MYSTICI CORPORIS CHRISTI
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS XII ON THE MISTICAL BODY OF CHRIST
TO OUR VENERABLE BRETHREN, PATRIARCHS, PRIMATES, ARCHBISHOPS, BISHIOPS, AND OTHER LOCAL ORDINARIES ENJOYING PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE
Venerable Brethren,
Health and Apostolic Benediction.
The doctrine of the Mystical Body of Christ, which is the Church,[1]
was first taught us by the Redeemer Himself. Illustrating as it does the
great and inestimable privilege of our intimate union with so exalted a
Head, this doctrine by its sublime dignity invites all those who are drawn
by the Holy Spirit to study it, and gives them, in the truths of which it
proposes to the mind, a strong incentive to the performance of such good
works as are conformable to its teaching. For this reason, We deem it
fitting to speak to you on this subject through this Encyclical Letter,
developing and explaining above all, those points which concern the Church
Militant. To this We are urged not only by the surpassing grandeur of the
subject but also by the circumstances of the present time.
2. For We intend to speak of the riches stored up in this Church which
Christ purchased with His own Blood, [2] and whose members glory in a
thorn-crowned Head. The fact that they thus glory is a striking proof that
the greatest joy and exaltation are born only of suffering, and hence that
we should rejoice if we partake of the sufferings of Christ, that when His
glory shall be revealed we may also be glad with exceeding joy. [3]
3. From the outset it should be noted that the society established by
the Redeemer of the human race resembles its divine Founder, who was
persecuted, calumniated and tortured by those very men whom He had
undertaken to save. We do not deny, rather from a heart filled with
gratitude to God We admit, that even in our turbulent times there are many
who, though outside the fold of Jesus Christ, look to the Church as the
only haven of salvation; but We are also aware that the Church of God not
only is despised and hated maliciously by those who shut their eyes to the
light of Christian wisdom and miserably return to the teachings, customs
and practices of ancient paganism, but is ignored and neglected, and even
at times looked upon as irksome by many Christians who are allured by
specious error or caught in the meshes of the world's corruption. In
obedience, therefore, Venerable Brethren, to the voice of Our conscience
and in compliance with the wishes of many, We will set forth before the
eyes of all and extol the beauty, the praises, and the glory of Mother
Church to whom, after God, we owe everything.
4. And it is to be hoped that Our instructions and exhortations will
bring forth abundant fruit in the souls of the faithful in the present
circumstances. For We know that if all the sorrows and calamities of these
stormy times, by which countless multitudes are being sorely tried, are
accepted from God's hands with calm submission, they naturally lift souls
above the passing things of earth those of heaven that abide forever, and
arouse a certain secret thirst and intense desire for spiritual things.
Thus, urged by the Holy Spirit, men are moved, and as it were, impelled to
seek the kingdom of God with greater diligence; for the more they are
detached from the vanities of this world and from inordinate love of
temporal things, the more apt they will be to perceive the light of
heavenly mysteries. But the vanity and emptiness of earthly things are
more manifest today than perhaps at any other period, when Kingdoms and
States are crumbling, when enormous quantities of goods and all kinds of
wealth are being sunk in the depths of the sea, and cities, towns and
fertile fields are strewn with massive ruins and defiled with the blood of
brothers.
5. Moreover, We trust that Our exposition of the doctrine of the
Mystical Body of Christ will be acceptable and useful to those also who
are without the fold of the Church, not only because their good will
toward the Church seems to grow from day to day, but also because, while
before their eyes nation rises up against nation, kingdom against kingdom,
and discord is sown everywhere together with the seeds of envy and hatred,
if they turn their gaze to the Church, if they contemplate her
divinely-given unity - by which all men of every race are united to Christ
in the bond of brotherhood - they will be forced to admire this fellowship
in charity, and with the guidance and assistance of divine grace will long
to share in the same union and charity.
6. There is a special reason too, and one most dear to Us, which recalls
this doctrine to Our mind and with it a deep sense of joy. During the year
that has passed since the twenty-fifth anniversary of Our Episcopal
consecration, We have had the great consolation of witnessing something
that has made the image of the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ stand out
most clearly before the whole world. Though a long and deadly war has
pitilessly broken the bond of brotherly union between nations, We have
seen Our children in Christ, in whatever part of the world they happened
to be, one in will and affection, lift up their hearts to the common
Father, who, carrying in his own heart the cares and anxieties of all, is
guiding the barque of the Catholic Church int he teeth of a raging
tempest. This is a testimony to the wonderful union existing among
Christians; but it also proves that, as Our paternal love embraces all
peoples, whatever their nationality and race, so Catholics the world over,
though their countries may have drawn the sword against each other, look
to the Vicar of Jesus Christ as to the loving Father of them all, who,
with absolute impartiality and incorruptible judgment, rising above the
conflicting gales of human passions, takes upon himself with all his
strength the defence of truth, justice and charity.
7. We have been no less consoled to know that with spontaneous
generosity a fund has been created for the erection of a church in Rome to
be dedicated to our saintly predecessor and patron, Eugene I. At this
temple, to be built by the wish and through the liberality of all the
faithful, will be a lasting memorial of this happy event, so We desire to
offer this Encyclical Letter in testimony of Our gratitude. It tells of
those living stones which rest upon the living cornerstone, which is
Christ, and are built together into a holy temple, far surpassing any
temple built by hands, into a habitation of God in the Spirit. [4]
8. But the chief reason for Our present exposition of this sublime
doctrine is Our solicitude for the souls entrusted to Us. Much indeed has
been written on this subject; and We know that many today are turning with
greater zest to a study which delights and nourishes Christian piety.
This, it would seem, is chiefly because a revived interest in the sacred
liturgy, the more widely spread custom of frequent Communion, and the more
fervent devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus practiced today, have
brought many souls to a deeper consideration of the unsearchable riches of
Christ which are preserved in the Church. Moreover, recent pronouncements
on Catholic Action, by drawing closer the bonds of union between
Christians and between them and the ecclesiastical hierarchy and
especially the Roman Pontiff, have undoubtedly helped not a little to
place this truth in its proper light. Nevertheless, while We can derive
legitimate joy from these considerations, We must confess that grave
errors with regard to this doctrine are being spread among those outside
the true Church, and that among the faithful, also, inaccurate or
thoroughly false ideas are being disseminated which turn minds aside from
the straight path of truth.
9. For while there still survives a false rationalism, which
ridicules anything that transcends and defies the power of human genius,
and which is accompanied by a cognate error, the so-called popular
naturalism, which sees and wills to see in the Church nothing but a
juridical and social union, there is on the other hand a false mysticism
creeping in, which, in its attempt to eliminate the immovable frontier
that separates creatures from their Creator, falsifies the Sacred
Scriptures.
10. As a result of these conflicting and mutually antagonistic schools
of thought, some through vain fear, look upon so profound a doctrine as
something dangerous, and so they shrink from it as from the beautiful but
forbidden fruit of paradise. But this is not so. Mysteries revealed by God
cannot be harmful to men, nor should they remain as treasures hidden in a
field, useless. They have been given from on high precisely to help the
spiritual progress of those who study them in a spirit of piety. For, as
the Vatican Council teaches, "reason illumined by faith, if it seeks
earnestly, piously and wisely, does attain under God, to a certain and
most helpful knowledge of mysteries, by considering their analogy with
what it knows naturally, and their mutual relations, and their common
relations with man's last end," although, as the same holy Synod
observes, reason, even thus illumined, "is never capable of
understanding those mysteries as it does those truths which forms its
proper object." [5]
11. After pondering all this long and seriously before God We consider
it part of Our pastoral duty to explain to the entire flock of Christ
through this Encyclical Letter the doctrine of the Mystical Body of Christ
and of the union in this Body of the faithful with the divine Redeemer;
and then, from this consoling doctrine, to draw certain lessons that will
make a deeper study of this mystery bear yet richer fruits of perfection
and holiness. Our purpose is to throw an added ray of glory on the supreme
beauty of the Church; to bring out into fuller light the exalted
supernatural nobility of the faithful who in the Body of Christ are united
with their Head; and finally, to exclude definitely the many current
errors with regard to this matter.
12. When one reflects on the origin of this doctrine, there come to mind
at once the words of the Apostle: "Where sin abounded, grace did more
abound."[6] All know that the father of the whole human race was
constituted by God in so exalted a state that he was to hand on to his
posterity, together with earthly existence, the heavenly life of divine
grace. But after the unhappy fall of Adam, the whole human race, infected
by the hereditary stain, lost their participation in the divine nature,[7]
and we were all "children of wrath."[8] But the all-merciful God
"so loved the world as to give His only-begotten Son,"[9] and
the Word of the Eternal Father with the same divine love assumed human
nature from the race of Adam - but as an innocent and spotless nature - so
that He, as the new Adam, might be the source whence the grace of the Holy
Spirit should flow unto all the children of the first parent. Through the
sin of the first man they had been excluded from adoption as children of
God; through the Word incarnate, made brothers according to the flesh of
the only-begotten Son of God, they receive also the power to become the
sons of God.[10] As He hung upon the Cross, Christ Jesus not only appeased
the justice of the Eternal Father which had been violated, but He also won
for us, His brethren, an ineffable flow of graces. It was possible for Him
of Himself to impart these graces to mankind directly; but He willed to do
so only through a visible Church made up of men, so that through her all
might cooperate with Him in dispensing the graces of Redemption. As the
Word of God willed to make use of our nature, when in excruciating agony
He would redeem mankind, so in the same way throughout the centuries He
makes use of the Church that the work begun might endure. [11]
13. If we would define and describe this true Church of Jesus Christ -
which is the One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic and Roman Church [12] - we
shall find nothing more noble, more sublime, or more divine than the
expression "the Mystical Body of Christ" - an expression which
springs from and is, as it were, the fair flowering of the repeated
teaching of the Sacred Scriptures and the Holy Fathers.
14. That the Church is a body is frequently asserted in the Sacred
Scriptures. "Christ," says the Apostle, "is the Head of the
Body of the Church."[13] If the Church is a body, it must be an
unbroken unity, according to those words of Paul: "Though many we are
one body in Christ."[14] But it is not enough that the Body of the
Church should be an unbroken unity; it must also be something definite and
perceptible to the senses as Our predecessor of happy memory, Leo XIII, in
his Encyclical Satis Cognitum asserts: "the Church is visible
because she is a body.[15] Hence they err in a matter of divine truth, who
imagine the Church to be invisible, intangible, a something merely "pneumatological"
as they say, by which many Christian communities, though they differ from
each other in their profession of faith, are untied by an invisible bond.
15. But a body calls also for a multiplicity of members, which are
linked together in such a way as to help one another. And as in the body
when one member suffers, all the other members share its pain, and the
healthy members come to the assistance of the ailing, so in the Church the
individual members do not live for themselves alone, but also help their
fellows, and all work in mutual collaboration for the common comfort and
for the more perfect building up of the whole Body.
16. Again, as in nature a body is not formed by any haphazard grouping
of members but must be constituted of organs, that is of members, that
have not the same function and are arranged in due order; so for this
reason above all the Church is called a body, that it is constituted by
the coalescence of structurally untied parts, and that it has a variety of
members reciprocally dependent. It is thus the Apostle describes the
Church when he writes: "As in one body we have many members, but all
the members have not the same office: so we being many are one body in
Christ, and everyone members one of another." [16]
17. One must not think, however, that this ordered or "organic"
structure of the body of the Church contains only hierarchical elements
and with them is complete; or, as an opposite opinion holds, that it is
composed only of those who enjoy charismatic gifts - though members gifted
with miraculous powers will never be lacking in the Church. That those who
exercise sacred power in this Body are its chief members must be
maintained uncompromisingly. It is through them, by commission of the
Divine Redeemer Himself, that Christ's apostolate as Teacher, King and
Priest is to endure. At the same time, when the Fathers of the Church sing
the praises of this Mystical Body of Christ, with its ministries, its
variety of ranks, its officers, it conditions, its orders, its duties,
they are thinking not only of those who have received Holy Orders, but of
all those too, who, following the evangelical counsels, pass their lives
either actively among men, or hidden in the silence of the cloister, or
who aim at combining the active and contemplative life according to their
Institute; as also of those who, though living in the world, consecrate
themselves wholeheartedly to spiritual or corporal works of mercy, and of
those in the state of holy matrimony. Indeed, let this be clearly
understood, especially in our days, fathers and mothers of families, those
who are godparents through Baptism, and in particular those members of the
laity who collaborate with the ecclesiastical hierarchy in spreading the
Kingdom of the Divine Redeemer occupy an honorable, if often a lowly,
place in the Christian community, and even they under the impulse of God
and with His help, can reach the heights of supreme holiness, which, Jesus
Christ has promised, will never be wanting to the Church.
