Pope Pius XII and the Theological Treatise on the Church
POPE PIUS XII AND THE THEOLOGICAL TREATISE ON THE CHURCH
by Joseph Clifford Fenton
In the brilliant prolixity of his writings and his allocutions, the
late and beloved Sovereign Pontiff, Pope Pius XII, made important
contributions to many areas within the field of Catholic doctrine.
Yet one theological treatise seems to have been affected and improved
more effectively than any other by what he wrote and said in his
capacity as the Vicar of Jesus Christ on earth. That treatise is the
During the early years of the twentieth century there was more
confusion and misunderstanding about the Church than about any other
reality studied in the science of sacred theology. Three factors were
responsible for the comparatively imperfect status of popular writing
about the kingdom of God on earth. First, there was the fact that the
treatise on the true Church of Jesus Christ had a history quite
different from that of most of the other individual treatises within
the confines of dogmatic theology.[1] Second among these factors was
the unfortunate misinterpretation of terminology employed in St.
Robert Bellarmine's classical
These three factors, acting together, produced a condition in which religious books by some rather influential Catholic authors tended, during the first half of the twentieth century, to speak of a kind of super-Church, a Mystical Body of Jesus Christ, in some way distinct from and superior to the visible Catholic Church over which the Bishop of Rome presides as visible head and as the Vicar on earth of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Basically, it was that condition which the late and great Sovereign Pontiff was called upon to remedy. And, by the force of his most important writings and allocutions, he fulfilled this task most admirably.
Amidst the literally thousands of entries in the official
MYSTICI CORPORIS CHRISTI
The
Pope Pius XII issued the
If we would define and describe this true Church of Jesus Christ- which is the One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic Roman Church-we shall find nothing more noble, more sublime, or more divine than the expression "the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ"-an expression which springs from and is, as it were, the fair flowering of the repeated teaching of the Sacred Scriptures and the holy Fathers.[4]
After this strong and eminently clear declaration, there could be no
shadow of excuse for any tactic tending to depict the Mystical Body
of Our Lord as in any way distinct from or superior to the visible
Catholic Church, the religious society over which the Vicar of Christ
rules as the visible head. The expression "Mystical Body of Jesus
Christ" appears in this ringing pronouncement of Pius XII as the
description and even as the definition of the One, Holy, Catholic,
Apostolic Roman Church. The
Hence they err in a matter of divine truth, who imagine the Church to be invisible, intangible, a something merely "pneumatological" as they say, by which many Christian communities, though they differ from each other in their profession of faith, are united by an invisible bond.[5]
In the same way this great encyclical letter reproves the error and confusion inherent in the writings of those Catholics who taught the existence of a twofold Church of God in this world:
For this reason We deplore and condemn the pernicious error of those who dream of an imaginary Church, a kind of society that finds its origin and growth in charity, to which, somewhat contemptuously, they oppose another, which they call juridical. But this distinction which they introduce is false: for they fail to understand that the reason which led our Divine Redeemer to give to the community of men He founded the constitution of a Society, perfect in its kind and containing all the juridical and social elements-namely, that He might perpetuate on earth the saving work of Redemption- was also the reason why He willed it to be enriched with the heavenly gifts of the Paraclete.[6]
Finally, Pope Pius XII, writing in the
Actually only those are to be included (
There was another point magnificently clarified by the late Sovereign
Pontiff in the text of the
As you know, Venerable Brethren, from the very beginning of Our
Pontificate, We have committed to the protection and guidance of
heaven those who do not belong to the visible Body of the Catholic
Church (
There is another important item on which the
HUMANI GENERIS
Doctrinal errors which were taught or at least favored in some
Catholic circles after the close of the second world war were
indicated and reproved in the encyclical letter
The most important individual contribution made to ecclesiology in
the
In this encyclical Pope Pius XII reminded Catholic scholars that "in
matters of faith and morals this sacred
Specifically he taught about the authority of the encyclical letters and the other acts of the Sovereign Pontiff's ordinary magisterium.
