). Yea, He commanded that this unity should be so closely knit and so
perfect amongst His followers that it might, in some measure, shadow forth
the union between Himself and His Father: "I pray that they all may be
one as Thou Father in Me and I in Thee" (Ibid. 21).
Agreement
and union of minds is the necessary foundation of this perfect concord
amongst men, from which concurrence of wills and similarity of action are
the natural results. Wherefore, in His divine wisdom, He ordained in His
Church Unity of Faith; a virtue which is the first of those bonds which
unite man to God, and whence we receive the name of the faithful - "one
Lord, one faith, one baptism" (Eph. iv., 5). That is, as there is one
Lord and one baptism, so should all Christians, without exception, have but
one faith. And so the Apostle St. Paul not merely begs, but entreats and
implores Christians to be all of the same mind, and to avoid difference of
opinions: "I beseech you, brethren, by the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ, that you all speak the same thing, and that
there be no schisms amongst you, and that you be perfect in the same mind
and in the same judgment" (I Cor. i., 10). Such passages
certainly need no interpreter; they speak clearly enough for themselves.
Besides, all who profess Christianity allow that there can be but one faith.
It is of the greatest importance and indeed of absolute necessity, as to
which many are deceived, that the nature and character of this unity should
be recognized. And, as We have already stated, this is not to be ascertained
by conjecture, but by the certain knowledge of what was done; that is by
seeking for and ascertaining what kind of unity in faith has been commanded
by Jesus Christ.
The Kind of Unity in Faith Commanded by
Christ
7. The heavenly doctrine of Christ, although
for the most part committed to writing by
divine inspiration, could not unite the minds of men if left to the human
intellect alone. It would, for this very reason, be subject to various and
contradictory interpretations. This is so, not only because of the nature of
the doctrine itself and of the mysteries it involves, but also because of the
divergencies of the human mind and of the disturbing element of conflicting
passions. From a variety of interpretations a variety of beliefs is
necessarily begotten; hence come controversies, dissensions and wranglings
such as have arisen in the past, even in the first ages of the Church.
Irenaeus writes of heretics as follows: "Admitting the sacred Scriptures
they distort the interpretations" (Lib. iii., cap. 12, n. 12). And
Augustine: "Heresies have arisen, and certain perverse views ensnaring
souls and precipitating them into the abyss only when the Scriptures, good in
themselves, are not properly understood" (In Evang. Joan., tract
xviii., cap. 5, n. I). Besides Holy Writ it was absolutely necessary to insure
this union of men's minds - to effect and preserve unity of ideas - that there
should be another principle. This the wisdom of God requires: for He could not
have willed that the faith should be one if He did not provide means
sufficient for the preservation of this unity; and this Holy Writ clearly sets
forth as We shall presently point out. Assuredly the infinite power of God is
not bound by anything, all things obey it as so many passive instruments. In
regard to this external principle, therefore, we must inquire which one of all
the means in His power Christ did actually adopt. For this
purpose it is necessary to recall in thought the institution of Christianity.
The Magisterium (or Teaching Authority) of
the Church to be Perpetual
8. We are mindful only of what is witnessed
to by Holy Writ and what is otherwise well known. Christ proves His own
divinity and the divine origin of His mission by miracles; He teaches the
multitudes heavenly doctrine by word of mouth; and He absolutely commands that
the assent of faith should be given to His teaching, promising eternal rewards
to those who believe and eternal punishment to those who do not. "If I do
not the works of my Father, believe Me not" (John x., 37).
"If I had not done among them the works than no other man had done, they
would not have sin" (Ibid. xv., 24). "But if I do (the works) though
you will not believe Me, believe the works" (Ibid. x., 38). Whatsoever He
commands, He commands by the same authority. He requires the assent of the
mind to all truths without exception. It was thus the duty of all who heard
Jesus Christ, if they wished for eternal salvation, not merely to accept His
doctrine as a whole, but to assent with their entire mind to all and every
point of it, since it is unlawful to withhold faith from God even in regard to
one single point.
When about to ascend into heaven He
sends His Apostles in virtue of the same power by which He had been sent from
the Father; and he charges them to spread abroad and propagate His teaching.
"All power is given to Me in Heaven and in earth. Going therefore teach
all nations....teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded
you" (Matt. xxviii., 18-19-20). So that those obeying the Apostles
might be saved, and those disobeying should perish. "He that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved, but he that believed not shall be
condemned" (Mark xvi., 16). But since it is obviously most in
harmony with God's providence that no one should have confided to him a great
and important mission unless he were furnished with the means of properly
carrying it out, for this reason Christ promised that He would send the Spirit
of Truth to His Disciples to remain with them for ever. "But if I go I
will send Him (the Paraclete) to you....But when He, the Spirit of Truth is
come, He will teach you all truth" (John xvi., 7-13). "And I
will ask the Father, and He shall give you another
Paraclete, that he may abide with you for ever, the Spirit of 'Truth"
(Ibid. xiv., 16-17). "He shall give testimony of Me, and you shall give
testimony" (Ibid. xv., 26-27). Hence He commands that the teaching of the
Apostles should be religiously accepted and piously kept as if it were His
own - "He who hears you hears Me, he who despises you despises Me" (Luke
x., 16). Wherefore the Apostles are ambassadors of Christ as He is the
ambassador of the Father. "As the Father sent Me so also I send you"
(John xx., 21). Hence as the Apostles and Disciples were bound to obey
Christ, so also those whom the Apostles taught were, by God's command, bound
to obey them. And, therefore, it was no more allowable to repudiate one iota
of the Apostles' teaching than it was to reject any point of the doctrine of
Christ Himself.
Truly the voice of the Apostles, when
the Holy Ghost had come down upon them, resounded throughout the world.
Wherever they went they proclaimed themselves the ambassadors of Christ
Himself. "By whom (Jesus Christ) we have received grace and Apostleship
for obedience to the faith in all nations for His name" (Rom. i.,
5). And God makes known their divine mission by numerous miracles. "But
they going forth preached everywhere: the Lord working withal, and confirming
the word with signs that followed" (Mark xvi., 20). But what is
this word? That which comprehends all things, that which they had learnt from
their Master; because they openly and publicly declare that they cannot help
speaking of what they had seen and heard.
