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2146 lines
108 KiB
Plaintext
33 page printout
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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This file, its printout, or copies of either
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are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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**** ****
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ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
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THE LAST BLAST OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH'S
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MEDIEVAL TRUMPET
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By JOSEPH McCABE
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HALDEMAN-JULIUS PUBLTCATIONS
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GIRARD -- : -- KANSAS
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**** ****
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INTRODUCTION
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In recent literature about the Roman Catholic Church one still
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occasionally meets references to "the Syllabus," or the "Syllabus
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of Condemned Opinions." A "syllapub" was a delectable medieval
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drink composed of sugar, cream, brandy, sherry, and lemon -- they
|
||
knew a lot about drinking in the Ages of Faith -- but what the heck
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a Syllabus is few have the faintest idea. The word means "a
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collection," and the ecclesiastical historians will tell you that
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it was selected as the title of a number of propositions condemned
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by Pope Pius IX about 90 years ago. Amongst these propositions
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which Catholics were sternly forbidden to entertain was almost
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every principle of the American Constitution that had any reference
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to religion. The good Catholic must regard with abhorrence such
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statements as that Church and State must be separated, that the
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ecclesiastical authority has no power over the secular, that
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education is the business of the State, that there must be complete
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religious freedom, that a man may choose his religion in the light
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of his reason and conscience, that all sects must be equal in the
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law, that a Christian is validly married in a registry office, and
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so on. But if you ask a Catholic official interpreter of his
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religion to the American public what it means, he will reply, with
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the familiar synthetic smile, which is so like that of a Daughter
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of Joy, that the Popes of 90 years ago did not know what we know
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today. They did not know, for instance, as slick American priests
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have discovered, that Thomas Jefferson, who is so largely
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responsible for the principles of the American Constitution,
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learned them, especially the great principles of Freedom and
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Democracy, from the pages of the Roman Jesuits, Suarez and
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Bellarmine. But if you know that mendacity is one of the primary
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||
qualifications of a Catholic apologist, if yon remember that the
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||
Pope imposed most of these chains upon the Italian people when he
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made his infamous $90,000,000 deal with Mussolini, you will want
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sounder information about the Syllabus. I call it the last blast of
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the Pope's medieval trumpet, and the reasons why I do so are
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||
forgotten historical movements of the last century which make an
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intriguing and instructive story. But remember the Church's motto:
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Immutable Rome. Have the Popes merely hung up their brazen trumpet
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until the glorious day comes when, through a Catholic majority in
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America, they will again rule the world? And in order that you may
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be able to form a sound idea on this point I begin with a
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||
translation of the complete Latin text of the famous docuriieiit.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
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1. WHAT THE SYLLABUS SAID
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The stirring condition of the European world at which the
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Vatican Jupiter hurled his thunderbolt 90 years ago will be
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described in the next section, but I must say a few words about it
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before I give the text of the Syllabus. On November 24, 1848, there
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occurred in Rome an event which was symbolical of the mightiest
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revolution that had yet flared up in the history of Europe, yet I
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dolabt if one man in hundreds of thousands in either Europe or
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America today ever heard of it. A vast crowd surrounded the Pope's
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palace, the Quirinal. They did not threaten his life, though a few
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shots were fired by enthusiasts in the crowd. They demanded only
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that the Pope should give effect to the concession of Freedom and
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Democracy which he, as King of Rome and Central Italy, had recently
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signed and now proposed to recant. The carriage of the Bavarian
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Minister drove up to the palace. Presently the Minister emerged,
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the liveried footman ushered him into the coach and mounted the
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box, and they drove off. That footman was the Vicar of Christ, Pope
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Pius IX, flying in disguise from his "beloved people" whose new
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liberty, which he had sworn to respect, he was about to betray,
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under the shelter of the perjured King of Naples, to the perjured
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King of France.
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In the firest half of 1848 the people of Europe had risen in
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revolt from North Germany to Sicily. seven kings had been shaken
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from their thrones or (two of them) had been suffered to hold on to
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their barbaric pomp only on condition that they accepted democracy.
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But the flight of the Pope was the beginning of the gross perjury
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by which, with the aid of hireling soldiers, the kings won back
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their feudal power and drowned democracy in a lake of blood. By
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1860 a quarter of a million democrats -- men, women and children --
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had either died on the scaffold or in fetid jails and penal
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colonies, or lingered in the jails or in exile. But their leaders,
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||
not sleek politicians such as we have today, but men like Mazzini
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and Garibaldi; Louis Blanc, Karl Marx, and a hundred others carried
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on the flight from exile. and the millinns of Italy and Spain, of
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Austria-Hungary and Germany, responded so well that by 1860 the
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ground of Europe was shaking once more. It was Footman-Pius said,
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all due to these damnabie Liberal and Humanist principles that
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certain writers were spreading, undermining his semi-divine
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authority, and he set his learned theologians to gather from
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European literature these utterly poisonous and devil-inspired new
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ideas and declared them "reprobated, prescribed, and condemned"
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with all the weight of his "apostolic authority." Here they are:
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The Syllabus of Condemned Propositions
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1. There is no supreme, omniscient, all foreseeing Deity
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distinct from the universe. God is the same thing as Nature and
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therefore subject to change. He becomes God in the world and man;
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all things are God and have the very substance of God. God is one
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and the same thing as the world; therefore spirit is the same thing
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as matter, necessity the same thing as liberty, truth the same as
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falseness, good the same is evil, justice the same as injustice.
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||
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Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
2
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ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
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2. That God acts upon man and the world is to be denied.
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3. Human reason is the sole judge of truth and falseness,
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good and evil. It is a law unto itself and suffices, by its natural
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resources, to promote the welfare of nations.
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4. All truths of religion have their origin in the natural
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use of human reason. Hence reason is the chief means by which we
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can and ought to arquire a knowledge of all truth.
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||
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5. Divine revelation is imperfect and therefore subject to
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||
continual and indefinite progress, and this corresponds to the
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advance of human reason.
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||
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6. The faith of Christ is opposed to human reason, and
|
||
divine revelation is not merely useless but injurious to man's
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||
interests.
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||
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||
7. The prophesies and miracics that are contained in Holy
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||
Writ are poetic fiction, and the mysteries of the Christian faith
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||
are the outcome of philosophic inquiries; the contents of both Old
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and New Testaments are fiction, and Jesus Christ himself is a
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||
mythical figure.
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||
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||
8. Since human reason is as valuable as religion,
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||
theological matters are to be treated in the same way as
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||
philosopliiepl.
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||
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||
9. All the dogmas, without exception, of the Christian
|
||
religion are the suhject of natural science or philosophy. Human
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||
reason can in the course of time be so developed that by its
|
||
natural force and principles it can attain all knowledge, even the
|
||
more profound, provided that these, dogmas have been submitted to
|
||
reason as its subject.
|
||
|
||
10. Since the philosopher is one thing and philosophy
|
||
another, the former has the, right and the duty to submit to
|
||
authority which he believes to be sound, but philosophy neither can
|
||
nor ought to bow to authority.
|
||
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||
11, The Church not only must never pass judgment on
|
||
philosophy but must tolerate its errors and leave it to correct
|
||
them itself.
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||
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||
12. The decrees of the Apostolic See and the Roman
|
||
Congregations are an impediment to the free advance of science.
|
||
|
||
13. The methods and principle which the older Scholastic
|
||
doctors used in studying theology are not in the least in harmony
|
||
with the needs of our time and the progress of the sciences.
|
||
|
||
14. Philosophy must be studied without regard to supernatural
|
||
revelation.
|
||
|
||
15, Every man is free to adopt and profess any religion
|
||
which, under the guidance of reason, he believes to be true.
|
||
|
||
16. Men can find the way to eternal salvation and attain it
|
||
in any religion.
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
3
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
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17. At least we have good ground to hope for the eternal
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salvation of men who do not belong to the true Church of Christ.
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||
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||
18. Protestantism is only another form of the one true
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Christian religion, and God is just as pleascd for men to join it
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||
as to join the Catholic Church.
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||
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||
19. The Church is not a true, perfect, and entirely free
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||
body, and it cannot decide in virtue of the rights conferred upon
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||
it by its divire founder what are the limited times within which it
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||
can exercise its rights, but must leave this decision to the civil
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power.
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||
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20. Ecclesiastical authority must not use its powers without
|
||
the permission and consent of the civil government.
|
||
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21. The Church has no power to lay down dogmatically that the
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||
relegion of the Catholic Church is the one true religion.
|
||
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||
22. The obligations which strictly bind Catholic teachers and
|
||
writers are confined to matters which have been declared by the
|
||
infallible judgment of the Church to be dogmos of the faith to be
|
||
believed by everybody.
|
||
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||
23. Roman Pontiffs and Ecumenical Councals have exceeded
|
||
their powers, usurped the rights of princes, and erred even in
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||
defining questions of faith and morals.
|
||
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||
24. Tue Church has no power to use force or any temporal
|
||
power, direct or indirect.
|
||
|
||
25, Apart from the authority which is inherent in the office
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||
of bishop, any secular power is conferred upon him expressly or
|
||
tacitly by the civil power and may therefore be withdrawn by that
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||
power when it pleases.
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||
|
||
26. The Church has no native and legitimate right to acquire
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||
and hold property.
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||
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||
27. The sacred ministry of the Church and the Roman Pontiff
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||
must be entirely excluded from concern about ownership and secular
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||
things.
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||
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||
28. Bishops cannot be allowed to publish even the Pope's
|
||
letters without permission of the government.
|
||
|
||
29. Privileges conferred by the Roman Pontiff must be
|
||
regarded as null unless they were asked for through the
|
||
governiment.
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||
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||
30. The immunity of the Church and of eceelesiastical persons
|
||
has its origin in civil law.
|
||
|
||
31. The ecclesiastical court for hearing secular charges,
|
||
either civil or criminal, against clerics must be entirely
|
||
abolished, without consulting or even against the protest of the
|
||
Apostolic see.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
4
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
32. The personal immunity from the duty of military service
|
||
which clerics enjoy may be revoked without any violation of
|
||
national law and equality, and this revocation is necessary for
|
||
social progress, especially in countries with a more liberal
|
||
constitution.
|
||
|
||
33. It is not the exclusive right of ecclesiastical
|
||
jurisdiction to regulate the teaching of theological matters.
|
||
|
||
34. The idea that the Roman Pontiff may be compared to a free
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||
prince acting in the universal Church is medieval.
|
||
|
||
35. There is no reason why the Supreme Pontificate should not
|
||
be transferred by the decision of a General Council or the action
|
||
of all nations from the Bishop of the city of Rome to some other
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||
bishop and city.
|
||
|
||
36. The decision of a National Congress is not subject to
|
||
further discussion, and the civil administration may demand this.
|
||
|
||
37. It is lawful to establish National Churches that are not
|
||
subject to the authority of the Roman Pontiff and are, in fact,
|
||
entrely separated.
|
||
|
||
38. The arbitrary action of the Roman Pontiffs is in part
|
||
responsible for the division of the Church into Eastern and
|
||
Western.
|
||
|
||
39. A republic, as the origin and power of all rights, has an
|
||
unlimlted power,
|
||
|
||
40. The teaching of the Catholic Church is opposed to the
|
||
welfare of human society.
|
||
|
||
41. The civil power, even if the ruler be an infidel, has an
|
||
indirect negative right to interfere in sacred thins, and it
|
||
therefore had the right which is called exequatur (permission to
|
||
carry out an ecclesiastical order) and what is called the right to
|
||
appeal against abuses.
|
||
|
||
42. In a conflict of law between the two powers the civil law
|
||
takes precedence.
|
||
|
||
43. The lay government has the power to rescind or to declare
|
||
null and void the solemn agreements usually called Concordats about
|
||
the use of rights pertaining to ecclesiastical immunity entered
|
||
upon with the Apostolic See without the consent or even against the
|
||
protest of Rome.
|
||
|
||
44. The civil authority may intervene in matters that refer
|
||
to religion, morals and the spiritual order. Hence it has the right
|
||
to criticise the instructions which the Church gives to priests for
|
||
the guidance of consciences and even to lay down rules for the
|
||
administration of the divine sacraments or the disposition required
|
||
for receiving them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
5
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
45. Public schools in which the yolith of a republic are
|
||
trained with the exception of episcopal seminaries to some extent,
|
||
are and ought to be controlled by the civil authority; and to such
|
||
an extent that no other authority has the right to interfere in the
|
||
curriculum, the discipline, the awarding of degrees, or in the
|
||
choice and approval of masters.
