7 Catholic Church History Part II Viii-End
7 Catholic Church History Part II Viii-End
7 Catholic Church History Part II Viii-End
VIII
Liberal Revolutions
A. Liberalism in General
(1) DEFINITIONS
Liberalism, according to common usage since the French Revolution, has in general
connoted freedom of the individual human spirit from social tyranny. The term itself seems to
have first been used in 1811 to designate advocates of the new Spanish Constitution, an imitation
of the revolutionary French document of 1791. It remains, indeed, an elusive and shifting
designation, for though at first it suggested chiefly revolutionary liberation from something, once
established, more recent "Welfare Liberalism" argues about freedom for something. Certain
generic characteristics, however, can be predicated of this movement in its historical setting.
Following Dr. Neill,' these may be enumerated for "Integral Liberalism," or Liberalism in general:
(1) strongly bourgeois membership; (2) capitalistic economic theory; (3) nonconformist attitude
toward religion; (4) a reverence for property; (5) preference for empirical, scientific knowledge; (6)
optimism; (7) rationalism; and (8) a faith in the possibility of unlimited progress.
(2) EVALUATION
Briefly, it may be said that Liberalism's justification or condemnation lies in whether it repudiates
the abuse of authority, or the very principle of authority itself; whether it distinguishes between
infallible divine authority enjoining immutable divine law in the human conscience, or fallible
human government legislating on matters of changing opinion. Liberalism can stand for the
glorious tradition of Western Civilization resisting despotism in the spirit of Herodotus: "Though
the Greeks are freemen, they are not free in every respect. Law is the master they own, and this
master they fear more than thy subjects fear you." Widely as they may have differed on other
points, on such grounds even Herbert Hoover and Franklin Delano Roosevelt might find
themselves in agreement. Yet since the French Revolution, Integral Liberalism-Liberalism
unqualified as to species or degree-has indeed taken on a pejorative sense in Church history,
even if not always deserving of Sarda y Salvani's uncompromising phrase: "Liberalismo es
pecado." For many liberals have not understood the classic tradition of "Christian Humanism" and
have been betrayed into sweeping denunciations of all authority, a course which repudiates true
Liberalism as well. Luther and Calvin can be cited both for as well as against religious despotism;
Rousseau was parent alike of Democracy and Fascism; Kant can lead to Nietzsche; some of
Adam Smith's disciples made of his tenets a code of economic oppression; and that great alleged
champion of the common man, Marxism-Leninism, admits that it involves the "dictatorship of the
proletariat." Because of these manifold senses and nuances of Liberalism, accuracy demands a
more thorough inquiry into specific types of Liberalism in the intellectual, political and economic
orders.
B. Theological Liberalism
Historically, during the period now under survey, Pope Pius VI condemned the
aberrations of the Synod of Pistoia by Auctorem Fidei (1794); Leo XII warned against various
rationalist "Bible Societies" in Ubi Primum (1824); Gregory XVI rejected both the Indifferentism of
Lammenais (1832) and the Rationalism of Hermes (1835), while Pius IX summed up for
reprobation all the latitudinarian errors in his Syllabus Errorum (1864). Finally, after reaffirming
Catholic teaching on Faith and reason, the Vatican Council during 1870 flung the definition of
papal infallibility in the face of both dogmatic Liberals and Catholic opportunists.
Influence. Still it must be admitted that some clerics of the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries did meddle in politics. In Latin lands especially, the clergy tended to remain
uncompromising monarchists, basking in and later harking back to the privileged status of the Old
Regime. But in so doing the majority were seeking to uphold ecclesiastical rights over morality,
education, matrimony, etc., which the Liberal war on "throne and altar" endangered. Insofar as
the Liberal program usually embraced divorce, civil marriage, secular schools, and unlimited
tolerance of blasphemy, immorality, and falsity, this majority can scarcely be blamed for their
attitude. Some of these clerics, it is true, were more attached to the material perquisites of their
profession, and this minority by their excesses exposed the whole body to attack. It was
possible, then, for some anticlericals in their indignation against real abuses or selfishness to be
more or less in good faith during the early stages of an anticlerical campaign.
C. Philosophical Liberalism
(1) SUBJECTIVIST TREND
(2) EVALUATION
"The only thing that can be said to the credit of the so-called Liberal philosophers is that ever
since 1850 most of them have realized that the recent extension of positive science to social facts
was bound to bring about this new fatalism. . . . Unfortunately, themselves the sons of Kant and
Hume, they had lost faith in the rational validity of all metaphysical knowledge. Thus, left without
any set of philosophical convictions concerning man, his nature, and his destiny, they had nothing
wherewith to oppose the progressive encroachments of science on the field of human facts. This
is the reason why, for want of a rational metaphysics by which the use of science could be
regulated, the Liberal philosophers had no other choice than to attack science itself and weaken
its absolute rationality. The source of modern Agnosticism is the fear of scientific determinism in
the hearts of men who, by breaking metaphysical Rationalism, had broken the very backbone of
human liberty. . . ."
D. Political Liberalism
(1) THEORY
"In its essence true Liberalism is associated neither with 'progressivism' nor with
'conservatism.' When the existing regime is dominated by autocracy or despotism, the followers
of liberalism are ardent reformers and demand rapid and widespread political changes. When, on
the other hand, a country has a free and democratic government and this government seems
threatened by a drift towards autocracy and despotism, the true liberal is a conservative, resisting
all efforts to overthrow the existing regime. . . . To the present writer it seems clear that Liberalism
as a political creed is a compound of two separate elements. 0ne of these elements is
Democracy, the other is Individualism. Not infrequently these two elements are confused
because of their long association inside the Liberal tradition, but it is well to keep the two
doctrines
clearly separate and distinct. Democracy, of course, means the belief that ultimate political
control should rest with the citizens of the country concerned and more particularly with the
numerical majority of such citizens, rather than be entrusted permanently to a single person or to
any minority group. . . . To be sharply distinguished from Democracy is the doctrine of
Individualism, which implies the right of each person to control his actions as long as he does not
seriously interfere with the liberty or the actions of others."
(2) PRACTICE
E. Economic Liberalism
(1) TRANSITION FROM MERCANTILISM
Corresponding to the political age of absolutism had been an equally prevalent adherence to the
economic theory of Mercantilism, the minute governmental regulation of economic life. But
Francois Quesnay (16941744) and his school of "Physiocrats" came to oppose this notion with
the argument that governmental authority was merely a necessary evil and therefore ought to be
curbed as much as possible. Instead, government should give individual liberty and initiative free
rein. The Physiocrats employed the term laissez faire, and one of their number, Turgot, was
minister of King Louis XVI from 1774 to 1776. In the latter year, moreover, appeared Adam
Smith's book, Wealth of Nations, which gave greater currency to similar doctrines in Great Britain.
"All systems, either of preference or restraint, being thus completely taken away," he concluded,
"the simple and obvious system of natural liberty establishes itself of its own accord." In its
economic aspect, the American Revolution of the same year was a breach in Mercantilism. As
soon as the French Revolution got under way, the most radical economic Liberalism was for a
time proclaimed. Thus during 1791 the Loi Chapelier abolished trade guilds and all professional
societies. At first these changes to individual liberty were chiefly of benefit to the new industrial
capitalists who easily outdistanced poorer individuals in very non-collective bargaining, while the
state remained muzzled.
Theory. "As developed by the classical economists and crystallized in the writings of
Senior, economic Liberalism was a mighty prop to the new industrialists. It maintained that the
'greatest good of the greatest number' would be promoted by encouraging business enterprise
and individual industrial profit, and that such encouragement could best be given through a policy
of laissez faire freedom of trade, freedom of contract, freedom of competition, free operation of
the 'laws' of supply and demand, without interference by government or social groups."';
Laissez-faire maxims may be appraised from the following samples: "The natural price of
labor is that price which is necessary to enable the laborers to subsist and perpetuate their race
without either increase or diminution. . . . There is no means of improving the lot of the worker
except by limiting the number of his children. . . . All legislative interference must be pernicious"
(Ricardo). "The poverty of the incapable, the distresses that come upon the imprudent, the
starvation of the idle, are the decrees of a large, far-seeing benevolence" (Spencer). "The true
gospel concerning wealth . . . is that the law of competition is basic to economic society, divine
and irrevocable . . . because it ensures the survival of the fittest in every department" (Carnegie).
"Godliness is in league with riches. . . . Material prosperity is helping make the national character
sweeter, more joyous, more unselfish, more Christlike" (Protestant prelate of Massachusetts, Dr.
Lawrence). I
Summary. "If we were to characterize modern Western society in a single word, one
such word would unquestionably be Contractualism . . . of economic relationship . . . of
government of the people . . . of religion. . . . Marriage was also made more contractual in its
continuity and dissolution; the family tended to become an increasingly contractual institution.
VIII
Liberal Revolutions
A. Industrial Revolution
Survey of industrial evolution. The first stage was that of the primitive family which co-
operated without specialization in supplying all of its needs. This lasted into the early Middle
Ages, although there are rare survivals today. The second stage is that of handicrafts when the
cultivation of food crops has reached a development sufficient to permit a group of craftsmen to
specialize in the making of articles for sale. This stage, flowering during the twelfth and thirteenth
centuries, requires and stimulates urban growth and improved communications. The craftsman,
however, had a limited market and usually sold directly to the customer without a middleman.
Skill was more important than capital, and associations known as guilds protected good
workmanship and fair dealing. It has been seen that these guild regulations were in an ossified or
decadent condition by the sixteenth century. A third stage appeared during the later Middle Ages
and has been termed the domestic system. Now capitalists and middlemen increase in
importance for supplying raw materials to individual workmen at home, collecting the finished
articles, and marketing them. The workers remained their own masters as to time, tools, and
working conditions, but they became much more dependent on outside merchants. This system
lasted into the eighteenth century and has not yet ceased in all places. A fourth stage was that of
the factory where the worker was required to labor on the employer's terms: in a place and with
tools provided by the latter, and under conditions and for wages largely controlled by the
capitalist. Although factories existed as early as the days of the Roman Empire, full utilization of
such a procedure awaited the introduction of power-driven machinery.
"The term, 'Industrial Revolution,' was first made popular by Arnold Toynbee who chose it
as the title of a course of lectures published after his death in 1884. . . . The industrial
transformation of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries was marked by two outstanding
features, each of which deserves to be qualified as revolutionary: (a) an enormous acceleration in
the rate of economic change; (b) an intensification of the social suffering which has hitherto been
the invariable concomitant of ruthlessly pursued economic progress. . . . In its essence, the
Industrial Revolution means the substitution of industry for agriculture as the principal occupation
of the leading European peoples. . . . The immediate causes of this great transformation were
mainly two: (a) the opening up of new markets by the expansion of overseas trade; (b) the
development of mass machine methods of production. . . . The marks of an industrialized state
are: (a) a high degree of urbanization; (b) a large industrial population; (c) an excess of imports
over exports in regard to food and raw materials; (d) conversely, an excess of exports over
imports in regard to manufactures."
B. Financial Revolution
(1) INDUSTRIAL CAPITALISM
Capitalism, of course, had long been in existence in banking and commerce, but its
widespread application to revolutionary industrial conditions produced remarkable developments
in their turn. Briefly, the equipment required for the new industrialism soon exhausted the
resources of even the larger individual fortunes, and necessitated a pooling of fortunes in the
joint-stock company or corporation. In England the building of railways and subsequently
exploitation of the resources of economically retarded countries abroad, evoked the British
investment market under the lead of the Rothschilds and Barings. In 1844 the Bank Charter Act
gave the Bank of England an eventual monopoly on note issues, and in 1855 the British
Companies Act securely established industrial capitalism by granting limited liability to all joint-
stock concerns in industry.
The corporation--or societe anonyme as the French aptly termed it unfortunately tended
to diffuse responsibility among too numerous and too scattered a body of stockholders to allow
for personal interest or even democratic control. Large numbers of investors were not interested
in the industry, its methods, policies, or morals, but solely in their dividends and profits. British
investments led the way, both at home and abroad, but other industrialized countries quickly
organized in similar fashion. Economic imperialism became an important factor in international
politics now on a global scale, and economic imperialism could easily evolve into war.
British endorsement. Adam Smith had begun the attack on the mercantilist theory of
protection of home industries, but his views, however acceptable to the merchants, at first
clashed with those of the landowners. The latter insisted on subsidies known as the
Spenhamland System in England, and laid on imported grains high tariffs known as the Corn
Laws. Industrialists and merchants argued, however, that Great Britain's superior resources and
start in industry and trade could enable her to win such profits in the international market that
these would more than offset the need to import foodstuffs. With the abolition of the Corn Laws in
1846 Great Britain began to opt for "free trade," a policy which she quite consistently followed into
the twentieth century. England ceased to be predominantly agricultural and entrusted her
economic destiny almost entirely to coal and iron, factory and power plant, railway and
steamship.
Other countries, if they viewed British prosperity with an envious eye, were long so far
behind in the industrial transformation that they continued to resort with fair consistency to
protective tariffs. In Germany, Friedrich List explicitly challenged the prevalent theory of free
trade, and manufacturers in the United States joined farmers in demanding protective duties on
many items.
C. Social Consequences
Urban distress. The Agrarian Revolution had already displaced a considerable number of
English laborers from rural areas, and had driven them to the cities. The Industrial Revolution
accentuated this trend. Again social evils arose while profits went to the few. There resulted
overcrowding of cities, slums, disease, drunkenness, vice, lack of education, low wages, long
hours of labor, unsanitary and unpleasant working conditions, exploitation of female and child
labor at inappropriate tasks. For a time the workman was completely at the employer's mercy, for
until 1833 in England the Government abided quite strictly by the new laissez faire economic
theory-and Great Britain was the first country that made any departure from this prevailing
dogma. Hence the artisan, in company with the ex-farmer, lost all economic independence. He
became a laborer, dependent on the wage paid him by the employer-if the latter chose to employ
him. The very numbers of those in this condition deprived individual employees of bargaining
power. Individualists for centuries, rural and domestic workers did not know how to organize;
scattered attempts in this direction were severely repressed by governments dominated by the
industrial or agrarian capitalists. Thus for years laborers worked as long as there was light-
sixteen hours were not unknown. Crowded into boom towns with medieval facilities, any time off
tended to be spent exclusively in eating and sleeping-and drinking to escape troubles that
stretched without seeming end.
Case histories reported by parliamentary investigations during the first half of the
nineteenth century give some picture of the resulting misery. We learn that Matthew Crabtree
worked in the factory since he was eight years old, ordinarily from 6 A.M. to 8 P.m., and from 5 to
9 when trade was brisk. He had to walk two miles to the factory and was beaten if late. Although
the overseer was not unusually vicious, someone was being beaten in the factory hourly. No
wonder that Matthew returned to supper and at once went to bed. Elizabeth Bentley was beaten
if she was late or flagged at her work; indeed, all the boys and girls there were flogged. She
could not eat in the factory because there was too much dust, and the foreman would give her
food to the pigs. Let Sarah Gooder, aged eight, speak for herself: "I'm a trapper in the Gawber
pit. It does not tire me, but I have to trap without a light and I'm scared. I go at four and
sometimes half past three in the morning, and come out at five and half-past. I never go to sleep.
Sometimes I sing when I've light, but not in the dark; I dare not sing then. I don't like being in the
pit. I'm very sleepy when I go sometimes in the morning. I go to Sunday school and read
Reading Made Easy. . . . They teach me to pray: 'God bless my father and mother, and sister and
brother, and everybody else, and God bless me and make me a good servant. Amen.' I have
beard tell of Jesus many a time. I don't know why He came on earth, I'm sure, and I don't know
why He died, but He had stones for His head to rest on." 11 From an instance such as this it is
easy to surmise the origin of the Marxist slur: "Religion is the opiate of the people" -however
grossly inaccurate it is as a generalization even of nineteenth century morals.
In England, governmental bodies were controlled until 1832 by the alliance of Tory
squires and Whig merchants and industrialists. Their rivalry and spite-aside from humanitarian
sentiments-sometimes resulted in departures from the classic laissez faire role for government.
Intervention began halfheartedly in 1802, but it was not until after the 1833 Factory Act that there
was effective enforcement of a ban on child labor under nine and limitation of minors to a twelve
hour day. Even so, protection of the underprivileged did not really get under way until after 1850.
France made laws limiting the working day to a twelve hour maximum as early as 1841,
but since no inspectors were provided to enforce the law until 1874, little or no protection was
given the laborers.
Prussia had a child labor law in 1839, though it also was scarcely enforced adequately
until 1853. Bismarck was the first European statesman to give labor a general code, and this was
during the 1880's.
Eventually, as is well-known, even the most laissez faire of theorists departed from
Manchester School Individualism to invoke governmental protection for the working classes. But
this did not happen before Marx and Engels had issued a fateful summons to desperate men:
"Workers of the world unite; you have nothing to lose but your chains" (Communist Manifesto,
1848).
VIII
Liberal Revolutions
The American Revolution left Great Britain temporarily disillusioned about the advantages
of empire. The mercantilist tenet of the Whig commercial oligarchy was discredited, and the
Tories entered into a parliamentary supremacy which lasted almost unbroken from 1783 to 1830.
Their premier, William Pitt II, was, indeed, an able war minister, but after his death in 1806 Tory
rule degenerated into mere standatism. The rise of new industrial magnates, still unenfrancbised,
created a new cause for the Whigs to champion, and the grossly unequal system of parliamentary
representation came in for repeated denunciations. War conditions enabled the Government to
repress would-be reformers with a heavy hand, but removal of the Napoleonic menace in 1815
unleashed the full force of political and social discontent. Early labor agitation evoked (1819) the
"Manchester Massacre" and "Six Repressive Acts" which invaded traditional English rights of
freedom from search, of assembly, of speech and the press.
After the suicide of the ultra-conservative Castlereagh in 1822, however, moderate Tories
came to the fore. Canning as foreign minister abandoned the Metternich system to abet foreign
Liberalism, while Huskinson as president of the Board of Trade modified mercantilist restrictions.
But these efforts to appease the demand for parliamentary reform by concessions on other points
merely postponed the issue. The Whigs won the 1830 elections and after two years of tense
struggle pushed through the Reform Act of 1832 which redistributed parliamentary seats so as to
give some representation to the industrial boom towns. Only wealthy industrialists profited by this
modification, however, for the proportion of voters still remained about one in twenty-two. The
reform, then, was far from producing Democracy, although it was Liberalism, and at long last it
dethroned the oligarchy which had dominated England since the "Glorious Revolution" of 1689.
(2) POLITICAL FACTORS FOR TOLERANCE
The failure in 1745 of the last attempt at a Stuart restoration had removed Hanoverian
dread of Jacobites-which Catholics were all supposed to be. Acquisition of numerous Catholic
subjects for the British crown in Canada had dictated a certain toleration (1763; 1774) in order to
conserve their loyalty, especially during and after the American Revolution. British statesmen
understood the danger that Ireland might imitate the Americans, and realized that concessions to
Catholicity might allay part of the Celtic grievance. The Napoleonic Wars, moreover, had found
Great Britain allied with the Papal States, and during the whole period of the French Revolution
many French priests fled to England as refugees. These cultured gentlemen conducted
themselves decorously-some were even hired as tutors-and thus seemed to have more in
common with British "respectability" than with their fanatical persecutors, the sans-culottes. All in
all, despite their traditional prejudices, Englishmen moved haltingly toward emancipation for
Catholics because such a course was in accord with political expediency and a spirit of
compromise. These political factors were paralleled by a new interest in religion in British lands.
On the one hand the progress of Deism among the commercial and industrial classes made them
less interested in the suppression of any one type of supernatural religion. On the other hand,
the excesses of the French Revolution in the direction of atheism shocked the Anglicans and the
earnest newly-formed Methodists. A menace of anarchy and godlessness had arisen, and
conservative Protestants became less averse to extending the "Christian Front" to include
Catholics-whom none could accuse of latitudinarianism.
Relief Act of 1778. By 1778 the English Catholics constituted a minority of some sixty
thousand, served by 350 priests. Although strict enforcement of the Penal Code against
Catholics had waned, as late as 1771 Father Maloney had had a death sentence commuted to
deportation. During the manifold difficulties of the American Revolution a group of English
Catholics, headed by the duke of Norfolk, were emboldened to send an address of loyalty to the
king. This was particularly welcome after the disaster at Saratoga (1777), and Edmund Burke,
whose wife was a Catholic, had no great difficulty in steering a modest Relief Bill through
parliament. In May, 1778, this passed both houses of parliament and received the signature of
King George III. This measure did away with the &-100 reward for informers against Catholic
priests and schoolmasters, and abolished the penalty of life imprisonment for these two
categories in the event of their conviction. Although Catholics were not yet permitted to hear
Mass publicly, they were given to understand by the government that they would not be disturbed
during peaceable worship in private chapels and homes. Catholics were now allowed to bold,
purchase, and inherit real estate without fear that an apostate among the heirs might claim the
whole inheritance. Yet they remained excluded from all official, legal and military positions, and
were obliged to a double tax on land.
Flare-up of bigotry. Bitter popular opposition to the Relief Act in London was in marked
contrast to the official attitude. The somewhat unbalanced Lord George Gordon stirred up a mob
to burn and pillage Catholic properties while other agitators tried to intimidate parliament with
monster petitions. The city magistrates refused to take action, and disorder was finally halted by
the king's personal intervention. After the regular soldiers had fired upon the mob, more than a
hundred casualties were reported before quiet was restored. Eventually Catholics were
indemnified financially by the government and the City of London. But in Scotland popular
opposition became so violent that the 1778 Relief Act could not be put into force until 1793, and
bigotry lingered longer there.
Relief Act of 1791. The wealthier Catholics were now intent on removal of civil and social
disabilities. But their disposition to gain concessions at the cost of a compromising oath of
allegiance threatened a rift between "cisalpine" and "ultramontane" Catholics: those suspicious of
or zealous for papal direction. During 1782 the lay leaders formed a "Catholic Committee" which
in 1788 requested further relief. They assured Prime Minister Pitt that they considered papal
infallibility and theocratic powers of no effect in Great Britain. In place of the existing Test and
Supremacy Oaths, they proposed a new formula in which the aforesaid papal prerogatives were
branded as "impious, heretical and damnable." The Catholic clergy, led by Bishop Walmesley, for
the most part condemned the proposed oath, and eventually suggested as the lesser of two evils
the Irish Oath of 1774 which confined itself to a simple rejection of papal secular jurisdiction and
deposing powers in regard to the British crown. Although not entirely unobjectionable, this
formula was not, like the committee's proposal, proxima haeresi. The Anglican prelate, Dr.
Horsley, advised Pitt to reject the lay formula for the clerical one, and the Prime Minister, who
sought to pacify and not provoke Catholics, followed this course. On July 24, 1791, a new
Catholic Belief Act provided that those who pronounced the new oath were henceforth immune
from prosecution for their religion or priesthood. Catholic chapels were now recognized as legal
places of worship, provided that their location was signified to the government, and they did not
manifest the external appearance of a church-which, it seems, essentially consisted in steeple
and bell. Catholic children might now be tutored in their religion, although Catholic schools were
not formally authorized. The legal profession was opened to Catholics, but the civil and military
services remained closed. Catholic marriages and funerals were still to be held in Anglican
churches.
Relief Bill of 1813. English and Irish Catholics were now united under a single political
regime and the right of suffrage became a common goal. Unfortunately its acquisition was
delayed by disagreement as to means. The English Catholic Committee persisted in seeking
political enfranchisement from parliament by offering ultra-liberal concessions regarding
subjection to the Holy See. In 1813 Charles Butler, secretary of the English Committee, and
Henry Grattan, a conciliatory Irish Protestant leader, sponsored a Relief Bill which proposed to
allow the British government a veto on papal nomination of bishops throughout the United
Kingdom, and some regulation of hierarchical communication with the Holy See. The Irish
hierarchy resolutely opposed emancipation on such conditions, and were vehemently supported
by the English vicar-apostolic, John Milner. Schism was never nearer than when the Catholic
Committee censured and expelled Milner who, however cornbative and tactless, was a Catholic
bishop. The English Committee did receive a vague endorsement of their plan from Monsignor
Quarantotti, locum tenens of the Congregation of Propaganda, during the detention of Pius VII
and his advisors in France. On his return from captivity, however, the pope repudiated the
concession. Both the Irish hierarchy and the Cisalpines tried to influence the Holy See in their
favor in none too deferential terms, and the controversy lasted for years. In 1821 William Plunkett
did pass a Relief Bill incorporating the proposed veto through Commons, but fortunately it was
thrown out by the House of Lords. The prolonged agitation had revealed sad disagreement
between English and Irish Catholics, or rather, between "Old Catholics," wealthy aristocrats
whose grievances were largely political and social, and the rank and file who suffered economic
discrimination as well. The "Cisalpine" attitude, which stopped just short of schism, was yet to
give the Catholic Church in England some anxious moments, but like French Gallicanism it died
with the Vatican definition of papal primacy.
Final struggle. The association continued to gain strength and in 1826 O'Connell steeled
the Irish tenants to oust the incumbent Beresford from a safe parliamentary borough and to
threaten many others. During 1828 he himself defeated Fitz Gerald in Clare, announcing: "The
oath at present required by law is: 'That the Sacrifice of the Mass and invocation of the Blessed
Virgin Mary and other saints, as now practiced in the Church of Rome, are impious and
idolatrous.' Of course, I will never stain my soul by such an oath. I leave that to my honorable
opponent, Mr. Vesey FitzGerald. He has often taken that horrible oath." Thus, though clearly the
choice of his constituents for a seat in the British parliament, O'Connell demonstrated that he was
barred from taking office on religious grounds. This point be dramatized on the floor Of
Commons to Englishmen priding themselves on "fair play." The Point was made.
British surrender. O'Connell's electoral victories made British politician, aware that some
concession would be required. In a last ditch stand against all forms of Liberalism, the Tories put
the premiership in the hands of the duke of Wellington. But Wellington, experienced in civil strife
from the Spanish peninsula, advised against forcible repression of the Irish movement-the
peacefulness and sobriety of which O'Connell had taken pains to emphasize. The Clare election
convinced Wellington that he was fairly beaten, and with a soldier's scorn of political maneuvers
prepared to surrender. in this be was supported by Robert Peel, at least on grounds of
expediency. At first King George IV, deserter of a lawful Catholic wife, refused to sanction this
proposal. Thereupon Wellington and Peel resigned. When the king learned that his only
alternative was to summon a yet more detested foe, a Whig ministry, he recalled the Tories. After
much haggling over terms and pleading of his "conscience," the king finally gave his reluctant
signature on April 13, 1829, to an act granting emancipation to British Catholics.
(2) NATURE OF. EMANCIPATION
Content of the Act. An oath of allegiance, acceptable to all Catholics, was now
substituted for the Test and Corporation Acts. Thereby all offices under the crown and all
legislative positions were opened to Catholics with the following exceptions. The Act of
Succession still required the king to be a Protestant and-until 1910-obliged him to make a
"Protestant Declaration" repudiating Transubstantiation, etc. Catholics were also denied the
posts of Lord Chancellor, Lord Keeper of the Seal, and Viceroy of Ireland-which last has ceased
to exist. To placate bigotry several nuisance riders obliged religious to notify the civil authorities
of their whereabouts, forbade religious processions outside churches, and still denied Catholic
churches steeples and bells.
Operation of the Act. When some Catholics wished to reject the concession for these
latter reasons, O'Connell shrewdly pointed out that the British government was merely trying to
save face and had no serious intention of enforcement. This proved largely true in the Sequel,
and the obnoxious appendices had generally fallen into disuse by the time that they were formally
repealed in 1927. O'Connell was re-elected and took his seat in parliament, though preceded
there by Howard, earl of Surrey, first acknowledged Catholic in Commons since the Elizabethan
era. Requirements regarding Catholic marriage in Anglican churches were modified in 1835, and
Catholics, though tinder governmental surveillance until 1898, could thereafter be legally married
before a priest. Paradoxically, emancipation temporarily disenfranchised 190,000 of the 40
shilling freeholders by whose support O'Connell had wona bargain of which he beard much
subsequently. On the whole, however, if popular bigotry was far from stilled, Catholics were now
legally emancipated throughout Great Britain, and by implication, Sts. John Fisher, Thomas
More, and their martyred associates were again "His Majesty's loyal opposition."
VIII
Liberal Revolutions
A Revolution
A basic political cause of the American Revolution was Britain's desire to rule the colonies
primarily, if not exclusively, for the benefit of the mother country. This attitude of British aristocrats
was an outcome of the "sacred egoism" of sovereign states following the breakdown of medieval
Christendom. Great Britain had profited most by the disruption of the Theocracy, and her
successful career, as judged by materialistic norms, was hailed as vindication of the
Machiavellian new order. In 1763 she had emerged as victor and seemingly master in both
America and India. Yet within a generation her selfish policy had received a stinging rebuke, and
it might be regarded as fitting that this was delivered by those who secured some of their
philosophic ammunition, although unconsciously and indirectly, from Scholastic sources.
An initial aspect was economic, for British merchants were pursuing the theory of
Mercantilism which regarded colonies as chattels to enrich the mother country: they were to trade
exclusively with Great Britain. Thus the lion's share of profits would go to the British commercial
oligarchy, whatever might be the hardships imposed upon the American
Colonies. Though the administration of these Colonies did cost the British government
£350,000 annually by 1764, British merchants were realizing simultaneously a yearly profit from
these same Colonies of £2,000,000. The only loss was through American smuggling to the
French and Spanish West Indies-where alone the colonists could make a profit. This drain upon
British revenues certain statesmen were now resolved to plug.
Taxation of the Colonies to ease the British Exchequer was the aim of Grenville, expert
financier but no politician. His Revenue Act of 1764 after (1) asserting a parliamentary right to tax
Americans; (2) levied duties on sugar and other luxuries; and (3) tightened tip on enforcement of
customs upon erstwhile smugglers. But in 1765 Grenville's Stamp Act crystallized American
opposition, and a "Virginia Resolution"-widely circulated if never formally adopted-asserted that
colonists were not obliged to obey any tax not imposed by their own assembly. A colonial boycott
proved so effective that the British merchants themselves advocated repeal as a strategic retreat.
But in 1767 Townshend raised the same basic issue with new import duties, and colonial
assemblies in New York and Massachusetts were dissolved in an evident effort to discipline the
colonies.
"Legal rights" accordingly became the subject of the hour. The best legal authorities in
England and America had declared that equality before the law was the common birthright of all
Englishmen, even when transplanted to America. "No taxation without representation,"
Hutchinson contended, in rebutting the English rejoinder that the average Englishman was not
represented in the British parliament, did not mean that every individual had to be represented,
but every "interest." While urban and rural England were collectively represented in parliament,
Americans lacked any spokesman. This complaint might have been met by Pitt's anticipation of a
"British Commonwealth" or by an imperial parliament, and had such ideas been proposed in time
they could well have been acceptable to most Americans. For the colonists did not deny a certain
"equality in subordination" to the mother country, and they revered the majesty of the crown until
the king's obstinacy alienated them. What Americans objected to were: (1) abuse of authority by
writs of assistance, breaking up of assemblies, suspension of colonial legislation, excessive trade
restrictions; (2) discriminatory legislation extending admiralty and martial law beyond limits set by
English constitutional norms; and (3) the claim of the British parliament to universal, absolute
jurisdiction in "all cases whatsoever."
"Natural rights" were also invoked to interpret the British Constitution, or if need be, to
assert it as a "higher law." Samuel Adams maintained that the "British Constitution . . . is founded
on the law of God and nature," and not in "positive law, which would indeed give parliament an
ultimate and therefore a despotic authority." Since "it is an essential natural right that a man shall
quietly enjoy and have sole disposal of his property," the Americans share this right equally with
Englishmen. Bostonians, complaining against soldiers and customs officials, proclaimed that
they possessed "natural rights" to 'life, liberty, and property."
The Boston Tea Party, December 16, 1773, provided the spark for this inflammable
atmosphere. Taking the concession of a tea monopoly to the East India Company as an added
insult, Bostonians tossed a large consignment into the harbor, reminding all concerned that "we
are not Sepoys or Marattas, but British subjects born to liberty." When the British government
closed the port of Boston, the American colonies, hitherto all too individualistic, rallied to the
support of Massachusetts. On September 5, 1774, representatives from twelve of the American
colonies entered Carpenter's Hall, Philadelphia, to form the First Continental Congress. Out of
the retaliatory measures against Great Britain which were voted by this body, the American
Revolution followed within a year.
(3) EFFECTS
Independence. The Continental Congress was to some extent precipitated into taking
extreme measures by Thomas Paine's Common Sense which appeared in January, 1776. This
fervid denunciation of "crowned ruffians" urged Americans to strike out for themselves, for
"freedom bath been hunted round the globe. . . . Receive the fugitive and prepare in time an
asylum for mankind." Paine's religious views were scarcely orthodox and his political ideal
eventually verged on anarchism, but his was the book of the year 1776. Congress could have
alleged more conservative authority, for St. Thomas had said: "If it pertains to the right of the
multitude to provide a king for itself, it will not be unjust to depose such a king . . . if the royal
power is tyrannously abused . . . because this royal power was not delegated to him to abuse his
office." With perhaps pardonable exaggeration, the Americans recited such abuses. They then
asserted that "to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just
powers from the consent of the governed." The British Constitution-Magna Carta, Petition and
Declaration of Right-parliamentary practice, and the colonial charters had all implicitly recognized
popular sovereignty. It was not, then, "for light and transient reasons" that they decided "to
dissolve the political bonds which connected them with another," in order "to assume among the
powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's
God entitle them." To safeguard "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness," they were resolved to
pledge one another "their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor."
In the political sphere, the success of the American Revolution marked a turning point in
history. It gave scope for the formation of a state not bound by the monarchical tradition
predominant since the crossing of the Rubicon. The new Republic would have a unique
opportunity to profit by the successes and mistakes of England's political evolution. The theory, if
not yet the practice, of the new nation was Democracy. Should it prove successful, the way
would lie open for imitation by peoples of the Old World, and absolute monarchy, creature of
humanism and Protestantism, would be doomed. With the blessing of Providence, the
democratic dream was in large part realized and the United States became a beacon to the
world. Most of the Liberal reform movements of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries invoked
the American Declaration of Independence and its principles were finally accepted by half of the
world.
In regard to religion, the Catholic Church could have no regret to see Absolutism
supplanted by Democracy, for she had long languished under oppressive regimes that relegated
her to the background, tied her hands for good, and expected her to be obsequiously grateful for
the patronage accorded her. Under the new American system the Church could not be legally
dominated. Neither, however, could she dominate. Her clergy would have to abandon their
privileged position in the Old World; henceforth they would have to persuade instead of
commanding with the sanction of civil law at their back. The Church had once subsisted under a
regime which granted her no priorities, the Roman empire, and had converted it. She could
repeat this achievement if primitive zeal returned as well. But in a democratic regime, Christian
brotherhood would have to be stressed without detriment to clerical authority; energy and
initiative would have to prevail over clerical decorum to the extent that the priest would be obliged
to go to the people, and not expect them to come to him.
B. Organization
The Constitutional Convention (1787) sought a remedy for the disunity prevailing among
the newly independent states under the original Articles of Confederation. A veritable "brain trust"
met: thirty-one of its fifty-five members were college trained and most had experience in the
Continental Congress. Washington presided over deliberations led by Madison and Wilson, and
restrained by Franklin; the Catholics, FitzSimons and Daniel Carroll, were members of the
convention.
Constitutional theory was in accord with scholastic principles that secular authority
emanated from God through the people, for: "We, the People of the United States, in order to
form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common
defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our
posterity, do ordain and establish this constitution for the United States of America." The
Constitution was really the first explicitly written instrument of government, although it reflected
the memory of centuries of English constitutional evolution and more proximate experience of
American autonomy under the colonial charters. Its theory emanated from Locke's distinction of
governmental powers, as distorted by Montesquieu into a check and balance of governmental
branches to avoid tyranny. But the Founding Fathers probably derived more from practical
experience than from abstract political science. The constitutional machinery that emerged was
federal rather than national, and left most domestic affairs to the state governments. Broad
principles were enunciated; details were left to time and experience, though succeeding
generations were tempted to read into the mind of the authors their own political and economic
views.
Religious guarantees were eventually written into the Constitution. Charles Pinckney of
South Carolina proposed to the Convention a draft statement which contained the phrase, "The
legislature of the United States shall pass no law on the subject of religion." This was not
adopted, not so much because it was opposed, but because it was felt to be unnecessary. But
the debates concerning the adoption of the Constitution revealed the uneasiness of a large
portion of the American people about the lack of a "Bill of Rights" explicitly affirmed in the
document. To allay such fears, the first Congress of the new Federal Government adopted in
December, 1791, such a charter of liberties: the first ten amendments. The first of these
amendments contains this reference to religious liberty: "Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or of the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
government for a redress of grievances." The last clause of the sixth article of the original
Constitution, moreover, had asserted that "no religious test shall ever be required as a
qualification to any office or public trust under the United States."
Generic status. Despite the Federal Constitution, the laws of many states continued for
some time to discriminate against Catholics. This was particularly true of New England where
Catholics were debarred from office during most of the period under review. After the rise of
political parties, the Federalists became identified in New England with retention of
Congregational establishment, supported as it was by the commercial aristocracy. Accordingly
after 1794 the Democratic-Republicans took up the cause of dissenters and strove to repeal
oppressive legislation. This aim attracted to their ranks many Irish immigrants who at this early
date came to play an important minor role in the party of "Rum, Romanism and Rebellion." But
though uniformly successful in Federal politics after 1800, the Democrats remained a minority
party in New England state politics for some fifteen years longer. By 1815, however, the
Federalists had degenerated into a sectionalist party stubbornly defending Congregationalist
supremacy and class distinctions. Bigotry and fanaticism spelled the ruin of this group, for
Federalist espousal of secession for New England during the War of 1812 brought about a rapid
loss of support in the East, while western expansion of the United States reduced the relative
importance of New England.
Massachusetts in its first state constitution (1780) obliged its citizens to support the
established Congregational Church, and excluded from public office all refusing to renounce by
oath "those principles of spiritual jurisdiction which Roman Catholics in some countries have
held." A brief Democratic tenure of office (1807) saw introduction of a new Public Worship Bill, but
it was defeated and the Federalists returned to power. Congregationalism, however, was
challenged by the development of Unitarianism, and in 1818 Chief justice Parker sustained the
dissenting minister, Alvan Lamson. Yet in the 1820 constitutional convention Congregationalists
joined the Unitarians to continue discrimination against others. Democratic victory in 1823 led to
amendments, for a time blocked by a die-hard senate. But by 1833 the offending clauses had
been removed.
Connecticut granted religious liberty during the period between 1777 and 1791, though
under vexatious conditions. Certificates of exemption from support of the established church
were issued, and the struggle for equal rights followed the pattern in Massachusetts, but was
resolved in favor of the dissenters as early as 1818.
New Hampshire persevered longest in discriminating against Catholics. Not only was
there an established religion, but a test oath against the papacy was deliberately included.
Congregational establishment was terminated in 1819, but public officials and teachers still had to
be Protestants. In 1852 Catholic emancipation was rejected by votes of fifteen thousand to
twenty-five thousand, and not until 1877 was the religious test for office abolished. Yet even then
the words "Protestant" and "Evangelical" were still retained in the Constitution of a supposedly
nonsectarian state.
New York suffered until 1821 under the Jay "Alien Clause" requiring immigrants seeking
naturalization to renounce allegiance to foreign authority "in matters ecclesiastical as well as
civil." Native Catholics, however, were elected to the legislature in 1806, and during 1812 judge
De Witt Clinton upheld Father Kohlman's plea for the privileged character of "secrets of
sacramental confession" in a case of alleged theft.
Southern states. Religious liberty in the southern states had to await formulation of the
new constitutions. In 1776, indeed, North Carolina granted that "no person who shall deny the
being of God or the truth of the Protestant religion . . . will be capable of holding office." Yet
several Catholics attained posts by various evasions. One asserted that be did deny any "truth"
of the Protestant religion; in another instance, a request for an official list of these truths provoked
internecine strife among Protestants. At any rate, Thomas Burke became congressman and
governor, and Aldanus Burke and William Gaston were justices of the State Supreme Court
before the phrase was officially altered from "Protestant" to "Christian." South Carolina also tried
to maintain a "Christian Protestant" established religion in 1778, while conceding equal and
religious rights to Protestants of every denomination. These provisions, however, were
abandoned in 1790 and religious freedom and civil equality defined in terms which could include
Catholics. Georgia in 1777 conceded "freedom of conscience" while still insisting that all
legislators be Protestants. Taxes for the support of religion were imposed until 1789 when at
length all "male, tax-paying freemen" were enfranchised. As previously noted, Virginia and
Maryland had granted religious liberty at the end of the colonial period. In 1786 Virginia
dissenters secured the disestablishment of Anglicanism, although Catholic corporate property
rights were imperfectly recognized at law until 1830.
It required approximately a half century, then, before the principles of the Federal
Constitution regarding religion were put into effect by the vast majority of the States.
Transitional status. At the outbreak of the Revolution, American Catholics were still
subject to Bishop Challoner, vicar-apostolic of the London District. Prior to the opening of
hostilities, Bishop Challoner had named Father John Lewis (1721-88), former superior of the
Jesuit missionaries in the English colonies, his vicar-general. Father Lewis continued to act as
local superior after Bishop Challoner's death in 1781, although the latter's successor, Bishop
James Talbot, refused to exercise jurisdiction within the new Republic. To clarify this nebulous
canonical status, the American clergy decided at a conference during 1783 to appeal to the Holy
See. They reported that although Catholicity was by then tolerated in all of the United States, it
had been intimated to them that continued subjection to an English hierarchy would not be
pleasing to the American Continental Congress. Fearing that appointment of a Catholic bishop
would arouse Protestant alarm-since no Anglican prelate had thus far been named for the English
colonies-the American clergy suggested to Propaganda that the American mission be ruled
directly by the Holy See through a superior with faculties to confirm. Meanwhile, in response to
inquiries by Cardinal Antonelli, prefect of Propaganda, Monsignor Pamphili, the nuncio in France,
reported a suggestion emanating from Benjamin Franklin that a French bishop be substituted for
the English prelate, and that the American clergy might be recruited from a seminary at Bordeaux.
Prefecture-apostolic. More recent research seems to have established that Rome gave
no serious consideration to the "French Plan," and Franklin, on recalling his old diplomatic
colleague, John Carroll, expressed confidence in his prudence. The Holy See, after excusing
Father Lewis from further responsibility by reason of his "advanced age," on June 9, 1784, named
Father John Carroll provisional superior of the American mission, with faculties to confirm. At the
same time the new prelate was informed that this arrangement was merely temporary, and was
asked to forward a report to guide the Holy See in preparing a definitive organization. Father
Carroll did not delay in sending this report (1785), in which he estimated the number of Catholics
at about twenty-five thousand; that the few priests-twenty-five or twenty-sixled a life of great labor
in visiting scattered congregations; and that the Church possessed no corporate property, all
establishments being held under individual title. Father Carroll believed that the native Catholics,
if somewhat influenced by their non-Catholic environment, were generally faithful to the
sacraments, at least to their Easter Duties, but he deplored the laxity of newer immigrants.
Catechetical instruction, especially for Negro slaves, left very much to be desired. Father Carroll
also set out to visit his prefecture and to exercise his functions, although an oversight in his
delegation, corrected in 1786, at first prevented him from conceding faculties to clerics
volunteering for the American mission. He needed patience to guide his flock through disputes
about jurisdiction with the see of Quebec, the heresy of the apostate priest Wharton, and the
criticisms of vagrant and insubordinate clerics. Thus in 1788 be and his ex-Jesuit confreres were
accused by a disgruntled Irish priest, Patrick Smyth, of plotting to dominate the Church in America
in his Present State of Catholic Missions Conducted by Ex-Jesuits. But presently the even-
tempered Carroll under the pen name of "Pacific" was appealing to his fellow citizens for religious
liberty (1789).
Nomination. Pope Pius VI gave his approbation on September 14, 1789, and the
following November 6 issued the brief, Ex Hac Apostolicae, naming John Carroll bishop of
Baltimore, with jurisdiction over all the territory of the United States-in 1791 Propaganda
confirmed that Bishop Carroll's jurisdiction was conterminous with American civil jurisdiction.
Before sailing to England for his consecration, the bishopelect joined Senator Charles Carroll in
an "Address of Roman Catholics," congratulating George Washington on his election as president
of the United States, and received a gracious reply. By happy coincidence the first bishop and
the first president were chosen in the same year.
Consecration. John Carroll sailed for Europe in the same ship bearing Dr. Madison,
recently selected as the first Protestant Episcopalian prelate for Virginia. Carroll was consecrated
bishop on August 15, 1790, in the chapel of the Weld family's Lulworth Castle. The consecrator
was his friend, Bishop Charles Walmesley, O.S.B., senior English vicar-apostolic; from this source
the majority of American bishops derive their participation in the apostolic succession. Before
returning to America, Bishop Carroll arranged with Father Emery, superior of Saint-Sulpice, for
the staffing of a seminary at Baltimore; the future St. Mary's was opened by French Sulpicians
during 1791. Refusing pressing invitations to visit Ireland, Bishop Carroll hastened back to his
diocese. He arrived to begin his quarter century of episcopate on the eve of the feast of the
Immaculate Conception. The next Sunday, December 12, the bishop took possession of his
temporary pro-cathedral of St. Peter's, celebrated pontifical Mass, preached eloquently, and
dedicated his national diocese to the Mother of God, commending his subjects to be devoted to
her.
The Synod of Baltimore, held by Bishop Carroll and twenty-two priests during November,
1791, enacted the first canonical legislation in the United States, and its decrees were binding on
the whole country until supplemented by the first provincial council of 1829. The chief
prescriptions were the following:
Baptism. Canonical legislation regarding conditional re-baptism of converts was clarified
and prescribed, with the requirement of investigation in each case. Baptismal registers were
ordered kept.
Holy Eucharist. So far as possible, Sunday Mass was to be made accessible to all, with
due regard to the needs of merchants and of laborers. The cassock was to be worn at the
celebration of Mass, and the surplice during public functions of the ministry. At Sunday Mass,
reading of the Gospel in the vernacular, a short sermon, the litany of the Blessed Virgin, and a
prayer for civil authorities were prescribed. Wherever possible, a missa cantata with the
Asperges should be celebrated, followed in the afternoon by Vespers and Benediction. Children
ought to be prepared without undue delay for reception of Holy Communion.
Extreme unction was to be conferred on all in danger of death, even upon children who
had reached the use of reason.
Matrimony. The bans of marriage should be duly proclaimed three times. Instructions in
the fundamental doctrines of the Catholic Church and testimonials from former pastors were to be
required. Mixed marriages ought to be discouraged, but if they could not be prevented, the
promise of educating children in the Catholic faith was to be exacted from the non-Catholic party.
Mixed marriages were not to be entitled to the Nuptial Mass.
Finances. Parochial funds ought to be divided into three portions: one for the support of
the clergy, another for maintenance of the church, and a third for assisting the poor. Avarice and
simony in regard to stipends were reprimanded. The faithful ought to be admonished to support
the church and an instruction regarding the amount of stipends read to them. Cleanliness must
be observed in regard to the church and altar, and trustees and ushers named to ensure good
order at services.
Episcopal coadjutors. Lest some accident deprive the nascent Church in the United
States of a bishop for a long period, Bishop Carroll petitioned the Holy See to divide his diocese
or grant him a coadjutor. The Holy See preferred the latter alternative (1793), and the Bavarian,
Lawrence Graessl, was elected and confirmed by Rome, but died before his consecration. The
second nominee, Leonard Neale, though confirmed in 1795, was not consecrated until 1800 by
reason of delay in the arrival of documents. Bishop Neale, president of Georgetown College, had
little share in diocesan administration until he succeeded Bishop Carroll at Baltimore (1815-17).
But by 1806 the diocese was well organized and the cornerstone for America's first cathedral, that
of the Assumption, was laid-it was not completed Until 1821. The Louisiana purchase (1803)
extended Bishop Carroll's responsibilities, for he was made administrator of the vacant see of
New Orleans which had been erected under Spanish rule in 1793. In 1812 Bishop Carroll had
William DuBourg named administrator, and the latter became bishop of New Orleans in 1815.
Baltimore. Until the division of the diocese in 1808, Bishop Carroll preserved the existing
subdivisions of the American mission. He himself cared for the Middle District in Maryland, and
had fairly regular vicarsgeneral for the Northern, Southern, and Western Districts. By 1815
Baltimore city had four churches and the seminary. But the Southern District was sparsely
provided with missionary priests. Virginia received its first resident priest in 1791; be was Jean
Dubois, future bishop of New York. The French Revolution was an ill wind that blew much good
to the New World in the person of emigres who worked in the Carolinas and Georgia.
Unfortunately, insubordination and Trusteeism were also rife.
Boston had its first resident priest in 1788, but the pastors proved illsuited until the arrival
in 1792 of the exemplary Abb'e Francois Matignon, whose brilliant assistant, Jean Cheverus,
became the first bishop in 1808. Bigotry was not yet dead in Boston, for in 1800 Father Cheverus
was tried for officiating at a Catholic marriage. Though threatened with the pillory, he was at
length acquitted of wrongdoing. As bishop, this ascetic, sociable, learned missionary won all
hearts. He was one of Boston's leading citizens when ill-health forced him to return to France
-where be was later named a cardinal.
New York. As late as 1777, P'ere de la Motte had been arrested for saying Mass in New
York, but in 1781 Father Farmer could open a chapel over a carpenter shop. Catholics also
worshipped in the Spanish Embassy chapel until St. Peter's Church was erected in 1786 with
donations from the Spanish crown. Trusteeism blighted the early history, and the first bishop
never arrived in his see. Until the arrival of the second bishop in 1815, the diocese was
administered by Father Anthony Kohlmann.
Incorporation of church property provided the immediate occasion for the difficulty.
Discriminatory laws during colonial days had forced Catholics to use devious methods to
safeguard what little ecclesiastical property they had. The Jesuit missionaries in Maryland had
usually taken title to church real estate as individuals, handing it on by will to their designated
successors. This precarious system was at the mercy of accidents of sudden death,
unsympathetic probate courts, and avaricious clerics. The Jesuits, barred from private property
by their vow of poverty, conserved the church property intact, and even after secularization had
preserved an esprit de corps. This could not be expected of seculars, some of whom had
constituted disciplinary problems in their European dioceses, and were now open to temptations
to avarice and ambition. A solution for the problem seemed to be suggested by an act of the New
York legislature of April 6, 1784. This allowed lay trustees of any church or congregation to "have,
hold, use, exercise and enjoy, all and singular the churches, meeting-houses, parsonages . . . to
the sole and proper use and benefit of them the said trustees and their successors forever in as
full, firm, and ample a manner in the law, as if the said trustees had been legally incorporated."
Early problems. Though this and similar subsequent enactment's of other states
contemplated a Protestant type of ecclesiastical government, they were so worded as to permit
Catholics to take advantage of them. The congregation of St. Peter's Church in New York City
began by choosing five lay trustees under the foregoing statute. Bishop Carroll, familiar with
European and lay patronage, was induced to tolerate this procedure in view of the precarious
condition of church property, though the sixth decree of his Synod contemplated appointment of
the trustees by the pastor, and restricted their functions to taking up the collection. Bitter
experience would reveal that some trustees, with more attention to civil than canon law, deemed
themselves masters not only of the property but even of the clergy of the Church. Weak or venal
clerics were found, moreover, to conspire with such trustees in defying episcopal authority itself.
Instances of this serious evil appeared even during Bishop Carroll's lifetime, although his
prestige, popularity, and amiable tact mitigated problems and postponed major crises until later,
when the problem would be aggravated by nationalist friction within Catholic ranks. Thus St.
Peter's of New York saw disputes between Fathers Whalen and Nugent until Father William
O'Brien was finally recognized at law as legitimate pastor. Holy Trinity Church in Philadelphia
went as far as schism between 1797 and 1802 in defense of the clerical vagrants, Goetz and
Elling. From 1793 Dr. Gallagher, orator and inebriate, was in and out of favor with hierarchy and
trustees in the Carolinas, and eventually precipitated a schism in Charleston. At New Orleans,
the rector of the cathedral, Antonio de Sedella, entrenched himself with his masonic-minded flock,
and defied both Spanish and American episcopal authorities from 1785 to his death in 1829. By
1815, then, Trusteeism had by no means reached its peak.
Colonial mission schools are known in Florida from 1594, in New Mexico from 1630, in
Texas in 1689, in Louisiana in 1722, in Missouri in 1774, in Indiana in 1786, and in California in
1793, but all ceased with the respective missions to which they had been attached. But the
Ursuline Academy, founded in New Orleans in 1727, survived into the administration of the United
States. English Jesuits had schools in Maryland and Pennsylvania; and one at Philadelphia, St.
Mary's, is regarded as the oldest parochial school in the United States.
Clerical formation, stressed in the papal bull of erection for Baltimore, was carried out
through St. Mary's Seminary. On his return to America, Bishop Carroll purchased One Mile
Tavern as the nucleus of the new major seminary. Father Charles Nagot (1754-1816) became
the first rector in 1791 and continued in his post until 1810. He brought over from France four
professors and five seminarians for whose support the Sulpicians furnished 100,000 francs. The
first ordinand (1793) was Stephen Badin, long a missionary in Kentucky, and the second (1795)
was Lord Gallitizin who labored in Pennsylvania until his death in 1840. After his ordination the
seminary lacked students for two years; only in 1800 did it ordain its third priest, the first native
alumnus, Father William Mathews, pastor of St. Patrick's in Washington from 1805 to 1855. In
1803, however, Father Emery ordered the Sulpicians' return, claiming that the seminary was
neither a financial nor spiritual success. Bishop Carroll appealed to the Holy See, and Pope Pius,
at Paris in 1804 for Napoleon's coronation, prevailed on Father Emery: "My son, let it stand; it will
bear fruit in its own time." St. Mary's vindicated the papal prophecy, for between 1791 and 1815
thirty priests were ordained for the needy American mission. After a number of unsuccessful
attempts to use secular colleges as preparatory seminaries, the Sulpicians opened a minor
seminary at Mount St. Mary's, Emmitsburg, in 1808; when this was taken over by the Diocese of
Baltimore in 1826, they began another at Catonsville.
Lay instruction under the national period began with Carroll's foundation of Georgetown
College (1789). Sulpicians assisted in the teaching at Georgetown until 1806, when the College
was committed to the revived Society of Jesus; it was chartered as a university in 1815. Besides
the Sulpician colleges already mentioned, the Dominicans founded St. Thomas Academy in
Kentucky in 1807. Most remarkable among these early educators was Father Richard, who in
1798 took over an existing French Canadian school at Detroit, opened a high school in 1802,
edited the first Catholic newspaper, the Michigan Essay, in 1809, became vice-president of
Michigan University in 1817, and was elected to the Federal Congress in 1823. Besides St.
Mary's parochial school in Philadelphia (1781), Holy Trinity School was erected in the same city in
1789. St. Peter's parochial "free school" in New York City dates from 1800, but there is no record
of a parish school in New England during Bishop Carroll's lifetime. A school opened by the Poor
Clares at Baltimore in 1792 was continued after their departure in 1805 by a community of
Visitandines founded by Bishop Neale. Mother Seton is entitled to a place of honor beside
Bishop Carroll as a pioneer educator, for her school dates from 1808, and educational institutions
were associated with most of the early religious houses now to be noted.
Mother Seton. Elizabeth Bayley (1774-1821), reared as an Episcopalian, was married to Mr.
William Seton (1768-1803) of New York in 1794. His death in Italy brought her into contact with
Catholicity as practiced by their friends, the Filiccis. On her return to the United States, Mrs.
Seton braved her minister's displeasure to join the Catholic Church in 1805. Ostracized by most
of her relatives, the widow turned to teaching in order to support her children. In time her life
approximated to that of a religious and attracted disciples. Though she wished to affiliate her
nascent community with St. Vincent de Paul's Daughters of Charity, the Napoleonic Wars
prevented this. Yet she modeled the rule of her Sisters of Charity after theirs, subject to certain
modifications suggested by Bishop Carroll, who approved the institute in 1812. In the latter year
her Academy begun at Baltimore in 1808 moved to Emmitsburg, which became the headquarters
of her community. A portion of her foundation subsequently affiliated with the Daughters of
Charity, while other groups survive as the Sisters of Charity.