18. Now we see that the human body is given the proper means to provide
for its own life, health and growth, and for that of all its members.
Similarly, the Savior of mankind out of His infinite goodness has provided
in a wonderful way for His Mystical Body, endowing it with the Sacraments,
so that, as though by an uninterrupted series of graces, its members
should be sustained from birth to death, and that generous provision might
be made for the social needs of the Church. Through the waters of Baptism
those who are born into this world dead in sin are not only born again and
made members of the Church, but being stamped with a spiritual seal they
become able and fit to receive the other Sacraments. By the chrism of
Confirmation, the faithful are given added strength to protect and defend
the Church, their Mother, and the faith she has given them. In the
Sacrament of Penance a saving medicine is offered for the members of the
Church who have fallen into sin, not only to provide for their own health,
but to remove from other members of the Mystical Body all danger of
contagion, or rather to afford them an incentive to virtue, and the
example of a virtuous act.
19. Nor is that all; for in the Holy Eucharist the faithful are
nourished and strengthened at the same banquet and by a divine, ineffable
bond are united with each other and with the Divine Head of the whole
Body. Finally, like a devoted mother, the Church is at the bedside of
those who are sick unto death; and if it be not always God's will that by
the holy anointing she restore health to the mortal body, nevertheless she
administers spiritual medicine to the wounded soul and sends new citizens
to heaven - to be her new advocates - who will enjoy forever the happiness
of God.
20. For the social needs of the Church Christ has provided in a
particular way by the institution of two other Sacraments. Through
Matrimony, in which the contracting parties are ministers of grace to each
other, provision is made for the external and duly regulated increase of
Christian society, and, what is of greater importance, for the correct
religious education of the children, without which this Mystical Body
would be in grave danger. Through Holy Orders men are set aside and
consecrated to God, to offer the Sacrifice of the Eucharistic Victim, to
nourish the flock of the faithful with the Bread of Angels and the food of
doctrine, to guide them in the way of God's commandments and counsels and
to strengthen them with all other supernatural helps.
21. In this connection it must be borne in mind that, as God at the
beginning of time endowed man's body with most ample power to subject all
creatures to himself, and to increase and multiply and fill the earth, so
at the beginning of the Christian era, He supplied the Church with the
means necessary to overcome the countless dangers and to fill not only the
whole world but the realms of heaven as well.
22. Actually only those are to be included as members of the Church who
have been baptized and profess the true faith, and who have not been so
unfortunate as to separate themselves from the unity of the Body, or been
excluded by legitimate authority for grave faults committed. "For in
one spirit" says the Apostle, "were we all baptized into one
Body, whether Jews or Gentiles, whether bond or free."[17] As
therefore in the true Christian community there is only one Body, one
Spirit, one Lord, and one Baptism, so there can be only one faith.[18] And
therefore, if a man refuse to hear the Church, let him be considered - so
the Lord commands - as a heathen and a publican. [19] It follows that
those who are divided in faith or government cannot be living in the unity
of such a Body, nor can they be living the life of its one Divine Spirit.
23. Nor must one imagine that the Body of the Church, just because it
bears the name of Christ, is made up during the days of its earthly
pilgrimage only of members conspicuous for their holiness, or that it
consists only of those whom God has predestined to eternal happiness. It
is owing to the Savior's infinite mercy that place is allowed in His
Mystical Body here below for those whom, of old, He did not exclude from
the banquet.[20] For not every sin, however grave it may be, is such as of
its own nature to sever a man from the Body of the Church, as does schism
or heresy or apostasy. Men may lose charity and divine grace through sin,
thus becoming incapable of supernatural merit, and yet not be deprived of
all life if they hold fast to faith and Christian hope, and if, illumined
from above, they are spurred on by the interior promptings of the Holy
Spirit to salutary fear and are moved to prayer and penance for their
sins.
24. Let every one then abhor sin, which defiles the mystical members of
our Redeemer; but if anyone unhappily falls and his obstinacy has not made
him unworthy of communion with the faithful, let him be received with
great love, and let eager charity see in him a weak member of Jesus
Christ. For, as the Bishop of Hippo remarks, it is better "to be
cured within the Church's community than to be cut off from its body as
incurable members."[21] "As long as a member still forms part of
the body there is no reason to despair of its cure; once it has been cut
off, it can be neither cured nor healed." [22]
25. In the course of the present study, Venerable Brethren, we have thus
far seen that the Church is so constituted that it may be likened to a
body. We must now explain clearly and precisely why it is to be called not
merely a body, but the Body of Jesus Christ. This follows from the fact
that our Lord is the Founder, the Head, the Support and the Savior of this
Mystical Body.
26. As We set out briefly to expound in what sense Christ founded His
social Body, the following thought of Our predecessor of happy memory, Leo
XIII, occurs to Us at once: "The Church which, already conceived,
came forth from the side of the second Adam in His sleep on the Cross,
first showed Herself before the eyes of men on the great day of Pentecost."[23]
For the Divine Redeemer began the building of the mystical temple of the
Church when by His preaching He made known His Precepts; He completed it
when he hung glorified on the Cross; and He manifested and proclaimed it
when He sent the Holy Ghost as Paraclete in visible form on His disciples.
27. For while fulfilling His office as preacher He chose Apostles,
sending them as He had been sent by the Father [24] - namely, as teachers,
rulers, instruments of holiness in the assembly of the believers; He
appointed their Chief and His Vicar on earth;[25] He made known to them
all things and whatsoever He had heard from His Father; [26] He also
determined that through Baptism [27] those who should believe would be
incorporated in the Body of the Church; and finally, when He came to the
close of His life, He instituted at the Last Supper the wonderful
Sacrifice and Sacrament of the Eucharist.
28. That He completed His work on the gibbet of the Cross is the
unanimous teaching of the holy Fathers who assert that the Church was born
from the side of our Savior on the Cross like a new Eve, mother of all the
living. [28] "And it is now," says the great St. Ambrose,
speaking of the pierced side of Christ, "that it is built, it is now
that it is formed, it is now that it is...molded, it is now that it is
created... Now it is that arises a spiritual house, a holy priesthood."
[29] One who reverently examines this venerable teaching will easily
discover the reasons on which it is based.
29. And first of all, by the death of our Redeemer, the New Testament
took the place of the Old Law which had been abolished; then the Law of
Christ together with its mysteries, enactments, institutions, and sacred
rites was ratified for the whole world in the blood of Jesus Christ. For,
while our Divine Savior was preaching in a restricted area - He was not
sent but to the sheep that were lost of the House of Israel [30] - the Law
and the Gospel were together in force; [31] but on the gibbet of His death
Jesus made void the Law with its decrees [32] fastened the handwriting of
the Old Testament to the Cross, [33] establishing the New Testament in His
blood shed for the whole human race.[34] "To such an extent, then,"
says St. Leo the Great, speaking of the Cross of our Lord, "was there
effected a transfer from the Law to the Gospel, from the Synagogue to the
Church, from the many sacrifices to one Victim, that, as Our Lord expired,
that mystical veil which shut off the innermost part of the temple and its
sacred secret was rent violently from top to bottom." [35]
30. On the Cross then the Old Law died, soon to be buried and to be a
bearer of death, [36] in order to give way to the New Testament of which
Christ had chosen the Apostles as qualified ministers; [37] and although
He had been constituted the Head of the whole human family in the womb of
the Blessed Virgin, it is by the power of the Cross that our Savior
exercises fully the office itself of Head of His Church. "For it was
through His triumph on the Cross," according to the teaching of the
Angelic and Common Doctor, "that He won power and dominion over the
gentiles";[38] by that same victory He increased the immense treasure
of graces, which, as He reigns in glory in heaven, He lavishes continually
on His mortal members; it was by His blood shed on the Cross that God's
anger was averted and that all the heavenly gifts, especially the
spiritual graces of the New and Eternal Testament, could then flow from
the fountains of our Savior for the salvation of men, of the faithful
above all; it was on the tree of the Cross, finally, that He entered into
possession of His Church, that is, of all the members of His Mystical
Body; for they would not have been untied to this Mystical Body through
the waters of Baptism except by the salutary virtue of the Cross, by which
they had been already brought under the complete sway of Christ.
31. But if our Savior, by His death, became, in the full and complete
sense of the word, the Head of the Church, it was likewise through His
blood that the Church was enriched with the fullest communication of the
Holy Spirit, through which, from the time when the Son of Man was lifted
up and glorified on the Cross by His sufferings, she is divinely
illumined. For then, as Augustine notes, [39] with the rending of the veil
of the temple it happened that the dew of the Paraclete's gifts, which
heretofore had descended only on the fleece, that is on the people of
Israel, fell copiously and abundantly (while the fleece remained dry and
deserted) on the whole earth, that is on the Catholic Church, which is
confined by no boundaries of race or territory. Just as at the first
moment of the Incarnation the Son of the Eternal Father adorned with the
fullness of the Holy Spirit the human nature which was substantially
united to Him, that it might be a fitting instrument of the Divinity in
the sanguinary work of the Redemption, so at the hour of His precious
death He willed that His Church should be enriched with the abundant gifts
of the Paraclete in order that in dispensing the divine fruits of the
Redemption she might be, for the Incarnate Word, a powerful instrument
that would never fail. For both the juridical mission of the Church, and
the power to teach, govern and administer the Sacraments, derive their
supernatural efficacy and force for the building up of the Body of Christ
from the fact that Jesus Christ, hanging on the Cross, opened up to His
Church the fountain of those divine gifts, which prevent her from ever
teaching false doctrine and enable her to rule them for the salvation of
their souls through divinely enlightened pastors and to bestow on them an
abundance of heavenly graces.
32. If we consider closely all these mysteries of the Cross, those words
of the Apostle are no longer obscure, in which he teaches the Ephesians
that Christ, by His blood, made the Jews and Gentiles one "breaking
down the middle wall of partition...in his flesh" by which the two
peoples were divided; and that He made the Old Law void "that He
might make the two in Himself into one new man," that is, the Church,
and might reconcile both to God in one Body by the Cross." [40]
33. The Church which He founded by His Blood, He strengthened on the Day
of Pentecost by a special power, given from heaven. For, having solemnly
installed in his exalted office him whom He had already nominated as His
Vicar, He had ascended into Heaven; and sitting now at the right hand of
the Father He wished to make known and proclaim His Spouse through the
visible coming of the Holy Spirit with the sound of a mighty wind and
tongues of fire.[41] For just as He Himself when He began to preach was
made known by His Eternal Father through the Holy Spirit descending and
remaining on Him in the form of a dove, [42] so likewise, as the Apostles
were about to enter upon their ministry of preaching, Christ our Lord sent
the Holy Spirit down from Heaven, to touch them with tongues of fire and
to point out, as by the finger of God, the supernatural mission and office
of the Church.
34. That this Mystical Body which is the Church should be called
Christ's is proved in the second place from the fact that He must be
universally acknowledged as its actual Head. "He," as St. Paul
says, "is the Head of the Body, the Church." [43] He is the Head
from whom the whole body perfectly organized, "groweth and maketh
increase unto the edifying of itself." [44]
35. You are familiar, Venerable Brethren, with the admirable and
luminous language used by the masters of Scholastic Theology and chiefly
by the Angelic and Common Doctor, when treating this question; and you
know that the reasons advanced by Aquinas are a faithful reflection of the
mind and writings of the Holy Fathers, who moreover merely repeated and
commented on the inspired word of Sacred Scripture.