|
||
|
||
46. Even in seminaries for the priesthood the arraigement of
|
||
the studies is subject to the civil authority.
|
||
|
||
47. The best interests of society demand that public schools,
|
||
which are open to all children of every class, and public
|
||
institutions generally that give higher education and train youths,
|
||
shall be free from all clerical authority, control, or interference
|
||
and shall be left entirely to the dictates of the civil political
|
||
authority as the rulers and the general opinion of the public shall
|
||
decide.
|
||
|
||
48. Catholic men may approve of a kind of education that is
|
||
separated from the Catholic faith and the power of the Church and
|
||
that looks only, or at least primarily, to the interests of the
|
||
natural sciences and the social welfare.
|
||
|
||
49. The civil authority may prevent prelates and the Catholic
|
||
laity from communicating freely with the Roman Pontiff.
|
||
|
||
50. The secular authority has the intrinsic right of
|
||
appointing bishops and it may demand of them that they visit their
|
||
dioceses before they themselves receive canonical institution and
|
||
Letters from the Holy See.
|
||
|
||
51. Moreover the secular government has the right to deprive
|
||
Bishops of the exercise of their pastoral ministry and is not bound
|
||
to obey the Roman Pontiff in matters concerning the office of
|
||
bishops.
|
||
|
||
52. The government has the right to change the age fixed by
|
||
the Church for entering the religious orders of both men and women;
|
||
and to forbid these orders to admit anybody to take the solemn vows
|
||
without its permission.
|
||
|
||
53. Laws that protect the status of religious communities and
|
||
relate to their rights and duties should be abrogated; the secular
|
||
government may assist all who wish to abandon the religious life
|
||
and break their solemn vows; it may suppress religious cominunities
|
||
as well as collegiate and parish churches and hand over their
|
||
property and revenue to the administration and disposal of the
|
||
secular authority.
|
||
|
||
54, Kings and princes are not only exempt from the
|
||
jurisdiction of the Church but in deciding questions of
|
||
jurisdiction they are above the Church.
|
||
|
||
55. The Church must be separated from the State and the State
|
||
from the Church.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
56. Moral law does not need a divine sanction, it is not at
|
||
all necessary that human laws should conform to the Law of Nature
|
||
or derive their binding force from God.
|
||
|
||
51. Philosophy, the science of ethics, and human laws may or
|
||
ought to be independent of divine and ecclesiastical authority.
|
||
|
||
58. No forces are to be recognized which are not inherent in
|
||
matter, and all moral and decent effort ought to be expended in
|
||
accumulating wealth and procuring, pleasure in any way.
|
||
|
||
59. Right consists of a material fact, "duties of man" is an
|
||
empty phrase, and all man's acts have the force of right.
|
||
|
||
60. Authority is merely the sum of numbers and material
|
||
farces.
|
||
|
||
61. A fortunate outcome of an unjust act does no harm to the
|
||
sanctity of right.
|
||
|
||
62. The principle of Non-interventicin is to be recommended
|
||
and observed.
|
||
|
||
63. It is lawful to refuse to obey and even rebel against
|
||
legitimate princes.
|
||
|
||
64. The violation of the most sacred oaths and any criminal
|
||
and disgraceful action in violation of the eternal law are not to
|
||
be censured but are entirely lawful and worthy of the highest
|
||
praise if they are done out of love of one's country.
|
||
|
||
65. It must by no means be admitted that Christ raised
|
||
marriage to the dignity of a sacrament.
|
||
|
||
66. The sacrament of matrimony is something added to the
|
||
contract and Separable from it, and the sacrament consists in a
|
||
single nuptial blessing.
|
||
|
||
67. By natural law the bond of matrimoiiy is not indissoluble
|
||
and on various grounds the civil authority may grant divorce.
|
||
|
||
68. The Church has no power to create nullifying impediments
|
||
to marriage; that power belongs to the civil authority, and it must
|
||
abolish existings, impediments.
|
||
|
||
69. In earlier ages the Church began to create nullifying
|
||
impediments by the powers entrusted to it by the civil authority,
|
||
not by any power of its own.
|
||
|
||
70. The canons of the Council of Trent which impose the
|
||
censure of anathema on those who dare to deny that the Church has
|
||
the right to create nullifying impediments are ether not dogmatic
|
||
or are to be understood as deriving force from this delegated
|
||
authority.
|
||
|
||
71. The Tridentine formula with its penalties is not binding
|
||
when the civil authority provides a different form and insists that
|
||
if this is followed the marrage is valid.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
72. Boniface VIII was the first to lay down that the vow of
|
||
chastity taken at ordination invalidalles a marriage.
|
||
|
||
73. There can be true marriage for Christians on the strength
|
||
of the civil contract alone; and it is false to say either that
|
||
between Christians the contract of marriage is always a sacramen,
|
||
or that the contract is null if there is no sacrament.
|
||
|
||
74. Matrimonial and espousal cases belong by their very
|
||
nature to the civil court.
|
||
|
||
75. Whether the secular power can be reconciled with the
|
||
spiritual is disputed in Christian and Catholic cireles.
|
||
|
||
76. The destruction of the temporal power that the Apostolic
|
||
See holds would greatly promote the freedom of the Church.
|
||
|
||
77. In our age it is no longer expedient to have the Catholic
|
||
faith as the only religion of the State, to the exclusion of all
|
||
others.
|
||
|
||
78. Hence it is rightly provided by law in certain nominally
|
||
Catholic countries that men who migrate to them shall be allowed
|
||
the public practice of the religion of each.
|
||
|
||
79. For it is false to say that the civil liberty of all
|
||
cults and the concession of full power to men to discuss in public
|
||
any sort of opinion and ideas leads to the corruption of the minds
|
||
and morals of the people and the spread of the pest of
|
||
indifferentism.
|
||
|
||
80. The Roman Pontiff can and ought to be reconciled and come
|
||
to terms with progress, liberalism, and modern civilization.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
To these theologians add 11 theses which are, they say,
|
||
condemned in the Bull itself:
|
||
|
||
1. That the highest public interest and the progress of
|
||
society emphatically demand that human society be constituted and
|
||
governed without any regard for religion, as if there were no such
|
||
thing, or at all events without making any distinction between true
|
||
and false religions.
|
||
|
||
2. That the best form of society is that in which the
|
||
government does not recognize any duty to punish offenders against
|
||
the Catholic religion except in so far as public order requires
|
||
this.
|
||
|
||
3. That freedom of conscience and religion are the right of
|
||
every man, and it ought to be decreed by law in every properly-
|
||
constituted society that all citizelis have the right to all
|
||
freedom without the coercion of either civil or ecclesiastical
|
||
authority, so that thay may publicly declare their opinions either
|
||
vocally or in print or in any other way.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
4. That the will of the people, made known either by public
|
||
opinion or in any other way, is the supreme law apart from any
|
||
divine or human right, and that in the political order accomplished
|
||
facts have, by the very fact that they are accomplished, the force
|
||
of law.
|
||
|
||
5. That monistic orders have no legitimate reason to exist.
|
||
|
||
6. That the law which forbids manual labor on certain days
|
||
in order that people may go to church should be abolished.
|
||
|
||
7. That domestic society or the family derives the whole
|
||
reason for its existence from civil law, hence all rights of
|
||
parents in their children, especially the right of seeing to their
|
||
edueation, depend upon civil law.
|
||
|
||
8. That the clergy, being hostile to true and useful science
|
||
and the advance of civilization, must be excluded from all share in
|
||
the training and education of the young.
|
||
|
||
9. That the laws of the Church are not binding in conscience
|
||
unless they are issued by the civil power; that the acts and
|
||
decrees of the Roman Pontiffs concerning religion and the Church
|
||
need the sanction and approval or at least the consent of the civil
|
||
power; that the Apostalic Constitutions which condemn secret
|
||
societies, whether or no they require an oath of secrecy, and
|
||
punish their members and promoters with anathema have no force in
|
||
those parts of the world where such societies are allowed by the
|
||
civil government; that the excommunication passed by the Council of
|
||
Trent and the Roman Pontiff against those who invade or seize the
|
||
property of the Church is based upon a confusion of the spiritual
|
||
and the civic or political order and the protection of worldly
|
||
goods; that the Church must not pass any decree that may coerce the
|
||
conscierces of the faithful in questions of the use of secular
|
||
property: that the Church has no right to punish transgressors of
|
||
its laws with material penalties; that it is in harmony with the
|
||
principles of sacred theology and public law for the civil
|
||
authority to take over the ownership of property taken from the
|
||
Church.
|
||
|
||
10. That the ecclesiastical authority is not distinct from
|
||
and independent of the civil authority by divine right, and such
|
||
distinction and independetice could not be maintained without the
|
||
Church invading and usurpirig esesntial righi of the civil power.
|
||
|
||
11. It is lawful to refuse to obey those judgments and
|
||
decrees of the Apostolic See the object of which is said to be the
|
||
general good of the Church and its rights and discipline, provided
|
||
they do not deal with matters of faith and morals, without simony
|
||
or abandoning the Catholic religion.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
The American Catholic has no opportunity of reading this
|
||
extraordinary document for himself. No translation of the Syllabus
|
||
or the Papal Encyclical that accompanied it is available to him. He
|
||
has to take the word of his priests and clerical writers, who
|
||
almost alone knew Latin, and it is doubtful if even one in a
|
||
thousand of them has ever read even the Syllabus itself. Teday, no
|
||
doubt, the priest refers the inquirer to their precious Catholic
|
||
Encyclopedia, in which there is a long article by the Rev.
|
||
Professor Ott, an American priest-teacher in an American Catholic
|
||
College. And here is what the gentleman teaches American Catholics
|
||
about this medieval collection of claims and its muddle-headed
|
||
author, in the article "Pius IX":
|
||
|
||
"It is astounding how fearlessly he fought against the false
|
||
liberalism that threatened to destroy the very essence of faith and
|
||
religion. Though ugly misunderstandings and malice combined in
|
||
representing the Syllabus as a veritable embodiment of religious
|
||
narrowmindedness and cringing servility to papal authority, it has
|
||
done inestimable service to the Church and to society at large by
|
||
unmasking the false liberalism that had begun to insinuate its
|
||
subtle poison into the very marrow of Catholics."
|
||
|
||
This is one of those calculated misrepresenattions of which,
|
||
numerous as they are in his Encyclopedia, any honest Catholic ought
|
||
to be ashamed, yet in the midst of his fasifications this American
|
||
priest complains of "misrepresentation and malice." Turn back to
|
||
clause 80 of the Syllabus. Some Catholic writer who claims, as a
|
||
few did in the stormy year's, that the Vatican ouhht to come to
|
||
terms with "propress, liberalism and modern civilization" is
|
||
denounced. The Pope knows nothing whatever about a distinction
|
||
between true and false liberaiism. All his life -- and Pius IX
|
||
showered documents upon the world after 1850 -- he made no
|
||
distinction whatever between shades of liberalism. Liberalism pure
|
||
and simple was a child of the Reformation, which was spawn of the
|
||
devil. As to the monstrous claims of this Catholic professor of our
|
||
time that the opinions which the Pope condemned were a danger to
|
||
"society at large," what Catholic, not having any chance to see a
|
||
translation of the Syllabus, would dream after such language that
|
||
all the liberal principles on the social side which are
|
||
"reprobated" by the stupid Pope are now incorporated in the life
|
||
and constitution of every leading civilization, and that those
|
||
countries which have not yet fully accepted them -- Spain,
|
||
Portugal, Eire, etc. -- lag in the rear of advancing "Society at
|
||
large."