Nuns. Though the first nuns in the United States, the Carmelite contemplatives (1791),
could not be persuaded to open a school, educational institutions of one kind or another were
associated with the convents of the Poor Clares (1792), the Visitandines (1799), Mother Seton's
Sisters of Charity (1812), and the Lorettines, founded in 1812 by Father Charles Nerinckx in
Kentucky.
Communities of men. The Jesuit pioneers in the English Colonies were reinforced soon
after American independence by the Austin Friars from Dublin (1796), the Franciscans under
Father Egan, subsequently bishop of Philadelphia (1799), and the Dominicans, introduced by the
native Marylander, Edward Fenwick, later bishop of Cincinnati (1804). The Trappists (1804-12),
however, discovered that they could not endure pioneer clerical life without mitigating their severe
austerities; they returned to Europe to await a more providential time. Enlisted for the American
missions by Bishop Du Bourg at Rome, Fathers De Andreis, Rosati, and other Italian Vincentians
departed for their destination late in 1815, but did not reach the United States during Bishop
Carroll's lifetime.
VIII
Liberal Revolutions
(1) PREPARATIONS
Mode of selection. On January 24, 1789, the crown issued regulations for convoking the
three Estates as "counselors and friends." They were assured that they would speak for the
nation, control taxation, and meet at regular intervals in the future-for their last regular assembly
had been in 1614. Individual liberty would be safeguarded, lettres de cachet and press
censorship would end, and a constitution-very vague in the royal mind-would ensure equal
taxation for all. Each Estate was directed to choose its representatives in the traditional manner,
though as a palliative the Third Estate was allowed double representation. The First Estate chose
308 delegates by the votes of all ordained members, a system which gave little preference to the
prelates and provoked some friction. The Second Estate, more homogeneous, had less difficulty
in choosing 285 nobles. Progressives seem to have gained a majority of the 621 members
chosen by the Third Estate where the number of Rationalists and Freemasons was probably out
of proportion.
Secular objectives are revealed in the cahiers or memorials drawn up by various district
constituencies for directing their delegates in voicing grievances. Their tenor was frequently
suggested by bourgeois lawyers, and the duke of Orleans is believed to have exercised a special
influence throughout the Loire Valley. A consensus of these complaints reveals desires for a
"constitution," a "King of the French," i.e., a limited rather than absolute monarch, equal taxation,
guarantees of personal liberty, abolition of abuses in administration, and the termination of the
feudal
privileges.
Clerical aspirations exhibit the point of view of the rank and file of the secular clergy.
Frequently mentioned proposals were: (1) change of the method of choosing bishops: some
would have the crown advised by a new council of conscience; others wished election by the
clergy; (2) pastoral representation in councils and synods, with stress on pastoral experience as a
qualification for prelatial posts; (3) suppression of monastic religious houses or redirection of their
personnel to the active ministry-though there was little objection to convents of nuns. What is
remarkable is that these and all other desired "reforms" were sought from the crown; not one
cahier proposed recourse to the Holy See to remedy abuses.
(2) DELIBERATIONS
Organizational contest. The Estates General formally opened their sessions at Versailles on May
5 when they listened to a rambling speech from the throne, and long reports by Barenton and
Necker that were poorly understood. But on May 6 the king directed the Estates to organize
separately in order to cast their votes by houses, as of yore. Since this procedure would enable
the two privileged Estates to outvote the commoners, the Third Estate invited the others to join
them in forming a "National Assembly" where voting would be by head. This method, in view of
the Third Estate's double representation, could ensure the latter a slight majority. A deadlock
ensued until June 17 when Abb'e Sieyes led the Third Estate in arrogating to itself the role of
"National Assembly." Many clerics and a few nobles expressed sympathy with this plan, although
the majority votes of the privileged Estates opposed it.
Victory of the Third Estate. On June 22 a long-delayed royal session was held. The
court had twice evicted the commoners from their meeting places, and they had retorted by an
oath not to disband until they had given the nation a constitution. The king now bluntly ordered
them to conform to the traditional organizational procedure. After the king's departure, however,
the Third Estate, reputedly on Mirabeau's motion, refused to disperse, asserting that it
represented the nation and that only bayonets could dismiss them. The court wavered between
coercion and appeasement: while the comte d'Artois recommended the use of troops, others
doubted their loyalty. Meanwhile the duc D'Orleans and forty-seven of the nobles rallied to the
Third Estate, with which the majority of the clergy were now in sympathy. On June 27 the king
yielded to the demand that all three Estates meet together and vote by bead. Irresolute, averse
to bloodshed, fearful of responsibility, Louis XVI would henceforth capitulate in every decisive
political-though not religious-contest. The "sovereign people" had embarked on their momentous
revolution for the principles of Libert'e, Egalit'e, Fraternit'e-which last may be equated with
nationalism.
Political parties. The National Assembly became a disorderly body permitting endless
discussion. Its leaders were mostly lawyers or civil servants. Though there were no organized
political parties in the Anglo-Saxon sense, members might be classified according to their views.
As "birds of a feather flocked together," this physical circumstance has given some ideological
significance to the position of their seats. The Right showed itself politically inept, reactionary,
without a positive program. The Moderate Right, indeed, was composed of theorists favoring
constitutional monarchy on a British model, but it lacked popular and nationalist support. The
Plain in the center of the assembly comprised some six hundred leaderless deputies with few
decided views, and these easily modified by oratory or mob pressure. The Moderate Left was
well led and provided the leadership for the first phase of the Revolution. The Radicals, seated in
the "mountain" of the galleries, favored a republic, but had as yet little influence in the assembly
itself while located at Versailles. Clubs, such as the Jacobins, outside the assembly, were quite
as important as the deputies on the floor in preparing and pressing through measures.
Fall of the Bastille. The Parisian mob often showed its power. Reports, partly true,
reached the populace that the court was planning a reaction. On July 11 the beloved Necker was
dismissed, and it was rumored falsely, as it proved-that Orleans was in exile. By July 12 the
demagogue Des Moulins was stirring up discontent in Paris and for several days the mob was out
of control. Private grudges were settled, shops pillaged, and then on July 14 the mob's attention
was directed to the Bastille, symbol of autocracy, although at the moment housing but seven non-
political criminals. The commandant Launay yielded after some skirmishing and bloodshed, while
rumor and propaganda magnified the incident into a heroic popular storming of a royal
stronghold.
"The Great Fear." The Bastille uprising prevented any possible royal coup. Louis XVI
recalled Necker, donned a revolutionary cap, and absolved the rioters. The comte d'Artois in
disgust led the aristocratic die-bards across the border-first of an increasing class of 'emigr'es.
Panic, probably in large measure artificially induced, spread into the provinces, where peasants
began to take vengeance on bated landlords and destroy the written records of their feudal
obligations. Impressed by these developments, prelates and nobles hastened during an
emotional session on the evening of August 4 to renounce feudal privileges which by then the
near anarchy had rendered largely academic. Included in this impulsive renunciation were the
clerical tithes. By August 13 these pledges had been formally enacted into law, and the
Assembly's "Rights of Man" included the declaration: "The National Assembly destroys the feudal
regime entirely."
"Rights of Man and the Citizen." Protracted debates had been going on regarding the
"rights of man" which were elaborately defined according to prevailing deist and rationalist
philosophy. The work, which proceeded in piecemeal fashion, may be here summarized. In
place of the Old Regime of "arbitrary fiat," was to be substituted what purported to be a
government by law. Thus Article I declared that: "Men are born and remain free and equal in
rights"-about duties the Liberals were much less emphatic. Abbe Siey'es took the lead in
proclaiming freedom of speech, of the press, from arrest, of trial; moreover, "no one may be
disturbed for his opinions, even in religion, provided that their manifestation does not trouble
public order as established by law" (Article 10). Private property was highly safeguarded, and the
original Declaration of August, 1789, proclaimed it a "sacred and inviolable right."
Political administration. But slogans more than practical statesmanship ruled the day,
and fear of tyranny led to a clumsy administrative machinery on a theory of separation of powers.
The king was named chief executive, but given slight control over elective officials in charge of
executive bureaus, themselves denied seats in the legislature. A unicameral legislative assembly
took the place of the estates, but a self-denying ordinance forbidding re-election promised
another inexperienced body. Legal parlements were replaced by elected judges who soon
became tools of the dominant faction. The local provinces were replaced by eighty-three
departements deliberately suppressing traditional boundaries, customs, and dialects. These
departements and their subdivisions were made autonomous under a host of elected officials.
Though all males over twenty-five were made "passive citizens," only "active citizens,"
determined by a high property qualification, were allowed to vote. Electoral procedure was so
indirect and complicated, elections and candidates so numerous, that soon all but purposeful
Jacobins were discouraged in its exercise.
Clerical schism. Pope Pius VI hesitated to condemn this measure immediately, though
he requested the king not to sanction it. The papal request arrived a day late; Louis XVI had
signed on July 22. Even then the pope delayed formal condemnation of the Civil Constitution
until April 13, 1791, although he had previously sustained clerics who defied it. The French
hierarchy had denied the Assembly's competence to enact the Civil Constitution, but on
November 27, 1790, the Assembly retorted by exacting an oath, effective January 4, 1791. Abb'e
Gregoire led 62 priests in the Assembly in taking the oath. Of 160 bishops, only Cardinal Brienne
of Sens, Talleyrand of Autun, Jarentes of Orleans, and Savine of Viviers, among the ordinaries,
took the oath, along with three auxiliaries. The majority of the non-juring bishops became
'emigr'es in 1790, while Talleyrand on February 24, 1791, inaugurated a schismatic hierarchy by
consecrating Marolles and Expilly. Though the consecrator deserted the ecclesiastical state
shortly afterwards, he assured Father Emery of St. Sulpice he had had the proper intention. Thus
the "constitutional" or juring hierarchy came into being. Exact figures on the attitude of the lower
clergy are not available, but about forty-five per cent seem to have taken the oath at first, though
some of these later retracted. Although the constitutional clergy were placed in control of the
nationalized churches by the Assembly, many Frenchmen, especially the peasants, continued to
support the "non-jurors," and in some instances forcibly kept them in possession. When the king
resisted penalties for the non-jurors, the Assembly on May 9, 1791, temporized by allowing the
latter to say Mass in the churches with the jurors' leave. As a consequence, many French
parishes had two titulars. Thus the Civil Constitution effected the first real break in the ranks of
the Third Estate, alienating the Revolution not merely from the throne, but from the altar as well.
The king, having ratified the Constitution with misgivings, was filled with remorse and now
secretly intrigued with foreign powers in opposition to the new regime.
Ideological conflict. Meanwhile, Europe had begun to take sides in regard to the French
Revolution. Jacobin clubs and masonic lodges sought to create a favorable "fifth column," while
the 'emigr'es spread tales of woe. Monarchs, at first disposed to rejoice at France's discomfiture,
began to fear for their crowns. Incorporation of Alsace-Lorraine embroiled the empire, and
occupation of Avignon involved the papacy. Queen Marie Antoinette entered into communication
with her brother, Emperor Leopold II, and the royal family attempted to flee to Metz on June 20,
1791, in order to co-operate with an army of liberation. Halted at Varennes, the king was
ignominiously brought back to Paris. Henceforth he was discredited and quite powerless to halt a
radical trend. Yet lie gave formal sanction to the Constitution, September 14, 1791, and the
Assembly dissolved. Supposedly the Revolution was over, but there would yet be some bloody
amendments to the "Constitution of the Rights of Man and the Citizen."
Domestic shift to the Left. The newly elected legislature was composed of more extreme
revolutionists, for only five per cent of the people had voted and Jacobin electoral propaganda
had been largely successful. The Girondins constituted the dominant party, drawn chiefly from
the region of that name in the South of France. Their leaders were agnostic or atheistic lawyers,
often pompous theorists who aped Roman classicism. The party was largely bourgeois in
composition; if it had anmy definite program, it inclined to favor federation of local units. On the
other band, the Jacobins were predominantly Parisian and tended to be centralist in politics.
Their chiefs proved more responsive to the mob. The doctrinaire theorist Robespierre was at first
overshadowed by a brutal realist, Danton. The old Right had fled, and the former Moderate
Right, having lost its great strategist, Mirabeau, remained an uninfluential minority. The Plain was
as vacillating as before, prone to bend tinder pressure of the proletarian Parisian populace,
controlled by Marat.
Foreign menace. The king's unsuccessful flight had not merely destroyed his prestige: it
had focused attention on the foreign intervention secretly invoked by the court and openly
demanded by the 'emigr'es. The Assembly strove to force the latter to return to France under
penalty of judicial death sentence and confiscation of property. This measure did little more than
stress the ideological nature of the conflict into which France was to draw most of Europe. The
menace of foreign intervention on behalf of the king and against the Revolution now formed a
background for the deliberations of the Assembly, and inclined it in self-defense to ever more
extreme measures. In Germany, with Prussian support for a change, the Habsburgs mobilized
the resources of the antique Holy Roman Empire. The Assembly adopted a defiant attitude
toward alien threats, and on April 20, 1792, forced the king to declare war upon his would-be
rescuers. This brought down on France the armies of the First Coalition (1792-97). At first a
succession of French ministries mismanaged military operations, but the Assembly merely
blamed the rovalists and the clergy for disasters. Vastly superior allied forces slowly penetrated
France against undisciplined militia. Allied propaganda, however, boomeranged for it made the
Radicals more desperate.
Fall of the monarchy. When the Prussian commander Brunswick isstied an inept
threatening manifesto, the Assembly on July 11 proclaimed the country in danger, and presently
evoked a Lev'ee en masse, the first total mobilization of a nation for war. Popular suspicions of
the king's loyalty to France culminated in an attack on the Tuileries, August 9-10. The Swiss
Guard was massacred and the royal family forced to take refuge with the Assembly. This, after
suspending the king from his functions, consigned him to the old house of the Knights Templar
under close surveillance. Radicals gained control of the Assembly which soon dissolved, calling
for a new constitutional convention to provide republican institutions for France. The monarchy
had terminated; its abolition the following September 21 merely confirmed this.
VIII
Liberal Revolutions
Regicide. With such measures the Girondists, republican constitutionalists, would have
been well satisfied. But the Jacobins clamored for the execution of the king as a political
necessity. For some time the Girondists demurred, but under popular pressure were rushed from
half measure to half measure until at length they acquiesced in a death sentence for Louis XVI.
After a sensational trial, the former king was condemned to death by 361 votes to 360 out of a
possible 749. On January 21, 1793, the election of Duke Hugh Capet in 987 was undone:
pedantically designated as "Citoyen Capet," his descendant Louis was executed. Incompetent as
a ruler, he yet knew how to die as a Christian gentleman. Royalist sentiment, apathetic before
the abuses of the Ancien R'egime, now revived and reached fanatical proportions among some of
the 'emigr'es, including many of the prelates. On the other band, within France a regicide
oligarchy had been created which was irrevocably committed to the Revolution and the war
against foreign intervention. Having gambled all, the Revolution must perforce subscribe to
Danton's slogan: "L'audace, toujours l'audace." In self-defense, the Convention inaugurated a
"Reign of Terror."
Civil conflict. In March, 1793, a royalist insurrection began in La Vend'ee in the west of France,
and this gave the Jacobins the ample pretext for crushing all opposition by summary methods.
From March 4, 1793, the executive was committed to a "Committee of Public Safety," armed with
dictatorial powers. Thirty-one Girondin deputies were arrested in June and the rest frightened
into absenting themselves. Thus purged, the Convention became a Jacobin tool. It voted the
committee plenary powers over conscription, war, life, and personal property. Arrests were made
on mere suspicion; prisoners were seldom allowed much defense, and often were condemned in
groups without even an opportunity to speak for themselves. The Terror, then, was the plan of a
select minority to force Frenchmen to become revolutionaries whether they willed or no. The
queen was executed in October, 1793, one of over five thousand victims of the Terror which
raged against Girondin bourgeoisie as well as aristocrats; the grand total throughout France may
have reached twenty or thirty thousand. The guillotine became the "national razor," and hysterical
faslions a la guillotine were adopted. In the Midi the infamous Carrier found the guillotine too
slow for he had two thousand victims drowned in the Loire. Fouch'e, ex-Oratorian, conducted
judicial massacres at Lyons. And in October, 1793, the Vend'ee uprising was crushed in a
holocaust of slaughtered prisoners of war. Meanwhile, under the brilliant direction of Danton and
Carnot, the French had forced the allies back across the Rhine. Belgium and the Rhineland were
invaded, and Napoleon Bonaparte had recaptured Toulon from the British fleet. The Republic
was more than saved.
Religious persecution began when the Convention on March 19, 1793, proscribed all
priests. On April 23, the death penalty was decreed for non-jurors still exercising their functions,
and deportation for others. Though married clerics were exempted from these penalties in
November, the Terror eventually began to rage against all priests, and the constitutional clergy in
large part apostatized or submitted to Rome. On November 6, 1793, the constitutional bishops,
Gobel of Paris and Lindet of L'Eure, had abjured the Faith in presence of the Convention, and
four days later Gobel attended the fete of the Goddess of Reason in Notre Dame. Such
constitutional clergy as remained at their posts went through at least a formality of marriage.
Iconoclasm, official or voluntary, had free reign; Catholic worship was proscribed.
Struggle of factions. Although the Terror had repressed revolt at home and thrust back
foreign armies, its Jacobin sponsors began to turn on one another early in 1794. In January, the
faction of "Enrag'es," indignant critics of everything, were the first to be liquidated; their leader, the
expriest Jacques Roux, committed suicide. Next Danton and Robespierre united against
H'ebert's "Communists," atheistic proletarians of leveling tendencies. These sans-culottes had
terrorized terrorists and seemed to kill for the joy of it. In March, H'ebert and his followers,
denounced of undermining the Revolution by extremism, were arrested and guillotined. Next
Robespiere turned on Danton and the "Indulgents," who argued that since the Terror was but a
means to victory in war, it ought to cease with victory. During April, the blood-weary Danton was
overcome without offering much resistance.
"Reign of Virtue." Robespierre and his "Purists" were now the sole survivors.
Robespierre argued that the Terror must continue until Republican principles had been
everywhere established. This precise, incorruptible, pedantic lawyer was a Deist and doctrinaire.
Having substituted worship of the "Supreme Being" for that of the "Goddess of Reason," on June
8 he presided as high priest at a new festival, that of the "Supreme Being." But though Atheism
was thus officially repudiated, persecution of practicing Catholics did not cease. Sister
Marguerite Rutan died at Dax, Blessed Magdalene and other Daughters of Charity were executed
in June, and thirty-two nuns were put to death at Orange during July, 1794. Everywhere it was
made clear that the "Supreme Being" had but one prophet: Robespierre. It was no longer enough
to be a Jacobin; one had to be positively for Robespierre. It was ordered that trials of those
accused-often on mere suspicion or indictment by a Purist leader-were to be conducted without
allowing the accused to speak. During the six weeks of the "Reign of Virtue," thirteen hundred
heads fell in Paris alone.
Thermidor. Robespierre eventually overreached himself, since sheer dread for their own
lives induced collaborators to turn against him to escape his sensitive suspicions. Fouch'e,
disgraced for his rule at Lyons, feared chastisement. When he started a whispering campaign
against Robespierre in the Jacobin club, Robespierre retaliated by indicting his unnamed
enemies in the Convention. But in announcing a new purge of his foes, he made a tactical error,
for now all members felt insecure. Fouch'e anticipated the purge on 9 Thermidor-July 28-by
denouncing Robespierre in the Convention and later seizing him and his chief lieutenants.
Robespierre and his associates then followed their many victims to the over-worked guillotine.
Moderate revival. Fouch'e and his fellow conspirators were themselves terrorists: they
had intended to continue the iron rule-against someone else. But at once they were bailed on all
sides as liberators who had put an end to the Terror. So genuine and spontaneous was this
popular sentiment, that the Thermidorians found it expedient to acquiesce in the role assigned to
them. Accordingly they permitted the surviving Girondists to return to the rump Convention, while
the Plain, hitherto "motionless amid evil deliberations," re-emerged to second the bourgeois,
plutocratic trend of that reconstituted body. A new constitution (August, 1795) called for a
bicameral legislature, and a five-man executive, the Directory. Jacobins objected to this proposal,
but 13 Vend'emiaire (October 5) saw Barras and Bonaparte defend Thermidor by a "whiff of
grapeshot." It was the first time that a leftist uprising had failed. Having perpetuated two thirds of
its members in the new legislature, the Convention adjourned on October 26, 1795.
Lull in persecution. Thermidor did not at once halt the persecution of the Church.
Indeed, the Convention by suppressing the budget for public worship, September 18, 1794,
implied that religion was a thing of the past. But once more popular opinion failed to agree with
the men in power, and without awaiting governmental authorization Catholics resumed public
worship on all sides. Thereupon the Convention tried to wash its hands of the religious issue by
decreeing, February 21, 1795, separation of Church and state. Freedom of worship was
simultaneously proclaimed for the entire nation. Many non-jurors now came out of hiding or
returned from abroad to resume their public functions. Constitutional Bishop Gregoire tried to
rally the jurors as well, but many of these had renounced their priesthood. Disputes for
possession of the churches were resumed between jurors and non-jurors so that on May 30,
1795, the Convention proposed to authorize the function of any priest who would take a new oath
of "loyalty to the Republic and its laws." Royalists and 'emigr'es denounced this as a betrayal of
sacred duties of allegiance, but Father Emery of St. Sulpice, who had almost miraculously
survived the Terror, declared that merely political issues were involved. He accordingly led many
non-jurors in taking the new pledge. His attitude was eventually upheld in substance by Pope
Pius VI, for on June 8, 1796, the papal bull, Pastoralis Sollicitudo, directed French Catholics to
obey the Republic in all just legislation. Unfortunately the French Republic would not prove
equally tolerant and progressive, and the new Directory, far from reaching an accord, would, after
a period of "unfriendly neutrality," launch a new persecution. Nevertheless the Thermidorian
regime, in contrast to the Terror, afforded the Catholic clergy and the faithful a much needed
period for recuperation and reorganization, French society would never return as a unit to the
simple faith of the Ancien R'egime, but never again would the French Church forget the martyrs of
the Revolution and their legacy of initiative and heroism.
B. The Directory (1795-99)
Jacobin reaction. This trend toward conservatism, if not to monarchism, alarmed the
clique of Thermidorians who had been thus far exploiting the Directory. They and the army,
largely Jacobin, combined to purge the government of reactionary elements. The result was the
coup d'etat of 18 Fructidor (September 4), 1797. With the support of General Augerau, Barras
replaced conservative directors with Jacobins, and purged the legislatures of 154 alleged
royalists. Fructidor, then, represents a reaction to Jacobin views.
Renewed persecution was to be expected. A new anti-religious campaign got under way.
Although it professed to restrict itself to measures short of the death penalty, it must be
remembered that the maximum legal sentence, deportation to French Guiana, was more often
than not lethal. During 1797 a new oath required the clergy to profess "hatred for royalty and
anarchy." The French hierarchy were divided on the morality of this profession, and Father Emery
remained neutral. A period of perplexed consciences ensued until the Holy See indicated its
disapproval. From France, to which Belgium had been annexed by the victorious republican
arms, some ten thousand priests were deported during this "Second Terror." Providentially the
British navy in many instances prevented execution of the sentence; of the deported clergy 258
actually reached French Guiana, where 118 died.17 A new monarchist uprising broke out in the
Vend'ee.
Papal-French relations. Pope Pius VI, advised during the early stages of the French
Revolution by his envoy, Monsignor Salamon, had consistently sustained the non-jurors, to
whose bishops he granted ample special faculties. His threats and censures of the jurors were
regarded by the French Republic as political acts-French rulers even objected to the pope's
announcement of prayers for France as having political overtones. Not merely did the Republic
annex Avignon, but its armies invaded the Papal States in 1796, even though the pope was not at
war with France. In February, 1797, the victorious General Bonaparte dictated the Peace of
Tolentino, which obliged Pius VI to cede Avignon and the Romagna, and to yield an indemnity of
46,000,000 scudi and precious art objects.
The Roman Republic. Bonaparte's brother Joseph as the French ambassador to Rome
was instructed to foment a republican party in the Papal States. On December 28, 1797, a few
hundred rebels were found to shout for: "Liberty; long live the Republic; down with the pope."
Backed tip from February, 1798, by French troops under General Berthier, three hundred
organized "patriots" met in the Forum to declare the pope deposed from temporal rule in favor of
seven consuls. When the Roman populace failed to respond enthusiastically to this engineered
regime, Berthier feared that the pope's continued presence in Rome might inspire a reaction in
his favor. Hence he was ordered to go to Siena. When the octogenarian pontiff begged to be
allowed to die at Rome, Berthier retorted brutally: "You can die anywhere." Without preparation,
the pope was hustled into a mail coach and driven to Siena where lie remained for three months
under moderate confinement. During his absence the "Roman Republic" was to collapse when
the Russian general Suvorov's counter attacks drove back the French armies in Italy (1799).
Death of Pius VI. Meanwhile Pope Pius VI, transferred to the Carthusian monastery at
Florence in May, 1798, could still correspond with the outside world. Cardinals Altieri and Antici,
who had deserted him during the Roman Republic, were deposed, September, 1798. On March
28, 1799, the pope, now ailing and partially paralyzed, began his "stations of the Cross": he was
dragged to Bologna, through Modena, Reggio, Parma, Turin, carried on a stretcher over the Alps
to Briancon and Grenoble, and finally lodged in the abandoned city hall of Valence, France, on
July 14, 1799. When French peasants greeted him enthusiastically, the pope was ordered on to
yet another prison. This was more than he could stand: on August 28, 1799, he died at Valence,
begging forgiveness for his enemies, peace for Europe, restoration of the Faith to France, the
return of the papacy to Rome. But as the French themselves used to say, "qui mange du pape
meurt"; four days previously, Napoleon Bonaparte had left Egypt to overthrow the Directory.
VIII
Liberal Revolutions
A new constitution, adopted on Christmas, 1799, and promulgated on New Year's Day,
1800-thus did Napoleon subtly begin to lead France back to the Christian calendar-transformed
the Republic into a veiled dictatorship. Siey'es had intended that the executive should consist of
a commission of three consuls, but Bonaparte practically amended this to designation of himself
as first consul with authority to promulgate laws, appoint most of the councilors, ministers,
diplomats, judges, and generals, under the sole restraint of a merely consultative vote of the other
consuls. The triumvirate ultimately named were: Bonaparte, the novus homo, Lebrun, moderate
royalist, and Cambac'er'es, regicide. Though the Republic nominally continued until 1804, from
the first Bonaparte was supreme since the legislative power was so divided that it was unable to
check him effectively. For a council of state, named by the First Consul, had sole right to propose
laws. These were debated by a tribunate which, however, had no authority to vote on them.
Voting was done in a legislative court which was denied any right to discuss the proposals.
Finally a senate made some appointments to minor posts. After Bonaparte had been proclaimed
consul for life in 1802, even some of these forms of democracy disappeared.
Administration. Bonaparte, once an amnesty had put an end to the Second Vendean
Insurrection, tried to minimize factions. He restored civil rights to relatives of 'emigr'e aristocrats
whom he sought to attach to the new regime, and 'emigr'es were included in his council of state
along With regicides. Liberal pensions conciliated generals prone to revolt. Choosing a ministry
from all factions, Bonaparte pushed forward administrative centralization. Elected local prefects,
sub-prefects, and mayors were replaced by direct appointees from Paris.
The Code Napoleon, Bonaparte's revision of Roman Law, was to prove his most enduring
contribution. This compromise between the classical and the common law imposed a uniform,
secularistic code, eventually imitated by most of Latin Europe. Though liberty was curbed, all
citizens became equal before the law. Freedom of choice of occupation opened a career to non-
nobles, though Bonaparte never understood the full implications of the Industrial Revolution:
Article 1781 accepted employers' unsupported testimony regarding the proper amount of wages
to be paid workingmen. Freedom of conscience was allowed and liberty of cult proclaimed. All
children were to share equally in inheritance. Civil marriage was made available to all, and
divorce allowed on certain conditions. A regimented national school system was planned. It was
to be capped by a national university on secularist and rationalist principles, but this latter
institution did not immediately influence the lower schools. Schools, even catechetical, were
used for civilian training in a nationalistic, even chauvinistic, loyalty to the new regime.
Newspapers, clubs, and theaters were carefully controlled. Bourgeois desires were satisfied by
safeguarding of private property, and criminal procedure was made more humane. For good or
ill, one could say with one of Bonaparte's aides: "In three years be has ruled more than the kings
for a century."
Military vindication. Since 1798 France had been at war with a second coalition of Great
Britain, Russia, Austria, Sicily, Portugal, and Turkey. Before Napoleon's return from Egypt, Italy
had been lost and France invaded. Allied advance stalled, however, with Russia's withdrawal in
October, 1799, and in June, 1800, Bonaparte's great victory at Marengo broke the back of the
allied coalition. By February, 1801, Austria and the continental foes consented to the Peace of
Lun'eville which recognized French annexation or domination of the Netherlands, the west bank
of the Rhine, Switzerland, and all of Italy north of an already truncated Papal State. Though
Great Britain, save for a brief truce (180,93), continued the war at sea until Bonaparte's Waterloo
in 1815, until 1805 she could find none to support her on land. Bonaparte had restored French
leadership on the Continent, and could devote himself to sharing the real and imaginary blessings
of the French Revolution with the satellite republics of Batavia (Holland), Helvetia (Switzerland),
Cisalpine (Lombardy), etc.
Difficult conclave. The task of choosing a successor to Pope Pius VI who had died in
France in August, 1799, was delayed and greatly complicated by the Italian wars and attempts of
governments to dominate the papacy for political motives. Even before the late pontiff's death,
Napoleon had written his brother Joseph, then ambassador at Rome, that if possible he was to
prevent choice of a successor. The Roman Republic obviated normal electoral procedure, and it
was not until November, 1799, that thirty-four cardinals could assemble at the Abbey of St.
George on one of the Venetian islands, under Austrian protection. The conclave was protracted
by the usual counterintrigues of France and Austria, now accentuated by grave ideological
differences. It seemed that Cardinal Bellisome would be selected, subject to the approval of
Emperor Francis II, but Monsignor Consalvi, secretary of the conclave, persuaded the cardinals
to reconsider while they were awaiting the imperial response. On March 14, 1800, without
awaiting imperial sanction, the cardinals elected Gregorio Chiaramonti, bishop of Imola, who had
made several public pronouncements to the effect that Democracy could be easily harmonized
with the Church's mission. On March 21 he was crowned as Pope Pius VII. Bonaparte had
made no attempt to binder the collapse of the artificially created Roman Republic, and Emperor
Francis so far relented from his initial displeasure as to provide an Austrian ship to bring the new
pope to Rome on July 3. Pope Pius was enthusiastically received by the Roman people. In
August he named Consalvi cardinal secretary of state, and the latter served in that capacity
throughout the long pontificate (1800-23), except for the period 1806 to 1814 when Bonaparte's
pressure induced the pope to substitute Cardinal Pacca, at least for formal relations.
Negotiations commenced unofficially in July, 1800, when Bonaparte sounded out the
aged and diplomatically inexperienced Cardinal Martiniana of Vercelli about some understanding
between the Church and the new French government. These talks were officially pursued at
Paris the following November by Monsignor Spina for the Holy See and Abb'e Bernier for the
Consulate. Though Spina, who arrived in lay attire, secured tentative accord on many points, the
negotiations reached a deadlock on the point of hierarchical reorganization in May, 1801.
Thereupon Cardinal Consalvi himself came to discuss matters with foreign minister Talleyrand,
with some help from Father Emery. Consalvi had to resist Bonaparte's efforts to stampede,
confuse, or fatigue him, and brought the tortuous negotiations to an agreement on July 15, 1801.
This was ratified by the pope on August 15 and by the First Consul on September 8. The
Concordat was promulgated on Easter Sunday, April 10, 1802, when the bells of Notre Dame
rang for the first time in a decade.
Provisions. The articles of the Concordat provided the following: 1) Catholicity was
declared the privileged cult of the majority of Frenchmen, but not the state religion and other
religions continued to be tolerated. 2-3) A compromise was to be reached about the sees of the
Old Regime and the "Constitutional" ones of the Republic: pope and consul would use their
authority to secure the resignations of uncooperative prelates. 4-5) Future episcopal selection
would be regulated according to the Concordat of 1516: the First Consul would nominate and the
pope confirm. 6-7) Bishops and other ecclesiastics would be obliged to take an oath of fidelity to
the state. 8) Public prayers would be offered for the Republic and its Consuls. 9-10) New
parochial boundaries were to be arranged and episcopal appointment of pastors subjected to
governmental review. 11) The government would no longer endow chapters and seminaries. 12-
13) Ecclesiastical property still under governmental control would be returned; that already in
private possession would be condoned. 14-15) The government engaged to pay clerical salaries,
leaving the faithful free to endow their churches. 16-17) The First Consul would enjoy the
personal privileges of the former kings, though in the event of a non-Catholic holder of the office a
new arrangement would be reached.
Restrictions. To the Concordat the First Consul in time published unilateral appendices
termed "Organic Articles." These were the most vexatious: 1) The exequatur was claimed: no
papal document might be received in France without governmental authorization. 2) Papal
nuncios might not enter French territory without similar leave. 3) Conciliar decrees needed
governmental sanction for promulgation. 4) National councils might not be held without the same
approval. 6) The government claimed the right to bear appeals in cases of alleged violation of the
"Customs of the Gallican Church." 12) Bishops shall be addressed merely as "Monsieur." 20)
They may not leave their dioceses without governmental permission. 25) No one may be
ordained unless be possesses property of 300 francs' value. Despite papal repudiation,
Bonaparte repeatedly tried to apply these and other restrictions to the Concordat. He strove to
regulate the seminary curriculum, demanded adoption of a single catechism and liturgy for the
whole of France, forbade institution of new feasts, pretended to regulate preaching and
matrimonial rites, and meddled in clerical administration and finances. In time, however, this
obnoxious secular interference alienated erstwhile Gallicans from the state to closer co-operation
with the Holy See.
The new hierarchy. At Bonaparte's insistence, the eighty odd departmental sees were
reduced to sixty, of which ten were to be metropolitan. Great difficulty was experienced in finding
a new hierarchy, but the new organization was virtually complete by July 29, when Bonaparte's
uncle, Cardinal Fesch, was named to the primatial see of Lyons. Of the new bishops, sixteen
were progressives from the Old Regime, twelve were penitent "constitutionals," and thirty-two
were priests newly consecrated. Few of the bishops of the Old Regime were enthusiastic about
the Concordat, and several, headed by Coucy of La Rochelle, refused to resign. These came to
constitute an enduring but relatively unimportant schismatic "Petite Eglise" which was not
extinguished until 1894. On the other hand, Gregoire persisted until his death in 1831 as
representative of a group of constitutional intransigents who refused to submit to the Holy See.
On the whole, the new hierarchy was composed of realistic and hardworking men who tried to do
their best in a bad situation. The new arrangement removed all temporal advantages from the lot
of prelates, but also took away temptation for worldly ambition. Eventually the French hierarchy
became more devoted to the Holy See; Gallicanism had received its death blow-though it was a
long time in dying.
The new clergy. Not only were the bishops thus greatly reduced in numbers, but the
French clergy could at first muster but a third to a half of its pre-revolutionary numbers.
Seminaries had almost ceased to function. They were now hastily reconstituted, but not only
were professors few and material resources discouraging, but vocations had fallen off. Yet
ordinations arose from 344 in 1807 to 1,504 in 1816. These assembly line tactics turned out a
poorly educated clergy which may have been less fitted to win back the French intelligentsia.
Still, had all of them had the compensating virtue of one of those ordinands, the Cur'e of Ars, this
might not have mattered. Government salaries were inadequate, and parsimony and donations
of the faithful were needed to fill out the deficit. The clergy were far from being independent of
secular control, and had to administer the sacraments at the cost of great personal sacrifice for
slight material reward. By 1809 there were still but thirty-one thousand priests and many parishes
were without pastors, although Brittany and a few other Catholic regions were better provided
than the average.
Papal-governmental relations. From 1801 to 1808 Pope Pius VII was represented in
France by his legate, Cardinal Caprara, persona grata to Bonaparte by reason of his
impressionable and pliant temperament. The Consul was represented in religious matters by M.
Portals, minister of public worship. Though a Gallican, Portalis was comparatively considerate of
papal interests. Abb'e Bernier, a non-juror who had rallied to the Consulate, remained liaison
officer. Although promising from time to time to withdraw the "Organic Articles," e.g., on the eve
of imperial coronation in 1804, Bonaparte continued to threaten the Holy See and the French
clergy with this new Pragmatic Sanction. Later Cardinal Caprara allowed celebration of the feast
of a "St. Napoleon" (unknown to the Roman Martyrology) on August 15, and approved of the
imperial catechism which exacted of children a lengthy response of twenty-five lines on their
duties to "Napoleon, our emperor."
In Germany, which came increasingly under Bonaparte's domination between 1801 and
1805, the French Consul also hoped to effect an agreement with the Church. After negotiations
between Monsignor Severoli and Herr Franck, a draft was presented to the pope for confirmation
in November, 1804. The proposal was, however, rejected by the pope because of the schismatic
tendencies of Dalberg, Febronianminded bishop and Bonaparte's candidate for primate of a new
German state Church. Dalberg's objective seems to have been a national patriarchate, and his
attitude prevented ecclesiastical peace in Germany throughout the Napoleonic Era. Dalberg, as
will be seen, was rebuffed at the Congress of Vienna in 1815, and after his death in 1817 the Holy
See was able to conclude limited agreements with individual German states.
VIII
Liberal Revolutions
(1)IMPERIAL SUNRISE
The coronation. On May 18, 1804, subservient legislative bodies proclaimed Napoleon
Bonaparte "Emperor of the French." Bonaparte next sought papal confirmation of his new title,
and Cardinal Consalvi persuaded Pope Pius to assist at the coronation in Paris in the hope that a
revitalized Christendom might be created in the image of Charlemagne. But even before the
ceremony, Bonaparte insisted that the traditional ritual be pared of theocratic vestiges: the
medieval "accipe coronam" ought to become "coronet te Deus" in order to stress divine right
monarchy. As it actually turned out, Bonaparte crowned himself with the pontiff little more than a
passive spectator. For even such assistance Pope Pius had exacted promises of faithful
observance of the Concordat and of complete restoration of the Papal States. Bonaparte did not
keep his pledges, and upon his return to Rome Pius VII found that members of the curia ill
concealed their conviction that he had lent the French ruler great prestige without obtaining any
compensating advantages.
Imperial success. Internally, the new form of government made little real change in
Bonaparte's dictatorship, though a new peerage was created and subordinate officials were given
high-sounding titles. But outside of France, the imperial title, together with his assumption of the
title of "King of Italy" in 1805, challenged what remained of the old European order. Austria, still in
possession of ceremonial primacy as head of the Holy Roman Empire, was induced by Britain's
William Pitt to join yet a Third Coalition against the upstart monarch. But on the first anniversary
of his coronation, December 2, 1805, Bonaparte won the brilliant victory of Austerlitz. The Treaty
of Pressburg forced Francis II of Austria to cede Venice to France and allow her a free band in
reorganizing Germany. On July 12, 1806, Bonaparte formed the western half of Germany into the
"Confederation of the Rhine" with himself as protector. This meant the destruction of the
thousand-year Holy Roman Empire, and Francis II formally abdicated the ancient title on August
6-having already assumed a new title of "Emperor of Austria." Stich sweeping changes had
alarmed Prussia. She entered the war only to be speedily crushed at Jena, October, 1806.
Bonaparte pushed through Prussia to bring Russia to terms by the battles of Eylau and Friedland.
The Treaty of Tilsit, July, 1807, concluded the German phase of the war, and charmed Alexander I
of Russia into an alliance which cost him no territory. Prussia, however, was halved by cessions
to the Confederation of the Rhine and erection of a dependent "Grand Duchy of Warsaw" out of
Prussian and Austrian Poland. British Hanover became the nucleus of a "Kingdom of
Westphalia" for brother Jerome Bonaparte, though Great Britain, saved from threat of invasion by
the naval victory of Trafalgar, October, 1805, fought on at sea. But on land, which alone seemed
to matter, Bonaparte had apparently made good his claim to empire: he was undisputed master of
Western Europe and Alexander of Russia his dazzled junior partner. Bonaparte therefore had no
difficulty in deposing the Neapolitan Bourbons in 1806 and placing brother Joseph on that throne.
Then late in 1808 he interned the Spanish Bourbons and promoted Joseph to Madrid, brother-in-
law Joachim Murat replacing Joseph at Naples. Brother Louis Bonaparte had already been
named "King of Holland"-only Lucien had the independence and republican principle to refuse a
crown. Principalities were carved out for other relatives and servitors; by 1811 the French State
had expanded to 128 d'epartements under its direct rule, with most of western Europe tributary or
cowed. The "Man of Destiny" could proclaim: "The Civil Code [Napoleon] is the code of the
age!"
Economic warfare presently brought about new disagreements between the papacy and
the Bonapartist system. On November 21, 1806, by decree Bonaparte had inaugurated his
"Continental System," a paper blockade of Great Britain designed to prevent European and other
neutral states from trading with this one inaccessible foe of France. Great Britain retaliated with
"Orders in Council," blockading the continental ports. Neutrals were torn between the two camps.
The United States, despite ample grievance against both powers, finally declared war on Britain
alone. Tiny Denmark tried to preserve her neutrality; whereupon the British seized the Danish
fleet and the French occupied Danish territory. After that, while private blockade running
flourished and some trade was officially winked at, no continental state would risk open defiance
of the Continental System. This made all the more courageous the pope's refusal to abide by it.
Bonaparte insisted that all Englishmen be expelled from Rome, for not only were they heretics,
but "my enemies ought to be yours." Pius VII, after consulting the cardinals in consistory, replied
in effect that the spiritual mission of the papacy required papal impartiality toward all amid the
temporal rivalries of nations. Despite Bonaparte's threats, the pope refused to conform to the
anti-British embargo. Thereafter Bonaparte refused to entertain direct diplomatic relations with
the Holy See. Recalling the pacific Cardinal Fesch, his ambassador extraordinary, be replaced
him with the regicide Alquier. Thus papal-imperial relations became strained to the breaking
point. But Bonaparte's political and economic imperialism at last began to backfire: Russia
became alienated and Alexander I entered secret negotiations with Bonaparte's foes, including
the traitor Talleyrand. In Spain, moreover, popular resistance was the first instance of a counter-
nationalism aroused by the French Revolution. Spanish guerillas enabled the British forces to
find a foothold on the Continent and to dig a festering sore which within six years would poison
the entire imperial system.
Seizure of Rome. Open rupture between pope and dictator came on February 2, 1808,
when French troops occupied Rome unopposed. The Pope put up a placard of protest, recalled
Cardinal Caprara, and thus severed diplomatic relations. In April the occupying forces penetrated
into the papal residence at the Quirinal and French officers interfered with the pontifical
household. Cardinal Consalvi deemed it prudent to resign as secretary of state to placate
Bonaparte, although he remained in secret a trusted papal advisor. From 1808 to 1814 the
conservative Cardinal Pacca discharged the office of secretary until Cardinal Consalvi could be
reinstated. On May 17, 1809, a grandiloquent decree "from imperial field headquarters, Vienna,"
proclaimed that the papal city of Rome had been annexed to France. During July, the pope was
arrested and roughly bustled by night and day trips to Savona, where he remained under guard
until June, 1812.
Papal detention at Savona. Pius VII had replied by excommunicating all responsible for
this detention of Christ's Vicar, July, 1809. But though secretly distributed by Father Emery and
others, this decree was never openly promulgated in France. Bonaparte, however, was under no
illusions about his censure; he exclaimed: "I received news that the pope has excommunicated
me; be is a madman who should be shut up." Bonaparte took malicious pleasure in
communicating the news to timeserving Gallican prelates who continued to attend imperial fetes
on the ground that Bonaparte had not been explicitly named in the censure, or that Gallican
privilege prevented an anathema from taking effect on a French ruler. Meanwhile the pope was
held strictly incommunicado in the episcopal residence: he was refused visitors and his mail was
censored. Yet he bore his sufferings with Christian patience. Once again the "poor monk
Chiaramonti," he washed and mended the few garments that he had been allowed.
Napoleon's divorce. Napoleon Bonaparte believed that an upstart monarch must have a
direct heir, and that his aging childless wife, Josephine Beauharnais, could not give him one.
Though at first but civilly wedded to Bonaparte, she had revealed her scruples to the pope on the
eve of the imperial coronation in 1804. The pope had insisted upon having the marriage
canonically rectified, and Cardinal Fesch had received papal delegation to marry the couple
privately. Yet Gallican clerics, headed by Cardinal Maury, since 1808 archbishop of Paris without
the favor of the Apostolic See, complacently annulled the marriage on the supposed ground that
Cardinal Fesch was not Napoleon's pastor as required by Trent, and for presumed lack of
consent. After a senatusconsultum of December, 1809, had declared the marriage dissolved,
Bonaparte in April, 1810, contracted a union with Maria Louisa of Austria before Cardinal Maury.
Maury and those fourteen cardinals who assisted at the ceremony retained Bonaparte's favor and
continued to wear their cardinalatial. insignia. Cardinal Consalvi and twelve other members of the
Sacred College who had declined an invitation to the wedding were forbidden to wear their
insignia and henceforth were dubbed the "black cardinals." Under the circumstances, however,
the new style was very becoming.
"Concordat of Fontainebleau." During June, 1812, the ailing pontiff was transported to
Fontainebleau in France to be subjected to new imperial pressures. After his return from Russia,
where the repulse of the Grand Army had made his position critical, Bonaparte engaged in a six-
day conference with Pius VII during January, 1813. The kindly pontiff seems to have been
impressed by Napoleon's undeniable charm. The "red cardinals" induced the pope to make
certain tentative concessions: authorization for the metropolitans to concede canonical
institution if the pope failed to do so within six months; and acceptance of financial compensation
in exchange for the confiscated Papal States. Yet such points were clearly tentative, for the
memorandum was designated as a "basis for definitive settlement," and was conditioned by the
"approval of all the cardinals." But when Pius consulted the "black cardinals," both Consalvi and
Pacca convinced him that the concessions were incompatible with papal primacy. Humbly
remorseful, the pope on March 24 retracted his concessions in a letter to Bonaparte. But the
latter, suppressing the papal revocation, published the memorandum on March 25 as the
definitive Concordat of Fontainebleau. When, however, Bonaparte followed it in practice, Pope
Pius on May 9, 1813, declared all archiepiscopal ratification's of episcopal nominations null.
Thereafter be remained adamant.
Napoleonic collapse. At the height of his power, Napoleon Bonaparte had jeered at papal
rebukes: "What does the pope mean by denouncing me to Christendom? Does he think that the
arms shall fall from the hands of my soldiers?" The Russian campaign of 1812 provided an
almost literally affirmative answer. During the summer Bonaparte's army had invaded Russia to
punish her for non-adherence to the Continental System. Though Moscow was captured, no
decisive victory could be won. During the wintry retreat to Germany the greater part of this force
of half a million disappeared-they were dead, captured, or deserted-leaving their weapons lying in
the snow. This first serious reverse encouraged all the subject peoples, and the nationalism
evoked by the French Revolution now turned against it. Spaniards, aided by an English
expeditionary force, had long harassed French forces; now they drove them out of the Peninsula
and invaded southern France. Germans, belatedly catching the nationalistic fever, joined the
Russians on the eastern front. Bonaparte desperately raised a new army, but at the "Battle of the
Nations," Leipsic, October, 1813, be was decisively defeated and forced to retreat to France.
Thereafter his admittedly brilliant maneuvers could merely delay surrender. At last on April 6,
1814, he returned to Fontainebleau, but to abdicate his imperial crown.
Papal liberation. Pope Pius, however, was no longer there. In December, 1813,
Bonaparte had given orders for his return to Savona, and there on March 17, 1814, the captive
pontiff received the French government's assurance that he was free. Rome, however, was still
occupied by the imperial lieutenant, Joachim Murat of Naples, who now betrayed Ms master by a
secret treaty with Austria which proposed to purchase his alliance by the gift of papal territory.
This secret diplomacy unexpectedly came to light and was soundly denounced by the British
envoy Bentinck, and hastily disavowed by Austria. Though large portions of the pontifical
dominions remained under Austrian or Neapolitan control, Pius VII was able to return to Rome on
May 24, 1814.
"The Hundred Days" may be briefly treated here out of chronological order to conclude
Bonaparte's career. Relegated to Elba after his abdication, he felt encouraged by Allied
bickerings at the peace conferences to make a new bid for power. He landed at Cannes on
March 1, 1815, and was able to rally his old officers and occupy Paris. Both Bonaparte and the
Allies now sought the moral support of the pope, but he continued severely impartial, and the
French clergy showed little enthusiasm for the returned dictator. Murat's alliance with Bonaparte
forced the pope to retire temporarily to Genoa, but Murat's speedy capture and execution
removed this menace, and Pius was back in Rome on June 7, 1815. Further problems from
Bonaparte, moreover, were cut short by the latter's defeat at Waterloo, Belgium, by Wellington
and Blucher on June 18. Four days later Bonaparte abdicated a second time. Failing to escape
to the United States, he surrendered to the British who transported him to St. Helena for the
remainder of his life. Pope Pius granted asylum for Napoleon's mother and relatives in the Papal
State, intervened on behalf of the deposed ruler, and had the satisfaction of learning that
Napoleon Bonaparte died apparently reconciled with the Church, May 5, 1821.
IX
Authoritarian Reaction
A. Political Reaction
Ecclesiastical reorganization. Cardinal Consalvi had taken care to meet the leading
diplomats before the opening of the Vienna Congress, even going to London on this errand.
During the first period of the Congress prior to the "Hundred Days," Consalvi had little success in
promoting his objective, complete restoration of papal temporal possessions. He kept aloof from
the social life of the Congress and lacked the material inducements used by other embassies,
though at Talleyrand's motion the papal nuncio was accorded ceremonial precedence among
diplomats as had been traditional. But France held on to Avignon, Austria continued to occupy
the Romagna, Murat had the Marches, and Talleyrand himself wanted to keep his Principality of
Benevento. Bonaparte's reappearance reunited the allies and they vied with him in seeking papal
favor. Murat's capture and execution freed part of the Papal States, and Austria then allowed
restoration of her occupied territories, save for a slight "rectification" of the frontier along the Po.
As soon as the Holy See had paid the expenses of the occupation forces they would be
withdrawn. Talleyrand agreed to yield Benevento for monetary compensation: all that the Holy
See had to do was to buy back its own territory from an apostate bishop. But as for Avignon,
King Louis XVIII of France explained that though his own intentions Were good, public opinion
would not permit him to return it. Yet on the whole, Consalvi had restored the bulk of the Papal
States, now the Only surviving ecclesiastical palatinate, and the diplomatic prestige of the papacy
was comparatively high.
Liberal defections, however, began that very year when Canning of Great Britain
countenanced Greek rebellion against the Turks and cooperated with the Monroe Doctrine of the
United States in regard to Latin American independence from Spain and Portugal. During
183031 Metternich had to acquiesce in the substitution of the more liberal Orleanists for the
Bourbons in France, and the independence of Belgium from Holland. But at least the new
regimes were monarchical in form, and prompt military action had prevented the spread of
Liberalism to Central Europe: revolts in Italy and Poland had been suppressed. For nearly two
decades more Metternich held down the lid on Liberalism with increasing difficulty. But in 1848
occurred a series of explosions: the Second Republic in France; papal concessions in Rome;
overthrow of absolute monarchs in Germany and Italy, together with projects for national
unification under Liberal auspices. Finally Metternich himself under the incognito of "Mr. Smith"
had to seek temporary asylum in England. To be sure, his system gradually returned within the
next few ears though with increasing concessions to Liberalism as the bourgeoisie were gradually
fused with the nobility. Absolute monarchy accepted more and more "constitutional" restraints as
time worked a compromise between the Old Regime and Liberalism that was neither Democracy
nor Proletarianism. By the end of the nineteenth century, Liberalism began to share the
stage with Nationalism and Socialism in the ideological parade.
B. Intellectual Currents
(1) VOGUE OF ROMANTICISM
"Romanticism was not merely a literary movement. . . . From the literary aspect,
Romanticism was the movement of liberation from the classical rules of composition, from the
logical order in speech, from the restricting unities of tragedy. it meant a free rein to fantasy,
escape from the present, worship of the past, a leap into the unreal. It was the irrational turned
toward the sensual, the mystical bordering on the orgiastic, the substitution of the passional for
the lyrical, the abandon of the idea for experience of the concrete. All this brought confusion, but
it gave a means for renewing the material and technique of poetic and artistic expression. . . . The
underlying exigencies of the Romantic movement were sound: a return to historical, traditional,
ethnical, religious, and popular values-not a return such as some, in their exaggeration, wanted,
to even the style and incongruities of a Middle Ages that could not be brought back to life, but
taking such values as permanent values of the historical process, successively realized by the
culture of the various ages. . . . The Romantic movement was at bottom a movement of Catholic
liberation, albeit with an immense confusion of ideas and sentiments and with an unloosing of
passions and signal deviations and distortions."
A new dogmatism was in marked contrast to the cynicism of the "Enlightenment," though,
as Madame de Stael expressed it, the content of this dogma seemed secondary: "I do not know
exactly what we must believe, but I believe that we must believe! The eighteenth century did
nothing but deny. The human spirit lives by its beliefs. Acquire faith through Christianity, or
through German philosophy, or merely through enthusiasm, but believe in something"3 It is not
surprising, then, that Romanticism took some rather confused lurches in different directions.
Pietism revived in Germany; Methodism won new converts in England and the United States,
while Anglicans at Oxford, Liberals in France, and Febronians in Germany sometimes set out on
the path to Rome. Meanwhile non-scholastic philosophy veered from Hume's skepticism to a
search for a new principle of authority. Immanuel Kant promised a new certainty in his
"categorical imperative"; Fichte and Schelling called on the will, Jacobi on a "sentimental faith,"
Hegel elaborated the Absolute Idea, concreted in the Prussian state. Marx reacted against
Hegelian Idealism to use his technique in Dialectical Materialism, while Kierkegaard scorned
Hegelian religious rationalism for existential experience-not that these two latter offshoots created
much stir in the contemporary scene. Romanticism was nearly as slippery to define, its
Liberalism, with which it was often allied in political aspirations. Romanticism was in part
disillusioned by the ultimate failure of the 1848 Liberal Revolutions to achieve a prompt
millennium, and during the second half of the nineteenth century many intellectuals inclined
toward a tougher "Realism," even if they did not subscribe wholly to terialism."
"Ontologism" was closely allied with Fideism in the sense of a pietistic reaction of well-
meaning men against Rationalism. its exponents included Vicenzo Gioberti (1801-52), Auguste
Gratry (1805-72), and Antonio Rosmini-Serbati (1797-1855), who held for a form of natural
intuition of the divine essence. Rosmini was acquitted by an investigating commission in 1854,
but extreme expressions of this theory were condemned by the Holy Office in 1861 (Denzinger
1659-66), including the claim that "at least an habitual immediate cognition of God is essential to
the human intellect so that without it it can know nothing." Pope Pius IX's admiration for Padre
Rosmini's virtue Preserved him from further prosecution during their lifetimes, but Pope-Leo XIII,
who as Cardinal Pecci had vainly tried to obtain a condemnation of Rosmini's views at the Vatican
Council, ordered a searchinh investigation in 1887, which resulted in the posthumous
condemnation of forty of Rosmini's propositions (Denzinger 1891-1930). Some elements of
Ontologism have also been detected in Ubaghs, Maret, and perhaps Brownson. in brief, these
men and many others fiercely challenged the smug and blas'e Rationalism of the eighteenth
century. Whatever they were, they were enthusiastic, and as such, portended change. For all its
vaunted political stability, therefore, the Metternich Era did not prove intellectually stagnant.