36. However for the good of all We wish to touch on this point briefly.
And first of all it is clear that the Son of God and of the Blessed Virgin
is to be called the head of the Church by reason of His singular
pre-eminence. For the Head is in the highest place. But who is in a higher
place than Christ God, who as the Word of the Eternal Father must be
acknowledged to be the "firstborn of every creature?"[45] Who
has reached more lofty heights than Christ Man who, though born of the
Immaculate Virgin, is the true and natural Son of God, and in virtue of
His miraculous and glorious resurrection, a resurrection triumphant over
death, has become the "firstborn of the dead?" [46] Who finally
has been so exalted as He, who as "the one mediator of God and men"[47]
has in a most wonderful manner linked earth to heaven, who, raised on the
Cross as on a throne of mercy, has drawn all things to Himself,[48] who,
as the Son of Man chosen from among thousands, is beloved of God beyond
all men, all angels and all created things? [49]
37. Because Christ is so exalted, He alone by every right rules and
governs the Church; and herein is yet another reason why He must be
likened to a head. As the head is the "royal citadel" of the
body [50] - to use the words of Ambrose - and all the members over whom it
is placed for their good [51] are naturally guided by it as being endowed
with superior powers, so the Divine Redeemer holds the helm of the
universal Christian community and directs its course. And as to govern
human society signifies to lead men to the end proposed by means that are
expedient, just and helpful, [52] it is easy to see how our Savior, model
and ideal of good Shepherds, [53] performs all these functions in a most
striking way.
38. While still on earth, He instructed us by precept, counsel and
warning in words that shall never pass away, and will be spirit and life
[54] to all men of all times. Moreover He conferred a triple power on His
Apostles and their successors, to teach, to govern, to lead men to
holiness, making this power, defined by special ordinances, rights and
obligations, the fundamental law of the whole Church.
39. But our Divine Savior governs and guides the Society which He
founded directly and personally also. For it is He who reigns within the
minds and hearts of men, and bends and subjects their wills to His good
pleasure, even when rebellious. "The heart of the King is in the hand
of the Lord; whithersoever he will, he shall turn it."[55] By this
interior guidance He the "Shepherd and Bishop of our souls,"[56]
not only watches over individuals but exercises His providence over the
universal Church, whether by enlightening and giving courage to the
Church's rulers for the loyal and effective performance of their
respective duties, or by singling out form the body of the Church -
especially when times are grave - men and women of conspicuous holiness,
who may point the way for the rest of Christendom to the perfecting of His
Mystical Body. Morever from Heaven Christ never ceases to look down with
especial love on His spotless Spouse so sorely tried in her earthly exile;
and when He sees her in danger, saves her from the tempestuous sea either
Himself or through the ministry of His angels,[57] or through her whom we
invoke as Help of Christians, or through other heavenly advocates, and in
calm and tranquil waters comforts her with the peace "which
surpasseth all understanding." [58]
40. But we must not think that He rules only in a hidden [59] or
extraordinary manner. On the contrary, our Redeemer also governs His
Mystical Body in a visible and normal way through His Vicar on earth. You
know, Venerable Brethren, that after He had ruled the "little flock"
[60] Himself during His mortal pilgrimage, Christ our Lord, when about to
leave this world and return to the Father, entrusted to the Chief of the
Apostles the visible government of the entire community He had founded.
Since He was all wise He could not leave the body of the Church He had
founded as a human society without a visible head. Nor against this may
one argue that the primacy of jurisdiction established in the Church gives
such a Mystical Body two heads. For Peter in view of his primacy is only
Christ's Vicar; so that there is only one chief Head of this Body, namely
Christ, who never ceases Himself to guide the Church invisibly, though at
the same time He rules it visibly, through him who is His representative
on earth. After His glorious Ascension into Heaven this Church rested not
on Him alone, but on Peter, too, its visible foundation stone. That Christ
and His Vicar constitute one only Head is the solemn teaching of Our
predecessor of immortal memory Boniface VIII in the Apostolic Letter Unam
Sanctam; [61] and his successors have never ceased to repeat the same.
41. They, therefore, walk in the path of dangerous error who believe
that they can accept Christ as the Head of the Church, while not adhering
loyally to His Vicar on earth. They have taken away the visible head,
broken the visible bonds of unity and left the Mystical Body of the
Redeemer so obscured and so maimed, that those who are seeking the haven
of eternal salvation can neither see it nor find it.
42. What we have thus far said of the Universal Church must be
understood also of the individual Christian communities, whether Oriental
or Latin, which go to makeup the one Catholic Church. For they, too, are
ruled by Jesus Christ through the voice of their respective Bishops.
Consequently, Bishops must be considered as the more illustrious members
of the Universal Church, for they are united by a very special bond to the
divine Head of the whole Body and so are rightly called "principal
parts of the members of the Lord;" [62] moreover, as far as his own
diocese is concerned, each one as a true Shepherd feeds the flock
entrusted to him and rules it in the name of Christ. [63] Yet in
exercising this office they are not altogether independent, but are
subordinate to the lawful authority of the Roman Pontiff, although
enjoying the ordinary power of jurisdiction which they receive directly
from the same Supreme Pontiff. Therefore, Bishops should be revered by the
faithful as divinely appointed successors of the Apostles, [64] and to
them, even more than to the highest civil authorities should be applied
the words: "Touch not my anointed one!" [65] For Bishops have
been anointed with the chrism of the Holy Spirit.
43. That is why We are deeply pained when We hear that not a few of Our
Brother Bishops are being attacked and persecuted not only in their own
persons, but - what is more cruel and heartrending for them - in the
faithful committed to their care, in those who share their apostolic
labors, even in the virgins consecrated to God; and all this, merely
because they are a pattern of the flock from the heart [66] and guard with
energy and loyalty, as they should the sacred "deposit of faith"[67]
confided to them; merely because they insist on the sacred laws that have
been engraved by God on the souls of men, and after the example of the
Supreme Shepherd defend their flock against ravenous wolves. Such an
offence We consider as committed against Our own person and We repeat the
noble words of Our Predecessor of immortal memory Gregory the Great: "Our
honor is the honor of the Universal Church; Our honor is the united
strength of Our Brethren; and We are truly honored when honor is given to
each and every one." [68]
44. Because Christ the Head holds such an eminent position, one must not
think that he does not require the help of the Body. What Paul said of the
human organism is to be applied likewise to the Mystical Body: "The
head cannot say to the feet: I have no need of you."[69] It is
manifestly clear that the faithful need the help of the Divine Redeemer,
for He has said: "Without me you can do nothing,"[70] and
according to the teaching of the Apostle every advance of this Mystical
Body towards its perfection derives from Christ the Head.[71] Yet this,
also, must be held, marvelous though it may seem: Christ has need of His
members. First, because the person of Jesus Christ is represented by the
Supreme Pontiff, who in turn must call on others to share much of his
solicitude lest he be overwhelmed by the burden of his pastoral office,
and must be helped daily by the prayers of the Church. Moreover as our
Savior does not rule the Church directly in a visible manner, He wills to
be helped by the members of His Body in carrying out the work of
redemption. That is not because He is indigent and weak, but rather
because He has so willed it for the greater glory of His spotless Spouse.
Dying on the Cross He left to His Church the immense treasury of the
Redemption, towards which she contributed nothing. But when those graces
come to be distributed, not only does He share this work of sanctification
with His Church, but He wills that in some way it be due to her action.
This is a deep mystery, and an inexhaustible subject of meditation, that
the salvation of many depends on the prayers and voluntary penances which
the members of the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ offer for this intention
and on the cooperation of pastors of souls and of the faithful, especially
of fathers and mothers of families, a cooperation which they must offer to
our Divine Savior as though they were His associates.
45. To the reasons thus far adduced to show that Christ our Lord should
be called the Head of the Society which is His Body there may be added
three others which are closely related to one another.
46. We begin with the similarity which we see existing between Head and
body, in that they have the same nature; and in this connection it must be
observed that our nature, although inferior to that of the angels,
nevertheless through God's goodness has risen above it: "For Christ,"
as Aquinas says, "is Head of the angels; for even in His humanity He
is superior to angels... Even as man He illumines the angelic intellect
and influences the angelic will. But in respect to similarity of nature
Christ is not Head of the angels, because He did not take hold of the
angels - to quote the Apostle - but of the seed of Abraham."[72] And
Christ not only took our nature; He became one of our flesh and blood with
a frail body that could suffer and die. But "If the Word emptied
himself taking the form of a slave," [73] it was that He might make
His brothers according to the flesh partakers of the divine nature, [74]
through sanctifying grace in this earthly exile, in heaven through the
joys of eternal bliss. For the reason why the only-begotten Son of the
Eternal Father willed to be a son of man was that we might be made
conformed to the image of the Son of God [75] and be renewed according to
the image of Him who created us. [76] Let all those, then, who glory in
the name of Christian, look to our Divine Savior as the most exalted and
the most perfect exemplar of all virtues; but let them also, by careful
avoidance of sin and assiduous practice of virtue, bear witness by their
conduct to His teaching and life, so that when the Lord shall appear they
may be like unto Him and see Him as He is. [77]
47. It is the will of Jesus Christ that the whole boy of the Church, no
less than the individual members, should resemble Him. And we see this
realized when, following in the footsteps of her Founder, the Church
teaches, governs, and offers the divine Sacrifice. When she embraces the
evangelical counsels she reflects the Redeemer's poverty, obedience and
virginal purity. Adorned with institutes of many different kinds as with
so many precious jewels, she represents Christ deep in prayer on the
mountain, or preaching to the people, or healing the sick and wounded and
bringing sinners back to the path of virtue - in a word, doing good to
all. What wonder then, if, while on this earth she, like Christ, suffer
persecutions, insults and sorrows.
48. Christ must be acknowledged Head of the Church for this reason too,
that, as supernatural gifts have their fullness and perfection in Him, it
is of this fullness that His Mystical Body receives. It is pointed out by
many of the Fathers, that as the head of our mortal body is the seat of
all the senses, while the other parts of our organism have only the sense
of touch, so all the powers that are found in Christian society, all the
gifts, all the extraordinary graces, attain their utmost perfection in the
Head, Christ. "In Him it hath well pleased the Father that
all fulness should dwell."[78] He is gifted with those supernatural
powers that accompany the hypostatic union, since the Holy spirit dwells
in Him with a fulness of grace than which no greater can be imagined. To
Him has been given "power over all flesh"; [79] "all the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge are in Him"[80] abundantly. The
knowledge which is called "vision" He possesses with such
clarity and comprehensiveness that it surpasses similar celestial
knowledge found in all the saints of heaven. So full of grace and truth is
He that of His inexhaustible fullness we have all received. [81]
49. These words of the disciple whom Jesus loved lead us to the last
reason why Christ our Lord should be declared in a very particular way
Head of His Mystical Body. As the nerves extend from the head to all parts
of the human body and give them power to feel and to move, in like manner
our Savior communicates strength and power to His Church so that the
things of God are understood more clearly and are more eagerly desired by
the faithful. From Him streams into the body of the Church all the light
with which those who believe are divinely illumined, and all the grace by
which they are made holy as He is holy.
50. Christ enlightens His whole Church, as numberless passages from the
Sacred Scriptures and the holy Fathers prove. "No man hath seen God
at any time: the only-begotten Son who is in the bosom of the Father he
hath declared him"[82] Coming as a teacher from God [83] to give
testimony to the truth [84] He shed such light upon the nascent apostolic
Church that the Prince of the Apostles exclaimed: "Lord, to whom
shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal life"; [85] from heaven
He assisted the evangelists in such a way that as members of Christ they
wrote what they had learned, as it were, at the dictation of the Head.
[86] And as for us today, who linger on in this earthly exile, He is still
the author of faith as in our heavenly home He will be its finisher.[87]
It is He who imparts the light of faith to believers; it is He who
enriches pastors and teachers and above all His Vicar on earth with the
supernatural gifts of knowledge, understanding and wisdom, so that they
may loyally preserve the treasury of faith, defend it vigorously, and
explain it and confirm it with reverence and devotion. Finally, it is He
who, though unseen, presides at the Councils of the Church and guides
them. [88]
51. Holiness begins from Christ; and Christ is its cause. For no act
conducive to salvation can be performed unless it proceeds from Him as
from its supernatural source. "Without me," He says, "you
can do nothing."[89] If we grieve and do penance for our sins if,
with filial fear and hope, we turn again to God, it is because He is
leading us. Grace and glory flow from His inexhaustible fulness. Our
Savior is continually pouring out His gifts of counsel, fortitude, fear
and piety, especially on the leading members of His Body, so that the
whole Body may grow ever more and more in holiness and integrity of life.
When the Sacraments of the Church are administered by external rite, it is
He who produces their effect in souls.[90] He nourishes the redeemed with
His own flesh and blood and thus calms the turbulent passions of the soul;
He gives increase of grace and prepares future glory for souls and bodies.