|
||
|
||
Note that I do not say that all the clauses, but the great
|
||
majority of them, are now accepted throughout the really civilized
|
||
part of the world, and in America even the Catholic clergy profess
|
||
to accept them. Apart from these there are clauses which reject
|
||
Atheism or Materialism and claims that have meaning only in
|
||
Catholic countries of the old type and are unintelligible to
|
||
ordinary mortals, such as the medieval church -- claim that
|
||
Catholic priests must not be put on trial except in clerical
|
||
courts.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
Now, we do not grudge the Pope his belly-rumbling at the
|
||
growth of Atheism and Materialism. We are not clear whether he
|
||
found them spreading in his own flock, in which alone he has the
|
||
right to brandish his shepherd's crook, or whether he imagined that
|
||
Atheists and Materialists outside his church would grow pale at the
|
||
sound of his anathemas. As a matter of fact there were still in
|
||
1864 comparatively few Atheists and Materialists. Few revolutionary
|
||
leaders had the courage, as Garibaldi had, to avow himself an
|
||
Atheist and thumb his nose at what he called "the Sacred Shop."
|
||
Still less had the courage and knowledge to insist, as Marx did,
|
||
that the new civilization must be materialistic to its foundations.
|
||
One suspects that the Pope dragged these into his list of errors in
|
||
part to freeze the blood of Catholic women and peasants and excuse
|
||
the reckless violence with which, in the Encyclical that introduced
|
||
the Syllabus, he shrieked about "poisonous" opinions that led to
|
||
general debauchery we shall see presently, that there was at the
|
||
time as much of these colorful practices in Rome as anywhere in
|
||
Europe -- and the collapse of civilization.
|
||
|
||
With our customary liberality we Atheists and Materialists do
|
||
not grudge the Pope his anger against these developments, and the
|
||
modern apologist can say little about them except to the more
|
||
ignorant Catholics because the immense growth of these fundamental
|
||
heresies has coincided with the most rapid progress that
|
||
civilization ever made, while the Catholic countries that hinder
|
||
this growllh by still torturing heretics remain on the lowest level
|
||
of modern civilization. We can afford to smile at these contortions
|
||
and distortions. Are we expected to take courteous and serious
|
||
notice where the head of the biggest church represents Freethinkers
|
||
as saying that "truth is the same thing as falseness," "justice is
|
||
the same thing as injustice," and "duty is an empty phrase." Even
|
||
popes must learn that this is not the Dark Age; that now even
|
||
peasants can read. But the great majority of the condemned opinions
|
||
have a far more real interest for us and had already been embodied
|
||
in the American Constitution. First, however, the reader will find
|
||
it useful to have the Pope's fit of holy temper set in its actual
|
||
historical frame.
|
||
|
||
|
||
2. POPE NERO FIDDLING WHILE ROME BURNS
|
||
|
||
In one of my earlier works, "The Epic of Universal History,"
|
||
I point out that a good cleal of history-writing by American
|
||
professors in the last 20 years has shared, in less degree, the
|
||
viciousness which the Encyclopedia Britannica displayed since, in
|
||
the last edition, it submitted to American Catholic influence.
|
||
Taking one of (in most respects) the best of these large and finely
|
||
illustrated histories of the world or of Europe which have appeared
|
||
in our time, Professor Lucas' "Short History of Civilization"
|
||
(1943), I find that, immense as the work is, it crushes into a page
|
||
or two, and by its omissions totally misrepresents, the most
|
||
momentous century in history, the period from about 1770 to 1870.
|
||
From the social angle this century is of supreme importance
|
||
because, in the first place, it witnessed the colossal struggles
|
||
which, outside the United States, gave birth to the freddom and
|
||
democracy about which we talk so much, and, in the second place, it
|
||
puts in the clearest light the true relation of the Roman Church to
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
these ideals and to the advance of civilization. If American youths
|
||
and girls are taught modern history as it is expounded by our
|
||
professors in these sumptuous popular manuals we cannot wonder that
|
||
Americans can be duped by such blatant and stupid falsehoods as
|
||
that the fathers of the Revolution learned democracy from Jesuit
|
||
theologians of the 16th century.
|
||
|
||
Very rightly, we have in the year 1949 celebrated centenaries
|
||
of Goethe and Chopin, but I saw only a puzzled expression on the
|
||
faces of my audience when, lecturing in London, I saggested that
|
||
there ought also to be some recognition of the memory of the
|
||
100,000 men and women, martyrs of democracy, who were tortured,
|
||
ruined, or executed in the year 1849. In Britain, as in America, if
|
||
a little less extensively, Roman Catholic influence, which is out
|
||
of all proportion to the number of the faithful, has led to the
|
||
prostitution of historical education on most vital points. I have
|
||
explained elsewhere that in the course of the 19th century about
|
||
400,000 unarmed men, women and children perished, usually in agony,
|
||
on scaffolds, in fetid jails, in savage penal colonies, or in
|
||
massicres for maintaining the right to freedom and democracy; that
|
||
nearly the whole of these were done to death in Catholic countries,
|
||
where the church not only supported but spurred on the feudal
|
||
monarchs, some of whom were as vile as the worst Roman emperors;
|
||
and that the popes, who were until 1870 the Kings of Central Italy,
|
||
were almost as bad as the Kings of Naples, Spain, and Portugal. It
|
||
is against that lurid background, of which no trace is given in
|
||
these American histories, that we must read the Syllabus if we want
|
||
to get the full meaning and irony of it.
|
||
|
||
Here I will confine myself mainly to Italy. The armies of the
|
||
French Revolution had spread over Italy and in great measure
|
||
reformed its gross medieval condition and inspired the
|
||
establishment of several republics. When it became necessary to
|
||
withdraw the troops from southern Italy clerical-royalist reaction
|
||
had opened in its most brutal form, but Napoleon had clung to
|
||
Northern and Central Italy and until he was beaten at Waterloo the
|
||
popes and the reactionary forces were checked. Then, as is
|
||
generally known, the Pope recovered what he called his "temporal
|
||
dominion," the Kingdom of Central Italy, and the leading powers --
|
||
Russia, Prussia, Austria and (for a time) England -- formed a Holy
|
||
Alliance to "stamp out the last sparks of reolution." It is ironic
|
||
to reflect today that in 1816 that meant to bludgeon and bleed the
|
||
peoples of Europe until they surrendered the last hope of this
|
||
foolish and impious dream, as they called it, of having freedom and
|
||
democracy.
|
||
|
||
North Italy belonged to Austria; Central Italy to the papacy;
|
||
Southern Italy to the King of Naples (or of the Two Sicilies). Even
|
||
Austria in those pions days allowed its fine character to be
|
||
disgraced by the cruel treatment of rebels, but it was in the
|
||
Center and South (and in Spain and Portugal) that the most sordid
|
||
massacres and the foulest jails were found. This lower two-thirds
|
||
of Italy may be regarded as a unity from the social angle, as it
|
||
was a continuous territory and the king of Naples were completely
|
||
docile to the papacy. "The nearer to Rome, the worse the morals,"
|
||
was a common saying in those days. The Austrian emperors ruled
|
||
Northern Italy from Vienna and showed a considerable degree of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
independence of the papacy, and their rule was the least corrupt
|
||
and oppressive in Italy. The King and court of Naples in the first
|
||
half of the century were gross in conduct and as foul as the worst
|
||
monarchs of the Middle Ages in the oppression of the people and the
|
||
punishment of these who demanded some measure of democracy. A
|
||
Catholic general in the royal service, Colletta, I writer whose
|
||
conscientiousness has been fully vindicated by the distingushed
|
||
Italian scholar, Professor Croce, tells us that under the vile King
|
||
Ferdinand (1790-1825) "100,000 Neapolitans perished by every kind
|
||
of death in the cause of political freedom," a large part of these
|
||
dying a slow and horrible death in dungeons of an incredible
|
||
character. His son, Francis I, was just as vile in personal conduct
|
||
("A vulgar cruel profligate who left the Government to his
|
||
favorites and lived with his mistresses," says Prof Bolton King),
|
||
and the continuer of Colletta's contemporary history tells us that
|
||
in the next 30 years (1825-1855) 150,000 were added to the list of
|
||
democratic martyrs. As the population of the Kingdom was not more
|
||
than 2,000,000 one can easily understand that this awful drain of
|
||
the best blood of the country, chiefly the educated Liberals,
|
||
caused that decay from which Southern Italy has not yet fully
|
||
recovered.
|
||
|
||
This ghastly and murderous misgovernment was maintained under
|
||
the very eyes of the popes for more than 60 vears. It was at its
|
||
worst when Pius IX issued his fatuous warning to the world that
|
||
Liberal sentiments we recorrupting civilization and laid down that
|
||
in no circumstances were men entitled to rebel against their
|
||
"legitimate" king. The church was so intimately on the side of the
|
||
monarch that twice, after risings of the people, the king was
|
||
surrounded by the bishops at the altar when be swore -- even
|
||
calling upon God to strike him dead if he did not keep his word --
|
||
to grant freedom and democracy, and they still fully supported the
|
||
royal perjurer when he disowned his oath and committed his murders
|
||
and massacres. So callous was the court that the lazzaroni of
|
||
Naples, the human vermin of Neapolitan society, roasted and ate,
|
||
under the palace windows, the bodies of Liberals they had killed,
|
||
and brigand-chiefs drank their blood from their skulls. And all
|
||
that the world's moral oracle could find to say was that these
|
||
damnable Atheists and Liberals threatened the fair flower of Roman
|
||
and Neapolitan civilization. These things are suppressed by
|
||
historians today and the public mind is left open to Catholic lies.
|
||
When, some years ago I wrote a book ("The Price of Democracy") on
|
||
these real events of the last century no publisher in London would
|
||
accept it. It might hurt the feelings of our Catholic fellow-
|
||
citizens.
|
||
|
||
The condition of the Pope's Kingdom, the Papal States, was
|
||
just as foul, though the number of the victims was less. The
|
||
Catholic legend here is that there was a Catholic as well as a
|
||
Protestant Reformation in the 16th century, and in the course of
|
||
this the gross corruption which "the evil taint of the Renaissance"
|
||
had brought into the papal court and kingdom was abolished and the
|
||
people lived happily ever afterwards, as they always do in fairy-
|
||
tales. It is, as usual, a lie. Napoleon destroyed the papal rule,
|
||
but at his fall the Holy Alliance restored it. At once it was
|
||
discovered to be one of the most corrrupt little Kingdoms in
|
||
Europe.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
I have in earlier works pointed out that in the standard
|
||
historical work on 19th century Europe, Volume XI of the Cambridge
|
||
Modern History -- Catholics were so successful in revising the
|
||
Encyclopedia Briticannica that they have even got this too truthful
|
||
volume withdrawn for "revision" -- the Catholic historian Lady
|
||
Blennerhasset quotes with approval the statement of the
|
||
distinguished French priest Lamennais that Rome, which he visited
|
||
in the thirties, was "the foulest sewer ever opened up to the eye
|
||
of man"; and Lamennais was so able and zealous a priest that the
|
||
Vatican had thought of making him a cardinal. The British
|
||
ambassador Lord Clarendon said that it was "the shame of Europe."
|
||
In 1831 the powers of the Holy Alliance, Russia, Prussia, Austria,
|
||
Frxnce and England sent a stern letter, which was published, to the
|
||
Pope, telling him that his Kingdom, with its clerical government
|
||
and administration, was so foul that it bred revolution. All the
|
||
authorities -- contemporary Italian Catholic historians like Dr.
|
||
Azeglio, Farini, and Cantu, and modern experts like Lord Acton (the
|
||
leading Catholic historian in Enrope), Bishop Nielsen, King, Okey,
|
||
Orsi, etc. -- tell the same story. Such was the savagery with which
|
||
the popes repressed liberalism that lord Acton angrily remarks that
|
||
they were worse than the Old Man of the Mountains, hitherto the
|
||
worst organizer of murder In history.
|
||
|
||
This fqul administration was conducted, not by Atheists and
|
||
Liberals who were poisoning civilization, but by sleek and corrupt
|
||
clerics. The public debt grew year by year, and famine and cholera
|
||
swedt the country. Brigandage was so rife that when a foreign
|
||
pritlee visited Italy 9,000 papal soldiers had to protect his
|
||
route. The general poverty was appalling, for there was little
|
||
trade and less industry. There was no system of education, and
|
||
schools were so few that illiteracy was 85 percent. Vice was as bad
|
||
as in any country. The administration of justice was corrupt,
|
||
violence appalling, priests with crucifixes presided at the drawing
|
||
of prizes for the public lotteries, and so on. All this is -- or
|
||
was -- in the Cambridge Modern History. There was, except under the
|
||
Turks, not a less civilized state in Europe. And American priest-
|
||
professors now say that in protecting this system from "false
|
||
liberalism" the popes rendered inestimable service to society at
|
||
large, and professors in our universities suppress the whole of the
|
||
facts in teaching the public history.
