Fr.
Roger Calmel, O.P.
This
essay by Fr. Roger Calmel, O.P. (1914-75) helps
us in these difficult times to preserve our love
of the Church. More than 30 years after its first
publication, this article retains all its relevance,
so much so that it even seems to have been written
for our time, in which the crisis in the Church
deepens at an unprecedented pace.
This
essay will help the reader to think clearly, keep
the Faith, and maintain serenity in the troubled
times we are navigating.
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“My country
has hurt m e,”wrote a young poet in 1944 during the
purge1when
the head of state [Charles De Gaulle] implacably pursued
the sinister job that had been in the works for more than
four years. My country hurt me: this is not a truth that
one shouts from the rooftop. It is rather a secret one whispers
to oneself, with great sorrow, while trying nonetheless
to keep hope. When I was in Spain during the 1950’s,
I remember the extreme reserve with which friends, regardless
of their political allegiance, would let escape certain
details about “our war.” Their country was still
hurting them. But when it is no longer a question of one’s
temporal motherland, when it is a question, not of the Church
considered in herself, for from this perspective she is
holy and indefectible, but of the visible head of the Church;
when it is question of the current holder2of
the Roman primacy, how shall we come to grips with it, and
what is the right tone to adopt as we acknowledge to ourselves
in a low voice: Ah! Rome has hurt me!
Undoubtedly, the
publications of the “good” Catholic press will
not fail to inform us that, in the last 2,000 years, the
Lord’s Church has never known such a splendid pontificate!
But who takes these pronouncements of the establishment’s
hallelujah choir seriously? When we see what is being taught
and practiced throughout the Church under today’s
pontificate, or rather when we observe what has ceased to
be taught and practiced, and how an apparent Church, which
passes itself off as the real Church, no longer knows how
to baptize children, bury the dead, worthily celebrate holy
Mass, absolve sins in confession; when we apprehensively
watch the spread of Protestantizing influences swelling
like a contaminated tide without the holder of supreme power
energetically giving the order to lock the sluice gate;
in a word, when we face up to what is happening, we are
obliged to say: Ah! Rome has hurt me.
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And we all know that
it involves something other than the iniquities, in a sense
private, which the holders of the Roman primacy were too
often wont to commit during the course of history. In those
cases the victims, more or less maltreated, could recover
from it relatively easily by being more vigilant over their
personal sanctification. We must always watch over our sanctification.
Only, and this is what was never seen in the past to such
a degree, the iniquity allowed to happen by the one who
today occupies the throne of Peter consists in his abandoning
the very means of sanctification to the maneuvers of the
innovators and the negators. He allows sound doctrine, the
sacraments, the Mass, to be systematically undermined. This
throws us into a great danger. If sanctification has not
been rendered all together impossible, it is much more difficult.
It is also much more urgent.
At such a perilous
juncture, is it still possible for the simple faithful,
the little sheep of the immense flock of Jesus Christ and
His vicar not to lose heart, not to become the prey of an
immense apparatus which progressively reduces them to changing
their faith, worship, religious habit, and religious life-in
a word, to changing their religion?
Ah! Rome has hurt
me! It would be truly meet and just to repeat gently to
oneself the words of truth, the simple words of supernatural
doctrine learned in catechism, so as not to add to the harm,
but rather to let oneself be profoundly persuaded by the
teaching of Revelation, that one day Rome will be healed;
that the impostor Church will soon be officially unmasked.
Suddenly it will crumple into dust, because its principal
strength comes from the fact that its intrinsic lie passes
for truth, since it has never been effectively disavowed
from above. In the midst of such great distress, one would
like to speak in words that are not out of phase with the
mysterious, wordless discourse that the Holy Ghost murmurs
to the heart of the Church.
