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papal encyclicals - some extracts: on socialism and liberalism

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papal encyclicals and marx - some extracts: on socialism and liberalism gives extracts from papal encyclicals that are critical of its competing religion, socialism.
This page is one in a series of supporting resources for other briefing documents that analyse dysfunctional social, or group, behaviour in modern society.
précis of the communist manifesto and extracts from Das Capital
papal encyclicals and marx - some extracts: on socialism and liberalism
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Papal encyclicals and associated documents, with chronology of associated Popes
 
Pope Pius IX, June 16, 1846 – February 7, 1878
1849: nostis nobiscum
1864: the syllabus of errors / syllabus errorum
Leo XIII, February 20, 1878 - July 20, 1903
1879: on socialism / quod apostolici muneris —‘the deadly plague’
1891: on capital and labor / rerum novarum
Pius X, August 4, 1903 – August 20, 1914
1907: syllabus condemning the errors of the modernists / lamentabili sane
1910: the oath against modernism
Benedict XV, September 3, 1914 – January 22, 1922
Pius XI, February 6, 1922 – February 10, 1939

1931: Quadragesimo Anno
Pius XII, March 2, 1939 – October 9, 1958
John XXII, October 28, 1958 – June 3, 1963
Pope Paul VI, June 21, 1963 – Aug. 6, 1978
Pope John Paul II, Oct. 16, 1978 –

End notes

'Y'

 

Papal encyclicals
and associated documents, with chronology of associated Popes

The Church of Rome has long been an implacable foe of ‘liberalism’, or independent thought. It has tended to identify liberalism with freemasonry. It has also, with good cause, disparaged socialism from early in the development of Marxist socialism.

I shall place my comments on papal encyclicals, published from the mid-1800s onwards, into three groups:

  1. The Roman Catholic Church’s attacks on socialism.
    This later includes the Vatican’s approach to mitigating abuse of the poorer classes.
    (Socialism was responding to real abuses with simplistic nostrums.)
  2. Continual and continuing attacks on a liberal, or free, society.
  3. The Church’s preoccupation with sex. This can be seen, for instance, in the section on marriage in the Ecumenical Councils and the rise and fall of the Church of Rome (Roman Catholic Church) and in the section on Manicheanism in Heresies: ‘heresy’, authority, quarrels and words.
    Gradually, the Church of Rome is adapting, but there are similar sexual preoccupations in modern Islam.
    An early response by the socialist camp to the sexual preccupations can be seen in the section on bourgeois marriage in the Communist Party Manifesto.return to contents

 


Pope Pius IX June 16, 1846 – February 7, 1878

This was the Pope who, in 1870, declared the Pope (himself!) to be infallible.

1849: nostis et nobiscum Pope Pius IX
Written the year following the publication of the Communist Manifesto

18. As regards this teaching and these theories, it is now generally known that the special goal of their proponents is to introduce to the people the pernicious fictions of Socialism and Communism by misapplying the terms "liberty" and "equality." The final goal shared by these teachings, whether of Communism or Socialism, even if approached differently, is to excite by continuous disturbances workers and others, especially those of the lower class, whom they have deceived by their lies and deluded by the promise of a happier condition. They are preparing them for plundering, stealing, and usurping first the Church's and then everyone's property. After this they will profane all law, human and divine, to destroy divine worship and to subvert the entire ordering of civil societies.

6. You are aware indeed, that the goal of this most iniquitous plot is to drive people to overthrow the entire order of human affairs and to draw them over to the wicked theories of this Socialism and Communism, by confusing them with perverted teachings. But these enemies realize that they cannot hope for any agreement with the Catholic Church, which allows neither tampering with truths proposed by faith, nor adding any new human fictions to them. This is why they try to draw the Italian people over to Protestantism, which in their deceit they repeatedly declare to be only another form of the same true religion of Christ, thereby just as pleasing to God. Meanwhile they know full well that the chief principle of the Protestant tenets, i.e., that the holy scriptures are to be understood by the personal judgment of the individual, will greatly assist their impious cause. They are confident that they can first misuse the holy scriptures by wrong interpretation to spread their errors and claim God's authority while doing it. Then they can cause men to call into doubt the common principles of justice and honor.

25. But if the faithful scorn both the fatherly warnings of their pastors and the commandments of the Christian Law recalled here, and if they let themselves be deceived by the present-day promoters of plots, deciding to work with them in their perverted theories of Socialism and Communism, let them know and earnestly consider what they are laying up for themselves. The Divine Judge will seek vengeance on the day of wrath. Until then no temporal benefit for the people will result from their conspiracy, but rather new increases of misery and disaster. For man is not empowered to establish new societies and unions which are opposed to the nature of mankind. If these conspiracies spread throughout Italy there can only be one result: if the present political arrangement is shaken violently and totally ruined by reciprocal attacks of citizens against citizens by their wrongful appropriations and slaughter, in the end some few, enriched by the plunder of many, will seize supreme control to the ruin of all. return to contents


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1864: the syllabus of errors / syllabus errorum Pope Pius IX

Remember, these attitudes are condemned as errors!