|
||
|
||
What sort of men were these popes who were trying so hard to
|
||
save civilization? In 1823, when the Pope of Napoleon's days cried,
|
||
the quarrels and greeds of the cardilials and of the Catholic
|
||
powers led to the election of Leo XII, an old man who preferred
|
||
shooting birds to attending to ecclesiastical business. He left
|
||
this to his Secretary of State, Cardinal Consalvi, who refused to
|
||
be ordained priest so that he could indulge in luxuries with more
|
||
comfort. Leo died in Six years, to "the indecent joy of Rome," says
|
||
Baron Bunsen, then Prussian embassadur in the "Holy City," and, as
|
||
the cardinals still fought, they put in Pius VIII, a wreck of a
|
||
man, in senile decay, who Shuffled about the palace for less than
|
||
two years slobbering, his head twisted permanently to one side by
|
||
incipient paralysis. The "princes of the church" (cardinals) who
|
||
were helping the Pope to save civilization, deliberallely chose
|
||
these wrecks when the voting was equal so that there would be
|
||
another election as soon as possible. They were, in fact, on the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
whole a set of doddering old fools with just enough vitality to
|
||
secure the money that their wines and other luxuries required. The
|
||
zealous contemporary French Catholic Chateaubriand, one of the
|
||
chief literary glories of the French church, was in Rome when Pius
|
||
VIII ceased his dribbling, and he describes with disgust how the
|
||
Catholic powers bribed the cardinal electors and intrigued for
|
||
their own candidates. But the aged Cardinal Albani, who had carried
|
||
the election of Pius VIII and been rewarded with the post of
|
||
Secretary of State, used Austrian funds and so blocked the various
|
||
candidates that they had to elect another old man, Gregory XVI.
|
||
|
||
It was a scandalous choice, for Gregory was notoriously a
|
||
vular glutton, of disputed morals, a heavy wine bibber, fond of
|
||
erotic novels and of salacious gossip. Bolton King, one of the more
|
||
moderate writers on the period, says that "he absorbed himself in
|
||
ignoble pursuits while the country groaned under misrule."
|
||
Professor Orsi, who testifies to his gluttony and excessive love of
|
||
wine, says that "the abomination of misrule became blacker than
|
||
ever." It was the year 1831, just a year after the Second Frencn
|
||
Revolution and risings in Spain and Naples. The whole of South or
|
||
Catholic Europe seethed with revolt. And your Catholic neighbor,
|
||
duped by his literature and surrendered to the dupers by professors
|
||
who write the history of Europe for him, imagines that at these
|
||
elections (three in eight years) the pions cardinals prayed and
|
||
fasted in their sealed chamber until the light of the Holy Ghost
|
||
descended and guided them to elect the man best fitted to steer the
|
||
Church in such turbulent waters.
|
||
|
||
This clergy will assure him (1) that these three popes of the
|
||
revolutionary period were holy and vigorous men, and (2) that if it
|
||
is true that they were completely worthless, this did not matter
|
||
much as they all left the rule of the church to the Cardinal
|
||
Secretary of State. This draws our attention to an even more
|
||
scandalcus aspect of the period. Three able cardinals in succession
|
||
did rule the church in this capacity from the fall of Napoleon to
|
||
the issue of the Syllabus in 1864: Consalvi, Albani and Antonelli,
|
||
Of Consalvi the Catholic Encyclopedia says that he was "one of the
|
||
purest glories of the Church of Rome" and that "the purity of his
|
||
life was the more admired because in his position he had to mingle
|
||
much with a worldly society." No one knows whether his earlier life
|
||
was asceptic, He was an Italian aristocrat who refused to let his
|
||
hands (or other organs) be bound up by takinf the vows of a priest,
|
||
and who -- was a welcome figure in Parisian and Roman society. "I
|
||
like pleasure as much as any man" he told Tallyrand. Other
|
||
contemporaries said that he was skeptical and amorous, like the
|
||
circles in which he moved. The Catholic Lady Blennerhassett
|
||
leniently credits him with "an easy-going, somewhat woridly life."
|
||
|
||
But the murderous suppression of liberalism did not begin
|
||
under Consalvi but under Cardinal Albani. About this gentleman the
|
||
Encyclopedia prefers to say nothing. He also declined to take the
|
||
vows of priesthood and he was, in Rome, notoriously skeptical and
|
||
immoral. He was 80 years old when in 1821 he got Gregory elected,
|
||
yet he was at ihe opera every night of the season (to see and hear
|
||
Malibran) that year. He did not, however, live long to enjoy his
|
||
new position, and it was the third of this remarkable trio,
|
||
Cardinal Antonelli, who presided over the direst butchery of the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
middle class and the nobles of Italy and introduced the Syllabus to
|
||
the world in a message of touching piety and zeal for civilization.
|
||
He was by far the worst of the three. Before the fumigation of it,
|
||
in the Catholic sanctuary, the Encyclopedia Britannica said that he
|
||
"displayed consumate duplicity" and spoke of his "unscrupulous.
|
||
grasping, and sinister personality." In the last edition -- for one
|
||
more enlightened generation -- these words have, of course, been
|
||
cut out. The French Grande Encyclopedie, written nearer, the time
|
||
of his death and in its day the greatest work of reference in
|
||
Europe, says that "he left an immense fortune but nothing to the
|
||
distressed church, and the claims of the Countess Lambertini, his
|
||
bastard daughter, bore witness to the corruption of his morals."
|
||
The Catholic Encyclopedia softens the final exposure of him by
|
||
saying that he was born of rich parents. He was, in fact, the son
|
||
of a poor peasant and he left a fortune of $20,000,000 to his
|
||
relatives, the bastard countess claiming her share openly on the
|
||
ground of paternity. He left little to the Church, whose finances
|
||
he had left in a chaotic condition and deeply in debt, and "only a
|
||
trifling souvenir to the Pope.
|
||
|
||
How many Italian liberals were sacrificed under these
|
||
disgusting popes and Secretaries of State, in addition to their
|
||
responsibility for the Neapolitan butcheries, it is not possible to
|
||
say, but from a book published in London in 1856 by one of their
|
||
victims, Luigi Orsini, we get a grim idea. He called it "The
|
||
Austrian Dungeons in Italy," but it includes his experience in
|
||
Papal dungeons. He knew both well. His autographed photograph hangs
|
||
on the wall of my study, signed by him just before he left London
|
||
to try to assassinate Napoleon III for supporting papal corruption.
|
||
His first prison was a stifling hole measuring 6 feet by 4 feet and
|
||
containing only a sack of straw. Taken to Rome he was put in the
|
||
Pope's "New Prison" with nine youths of 17 to 19, all "looking more
|
||
like corpses than human beings." They could hardly turn round
|
||
standing up. Their food was "water-soup" and a little bread; their
|
||
straw sacks were alive with vermin. From there he was taken with
|
||
120 ethers "chained two, and two" to the fortress of Castellana.
|
||
This had at one time been a villa in which Pope Alexander VI, of
|
||
fragrant memory, had spent weekends in the summer with his
|
||
mistresses and the choicer Roman courtesans; and the Pope's bedroom
|
||
was piously preserved, says Orsini, and had "the most hideous and
|
||
obscene pictures" (or frescoes) on the walls. The place, in a heavy
|
||
malaria swamp, was now "thick with damp and fungus." The unvarying
|
||
diet of the prisoners was slices of bread in warm water flavored
|
||
with tallow. Half the prisoners had already been in prison 15 to 20
|
||
years. Orsini and the younger man were sentenced to the galleys,
|
||
and after a time they were taken in chains to the fortress at
|
||
Civita Vacchia. Dressed as galley-slaves, crowded 50 or 60 in one
|
||
dungeon, they were chained to the wall with a two foot long chain
|
||
which was "never unfastened" (even for sanitary purposes). Most of
|
||
them died solwly of disease or starvation. "This," says Orsini, "is
|
||
the treatment to which the Most Holy and Merciful Father of the
|
||
faithful condemns those who labor to drive out the forein oppressor
|
||
from their native land."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
There were about 10,000 of these Political prisoners (though
|
||
the total Population of the Papal States was only about 3,000,000.)
|
||
in his foul and murderous jails when Pope Pius IX penned the
|
||
encyclical and Syllabus in which he affected to save civilization
|
||
and his friend Antonelli, sent it out over the world. One does not
|
||
know whether to be more disgusted with the, priests who perpetrated
|
||
these horrors to protect their power or the priests and professors
|
||
who today suppress the facts and lie about the general conditions.
|
||
But in the middle of this unholy period (1830-60), which the popes
|
||
were so eager to prolong, occurred the great revolution of 1848 and
|
||
the consecration of Pope Pius IX, and it is necessary to consider
|
||
the relation of these events. In the Encyclopedia Americana there
|
||
is a 20-column article on "The 19th Century." It devotes just six
|
||
lines to the prodigious revolutionary wave which in 1848 swept
|
||
seven kings from their thrones and the counter-revolutions of 1849,
|
||
which led to an intensification of the butchery of democrats. The
|
||
editors of the Encyclopedia must have known what to expect when
|
||
they entrusted the writing of this article to Dr. J. Walsh, the
|
||
zealous Catholic propagandist and anything but an historian. Here
|
||
I must be curt.
|
||
|
||
In 1830 the French carried their Second Revolution, and by
|
||
that year the Latin-American colonies and the Greeks had won
|
||
independence; and there were revolts in many parts of Europe. These
|
||
events raised the hopes of all liberals and, in spite of the fierce
|
||
prosecution I have described, the Italian demand for freedom and
|
||
democracy spread to the bulk of the midle class and to large bodies
|
||
of the workers. In 1846 the miserable Pope Gregory died and, after
|
||
the usual indecent struggle for the tiara, Pius IX was elected.
|
||
|
||
A provincial bishop, he had come to Rome with the reputation
|
||
of a man who deplored the bloodshed and was in favor of making
|
||
concessions. I confess that with all my experience in writing
|
||
biography I do not understand his true character at that time. He
|
||
had been sickly and epileptic as a youth, and anti-clerical fellow-
|
||
pupils later insisted that he had taken a passive part in
|
||
adolescent perversions. His British biographer, T.A. Trollope, was
|
||
convinced by the evidence that he was "the biggest liar in the
|
||
school." In my "Histary of Freemasonry" I tell how, as a 46-year-
|
||
old priest, he bocame a Mason -- a charge repudiated with rage by
|
||
Catholics but fully proved by the Masonic historian, my friend
|
||
Dudley Wright -- and as Bishop of Imola he was certainly on good
|
||
terms with the liberals. The powers therefore favored his election;
|
||
the liberals hailed it with enthusiasm. Under pressure fro.m them
|
||
he granted an amnesty, but he did nothing further until the
|
||
revolution broke in 1848. In January of that year the peasants of
|
||
Sicily, led by professional men, drove out the royal armies and
|
||
proclaimed a republic, and the revolt spread to Naples. In February
|
||
was the Third French Revolution, and the flames spread to Germany,
|
||
Austria-Hungary, and North Italy. The Papal States were surrounded
|
||
by triumphant democracies, and Pius began to make concessions to
|
||
the liberals of Rome, though the wily and unscrupulotis Antonelli
|
||
robbed those of real value. But in June Pius heard that the
|
||
reactionaries had smashed the revolutionaries in Paris, and then
|
||
that Austria was negotiating for a big Russian army. From that time
|
||
the wretched Pope disowned all trace of democratic sentiment, if he
|
||
had ever genuinely entertaiiied it (as he certainly professed).