Nor must it be thought that what is expounded in Encyclical Letters
does not in itself demand consent, since in writing such letters the
Popes do not exercise the supreme power of their teaching authority
(
In the
Some say that they are not bound by the doctrine, explained in Our Encyclical Letter of a few years ago, and based on the sources of revelation, which teaches that the Mystical Body of Christ and the Roman Catholic Church are one and the same thing. Some reduce to a meaningless formula the necessity of belonging to the true Church in order to gain eternal salvation.[14]
SUPREMA HAEC SACRA
A year before the appearance of the
This document set forth clearly and in detail, and as the authentic
teaching of the Holy See, the explanation of the dogma on the
necessity of the Catholic Church for the attainment of eternal
salvation which had long been presented as common teaching in the
theological teaching on the Church itself. The elements of the
exposition contained in the
The
The strictly doctrinal portion of the
But it must not be thought that any kind of desire of entering the Church suffices that one may be saved. It is necessary that the desire by which one is related to the Church be animated by perfect charity. Nor can an implicit desire produce its effect, unless a person has supernatural faith: "For he who comes to God must believe that God exists and is a rewarder of those who seek Him" (Hebrews, 11: 6). The Council of Trent declares (Session VI, chap. 8): "Faith is the beginning of man's salvation, the foundation and root of all justification, without which it is impossible to please God and attain to the fellowship of His children" (Denzinger, n. 801).[17]
CI RIESCE
The
An article in the February, 1954, issue of
(1) The allocution employs the term "Stato cattolico." Indeed, the concept of the Catholic state is one of the key notions used in this document. The term is applied to modern states, to civil societies which will have relations with a still uncompleted juridical international community of sovereign states. Hence, it would seem idle to maintain in the future that this term is inept, or that it can legitimately refer only to civil societies or kingdoms of times past.
(2) The allocution asserts that "what does not correspond to the
truth and to the moral standards has, objectively, no right to exist,
to be taught, or to be done." As a result we can expect that, in the
future, there will be no objections raised against the teaching or
the terminology of writers who hold that, in itself, error has no
rights. Incidentally, it is interesting to note that Cardinal
Ottaviani, in his article in the May, 1953, issue of
(3) It is certainly no longer feasible to reprove the teaching that objectively, a complete separation of Church and state is an evil. Likewise it would appear that henceforth the legitimacy of the explanations between Church and state in terms of thesis and hypothesis will be acknowledged.[18]
The
Christ Our Lord entrusted the truth which He had brought from heaven to the Apostles, and through them to their successors. He sent His Apostles, as He had been sent by the Father (John, 20:21), to teach all nations everything they had heard from Him (cf. Matt., 28:19 f.). The Apostles are, therefore, by divine right the true doctors and teachers in the Church. Besides the lawful successors of the Apostles, namely the Roman Pontiff for the universal Church and Bishops for the faithful entrusted to their care (cf. can. 1326), there are no other teachers divinely constituted in the Church of Christ. But both the Bishops and, first of all, the Supreme Teacher and Vicar of Christ on earth, may associate others with themselves in their work of teacher, and use their advice; they delegate to them the faculty to teach, either by special grant, or by conferring an office to which the faculty is attached (cf. can. 1328). Those who are so called teach not in their own name, nor by reason of their theological knowledge, but by reason of the mandate which they have received from the lawful Teaching Authority. Their faculty always remains subject to that Authority, nor is it ever exercised in its own right or independently. Bishops, for their part, by conferring this faculty, are not deprived of the right to teach; they retain the very grave obligation of supervising the doctrine which others propose, in order to help them, and of seeing to its integrity and security. Therefore the legitimate Teaching Authority of the Church is guilty of no injury or no offense to any of those to whom it has given a canonical mission, if it desires to ascertain what they, to whom it has entrusted the mission of teaching, are proposing and defending in their lectures, in books, notes, and reviews intended for the use of their students, as well as in books and other publications intended for the general public.[19]
Prior to the issuance of the
THE LETTER ON FRATERNAL CHARITY WITHIN THE CHURCH AND WITHIN THE PRIESTHOOD
The contributions to the
The central theme of the meeting to which the letter was sent was "Charity in the Christian Community." Pope Pius XII called it "a theme which is at once the most exalted and the most effective for the Christian renewal of society."[20] In his comments on that theme he forcefully reminded his readers of the essential function of charity within the Church.
