POPE PIUS XI
on
THE NEW PERSECUTIONS
OF THE CHURCH BY THE
MEXICAN GOVERNMENT
(Acerbo Animi)
September 29, 1932
THE TRIPLE CROWN
OR TIARA
THE POPE'S OFFICIAL HEADDRESS
To The Archbishops, Bishops
And Ordinaries Of Mexico
Venerable Brethren
Health And Apostolic Benediction
The concern and sorrow which We feel at the
present sad plight of human society at large do in no way lessen Our special
solicitude for Our beloved sons of the Mexican nation and for you, Venerable
Brethren, who are the more deserving of Our Paternal regard because
you have been so long harassed by grievous persecutions.
From the beginning of Our Pontificate, following
the example of Our Venerable Predecessor, We endeavored with all Our might
to ward off the application of those constitutional statutes which the
Holy See had several times been obliged to condemn as seriosly derogatory
to the most elementary and inalienable rights of the Church and of the
faithful. With this intent, we provided that Our representative
should take up his residence in your Republic.
But whereas other governments in recent times have
been eager to renew agreements with the Holy See, that of Mexico frustrated
every attempt to arrive at an understanding--on the contrary, it most unexpectedly
broke the promises made to Us shortly before in writing, banishing repeatedly
Our representatives and showing thereby its animosity against the Church.
Thus a most rigorous application was given to Article 130 of the Constitution,
against which, on account of its extreme hostility to the Church, as may
be seen from Our Encyclical Iniquis Afflictisque, of November
18, 1926, the Holy See had to protest in the most solemn manner.
Heavy penalties were then enacted against
the transgressors of this deplorable Article; and as a fresh affront
to the Hierarchy of the Church, it was provided that every State of the
Confederation should determine the number of Priests empowered to exercise
the Sacred Ministry, in public or in private.
Unjust And Intollerable Injunctions
In view of these unjust and intolerant injunctions,
which would have subjected the Church in Mexico to the despotism of the
State and of the Government hostile to the Catholic Religion, you determined,
Venerable Brethren, to suspend public worship, and at the same time called
on the faithful to make efficacious protest against the unjust procedure
of the Government. For your Apostolic firmness, you were nearly all
exiled from the Republic, and from the land of your banishment you had
to witness the struggles and martyrdom of your Priests and of your flock,
while those very few amongst you who, almost by miracle, were able to remain
in hiding in their own Dioceses succeeded in effectively encouraging the
faithful with the splendid example of their own undaunted spirit.
Courage Of Clergy Commended
Of these events We took occasion to speak in solemn
Allocutions, in public discourses, and more at length in the above-mentioned
Encyclical Iniquis Afflictisque, and we were comforted by
the world's admiration for the courage displayed by the Clergy in administering
the Sacraments to the faithful, amid a thousand dangers, and at the risk
of their lives, who at the cost of unheart-of sufferings and enormous
sacrifices gave valiant assistance to their Priests.
Meanwhile, We did not forbear to encourage with
word and counsel the lawful Christian resistance of the Priests and the
faithful, exhorting them to placate, by penance and prayer, God's
Justice, that in His Merciful Providence He might shorten the time of trial.
At the same time, We invited Our sons throughout the world to unite
their prayers to Ours in behalf of their brethren in Mexico; and wonderful
were the ardor and whole-heartedness with which they responded to
Our appeal.
Nor did we neglect to have recourse, besides, to
the human means at Our disposal, in order to give assistance to Our
beloved sons. Whilst addressing Our appeal to the Catholic world
to give help and generous alms to their persecuted Mexican brethren, We
urged the governments with whom We have diplomatic relations to take to
heart the abnormal and grievous condition of so many of the faithful.
Harm Due To Suspension Of Public Worship
In the face of the firm and generous resistance
of the oppressed, the Government now began to give indications in various
ways that it would not be adverse to coming to an agreement, if only to
put an end to a condition of affairs that it could not turn to its own
advantage. Whereupon, though taught by painful experiences to put
scant trust in such promises, we felt obliged to ask Ourselves whether
it was for the good of souls to prolong the suspension of public worship.
That suspension had indeed been an effective protest against the arbitrary
interference of the Government; nevertheless, its continuation might have
seriously prejudged civil and Religious Order. Of even greater
weight was the consideration that this suspension, according to grave reports
We received from various and unimpeachable sources, was productive of serious
harm to the faithful. As these were bereft of spiritual helps necessary
for Chritian life, and not infrequently were obliged to omit their Religious
duties, they ran the risk of first remaining apart from and then being
entirely separated from the Priesthood, and in consequence from the very
sources of Supernatural Life. To this must be added the fact that
the prolonged absence of almost all the Bishops from their Dioceses could
not fail to bring about a relaxation of Ecclessiastical discipline, especially
in times of such great tribulation for the Mexican Church, when Clergy
and people had particular need of the guidance of those "whom the Holy
Ghost has placed to Rule the Church of God."