Unfortunately the same years saw a low ebb of Scholasticism so that various theologians and
philosophers were tempted to essay a new doctrinal synthesis on the basis of revolutionary
philosophies. This trend, applying Kantianism to dogma, eventually produced Modernism.
Liberal Agnosticism (1789-1870) IX Authoritarian Reaction (1815-48)
74. Capetian Finale (1814-48)
IX
Authoritarian Reaction
Neo-Gallicanism. If the royal government did conciliate the clergy by small concessions,
it also strove to dominate them. Thus the king enacted a law against sacrilege and increased
ecclesiastical subsidies, but he also insisted on the teaching of the Four Gallican Articles in the
seminaries. The placet and the exequatur were often invoked from the "Organic Articles": during
1826 one papal document was published with reservations, and another was suppressed. In
1827 the king named a bishop to Strasbourg without awaiting papal confirmation, and be
continued to insist on the deposition of Cardinal Fesch from the see of Lyons-a demand which
Pope Leo XII as consistently refused. Religious orders had reappeared in France with
governmental authorization or toleration. When Ultra-Royalist concessions provoked the Liberals
into Jesuit-baiting, the king placated them by naming a Liberal prime minister, Martignac (1828).
The latter subjected Jesuit schools to prying regulations, placed minor seminaries under
governmental inspection, and limited the number of seminarians. Though the French hierarchy
were roused to protest, they ended by accepting the regulations. To be sure, Lamennais flayed
this Neo-Gallicanism and summoned the younger clergy to profess uncompromising
Ultramontanism. At the same time he abandoned his original Ultra-Royalism for what he
eventually styled "Catholic Liberalism." Pope Leo XII prudently suspended judgment on this sort
of apologetics. While receiving Lamennais kindly, he distrusted his aims: "He is one of those
lovers of perfectionism who, if allowed, would overturn the world."
Revolt in July. Ultra-Royalist strictures induced the king in 1829 to replace Martignac with
the authoritarian Jules Polignac. Press warfare between Ultra-Royalists and Liberals, Gallicans
and Ultramontanes, became vigorous: Lamennais publicly denounced the French hierarchy for
weakness to Archbishop De Quelen of Paris, who replied. Bourgeois Liberals and Republicans
revived old accusations against union of "throne and altar." In 1830 Charles X dissolved the
Assembly and called for new elections, in which many clerics actively supported the crown.
When the Liberals nonetheless increased their hold on the legislature, the king issued his "July
Ordinances" designed to muzzle the press and manipulate elections to secure an "Ultra" majority.
This was enough; three days later, July 28, Paris arose under Lafayette and Thiers to demand the
king's abdication. Archbishop De Quelen was menaced with death, several church edifices were
plundered, and priests found it prudent to close the churches and stay off the streets. Street
fighting began in Paris. Refusing to preserve his crown by shedding his people's blood, Charles
X made a dignified retreat to England, and after some hesitation, Louis Philippe d'Orleans was
named the constitutional "King of the French."
L'Avenir was their organ of expression, begun on October 16, 1830. Liberty for France to
them meant liberty of teaching, liberty of the press ("the strongest guarantee of all the others"),
liberty of assembly, freedom of election, political liberty. These Catholic Liberals also agitated on
behalf of the independence of Belgium, Poland, Ireland, and Italy. Lamennais and Lacordaire
were prosecuted by the Orleanist government during January, 1831, for opening a free school,
but were acquitted. But their continuing attacks on the monarchy and the Gallican hierarchy
brought down upon them official condemnations. The government subjected L'Avenir to endless
legal prosecutions-usually with scant success, while the prelates, led by Cardinal De Bohan,
blacklisted the paper and drew up a list of its alleged theological errors. Anticipating denunciation
to Rome, Lamennais, Lacordaire, and Montalembert suspended publication in November, 1831,
and proceeded themselves to lay their cause before Gregory XVI at Rome.
Papal condemnation. Pope Gregory was personally anything but liberal, but he might
legitimately object to a defense of separation of Church and state as an ideal regime. Even more
dangerous was Lamennais' implication that faith, stemming from a primitive revelation, rather
than unaided reason, established God's existence, and his corollary that profession of the
Catholic faith was a matter of indifference provided that non-Catholics lived honorably. After
careful examination, the pope condemned the tenets of L'Avenir in his encyclical, Mirari Vos
(1832). Though its language was rather severe, the papal document refrained from citing the
editors by name.
IX
Authoritarian Reaction
Secularization. The Napoleonic victories put an end to the ancient Holy Roman Empire
in 1806. As early as 1801 French annexations necessitated a reapportionment of territories to
"compensate" dispossessed magnates, especially in the Rhineland. To this end recourse was
had in 1803 to a general secularization of the ecclesiastical palatinates. Then the Diet of
Regensburg issued the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss, which verbose legal theft deprived the
Church in Germany of temporal rule over 3,500,000 subjects, of three electoral votes, and of an
annual revenue of $10,000,000. Though Cardinal Consalvi requested restoration at the
Congress of Vienna, it was in vain. The Church in Germany never received any adequate
reimbursement for this robbery of the pious bequests of centuries, and the German clergy were
largely cast on the resources of the faithful during the nineteenth century.
Febronian alienation. This impoverishment, however, may have averted the greater evil
of a schismatic German Church. Bonaparte's ecclesiastical tool in Germany had been Karl von
Dalberg (1744-1817), coadjutor of Mainz. At the secularization of 1803, not to lose his worldly
status, Dalberg transferred his metropolitan rights to Regensburg, and with Bonaparte's
approbation carved out a temporal principality for himself. Next Dalberg was pressed upon Pope
Pius VII as primate of a subservient German hierarchy according to the erroneous Febronian
views. When the pontiff refused to be content with a mere primacy of honor over Germany,
Bonaparte and Dalberg put their project into execution within the French-dominated
Confederation of the Rhine. Dalberg as primate altered diocesan boundaries and installed
henchmen without recourse to the Holy See. Ignaz von Wessenberg (1774-1860) became
Dalberg's vicar and aide in introducing Febronian concepts of a German national Church. Papal
refusal of canonical institution to Dalberg's hierarchy completed the organizational confusion of
the Church in Germany.
Febronian defeat. After the Battle of Leipsic (1813) had freed Germany from French
domination, Dalberg was obliged to renounce his secular principality, but continued to hold on to
the see of Regensburg. To the Congress of Vienna Dalberg's deputy Wessenburg proposed a
national Church with a German jurisdictional patriarchate under honorary papal precedence. The
ex-elector of Trier, Archbishop Clemens von Wettin, who had long failed to rebuke his auxiliary
Hontheim (Febronius) in the eighteenth century, now made belated amends by opposing this
project. But what most effectively countered Dalberg's plan was the desire of the German
magnates to preserve state autonomy in ecclesiastical as well as secular affairs. For at the
Congress, the German princes defeated a restoration of the Holy Roman Empire as well as a
strong federal union, and contented themselves with a league of independent states similar to the
United States under the Articles of Confederation. Cardinal Consalvi, in order to defeat Dalberg,
sided with the magnates' aspirations to the extent of consistently speaking of the "Catholic
Churches in Germany." Dalberg's scheme was therefore rejected and the German Church
received no national organization. Instead, bierarchical reorganization was subsequently
undertaken through concordats with individual states, e.g., Bavaria (1817-1933) and Austria
(1855). Dalberg held out at Regensburg until his death in 1817 and Wessenberg hampered
Swabian ecclesiastical jurisdiction until 1827. Febronianism was not entirely extinguished even
among German prelates, but a rising tide of Ultramontanism would soon render it old-fashioned.
Munster Circle. The first manifestation of this revival appeared in Westphalia where the
"Munster Circle" was founded by Canon Franz von Furstenberg (1729-1810). As temporal
administrator (1762-80) of the prince-bishopric, he had fostered agrarian reforms which reduced
serfdom, introduced a system of Catholic education free from Febronian and Rationalist
influences and employing modem methods, and had tried to train a solidly Catholic clergy and
laity in his Munster University (1771). Canon Furstenberg continued to direct education until the
1803 secularization, but his ideals survived under Father Bernard Overberg (1754-1820) who
added normal schools to the program. These educators' efforts attracted the patronage of Lady
Adele Schmettau. (1748-1806), wife of a Russian nobleman, and mother of the American
missionary, Father Demetrius Gallitzin (1770-1840). After returning to the practice of the Catholic
Faith in 1786, she sponsored a literary group which publicized and aided the revival. In 1800 the
circle was augmented by the conversion of the classical scholar, Count Friedrich zu Stolberg
(17501819), a sort of German Chateaubriand. At Cologne be inaugurated a rebirth of Christian
art. This in turn inspired the "Nazarean School" of German painters at Rome, and the Dusseldorf
School in the town of that name. Clemens von Droste-Vischering (1773-1845), subsequently
archbishop of Cologne during the Prussian Mixed Marriage Controversy, was also a member of
the Munster Circle.
Landshut Group. Another associate of the Munster Circle, Johann Sailer (1751-1832),
carried the revival to Landshut in Bavaria where be became bishop of the reorganized see of
Regensburg in 1829. As professor and bishop he sought to train good priests; as writer of
devotional works be sought to develop piety among the laity. Bishop Sailer brought back to the
Faith Melchior von Diepenbrock (1798-1853), later the zealous bishop of Breslau, and Clemens
Brentano (1778-1842), Romantic apologist for the Church, and protagonist of the stigmatic, Anne
Catherine Emmerich (1774-1824). Bishop Sailer also exercised a good influence upon Prince
Louis I of Bavaria (1786-1868), patron of the Munich School.
Munich School. On his accession to the Bavarian throne in 1825, Louis I transferred the
Landshut college to Munich to make of it a truly Catholic university. To this end in 1827 he
summoned Joseph Gorres (1776-1848) to become professor and to preside over an
extracurricular academy of Catholic scholars. Gorres was an ex-Jacobin disillusioned of
Liberalism who had been a German patriot in the resistance to Bonaparte, and was becoming a
great literary apologist for the Church. He became widely known through lectures, books, and
articles, chiefly in a new review, Der Katholik, which was the leading organ of Ultramontane
expression. Against Hegel's pantheistic Philosophy of History, Gorres pleaded for a Christian
interpretation of historical development, and himself edited a series entitled God in History from
1831. His Historisch-Politische Blatter traced some of the ideas later put into practice by the
Catholic Center Party. Among Gorres's disciples at Munich were the Catholic scholars and his
son Guido Gorres (1805-52), also an editor; Georg Phillips (1804-1872) and Karl May (1799-
1867), lay experts in both civil and canon law; Father Joseph Allioli (1793-1873), translator of a
new Catholic German version of the Bible; Father Johann Mohler (1796-1838), theologian and
patrologist; Peter Cornelius (1805-64), Christian artist; Franz Streber (180564), archaeologist;
and Johann Ignaz Dollinger (1799-1890), the brilliant but caustic historical scholar, who did good
work before becoming an "Old Catholic" apostate. Theirs was to be a vocation in line with Bishop
Sailer's ideal for the men of the nineteenth century when ecclesiastics "must know more, do
more, and be ready to suffer more" than formerly. The School enjoyed the patronage of Prince
Louis, who also founded the Ludwigverein, a missionary aid society which greatly assisted the
spread of the Faith in the United States. Though the Spanish actress, Lola Montez, later
distracted his attention, Prince Louis was on the whole quite favorable to the Church until his
deposition in the 1848 Revolutions.
In Austria, despite the good dispositions of Francis II (1792-1835) and Ferdinand (1835-
48), the court remained permeated with Josephinist adherents who strove to control the Church
through a governmental agency, the "Ecclesiastical Commission." Universities and schools had
been proclaimed neutral by Emperor Joseph II, and later-day Josephinists tried to make them so
in practice. Thus, St. Clement Hofbauer (1751-1820), the "Apostle of Vienna," was obliged to
make use of what today would be called a "Newman Club" in the supposedly Catholic city and
University of Vienna. On the other hand, except for the appropriation of the large palatinate of
Salzburg, Austrian ecclesiastical property and diocesan boundaries had remained substantially
intact through the revolutionary era. Though the government permitted greater clerical influence
upon educational supervision as time went on, no complete accord could be reached with the
Holy See despite attempts at a concordat in 1819 and 1833. Except for Bavaria, other nominally
Catholic states-whose detailed history cannot be traced here-were even less co-operative with
the Church.
In Prussia, the acquisition of the Rhineland at the Congress of Vienna brought many
Catholics into this hitherto predominantly Protestant state. As previously noted, Frederick the
Great (1740-86) had initiated a policy of religious tolerance, and Pope Pius VII was able to utilize
this spirit to reach an agreement with King Frederick William III (17971840) regarding the erection
of dioceses and vicariates within Prussian frontiers. According to the bull, De Salute Animarum
(1821), cathedral chapters were authorized to select bishops, subject alike to papal confirmation
and royal veto. Seminaries were to be established in each diocese. For a time the Prussian
government, while directed by the anti-masonic premier, Baron von Hardenberg, was almost
more gracious toward Catholics than were the Catholic princes. But after Hardenberg's
retirement in 1822, a major controversy arose about mixed marriages. While its history is here
traced for Prussia alone, where it assumed the most serious proportions, it should be noted that
similar struggles went on simultaneously in many other German states.
Government capitulation followed the old king's death in June, 1840. The new monarch,
Frederick William IV (1840-61), realized that the controversy ill served his dream of German
unification under Prussian presidency. He permitted Archbishop Dunin to return to his see, while
the ailing Droste-Vischering since 1839 under house arrest instead of in prison-was released to
proceed to Rome where the Prussian government instituted discussions. After the king had
agreed to accept the papal directive unconditionally and to withdraw the governmental placet and
exequatur, a way was open for a settlement of the dispute. The government withdrew its charges
against Droste-Vischering, while the Holy See saved royal prestige by sacrificing the "New
Athanasius" as it had the first one. Though the aged prelate retained title to his see, he remained
at Rome, leaving the administration in the hands of a coadjutor, Johann von Geisel, acceptable to
the king. On his part, the king tried to make amends by admitting some Catholic representatives
to his "ministry of cult" where they could advise him on Catholic interests in legislation, and by
contributing generously to the completion of the five-hundred-year-old Cologne Cathedral-it was
finished in 1880.
Canonical postscript. The concessions of Literis Altero remained the norm for mixed
marriages in Prussia and several other German states until 1918, and even Ne Temere which in
1908 required interrogations for validity did not alter these special pontifical concessions. But in
1918 not only did the New Code of Canon Law revoke the concessions of Literis Altero, but the
democratic revolutions in Central Europe following World War I swept away the meddling
monarchical governments which had extorted them from the Holy See, for arrangements similar
to the Prussian had been made with Austria (1841), Hungary, and Bavaria.-'
IX
Authoritarian Reaction
Italian restoration. For a decade (1802-13) a Republic and kingdom of Italy had existed
under Napoleonic leadership. Though this comprised only a part of the Italian peninsula, it had
awakened nationalist aspirations. But since for Metternich, "Italy was a mere geographical
expression," the Congress of Vienna ignored any desires of Italian patriots for unity and imposed
a political system which was destined to endure without substantial change until 1859. The Papal
States and the Two Sicilies were restored to their former rulers without major alteration. Sardinia-
Savoy-Piedmont was permitted to annex Genoa and remained the only dynasty Italian in
sentiment; hence it soon became a rallying point for patriots. Lombardy, with the former Republic
of Venice, became an Austrian province. Tuscany, Modena, Parma, Lucca, and Guastalla
became Austrian protectorates-Lucca was annexed by Tuscany in 1847 and Guastalla absorbed
by Modena in 1848.
Pontifical restoration. Pope Pius VII made his definitive return to Rome-after the Hundred
Days-on June 7, 1815. Cardinal Consalvi, again papal secretary of state, secured the almost
complete restoration of the papal temporal states, but the problem of reorganizing the
administration remained. The Zelanti, led by Cardinal Bartolomeo Pacca (1756-1844), pro-
secretary from 1808 to 1814, inclined toward conservative reaction, and during Cardinal
Consalvi's absence at Vienna, Monsignor Rivarola, provisional administrator of the Papal States,
had practically ignored the revolutionary developments in restoring the old system of government.
On the other band, the Politiques, led by Consalvi (1757-1824) himself, favored a compromise
between the Old and New Regimes. The cardinal secretary of state eventually convinced Pius
VII of the expediency of the latter program, which was the basis of a motu proprio issued by the
pope on July 6, 1816. By this decree the pontifical territories were subdivided into legations on
the model of the new French departments. The clerical legates were to be assisted by lay
subordinates, and advised by provincial councils, though these were named from Rome rather
than elected. justice and administration were separated; a new civil code tried to harmonize the
better features of the Code Napoleon with the canon law. Torture was abolished, and feudal
privileges of the nobility sacrificed to equality of taxation. Other progressive measures, chiefly
economic, were planned, but want of funds would keep them merely on paper. During 1818 a
concordat was negotiated with the Two Sicilies which may represent standard papal desiderata in
Italy: recognition of the Church as the state religion; renunciation of the placet; acceptance of
endowments by the Church in condonation of confiscated properties; redrawing of diocesan
boundaries, and subjection of royal nomination of prelates to papal confirmation.
Carbonari uprisings. Yet youths enamored of extremist views of the Jacobin Revolution
regarded these changes entirely inadequate. The secret society of the Carbonari ("Charcoal
Burners"), which seems to have been formed about 1800, began to work for the overthrow of
"priestly government." An abortive revolt in the Papal States during 1817 led to the arrest and
condemnation to death of the ringleaders, but the pope commuted the sentences to life
imprisonment. Cardinal Pacca had issued an edict against these Carbonari in 1814, but it was
not until 1821 that the kindly pontiff could be induced to pronounce definitive condemnation. This
censure seems to have precipitated the dissolution of the Carbonari, but similar societies took
their place. With these, however, the aged and patient Pius VII did not have to deal, for he died
on August 16, 1823, to be followed within six months by his faithful aide, Cardinal Consalvi.
Though not a strong character, Pius VII had won general European admiration for his patient
sufferings at Bonaparte's hands, and for his willingness to meet new ideas half way.
Diplomatic affairs had little interest for the pope, yet he courageously reorganized the
Latin American hierarchies, despite the vehement opposition of the Spanish monarchy. Pacts
were also concluded with Hanover (1824), and the Netherlands (1827), and the Rhenish
hierarchy reorganized.
Spiritual leadership was the pope's chief concern and here he displayed both intelligence
and zeal. His encyclical of May 5, 1824, Ubi Primum, condemned Indifferentism and the
Rationalist Bible Societies, and in 1825 Quo Graviore renewed the condemnation of the
Carbonari and Freemasons. The Holy Year jubilee, omitted in 1800, was resumed in 1825. The
pope was particularly solicitous for the foreign missions and reunion of Oriental Dissidents. Leo
XII departed life in an edifying manner on February 10, 1829, but was little mourned by his
restless contemporaries.
Clerical Federalists. Some "Liberal Catholics," led by Padre Vincenzo Gioberti (1801-52),
sought a federation of autonomous Italian states under papal presidency. In his Primato Morale e
Civile degli Italiani (1843), Gioberti denounced revolution and conspiracy as futile means toward
Italian unification, and defended the traditional cultural leadership of the papacy. But in his
Gesuita Moderno, Gioberti turned to baiting Jesuit Ultramontanes. The Federalist cause was also
sustained, with some modifications of thought, by the writings of Cesare Balbo (17871853) and
Massimo Taporelli (1798-1866), marchese d'Azeglio. This group, which included Liberals and
Romantics of the Chateaubriand type as well as the old Guelf nobility, desired to preserve papal
sovereignty at all costs. Realization of this program, however, would have identified the papacy
with Italian nationalism and it was doomed by
papal repudiation.
Liberal monarchists. A third group hoped to unify Italy into a constitutional monarchy
under the House of Savoy. Their leader was a Mason, Count Camillo di Cavour (1810-61),
almost continuously premier of Sardinia from 1852 to his death. Though he proclaimed a "free
Church in a free state," in practice his program involved abolition of the Papal States and
reduction of the papacy to a national primacy. He expected to engineer a fait accompli and then
placate the Holy See by expressions of regret and financial reimbursement. His party included a
large number of compromising Catholics, torn between their love and loyalty for the Holy See and
their ambitions for a unified Italy. The party's leaders represented the dominant class of the
century, the industrial and capitalist bourgeoisie. Piedmont as yet comprised the only
industrialized area in Italy, and its leaders looked with favor on the British monarchy where
administration was in accord with laissez-faire theories. Viscount Palmerston, influential British
statesman, lent Cavour powerful backing, and Napoleon III of France was eventually prodded into
half-hearted military intervention. King Charles Albert of Sardinia (1831-49), like Napoleon,
seems to have had links with the Carbonari in his youth, and it is possible that political blackmail,
if not threats of assassination, forced him to play the role assigned. Stampeded into a war
beyond his resources, he abdicated and went into exile, leaving the throne to a son, Vittorio
Emmanuele II, whom Pope Pius IX was to describe as the "compliant tool of Freemasons."
Jacobin revolt. The revolutionary agitation had spread to the Papal States during the
conclave, and two days after the pope's election, Bologna set up a Jacobin provisional
government. Cardinal Benevenuti, sent to suppress the insurrection, was taken prisoner. Riots in
Rome were put down with difficulty. Hence, the new secretary of state, Cardinal Bernetti,
appealed to Austria for assistance. Metternich was only too happy to oblige and Austrian troops
speedily dispersed the rebels of Bologna by the end of March, 1831. Some of the refugees were
given asylum by the bishop of Imola, Giovanni Mastia-Ferretti, the future Pope Pius IX.
Alien intervention. In May, 1831, the Quintuple Alliance dictated a memorandum to the
pope, recommending that he introduce the following reforms into the Papal States: a general
amnesty; elective communal and provincial councils; a lay judiciary and civil service; and a
central assembly of nobles to advise on administration and finance. The pope was happy enough
to grant an amnesty, but aside from some gestures toward greater lay participation-by restoring
Pius VII's councils-he refused to be lectured. The allied sovereigns did not insist; indeed, did
three of them, the rulers of Austria, Prussia, and Russia, grant as much to their own subjects?
During August, 1831, moreover, Pope Gregory freed himself from diplomatic problems by
announcing in Sollicitudo Ecclesiarum that the Holy See would automatically recognize the de
facto existence of new governments, without thereby committing itself to a judgment upon their
legitimacy.
Unfavorable estimate. On the other hand, Luigi Farini, undersecretary of Pius IX in 1848,
believed that the native soldiers were poorly paid and disciplined, and so untrustworthy that
reliance was had on foreign mercenaries. Commerce was anemic and large industry absent.
Robber bands threatened the country districts. Government bureaus were in a chaotic condition,
and inordinate and inequitable taxes imposed on the people. Maladministration made economic
conditions deplorable; large reserves of wealth were immobile. Citizens were not equal before
the law, and the course of justice was slow, tedious, and costly. The national debt amounted to
37,000,000 scudi with a five per cent interest charge and a yearly deficit of at least a million.
Education be believed woefully deficient in all its branches, not excluding that of religious
instruction. Thousands of citizens were "admonished," and therefore ineligible for office. Military
commissions were in permanent session. Pope Pius IX, however, "knew nothing of this, for his
favorites took care that business affairs were never discussed." 8 Some confirmation of these
charges would seem to be found in a remark attributed to Pope Gregory XVI in 1843: "The civil
administration of the Papal States stands in need of a thoroughgoing reform, but I was too old
when I was elected pope; I did not think that I would live so long, and had not the courage to
undertake the task. For whoever undertakes it must carry it through. A younger pope will be
chosen as my successor, and it will devolve upon him to accomplish this task, without which it will
be impossible to go on."
IX
Authoritarian Reaction
Legacy of Catherine the Great. Russia had been welded into a great power by Peter the
Great (1689-1725) and Catherine the Great (1762-96). The former had taken from Sweden in
1721 the Baltic Provinces where he located his capital Petrograd with a "window on the Baltic."
The latter had annexed Catholic Poland-Lithuania in three partitions (1772-95), besides acquiring
an outlet to the Black Sea by wresting the Crimea from Turkey (1774-92). Until 1918, then, large
numbers of Catholics lived under Russian czardom, divided between the Latin and Oriental Rites.
The czars generally pretended to be the heirs of the Byzantine Basileus and aspired to free the
Turkish dominated patriarch of Constantinople, and then to make of him a court chaplain for
controlling all Graeco-Slav Christians, including, if possible, some eight million Ruthenian
Uniates. And the Communist dictators have substantially returned to this policy.
Paul Petrovich (1754-1801) had been kept in leading strings by his German mother,
Catherine of Anhalt, who had usurped the Russian throne after murdering his father. For greater
reason than Victoria's son, Edward of Wales, Paul sought to assert his individuality by a complete
change of policy. It is true that he did not proceed far on the road to political Liberalism, although
in 1797 be delivered an initial blow to feudalism by restricting the serfs' labor for their landlords to
three days a week. On the other hand, be returned to the use of torture in judicial procedure and
used his power in tyrannical, erratic, and at times almost insane fashion. He came to admire
Bonaparte as a strong man and to dissent from the anti-French coalition. Finally on March 11,
1801, discontented and inebriated officers slew him, with at least the foreknowledge of his heir,
Alexander Pavlovich.
Political policies. Alexander's brain trust, the "Informal Committee," discussed many
liberal reforms and even meditated grant of a constitution. In 1803 an edict regulated optional
emancipation of serfs. After the Peace of Tilsit (1807) with Bonaparte had temporarily relieved
the czar from foreign cares, he confided the task of liberalizing the Russian autocracy to Michael
Speranski (1772-1839). In 1810 a council of state was set up to supervise administration, and
legal, financial, and bureaucratic reorganization on Western models was planned. But when
Speransky drafted a constitution (1812), conservative opposition from the privileged classes
secured his dismissal. The French invasion of that year obliged Alexander to appeal to the
traditional elements in Russia, and after the alien peril had been repulsed, he selected the
reactionary General Arakcheiyev (1769-1834) as chief advisor. The masonic-Liberal group of
cosmopolites protested the czar's conservative trend and Paul Pestel (1793-1826) organized
secret societies among army officers to promote Liberalism. But Kotzebue's murder in 1819
increased Alexander's distrust of Liberalism, and be confessed to Metternich: "You have nothing
to regret, but I have." Thenceforward benevolent despotism became his policy in Russia, though
Finland, acquired from Sweden in 1809, was granted an autonomous position under a feudal
constitution.
Polish status. Acquisition of the Napoleonic puppet Grand Duchy of Warsaw gave
Alexander two thirds of the former Polish territory. The Congress of Vienna confirmed this as his
"Kingdom of Poland" at gun-point: Alexander told Castlereagh: "I conquered the duchy and
have 480,000 men to keep it." Yet the new "King of Poland" essayed a liberal program which lie
denied to Russia itself. Under the influence of a Polish friend of his youth, Prince Adam
Czartoryski (1770-1861), lie conceded a constitution which provided for a Polish legislature, a
separate administration and army. Polish was declared the official language, and freedom of
speech and of the press proclaimed. Later, however, Czartoryski was supplanted by the brutal
Novosiltsov and his secret police. Polish resentment, however, required the open provocation of
Alexander's successor before breaking into revolt.
Polish revolt. The czar accordingly viewed with disfavor his "Kingdom of Poland" under
Constantine's regency, and at once began to restrict Polish liberties through Russian agents.
Religious houses were forbidden to receive novices without governmental leave. In 1830
Nicholas demanded transfer of matrimonial jurisdiction from canonical to civil courts, but the
Polish Diet objected. Though Constantine somewhat softened the application of the czar's
decrees, Poles formed secret societies of their own despite the submission preached to them by
the Catholic hierarchy. In November, 1830, the rumor that Nicholas was about to employ Polish
troops in suppressing the Belgian revolution with which they sympathized, induced Polish Liberals
to rebel. In expectation of aid from the liberal regime of Louis Philippe of France, they
assassinated Russian officials, drove out Prince Constantine, and asserted their independence.
From January to September, 1831, they fought desperately but unsuccessfully against superior
Russian forces. They were short of munitions, divided between Moderates and Radicals, and
elicited little outside aid. Prince Adam Czartoryski, their one statesman, was placed at the head
of the provisional government too late to prevent collapse, and he fled the country to spend the
rest of his life in Western Europe trying to organize relief for Poland.
Polish repression. As soon as he had suppressed the military uprising, the czar revoked
the Polish constitution and simply annexed the "Kingdom" to his Russian dominions. Russian
troops were quartered in the country and hundreds of Poles executed or exiled to Siberia.
Thereafter Russian czardom pursued quite consistently an attempt to exterminate Polish
nationalism: its language, customs, and if possible, its religion. Religious houses were
suppressed and interference in ecclesiastical discipline and cult began. Save for the brief interval
(1837-38), the metropolitan see of Warsaw was kept vacant from 1829 to 1857, and
administrators had to labor under near catacomb conditions. Gregory XVI, deceived by Russian
diplomats, issued a letter on June 9, 1832, blaming the rebels and urging submission to the
Russian government; later the pope admitted that he had been misinformed and told General
Zamoyski that fear of reprisals against the Polish people had prompted his action. But Polish
nationalism almost fused with religious loyalty to set up a solid resistance to Russian pressure;
after a century of persecution, this judgment still seems correct today.
Czarist propaganda tried to represent all Latin Rite Catholics as aliens who might be
tolerated because they could not be integrated; all Catholics of Oriental Rites, however, were
lectured on their patriotic duty to conform to the state church. Pope Gregory XVI delayed until
July 22, 1842, to denounce the czar's persecution. Nicholas was somewhat perturbed by this
publicity, for he had hoped to conceal his religious discrimination from Metternich, his political
ideal. This concern for his European reputation may have prompted the czar to visit Rome in
1845. His audience with Gregory XVI was stormy and produced no immediate effect. But when
the new Pope Pius IX succeeded, Nicholas reached a modus vivendi in August, 1847, whereby
diocesan limits were redefined and canonical episcopal appointments allowed to be made.
Though restricted "liberty of cult" was proclaimed for both Russia and Poland, no agreement
could be reached regarding free communication with the Holy See and matrimonial discipline.
The czar seems to have designed the pact chiefly for propaganda purposes, for it remained
almost a dead letter. Curiously, Nicholas's pretended zeal for religion boomeranged, for his claim
to exercise a protectorate over Orthodox Dissidents in the Turkish dominions became a technical
cause of the Crimean War. Great Britain and France rightly judged his policy was but a blind for
penetration of the Balkans and inflicted serious reverses on the Russians. Nicholas died during
February, 1855, and his successor hastily (1856) extricated himself from an untenable position by
what proved to be temporary territorial and military concessions.
IX
Authoritarian Reaction
The 1832 Reform Act enfranchised wealthy financiers and industrialists, admitting the
middle class to a share in the government with the aristocracy. Once accepted politically,
however, the beneficiaries proved adamant against further extension of the vote. The ensuing
regime was Liberal without being democratic. This conservative attitude characterized the first
part of Queen Victoria's reign ( 1837-1901 ) and is known as the "Victorian Compromise" between
the ideas of the Old Regime and the French Revolution. Until his death in 1865 the dominant
political figure was Viscount Palmerston, almost continuously as foreign secretary, home minister,
or premier. Reputed "patriarch of Freemasonry," he was bluntly anti-Catholic in attitude. Since
Catholic emancipation, his power to harm was limited at home, but it was often exercised abroad,
especially in Portugal, Spain, and Italy. His resolute opposition to Democracy, moreover, led him
to espouse the Southern cause during the American Civil War; only Prince Albert's intervention is
believed to have averted British involvement. Finally, Palmerston was an imperialist: his defense
of Don Pacifico by his "Civis Romanus sum" speech was a symptom of the reviving or "Second
British Empire."
Liberal measures included the Municipal Corporations Act, extending the 1832 reform to
local government, the abolition of Negro slavery (1833); the Factory Act (1833) providing for
government inspectors; and the Poor Law (1834) which constrained paupers to the grim
discipline of the "workhouse" excoriated by Charles Dickens. The Education Act of 1834 seems
to have been originally designed as a step toward universal secular training by offering state aid
to schools permitting government inspection. But stout resistance by religious groups diverted
the official policy to one of equal support for all schools. Publicity for parliamentary debate was
granted Hansard, and in 1839 the Penny Postage Act brought the mails within reach of all. The
Bank of England was chartered by parliament (1844) and came to have the sole right to issue
currency as other banks gradually lost the franchise. The British Companies Act (1855) permitted
formation of joint stock corporations with limited liability.
An orthodox reaction to such attacks was not long in developing. Liberal sallies brought
Conservative religious thinkers to give attention both to the foundations for their beliefs, and to
the problem of revitalizing Anglicanism by renovation rather than revolution. The first leader of
this reaction was John Keble (1792-1866), whose Christian Year (1826) was its initial literary
manifestation. He was, however, of a retiring, scholarly disposition and withdrew to his father's
rectory soon after the start of the controversy to engage chiefly in literary argument. Forensic
leadership passed to a disciple, Richard Hurrell Froude (1803-36), a romanticist, who resurrected
Primate Laud's "High Church" principles from the seventeenth century to combat the Liberals.
John Henry Newman (1801-90) entered Oxford in 1816 and at first associated chiefly
with Richard Whately (1787-1863) from whom he derived two ideas: insistence upon the visible
nature of the Church, and on its independence of the state. Newman was led to make more
profound inquiries into dogmatic problems and these brought him nearer the Conservative
position. About 1828 he came under Froude's influence and imbibed some of his enthusiasm and
piety. As tutor at Oriel College and Vicar of St. Mary's (1828), Newman himself began to exercise
a limited sway, attracting kindred spirits in Edward Pusey (1800-1882), Robert Wilberforce (1802-
57), and Ambrose St. John (1815-76), of whom the latter two followed him to Rome.
Erastianism, or the theory of secular supremacy in religious affairs, became the issue for
the birth of the Oxford Movement. The Peel election at Oxford in 1829 marked Newman's
definitive break with the Noetics. Peel sought re-election to parliament after announcing his
support of Catholic emancipation. Newman feared that this would be but a prelude to Anglican
disestablishment. By prevailing on the Oxford constituency to reject Peel he provoked a clash
between Liberals and Conservatives. In search of arguments, Newman turned to patristic
sources. A visit to Italy, together with an interview with Dr. Nicholas Wiseman (1802-65), then
rector of the English Catholic College at Rome, somewhat strengthened his patristic stand. After
an illness at Naples-whence "Lead Kindly Light"-Newman returned to England in 1833 to find his
fears confirmed: the triumphant Whigs were now proposing to disestablish certain Anglican sees
in Ireland. Newman had come to feel that Anglicanism was a divine institution enjoying the
apostolic succession of the episcopacy. Hence, he opposed the measure with all his might-and
postponed Irish disestablishment until 1869, when he had ceased to be an Anglican. According
to Newman himself, John Keble's Sermon on National Apostasy, July 14, 1833, delivered against
this Erastian program, marked the beginning or at least the external manifestation of the Oxford
Movement.
(2) CLIMAX
Tractarianism. In September, 1833, the Oxford Conservatives began to publish Tracts for
the Times, a series of articles by Newman and others on points of patristic tradition, apostolic
succession of the episcopacy, the sacramental and liturgical system, and ecclesiastical discipline.
These activities marked out Newman as active leader of the movement after Froude's death in
1836, though from 1835 Pusey contributed more lengthy and learned articles on ritualism, in
which Newman himself was but slightly interested. Anglican clerics were aroused for or against
the Tractarians, and the prelates generally frowned on them lest the bogey of Romanism draw
down secular strictures or disturb their comfortable benefices.
A "Via Media" theory was expounded for the first time during 1834 in Newman's Tracts 38
and 41. According to this, although Catholics had departed far from primitive tradition by
introducing novelties, Protestants erred in the opposite direction by abandoning essential truths.
A purified Anglicanism would be a safe middle course between two erroneous extremes.
Appointment of the Latitudinarian Dr. Renn Hampden to a theology professorship at Oxford in
1836 provoked a storm of protest from the Tractarians against the Erastian indifference to
"heresy." Meanwhile Dr. Newman supplemented his influence by renowned sermons at St.
Mary's.
The "Branch Theory." On his return to England in 1836, Dr. Wiseman joined Daniel
O'Connell in founding the Dublin Review. His articles in this organ and his popular lectures soon
established Wiseman as an effective apologist for the Catholic Church, and his prestige was
augmented by his episcopal consecration in 1840. Dr. Wiseman persisted in drawing Newman's
patristic arguments to their logical conclusions. When Wiseman pointed out from St. Augustine
that union with the Holy See was a patristic dogma-for "securus judicat orbis terrarum" Newman
found it difficult to justify his via media position. Obsessed by the similarity of the Anglican status
to that of early heretics and schismatics, be began to belabor Protestants more than Catholics,
and advanced toward a "Branch Theory": Roman, Greek, and Anglican Churches were but
accidental and ritual variations of one true Christian society. In 1841 his Tract 90 tried to
reconcile the Anglican thirty-nine Articles with the Council of Trent-an impossible task, even for
Newman.
Parting of the ways. But Tract 90 had antagonized the Anglican hierarchy and Newman
was censured. Without retracting his stand, he suspended publication of the Tracts and imposed
silence on himself. Posey and Ward, however, defended the incriminated treatise vigorously. At
the same time (1841) proposal of a see at Jerusalem to be occupied alternately by an Anglican
and a Lutheran gave new proof of Erastian disregard for episcopal succession, and new affront to
Newman who by now excluded Lutherans and other Protestants from his "true Church." During
1842 he retired to his Littlemore benefice, abdicating leadership of the Oxford Movement. The
Tractarians now began to divide: Moderate Ritualists, led by Pusey, deemed the Branch Theory
an adequate solution within the existing Anglican Establishment; Progressives, made articulate by
William G. Ward (1812-82) in his Ideal of a Christian Church (1844), insisted on radical changes
in Anglicanism in the direction of Rome. When Ward was censured and degraded by Anglican
prelates, he led an exodus to Rome in August, 1845. Dalgairns and St-John followed, and at
length Newman was received into the Church, October 8, 1845, by Padre Domenico Barberi
(1792-1849), a Passionist mystic who had long sacrificed himself for the English mission.
(3) SEQUEL
Catholic converts. Ward and Newman headed a stream of Oxford converts,
comparatively few in number, but enjoying immense prestige. None was more influential than
Frederick Faber (1814-63) who brought his whole Anglican community of forty enthusiasts into
the Church in 1845. Ordained to the priesthood and joining the Oratorians, he was
commissioned in 1849 to found the London house, whence his sermons and books influenced
many. Newman himself was ordained priest and established the Oratory at Birmingham. His
Essay on Development of Christian Dogma appealed to those still hesitating at Oxford, though his
justified attacks on the renegade Italian cleric, Dr. Achille, led to his fine for libel (1852) when
Wiseman misplaced the documentary proofs. In 1847 promotion of Dr. Hampden to the Anglican
see of Hereford and nomination of the clearly heretical George Gorham to the vicarage of
Bamford Speke antagonized the Tractarians anew. This was compounded in 1850 by the
disgraceful hubbub about the restoration of the Catholic hierarchy and the upholding of Gorham's
appeal by the secular Privy Council over the decision of the Anglican prelate Phillpotts. Another
wave of converts to Rome followed: in 1849, Thomas Allies (18131903), the historian, and
Frederick Capes (1816-88), journalist. During 1850-51 came Henry Edward Manning (1808-92),
Henry Wilberforce, Lord Fielding, Bellasis, Maskel, Monsell, John Pollen, and others. With
special permission from Rome obtained by Wiseman, Manning was ordained priest within ten
weeks of his conversion. Later he studied in Rome and founded the Oblates of St. Charles.
Capes founded the Rambler in 1848; its Liberal views brought censure and Capes temporarily
relapsed, but later returned to die in the Catholic Church. Cambridge University also had
converts in Kenelm Digby, Romanticist; Ambrose Phillips, founder of a Trappist monastery; and
George Spencer, later a Passionist. August Pugin (1812-52), converted in 1833, was a fanatical
champion of Gothic architectural restoration, for which the Catholic earl of Shrewsbury (d. 1852)
proved a generous patron.
Anglican ritualists. Keble and Pusey, however, remained in the Established Church to
found the "High Church Ritualist" faction. Pusey's sermons insisted on the "objective presence"
of Christ in the Eucharist, while rejecting transubstantiation. He likewise introduced optional
confession and many Roman liturgical practices. But Anglican prelates with but one exception
emphatically repudiated such views. For a time High and Low Church parties united to denounce
the Broad Church views of Williams and Wilson in their Essays and Reviews (1860). But though
condemned by the Anglican prelates, these "heretical" clergymen appealed to the Privy Council,
which sustained them in 1864. During 1865, moreover, the Privy Council set aside Metropolitan
Gray of South Africa's condemnation of his suffragan Colenso's Liberal expressions. The
Tractarians took refuge in Ritualism and in 1873 some 483 clergymen petitioned Convocation for
appointment of qualified confessors. Protestant indignation was aroused and in 1874 the House
of Lords banned Ritualism. This was really the end of the original Oxford Movement, although
controversy continued to disturb the Anglican body. Dr. Benson as primate of Canterbury effected
a compromise in 1890. Pusey's successor as Ritualist leader, Charles Gore (1853-1932),
Anglican prelate of Oxford (1911-19), admitted some Liberal theological ideas. In 1928 High
Church emendations of the Book of Common Prayer were rejected in the House of Commons.
Catholic growth. Since the beginning of Catholic relief (1778), life among English
Catholics had shown signs of revival. Douay College in Belgium, which had been closed during
the French Revolution, had been reconstituted in England for clerical training at St. Cuthbert's
and St. Edmund's Colleges. The English College at Rome, closed in 1798, had reopened in 1818
with Wiseman as a student. Ordained in 1825, Wiseman became its rector in 1828. He later in
1840 headed St. Mary's College-Seminary at Oscott, which he made into a "reception room" for
Oxford converts. By 1840 Catholic population increase, especially through Irish immigration,
required the erection of four new vicariates besides the existing four. By 1850 Catholics in
England numbered nearly a million.
Ex Porta Flaminiana. In order to give adequate Catholic leadership and stimulate further
Oxford conversions, Pope Pius IX on September 29, 1850, revived the Catholic hierarchy by
creating the metropolitan see of Westminster with twelve suffragans. To Westminster be named
Nicholas Wiseman, since 1847 vicar-apostolic of the London District. On October 7, Wiseman,
who had also been promoted cardinal, jubilantly announced from Rome-"From out the Flaminian
Gate" his pastoral was dated-that the Catholic Church had officially reappeared in a land where it
had been in hiding since the deaths of Mary I and Cardinal Pole in 1558.
"No popery." Classical scholars recalled that Roman legions used to march to conquest
from the Flaminian Gate. Riding on the crest of vociferous "no popery" outbursts, Premier Russel
in 1851 introduced the Ecclesiastical Titles Bill forbidding assumption by Catholic bishops of titles
of ancient sees now Anglicanized and withholding legal recognition of the new Catholic dioceses.
The Lord Chancellor cited Shakespeare: "Under my feet I stamp thy cardinal's hat in spite of pope
or dignities of Church" (I Henry VI, i, iii, 49). But shortly after his return to England, November,
1850, Cardinal Wiseman met this with an Appeal to the English People. He assured the
Westminster chapter that he would claim no jurisdiction over the Abbey and would continue to
pay his entrance fee; the poor of the surrounding slums would be his portion. Not in vain did he
call for "fair play." The Times congratulated him on "recovering the use of the English language,"
and Punch lampooned Russel as an urchin writing "No Popery" on Wiseman's door and running
away. Russel, indeed, got his bill, but dared not enforce it; it was formally repealed by Gladstone
in 1871.
Catholic organization. The new hierarchy held its first provincial council in 1852, at which
Newman preached a memorable sermon on the "Second Spring" of Catholicity in England. The
Council reorganized discipline, but also revealed Wiseman's somewhat cavalier attitude toward
his suffragans, a breach widened when George Errington became his coadjutor in 1855.
Errington opposed Wiseman's close control of Catholic colleges and was eventually sustained by
Rome. He also strove to suppress Manning's Oblates and to dismiss Ward as lay lecturer in
theology at St. Edmund's Seminary. Though the Third Provincial Council (1859) supported
Errington on many points against Wiseman, the case went to Rome which at length removed
Errington (1860). Meanwhile Newman's efforts to found a Catholic University at Dublin (1855-58)
foundered, and his proposed chaplaincy for Catholic students at Oxford-where religious tests
were removed in 1854was turned down by Propaganda on the plea of Wiseman and Manning.
Primatial succession seemed to spell victory for either group. Though Errington, by
refusing to resign gracefully, had made necessary his removal by Rome in 1860, he had retired
submissively to private life. At Wiseman's death in 1865 the chapter and the majority of the
English hierarchy suggested Errington as his successor at Westminster. Propaganda, indeed,
proposed Ullathorne as compromise candidate, but Pio Nono overruled all suggestions by
naming Manning archbishop of Westminster. With Manning, Ultramontanism won a definite
triumph among the English hierarchy and clergy, and the coolness of Newman and Acton to the
opportuneness of the definition of papal infallibility caused them to be suspect for a time. This
issue awaited the Vatican Council where Manning's marshalling of the Ultramontanes won a
decisive victory. Newman, whose chief theological defect had been lack of precise scholastic
training, readily gave his adhesion to the conciliar definition, and Lord Acton also gave
satisfactory evidence of submission. Gladstone's pamphlet denouncing the Vatican decree as an
assault on secular government called forth Newman's clarification contained in his 1875 Letter to
the Duke of Norfolk. Internecine disputes died away, and in 1879 Manning supported a request
for the cardinalate for Newman, and presently the man of action and the scholar were united in
the College of Cardinals.
Educational differences were likewise flagrant. Overt and Protestant proselytizing in state
schools forced Catholics to maintain "hedge schools" at home and partake of foreign gratuity
abroad. Though the concessions of 1782 and 1792 allowed Catholics to become licensed
schoolmasters, by 1824, of 11,823 primary schools, all were under Protestant influence save 422.
Dublin's Trinity College admitted Catholics to degrees in 1793, but not to fellowships or
professorships. Maynooth Seminary was opened in 1795 with governmental subsidies, which
continued until 1869.
The "Tithe War" opened in 1830 with parochial resistance to collection of tithes. Armed
clashes multiplied, costing the lives of eleven British officers in 1831. O'Connell, now admitted to
the British parliament, took up this grievance in 1832. After an ineffective Coercion Bill and other
proposals had been thrice rejected, a Tithe Commutation Act (1838) canceled arrears, reduced
existing tithe rates by twenty-five per cent, and converted tithes into a rent charge payable by
landlords who usually passed it on to the Catholic tenants in the form of higher rents.
Disestablishment could therefore be the only final solution. In 1834 Lord Grey had
abolished eight Anglican sees in Ireland, and Irish moderates, led by Maguire, proposed complete
disestablishment as a reward for loyalty during the Fenian agitation. The Episcopalians, after
failing to justify their privileged position despite a proselytizing campaign, yielded. On July 26,
1869, Gladstone passed the Disestablishment Act to take effect on January 1, 1871.
Episcopalianism in Ireland became a private corporation and its prelates lost their seats in
parliament. Both the Episcopalian tithe and the Presbyterian subsidy ceased, though the
government made generous compensations before putting them on their own.
(2) SOCIAL WELFARE
Poor relief became an acute religious-social issue in 1838-one hundred workhouses were
set up. Though most of these paupers were Catholics, Protestant administrators supervised the
unpopular system and sometimes used their commanding position to force apostasy or religious
neglect. After 1840, however, measures of municipal reform enabled the Irish to regain control
over their local government. Poor relief supervision accordingly changed, and from 1861 the
Sisters of Mercy were put in charge of some of the local bureaus by the electorate.
The Irish Famine of 1845-51 resulted from simultaneous rotting of English wheat through
rain and a blight on Irish potatoes. Prime Minister Peel tried to import American corn and
introduced a sliding scale of emergency prices. Finally the Corn (Wheat) Laws, a protective tariff,
were repealed. But within these years some two million Irishmen had died or emigrated. Severe
economic stress continued, reducing the Irish population by half during the course of the
nineteenth century.
Education progressed slowly under the inspiration of the Irish Christian Brothers, founded
in 1802 by Edmund Rice, and various sisterhoods. In 1831, Irish Secretary Stanley secured
adoption of a national system of education, neutral in religion, but allowing "released time" for
separate religious instruction. Catholics divided as to the prudence of using the project. The
hierarchy having failed to reach agreement, Propaganda in 1841 left it to each bishop's judgment
to adopt the system in his own diocese. But recurrence of dangers to Faith and the determined
opposition of Archbishop Cullen caused these mixed schools to decline in favor of parochial, so
that by 1908 there were 482,000 pupils in denominational schools and 192,000 in the mixed
schools. Though secular colleges now admitted Catholics, Propaganda deemed Catholic
attendance perilous. Yet nationalistic and financial difficulties defeated Newman's projected
Catholic University at Dublin, although after his resignation the medical and science faculties
survived and later achieved some sort of accreditation. Carlow Seminary had opened in 1793;
Father Hand, C.M., founded All Hallows missionary seminary in 1842, and other institutions
followed.
IX
Authoritarian Reaction
Nationalism, that "the government of the Union . . . is truly a government of the people,"
remained a thesis of Chief justice Marshall (180135). From this Henry Clay, spokesman for the
West, drew a corollary of "Manifest Destiny" to which nineteenth-century politicians were most
attentive. For Clay, "true glory . . . will finally conduct this nation to that height to which God and
nature have destined it." This came to involve not merely the "American System" of protective
tariffs and internal public works at Federal expense, but domination of foreign territory. Ere long,
Americans were extorting Florida from Spain, ogling Canada brazenly, warning Europe that the
New World was no longer open for colonization-but themselves colonizing Texas and Oregon.
Though they did arbitrate the Oregon frontier, it was only to free themselves to annex Texas. This
led to war with Mexico and seizure of New Mexico and California. Here politicians and journalists
paused only for breath before they shouted for Mexico, Santo Domingo, Cuba-and in 1848 even
for Ireland!
President Monroe ( 1817-25) was chief beneficiary of this era, to which his conciliatory
temperament contributed. After the end of the War of 1812, it was possible to concentrate upon
domestic progress. A rechartered United States Bank promised a sound currency, High tariffs
were passed to protect agrarian and manufacturing interests, which, however, soon diverged on
their utility. Construction of roads and canals was pushed at Federal direction. After high-handed
invasions by General Jackson, Florida was yielded by Spain (1819), and new states were
organized in the Northwest and Louisiana Territories. In 1820, however, expansion for the first
time encountered difference of sectional opinion. While the northern states had restricted slavery
by 1800, the southern citizens were firmly convinced of its economic necessity. From the two
sections emigrants carried their ideas into new areas and a rough parity between free and slave
states developed. The question of Missouri's admission as a slave state revealed passions so
intense that Jefferson called the debate a "fire-bell in the night." Dissension was temporarily
allayed by the Missouri Compromise, which extended a line of demarcation-36' 30'-between
potential free and slave territories, and admitted equal numbers of free and slave states. Until
1849 this parity was maintained to give each section equal senatorial representation capable of
vetoing hostile legislation. Finally, the "Monroe Doctrine," while assuring Latin America of
opposition by the United States to Old World aggression, hinted at a possible protectorate by
aggressive Anglo-Saxons in the New World.
An "Era of Bad Feeling" succeeded in 1824 when Treasury Secretary Crawford tried to
perpetuate the Virginia dynasty by the caucus method. Illness, however, all but eliminated him
from a race hotly contested by State Secretary Adams, War Secretary Calhoun, Speaker Clay,
and General Jackson. The Democratic-Republicans dissolved into factions, and aristocratic elder
statesmen were challenged by new leaders who catered to the expanding popular suffrage. The
close 1824 election went to the House of Representatives, where Clay's choice of Adams, from
whom lie later accepted the secretariate of state, was denounced as corrupt by Jackson's
followers.
President Adams (1825-29), an upright statesman of the old school, conscientious and
forthright, all too brusquely rejected the arts of pleasing. Though respected, lie was never
popular and found his administration almost paralyzed by the union of factions against him; even
his farsighted project of Pan-American harmony was rebuffed. The main issue of the 1828
election became the charge of the aggrieved General Jackson that Clay had deprived him of the
presidency in 1824. Jackson never proved his point by documents, but won the presidency in the
first truly popular election.
and with the southern squirearchy whose threats of nullification he sternly repressed: "Our
Federal Union, it must be preserved," proved for him more than a phrase.
President Van Buren (1837-41), Jackson's heir, reaped a harvest of his mistakes, without
inheriting his force and ability. Speculation and financial experimentation ended in the Panic of
1837. Van Buren's sound remedy, the Independent Treasury, came too late to save him from the
customary blame for bard times attached to the party in power. In the 1840 election he fell before
the Whigs, who had stolen Democratic political thunder with "Tippecanoe (Harrison) and Tyler
too."
President Polk (1845-49), Democratic dark horse candidate, proved a capable war
president; for Mexican resentment at ill-disguised American imperialism provoked war (1846-48).
This resulted in an easy American triumph which produced the forced sale of California and New
Mexico to the United States, though the Federal Government undertook Mission claims. Zachary
Taylor won the 1848 election when Polk refused to run for a second term.
Taylor and Fillmore (1849-53). The Whig administration had to deal with sectional
disputes about the disposition of the newly annexed territories. California's application for
statehood disturbed senatorial parity between sections, and required the 1850 Compromise
which extended the division somewhat to Northern advantage, while guaranteeing Southern
ownership of slaves wherever they might roam. Taylor opposed the Compromise, but his death in
July, 1850, permitted his more pliant successor Fillmore to authorize it. In 1853 the Gadsden
Purchase from Mexico completed American acquisition of contiguous territory.
"The Catholic Invasion"-thus Maynard "I aptly described the tide of European immigration
which during the period raised the Catholic population from an estimated 195,000 in 1820 to over
3,000,000 by 1860. Shaugnessy has calculated that between 1790 and 1850 over one million
Catholic immigrants landed in the United States, and this phenomenon continued to increase
without substantial modification until the beginning of immigration restrictions in 1921. During the
present period the greater number of Catholics came from Ireland and Germany. Even though
the total American population soared from eight to twenty-seven millions during the same span,
"Native Americans" came to feel that the Catholic increase was all out of proportion for a
"Protestant country" where they had hitherto been a negligible minority. But economic difficulties
in Ireland and political troubles on the Continent continued to drive thousands of impoverished
Catholics to the United States. Resentment turned chiefly against the Irish, who were not only
the more numerous, but were not restrained by the language barrier from entering promptly into
American life. While the Irish tended to congregate in the Eastern cities, according to Bishop
Hughes' belief that concentration would retain them in the Faith, McGee and others argued that
they ought to "go West" to become land owners and self-employed. In the cities the Irish could
use the ballot, following speed and sometimes routine nationalization, raising fears of an "Irish
Catholic peril" in politics. The Germans, who by 1850 constituted twenty-five per cent of the
foreign born of the country, went chiefly to the farms and villages of the Midwest and provoked
less opposition by their conservative ways.
Americanization. "Willy-nilly the American Church had become catholic in the broadest
sense. . . . The Church rendered a distinct service to the nation by the Americanization program
which it fostered among its foreign-born members, even tinder persecution. Measured by modern
standards, it was not a scientific program, but the quiet counseling of the immigrants by bishops
and by the priests in the parishes, the instruction in Catholic schools, and the information
imparted through the Catholic press once it got under way in the 1820's constantly assimilated
newcomers to the American way of life."
Violence. This incitement led to attacks on Catholic institutions during the 1830's and
1840's. In 1834 a mob, aroused by a Congregationalist minister, Dr. Beecher, attacked and
burned the Ursuline convent in Boston on pretext of rescuing a novice. In its fury the mob went
on to attack Catholic buildings and desecrate the cemetery. Though Mayor Lyman led decent
Protestants in a protest meeting, anti-Catholic forces in the state legislature repeatedly blocked
measures for indemnity. The escape of the culprits was a signal for other outbreaks, especially in
the East. The most serious incident was a three-day riot at Philadelphia in 1844. The attack was
provoked by Bishop Kenrick's request to save Catholic children from reading the Protestant
version of the Bible and attending the sectarian religious classes in the public schools. When the
city council granted the request, bigots with the connivance of police and other officials burned
two churches and the seminary, plundering Irish Catholic residences, and killing thirteen and
wounding fifty. The mild bishop ordered all religious services suspended until the state troops
had restored order. Meanwhile in New York, Bishop Hughes's request for a Catholic Bible and
educational subsidies from the state legislature had provoked threats of similar riots. But Bishop
Hughes inspired Irish members of the "Church Militant" to arm in defense of their institutions, and
practically forced the authorities to provide police protection (1844). This firm stand deterred
bigots, already discredited among most Protestants for their violence, while the Oregon and
Texan threats of foreign war temporarily diverted the American public's attention.