But where shall I
begin? Doubtlessly, by recalling the first truth touching
the dominion of Jesus Christ over His Church. He wanted
a Church having at its head the Bishop of Rome, who is His
visible vicar and at the same time the Bishop of the bishops
and of the entire flock. He conferred upon him the prerogative
of the rock so that the edifice might never collapse. He
prayed that he at least, among all the bishops, not make
shipwreck of the faith, so that, having converted after
the failures from which he would not necessarily be preserved,
he confirm his brethren in the faith; or, if it is not himself
in person who confirms his brethren, that it be one of his
closest successors.
Such is undoubtedly
the first consoling thought that the Holy Ghost suggests
to our hearts in these desolate days in which Rome has been
at least partially invaded by darkness: there is no Church
without the infallible vicar of Christ endowed with the
primacy. Moreover, whatever the miseries, even in the religious
domain, of this visible and temporary vicar of Jesus Christ,
it is still Jesus Himself who governs His Church, and who
governs His vicar in the government of the Church; who governs
in such wise that His vicar cannot engage his supreme authority
in the upheavals or betrayals that would change the religion.
For, by virtue of His sovereignly efficacious Passion, the
divine power of Christ’s regency in heaven reaches
that far. He conducts His Church both from within and from
without, and He has dominion over the antagonistic world.
Modernist
Strategy
The strategy of modernism
has been elaborated in two stages: firstly, to get heretical
parallel authorities whose strings they pull to be mixed
with the regular hierarchy; then, engage in a self-styled
pastoral activity for universal renewal which either omits
or systematically falsifies doctrinal truth, which refuses
the sacraments, or which makes the rites doubtful. The great
cunning of the modernists is to use this pastoral approach
from Hell, both to transmute the holy doctrine confided
by the Word of God to His hierarchical Church, and then
to alter or even annul the sacred signs, givers of grace,
of which the Church is the faithful dispenser.
Indeed, there is
a head of the Church who is always infallible, always impeccable,
always holy, with no interruption or halt in his work of
sanctification. And that head is the one head, for all the
others, even the highest, merely hold their authority by
him and for him. Now, this head, holy and without stain,
absolutely separated from sinners and elevated above the
heavens, is not the Pope; it is he of whom the Epistle to
the Hebrews speaks so magnificently; it is the Sovereign
High Priest, Jesus Christ.
Papal
Authority
Before ascending
into heaven and becoming invisible to our eyes, Jesus, our
Redeemer by the Cross, wanted to establish for His Church,
above and beyond numerous particular ministers, a unique
universal minister, a visible vicar, who alone holds supreme
jurisdiction. He heaped him with prerogatives:
Thou art Peter; and
upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of
hell shall not prevail against it (Mt. 16:18-19).
Yea, Lord, thou knowest
that I love thee. He saith to him: Feed my lambs....Feed
my sheep (Jn. 21:16-18).
But I have prayed
for thee, that thy faith fail not: and thou, being once
converted, confirm thy brethren (Lk.22:32).
Now, if the Pope
is the visible vicar of Jesus, who has ascended into the
invisible heavens, he is nothing more than vicar: vices
gerens, he holds the place but he remains another. The
grace that gives life to the mystical Body does not derive
from the Pope. Grace, for the Pope as for us, derives from
the one Lord Jesus Christ. The same holds for the light
of Revelation. He has a singular role as the guardian of
the means of grace, of the seven sacraments as well as of
revealed truth. He is specially assisted to be the guardian
and faithful servant. Yet, for his authority to receive
a privileged assistance in its exercise, it must not fail
to be exerted. Besides, if he is preserved from error when
he engages his authority in such a way that it is infallible,
he can err in other cases. But should he do wrong in matters
that do not engage papal infallibility, that does not prevent
the unique head of the Church, the invisible High Priest,
from continuing the governance of His Church; it changes
neither the efficacy of His grace nor the truth of His law.
It cannot make Him powerless to limit the failings of His
visible vicar nor to procure, without too much delay, a
new and worthy Pope, to repair what his predecessor allowed
to be spoiled or destroyed, for the duration of the insufficiencies,
weaknesses, and even partial betrayals of a Pope do not
exceed the duration of his mortal existence.