All these treasures of His divine goodness He is said to bestow on the
members of His Mystical Body, not merely because He, as the Eucharistic
Victim on earth and the glorified Victim in heaven, through His wounds and
His prayers pleads our cause before the Eternal Father, but because He
selects, He determines, He distributes every single grace to every single
person "according to the measure of the giving of Christ."[91]
Hence it follows that from our Divine Redeemer as from a fountainhead "the
whole body, being compacted and fitly joined together, by what every joint
supplieth according to the operation in the measure of every part, maketh
increase of the body, into the edifying of itself in charity." [92]
52. These truths which We have expounded, Venerable Brethren, briefly
and succinctly tracing the manner in which Christ our Lord wills that His
abundant graces should flow from His fulness into the Church, in order
that she should resemble Him as closely as possible, help not a little to
explain the third reason why the social Body of the Church should be
honored by the name of Christ - namely, that our Savior Himself sustains
in a divine manner the society which He founded.
53. As Bellarmine notes with acumen and accuracy,[93] this appellation
of the Body of Christ is not to be explained solely by the fact that
Christ must be called the Head of His Mystical Body, but also by the fact
that He so sustains the Church, and so in a certain sense lives in the
Church, that she is, as it were, another Christ. The Doctor of the
Gentiles, in his letter to the Corinthians, affirms this when, without
further qualification, he calls the Church "Christ," [94]
following no doubt the example of his Master who called out to him from on
high when he was attacking the Church: "Saul, Saul, why persecutest
thou me?" [95] Indeed, if we are to believe Gregory of Nyssa, the
Church is often called simply "Christ" by the Apostle;[96] and
you are familiar Venerable Brethren, with that phrase of Augustine: "Christ
preaches Christ." [97]
54. Nevertheless this most noble title of the Church must not be so
understood as if that ineffable bond by which the Son of God assumed a
definite human nature belongs to the universal Church; but it consists in
this, that our Savior shares prerogatives peculiarly His own with the
Church in such a way that she may portray, in her whole life, both
exterior and interior, a most faithful image of Christ. For in virtue of
the juridical mission by which our Divine Redeemer sent His Apostles into
the world, as He had been sent by the Father, [98] it is He who through
the Church baptizes, teaches, rules, looses, binds, offers, sacrifices.
55. But in virtue of that higher, interior, and wholly sublime
communication, with which We dealt when We described the manner in which
the Head influences the members, Christ our Lord wills the Church to live
His own supernatural life, and by His divine power permeates His whole
Body and nourishes and sustains each of the members according to the place
which they occupy in the body, in the same way as the vine nourishes and
makes fruitful the branches which are joined to it. [99]
56. If we examine closely this divine principle of life and power given
by Christ, insofar as it constitutes the very source of every gift and
created grace, we easily perceive that it is nothing else than the Holy
spirit, the Paraclete, who proceeds from the Father and the Son, and who
is called in a special way, the "Spirit of Christ" or the "Spirit
of the Son."[100] For it was by this Breath of grace and truth that
the Son of God anointed His soul in the immaculate womb of the Blessed
Virgin; this Spirit delights to dwell in the beloved soul of our Redeemer
as in His most cherished shrine; this Spirit Christ merited for us on the
Cross by shedding His Own Blood; this Spirit He bestowed on the Church for
the remission of sins, when He breathed on the Apostles;[101] and while
Christ alone received this Spirit without measure,[102] to the members of
the Mystical Body He is imparted only according to the measure of the
giving of Christ from Christ's own fulness.[103] But after Christ's
glorification on the Cross, His Spirit is communicated to the Church in an
abundant outpouring, so that she, and her individual members, may become
daily more and more like to our Savior. It is the Spirit of Christ that
has made us adopted sons of God [104] in order that one day "we all
beholding the glory of the Lord with open face may be transformed into the
same image from glory to glory."[105]
57. To this Spirit of Christ, also, as to an invisible principle is to
be ascribed the fact that all the parts of the Body are joined one with
the other and with their exalted Head; for He is entire in the Head,
entire in the Body, and entire in each of the members. To the members He
is present and assists them in proportion to their various duties and
offices, and the greater or less degree of spiritual health which they
enjoy. It is He who, through His heavenly grace, is the principle of every
supernatural act in all parts of the Body. It is He who, while He is
personally present and divinely active in all the members, nevertheless in
the inferior members acts also through the ministry of the higher members.
Finally, while by His grace He provides for the continual growth of the
Church, He yet refuses to dwell through sanctifying grace in those members
that are wholly severed from the Body. This presence and activity of the
Spirit of Jesus Christ is tersely and vigorously described by Our
predecessor of immortal memory Leo XIII in his Encyclical Letter Divinum
Illud in these words: "Let it suffice to say that, as Christ is
the Head of the Church, so is the Holy Spirit her soul."[106]
58. If that vital principle, by which the whole community of Christians
is sustained by its Founder, be considered not now in itself, but in the
created effects which proceed form it, it consists in those heavenly gifts
which our Redeemer, together with His Spirit, bestows on the Church, and
which He and His Spirit, from whom come supernatural light and holiness,
make operative in the Church. The Church, then, no less than each of her
holy members can make this great saying of the Apostle her own: "And
I live, now not I; but Christ liveth in me."[107]
59. What We have said concerning the "mystical Head"[108]
would indeed be incomplete if We were not at least briefly to touch on
this saying of the same Apostle: "Christ is the Head of the Church:
He is the savior of his Body."[109] For in these words we have the
final reason why the Body of the Church is given the name of Christ,
namely, that Christ is the Divine Savior of this Body. The Samaritans were
right in proclaiming Him "Savior of the world;"[110] for indeed
He most certainly is to be called the "Savior of all men," even
though we must add with Paul: "especially of the faithful,"[111]
since, before all others, He has purchased with His Blood His members who
constitute the Church.[112] But as We have already treated this subject
fully and clearly when speaking of the birth of the Church on the Cross,
of Christ as the source of life and the principle of sanctity, and of
Christ as the support of His Mystical Body, there is no reason why We
should explain it further; but rather let us all, while giving perpetual
thanks to God, meditate on it with a humble and attentive mind. For that
which our Lord began when hanging on the Cross, he continues unceasingly
amid the joys of heaven: "Our Head," says St. Augustine, "intercedes
for us: some members He is receiving, others He is chastising, others
cleansing, others consoling, others creating, others calling, others
recalling, others correcting, others renewing."[113]But it is for us
to cooperate with Christ in this work of salvation, "from one and
through one saved and saviors."[114]
60. And now, Venerable Brethren, We come to that part of Our explanation
in which We desire to make clear why the Body of Christ, which is the
Church, should be called mystical. This name, which is used by many early
writers, has the sanction of numerous Pontifical documents. There are
several reasons why it should be used; for by it we may distinguish the
Body of the Church, which is a Society whose Head and Ruler is Christ,
from His physical Body, which, born of the Virgin Mother of God, now sits
at the right hand of the Father and is hidden under the Eucharistic veils;
and, that which is of greater importance in view of modern errors, this
name enables us to distin guish it from any other body, whether in the
physical or the moral order.
61. In a natural body the principle of unity unites the parts in such a
manner that each lacks in its own individual subsistence; on the contrary,
in the Mystical Body the mutual union, though intrinsic, links the members
by a bond which leaves to each the complete enjoyment of his own
personality. Moreover, if we examine the relations existing between the
several members and the whole body, in every physical, living body, all
the different members are ultimately destined to the good of the whole
alone; while if we look to its ultimate usefulness, every moral
association of men is in the end directed to the advancement of all in
general and of each single member in particular; for they are persons. And
thus - to return to Our theme - as the Son of the Eternal Father came down
from heaven for the salvation of us all, He likewise established the body
of the Church and enriched it with the divine Spirit to ensure that
immortal souls should attain eternal happiness according tot he words of
the Apostle: "All things are yours; and you are Christ's; and Christ
is God's."[115] For the Church exists both for the good of the
faithful and for the glory of God and of Jesus Christ whom He sent.
62. But if we compare a mystical body with a moral body, it is to be
noted that the difference between them is not slight; rather it is very
considerable and very important. In the moral body the principle of union
is nothing else than the common end, and the common cooperation of all
under the authority of society for the attainment of that end; whereas in
the Mystical Body of which We are speaking, this collaboration is
supplemented by another internal principle, which exists effectively in
the whole and in each of its parts, and whose excellence is such that of
itself it is vastly superior to whatever bonds of union may be found in a
physical or moral body. As We said above, this is something not of the
natural but of the supernatural order; rather it is something in itself
infinite, uncreated: the Spirit of God, who, as the Angelic Doctor says, "numerically
one and the same, fills and unifies the whole Church."[116]
63. Hence, this word in its correct signification gives us to understand
that the Church, a perfect society of its kind, is not made up of merely
moral and juridical elements and principles. It is far superior to all
other human societies;[117] it surpasses them as grace surpasses nature,
as things immortal are above all those that perish.[118] Such human
societies, and in the first place civil Society, are by no means to be
despised or belittled; but the Church in its entirety is not found within
this natural order, any more than the whole man is encompassed within the
organism of our mortal body.[119] Although the juridical principles, on
which the Church rests and is established, derive from the divine
constitution given to it by Christ and contribute to the attaining of its
supernatural end, nevertheless that which lifts the Society of Christians
far above the whole natural order is the Spirit of our Redeemer who
penetrates and fills every part of the Church's being and is active within
it until the end of time as the source of every grace and every gift and
every miraculous power. Just as our composite mortal body, although it is
a marvelous work of the Creator, falls far short of the eminent dignity of
our soul, so the social structure of the Christian community, though it
proclaims the wisdom of its divine Architect, still remains something
inferior when compared to the spiritual gifts which give it beauty and
life, and to the divine source whence they flow.
64. From what We have thus far written, and explained, Venerable
Brethren, it is clear, We think, how grievously they err who arbitrarily
claim that the Church is something hidden and invisible, as they also do
who look upon her as a mere human institution possession a certain
disciplinary code and external ritual, but lacking power to communicate
supernatural life.[120] On the contrary, as Christ, Head and Exemplar of
the Church "is not complete, if only His visible human nature is
considered..., or if only His divine, invisible nature..., but He is one
through the union of both and one in both ... so is it with His Mystical
Body"[121] since the Word of God took unto Himself a human nature
liable to sufferings, so that He might consecrate in His blood the visible
Society founded by Him and "lead man back to things invisible under a
visible rule."[122]
65. For this reason We deplore and condemn the pernicious error of those
who dream of an imaginary Church, a kind of society that finds its origin
and growth in charity, to which, somewhat contemptuously, they oppose
another, which they call juridical. But this distinction which they
introduce is false: for they fail to understand that the reason which led
our Divine Redeemer to give to the community of man He founded the
constitution of a Society, perfect of its kind and containing all the
juridical and social elements - namely, that He might perpetuate on earth
the saving work of Redemption,[123] - was also the reason why He willed it
to be enriched with the heavenly gifts of the Paraclete. The Eternal
Father indeed willed it to be the "kingdom of the Son of his
predilection;"[124] but it was to be a real kingdom in which all
believers should make Him the entire offering of their intellect and
will,[125] and humbly and obediently model themselves on Him, Who for our
sake "was made obedient unto death."[126] There can, then, be no
real opposition or conflict between the invisible mission of the Holy
spirit and the juridical commission of Ruler and Teacher received from
Christ, since they mutually complement and perfect each other - as do the
body and soul in man - and proceed from our one Redeemer who not only said
as He breathed on the Apostles "Receive ye the Holy Spirit,"[127]
but also clearly commanded: "As the Father hath sent me, I also send
you;"[128] and again: "He that heareth you, heareth me."[129]
66. And if at times there appears in the Church something that indicates
the weakness of our human nature, it should not be attributed to her
juridical constitution, but rather to that regrettable inclination to evil
found in each individual, which its Divine Founder permits even at times
in the most exalted members of His Mystical Body, for the purpose of
testing the virtue of the Shepherds no less than of the flocks, and that
all may increase the merit of their Christian faith. For, as We said
above, Christ did not wish to exclude sinners from His Church; hence if
some of her members are suffering from spiritual maladies, that is no
reason why we should lessen our love for the Church, but rather a reason
why we should increase our devotion to her members. Certainly the loving
Mother is spotless in the Sacraments by which she gives birth to and
nourishes her children; in the faith which she has always preserved
inviolate; in her sacred laws imposed on all; in the evangelical counsels
which she recommends; in those heavenly gifts and extraordinary grace
through which with inexhaustible fecundity,[130] she generates hosts of
martyrs, virgins and confessors. But it cannot be laid to her charge if
some members fall, weak or wounded. In their name she prays to God daily:
"Forgive us our trespasses;" and with the brave heart of a
mother she applies herself at once to the work of nursing them back to
spiritual health. When, therefore, we call the Body of Jesus Christ "mystical,"
the very meaning of the word conveys a solemn warning. It is a warning
that echoes in these words of St. Leo: "Recognize, O Christian, your
dignity, and being made a sharer of the divine nature go not back to your
former worthlessness along the way of unseemly conduct. Keep in mind of
what Head and of what Body you are a member."[131]
67. Here, Venerable Brethren, We wish to speak in a very special way of
our union with Christ in the Body of the Church, a thing which is, as
Augustine justly remarks, sublime, mysterious and divine;[132] ut for that
very reason it often happens that many misunderstand it and explain it
incorrectly. It is at once evident that this union is very close. In the
Sacred Scriptures it is compared to the chaste union of man and wife, to
the vital union of branch and vine, and to the cohesion found in our
body.[133] Even more, it is represented as being so close that the Apostle
says: "He (Christ) is the Head of the Body of the Church,"[134]
and the unbroken tradition of the Fathers from the earliest times teaches
that the Divine Redeemer and the Society which is His Body form but one
mystical person, that is to say to quote Augustine, the whole Christ.[135]
Our Savior Himself in His sacerdotal prayer did not hesitate to liken this
union to that wonderful unity by which the Son is in the Father, and the
Father in the Son.[136]
68. Our union in and with Christ is first evident from the fact that,
since Christ wills His Christian community to be a Body which is a perfect
Society, its members must be united because they all work together towards
a single end. The nobler the end towards which they strive, and the more
divine the motive which actuates this collaboration, the higher, no doubt,
will be the union. Now the end in question is supremely exalted; the
continual sanctifying of the members of the Body for the glory of God and
of the Lamb that was slain.[137] The motive is altogether divine: not only
the good pleasure of the Eternal Father, and the most earnest wish of our
Savior, but the interior inspiration and impulse of the Holy Spirit in our
minds and hearts. For if not even the smallest act conducive to salvation
can be performed except in the Holy Spirit, how can countless multitudes
of every people and every race work together harmoniously for the supreme
glory of the Triune God, except in the power of Him, who proceeds from the
Father and the Son in one eternal act of love?