Politics. Meanwhile Samuel Morse was electrifying America in more ways than one.
Sunday and public school libraries featured his book denouncing the machinations of "Jesuit
emissaries of the Holy Alliance," i.e., Metternich's Austrian Order. Yet the early concessions of
Pius IX to Liberalism in the Papal State were saluted as signs of conversion by the Federal
Government. These and the pressing need of negotiations with Catholic Mexico induced
President Polk to obtain Congressional consent to the opening of diplomatic relations with the
Papal State during 1848. The President had also requested the hierarchy to select two Catholic
chaplains for the armed forces; they chose the Jesuits, John McElroy and Anthony Rey, to
counter Mexican propaganda against the "heretical" American invaders. After the war, questions
concerning church property in the ceded lands were peacefully settled with the State Department
by Archbishops Eccleston of Baltimore and Hughes of New York. International litigation
eventually won a judgment from the Hague Court in 1902 against Mexico for impounding the
missionary "Pious Fund," but Mexico paid little. All these negotiations led Representative Leven
to warn Congress somberly: "How many Jesuit senators shall we have in the course of the next
twenty years!" His misstatements were exposed by Representative Maclay of New York, and the
future president, Andrew Johnson of Tennessee, also defended Catholics in Congress. But the
1850's were to witness worse storms: "Know-Nothingism."
New York troubles. Bishop Concanon, New York's first ordinary, never reached his
diocese, and his successor, John Connolly, found Trusteeism well entrenched. The situation was
complicated by rivalry between the Irish and the French, and St. Peter's Church and Father Malou
were storm centers until the bishop's death in 1825. Matters did not greatly improve under the
third bishop, Jean Dubois (1826-40), whose long residence in America did not absolve him in
nativist eyes of a stigma of foreign birth. But his coadjutor, John Hughes, who assumed
administration in 1838, had gained experience of Trusteeism. He launched a cornpaign against
obstructionist trustees at a Catholic mass meeting, and within four years the trustees, whose
mismanagement had bankrupted five parishes, were obliged to yield title to the bishop. During
the KnowNothing ascendancy, disaffected Catholics of the trustee party secured the Putnam Act
(1855) which permitted them to overrule the bishop on the ground that he had obtained title by
coercion. When Irish support of the Union was needed, however, Senator Connolly and his legal
aide, Charles O'Conor, were able to have this measure repealed (1863), and replaced by a model
incorporation law explicitly giving the ordinary preponderant control.
New Orleans litigation. The deeply rooted French patronage system in Louisiana had
permitted Padre Sedella to defy his superiors at the cathedral. Even after his death in 1829, the
trustees obtained an act of the state legislature (1837) allowing them to mortgage the cathedral
against the will of Bishop Blanc. The head of these trustees, a Masonic grand master, was
determined to resist the bishop's spiritual as well as his temporal authority. In 1842 the trustees
refused to accept the bishop's nominee as rector, though under threat of interdict they pretended
to receive him while denying him real rule. To the bishop's rebukes they retorted with a $20,000
suit for libel: he had termed them "schismatics," which of course they were not. Finally in 1844
the State Supreme Court, in the case of the "Wardens of Church of St. Louis versus Antoine
Blanc, Bishop of New Orleans," decided that the patronage law was abrogated and the Church
disestablished in Louisiana; hence the trustees had no standing in civil law. In litigation involving
other parishes the bishop was less fortunate, but by 1845 the worst was over.
General settlement. The foregoing were but the more notorious cases of Trusteeism.
Pursuant to instructions from the Holy See, the First Provincial Council of Baltimore had decreed
in 1829: "We most earnestly desire that no church shall be erected or consecrated in future
unless it is assigned by a written document to the bishop in whose diocese it is to be erected. . . .
We further declare that no right of patronage of any kind which the Sacred Canons recognize
Dow belongs to any person, congregation of laymen, board of trustees, or any other persons
whatever in this province." Advised by Attorney-General Taney of Maryland, later chief justice of
the United States Supreme Court, Archbishop Whitfield of Baltimore obtained from the State of
Maryland in 1834 the first act recognizing a Catholic bishop as a "corporation sole." This system
safeguarded episcopal jurisdiction while assuring the proper transmission of diocesan property
from one ordinary to his legitimate successor. It avoided possession by the bishop in fee simple
of diocesan property to be transmitted by will, a mode that could lead to confusion of diocesan
and private funds, as occurred in Cincinnati in 1888. The corporation sole method was imitated in
Chicago (1845) and in California (1852), and presently became the most common procedure.
The Roman Curia in 1911, while permitting this method, preferred as the ideal a "parish
corporation" system.
"The Concord Movement," then, is a possible name for the trickle of converts from
Transcendentalism to the Catholic Church, almost simultaneously with the Oxford Movement in
England. These converts and their associates did something to dispel the idea that the Catholic
religion was a fetish of low-caste immigrants, but was belief able to satisfy the "native Americans"
and even the hardheaded Yankee. Among these converts, Orestes Brownson (1803-76) became
a militant Catholic lay publicist after his conversion in 1845, the ear of Ward and Newman. His
friend, Isaac Hecker (1819-88), in 1858 founded along with four fellow converts, the Paulists,
whose convert-making techniques soon became renowned in America. Hawthorne's daughter,
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop (1851-1926), became a Catholic, and after her husband's death, a
Dominican nun. Cornelia Peacock of Philadelphia was converted with her husband, Pierce
Connelly, an Episcopalian minister. They separated to enter the religious life. Despite his
relapse, she persevered to found the Sisterhood of the Holy Child Jesus for the education of
children.
Domestic missions. In 1818 Venerable Felix de Andreis (1778-1820) led the first
contingent of the Congregation of the Mission to Missouri, and he was closely followed by
Blessed Philippine Duchesne (17691852), who introduced the Religious of the Sacred Heart to
St. Louis. Father de Andreis and his successor Rosati, presently first bishop of St. Louis, founded
a seminary at Perryville which furnished priests for both the secular and regular clergy laboring
throughout the West and on Negro and Indian missions. The Indian missions were the special
care of Father Pierre De Smet, S.J. (1801-72) from 1838 forward. He had arrived at Florissant,
Missouri, in 1823 with other Jesuits, who opened St. Louis University in 1829. In Iowa, Matthias
Loras, first bishop of Dubuque, and Father Samuel Mazzuchelli, O.P., were famous missionaries,
while in the area of the Great Lakes, Frederick Baraga (17971868), subsequently bishop,
displayed outstanding zeal. The Texan mission was reopened during the 1840's by Vincentian
missionaries, of whom the future bishops, Timon and Odin, were prominent.
Foreign missions. Even at this early date Americans sought to open a foreign missionary
field. When Liberia was established in West Africa as a haven for emancipated slaves, the
American hierarchy sought volunteers to undertake their care. Pioneer American missionaries
included Edward Barron, who became episcopal vicar apostolic of Guinea (184246), Father John
Kelly of New York, and Denis Pindar, lay catechist. The latter died in Africa in 1844; the priests
were eventually forced to return by the oppressive climate and as yet unsurmounted tropical
diseases.
The First Plenary Council of Baltimore in 1852 terminates this period with an assembly of
a large part of the new hierarchy. The Council was chiefly concerned with confirmation and
codification for national use of the legislation of the previous seven provincial councils of
Baltimore, and the second canon extended these provincial decrees to the new ecclesiastical
provinces. The resolutions of the Sixth and Seventh Councils adopting the feast of the
Immaculate Conception as the patronal feast for the Church in the United States, and petitioning
definition of the dogma were soon to be heeded. Rosati's Baltimore Ceremonial was made
obligatory. Parochial schools and seminaries were again earnestly demanded. Waning
Trusteeism was castigated, but the Council under the presidency of Archbishop Francis Kenrick
was silent on the question of slavery, as indeed might be expected from that prelate's 1841
edition of his widely normative Theologia Moralis which, while deploring Negro slavery, still
advised obedience to existing laws and docility. On these matters, Catholics were men of their
times.
Liberal Agnosticism (1789-1870) X Consummation of Nationalism (1848-71)
X
Consummation of Nationalism
A. Nationalism
(1) NATURE
Nominal derivation. "The word 'Nationalism' was born in the course of the past century,
soon after the birth of three 'isms': 'Liberalism,' 'Socialism,' and 'Communism.' All four words have
highly respectable origins . . . 'nation,' 'liberty,' 'society,' and 'community.' . . . The 'ism' was
accepted to mean either a theory founded upon these principles or qualities, or an organized
activity which, adopting some special interpretation of the principle, built up a theoretico-practical
system; or, finally, a collective sentiment favoring in any way the tendency represented by the
'ism' in question. . . . From the very beginning, the 'ism' connoted an excess, a supervaluation of
what the original substantives liberty, society, and community-signified. . . . Nationalism, too, must
be classed along with the other already mentioned 'isms' which during the nineteenth century
usurped the place rightfully belonging to the concepts from which they originated. Thanks to
nationalism, the nation's character as the community of a people organized on the basis of its
traditions, history, language, and culture has come to be perverted; for nationalism is interpreted
as being the principal efficient and final cause of the community. Nationalism, too, takes on a
broad variety of colors ranging from the most extravagant to the quite moderate, and all the way
from the philosophic to the sentimental."
The "nationalistic generation"--one might almost designate that which lived and acted
between 1848 and 1871. Italy and Germany achieved national unification; the United States
preserved its own. Hungary and the Balkans won national autonomy; Poles, Czechs, and Irish
strove vainly to obtain theirs. Japan awoke to jingoistic music, and the ancient Habsburg
monarchy, antithesis of nationalism, began its last waltz; and the final fruit of nationalism was
imperialism.
(2) EVOLUT10N OF MODERN NATIONALISM
Popular nationalism. The Middle Ages had not been entirely without experience of
nationalism, but the rise of national literature during the Renaissance and of national monarchies
against the condominium of papacy and empire have been rather generally taken as the
transition to modern times. This modern nationalism, however, as has been previously indicated,
remained largely a dynastic affair. True popular enlistment in the nationalistic movement may be
dated from Danton's lev'ee en masse, the total mobilization of the French people during the
Revolution for repulse of foreign invaders. In the course of the French Revolution a new loyalty
was born: whereas the king thought it not unpatriotic to negotiate secretly with brother monarchs
to extricate himself from his position of subservience, the new concept of the French nation
branded this as treason, indeed, a crime deserving the death Penalty. Governments of the future
must remember that the were the nation's servants; even a monarch must be a "King of the
French," and not of France. In their sacred trilogy-libert'e, 'egalit'e, fraternit'e-the men of the
Revolution came to include nationalism under the last term.
Nationalist striving did not cease, though there was a tendency for votaries to desert
liberal and romantic slogans for realism and what Bismarck later bluntly termed "Blood and Iron."
Hence, "the first half of the nineteenth century was an age of philosophy; the second half of the
century was an age of science. . . . The revolutions of 1848 had seemed to prove, not only that
certain theorists were wrong, but that all theories were unimportant. . . . The international system
of the European states took on during these decades those characteristics that came to be called
the 'Armed Peace,' which paralleled the development and spread of the centralized national
states as a standard political form."
Nationalist achievement under these new auspices seemed to justify a new series of
'isms': realism, materialism, militarism. With superior military assistance from France, Italians had
little difficulty in winning national unification during 1859-61 at the expense of Austria, and cold-
blooded seizure of opponents' weak moments enabled the new kingdom of Italy to annex Venetia
(1866) and absorb the last of the Papal States (1870). Bismarck's Prussia meanwhile forced
Denmark to cede "German" Schleswig-Holstein (1864) and expelled multinational Habsburg
Austria from Germany (1866). Then Bismarck stampeded the south German states into a new
German Reich after a successful war against France (1871). Defeated Austria had to capitulate
to Hungarian nationalism by according equal status in the Austro-Hungarian dual monarchy
(1867), but many submerged nationalities still clamored for redress within the revamped state.
But they were not so strong as the Hungarians and failed to achieve national status. The Poles
revolted unsuccessfully once more (1863), and Irish Fenian agitation produced no immediate
result. It was only with British backing that Greece could continue to maintain her independence
against Turkey; and Servian, Bulgarian, and Rumanian graduation from autonomous principalities
to complete independence awaited the nod of Russian Pan-Slavism. But on the whole, in Europe
national boundaries were more tightly drawn and national unities more closely cemented. Yet this
national order was presently to make for international disorder, even anarchy.
B. Imperialism
(1) THE IMPERIALIST PHENOMENON
Nationalism during the third quarter of the nineteenth century contributed strongly to an
amazing imperialistic expansion during the last quarter. "Synchronizing with the revival of
protective tariffs and the extension of socializing legislation toward the close of the 1870's was a
tremendous outburst of imperialistic interest and activity. The outburst was common to all the
great powers of Europe, except Austria-Hungary; and it was so potent that during the next three
decades greater progress was made toward subjecting the world to European domination than
had been made during three centuries previous."
Industrial progress tended to increase production, specialize labor, and develop natural
resources. Acquisition of further advantages than one's neighbor tempted a nation on to political
imperialism in the interest of developing international trade. To some degree-though Hayes
warns against the Marxist over stress of this theory-the search for additional consumers for
increased production could lead industrialists beyond national boundaries. Here they might
encounter competition from fellow industrialists who, if keenly alive to the situation, would refuse
to allow their national markets to be taken from them. If they were of the same stage of industrial
development as their competitors, they usually were able to hold their own, at least with the
assistance of a protective tariff. European merchants, therefore, would entertain favorably sale to
countries on a lower level of material civilization or less industrially advanced. Such markets
could be found in the unappropriated regions of Africa, among the politically impotent nations of
Asia, and in the economically dependent countries of Latin America. Here a foreign trader might
encounter his erstwhile competitor from another European country. Here again competition could
arise, but the field was so vast and inviting and the changes and chances of fortune so varied that
all, even tiny Belgium, felt that they could enter the race with fair prospect of success. When a
competitor did secure a footing in an undeveloped area he would strive to monopolize his
advantage. In Africa this could be achieved by outright annexation of colonies or assumption of
protectorates over weaker native states. In Asia, rival spheres of influence were set up in the
existing, but backward civilizations of China, India, Persia, Afghanistan, Turkey, Arabia, and Siam.
In Latin America, the powers worked more cautiously for fear of the Monroe Doctrine, but
concessions of mines, oil wells, etc., were obtained, loans made to governments and
revolutionary juntas, and public works contracted for. By this ceaseless activity the period
witnessed a transformation of the world. But the industrial and commercial shares were not
equal. Perhaps agreement might have been reached had the differences been exclusively
commercial-for businessmen as such usually feared war-but they were more than that.
Politicians looked war straight in the eye; in Bismarck's phrase: "They watch each other,
and then one of them puts his band in his pocket, his neighbor readies his own gun in order to be
able to fire the first shot." Officially, at least, they did not flinch. Each country's leaders told their
citizens that they were on the defensive and were in large part believed. Peace advocates toiled
frantically for disarmament and usually were made laughingstocks. Only the popes knew what
was wrong: the nationalism that had raised its hand against Boniface VIII at Anagni was about to
commit suicide. The tongues of those nationalistic towers of Babel raised during the sixteenth
century against the theocracy were to be confounded. Peoples half-fearfully, half-excitedly
continued to await war. Politicians, civil or military, tinkered with their alliances and military
machines. Some cynically speculated on the time best suited for the next war; others coolly. It
came, and, it seems, was the beginning of the end of "modern" civilization.
X
Consummation of Nationalism
Giovanni Mastai-Ferretti (1792-1878) was chosen to succeed Pope Gregory XVI on June
16, 1846, by a reputed thirty-four of forty-nine votes. The conclave had been comparatively free,
inasmuch as Austrian and French pressures nullified one another. Cardinal Mastai was a
handsome, affable, conciliatory cleric, who was believed to be well disposed toward new ideas.
As a member of a pontifical embassy to Chile in 1823, be was the first pope to visit the New
World. He had been noted for his charity as bishop of Imola and Spoleto, and this had not
excluded conversation with Liberal leaders. His protection of refugees after the failure of the
Bologna uprising of 1832 was remembered, and the progressive leader Rossi assured everybody
that "in the house of Mastai Ferretti everybody is Liberal down to the family cat." It is not
surprising, therefore, that Cardinal Lambruschini, connected with the late repressive regime,
would be passed over for this genial Politique. But though acclaimed as "Il Papa Liberale," Pio
Nono had few illusions; on the day of his election he is said to have exclaimed: "Today the
persecution begins."
Early concessions. The new pontiff was nonetheless resolved to do everything in his
power to reconcile the Liberal movement to the Church. He named the conciliatory Cardinal Gizzi
as secretary of state, and appointed a commission of cardinals to reform administration and the
civil code. An amnesty was granted to all political prisoners arrested by his predecessor;
unfortunately these when liberated only swelled the ranks of agitators urging the pope on to yet
more "progress." The amnesty was criticized by Chancellor Metternich, and the pope's
concession of a civil guard led to the resignation of Cardinal Gizzi in July, 1847. Pius IX went on
to mitigate restrictions on the press, but this concession was soon abused by Masonic
publications with "between the-lines" communications for Liberal conspirators. The pope was,
indeed, cheered in the Roman streets by Italian Liberals; Adolphe Thiers, supporter of Louis
Philippe, hailed the program in the French Chamber of Deputies; Viscount Palmerston sent Lord
Minto to Rome to help manipulate the Liberal enthusiasm. Mazzini poured in instructions for his
"Young Italian" lieutenants.
Liberal zenith. To the horror of Metternich and his associates the pope still went forward.
In March, 1847, he had mitigated censorship; in June he created a council of ministers; this was
followed by a group of lay notables to represent the communes and advise on civil administration.
The new council of state met for the first time in October, 1847, under the presidency of Giacomo
Antonelli (1808-76), lay cardinal since 1846, and the pope's chief political advisor during most of
his pontificate. Though Metternich had occupied Ferrara in July, 1847, as a sign of his august
displeasure, the pope protested but went on his Liberal course. In December, 1847, he agreed to
ministerial responsibility: civil officials would depend for continuance in office upon a
parliamentary majority. Early in 1848 the rulers of the Two Sicilies, Sardinia and Tuscany,
conceded constitutions in order to allay discontent of the Liberals, and on February 8 an uprising
in Rome demanded a similar grant. On March 14, 1848-the day that an "elderly Englishman,"
Metternich in disguise, stole out of Vienna-Pio Nono granted a constitution: the "Fundamental
Statute for Temporal Administration of the Papal States." There were to be two houses: a high
council of life members named by the pope, and a council of deputies elected by the people. All
legislation, however, was subject to review by a supreme court: the college of cardinals, and
ecclesiastical and foreign affairs were excluded from the legislature's competence. Cardinal
Antonelli took office as the first premier on March 16, 1848. All of Italy seemed to have become
Liberal except for the Austrian-dominated territories, and there groups shouted "down with the
barbarians." Some Roman troops marched to the northern frontier with Pius's blessing; when,
however, newspapers interpreted this as a papal declaration of war, the pope explained that they
were merely guards. Early in April, the pope sent a prelate to discuss Italian confederation with
the king of Sardinia. The papacy, far from obstructing Italian Liberal nationalism, seemed a
beacon.
Roman Republic. Roman Radicals denounced the allocution and on May 3 replaced
Antonelli as premier with Count Mamiani who announced that henceforth the pope would merely
"pray, bless, and pardon." Pio Nono retorted that be would retain "full liberty of action,' and search
for a moderate premier began. The pope felt that be had found one in Pellegrino Rossi, but the
latter was stabbed to death as he opened parliament on November 15. The Civic Guard sided
with the assassins and a Radical ministry was forced upon the pope. Presently the most
infamous decrees appeared under the papal name. Pius informed the diplomatic corps:
"Gentlemen, I am a prisoner." During the night of November 24, the Bavarian ambassador, Graf
Spaur, assisted the pope, "disguised as a priest," to escape to Gaeta in the Two Sicilies, where
King Ferdinand II, who had subdued his own Liberals, gave him asylum. Meanwhile a Radical
Liberalism triumphed at Rome. The papal commission delegated to rule in the pope's absence
was disregarded, and Mazzini arrived to head a junta which announced a plebiscite for
December. Since the pope threatened all taking part with excommunication, the Radicals carried
the day and on February 9, 1849, declared Pius IX deposed in favor of a "Roman Republic." On
February 18 all ecclesiastical property was secularized and other Italian states invited to imitate
this "Young Italian" regime at Rome. On March 29 Mazzini became one of the triumvirs and on
occasion occupied the papal throne in St. Peter's; Armellini set up placards: "Down with Christ;
long live Barabbas"-a sample of the lunatic fringe of Freemasonry.
Papal intransigence. Pius IX was now free from his officious liberators, although a
French garrison remained in Rome until 1866. The pope and Cardinal Antonelli had returned to
Rome disillusioned about Liberalism. Everything compatible with the divine monarchical
constitution of the papacy had been done to conciliate the Liberals without appeasing their
importunate demands. Henceforth there would be no more experiments, and strict conservatism
would be the rule. Though by no means vindictive-an amnesty was granted-Pius IX henceforth
imposed stern restraint upon Liberals and Radicals. Progress and reform would be achieved by
benevolent despotism. In this policy the adroit Cardinal Antonelli perhaps achieved as much
success as was possible in the face of European opinion now largely convinced that papal
temporal sovereignty was an anachronism, a relic of medievalism. The old system of legatine
government was restored, and education committed to Jesuit supervision. The Jesuit review,
Civilta Cattolica, became the organ of an uncompromising and sometimes extreme
ultramontanism. Reforms in administration, agriculture and commerce were introduced by
Antonelli. His administration, although neither democratic nor progressive, was tolerably just and
prosperous, so that the average citizens of the Papal States, much to the disgust of expatriate or
foreign agitators, were disposed to leave things well enough alone. But this could scarcely
endure, since the Papal State still lay athwart any prospective united Italy. How could Italy be
unified so long as Rome cut it in two? The Lateran solution of 1929 was still far in the future, the
idea of papal presidency of an Italian federation had been repudiated by the Holy See. just as
Austria could never countenance German unification at the expense of her multinational
monarchy, the Papal State could scarcely approve of Italian unification without renouncing its
independence and its international position. just as Bismarck's Prussia resolved to realize
German unity without Austria, so Cavour's Sardinia began to dream of a "Kingdom of Italy," papal
opposition notwithstanding. Since to all proposals of cession of papal territory or temporal
prerogatives, Pio Nono and Cardinal Antonelli opposed an unwavering "non possumus," an
irresistible material force began to move toward an immovable spiritual object.
Diplomatic activity was intense. Repeatedly the Holy See clashed with the Russian
government for violation of the pact of 1847, and in 1866 issued a documented exposition of
Russian infractions of religious agreements regarding the Polish and Ruthenian Uniates. The
pope, however, did not endorse the Polish uprising of 1863. He repeatedly denounced the
Kulturkampf in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. The French, English, and Portuguese
hierarchies came in for chiding on occasion for either weakness or internal disputes. But if the
pope was strongly authoritarian, his winning personality repeatedly disarmed his opponents:
bishops summoned to Rome for reprimands often returned strong Ultramontanes. Pio Nono's
nervous and variable temperament, however, made his policies frequently seem inconsistent or
improvised.
The Oriental Church, as will be noted elsewhere more in detail, was an object of the
pope's solicitude, though be was accused of favoring Latinization and extinction of patriarchal
autonomy. The bull Reversurus (1867), fusing two Armenian primatial sees, provoked a
temporary schism, which was repeated soon afterwards when the norms of that document
regarding prelatial jurisdiction were applied to the Chaldean Rite. Other Catholic Rites evaded
the regulations or observed them under protest. Happily the disputes led eventually to better
understanding on both sides and more conciliatory treatment by the Roman Curia.
The Immaculate Conception. In 1830 the Blessed Virgin had herself suggested definition
of her unique prerogative by thrice appearing to the Daughter of Charity, St. Catherine Laboure,
during July, November, and December at the mother house in Paris. St. Catherine was directed
to promote wearing of a medal with the invocation: "O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us
who have recourse to thee." Such medals began to appear in 1832 with the authorization of
Hyachinthe de Quelen, archbishop of Paris. Father Jean Etienne, superior-general of the
Vincentians and of the Daughters of Charity, formed a confraternity. Authenticated benefits, such
as the conversion of the Jew, Alphonse Ratisbonne, soon spread the fame of this Miraculous
Medal. While in exile at Gaeta during 1849 Pope Pius sent a circular letter to the Catholic
hierarchy requesting their views regarding a definition of Mary's Immaculate Conception. Replies
were overwhelmingly favorable, and on December 8, 1854, the pope formally defined that "the
doctrine which holds that the most Blessed Virgin Mary was, by the singular favor and privilege of
Almighty God in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, the Savior of the human race, preserved free
from all stain of original sin from the first instant of her conception, is a doctrine revealed by God
and therefore to be firmly and constantly believed by all the faithful" This declaration, Ineffabilis
Deus (Denzinger 1641), is cited by many theologians as a clear example of an ex-cathedra papal
dogmatic definition independently of a general council. At Lourdes, France, four years later, the
Blessed Mother graciously acknowledged the tribute of the universal Church by introducing
herself to St. Bernadette Soubirous as "The Immaculate Conception." There too she opened to
mankind a fountain of healing waters bringing to many health of soul and body though
occasioning not a few Rationalist headaches.
The Syllabus of Errors, issued on the tenth anniversary of the Immaculate Conception,
December 8, 1864, was the chief object of Liberal scandal, pharisaic or otherwise. This was a
compendium of censures of modern errors accompanying the encyclical Quanta Cura. This
denounced Pantheism, Naturalism, Rationalism, Indifferentism, Latitudinarianism, Socialism,
Communism, and Liberalism, together with pseudo-Bible societies, secret organizations, and
"clerical-liberal" ententes. The Syllabus was a summary of modern errors briefly stated.
Unfortunately Cardinal Antonelli's editing of the document was somewhat at fault, so that some of
the propositions, when thus read out of the context of the original documents, were a little
startling, such as: "The Roman pontiff can and ought to reconcile himself to and compromise with
progress, with Liberalism, and with modern civilization." Bismarck, Gladstone, and Bonaparte
were dismayed by this reprobation. Bishop Dupanloup of Orleans undertook to explain that
whereas the abstract errors noted had already been often condemned in the past, the Church
would always be disposed to be merciful to human wanderers in good faith, and to take into
consideration special circumstances requiring toleration of what could, however, never be
proclaimed as an ideal. But however explained, nineteenth-century European Liberals found the
Syllabus absurd-though some twentieth-century thinkers are beginning to have doubts about the
vaunted merits of "modern civilization."
Precarious protection. Though Bonaparte had recognized the kingdom of Italy, he had
done so on the express condition that Rome would not become its capital. The storm of Catholic
protest raised by Bishop Dupanloup convinced him that be must maintain the remnant of the
Papal States. In summer, 1862, Garibaldi called his bluff. Organizing two thousand volunteers,
he marched on Rome with the cry: "Rome or death." He got neither, for the Italian government,
frightened by French threats, arrested him-though soon allowing him to "escape." By a
Convention of 1864, Victor Emmanuel undertook to protect Rome from seizure so that the French
troops might be withdrawn within two years. The pope enlisted volunteer defenders from all
nations under the Swiss General Kanzler. As soon as French troops departed, Garibaldi made
another attempt to capture Rome in October, 1867, but returning French forces reinforced the
papal troops to repel the Italians at Mentana. Garibaldi was captured and sent to Caprera.
Failing to have the "Roman Question" settled by international pact, Bonaparte was obliged to
continue a token French garrison at Rome for the protection of the pope. This force deterred the
Italian government from a move which would involve France.
Rome's fall was inevitable as soon as the Italian kingdom had obtained certain
information of French reverses during the Franco-Prussian War (1870). The Roman garrison was
recalled on July 26, 1870, and the capture of Napoleon III on September 2 relieved the Italian
government from any further anxiety on the part of France. On September 8 King Victor
Emmanuel informed the pope that Rome was about to be seized, but promised to guarantee his
safety. Pio Nono retorted: "They speak of guarantees. Who will guarantee these guarantees?
Your king cannot guarantee them. Your king is no longer king; he is dependent on his parliament,
and that parliament depends on the secret societies." The United States Minister King and
Assistant Secretary of the Navy Fox offered the pope American naval vessels for flight, but Pio
Nono pointed to a crucifix on his table and remarked: "This is all my artillery." On September 11,
General Cadorna crossed the frontier with sixty thousand troops. Although effective papal
resistance was impossible, Pius IX ordered his forces to defend the Roman city walls until a
breach was made, in order to demonstrate that be yielded only to force. At Dine o'clock on
September 20, 1870, the Italian troops broke through the Porta Pia and the papal forces
surrendered. The Papal State, founded in 755 by donation of Pepin of Frankland, came to an
end with General Kanzler's capitulation.
(3) EPILOGUE: "VATICAN CAPTIVITY" (1870-78)
Papal-royal relations. After a managed plebiscite on October 2, the king announced that
"Rome and the Roman provinces form an integral part of the kingdom of Italy." The pope retorted
on November 1 with a formal protest and excommunication for all "invaders, be their dignity what
it may," With the king usurping the papal palace of the Quirinal, the pope immured himself as the
"prisoner of the Vatican": neither he nor his successors set foot on Italian soil from September,
1870 to 1929. True, the Italian government in May, 1871, voted the "Law of Guarantees" assuring
the pope of personal inviolability, freedom of communication with the outside world "in spiritual
matters," use of the Vatican and Lateran palaces with Castel Gandolfo, and an annual subsidy of
3,225,000 lire. Pius IX rejected this unilateral governmental fiat which would make of him a
national chaplain. While the government proceeded to new confiscations, the pope retained the
Non Expedit decree: no loyal Catholic ought to vote or take office under the king. The pope
survived the king by one month, dying on February 8, 1878, after the longest pontificate since St.
Peter. During his funeral procession, delayed to 1881, Freemasons attempted to throw the coffin
into the Tiber. Though they were restrained, papal prestige seemed to have reached a new nadir.
X
Consummation of Nationalism
A. Conciliar Preparations
Papal preparation. Pope Pius IX consulted the curial cardinals during December, 1864,
on the expediency of holding an ecumenical council. When the majority pronounced in favor of
the proposal, a secret circular letter during 1865 ascertained that informed and distinguished
prelates through the world also for the most part favored convocation. The German civil war
somewhat delayed preparations, but by 1867 the pope was ready to commit himself publicly.
Despite Cardinal Antonelli's forebodings, Pius IX told some five hundred bishops assembled at
Rome to celebrate the eighteenth centenary of the martyrdom of Sts. Peter and Paul, June,
1867, that he would call a general council "in order to bring necessary and salutary remedies to
the many evils whereby the Church is oppressed." A year later he fixed the opening date for
December 8, 1869.
Personnel. The Catholic prelates who comprised the Council included over 200 Italians,
70 Frenchmen, 40 Austro-Hungarians, 36 Spaniards, 19 Irishmen, 18 Germans, 12 Englishmen,
and 19 from smaller European countries. There were 40 from the United States, 9 from Canada,
and 36 from Latin America, while 120 came from the British Commonwealth as a whole. There
were prelates from the Catholic Oriental Rites; only Czar Alexander II of Russia hindered his
bishops from coming. Papal invitations had also been issued to important Dissident and
Protestant leaders. Although the Dissident patriarchs ignored the papal appeal, some of their
bishops displayed interest and might have responded had they been permitted by their religious
or secular superiors. Papal invitations to the Protestants were greeted by angry demonstrations
before Luther's new monument at Worms. But the French Huguenot, Francois Guizot, made a
courteous reply.
Foes of papal infallibility itself were few: chiefly Hefele, Maret, a surviving Gallican, and
Kenrick of St. Louis. All eventually submitted, unlike their outside supporter, Doellinger, who went
far beyond them in opposition.
B. Conciliar Deliberations
(1) CONCILIAR PROCEDURE
Conciliar commissions. The Vatican Council, like any numerous assembly, had to do
much of its work through committees. The assigned commissions were: (1) Faith and Dogma; (2)
Ecclesiastical Discipline and Canon Law; (3) Religious Orders and Regulars; (4) Oriental
Churches and Foreign Missions; (5) Ecclesiastical-Political Affairs. As it turned out, only the
material prepared by the first two commissions was ever discussed in the Council, and but part of
the agenda of the first of these was voted on. Archbishop Manning seems to have effected a
coup in the selection of members of the majority for the key commission on Faith and Dogma.
Though his tactless stroke displeased the minority, it did not involve coercion, for there was full
opportunity for episcopal discussion during the general conciliar meetings.
Rules of procedure. The pope reserved the right to propose questions for consideration
through the presidents: Cardinals Reisach, De Luca, Bizzarri, Bilio, Capalti, and De Angelis. The
bishops might also submit subjects for discussion to the commissions, and these would deliberate
on proposals to recommend to the pope for introduction. Bishop Fessler acted as secretary of
the Council. The theologians' printed schemata were to be distributed before any matter was
discussed in a general congregation, so that anyone desiring to speak might notify one of the
presidents beforehand. In case that difficulties arose or amendments were proposed, these
would be referred to the commissions which would deliberate on the matter and make
recommendations to the general congregations. When discussion had concluded on any point,
the bishops voted: placet, non placet, or placet juxta modum to signify respectively approval,
disapproval, or approbation on condition of amendment. Once a congregation, a virtual
committee of the whole, had settled a point, this might then be formally voted in a public conciliar
session.
In practice, the bishops tore to pieces the theologians' lengthy and academic schemata,
and the real formulation of the definitions thus reverted largely to the Commission on Faith. This
meant that the proposed formula would represent the wishes of the opportunist majority.
Nevertheless the minority had ample chance to exhaust their objections in lengthy speeches; had
their arguments been better, they would-salva praesentia Spiritus Sancti-have won over the
majority in that time. Premier Ollivier, a master of parliamentary procedure, thought the Vatican
method of discussion fair and just; his chief criticism lay in that too much latitude was given the
minority for the good of efficient business. This view of a French Liberal may balance
accusations by Doellinger and Friedrich in their Letters From Rome under the pseudonym of
"Quirinus." These future "Old Catholics" claimed that the majority ran roughshod over the minority
by arranging for larger Italian than German representation, packing the Council with dependent
titular bishops, and bribing leaders with offers of red hats. These gratuitous assertions were in
large part based on the assumption that the Council was supposed to do business according to
parliamentary theories of proportional representation. Actually titular bishops numbered only 36
out of 750, voting was not by nations but by individuals, and insinuations of coercion or bribery by
the pope are utterly groundless.
(2) SURVEY OF EXTERNAL HISTORY
First session. The first public session of the Vatican Council was opened by Pope Pius IX
in St. Peter's Basilica on December 8, 1869. Over 600 bishops were present, and during the
course of the Council the number rose to 774. The Mass of the Holy Spirit and inaugural
formalities occupied the first session.
Second session. Since the congregations had no decrees ready for voting, the second
session of January 6, 1870, confined itself to recitation of the Profession of Faith by members of
the Council.
Third session: Dei Filius. The third session convened on April 24, 1870, to adopt the
dogmatic constitution, Dei Filius, by a vote of 667 placet. This constitution was divided into four
positive chapters, with corresponding negative canons:
1) "De Deo Creatore" anathematized theories of the production of the world other than by
creation of all things from nothing by God, freely and for his own glory; denials of spiritual
existence; and pantheistic identification of God with the universe.
2) "De Revelatione" defined that God can be known by human reason per ea quae facta
sunt, and that man can be instructed by Revelation through the canonical Scriptures, to be
accepted as decreed by the Council of Trent.
3) "De Fide" pronounced anathema on those who would say that divine revelation contained
contradictions, so that God cannot exact faith in Revelation, nor make Revelation credible
through external signs sufficient to induce a free and certain assent.
Conclusion. The dogma on infallibility was at once proclaimed by Pius IX amid the
thunder and lightning of Sinai as a summer storm surged about St. Peter's. The next day the
Franco-Prussian War forced postponement. Though reduced numbers continued informal
discussion during the summer, the Council was prorogued on October 20. That this adjournment
has become definitive may be deduced from Pope John XXIII's announcement of a Second
Vatican Council.
Discussion on discipline. While the Commission on Faith was revising the original
schema, the Council's members proceeded to discuss disciplinary matters. Although these
considerations never came to a vote, they reveal some clerical opinions. Many bishops
complained that too much was said in the agenda about episcopal duties and not enough about
their rights. Others objected to excessive disciplinary centralization at the Roman Curia. German
bishops staunchly defended their catechism of St. Peter Canisius against proposed obligatory
and general use of the one by St. Robert Bellarmine. Bishop Verot of Savannah, who repeatedly
leavened proceedings by saving humor, inveighed against apocryphal hagiography and
incongruous homilies. Bishop Martin thought there might be some merit in clerical beards. The
only serious disagreement arose when the Chaldean patriarch, Joseph VI Audo, protested
against what he characterized as a Roman tendency to Latinize the Orientals. Later he defied an
order of Cardinal Barnabo, prefect of Propaganda, and went into virtual schism. He was
subsequently reconciled to Pope Leo XIII, and a more generous curial policy adopted.
Primacy debate. The Council was proceeding slowly, so slowly that it seemed unlikely
that discussion of papal primacy could begin during 1870. Accordingly Pope Pius advanced the
question so that debate opened on May 13. As far as papal primacy, exclusive of infallibility, was
concerned, discussion centered on its nature, for its institution and perpetuity were unanimously
ratified at once. The chief concern of the minority was about the seeming omission of the
hierarchy, a fear that bishops might be reduced to mere papal deputies. Cardinal Rauscher
accordingly proposed that papal power in dioceses be termed extraordinary rather than ordinary,
but his amendment was defeated. Bishop Freppel of Angers concluded the debate by explaining
certain terms and pointing out several fallacies, and with a last-minute addition, the chapter on
the primacy was accepted by July 13. Bishop Strossmayer, an ardent Croatian nationalist, often
increased the tension by his blunt language. But both during and after the Council be accepted
the doctrine of papal primacy; the speech against this said to have been delivered by
Strossmayer on June 2, 1870, is a forgery, still being exploited by the Converted Catholic, etc.
Infallibility debate. Excitement naturally reached its zenith during the discussion of papal
infallibility. The theologians' schema having been set aside for one prepared by Cardinal Bilio,
first Cardinal Guidi of Bologna secured the alteration of its title from "the infallibility of the pope,"
to the more accurate, "infallible magisterium of the pope." Cardinal Rauscher spoke for the
minority in proposing as an amendment the formula of St. Antonine: "The successor of St. Peter,
using the counsel and seeking for the help of the universal Church, cannot err." But the majority
objected that this savored too much of the Gallican theory that papal decrees do not become
valid save with the consent of the Church. Archbishop Landriot of Rheims favored the distinction
employed by Bossuet and Fenelon: that between the infallibility of the see and its occupant, sedis
et sedentis. This, too, was set aside. Many other verbal changes were proposed, among them
some by Bishop Amat of, Los Angeles. Finally, Bishop Gasser of Brixen made a long address
discounting the fears of those who saw in the definition an infallibility separate from that of the
Church. He pointed out that to prescribe conditions for the exercise of papal infallibility was
unnecessary and impractical. Archbishop Manning had already argued that definition of papal
infallibility would appeal to wavering conservative Protestants, and supported his thesis by an
account of his own conversion and up-to date citations. At the conclusion of these debates, the
minority had dwindled from an estimated 136 in January to 88 in July-the Americans had
apparently been the national group most impressed, for their original 24 non placet had declined
to 9. Of the 88 hold-out opponents, only two actually repeated their vote in the public session, the
others absenting themselves. But all of the minority subsequently subscribed to the dogmatic
definition.
C. Conciliar Sequel
(1) CONCILIAR ACCEPTANCE
Episcopal Unanimity. All of the opposition bishops of the Vatican Council, then, without
exception submitted. Formal professions from Central Europe were, indeed, slow in coming, but
not so much from episcopal reluctance to subscribe, as from fear of governmental reaction.
Bishop Hefele, a long waverer, promulgated the decrees on April 10, 1871. Bishop Maret of the
Sorbonne, who had published a book against papal infallibility in 1869, loyally retracted any
adverse statements. Bishop Strossmayer, despite importunity from schismatics, remained
faithful.
Faithful majority. In France, but thirty to forty clerics were tempted into some phase of the
German Old Catholic movement, but they included no prominent individuals save Abb'e Michaud,
vicar at the Madeleine in Paris, and P'ere Hyacinth, Carmelite preacher of the Notre Dame
Conferences. Though fears were entertained for them, P'ere Gratry, John Henry Newman, and
Lord Acton joined the vast majority of the clergy and faithful in ready acceptance of the Vatican
definitions, and the few dissenters became just other bits of driftwood from St. Peter's bark.
Schism. After the Council, Archbishop Scherr of Munich in reporting the conciliar decrees
to the university faculty and its dean, Doellinger, remarked: "Now we are going to work anew for
Holy Church." Doellinger, however, retorted, "Yes, for the old Church; they have made a new
one." This incident of July 21, 1870, foreshadowed and furnished a name to the "Old Catholic"
movement in Germany and Switzerland. During August, 1870, Doellinger conferred at
Nuremburg with other professors of Central European universities, including Friedrich, Schulte,
Reusch, Langen, and Reinkens. They decided not to acknowledge the Vatican Council as
ecumenical and consequently rejected its definition of papal infallibility. When they appealed for a
new council outside of Italy, the German bishops on August 30 published their own adhesion to
the conciliar decrees, and requested prayers for the hesitant. Though Archbishop Scherr and
other members of the hierarchy accorded the disaffected ample time for reflection, on March 28,
1871, the dissidents sanctioned an article in the Allgemeine Zeitung in which they compared the
Vatican Council to the Latrocinium of Ephesus. Excommunicated on April 23, Doellinger united
kindred spirits on May 28 to plan a congress which met the following September tinder Schulte's
presidency. When the majority moved from protest to organizing a sect, however, Doellinger
separated from the movement to live in excommunicated isolation until his death.
Sectarianism. During 1873 an assembly of twenty-two priests and fifty-five Old Catholic
laymen at Cologne elected Joseph Reinkens bishop of the new sect, and he received
consecration from the Jansenist prelate of Deventer, August 11. Though excommunicated by
Pope Pius IX on November 11, 1873, during the same year Reinkens was recognized as
"Catholic bishop" by the governments of Prussia, Bavaria, and HesseDarmstadt. During 1874 the
Bonn congress of the Old Catholics adopted an ecclesiastical constitution worked out by Schulte.
Each national church was declared independent, and government was shared with lay delegates.
A loose union was effected with the Utrecht Jansenists in 1889, but even with considerable
secular backing, the combined sectaries never exceeded 150,000. After the Kulturkampf, they
not only declined in numbers, but began to discard Catholic teachings and practices, such as
clerical celibacy, auricular confession, and fasting and abstinence. They eventually reached
some understanding with the Anglicans, and intercommunion was sanctioned between Anglicans
and Old Catholics in 1931.
X
Consummation of Nationalism
Orleanist collapse. By February, 1848, the Orleans monarchy had for one reason or
another alienated the majority of Frenchmen. Liberal reformers organized "banquets" to promote
a movement for extension of the suffrage. When Premier Guizot banned these political rallies,
the agitation got out of hand and the Socialists mounted the barricades. Riots ensued during
which royal troops fired on the mob. A cry arose: "Louis Philippe massacres us as did Charles X;
let him go join Charles X." The "King of the French" could take a hint; as "Mr. Smith" he followed
his royal predecessor into English exile, February 24, 1848.
Provisional government. The successful rebels proclaimed a Second Republic, but the
provisional government reflected the heterogeneous nature of the new regime. The Revolution
had not been directed against the Church, and "Catholic liberals" were popular for a time.
Lamennais was elected along with Lacordaire to the legislature, and the poet Alphonse Lamartine
became premier. He was, however, checked by the Republican leader Ledru-Rollin, and Louis
Blanc, pre-Marxian Socialist. The latter devised a system of "national workshops," a sort of badly
managed W.P.A. for the Parisian workers, and induced the provisional government to guarantee
"the right to work": public insurance of work relief.
Bourgeois reaction. But Blanc's attacks on private property alarmed the middle class and
the peasantry. The April elections based on manhood suffrage gave these groups a majority in
the new assembly. But when they decreed abolition of the "national workshops," the proletariat
rebelled in June. Sanguinary street fighting followed, during which Archbishop Denis Affre of
Paris lost his life in attempting to mediate. At length General Louis Cavaignac was given
temporary dictatorial powers and suppressed the insurrection firmly,
The "Prince-President" took the oath of office December 20, 1848. Though be pledged
himself to maintain the Republic, his whole previous career had been devoted to restoration of his
dynasty, and lie continued to exploit the Napoleonic legend. Shrewdly he worked to conciliate as
many groups as possible, paying at least one dividend on each of his campaign promises.
Clericals were pleased by the papal relief expedition and religious instruction in the schools.
Laborers heard of an old age pension. Citizens were assured that the president would defend
universal manhood suffrage against any bourgeois attempts to restrict it. It was in fact on the
pretext of protecting democracy against a reaction to privilege that Bonaparte assumed dictatorial
powers on December 2, 1851though not without bloodshed. Thereafter his campaign for a crown
was obvious: his term of office was lengthened; military reviews in uniform were frequent;
"spontaneous" outbursts of "vive l'empereur" were condoned. At length a managed plebiscite,
November 21, 1852, restored the Bonapartist empire, and the following December 2, anniversary
of his "great uncle's" coronation, Louis Bonaparte proclaimed himself Napoleon III, though without
explicit papal sanction.
Foreign affairs. The Napoleonic legend demanded glory and conquest, even if Napoleon
III had promised, "the empire means peace." In his efforts to fill his uncle's far larger military
boots, Napoleon III made most of his worst mistakes. At first, it is true, be seemed successful.
African colonial expansion harmed no European power, and the Crimean War (1854-56) was a
crusade against barbarism, autocracy, or schism whatever each party at home might choose to
call it. But the Italian question proved a two-edged sword. Napoleon wished to dominate Italy
and yet please Liberals by assisting in Italian liberation; he would unite Italians without destroying
the Papal State. He made halfhearted efforts to realize now one, now the other of such
incompatible objectives. Though he was eventually induced to intervene, an "inspired" writer
Dela Gueronniere suggested in Napoleon III et l'Italie and Le Pape et le Congres a temporal
power restricted to Rome. All these shifty maneuvers raised a storm of criticism from the right.
To conciliate criticism itself, Napoleon III embarked on a "Liberal" course.
Religious instruction. Bonaparte rewarded Catholics for their support in the presidential
election by naming Frederic, Vicomte de Falloux (1811-85), minister of education. This ardent
Catholic sponsored a bill which permitted erection of primary and secondary schools under
direction of duly qualified religious or lay teachers. "Study certificates" and state examinations for
diplomas were abolished, and the baccalaureate Opened to pupils in seminaries and religious
schools. Though Falloux went out of office in 1849, his successor Pariou put through what was to
be known as the "Falloux Law," March 15, 1850. This measure was deemed acceptable, if not
perfect, by Bishop Dupanloup of Orleans and the comte de Montalembert, though denounced by
Veuillot for what it withheld. The monopoly on education hitherto possessed by the Rationalist
university was broken, some hierarchical influence on higher education was conceded, and
private religious schools were authorized. Though the university still conferred degrees,
Napoleon III prevented it from using this prerogative to the serious detriment of Catholics during
the conservative period. It would seem by Catholic standards that the Falloux Law did much
good. Within two years 257 Catholic schools had been set up, and 52 secular institutions closed
for want of attendance. Councils of instruction, composed of both clerics and laymen, supervised
these schools.
Controversies were all too numerous. In 1850 the Gallican Archbishop Sibour of Paris
promulgated conciliar decrees against meddling lay editors, with special animus against Veuillot.
The latter, however, appealed to Rome and was defended by the nuncio, Monsignor Fornari, a
provocative Ultramontane who placed all progressive works on the Index. Disputes resumed in
1851 when Abb'e Gaume denounced the pagan classics as a menace to Catholic education, with
Veuillot's support. This time Bishop Dupanloup and others took the opposite view and gained
many episcopal signatures on behalf of the indicted works. Meanwhile Archbishop Sibour and
fifteen bishops issued a manifesto defending "legitimate Gallican customs," and the archbishop
condemned the Univers in 1853. Under pressure from Rome and other members of the
hierarchy, Sibour withdrew his ban. In 1853 the pope approved the use of the pagan classics and
gently and indirectly, but firmly, rejected all Gallicanism, including that of the episcopal manifesto.
Assassination of Archbishop Sibour in 1857 by a disgruntled cleric and the attack on the Papal
State (1859) served to unite clerical factions.
Foreign affairs once again proved Napoleon's undoing. He tried to distract French
attention abroad, but now he was trying to create situations in which lie might recoup his waning
prestige. The Polish Revolt of 1863 afforded him a good chance to appease both Catholics and
Liberals, but be hesitated too long and confined himself to protest. In Mexico he proposed
collecting capitalists' debts while installing a Catholic monarch-a double-headed venture such as
always tempted him. When the anticlerical President Juarez imperiled the project, French troops
had to be used to occupy Mexico. But after the Civil War the United States bluntly reminded
Napoleon of the Monroe Doctrine, and the French ruler beat an ignominious retreat, leaving
Maximilian to his fate. Thereafter the ailing monarch was clearly fumbling at the diplomatic
controls. He turned attention to Germany where Bismarck's Prussia loomed too large after
defeating Austria in 1866. Would not Bismarck in compensation permit France to annex Belgium,
or Luxemburg, or a South German state in exchange for giving Prussia a free band in
reorganizing Germany? The wily Iron Chancellor played his imperial fish until Prussia was
secure, and then refused.
Imperial collapse. Against his better judgment Napoleon III took the last plunge. Yielding
to Ollivier's assurance that a firm stand was needed against Hohenzollern candidacy for the
Spanish throne, he furnished provocation for Bismarck's garbled "Ems Despatch" in such wise as
to inflame public opinion in Germany and France. Urged on by Eugenie to save the dynasty,
Napoleon sought to rally all Frenchmen to a war against Prussia. But they marched out on
Bastille Day, 1870, only to surrender at Sedan in September. This was a signal for proclamation
of the Third Republic, and a third French monarch sought asylum in Eng. land. Few Catholics
regretted his departure, but the demagogue, Leon Gambetta, who led Paris in overthrowing Neo-
Bonapartism, would presently give the new regime its war cry: "Clericalism: there is the enemy.
Local restrictions multiplied. In 1863 the secularist Duruy was made minister of
education and began to attenuate the Falloux Law's enforcement, while Persigny as minister of
the interior imposed regulations on the St. Vincent de Paul Society and dissolved it. While the
government's favor to the Church wore thin, and religious were often criticized, Ernest Renan
(1828-92) produced in 1863 a rationalist Life of Jesus which shocked France.
The Syllabus of Errors, therefore, exploded in 1864 within a tense atmosphere.
Napoleon forbade its publication within France, and the Gallican Rouland indicted
Ultramontanism in the French senate. To this Cardinal Bonnechose replied by deploring the
placing of Gallican interests before those of the Roman pontiff, and Bishop Pie and Veuillot
upheld the most extreme interpretations of the papal document. Bishop Dupanloup made a
prudent distinction between "thesis and hypothesis": the Syllabus set forth an ideal Catholic
society, but adaptation to existing conditions was left to the prudent conscience of the faithful.
Archbishop Darboy of Paris urged "wisdom and conciliation." The controversy gradually died
down in the public prints, though it still smoldered under the surface. Thus the last decade of the
Bonapartist regime proved a transition to the open anticlericalism of the Third Republic.
Catholic life. The prelates and cures seemed by now to lack close contact with their
people. Though generally zealous, they were prone to combat past errors and to resist change.
Religious orders indeed increased in personnel. Yet despite many charitable works and many
contemporary saints,-St. Jean Vianney and St. Sophie Barat among then, -the breakdown of the
Christian tradition in France seems to date from the middle of the nineteenth century. The
country people tended to lose their pious traditions with their provincial dress, and parochial
missions did not entirely halt this process. Though baptism, First Communion, ecclesiastical
marriage and burial, remained conventional, Sunday observance and even Easter Duties began
to be neglected by many. The anticlerical press weakened the Church's influence among the
people, and at Paris and Lyons bitter anti-anticlericalism was in evolution.
X
Consummation of Nationalism
84 GERMAN UNIFICATION
Liberal uprisings (1848-49) finally ended the surface tranquillity of the Metternich System.
Since 1845 there had been petitions for national autonomy in the Austrian monarchy, and
demands for a constitution forced Metternich into exile. The Hungarian Masonic leader, Louis
Kossuth (1802-91), seized this opportunity to proclaim a Hungarian Republic, while a Pan-Slavic
conference met at Prague in Bohemia. In Germany, princes were forced by other revolts either to
abdicate or concede liberal constitutions. By May, 1848, Liberals and nationalists were meeting
at Frankfurt to design a new German federal government. Before the end of the year this body
had drawn up the "Fundamental Rights of the German Nation," a variation of the French
Revolution's "Rights of Man and the Citizen." During April, 1849, the Frankfurt assembly produced
a constitution for a federated parliamentary monarchy, and offered the crown to Frederick William
IV of Prussia, who had been one of the first rulers to concede a constitution.
Conservative reaction (1848-50), however, had set in by this time. Revolt began to lose
ground where it had begun-Vienna. Here the Liberals proved to be divided among themselves
regarding details of a constitution, and various subject nationalities of the Habsburg monarchy
were contending for primacy. When radical leaders came to the fore, the conservative military
class used the consequent disorder as a reason for counterrevolution. In June, 1848, General
Windischgratz subjugated Bohemia, dispersing the Pan-Slav Congress. In October the military
aristocrat Schwarzenberg seized Vienna and made himself chancellor. After securing
Ferdinand's abdication, Schwarzenberg installed the monarch's nephew, Francis III Joseph
(1848-1916). Claiming that Ferdinand's concessions had been voided by the change of regime,
the chancellor proceeded to restore much of the old system of government. Kossuth's Hungarian
Republic was suppressed with Russian military assistance in August, 1849, and Austrian power
was restored in northern Italy. Meanwhile in Prussia the Junker, Count Brandenburg, had
become chancellor and had induced the king to spurn the Frankfurt offer as a "crown from the
gutter." Frankfurt Liberals then made desperate efforts to set up a German Republic, but were
speedily suppressed. Schwarzenberg by 1850 felt strong enough to demand restoration of the
old Germanic Confederation under Austrian presidency, and the vacillating Frederick William IV
feared to assert Prussian claims to leadership at the expense of civil war in Germany. Thus,
Metternich's system was in large measure restored under Schwarzenberg's new management.
Though a number of paper constitutions survived, the only real gain was the abolition of serfdom.
German Liberalism had failed, and would not have another opportunity until 1918. For about a
decade after these mid-century revolts, Germany remained comparatively peaceful. German
princes excluded known Liberals from political life, and, indeed, nationalistic patriots were now
inclined to regard Liberal aims and means as visionary. Vowed to achieve unification of Germans
at all costs, they were particularly susceptible to the successful methods of Otto von Bismarck
(1815-98), who became Prussian premier in 1862, proposing to act "not by parliamentary
speeches but by blood and iron."
