Modernism is indeed what undermines
the Church from within, today as yesterday. Let us again quote
from the encyclical Pascendi some typical features which correspond
with what we are experiencing now. “The Modernists say that authority
in the Church, since its end is purely spiritual, should strip
itself of all that external pomp, all those pretentious adornments
with which it parades itself in public. In this they forget that
religion, while it belongs to the soul, is not exclusively for
the soul and that the honor paid to authority is reflected back
on Christ who institutes it.”
It is under pressure from these “speakers
of novelties” that Paul VI abandoned the tiara, bishops gave up
the violet cassock and even the black, as well as their rings,
and priests appear in lay clothes, usually in a deliberately casual
style. There is nothing among the general reforms already put
into effect or insistently demanded that St. Pius X has not mentioned
as the “maniac” desires of the modernist reformers. You will recognize
them in this passage: “As regards worship (they want) to diminish
the number of external devotions or at least stop their increasing...
Let ecclesiastical government become democratic; let a share in
the government be given to the junior clergy and even the laity;
let authority be decentralized. Reform of the Roman Congregations,
above all the Holy Office and the Index... Finally there are those
among them who, echoing their Protestant masters, seek the suppression
of priestly celibacy.” Notice that the same demands are now being
put forward and that there is absolutely nothing original. As
regards Christian thought and the formation of future priests,
the intention of the reformers of St. Pius X’s time was the abandonment
of scholastic philosophy among the obsolete systems.” They advocate
“that young people should be taught modern philosophy, the only
true philosophy, the only one suitable for our times... that so-called
rational theology should be based on modern philosophy and positive
theology on the history of dogmas.” In this respect, the Modernists
have got what they wanted and more. In what passes for seminaries,
they teach anthropology, psychoanalysis and Marx in place of St.
Thomas Aquinas. The principles of Thomist philosophy are rejected
in favor of vague systems which themselves recognize their inability
to explain the economy of the Universe, putting forward as they
do the philosophy of the absurd. One latter-day revolutionary,
a muddle-headed priest much heeded by intellectuals, who put sex
at the heart of everything, was bold enough to declare at public
meetings: “The scientific hypotheses of the ancients were pure
nonsense and it is on such nonsense that St. Thomas and Origen
based their systems.” Immediately afterwards, he fell into the
absurdity of defining life as “an evolutionary chain of biologically
inexplicable facts.” How can he know that, if it is inexplicable?
How, I would add, can a priest discard the only explanation, which
is God?
The Modernists would be set at naught
if they had to defend their elaborate theories against the principles
of the Angelic Doctor, the notions of potency and act, essence,
substance and accidents, body and soul, etc. By eliminating these
notions they would render the theology of the Church incomprehensible
and, as one reads in the Motu Proprio Doctoris Angelici,
“the result is that students of the sacred disciplines no longer
even perceive the meaning of the words by which the dogmas which
God has revealed are propounded by the Magisterium.” The offensive
against scholastic philosophy is a necessary preliminary when
one wants to change dogma and attack Tradition.
But what is Tradition? It seems to
me that the word is often imperfectly understood. It is equated
to the “traditions” that exist in trades, in families and in civic
life: the “bouquet” fixed to the roof of a house when the last
tile is laid, the ribbon that is cut to open a monument, etc.
That is not what I am referring to: Tradition does not consist
of the customs inherited from the past and preserved out of loyalty
to the past even where there are no clear reasons for them. Tradition
is defined as the Deposit of Faith transmitted by the Magisterium
down through the centuries. This deposit is what has been
given to us by Revelation; that is to say, the Word of God entrusted
to the Apostles and transmitted unfailingly by their successors.
But now they want to get everyone
inquiring, searching, as if we had not been given the Creed, or
as if Our Lord had not come to bring us the Truth once and for
all. What do they claim to discover with all this inquiry? Catholics
upon whom they would impose these “questionings,” after having
made them “abandon their certainties,” should remember this: the
deposit of Revelation concluded at the death of the last Apostle.
It is finished and it cannot be touched until the end of time.