69. Now since its Founder willed this social body of Christ to be
visible, the cooperation of all its members must also be externally
manifest through their profession of the same faith and their sharing the
same sacred rites, through participation in the same Sacrifice, and the
practical observance of the same laws. Above all, it is absolutely
necessary that the Supreme Head, that is, the Vicar of Jesus Christ on
earth, be visible to the eyes of all, since it is He who gives effective
direction to the work which all do in common in a mutually helpful way
towards the attainment of the proposed end. As the Divine Redeemer sent
the Paraclete, the Spirit of Truth, who in His name [138] should govern
the Church in an invisible way, so, in the same manner, He commissioned
Peter and his successors to be His personal representatives on earth and
to assume the visible government of the Christian community.
70. These juridical bonds in themselves far surpass those of any other
human society, however exalted; and yet another principle of union must be
added to them in those three virtues, Christian faith, hope and charity,
which link us so closely to each other and to God.
71. "One Lord, one faith,"[139] writes the Apostle: the faith,
that is, by which we hold fast to God, and to Jesus Christ whom He has
sent.[140] The beloved disciple teaches us how closely this faith binds us
to God: "Whosoever shall confess that Jesus is the Son of God, God
abideth in him, and he in God."[141] This Christian faith binds us no
less closely to each other and to our divine Head. For all we who believe,
"having the same spirit of faith,"[142] are illumined by the
same light of Christ, nourished by the same Food of Christ, and live under
the teaching authority of Christ. If the same spirit of faith breathes in
all, we are all living the same life "in the faith of the Son of God
who loved us and delivered himself for us."[143] And once we have
received Christ, our Head, through an ardent faith so that He dwells
within our hearts,[144] as He is the author so He will be the finisher of
our faith.[145]
72. As by faith on this earth we hold fast to God as the Author of
truth, so by Christian hope we long for Him as the fount of blessedness, "looking
for the blessed hope and coming of the glory of the great God."[146]
It is because of this universal longing for the heavenly Kingdom that we
do not desire a permanent home here below, but seek for one above,[147]
and because of our yearning for the glory on high that the Apostle of the
Gentiles did not hesitate to say: "One Body and one Spirit, as you
are called in one hope of your calling;" [148] nay rather that Christ
in us is our hope of glory.[149]
73. But if the bonds of faith and hope, which bind us to our Redeemer in
His Mystical Body are weighty and important, those of charity are
certainly no less so. If even in the natural order the love of friendship
is something supremely noble, what shall we say of that supernatural love,
which God infuses in our hearts? "God is charity and he that abideth
in charity abideth in God and God in him."[150] The effect of this
charity - such would seem to be God's law - is to compel Him to enter into
our loving hearts to return love for love, as He said: "If anyone
love me..., my Father will love him and we will come to him and will make
our abode with him."[151] Charity then, more than any other virtue
binds us closely to Christ. How many children of the Church, on fire with
this heavenly flame, have rejoiced to suffer insults for Him, and to face
and overcome the hardest trials, even at the cost of their lives and the
shedding of their blood. For this reason our Divine Savior earnestly
exhorts us in these words: "Abide in my love." And as charity,
if it does not issue effectively in good works, is something altogether
empty and unprofitable, He added immediately: "If you keep my
commandments you shall abide in my love; as I have also kept my Father's
commandments and do abide in His love."[152]
74. But, corresponding to this love of God and of Christ, there must be
love of the neighbor. How can we claim to love the Divine Redeemer, if we
hate those whom He has redeemed with His precious blood, so that He might
make them members of His Mystical Body? For that reason the beloved
disciple warns us: "If any man say: 'I love God' and hates his
brother, he is a liar. For he that loveth not his brother whom he seeth,
how can he love God whom he seeth not? And this commandment we have from
God, that he who loveth God loveth his brother also."[153] Rather it
should be said that the more we become "members one of another"[154]
"mutually careful, one for another,"[155]the closer we shall be
united with God and with Christ; as, on the other hand, the more ardent
the love that binds us to God and to our divine Head, the closer we shall
be united to each other in the bonds of charity.
75. Now the only-begotten Son of God embraced us in His infinite
knowledge and undying love even before the world began. And that He might
give a visible and exceedingly beautiful expression to this love, He
assumed our nature in hypostatic union: hence - as Maximus of Turin with a
certain unaffected simplicity remarks - "in Christ our own flesh
loves us."[156] But the knowledge and love of our Divine Redeemer, of
which we were the object from the first moment of His Incarnation, exceed
all that the human intellect can hope to grasp. For hardly was He
conceived in the womb of the Mother of God, when He began to enjoy the
Beatific Vision, and in that vision all the members of His Mystical Body
were continually and unceasingly present to Him, and He embraced them with
His redeeming love. O marvelous condescension of divine love for us! O
inestimable dispensation of boundless charity! In the crib, on the Cross,
in the unending glory of the Father, Christ has all the members of the
Church present before Him and united to Him in a much clearer and more
loving manner than that of a mother who clasps her child to her breast, or
than that with which a man knows and loves himself.
76. From all that We have hitherto said, you will readily understand,
Venerable Brethren, why Paul the Apostle so often writes that Christ is in
us and we in Christ. In proof of which, there is this other more subtle
reason. Christ is in us through His Spirit, whom He gives to us and
through whom He acts within us in such a way that all the divine activity
of the Holy Spirit within our souls must also be attributed to
Christ.[157] "If a man hath not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of
his," says the Apostle, "but if Christ be in you..., the spirit
liveth because of justification."[158]
77. This communication of the Spirit of Christ is the channel through
which all the gifts, powers, and extra-ordinary graces found
superabundantly in the Head as in their source flow into all the members
of the Church, and are perfected daily in them according to the place they
hold in the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ. Thus the Church becomes, as it
were, the filling out and the complement of the Redeemer, while Christ in
a sense attains through the Church a fulness in all things.[159] Herein we
find the reason why, according to the opinion of Augustine already
referred to, the mystical Head, which is Christ, and the Church, which
here below as another Christ shows forth His person, constitute one new
man, in whom heaven and earth are joined together in perpetuating the
saving work of the Cross: Christ We mean, the Head and the Body, the whole
Christ.
78. For indeed We are not ignorant of the fact that his profound truth -
of our union with the Divine Redeemer and in particular of the indwelling
of the Holy spirit in our souls - is shrouded in darkness by many a veil
that impedes our power to understand and explain it, both because of the
hidden nature of the doctrine itself, and of the limitations of our human
intellect. But We know, too, that from well-directed and earnest study of
this doctrine, and from the clash of diverse opinions and the discussion
thereof, provided that these are regulated by the love of truth and by due
submission to the Church, much light will be gained, which, in its turn
will help to progress in kindred sacred sciences. Hence, We do not censure
those who in various ways, and with diverse reasonings make every effort
to understand and to clarify the mystery of this our wonderful union with
Christ. But let all agree uncompromisingly on this, if they would not err
from truth and from the orthodox teaching of the Church: to reject every
kind of mystic union by which the faithful of Christ should in any way
pass beyond the sphere of creatures and wrongly enter the divine, were it
only to the extent of appropriating to themselves as their own but one
single attribute of the eternal Godhead. And, moreover, let all hold this
as certain truth, that all these activities are common to the most Blessed
Trinity, insofar as they have God as supreme efficient cause.
79. It must also be borne in mind that there is question here of a
hidden mystery, which during this earthly exile can only be dimly seen
through a veil, and which no human words can express. The Divine Persons
are said to indwell inasmuch as they are present to beings endowed with
intelligence in a way that lies beyond human comprehension, and in a
unique and very intimate manner which transcends all created nature, these
creatures enter into relationship with Them through knowledge and
love.[160] If we would attain, in some measure, to a clearer perception of
this truth, let us not neglect the method strongly recommended by the
Vatican Council [161] in similar cases, by which these mysteries are
compared one with another and with the end to which they are directed, so
that in the light which this comparison throws upon them we are able to
discern, at least partially, the hidden things of God.
80. Therefore, Our most learned predecessor Leo XIII of happy memory,
speaking of our union with Christ and with the Divine Paraclete who dwells
within us, and fixing his gaze on that blessed vision through which this
mystical union will attain its confirmation and perfection in heaven says:
"This wonderful union, or indwelling properly so-called, differs from
that by which God embraces and gives joy to the elect only by reason of
our earthly state."[162] In that celestial vision it will be granted
to the eyes of the human mind strengthened by the light of glory, to
contemplate the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit in an utterly
ineffable manner, to assist throughout eternity at the processions of the
Divine Persons, and to rejoice with a happiness like to that with which
the holy and undivided Trinity is happy.
81. It seems to Us that something would be lacking to what We have thus
far proposed concerning the close union of the Mystical Body of Jesus
Christ with its Head, were We not to add here a few words on the Holy
Eucharist, by which this union during this mortal life reaches, as it
were, a culmination.
82. By means of the Eucharistic Sacrifice Christ our Lord willed to give
the faithful a striking manifestation of our union among ourselves and
with our divine Head, wonderful as it is and beyond all praise. For in
this Sacrifice the sacred minister acts as the viceregent not only of our
Savior but of the whole Mystical Body and of each one of the faithful. In
this act of Sacrifice through the hands of the priest, by whose word alone
the Immaculate Lamb is present on the altar, the faithful themselves,
united with him in prayer and desire, offer to the Eternal Father a most
acceptable victim of praise and propitiation for the needs of the whole
Church. And as the Divine Redeemer, when dying on the Cross, offered
Himself to the Eternal Father as Head of the whole human race, so "in
this clean oblation"[163] He offers to the heavenly Father not only
Himself as Head of the Church, but in Himself His mystical members also,
since He holds them all, even those who are weak and ailing, in His most
loving Heart.
83. The Sacrament of the Eucharist is itself a striking and wonderful
figure of the unity of the Church, if we consider how in the bread to be
consecrated many grains go to form one whole,[164] and that in it the very
Author of supernatural grace is given to us, so that through Him we may
receive the spirit of charity in which we are bidden to live now no longer
our own life but the life of Christ, and to love the Redeemer Himself in
all the members of His social Body.