But, as we
have already said, the Apostolic mission was not destined to die with the
Apostles themselves, or to come to an end in the course of time, since it was
intended for the people at large and instituted for the salvation of the human
race. For Christ commanded His Apostles to preach the "Gospel to every
creature, to carry His name to nations and kings, and to be witnesses to him
to the ends of the earth." He further promised to assist them in the
fulfilment of their high mission, and that, not for a few years or centuries
only, but for all time - "even to the consummation of the world." Upon
which St. Jerome says: "He who promises to remain with His Disciples to
the end of the world declares that they will be for ever victorious, and that
He will never depart from those who believe in Him" (In Matt.,
lib. iv., cap. 28, v. 20). But how could all this be realized in
the Apostles alone, placed as they were under the universal law of dissolution
by death? It was consequently provided by God that the Magisterium instituted
by Jesus Christ should not end with the life of the Apostles, but that it
should be perpetuated. We see it in truth propagated, and, as it were,
delivered from hand to hand. For the Apostles consecrated bishops, and each
one appointed those who were to succeed them immediately "in the ministry
of the word."
Nay more: they likewise required
their successors to choose fitting men, to endow them with like authority, and
to confide to them the office and mission of teaching. "Thou, therefore,
my son, be strong in the grace which is in Christ Jesus: and the things which
thou bast heard of me by many witnesses, the same command to faithful men, who
shall be fit to teach others also" (2 Tim. ii., I-2). Wherefore,
as Christ was sent by God and the Apostles by Christ, so the Bishops and those
who succeeded them were sent by the Apostles. "The Apostles were
appointed by Christ to preach the Gospel to us. Jesus Christ was sent by God.
Christ is therefore from God, and the Apostles from Christ, and both according
to the will of God....Preaching therefore the word through the countries and
cities, when they had proved in the Spirit the first-fruits of their teaching
they appointed bishops and deacons for the faithful....They appointed them and
then ordained them, so that when they themselves had passed away other tried
men should carry on their ministry" (S. Clemens Rom. Epist. I ad
Corinth. capp. 42, 44). On the one hand, therefore, it is necessary that
the mission of teaching whatever Christ had taught should remain perpetual and
immutable, and on the other that the duty of accepting and professing all
their doctrine should likewise be perpetual and immutable. "Our Lord
Jesus Christ, when in His Gospel He testifies that those who not are with Him
are His enemies, does not designate any special form of heresy, but declares
that all heretics who are not with Him and do not gather with Him, scatter His
flock and are His adversaries: He that is not with Me is against Me, and he
that gathereth not with Me scattereth" (S. Cyprianus, Ep. lxix., ad
Magnum, n. I).
Every Revealed Truth, without Exception,
Must be Accepted
9. The Church, founded on these principles
and mindful of her office, has done nothing with greater
zeal and endeavour than she has displayed in guarding the integrity of the
faith. Hence she regarded as rebels and expelled from the ranks of her
children all who held beliefs on any point of doctrine different from her own.
The Arians, the Montanists, the Novatians, the Quartodecimans, the Eutychians,
did not certainly reject all Catholic doctrine: they abandoned only a tertian
portion of it. Still who does not know that they were declared heretics and
banished from the bosom of the Church? In like manner were condemned all
authors of heretical tenets who followed them in subsequent ages. "There
can be nothing more dangerous than those heretics who admit nearly the whole
cycle of doctrine, and yet by one word, as with a drop of poison, infect the
real and simple faith taught by our Lord and handed down by Apostolic
tradition" (Auctor Tract. de Fide Orthodoxa contra Arianos).
The practice of the Church has always been the same, as is
shown by the unanimous teaching of the Fathers, who were wont to hold as
outside Catholic communion, and alien to the Church, whoever would recede in
the least degree from any point of doctrine proposed by her authoritative
Magisterium. Epiphanius, Augustine, Theodoret, drew up a long list of the
heresies of their times. St. Augustine notes that other heresies may spring
up, to a single one of which, should any one give his assent, he is by the
very fact cut off from Catholic unity. "No one who merely disbelieves in
all (these heresies) can for that reason regard himself as a Catholic or call
himself one. For there may be or may arise some other heresies, which are not
set out in this work of ours, and, if any one holds to one single one of these
he is not a Catholic" (S. Augustinus, De Haeresibus, n. 88).
The need of this divinely instituted means for the preservation
of unity, about which we speak is urged by St. Paul in his epistle to the
Ephesians. In this he first admonishes them to preserve with every care
concord of minds: "Solicitous to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond
of peace" (Eph. iv., 3, et seq.). And as souls cannot be perfectly
united in charity unless minds agree in faith, he wishes all to hold the same
faith: "One Lord, one faith," and this so perfectly one as to
prevent all danger of error: "that henceforth we be no more children,
tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine by the
wickedness of men, by cunning craftiness, by which they lie in
wait to deceive" (Eph. iv.,
14): and this he teaches is to be observed, not for a time only-"but
until we all meet in the unity of faith...unto the measure of the age of
the fulness of Christ" (13). But, in what has Christ placed the
primary principle, and the means of preserving this unity? In
that-"He gave some Apostles-and other some pastors and doctors, for
the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the
edifying of the body of Christ" (11-12).
Wherefore,
from the very earliest times the fathers and doctors of the Church have
been accustomed to follow and, with one accord to defend this rule. Origen
writes: "As often as the heretics allege the possession of the
canonical scriptures, to which all Christians give unanimous assent, they
seem to say: `Behold the word of truth is in the houses.' But we should
believe them not and abandon not the primary and ecclesiastical tradition.
We should believe not otherwise than has been handed down by the tradition
of the Church of God" (Vetus Interpretatio Commentariorum in Matt.
n. 46). Irenaeus too says: "The doctrine of the Apostles is the true
faith...which is known to us through the Episcopal succession...which has
reached even unto our age by the very fact that the Scriptures have been
zealously guarded and fully interpreted" (Contra Haereses,
lib. iv., cap. 33, n. 8). And Tertullian: "It is therefore clear that
all doctrine which agrees with that of the Apostolic churches - the matrices
and original centres of the faith, must be looked upon as the truth,
holding without hesitation that the Church received it from the Apostles,
the Apostles from Christ and Christ from God....We are in communion with
the Apostolic churches, and by the very fact that they agree amongst
themselves we have a testimony of the truth" (De Praescrip.,
cap. xxxi). And so Hilary: "Christ teaching from the ship signifies
that those who are outside the Church can never grasp the divine teaching;
for the ship typifies the Church where the word of life is deposited and
preached. Those who are outside are like sterile and worthless sand: they
cannot comprehend" (Comment. in Matt. xiii., n. I). Rufinus
praises Gregory of Nazianzum and Basil because "they studied the text
of Holy Scripture alone, and took the interpretation of its meaning not
from their own inner consciousness, but from the writings and on the
authority of the ancients, who in their turn, as it is clear, took their
rule for understanding the meaning from the
Apostolic succession" (Hist. Eccl., lib. ii., cap. 9).
Wherefore,
as appears from what has been said, Christ instituted in the Church a
living, authoritative and permanent Magisterium, which by His own power He
strengthened, by the Spirit of truth He taught, and by miracles confirmed.