First of all, he insisted that the only genuine charity within the Christian community "is the theological virtue of charity, which has as its object God Himself, who is 'Charity' and 'Love,' infinite and worthy to be loved for His own sake and above all things."[21] He showed that basically and essentially the love of charity that should exist and operate within the Christian community is this supernatural love of friendship for the Triune God, who has first loved us so tenderly. Then he pointed out the fact that this charity for God must carry with it a love for one another in the society of Our Lord's disciples.
The infinite love with which God loves Himself in the ineffable mystery of the Trinity is manifested to us through the Incarnate Word who has given us the new commandment, to love one another as God has loved us.
Even before the Last Supper and the Passion, Jesus had recalled that the precept of the love of God ought to be integrated with that of the love of the neighbor. After having asserted the primacy of the love of God, He said: "The second [commandment] is like to this: Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." But, in the discourse after the Last Supper, speaking of the "new commandment," He gave a more precise and profound explanation of the terms. "As the Father hath loved me, I also have loved you"; "By this shall all men know that you are my disciples, if you have love one for another."[22]
When we read the New Testament carefully, we soon become aware of the fact that the command most frequently and forcefully imposed upon the members of the Church by Our Lord Himself and by the inspired writers was the precept to love one another.
Actually, as the Holy Father pointed out, this mutual love of charity within the Church was proposed by Our Lord Himself as evidence of discipleship. The disciples were instructed and ordered to forgive one another, to bear with one another, and to seek forgiveness from one another. They were to put aside anything that stood in the way of mutual love of charity among themselves.
Yet, when the contemporary student reads the treatise on the Church
(or for that matter, the treatise
The letter to Cardinal Dalla Costa reminded the men of our time of the preeminent place of mutual charity among the members of the Catholic Church. Ultimately that letter showed the obligation and the necessity of fraternal charity among the priests of the Catholic Church. The fraternal charity which God commands and which He expects within the Catholic priesthood is only the flowering and the center of the mutual fraternal love which should exist among all the members of the true Church.
During our own times there has been a manifest and widespread tendency to ignore the central truth brought out in this letter It was perhaps the crowning achievement of Pope Pius XII to insist strongly upon the fact that the Savior's "new" command that His disciples love one another is, essentially, only the more profound and precise application, within the Mystical Body, of the second precept of divine charity.
* * * *
In 1956, Fr. Domenico Bertetto edited a volume entitled II
Helpful and enlightening statements about the nature and the properties of Our Lord's Church abound in many of the documents issued by Pope Pius XII. Yet it would seem that the most important and the most urgently needed clarifications he made can be found in the documents mentioned in the course of this brief tribute. It is chiefly by reason of the statements contained in these documents that the task of teaching the theological treatise on the Church has been aided during the course of his long and glorious reign as Christ's Vicar on earth.
Those of us who have been privileged to teach the
JOSEPH CLIFFORD FENTON The Catholic University of America Washington, D. C.
ENDNOTES
1 Cf. Fenton,
2 Cf. ibid., pp. 171-88.
3 The tendency called "liberal Catholicism" is founded on religious
indifferentism, involving opposition to the dogmas of the necessity
of the true faith and of the true Church for the attainment of
eternal salvation Cf. "The Components of Liberal Catholicism," in
4 NCWC translation, n. 13.
5.
6
7
8
9
10 Cf. Ottaviani,
11 Cf. NCWC translation, n. 18.
12 Cf.
13 NCWC translation, n. 20.
14
15 The original Latin text and the official English translation of
this document are to be found in
16
17 Ibid., 314.
18 "The Teachings of the
19 The text and the English translation of
20 The English translation of this letter is carried in
21
22
23 This book was published by the Edizioni Paoline of Turin.
This article was taken from "The American Ecclesiastical Review" December, 1958.
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