Prussian leadership within the remainder of the German states was a natural corollary of
its population, size and power. In punishment for supporting Austria during the recent war,
Hanover-since 1837 separated from the British crown-was annexed to Prussia, and
HesseCassel, Nassau, and Frankfurt were also appropriated. The remaining states north of the
river Main were dragooned into the new North German Federation with Prussia at its head. In the
new federation the Prussian monarch as president managed foreign and military affairs, and
Prussian deputies in the Reichstag could outvote the other states combined. This left outside the
new Prussian-dominated federation only the southern states of Baden, Bavaria, Hesse-
Darmstadt, and Wurtemberg. These Bismarck preferred to persuade than conquer. He bided his
time until Napoleon III claimed his "compensations." When the latter secretly suggested that he
be allowed to annex a part of southern Germany, Bismarck had only to inform the South German
states of French designs in order to induce them to conclude hasty defensive alliances with the
North German Federation. After carefully prepared diplomatic isolation of his intended French
victim, Bismarck utilized the Spanish offer of a crown to a Hohenzollern prince to provoke war.
He published a truncated version of diplomatic correspondence which made it appear that mutual
royal insults had been exchanged between William I of Prussia and Napoleon III. The French
were stampeded into declaring war on Bastille Day, 1870, but North and South Germans easily
and quickly defeated the French armies, captured Napoleon and encircled Paris. During these
common military successes, Bismarck had little difficulty in securing the adherence of the South
German states to an enlarged Federation. On January 18, 1871, in the occupied Versailles
palace, German leaders transformed the North German Federation into the "German Empire": the
second or Hohenzollern Reich (1871-1918). King William of Prussia (1861-88) became Kaiser
William, and Bismarck was his prophet.
Austrian Concordat. With the Liberals discredited by the failure of the 1848 uprising,
Francis Joseph was able to assert his personal wishes. The Revolution had swept away some
Josephinist barnacles and these were not replaced. In 1850 Francis Joseph also renounced the
placet by royal edict, and recognized episcopal right to inflict censures and to license theology
professors in the University of Vienna. During 1851 Bishop Joseph Rauscher (1797-1875) of
Seckau was instrumental in securing governmental recognition of canonical matrimonial
regulations. Promoted to the archdiocese of Vienna in 1852, Rauscher was named
plenipotentiary to arrange a concordat with the Holy See. This pact was concluded on August 18,
1855, and earned for Rauscher a cardinal's bat. In general, the Concordat guaranteed the
Catholic Church all of her canonical rights and privileges as the state religion. Bishops were to be
nominated by the monarch after consultation with the hierarchy, and subject to papal
confirmation. Possession of and free administration of church property were assured.
Seminaries were placed under exclusive episcopal supervision, while the teaching of the Catholic
religion became obligatory in all state schools. Religious orders were granted their freedom, the
Church remained free to regulate marriage, and all contrary civil laws were declared null. Until
threatened by the Austro-Hungarian Ausgleich of 1867 this Concordat regulated Church-state
relations. There was a resurgence of Catholic life. The hierarchy, if learned and conscientious,
tended to be quite conservative, and not overly critical of the secular regime.
Prussian toleration. Catholic freedom was the rule during the greater part of the reign of
Frederick William IV (1840-61). The 1848 constitution conceded Catholics liberty of worship, of
discipline, of religious instruction, and of communication with Rome. This benign state of affairs
continued for a decade. In 1858 when Prince William became regent for the ailing king, the new
prime minister Anton von Hohenzollern (1858-62) was anti-Catholic in spirit and prone to
denounce Catholics as unpatriotic. But when Bismarck succeeded as premier (1862-90), he at
first refrained from such hostile expressions. He had been previously and was yet again to prove
anti-Catholic, but for the moment the Iron Chancellor wished Catholic support for his schemes of
German unification. Hence he blocked anti-Catholic legislation and even restrained liberals from
sectarian conflict. In 1869 Bismarck ignored a petition from German journalists, demanding
suppression of the monasteries. Some Catholics were probably lulled into sleep by this
toleration, but events soon demonstrated that Bismarck was but delaying his Kulturkampf until all
the southern German states, largely Catholic, were safely in the Second Reich.
Bavarian Febronianism revived after the deposition of Prince Louis in 1848. Prime
Minister Chlodwig Hohenlohe (1866-70), whose brother the cardinal was almost disloyal to the
Vatican, gave the Church much to suffer. But when he threatened religious instruction in the
primary schools, the laity formed the Bavarian People's Party which overthrew the Hohenlohe
ministry in 1870.
Wurzburg Discussions. For the first time since the Ems Congress of 1786, the German
hierarchy met at Wurzburg in 1848. Even in southern Germany, Febronianism had begun to pass
out of fashion, and Bishop Richarz of Augsburg was deemed reactionary in airing Febronian
views. On the other hand, the bishops paid scant attention to Doellinger, who pleaded for a
national church in his opposition to secularism. Archbishop Geissel of Cologne provided
moderate and intelligent leadership in opposing the placet and the patronage system. He led the
bishops in a circular to the governments which complained of secular interference in clerical
training, lay education, clerical administration and bestowal of benefices. This was the first
indication of a united hierarchy, capable of joining in firm and moderate demands.
Adolf Kolping (1813-65), like St. John Bosco, was a workman before his ordination to the
priesthood. As a priest he devoted much of his time to helping laborers. One part of his program
included the provision of community dwellings-"Kolping Houses"-for young journeyman artisans.
Here the workers could receive religious, vocational, and recreational helps under the supervision
of a chaplain. Founded in Elberfeld in 1845, the organization opened national headquarters in
Cologne by 1851, and presently followed German emigrants to the United States.
Ludwig Windhorst (1812-91) was an outstanding Catholic lay leader. He began his
career of social service as chairman of the Catholic school board in Hanover, and from 1848 to
1865 he was almost continuously in office as minister or legislator. After the Prussian annexation
of Hanover in 1866, Windhorst entered the Federal Reichstag. Here in 1868 he formed a
coalition of minority groups wronged by Prussia and entered into alliance with the Bavarian
People's Party. Minor successes proved the utility of the venture, and in 1870 all these groups,
largely but not exclusively Catholic, fused into the German Center Party with the professed aims
of the defense of religion, democracy, and social justice. The Kulturkampf was to prove its
strength and bring its membership up to one hundred deputies. With this strong minority bloc the
Centrists safeguarded Catholic interests and cooperated in many beneficial national projects until
their dissolution by Hitler in 1933.
X
Consummation of Nationalism
A. Spain: 1808-74
Bonapartist Revolution. After interning the Spanish Bourbon royal house at Bayonne in
France during 1808, Napoleon Bonaparte had commissioned his brother Joseph to remodel the
Spanish monarchy on the French state. Social and administrative changes in keeping with the
ideas of the French Revolution were announced, and King Joseph suppressed the Inquisition and
decreed confiscation of religious houses. While these changes were welcomed by a few Spanish
Jacobins, foreign rule was something which no Spaniard would tolerate, so that Joseph had
scarcely a peaceful day during his nominal reign (1808-13).
Liberal resistance. From the Dos de Mayo uprising in 1808, Spanish guerillas conducted
a war of liberation against the French. With British assistance they wore down and cut off French
armies, and by 1813 expelled them from Spanish territory. Meanwhile a provisional junta had
been set up. A Cortes met near Cadiz during September, 1810. Though opened by Mass, this
assembly was dominated by Liberals from the Catalonian provinces in the absence of delegates
from French occupied Castile. Using the French Constitution of 1791 as a model, the Liberals in
1812 issued a similar document. Though Catholicity was recognized as the sole legal religion,
clerical privileges were curtailed and smaller religious houses suppressed. When protests were
made by the hierarchy, the papal nuncio was expelled and some bishops exiled. Subsequent
electoral success by Conservatives restrained the Liberals from further measures.
Legitimist reaction. Liberal excesses had alienated many Spaniards, and former Crown
Prince Ferdinand was able to regain his throne (1813-33). Though he temporized with facile
promises, be was unalterably opposed to any deviation from absolutism. By 1814 be utilized a
conservative reaction to abolish the constitution and arrest Liberal chiefs. pre-Revolutionary
conditions returned: confiscated church property was restored, the Jesuits recalled, and the
Inquisition re-established But the king displayed little prudence in government and even
Conservatives dared not defend his personal morality. He set himself against any recognition of
the Industrial Revolution, or any departure from mercantilist policy toward the American colonies.
These colonies, left to themselves during the French occupation of Spain, were ill-disposed
toward subjection, much less to absolutism.
The Carlist War (1833-40) followed when Don Carlos challenged this arrangement. To
his standard rallied Conservatives, together with most of the clergy. This forced Dona Christina to
turn to the Liberals, whose support she consolidated by conceding a constitution in 1837. The
Liberals responded eagerly under the leadership of General Baldomero Espartero (1792-1879).
Anticlerical riots broke out in Madrid and other cities in 1834-35. Some nine hundred religious
houses were suppressed by Premier Mendizabal in an "emergency measure." The 1837
Constitution confirmed "nationalization" of clerical property and the abolition of the tithes and
annates. All religious orders save the Escolapians and Hospitalers were dissolved. Bishops who
protested were expelled until, by 1843, half of the Spanish sees were vacant. Though Don Carlos
enjoyed the support of Metternich, the advent of the Orleans monarchy in France prevented any
repetition of 1823. Don Carlos tried to win the provinces by promising provincial autonomy
against the Liberals' centralizing trend. The Basques did declare for him, but in the long run
sectionalist rivalry became a plague for Spain. The Liberals, on the other hand, enjoyed the
powerful support of Louis Philippe of France and the British minister Palmerston. Nevertheless
the struggle proved severe. No quarter was given at times and well-nigh indelible hatreds
engendered. The Carlist forces broke up in dissension in 1839. Don Carlos fled to pretend
abroad, and in 1840 General Cabrera surrendered the last armed forces. Don Carlos's
descendants kept up pretensions to the Spanish throne until the extinction of their line in 1936;
diehard legitimists still find pretenders.
Radical Liberalism became the rule when General Espartero deposed Queen Christina
and assumed the regency for himself (1840-43). Wholesale arrest and exile of bishops and
priests followed to make way for pastors enjoying the government's confidence. By 1841 only six
sees had canonical incumbents. Pope Gregory XVI denounced the government's tactics in
March, 1841, and during 1842 asked public prayers for a change in Spain.
Conservative reaction. Spaniards themselves heeded the papal request in the summer
of 1843 when a coalition of Conservatives and Moderate Liberals overthrew Espartero and
proclaimed Isabella II of age. Clerical exiles were permitted to return, and relations resumed with
the Holy See in 1845. Protracted negotiations culminated in 1851 in a concordat with the Holy
See. By its terms the Church renounced confiscated properties-estimated at nearly
$200,000,000 at 1938 rates-in exchange for government subsidies for public worship and
payment of clerical salaries. Canonical institution was now conceded to governmental
nominations to bishoprics, and special provision was made for seminaries. Officially the 1851
Concordat remained in force until 1931, but there were numerous suspensions during Liberal
relapses, and subsidies were meager and often in arrears, stationary amid rising prices.
Liberal relapse (1854-56). When the Conservatives announced their intention of revising
the Liberal constitution, the coalition dissolved. A "progressive" biennium followed, again directed
by Espartero. The latter at once passed some anticlerical legislation, but when be proposed sale
of all church property and discontinuance of governmental subsidies entirely, the Moderates
disagreed and dismissed him.
Moderate regimes (1856-68). Succeeding governments were dominated either by the
Moderate Liberal leader, General O'Donnell (1809-67) or the Conservative, Ramon Narvaez
(1800-1868). The former, premier in 1856 and from 1857 to 1863, proposed less drastic
appropriation of church property and sponsored Liberalism at home and abroad. But be had
repealed Espartero's legislation and in 1860 reached a supplementary agreement with the Holy
See regarding some violations of the Concordat. Premier Narvaez arrested Liberals and
sponsored political reaction. But his death and that of O'Donnell deprived Spain of experienced
administrators, and the incompetent ministry of Bravo permitted another Radical revolt that
overthrew the monarchy. Queen Isabella fled to France, involving in her merited discredit her
long-suffering and dragooned spiritual advisor, St. Antonio Claret.
The First Republic (1873-74) was immediately proclaimed by the Radical majority in the
Cortes. The Republicans, however, were divided on the degree of centralization to give the
administration, and four presidents passed in rapid succession. All of the leaders of the Republic
united in opposition to the Church, however, and riots and arson resumed. One of the presidents,
Pi y Margall, asserted that Catholicity was outmoded both for humanity and the Spanish people.
This Spaniards recognized as nonsense and Carlists took the field along with partisans of Don
Alfonso, son of the deposed Queen Isabella II. For about a year a three-cornered civil war went
on until the leading generals, disgusted with the anarchy, overthrew the Republic late in
December, 1874.
Alfonsist restoration followed upon the handsome young prince's magic phrase that he
would be a "Good Spaniard, good Catholic, and good Liberal." Proclaimed Alfonso XII (1874-85),
the new king restored the 1851 Concordat with slight modifications, paid the arrears of clerical
stipends, and inaugurated a moderate regime which for the most part kept on outwardly polite
terms with the Church until overthrown by the Second Republic in 1931. The 1876 Constitution,
in operation until 1923, proclaimed religious liberty and parliamentary government, though the
latter proved more nominal than real. Liberals and Conservatives, more or less anticlerical, would
rotate in power until the next major Spanish explosion in the twentieth century.
B. Portugal: 1809-1910
(1) PORTUGUESE ANALOGIES TO SPAIN (1809-34)
Revolutionary conditions. Portuguese history during the early part of the nineteenth
century presented many resemblance's to that of Spain. Like Spain, Portugal felt the force of
French invasion, though her royal family escaped to the American colony of Brazil. During the
royal absence (1807-22), Portugal became a battlefield. Bishop de Castro of Porto formed a
junta to resist the French and invoked English aid. An expeditionary force was sent under Lord
Beresford who exercised martial law from 1809 to 1820. British occupation authorities did not
seriously interfere with the Catholic Church, but Liberals were naturally in favor.
Royal restoration. Continuance of martial law after the war incensed Portuguese patriots
who expelled the English during Beresford's absence. In 1820 a Portuguese assembly adopted a
constitution similar to the Spanish charter of 1812: feudal privileges were abolished; clerical
prerogatives curtailed; church property "nationalized"; and some religious orders disbanded.
After freedom of the press and popular sovereignty had been proclaimed, the king was invited to
return to enjoy a merely suspensive veto over a unicameral Cortes. John VI, regent since 1792
and king since 1816, returned to Portugal in 1822 after appointing Crown Prince Pedro regent of
Brazil. John perforce accepted the Liberal Constitution, but his younger son, Dom Miguel,
denounced the document and built up a reactionary party. Miguel succeeded in dissolving the
constituent Cortes, but the king was preparing a compromise when he died.
Dynastic dispute. John's middle-of-the-road policies had pleased neither his Liberal son
Pedro nor his reactionary son Miguel. Dorn Pedro had been proclaimed "Emperor of Brazil" in
1822 to avert complete separation of that colony from the Braganza dynasty, and Brazilians
objected to reunion of the royal authority in one person. Dorn Pedro accordingly returned to
Portugal merely to abdicate the Portuguese crown in favor of his infant daughter, Maria da Gloria.
After betrothing her to her uncle, Dom Miguel, Pedro left the regency in the latter's hands, but
exacted a promise to support the Liberal Constitution. Then Pedro returned to Brazil.
Miguelist Civil War. In 1828, however, Dom Miguel abolished the constitution and
proclaimed himself "autocratic king." Liberals were repressed and clerical support courted. There
followed a protracted civil contest during which Dom Pedro was assisted by the British navy to
return to Portugal from Brazil where he had left his infant son Pedro II in nominal possession of
the throne. By May, 1834, the prevailing sentiment for Miguel had been overcome by force of
arms, largely supplied from without. Dom Miguel went into exile on a pension, though his
partisans, like those of Don Carlos in Spain, long kept up pretensions to the throne. Dom Pedro
then restored the Liberal regime. Prelates favorable to Miguel were replaced by his own
nominees. Clerical tithes were abolished without compensation, and religious orders declared
suppressed and their properties confiscated. All secular benefices were subjected to
governmental appointment. Relations were broken off with the Vatican, but Pedro's death in
September, 1834, put a halt to further attacks on the Church, a month after Gregory XVI had
denounced the regime.
Clerical conformity to Liberalism was the worst feature of the Portuguese scene during
the nineteenth century. Many clerics who had been educated in government-controlled
seminaries or colleges were passive or even favorable to the most flagrant manifestations of
Liberalism. Some prelates even co-operated in Masonic functions, while ecclesiastical sodalities
sometimes became virtual subsidiaries of the Masonic lodges. During 1862 Pope Pius IX saw fit
to protest to the patriarch of Lisbon regarding the entire Portuguese hierarchy: "No public
testimony has come to prove that you have displayed in the fulfillment of your episcopal charge
the vigilance and energy which are necessary. . . . Difficulties could doubtless hinder you from
coming to us, but it is not less evident that nothing could hinder you from sending letters." Yet
despite this rebuke, only two bishops from Portugal were present at the Vatican Council in 1870.
Maria's sons, Pedro (1853-61) and Luis (1861-89), effected no substantial change in this
situation. They were children of Maria and Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, and thus the male
line of the Braganza dynasty ceased to rule in Portugal, though continuing in Brazil until the
revolution of 1889. The advocates of Dom Miguel and his descendants accordingly renewed their
agitation, and like the Spanish Carlists struck a discordant note in politics. Religious apathy
continued. Introduction of the Daughters of Charity was followed by a Masonic campaign of
abuse until the king was obliged to demand their recall. When Luis in 1872 attempted to give
legal recognition to some religious orders, Liberals, and Masons-who often displayed their lodge
insignia openly in parliament-forced him to desist. Some religious continued to work in Portugal
and her colonies without legal sanction, but the Goa schism in Portuguese India revealed
considerable insubordination to the Holy See even among the missionaries, while the crown
refused to surrender its patronage claims.
X
Consummation of Nationalism
A. The Netherlands
Retrospect. The Netherlands, comprising modern Belgium and Holland, had remained
formally a part of the Holy Roman Empire until the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648. Since 1465,
however, the various feudal states had been united under the Burgundian dynasty into a
confederation with a common parliament. The Habsburgs succeeded to the Burgundian
possessions in 1477, and the Netherlands were the birthplace of Emperor Charles V. Then they
passed to his son, King Philip II of Spain, against whom the Dutch revolted in 1581. This resulted
in a division of the Netherlands into predominantly Calvinist Holland, an independent aristocratic
republic, and largely Catholic Belgium, a dependency of Spain until 1713, and of Austria to 1795.
During the Revolution, both lands came tinder French domination from 1795 to 1814, and
Catholics had shared in the persecution of the Jacobins and the limited blessings of the
Napoleonic Concordatagainst the latter a schism broke out which endured until 1957: the
"Stevenists."
Allegiance controversy. The king promptly nominated Bishop De Mean of Liege, the only
dissenter to the "doctrinal decision," to be archbishop of Malines. Pope Pius VII refused to
confirm this appointment until the nominee should make a declaration that be took the oath of
allegiance only insofar as it did not contradict Catholic doctrine, and in particular should interpret
the constitutional "protection" of all religions as merely civil. The king replied in 1816 by declaring
the Organic Articles in force, and indicted the Catholic leader, Bishop De Broglie of Ghent, for
communication with the Holy See and promulgation of papal documents without the
governmental placet and exequatur. During 1817 the Court of Assizes sentenced Bishop De
Broglie to exile, but the pope and the cathedral chapter resisted the king's efforts to install a
successor. When De Broglie died in Paris in 1821, the king terminated this controversy by
conceding that the oath of allegiance entailed assent to the merely political provisions of the royal
constitution.
Education dispute. The king, however, sought to dominate education. The constitution
had placed colleges under secular administration, and now a series of decrees (1821-25)
subjected other schools to state control. In 1825 the king established the Philosophical College
at Louvain and decreed that all seminarians must spend two years in attendance prior to their
theological training. This measure evoked a protest even from the conciliatory Archbishop De
Mean. The Belgian deputies in parliament voiced the popular indignation by remonstrance's, and
finally backed these up by a refusal to vote taxes. This opposition became so menacing that
during 1827-28 King William negotiated a concordat with the Holy See which proposed to
introduce the Napoleonic system of episcopal nominations and rescinded the decree regarding
the Philosophical College. Calvinist opposition, however, induced the king to delay the actual
suppression of the institution until 1830. Then the concession came too late to placate the
Belgians, for Catholics and Liberals had formed a "Patriotic Union" against the common enemy.
This Union rapidly gained strength and seized the example of the French July Revolution (1830)
to issue a declaration of independence. Fighting began in September when Prince Frederick
occupied Brussels. But the Belgians, supported by Louis Philippe and Palmerston, soon drove
the Dutch from Belgium, and in 1832 the Great Powers recognized Belgian independence,
although William did not acknowledge the accomplished fact until 1839.
Liberal regime (1847-55). But Masonic propaganda had been urging the Liberals to
sponsor a program of secular education. In 1846 the Liberal Party Congress renounced the
coalition and named their own candidates on a vague platform of "religious and political reform."
The Catholics were negligent in forming their own organization so that the Liberals won a majority
in the 1847 elections and installed their own ministry. Charles Rogier, leader of the Moderate
Liberal majority, became premier (1847-53), though Walther Frere-Orban headed a Radical anti-
Catholic minority. The Moderate Liberals professed to be merely neutral, but consistently worked
for complete secularization. In 1849 charitable institutions were subjected to state control, and in
1850 a bill proposed secularization of schools. But in the Convention of Antwerp (1850) the
Catholic hierarchy secured amendments permitting religious instruction belonging to the religion
of the majority of the pupils, according to books approved by the hierarchy. Safeguards were also
appended to prevent antireligious propaganda in other courses. This compromise brought
temporary peace.
Clerical reaction (1855-57). The Catholic or Clerical Party won the 1854 elections on
their budget program and Pierre Decker became premier from 1855 to 1857. In the latter year he
proposed amendments to the Charitable Institutions Act of 1849 in the direction of subsidies to
Catholic religious orders. Decker was an inept politician, and the Liberals defeated him with the
slogan that he proposed endowing convents. Riots, probably engineered, forced Decker's
resignation,
Liberal return (1857-70). Charles Rogier and the Liberals returned to office which they
held until 1870. Although still stopping short of radical measures, they continued secularization.
More charitable institutes were secularized in 1859; in 1862 they repealed the guarantee of
religious control of cemeteries, and scholarships for Catholic education were confiscated in 1864.
The Protestant King Leopold I (1831-65) was now succeeded by his Catholic son, Leopold II
(1865-1909). Though not a stalwart Catholic, he urged moderation upon the Liberal ministers.
When these, nevertheless, imposed military service on seminarians and novices, the Catholics
were aroused. In 1870 they won the elections and themselves took over the ministry. They were
yet to learn that Catholic vitality would provoke more radical opposition.
Catholic-Liberal coalition (1848-57). Hence, the Catholics allied themselves with the
Liberals who were opposed to the regime on political grounds. Accession of the religiously
indifferent William II (1840-49) paved the way for concessions. The revolutionary fever of 1848
induced the monarch to grant a new constitution, wherein the placet was abandoned and
Catholics granted freedom of association and legal property rights. Pope Pius IX took this
occasion to restore the Catholic hierarchy. In the brief Ex Qua Die, March, 1853, be created the
archbishopric of Utrecht with four suffragan sees. Jan Zwijser became the first metropolitan
(1853-68). The Calvinists at once stirred up a furor similar to that in England during 1850. Vast
blanket petitions made the government hesitate, but it was at length placated by the papal
concession that the bishops would be permitted to take an oath of civil allegiance to the new King
William III (1849-90). A law authorizing governmental supervision of religious societies was
passed, but this probable face saving measure was eventually relaxed. Catholics and Liberals
continued their fruitful political alliance against the die-bard Calvinist Conservatives.
B. Switzerland
Conservatism (1815-32). The constitution of 1815 was in accord with the reactionary
ideas of the Congress of Vienna. Certain changes, however, had to be conceded. In the old
Confederation, there had been thirteen cantons, together with subject districts. The new
Confederation was composed of twenty-two equal cantons. This modification destroyed the
ancient balance between Catholic and Protestant cantons, and accordingly in the Diet a
compromise was secured by granting nine and one-half votes each to the Catholic and Calvinist
cantons. The remaining three votes were exercised by the mixed cantons of St. Gall, Aargau,
and Glarus. Catholic monasteries were everywhere safeguarded. But this conservative
arrangement was increasingly challenged by Liberals, including many political refugees from
other lands.
Civil conflict (1841-48). A decisive act proved to be the suppression of the Aargau
monasteries (1841) in violation of the constitutional guarantee. The Diet, after protesting
ineffectually, acquiesced. Thereupon Catholic representatives concluded a defensive league
upon which the Liberals-playing up the "Jesuit menace"-made an unsuccessful armed attack
during December, 1844. The Catholic cantons strengthened their Sonderbund into a military
alliance during 1845. This amounted to secession from the Swiss Confederation, and the
Liberals called upon the Diet to suppress the Sonderbund. Two years of armed truce passed until
the Radicals overcame Conservative opposition in the Diet. After the Radicals had secured
control, in July, 1847, the Diet decreed dissolution of the Sonderbund, revision of the constitution,
and expulsion of the Jesuits. General Guillaume Dufour, a former Bonapartist officer, was named
commander-in-chief of the Liberal forces, and by December, 1847, he had conquered the
Sonderbund with a minimum of bloodshed. Any interference from Metternich, who protested in
January, 1848, was nullified by the Liberal revolutions of the next few months throughout the
European Continent.
Religious strife was almost continuous. The Catholic champion, Bishop Marilley of
Lausanne, was exiled. Catholics, worsted in war, turned to political action in which they
sometimes received support of conservative Protestants against Liberalism. Many Catholics
moved to former Protestant cantons where they took advantage of federal toleration to erect
churches, form organizations, and edit newspapers. This provoked reprisals, and Catholic
institutions and property were targets for cantonal attacks.
C. Scandinavia
(1) DENMARK
Retrospect. The Catholic Church in Denmark had been completely crushed by the
Protestant Revolt of the sixteenth century, and severe laws were directed against any possible
missionary efforts of the Counter Revolution. Until 1849 the French embassy in Copenhagen
possessed the only legal Catholic chapel in Denmark, and the vast majority of the Danes had
been lost to the ancient Faith.
Liberal concessions. In Scandinavia, Liberalism worked in favor of Catholics inasmuch
as the Liberals clamored as usual for religious liberty against an established Lutheran religion.
Warned by the revolutions of 1848, King Frederick VII conceded a Liberal constitution in 1849.
This allowed dissenters, including Catholics, freedom of cult and freed them from payment of
tithes to the Established Church. At the same time all citizens were guaranteed their civil rights.
In 1852, moreover, the Lutheran Establishment was replaced by the privileged and subsidized
status of a majority religion, for Danish Protestantism was honeycombed with indifferentism to an
unusual degree.
Catholic progress followed the arrival of missionary priests and nuns, at first chiefly from
Germany. They discovered that a few native Danish families had preserved the Faith during
penal days. The Catholics began the Church of St. Ansgar in Copenhagen, and here in 1853 was
preached the first public Catholic sermon in Danish since the Revolt. Catholics founded their own
schools, hospitals, and orphanages, and these institutions, served by devoted religious, acquired
a high reputation among non-Catholics. Protestants made use of their services and in this way
converts were made with surprising rapidity in proportion to the Catholic numbers. In 1869
Hermann Gruder was named prefect apostolic, and in 1892 the prefecture was raised to an
episcopal vicariate. By the end of the century there were some forty priests and nine thousand
Catholics in Denmark. Iceland, still a Danish dependency, received its first two resident priests in
1896.
(2) SWEDEN
Retrospect. Sweden's monarchs had dallied with the notion of reunion with the Holy See
until 1599 when Protestantism was definitively established. Severe penal legislation had imposed
exile on all missionaries and converts to Catholicity, and had deprived Catholics of all religious
and civic rights. Queen Christina's conversion during the seventeenth century had not affected
the status of her Catholic subjects, for she had been forced to abdicate.
Toleration was granted in 1780 to "Christians of other faiths" who might wish to emigrate
to Sweden for the sake of promoting the country's economic development. In 1783 Pope Pius VI
named Father Oster prefect apostolic, but he and his immediate successors could make little
progress among native Swedes, because the penalty of exile for converts to Catholicity remained.
As late as 1858 five converts were exiled and their goods confiscated. The intervention of
Princess Josephine (1807-70), Catholic daughter of Eugene de Beauharnais and wife of the well-
disposed King Oscar I (1844-59), considerably changed the position of Catholics. The prudent
vicar-apostolic, Monsignor Studach (1833-73), could erect Ste. Eugenie's Church in 1837, and
other Catholic edifices followed. In 1860 the penalty for adult conversions was removed.
Dissenters were allowed private exercise of their religion, but public preaching and proselytizing
remained under ban. Dissenters were also made eligible for most civil offices in 1870. During
1872-73 remaining restrictions were removed with these exceptions: minors tinder eighteen might
not leave the Established Church; royal permission was required to hold property and organize
parishes; all religious except the Sisters of Charity were excluded from Sweden. Catholics
remained few in number, probably no more than one or two thousand.
(3) NORWAY
Toleration. Norway was subject to the Swedish crown from 1814 to 1905, but
Norwegians were more progressive and cosmopolitan and dissent from the Lutheran
Establishment became common. When the dissenters in 1839 forced the king to grant them
freedom of religious assembly, and in 1845 the right to have public churches, Catholics shared in
these gains. A church was erected in Oslo in 1872 and Catholic growth was so rapid that a
prefecture was established in 1887 and raised to a vicariate in 1892. During 1891 dissenters
were granted full religious liberty, subject to a few restrictions, and in 1894 civil rights were
conceded as well. Distinguished converts were made, including Dr. Tonning, a Lutheran minister,
and the novelist, Sigrid Undset (18821949). By 1900, the Catholic population was estimated at
two thousand.
X
Consummation of Nationalism
87. NORTH AMERICA NATIONAL CRISIS
Issues. The slavery dispute, far from having been settled by the Compromise of 1850,
soon became acute. The ostensible issue remained economic: the firm conviction of the South
that slaves were essential to her prosperity, so that no fancied moral question dare be raised. It
is true that some Northern abolitionists were more solicitous for Negro slaves that they did not
own, than about fair wages for their own factory workers. Yet even Southerners like Lee who
freed his slaves-agreed that slavery, if seldom deliberately cruel in practice, was far from
compatible with human dignity and American democratic theory. A social issue was also involved,
for if one may be permitted sweeping generalizations, the South was aristocratic, the North
bourgeois, and the West democratic in collective outlook. Yet in the end, it was the national issue
that proved basic. Southerners, as a defensive minority, insisted on "state sovereignty," a
decentralized, sectionalist view of government. But the North and West regarded a strong federal
government as most in accord with their industrial and financial concerns that knew no state lines,
or most likely to finance expansion to the Pacific. As Lincoln put it in 1860: "Physically we cannot
separate." This view was sentimentally confirmed by numerous immigrants who gravitated toward
the North and were more familiar with Old World centralization. Ultimately, the North and West
had a majority of about twenty-one million against the South's nine million including three million
slaves. Railroads were rapidly linking their lands and their horizons extended to the Atlantic and
Pacific coasts; indeed, Yankee clippers were seeking Japan and the Indies.
Political parties, despite efforts to compromise, were at last obliged to lean toward one
view or the other. Democrats, while retaining a minority of Conservative and pacifist adherents in
the North, had become largely identified with Southern statesmanship by the 1850's. The Whigs,
who tried to evade taking sides, were rejected by both sections, and groups like the Know-
Nothings who proposed new issues did not endure. A new party, the Republican, was born in
1854 and quickly captured favor in the North by its firm opposition to slavery extension. The
fugitive slave clause of the 1850 Compromise proved a continual goad to Northerners who
abetted the "underground railroad," and not even its approbation by Chief justice Taney in the
Dred Scott Case (1857) could make them accept it. Stephen A. Douglas essayed a new
compromise with his doctrine of "popular sovereignty," but it became "squatter rule" in practice,
and a bloody practice at that. Douglas might defeat the shrewd and moderate Lincoln in debate
(1858), but he could not control Southern "fire-eaters": those who demanded a repeal of the ban
on slave trading. Defeated by John Quincy Adams in their effort to impose a "gag-rule" on
Congress during the 1840's, these myopic defenders of sectional interest demanded in the 1850's
that free speech cease on slavery, even in the North. An older school of statesmen like Webster
and Clay had soothed these courtly egotists, but now blunter men like Senator Seward of New
York declared that "there was a higher law than the Constitution" on the slavery question, and that
between free and slave societies there existed "an irrepressible conflict." Lincoln, indeed, hoped
to avoid armed strife if possible, but even he warned that the 'Union . . . will cease to be divided.
It will become all one thing, or all the other." Four years of bitter war decided that America would
be all free.
Chief Justice Taney (1857) stole the inaugural headlines, March 6, 1857, by his decision
that not merely did the free soil of Illinois fail to free the Missouri slave Dred Scott, but that the
Missouri Compromise had been unconstitutional: slavery might not be outlawed from any territory.
It seems that this upright Catholic judge allowed himself to be swayed by his Southern prejudices.
Wrongly, but understandably, Northerners branded the court's decision a conspiracy with the new
administration and invoked a "higher law than the Constitution."
President Buchanan (1857-61) proved almost a caretaker administrator, and in his last
months was but a grieving bystander. John Brown's attack on Harpers Ferry (1859) in a
desperate attempt to free slaves got him a hanging, but "John Brown's Body" soon became an
abolitionist war cry. The South lost its best chance to continue compromise by walking out on the
conciliatory Democratic nominee, Stephen A. Douglas, and nominating vice-president
Breckinridge who, unlike Douglas, had endorsed a congressional slave code for the territories.
When Southerners asserted that they would not accept the Republican candidate Lincoln even if
elected, conservatives put up yet a fourth nominee, Senator Bell. On electoral votes the choice
was never in doubt: Lincoln won by 180. An analysis of the popular vote shows forty per cent for
Lincoln, forty-two per cent for Douglas and Bell, and eighteen per cent for Breckinridge. Though
the upholders of the Union thus constituted a clear majority, South Carolina seceded in
December, 1860, and by February, 1861, six other states had joined her in forming the
"Confederate States of America."
President Lincoln (1861-65) at his inaugural addressed the South: "In your hands and not
in mine is the momentous issue of the civil war. The government will not assail you . . . but no
state on its own mere action can lawfully get out of the Union. . . . I shall take care. . . that the
laws of the Union be faithfully executed in all the States." When Lincoln undertook to relieve Fort
Sumter in Southern territory, Confederate President Jefferson Davis permitted and General
Beauregard precipitated war by firing upon the Federal position, April 12, 1861. Secession would,
then, mean war. The conflict was prolonged by the fact that the South had a larger proportion of
experienced officers and that her soldiers fought on their own territory with the advantage of
interior lines of communication. Convinced that "cotton was king," Southern planters hoped to do
business as usual with Europe, but despite a general European disposition to favor the South, an
efficient Northern blockade presently stifled Southern economy. The North had the greater
population, area, resources, and industrial technique, and must, if it persevered, inevitably outlast
the South. If the Confederate States had an experienced and intelligent leader in Jefferson
Davis, he lacked the unusual common sense and loftiness of character that made Lincoln pursue
victory with patient tenacity against most discouraging setbacks. Lincoln lived to witness Lee's
surrender at Appomattox, April 9, 1865, though his assassination five days later was the crowning
tragedy of a "Tragic Era." His Emancipation Proclamation of January 1, 1863, however, was
legalized by the Thirteenth Amendment, December 18, 1865. Slavery was done and the Union
was one.
A papal nuncio, Archbishop Bedini, could not have arrived at a less propitious time when
during 1853 he called on President Pierce en route to his Brazilian post. Unfortunately he had
been papal representative at Bologna while Austria was assisting the Vatican in suppressing the
Young Italian Revolution. This gave an apostate Italian priest, Gavazzi, an opportunity to
denounce him as the "Bloody Butcher of Bologna," typical agent of the Vatican Inquisition.
Audiences were regaled with pictures of the Inquisition buildings at Rome in which, supposedly,
rich apartments for the inquisitors contrasted with the dungeons and torture chambers of the
victims. It is little wonder that mass demonstrations were provoked: at Baltimore Bedini was fired
upon and burned in effigy; at Pittsburgh be was pushed about by rowdies who broke through a
Gaelic bodyguard; Cincinnati Germans prepared to lynch him, and one man was killed and
sixteen wounded in crashes with the police. Despite Bedini's courageous attitude, it was deemed
expedient to smuggle him out of New York in a tug, for a mob had congregated at the dock. The
Bedini tour stirred up emotions and the years that followed were too often marred by violence.
The Federal Government, however, was not responsible. Its envoy, Lewis Cass, presented
apologies to Cardinal Antonelli during 1853, and during the perils of the papal temporal
government the pope was offered American naval vessels as means of escape to a haven in the
United States. It is not difficult to understand why Pius IX preferred to remain in Rome.
(2) KNOW-NOTHINGISM
Local origins. Nativist fears were capitalized upon by a new political party. In 1849
Charles Allen founded the Order of the Star Spangled Banner at New York. Reorganized as the
Order of United Americans by James Barker in 1852, its members observed a Masonic secrecy
which they guarded with such fidelity as to be nicknamed "Know-Nothings." During 1852 the
movement began to attain phenomenal success in local politics. It elected municipal officials and
prepared to capture state governments. The party was pledged "to resist the insidious policy of
the Church of Rome and all other foreign influence against our republican institutions in all lawful
ways; to place in all offices of trust, honor or profit in the gift of the people or by appointment,
none but native American Protestant citizens." Members were obliged to swear that they would
never vote for a Catholic or a foreign-born citizen. Despite their profession of being law-abiding,
Know-Nothing officials often condoned mob activity, and "plug-uglies," armed with awls,
threatened to harm voters who refused to give the Know-Nothing password on the way to the
polls. Catholics were kept from voting by violence, as on "Bloody Monday," August 5, 1855, at
Louisville, Kentucky. By fair means or foul, the Know-Nothings carried nine states between 1854
and 1856, and held the balance of power in others. They elected governors in New York, Rhode
Island, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. During 1855 the first steps were taken
in New York State toward confiscation of church property, while anti-Catholic legislation was
passed or attempted in Michigan and elsewhere. Once again Bishop Hughes proved a shrewd
and belligerent opponent who marshaled Catholic legal and political defenses, Churches
elsewhere were burned or looted, and convent inspection regulations occasioned good nuns
trouble and insults.
Lay opinion. The leading Catholic lay publicist, Orestes Brownson, changed from
toleration of slavery to abolitionism during the prewar excitement, but lie also indicted the evils of
wage-slavery in Northern factories. Patrick Donohue of the Boston Pilot and most Northern
Catholic newspapermen were staunchly Federalist, but Courtney Jenkins of the Catholic Mirror of
Baltimore remained a Southern sympathizer, with the disapproval but toleration of Archbishop
Kenrick. The judicial verdict on slavery was banded down by a Catholic, Chief justice Taney, in
the Dred Scott case. Holding to a strict construction of constitutional opinion, Taney held that
Negroes "had for more than a century been regarded as beings of an inferior order." Yet in his
private capacity, Taney "did not believe in slavery and had not only manumitted those slaves
whom he had inherited at the death of his father, but pensioned his freedmen." 8 Personally
humble, he used to take his turn after Negroes in the line of penitents before the confessional.
Yet be believed that be must uphold the law as Chief justice until slavery had gradually been
eliminated. But popular Northern opinion, with less prudence but more heart than Taney,
bypassed such "law" for equity and insisted that the evil was intolerable. Certainly voluntary
emancipation with some public compensation would have been the ideal solution, but since the
Bourbons would not take that course, they reaped the "grapes of wrath" and the "terrible swift
sword."
The Federal Union, not abolition of slavery, Archbishop Hughes told Secretary Cameron
in 1861, was the object of Northern Catholics' loyalty: "Catholics, so far as I know, whether of
native or foreign birth, are willing to fight to the death for the support of the Constitution, the
Government and the laws of the country." The archbishop himself, a friend of President Lincoln,
accepted a diplomatic mission to Ireland, France, and Italy in a successful effort to avert foreign
recognition of the Confederacy. Bishop Domenech exercised like influence in Spain, and Bishop
FitzPatrick of Boston in Belgium on behalf of the Union. When many Irish Catholics, too poor to
buy exemption from military service at $300, participated in the 1863 draft riots, the dying
Archbishop Hughes appeared in public to urge them to disperse; in this be was sustained by
other members of the hierarchy. The Catholics, Sheridan and Rosecrans, were Federal generals.
Regular chaplains were often assigned by regimental vote, which seldom favored a Catholic.
Hence auxiliary nonmilitary chaplains took care of most Catholic needs, though there is record of
about forty regular army priest chaplains. Notre Dame University sent seven chaplains, and their
Father William Corby was the only Catholic chaplain at Gettysburg. The future bishops, James
Gibbons, John Ireland, and Lawrence McMahon, served as chaplains. Mother Seton's Sisters of
Charity and nuns of other communities to the number of six hundred almost monopolized the
nursing service and won universal acclaim from men of good will; a monument in Washington
pays tribute to their work. "All these sisters must be remembered for their heroic service in the
cause of charity. And they must be still more remembered on account of their service to a better
understanding of the Church and all it stands for; no one who experienced their unselfish charity
could long remain a bigot."
Religious communities coming to the United States from Europe also helped provide
priests, brothers, and sisters for the American mission. Redemptorists came to Cincinnati during
the early 1830's, and toward the close of that decade Bishop Forbin-Janson's Fathers of Mercy
began to work in the South. Foreign sisterhoods arrived in increasing numbers: during 1833,
Carmelites went to New Orleans, Sisters of St. Joseph to Carondolet, and the Dublin Sisters of
Charity to Philadelphia. During the 1840's Holy Cross Fathers, Brothers, and Sisters began to
settle in Indiana, where Notre Dame University would germinate. During the same decade,
Benedictine Monks came to the United States, and the Trappists returned, establishing
themselves at Gethsemane, Kentucky. At the same time the Sacred Heart Brothers (1847), the
Christian Brothers (1848), and the Marianist Brothers (1849) arrived. The Sisters of Providence,
the Precious Blood Sisters, the Sisters of the Good Shepherd, the Sisters of Mercy, and the Notre
Dame Sisters all opened establishments. The Oblates came in 1851 and the Passionists in 1852.
Finally the poor and sick drew the Brothers of Charity, the Alexian Brothers, and the Little Sisters
of the Poor toward the close of the Civil War.
Missionary work continued, with Bishop Lamy of Santa Fe (1850-85) sketching an epic of
zeal before "death came for the archbishop" in 1888. Other prelates were concerned about the
Negroes. Bishop England had opened a school for free Negroes at Charleston in 1835, but was
forced to abandon it in the face of anti-abolitionist panic. In 1844 Bishop Peter Kenrick of St.
Louis opened a school for both free and slave children, but it failed for much the same reason
within two years. Bishop Elder of Natchez in 1858 deplored that though half of Mississippi's six
hundred thousand people were Negroes, be could not provide enough priests to visit and instruct
the Catholic slaves. The American bishops of the Second Plenary Council of Baltimore (1866)
after the Civil War declared that though they would have desired that "a more gradual system of
emancipation could have been adopted," they now urged on clergy and laity alike "charity and
zeal" for the emancipated Negroes. Catholics ought "to extend to them that Christian education
and moral restraint which they so much stand in need of." If segregation was tolerated in secular
contacts where expedient, it was not to be the rule in religion: Catholics were directed to admit
Negroes to their existing churches without discrimination. Execution of these decrees was left to
the bishops' discretion, but "let the ordinaries see to it that this is done in such wise that later the
Church will not be subject to complaint or pretext of complaint. . . . If through neglect this is not
done, anyone who, unmindful of his duty, shall fail to provide the means of salvation to all seeking
them, be they black or not, will merit the strongest condemnation." The slavery issue was settled;
the Negro problem remained.
Lincoln's assassination may have strained papal-American relations. The assassin Booth
was not a Catholic, certain bigots' suspicions that he was a Jesuit notwithstanding. But the
conspirators met in the house of a Catholic, Mrs. Surratt. She was hanged during the vindictive
aftermath, but doubt of the reliability of the circumstantial evidence has since been expressed.
Her son John escaped to the Papal States where he enlisted in the Zouaves as "Watson." When
he was traced, Minister King asked extradition from Cardinal Antonelli. Though the secretary of
state agreed to detain Surratt pending instructions from Washington, he was embarrassed by the
escape of the elusive fugitive to Alexandria, Egypt. Recaptured and tried, Surratt had his case
dismissed by reason of disagreement among the jury.
Close of the American Embassy came when Congress, dominated by a vindictive "Black
Republican" oligarchy, discontinued appropriations for its support. The real cause seems to have
been bigotry, though the pretext adduced in Congress was that American Protestants had been
denied liberty of worship in Rome and ordered outside its walls. in reality, as Minister King
reported, the Protestants held their services in the American legation building with the permission
of the papal government, so that discontinuance of the legation would have precisely the effect
alleged as cause for its suppression. The Holy See was never directly notified of the
suppression, but diplomatic relations actually ceased in December, 1867.
Liberal Agnosticism (1789-1870) X Consummation of Nationalism (1848-71)
X
Consummation of Nationalism
Clerical divisions. "Speaking generally and allowing for individual exceptions on both
sides, the bishops opposed the movement for independence, while the lower clergy strongly
favored them. A similar situation existed among the religious orders: the superiors were for
Spain, the rank and file were largely, though not entirely, for separation. This is not difficult to
understand. The bishops were nearly all Spaniards and all were appointees of the crown; the
lower clergy were either creoles persons of pure Spanish descent born in America-or maestros-a
mixture of Spanish blood with Indian or Negro or both. Hence there was much class and racial
jealousy. Separation from Spain could mean to the bishops only difficulties for themselves or
even possibly deprivation, while to the rest of the clergy it held out hope of advancement from
which under the Spanish regime they were cut off. In addition, the mass of the priests considered
the subjection of the Church to the civil power detrimental to spiritual interests-little better, in fact,
than slavery. While they continued to advocate union of Church and state, they wished that union
to safeguard the rights and the dignity of both parties, a condition which they felt was not realized
under a system whereby the Church was practically a department of the civil government. . . .
One can safely say that both among those who worked for separation and those who remained
loyal to Spain, the majority were actuated also by motives conscientious and lofty. This needs to
be insisted upon especially in regard to the former, who have been attacked unjustly."
Clerical participation. The revolutionary movements against the Spanish crown, then,
were not per se anticlerical. In fact, many clerics took a prominent part in the revolts, either as
publicists for Latin American interests, chaplains in the rebel forces, or advisors to the
constitutional conventions of the new states. Outstanding in the latter role was the Dominican
friar, Santa Maria de Oro. As a participant in the Argentine Congress of Tucuman in 1816, he not
only declared unequivocally for independence, but defeated a proposal for a monarchy on the
ground that the delegates to the convention would not thereby execute the wishes of the people
who had elected them. The democratic precedent thus set by the largest of the Spanish-
American states probably did much to influence the setting up of republics in Latin America. That
monarchy was the preference is indicated in the Mexican and Brazilian experiments. Clerical
patriotism, therefore, did much to preserve Catholic influence in the new countries irrespective of
political animosities: at first each of the republics declared Catholicity the state religion. Although
many of the revolutionary chieftains were sincere Catholics, such as O'Higgins of Chile, others
had been influenced by the Rationalism of the French Revolution. Clerics participating in the
movement for independence were consequently brought into contact with the Liberals of the
future. Such association was not always felicitous: some clerics, like Camilo Enriquez in Chile,
became apostates, while the career of Hidalgo in Mexico is ambiguous to say the least. On the
other hand, some clerics, alarmed at these latitudinarian ideas, were repelled into a reactionary
conservatism in politics. But on the whole, lack of patriotism during the independence movement
is not a charge that can be laid against the Latin American clergy.
(2) HIERARCHICAL REORGANIZATION
Recognition crisis. On the one hand, the sympathy of the Latin American hierarchy with
the mother country of Spain prejudiced the revolutionary leaders against these bishops and made
it practically impossible for them to continue to reside in their sees. By 1822 the six
archbishoprics and thirty-two bishoprics of South America were without resident titulars, while in
Mexico only four bishops remained-and by 1829 there were none. In their place, as well as in
that of religious ordinaries, the new governments were prone to install sacerdotal vicars whom
many people refused to acknowledge. On the other hand, the Spanish crown declined to
recognize the independence of its revolted colonies, even long after military operations had
ceased. This created a problem of providing a new hierarchy, inasmuch as the real patronado
had virtually made the king of Spain papal vicar-general in the choice If prelates. During the early
days of the insurrections, Pius VII had been under Bonapartist surveillance (1809-14), and
doubtless remained ill informed about Latin American affairs. On his release, he urged the
bishops to win over their subjects to obedience to Ferdinand VII, restored to the Spanish throne
since 1813. From 1814 to 1820 the Roman Curia continued to confirm royal nominations to Latin
American sees, but the recommendations of the Holy See fell on deaf ears in the New World.
Hierarchical restoration. Latin American governments then sought to change the papal
attitude, while claiming patronage privileges for themselves. In 1822 Chile sent a delegation
headed by Padre Jose Cienfuegos, which Cardinal Consalvi received over Spanish protests. A
cardinalatial commission was then set up to study the proposals, and the pope sent back an
apostolic delegate extraordinary to examine the Latin American situation. Monsignor Muzi, the
legate, was accompanied by Canon Mastai, the future Pius IX. This mission visited Argentina,
Chile, and Uruguay, while corresponding with Bolivar in Peru. Muzi's refusal to recognize a
patronado nacional made his mission, terminated in 1825, a failure. Meanwhile Mexican envoys
at Rome, Canons Marchena and Vasquez, were unsuccessful in making the same demands.
During 1825, recognition of Brazilian independence by Portugal made possible a settlement of
jurisdictional difficulties in that former colony. But Ferdinand VII of Spain still refused to yield,
even after all hostilities had ceased in 1826. Finally in a consistory of May 27, 1827, Pope Leo
XII resumed the privileges of patronage conceded to the Spanish crown, and himself named six
bishops for sees in Greater Colombia, following recommendations by Bolivar. The next year he
made other appointments in Chile and Argentina. King Ferdinand then dismissed the papal
nuncio, Monsignor Tiberi, but the pope stood his ground. Pius VIII tried in vain to placate the
Spanish monarchy, but continued his predecessor's course. Pope Gregory XVI in 1831 named
six bishops for Mexico, and in 1832 further sees in Argentina and Chile were filled. The papal
bull, Sollicitudo Ecclesiarum (1831) enabled him to extend de facto recognition to the new
governments without committing himself as to their legitimacy. The death of Ferdinand VII in
1833 removed a great obstacle to peace, and in 183 5 the pope conceded complete diplomatic
recognition to Colombia, a procedure presently imitated in regard to other Latin American states.
Papal relations. Pius IX (1846-78), mindful of his South American visit, displayed special
interest in Latin American problems. In 1855 he named Monsignor Nunguia his representative to
promote clerical reform in Mexico, but the latter was encountering resistance from the
beneficiaries when his mission was cut short by the accession of the anticlericals to power.
French intervention in Mexico raised new difficulties, which were met with intransigence by nuncio
Meglia and Archbishop Labastida. But by this time the pontiff had lost his earlier prestige with the
Liberals, and most disputes were approached with insuperable prejudice. By his foundation of
the Latin American College in Rome (1858), Pius IX tried to develop a devoted and learned clergy
outside this oppressive secular climate.
"In the last quarter of the century, Leo XIII (1878-1903) felt that a more conciliatory policy
might be safely adopted and in several accidental matters saw fit to diverge from the rigid policies
of Pius IX The concordat between the Holy See and Colombia, made in 1887, is a good example
of the arrangement of a modus vivendi between the Vatican and a modern state. Certain old
privileges were yielded in return for guarantees of a substantial nature by government in return."
The pope also assembled at Rome during 1899 a plenary council of Latin bishops to win over
their subjects to obedience to Ferdinand VII, restored to the Spanish throne since 1813. From
1814 to 1820 the Roman Curia continued to confirm royal nominations to Latin American sees,
but the recommendations of the Holy See fell on deaf ears in the New World.
Hierarchical restoration. Latin American governments then sought to change the papal
attitude, while claiming patronage privileges for themselves. In 1822 Chile sent a delegation
headed by Padre Joss Cienfuegos, which Cardinal Consalvi received over Spanish protests. A
cardinalatial commission was then set up to study the proposals, and the pope sent back an
apostolic delegate extraordinary to examine the Latin American situation. Monsignor Muzi, the
legate, was accompanied by Canon Mastai, the future Pius IX. This mission visited Argentina,
Chile, and Uruguay, while corresponding with Bolivar in Peru. Muzi's refusal to recognize a
patronado nacional made his mission, terminated in 1825, a failure. Meanwhile Mexican envoys
at Rome, Canons Marchena and Vasquez, were unsuccessful in making the same demands.
During 1825, recognition of Brazilian independence by Portugal made possible a settlement of
jurisdictional difficulties in that former colony. But Ferdinand VII of Spain still refused to yield,
even after all hostilities had ceased in 1826. Finally in a consistory of May 27, 1827, Pope Leo
XII resumed the privileges of patronage conceded to the Spanish crown, and himself named six
bishops for sees in Greater Colombia, following recommendations by Bolivar. The next year he
made other appointments in Chile and Argentina. King Ferdinand then dismissed the papal
nuncio, Monsignor Tiberi, but the pope stood his ground. Pius VIII tried in vain to placate the
Spanish monarchy, but continued his predecessor's course. Pope Gregory XVI in 1831 named
six bishops for Mexico, and in 1832 further sees in Argentina and Chile were filled. The papal
bull, Sollicitudo Ecclesiarum (1831) enabled him to extend de facto recognition to the new
governments without committing himself as to their legitimacy. The death of Ferdinand VII in
1833 removed a great obstacle to peace, and in 1835 the pope conceded complete diplomatic
recognition to Colombia, a procedure presently imitated in regard to other Latin American states.
Papal relations. Pius IX (1846-78), mindful of his South American visit, displayed special
interest in Latin American problems. In 1855 be named Monsignor Nunguia his representative to
promote clerical reform in Mexico, but the latter was encountering resistance from the
beneficiaries when his mission was cut short by the accession of the anticlericals to power.
French intervention in Mexico raised new difficulties, which were met with intransigence by nuncio
Meglia and Archbishop Labastida. But by this time the pontiff had lost his earlier prestige with the
Liberals, and most disputes were approached with insuperable prejudice. By his foundation of
the Latin American College in Rome (1858), Pius IX tried to develop a devoted and learned clergy
outside this oppressive secular climate.
"In the last quarter of the century, Leo XIII (1878-1903) felt that a more conciliatory policy
might be safely adopted and in several accidental matters saw fit to diverge from the rigid policies
of Pius IX. The concordat between the Holy See and Colombia, made in 1887, is a good
example of the arrangement of a modus vivendi between the Vatican and a modern state.
Certain old privileges were yielded in return for guarantees of a substantial nature by government
in return." The pope also assembled at Rome during 1899 a plenary council of Latin American
prelates. The 54 members of this council enacted 998 decrees, among which can be singled out
the proclamation of Our Lady of Guadalupe as the universal patroness of Latin America, and the
unanimous condemnation of Freemasonry as "peste nefaria." From this distinguished meeting a
distinct revival of Catholic life in Latin America can be traced.
Missionary survival. "In Latin South and Central America, the missions, like the
ecclesiastical situation in general, were gravely impaired by the abolition of the reductions and by
the revolutionary disturbances which in the wars for independence usually brought anticlerical
governments into power." It has been estimated that possibly three million Indians relapsed into a
state of paganism during this period. But the Franciscans had taken over some of the Jesuit
missions and had maintained many of their own, for the Gran Chaco Indians in northern
Argentina had preserved their Christian faith for years without priestly ministrations. In 1832 the
Friars received their first re-enforcement from abroad, and in succeeding years could resume
their apostolic work, aided by the returning Jesuits and many other religious communities. The
new Salesian Congregation of St. John Bosco under the future Cardinal Caglieri were particularly
active from 1880. In Mexico and Central America, if missionary work was slowed by the political
transition, few of the Indians abandoned the Faith entirely, although there were some
superstitious interpolations.