When, therefore, in 1929, the Supreme Magistrate
of Mexico publicly declared that the Government, by applying the laws in
question, had no intention of destroying the "Identity of the Church"
or of ignoring the Ecclessiastical Hierarchy, We thought it best, having
no other intention but the good of souls, to profit by the occasion, which
seemed to offer a possibility of having the rights of the Hierarchy duly
recognized. Seeing, therefore, some hope of remedying greater evils,
and judging that the principal motives that had induced the Episcopate
to suspend public worship no longer existed, We asked Ourselves whether
it were not advisable to order its resumption. In this there was
no intention, certainly, of accepting the Mexican regulations of worship,
nor of withdrawing Our protests against these regulations, much less of
ceasing to combat them. It was merely a question of abandoning, in
view of the Government's new declarations, one of the methods of resistance
before it could bring harm to the faithful, and of having recourse instead
to others deemed more opportune.
Penalization Of Faithful Catholics
Unfortunately, as all know, Our wishes and desires
were not followed by the peace and favorable settlement We had hoped
for. On the contrary, Bishops, Priests and faithful Catholics continued
to be penalized and imprisoned contrary to the spirit in which the Modus
Vivendi had been established. To Our great distress We saw
that not merely were all Bishops not recalled from exile, but that others
were expelled without even the semblance of legality. In several
Dioceses neither Churches, Seminaries, Bishop's residences, nor other Sacred
Edifices were restored; notwithstanding explicit promises, Priests and
laymen who had steadfastly defended the Faith were abandoned to the cruel
vengeance of their adversaries.
Furthermore, as soon as the suspension of public
worship had been revoked, increased violence was noticed in the campaign
of the press against Clergy, Church and God Himself; and it is well known
that the Holy See had to condemn one of these publications, which in its
sacrilegious immorality and acknowledged purpose of anti-Religious and
slanderous propaganda had exceeded all bounds.
Dangers Of Irreligious And Immoral Teachings
Add to this that not only is Religious instruction
forbidden in the primary schools, but not infrequently attempts are made
to induce generations, to become purveyors of irreligious and immoral teachings,
thus obliging the parents to make heavy sacrifices in order to safeguard
the innocence of their children. We bless with all Our heart these
Christian parents and all the good teachers who help them, and We urge
upon you, Venerable Brethren; upon the Clergy, Secular and Regular, and
upon all the faithful the necessity of giving utmost attention to the question
of education and the formation of the young--especially among the poorer
classes, since they are most exposed to atheist, Masonic and communistic
propaganda--persuading yourselves that your country will be such
as you build it up in the children.
Limitation Of Clergy Protested
An effort has been made to strike the
Church in a still more vital spot, viz., in the existence of the
Clergy and the Catholic Hierarchy, by trying to eliminate it gradually
from the Republic. Thus the Mexican Constitution, as We have several
times deplored, while proclaiming with the most evident contradiction that
each State of the Federal Republic must determine the number of Priests
to whom the exercise of the Sacred Ministry is allowed, not only in public
Churches but even within private dwellings. This enormity is further
aggravated by the way in which the law is applied.
In fact, the Constitution lays down that the number
of Priests must be determined, but ordains that this determination must
correspond to the Religious needs of the faithful and of the locality.
It does not prescribe that the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy is to be ignored
in this matter, and this point was explicitly recognized in the declarations
of the Modus Vivendi. Now in the State of Michoacan
one Priest was assigned for every 33,000 of the faithful, in the State
of Vera Cruz only one Priest was to exercise the Sacred Ministry for every
100,000 of the inhabitants. Everyone can see whether it is possible
with such restrictions to administer the Sacraments to so many people scattered
for the most part over a vast territory.
Indeed the persecutors, as though sorry for having
been too liberal and indulgent, have imposed further limitations.
Some Governors closed Seminaries, confiscated Canonries, and determined
the Sacred buildingss and the territory to which the Ministry of the approved
Priests would be restricted.
Recognition Of Hierarchy Denied By State
The clearest manifestation of the will
to destroy the Catholic Church itself is, however, the explicit declaration
published in some States that the civil authority, in granting the
license for Priestly Ministry, recognizes no Hierarchy, on the contrary
positively excludes from the possibility of exercising the Sacred Ministry
all of Hierarchic rank, viz., all Bishops and even those who have held
the Office of Apostolic Delegate.
We wished briefly to rehearse the salient
points in the grievous condition of the Church in Mexico, so that all lovers
of order and peace among nations, on seeing that such an unheard-of
persecution differs but little, especially in certain States, from
the one raging within the unhappy borders of Russia, may from this iniquitous
similarity of purpose conceive fresh ardor to steam the torrent that is
subverting all social order.