Since He has returned
to heaven, Jesus has chosen and procured 263 Popes. Some,
just a small number, have been such faithful vicars that
we invoke them as friends of God and holy intercessors.
A still smaller number have fallen into very serious breaches.
Yet the great number have been suitable. None of them, while
still Pope, has betrayed nor could betray to the point of
explicitly teaching heresy with the fullness of his authority.
This being the situation of each Pope and of the succession
of Popes in relation to the head of the Church who reigns
in heaven, the weaknesses of one Pope must not make us forget
in the least the solidity and the sanctity of our Savior’s
dominion, nor prevent us from seeing the power of Jesus
and His wisdom, who holds in His hand even the inadequate
Popes, and who contains their inadequacy within strict bounds.
But to have this
confidence in the sovereign, invisible head of the Church
without straining to deny the serious failings from which,
despite his prerogatives, the visible vicar, the Bishop
of Rome, the key-bearer of the kingdom of heaven, is not
necessarily exempt; in order to place in Jesus this realistic
trust which does not evade the mystery of the successor
of Peter with his heaven-guaranteed privileges and his human
fallibility; so that this overwhelming distress caused by
the occupant of the papacy might be subsumed in the theological
virtue of hope we place in the Sovereign Priest, obviously
our interior life must be centered on Jesus Christ, and
not the Pope. It goes without saying that our interior life,
while taking into account the Pope and the hierarchy, must
be established, not in the hierarchy and in the Pope, but
in the Divine Pontiff, in the priest which is the Word Incarnate,
Redeemer, on whom the visible, supreme vicar depends even
more than the other priests: More than the others, for he
is in the hand of Jesus Christ in view of a function without
equivalent among the others. More than any other, and in
a more eminent and unique way, he cannot leave off confirming
his brethren in the faith-he or his successor.
The Church is not
the mystical body of the Pope; the Church with the Pope
is the mystical Body of Christ. When the interior life of
Christians is more and more focused on Jesus Christ, they
do not despair, even when they suffer an agony over the
failings of a Pope, be it an Honorius I or the rival Popes
of the Middle Ages, or be it, at the extreme limit, a Pope
who fails according to the new possibilities of failing
offered by modernism. When Jesus Christ is the principle
and soul of the interior life of Christians, they do not
feel the need to lie to themselves about the failures of
a Pope in order to remain assured of his prerogatives; they
know that these failures will never reach such a degree
that Jesus would cease to govern His Church because He would
have been effectively prevented by His vicar. He would yet
hold such an erring Pope in His hand, preventing him from
ever engaging his authority for the perversion of the faith
which he received from above.
True
Obedience
An interior life
centered as it should be on Jesus Christ and not on the
Pope would not exclude the Pope, or else it would cease
to be a Christian interior life. An interior life focused
as it should be on the Lord Jesus thus includes the vicar
of Jesus Christ and obedience to this vicar, but God
served first; that is to say, that this obedience, far
from being unconditional, is always practiced in the light
of theological faith and the natural law.
We live by and for
Jesus Christ, thanks to His Church, which is governed by
the Pope, whom we obey in all that is of his purview. We
do not live by and for the Pope as if he had acquired for
us eternal redemption; that is why Christian obedience
can not always nor in everything identify the Pope with
Jesus Christ. What ordinarily happens is that the vicar
of Christ governs sufficiently in conformity with the Apostolic
tradition so as not to provoke major conflicts in the consciences
of docile Catholics. But occasionally it can be otherwise.
And exceptionally things can be such as to cause the faithful
to legitimately wonder how they can hold fast to tradition
if they follow the directives of this Pope?
The interior life
of a son of the Church who would set aside the articles
of Faith concerning the Pope, obedience to his legitimate
orders, and prayer for him would have ceased to be Catholic.
On the other hand, an interior life which includes yielding
to the Pope unconditionally, that is to say, blindly in
everything and always, is an interior life which is necessarily
subject to human respect, which is not free with regard
to creatures, which is exposed to many occasions of compromise.