He willed and ordered, under the gravest penalties, that its teachings
should be received as if they were His own. As often, therefore, as it is
declared on the authority of this teaching that this or that is contained
in the deposit of divine revelation, it must be believed by every one as
true. If it could in any way be false, an evident contradiction follows;
for then God Himself would be the author of error in man. "Lord, if
we be in error, we are being deceived by Thee" (Richardus de S.
Victore, De Trin., lib. i., cap. 2). In this wise, all cause for
doubting being removed, can it be lawful for anyone to reject any one of
those truths without by the very fact falling into heresy?-without
separating himself from the Church?-without repudiating in one sweeping
act the whole of Christian teaching? For such is the nature of faith that
nothing can be more absurd than to accept some things and reject others.
Faith, as the Church teaches, is "that supernatural virtue by which,
through the help of God and through the assistance of His grace, we
believe what he has revealed to be true, not on account of the intrinsic
truth perceived by the natural light of reason, but because of the
authority of God Himself, the Revealer, who can neither deceive nor be
deceived" (Conc. Vat., Sess. iii., cap. 3). If then it be certain
that anything is revealed by God, and this is not believed, then nothing
whatever is believed by divine Faith: for what the Apostle St. James
judges to be the effect of a moral deliquency, the same is to be said of
an erroneous opinion in the matter of faith. "Whosoever shall offend
in one point, is become guilty of all" (Ep. James ii., 10).
Nay, it applies with greater force to an erroneous opinion. For it can be
said with less truth that every law is violated by one who commits a
single sin, since it may be that he only virtually despises the majesty of
God the Legislator. But he who dissents even in one point from divinely
revealed truth absolutely rejects all faith, since he thereby refuses to
honour God as the supreme truth and the formal motive of faith. "In
many things they are with me, in a few things not with me; but in those
few things in which they are not with me the many things in which they are
will not profit them" (S. Augustinus in Psal. liv., n. 19). And this
indeed most deservedly; for they, who take from Christian doctrine what
they please, lean on their own judgments, not on faith; and not
"bringing into captivity every understanding unto the obedience of
Christ" (2 Cor. x., 5), they more truly obey themselves than
God. "You, who believe what you like, believe yourselves rather than
the gospel" (S. Augustinus, lib. xvii., Contra Faustum Manichaeum,
cap. 3).
For this reason the Fathers of the Vatican
Council laid down nothing new, but followed divine revelation and the
acknowledged and invariable teaching of the Church as to the very nature
of faith, when they decreed as follows: "All those things are to be
believed by divine and Catholic faith which are contained in the written
or unwritten word of God, and which are proposed by the Church as divinely
revealed, either by a solemn definition or in the exercise of its ordinary
and universal Magisterium" (Sess. iii., cap. 3). Hence, as it is
clear that God absolutely willed that there should be unity in His Church,
and as it is evident what kind of unity He willed, and by means of what
principle He ordained that this unity should be maintained, we may address
the following words of St. Augustine to all who have not deliberately
closed their minds to the truth: "When we see the great help of God,
such manifest progress and such abundant fruit, shall we hesitate to take
refuge in the bosom of that Church, which, as is evident to all, possesses
the supreme authority of the Apostolic See through the Episcopal
succession? In vain do heretics rage round it; they are condemned partly
by the judgment of the people themselves, partly by the weight of
councils, partly by the splendid evidence of miracles. To refuse to the
Church the primacy is most impious and above measure arrogant. And if all
learning, no matter how easy and common it may be, in order to be fully
understood requires a teacher and master, what can be greater evidence of
pride and rashness than to be unwilling to learn about the books of the
divine mysteries from the proper interpreter, and to wish to condemn them
unknown?" (De Unitate Credendi, cap. xvii., n. 35).
It
is then undoubtedly the office of the church to guard Christian doctrine
and to propagate it in its integrity and purity. But this is not all: the
object for which the Church has been instituted is not
wholly attained by the performance of this duty. For, since Jesus Christ
delivered Himself up for the salvation of the human race, and to this end
directed all His teaching and commands, so He ordered the Church to
strive, by the truth of its doctrine, to sanctify and to save mankind. But
faith alone cannot compass so great, excellent, and important an end.
There must needs be also the fitting and devout worship of God, which is
to be found chiefly in the divine Sacrifice and in the dispensation of the
Sacraments, as well as salutary laws and discipline. All these must be
found in the Church, since it continues the mission of the Saviour for
ever. The Church alone offers to the human race that religion-that state
of absolute perfection - which He wished, as it were, to be incorporated in
it. And it alone supplies those means of salvation which accord with the
ordinary counsels of Providence.
The Church a Divine Society
10. But as this heavenly doctrine was
never left to the arbitrary judgment of private individuals, but, in the
beginning delivered by Jesus Christ, was afterwards committed by Him
exclusively to the Magisterium already named, so the power of performing
and administering the divine mysteries, together with the authority of
ruling and governing, was not bestowed by God on all Christians
indiscriminately, but on certain chosen persons. For to the Apostles and
their legitimate successors alone these words have reference: "Going
into the whole world preach the Gospel." "Baptizing them."
"Do this in commemoration of Me." "Whose sins you shall
forgive they are forgiven them." And in like manner He ordered the
Apostles only and those who should lawfully succeed them to feed - that is
to govern with authority - all Christian souls. Whence it also follows that
it is necessarily the duty of Christians to be subject and to obey. And
these duties of the Apostolic office are, in general, all included in the
words of St. Paul: "Let a man so account of us as of the ministers of
Christ, and the dispensers of the mysteries of God" (I Cor.
iv., I).
Wherefore Jesus Christ bade all men, present
and future, follow Him as their leader and Saviour; and this, not merely as
individuals, but as forming a society, organized and united in mind. In this
way a duly constituted society should exist, formed out of the divided
multitude of peoples, one in faith, one in end, one in the participation of
the means adapted to the attainment of the end, and one as subject to one and
the same authority. To this end He established in the Church all principles
which necessarily tend to make organized human societies, and through which
they attain the perfection proper to each. That is, in it (the Church), all
who wished to be the sons of God by adoption might attain to the perfection
demanded by their high calling, and might obtain salvation. The Church,
therefore, as we have said, is man's guide to whatever pertains to Heaven.
This is the office appointed unto it by God: that it may watch over and may
order all that concerns religion, and may, without let or hindrance, exercise,
according to its judgment, its charge over Christianity. Wherefore they who
pretend that the Church has any wish to interfere in Civil matters, or to
infringe upon the rights of the State, know it not, or wickedly calumniate it.