B. Mexican Independence
Introduction. Since a summary such as this cannot treat in detail each of the Latin
American countries, some of the general trends will be illustrated in the history of that Mexican
state which, besides exhibiting unusual problems for the Catholic Church, has also had the most
intimate relations with the United States.
Organization. The Spanish Cortes repudiated O'Donoju's pact, but Spain had no means
to effect reconquest and Iturbide occupied Mexico City on September 27, 1821, and formally
proclaimed Mexican independence. Failing to obtain a Bourbon prince, Iturbide had himself
proclaimed monarch on May 18, 1822, and he was anointed by Bishop Ruiz of Guadalajara and
crowned by President Cantarines of Congress the following July 21. Though Iturbide's regime,
Catholic, conservative, agrarian, and nativist, probably enjoyed popular support, it alienated a
Masonic and militarist clique. Provoked into arbitrary acts by the difficulties of his position,
Iturbide gave the generals an excuse to revolt. Under the lead of Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
(1795-1876) they forced Iturbide to resign on March 19, 1823. He departed for Italy with the
promise not to return; when he broke this in July, 1824, be was shot by the ruling junta.
Archbishop Fonte of Mexico City, who had held aloof from the movement as much as be could,
now departed for Europe where he remained until his death in 1839. By 1822 only four bishops
remained in Mexico, and with the death of Bishop Perez of Puebla during 1829, the land was
without a resident hierarchy.
Hierarchical re-establishment. During this time Roman Catholicity remained the state
religion, and the government, whether more or less anticlerical, insisted on claiming the real
patronado. The Holy See was not pleased with the importunate demands of Mexican envoys on
this point, and delayed in restoring the hierarchy. At length in 1831 Gregory XVI named six
bishops, implicitly recognizing the patronado to the extent of accepting the nominations of
President Bustamente (1829-32).
Farias attack. Santa Anna, though not hostile to the Church, was a sort of Robin Hood
not above profiting from clerical wealth, or letting others do so. He frequently delegated his
presidential powers to others, and thus during 1833-34 acting vice-president Farias was enabled
to persecute the Church. The latter secularized mission properties, discontinued the tithe,
decreed suppression of monastic vows and clerical participation in education. When the
hierarchy protested, four bishops were exiled. But in September, 1834, Santa Anna, sensing
popular displeasure, came out of retirement, recalled the bishops and mitigated the anticlerical
measures. The Conservatives remained in control of Congress until 1855. Farias fled to New
Orleans where he formed a secret society pledged to an anticlerical program in the future.
War with the United States induced Santa Anna to reconcile himself with Farias, though
the latter, again acting vice-president in 1847, devoted more attention to annoying the Church
than to supplying Santa Anna on the military front. Santa Anna gained little glory in the war and
his prestige was seriously weakened. The Liberals, led by Benito Juarez (1806-72), announced
in 1854 the "Plan of Ayutla" which called for the secularization of Church property in exchange for
governmental subsidies, in accord with projects concocted at New Orleans in 1835. After trying
to put down the spreading revolt, Santa Anna recognized that be could no longer maintain his
dictatorship. He resigned in August, 1855, and his departure from Vera Cruz on the S.S. Iturbide
marked the end of an era, for though be twice attempted a comeback, he could never regain
power. He died reconciled with the Church.
Ayutla regime. The clique of Liberals now in power were long dominated by Benito
Juarez (1806-72) and Sebastian Lerdo (1825-89), both subsequently presidents. The Ley Juarez
(1855) ended the immunity of the ecclesiastical courts and expelled the Jesuits. The Ley Lerdo
(1856) decreed that existing Church properties were to be sold and the Church forbidden in future
to own land. The Ley Iglesias denied state support in collecting tithes and regulated clerical fees.
In 1857 a new constitution, destined to remain in force until 1917, embodied these and similar
provisions.
Conservative reaction took the form of revolts, but in the ensuing "War of Reform" (1857-
61) the Liberals were ultimately successful. As a war measure Juarez promulgated in July, 1859,
his law "nationalizing clerical property," which thereafter paralyzed the social welfare work of the
Church, while failing to achieve its announced aim of state aid to the underprivileged. During
1861, moreover, Juarez strove to set up a schismatic church, but the sudden death of the bishop-
designate led to abandonment of the attempt.
Anticlerical relapse followed the overthrow of the French and their puppet. Though the
Liberal leaders again claimed to be helping the poor, it would seem that more of the loot went into
the pockets of politicians and generals than ever reached the poor. A class of "new rich" was thus
created with a vested interest in the perpetuation of the Liberal-Masonic regime. The clergy were
excluded from control of education, though in virtue of the separation of Church and state now
proclaimed, the naming of bishops and the training of the clergy escaped governmental control.
But a respite was at hand: in 1876 Porfirio Diaz, a rival of Tejada, successor of Juarez, overthrew
his regime, and himself entered into thirty-five years of power, during which be was content to
relax, not so much the anticlerical legislation, but its enforcement.
XI
Individualistic Heyday
Generic definition. Though Materialism was not a new phenomenon in history, both
Carlton Hayes and Father Corrigan would stress it as characteristic of the period after 1870.
Father Corrigan endeavors to define Materialism, terming it a "perennial pseudo-philosophy,
which teaches that we know nothing but matter, and that there is no ground for supposing thought
and the human mind to be anything beyond a function of organized material substance.
Materialism is latent in most of the "isms" of the century. In a less philosophical sense, but
scarcely less important, Materialism stands for an immersion in material things, in money-making,
pleasure, comfort, and power: living as if there were no soul, no God, no future life."
Popular attitudes, however, usually eschewed metaphysics for a more pragmatic cult of
matter. "In this broad sense, many persons may be accounted 'materialist' who were not at all
philosophically minded and who ignored, rather than denied, the traditional dualism of 'spirit'
and,matter'-persons who were absorbed in 'practical matters' of making money, directing banks,
organizing industrial corporations, devising machinery, or otherwise 'applying' science. Such
persons had little time or inclination to think about the ultimates of human life and destiny. Some
of them might profess from habit a belief in the supernatural, but most of them were influenced,
consciously or unconsciously, by the Materialism of the 'philosophical' science accompanying the
experimental or applied science which they immensely-if somewhat vaguely -respected. Among
them and amongst most scientific' philosophers too, it was not so much a question of
dogmatically rejecting the spiritual as of exalting the physical and the material and confessing a
complete agnosticism about the supernatural."
Typical realists were Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906), Emile Zola (1840190-9), and Anatole
France (1844-1924), and many of the same symptoms can be found in Blasco Ibamez (1867-
1928), Thomas Hardy (18401928), Anton Chekov (1860-1904), Maxim Gorky (1868-1936), and
Sinclair Lewis (1885-1951) and Ernest Hemingway. Corresponding to materialist philosophy,
then, there emerged what Sorokin has termed a "sensate culture," or at least the traditional
Christian civilization became afflicted with various sensate maladies. Among these were the
degradation of social values to sensual enjoyment an endeavor to portray the sensual, even the
sexual, "frankly"; the nervous quest for sensationalism and novelty to the extent of entering the
realm of the pathological and fantastic; the tendency to make means an end; a depressing
standardization of mass production, carried over into the artistic and literary fields by catering to
popular animal tastes. A true realism which would face the fact of original sin-as opposed to
Victorian prudishness-might have been salutary, but scarcely a pseudo-realism which rashly
plumbed the depths of human evil while ignoring supernatural remedies. Such imprudent probing
threatened moral disaster, perhaps what Chesterton would call "breaking the spring."
Balkan nationalism also came of age during this period in the wake of periodic risings
against Turkish oppression. Greece was joined in her independent status by Serbia, Montenegro,
and Rumania (1878), and later by Bulgaria (1909) and Albania (1913). This was all at the
expense of the fast fading Ottoman dominions, which lost Tripoli to Italy in 1911 and retained but
nominal suzerainty outside of the Anatolian peninsula, where, indeed, a saving nationalism was
brewing in the "Young Turk" movement.
Peace efforts through the Hague conferences of 1899 and 1907 were the only hopeful
omens in this charged atmosphere. Certain regulations for hostilities were adopted and
provisions were made for voluntary arbitration of disputes. But on the crucial points of sanctions
for international justice and compulsory arbitration, no agreement was possible amid the fixation
of "national sovereignty" which deemed every state its own ultimate judge of its own interests.
What remained of Metternich's "Concert of Europe" was fast dissolving into "International
Anarchy."
Cult of progress. This ceaseless quest-for a beatitude to be found in God alone-found its
expression in the "cult of progress," a sort of universal application of Darwinian biological
postulates. The magic key to knowledge became evolution. Darwin's Origin of Species (1859)
was presently followed in 1867 by Marx's "evolutionary materialism" that applied the hypothesis to
the economic sphere; in 1871 Edward Tylor revolutionized anthropology on an evolutionary basis;
in 1872 D. F. Strauss abandoned "spiritual philosophy" for "the materialism of modern science" in
the name of evolution: philosophy, ceasing to be metaphysics, would become a synthesis of
physical science. Wilhelm Wundt during 1874 used the evolutionary hypothesis for his "New
Psychology," and by 1875 sociology saw Gumplowicz employing evolution in his analysis of
civilization as the "struggle for existence between races"-remotely sowing seeds of Nazism.
William James and Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., hailed an "evolutionary law." Nowhere was the
application of the evolutionary presupposition more exposed to abuse than in religion. Yet not
only did contemporary Protestants for the most part surrender to doctrinal Latitudinarianism, but-
as will be noted more in detail later-the Catholic Church faced the insidious threat of
"Modernism." It is true that all Protestants did not yield to the Zeitgeist, but many who had
rejected the lures of "agnosticism," "creedless morality," "religion of humanity," "national faith,"
etc., did so only by blind insistence upon Genesis literally interpreted according to outworn
scientific principles, as was lamentably demonstrated at the Scopes trial in 1925. While docility to
authoritative interpretation preserved Catholics from like folly, stubborn fundamentalists not
merely cut themselves off from contemporary intellectual movements, but brought traditional
religion into contempt among the younger generations by narrow-minded, if sincere, attitudes.
Many of today's Radicals are reactionaries against a blind and arid Fundamentalism.
XI
Individualistic Heyday
"All the industrial developments of the period from 1830 to 1870 continued and spread
throughout the period from 1870 to 1910 in an exaggerated degree and with more and more far-
reaching effects. . . . Opportunities for 'self-made men' as well as for professional bankers (and
corporation lawyers) were now golden. And such opportunities were not neglected. . . . The new
type of business corporation dispersed nominal ownership and centralized actual control. It
enabled a few directors and officials to enrich themselves on other peoples' money and to
become irresponsible 'captains of industry,' tsars of paper-credit empires. At the same time it
imparted to a mass of investors a blissful ignorance of sordid details and a heavenly manna of
bond interest and stock dividends. It also promoted monopoly. For the corporation was big and
rich compared with most individual and family enterprises, and the big fellow might buy up the
little fellow, or still more simply, might crush him in free and open competition. By the 1880's
industrial and financial combination was striding over the industrial world." 'I, 7 International
concerns limited competition and obtained privileges; varying with the countries involved, there
were now "trusts" or "holdingcompanies," joint-stock concerns, cartels. Everywhere in the
Western World arose industrial and financial titans to flourish in a classic age of economic
feudalism. Henceforth the "first families" in wealth and power were not those of kings and nobles,
but the economic barons, more often than not newly rich. Nobel in Sweden, Krupp in Germany,
Creusot in France, J. & P. Coats in England, Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Morgan in the United
States, and the Rothschilds nearly everywhere were but a few of these dynasties.
B. Socialist Onslaught
(1) SOCIALIST 0RIGINS
Utopian Socialism ushered in the nineteenth century with the schemes of Saint-Simon
(1760-1825) and Charles Fourier (1772-1837) in France, and Robert Owen (1771-1858) in
England, Scotland, and the United States. The general aim of these reformers was to correct the
abuses of private property by the voluntary example of model communities. But if the Scots for a
time publicized New Lanark in Scotland, "New Harmony" in Indiana proved a dismal failure.
Briefly, voluntary communal living, difficult in religious orders for supernatural motives, proved too
much to expect of unregenerate human selfishness.
Marxian Socialism was born when Karl Marx (1818-83) and his patron and inseparable
collaborator, Friedrich Engels (1829-95), adapted some of Proudhon's economic materialism to
Hegelian dialectic. Marx had been born in the Rhineland, a region stirred by the French
Revolution and chafing under the reactionary Prussian yoke. Of his ancestral Judaism, Marx
seems to have retained nothing save perhaps a despiritualized Messianism to be fulfilled in a
Communist millennium. Any Christianity he imbibed from the family's outward acceptance was
lost under teachers of the prevailing Hegelian Pantheism and Feuerbach's "anthropolatry." From
Hegel's Philosophy of History, Marx derived a determinist theory which at Proudhon's suggestion,
lie transposed from its idealist setting to a remorseless march of materialist economics. Barred
from teaching by his rebellion against the official Hegelianism and successively exiled from
Germany and France for journalistic agitation against the established order, Marx spent his later
life in England composing that "Dialectical Materialism" which would become concrete in Russian
Communism. Assuming an autodynamic, wholly material universe, Marx made man subject
chiefly, if not entirely, to economic motives. Existing society is but an expression and defense of
the proprietary avarice of the dominant capitalists. In pursuing his exclusive interests, the
capitalist usurps the "surplus value" of workmen's labor, for the product is sold for more than the
wage paid-all economically unsound postulate. Inevitably, Marx argued, capitalistic exploitation
would reach intolerable dimensions and provoke the proletariat into revolt; whereupon the
"expropriators are expropriated." Then a transitional "dictatorship of the proletariat" would enforce
proper remuneration for each through collective ownership of the means of production.
Eventually, when all classes have been dissolved into a classless society, the state will "wither
away" and there will emerge a world-society without coercion in which "man, at last master of his
own form of social organization, becomes at the same time lord over nature, his own master-
free.,,
The Second International, founded at Paris on the centenary of Bastille Day, July 14,
1889, signalized the re-emergence of Marxism into favor. After some disputes, leaders avoided
the pitfall of the First International by repudiating Anarchism for Marxian orthodoxy. The dead
Marx henceforth became a revered and infallible guide, although live leaders continued to dispute
about various interpretations of his teaching. Membership in this Second International grew
rapidly at successive congresses where a standard program was prepared and party discipline
enforced. But as membership grew, so did the numbers of moderates, workingmen, and
reformers, interested more in social betterment than in "Dialectical Materialism." Hence the
movement became increasingly "political," to the disgust of Lenin's faction. It remained to be
seen whether it was truly international. When in 1914 the Socialists for the most part rallied to
their respective national states, the Second International practically dissolved-though a "Fourth
International" founded in 1946 mustered 22 national units for its 1951 Frankfurt congress. But
meanwhile Lenin and Trotsky had organized a more famous and influential "Third International":
Communism.
Revived Thomistic teaching, applied to modern conditions, was the essence of Bishop
Ketteler's solution for the social question. Pointing out that God has eminent domain over
property and that man merely the usufruct, the bishop asserted that, "the Catholic teaching of
private property has nothing in common with the concept current in the world, according to which
man regards himself as unrestricted master of his possessions." Rather, "man should never look
on these fruits as his exclusive property, but as the common property of all, and should therefore
be ready to share them with others in their need." Under existing conditions, however, the bishop
deemed the organization of labor unions to assist in this work "not only justified but necessary."
Indeed, "it would be great folly on our part if we kept aloof from this movement merely because at
the present time it happens to be promoted chiefly by men who are hostile to Christianity." The
Catholic Church ought to replace the vanished guilds with "workingmen's associations." With
prudent foresight, moreover, Ketteler warned: "Lassalle wishes to carry out this project with the
help of capital advanced by the state. This expedient, at least if carried out on a large scale,
appears to us . . . unjustifiable encroachment on the rights of private property." Admonishing labor
against excessive wage increase demands, be said: "The object of the labor movement is not to
be war between the workman and the employer, but peace on equitable terms between both."
Among such fair terms, however, the bishop would recognize the justice of workers' claims for
shorter hours, days of rest, prohibition of child labor and of female work in the factories. To
secure these and other demands, he admitted that the "working classes have a right to demand
from the state that it give back to them what it deprived them of, namely, a labor constitution,
regulated labor. . . . In the second place, the workingMan has a right to demand from the state
protection for himself, his family, his work and health, against the superior force with which capital
endows its owner. . . . By wise legislation the state can bring about peaceful organization of the
working-classes, and it certainly has no right to leave this result to be accomplished by a long-
drawn-out struggle between capital and labor." During the Kulturkampf, Bishop Ketteler continued
to lead Catholics on social issues, completing his fund of ninety-two sermons or pamphlets. It
was a just as well as a graceful tribute to Bishop Ketteler for Pope Leo XIII to refer to him as "my
great predecessor": that is, in the preparation of the papal social teaching eventually appearing in
Rerum Novarum.
Corporative School. On the other hand, a so-called "Corporative School" was largely
predominant among the Austrian and French groups. In Austria this movement was led by Baron
Karl von Vogelsang (1818-90), and in France it was headed by Count Albert de Mun (1841-1914)
and Marquis Tour du Pin. As might be suspected from the titles of these aristocrats, the
movement tended to be paternalistic, and somewhat idealized the Middle Ages. Some proposed
an ideal organization of the whole state under a "grand council of corporations" which would
advise on social questions. But Count de Mun also formed a Catholic association, including a
youth movement, and advocated state relief legislation. During 1880 Father Cerutti formed near
Venice the first farm co-operative, and this organization was imitated in most of the other
countries by 1914.
Education was the medium chiefly employed by Giuseppe Toniolo (1845-1918), professor
and writer at the University of Pisa. He outlined the program of "Christian Democracy," a Catholic
social and political movement founded in 1903, which evolved into Don Luigi Sturzo's Partito
Popolare. Organizations for families were begun by Abb'e Viollet in France in 1887, and in
Switzerland, Cardinal Gaspard Mermillod (1824-92), bishop of Lausanne, sponsored social
journals and the Catholic Union for Social Studies. In 1925 Abb'e Cardijn founded the Jocists-
Young Christian Workers-in Belgium, and they spread to France in 1926.
In Anglo-Saxon lands, Cardinal Manning, archbishop of Westminster, took the lead in the
Catholic labor movement in England, and intervened with outstanding success in the London
dock strike of 1889. In the United States, Cardinal Gibbons, archbishop of Baltimore, averted
papal condemnation of the first nationwide labor organization, the Knights of Labor, and softened
possible censure on Father McGlynn for participation in Henry George's ill-advised but popular
"Single Tax" scheme.
These pioneers, all intelligent, zealous, and courageous workers, even if not always
successful at first, in the long run launched movements which achieved great results. Christian
democracy, or the banding together for social action of Catholics and conservative non-Catholics,
was to be a bulwark against Communism in Western Europe after World War II. Unfortunately
much precious time had by then been consumed in overcoming prejudices and fixed ideas, and in
working out effective lay support.
XI
Individualistic Heyday
Gioacchino Vincenzo Pecci (1810-1903) was born at Carpineto, then in the Papal States,
of an aristocratic family. In his early years be seems to have shared his relatives' ambitions for a
brilliant ecclesiastical career: on one occasion he assured his brother that he sought "to rise in the
hierarchical ranks of prelacy, and so augment the due respect our family enjoys in the country."
Educated at the Roman Academia dei Nobili and the Gregorian University, he was ordained to the
priesthood in 1837 and entered upon the temporal administration of the Papal States, first as
governor of Benevento, and then as delegate for Umbria. In 1843 he was named nuncio to
Belgium and consecrated titular archbishop. But as a diplomat he seems to have proved
somewhat inexperienced; at least he was recalled in 1845 and "rusticated" as archbishop of
Perugia. Out of favor with Cardinal Antonelli, the papal secretary of state, Pecci reminded himself
of St. Ignatius Loyola's axiom that everyone ought to be resigned to being but an instrument of
Divine Providence, and applied himself to the work of his diocese. Pecci's pastoral skill attracted
the pope's attention. He was named cardinal in 1854, consulted on many ecclesiastical projects,
and after Antonelli's death, also made camerlengo. As such be presided over the conclave of
February 18, 1878, which on the third ballot of the third day, February 20, chose him as Pope Leo
XIII.
Role. This holy urbanity enabled Leo XIII to conciliate many of those who had been
alienated by Pius IX's intransigence. Without abating any of the Church's claims, the new pope
nevertheless found a way of presenting them without needlessly antagonizing Liberals. Perhaps
he came to regard them less as traitors to the Church than as deluded wanderers in a generation
which no longer appreciated religious authority. At least such was the respect which Leo won for
the papacy that from his pontificate may be dated much of the esteem for the office in moderate
non-Catholic circles. The Leonine tact induced many to cease to regard the Holy See as the
Beast of the Apocalypse; some now deemed it a venerable, benevolent, if somewhat impractical
force for peace.
Doctrinal errors condemned by Leo XIII included Rosmini's Ontologism (Denzinger 1881)
and the so-called "Americanism" of natural virtue (Denzinger 1967), treated elsewhere. Duelin,
cremation, and abortion were reprobated by the Holy Office, and Anglican orders held invalid.
Devotional practices recommended by the pope included those to the Sacred Heart of
Jesus and the Rosary of the Blessed Virgin. The vernacular prayers after low Mass and the
"October Devotions" are of Leonine institution.
Pacification of the Kulturkampf in Germany and Switzerland, the reaching of an
understanding on the Belgian dispute about education, a modus vivendi with Russia, termination
of the Goa schism and the Chaldean estrangement, settlement of the Philippine Friary question,
and arbitration of the Caroline Island dispute between Germany and Spain-this list of diplomatic
successes discussed more at length elsewhere, reveals Leo's conciliatory attitude.
Regime of Guarantees. Pope Leo's relations with the Italian kingdom, however, had
been largely predetermined by his predecessor's policies. After the annexation of Rome, the
Italian parliament had enacted a "Law of Guarantees" which unilaterally regulated relations
between Italy and the Holy See. These assured the Roman pontiff of personal inviolability equal
to that of the Italian monarch; allowed him complete freedom of communication "in spiritual
matters" with the Catholic world; permitted him to retain the Vatican and Lateran palaces, with
Castel Gandolfo, and assigned him an annual subsidy of 3,225,000 lire about $640,000 at pre-
1914 rates. Pope Pius IX had rejected this law as a mere governmental fiat which ignored his
sovereignty and threatened to reduce him to the status of a national chaplain. To avoid any
appearance of recognizing the de facto situation, he had inaugurated the famous "Vatican
Captivity" of the papacy during which no pope set foot on Italian soil in order to avoid even an
implicit recognition of the kingdom of Italy. But the Italian government could display its
resentment as well. Protestant churches began to appear in Rome without disguise in 1871; in
1873 houses of religious orders in Rome were declared secularized, and during 1876 Premier
Depretis, a cousin of St. Francesca Cabrini, banned all religious processions outside of churches.
During 1874 Pope Pius IX had applied an earlier decree, Non Expedit, to regulate the conduct of
loyal Italian Catholics: none who manifested his allegiance to the Holy See ought to vote or hold
office under the usurping government of Savoyard Italy, and Roman aristocracy divided into pro-
Vatican or pro-Quirinal factions.
Papal-royal estrangement. When Leo XIII succeeded Pius IX in February, 1878, it was
generally expected that a reconciliation would be reached with the new King, Humbert I (1878-
1900), who had mounted the throne the preceding month. And the new pontiff, without abating
papal claims, did show himself not unfriendly. On his own account he made no overt move until
the obsequies of the late pontiff-delayed until July 13, 1881-provoked public insults and an
attempt to throw the body into the Tiber as it was borne from St. Peter's to San Lorenzo. Pope
Leo denounced this violence in an allocution of August 4, and the Freemasons countered with a
demonstration on August 7 during which they denounced the Law of Guarantees as too generous
toward the papacy. Open conflict followed, sometimes reaching fanatical proportions, e.g.,
Carducci presented his "Hymn to Satan" at La Scala Opera House in 1882. The regime of
Premier Depretis (1876; 1878-79; 1881-87) renewed legal attacks upon the Church. One of the
most reprehensible of these was seizure of the property of Propaganda, devoted to the service of
Catholic missions throughout the world. No fancied principles of national interest could justify this
grievous act of injustice, and Catholic bishops endorsed the protest of Cardinal Guibert of Paris
(1884). The Italian government, moreover, violated its own Law of Guarantees in 1882 by
assuming jurisdiction over Vatican territory in the case of Martinucci, a dismissed Vatican
employee. The French anticlerical Gambetta was eulogized, and a royal representative presided
at the erection of a statue at Brescia in honor of the medieval "Communist" agitator, Arnold of
Brescia. Papal protests, however repeated, seemed to fall on deaf ears.
Impasse. Some claim that the Italian government during 1887 meditated restoration of a
small strip of territory to the Holy See, and that proposals in this direction were actually made in
1894, but quashed by French governmental interference. However this may be, relations
between the Holy See and Italy even worsened when Depretis was succeeded by the more
radical Francesco Crispi (1887-91; 1893-96). His associate minister, Giuseppe Zanardelli, in
1888 enacted a penal code which threatened with fine or prison clerics or laymen violating the
anticlerical laws or speaking against them. In the same year new decrees forbade religious
instruction in the state schools. During June, 1889, erection of a statue to the renaissance rebel,
Giordano Bruno, provoked antipapal demonstrations at Rome, so that even Leo XIII is reported to
have long considered leaving the city. New governmental decrees subjected works of charity to
state control. While not essentially modifying the papal directive of Non Expedit or Non Licet, Leo
XIII did approve of the formation of nonpolitical organizations of Catholics to work for local social
reforms. Yet in 1898 the otherwise moderate Rudini ministry suppressed four thousand of such
groups. But disasters to Italian arms in the invasion of Ethiopia, and bread riots-falsely blamed
on Milanese priests-contributed to Rudini's fall. His successor as premier, General Pelloux,
permitted reestablishment of the Catholic social groups. The pontificate of Leo XIII closed,
however, without any essential modification of the Vatican-Quirinal impasse. Perhaps Pecci had
been too closely associated with papal temporal government in his youth to propose the radical
solution of 1929, but it is questionable if Italian statesmen were yet disposed to be fair.
Aeterni Patris ( 1879) directed Catholic theologians and philosophers to return to St.
Thomas Aquinas and Scholastic principles. Catholic educators were to seek in these sources
perennial principles for refuting modern pseudo-science, pseudo-rationalism, and pseudo-
historicism. Since "false conclusions concerning divine and human things, which originated in the
schools of philosophy, have crept into all the orders of the state and have been accepted by the
common consent of the masses," the pope insisted that the truth be sought again from the
Fathers and Scholastics and reapplied to present-day conditions. From the pope's initiative dates
the Neo-Scholastic movement, carried on by Zigliara, Cornoldi, and Satolli at Rome, and soon
pushed forward by Mercier at Louvain. This movement, besides systematizing clerical
instruction, has produced lay philosophical experts and even interested some non-Catholic
scholars, although not to a degree to offset the prevailing anti-metaphysical bias of secular
philosophers. The next pontificate would indicate that the Leonine revival of the philosophia
perennis had come in the nick of time to avert a widespread infiltration of the clergy by Kantian
subjectivism.
Saepenumero (1883) is Pope Leo's instruction on history. The pope reminded relativist
cynics about the validity of any objective history, that still the "first law of history is that it presume
to say nothing false." This was no mere aphorism, for the pontiff opened the Vatican archives to
the research of Ludwig von Pastor on papal history, remarking that the truth could never damage
the Catholic Church. Rather, "all history shouts out- that God is the supreme governor of mortal
events. The historian, then, ought to go beyond the mere narration of facts to their interpretation;
indeed, every Catholic philosophy of history tends to become somewhat of a "theology of history."
And for a mentor in this quest for meaning in history, the Pope bade Catholics turn to St.
Augustine, author of De Civitate Dei.
Providentissimus Deus (1893) completed the Leonine study program by urging the
careful cultivation of Biblical sciences. While firmly laying down principles of divine inspiration
and inerrancy of the Holy Scriptures, Leo XIII bade Catholic scholars devote human learning to
the exposition of the sacred text. When a tendency toward Modernism appeared, the pope took
the first steps to combat it in 1902 by setting up the Pontifical Biblical Commission to serve as an
official, reliable, although not necessarily infallible, guide to biblical studies.
Officiorum ac Munerum (1897) undertook the first thorough revision of the Index Librorum
Prohibitorum since the sixteenth century. The revised lists and modernized norms still preserved
a salutary restraint upon inordinate human curiosity.
Immortale Dei (1885) clarified Catholic teaching on relations between Church and state.
The Syllabus had been misinterpreted by many. Between secularists and anticlericals who would
subject the Church to the state or entirely separate the institutions, and fanatical medievalists and
curialists who would, against all reasonable hope, cling to their own inaccurate versions of
theocracy, the pope steered a middle course that recalled the Gelasian dyarchy. Basing his
teaching upon Christ's response regarding the rights of God and Caesar, Leo XIII asserted: "The
Almighty has appointed the charge of the human race between two powers, the ecclesiastical and
the civil, the one being set over divine, the other over human things. Each in its kind is supreme,
each has fixed limits within which it is contained, limits which are defined by the nature and
special object of the province of each, so that there is, we may say, an orbit traced out within
which the action of each is brought into play by its own native right." Neither disestablishment nor
inquisition need be the consequences, for "the Church, indeed, deems it unlawful to place the
various forms of divine worship on the same footing as the true religion, but does not on that
account condemn those rulers who, for the sake of securing some great good or hindering some
great evil, allow patiently custom or usage to be a kind of sanction for each kind of religion having
its place in the state."
Libertas (1888) admitted a legitimate political Liberalism, but distinguished between true
liberty and license: "Men have a right freely and prudently to propagate throughout the state what
things are true and honorable, so that as many as possible may possess them; but lying opinions,
than which no mental plague is greater, and vices which corrupt the heart and moral life, should
be diligently repressed by public authority, lest they insidiously work the ruin of the state. . . .
Every man in the state may follow the will of God and from a consciousness of duty and free from
every obstacle, obey his commands. This is true liberty."
Sapientiae Christianae (1890) commended legitimate love of country, without envy of the
Church: "Church and state alike both possess individual sovereignty; hence in the conduct of
public affairs neither is subject to the other within the limits to which each is restricted by its
constitution." And Americans were reminded by Longinqua Oceani (1895) that "it would be very
erroneous to draw the conclusion that in America is to be sought the type of the most desirable
status of the Church, or that it would be universally lawful or expedient for Church and state to be,
as in America, dissevered and divorced."
XI
Individualistic Heyday
A. Restoration in Christ
Giuseppe Sarto (1835-1914) was born in the village of Riese, near Vicenza, then under
Austrian rule. He was early acquainted with manual labor on the small plot of his peasant
parents. After his father's death in 1852, only his pious mother's self-denial and help from clerical
sponsors enabled him to acquire a formal education and later a scholarship to a seminary. He
was ordained to the priesthood in 1858 by Bishop Farini of Treviso and at once began a long
parochial apprenticeship, as curate of Tombolo (1858-67) and pastor of Salzano (1867-75).
Zealous preaching and devoted solicitude for the poor impressed his superiors, and between
1875 and 1884 be served at one time or another as canon, seminary director, synodal examiner,
canonical judge, chancellor, vicargeneral, and vicar-capitular.
Episcopate. In 1884 Leo XIII named Sarto to the see of Mantua, where Masonry and
Jewry had been strong. Undismayed, the new bishop in his first pastoral pledged "hope-not in
man, but in Christ." Even then he set out to fulfill his subsequent papal motto: "restaurare omnia
in Christo." He pointed out that, "God is driven from politics by separation of Church and state;
from science by teaching doubt as a system; from art, lowered through Realism; from the laws,
modelled according to notions of flesh and blood; from schools, by the abolition of the catechism;
from the family, by the attempt to secularize it in its origin and deprive it of sacramental grace."
After first reforming his clergy and seminary, Bishop Sarto next provided spiritual and civic
leadership. Named cardinal and patriarch of Venice in 1893, his installation was held up until
1895 by a governmental exequatur. Then the king, after a reserved but friendly interview, yielded.
Sarto's denunciation of the king's assassination in 1900 improved unofficial clerical relations with
the House of Savoy. At Venice, the cardinal merely expanded his Mantuan activities among
clergy and laity, and it is here that he first designated lay participation in the Christian apostolate
as "Catholic Action." Music and liturgy were also stressed in his pastoral vigilance.
Papal election. At Pope Leo's death, this "poor country cardinal" met the unforeseen
emergency by borrowing money for a round trip to Rome. Assured by Cardinal Mathieu of Paris
that be was not papabile because he could not speak French, Sarto entered the conclave of
August at ease. The early favorite was Cardinal Rampolla, Leo's secretary of state, but Cardinal
Puzyna of Cracow announced a veto by the Austrian monarch. In spite of general protest at this
anachronistic revival of Caesaro-papism, the cardinals reconsidered and on the seventh ballot,
August 4, cast fifty votes for Sarto. He gave every indication of a refusal until, it is said, Cardinal
Gibbons pressed acceptance on him through Monsignor Merry del Val, secretary of the conclave
and presently secretary of state. The latter reminisced that "truly deep and unaffected humility
was, I consider, the prominent characteristic of the Holy Father." This humility, it is now confirmed,
was that of sanctity, not of weakness. On January 20, 1904, by Commissum Nobis Pius X
repudiated the Austrian claim to a veto. For the new pope, "temporal dreams were out of date,"
and the Habsburgs were reminded of this again in 1914 when the dying pontiff exclaimed: "I bless
peace, not war."
Canonical codification was set in progress by St. Pius's initiative expressed in Arduum
Sane (1904). A commission under Cardinal Pietro Gasparri attacked this gigantic task with vigor,
so that it was actually completed with the issuance of the New Code during the succeeding
pontificate. Already in 1908 Ne Temere had anticipated the Code in the regulation of marriage.
Curial reorganization was effected by Sapienti Consilio, June, 1908. This, the first
complete overhauling of the curial machinery since the Sistine decree of 1587, set up the modern
sacred congregations, prescribing for Roman congregations, tribunals, and offices, their titles,
rights, and duties. By this apostolic constitution the Congregation of Propaganda was confined to
strictly missionary jurisdiction, and England, Ireland, Holland, Canada, and the United States,
where the hierarchy had been by then regularly established, were removed from its direction.
Catechetical instruction was deemed of prime importance by St. Pius. In 1905 the
encyclical Acerbo Nimis reinforced Tridentine decrees on the conscientious teaching of the
catechism by the clergy, and also ordered erection of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine in
each parish to secure "lay helpers in the teaching of the catechism." Major points in the papal
directive were: 1) "On every Sunday and holy day, with no exception throughout the year, all
parish priests and in general all those having the care of souls, shall instruct boys and girls for the
space of an hour from the text of the Catechism on those things they must believe and do in order
to attain salvation." 2) "They shall at certain times throughout the year, prepare boys and girls to
receive properly the sacraments of penance and confirmation by a continued instruction over a
period of days." 3) "They shall with a very special zeal on every day in Lent, and if necessary on
the days following Easter, instruct the youth of both sexes to receive Holy Communion in a holy
manner with the use of apt illustrations and exhortations." 4) In each and every parish the society
known as the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine is to be canonically established. Through this
Confraternity the pastors . . . will have lay helpers in the teaching of the Catechism. 5) "In the
larger cities and especially where universities, colleges, and secondary schools are located, let
classes in religion be organized to instruct in the truths of faith and in the practice of Christian life
the youths who attend the public schools from which all religious teaching is banned."
Seminary instruction was regulated by Pius X who followed up Pope Leo's stress on
Thomistic principles and care for biblical studies, himself founding the Biblical Institute in 1909.
Some three hundred Italian seminaries, some with but one or two professors, were consolidated
into regional institutions for which a thorough program was laid down in 1908.
The lay social apostolate, nevertheless, presented its own problems, chiefly those of
insubordination of single-minded zealots toward bierarchical direction. As early as July, 1904, the
pope was obliged to dissolve the rebellious Catholic groups, Opera dei Congressi. Publications
of the Societa Editrice Romana were also banned for insubordination to hierarchical jurisdiction.
On March 1, 1905, the pope, as will be seen, condemned the Italian Catholic "autonomous
movement" of Padre Murri; the latter's Lega Democratica Nacionale was repudiated in 1906, and
clerics were forbidden to join under pain of suspension. The Pentecostal encyclical of 1905, Il
Fermo Proposito, reiterated the need of subjection of Catholic Action to ecclesiastical authority.
Notre Charge (1910) suppressed Sangnier's French review, Le Sillon, as productive of a
"democracy neither Jewish, nor Protestant, nor Catholic, a religion more universal than the
Catholic Church." The Sillonists submitted, but in 1912 the pope had to warn against a similar
tendency among Catholic workers' unions. In Singulari Quadam (1912), the pope opposed
formation of interconfessional labor unions with a design of escaping ecclesiastical direction. In
1914 the Centrist Dr. Wacker's book, Center Party and Ecclesiastical Authority, was placed on the
Index. The pope continued to prefer purely Catholic labor organizations, although tolerating in
addition "federations formed by Catholics with non-Catholics for the purpose of promoting
material welfare . . . under certain definite conditions."
Italian "Christian Democracy," already taught by Toniolo, was implemented by Don Luigi
Sturzo's "Popular Union." When Father Sturzo was elected mayor of Caltagirone in 1905, Pius X,
instead of excommunicating him as some demanded, accorded him audience and embraced him.
But the Vatican refused to endorse any official Catholic political party, and Don Sturzo's activities
were merely tolerated as private efforts. During 1909, however, a decree of the Sacred
Penitentiary allowed local ordinaries to relax Non Expedit at their discretion-by 1914 most of them
had done so for local questions. On March 1, 1905, the pope in rejecting Padre Murri's
"autonomous movement," denied the view that ecclesiastical authority did not extend to civic
matters.
"The Roman Question" remained unsolved, although there may have been some
improvement in papal-royal relations during the pontificate. In 1908 the ban on religious
instruction in state schools was relaxed to allow parents to provide it at their own expense. After
1909 some Catholics took part in politics and in that year twenty-four Catholic deputies were
elected. From 1906 to 1914 Ernesto Nathan, a violent Jewish anticlerical, made himself
particularly obnoxious as mayor of Rome. His tactless address of September 20, 1910, elicited
an open letter of protest from the pope. Finally in 1914 the Catholics were able to replace Nathan
with Prince Colonna. The pope's influence also prevailed sufficiently with 228 deputies to block a
divorce bill, and in 1914 the Freemason, Finocchiaro-Apule, was prevented from imposing a civil
marriage ceremony prior to the religious rite. The new Catholic deputies made no difficulty about
recognizing Rome as the Italian capital, and it is possible that the Holy See inspired the "feelers"
in Osservatore Romano suggesting a safeguarding of papal independence "otherwise than by
means of territorial sovereignty, as for instance, by an international guarantee." But for this or any
other settlement the Liberal Italian statesmen were not yet ready.
B. Modernism in Kant
(1) EVOLUTION OF MODERNISM
Origin and nature. Modernism was the attempt of certain Catholic scholars-their eyes
captivated by contemporary philosophy and science -to renovate or "modernize" the Catholic
Church, not only in discipline, but even in dogma, by applying to it principles of Kantian
subjectivism. Though the external fabric of ecclesiastical organization and the dogmatic
terminology were to remain, behind this facade the innovators hoped to "reinterpret" Catholicity in
the light of "modern needs." Thus, Modernism became a form of subjective Nominalism whereby
the meaning underlying dogmatic expressions would be expounded according to the personal
views of theologians and thereby the more easily harmonized with contemporary non-Catholic
thought. "Revelation," Modernists said, "is not an affirmation but an experience." This could only
signify that subconscious individual experience alone would serve as the source of enlightenment
about the meaning of dogmas. The latter, indeed, were to be esteemed as nothing more than
external stimuli, adaptable changing guides. Truth, then, was merely an intrinsic phenomenon
varying with individuals and times, which bore merely an accidental relation to external
phenomena or reality. Since, according to Modernists, present-day experience must be unduly
strained to conform to antiquated dogmatic formulas, such as the Trinity and the Divinity of Christ,
such formulas, though remaining verbally the same, might be reinterpreted in a new sense. For
in Loisy's view, "these formulas are not immutable, they are perfectible. All have responded to a
need of the Christian conscience, and consequently contain a moral sense which we must extract
when the symbol itself has become outmoded." In their place new religious impulses will be
substituted, emerging from the subconscious as a "vital phenomenon."
Expression of modernist ideas can already be found in the Protestant Sabatier's Esquisse
d'une Philosophie de la Religion (1879). Blondel's L'Action (1893) presented a novel theme,
while Modernism was detected in La Berthonnierre's Essais de Philosophie Religieuse (1903)
and Le Realisme Chretien et L'Idealisme Grec (1904). At the same time Abb'e Alfred Loisy
applied Modernism to biblical criticism in L'Evangile et L'Eglise (1902) and Autour d'un Petit Livre
(1903). Therein distinction was drawn between a "Christ of history" and a "Christ of Faith": the
former had no intention of founding a Church, which is the product of the evolution of Christian
consciousness. French Modernism culminated in a notorious article, "What is dogma?", written
by Edouard Le Roy for the April, 1905, number of La Quinzaine. Official formulas, it would seem,
were issued merely to stimulate internal religious inquiry. Meanwhile in England the Jesuit,
George Tyrrell, was developing Modernist theology. He had indeed studied St. Thomas
superficially, but the teaching of his Lex Orandi, Lex Credendi and Between Scylla and Charybdis
(1903-7) was no brand of Scholasticism. For Tyrrell, theology was normative only insofar as it
"formulates and justifies the devotion of the best Catholics, and as far as it is true to the life of
faith and charity as actually lived." It Italy, Foggazaro tried to sketch in popular fashion bow
Modernism should be lived in his novel, Il Santo (1905). Here he predicted that the moment was
at hand when the Church would undergo revival under Modernist auspices. At the same time
Padre Murri sought applications of Modernism in the social field. Most of these leaders belonged
to a reputed intelligentsia, but one uninfluenced by the budding Neo-Scholasticism-which they
derided as the dusting off of outworn weapons.
Pascendi Dominici Gregis (1907). Modernist subtleties did not appeal to St. Pius X,
simple with the simplicity of Christ. As successor of him to whom the "historical Christ" had said,
"Feed my sheep," be issued on September 8, 1907, an encyclical providing solid doctrinal food
for the flock. Pascendi branded Modernism as a "synthesis of all heresies," embracing
Agnosticism, Immanentism, and Evolutionism. its chief cause lay in ignorance of Scholasticism by
men deluded by the "false glamour" of modern philosophies. Curious to know more than it
behooves to know, inflated by the pride of modern science, these persons were pushed on to
novelties, "lest they appear as other men," saying the traditional things. Whence their erroneous
conclusions: Faith arises from a need of the divine, a need perceived by a religious sense
resident in the subconscious, unaffected by dogmas. Tradition, therefore, they would term but
communication of the collective religious sense, successively "transfigured and disfigured" during
the course of centuries. Thereafter everything, Church, sacraments, Scriptures, history, is
warped to fit their varying subconscious religious sense, their emotional "need of the divine,"
Dogmas vanish into mere symbols; censures are disregarded as antiquated. All is "theological
symbolism."
Repression. The pope then laid down practical remedies to check Modernism: (1) study
of scholastic as well as positive theology; (2) exclusion from seminaries and colleges of directors
and professors in any way imbued with Modernism; (3) episcopal vigilance committees to
supervise publications and clergy conferences, and to report to the bishop who in turn must
periodically inform the Holy See. These measures proved so effective that as early as 1909 Loisy
admitted that Modernism was "doomed and would not be difficult to crush." The leaders left the
Church: Loisy, excommunicated by name in 1908, held tenaciously to his views until his death in
1940. Tyrrell died in the Petrie home in 1909, dubiously reconciled by Abb'e Bremond. Padre
Murri was excommunicated in 1909 but returned to the Church during the 1940's. Floods of
modernist pamphlets appeared and there were reports of clandestine agitation. Pius X, who
believed in taking no chances, issued on September 1, 1910, the motu proprio, Sacrorum
Antistitum, which imposed an "Oath Against Modernism," upon prelates, educators, and
candidates for the subdiaconate. Criticism has been beard in certain quarters that this provision
is now obsolete, but Pius XII in Humani Generis, August 12, 1950, still found it necessary to
castigate "some false opinions which threaten to undermine the foundations of Catholic doctrine."
At the time of Modernism, however, some suspicions were excessive, even if it may not be true
that Pope Benedict XV discovered in his predecessor's desk a denunciation of himself, then
archbishop of Bologna, as suspected of Modernism.
A. Papal Peace
Giacomo della Chiesa (1854-1922) was born at Genoa of a noble family. His elementary
education was received in the Genoese public schools and he at first pursued studies in civil law
at the University of Genoa from 1871 to 1875. During these years, however, he was a member of
a confraternity which served in hospitals, so that his decision to embrace the clerical life was not
wholly unexpected. After he had received his doctorate in civil law in 1875, his father permitted
him to enroll in the Capranica College where he obtained his theological degree in 1878.
Ordained to the priesthood in the same year, he attended the Academia dei Nobili where he
secured a doctorate in canon law in 1880. During 1881 he became secretary to Cardinal
Rampolla, serving under him first at the Spanish nunciature (1883-87), and then in the Roman
secretariat of state. Monsignor della Chiesa remained deputy secretary of state until 1907 when
be was named archbishop of Bologna and consecrated by Pope Pius X himself. He was zealous
in visiting the parishes of his diocese, especially during Forty Hours, and conducted a pilgrimage
to Lourdes in 1913. He was created cardinal on May 25, 1914, and-following the death of Pius X
on August 20-was elected to the papacy on September 3, 1914.
Character. The new pope had several physical handicaps: be was short and somewhat
lame, and his voice was not particularly good. He had, however, a well-trained mind, great
powers of concentration and administration, and a good sense of humor. To an English lady, at a
loss during a papal audience, he gave a complete guide of what to see in Rome, complete with
the times of opening and closing of the museums. If Benedict XV seems a less attractive
personality than St. Pius X, it was from no absolute deficiency, but merely from the competition
with sanctity. In learning and diplomatic skill he undoubtedly surpassed his predecessor, and
Providence gave him to the Church at the critical period of World War I when his talents were
needed.
Curial activity. It was providential also that the new Code of Canon Law, begun by St.
Pius X, could be guided to completion by a pope versed in both the laws. Its appearance was
clearly the most memorable event of the pontiff's ecclesiastical administration: promulgated at
Pentecost, 1917, it went into effect on May 19, 1918. During 1915 the pope ordered the addition
of the invocation, Regina Pacis, to the Litany of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and on August 10 of the
same year the papal document, Incruentum Altaris, conceded trination privileges to all priests for
All Souls' Day. Benedict XV assumed personal direction of a new Congregation for & Oriental
Church, and his important encyclical, Maximum Illud, stressed the need for developing a native
clergy and improving missionary methods.
Strict impartiality was the pope's announced policy during the war, and the criticisms of
his conduct by both sides may well represent an unconscious testimony to his fidelity in keeping
his pledged word. Elected during the war, the pope took the first opportunity, November 1, 1914,
to urge peace upon the belligerents. His request for a truce at Christmas was not heeded, but
proposals during January, 1915, for mutual exchange of interned civilians and disabled prisoners
of war were eventually put into partial effect through Swiss mediatorship. During January, 1915,
the pope also deplored the "injustice" to Belgium, an injustice indeed admitted by the German
chancellor, Bethmann-Hollweg. On July 28, 1915, the pope issued a second peace plea, and the
following September suggested five conditions: (I ) preservation of French territorial integrity; (2)
restoration of Belgian independence; (3) preservation of Austria-Hungary, although with some
concessions to Italy; (4) re-establishment of Poland within generous limits; (5) freedom of the
Dardanelles. in November, 1916, he condemned the bombing of the open city of Padua.
Papal peace note. During 1917 the pope made his major effort to terminate the war. In
May be consecrated Eugenio Pacelli and sent him to the Kaiser with an urgent plea for peace on
the terms of the general peace note of August 1, 1917. This urged participants that, "the moral
force of right shall be substituted for the material force of arms; . . . a just agreement of all for the
simultaneous and reciprocal diminution of armaments; . . . institution of arbitration . . . subject to
regulations to be agreed on and sanctions to be determined against a state which should refuse; .
. . total evacuation of Belgium with a guarantee of her complete political, military, and economic
independence; . . . similar evacuation of French territory; . . . similar restitution of German
colonies; . . . as regards territorial questions, to examine them in a conciliatory spirit."
Unfortunately, as the pope himself admitted privately later, this note was badly timed, for it
followed American entrance into the conflict and the First Russian Revolution. The first event
heartened the Allies, the second the Central Powers, to seek the chance of total victory rather
than compromise on a negotiated peace. But time proved that the real losers were all the
belligerents concerned.
The Roman Question had been explicitly banned from discussion at Versailles by the
fifteenth article of the secret Treaty of London. This document, signed in 1915, was given to the
world from the Petrograd archives by the Communist revolutionaries. The portion pertaining to
the Holy See pledged: "France, Great Britain, and Russia will support the opposition which Italy
may make to any proposition, no matter what, having in view the introduction of a representative
of the Holy See in the negotiations which have for their object the questions arising out of the
present war." It was in vain, then, that Monsignor Kelley, later bishop of Oklahoma City, strove to
have the Roman Question brought up at Versailles by the American delegation. Cardinal
Gasparri, however, asserted that the Roman Question ought not to be settled "through foreign
armies," and this also implied not through foreign governments. Cardinal Ehrle, the Vatican
librarian, unofficially put for. ward a suggestion of restoration of papal temporal sovereignty limited
to the Leonine City. But the Italian Government, which had seized the Palazzo Venetia in 1916,
was unwilling to make any concessions whatsoever. Pope Benedict XV, however, by entirely
revoking Non Expedit removed any obstacle to Catholic influence upon national politics. Don
Sturzo organized his Partito Popolare on January 10, 1919, although the Osservatore Romano
asserted on June 10, 1920: "The Holy See is and remains completely foreign to the direction and
attitude of the Partito Popolare Italiano, as of all political parties." Thus Benedict XV was forced to
leave a still unsolved Roman Question to his successor when he died after a short illness,
January 22, 1922.
B. Secular Belligerency
(1) WORLD WAR I
The seeds of war, according to Hayes, lay in international anarchy, Blustering self-interest
led to a race for the strong, and unlimited competition in domestic economics reacted upon
national ambitions and was carried over into the international sphere. Areas of friction were
created through myopic self-interest. No international organ existed to settle disputes save by
extraordinary international conferences which uniformly failed to win general approval, in the face
of rampant imperialism and nationalism.
More proximate causes, in Fay's view, were: 1) a system of secret alliances, which made
a local conflict inevitably world-wide. Although these alliances, chiefly the German-Austrian-
Italian Triple Alliance and the Anglo-French-Russian Entente, were defensive in aim, the security
afforded by promised support of friends rendered an offensive possible and assured that it would
be on an extensive scale. 2) Militarism involved huge armies and the presence of a military class
prone to push, and even to rush diplomats into war by demanding general mobilization in any
emergency. 3) Nationalism, especially when heated by war propaganda, evoked worship of the
fatherland, and hatred for other nations: newspapers infuriated the populace, heckled the
pacifiers, and precipitated issues. 4) Economic imperialism, though somewhat exaggerated, was
also a contributing factor.
Occasion. After a series of international crises in 1905, 1908, 1911, 1912, and 1913 had
produced diplomatic hypertension, Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, reputed advocate of a
Triple Monarchy to alleviate Slav grievances within the Habsburg state, was slain by three
Bosnian youths, promoters of a "Greater Serbia." Austrian foreign minister Berchtold hoped to
chastise Serbia in a local war, but Russia announced support of the latter. Russian mobilization
alarmed Austria's German ally, who mobilized in turn and asked France her intentions. Receiving
an evasive reply, Germany strove to skirt French defenses by passing through Belgium, which
brought in Britain as guarantor of Belgian neutrality. Eventually the Entente blockade of Germany
was countered by German submarine blockade of the British Isles, and the United States was
drawn into the conflict.
Course. German blitzkrieg tactics called for a quick decision. Unexpected Russian
speed in advance necessitated transfer of German forces from France to the eastern front. The
latter was saved but at the expense of fatally impairing the Western offensive. Austrian military
weakness prolonged this diversion until 1917 when czarist collapse was helped along by
introduction of the Bolshevik germ. Meanwhile the British and French with difficulty sustained the
western front in Monotonous trench warfare. American assistance arrived in time to offset
German successes in the east, and internal dissension on the German home front made
armistice imperative. When the four-year ordeal was over, the, Western World was exhausted
more than by previous conflicts. For this had been a popular war involving the personal sacrifice
and hardships of a majority of the people; it had been an unusually destructive war affecting the
lives and property of millions; it had, finally, been a demoralizing conflict which shook Liberal
confidence in the "cult of progress," and had left secular leaders disillusioned, cynical and
desperate.
League of Nations. President Wilson had consented to terms not in conformity with his
announced "Fourteen Points" in the hope that the League of Nations would rectify any injustice.
The resulting League was a free association of states for the realization of certain aims, but none
yielded its sovereignty and each retained a veto. The League was to formulate plans and
suggest solutions in a crisis, but it remained for the several states to take what steps they thought
best to enforce decisions. The supreme organ was to be an assembly with one vote for each
nationmember, but effective direction rested with the council composed of the Great Powers.
Russia's ostracism and the abstention of the United States struck the League crippling blows at
the start. It tended then to become an instrument of Britain and France to maintain the status
quo. When these came to disagree on the status quo, it lost all political significance, although
certain juridical and social agencies attached to the League continued to do useful work.
In any event, the new League of Nations was secularist, in fact, the triumph of
secularism. Despite many naturally good principles, the League avoided any explicit invocation
of God or any recognition of Christianity. Versailles and its League may be taken as marking the
zenith of Liberalism, but this "parliament of man in the federation of the world" proved exceedingly
short-lived at Geneva.
XI
Individualistic Heyday
94. TEUTONIC KULTURKAMPF
Bismarck, first German chancellor (1871-90), dominated the reigns of William I (1871-88)
and Frederick (1888). A conservative junker, he was nonetheless an intelligent and progressive
statesman. Once be had united Germany and defeated France, he professed no further territorial
ambitions. Germany was a "sated power" and would confine her efforts to maintaining the status
quo by isolating France from a war of revenge. In this objective Bismarck was quite successful:
while binding Austria and Italy to Germany by the Triple Alliance (1882), be yet preserved
friendship with the Russian czar through the Drei-KaiserBund (1881) and Reinsurance Treaty
(1887-90). Meanwhile he kept on good terms with Great Britain by moderating German colonial
and naval expansion. For Bismarck, the strong German army would suffice to bring the Reich
political primacy, and industrial development would ensure prosperity. German industrial growth,
however, accentuated social problems and provoked active socialist agitation. Regarding
Socialism as a greater menace than Romanism, Bismarck eventually made peace with the latter
in order to oppose the former. His attitude, however, was not merely negative, for between 1883
and 1889 be took the lead in social insurance legislation which did much to allay discontent
among the laboring classes.
William II (1888-1918) would not tolerate for long the dictation of this aged mentor of the
Hohenzollern; in 1890 be "dropped the pilot" and essayed thereafter to act as his own prime
minister. His labor policy was even more liberal than Bismarck's and his condescension to the
proletariat, similar to that of Napoleon III, won for him for a time the title of the "Labor Emperor."
But his foreign policy was unwise. Not only did this neurotic ruler alarm Europe by irresponsible,
belligerent speeches, but his surrender to the naval building mania of Tirpitz brought Germany
into rivalry with Great Britain which eventually sided with France and Russia against the Central
Powers. During the World War, greater tactlessness-and inept propaganda-antagonized neutrals
and the United States, setting in motion forces which brought about the downfall of the
Hohenzollerns.