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
Mazzini, Garibaldi, and other republicans came to Rome, and Pius,
|
||
alarmed at the revolt of, apparenlly, the whole people of Rome,
|
||
signed a grant of a Constitiition and then, as I said in the first
|
||
chapter, fled, disguised as a footman, to the protection of the
|
||
infamous King of Naples, to await the deliverance promised by Louis
|
||
Napoleon and the Austro-Russian forces.
|
||
|
||
Seventy years ago, a pious school (and altar) boy of 12 years,
|
||
I devoutly kissed the skull-cap of Pius IX, for the church had
|
||
declared him a quarter-saint (a "Venerable") and Rome had sent
|
||
these relics (probably bogus, as was usual) over the world to
|
||
collect funds. Today I execrate his blood-soaked memory and salute
|
||
the bearded portrait of Orsini, the man who tried to assassinate
|
||
Napoleon III for putting him back in the Chair of Peter. Rome fell
|
||
to the troops of the vile French adventurer, who bassed his power
|
||
upon such a combination of the skeptical but bitterly anti-Socilist
|
||
middle class and the clergy as there is today. But the Pope
|
||
remained in the mountains until the last democrat was dead or
|
||
cleared out of Rome. He promised an amnesty, but, with exceptions
|
||
which, the Cambridge History, tells us, left 7,256 democrats
|
||
outside the range of the amnesty. There were 90 executed in Rome.
|
||
At Bologne "more than once 10 to 20 of the noblest citizens were
|
||
shot in one day" (Orsini.), 10 in one day at Imola (Pius' former
|
||
Bishopric), 15 at Ancona, 30 at Forli, and so on. There had been
|
||
2,000 political prisoners in the jails when Gregory died and Pius
|
||
anonunced an amnesty. There were now 8,000. Torture was
|
||
reintroduced. The Catholic mobs were armed and committod "atrocious
|
||
acts of revenge" (Firini). The historical law held good; there had
|
||
been no reprisals after the popular revolution but the land groned
|
||
with torture after the clerical royalist counter-revolution. And it
|
||
was in this atmosphere of holiness that the Pope marshalled his
|
||
sacred legions for a solemn occasion and declared that the Virgin
|
||
Mary had been born without the stain of Original Sin (the
|
||
Immaculate Corception).
|
||
|
||
This incidental development gives you the measure of the
|
||
Pope's intelligence and "statesmanship." It, was in 1854 that he
|
||
declared this a dogma of the church and urged Catholics everywhere
|
||
to, bow down to statues of "Mary Immaculate" (in flowing blue and
|
||
white robes) ind wear medals with the same familiar figure. Priests
|
||
in every town and village of Europe gave rousing sermons on the
|
||
Immaculate Conception. Every peasant child treasured and wore a
|
||
brass or tin medal. And, naturally, a half-witted child in a
|
||
village on the slopes of the Pyrenees came home one day in 1854 and
|
||
told her parents that a mysterious but glorious lady in the
|
||
familiar robes had appeared to her, not in the correct French that
|
||
is usually quoted but in the half-Spanish patois of the village, "I
|
||
am the Immaculate Conception." Pius swallowed the story and helped
|
||
to impose the fraud upon the church. to the gorgeous profit of the
|
||
store-keepers of Lourds and the Freneh church. He even blessed the
|
||
enterprise of another village which tried to grow into a town by
|
||
having a rival apparition.
|
||
|
||
At this time at least 50,000 men and women lay festering in
|
||
the jails of Italy from the Alps to Sicily, and there were further
|
||
tens of thousands in the jails of Hungiry, and France. Such was the
|
||
indignation of Europe that when British sympathizers with Garibaldi
|
||
in 1869 organized a legion of volunteers in London to go out and
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
help him to clean up Italy the British Premier, Lord Palmorston,
|
||
said in the House of Commons when he was pressed to intervene: "I
|
||
see no objection to a party of English gentlemen going to Italy to
|
||
see the eruption of Mount Etna." Palmerston must have known, as the
|
||
whole Navy did, that a British fleet was then cruising in Italian
|
||
waters, and the commanders daily gave permission to batches of
|
||
sailors and officers to hove a day ashorp and to take their
|
||
cultasses and pistols with them. Somehow they always had to use
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
The King of Piedmont had bribed the French to withdraw with a
|
||
concession of what is known as the Riviera (Nice, Monte Carlo,
|
||
etc.) and was unifying Italy under his crown, Garibaldi and his
|
||
"Thousand" playing a glorious part in the campaign. It ended with
|
||
the occupation of the Papal States and in 1870, of Rome itself. He
|
||
offered the Vatican a generous annual allowance in compensation but
|
||
it was indignatly refused. It was more
|
||
profitable to denounce the Italians as "robbers" and describe the
|
||
Pope as "the Prisoner of the Vatican" in Catholic lands. It was the
|
||
accumulated allowance and compound interest on this that was
|
||
hypocritically accepted by the papacy in 1929 as the price of the
|
||
Pope's blessing on Fascism.
|
||
|
||
In fact the Papicy had no right whatever to compensation. It
|
||
had got the territory originally by the gross fraud of the Donation
|
||
of Constantine: it had soaked the soil of Central Italy with blood
|
||
to hold it from 800 to 1870; and, above all, the inhabitiants had
|
||
voted overwheimingly for incorporation in the kingdom of Italy and
|
||
rejection of the papal yoke. The Piedmontese had taken an honest
|
||
plebisicite in every province and in Rome. In the Roman province
|
||
232,856 votes for Victor Emmanual and only 1,590 for the Pope. In
|
||
the Pope's own city 40,785 voted against him and only 46 for him.
|
||
If ever you see these important facts mentioned today you probably
|
||
find the Catholic tag attached that the result means nothing
|
||
because the Pope forbade Catholics to vote. As a matter of fact
|
||
40,000 voters meant four-fifths of the total adult male population
|
||
of Rome. Women had no vote in those days and the other fifth were
|
||
clerics, papal officials, and clerical servants and merchants.
|
||
|
||
3. THE CONTEMPTUOUS DEFIANCE OF AMERICA
|
||
|
||
We now see the full enormity of the claim of the Catholic
|
||
Encyclopedia that our modern scorn of the Syllabus is based upon
|
||
"misunderstandings and malice" and that it really rendered
|
||
"inestimable service to ... society at large." It is the customary
|
||
trick. Catholic apologists who expect their works to be read by
|
||
educated non-Catholic usually treat the Syllabus cavalierly. It
|
||
does not claim infallibility, they say, and its condemnations and
|
||
reprobations do not bind the modern Catholics. It just expresses
|
||
the personal opinions of a worthy and remarkable pontiff "who,
|
||
dazed by the new thought that was coming into Europe, did not
|
||
discriminate sufficiently between its extreme forms (Atheism, etc.)
|
||
and its social liberalism, and really felt that it was a danger to
|
||
the moral principles on which civilization is built." The Catholic
|
||
Encyclopedia, which professes to the general public that it is the
|
||
cream of up-to-date Catholic scholarship but is really the arsenal
|
||
from which preachers and popular propagandists derive their
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
ammunition, will have none of these glosses. Pius was the St.
|
||
George, the grandest figure of those hectic years in the middle of
|
||
the last century. Civilization was threatened by the new thought
|
||
and its more impulsive and more unscrupulous champions, and, as
|
||
usual, the wise and inspired head of the church, sitting on the
|
||
Olympus of the "See of Peter," screened from the passions of men by
|
||
his holy environment, serenely pointed out to the world the dangers
|
||
of its false liberalism."
|
||
|
||
It is time that American historians and sociologists resented
|
||
the imposition of this mendacious junk upon millions of citizens
|
||
instead of indirectly encouraging it by suppressing the facts. The
|
||
"fearlessness" of Pius in issuing, between 1850 and 1863, the
|
||
thunderbolts which are gathered together in the Syllabus is
|
||
grotesque. The priest-writer who claims it must have known
|
||
perfectly well, as every freshman in history knows, that during
|
||
that period the Pope and the papal system were protected by the
|
||
hundred thousand bayonets of the Russians, Austrians, and French
|
||
besides the Swiss hirelings of the Vatican itself. The writers whom
|
||
the Pope criticized were not only beyond his power but laughed at
|
||
him instead of threatening him. He was to a great extent condemning
|
||
the leaders of the new Latin-American Republic, who had scornfully
|
||
rejected the dictation of the church as well as the rule of the
|
||
Kings of Spain and Portugal. The references appended to the
|
||
Syllabus show this. In the second place the Pope was condemning
|
||
certain liberal Catholic, or what was later called Modernist,
|
||
writers of France, Germany and Italy. These, from 1849 onward, were
|
||
bullied into silence, and it required no more courage to dance on
|
||
them than it does in jackals threatening a dead lion. The men who
|
||
were really dangerous from the Vatican angle were dying in the
|
||
putrid jails I described, or were scattered from Constantinople to
|
||
Philadelphia. Fearless! One is inclined to think that this pious
|
||
Washington Catholic professor is writing just for agitated Catholic
|
||
spinsters (with money) or children, but I suppose that even the
|
||
recent converts of whom the church boasts have to swallow this
|
||
stuff.
|
||
|
||
But the worst of it is the pretence that the Pope had any
|
||
right to speak in the name of civilization. Thirty years earlier
|
||
the five leading powers of Europe had, in a most humiliating
|
||
letter, ordered the Pope to bring his dominion up to the level of
|
||
civilization. I described their condition. After 1849 they fell
|
||
back into that condition and were as foul as ever. There was not a
|
||
more ignorant, more criminal more ineptly and corruptly
|
||
administrated area in Europe. It, rang with scorn of the Syllabus.
|
||
There are several columns of caustic works on the Syllabus, in a
|
||
dozen languages, in the index of the British National Library.
|
||
There was only one other kingdom in Europe at that time which was
|
||
as low as that of the Pope. This was the Kingdom of Naples, and it
|
||
was just as much subject to the Pope's moral rule as the papal
|
||
Kingdom itself. Next to them at the bottom of the scale of
|
||
civilization was Spain, and to its queen Isabella, II, Pius IX had
|
||
recently presented the Golden Rose, Rome's annual tribute to a
|
||
womanly model of virtue and piety. It is not disputed that Isabella
|
||
was the most openly and indiscriminately immoral princess in
|
||
Europe!
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
With particular scorn Europe noted that the Pope's encyclical
|
||
'Quanta cura,' in which Pius mourned the growing debauchery and the
|
||
threat to civilization, and the accompanying Syllabus were sent out
|
||
by Cardinal Antonelli as Secretary of State. He wrote his message
|
||
in the same virtuous ink as the Pope. Through the ambassadors every
|
||
country knew the details of Antonelli's amorous adventures, and
|
||
some of them knew that he was taking colossal bribes from them for
|
||
being allowed to influence the Vatican policy. We need not express
|
||
disgust at the hypocrisy of Europe. It, and America, are just as
|
||
hypocritical today, the only difference being that in our days the
|
||
hypocrisy is in the name of freedom and democracy and in those days
|
||
it was in the sacred cause of suppressing freedom and democracy. I
|
||
am not clear which is the more laudable.
|
||
|
||
But the liberating armies were well on the march in 1854. I
|
||
would not claim the same virtue of Crusaders for the armies of
|
||
Victor Emmanuel, who by the unification of Italy doubled or trebled
|
||
his wealth and power, as for Garibaldi and his volunteers, but at
|
||
least they were bringing civilization to Central and Southern Italy
|
||
while the Pope shrieked anathemas at them one day and talked about
|
||
the threat to civilization the next day. Under various headings
|
||
(Illiteracy, Education, Crime, Wealth, etc.)' Mulhall's Standard
|
||
Dictionary of Statistics shows the advance after 1870, when the
|
||
papal rule that had blighted Italy for so many centuries was
|
||
brought to an end. Dean Milman says of the temporal power in his
|
||
classic "History of Latin Christianity:
|
||
|
||
"Rome, jealous of all temporal sovereignty but its own,
|
||
yielded up, or rather made Italy a battlefield of the
|
||
Transalpine and the stranger and at the same time so
|
||
secularized her own spiritual supremacy as to confound
|
||
altogether the priest and the politician, to degrade
|
||
absolutely, almost irrevocably, the Kingdom of Christ into a
|
||
Kingdom of this world."
|
||
|
||
And Georgorovious, the highest authority on the history of the
|
||
city of Rome, says:
|
||
|
||
"The whole history of the human race affords no example
|
||
of a struggle of such long duration, or one so unchanged in
|
||
motive, as the struggle of the Romans and Italians against the
|
||
Temporal Power of the Popes, whose Kingdom ought not to have
|
||
been of this world."