God indeed even made the Church a society far more perfect than
any other. For the end for which the Church exists is as much higher than the
end of other societies as divine grace is above nature, as immortal blessings
are above the transitory things on the earth. Therefore the Church is a
society divine in its origin, supernatural in its end and in means proximately
adapted to the attainment of that end; but it is a human community inasmuch as
it is composed of men. For this reason we find it called in Holy Writ by names
indicating a perfect society. It is spoken of as the House of God, the city
placed upon the mountain to which all nations must come. But it is also the
fold presided over by one Shepherd, and into which all Christ's sheep must
betake themselves. Yea, it is called the kingdom which God has raised up and
which will stand for ever. Finally it is the body of Christ - that is, of
course, His mystical body, but a body living and duly organized and composed
of many members; members indeed which have not all the same functions, but
which, united one to the other, are kept bound together by the guidance and
authority of the head.
Indeed no true and perfect human
society can be conceived which is not governed by some supreme authority.
Christ therefore must have given to His Church a supreme authority to which
all Christians must render obedience. For this reason, as the unity of the
faith is of necessity required for the unity of the church, inasmuch as
it is the body of the faithful, so also for this same unity,
inasmuch as the Church is a divinely constituted society, unity of government,
which effects and involves unity of communion, is necessary jure divino.
"The unity of the Church is manifested in the mutual connection or
communication of its members, and likewise in the relation of all the members
of the Church to one head" (St. Thomas, 2a 2ae, 9, xxxix., a. I).
From this it is easy to see that men can fall away from the
unity of the Church by schism, as well as by heresy. "We think that this
difference exists between heresy and schism" (writes St. Jerome):
"heresy has no perfect dogmatic teaching, whereas schism, through some
Episcopal dissent, also separates from the Church" (S. Hieronymus, Comment.
in Epist. ad Titum, cap. iii., v. 10-11). In which judgment St. John
Chrysostom concurs: "I say and protest (he writes) that it is as wrong to
divide the Church as to fall into heresy" (Hom. xi., in Epist. ad
Ephes., n. 5). Wherefore as no heresy can ever be justifiable, so in like
manner there can be no justification for schism. "There is nothing more
grievous than the sacrilege of schism....there can be no just necessity for
destroying the unity of the Church" (S. Augustinus, Contra Epistolam
Parmeniani, lib. ii., cap. ii., n. 25).
The Supreme Authority Founded by Christ
11. The nature of this supreme authority,
which all Christians are bound to obey, can be ascertained only by finding out
what was the evident and positive will of Christ. Certainly Christ is a King
for ever; and though invisible, He continues unto the end of time to govern
and guard His church from Heaven. But since He willed that His kingdom should
be visible He was obliged, when He ascended into Heaven, to designate a
vice-gerent on earth. "Should anyone say that Christ is the one head and
the one shepherd, the one spouse of the one Church, he does not give an
adequate reply. It is clear, indeed, that Christ is the author of grace in the
Sacraments of the Church; it is Christ Himself who baptizes; it is He who
forgives sins; it is He who is the true priest who bath offered Himself upon
the altar of the cross, and it is by His power that His body is daily
consecrated upon the altar; and still, because He was not to be visibly
present to all the faithful, He made choice of ministers through whom the
aforesaid Sacraments should be dispensed to the faithful
as said above" (cap. 74). "For the same reason, therefore, because
He was about to withdraw His visible presence from the Church, it was
necessary that He should appoint someone in His place, to have the charge of
the Universal Church. Hence before His Ascension He said to Peter: 'Feed my
sheep' " (St. Thomas, Contra Gentiles, lib. iv., cap. 76).
Jesus
Christ, therefore, appointed Peter to be that head of the Church; and He also
determined that the authority instituted in perpetuity for the salvation of
all should be inherited by His successors, in whom the same permanent
authority of Peter himself should continue. And so He made that remarkable
promise to Peter and to no one else: "Thou are Peter, and upon this rock
I will build my church" (Matt. xvi., 18). "To Peter the Lord
spoke: to one, therefore, that He might establish unity upon one" (S.
Pacianus ad Sempronium, Ep. iii., n. 11). "Without any prelude He
mentions St. Peter's name and that of his father (Blessed art thou Simon, son
of John) and He does not wish Him to be called any more Simon; claiming him
for Himself according to His divine authority He aptly names him Peter, from
petra the rock, since upon him He was about to found His Church" (S.
Cyrillus Alexandrinus, In Evang. Joan., lib. ii., in cap. i., v. 42).
The Universal Jurisdiction of St. Peter
12. From this text it is clear that by the
will and command of God the Church rests upon St. Peter, just as a building
rests on its foundation. Now the proper nature of a foundation is to be a
principle of cohesion for the various parts of the building. It must be the
necessary condition of stability and strength. Remove it and the whole
building falls. It is consequently the office of St. Peter to support the
Church, and to guard it in all its strength and indestructible unity. How
could he fulfil this office without the power of commanding, forbidding, and
judging, which is properly called jurisdiction? It is only by this power of
jurisdiction that nations and commonwealths are held together. A primacy of
honour and the shadowy right of giving advice and admonition, which is called
direction, could never secure to any society of men unity or strength. The
words - and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it - proclaim and
establish the authority of which we speak. "What is the it?" (writes Origen). "Is it the rock upon which Christ builds the Church
or the Church? The expression indeed is ambiguous, as if the rock and the
Church were one and the same. I indeed think that this is so, and that neither
against the rock upon which Christ builds His Church nor against the Church
shall the gates of Hell prevail" (Origenes, Comment. in Matt.,
tom. xii., n. ii). The meaning of this divine utterance is, that,
notwithstanding the wiles and intrigues which they bring to bear against the
Church, it can never be that the church committed to the care of Peter shall
succumb or in any wise fail. "For the Church, as the edifice of Christ
who has wisely built 'His house upon a rock,' cannot be conquered by the gates
of Hell, which may prevail over any man who shall be off the rock and outside
the Church, but shall be powerless against it" (Ibid.). Therefore God
confided His Church to Peter so that he might safely guard it with his
unconquerable power. He invested him, therefore, with the needful authority;
since the right to rule is absolutely required by him who has to guard human
society really and effectively. This, furthermore, Christ gave: "To thee
will I give the keys of the kingdom of Heaven." And He is clearly still
speaking of the Church, which a short time before He had called His own, and
which He declared He wished to build on Peter as a foundation. The Church is
typified not only as an edifice but as a Kingdom, and every one knows that the
keys constitute the usual sign of governing authority. Wherefore when Christ
promised to give to Peter the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven, he promised to
give him power and authority over the Church. "The Son committed to Peter
the office of spreading the knowledge of His Father and Himself over the whole
world. He who increased the Church in all the earth, and proclaimed it to be
stronger than the heavens, gave to a mortal man all power in Heaven when He
handed him the Keys" (S. Johannes Chrysostomus, Hom. liv., in Matt. v.,
2). In this same sense He says: "Whatsoever thou shall bind upon earth it
shall be bound also in Heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth it
shall be loosed also in Heaven." This metaphorical expression of binding
and loosing indicates the power of making laws, of judging and of punishing;
and the power is said to be of such amplitude and force that God will ratify
whatever is decreed by it. Thus it is supreme and absolutely independent, so
that, having no other power on earth as its superior, it embraces the whole
Church and all things committed to the Church.
