It is high time to react. When Gaudium
et Spes speaks of the movement of history “becoming so rapid
that everybody finds it hard to follow,” we can take this as meaning
the headlong rush of liberal society into disaggregation and chaos.
We must take care not to follow!
One cannot understand how the leaders
can claim to be of the Christian religion whilst destroying all
authority within the State. On the contrary, it is important to
re-establish this authority which is prescribed by Providence
in the two natural societies of divine right, the family and civil
society, whose influence here below is fundamental. In recent
times it is the family that has suffered the hardest blows. The
changeover to Socialism in countries like France and Spain has
only speeded up the process.
The ensuing legal measures demonstrate
a great cohesion in their determination to ruin the institution
of the family; the reducing of parental authority, easy divorce,
the disappearance of responsibility in the procreative act, the
legal recognition of irregular unions and even of homosexual couples,
juvenile cohabitation, trial marriage, the reduction of financial
and social assistance to large families, etc... The State itself
in its own interests is beginning to see the effects of this in
the declining birth rate, and wonders how in the near future the
rising generations will be able to maintain the pensions of those
who are no longer economically active. But the effects are considerably
more serious in the spiritual field.
Catholics must not follow, but as
citizens they must bring all their weight to bear to put right
what is needed. This is why they may not remain aloof from politics.
However, their endeavors will be most effective in the upbringing
they give their children.
On the subject, authority is contested
at its very source by those who declare, “Parents are not the
owners of their children,” by which they mean that their education
reverts to the State with its schools, its day nurseries and its
kindergarten schools. They reproach parents with failing to respect
the “freedom of conscience” of their children when they bring
them up in accordance with their own religious convictions.
These ideas can be traced back to
the seventeenth-century English philosophers who maintained that
men are separate individuals, independent from birth, all equal
and free from all authority. We know that to be false. The child
receives everything from his father and his mother, all nourishment--bodily,
intellectual, educational, moral and social. Parents are aided
in this by teachers who in the children's minds share their authority,
but whether it be from either or both of them, almost all the
learning they obtain during their youth will be received and accepted,
rather than gathered by observation and personal experience. A
considerable part of knowledge comes from the authority who passes
it on. The pupil has confidence in his parents, in his teachers
and in his books and thereby his knowledge grows.
This is even more true of religious
knowledge, of religious practice, of moral training in conformity
with the faith, with tradition, and customs. Men generally live
by following family traditions, as can be observed throughout
the whole world. Conversion to another religion from that received
during childhood presents serious difficulties.
This extraordinary influence of the
family and background was intended by God. He willed that His
blessings should first of all be passed on by the family. This
is the reason why He gives to the father of a family such great
authority and power over his family, his wife and his children.
A child is born in such extreme weakness that we can appreciate
the absolute need for the stability and indissolubility of the
home.
To want to exalt a child’s personality
and consciousness to the detriment of parental authority is ruinous
for him, driving him to revolt and to despise his parents, whereas
long life is promised to those who honor their parents. Saint
Paul, in reminding us of this, makes it a duty for fathers not
to exasperate their sons, but to bring them up in the discipline
and fear of the Lord.
If we had to wait to receive an understanding
of religious truth before believing and conversion, there would
be very few Christians today. We believe the truths of religion
because its witnesses are worthy of belief by their holiness,
their unselfishness and their charity. As Saint Augustine says,
faith gives understanding.
The role of parents has become very
difficult. As we have seen, the majority of Catholic schools
have in effect become secular. The true religion is no longer
taught in them, nor even the natural sciences in the light of
the faith. The catechisms spread Modernism. The hectic style
of modern living leaves no spare time and professional obligations
separate parents and children from the grandfathers and grandmothers
who before used to help with their upbringing. Catholics are now
not only confused but also defenseless.
Not to such an extent, however, that
they cannot provide the essentials, the grace of God making up
what lacks. What must be done? Truly Catholic schools do exist,
though few in number. Send your children to them even if it is
a financial burden. Open new schools, as others have already done.
If you are only able to use schools where the teaching has been
distorted, then you must complain and demonstrate against it;
do not allow the teachers to cause your children to lose their
faith.
Read and re-read as a family the
Catechism of Trent, the finest, the soundest and the most complete.
Organize “parallel catechism classes” under the spiritual direction
of good priests, do not be afraid of being called, like us “rebel.”
Moreover, there are already numerous groups operating who would
welcome your children.
Throw out the books that carry Modernist
poison. Seek advice. There are courageous publishers printing
excellent works and re-printing those destroyed by the Modernists.
Do not buy just any Bible; every Catholic family ought to have
a faithful translation of the Vulgate, the Latin version made
by Saint Jerome in the fourth century and canonized by the Church.
Hold on to the true interpretation
of the Scriptures, keep to the true Mass and the Sacraments such
as were formerly administered everywhere. At the present time
the devil is assailing the Church: that is the fact of the matter.
We are witnessing perhaps one of his last battles, an all-out
battle. He is attacking on all fronts; and if Our Lady of Fatima
said that one day he would penetrate to the highest positions
of the Church, we must believe that could happen. Personally,
I am alleging nothing, yet there are signs which could make us
think that in the highest administrative bodies in Rome there
are men who have lost their faith.
Urgent spiritual remedies must be
applied. We must pray and do penance, as the Blessed Virgin has
requested, and say the Rosary together in the family. As we have
seen during each war, people begin to pray together when the bombs
begin to fall. In exactly the same way, they are falling at this
moment; we are on the brink of losing faith. Do you realize that
that would surpass in seriousness every catastrophe feared by
man, such as world economic crisis or atomic warfare?
Renewal is absolutely necessary;
but you must not assume that you cannot count on the young for
that. The whole of youth is not corrupted, as some try to convince
us. Many of them hold an ideal; for many others it would be enough
to offer them one. There are boundless examples of movements that
have successfully appealed to their generosity; those monasteries
faithful to Tradition are drawing them, and there is no lack of
vocations from young seminarians or novices wanting to be accepted.
There is a magnificent undertaking to be accomplished in conformity
with the instructions given by the Apostles, “Tenete traditiones.
Permanete in iis quae didicistis.” “Keep the traditions. Stand
fast in those things which you have learned” (II Thessalonions
2:14).
The old world called upon to disappear
is the world advocating abortion. Families who are faithful to
Tradition are also large families and their very faith ensures
their posterity. “Increase and multiply!” By keeping to what the
Church has always taught you will ensure the future.