84. As then in the sad and anxious times through which we are passing
there are many who cling so firmly to Christ the Lord hidden beneath the
Eucharistic veils that neither tribulation, nor distress, nor famine, nor
nakedness, nor danger, nor persecution, nor the sword can separate them
from His love,[165] surely no doubt can remain that Holy Communion which
once again in God's providence is much more frequented even from early
childhood, may become a source of that fortitude which not infrequently
makes Christians into heroes.
85. If the faithful, Venerable Brethren, in a spirit of sincere piety
understand these things accurately and hold to them steadfastly, they will
the more easily avoid those errors which arise from an irresponsible
investigation of this difficult matter, such as some have made not without
seriously endangering Catholic faith and disturbing the peace of souls.
86. For there are some who neglect the fact that the Apostle Paul has
used metaphorical language in speaking of this doctrine, and failing to
distinguish as they should the precise and proper meaning of the terms the
physical body, the social body, and the Mystical Body, arrive at a
distorted idea of unity. They make the Divine Redeemer and the members of
the Church coalesce in one physical person, and while they bestow divine
attributes on man, they make Christ our Lord subject to error and to human
inclination to evil. But Catholic faith and the writings of the holy
Fathers reject such false teaching as impious and sacrilegious; and to the
mind of the Apostle of the Gentiles it is equally abhorrent, for although
he brings Christ and His Mystical Body into a wonderfully intimate union,
he nevertheless distinguishes one from the other as Bridegroom from
Bride.[166]
87. No less far from the truth is the dangerous error of those who
endeavor to deduce from the mysterious union of us all with Christ a
certain unhealthy quietism. They would attribute the whole
spiritual life of Christians and their progress in virtue exclusively to
the action of the Divine Spirit, setting aside and neglecting the
collaboration which is due from us. No one, of course, can deny that the
Holy spirit of Jesus Christ is the one source of whatever supernatural
powers enters into the Church and its members. For "The Lord will
give grace and glory" as the Psalmist says.[167] But that men should
persevere constantly in their good works, that they should advance eagerly
in grace and virtue, that they should strive earnestly to reach the
heights of Christian perfection and at the same time to the best of their
power should stimulate others to attain the same goal, - all this the
heavenly Spirit does not will to effect unless they contribute their daily
share of zealous activity. "For divine favors are conferred not on
those who sleep, but on those who watch," as St. Ambrose says.[168]
For if in our mortal body the members are strengthened and grow through
continued exercise, much more truly can this be said of the social Body of
Jesus Christ in which each individual member retains his own personal
freedom, responsibility, and principles of conduct. For that reason he who
said: "I live, now not I, but Christ liveth in me"[169] did not
at the same time hesitate to assert: "His (God's) grace in me has not
been void, but I have labored more abundantly than all they: yet not I,
but the grace of God with me."[170] It is perfectly clear, therefore,
that in these false doctrines the mystery which we are considering is not
directed to the spiritual advancement of the faithful but is turned to
their deplorable ruin.
88. The same result follows from the opinions of those who assert that
little importance should be given to the frequent confession of venial
sins. Far more important, they say, is that general confession which the
Spouse of Christ, surrounded by her children in the Lord, makes each day
by the mouth of the priest as he approaches the altar of God. As you well
know, Venerable Brethren, it is true that venial sins may be expiated in
many ways which are to be highly commended. But to ensure more rapid
progress day by day in the path of virtue, We will that the pious practice
of frequent confession, which was introduced into the Church by the
inspiration of the Holy spirit, should be earnestly advocated. By it
genuine self-knowledge is increased, Christian humility grows, bad habits
are corrected, spiritual neglect and tepidity are resisted, the conscience
is purified, the will strengthened, a salutary self-control is attained,
and grace is increased in virtue of the Sacrament itself. Let those,
therefore, among the younger clergy who make light of or lessen esteem for
frequent confession realize that what they are doing is alien to the
Spirit of Christ and disastrous for the Mystical Body of our Savior.
89. There are others who deny any impetratory power to our prayers, or
who endeavor to insinuate into men's minds the idea that prayers offered
to God in private should be considered of little worth, whereas public
prayers which are made in the Name of the Church are those which really
matter, since they proceed from the Mystical Body of Christ. This opinion
is false; for the divine Redeemer is most closely united not only with His
Church, which is His Beloved Spouse, but also with each and every one of
the faithful, and He ardently desires to speak with them heart to heart,
especially after Holy Communion. It is true that public prayer, inasmuch
as it is offered by Mother Church, excels any other kind of prayer by
reason of her dignity as Spouse of Christ; but no prayer, even the most
private, is lacking in dignity or power, and all prayer is of the greatest
help to the Mystical Body in which, through the Communion of Saints, no
good can be done, no virtue practiced by the individual members, which
does not redound also to the salvation of all. Neither is a man forbidden
to ask for himself particular favors even for this life merely because he
is a member of this Body, provided he is always resigned to the divine
will; for the members retain their own personality and remain subject to
their own individual needs.[171] Moreover, how highly all should esteem
mental prayer is proved not only be ecclesiastical documents, but also by
the custom and practice of the saints.
90. Finally, there are those who assert that our prayers should be
directed not to the person of Jesus Christ, but rather to God, or to the
Eternal Father through Christ, since our Savior as Head of His Mystical
Body is only "Mediator of God and men."[172] But this certainly
is opposed not only to the mind of the Church and to Christian usage, but
to truth. For to speak exactly, Christ is Head of the universal Church as
He exists at once in both of His natures[173] moreover He Himself has
solemnly declared: "If you shall ask me anything in my name, that I
will do."[174] For although prayers are very often directed to the
Eternal Father through the only-begotten Son, especially in the
Eucharistic Sacrifice - in which Christ, at once Priest and Victim,
exercises in a special manner the office of Mediator - nevertheless not
infrequently even in this Sacrifice, prayers are addressed to the Divine
Redeemer also; for all Christians must clearly know and understand that
the man Jesus Christ is also the Son of God and God Himself. And thus,
when the Church Militant offers her adoration and prayers to the
Immaculate Lamb, the Sacred Victim, her voice seems to re-echo the
never-ending chorus of the Church Triumphant: "To him that sitteth on
the throne and to the Lamb benediction and honor and glory and power
forever and ever."[175]
91. Venerable Brethren, in Our exposition of this mystery which embraces
the hidden union of us all with Christ, We have thus far, as Teacher of
the Universal Church, illumined the mind with the light of truth, and Our
pastoral office now requires that We provide an incentive for the heart to
love this Mystical Body with that ardor of charity which is not confined
to thoughts and words, but which issues in deeds. If those who lived under
the Old Law could sing of their earthly city: "If I forget thee, O
Jerusalem, let my right hand be forgotten; let my tongue cleave to my jaws
if I do not remember thee, if I make not Jerusalem the beginning of my
joy,"[176] how much greater then should be the joy and exultation
that should fill our hearts who dwell in a City built on the holy mountain
of living and chosen stones, "Jesus Christ himself being the chief
cornerstone."[177] For nothing more glorious, nothing nobler, nothing
surely more honorable can be imagined than to belong to the One, Holy
Catholic, Apostolic and Roman Church, in which we become members of One
Body as venerable as it is unique; are guided by one supreme Head; are
filled with one divine Spirit; are nourished during our earthly exile by
one doctrine and one heavenly Bread, until at last we enter into the one,
unending blessedness of heaven.
92. But lest we be deceived by the angel of darkness who transforms
himself into an angel of light,[178] let this be the supreme law of our
love: to love the Spouse of Christ as Christ willed her to be, and as He
purchased her with His blood. Hence, not only should we cherish
exceedingly the Sacraments with which holy Mother Church sustains our
life, the solemn ceremonies which she celebrates for our solace and our
joy, the sacred chant and the liturgical rites by which she lifts our
minds up to heaven, but also the sacramentals and all those exercises of
piety by which she consoles the hearts of the faithful and sweetly imbues
them with the Spirit of Christ. As her children, it is our duty, not only
to make a return to her for her maternal goodness to us, but also to
respect the authority which she has received from Christ in virtue of
which she brings into captivity our understanding unto the obedience of
Christ.[179] Thus we are commanded to obey her laws and her moral
precepts, even if at times they are difficult to our fallen nature; to
bring our rebellious body into subjection through voluntary mortification;
and at times we are warned to abstain even from harmless pleasures. Nor
does it suffice to love this Mystical Body for the glory of its divine
Head and for its heavenly gifts; we must love it with an effective love as
it appears in this our mortal flesh - made up, that is, of weak human
elements, even though at times they are little fitted to the place which
they occupy in this venerable body.
93. In order that such a solid and undivided love may abide and increase
in our souls day by day, we must accustom ourselves to see Christ Himself
in the Church. For it is Christ who lives in His Church, and through her,
teaches, governs, and sanctifies; it is Christ also who manifests Himself
differently in different members of His society. If the faithful strive to
live in a spirit of lively faith, they will not only pay due honor and
reverence to the more exalted members of this Mystical Body, especially
those who according to Christ's mandate will have to render an account of
our souls,[180] but they will take to their hearts those members who are
the object of our Savior's special love: the weak, We mean, the wounded,
and the sick who are in need of material or spiritual assistance; children
whose innocence is so easily exposed to danger in these days, and whose
young hearts can be molded as wax; and finally the poor, in helping whom
we recognize as it were, through His supreme mercy, the very person of
Jesus Christ.
94. For as the Apostle with good reason admonishes us: "Those that
seem the more feeble members of the Body are more necessary; and those
that we think the less honorable members of the Body, we surround with
more abundant honour."[181] Conscious of the obligations of Our high
office We deem it necessary to reiterate this grave statement today, when
to Our profound grief We see at times the deformed, the insane, and those
suffering from hereditary disease deprived of their lives, as though they
were a useless burden to Society; and this procedure is hailed by some as
a manifestation of human progress, and as something that is entirely in
accordance with the common good. Yet who that is possessed of sound
judgment does not recognize that this not only violates the natural and
the divine law [182] written in the heart of every man, but that it
outrages the noblest instincts of humanity? The blood of these unfortunate
victims who are all the dearer to our Redeemer because they are deserving
of greater pity, "cries to God from the earth."[183]
95. In order to guard against the gradual weakening of that sincere love
which requires us to see our Savior in the Church and in its members, it
is most fitting that we should look to Jesus Himself as a perfect model of
love for the Church.
96. And first of all let us imitate the breadth of His love. For the
Church, the Bride of Christ, is one; and yet so vast is the love of the
divine Spouse that it embraces in His Bride the whole human race without
exception. Our Savior shed His Blood precisely in order that He might
reconcile men to God through the Cross, and might constrain them to unite
in one body, however widely they may differ in nationality and race. True
love of the Church, therefore, requires not only that we should be
mutually solicitous one for another [184] as members and sharing in their
suffering [185] but likewise that we should recognize in other men,
although they are not yet joined to us in the body of the Church, our
brothers in Christ according to the flesh, called, together with us, to
the same eternal salvation. It is true, unfortunately, especially today,
that there are are some who extol enmity, hatred and spite as if they
enhanced the dignity and the worth of man. Let us, however, while we look
with sorrow on the disastrous consequences of this teaching, follow our
peaceful King who taught us to love not only those who are of a different
nation or race,[186] but even our enemies.[187] While Our heart overflows
with the sweetness of the teaching of the Apostle of the Gentiles, We
extol with him the length, and the breadth, and the height, and the depth
of the charity of Christ,[188] which neither diversity of race or customs
can diminish, nor trackless wastes of the ocean weaken, nor wars, whether
just or unjust, destroy.
97. In this gravest of hours, Venerable Brethren, when bodies are racked
with pain and souls are oppressed with grief, every individual must be
aroused to this supernatural charity so that, by the combined efforts of
all good men, striving to outdo each other in pity and mercy - We have in
mind especially, those who are engaged in any kind of relief work - the
immense needs of mankind, both spiritual and corporal, may be alleviated,
and the devoted generosity, the inexhaustible fruitfulness of the Mystical
Body of Jesus Christ, may shine resplendently throughout the whole world.