The
promise is carried out when Christ the Lord after His Resurrection, having
thrice asked Peter whether he loved Him more than the rest, lays on him the
injunction: "Feed my lambs - feed my sheep." That is He confides to
him, without exception, all those who were to belong to His fold. "The
Lord does not hesitate. He interrogates, not to learn but to teach. When He
was about to ascend into Heaven He left us, as it were, a vice-gerent of His
love....and so because Peter alone of all others professes his love he is
preferred to all-that being the most perfect he should govern the more
perfect" (S. Ambrosius, Exposit. in Evang. secundum Lucam, lib.
x., nn. 175-176).
These, then, are the duties of a
shepherd: to place himself as leader at the head of his flock, to provide
proper food for it, to ward off dangers, to guard against insidious foes, to
defend it against violence: in a word to rule and govern it. Since therefore
Peter has been placed as shepherd of the Christian flock he has received the
power of governing all men for whose salvation Jesus Christ shed His blood.
"Why has He shed His blood? To buy the sheep which He handed over to
Peter and his successors" (S. Joannes Chrysostomus, De Sacerdotio,
lib. ii).
And since all Christians must be closely
united in the communion of one immutable faith, Christ the Lord, in virtue of
His prayers, obtained for Peter that in the fulfilment of his office he should
never fall away from the faith. "But I have asked for thee that thy faith
fail not" (Luke xxii., 32), and He furthermore commanded him to
impart light and strength to his brethren as often as the need should arise:
"Confirm thy brethren" (Ibid.). He willed then that he whom He had
designated as the foundation of the Church should be the defence of its faith.
"Could not Christ who confided to him the Kingdom by His own authority
have strengthened the faith of one whom He designated a rock to show the
foundation of the Church?" (S. Ambrosius, De Fide, lib. iv., n.
56). For this reason Jesus Christ willed that Peter should participate in
certain names, signs of great things which properly belong to Himself alone:
in order that identity of titles should show identity of power. So He who is
Himself "the chief corner-stone in whom all the building being framed
together, groweth up in a holy temple in the Lord" (Eph. ii., 21),
placed Peter as it were a stone to support the Church.
"When he heard `thou art a rock,' he was ennobled by the announcement.
Although he is a rock, not as Christ is a rock, but as Peter is a rock. For
Christ is by His very being an immovable rock; Peter only through this rock.
Christ imparts His gifts, and is not exhausted....He is a priest, and makes
priests. He is a rock, and constitutes a rock" (Hom. de Poenitentia,
n. 4 in Appendice opp. S. Basilii). He who is the King of His Church,
"Who bath the key of David, who openeth and no man shutteth, who shutteth
and no man openeth (Apoc. iii., 7), having delivered the keys to Peter
declared him Prince of the Christian commonwealth. So, too, He, the Great
Shepherd, who calls Himself "the Good Shepherd," constitued Peter
the pastor "of His lambs and sheep. Feed My lambs, feed My Sheep."
Wherefore Chrysostom says: "He was preeminent among the Apostles: He was
the mouthpiece of the Apostles and the head of the Apostolic College....at the
same time showing him that henceforth he ought to have confidence, and as it
were blotting out his denial, He commits to him the government of his
brethren....He saith to him: 'If thou lovest Me, be over my brethren.' Finally
He who confirms in "every good work and word" (2 Thess. ii.,
16) commands Peter "to confirm his brethren."
Rightly,
therefore, does St. Leo the Great say: "From the whole world Peter alone
is chosen to take the lead in calling all nations, to be the head of all the
Apostles and of all the Fathers of the Church. So that, although in the people
of God there are many priests and many pastors Peter should by right rule all
of those over whom Christ Himself is the chief ruler" (Sermo iv., cap.
2). And so St. Gregory the great, writing to the Emperor Maurice Augustus,
says: "It is evident to all who know the gospel that the charge of the
whole Church was committed to St. Peter, the Apostle and Prince of all the
Apostles, by the word of the Lord....Behold! he hath received the keys of the
heavenly kingdom-the power of binding and loosing is conferred upon him: the
care of the whole government of the Church is confided to him" (Epist.
lib. v., Epist. xx).
The Roman Pontiffs Possess Supreme Power in
the Church Jure Divino
13. It was necessary that a government of
this kind, since it belongs to the constitution and formation of the Church,
as its principal element - that is as the principle of unity and
the foundation of lasting stability - should in no wise come to an end with St.
Peter, but should pass to his successors from one to another. "There
remains, therefore, the ordinance of truth, and St. Peter, persevering in the
strength of the rock which he had received, hath not abandoned the government of
the Church which had been confided to him" (S. Leo M. sermo iii., cap. 3).
For this reason the Pontiffs who succeed Peter in the Roman Episcopate receive
the supreme power in the church, jure divino. "We define" (declare the
Fathers of the Council of Florence) "that the Holy and Apostolic See and
the Roman Pontiff hold the primacy of the Church throughout the whole world: and
that the same Roman Pontiff is the successor of St. Peter, the Prince of the
Apostles, and the true Vicar of Christ, the head of the whole Church, and the
father and teacher of all Christians; and that full power was given to him, in
Blessed Peter, by our Lord Jesus Christ to feed, to rule, and to govern the
universal Church, as is also contained in the acts of oecumenical councils and
in the sacred canons" (Conc. Florentinum). Similarly the Fourth Council of
Lateran declares: "The Roman Church, as the mother and mistress of all the
faithful, by the will of Christ obtains primacy of jurisdiction over all other
Churches." These declarations were preceded by the consent of antiquity
which ever acknowledged, without the slightest doubt or hesitation, the Bishops
of Rome, and revered them, as the legitimate successors of St. Peter.
Who is unaware of the many and evident
testimonies of the holy Fathers which exist to this effect? Most remarkable is
that of St. Irenaeus who, referring to the Roman Church, says: "With this
Church, on account of its preeminent authority, it is necessary that every
Church should be in concord" (Contra Haereses, lib. iii., cap. 3, n. 2);
and St. Cyprian also says of the Roman Church, that "it is the root and
mother of the Catholic Church, the chair of Peter, and the principal Church
whence sacerdotal unity has its source" (Ep. xlviii., ad Cornelium, n. 3.
and Ep. liac., ad eundem, n. 14). He calls it the chair of Peter because it is
occupied by the successor of Peter: he calls it the
principal Church, on account of the primacy conferred on Peter himself and his
legitimate successors; and the source of unity, because the Roman Church is
the efficient cause of unity in the Christian commonwealth. For this reason
Jerome addresses Damasus thus: "My words are spoken to the successor of
the Fisherman, to the disciple of the Cross....I communicate with none save
your Blessedness, that is with the chair of Peter. For this I know is the rock
on which the Church is built" (Ep. xv., ad Damasum, n. 2). Union
with the Roman See of Peter is to him always the public criterion of a
Catholic. "I acknowledge everyone who is united with the See of
Peter" (Ep. xvi., ad Damasum, n. 2). And for a like reason St.