In his interior life, the true son of the Church having
received with his whole heart the articles of the faith
with regard to the vicar of Christ prays for him faithfully
and obeys him willingly, but only in the light, that is
to say, only while the Apostolic tradition and, of course,
the natural law are preserved whole and entire.
Holy
Church, Sinful Churchmen
Let us remember the
great prayer at the beginning of the Roman Canon, in which
the priest, having earnestly implored the most clement Father
by His Son Jesus Christ, to sanctify the spotless sacrifice
offered in first place for Ecclesia tua sancta catholica,
continues thus: “...una cumfamulo tuo Papa
nostro...et Antistite nostro....” The Church has
never envisaged him saying: “una cum SANCTO famulo
tu Papa nostro et SANCTO Antistite nostro,’“
while she does have him say, “for Thy HOLY Church.”
The Pope, unlike the Church, is not necessarily holy. The
Church is holy with sinful members, among whom are we ourselves;
sinful members who, alas! do not pursue or no longer pursue
holiness. It can even happen that the Pope himself figures
in this category. God knows. In any case, the condition
of the head of the holy Church being what it is, that is
to say not necessarily that of a saint, we should not let
ourselves be scandalized if trials, sometimes very cruel
trials, befall the Church because of her visible head in
person. We must not let ourselves be scandalized from the
fact that, subjects of the Pope, we cannot, after all, follow
him blindly, unconditionally, always and in all.
Layman's
Right
The Lord, by the
Pope and the hierarchy-by the hierarchy subject to the Pope-governs
His Church in such a way that it is always secure in the
possession and understanding of its tradition. On the truths
of the catechism, on the celebration of the Holy Sacrifice
and on the sacraments, on the fundamental structure of the
hierarchy, on the states of life and the call to perfect
love, let us say on all the major points of tradition, the
Church is assisted in such way that any baptized Catholic
having the faith clearly knows what he must hold. Thus the
simple Christian who, consulting tradition on a major point
known to all, would refuse to follow a priest, a bishop,
an episcopal conference, or even a Pope who would ruin tradition
on this point, would not, as some charge, be showing signs
characteristic of private judgment or pride; for it is not
pride or insubordination to discern what the tradition is
on major points, or to refuse to betray them. Whatever may
be the collegiality of bishops, for example, or the secretary
of the Roman Congregation who uses subterfuge to arrange
things so that Catholic priests end up celebrating the Mass
without giving any mark of adoration, no exterior sign of
faith in the sacred mysteries, every faithful Catholic knows
that it is inadmissible to celebrate Mass making this display
of non-faith. One who would refuse to go to such a Mass
is not exercising private judgment; he is not a rebel. He
is a faithful Catholic established in a tradition that comes
from the Apostles and which no one in the Church can change.
For no one in the Church, whatever his hierarchical rank,
be it ever so high, no one has the power to change the Church
or the Apostolic tradition.
On all the major
points, the Apostolic tradition is quite clear. There is
no need to scrutinize it through a magnifying glass, nor
to be a cardinal or a prefect of some Roman dicastery to
know what is against it. It is enough to have been instructed
by the catechism and the liturgy prior to the modernist
corruption.
Too often, when it
is a question of not cutting oneself off from Rome, the
faithful and priests have been formed in the sense of a
partly worldly fear in such a way that they feel panic-stricken,
that they are shaken in their consciences and they no longer
examine anything once the first passer-by accuses them of
not being with Rome. A truly Christian formation, on the
contrary, teaches us to be careful to be in union with Rome
not in fear or without discernment, but in light and peace
according to a filial fear in the Faith.
For it must be said,
first of all, that on the major points the tradition of
the Church is established, certain, irreformable; then,
that every Christian instructed in the rudiments of the
Faith, knows them without hesitation; thirdly, that it is
faith and not private interpretation which makes us discern
them, just as it is obedience, piety and love, and not insubordination,
which make us uphold this tradition; fourthly, that the
attempts of the hierarchy or the weaknesses of the Pope
which would tend to upset this tradition or let this tradition
be upset will one day be overturned, while Tradition will
triumph.