At the same time, it is Our intention to give a
new proof to you, Venerable Brethren, and to all Our beloved sons of Mexico,
of the Paternal solicitude with which We follow you in your tribulation:
the same solicitude that inspired the instructions which We gave you last
January through Our beloved son, the Cardinal Secretary of State,
and which were communicated to you by Our Apostolic Delegate. In
matters strictly connected with Religion, it is undoubtedly Our duty and
Our right to establish the reasons and norms that all who glory in the
name of Catholic are under the obligation of obeying.
In this connection We are anxious to recall to mind
that when We issued these instructions, We gave due consideration to all
the reports and advices that came to Us either from the Hierarchy or the
faithful. We say all--even those that appeared to counsel a return
to a severer line of conduct, with the total suspension of public worship
throughout the Republic, as in 1926.
Wisdom Of Mexican Hierarchy Praised
Concerning, therefore, the conduct to follow, since
the number of Priests is not equally limited in every State, nor the rights
of the Ecclessiastical Hierarchy everywhere equally disregarded, it is
evident that according to the different applications of the unhappy decrees,
different likewise must be the conduct of the Church and the Catholics.
Here it seems just to pay a special tribute to praise to those Mexican
Bishops who, according to advices received, have wisely interpreted the
instructions We have inculcated time and again. To this We wish to
call attention; for if some, urged rather by zeal for the defense of their
own Faith than by prudence so necessary in delicate situations, may from
diverse conduct in diverse circumstances have concluded that there have
been contradictory judgments on the part of the Bishops, let them now be
certain that such an accusation is utterly unfounded.
Nevertheless, since any restriction whatever of
the number of Priests is a grave violation of Divine rights, it will be
necessary for the Bishops, the Clergy and the Catholic laity to continue
to protest with all their energy against such violation, using every legitimate
means. For even if these protests have no effect on those that govern
the country, they will be effective in persuading the faithful, especially
the uneducated, that by such action the State attacks the liberty of the
Church, which liberty the Church can never renounce, no matter what may
be the violence of the persecutors.
Persecution Of Church Outrage Against God
And therefore, just as We have read
with satisfaction the protests recently made by the Bishops and Priests
of the Dioceses that are victims of the deplorable measures of the
Government, so We join Our protests to yours before the rulers of the nations,
to make them realize that the persecution of Mexico, besides being an outrage
against God, against His Church, and against the conscience of a Catholic
people, is also an incentive to the subversion of the social order,
which is the aim of those organizations that profess to deny God.
Meanwhile, in order to remedy to some extent the
calamitous conditions that afflict the Church in Mexico, we must
avail Ourselves of those means which We still have in hand, so that
by the maintenance of Divine worship as far as possible in every place,
the light of faith and the Sacred Fire of Charity may not be extinguished
among those unhappy populations. Certainly the laws are iniquiitous;
they are impious, as We have already said, and condemned by God for everything
that they iniquitously and impiously derogate from the rights of God and
of the Church in the government of souls.
Nevertheless, it would be a vain and unfounded fear
to think that one is cooperating with these iniquitous legislative ordinances
which oppress him, were he to ask the Government that imposes these things
for permission to carry out public worship--and hence to hold that it is
one's duty to refrain absolutely from making such a request.
Such an erroneous opinion and conduct might lead to total suspension of
public worship, and would without doubt inflict grievous harm on
the entire flock of the faithful.
Approval Of Iniquitous Laws Illicit
It is well to observe that to approve such an iniquitous
law, or spontaneously to give to it true and proper cooperation, is undoubtedly
illicit and sacrilegious. But absolutely different is the case of
him who yields to such unjust regulations solely against his will and under
protest, and who on the other hand does everything he can to lessen
the disastrous effects of the pernicious law. In fact, the Priest
finds himself compelled to ask for that permission, without which it would
be impossible for him to exercise his Sacred Ministry for the good of souls;
it is an imposition to which he is forced to submit in order to avoid a
greater evil. His behavior consequently is not much different
from that of one who, having been robbed of his belongings, is obliged
to ask his unjust despoiler for at least the use of them.
In truth, the danger of formal cooperation, or of
any approval whatever of the present law, is removed, as far as is necessary,
by the protests energetically expressed by this Apostolic See, by the whole
Episcopate, and by the people of Mexico. To these are added the precautions
of the Priest himself, who although already appointed to the Sacred Ministry
by his own Bishop, is obliged to ask the Government for the possibility
of holding Divine Service, and far from approving the law that unjustly
imposes such a request, submits to it materially, as the saying is, and
only in order to remove an obstacle to the exercise of the Sacred Ministry;
an obstacle that would lead, as we have said, to a total cessation of worship,
and hence to exceedingly great harm to innumerable souls. In much
the same manner the faithful and the Sacred Ministers of the early Church,
as history relates, sought permission, by means of gifts even, to visit
and comfort the martyrs detained in prison and to administer the Sacraments
to them; yet surely no one could have thought that by so doing they in
some way approved or justified the conduct of the persecutors.