Augustine publicly attests that, "the primacy of the Apostolic chair
always existed in the Roman Church" (Ep. xliii., n. 7); and he denies
that anyone who dissents from the Roman faith can be a Catholic. "You are
not to be looked upon as holding the true Catholic faith if you do not teach
that the faith of Rome is to be held" (Sermo cxx., n. 13). So, too, St.
Cyprian: "To be in communion with Cornelius is to be in communion with
the Catholic Church" (Ep. lv., n. 1). In the same way Maximus the Abbot
teaches that obedience to the Roman Pontiff is the proof of the true faith and
of legitimate communion. Therefore if a man does not want to be, or to be
called, a heretic, let him not strive to please this or that man...but let him
hasten before all things to be in communion with the Roman See. If he be in
communion with it, he should be acknowledged by all and everywhere as faithful
and orthodox. He speaks in vain who tries to persuade me of the orthodoxy of
those who, like himself, refuse obedience to his Holiness the Pope of the most
holy Church of Rome: that is to the Apostolic See." The reason and motive
of this he explains to be that "the Apostolic See has received and hath
government, authority, and power of binding and loosing from the Incarnate
Word Himself; and, according to all holy synods, sacred canons and decrees, in
all things and through all things, in respect of all the holy churches of God
throughout the whole world, since the Word in Heaven who rules the Heavenly
powers binds and loosens there" (Defloratio ex Epistola ad Petrum
illustrem).
Wherefore what was acknowledged and
observed as Christian faith, not by one nation only nor in one age, but by the
East and by the West, and through all ages, this Philip, the priest, the
Pontifical legate at the Council of Ephesus, no voice being raised in dissent,
recalls: "No one can doubt, yea, it is known unto all ages, that St.
Peter, the Prince of the Apostles, the pillar of the faith
and the ground of the Catholic Church, received the keys of the Kingdom from
Our Lord Jesus Christ. That is: the power of forgiving and retaining sins was
given to him who, up to the present time, lives and exercises judgment in the
persons of his successors" (Actio iii.). The pronouncement of the
Council of Chalcedon on the same matter is present to the minds of all:
"Peter has spoken through Leo" (Actio ii.), to which the
voice of the Third Council of Constantinople responds as an echo: "The
chief Prince of the Apostles was fighting on our side: for we have had as our
ally his follower and the successor to his see: and the paper and the ink were
seen, and Peter spoke through Agatho" (Actio xviii.).
In
the formula of Catholic faith drawn up and proposed by Hormisdas, which was
subscribed at the beginning of the sixth century in the great Eighth Council
by the Emperor Justinian, by Epiphanius, John and Menna, the Patriarchs, this
same is declared with great weight and solemnity. "For the pronouncement
of Our Lord Jesus Christ saying: 'Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will
build my Church,' &c., cannot be passed over. What is said is proved by
the result, because Catholic faith has always been preserved without stain in
the Apostolic See" (Post Epistolam, xxvi., ad omnes Episc. Hispan., n.
4). We have no wish to quote every available declaration; but it is well to
recall the formula of faith which Michael Paleologus professed in the Second
Council of Lyons: "The same holy Roman Church possesses the sovereign and
plenary primacy and authority over the whole Catholic Church, which, truly and
humbly, it acknowledges to have received together with the plenitude of power
from the Lord Himself, in the person of St. Peter, the Prince or Head of the
Apostles, of whom the Roman Pontiff is the successor. And as it is bound to
defend the truth of faith beyond all others, so also if any question should
arise concerning the faith it must be determined by its judgment" (Actin
iv.).
Bishops Belong to the Essential Constitution
of the Church
14. But if the authority of Peter and his
successors is plenary and supreme, it is not to be regarded as the sole
authority. For He who made Peter the foundation of the Church also
"chose, twelve, whom He called apostles" (Luke vi., 13); and
just as it is necessary that the authority of Peter should be perpetuated in
the Roman Pontiff, so, by the fact that the bishops succeed the Apostles, they
inherit their ordinary power, and thus the episcopal order necessarily belongs
to the essential constitution of the Church. Although they do not receive
plenary, or universal, or supreme authority, they are not to be looked as
vicars of the Roman Pontiffs; because they exercise a power really their own,
and are most truly called the ordinary pastors of the peoples over whom they
rule.
But since the successor of Peter is one, and those
of the Apostles are many, it is necessary to examine into the relations which
exist between him and them according to the divine constitution of the Church.
Above all things the need of union between the bishops and the successors of
Peter is clear and undeniable. This bond once broken, Christians would be
separated and scattered, and would in no wise form one body and one flock.
"The safety of the Church depends on the dignity of the chief priest, to
whom if an extraordinary and supreme power is not given, there are as many
schisms to be expected in the Church as there are priests" (S.
Hieronymus, Dialog, contra Luciferianos, n. 9). It is necessary,
therefore, to bear this in mind, viz., that nothing was conferred on the
apostles apart from Peter, but that several things were conferred upon Peter
apart from the Apostles. St. John Chrysostom in explaining the words of Christ
asks: "Why, passing over the others, does He speak to Peter about these
things?" And he replies unhesitatingly and at once, "Because he was
pre-eminent among the Apostles, the mouthpiece of the Disciples, and the head
of the college" (Hom. lxxxviii. in Joan., n. I). He alone was designated
as the foundation of the Church. To him He gave the power of binding and
loosing; to him alone was given the power of feeding. On the other hand,
whatever authority and office the Apostles received, they received in
conjunction with Peter. "If the divine benignity willed anything to be in
common between him and the other princes, whatever He did not deny to the
others He gave only through him. So that whereas Peter alone received many
things, He conferred nothing on any of the rest without Peter participating in
it" (S. Leo M. sermo iv., cap. 2).
Bishops Separated from Peter and His
Successors, Lose All Jurisdiction
15. From this it must be clearly understood
that Bishops are deprived of the right and power of
ruling, if they deliberately secede from Peter and his successors; because, by
this secession, they are separated from the foundation on which the whole
edifice must rest. They are therefore outside the edifice itself; and for this
very reason they are separated from the fold, whose leader is the Chief
Pastor; they are exiled from the Kingdom, the keys of which were given by
Christ to Peter alone.