98. As the vastness of the charity with which Christ loved His Church is
equalled by its constant activity, we all, with the same assiduous and
zealous charity must love the Mystical Body of Christ. Now from the moment
of His Incarnation, when he laid the first foundations of the Church, even
to His last mortal breath, our Redeemer never ceased for an instant,
though He was the Son of God, to labor unto weariness in order to
establish and strengthen His Church, whether by giving us the shining
example of His holiness, or by preaching, or conversing, or gathering and
instructing disciples. And so We desire that all who claim the Church as
their mother, should seriously consider that not only the clergy and those
who have consecrated themselves to God in the religious life, but the
other members of the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ as well have, each in
his degree, the obligation of working hard and constantly for the building
up and increase of this Body. We wish this to be borne in mind especially
by members of Catholic Action who assist the Bishops and the priests in
their apostolic labours - and to their praise be it said, they do realize
it - and also by those members of pious associations which work for the
same end. There is no one who does not realize their energetic zeal is of
the highest importance and of the greatest weight especially in the
present circumstances.
99. In this connection We cannot pass over in silence the fathers and
mothers of families to whom our Savior has entrusted the youngest members
of His Mystical Body. We plead with them most earnestly, for the love of
Christ and the Church, to take the greatest possible care of the children
confided to them, and to protect them from the snares of every kind into
which they can be lured so easily today.
100. Our Redeemer showed His burning love for the Church especially by
praying for her to His heavenly Father. To recall but a few examples:
everyone knows, Venerable Brethren, that just before the Crucifixion He
prayed repeatedly for Peter,[189] for the other Apostles,[190] for all
who, through the preaching of the holy Gospel would believe in Him.[191]
101. After the example of Christ we too should pray daily to the Lord of
the harvest to send laborers into His harvest.[192] Our united prayer
should rise daily to heaven for all the members of the Mystical Body of
Jesus Christ; first for Bishops who are responsible in a special way for
their respective dioceses; then for priests and religious, both men and
women, who have been called to the service of God, and who, at home and in
the foreign missions, are protecting, increasing, and advancing the
Kingdom of the Divine Redeemer. No member of this venerated Body must be
forgotten in this common prayer; and let there be a special remembrance of
those who are weighed down with the sorrows and afflictions of this
earthly exile, as also for the suffering souls in Purgatory. Neither must
those be neglected who are being instructed in Christian doctrine, so that
they may be able to receive baptism without delay.
102. Likewise, We must earnestly desire that this united prayer may
embrace in the same ardent charity both those who, not yet enlightened by
the truth of the Gospel, are still outside the fold of the Church, and
those who, on account of regrettable schism, are separated from Us, who
though unworthy, represent the person of Jesus Christ on earth. Let us
then re-echo that divine prayer of our Savior to the heavenly Father: "That
they all may be one, as thou, Father, in me, and I in thee, that they also
may be one in us; that the world may believe that thou hast sent me."[193]
103. As you know, Venerable Brethren, from the very beginning of Our
Pontificate, We have committed to the protection and guidance of heaven
those who do not belong to the visible Body of the Catholic Church,
solemnly declaring that after the example of the Good Shepherd We desire
nothing more ardently than that they may have life and have it more
abundantly.[194] Imploring the prayers of the whole Church We wish to
repeat this solemn declaration in this Encyclical Letter in which We have
proclaimed the praises of the "great and glorious Body of Christ"[195]
and from a heart overflowing with love We ask each and every one of them
to correspond to the interior movements of grace, and to seek to withdraw
from that state in which they cannot be sure of their salvation.[196] For
even though by an unconscious desire and longing they have a certain
relationship with the Mystical Body of the Redeemer, they still remain
deprived of those many heavenly gifts and helps which can only be enjoyed
in the Catholic Church. Therefore may they enter into Catholic unity and,
joined with Us in the one, organic Body of Jesus Christ, may they together
with us run on to the one Head in the Society of glorious love.[197]
Persevering in prayer to the Spirit of love and truth, We wait for them
with open and outstretched arms to come not to a stranger's house, but to
their own, their father's home.
104. Though We desire this unceasing prayer to rise to God from the
whole Mystical Body in common, that all the straying sheep may hasten to
enter the one fold of Jesus Christ, yet We recognize that this must be
done of their own free will; for no one believes unless he wills to
believe.[198] Hence they are most certainly not genuine Christians[199]
who against their belief are forced to go into a church, to approach the
altar and to receive the Sacraments; for the "faith without which it
is impossible to please God"[200] is an entirely free "submission
of intellect and will."[201] Therefore, whenever it happens, despite
the constant teaching of this Apostolic See,[202] that anyone is compelled
to embrace the Catholic faith against his will, Our sense of duty demands
that We condemn the act. For men must be effectively drawn to the truth by
the Father of light through the spirit of His beloved Son, because,
endowed as they are with free will, they can misuse their freedom under
the impulse of mental agitation and base desires. Unfortunately many are
still wandering far from the Catholic truth, being unwilling to follow the
inspirations of divine grace, because neither they [203] nor the faithful
pray to God with sufficient fervor for this intention. Again and again We
beg all we ardently love the Church to follow the example of the Divine
Redeemer and to give themselves constantly to such prayer.
105. And likewise, above all in the present crisis, it seems to Us not
only opportune but necessary that earnest supplications should be offered
for kings, princes, and for all those who govern nations and are thus in a
position to assist the Church by their protecting power, so that, the
conflict ended, "peace, the work of justice"[204] under the
impulse of divine charity may emerge from out this raging tempest and be
restored to wearied man, and that holy Mother Church "may lead a
quiet and peaceable life in all piety and chastity."[205]We must
plead with God to grant that the rulers of nations may love wisdom,[206]
so that the severe judgment of the Holy spirit may never fall on them: "Because
being ministers of His Kingdom you have not judged rightly, not kept the
law of Justice, nor walked according to the will of God; horribly and
speedily will he appear to you; for a most severe judgment shall be for
them that bear rule. For to him that is little, mercy shall be granted;
but the mighty shall be mightily tormented. For God will not except any
man's person, neither will he stand in awe of any man's greatness; for he
made the little and the great, and he hath equally care of all. But a
greater punishment is ready for the more mighty. To you, therefore, O
Kings, these are my words, that you may learn wisdom and not fall from it."[207]
106. Moreover, Christ proved His love for His spotless Bride not only at
the cost of immense labor and constant prayer, but by His sorrows and His
sufferings which He willingly and lovingly endured for her sake. "Having
loved His own...He loved them unto the end."[208] Indeed it was only
at the price of His Blood that He purchased the Church.[209] Let us then
follow gladly in the bloodstained footsteps of our King, for this is
necessary to ensure our salvation: "For if we have been planted
together in the likeness of His Resurrection."[210] and "if we
be dead with him, we shall live also with Him."[211] Also our zealous
love for the Church demands it, and our brotherly love for the souls she
brings forth to Christ. For although our Savior's cruel passion and death
merited for His Church an infinite treasure of graces, God's inscrutable
providence has decreed that these graces should not be granted to us all
at once; but their greater or lesser abundance will depend in no small
part on our own good works, which draw down on the souls of men a rain of
heavenly gifts freely bestowed by God. These heavenly gifts will surely
flow more abundantly if we not only pray fervently to God, especially by
participating every day if possible in the Eucharistic Sacrifice; if we
not only try to relieve the distress of the needy and of the sick by works
of Christian charity, but if we also set our hearts on the good things of
eternity rather than on the passing things of this world; if we restrain
this mortal body by voluntary mortification, denying it what is forbidden,
and by forcing it to do what is hard and distasteful; and finally, if we
humbly accept as from God's hands the burdens and sorrows of this present
life. Thus, according to the Apostle, "we shall fill up those things
that are wanting of the sufferings of Christ in our flesh for His Body,
which is the Church."[212]
107. As We write these words there passes before Our eyes, alas, an
almost endless throng of unfortunate beings for whom We shed tears of
sorrow; sick, poor, disabled, widows, orphans, and many not infrequently
languishing even unto death on account of their own painful trials or
those of their families. With the heart of a father We exhort all those
who from whatever cause are plunged in grief and anguish to lift their
eyes trustfully to heaven and to offer their sorrows to Him who will one
day reward them abundantly. Let them all remember that their sufferings
are not in vain, but that they will turn to their own immense gain and
that of the Church, if to this end they bear them with patience. The daily
use of the offering made by the members of the Apostleship of Prayer will
contribute very much to make this intention more efficacious and We
welcome this opportunity of recommending this Association highly, as one
which is most pleasing to God.
108. There never was a time, Venerable Brethren, when the salvation of
souls did not impose on all the duty of associating their sufferings with
the torments of our Divine Redeemer. But today that duty is more clear
than ever, when a gigantic conflict has set almost the whole world on fire
and leaves in its wake so much death, so much misery, so much hardship; in
the same way today, in a special manner, it is the duty of all to fly from
vice, the attraction of the world, the unrestrained pleasures of the body,
and also from worldly frivolity and vanity which contribute nothing to the
Christian training of the soul nor to the gaining of Heaven. Rather let
those weighty words of Our immortal predecessor Leo the Great be deeply
engraven upon our minds, that by Baptism we are made flesh of the
Crucified:[213] and that beautiful prayer of St. Ambrose: "Carry me,
Christ, on the Cross, which is salvation to the wanderers, sole rest for
the wearied, wherein alone is life for those who die."[214]
109. Before concluding, We cannot refrain from again and again exhorting
all to love holy Mother Church with a devoted and active love. If we have
really at heart the salvation of the whole human family, purchased by the
precious Blood, we must offer every day to the Eternal Father our prayers,
works and sufferings, for her safety and for her continued and ever more
fruitful increase. And while the skies are heavy with storm clouds, and
exceeding great dangers threaten the whole of human Society and the Church
herself, let us commit ourselves and all that we have to the Father of
Mercies, crying out: "Look down, we beseech Thee, Lord, on this Thy
family, for which our Lord Jesus Christ did not hesitate to be betrayed
into the hands of evil men and to undergo the torment of the Cross."[215]
110. Venerable Brethren, may the Virgin Mother of God hear the prayers
of Our paternal heart - which are yours also - and obtain for all a true
love of the Church - she whose sinless soul was filled with the divine
spirit of Jesus Christ above all other created souls, who "in the
name of the whole human race" gave her consent "for a spiritual
marriage between the Son of God and human nature."[216] Within her
virginal womb Christ our Lord already bore the exalted title of Head of
the Church; in a marvelous birth she brought Him forth as the source of
all supernatural life, and presented Him newly born, as Prophet, King and
Priest to those who, from among Jews and Gentiles, were the first to come
to adore Him. Furthermore, her only Son, condescending to His mother's
prayer in "Cana of Galilee," performed the miracle by which "his
disciples believed in Him."[217] It was she, the second Eve, who,
free from all sin, original or personal, and always more intimately united
with her Son, offered Him on Golgotha to the Eternal Father for all the
children of Adam, sin-stained by his unhappy fall, and her mother's rights
and her mother's love were included in the holocaust. Thus she who,
according to the flesh, was the mother of our Head, through the added
title of pain and glory became, according to the Spirit, the mother of all
His members. She it was through her powerful prayers obtained that the
spirit of our Divine Redeemer, already given on the Cross, should be
bestowed, accompanied by miraculous gifts, on the newly founded Church at
Pentecost; and finally, bearing with courage and confidence the tremendous
burden of her sorrows and desolation, she, truly the Queen of Martyrs,
more than all the faithful "filled up those things that are wanting
of the sufferings of Christ...for His Body, which is the Church";[218]
and she continues to have for the Mystical Body of Christ, born of the
pierced Heart of the Savior,[219] the same motherly care and ardent love
with which she cherished and fed the Infant Jesus in the crib.
111. May she, then, the most holy Mother of all the members of
Christ,[220] to whose Immaculate Heart We have trustfully consecrated all
mankind, and who now reigns in heaven with her Son, her body and soul
refulgent with heavenly glory - may she never cease to beg from Him that
copious streams of grace may flow from its exalted Head into all the
members of the Mystical Body. May she throw about the Church today, as in
times gone by, the mantle of her protection and obtain from God that now
at least the Church and all mankind may enjoy more peaceful days.
112. Confiding in this sublime hope, from an overflowing heart We impart
to you, one and all, Venerable Brethren, and to the flocks entrusted to
your care, as a pledge of heavenly graces and a token of Our special
affection, the Apostolic Benediction.
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's on the twenty-ninth day of June, the
Feast of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul, in the year 1943, the fifth of
Our Pontificate.