Warns Against Disobedience And Obstinacy
Such is the certain and safe Doctrine of the Church.
If, however, the putting of it into practice should cause scandal to some
of the faithful, it will be your duty, Venerable Brethren, to enlighten
them carefully and exactly. If after you have performed this office
of explanation and persuasion, accordiing to these Our directions, anyone
should cling stubbornly to his own false opinion, let him know that he
can hardly escape the reproach of disobedience and obstinacy.
Let all then continue in that unity of purpose and
obedience that We have praised in the Clergy on another occasion at length
and with lively satisfaction. And putting aside all uncertainties
and fears, easily understood in the first moments of the persecution, let
the Priests with their proved spirit of abnegation render ever more intense
their Sacred Ministry, particularly among the young and the common people,
striving to carry on a work of persuasion and of the Church, who combat
Her because they do not know Her.
Recommends Further Extension Of Catholic Action
And here we recommend anew a point that We have
greatly at heart, viz., the necessity of instituting and furthering to
an ever greater extent Catholic Action, according to the directions
communicated at Our command by Our Apostolic Delegate. This is undoubtedly
a difficult undertaking in its first stages, and especially in the present
circumstances, an undertaking slow at times in producing the desired effects,
but necessary and much more efficacious than any other means, as is abundantly
proved by the experience of every nation that has been tried in the crucible
of Religious persecution.
To Our beloved Mexican sons We recommend with all
Our heart the closest union with the Church and the Hierarchy, manifesting
it by their docility to Her teachings and directions. Let them not
neglect to have recourse to the Sacraments, sources of Grace and strength:
let them instruct themselves in the Truths of Religion; let them inplore
mercy from God on their unhappy nation; and let them make it both a duty
and an honor to cooperate with the Apostolate of the Priesthood in the
ranks of Catholic Action.
Gives Praise To Clergy And Laity
We wish to pay a special tribute of praise to those
members of the Clergy, Secular and Regular, and of the Catholic laity,
who, moved by burning zeal for Religion and maintaining themselves
in close obedience to this Apostolic See, have written glorious pages in
the recent history of the Church in Mexico. At the same time We exhort
them earnestly in the Lord to continue to defend the Sacred rights of the
Church with that generous abnegation of which they have given such
a splendid example, always following the norms laid down by this Apostolic
See.
We cannot conclude without turning in a very special
manner to you, Venerable Brethren, who are the faithful interpreters of
Our thoughts. We wish to tell you that We feel all the more closely
united to you, in proportion to the hardships you are meeting with in your
Apostolic Ministry. We are certain that, being so close to the heart
of the Vicar of Christ, you will draw comfort and strength from this knowledge
to persevere in the holy and arduous enterprise of leading to salvation
the flock entrusted to you.
And that the Grace of God may ever assist you and
His mercy support you, with all Paternal affection We impart to you and
to Our beloved sons so sorely tried, the Apostolic Benediction.
Given at Romee, at Saint Peter's, on the Feast of
the Dedication of Saint Michael, the Archangel, the twenty-ninth day of
September, in the year 1932, the eleventh of Our Pontificate.
POPE PIUS XI
DESCRIPTION OF MAGNIFICENT
PAPAL CORONATION
As Peter was given a new name so does the
new Supreme Pontiff become known by another. After the election he
extends his first blessing to the people -- a Benediction which was not
given in the open for years until Pope Pius XI established the custom.
The Coronation, one of the most magnificent of
Vatican Ceremonies, takes place shortly after the election. With
the Pope carried high in a golden chair and attended by brilliantly attired
chamberlains and soldiers, the Coronation Mass is an unrivaled spectacle
of beauty, dignity, and ancient pageantry. At the Coronation, in
the midst of the pomp and splendor, a master of ceremonies recites in Latin:
"Holy Father, thus does the glory of the world pass away." As the
first Cardinal Deacon places the three-crowned Tiara on the head of the
Pope, he says: "Receive the three-crowned Tiara, and know that thou are
the Father of Princes and Kings, the Pastor of the earth, and Vicar of
Jesus Christ, to Whom be honor and glory forever. Amen."
The CORONATION of Pope Pius XII took place on
the balcony of St. Peter's in March 1939. (From the book "The
Vatican and Holy Year" by Stephen S. Fenichell & Phillip Andrews. --
1950 edition.)
(Tradition is an equal part [along with the Bible] of the Authoritative Teaching of the Church -- From the book "The Immaculate Way" by Brian Farrely, S.S.M. -- 1963 edition.)
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