|
||
|
||
Like the greediest prince in Europe the Pope had fought for
|
||
his wealth and power, and his modern lackeys, who argue solemnly
|
||
that a great moral power ought to be independent of secular powers
|
||
by having its own territory, conceal from their readers that for
|
||
centuries before 1870 these secular powers had corruptly intervened
|
||
in papal elections and the papacy was never so free as from 1870 to
|
||
1929, when it had not an acre of territory.
|
||
|
||
As I said, the men of the Papal States now completed the work
|
||
which their ancestors had begun 800 years before by voting the Pope
|
||
out of power. The sequel was amusing. Pius summoned all the bishops
|
||
of the world to the Vatican Council and they declared that the
|
||
popes are infallible! We may say to the credit of the bishops that
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
there was a formidable resistance. Clerics who knew some of these
|
||
bishops told me 60 years ago that violent language was used. But
|
||
the opponents were bribed, intimidated or driven out, and the dogma
|
||
was carried; and from that day to this no Pope has said a word to
|
||
his church for which he claims to be using his prerogative of
|
||
infallibility.
|
||
|
||
The odor of the chief aim of the Syllabus, the determination
|
||
to protect the Papal States as the basis of the wealth and power of
|
||
the popes, is smelt in almost every clause of it. Again, though the
|
||
world of the Syllabus seems remote, we perceive a parallel with our
|
||
own time. Just as in our own day the Vatican, finding that
|
||
Communism threatens the wealth and power of the church, implores
|
||
the secular states to suppress it by armed force on the ground that
|
||
it is dangerous to their civic ideals, so in the 60's of the last
|
||
century Pope Pius asked the powers to crush Liberalism, the parent-
|
||
devil whose spawn was Atheism, Communism, Socialism, Amoralism
|
||
Anarchy, on the ground that it threatened their civilization. For
|
||
the sake of effect he began by denouncing Atheists and Deists.
|
||
Something like Pantheism had appeared in the works of a few
|
||
Catholic writers but, naturally, none sanctioned Atheism, Deism, or
|
||
Materialism, and the Pope knew well that he was wasting his breath
|
||
when he talked about these.
|
||
|
||
But this quickly led him into much broader conflicts with the
|
||
modern spirit. He sourly attacked that cultivation of reason which,
|
||
by creating science, enriched the modern world and enabled it to
|
||
carry out its great new ideals (general education, social welfare,
|
||
etc.) and on the other hand rid civilization of the blunders that
|
||
had hindered progress throughout history. We do not grudge the Pope
|
||
the holy indignation with which he denounced Atheism, Deism and
|
||
Materialism. That was a futile, but legitimate, exercise of his
|
||
profession. But he was so stupid in his attacks on the use of
|
||
reason that he is almost a heretic in Catholic doctrine. The
|
||
Catholic scheme is that "Reason precedes Faith." The existence of
|
||
God and the immortality of the soul, it admits, can be proved by
|
||
the use of reason alone. Even the divinity of Christ and his
|
||
establishment of the church must be proved by argument and
|
||
historical documents (the gospel). Only then, when you have
|
||
rationally proved that the church is of supernatural origin, can
|
||
faith (an acceptance of statements on authority) begin. I doubt if
|
||
Pius IX was sufficiently clearheaded to recognize that this
|
||
position was inevitable if the church wanted to win education
|
||
adherents. And when he goes on to say that modern philosophy, which
|
||
does not concern itself about either God or immortality, must not
|
||
be studied without "any regard for supernatural revelation," that
|
||
philosophy must "submit to authority," etc., he betrays a weird
|
||
ignorance of the nature of philosophy; while when he suggests that
|
||
Atheists or Materialists do not distinguish between right and
|
||
wrong, truth and untruth, he shows he is as ignorant of Freethought
|
||
literature as any common village preacher. Evidently he had never
|
||
heard of Emerson and his colleagues in America.
|
||
|
||
With these blundering crudities we are not concerned here; and
|
||
we are, not much alarmed by the clauses that follow, which purport
|
||
to tell us the only conditions on which we can earn that eternal
|
||
bliss which we all, so ardently desire. Yet clauses 15 to 18 seem
|
||
to be interesting in view of the statements of American Catholics.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
They give Protestant neighbors the comfortable assurance that
|
||
unless we know that the Catholic is the true church and still
|
||
refuse to join it we'll all meet in the Happy Hunting Ground. The
|
||
psychology of this puzzles us. The theory supposes that there are
|
||
folk who really believe that churchgoing is rewarded with eternal
|
||
happiness and neglect of church going is punished with horrible
|
||
suffering for all eternity yet -- for trivial reasons or none --
|
||
they won't go to church! We leave it to the psychiatrist. But when
|
||
the Catholic tells you that a man may (if not must) follow the
|
||
religion which he believes to be true; that if he honestly thinks
|
||
the Protestant faith the true religion God will not -- or we
|
||
reasonably hope that he will not -- send him to hell, that
|
||
Protestantism is after all a respectable branch of the Christian
|
||
religion, tell him that his sentiments do credit to his American
|
||
education but these are just some of the opinions (clauses 15 to
|
||
18) which Pope Pius IX commanded Catholics to reject and condemn.
|
||
Of course, if he cares to retort that Pope Pius IX was just an old
|
||
fool who did not know the theology of his own church you're
|
||
stumped.
|
||
|
||
Of the remaining three-fourths of damnable and duly damned
|
||
opinions a large number refer to the authority of the Papacy. Rip
|
||
Van Winkle Pius saw the world still in a medieval dress with a lot
|
||
of demonic folk going about trying to tear it off and substitute
|
||
shorts and bare legs. At the head of states he sees feudal rulers,
|
||
happily restored by the bayonets of the Russian serfs, who are
|
||
fully justified in exploiting and torturing their people but are
|
||
always forgetting that the Pope is their master. They claim Powers
|
||
which in the dog-Latin of medieval theology are called Exe-quatur,
|
||
etc. They want to choose their own bishops and depose them when
|
||
they are disloyal to their country in the interest of the Vatican,
|
||
They drag sacred persons (priests) who are suspected of rape,
|
||
mayhem, or fraud into profane courts of law as if they were
|
||
ordinary citizens. They claim that they can stop the priests from
|
||
reading a papal letter from the pulpit if they do not think it in
|
||
the national interest, and that they may, if they think fit,
|
||
prevent bishops from going to Rome (with their pockets and luggage
|
||
full of gold). They sometimes have the odd idea that since monks
|
||
take a vow of poverty, individually as well as collectively, they
|
||
may relieve these monks of the vast property -- in some countries
|
||
half the cultivated land of the country -- they hold and thus
|
||
enable them to observe their vow. And so on. Such ideas, of course,
|
||
tend to destroy civilization -- and to reduce the Vatican's bank-
|
||
balance -- so the Pope thunders against them in clause after
|
||
clause. But as it only applies today to low-grade, unconsecrated,
|
||
and unimportant rulers of state like Franco, de Valera, and Eva
|
||
Peron we pass on.
|
||
|
||
What is really of interest is the drastic, uncompromising,
|
||
contemptuous challenge to fundamental principles of American life.
|
||
At that time (1864) America was, from the Vatican angle, scarcely
|
||
a part of civilization. Probably the Vatican had not yet heard that
|
||
quantities of gold had been found in California 15 years earlier,
|
||
so we will not be too severe on Rome for treating it disdainfully.
|
||
Beyond the eastern fringe, where there were a few Catholic bishops,
|
||
it was, to the Roman mind, a broad wilderness in which the chief
|
||
industry was making and using colts and bowie knives. These rebels
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
against a "legitimate" monarch were now destroying each other in a
|
||
Civil War. There would not be much money in the country for a long
|
||
time to come, so its spiritual needs did not press acutely on the
|
||
Pope's attention. We can, therefore, believe that, except in so far
|
||
as the Latin-American Republics had taken their principles from the
|
||
Constitution of the U.S.A., the Pope and his precious Cardinal
|
||
Secretary of State did not think of America in despising and
|
||
condemning, the fundamental principles of that Constitution.
|
||
|
||
It is amusing in one respect. Some 50 years later Catholic
|
||
apologists in America were blandly claiming, that freedom and
|
||
democracy, which are said to be the most vital of those principles,
|
||
were borrowed from the works of the 17th century Jesuits, Stiaiez
|
||
and Bellarmine. Somebody discovered this while in the first half of
|
||
the 19th century the Jesuits were the most deadly enemies of these
|
||
ideals and egged on the princes who murdered the men who fought for
|
||
them, these were really Jesuit principles, first proclaimed to a
|
||
benighted Europe by the great Jesuit theologians. Naturally, the
|
||
American Jesuits who made this discovery kept out of sight the
|
||
historical fact that the Popes had bitterly denounced and fought
|
||
these ideals in Rome for centuries; nor did they remind folk that
|
||
all that these theologians had really done was to discover that,
|
||
now that half the sovereigns of Europe were Protestants, it was
|
||
lawful and laudable for their people to rebel against them and
|
||
depose or behead them. In England, for instance, the Jesuits wanted
|
||
the fanatical Philip of Spain to be the monarch instead of the
|
||
genial and the universally-loved Elizabeth. They were, in fact,
|
||
expelled even from France for advocating that regicide was
|
||
legitimate. All this was kept out of sight, and, to meet the new
|
||
European situation they set out to prove that the people can elect
|
||
or depose a King (when he opposes the true faith), Someone then
|
||
"discovered" that Jefferson and the other authors of the American
|
||
Constitution had learned democracy from the pages of these Jesuit
|
||
theologians. Naturally, no American historian or sociologist was
|
||
rude enough to point out that there was no more freedom in lands
|
||
where the Jesuits had influence than there is in Spain or Portugal
|
||
today, and there never had been. However, the point of interest
|
||
here is that a large number of these propositions or sentiments
|
||
condemned by the Pope were already embodied in the American
|
||
Constitution and were regarded by Americans as installments of
|
||
social justice which raised their civilization high above any in
|
||
Europe. On the face of it one would say that Americans are more
|
||
passionately attached to them today than they ever were, since the
|
||
defense of freedom and democracy is loudly proclaimed to be the
|
||
motive of hasty military preparations which may plunge the race in
|
||
a far worse war than ever. First of these principles, which it was
|
||
not necessary to state in the Constitution since the new American
|
||
life was essentially based upon it, was that People has a right to
|
||
rebel against an unjust monarch, however "legitimate" -- of royal
|
||
birth, and duly anointed by the church -- he might be. Compare
|
||
clause 63 of the Syllabus: "It is lawful to refuse to obey and even
|
||
rebel against legitimate princes." That was held by every American,
|
||
was the starting point and basis of the greatness of modern
|
||
America, and is a platitude of political morality today. But Pius
|
||
IX commanded every Catholic to disavow it. He was, of course,
|
||
aiming at the French, the Italian, the Spaniards, and the Spanish-
|
||
Americans. But his action here is just a flat defiance of a basis
|
||
of the American State and the Conviction of every American.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
24
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
The consequences of this right to rebel are repeatedly stated
|
||
in the Constitution and in American legal and political procedure
|
||
today. The authority of the state is the collective authority of
|
||
its members and is valid only when it carries out the will of the
|
||
people. Only in the name of the people can politicians pass laws,
|
||
and even in the law-courts it is expressly and repeatedly stated
|
||
that it is the people that prosecute criminals. Now look at a dozen
|
||
clauses in the, Syllabus that are prosecuted and condemned:
|
||
|
||
Authority is merely the sum of numbers (of people) and
|
||
material forces. The decision of a National Congress is not
|
||
subject to further discussion, and the civil administration
|
||
may demand this.
|
||
|
||
A republic, as the origin and power of all rights, has an
|
||
unlimited power.
|
||
|
||
That the Will of the People, made known either by public
|
||
opinion or in any either way, is the supreme law, apart from
|
||
(not in opposition to) any divine or human right.
|
||
|
||
No sophistry can obscure the complete inconsistency of a
|
||
condemnation of these propositions with this fundamental principle
|
||
of American life. The peoples of America, North and South, had
|
||
chosen the republican form, in which the only authority is the will
|
||
of the majority. In 1848 several peoples of Europe had made the
|
||
same choice. The intention of Pope Pius IX is to condemn them and
|
||
justify the bloody violence with which in 1849 the corrupt feudal
|
||
("legitimate") monarchies had recovered power. He would equally
|
||
have condemned the American rebellion against King George if that
|
||
bully had been a Catholic.