PIUS XII
1. Cf. Col. I, 24.
2. Acts, XX, 28.
3. Cf. I Peter, IV, 13.
4. Cf. Eph., II, 21-22; I Peter, II, 5.
5. Sessio III; Const. de fide cath., c. 4.
6. Rom., V, 20.
7. Cf. II Peter, I, 4.
8. Eph., II, 3.
9. John, III, 16.
10. Cf. John, I, 12.
11. Cf. Vat. Council, Const. de Eccl., prol.
12. Cf. ibidem, Const. de fide cath., c. 1.
13. Col., I, 18.
14. Rom., XII, 5.
15. Cf. A.S.S., XXVIII, p. 710.
16. Rom., XII, 4.
17. I Cor., XII, 13.
18. Cf. Eph., IV, 5.
19. Cf. Matth., XVIII, 17.
20. Cf. Matth., IX, 11; Mark, II, 16; Luke, XV,
2.
21. August., Epist., CLVII, 3, 22: Migne, P.L., XXXIII,
686.
22. August., Serm., CXXXVII, 1: Migne, P.L., XXXVIII, 754.
23. Encycl. Divinum Illud: A.S.S., XXIX, p. 649.
24. John, XVII, 18.
25.Cf. Matth., XVI, 18-19.
26. John, XV, 15; XVII, 8 and 14.
27.Cf. John, III, 5.
28. Cf. Gen., III, 20.
29. Ambrose, In Luc, II, 87: Migne, P.L., XV, 1585.
30. Cf. Matth., XV, 24.
31. Cf. St. Thos., I-II, q. 103, a. 3, ad 2.
32. Cf. Eph., II, 15.
33. Cf. Col., II, 14.
34. Cf. Matth., XXVI, 28; I Cor., XI, 25.
35. Leo the Great, Serm., LXVIII, 3: Migne, P.L. LIV, 374.
36. Jerome and Augustine, Epist. CXII, 14 and CXVI, 16: Migne,
P.L., XXII, 924 and 943; St. Thos., I-II, q. 103, a. 3, ad 2; a. 4; ad 1;
Council of Flor. pro Jacob.: Mansi, XXXI, 1738.
37. Cf. II Cor., III, 6.
38. Cf. St. Thos. III, q. 42, a. 1.
39. Cf. De pecc. orig., XXV, 29: Migne, P.L., XLIV, 400.
40. Cf. Eph., II, 14-16.
41. Cf. Acts, II, 1-4.
42. Cf. Luke, III, 22; Mark, I, 10.
43. Col., I, 18.
44. Cf. Eph., IV, 16; Col., II, 19.
45. Col., I, 15.
46. Col., I, 18; Apoc., I, 5.
47. I Tim., II, 5.
48. Cf. John, XII, 32.
49. Cf. Cyr. Alex., Comm. in Ioh. I, 4: Migne, P.G., LXXIII, 69;
St. Thos., I, q. 20, a. 4, ad 1.
50. Hexaem., VI, 55: Migne, P.L., XIV, 265.
51. Cf. August., De agon. Christi, XX, 22: Migne, P.L., XL, 301.
52. Cf. St. Thos., I, q. 22, a. 1-4.
53. Cf. John, X, 1-18; I Peter, V, 1-5.
54. Cf. John VI, 63.
55. Proverbs, XXI, 1.
56. Cf. I Peter, II, 25.
57. Cf. Acts, VIII, 26; IX, 1-19; X, 1-7; XII, 3- 10.
58. Philipp., IV, 7.
59. Cf. Leo XIII, Satis Cognitum: A.S.S., XXVIII, 725.
60. Luke, XII, 32.
61. Cf. Corp. Iur. Can., Extr. Comm., I, 8, 1.
62. Gregory the Great, Moral., XIV, 35, 43: Migne, P.L., LXXV,
1062.
63. Cf. Vat. Council, Const. de Eccl., Cap. 3.
64. Cf. Cod. Iur. Can., can. 329, 1.
65. I Paral., XVI, 22; Ps., CIV, 15.
66. Cf. I Peter, V, 3.
67. Cf. I Tim., VI, 20.
68. Cf. Ep. ad Eulog., 30: Migne, P.L., LXXVII, 933.
69. I Cor., XII, 21.
70. John, XV, 5.
71. Cf. Eph., IV, 16; Col., II, 19.
72. Comm. in ep.ad Eph ., Cap. 1, lect. 8; Hebr., II,
16-17.
73. Phillipp., II, 7.
74. Cf. II Peter, I, 4.
75. Cf. Rom., VIII, 29.
76. Cf. Col., III, 10.
77. Cf. I John, III, 2.
78. Col., I, 19.
79. Cf. John, XVII, 2.
80. Cf. Col., II, 3.
81. Cf. John, I, 14-16.
82. Cf. John, I, 18.
83. Cf. John, III, 2.
84. Cf. John, XVIII, 37.
85. Cf. John, VI, 68.
86. Cf. August., De cons. evang., I, 35, 54; Migne, P.L.,
XXXIV, 1070.
87. Cf. Hebr., XII, 2.
88. Cf. Cyr. Alex., Ep, 55 de Symb.; Migne, P.G.,
LXXVII, 293.
89. Cf. John, XV, 5.
90. Cf. St. Thos., III, q. 64, a.3.
91. Eph., IV, 7.
92. Eph., IV, 16; cf. Col., II, 19.
93. Cf. De Rom. Pont., I, 9; De Concil., II, 19.
94. Cf. I Cor., XII, 12.
95. Cf. Acts, IX, 4; XXII, 7; XXVI, 14.
96. Cf. Greg. Nyss., De vita Moysis: Migne, P.G., XLIV,
385.
97. Cf. Serm.,CCCLIV, 1: Migne, P.L., XXXIX, 1563.
98. Cf. John, XXVII, 18, and XX, 21.
99. Cf. Leo XIII, Sapientiae Christianae: A.S.S., XXII, 392;
Satis Cognitum: ibidem, XXVIII, 710.
100. Rom, VIII, 9; II Cor. III, 17; Gal. IV, 6.
101. Cf. John, XX, 22.
102. Cf. John, III, 34.
103. Cf. Eph., I, 8; IV, 7.
104. Cf. Rom, VIII, 14-17; Gal., IV, 6-7.
105. Cf. II Cor., III, 18.
106. A.S.S., XXIX, p. 650.
107. Gal., II, 20.
108. Cf. Ambrose, De Elia et ieiun.,10, 36-37, et In Psalm.
118, serm. 20, 2; Migne, P.L., XIV, 710 et XV, 1483.
109. Eph., V, 23.
110. John, IV, 42.
111. Cf. I Tim., IV, 10.
112. Acts, XX, 28.
113. Enarr. in Ps., LXXXV, 5; Migne, P.L., XXXVII, 1085.
114. Clem. Alex., Strom., VII, 2; Migne, P.G. IX, 413.
115. I Cor., III, 23; Pius XI, Divini Redemptoris:
A.A.S., 1937, p. 80.
116. De Veritate, q. 29, a. 4, c.
117. Cf. Leo XIII, Sapientiae Christianae: A.S.S., XXII, p. 392.
118. Cf. Leo XIII, Satis Cognitum: A.S.S., XXVIII, p. 724.
119. Cf. Ibidem, p. 710.
120. Cf. Ibidem, p. 710.
121. Cf. Ibidem, p. 710.
122. St. Thos., De Veritate, q. 29, a. 4, ad 9.
123. Vat. Council, Sess. IV, Const. dogm. de Eccl., prol.
124. Col., I, 13.
125. Vat. Council, Sess. III, Const. de fide Cath., Cap. 3.
126. Philipp., II, 8.
127. John, XX, 22.
128. John, XX, 21.
129. Luke, X, 16.
130. Cf. Vat. Council, Sess. III, Const. de fide Cath., Cap 3.
131. Serm., XXI, 3: Migne, P.L., LIV, 192-193.
132. Cf. August., Contra Faust., 21, 8: Migne, P.L., XLII, 392.
133. Cf. Eph., V, 22-23; John, XV, 1-5; Eph.,
IV, 16.
134. Col., I, 18.
135. Cf. Enar. in Ps., XVII, 51 and XC, II, 1: Migne, P.L.,
XXXVI, 154, and XXXVII, 1159.
136. John, XVII, 21-23.
137. Apoc., V, 12-13.
138. Cf. John, XIV, 16 and 26.
139. Eph., IV, 5.
140. Cf. John, XVII, 3.
141. I John, IV, 15.
142. II Cor., IV, 13.
143. Cf. Gal., II, 20.
144. Cf. Eph., III, 17.
145. Cf. Hebr., XII, 2.
146. Tit., II, 13.
147. Cf. Hebr., XIII, 14.
148. Eph., IV, 4.
149. Cf. Col., I, 27.
150. I John, IV, 16.
151. John, XIV, 28.
152. John, XV, 9-10.
153. I John, IV, 20-21.
154. Rom., XII, 5.
155. I Cor., XII, 25.
156. Serm. XXIX: Migne, P.L., LVII, 594.
157. Cf. St. Thos., Comm. in Ep. and Eph., Cap. II, lect. 5.
158. Rom., VIII, 9-10.
159. Cf. St. Thos., Comm. in Ep. ad Eph., Cap I, lect. 8.
160. Cf. St. Thos., I, q. 43, a.3.
161. Sess. III. Const. de fide Cath., Cap. 4.
162. Cf. Divinum Illud: A.S.S., XXIX, p. 653.
163. Mal., I, 11.
164. Cf. Didache, IX, 4.
165. Cf. Rom., VIII, 35.
166. Cf. Eph., V, 22-23.
167. Ps., LXXXIII, 12.
168. Expos. Evang. sec. Luc., IV, 49; Migne. P.L. XV, 1626.
169. Gal., II, 20.
170. I Cor., XV, 10.
171. Cf. St. Thos., II-II, q. 83, a. 5 et 6.
172. I Tim., II, 5.
173. Cf. St. Thos., De Veritate, q. 29, a. 4, c.
174. John, XIV, 14.
175. Apoc., V, 13.
176. Ps., CXXXVI, 5-6.
177. Eph., II, 20; I Peter, II, 4-5.
178. Cf. II Cor., XI, 14.
179. Cf. II Cor., X, 5.
180. Cf. Hebr., XIII, 17.
181. I Cor., XII, 22-23.
182. Cf. Decree of the Holy Office, 2 Dec. 1940: A.A.S., 1940, p. 553.
183. Cf. Gen., IV, 10.
184. Cf. Rom., XII, 5; I Cor., XII, 25.
185. Cf. I Cor., XII, 26.
186. Cf. Luke, X, 33-37.
187. Cf. Luke, VI, 27-35; Matth.,V, 44-48.
188. Cf. Eph., III, 18.
189. Cf. Luke, XXII, 32.
190. Cf. John, XVII, 9-19.
191. Cf. John, XVII, 20-23.
192. Cf. Matth., IX, 38; Luke, X, 2.
193. John, XVII, 21.
194. Cf. Encyclical Letter, Summi Pontificatus: A.A.S., 1939, p.
419.
195. Iren., Adv. Haer., IV, 33, 7: Migne, P.G., VII, 1076.
196. Cf. Pius IX, Iam Vos Omnes, 13 Sept. 1868: Act. Conc. Vat.,
C.L.VII, 10.
197. Cf. Gelas. I, Epist., XIV: Migne, P.L. LIX, 89.
198. Cf. August., In Ioann. Ev. tract., XXVI, 2: Migne, P.L.
XXX, 1607.
199. Cf. August., Ibidem.
200. Hebr., XI, 6.
201. Vat. Counc. Const. de fide Cath., Cap. 3.
202. Cf. Leo XIII, Immortale Dei: A.S.S., XVIII, pp. 174-175;
Cod. Iur. Can., c. 1351.
203. Cf. August., Ibidem.
204. Is., XXXII,17.
205. Cf. I Tim., II, 2.
206. Cf. Wis., VI, 23.
207. Ibidem, VI, 4-10.
208. John, XIII, 1.
209. Cf. Acts, XX, 28.
210. Rom., VI, 5.
211. II Tim. II, 11.
212. Cf. Col., I, 24.
213. Cf. Serm., LXIII, 6; LXVI, 3: Migne, P.L., LIV, 357 and
366.
214. In Ps., 118, XXII, 30: Migne, P.L., XV, 1521.
215. Office for Holy Week.
216. St. Thos., III, q. 30, a.1, c.
217. John, II, 11.
218. Col., I, 24.
219. Cf. Vesper hymn of Office of the Sacred Heart.
220. Cf. Pius X, Ad Diem Illum: A.A.S., XXXVI, p. 453.
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