14. Philosophy is to be treated without taking any account of supernatural revelation.
15. Every man is free to embrace and profess that religion which, guided by the light of reason, he shall consider true.
16. Man may, in the observance of any religion whatever, find the way of eternal salvation, and arrive at eternal salvation.
24. The Church has not the power of using force, nor has she any temporal power, direct or indirect.
27. The sacred ministers of the Church and the Roman pontiff are to be absolutely excluded from every charge and dominion over temporal affairs.
55. The Church ought to be separated from the .State, and the State from the Church.
74. Matrimonial causes and espousals belong by their nature to civil tribunals.
77. In the present day it is no longer expedient that the Catholic religion should be held as the only religion of the State, to the exclusion of all other forms of worship.
80. The Roman Pontiff can, and ought to, reconcile himself, and come to terms with progress, liberalism and modern civilization.

Note: from Quibus quantisque, 1849. (This encyclical/allocution probably applies to freemasons. Unfortunately, no copy in English has yet been located.)

64. The violation of any solemn oath, as well as any wicked and flagitious action repugnant to the eternal law, is not only not blamable but is altogether lawful and worthy of the highest praise when done through love of country.

In the jargon of the Church of the time, ‘rationalism’ was reason without faith; whereas ‘fideism’ was faith without reason and identified with fundamentalism. The Church tended to identify ‘rationalists’ and freemasons as the hated ‘liberals’. ‘Rationalism’, together with ‘fideism’, were determined upon as the errors of ‘modernism’.return to contents


1870: the Pope is declared infallible [see also Pius IX]

Pastor aeternus, which was approved by Vatican I on July 18, 1870, defined the extent and limits of papal infallibility. Chapter 4, section 9 states:

Therefore, faithfully adhering to the tradition received from the beginning of the christian faith, to the glory of God our savior, for the exaltation of the Catholic religion and for the salvation of the christian
people, with the approval of the Sacred Council, we teach and define as a divinely revealed dogma that when the Roman Pontiff speaks EX CATHEDRA, that is, when, in the exercise of his office as shepherd and teacher of all Christians, in virtue of his supreme apostolic authority, he defines a doctrine concerning faith or morals to be held by the whole Church, he possesses, by the divine assistance promised to him in blessed Peter, that infallibility which the divine Redeemer willed his Church to enjoy in defining doctrine concerning faith or morals. Therefore, such definitions of the Roman Pontiff are of themselves, and not by the consent of the Church, irreformable.return to contents


Leo XIII February 20, 1878 - July 20, 1903

1879: on socialism / quod apostolici muneris —‘the deadly plague’

At the very beginning of Our pontificate, as the nature of Our apostolic office demanded, we hastened to point out in an encyclical letter addressed to you, venerable brethren, the deadly plague that is creeping into the very fibers of human society and leading it on to the verge of destruction; at the same time We pointed out also the most effectual remedies by which society might be restored and might escape from the very serious dangers which threaten it. But the evils which We then deplored have so rapidly increased that We are again compelled to address you, as though we heard the voice of the prophet ringing in Our ears: "Cry, cease not, lift up thy voice like a trumpet."[1] You understand, venerable brethren, that We speak of that sect of men who, under various and almost barbarous names, are called socialists, communists, or nihilists, and who, spread over all the world, and bound together by the closest ties in a wicked confederacy, no longer seek the shelter of secret meetings, but, openly and boldly marching forth in the light of day, strive to bring to a head what they have long been planning -- the overthrow of all civil society whatsoever.

The Roman Catholic Church is, of course, a major long term enemy of freedom, but it has not proven nearly as dangerous as socialism.

Socialism dehumanises, and that is what Rome recognised from very early on. Socialism has also been responsible for ginormous amounts of social disruption (and for deaths by the 10s of millions). This again was recognised, and even predicted, very early on by Rome.

But the Church has also been a major enemy of liberalism, a dire fault it shares with socialism.

On balance, however, socialism has proven to be a much greater enemy of humanity.

The major enemy identified by the Church, in its fight against liberalism, was freemasonry rather than socialism. Socialism is more authoritarian even than the Church.return to contents

 

The Church has also however responded to the real concerns regarding the conditions of workers often expressed by socialism

1891: on capital and labour / rerum novarum, Pope Leo XIII

Rerum Novarum is regarded among catholic apologists, with almost overweening pride, as showing the deep concerns of the Church for the poor and oppressed. A tract that is vaunted as ‘modern’. It is from Rerum Novarum and later, that the idea of the corporative state was developed. The corporative state is supposed to work from the bottom of society upwards, with unions and business organisations regarded as legitimate expressions of the individual. The theory tends to assume that, by working together, individuals, families and such organisations can be part of the state without serious conflict. Of course, this does not prove so, as various individuals and interests jockey for advantage.