Tradition
Will Triumph
We are at peace on
this point. Whatever may be the hypocritical arms placed
by modernism in the hands of the episcopal collegialities
and even of the vicar of Christ, tradition will indeed triumph:
solemn baptism, for example, which includes the anathemas
against the accursed devil will not be excluded for long;
the tradition of not absolving sins except after individual
confession will not be excluded for long; the tradition
of the traditional Catholic Mass, Latin and Gregorian, with
the language, Canon, and gestures in conformity with the
Roman Missal of St. Pius V, will soon be restored to honor;
the tradition of the Catechism of Trent, or of a manual
exactly in conformity with it, will be restored without
delay.
On the major points
of dogma, morals, the sacraments, the states of life, the
perfection to which we are called, the tradition of the
Church is known by the members of the Church whatever their
rank. They hold fast to it without a bad conscience, even
if the hierarchical guardians of this tradition try to intimidate
them or throw them into confusion; even if they persecute
them with the bitter refinements of modernist inquisitors.
They are very assured that by keeping the tradition they
do not cut themselves off from the visible vicar of Christ.
For the visible vicar of Christ is governed by Christ in
such wise that he cannot transmute the tradition of the
Church, nor make it fall into oblivion. If by misfortune
he should try to do it, either he or his immediate successors
will be obliged to proclaim from on high what remains forever
living in the Church’s memory: the Apostolic tradition.
The Spouse of Christ stands no chance of losing her memory.
“Quod
Ubique, Quod Semper...”
As for those who
say that tradition is a synonym of sclerosis, or that progress
occurs by opposing tradition, in short, those who conjure
up the mirages of an absurd philosophy of becoming, I recommend
the reading of St. Vincent of Lerins3
in his Commonitorium and the careful studying of
Church history: dogma, sacraments, fundamental constitution,
spiritual life, in order to descry the essential difference
which exists between “going forward” and “going
astray”; between having “advanced ideas”
and “advancing according to right ideas”; in
short, distinguishing between profectus (development)
and permutatio (change).
Even more so than
in times of peace, it has become useful and salutary to
us to meditate on the Church’s trials by the light
of faith. We might be tempted to reduce these trials to
persecutions and attacks coming from the outside. But enemies
from within are, after all, even more to be feared: they
know better the weak points; they can wound or poison where
or when it is least expected; the scandal they provoke is
much more difficult to overcome. Thus, in a parish, an anti-religious
institution will never succeed, whatever it does, in ruining
the faithful as much as a high-living, modernist priest.
Equally, the defrocking of a simple priest, though more
sensational, has consequences far less baneful than the
negligence or treason of the bishop.
Ultimate
Scandal
Be that as it may,
it is certain that if the bishop betrays the Catholic faith,
even without abandoning it, he imposes on the Church a much
heavier trial than the simple priest who takes a wife and
ceases to offer holy Mass. What then can be said of the
kind of trials that the Church of Jesus Christ would suffer
were it to come by the Pope, by the vicar of Jesus Christ
in person? Merely raising this question is enough to make
some hide their faces in their hands and push them to the
brink of crying blasphemy. The mere thought torments them.
They refuse to face up to a trial of this gravity.
I understand their
feeling. I am not unaware that a sort of vertigo can grip
the soul when it is placed in the presence of some iniquities.
“Sinite usque hue-Suffer ye thus far,”3
Jesus in agony said to the three Apostles when the rabble
of the high priest came to arrest Him, drag Him before the
tribunal and to death, Him who is the eternal High Priest.
Sinite usque hue. It is as if the Lord were saying:
“The scandal can indeed go that far, but let it go,
and follow my recommendation: Watch and pray, for the spirit
is willing, but the flesh is weak.” Sinite ad hue:
“By my consent to drink the chalice, I have merited
for you every grace while you were sleeping and left me
all alone. I obtained for you in particular the grace of
a supernatural strength that is up to every trial, even
the trial that can come upon the Church by the Pope’s
own doing. I have made you able to escape even that vertigo.”