|
||
|
||
The second fundamental law of the Constitution is that Church
|
||
and State shall be kept separate. A dozen of the Pope's
|
||
condemnations denounce this but it is enough to quote No. 55. "The
|
||
Church must be separated from the State and the State from the
|
||
Church." Compare Clause 79.
|
||
|
||
"It is false to say (as every American did) that to grant
|
||
civil liberty to all cults and full power to all men to
|
||
discuss in public any sort of ideas and opinions leads to the
|
||
corruption of the minds and morals of the people and the
|
||
spread of the pest of indifferentism."
|
||
|
||
As part of this strict separation of religion from the State
|
||
America decided that it should have secular schools and civil
|
||
marriage for those who desired it. The Pope damns this plain
|
||
American principle of education:
|
||
|
||
"45. Public school in which the youth of a republic are
|
||
trained, with the exception to some extent of episcopal
|
||
seminaries, are and ought to be controlled by the civic
|
||
authority ..."
|
||
|
||
The Catholic tries sometimes to elude the point by saying that
|
||
the Pope was merely legislating for Catholic countries. This is
|
||
refuted here. There were at the time no Catholic republics, for the
|
||
Pope would refuse that title even to the Latin-American republics.
|
||
Clause, 47 and 48 make his meaning clearer:
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
25
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
"The best interests of society demand that public schools
|
||
shall be free from all clerical authority, control, or
|
||
interference and shall be entirely governed by the civic and
|
||
political authority, as the ruler and the general opinion of
|
||
the public shall decide."
|
||
|
||
Still worse, because here even the American Catholic of today
|
||
cannot pretend that any adjustment is possible between the American
|
||
and the Catholic position, are the clauses on marriage (66, 67, 71,
|
||
73, 74). The condemnation of these propositions is a flat
|
||
declaration that marriage by civil contract only is invalid. There
|
||
is no room here to say that the Pope means that the clauses are for
|
||
Catholics only. American law, like the law of every fully civilized
|
||
country today, has the function of declaring whether or when the
|
||
marriage of Catholics, as well as other citizens, is valid or
|
||
invalid. It strictly holds that a Catholic pair are validly married
|
||
and would prosecute them for bigamy if they dared to marry again
|
||
without divorce, if they go through the civil ceremony without
|
||
going to church for what the church calls the sacrament. The church
|
||
may say that from its angle they commit sin but it just defies the
|
||
civil law when it refuses to admit that "there can be true marriage
|
||
for Christians on the strength of the civil contract only" (73) or
|
||
that "by natural law the bond of matrimony is not indissoluble and
|
||
on various grounds the civil authority may grant a divorce" (67).
|
||
|
||
There are other clauses which outrageously defy American law
|
||
and sentiment. The Pope condemns (31) the opinion that special
|
||
ecclesiastical courts for the trial of priests for offenses against
|
||
the civil or criminal law (their common vice of perversity, for
|
||
instance) and (32) the claim that ecclesiastical can compel the
|
||
state to relieve clerics of the duty of military service where this
|
||
is compulsory. I can imagine the cackle of the apologist at the
|
||
idea that these things "apply" in America. We will return to the
|
||
point but, obviously, these and other laws of the church do not
|
||
"apply" in any country where the church has not the least power to
|
||
enforce them and as long as it has no such power. These are the
|
||
permanent law and represent the standing pretensions of the church
|
||
to dictate to the civil power because it claims to be superior to
|
||
that power, as the Syllabus repeatedly claims. America leaves all
|
||
sects free to cultivate their own pleasures and interests in their
|
||
own buildings, and lays it down as one of its most fundamental
|
||
principles that the representatives of the people are to carry out
|
||
their work of administration in complete separation from religious
|
||
influences or organizations. Hence all the conflicts. We have,
|
||
therefore, next, to consider what is the position of the Syllabus
|
||
in theology today and how the glib propagandists of the church in
|
||
America conceal their vital antagonism from their own followers and
|
||
the general American public.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
26
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
4. THE MASKED PAPAL AGENTS IN AMERICA
|
||
|
||
In 1927 a Catholic, Alfred E. Smith, Governor of New York,
|
||
presented himself as candidate for the presidency. As he could not
|
||
afford to ignore the fact that this question of the deadly
|
||
opposition of papal and American ideals would be raised he
|
||
published a letter (composed for him by priests) in the Atlantic
|
||
|
||
Monthly explaining that as a Catholic he held no doctrine or
|
||
sentiment that in the slightest degree conflicted with American
|
||
ideals or the Constitution. He said such things as:
|
||
|
||
"I believe in absolute freedom of conscience for all men and
|
||
in the equality of all churches, all sects and all beliefs before
|
||
the law as a matter of right and not as a matter of favor. I
|
||
believe in the absolute separation of Church and State. I believe
|
||
in the absolute right of every parent to choose whether his child
|
||
shall be educated in the public school or in a religious school...
|
||
|
||
The Protestant lawyer Marshall at once, and very ably,
|
||
challenged him, and his shuffling was pitiful. To a great extent he
|
||
relied on the political trick of getting a popular Irish priest, a
|
||
military chaplain in the war and strident bugle-player to a New
|
||
York regiment, to back up his assurances. Smith refused to meet
|
||
Marshall's plain challenge to say what, if he were elected, he
|
||
would do if claims of the Vatican conflicted with his American
|
||
duties, and he made this obvious, and rather contemptuous,
|
||
referring to the Syllabus, which was the vital issue:
|
||
|
||
"You may find some dream of a Catholic State, having no
|
||
relation whatsoever to actuality, somewhere described."
|
||
|
||
This would-be President of the United States seems to have
|
||
been unaware that, in virtue of the murderous reaction of 1849,
|
||
Pius IX was laying down the actual law for nearly one half of
|
||
Europe -- France, Bavaria, Austria Hungary, Italy, Spain and
|
||
Portugal.
|
||
|
||
It is more important that American Catholic opinion was
|
||
already almost officially stated in the Catholic Encyclopedia, and,
|
||
while one would not expect a good mixer like smith to find time to
|
||
look up what it said about the Syllabus, the church leaders who
|
||
whispered encouragement to him from the wings -- for the whole
|
||
thing was a gigantic publicity-stunt for the church -- knew very
|
||
well what it said, as they were responsible for it. In the article
|
||
"Syllabus" the chief point is to instruct Catholics whether or no
|
||
this papal document is "infallible" and therefore to what extent it
|
||
is binding on Catholics. To listen to their glib male and female
|
||
radio orators and read their popular writers today you would
|
||
imagine that it is the orthodox Catholic position that the
|
||
condemnations of the Syllabus are just the emotional outburst of a
|
||
venerable prelate who lived in confusing conditions that are remote
|
||
from our age. It would give the American Catholic layman a shock to
|
||
read what his encyclopedia authoritatively says about it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
27
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
Looking up first what it says under "Infallibility" we learn
|
||
that in official Catholic theology it means that the faithful have
|
||
God's personal assurance that when the Pope says that he is
|
||
defining some belief for the entire Catholic world he is not
|
||
permitted to err. Catholics usually add that it must be a point of
|
||
faith or morals, but the writer of this article says that the
|
||
authorities are agreed that it applies also to an undefined range
|
||
of questions which arise from questions of faith or morals, and
|
||
that is in the Vatican decree. The condemnations of Pius IX
|
||
certainly fall into this category, and as the Pope insists that he
|
||
is speaking in virtue of his "apostolic authority" to all the
|
||
Catholics in the world, the Syllabus seems to be of the infallible
|
||
sort. An irresponsible layman like Smith who knew more about brands
|
||
of bourbon than about shades of theology might call it a dream that
|
||
has no relation to realities, even a Catholic theologian like Ryan,
|
||
who has to Americanize Catholicism in order to get American dupes
|
||
into the church, may call it just the "justifiable and reasonable"
|
||
declaration of a Pope in difficult circumstances. But an
|
||
encyclopedia that is sponsored by the hierarchy and promises
|
||
America to be strictly truthful cannot get away so lightly. It says
|
||
that whether the Syllabus is or is not to be regarded as infallible
|
||
is disputed in the theological world. Its value is differently
|
||
explained by Catholic theologians. To the question whether it must
|
||
be held to be infallible "many theologians say yes," while "others
|
||
question this." In any case, it goes on, "its binding force is
|
||
beyond doubt" because "It is a decision given by the Pope speaking
|
||
as universal teacher and judge to Catholics the world over." In
|
||
what sense does it bind? It says:
|
||
|
||
"All Catholics therefore are bound to accept the
|
||
Syllabus. Exteriorly they may neither in works nor in writing
|
||
oppose its contents; they must also assent to it interiorly."
|
||
|
||
In other words, the most responsible document in American
|
||
Catholic literature pronounces it infallible. And a few years later
|
||
a layman standing in a position of grave responsibility before the
|
||
American public, supported by the whole hierarchy, tells them that
|
||
it is just a dream or ideal with no application in real life! Where
|
||
are those gentle-minded folk who say that I am harsh, impetuous, or
|
||
worse when I say that Catholic propaganda is untruthful?
|
||
|
||
American priests and prelates have themselves over and over
|
||
again said, less flamboyantly, what Smith said in the Atlantic
|
||
Monthly, as I show in my Appeal to Reason Library (No. 1-16-33; No.
|
||
3 1-19). Twenty years after Pius IX had hurled his stage-
|
||
thunderbolt the Vatican realized the futility of it all. The Papal
|
||
States had been swept away like medieval modes of transport or
|
||
ideas of treating disease. Italy was rising steadily in the scale
|
||
of civilization and in the same proportion throwing off the yoke of
|
||
the Vatican. France, in which the fright of the middle class at the
|
||
menace of the Communards had given the church the same recovery of
|
||
a bastard power as the fright of the middle class at the menace of
|
||
Communism gives it today, was still more rapidly becoming
|
||
secularized. Spain had gone over to a dangerous liberalism, and
|
||
Spanish America was lost. Austria was no longer a great power. So
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
28
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
the immutable Vatican changed its policy and its language and began
|
||
to study diplomacy. Leo XIII, the great Pope (under whom the church
|
||
lost between 50 and 100 million followers), began that famous
|
||
series of "grand encyclicals" or fragrant anthologies of platitudes
|
||
and equivocations.
|
||
|
||
In one of the earlier of them (Libertas, 1888) he frankly
|
||
said:
|
||
|
||
"Although in the extraordinary condition of these times
|
||
the church usually acquiesces [says nothing about] in certain
|
||
modern freedoms. She does so not because she prefers them in
|
||
themselves but because she judges it expedient to permit them
|
||
until, in better days, she can assert her own liberty."
|
||
|
||
In other words, his predecessor's damnations were to be put
|
||
away, like a rod, until the nations of Europe had another 1849,
|
||
when the rod would be laid lustily on their backsides once more.
|
||
But events in France moved so rapidly in the wrong direction, from
|
||
his angle, that he lost his diplomatic poise in the following year
|
||
and issued the encyclical Immortal Dei. It was really a heavy
|
||
rebuke to France for decreeing the separation of Church and State.
|
||
Incidentally he gave his august permission to the French (who
|
||
frivolously laughed at it) to keep the republic they had set up,
|
||
and this first recognition of the right of people to choose such a
|
||
political form -- rather this first failure of a Pope to
|
||
anathematize them for doing so -- was hailed by American Catholics
|
||
as a very belated blessing" on the American Republic; and a few
|
||
tactful alterations in the translation of the encyclical enabled
|
||
them to greet it as the summit of political morality. The sub-title
|
||
"On the Christian Constitution of States" was given to the
|
||
translation. In the Latin it was, "On the Catholic Constitution of
|
||
States." It told the French that they might have a republic on
|
||
condition that not merely religion but the Catholic religion only
|
||
was to be established. It was as violent a repudiation as ever of
|
||
the idea of separation of Church and State and of the
|
||
secularization of education; two fundamental principles of American
|
||
life,
|
||
|
||
The American Catholic clergy and hierarchy, however, now
|
||
mendaciously represented that under the great Pope the church
|
||
repudiated all this medieval stuff that his infallible predecessor
|
||
had imposed upon all Catholics, and the process of Americanizing
|
||
the canon law set in; a process that would go on from success to
|
||
success until they would discover that the principle of the
|
||
American Revolution and Constitution were actually derived from
|
||
Roman moral theology. At the annual Council at Baltimore gloriously
|
||
star-spangled sentiments were heard. Kinsman ("Americanism and
|
||
Catholicism," 1924) quotes the pastoral letter of the Council of
|
||
Baltimore of 1884:
|
||
|
||
A Catholic finds himself at home in the United States,
|
||
for the influence of the church has been constantly exercised
|
||
on behalf of individual rights and popular liberties."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
29
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
Few Americans may have known the verdict of the great
|
||
historian that "the banners of the church were rarely seen on the
|
||
side of the people," but they were few who had never heard of the
|
||
fires of the Inquisition which had paralyzed the rights of
|
||
individuals for centuries and the feudal monarchies which the
|
||
church had sustained in Europe for ages.