These things enable us to see the
heavenly ideal, and the divine exemplar, of the constitution of the Christian
commonwealth, namely: When the Divine founder decreed that the Church should
be one in faith, in government, and in communion, He chose Peter and his
successors as the principle and centre, as it were, of this unity. Wherefore
St. Cyprian says: "The following is a short and easy proof of the faith.
The Lord saith to Peter: 'I say to thee thou art Peter'; on him alone He buildeth His Church; and although after His Resurrection He gives a similar
power to all the Apostles and says: 'As the Father hath sent me,' &c.,
still in order to make the necessary unity clear, by His own authority He laid
down the source of that unity as beginning from one" (De Unit. Eccl.,
n. 4). And Optatus of Milevis says: "You cannot deny that you know that
in the city of Rome the Episcopal chair was first conferred on Peter. In this
Peter, the head of all the Apostles (hence his name Cephas), has sat; in which
chair alone unity was to be preserved for all, lest any of the other apostles
should claim anything as exclusively his own. So much so, that he who would
place another chair against that one chair, would be a schismatic and a
sinner" (De Schism. Donat., lib. ii). Hence the teaching of
Cyprian, that heresy and schism arise and are begotten from the fact that due
obedience is refused to the supreme authority. "Heresies and schisms have
no other origin than that obedience is refused to the priest of God, and that
men lose sight of the fact that there is one judge in the place of Christ in
this world" (Epist. xii. ad Cornelium, n. 5). No one, therefore,
unless in communion with Peter can share in his authority, since it is absurd
to imagine that he who is outside can command in the Church. Wherefore Optatus
of Milevis blamed the Donatists for this reason: "Against which ages (of
hell) we read that Peter received the saving keys, that is to say, our prince,
to whom it was said by Christ: `To thee will I give the keys of the Kingdom of
Heaven, and the gates of Hell shall not conquer them.' Whence is it therefore
that you strive to obtain for yourselves the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven-you
who fight against the chair of Peter?" (Lib. ii., n. 4-5).
But
the Epsicopal order is rightly judged to be in communion with Peter, as Christ
commanded, if it be subject to and obeys Peter; otherwise it necessarily
becomes a lawless and disorderly crowd. It is not sufficient for the due
preservation of the unity of the faith that the head should merely have been
charged with the office of superintendent, or should have been invested solely
with a power of direction. But it is absolutely necessary that he should have
received real and sovereign authority which the whole community is bound to
obey. What had the Son of God in view when he promised the keys of the Kingdom
of Heaven to Peter alone? Biblical usage and the unanimous teaching of the
Fathers clearly show that supreme authority is designated in the passage by
the word keys. Nor is it lawful to interpret in a different sense what was
given to Peter alone, and what was given to the other Apostles conjointly with
him. If the power of binding, loosening, and feeding confers upon each and
every one of the Bishops the successors of the Apostles a real authority to
rule the people committed to him, certainly the same power must have the same
effect in his case to whom the duty of feeding the lambs and sheep has been
assigned by God. "Christ constituted [Peter] not only pastor, but pastor
of pastors; Peter therefore feeds the lambs and feeds the sheep, feeds the
children and feeds the mothers, governs the subjects and rules the prelates,
because the lambs and the sheep form the whole of the Church" (S. Brunonis Episcopi Signiensis
Comment. in Joan., part iii., cap. 21, n.
55). Hence those remarkable expressions of the ancients concerning St. Peter,
which most clearly set forth the fact that he was placed in the highest degree
of dignity and authority. They frequently call him "the Prince of the
College of the Disciples; the Prince of the holy Apostles; the leader of that
choir; the mouthpiece of all the Apostles; the head of that family; the ruler
of the whole world; the first of the Apostles; the safeguard of the
Church." In this sense St. Bernard writes as follows to Pope Eugenius:
"Who art thou? The great priest - the high priest. Thou art the Prince of
Bishops and the heir of the Apostles. . . . Thou art he to whom the keys were
given. There are, it is true, other gatekeepers of heaven and to pastors of
flocks, but thou are so much the more glorious as thou bast inherited a
different and more glorious name than all the rest. They have
flocks consigned to them, one to each; to thee all the flocks are confided as
one flock to one shepherd, and not alone the sheep, but the shepherds. You ask
how I prove this? From the words of the Lord. To which - I do not say - of the
Bishops, but even of the Apostles have all the sheep been so absolutely and
unreservedly committed? If thou lovest me, Peter, feed my sheep. Which sheep?
Of this or that country, or kingdom? My sheep, He says: to whom therefore is
it not evident that he does not designate some, but all? We can make no
exception where no distinction is made" (De Consideratione, lib.
ii., cap. 8).
But it is opposed to the truth, and in
evident contradiction with the divine constitution of the Church, to hold that
while each Bishop is individually bound to obey the authority of the Roman
Pontiffs, taken collectively the Bishops are not so bound. For it is the
nature and object of a foundation to support the unity of the whole edifice
and to give stability to it, rather than to each component part; and in the
present case this is much more applicable, since Christ the Lord wished that
by the strength and solidity of the foundation the gates of hell should be
prevented from prevailing against the Church. All are agreed that the divine
promise must be understood of the Church as a whole, and not of any certain
portions of it. These can indeed be overcome by the assaults of the powers of
hell, as in point of fact has befallen some of them. Moreover, he who is set
over the whole flock must have authority, not only over the sheep dispersed
throughout the Church, but also when they are assembled together. Do the sheep
when they are all assembled together rule and guide the shepherd? Do the
successors of the Apostles assembled together constitute the foundation on
which the successor of St. Peter rests in order to derive therefrom strength
and stability? Surely jurisdicton and authority belong to him in whose power
have been placed the keys of the Kingdom taken collectively. And as the
Bishops, each in his own district, command with real power not only
individuals but the whole community, so the Roman pontiffs, whose jurisdiction
extends to the whole Christian commonwealth, must have all its parts, even
taken collectively, subject and obedient to their authority. Christ the Lord,
as we have quite sufficiently shown, made Peter and his successors His vicars,
to exercise for ever in the Church the power which He
exercised during His mortal life. Can the Apostolic College be said to have
been above its master in authority?
This power over the
Episcopal College to which we refer, and which is clearly set forth in Holy
Writ, has ever been acknowledged and attested by the Church, as is clear from
the teaching of General Councils. "We read that the Roman Pontiff has
pronounced judgments on the prelates of all the churches; we do not read that
anybody has pronounced sentence on him" (Hadrianus ii., in Allocutione
iii., ad Synodum Romanum an. 869, Cf. Actionem vii., Conc.