On the subject of
this extraordinary trial there is what Church history says
and what Revelation about the Church does not say. For nowhere
does Revelation about the Church say that the Popes will
never sin by negligence, cowardice, or worldliness in the
keeping and defense of the Apostolic tradition. We know
that they will never sin by making the faithful believe
in another religion: that is the sin from which they are
preserved by the nature of their mandate. And when they
engage their authority in such a way as to invoke their
infallibility, it is Christ Himself who speaks to us and
instructs us: that is the privilege with which they are
robed as soon as they become successors of Peter. But if
Revelation instructs us in the prerogatives of the papacy,
nowhere does it say that when he exercises his authority
below the threshold of infallibility, a Pope will never
become Satan’s pawn and favor heresy up to a certain
point. Likewise, it is not written in sacred Scripture that,
though he cannot formally teach another religion, a Pope
will never go so far as to sabotage the conditions indispensable
to the defense of the true religion. The possibility of
such a defection is even considerably favored by modernism.
Thus, Revelation
about the Pope nowhere guarantees that the vicar of Christ
will never inflict on the Church the trial of some major
scandals; I speak of serious scandals, not just in the domain
of private morals, but rather in the religious sphere properly
so-called, and, so to speak, in the ecclesiastical domain
of faith and morals. In fact, the Church’s history
teaches us that this sort of trial inflicted by the Pope
has not been spared the Church, although it has been rare
and not prolonged to an acute stage. It is the contrary
that would be astonishing, when we consider the small number
of canonized Popes since the time of Gregory VII who are
invoked and venerated as the friends and saints of God.
And it is more astonishing still that the Popes who suffered
very cruel torments, like Pius VI or Pius VII, were never
prayed to as saints, neither by the Vox Ecclesiae, nor
by the Vox populi. If these Pontiffs, who nonetheless
had to suffer so much as Popes, did not bear their pain
with such a degree of charity as to be canonized saints,
how can we be astonished that other Popes, who looked upon
their position from a worldly point of view, would commit
serious breaches or inflict on the Church of Christ an especially
fearful and harrowing trial. When they are reduced to the
extremity of having such Popes, the faithful, priests and
bishops who want to live the life of the Church take great
care not only to pray for the Supreme Pontiff who is the
subject of great affliction for the Church, but first and
foremost they cleave to the Apostolic tradition, the tradition
concerning dogma, the missal and the ritual, the tradition
on the interior life and on the universal call to perfect
charity in Christ.
St.
Vincent Ferrer
In such a juncture,
the mission of the Friar Preacher who, undoubtedly among
all the saints worked the most directly for the papacy,
that son of St. Dominic, Vincent Ferrer (1350?-1419), is
particularly enlightening. Angel of Judgment, Legate a
latere Christi (from the side of Christ), causing the
deposition of a Pope after exercising towards him infinite
patience, Vincent Ferrer is also, and from the same inspiration,
the intrepid missionary full of benignity, abounding in
prodigies and miracles, who announces the Gospel to the
immense multitude of the Christian people. He carries in
his heart of an apostle not only the Supreme Pontiff, so
enigmatic, obstinate and hard, but also the whole flock
of Christ, the multitude of the hapless, humble folk, the
“turba magna ex omnibus tribubus et populis et
linguis-ihe great multitude...of all...tribes, and peoples,
and tongues” (Apoc. 7:9). Vincent understood that
the major concern of the vicar of Christ was not, indeed
was far from, faithfully serving the holy Church. The Pope
was placing the satisfaction of his own obscure will to
power ahead of everything. But if, at least among the faithful,
the sense of the life of the Church could be reawakened,
the concern to live in conformity with the dogmas and the
sacraments received in the Apostolic tradition, if a pure
and mighty wind of prayer and conversion were to unfurl
upon this languishing and desolate Christendom, then doubtlessly
there would come a vicar of Christ who would be truly humble,
who would have a Christian conscience about his super-eminent
charge, who would preoccupy himself with exercising it to
the best of his ability in the spirit of the Sovereign High
Priest. If the Christian people could rediscover a life
in accord with the Apostolic tradition, then it would become
impossible for the vicar of Jesus Christ, when it comes
to upholding and defending this tradition, to fall into
certain derelictions, to abandon himself to lying compromises.
