GRAVISSIMO OFFICII MUNERE
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS X
ON FRENCH ASSOCIATIONS OF WORSHIP
TO OUR VENERABLE BRETHREN,
THE ARCHBISHOPS, AND BISHOPS OF FRANCE
Venerable Brethren, Health and the Apostolic Benediction.
We are about to discharge today a very grave obligation of Our office, an
obligation which We assumed towards you when We announced, after the
promulgation of the law creating a rupture between the French Republic and the
Church, that We should indicate at a fitting time what it might seem to Us ought
to be done to defend and preserve religion in your country. We have allowed you
to wait until today for the satisfaction of your desires, by reason not only of
the importance of this great question, but also and above all by reason of the
quite special charity which binds Us to you and to all your interests because of
the unforgettable services rendered to the Church by your nation.
2. Therefore, after having condemned, as was Our duty, this iniquitous law,
We have examined with greatest care whether the articles of the said law would
leave Us any means of organizing religious life in France in such a way as to
safeguard from injury the sacred principles on which Holy Church reposes. To
this end it appeared good to Us both to take the counsel of the assembled
episcopate and to prescribe for your general assembly the points which ought to
be the principal objects of your deliberations. And now, knowing your views as
well as those of several cardinals, and after having maturely reflected and
implored by the most fervent prayers the Father of Lights, We see that We ought
to confirm fully by Our Apostolic authority the almost unanimous decision of
your assembly.
3. It is for this reason that, with reference to the associations for public
worship as the law establishes them, we decree that it is absolutely impossible
for them to be formed without a violation of the sacred rights pertaining to the
very life of the Church.
4. Putting aside, therefore, these associations which the knowledge of Our
duty forbids us to approve, it might appear opportune to examine whether it is
lawful to make trial in their place of some other sort of associations at once
legal and canonical, and thus to preserve the Catholics of France from the grave
complications which menace them. Of a certainty, nothing so engrosses and
distresses Us as these eventualities; and would to Heaven that We had some hope
of being able, without infringing the rights of God, to make this essay, and
thus to deliver Our well-beloved sons from the fear of such manifold and such
great trials.
5. But as this hope fails Us while the law remains what it is, We declare
that it is not permissible to try this other kind of association as long as it
is not established in a sure and legal manner that the Divine constitution of
the Church, the immutable rights of the Roman Pontiff and of the Bishops, as
well as their authority over the necessary property of the Church and
particularly over the sacred edifices, shall be irrevocably placed in the said
associations in full security. To desire the contrary is impossible for us,
without betraying the sanctity of Our office and bringing about the ruin of the
Church of France.
6. It remains, therefore, for you, Venerable Brethren, to set yourselves to
work and to employ all means which the law recognizes as within the rights of
all citizens to arrange for and organize religious worship. In a matter so
important and so arduous you will never have to wait for Our assistance. Absent
in body, We shall be with you in thought and in heart, and We shall aid you on
every occasion with Our counsel and with Our authority. Take up with courage the
burden We impose upon you under the inspiration of Our love for the Church and
for your country, and entrust the result to the all-foreseeing goodness of God,
Whose help, We are firmly convinced, will not, in His own good time, be wanting
to France.
7. It is not difficult to foresee the nature of the recriminations which the
enemies of the Church will make against Our present decree and Our orders. They
will endeavor to persuade the people that We have not had the interests of the
Church of France solely in view; that We have had another design foreign to
religion; that the form of the Republic in France is hateful to Us, that in
order to overthrow it We are seconding the efforts of the parties hostile to it;
and that We refuse to France what the Holy See has without difficulties accorded
to other nations. These recriminations, with others of the same sort, which, as
can be foreseen from certain indications, will be disseminated among the public
in order to excite irritation, We denounce now and henceforth with the utmost
indignation as false; and it is incumbent upon you, Venerable Brethren, as upon
all good men, to refute them in order that they may not deceive simple and
ignorant people.
8. With reference to the special charge against the Church of having been
more accommodating in a similar case outside France, you should explain that the
Church has acted in this way because the situations were quite different, and
above all because the Divine attributes of the hierarchy were, in a certain
measure, safeguarded. If any State has separated from the Church, while leaving
to her the resource of the liberty common to all and the free disposal of her
property, that State has without doubt, and on more than one ground, acted
unjustly; but nevertheless, it could not be said that it has created for the
Church a situation absolutely intolerable.
9. But it is quite otherwise today in France; there the makers of this unjust
law wished to make it a law, not of separation, but of oppression. Thus they
affirmed their desire for peace, and promised an understanding; and they are now
waging an atrocious war against the religion of the country and hurling the
brand of the most violent discords, and thus inciting the citizens against each
other, to the great detriment, as every one sees, of the public welfare itself.
10. Assuredly they will tax their ingenuity to throw upon Us the blame for
this conflict and for the evils resulting therefrom. But whoever loyally
examines the facts of which We have spoken in the Encyclical Vehementer Nos
will be able to see whether We have deserved the least reproach - We, who, after
having patiently borne with injustice upon injustice in Our love for the beloved
French nation, finally find Ourselves summoned to go beyond the last holy limits
of Our Apostolic duty, and We declare that We will not go beyond them - or
rather whether the fault does not lie entirely with those who in hate of the
Apostolic name have gone to such extremities.
11. Therefore, if they desire to show Us their submission and their devotion,
let the Catholic men of France struggle for the Church in accordance with the
directions We have already given them, that is to say, with perseverance and
energy, and yet without acting in a seditious and violent manner. It is not by
violence, but by firmness, that, fortifying themselves in their good right as
within a citadel, they will succeed in breaking the obstinacy of their enemies;
let them well understand, as We have said and as we repeat that their efforts
will be useless unless they unite in a perfect understanding for the defense of
religion.
12. They now know Our verdict on the subject of this nefarious law: they
should wholeheartedly conform to it, and whatever the opinions of some or others
of them may have been hitherto during the discussion of the question, We entreat
them all that no one shall permit himself to wound anyone whomsoever on the
pretext that his own way of seeing things is the best. What can be done by
concord of will and union of forces, let them learn from their adversaries; and
just as the latter were able to impose on the nation the stigma of this criminal
law, so by their united action will our people be able to eliminate and remove
it.
13. In this hard trial of France, if all those who wish to defend with all
their power the supreme interests of their country work as they ought to do in
union among themselves with their Bishops and with Ourselves for the cause of
religion, far from despairing of the welfare of the Church of France, it is to
be hoped, on the contrary, that she will be restored to her former prosperity
and dignity. We in no way doubt that the Catholics will fully comply with Our
directions, and conform with Our desires: and We shall ardently seek to obtain
for them by the intercession of Mary, the Immaculate Virgin, the aid of the
Divine goodness.
14. As a pledge of heavenly gifts and in testimony of Our paternal
benevolence, We impart with all Our heart the Apostolic Benediction to you,
Venerable Brethren, and to the whole French nation.
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, on August 10, the Feast of St. Lawrence, the
Martyr, in the year 1906, and the fourth of Our Pontificate.
PIUS X
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