Constantinopolitani iv). The reason for which is stated thus: "there is
no authority greater than that of the Apostolic See" (Nicholaus in Epist.
lxxxvi. ad Michael. Imperat.) wherefore Gelasius on the decrees of Councils
says: "That which the First See has not approved of cannot stand; but
what it has thought well to decree has been received by the whole Church"
(Epist. xxvi., ad Episcopos Dardaniae, n. 5). It has ever been
unquestionably the office of the Roman Pontiffs to ratify or to reject the
decrees of Councils. Leo the great rescinded the acts of the Conciliabulum of
Ephesus. Damasus rejected those of Rimini, and Hadrian I. those of
Constantinople. The 28th Canon of the Council of Chalcedon, by the very fact
that it lacks the assent and approval of the Apostolic See, is admitted by all
to be worthless. Rightly, therefore, has Leo X. laid down in the 5th council
of Lateran "that the Roman Pontiff alone, as having authority over all
Councils, has full jurisdiction and power to summon, to transfer, to dissolve
Councils, as is clear, not only from the testimony of Holy Writ, from the
teaching of the Fathers and of the Roman Pontiffs, and from the decrees of the
sacred canons, but from the teaching of the very Councils themselves."
Indeed, Holy Writ attests that the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven were given to
Peter alone, and that the power of binding and loosening was granted to the
Apostles and to Peter; but there is nothing to show that the Apostles received
supreme power without Peter, and against Peter. Such power they certainly did
not receive from Jesus Christ. Wherefore, in the decree of the Vatican Council
as to the nature and authority of the primacy of the Roman Pontiff, no newly
conceived opinion is set forth, but the venerable and constant belief of every
age (Sess. iv., cap. 3).
Nor does it beget any confusion in the administration
that Christians are bound to obey a twofold authority. We are prohibited in
the first place by Divine Wisdom from entertaining any such thought, since
this form of government was constituted by the counsel of God Himself. In the
second place we must note that the due order of things and their mutual
relations are disturbed if there be a twofold magistracy of the same rank set
over a people, neither of which is amenable to the other. But the authority of
the Roman Pontiff is supreme, universal, independent; that of the bishops
limited, and dependent. "It is not congruous that two superiors with
equal authority should be placed over the same flock; but that two, one of
whom is higher than the other, should be placed over the same people is not
incongruous. Thus the parish priest, the bishop, and the Pope, are placed
immediately over the same people" (St. Thomas in iv Sent, dist. xvii., a.
4, ad q. 4, ad 3). So the Roman Pontiffs, mindful of their duty, wish above
all things, that the divine constitution of the Church should be preserved.
Therefore, as they defend with all necessary care and vigilance their own
authority, so they have always laboured, and will continue to labour, that the
authority of the bishops may be upheld. Yea, they look up whatever honour or
obedience is given to the bishops as paid to themselves. "My honour is
the honour of the Universal Church. My honour is the strength and stability of
my brethren. Then am I honoured when due honour is given to everyone" (S. Gregorius M. Epistolarum, lib viii., ep. xxx., ad Eulogium).
Appeal to Sheep Not of the Fold
16. In what has been said we have faithfully
described the exemplar and form of the Church as divinely constituted. We have
treated at length of its unity: we have explained sufficiently its nature, and
pointed out the way in which the Divine Founder of the Church willed that it
should be preserved. There is no reason to doubt that all those, who by Divine
Grace and mercy have had the happiness to have been born, as it were, in the
bosom of the Catholic Church, and to have lived in it, will listen to Our
Apostolic Voice: "My sheep hear my voice" (John x., 27), and that
they will derive from Our words fuller instruction and a more perfect
disposition to keep united with their respective pastors, and through them
with the Supreme Pastor, so that they may remain more securely within the one
fold, and may derive therefrom a greater abundance of salutary
fruit. But We, who, notwithstanding our unfitness for this great dignity and
office, govern by virtue of the authority conferred on us by Jesus Christ, as
we "look on Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith" (Heb.
xii., 2) feel Our heart fired by His charity. What Christ has said of Himself
We may truly repeat of Ourselves: "Other sheep I have that are not of
this fold: them also I must bring and they shall hear my voice" (John
x., 16). Let all those, therefore, who detest the wide-spread irreligion of
our times, and acknowledge and confess Jesus Christ to be the Son of God and
the Saviour of the human race, but who have wandered away from the Spouse,
listen to Our voice. Let them not refuse to obey Our paternal charity. Those
who acknowledge Christ must acknowledge Him wholly and entirely. "The
Head and the body are Christ wholly and entirely. The Head is the
only-begotten son of God, the body is His Church; the bridegroom and the
bride, two in one flesh. All who dissent from the Scriptures concerning
Christ, although they may be found in all places in which the Church is found,
are not in the Church; and again all those who agree with the Scriptures
concerning the Head, and do not communicate in the unity of the Church, are
not in the Church" (S. Augustinus, Contra Donatistas Epistola,
sive De Unit. Eccl., cap. iv., n. 7).
And with the same
yearning Our soul goes out to those whom the foul breath of irreligion has not
entirely corrupted, and who at least seek to have the true God, the Creator of
Heaven and earth, as their Father. Let such as these take counsel with
themselves, and realize that they can in no wise be counted among the children
of God, unless they take Christ Jesus as their Brother, and at the same time
the Church as their mother. We lovingly address to all the words of St.
Augustine: "Let us love the Lord our God; let us love His Church; the
Lord as our Father, the Church as our Mother. Let no one say, I go indeed to
idols, I consult fortune-tellers and soothsayers; but I leave not the Church
of God: I am a Catholic. Clinging to thy Mother, thou offendest thy Father.
Another, too, says: 'Far be it from me; I do not consult fortune - telling, I
seek not soothsaying, I seek not profane divinations, I go not to the worship
of devils, I serve not stones: but I am on the side of Donatus.' What doth it
profit thee not to offend the Father, who avenges an offence against the
Mother? What doth it profit to confess the Lord, to honour God, to preach
Him, to acknowledge His Son, and to confess that He sits on the
right hand of the Father, if you blaspheme His Church? . . . If you had a
beneficent friend, whom you honoured daily - and even once calumniated his
spouse, would you ever enter his house? Hold fast, therefore, O dearly
beloved, hold fast altogether God as your Father, and the Church as your
Mother" (Enarratio in Psal. lxxxviii., sermo ii., n. 14).
Above
all things, trusting in the mercy of God, who is able to move the hearts of
men and to incline them as and when He pleases, We most earnestly commend to
His loving kindness all those of whom We have spoken. As a pledge of Divine
grace, and as a token of Our affection, We lovingly impart to you, in the
Lord, Venerable Brethren, to your clergy and people, Our Apostolic Blessing.
Given at St. Peter's, Rome, the 29th day
of June, in the year 1896, and the nineteenth of our Pontificate.
LEO XIII
© Copyright 1896 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
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