It would be necessary that, without delay, a good Pope,
and even a holy Pope, succeed the bad or misguided one.
Worthy
Flock, Worthy Shepherd
But too many of the
laity, priests and bishops in these days of great evil,
when trial overtakes the Church by the Pope, would like
order to be restored with their having to do nothing, or
almost nothing. At most will they agree to mutter a few
prayers. They even balk at the daily Rosary: five decades
offered daily to our Lady in honor of the hidden life, the
Passion, and the glory of Jesus. In this vein, they have
very little interest in deepening their understanding of
that part of the Apostolic tradition that applies directly
to them in a spirit of fidelity to that tradition: dogmas,
missal and ritual, interior life (for progress in the interior
life obviously is a part of the Apostolic tradition). Each
in his station of life having consented to lukewarmness,
they take scandal at the fact that neither is the Pope,
in his place as Pope, very fervent when it comes to upholding
for the entire Church the Apostolic tradition, that is to
say, to faithfully fulfilling the unique mission confided
to him. This view of things is unjust. The more we need
a holy Pope, the more we ourselves must begin by putting
our own lives, by the grace of God and holding fast to tradition,
in the path of the saints. Then the Lord Jesus will finally
give to His flock the visible shepherd of whom it will have
striven to make itself worthy.
This was the lesson
of St. Vincent Ferrer at an apocalyptic time of major failings
by the Roman Pontiff. But with modernism we are in the midst
of experiencing even greater trials, reasons all the more
compelling for us to live even more purely, and on all points,
the Apostolic tradition; on all points, including a real
tending towards perfect charity. And yet, in the moral doctrine
revealed by the Lord and handed down by the Apostles, it
is said that we must tend to perfect love, since the law
of growth in Christ is part and parcel of the grace and
charity which unite us in Christ.
A
Fundamental Mystery
There is indeed both
transcendence and obscurity in the Church’s dogma
relative to the Pope: a supreme pontiff who is the universal
vicar of Jesus Christ, yet who nonetheless is not sheltered
from failings, even serious ones, which can be quite dangerous
for his subjects. But the dogma of the Roman Pontiff is
but one of the aspects of the fundamental mystery of the
Church. Two great propositions introduce us to this mystery:
firstly, that the Church, whose members are recruited from
among sinners, which we all are, is nonetheless the infallible
dispenser of light and grace, dispenser by means of a hierarchical
organization, dispenser governed from heaven above by its
head and Savior, Jesus Christ, and assisted by the Spirit
of Jesus. On the other hand, on earth, the Savior offers
by His Church the perfect sacrifice and nourishes it by
His own substance. Secondly, the Church, holy Spouse of
the Lord Jesus, must have a share in the Cross, including
the cross of betrayal by her own; but for all that she does
not cease to be sufficiently assisted in her hierarchical
structure, beginning with the Pope, and to be on fire enough
with charity; in a word, she remains at all times holy and
pure enough to be able to share in the trials of her Spouse,
including betrayal by certain members of the hierarchy,
while keeping intact her self-mastery and supernatural strength.
Never will the Church be subject to vertigo.
If, in our spiritual
life, the Christian truth concerning the Pope is rightly
situated within the Christian truth about the Church, by
that light shall we overcome the scandal of all the lies,
not excluding those that can befall the Church by the vicar
of Christ or by the successors of the Apostles.