Revelation is irreformable. The First Vatican Council re-stated
this explicitly: “for the doctrine of faith which God has revealed
has not been proposed, like a philosophical invention, to be perfected
by human ingenuity; but has been delivered as a divine deposit
to the Spouse of Christ (the Church) to be faithfully kept and
infallibly declared.”
But, one will object, the dogma that
makes Mary the Mother of God only dates back to the year 431,
transubstantiation to 1215, papal infallibility to 1870 and so
on. Has there not been an evolution? No, not at all. The dogmas
which have been defined in the course of the ages were contained
in Revelation; the Church has just made them explicit. When Pope
Pius XII defined in 1950 the dogma of the Assumption, he said
specifically that this truth of the assumption into Heaven of
the Virgin Mary, body and soul, was included in the deposit of
Revelation and already existed in the texts revealed to us before
the death of the last Apostle. We cannot bring anything new into
this field, we cannot add a single dogma, but only express those
that exist ever more clearly, more beautifully and more loftily.
That is so certain that it forms
the rule to follow in judging the errors that are put before us
every day, and rejecting them with no concession. As Bossuet forcefully
wrote: “When it is a matter of explaining the principles of Christian
morality and the essential dogmas of the Church everything that
does not appear in the Tradition of all time, and especially the
early times, is from then on not only suspect but wrong and to
be condemned; and this is the principal basis on which all the
holy Fathers of the Church, and Popes more than anyone, condemned
false doctrines, there being nothing more odious to the Roman
Church than novelties.”
The argument that is pressed upon
the terrorized faithful is this: “You are clinging to the past,
you are being nostalgic; live in your own time!” Some are abashed
and do not know what to reply. Nevertheless, the answer is easy:
In this there is no past or present or future. Truth belongs
to all times, it is eternal.
In order to break down Tradition
they confront it with Holy Scripture, after the manner of the
Protestants, with the assertion that the Gospel is the only book
that counts. But Tradition came before the Gospel! Although the
Synoptic Gospels were not written nearly as late as some would
have us believe, a number of years had passed before the Four
Evangelists had completed their writing; but the Church already
existed, Pentecost had taken place and brought numerous conversions,
3000 on the very day the Apostles came out of the Upper Room.
What did they believe just at that moment? How was Revelation
transmitted if not by oral tradition? One cannot subordinate Tradition
to Holy Scripture, still less reject it.
But do not imagine that, adopting
this attitude, they have an unlimited respect for the inspired
text. They even dispute that it is inspired in its entirety: “What
is there in the Gospel which is inspired? Only the truths that
are necessary for our salvation.” In consequence, the miracles,
the accounts of the Holy Childhood, the actions and conduct of
Our Lord are relegated to the category of more or less legendary
biography. We fought in the Council over that phrase: “Only the
truths necessary for salvation.” There were some bishops in favor
of reducing the historical authenticity of the Gospels, which
shows the extent to which the clergy is corrupted by neo-Modernism.
Catholics should not allow themselves to be imposed upon: the
whole of the Gospel is inspired and those who wrote it had the
Holy Ghost guiding their intelligence, so that the whole of it
is the Word of God, Verbum Dei. It is not permissible to
pick and choose and to say today: “We will take this part but
we don't want that part.” To choose is to be a heretic, according
to the Greek derivation of that word.
It remains no less a fact that it
is Tradition that transmits the Gospel to us, and it appertains
to Tradition, to the Magisterium, to explain to us the contents
of the Gospel. If we have nobody to interpret it for us, we can
reach several completely different understandings of the same
words of Christ. We then end up with the free interpretation of
the Protestants and the free inspiration of the present day charismatics
which leads us into pure fantasy.
All the dogmatic councils have given
us the exact expression of Tradition, the exact expression of
what the Apostles taught. Tradition is irreformable. One can never
change the decrees of the Council of Trent, because they are infallible,
written and published by an official act of the Church, unlike
those of Vatican II, which pronouncements are not infallible because
the popes did not wish to commit their infallibility. Therefore
nobody can say to you, “You are clinging to the past, you have
stayed with the Council of Trent.” For the Council of Trent is
not the past. Tradition is clothed with a timeless character,
adapted to all times and all places.