Inaugural. An occasion for the fight was afforded by discussion of the new imperial
constitution. Since the Prussian constitution of 1848 had granted the Catholic Church
considerable liberty in administration, religious instruction and communication with Rome, Bishop
Ketteler urged that its provisions be extended to the whole new German federation. This became
the program of the states' rights parties in Bavaria and Hanover, aided by national groups of
Poles, Danes, and Alsatians. The Poles were particularly incensed at Bismarck's order that all
Polish schools teach German and in German from Easter, 1873, contrary to a privilege dating
from 1842. Most of these dissenters were Catholics, following the lead of Windhorst in forming
the Center coalition during 1870. They won sixty-seven seats in the 1871 Reichstag election,
increased their strength to ninety-four during the Kulturkampf, and until 1933 consistently held
about one hundred seats in an assembly of three hundred to four hundred-a deciding factor since
no one party polled a clear majority between 1871 and 1933. But in 1871 Bismarck pushed
through the imperial constitution with a significant modification of the Prussian religious articles.
The Catholic participation in the ministry of cult was abolished, and Catholics subjected to
Protestant secularism: "All public and private educational institutions are subject to supervision by
officials appointed by the state." Criticism of this administration was banned under penalty of fine
or prison. When Pope Pius IX intimated that the Febronian Cardinal von Hohenlohe, named
ambassador to the Vatican, might not act in such a secular capacity, it was rumored that
Ultramontane pressure had influenced the Vatican decision. Accordingly on July 4, 1872,
Germany declared her independence of the most virulent type of Ultramontane, the Jesuits. Not
only were they banished from the Reich, but in 1873 the Sacred Heart Sisters, Redemptorists,
Holy Ghost Fathers, and Vincentians were exiled as "affiliated societies"-apparently on the theory
that the Jesuit "Black Pope" directed all religious. The office of Catholic military bishop was
suppressed when use of a Catholic chapel by the Old Catholics was protested.
Coercive measures were added to the original May Laws during March and May, 1874,
and supplemented in March-June, 1875: 3) Catholic societies were dissolved and their press
prosecuted. 4) Civil marriage was introduced into Prussia in 1874 and extended to Germany the
next year. 5) Beneficiary vacancies, produced by the numerous arrests of bishops and priests for
disregard of the May Laws, were to be filled by the cathedral chapters; in case of their refusal, the
government would itself name administrators. But when the bishops, Melchers of Cologne,
Eberhard of Trier, and Ledochowski of Gnesen, were arrested in 1874, the chapters refused to
elect vicars. 6) Exile, therefore, was virtually imposed on the clergy, for in May, 1874, any priest
who had been deposed by the government was forbidden to exercise his ministry or reside in his
parish tinder penalty of loss of civil rights and exile from Germany. The few priests who sided
with the government were excommunicated by the hierarchy and shunned by the laity. The
bishop of Paderborn was exiled and the bishops of Breslau and Munster were arrested during
1875. 7) Clerical subsidies were discontinued for recalcitrant pastors. 8) Any religious orders,
save those tending the sick, were expelled from Germany. 9) Ecclesiastical property was taken
from episcopal direction and placed under committees of laymen. Catholics, however, chose
trustworthy men who safeguarded the property according to secret instructions from the bishops.
Catholic resistance was heroic and prolonged, for the Falk Code, once complete, was
vigorously enforced in 1876 and 1877. By the latter year, nine sees were vacant by death,
deposition, or exile. A thousand parishes lacked pastors, and over two thousand priests had
been fined, imprisoned, or exiled. All seminaries had been closed and detective measures taken
against secret training. The episcopal heroes were Archbishop Ledochowski, named cardinal in
prison by Pius IX, and Bishop Ketteler who, like Cardinal Faulhaber a half century later, was too
respected to be molested. Catholic lay officials continued to be dismissed until Falk resigned in
1879.
Catholic social activity. The Albertsverein for Catholic university students and the
Caritasverband of all Catholic welfare groups had both been organized in 1897, and annual
Catholic congresses continued to demonstrate Catholic unity. Other organizations took care of
the needs of Catholic emigrants from Germany, especially to the United States, and the
promotion of German Catholic missionary work. The Volksverein was a well-organized workers'
guild of five hundred thousand persons, and professional men also possessed their associations.
The Borromeo-Verein spread good literature, and many youth groups were founded.
Austrian Catholic political action was prone to sacrifice liberty to Catholic securit . In
defense of Catholic interests, Dr. Karl Lueger formed the Christian Democrat party which often
allied itself with the Socialists against the Liberals. During 1891 Dr. Lueger with the assistance of
an anti-Semitic group won control of Vienna's city government from the Liberals, whom he labeled
as Jewish anticlericals. As mayor of Vienna from 1896 to 1910, Lueger ran an efficient socialized
administration. Though the Christian Democrats were delated to Rome for condemnation, the
Holy See remained noncommittal on their political activity. The Christian Democrats remained in
control of Austrian government from 1895 to 1938. Unfortunately they employed antisemitism as
a scapegoat; the youthful Adolf Hitler used to sell the Christian Democrat Volksblott in the streets
of Vienna, and from it imbibed some of his first anti-Jewish notions.
Christian social leaders were Dot, however, lacking. Baron Karl von Vogelsang (1818-90)
tried to organize Dew guilds which were to be independent of all state control. He was a strong
foe of capitalism, but entertained an anachronistic and erroneous view on the immorality of
interest which be identified with medieval usury. Leading exponents of the principles of Rerum
Novarum were Prince Aloys von Lichtenstein (d. 1920) and Franz Schindler (d. 1922), whose
policies survived in his disciple, Monsignor Ignaz Seipel, subsequently Austrian chancellor after
the dismemberment of Austria-Hungary after World War 1.
XI
Individualistic Heyday
95. GALLIC REPUDIATION
Conservative trend. Bonaparte had been overthrown by patriots and republicans, but the
bloody Commune of Paris-March to May, 1871had alarmed Frenchmen at the spectre of
radicalism. Liberals, unsuccessful in frenzied appeals for continued war against Germany and
unable to use their organization at the polls, were dismayed at what Brogan terms a "free
election," return a Catholic and Conservative majority. Politically, however, Catholics were
divided among the legitimists favoring the comte de Chambord, Orleanists supporting the comte
de Paris, grandson of Louis Philippe, Bonapartists and Republicans. Although the first two
groups together had a majority, they failed to agree among themselves. Pending an expected
monarchical restoration, they designated Adolphe Thiers as provisional "Chief of the Executive
Power."
Catholic disunity, however, proved fatal to the clerical cause. A proposal to erect the
church of Sacre Coeur in Montmartre in reparation for civic bloodshed not merely antagonized
anticlericals, but divided the uncompromising Veuillot group from politic followers of Bishop
Dupanloup. The latter won out with a noncommittal assertion instead of an explicit
acknowledgement of reverence for the Sacred Heart demanded of the assembly. Anticlericals,
having impotently aired blasphemies in the Chamber, now shrieked that France had been vowed
to the Sacred Heart in a dangerous "clerical aggression." Meanwhile legitimist and Orleanist
squabbles were such that in 1873 Thiers announced his conversion to Republicanism.
Monarchists united long enough to replace him with a staunch clerical, Marshall MacMabon. But
a promising monarchist accord broke down in 1875 when Chambord agreed to accept the
Orleanist prince as his heir, but refused as prospective "Henry V" to abandon the absolutist
symbol of the Bourbon fleur-delis. Catholics did succeed in breaking the monopoly of degrees
possessed by the secularist National University (1875), and presently Monsignor D'Hulst was
installed as first rector of the Institut Catholique de Paris.
Republican triumph. Though Monarchists retained a majority in the Senate after the
1875 elections, Republicans under Gambetta won a decisive victory in the Chamber of Deputies:
340 of 533. Thereafter the president and senators were placed in the odious position of resisting
what appeared to be a popular demand for a republic. Even yet Catholics failed to unite. One of
their premiers, Dufaure, "wore the frock-coat, eloquence, and the Gallicanism of 1830." 13 He
refused admission to a papal document and castigated clerical finances. On the other extreme,
militant Ultramontanes led by Bishop Pie of Poitiers introduced resolutions demanding French
intervention to rescue Pius IX from Italian parliamentary persecution. The bishop of Nevers
saluted MacMahon as a new Joan of Arc to liberate the "France of St. Louis" from the aftereffects
of the French Revolution. Such clerical electioneering signally failed to overcome Gambetta's
war-cry: "Clericalism, there is the enemy." In the 1879 elections the Republicans captured both
houses and later in the year forced MacMahon to resign the presidency to Jules Grevy, moderate
anticlerical. The Republic had definitely arrived.
Separation Act (1905). Premier Combes then prepared a bill termed "Law of Separation
of the Churches and the State," designed to revoke the Napoleonic Concordat of 1801. Although
Combes himself was forced out of office early in 1905 on a side issue, espionage in the army, his
bill was nonetheless carried through by his successor, Maurice Rouvier. As promulgated on
December 9-11, 1905, the Act of Separation (1) guaranteed complete liberty of conscience and
freedom of worship to all religions; (2) severed all connection between the French state and the
Catholic Church, renouncing on the one hand privileges of nominating to benefices, while
repudiating all clerical salaries and subsidies for worship-save for a few meager and temporary
pensions; and (3) directed that all church property be taken over by lay associations cultuelles,
formed for that purpose. The last provision was a page from Falk's Kulturkampf, and intended to
tempt avaricious laymen to despoil the Church of her property. The Act of Separation
discontinued the annual governmental budget for worship, amounting in 1905 to 42,324,933
francs-perhaps averaging $8,000,000 a year. Pope Pius X condemned this Act in Vehementer
Nos February, 1906, but the "Eldest Daughter of the Church" had repudiated her mother.
Legal application. After the hierarchy of France failed to reach a decision in May, 1906,
the pope in Gravissimo Officii, August 10, 1906, condemned the "associations of cult" which the
government had ordered formed. Catholics, at last loyal to Vatican policy and united on an issue,
thereupon refused to form the associations and threatened to defend ecclesiastical property by
force. When officials entered church precincts to make inventories, sacrilegious acts often
provoked riots. Premier Clemenceau (1906-9), while suppressing the inventories, clamored
loudly for new laws "to protect the Republic against the priests." Failing the associations, much of
the property was handed over to central or local governmental agencies "to be and to remain the
property of the state, departement or town." When the state demanded that the clergy seek its
permission to officiate in the nationalized church edifices, the priests, in obedience to papal
instructions, refused to make application. Sometimes with the connivance of local officials they
performed liturgical services without authorization; elsewhere they were denied admission, The
Catholic laity raised a modest offering for the support of the clergy in lieu of discontinued
governmental subsidies.
XI
Individualistic Heyday
Czar Alexander II (1855-81) who succeeded his father Nicholas I during the Crimean
War, ended hostilities as soon as possible by making what some regarded as a humiliating
peace. Liberal Westernizers seized on this military discomfiture to urge political and social
reforms, and anarchistic "Nihilists" began to create serious unrest.
Social reform. Feeling his autocratic position unsafe, the czar decided to emulate his
avuncular namesake by embarking on a liberal course capable of pacifying discontent. He
inaugurated his program on March 3, 1861, with an edict abolishing serfdom. As a matter of fact,
although the serfs were conceded personal liberty, they were in some instances thereby deprived
of their only livelihood in the village communal mir. Most of them became economically poorer,
and some drifted to cities to form an exploited proletariat for Russia's belated industrialization.
Those who remained on the land-and in 1917 about eighty per cent of the people were still
peasants-were permitted, at least on paper, a minimum of local self-government by Alexander's
"Zemstvo Law" (1864). Actually, control of local government was monopolized by the nobility and
gentry, although legislation was not egregiously classconscious. During 1862 the juridical system
had been modernized on the pattern of the Code Napoleon. By reason of his efforts on behalf of
the serfs, Alexander II came to sympathize with the Northern side during the American Civil War
in the face of quite general European governmental favor toward the South. In recognition of this
friendship in a time of need, State Secretary Seward obliged Alexander in 1867 by taking "that
icebox," Alaska, off his hands. Along with his liberalizing trend and also for reasons originating in
the stresses of the Crimean War, Alexander somewhat relaxed the Russian government's
persecution of Catholics, but there was no essential change in czarist determination to dominate
the Church.
Reaction. "By 1865 the reforming spirit of Alexander II was spent. He had never been at
heart a Liberal. What reforms he had instituted were an impulsive response to the protest of
Russian Westernizers against a regime which had suffered humiliating foreign reverses in 1854-
56. By 1865 the Crimean War was a thing of the past, and a much more recent occurrence, the
Polish Rebellion of 1863, was discrediting the Westernizers and throwing the tsar into the arms of
the reactionary Russian Slavophiles." Alexander II accordingly abandoned domestic affairs in
large part for foreign diplomacy. In 1871 he denounced the neutralization of the Black Sea
imposed on Russia at the end of the Crimean War. Having reorganized the army in 1874, he
used it effectively during 1877 to free Serbia and Romania and regain Bessarabia. Yet at the
Congress of Berlin (1878) his plans for dismembering Turkey were thwarted by the Western
powers. Alexander, however, remained in a position to lead a Pan-Slavic alliance against both
Turkey and Austria-Hungary. Meanwhile at home Westernizers had become more bold and on
March 13, 1881, an anarchist emerged long enough from the underground to cast a bomb which
ended Alexander's career.
Polish rebellion. Polish Conservatives, led by Lord Alexander Wielpolski, accepted this
offer, but these concessions came too late to conciliate the Radicals who now insisted upon
Polish independence. The czar neglected the moderating influence of the hierarchy, for by
banning Catholic May Devotions during 1862, the Russian administration aroused the defiance of
the new Archbishop of Warsaw, Monsignor Felinski (1861-83). When the Russians in January,
1863, issued blanket search warrants that threatened the lairs of the Radical chiefs, the latter
precipitated the Second Polish Revolt, January to May, 1863. But this uprising proved to be
merely a poorly organized guerilla warfare which was quickly suppressed before foreign
assistance could come.
Repressive measures. Polish autonomy was again abolished and severe reprisals taken.
Russian administration was reestablished and the Russian tongue made obligatory in Polish
schools. Archbishop Felinski was deported to Siberia in June, 1863, but unlike his predecessor,
refused to die until 1895, and continued to govern his diocese as best he could. Back in Poland,
clerics were executed or imprisoned, and the rest placed on parole. Monasteries and private
schools were suppressed and seminaries subjected to secular control. Religious instruction by
priests in state schools might be given only in the presence of a Russian supervisor. When Pius
IX protested against this Polish persecution, Alexander II severed diplomatic relations with the
Vatican, January 1, 1866. In December of the same year be repudiated the understanding of
1847-not that this had ever meant much. All legal communication with Rome was cut off and the
Polish bishops refused visas to attend the Vatican Council. In 1875 it was announced that all
remaining Ruthenians had been incorporated into the Orthodox Church, but on the whole Polish
Catholics of both rites remained faithful to the Holy See and the memory of a free Poland. Leo
XIII's condemnation of Nihilism, however, so pleased Alexander II that he was about to reopen
negotiations with the Holy See when he was assassinated.
Secular policy. Throughout his reign Alexander III remained true to this program. His
father's murderers were executed and underground movements mercilessly ferreted out.
Repression became a full-time job and the secret police a regular arm of the government as
every phase of Russian life was subjected to a suspicious scrutiny. The czar promoted Russia's
rapid industrialization, though on mercantilist rather than laissez-faire principles. While lie
subsidized industrialists, however, he gave but inadequate protection to the proletariat and
peasantry.
Marxian Socialism accordingly found a field ripe for the harvest. The nihilist "Land and
Liberty" program, indeed, was waning; Alexander Ulianov's unsuccessful attempt to assassinate
the czar (1887) was one of the last manifestations of nihilist terrorism. But Ulianov's prompt
execution hardened in a revolutionary career a younger brother Vladimir, who as "Nikolai Lenin"
would one day rule from the czarist palace of the Kremlin. In 1883 survivors of the "Land and
Liberty" league under the leadership of Georg Plekhanov (1857-1918) formed the Marxist
"Liberation of Labor" movement, forerunner of the Social Democratic Party founded in 1898. The
latter divided in 1903 into Plekhanov's Mensheviks and Lenin's Bolsheviks. Underground or
abroad, foes of autocracy worked incessantly.
Religious policies. Alexander III promptly pursued his father's preliminary overtures to the
Holy See. By December, 1882, a new modus vivendi had been concluded between Leo XIII and
the czar. This provided that vacant sees in Russia and Poland might be filled, the seminaries
were restored to exclusive episcopal control, and Russian supervision of religious instruction in
Polish state schools was withdrawn. In 1883 Archbishop Felinski of Warsaw was released. The
prelate returned from exile only to resign and be succeeded by the able Vincent Popiel (1883-
1912). But cases of governmental interference with Catholic life still occurred. In 1885 the
bishop of Vilna was sent to Siberia for censuring his clergy without governmental approbation; the
pope procured his release only on the understanding that his resignation would follow. The mixed
marriage difficulties continued and Ruthenians were still retained in their enforced subjection to
the Orthodox Establishment, though by 1917 a third of Russian subjects were dissenters:
Catholics, Protestants, or members of radical Russian sects. Vladimir Solovyev, the "Russian
Newman," though converted to the Catholic Church in 1896 at Moscow, could be attended in
articulo mortis (1910) only by the village Orthodox priest. In Poland, the policy of Russification in
language and customs was pursued relentlessly against equally stubborn resistance. On the
whole, however, Polish Catholics enjoyed a slight respite from the severe religious persecution of
the previous years.
Provisional democracy. Lvov and associates were mostly aristocrats of Liberal leanings
and bourgeois professional men, though Alexander Kerensky of the Mensheviks was included in
the ministry to placate the workers. All the customary Liberal freedoms: of speech, of association,
of the press, and of religion, were at once proclaimed. The Russian Orthodox elected their first
patriarch in two centuries, Tikhon, and the Catholics were encouraged to secure an exarch.
Poland and Finland were promised home rule. Universal manhood suffrage was announced. But
these paper reforms could not be put into effect at the same time with successful prosecution of
the war. Lvov and his successor Kerensky worked frantically to refashion Russia into a
democracy while carrying on the czarist war. But effective military organization was impossible
on such short notice, and disastrous defeat and retreat continued. In May Kerensky succeeded
Lvov and tried to establish a moderate socialist regime. But he could not overcome defeatism,
sabotaged as he was by the Bolshevik capitalizing on the widespread demand for peace and
quick delivery on reforms. The Bolsheviks did support Kerensky against a militarist counter-revolt
under Kornilov in July, but thereafter asserted: "All power to the soviets (workers' councils); no
support to the Provisional Government."
XI
Individualistic Heyday
The Second Reform Act (1867) dissolved the "Victorian Compromise." This measure
gave the vote to urban workers irrespective of householding, though it conceded plural votes to
businessmen with an office separate from their residence and to university graduates. ModCrate
property qualifications based on rentals were still required, but a step had been taken toward
Democracy by enfranchising urban skilled workers. The act had been passed by the otherwise
Conservative Disraeli in an effort to win favor by what he believed to be an inevitable Concession.
But his political trick failed to win the 1868 elections which returned his Liberal rival, William
Gladstone, to office.
A first Gladstone ministry (1868-74) gave further substance to the liberalizing of the
"Victorian Compromise." In 1870 the Forster Education Act provided for free, nonreligious
schools, but offered subsidies to private schools which could meet government specifications. In
the same year a Civil Service Order assured a competent, well-trained, non. partisan career
bureaucracy. At the same time the commission purchase system was abolished in the army and
conditions of enlistment improved. The Ballot Act (1870) introduced secret voting. In 1873 the
judicature Act placed many separate courts under a supreme tribunal.
Disraeli's ministry (1874-80) proved conservative in domestic affairs. but departed from
the "Little England" policy of Gladstone's Liberals' Disraeli fostered British penetration into Egypt
where the Suez Canal was acquired in 1875 and a virtual protectorate assumed. In 1876 Victoria
was proclaimed "Empress of India"-a title which lapsed in 1947. Strong-arm methods at the
Congress of Berlin (1878) kept Russia from Balkan domination. But continual imperialist wars in
Afghanistan, South Africa, Egypt and elsewhere finally wearied "Little Englanders" of Disraeli and
Toryism.
A second Gladstone ministry (1880-85) strove, not always with success, to avoid
expansion-the premier's pacifist and hesitant policy in Egypt finally caused the fall of his ministry.
At home, a start was made in 1880 in holding employers liable for workers' injuries; the Corrupt
and Illegal Practices Act regulated campaign expenditures; and the Third Reform Act (1884)
enfranchised rural workers, thus according the suffrage to all save "peers, paupers, lunatics, and
women."
Tory imperialism was dominant for the next twenty years, punctuated briefly by
Gladstone's third (1886) and fourth (1892-94) ministries which collapsed in attempting to give
Ireland home rule. Conservatives had united with many Liberal "Unionists" to oppose Irish
autonomy and social legislation under ministries led by Lord Salisbury (1885; 1886-92; 1895-
1902) and his son-in-law, Balfour (1902-5). Imperial expansion was pushed forward vigorously,
especially in Africa, until momentarily shaken by reverses in the Boer War (1899-1902). Canada
(1867), Australia (1901), and soon South Africa (1909) became selfgoverning dominions, but
Joseph Chamberlain's project of imperial federation with close economic, political, and military
ties failed to elicit wholehearted response. Thus the "Empire" remained largely a traditional and
sentimental bond.
Political democracy. The "People's Budget" (1909), imposing new and heavy taxes to
finance the foregoing legislation, provoked a parliamentary crisis. Against custom, if not law, the
House of Lords rejected the budget, invading the Commons' normal prerogative. The Lords
continued to oppose until two general elections during 1910 sustained the Liberal majority in
Commons. King George V then threatened to swamp Tory membership in Lords by creating new
peers, and the upper house yielded. In 1911 the Parliament Act explicitly removed all financial
control from the House of Lords and reduced its legislative function to a two-year suspensive
veto. The popularly elected House of Commons, whose members were voted salaries for the first
time in the same year, was henceforth for all practical purposes the sole British legislature,
though the Lords still function as an appellate law court. In 1918, moreover, the suffrage was
extended to all men over twenty-one and to women over thirty-feminine embarrassment was
finally removed in 1928 when they were given the vote on the same terms as men. At the same
time most plural voting privileges ceased. Disestablishment of Anglicanism in Wales (1914) left
the English body the only refuge of privilege-and it was largely disregarded.
International crises, however, distracted Great Britain from social legislation after 1912.
In that year an Irish Home Rule Bill was introduced. After two rejections in Lords, it was enacted
in 1914, but the outbreak of World War I and the threatening opposition of Ulster led to
postponement of its application until 1922, when it was put in force in altered form for two
separate Irish governments. World War I, though it brought British imperial domain to a brief
zenith, seriously sapped the nation's vitality and resources. Though Lloyd George proved an
energetic war leader, he was neither a farsighted peacemaker nor a gifted economic analyst.
During the war, Great Britain was at last overtaken in industrial development and commercial
expansion. Post-war economic distress and serious labor agitation alarmed the British populace
and produced a conservative reaction which forced Lloyd George and the Liberals out of office in
the 1922 elections.
Relief of the poor. Cardinal Manning, indeed, became primarily interested in the pressing
problem of social betterment. He founded the League of the Cross for total abstinence, took the
pledge himself, and marched in temperance parades through the London streets. From 1866 be
constituted himself defender of the poor, especially those in public workhouses. There Catholic
children were likely to lose their Faith under Protestant administration and harsh economic
pressure. The cardinal succeeded in lessening discrimination, and in providing Catholic welfare
organizations to care for the Catholic poor. He made a start toward founding schools and homes
in the crowded cities, and these institutions were enlarged by his successors.
Labor disputes. In his lecture, "On the Rights and Dignity of Labor," Cardinal Manning
had defended the lot of the laboring man, and had admitted moderate governmental intervention
in order to safeguard for him proper working conditions, hours, and wages. As early as 1872 he
had supported the farm workers in a meeting at Exeter Hall, and he continued to participate in
public gatherings and discussions beyond Catholic circles. In 1887 he sustained Cardinal
Gibbons of Baltimore in the latter's defense of the Knights of Labor, and seconded the American
prelate's petition to Rome. Cardinal Manning himself won nationwide attention during 1889 by
personally intervening in the London dock-workers' strike. Though the Anglican prelate of London
had dodged the complexities of this dispute, the Catholic cardinal archbishop patiently
persevered in lengthy conferences with employers and employees. His mediation eventually
proved successful in settling the strike, and won him the respect of many non-Catholics. The
asceticlooking cardinal had at last come to be regarded as a great Englishman. He retained
intellectual vigor to the end of his life, and his death on January 14, 1892, elicited expressions of
regret from many non-Catholics.
Missionary agencies. During Cardinal Manning's episcopate, the Catholic Truth Society
began its dissemination of Catholic apologetic and instructive literature, and the Mill Hill Fathers,
founded by Father Herbert Vaughan-presently Manning's successor-furnished Catholic England
with its own foreign missionary society.
Cardinal Vaughan (1892-1903), Manning's successor at Westminster, did build the new
Catholic cathedral and was interred in it. On the question of Catholic attendance at Cambridge
and Oxford, he proved more obliging than his predecessor. He recommended a change of ruling
to Propaganda, and in 1895 Catholics were granted permission to attend these institutions under
certain safeguards. These were enumerated as a solidly Catholic preparatory training, and
compulsory attendance at lectures under Catholic auspices on religion, philosophy, and history.
When this program was put into operation, however, these formal courses were generally
modified in favor of Catholic guidance through special chaplains. Catholics were also divided on
the prudence of accepting governmental subsidies offered under the Forster Act of 1870, for it
was argued that this presaged state control of Catholic education. Cardinal Vaughan, however,
supported the legislation when the Act was extended to cover secondary education in 1902. "The
Act (1902) as finally passed put the Voluntary Schools 'on the rates.' Provided by the
denominations as to sites and buildings and structural repairs, they were henceforth to be
maintained financially by the new Local Education Authorities. Their teachers were to be
appointed by the School Managers, subject to a veto on educational grounds by the L.E.A.; the
secular education was to be controlled by the L.E.A.; the religious by the Managers, who were to
comprise four denominational, and two L.E.A. representatives."
Subsequent developments during the period of English history now under survey left this
"Dual System" of public and private schools untouched, despite agitation from secularists against
the procedure. Scottish Catholics concluded a quite satisfactory educational concordat with the
British Government in 1918, but the English Catholics remained divided on the measures to be
adopted and continued as before. Later educational legislation caused them to regret not having
made the more favorable arrangement when they had an opportunity to do so.
Diminution of discrimination. Edward VII had been well disposed to Catholics, but had
been unable to change the "King's Protestant Declaration" required since 1689 of "every king and
queen of this realm who at any time hereafter shall come to and succeed in the imperialcrown of
this kingdom." This declaration included the assertion that, "there is not any transubstantiation in
the sacrament of the Lord's Supper or in the elements of bread and wine, at or after the
consecration thereof by any person whatsoever." This enduring refutation of Anglo-Catholic
pretensions to valid orders was repealed on August 3, 1910, prior to George V's coronation,
though the 1701 Act of Settlement still bars a Catholic or anyone married to a Catholic from the
throne.
Noted converts of this period included the Anglican monks of Caldey and the nuns of St.
Bride (1913), and the writers, Baring, Benson, Chesterton, Dawson, Gill, Hollis, Knox, Leslie,
Lunn, MacKenzie, Noyes, Watkin, and Windle.
An Irish Land League was accordingly formed by Michael Davitt to demand three 'Ts":
"Free sale, fair rents, fixity of tenure." Davitt fought for his objectives through boycott and no-rent
campaigns, while Charles Parnell, a brilliant parliamentarian, aided him by filibusters at London.
Although the Irish hierarchy generally looked askance at Davitt's semisocialism, Bishops Walsh of
Dublin and Croke of Cashel supported the League and Leo XIII refused to condemn it in 1882.
During 1881 Gladstone passed another land measure, conceding the League's demands in
principle. In 1882, however, the murder of Cavendish by the "Invincibles" renewed bitterness and
endangered Parnell's political maneuvers for Home Rule and agrarian reform. His conviction for
adultery in 1890 divided Irish politicians. The Conservatives for a time tried to "kill Home Rule
with kindness": divert the Irish from politics by redressing their economic grievances. In 1891 the
Irish Land Purchase Act compensated landowners so that Irish tenants might regain the national
soil. These provisions were extended in 1896 and 1898, and in 1903 the Irish secretary, George
Wyndham, completed the reform by giving a bonus to landlords who would sell, while allowing
tenants to buy on easy terms with 68 years in which to repay.
XI
Individualistic Heyday
Materialism. In the generation following the American Civil War, Materialism seemed to
prevail over Idealism; at least its advocates were more vociferous and influential. The aristocratic
slave interest, indeed, had been destroyed forever, and political-economic events would soon
reveal that agrarian concerns had been subordinated to industrial. Yet by 1885 railroad capital
alone exceeded the old slave interest. The new industrial baronage, moreover, proved more
powerful than the planters in bending politicians to their will. Prewar moderate tariffs were
modified by the Morrill Act (1861), and succeeding measures which rapidly raised rates in favor of
manufacturers. The National Banking Acts (186364) virtually displaced the independent treasury
system which retained government funds; instead, the interests of private finance were favored.
In 1864 the Immigration Act by admitting contract labor paved the way for a new proletariat. With
this new vogue of Materialism, much of the simplicity and rugged honesty of frontier days went
West or vanished forever. Walt Whitman in 1873 viewed this trend with alarm: "Pride,
competition, segregation, vicious wilfulness, and licence beyond example brood already upon us.
Unwieldy and immense, who shall hold in behemoth? who bridle leviathan?"
President Ulysses Grant (1869-77) had been a successful and efficient, if not brilliant war
commander. In the business of government he was the ordinary man of average intelligence,
which might have been barely enough for less complex circumstances. But he assumed, as be
often stated, that the Constitution and the law were what the majority of the people wanted them
to be, and be displayed few inflexible principles. For economic affairs be was not at all qualified:
he had failed repeatedly in business up to the eve of the Civil War, and he was to be the victim of
another misfortune after his retirement from the White House. He readily accepted compromising
gifts, assuming the donors to be unbiased. He was blindly and doggedly loyal to friends, and
filled his administration with relatives, cronies, and army acquaintances. Providentially his
secretary of state, Hamilton Fish-himself only a second choice-was an outstanding statesman
who prevented mistakes abroad, and sometimes exercised some restraint on domestic issues.
President Hayes (1877-81). The president was a conscientious and upright man in both
public and private life, but lacked a reformer's singleness of purpose, and a leader's unquestioned
prestige. Nonpartisanship became a cardinal policy of Hayes's administration. He named to his
cabinet the Democrat Key and the Progressive Schurz. Civil service, promoted by Thomas
Jenkes of Rhode Island, obtained the president's moral support and received some publicity, but
politicians were not yet convinced of its necessity. The Bland-Allison Silver Purchase Act was
passed over the president's veto as a sop to Western farmers. Having alienated party managers,
Hayes was disregarded for Garfield in the 1880 nominations. Garfield won from Hancock in a
colorless election; his popular majority was but ninety-five hundred out of a vote of nine million.
Populism had absorbed the old Greenbackers and strove to give relief to the grievances
of laborers and farmers. In 1892 its candidate, General Weaver, won a million votes in the
Populist appeal for "free silver," government control of credit, government ownership of utilities,
and communications, a graduated income tax, an eight-hour day, a secret ballot, initiative and
referendum, direct election of senators, and a ban on labor spies. In 1896 Populists fused with
Silver Democrats to nominate William Jennings Bryan who had indicted big business: "You have
made the definition of a business man too limited in its application. The man who is employed for
wages is as much a business man as his employer; the attorney, the merchant at the crossroads
store..... farmer. We have petitioned and our petitions have been scorned....... We entreat no
more; we petition no more; we defy them. . . . You shall not press down on the brow of labor a
crown of thorns; you shall not crucify mankind on a cross of gold." But Bryan's evangelical
crusade failed to impress Mark Hanna and his protege, William McKinley, who carried the East for
the Republicans by 7,000,000 to 6,500,000 votes. Gold was sacred until 1933.
Catholic statesmen during the period were beaded by Edward White (1845-1921), chief
justice from 1910; Joseph McKenna (1843-1926) was also a member of the Supreme Court, from
1898 to 1925. Catholic senators, James Shields of Illinois and John Kenna of West Virginia,
earned inclusion in National Statuary Hall. Joseph McKenna was attorney general under
President McKinley, and Charles Bonaparte and Robert Wynne held cabinet posts under
Theodore Roosevelt. Maurice Francis Egan was a diplomat of some distinction, and the Bellamy
Storers pretended to inside White House information.
Apostolate to the Negro. The prewar missionaries to the Negro, Jesuits in Maryland and
Vincentians in Louisiana, continued their labors under these trying conditions. But there was
need for a specialized apostolate. Providentially this developed from a mission begun in
Baltimore in 1871 by the newly founded (1866) English Mill Hill Fathers. Father, later cardinal,
Vaughan accepted Pius IX's suggestion to devote four missionaries to the salvation of the
Negroes. Eventually it proved expedient for the American group to become a separate religious
community, the Josephite Fathers, pledged to work among the Negroes. In 1872 they were
joined by the Holy Ghost Fathers, and in 1906 the Society of the Divine Word began to take a
special interest in the Negro missions, and the African Mission Fathers came in 1907. A native
clergy was encouraged and between 1891 and 1941 some thirty Negroes were ordained to the
priesthood. A former slave, August Tolton, ordained in 1888, later baptized his former master.
James Healy, who had Negro blood, became bishop of Portland in Maine in 1875.
Negro education, if not merely nonexistent before the Civil War, was usually of an inferior
quality to that accorded Whites. The New Orleans Ursulines and Mother Seton's Sisters of
Charity at Emmitsburg, however, had from the beginning made their schools available to
Negroes, and other sisterhoods made contributions after the Civil War. In 1868 the Religious of
the Sacred Heart opened a school for Negroes in St. Michael, Louisiana, but in 1889 the Sisters
of Divine Providence still encountered opposition in starting a school at Clutierville, Louisiana.
Particularly noteworthy was the work of Katherine Drexel (1858-1955) of Philadelphia. In 1891 at
Pope Leo's suggestion she founded the Blessed Sacrament Sisters for work among Indians and
Negroes. Between 1915 and 1933, she developed at New Orleans, Xavier School, College, and
University, exclusively devoted to Negro education. After 1884, moreover, by decree of the Third
Plenary Council of Baltimore, an annual collection for the Negro and Indian missions has
contributed to the financing of educational facilities,
Catholic Indian Bureau. To protect Catholic interests, both at Washington and on the
reservations, James Roosevelt Bayley, archbishop of Baltimore, formed the Bureau of Catholic
Indian Missions, January, 1874. This was presently recognized by the Federal Interior
Department. General Charles Ewing, General Sherman's Catholic brother-in-law, became the
Bureau's first commissioner (1874-83) and worked in cooperation with the clerical director, Father
Brouillet (1874-84). Their efforts proved so successful that the objectionable features of the
"Peace Policy" were altered in 1881, and practically abandoned in 1883. The second director,
Monsignor Joseph Stephan (1884-1901), arranged for "contract schools" for Indian children
whereby the government paid for educational maintenance, once buildings and teachers were
assured. By 1890, Federal subsidies to sixty Catholic schools amounted to $300,000. It was
subsequently contended, however, that such subsidies violated the "principle of separation
between Church and state," and in 1900 Congress terminated the allocation. Presidents
Theodore Roosevelt and Taft, however, upheld the contract school policy, and in 1908 the
Supreme Court, in the case of Quick Bear vs. Leup, decided that subsidies to the Catholic Indian
Bureau were lawful inasmuch as they were treaty payments and not tax appropriations. The next
director, Monsignor Ketcham (1901-21), promoted better relations between the Bureau and the
government, and in 1912 was named a member of the Board of Indian Commissioners.
Indian missions. By 1955, about one-fourth of the Indians in the United States were
Catholic. There were 112,000 with 408 churches served by 224 priests and 58 schools had 8,000
students. Perhaps another 100,000 Indians claimed Protestant membership, and some still
remained pagan, for the survivors were prone to make a fetish of ancestral customs. The chief
missionaries were the Franciscans, Jesuits, Benedictines, and many communities of sisters.
(4) MASONIC SECULARISM
Bigotry revived shortly after the Civil War, though there was no organized movement until
the rise of the A.P.A. in 1887. Charles Chiniquy, a renegade priest who had been
excommunicated at Bourbonais, Illinois as early as 1857, foisted on the American public a bogus
Lincoln prophecy which represented the late president as saying: "I see a very dark cloud on our
horizon and that dark cloud is coming from Rome. It is filled with tears of blood." Though the
saying was repudiated by Robert Lincoln, it was still being used in the 1928 presidential
campaign. Long before that, Masonic secularism had made great strides in its drive against
religious education in the United States.
Educational threats. After the Civil War the trend to secular education was accentuated,
and most states placed a ban on religious instruction in the public schools. In a message to
Congress, moreover, President Grant recommended on December 7, 1875, "that a constitutional
amendment be submitted to the legislatures of the several states to establish and effectively
maintain free public schools adequate to the education of all children in the rudimentary branches
within their respective limitations, irrespective of sex, color, birthplace, or religion, forbidding the
teaching in said schools of religious, atheistic or pagan tenets, and prohibiting the granting of any
school funds . . . in aid, directly or indirectly, of any religious sect. . . . I suggest the taxation of all
property equally, whether church or corporation, exempting only the last resting place of the dead
and possibly, with proper restrictions, church edifices." Though Blaine the following December 14
introduced an amendment in this sense, this possible bid for bigots' votes did not succeed.
Politics were not adjourned, however. During 1876 radical Republican propaganda used
a pamphlet endorsing Bismarck's contemporary Kulturkampf, entitled, Vaticanism in Germany
and the United States. Garfield in 1876 castigated the "combined power of rebellion, Catholicism,
and whiskey," and in 1880, when accepting the Republican presidential nomination, said: "It
would be unjust to our people and dangerous to our institutions to apply any portion of the
revenues of the nation or of the states to the support of sectarian schools. The separation of the
church and the state in everything relating to taxation should be absolute." Blaine may have lost
New York and the presidency by permitting denunciation of the Democrats during 1884 as the
party "whose antecedents have been rum, Romanism, and rebellion." In 1888, Dr. Dorchester,
Protestant minister and Indian commissioner during the Harrison administration, denounced
alleged Catholic political influence. One can understand Monsignor Stephan's private description
of "the bigoted commissioner and not much less bigoted president" (Harrison), which
embarrassingly leaked out.
"The Chicago Massacre." But in 1893 the Detroit organ of the A.P.A., Patriotic American,
spread a rumor that Catholics would make use of the Columbian Exposition at Chicago to
perpetrate a massacre of Protestants. To Leo XIII was ascribed the following encyclical: "We
likewise declare that all subjects of every rank and condition in the United States and every
individual who has taken any oath of loyalty to the United States in any way whatever may be
absolved from said oath, as from all other duty, fidelity, or obedience on or about the fifth of
September, 1893, when the Catholic Congress shall convene at Chicago, Illinois, as we shall
exonerate them from all engagements and on or about the feast of Ignatius Loyola, in the year of
our Lord 1893, it will be the duty of the faithful to exterminate all heretics found within the
jurisdiction of the United States of America." Elbert Hubbard claims that during 1893 he found
terror in many villages, some were arming, others fleeing. The alarm excited was only partially
allayed by the assertion of the Protestant ministers of Columbus, Ohio, attesting the falsity of the
alleged encyclical. But the following November, Dr. Drury was still warning the Union Biblical
Seminary Conference at Xenia, Ohio, that Irish Catholics in the United States were enlisted
members of the papal troops.
Politics. A.P.A. political success seems to have been larger in boast than reality. In state
contests, it claimed to have effected a political revolution in New York, Massachusetts, Michigan,
Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, California, and Oregon;
actually, its only established triumph was the election of William Bradley as governor of Kentucky
in 1893. Though the Association pretended to have twenty-five members of Congress in 1895,
only one, William Linton of Saginaw, Michigan, is certain. The Democratic Party's alleged
identification with "Romanism" drove A.P.A. politicians into Republican ranks. They endorsed
Benjamin Harrison for the presidency in 1892, but Cleveland was elected. When McKinley
repudiated the A.P.A. in 1896, the organization made strenuous efforts to prevent his nomination.
Its complete lack of influence destroyed its prestige, and after 1900 the Association ceased as a
national organization, although Bowers posed as its president until his death in 1911.
Labor questions continued to arise for American clerics. Father Edward McGlynn, a New
York City pastor, publicly defended the semisocialistic "Single-Tax" theory of Henry George, and
was excommunicated by Archbishop Corrigan of New York, with the support of Bishop McQuaid
of Rochester. Cardinal Gibbons, however, averted Roman compliance with Corrigan's demand
for condemnation of George's treatise, Progress and Poverty. In Rerum Novarum, (1891), Leo
XIII contented himself with criticizing the unsound theory obliquely. Through his legate,
Monsignor Satolli, the pope secured McGlynn's reinstatement, though the latter was rusticated by
the archbishop. Cardinal Gibbons remained a champion of labor, while ever urging conciliation
with capital. In his Christian Heritage (1889), Gibbons upheld the right of a living wage and
denounced child labor, and in 1907 defended the workers' right to organize in an article in
Putnam's Monthly, while a sermon during 1908 criticized sweatshop conditions. Archbishop
Ireland endorsed President Cleveland's controversial intervention in the Pullman Strike (1893) as
a step toward order. On the other hand, President Roosevelt named Bishop Spalding of Peoria to
the Coal Anthracite Board during the 1902 Anthracite Strike, and this body's findings gave general
satisfaction. In 1906 appeared Father John Ryan's Living Wage, the first detailed application of
Rerum Novarum to American conditions. Father Peter Dietz was the first priest to attend an
A.F.L. convention in 1909, and in the following year organized a study group, the Militia for Christ.
In 1913 the Boston Labor School made its appearance.
Parochial schools. Even more necessary was the maintenance of the parochial school
system, also stressed by the Third Plenary Council. In their pastoral on this occasion the bishops
had set forth this ideal: "No parish is complete until it has schools adequate to the needs of its
children, and the pastor and people of such a parish should feel that they have not accomplished
their entire duty until the want is supplied." In 1884 this goal had been realized in scarcely forty
per cent of American parishes, but poorer dioceses and parishes were disturbed at the immense
financial outlay required and were disposed to consider favorably some sort of state assistance.
Mention has been made of the Lowell Plan (1831-52). Between 1873 and 1898, when the state
superintendent decided that teachers in religious habits were unconstitutional, a Poughkeepsie,
N.Y., parochial school was rented to the community and its teachers reimbursed by it. In 1890
Archbishop Ireland of St. Paul endorsed a modification of the Poughkeepsie Plan so
enthusiastically that Archbishop Corrigan and others deemed it approbation of a neutral public
school system. Actually, Archbishop Ireland's "Faribault Plan" allowed the public school board to
rent parochial school buildings, hire nuns as teachers-of secular subjects in regular hours; of
religion after hours-and administer the institution as an integral part of the public school system.
Dr. Thomas Bouquillon of Catholic University backed the plan a little too enthusiastically in a
booklet, Education: To Whom Does It Belong?, which magnified state control over Catholic
education. He was answered by Father Holaind, S.J., in The Parent First, which asserted that the
state might neither enforce attendance nor set teaching standards. Each view was supported by
members of the hierarchy, with Cardinal Gibbons seeking to moderate the heated dispute. In
1892 the papal envoy, Monsignor Satolli, lauded the American public school system, but in
ignorance of American conditions failed to indicate certain objectionable features. On April 21,
1892, Propaganda ruled that the Faribault Plan might be tolerated, but by that time local
opposition had canceled the plan. On May 31, 1893, Leo XIII urged all prelates to harmony,
strongly re-emphasized the Baltimore ideal, but urged the expediency of obtaining state aid
wherever possible. The controversy subsided but state subsidies remained a desideratum, for by
1933 the parochial school system had achieved but sixty per cent of its goal.
XI
Individualistic Heyday
Emergence of imperialism. Aside from the acquisition of Alaska by purchase from Russia
in 1867, no new territory had been added to the public domain since the Civil War, and foreign
relations until 1890 were largely confined to cases arising out of the Civil War. But coinciding with
the closing of the frontier on the Continent and the rapidly advancing industrialization of the
United States, came a new imperialism atune with the international interest in colonization. As
European powers carved out new colonial domains in Africa and extorted port concessions from
Asiatic monarchies, the United States became aware once again of Latin America. The Pan-
American Union began its conferences at Washington, D.C., in 1889 under Blaine's sponsorship,
and the Monroe Doctrine was cited anew. Though looming conflict with Great Britain over a
Venezuela boundary was eventually amicably settled in 1895, the incident gave occasion to a
brash distortion of the Monroe Doctrine by State Secretary Olney: "Today the United States is
practically sovereign on this continent, and its fiat is law upon the subjects to which it confines its
interposition." Simultaneously the dollar, well-nigh almighty at home, now ventured abroad, and
the resulting "dollar diplomacy" had no small say in Caribbean politics. Trade with Cuba played a
part in McKinley's acquiescence in a seemingly needless war with Spain in 1898, which not
merely freed Cuba, but involved the United States in Asiatic as well as American colonialism.
American idealism was outraged by acceptance of the Filipinos as colonial subjects, but
President McKinley at length decided that "there was nothing left for us to do but take them all,
and to educate the Filipinos and uplift and Christianize them." Clearly the United States was to lift
its share of the "white man's burden," but had never heard of three centuries of Catholic
evangelization of the Islands.
Oceanic imperialism. Yet there had been portents of this new American role. In 1844 the
United States through Caleb Cushing had made the first trade pact with China, and ten years
later Commodore Matthew Perry forced Japan to reopen commercial relations. In 1868 the
Burlingame Treaty with China concluded reciprocal trade and immigration agreements, but the
latter clause was repudiated by the United States in 1879 when Chinese labor on the West Coast
threatened native wage standards. In 1872 claims incurred by the Confederate cruiser Alabama
on the high seas with British connivance won the United States a judgment for $15,500,000. The
American navy obtained rights to use Pearl Harbor in 1875, and with them a virtual option to the
Hawaiian Islands. In 1894 a Republic was set up under an American, Sanford Dole, and
annexation followed in 1898. American interests in Samoa culminated in occupation of
Pagopago. All this brought the United States into Pacific trade and politics, and in 1899 China
was warned to keep the door open for American commerce, and patriotic "Boxers" were
chastised in 1900 by American as well as European troops. This new two-ocean position of the
United States necessitated better maritime communications. This was provided by the Panama
Canal, for which land was taken in rather cavalier fashion by President Theodore Roosevelt who
added a "corollary" to the Monroe Doctrine.
The Spanish-American War. Both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans were involved in the
Spanish-American contest, for though the spark was ignited in Cuba, the conflagration spread to
the Philippines. Cuban restiveness under Spanish rule was an old story, for basically the colonial
mercantilism had survived in Spain's diminished New World dominions. Of an annual revenue of
$26,000,000, but one twenty-sixth was devoted to the benefit of Cubans; the remainder was used
in Spain or her domain. Distance from the mother country, outmoded ideas of colonial
government, and belief in the disreputable character of the insurgents led the Spanish
government of the Conservative Premier Castillo into a series of errors. Cuban insurgents were
herded into concentration camps where they excited American sympathy. After another uprising
in 1895, American sugar interests importuned intervention by the United States, but President
Cleveland resisted all such pressure. In 1897 Castillo's assassination confused Spanish
administration, while the Spanish ambassador's indiscreet reference to President McKinley as a
politicastro antagonized the new American administration. When American lives became
endangered in Cuba, the U.S.S. Maine was sent there. This was blown up in February, 1898,
with the loss of 260 lives. Yellow journalism stirred up war fever although the cause of this
explosion has never been definitely established. McKinley's ultimatum of March was substantially
complied with in Spain, and the queen asked for papal arbitration. Despite Archbishop Ireland's
pleas, the president, fearful of bigots and warmongers, virtually asked for a declaration of war,
which Congress formally declared on April 25. The contest revealed the Spanish dominions an
empty hulk, and the Spanish forces lost all save honor. Though the American army was ill-
prepared, the Navy was superb. Dewey promptly captured Manila and ten Spanish ships,
committing the United States to Pacific occupation. In Cuba, American Rough Riders
distinguished themselves, a distinction that lost nothing in the telling.
Peace brought the cession by Spain to the United States of the Philippines, Guam, and
Puerto Rico, and placed Cuba under American supervision. After some hesitation, President
McKinley decided to keep the Philippines which the Democrats tried to get off American hands.
The United States renounced all intention of annexing Cuba, but ruled it by martial law from 1898
to 1902, and from 1906 to 1909. In 1901 the Platt-Root Amendment reserved to the American
Government the right to intervene to protect life and property, and until its abrogation in 1934 this
made of Cuba an American protectorate. In poverty-stricken Puerto Rico there was considerable
unrest until home rule was conceded in 1946.
Canal through Panama. The Spanish-American War had, however, excited hatred and
fear of the United States south of the border. An inter-oceanic canal had long been
contemplated, and the American government eventually acquired from the French De Lesseps
firm its rights of construction through the Isthmus of Panama. When Colombia, which then
controlled the Isthmus, made difficulties about leasing land, a revolution was engineered with the
connivance of the American State Department in November, 1903. A new Republic of Panama
was declared, promptly recognized, and graciously ceded the desired Canal Zone. Colombia
was finally granted some compensation in 1921.
Mexican intervention. In 1912, the United States intervened in Nicaragua; in 1914 it was
Haiti's turn. Hence it was understandable that the idealistic President Wilson came to conceive it
as his duty to meddle in Mexican affairs in 1914. Huerta's complicity in the murder of President
Madero,(1913), induced the American President, ill-advised by his agent, John Lind, to refuse
recognition of Huerta's provisional government and to prevent shipment of arms to him. At
Tampico, April 9, 1914, American sailors were detained briefly by Huerta and the latter refused to
make amends by saluting the American flag. Wilson ordered seizure of the Vera Cruz customs
office, and the operation resulted in the loss of 19 American and 193 Mexican lives. All Mexican
leaders denounced this action, and Wilson took refuge in A.B.C. mediation. Though this settled
nothing, in July, 1914, Huerta resigned, and Wilson recognized his opponent Carranza. Yet the
latter's insubordinate lieutenant, Pancho Villa, raided Columbus, New Mexico, in 1916, to be
vainly pursued into Mexico by General Pershing. After Carranza's assassination in 1920, the
United States withheld recognition from Obregon until 1923. But the American government soon
wearied of deciding which were the legitimate Latin American governments, and Presidents
Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt abandoned intervention for the "Good Neighbor Policy" which
blossomed in 1945 into Pan-American solidarity.
President William Taft (1909-13), Roosevelt's designated heir, was by nature judicious,
conservative, cautious. But in a less flamboyant way he carried on Roosevelt's antimonopoly
campaign, and actually gained more convictions. While the Mann-Elkins Act (1909) further
strengthened the Interstate Commerce Commission, a Corporation Tax (1909) and the Income
Tax Amendment (1913) threatened private hoards. Yet because the Payne-Aldrich Tariff of 1909
maintained protectionism, Taft began to lose Progressive support. Roosevelt was led to believe
by personal squabbles that his successor had betrayed his cause, and that it could be retrieved
only by his own candidacy in 1912. Though a patronage-dominated Republican Convention
renominated Taft, Roosevelt's independent campaign divided Republican votes and gave the
election to Democrats.
President Woodrow Wilson (1913-21), scholar and reform governor of New Jersey, was
rigidly honest, courageously but stubbornly firm. He convinced rather than persuaded, though lie
knew well how to work with professional politicians. Whereas Roosevelt believed in regulating
corporations in the public interest, Wilson championed restoration of as Much competition as
possible to American business life. This was to achieve the "New Freedom," his administration
slogan. After the Pujo Investigation of Trusts (1913) had confirmed the existence of large
monopolies, the president struck back with the Federal Trade Commission Act, providing a
bipartisan board to investigate corporations which might escape other agencies; the Clayton Anti-
Trust Act banned discrimination in competition, control of one corporation by purchase of stock in
another, interlocking directorates-though exempting labor unions. The Rayburn Railway Bill,
suspended by the outbreak of World War 1, attacked stock watering and rebates. The Federal
Reserve Act provided for twelve reserve banks owned by all national and some state and private
member banks, but subject to a board named by the president, with powers to render credit
elastic and secure. The Underwood Tariff scaled down protective rates. A separate Labor
Department was set up, though the Keating-Owens Bill regulating child labor (1916) was declared
unconstitutional. But Wilson's pursuit of the monopolist was halted in its career by the outbreak of
war. The capitalists came into their own during the unusual need, and some of the rigor of
enforcement lapsed. After the war, reaction against Wilson's foreign policies engulfed his
domestic policy, and there was a resounding turn from "Progressivism" to Republican "Normalcy."
The League of Nations, which President Wilson sponsored in the hope of rectifying
inequities in the vengeful peace, was to consist of a council of nine powers, with the United
States, Great Britain, France, Italy, and Japan as permanent members, and an assembly of all
member nations, each nation enjoying one vote. An International Court of justice would arbitrate
on cases submitted freely or by obligation. The League became the president's pet project,
though it won the endorsement of Republicans Taft and Root and a slender majority of
Democratic senators. But since the 1918 elections, Republicans possessed both a senatorial
and congressional majority. Not only were senatorial leaders disgruntled at Wilson's failure to
consult them, but Senators Borah, Johnson, and La Follette opposed the treaty on isolationist
grounds. Senator Lodge, Republican leader, demanded certain reservations to guard against a
commitment of the United States to the fighting of Europe's battles. Wilson took his case to the
people in a strenuous speaking tour, but suffered a stroke at Pueblo in September, 1919, and
never fully recovered his physical strength or his political influence. Since he refused all
compromise, the treaty embodying the League was defeated in the Senate in March, 1920. In
the 1920 elections, the Democratic candidates, James Cox and Franklin Roosevelt, undertook to
campaign on the League as a platform, but were snowed under by the Republican nominees,
Harding and Coolidge. Business returned to the center of the American stage, and the United
States renounced international concerns.
American colonies or protectorates acquired in the Spanish-American War also called for
ecclesiastical readjustments. The American Navy insisted that Guam be cleared of foreigners,
but at length allowed Spanish priests to stay until American clergy were prepared to take over this
mission. It was made a vicariate in 1911, and received an American bishop in 1945. Hawaii,
annexed in 1898, had been a mission of the Belgian Picpus Fathers since 1827. Father Damien
De Veuster (1840-88), the immortal Samaritan to the lepers, had an American disciple, Brother
Joseph Dutton. Here, too, Americans began to supplement the work of European pioneers, and
the vicariate established in 1844 became an American diocese in 1941. The place of the Spanish
missionaries in Puerto Rico was taken by American Redemptorists, Capuchins, Benedictines, and
Holy Ghost Fathers. For a long time material conditions were deplorable, but improvement came
at last and the Puerto Rican Commonwealth inaugurated in 1952 allayed native dissatisfaction.
Though Cuba was proclaimed independent, Governor Wood and Secretary of War Taft did much
to check anticlerical legislation by the Radicals under President Gomez (1906-9). Separation of
Church and state was written into the Constitution of Cuba, and Spanish patronage replaced by
nomination of bishops through apostolic delegates, of whom Archbishop Chapelle was the first.
The Extension Society had already been founded as an organization to sustain the home
missions. The idea was conceived by Father Francis Kelley, pastor in Lapeer, Michigan, and later
bishop of OklahomaTulsa. With the prompt support in 1905 of Archbishop Quigley and the early
assistance of Father William O'Brien, later auxiliary archbishop of Chicago, the Society was
organized to assist missionary districts in the United States, especially in the South and West. It
built chapels, devised railway and mobile motor chapels, and enlisted the missionary zeal of
clergy and laity of more well-established dioceses. Subsequently the Society was approved by
St. Pius X.
Maryknoll was America's answer to the call for foreign missionaries. In 1911 the Catholic
Foreign Mission Society was set up in New York by Fathers James Anthony Walsh and Thomas
Price. The Maryknoll Fathers constituted a "society of secular priests with the purpose of training
Catholic missioners for the heathen lands, and of arousing American Catholics to a sense of their
apostolic duty." "I By 1918 Father Price was able to lead the first mission band to China. Though
be died in 1919, the others long survived: James E. Walsh, later bishop and second superior-
general; Francis Ford, martyr under Communism, and Bernard Meyer. During the administration
of the cofounder and first superior-general, father, later bishop, James A. Walsh (d. 1936), the
Society expanded rapidly and was joined by auxiliaries, the Foreign Mission Sisters of St.