When we think of
the Pope now and of the prevailing modernism, of the Apostolic
tradition and perseverance in this tradition, we are more
and more reduced to considering these questions only in
prayer, only in an unceasing petition for the entire Church
and for him who, in our days, holds in his hands the keys
of the kingdom of heaven. He holds them in his hands, but
he does not use them, so to speak. He leaves the gate of
the sheepfold open at the approach of thieves; he does not
close these protective doors which his predecessors had
invariably kept shut with unbreakable locks and bolts. Sometimes,
as is the case with post-conciliar ecumenism, he even pretends
to open what will forever be kept shut. We are reduced to
the necessity of never thinking of the Church except to
pray for her and for the Pope. It is a blessing. Nevertheless,
thinking of our Mother, the Spouse of Christ, in this piteous
condition does not diminish in the least our resolve to
think clearly. At least, let this indispensable lucidity,
lucidity without which all courage would flag, be penetrated
with as much humility and gentleness as the vehemence with
which we assail the Sovereign Priest, that He make haste
to help us. Deus in adjutorium meum intende. Domine,
ad adjuvandum mefestina. May it please Him to charge
His most holy Mother, Mary Immaculate, with bringing us
as soon as possible the effective remedy.
EDITOR’S
NOTE:With
this installment of the Angelus Press English-Language
Article Reprint of SiSiNoNo, the Editor, with
the agreement of the Publisher, is discontinuing the
planned series (started October 2005, No.66) “On
the Nature of Modern Thought.” It has become
apparent that the series will have to run for as long
as two years to be completed and is extremely difficult
in both its writing and understanding. The author,
Dr. Paolo Pasqualucci, when contacted by Angelus Press,
claimed that there could be no satisfactory way of
presenting his treatise in either simpler or shorter
form. The Editor apologizes both to him and to any
readers disappointed with this decision. He is sorry
for making a premature judgment to translate and publish
the series.
For
readers of Italian, the series of issues containing
Professor Pasqualucci’s study may be obtained
by writing to Customer Service, SiSiNoNo, Via
Madonna degli Angeli n. 78, 1-00049 Velletri, Italy,
or to sisinono@tiscali.it;
telephone: [39] (6) 963-5568.-Ed. |
Translated exclusively
for Angelus Press and abridged by Miss Anne Stinnett from
the French-language version of SiSiNoNo (Courrier de
Rome, Nov. 2005, pp. 1-5). The original text was first
published in the review Itineraires in 1973 and
included in the anthology A Short Apologia for the
Church of All Time (1987).
Fr. Roger-Thomas
Calmel, O.P. (1914-75), was a prominent French Dominican
and Thomist philosopher, who made an immense contribution
to the fight for Catholic Tradition through his writings
and conferences, notably as a regular contributor for
17 years to Jean Madiran’s Itineraires. His
most enduring influence is through the traditional
Dominican Teaching Sisters of Fanjeaux and Brignole in
France who operate 12 girls’ schools in France and
the US.
1.
Translator’s
note: The epuration, a purge of “German
collaborators” occurred after the Normandy invasion
and the end of the war, resulting in the killing of a 100,000
Frenchmen. For example, acclaimed poet Robert Brasillach
was executed on this charge (Cf. Sisley Huddleston, France:
The Tragic Years, an Eyewitness Account of War, Occupation
and Liberation [Devin-Adair Co., 1955]).
2.
This was written
in 1973-Ed. (1987 ed.).
3.
Translator’s note: A monk and ecclesiastical
writer of southern Gaul (d. c. 450), famous for the practical
rule he enunciated, by which the faithful can steer clear
of heresy in troubled times: “Magnopere curandum
est ut id teneatur quod ubique, quod semper, quod ab omnibus
creditum est-What all men have at all times and everywhere
believed must be regarded as true.”
4.
Translator
note: Douay-Rheims translation. Alternate: “Let
them have their way in this” (Msgr. Ronald Knox version).
E
Courtesy of the Angelus
Press, Kansas City, MO 64109
translated from the Italian
Fr. Du Chalard
Via Madonna degli Angeli, 14
Italia 00049 Velletri (Roma)
October
2005 Volume XXVIII, Number 10 |