|
||
|
||
Some writers brought the Syllabus back to notice. Catholic
|
||
propaganda therefore increasingly took the line of representing
|
||
that Rome had abandoned the principles on which its older tyranny
|
||
had been based or said that at least the American branch of the
|
||
church was free to disavow those principles. The bishops were,
|
||
apparently, unaware that the "Liberal Pope" Leo XIII had in his
|
||
later years seen the futility -- the leakage from the church was
|
||
now tremendous -- of making half-hearted or insincere concessions
|
||
(in regard to labor, biblical criticism, the rights of conscience,
|
||
etc.) and had begun to withdraw them. our vivacious Catholic
|
||
Encyclopedia says that "the United States at all times attracted
|
||
the attention and admiration of Pope Leo XIII" and gives a list of
|
||
his benevolent (or routine) messages to its bishops. It says: "In
|
||
1898 appeared his letter Testem Benevolentiae to Cardinal Gibbons
|
||
on Americanism." Who would gather from this that this letter to the
|
||
American Archbishops and bishops made them red with indignation? It
|
||
was the most humiliating message that Rome had sent to any national
|
||
hierarchy for a long time, and precisely because the bishops were
|
||
permitting Catholic writers to give false versions of Catholic
|
||
teaching in order to conciliate Americans.
|
||
|
||
I cannot say that this letter was never translated into
|
||
English and so never reached the laity but certainly there is no
|
||
English translation of it amongst the 5,000,000 books of the
|
||
British National Library. I read it in the Latin, which Rome
|
||
published and the French joyously translated in order to show
|
||
Frenchmen that the Roman leopard had not really changed its spots.
|
||
This practice of softening the rigor and arrogance of the church's
|
||
doctrine, which Pius IX had called Liberalism and would later be
|
||
known as Modernism, had gone so far in the United States that it
|
||
was then known to the Vatican as Americanism, and Leo severely
|
||
rebuked it. He says that his purpose is "to correct errors," such
|
||
as that Catholic doctrines may be modified and the real teaching
|
||
kept out of sight for tactical reasons, or that Catholic discipline
|
||
might be relaxed where the political circumstances suggested this,
|
||
and that new methods of propaganda were to be introduced to suit
|
||
modern requirements. The bishops must see that all such ideas are
|
||
suppressed.
|
||
|
||
The truth was that America was not yet important from the
|
||
Vatican angle. Its wealth was increasing but Rome did not get much
|
||
of it, while, on the other hand, the millions of the Irish, Poles,
|
||
Italians, etc., who had settled in it drifted away from the church.
|
||
The Lucerne Memorial presented to the Pope by American Catholic
|
||
laymen in 1891 claimed that of 26,000,000 Catholic immigrants and
|
||
their descendants 16,000,000 had apostatized. The Canadian Catholic
|
||
paper Verite in 1898 said that there were between 15 and 17 million
|
||
apostates. The New York Freeman's Journal (Catholic) in the same
|
||
year said 20,000,000. In 1901 Irish priests who were brought over
|
||
for a special mission said 10,000,000. There had at all events been
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
30
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
a colossal leakage, and the great mass of the faithful were amongst
|
||
America's poorest citizens. Let us say that by 1898 the Vatican
|
||
had, through American conditions, lost about 15,000,000 Poles,
|
||
Irish, etc., who in their native lands had been, according to their
|
||
means, its most generous contributors. But the tide was then
|
||
turning. The priesthood was expanded and organized on a business
|
||
basis. Wealthy Catholics increased until the American Catholic
|
||
body, in proportion to its size, became Rome's fattest pasture.
|
||
Sociologists like Bodley were predicting that the population of
|
||
America would rise to 400,000,000 -- Gladstone said 600,000,000 --
|
||
by the end of the 20th century; and the Catholic population of this
|
||
richest country in the world could be 70,000,000.
|
||
|
||
So the Vatican opened its pockets and closed its mouth, and
|
||
the Americanization of Catholic teaching went on merrily. Cardinal
|
||
Gibbons himself said:
|
||
|
||
"We American Catholics rejoice in our separation of
|
||
Church and State, and I can conceive of no combination of
|
||
circumstances likely to arise which would make a union
|
||
desirable to either Church or State."
|
||
|
||
Of course American Catholics rejoiced at that time and still
|
||
rejoice in the separation of State and Church. If any Church were
|
||
established by law as the one official religion of America, what
|
||
hope would the Catholic one-seventh of the population have of
|
||
seeing their religion selected for the honor? But when the cardinal
|
||
went on to say that he could not conceive of any circumstances in
|
||
which Catholics would want to have their church established he was
|
||
lying. Didn't he, like every other Catholic in America, believe
|
||
that in time the majority of the Americans would belong to the
|
||
"true faith"? Or did he reject not only the syllabus but the "great
|
||
encyclical" by Leo XIII on "the Catholic Constitution of State."
|
||
Archbishop Ireland said, in a speech which was afterwards published
|
||
and scattered all over America, to a mass-meeting of Catholics at
|
||
Milwaukee on August 11, 1913:
|
||
|
||
"Would we alter, if we could, the Constitution in regard
|
||
to its treatment of religion, the principles of Americanism in
|
||
regard to religious freedom? I answer with an emphatic, No."
|
||
|
||
This was quoted and endorsed by, the late Dr. J. Ryan, the
|
||
chief exponent of church doctrine in these matters, the leading
|
||
professor of the Catholic University of America, in his work "The
|
||
State and the Church" (1923); and instead of being corrected by the
|
||
Vatican he was raised to the dignity of 'Monsignor' (My Lord).
|
||
Every phrase of the star-spangled version of Catholic teaching is
|
||
defended in this work, which was published by the Department Of
|
||
Social Action of the National Catholic Welfare Section. He barely
|
||
mentions the Syllabus and its "justifiable and reasonable"
|
||
condemnations, but in regard to the damnation of the belief that
|
||
Church and State ought to be separated he says:
|
||
|
||
"Pope Pius IX did not intend to declare that separation
|
||
is always inadvisable, for he had more than once expressed his
|
||
satisfaction with its arrangement obtaining in the United
|
||
States."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
31
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
Is there no limit to the swallowing capacity of Catholic
|
||
readers? Would even the muddle-headed Pius be expected to demand
|
||
that the Catholic Church should be established by law in Protestant
|
||
countries? In 1864 there were about 3,000.000 Catholics in the
|
||
United States, and Dr. Ryan wanted us to admire the Pope because he
|
||
liked an arrangement which put his church in America on the same
|
||
footing as the larger sects!
|
||
|
||
Another delicious passage in this chief work of the chief
|
||
oracle of American Catholics was his defense of the suppression of
|
||
critics which the Church notoriously insists on in Catholic
|
||
countries. It would do the same in America if it had the power and
|
||
it does it to some extent today by sneaking appeals to Washington
|
||
to see that criticisms of itself "disturb the national unity." It
|
||
is a matter of public knowledge, since Mr. Joseph Lewis and the
|
||
Rationalists of New York took the matter to court, that Catholic
|
||
officials at New York tried to prevent the importation of works of
|
||
mine in which I criticized the Church. So Ryan had to admit the
|
||
intolerance and how complete it would be if Catholics were in the
|
||
majority. But it is, he said, quite natural and moral because
|
||
"error has not the same rights as truth." What a delightful social
|
||
order we should have if the ruling power at any time could suppress
|
||
or muzzle all who differed from it on the grounds that they were in
|
||
error!
|
||
|
||
These mendacious apologists for the church, writers and radio
|
||
speakers, strike a particularly high note of hilarity when someone
|
||
asks whether a Catholic majority in America would light once more
|
||
the fires of the Inquisition. On Ryan's ingenious principles one
|
||
would expect it, but the apologists treat the idea as fantastic.
|
||
Yet they know perfectly well that the church claims today, in the
|
||
official version of its Public Canon Law -- the code translated
|
||
into English is Private Canon Law -- that it has the right and the
|
||
duty to put heretics to death. I translated several passages from
|
||
Dr. de Luca's official Roman (specially passed by Leo XIII) manual
|
||
("Institutions," 1901) of the law in my Appeal to Reason Library
|
||
(I. 25). I pointed out that just over the American frontier in
|
||
Canada, Cardinal Lepicier (another Roman professor), stated the
|
||
church's position in the same terms in his "De Stabilitate et
|
||
Progresser Dogmatis" and that he quotes a Canadian canonist, The
|
||
Very Rev. Dom Paquet, declaring it in plain French in his "Droit
|
||
Publique de L'Eglise" (1918). There is not the least controversy
|
||
about it amongst Catholic experts, and therefore all the popular
|
||
writers and radio speakers lie about the matter in America.
|
||
|
||
One more point. While heads (like Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler)
|
||
and professors of American Universities lent their patronage in the
|
||
Calvert Associates -- whose "Calvert Handbook of Catholic Facts"
|
||
(1928) is a tissue of lies -- to this gross scheme, Pope Pius XI,
|
||
was negotiating with the vile Dictator Mussolini, whose murder of
|
||
Matteotti had shaken his position, about the price of Catholic
|
||
support. Most of Mussolini's chief followers were anti-Catholic and
|
||
the Pope drove a hard bargain, his terms including $90,000,000,
|
||
Kingdom, the establishment of the church, clerical control of
|
||
education and marriages, penalization of critics of the church,
|
||
etc. In their acrid quarrel the Pope had his Secretary of State
|
||
print a public letter in the papal daily paper on the position of
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
32
|
||
|
||
ROME'S SYLLABUS OF CONDEMNED OPINIONS
|
||
|
||
the church in a modern state. I deal with it fully in my "True
|
||
Story of the Roman Church" (Vol. 12 pp. 18-20). Here I must say,
|
||
summarily, that it reiterated all the claims of the Syllabus as
|
||
the, unchanged and unchangeable law of the church, and, although at
|
||
that time it was not even clear that Catholics were in a majority
|
||
in Italy, he, as I said above, got most of them. This was in 1929.
|
||
How many American papers dared to tell the facts? How many Catholic
|
||
writers and radio-spouters changed their note and began to tell the
|
||
truth?
|
||
|
||
The enemies of the American way of life, the plotters against
|
||
the state, the cloak and dagger folk today, are not the Communists.
|
||
They are the Catholics. If they had, or ever got, the power they
|
||
would rip up the Constitution. Of course, they never will get the
|
||
power. That is not the point. It is not that we tremble in our
|
||
shoes in anticipation of the day when the 20,000,000 real Catholics
|
||
of today may become 70,000,000 or 80,000,000. Although Catholic
|
||
men's associations are now organizations for helping your
|
||
economical interest and the clerical body is just an economic
|
||
corporation, the church still loses as many honest men and women as
|
||
it attracts hypocrites. The point of actual social interest is that
|
||
for any large and powerful organization to promote its economic
|
||
interest by such lying is a grave social evil. Yet this Catholic
|
||
body is flattered by the entire press and allowed to usurp a
|
||
dictatorial power far greater even than its numbers and size
|
||
deserve. We, in fact, listen with respectful attention to its
|
||
claims that it alone can save civilization, while everybody knows
|
||
that by its extension of its unscrupulous methods to our relation
|
||
to the Soviet Union it is one of the major causes of our risks,
|
||
anxieties, and poisonous international hatreds. One of the urgent
|
||
needs of America today is to recognize dearly that it is fraudulent
|
||
and demoralizing.
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
||
us, we need to give them back to America.
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
33
|
||
|