The corporative state is often confused with the corporate state of socialism. Individuals in the socialist corporate state are its creatures, and the state is a beehive where individuals and their interests must be strictly subject to the state. In both cases, the reality tends to end at similar points with top-down government, lack of freedom, and predictable poverty.

But the dogma behind these models is seriously different. The Church is far more humanity-oriented and tends to kill far less. Socialism is essentially collectivist where the individual has no intrinsic place, individuality or value. Rerum novarum was developed further in 1931.return to contents

 


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Pius X August 4, 1903 – August 20, 1914

1907: syllabus condemning the errors of the modernists / lamentabili sane
Pius X July 3, 1907 (not an encyclical)

With truly lamentable results, our age, casting aside all restraint in its search for the ultimate causes of things, frequently pursues novelties so ardently that it rejects the legacy of the human race. Thus it falls into very serious errors, which are even more serious when they concern sacred authority, the interpretation of Sacred Scripture, and the principal mysteries of Faith. The fact that many Catholic writers also go beyond the limits determined by the Fathers and the Church herself is extremely regrettable. In the name of higher knowledge and historical research (they say), they are looking for that progress of dogmas which is, in reality, nothing but the corruption of dogmas.

Again remember carefully, these attitudes are condemned as errors!

4. Even by dogmatic definitions the Church's magisterium cannot determine the genuine sense of the Sacred Scriptures.
7. In proscribing errors, the Church cannot demand any internal assent from the faithful by which the judgments she issues are to be embraced.
8. They are free from all blame who treat lightly the condemnations passed by the Sacred Congregation of the Index or by the Roman Congregations.
12. If he wishes to apply himself usefully to Biblical studies, the exegete must first put aside all preconceived opinions about the supernatural origin of Sacred Scripture and interpret it the same as any other merely human document.
24. The exegete [interpreter/expounder] who constructs premises from which it follows that dogmas are historically false or doubtful is not to be reproved as long as he does not directly deny the dogmas themselves .
53. The organic constitution of the Church is not immutable. Like human society, Christian society is subject to a perpetual evolution.
56. The Roman Church became the head of all the churches, not through the ordinance of Divine Providence, but merely through political conditions.
64. Scientific progress demands that the concepts of Christian doctrine concerning God, creation, revelation, the Person of the Incarnate Word, and Redemption be re-adjusted.return to contents


1910: the oath against modernism
Pius X September 1, 1910.

This remained in force until recently (I am unsure of the dates, as sources give different dates ranging from 1967 to 1989) when a brief “Profession of Faith” and an “oath of fidelity” was substituted. A modern short and somewhat diluted form, including a short form of the creed, was issued in 1989. A copy can be found here.

To be sworn to by all clergy, pastors, confessors, preachers, religious superiors, and professors in philosophical-theological seminaries.

It begins:

I [...] firmly embrace and accept each and every definition that has been set forth and declared by the unerring teaching authority of the Church, especially those principal truths which are directly opposed to the errors of this day.

After a couple of long paragraphs, it ends thus:

Finally, I declare that I am completely opposed to the error of the modernists who hold that there is nothing divine in sacred tradition; or what is far worse, say that there is, but in a pantheistic sense, with the result that there would remain nothing but this plain simple fact-one to be put on a par with the ordinary facts of history-the fact, namely, that a group of men by their own labor, skill, and talent have continued through subsequent ages a school begun by Christ and his apostles. I firmly hold, then, and shall hold to my dying breath the belief of the Fathers in the charism of truth, which certainly is, was, and always will be in the succession of the episcopacy from the apostles. The purpose of this is, then, not that dogma may be tailored according to what seems better and more suited to the culture of each age; rather, that the absolute and immutable truth preached by the apostles from the beginning may never be believed to be different, may never be understood in any other way.
I promise that I shall keep all these articles faithfully, entirely, and sincerely, and guard them inviolate, in no way deviating from them in teaching or in any way in word or in writing. Thus I promise, this I swear, so help me God.

This oath amounts to swearing to obey orders and never to think independently.return to contents


Benedict XV September 3, 1914 – January 22, 1922

Pius XI February 6, 1922 – February 10, 1939

[1] Quadragesimo Anno / on reconstruction of the social order 1931

Pius XII March 2, 1939 – October 9, 1958

John XXIII October 28, 1958 – June 3, 1963

Pope Paul VI June 21, 1963 – Aug. 6, 1978

Pope John Paul II Oct. 16, 1978 –return to contents


end notes
1
return to contentsQuadragesimo anno
the fortieth year; that is the fortieth year since Rerum novarum

'Y'

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