Dominic (Maryknoll Sisters) and the lay Brotherhood of St. Michael. By 1951 there were six
hundred priests and one thousand nuns.
Other missionary activity continued or commenced during the same period. By the turn
of the twentieth century, the Indian and Negro missions were better organized, though little help
was forthcoming from the "Mexican Pious Fund" in spite of a judgment of the Hague tribunal in
1902 awarding the missions $1,420,682, for Mexico refused to pay. The Church, however, was
heartened by the reunion in 1909 of the Episcopalian Society of the Atonement, founded by Paul
Francis at Graymoor, New York, in 1899. After he brought his entire community into communion
with the Holy See, he gave added impetus to his Church Unity Octave to pray for the return of
separated believers in Christ. In 1918 the Catholic Students' Mission Crusade got under way at
Techny, though later transferred to Cincinnati. About the same time an Academia for Mission
Study for seminarians was founded by Monsignor McDonnell, director of the Propagation of the
Faith Society. The great American Catholic missionary response was demonstrated at the
International Eucharistic Congress held at Chicago in 1926.
Liberalism. National peculiarities naturally appeared in American Catholic life, and these
were magnified by suspicions accompanying Modernism at the turn of the century. Though the
otherwise conservative American Ecclesiastical Review under Herman Heuser's editorship
printed articles by the future Modernists, Loisy and Tyrrell, there was probably little native
theological Modernism. What chiefly aroused suspicion, especially in European circles, was the
easy-going tolerance of American Catholics in civil relations with non-Catholics. Cardinal
Gibbons was even criticized for endorsing the presidential Thanksgiving Day proclamation-which
Pius XII was to laud in 1947. In April, 1890, Gibbons was indicted in the Edinburgh Review as
presenting "a singular contrast to the orthodoxy of the Vatican." In 1893, the cardinal and other
prelates participated in the Chicago Exposition's "Parliament of Religions" at which each creed
expounded its tenets. The Cardinal's mild remark that, "though we differ in faith. . . . we stand
united on the platform of charity and benevolence," was distorted by the Review of Reviews into
exalting benevolence over Catholic Faith. Archbishop Ireland was less prudent in appearing as a
partisan at the Republican Party rallies in New York. But when he was denounced from the pulpit
for this by Bishop McQuaid-who boasted that be had never votedthe latter was rebuked by the
Holy See. In 1894 Father Tablaerts denounced "Liberalism" at a Catholic German Tag at
Louisville. On January 6, 1895, Pope Leo XIII issued his Longinqua Oceani. After lauding
American institutions and conceding that the Catholic Church in the United States had prospered
under them, the pope yet warned American Catholics not to defend their separation of Church
and state as an ideal to be followed in all ages and places. Conservatives bailed this
pronouncement as vindication, but the whole question of "Liberalism" was presently concentrated
into the single issue of the alleged "Americanism" of Father Hecker and his disciples. This new
controversy came to a head just at the time when the defeat of "Catholic Spain" by the United
States alarmed some Europeans and antagonized certain Catholic circles against things
American.
"Europeanism." But in 1897 the Life was translated by Louise, corntesse de Ravilliax, and
readapted, with a new "thesis" introduction by Abb'e Felix Klein (d. 1953). In his enthusiasm,
Abb'e Klein stressed far more than the original the innovations of Father Hecker and held him up
as a model for forward-looking French Catholics. But French and other European Conservatives
were antagonized. In March, 1898, appeared a series of articles criticizing and ridiculing this
novel "Americanism" under the name of Martel in La Verite. Martel was later identified as Abb'e
Charles Magnien of the Brothers of St. Vincent-not to be confused with the Sulpician Alphonse
Magnien of Baltimore. Magnien, a foe of De Mun and Leonine Ralliement, accused American
Catholics of advocating a false Liberalism: absolute separation of Church and state, limitation of
submission to lawful authority, criticism of older religious orders, and exaltation of active and
natural virtues over passive and supernatural ones. In May, 1898, these articles, together with
some additional material, appeared in Rome in book form: Etudes sur l'Americanisme: Le P'ere
Hecker, est-il un Saint? The treatise bore the imprimatur of the papal theologian, Alberto Lepidi,
and excited the ire of American prelates. Though Cardinal Gibbons protested that there was no
such thing as "Americanism" a commission of cardinals recommended its condemnation.
Papal intervention. At least by October, 1898, Pope Leo had personally intervened in the
dispute. While be softened considerably the indictment of the cardinalatial commission, Leo XIII
in his Testem, Benevolentiae, January 22, 1899, made no doubt that certain views, "called by
some 'Americanism,"' deserved censure. The pope asserted that "if under the name of
Americanism there should be designated the characteristic qualities which reflected honor on the
people of the United States, then there was no reason why these should be questioned or
discarded." Yet the pope feared that there were "some among you who conceive and desire a
Church in America different from that which is in the rest of the world." In particular, the pope
pointed out, (1) authority and spiritual direction were more, not less, needed at the present; (2)
natural virtues were not to be extolled over supernatural; (3) all virtue is active and suitable to all
times; (4) religious life and vows give the noblest "Christian liberty"; and (5) traditional methods of
evangelization are not to be abandoned. Although Cardinal Gibbons protested at "false
conceptions of Americanism emanating from Europe," he and the Progressives joined the
American hierarchy in acceptance. If Archbishops Corrigan and Katzer deemed "Americanism"
prevalent, in retrospect it seems that while Americanism in the sense of Modernism did exist
among a few in the United States, it was not peculiarly nor predominantly American.
Polish schism. Slavic protests, however, were not so easily quieted. On one occasion
the Polish Father Barascz of Jersey City went so far as to demand of President Cleveland that be
use influence at Rome to obtain a Slavic diocese. Cardinal Gibbons, to whom the president
referred this demand, replied that Catholic policy in the United States frowned on national
churches. But certain Polish elements remained dissatisfied. In 1897 there was set up the
"Polish Catholic Church of Chicago" by Anton Kozlowski, who secured consecration from the
Swiss "Old Catholics." This sect merged in 1907 with the "Polish National Catholic Church" which
had been founded at Scranton in 1904 by 147 clerical and lay delegates from isolated Polish
rebels. The convention elected Francis Hodur bishop, and lie later received consecration from
the Dutch Jansenists. Though this schism by no means received the support of the majority of
Polish Catholics, by 1945 the sect numbered seventy thousand. It soon added heresy to schism
as it rejected original sin, eternity of hell, and papal infallibility. Its liturgy honored as saints Peter
Waldo, John Hus, and Savonarola.
St. Frances Cabrini was a happy antidote to these heated nationalistic disputes and
partisan squabbles. While learned sociological studies were being made and discussion went on
about the best methods of taking care of the immigrants, this little Italian nun quietly entered the
United States (1889) with her Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart. With scant encouragement
from Archbishop Corrigan of New York, she opened hospitals and engaged in social work among
Italian immigrants. Her community, which by 1950 numbered four thousand professed sisters,
extended its activities from New York to Los Angeles. Finally Mother Cabrini died at Columbus
Hospital, Chicago, in 1917. Since she had become naturalized, her canonization by Pope Pius
XII in 1946 made her the first citizen of the United States to be raised to the altars.
Chaplaincies. At the declaration of War in April, 1917, there were but sixteen priests in
the regular army and nine national guard chaplains. The government issued a call for chaplains
of all denominations, and on the basis of enlistment statistics, raised the Catholic army quota
from 24 per cent to 37.8 per cent until 1920, when it was reduced to 25 per cent. Catholics were
allowed a 25 per cent quota in the Navy. By the date of the Armistice, there were 1,023 chaplains
on active service, and 500 approved applicants from the Catholic clergy. To govern this large
body, Pope Benedict XV in November, 1917, created the diocesis castrensis, naming Bishop
Hayes as the first military ordinary. The bishop divided his diocese into five vicariates, and
named a chancellor and secretary. This jurisdiction had temporary care of the more than eight
hundred thousand Catholics who enlisted in the armed forces. This organization, like that of the
N.C.W.C., proved so successful that it was retained in modified form in peace.
War activities. The Knights of Columbus and other male and female Catholic societies
set up centers for service men at home and abroad, e.g., the Etoile Club at Paris. Parishes were
used as units in fundraising drives, and millions of dollars of government funds were distributed
through the Catholic War Council. Cardinal Gibbons and other members of the American
hierarchy and clergy assisted Herbert Hoover in Belgian relief, and in the postwar assistance to
Germany and Austria. The cardinal set an example by upholding and explaining papal neutrality,
while himself defending in the United States universal military training. He attended rallies and
promoted drives with such diligence that he won the respect of many non-Catholics. Admiral
William Benson (1855-1932) was chief of naval operations from 1915 to 1919.
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
A. Generic Nature
(1) ORIGINS
"The word 'totalitarian' was coined by Mussolini and did not exist before in the Italian
dictionary, in the famous words: 'Nothing outside or above the state, nothing against the state,
everything within the state, everything for the state."' 1 In this new type of society, then, the
governing body would permeate all and the citizen would be expected to give his all, even to the
extent of worshipping the state by a Statolatry scarcely different from the ancient Roman imperial
cult. This materialistic "Totalitarianism" threatened to wreck human dignity and Christian culture;
its antidote Jay in the spirit of the thoroughgoing Christianity of the motto of St. Francis of Assisi:
"My God and my All."
Historical evolution. The first totalitarian state was set up in Russia during November,
1917, but early efforts to propagate its ideas outside Soviet borders failed, though Bavaria and
Hungary teetered on the brink for a time. Mussolini installed his Fascist dictatorship in 1922, but
took care to announce that Fascism was "not an article of export." In 1923 Rivera asserted a
dictatorship in Spain which his son strove to revive as Falangism in the next decade-though
Franco never completely identified himself with the latter. During January, 1933, Adolf Hitler
founded the Nazi brand of totalitarian rule in Germany, and this in time created in its own image
semi-totalitarian satellites before and during World War II-as Russia has been able to do since.
Abortive totalitarian movements were those of English Mosleyites, Belgian Rexists, French Croix
de Feux, and American Bundists, each paralleled by clever Communist branches.
Totalitarianism, however, has everywhere been somewhat modified or restrained by the varying
traditions of the national environment into which it has been introduced.
Religion. "As long as the Church could be useful toward bringing about or maintaining
dictatorships, its help was sought and concordats were negotiated. But when the Church became
an obstacle to the spirit of the totalitarian states, it was persecuted and even abolished. The
Bolshevists tried to form a church of their own, then they suppressed it, proscribing its priests and
closing its buildings, declaring freedom of worship, but imposing so many restrictions that this
freedom became illusory. Hitler promised that the state would respect both Catholics and
Protestants, attempted to make out of the Protestant church a Hitlerian church, stipulated a
concordat with Rome. But he soon failed in his promises to both Catholics and Protestants by
beginning a subtle persecution which aimed at the complete de-Christianization of Germany.
Mussolini settled the Roman Question with the Vatican and accepted a concordat on Pius XI's
terms. Generally speaking, he attempted to avoid open conflict with the Church, by favoring it up
to the point where it did not threaten the development of Fascism. Here the chief conflict arose
out of the question of education of the youth and of their Catholic societies.........
Education. "The totalitarian state has monopolized the schools, the sport activities of the
youth, the cinema, the radio, the press; special schools have even been created in order to shape
the 'perfect citizen.' Still another step: the effort is made to weaken or even to eliminate the
influence of the family; hence the special Fascist, Nazi, and Communist institutions for youth. At
the age of six, one became in Italy a member of the Sons of the She-Wolf, at the age of eight of
the Balillas, then of the Young Italians, and so on for every age to the grave. In Germany children
were conscripted into the Children's Group of the Hitler Youth at the age of six; . . . from ten to
fourteen years boys and girls belong to the Young Folk and Young Maidens respectively; from
fourteen to eighteen to the Hitler Youth proper and the Bund of German Girls, respectively.
Before being admitted to the party itself or one of its organizations of adults, the adolescents had
to go through the rigorous training of the Labor Service-both sexes-and of the army. The
Russians had the 'voluntary' organization of the Young Pioneers, embracing the ages from eight
to sixteen; younger children may be banded together in the Octobrist groups. From the age of
seventeen a Russian boy or girl is eligible for the Communist Youth: Comsomol."
Goals. Such states set millennial goals: Italy dreamed of a new Roman Empire and
"mare nostrum"; Nazi Germany idealized a triumphant "Herrenvolk"; Russia propagated the
"Communist International." All this demanded complete regimentation, and fostered militarism
and ideological imperialism.
Rival alliances, however, were not slow in arising. The world depression again disrupted
German economy and supplied fuel for Nazi agitation. Chancellor Bruening proposed to retrieve
German prosperity and national prestige through a Customs Union with Austria (1931), but
France vetoed the scheme and the Slavic lands were alarmed. Both Germany and Austria then
resorted to dictatorship, and eventually played into the bands of the Nazis. Successful Japanese
defiance of the League of Nations in Manchuria (1931) encouraged "have-not" or ambitious
governments in the belief that strong-arm methods would succeed.
Nazi aggression, a clever compound of threats and bluff, began to make headway from
1933 against a divided Europe. Though an attempt to seize Austria in 1934 proved premature in
that it aroused the suspicions of Fascist Italy, Hitler conciliated Mussolini by complacency toward
the latter's invasion of Ethiopia (1935) at a time when Great Britain and France talked of applying
economic sanctions against Italy through the League. A rift appeared between Britain and France
on the nature of these sanctions, and Hitler seized this moment (March, 1936) to reoccupy the
Rhineland with military forces. Shortly afterwards (October, 1936), Mussolini joined Hitler in
proclaiming a "RomeBerlin Axis," which pressed its military assistance upon the nationalist rebels
in Spain. The Spanish Civil War was to some extent used as a rehearsal for future world conflict:
Germany and Italy ostentatiously backing the Franco forces, while Russia and France aided the
"Loyalists." Nationalist successes in Spain alarmed the West, and France feared encirclement by
totalitarian powers. While Britain and France hesitated over thorough rearmament, the Axis
continually advertised its preparedness, especially in the air. Annexation of Austria by Germany
early in 1938 proved easy, but Nazi pressure upon Czechoslovakia threatened British and French
intervention in defense of the smaller country. But Anglo-French aversion for war and their
military unpreparedness eventually led to acquiescence in Nazi encirclement of a reduced
Czechoslovakia on the understanding that this would constitute a final liquidation of all German
territorial demands arising from the de. funct Versailles peace settlement. This Munich
Appeasement Pact (September, 1938) was practically repudiated early in 1939 when the Nazis
occupied the whole of Czechoslovakia as well as Memel, and the Fascists overran Albania.
When, therefore, Hitler repeated his ultimatum tactics in the summer of 1939, with Danzig and
Poland substituted for Memel and Czechoslovakia, even the more peacefully inclined Western
statesmen agreed that appeasement had gone far enough. After reaching a pact of expediency
with Soviet Russia regarding the disposal of Poland, Hitler, refused carte blanche on his
sweeping and peremptory demands upon the West, resorted to World War II at dawn of
September 1, 1939. This brought France and Great Britain into a European conflict which
presently engulfed the United States and most of the countries of the globe.
B. Totalitarian Ideologies
(1) POLITICAL-LEGAL THEORIES
Fascism. "Conceiving the doctrine of Natural Law to be indissolubly wedded to
liberalism-democracy-socialism, Fascism rejected the natural law as well. There are and can be
no rights other than those the state accords......... Criticising the "plutodemocracies," Rocco said:
"For Fascism, society is the end, individuals the means, and its whole life consists in using
individuals as instruments for its social ends. The state therefore guards and protects the welfare
and development of individuals not for their exclusive interest, but because of the identity of the
needs of individuals with those of society as a whole." Hence, in Mussolini's words, "The state is
not only the present, but it is also the past, and above all the future. Transcending the individual's
brief spell Of life, the state stands for the immanent conscience of the nation."
Nazism. "The 'blood and soil' principle was nothing more or less than the peculiar Nazi
theory of racial superiority. To the Nazi all races were inferior to the Aryan, and among Aryans the
Nordic was the highest, finest type. . . . The state was but the vital expression, the living will of the
national conscience. But the will of the people and the state are united in the leader. Thus, law,
in the form of a Hitler decree, could be called both the will of the people and the will of the leader.
There was an irrefutable presumption that the will of the leader was the will of the people and for
the best interests of the state-a sheer totalitarian principle. A corollary of the leadership principle
was the notion of 'national conscience.' The national conscience was the sentiment of the people,
it was arrived at, however, not by consulting the people, but by taking careful heed of party
directions. . . . A major change in German criminal laws was the power extended to courts to
convict of crime one who had performed an act not specifically declared to be criminal by statute,
provided the act offended the 'national conscience.' . . ."
Communism. "Law is now considered not merely a necessary evil, but a valued and
important instrumentality of the socialist state. During the years since Lenin seized power, law
has grown by leaps and bounds in Russia. So far have the jurists swung from their original
intention to eliminate law entirely, that now they speak of it as the expression of the toiler's will. If
in the earlier stages of the Marxian evolution law is a weapon in the hands of the dominant class,
so in Russia law is a weapon in the hands of the ruling party, the Communist Party." Stalin
commented on Marxian "withering away" of the state thus: "We are in favor of the state dying out
and at the same time we stand for the strengthening of the dictatorship of the proletariat, which
represents the most powerful and mighty authority of all forms of state which have existed up to
the present day. The highest possible development of the power of the state, with the object of
preparing the conditions for the dying out of the state, that is the Marxist formula. Is it
'contradictory?' Yes, it is 'contradictory!' But this contradiction is a living thing, and completely
reflects Marxist dialectics." This cavalier treatment of contradiction enables the 1936 Constitution
to guarantee freedom of religion, of press, of speech, of assembly, etc., "in conformity with the
interests of the toilers, and in order to strengthen the socialist system." I Article 135 even provides
for universal suffrage; thus does Totalitarianism utilize the democratic terminology.
Nazism: "The state's duty towards capital was comparatively simple and clear.
It merely had to see that capital remained the servant of the state and did not
contemplate obtaining control of the nation. In taking this attitude the state could confine itself to
two objects: maintenance of efficient national and independent economy on the one hand, and
the social rights of the workers on the other. . . . This will find expression in a wise grading of
earnings such as shall make it possible for every honest worker to be certain of living an orderly,
honorable life. . . . A nationalist socialist trades union . . . is not an instrument of class war, but
one for defense and representation of the workers. . . . If we review all the causes of the German
collapse, the final and decisive one is seen to be the failure to realize the racial problem,
especially the Jewish menace . . ." (Hitler).
Communism: "There are three fundamental aspects of the dictatorship of the
proletariat: (a) Utilization of the power of the proletariat for the suppression of the exploiters, for
the defense of the country, for the consolidation of the ties with the proletarians of other lands,
and for the development and the victory of the revolution in all countries;(b) the utilization of the
power of the proletariat in order to detach the toiling and exploited masses once and for all from
the bourgeoisie, to consolidate the alliance of the proletariat with these masses, to enlist these
masses in the work of socialist construction, and to assure the state leadership of these masses
by the proletariat; (c) the utilization of the power of the proletariat for the organization of
Socialism, for the abolition of classes, and for the transition to a society without classes, to a
society without a state" (Stalin).
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
Achille Ratti (1857-1939) was born at Desio, near Milan, the son of bourgeois parents: his
father was manager and part Owner of the Gadda silk mill. He received his elementary education
from Don Volontieri, a priest who for forty-three years maintained a practical and comparatively
progressive school in his own house. It was he and Achille's uncle, the priest Don Damiano Ratti,
who fostered the boy's education at San Carlo Seminary in Milan. Here he made a brilliant record
in mathematics, philosophy, theology, and canon law, and was sent to complete his studies at the
Lombard College at Rome. He was ordained to the priesthood at the age of twenty-two in the
Lateran, December 20, 1879. He continued his studies three years longer at the Gregorianum,
receiving doctorates in theology, philosophy, and canon law.
Scholarly career. Father Ratti returned to San Carlo Seminary as professor of theology
and sacred eloquence (1882-88). Thereafter be spent many years in research, first in the
Ambrosian Library at Milan (1888-1910), and then as vice-prefect of the Vatican Library at Rome
(1910-18). Some of his research on Milanese history has been published in his Historical
Essays. Until the age of sixty, however, Father Ratti lived a relatively retired life, broken only by
incessant mountain-climbing on vacations, reception of library visitors, and occasional trips as
manuscript scout or delegate to library conventions. Quiet, reservedbut as the future would
prove, strong-willed-he was observant as be walked the city streets or rode on the top of London
buses. During much of this time he was chaplain at the Cenacle Convent, and catechist for the
Milanese chimney sweeps.
Diplomatic service. Yet such a man seemed destined to remain forever in obscurity, had
not the Allies decided to resurrect a country. In 1918 even the Vatican diplomatic corps lacked an
expert in Polish history going back to Monsignor Garampi's mission in 1763. But Ratti had
published a monograph on the subject. He was summoned, and soon named nuncio to Poland
and consecrated bishop. At Warsaw (1918-21) be provided bishops for the new and rearranged
dioceses, negotiated a concordat with the Pilsudski government, and assisted in relief work. He
stayed in the city during a (critical communist siege of Warsaw, re.pulsed by Pilsudski and
Weygand on August 15, 1920. The eminently successful nuncio was recalled and made cardinal-
archbishop of Milan in June, 1921. He had barely time to inaugurate the Catholic University at
Milan on December 7, when he was summoned to Rome by the death of Benedict XV, January
22, 1922.
Papal election. If reporter Morgan's information be correct, the conclave elected Cardinal
Lauri, who refused the tiara. Be that as it may, on the fourth day and fourteenth ballot a two-
thirds majority was found in favor of Ratti, who accepted saying: "Pius is a name of peace. As I
desire to devote my efforts to the peace of the world . . . I choose the name of Pius." The new
pope's first effort in this direction was to resume a custom abandoned since 1870: he appeared
on St. Peter's balcony to give his blessing urbi et orbi. In the crowd, it is said, was Deputy
Mussolini who may have been impressed sufficiently by the popular enthusiasm for the Roman
pontiff to modify somewhat an hitherto uncompromising anticlericalism.
Concordats were the pope's attempts to conclude peace with the various national
governments. In this he was not averse to negotiating with forms of government of which lie did
not wholly approve, remarking that he was "disposed to treat with the Devil himself, when the
salvation of souls is concerned." Besides the epoch-making Lateran Pact with Fascist Italy,
presently discussed in greater detail, Pius XI concluded agreemerits with Latvia (1922), Poland
and Bavaria (1925), Lithuania (1927), Portugal (1928), Prussia and Rumania (1929), and Nazi
Germany (1933). Well aware of the dangers of prevailing selfish nationalism, be warned:
"Difficult, not to say impossible, is it for peace to endure between states and peoples, if in place of
true and genuine love of country there reigns, or rages, a hard and egotistical nationalism; that is
to say, if envy and hatred supplant mutual desire for good; distrust and suspicion replace fraternal
confidence; strife and conflict take the place of concord and co-operation; and ambition for
primacy and predominance excludes respect and protection of the rights of all, even the smallest
and weakest."
Missionary effort the pope tried to raise above national and racial considerations. The
headquarters of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith were transferred from Lyons and
Paris to Rome in May, 1922. The pope's personal consecration of six Chinese bishops at Rome
stressed his wish for a native clergy. An encyclical, Rerum Ecclesiae (1926), directed foundation
of schools for training native clerics, and during 1928 the encyclical Rerum Orientalium
encouraged reunion work among Eastern sects.
Requiescat in pace. During the Munich Crisis, Pius XI, though ailing, labored strenuously
for peace. Indeed, in his radio address of September 29, 1938, he offered his life for it: "With all
our heart we offer for the salvation and the peace of the world this life, which in virtue of those
prayers the Lord has spared and even renewed." Like another Moses, the pope interposed
himself to avert the divine wrath. It would seem that the exchange was accepted: peace was
preserved for 1938 against expectations, and Pius XI died on February 10, 1939. His last words,
scarcely audible, were: "Peace, peace, 0 Jesus!"
Lateran Treaty. Mussolini took up these hints in 1926 by opening unofficial talks with the
Vatican about the Roman Question. From 1926 to 1928 these were conducted by Francesco
Pacelli, brother of the future pope, for the Vatican, and Domenico Barone for Il Duce. Both were
conscientious lawyers, and when Barone died in 1928 such progress had been made that
Mussolini and Grandi continued them officially with Cardinal Pietro Gasparri, whom Pius XI had
retained as secretary of state from his predecessor's pontificate. At length a satisfactory accord
was reached, and the principals signed what is known as the Lateran Treaty on February 11,
1929. This set up an independent Vatican city-state, guaranteed as sovereign, neutral, and
inviolable territory in international law: "Italy recognizes the sovereignty of the Holy See in the
international field as an inherent attribute of its nature, in conformity with its tradition and the
exigencies of its mission in the world" (Article 2). On the other band, "The Holy See . . . declares
the 'Roman Question' definitively and irrevocably settled and therefore eliminated, and recognizes
the kingdom of Italy under the dynasty of the house of Savoy, with Rome as the capital of the
Italian state" (Article 26). A financial convention replaced the inoperative "Law of Guarantees."
After the Holy See had made generous condonation of property to the state and private
individuals, it accepted an indemnity of 750,000,000 lire in cash, and 1,000,000,000 lire in
government bonds.
Consequences. After this treaty had been ratified on June 7, the pope emerged from his
108-acre state for the first time, July 25, 1929. Accompanying the Lateran Treaty, a Concordat
opened a new alliance of Church and state: the Church was declared the religion of the state;
religious teaching was made obligatory in state schools for Catholics; clerical and religious
immunity were recognized; canonical matrimonial law given civil effects; and Catholic
organizations legally authorized. It will be seen in the national history of Italy that Mussolini soon
violated the spirit of this Concordat, thereby provoking a spirited contest between papal and
secular jurisdictions. Nonetheless, despite threats from Fascists and occupation of Rome by both
Germans and Americans, the Lateran Pact and its Vatican State creation seem to have stood the
test of World War II. As part of international law, it is not bound up per se with the Concordat, nor
does it lose its validity with a change of Italian government. Nevertheless the Italian Republic
under Premier Di Gasperri took care to renew the Lateran Pact explicitly on February 11, 1949.
B. Papal Magisterium
(1) CONDEMNATION OF TOTALITARIANISM
Catholic liberty was championed by Pius XI against a prevailing trend to dictatorship. His
appeal was intellectual and moral, though the Mexican persecution evoked the warning that all
physical selfdefense was not denied Christians. In Nos es Muy (1927), the pope sustained the
Mexican bishops in that: "You have also affirmed that if the case arose where the civil power
should so trample on justice and truth as to destroy even the foundations of authority, there would
appear Do reason to condemn citizens for uniting to defend the nation and themselves by lawful
and appropriate means against those who make use of the power of the state to drag the nation
to ruin." Only Spaniards averted totalitarian persecution by these means; elsewhere Catholics
could not or would not see the threat until it was too late.
Non Abbiamo Bisogno (1931) is the pope's classic, though by no means unique,
condemnation of Fascism. In this encyclical Pius touched on the basic issue between the Church
and totalitarian regimes. For the pope asserted: "We are happy and proud to wage the good fight
for the liberty of conscience." And be struck back with the verve of a Hildebrand: "Tell us,
therefore, tell the country, tell the world what documents there are . . . that treat of politics planned
and directed by Catholic Action. . . . We find ourselves confronted by the resolve . . . to
monopolize completely the young . . . for the exclusive advantage of a party and a regime based
on an ideology which clearly resolves itself into a true, a real pagan worship of the state-the
Statolatrywhich is in no less contrast with the natural rights of the family, than it is in contradiction
with the supernatural rights of the Church. . . . We have seen in action a species of religion which
rebels . . . even to cry out: 'Down with the pope and death to him."'
Mit Brennender Sorge (1937) gave the Nazi brand of totalitarianism a modern version of
papal anathema: "None but superficial minds could stumble into concepts of a national god, or
national religion, or attempt to lock within the frontiers of a single people, within the narrow limits
of a single race, God, Creator of the universe, King and Legislator of all nations, before Whose
immensity they are as a drop in a bucket. . . . Should any man dare in sacrilegious disregard of
the essential differences between God and His creature, between the God-Man and the children
of men, dare place a mortal, were he the greatest of all times, by the side of, or over against
Christ, he would deserve to be called a prophet of nothingness to whom the terrifying words of
Scripture would be applicable: 'He that dwelleth in heaven shall laugh at them.' . . . The day will
come when the Te Deum of liberation will succeed premature hymns of the enemies of Christ."
Divini Redemptoris (1937), finally, warned men not to fall into the utopian web of
Communism: "The means of saving the world today from the lamentable ruin into which amoral
Liberalism has plunged us are neither the class struggle, nor terror, nor yet the autocratic use of
state power, but rather the infusion of social justice and the sentiment of Christian love into the
social-economic order. . . . We have indicated how a sound prosperity is to be restored according
to the true principles of a corporative system which respects the proper hierarchic structure of
society, and how all the occupational groups should be fused into an harmonious unity, inspired
by the principle of the common good."
Economic society was recalled to the Leonine teaching of Rerum Novarum on its fortieth
anniversary by Pius's Quadragesimo Anno (1931). In applying his predecessor's teaching to
twentieth-century conditions, the pope distinguished the individual and social aspects of property,
while suggesting a corporate economic system as a via media between Capitalism and
Socialism. Speculation and credit manipulation, partial causes of the world depression of 1929,
came in for sharp criticism: "In our days not alone is wealth accumulated, but immense power and
despotic economic domination is concentrated in the hands of a few, and that those few are
frequently not the owners, but only the trustees and directors of invested funds, who administer
them at their good pleasure. This power becomes particularly irresistible when exercised by
those who, because they hold and control money, are able also to govern credit and determine its
allotment, for that reason supplying, so to speak, the lifeblood to the entire economic body, and
grasping, as it were, in their bands the very soul of production, so that no one dare breathe
against their will." The pope urged co-operation between employers and employees; they ought
not place all their hopes in state intervention. This, if necessary, should moderate and arbitrate
rather than participate; reasonable public ownership of certain natural resources, however, need
not be deemed socialistic.
Catholic Action was called upon for the work of social regeneration by Pius XI, who
diffused ever more widely and strongly the movement initiated by St. Pius X. "We have called this
movement so dear to our heart 'a particularly providential assistance' in the work of the Church in
these troublous times. Catholic Action is in effect a social apostolate also, inasmuch as its object
is to spread the Kingdom of Jesus Christ, not only among individuals, but also in families and in
society. It must, therefore, make it a chief aim to train its members with special care and to
prepare them to fight the battles of the Lord. The task of formation, now more urgent and
indispensable than ever, which must always precede direct action in the field, will assuredly be
served by studycircles, conferences, lecture-courses, and the various other activities undertaken
with a vie", to making known the Christian solution of the social problem" (Divini Redemptoris).
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
Diplomatic career. In 1901 Father Pacelli was assigned work under Monsignor Gasparri
in the Congregation of Extraordinary Affairs where he remained until 1917, becoming its secretary
in 1914. During 1901 he was bearer of a papal letter of condolence to Edward VII in London;
here he returned in 1908 for the Eucharistic Congress and in 1911 for the coronation of George V.
OD May 13, 1917, he was consecrated bishop by Benedict XV and named nuncio to Bavaria.
During July he met the Kaiser but proved unable to win his assent to the pope's peace plan.
During the communist riots in the spring of 1919, mobsters invaded the Munich nunciature, but
were faced down by Archbishop Pacelli; repeatedly his life was in peril on the streets. Named
nuncio to Germany in 1920, he retained both German legations until 1929. He participated in
arranging the Concordats with Bavaria (1925), Prussia (1929), Baden (1932), Germany (1933),
and Austria (1934). On his departure from Germany he received enthusiastic testimonials from
all German groups save the Nazis whom he had often criticized. Named cardinal in December,
1929, Pacelli became papal secretary of state, February, 1930. In 1934 he toured South America
and in 1936 the United States. He was legate to congresses at Lourdes (1935), Lisieux (1937),
and Budapest (1938). His opposition to Totalitarianism was well known: be denounced it at
Lourdes in 1935, and participated in the papal rebuke to Cardinal Innitzer of Vienna for his overly-
warm welcome to Nazi Anschluss. Reputedly another excoriation of Totalitarianism was
scheduled for February 11, 1939, but Pius XI died the preceding day.
Election to the papacy. As camerlengo, Cardinal Pacelli administered the Holy See
during the ensuing sede vacante and made arrangements for a conclave which at long last
included Cardinal O'Connell of Boston -for whom Pius XI had extended the Lyonnaise (1274)
prescription from ten to eighteen days. On March 2, 1939, reputedly on the third ballot and
almost unanimously, Cardinal Pacelli was elected to the supreme pontificate. His was the first
papal election announced orbi by radio as well as urbi, and Cardinal Caccia-Dominioni
discharged well this new extension of an ancient announcer's role. On the feast of St. Gregory
the Great, March 12, 1939, Eugenio Pacelli was crowned as Pope Pius XII. Thus began a long,
eventful, and progressive pontificate, conscientiously discharged until terminated by the pope's
death at Castel Gandolfo, October 9, 1958.
Holy Scripture. During 1943 also the pope commemorated the fiftieth anniversary of
Providentissimus Deus by issuing Divino Afflante Spiritu. The latter encyclical emphasized the
new information afforded by archaeological discoveries in regard to the languages, literature,
history, and customs of Biblical peoples. Nowadays Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek, original
tongues of the Scriptures, are essential to scholarly exposition. Accordingly, without prejudice to
the Vulgate, versions directly from the original texts should be prepared and appropriately
translated to the vernacular, subject to hierarchical sanction. In 1945 a papal motu proprio, In
Cotidianis Precibus, but some of these norms into effect by permitting liturgical use of a new
Psalter directly based on the Hebrew.
Canon Law. The apostolic constitution, Vacantis Apostolicae Sedis (1945), changed the
required two-thirds majority for papal elections dating from 1179 to two-thirds plus one, and
clarified procedure. In the same year an important Allocution to the Rota distinguished between
ecclesiastical jurisdiction derived immediately from God independently of the people, and civil
authority, deduced "as most Scholastics teach" mediately from God through the people. Between
1949 and 1957 the Holy Father issued a new Oriental Code for the Eastern Rites in communion
with the Holy See.
Mariology. Pius XII, when dedicating the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary by
establishing the feast in 1942, suggested prayers for the opportuneness of defining the doctrine
of her Assumption. This definition he made on November 1, 1950, in the constitution,
Munificentissimus Deus: "We pronounce, declare and define it to be a divinely revealed dogma
that the Immaculate Mother of God, ever Virgin Mary, when the course of her earthly life was
finished, was taken up body and soul into heavenly glory." The invocation, "Regina assumpta in
coelum," was added to the Litany. The centennial of the definition of the Immaculate Conception-
1954-was proclaimed a "Marian Year," climaxed by the festive celebration of the "Queenship of
Mary," henceforth assigned to May 31.
The Missions received attention from Pius XII who, adhering to the policy of his two
predecessors, fostered a native clergy. He consecrated twelve missionary bishops October 29,
1939, erected a Chinese bierarchy in 1945, set up a missionary college for native students
(1947), and admitted a Chinese and Indian to the Sacred College (1946; 1953). In 1939 more
liberal norms were permitted for use of Confucianist ceremonies. During 1947 Provida Mater
Ecclesia recognized the "secular institutes" as means of domestic asceticism; analogous and
overlapping was the development of a lay missionary movement.
Baptism. Through the Congregation of Rites the pope sanctioned alteration of the saliva
rubric (1944)-a change once denied to the Malabarese. In 1951 be provided for congregational
renewal of baptismal vows at the revived Holy Saturday Vigil.
Confirmation. Pius XII conceded general faculties to pastors and their equivalents in the
Latin Bite to administer this sacrament in case of danger of death and the absence of a bishop
(1946).
Penance. During 1947 the provisions of canon 883 for faculties for confession on a sea
voyage were extended to air travel.
Holy Eucharist. During World War II the pope allowed not only soldiers but war workers
to have evening Mass, with corresponding modifications of the Eucharistic fast (1942), and
permitted use of water only in ablutions where wine was not easily obtainable (1944).
Regulations about the time of the Mass and the Eucharistic fast were standardized and fused with
previous indults for the sick by Christus Dominus (1953), subject to a confessor's sanction. The
latter restriction was removed in March, 1957, by a supplementary regulation requiring a three-
hour fast from solids, a single hour from liquids-save intoxicants-for all, and permitting the sick
true medicine whenever needed. Water was entirely excluded from the Eucharistic fast.
Holy Orders. By Sacramentum Ordinis (1947) the pope settled longstanding theological
disputes about the matter and form of this sacrament by defining that "the matter of the sacred
orders of deaconship, priesthood and episcopacy is the imposition of bands alone; the form is the
words determining the application of this matter by which the sacramental effects are univocally
signified. These words are to be found in the Preface.
Matrimony. In 1940 the Holy Office condemned direct sterilization and in 1944 censured
those "who either deny that the primary end of marriage is the procreation and education of
children, or teach that the secondary ends are not essentially subordinate to the primary end."
The pope made the first change in the Latin Code during 1948 by suppressing the exception from
canonical form of marriage made by canon 1099 in favor of those baptized but not educated in
the Church. In 1949 Pius XII initiated the Oriental matrimonial code; the manner of computing
affinity and the form of marriage constituted the more notable differences from the Latin.
Addressing Catholic physicians in 1949, the pope "formally excluded artificial insemination from
marriage." Besides renewing his predecessor's ban on contraception, Pius XII in an address to
Catholic midwives during 1951 condemned the abuse of "rhythm."
B. Secular Problems
(1) WORLD WAR II (1939-45)
Causes. Versailles divided the powers into "haves" and "have-nots,' and the latter were
susceptible to any appeal, however radical, promising redress of their grievances. In Germany,
the Socialist-Center Bloc which ran the Weimar Republic was saddled with payment of
reparations. When France insisted upon repayment, however, Great Britain tended to side with
Germany, thereby virtually suspending the victorious Entente Cordiale. The world depression
(1929-33) hastened the decline of peace organization: economic self-sufficiency became the goal
and over-all planning of a socialist or fascist type became attractive. The economic status of the
German and Austrian states became straitened, but Laval's France vetoed any union. German
President Hindenburg then turned from the discredited democratic leaders to Hitler's promises,
and neither he nor the Germans were again allowed to change their minds. For Hitler cornered
political power and geared the entire German economy for war. In 1935 be courted Mussolini in
the latter's Ethiopian venture, and secured his benevolent neutrality the next year during his own
gamble of rearming the Rhineland in defiance of Versailles terms. France, without a cabinet,
hesitated and lost. Germany and Italy cemented their understanding in the BerlinRome Axis
(1936), to which Japan, which had successfully defied the League in Manchuria, adhered later.
Russia, however, held aloof from both Fascists and Liberals. Military rearmament was pushed
forward to outstrip, especially in the air, Britain, France, and the lesser states, while Russian
policy and strength remained an enigma. Preparedness and bluff enabled the Axis to appropriate
Austria, Czechoslovakia, Memel, and Albania within a year (1938-39).
Hostilities broke out on September 1, 1939, when Britain and France refused to appease
Hitler on his demands on Poland. Thinking to remedy German errors in World War 1, Hitler at
first avoided a war on two fronts. He appeased Russia with half of Poland in order to be free to
deal with the West. France was defeated and occupied along with the Netherlands, Denmark,
and Norway. Unable either to force Great Britain's surrender or her alliance in an anticommunist
"crusade," Hitler seems to have assumed that he could destroy Russia alone while slowly
starving out the British Isles. And so he might have done had not his Japanese partner,
interested as always in local more than overall Axis objectives, provoked the United States into
global war by attack on Pearl Harbor. American-British aid was henceforth given without stint to
Russia with such success that German advance was halted. Then, caught at last in his dreaded
two-front war, Hitler dodged encirclement until the Allied landings in North Africa, Italy, and France
produced the dire Nazi-dammerung at Berlin, May, 1945.
Armistice, rather than peace, was the sequel. Self-defense had in-. duced the Liberal
nations to ally themselves with Communism. The war thus failed to be an ideological contest with
Totalitarianism, however much wishful propaganda might sometimes represent it. Concern for
their soldiers' lives led the Liberal leaders to make great concessions to their Soviet partner in
order to ensure a speedy end to the war, and to this purpose also a fateful atomic bomb was
dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, quickly terminating the contest in the Far East. Principles were
again sacrificed at the peacemaking in the hope that present injustices might be eventually
remedied in a new world organization, the United Nations. Fearing to ruin this, as the League
had been, by American and Russian abstention, material unanimity was purchased at the
expense of formal disagreement, and the world remained divided, now into the armed camps of
Liberalism and Communism.
Relief activities. The Pontifical Relief Commission was set up in 1939 under Monsignor
Cortesi, and in time relief centers were opened in all occupied countries to dispense food,
clothing and medicine to men of all religions and races; by the end of the war the Commission
was operating in forty countries. Between 1939 and 1945, moreover, the Vatican Information
Service sent five million messages for private soldiers, often anticipating the secular sources;
e.g., the first news of American survivors from the Ploesti air raid came from the Vatican. During
1943-44 Vatican trucks foraged for food in Italy, and for a time a third of Rome's flour was being
supplied through the Vatican commissary. Soup kitchens and emergency shelters were
established in Rome, and after the war many of these relief agencies continued to assist
dispossessed persons, especially children.
Roman crises. Throughout the war, the pope rejected suggestions from either side to
leave Rome. After the bombings of San Lorenzo and the Lateran during the summer of 1943, the
pope hastened to the scene within the hour, and his cassock was stained with blood as he
participated in the relief work. Besides eliciting diplomatic protests, bombing of Vatican City-
without casualties-by an unidentified plane failed to budge the pope. During the Nazi occupation
of Rome, September, 1943, to June, 1944, the Vatican freedom was constrained, but ways were
yet discovered to help the poor and give asylum to Jews. To Nazi pressures Pius XII replied:
"Kindly inform whoever may be interested that not only do I refuse to leave Rome no matter what
happens, but herewith protest in advance any violence planned against, not my modest person,
but against the Vicar of Christ." This determination he repeated to the cardinals in consistory of
February 9, 1944, although allowing them full freedom to leave. Allied bombing of Castel
Gandolfo and of Monte Cassino yet followed, perhaps unavoidably. Tension eased, however,
after the entry of American troops into Rome, June 6, 1944. The day coincided with D-Day, the
Norman Reconquest that soon ended the war.
(3) POST-WAR PEACE EFFORTS (1945-58)
The "Cold War." From 1947 the American Marshall Plan for European Recovery (ECA)
was opposed by the "Cold War," warming in 1948 to the contest for Berlin. Already in December,
1945, the pope had deplored the surviving "bacillus" of Totalitarianism; a year later he lamented
that the ideals of the Atlantic Charter and of the Four Freedoms were being tarnished. During
1947-49 he appealed for internationalization of Jerusalem and the Holy Places, and for a
peaceful solution for the Arab-Jewish tension in Palestine. In 1948 be analyzed the situation as a
continuing insecurity arising from fear of aggression. The pope made peace one of the intentions
for the Holy Year of 1950, and pleaded: "Away with the barriers Break down the barbed wire
fences! Let each people be free to know the life of other peoples; let the segregation of some
countries from the rest of the civilized world, so dangerous to the cause of peace, be abolished.
How earnestly the Church desires to smooth the way for these friendly relations among peoples!
For her, East and West do not represent opposite ideals, but share a common heritage to which
both are called to contribute in the future also. By virtue of her divine mission she is a mother of
all peoples, and a faithful ally and wise guide to all who seek peace." But apparently East and
West still endorsed Kipling's dictum, for the Holy Year was marred by the opening of the Korean
War (1950-53). As this and other limited conflicts ever threatened to develop into World War III,
Pius XII repeated his appeals for peace, notably during the Marian Year of 1954 and the
Hungarian Uprising of 1956. Yet it was Dot "peace at any price," for the pope pointed out the
dangers of the newer Moscow line of "peaceful co-existence."
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
Party dictatorship. The Communist Party retained its rigid political monopoly and police
system. The Constitution of 1922, although conceding cultural autonomy to the many
nationalities within the federated Soviet Union, was chary about delegating political power. Only
the proletariat were allowed to participate in elections, and these were little more than ratification
of lists of party nominees. Even though a series of indirect representatives ascended to an All
Union Congress, any expression of the popular will was practically impossible. In theory the All
Union Congress selected an All Union Executive Committee which chose the Union Council of
Commissars with charge over national and foreign affairs. Actually, behind this facade all real
power rested with a restricted Communist Party. Though this expanded its membership from
23,000 in January, 1917, to 7,200,000 in January, 1957, at any period it constituted but a small
percentage of the total Russian population.
Faction contests. When Lenin's health began to fail in 1922, a struggle for the
succession began between Leftists under Trotsky who denounced NEP as a betrayal of
Communism, and Rightists led by Stalin who were primarily interested in Russian nationalism.
Trotsky, intellectual, mercurial, a brilliant speaker, advocated world revolt at once; Stalin,
illeducated, plodding, a wirepuller, argued that a powerful Russian state must be the immediate
objective. As the secretary-general of the Party, Stalin outmaneuvered Trotsky in dominating
patronage after Lenin's death in 1924. From 1923 to 1925 Zimoviev and Kamenev joined Stalin
against Trotsky; then they sided with the latter. Relegated to a minor role, Trotsky agitated,
opposing concessions to the rising wealthy peasants, the kulaks. In 1927 the OGPU under
Stalin's orders began for the first time to purge Reds; by 1929 Trotsky was in exile and Stalin was
dictator. Events were to demonstrate him a "realist" who stole Lenin's policy. Yet he was ever
more concerned with achieving objectives by any means than with fidelity to correct theory.
Calculated repression. During the NEP period, religious policy was likewise somewhat
modified without any basic change in the Marxist long-term attitude toward religion. Exposed to
international denunciation, the Soviet regime accepted some food donations through the Papal
Relief Commission (1922) and released Patriarch Tikhon (1923). Less support was given to the
farce of the "Living Church," and direct attacks upon the clergy and faithful were discontinued for
a time. Yet during 1922-23 all of the nine Catholic prelates had been executed, imprisoned, or
exiled. The Holy See named ten new prelates in 1926, but all had been apprehended by 1932
when but fifty priests survived. If less violence was displayed against the Orthodox clergy,
antireligious propaganda and ridicule of religious observance increased. These measures were
promoted by the Militant Atheists' League, organized in 1925, but making but slow progress
before 1928. In 1924 the legal catechism class was reduced to three, and sermons subjected to
a preliminary censorship. A "new calendar"-the Gregorian-together with civil holidays deliberately
at variance with the ecclesiastical disrupted the Orthodox festivals. The Militant Atheists spread
antireligious propaganda in markets, music-halls, by playing-cards, and children's ABC's.
AntiChristmas and anti-Easter carnivals strove to attract the people from worship. Religious
ceremonies and persons were parodied or caricatured on the streets or in cartoons; shrines and
miracles were "debunked"; statues equipped with flashing signs: "Join the League of Godless
today." If less violent means were employed, Communist persecution of religion continued.
Communist purges continued as Stalin struck at rivals, now to the right, then to the left.
Collectivization had alienated Premier Rykov, Bukharin, and Tomski; in 1930 these Rightists were
demoted, to be purged in 1938. In 1934 murder of Stalin's friend Kirov set off a series of reprisals
and demonstration trials: in 1936 Zimoviev and Kamenev "confessed" plots against Stalin; in
1937 Radek and five thousand others were executed for plotting with Trotsky or Hess, or
committing sabotage of one kind or another; then came the turn of Marshal Tukhachevsky and
seven generals purged for conspiring with an "unfriendly power." By 1938 no dissent could be
heard in Russia.
Religious persecution was accentuated during this period, with special vehemence during
1929-30 and 1937-38, The attack began with the closing of churches-1,440 during 1929-and this
continued whenever and wherever expedient. The clergy were prosecuted in large numbers:
imprisoned, executed, deported, or relegated to rural areas; at one time 150 bishops were under
arrest. The revolutionary six-day week with periodic labor shifts, in force from 1929 to 1940,
played havoc with religious observance. Once again the 1929 Constitution proclaimed "freedom
of religious cult and of antireligious propaganda": all proselytizing was banned, while the atheistic
program was accelerated. Positively atheistic education became obligatory, and the Militant
Atheist League used physical and moral pressure to discourage fidelity to religion. Training
schools and study clubs in atheism and materialism were sponsored. During 1934-37 a lull
occurred: during 1934 a stricter domestic morality was imposed, and in 1935 the anti-Easter
campaign was so far abandoned as to sanction sale of Easter cakes. Christmas trees and
wedding rings came back on the market. Despite these trifling baits, in 1937 indictment and
arrest of the clergy was resumed, and this time chiefly on charges of lack of patriotism. More
churches were closed: Timasheff cites 1,100 Orthodox, 240 Catholic, 61 Protestant, and 110
Mohammedan religious edifices closed during 1937. Despite some courting of the New Deal by
allowing an American priest at Moscow, the Soviet government did not deviate from a basic policy
of extermination of religion during this period. Monsignor Frizon, Catholic administrator of
Odessa, was shot in 1937.
Stalinist religious policy during this period did manifest some analogies to the French
Thermidorian reaction, but it will be recalled that Thermidor was followed by a "Second Terror."
The 1936 Stalinist Constitution proclaimed freedom of religion and restored to the clergy their civil
rights-but this document in its entirety means simply what the Communist dictatorship wishes it to
signify. During 1939-40 another lull in persecution began, and the government embarked on a
new compromise, possibly suggested in an interview with the modernist prelate Kallistratos of
Georgia who asserted that communism and Christianity were not opposed and would eventually
fuse. After the Nazi invasion of 1941, moreover, Metropolitan Sergius of Moscow declared that
the Orthodox Church would support the national government in its peril. As invaders opened the
churches, Stalin's government in desperation turned to the Church as a patriotic agency. A
puppet patriarch was installed in 1943, and Orthodox antipathies against Catholics, Latin or
Ruthenian, were encouraged. In March, 1946, the 1596 Reunion of Brest was declared
abrogated and all non-Latin Catholics subjected to the Stalinist Patriarch of Moscow, both in
Russia and in the satellite countries. The Militant Atheist League was suppressed in 1942, and
the more blatant antireligious propaganda discontinued. Crude massacres and public tortures
were abandoned for more secret and subtle methods of "brainwashing." Yet down to Stalin's
death in 1953, Timasheffs words, written in 1942, remained valid: "Never forget that the 'New
Religious Policy' is merely a compromise, reluctantly accepted for compelling reasons, and
contrary to the convictions of the government. Hence the concessions are precarious."
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
A. Fragments of Czardom
Introduction. Dissolution of the Russian, Austro-Hungarian, and German monarchies
gave rise to a number of "succession states" in Central Europe and the Balkans, national
fragments endowed with "sovereign" existence by the Wilsonian principle at the Versailles
Conference, without sufficient consideration as to whether they were viable as states or not.
Latvia. Latvia, besides coming under the same suzerains as Estonia, had also been
ruled by Poland for a time before gaining its independence, 1918-40. Catholics had numbered
about twenty-five per cent of the population. During Soviet occupation, 1940-41, some thirty-four
thousand Catholics and Lutherans were killed, and several priests brutally slain. Nazi occupation
permitted religious services once more, but on the return of the Reds, bishops and priests were
deported to Siberia in large numbers: 50 of 187 priests "disappeared."
Lithuania had once been a powerful state which, with the Ukraine, extended to the Black
Sea. United with Poland since 1386 by a common ruler, it was legally merged with that country in
1569 by the Lublin Union, and shared its fate of partition, 1772-95. When resuscitated, 1918-40,
eighty per cent of Lithuania's three million inhabitants were Catholics. Russian annexation
quickly led to closing of Catholic schools and suppression of the ecclesiastical press. By 1948
there were seven hundred priests, but half of the 1940 total; by 1954, their number had fallen to
four hundred, and these were severely restricted in their ministrations. In 1953 all but one of the
bishops had been slain or deported.
Ukraine. This was the motherland of the Russian or Ruthenian Rite, and it contained
many Catholics after the Brest Reunion of 1596. These, however, had been subjected to
pressures after Russian annexation from Poland-Lithuania during the seventeenth century. Prior
to 1939 the area contained some 3,500,000 Catholics and 2,200 priests of the Ruthenian Rite
worked in Ukraine and Galicia. The Reds at once expelled the Latin bishops, but forebore to
disturb the respected Ruthenian metropolitan, Monsignor Szeptyckyj, until his death in 1944.
Although Khrushchev attended the funeral, the metropolitan's successor Slipyj and four other
bishops were imprisoned in April, 1945. A weak and kindly nepotist, Monsignor Kostelnyk, was
named vicar-capitular, and in March, 1946, proclaimed at Soviet dictation the dissolution of the
Brest Union. According to Orthodox computation, 1,111 priests accepted the new union with
Muscovy; this would mean that at least 900 openly refused. Similar forcible annexations to
Muscovite Orthodoxy occurred in the Carpatho-Ukraine, and indeed wherever Soviet power
extended.
Soviet domination. Nazi collapse brought Russian troops into possession of Poland and
their puppet Lublin Government, to which in 1943 the Soviets transferred recognition from the
London regime, practically ignored Yalta demands for free, representative government. As a
price of continued Soviet-Polish alliance, Stalin insisted on the "Curzon Line," renamed the
"Molotov-Ribbentrop Line," Poland obtaining German Silesia and East Prussia in exchange.
Under protests from the United States, some gestures toward Democracy were made until 1947
when as a result of a subtly terrorized "plebiscite," the provisional government was proclaimed
"constitutional." Poland remained simply a Soviet satellite until 1956 when a nationalist, though
Communist, uprising under Gomulka secured for the country a greater measure of autonomy, still
under Soviet suzerainty.
Communist persecution. In 1945 the Concordat was repudiated and during 1946 the
Ruthenian Catholics were arbitrarily subjected to the Muscovite puppet patriarch. Caritas, a
Catholic relief organization, was suppressed in 1949, though a bogus group usurped its name.
From 1949 the Reds tried to organize "patriot priests," ostensibly to defend the new Polish-
German frontier from revision. Of eleven thousand priests, an estimated seventeen hundred,
mostly ex-Nazi prisoners, joined this movement which denounced German bishops. A political
party called the "Catholic Social Club" elected several deputies, but was rebuked by the Vatican.
In 1950 the government exacted from the hierarchy an ambiguous endorsement, twisted into an
approbation of a Soviet "peace plan." In virtue of this pact, certain paper concessions to the
Church were made, and religious instruction was still able to be held. But in 1953 a campaign
against the hierarchy commenced with the arrest of Cardinal Wyszynski and six other bishops.
By the end of the year, 37 priests had been killed, 260 were missing, 350 deported, 700
imprisoned, 700 in exile. Impeded sees were filled by "patriotpriests" as vicars. But though the
government could at times lure a thousand "patriot-priests" to meetings, those actually
collaborating with its schemes were about one hundred or one per cent of the entire Polish clergy.
Church property was nationalized and the press destroyed. In virtue of the October, 1956,
uprising, however, the Cardinal was freed and five bishops allowed to resume their sees. The
following December it was agreed that religion be an "optional, extracurricular subject, given by
teachers appointed jointly by the school and Church authorities, and paid for by the state."
Several Catholic publications reappeared, and the favor toward the "patriot-priests" diminished.
But the regime continued Communist and termination of anti-Catholic persecution seemed
unlikely. Great external demonstrations of Faith, indeed, were followed by a government raid on
the shrine of Czestowchowa during the summer of 1958.
B. Habsburg Heirs
(1) AUSTRIA (1918-55)
Breakup of the Habsburg monarchy at Versailles destroyed a working economic unit in
favor of racial and political distinctions. Austria was faced with a pressing economic problem
barely capable of solution within her reduced borders. Though the Allies temporarily righted her
finances, she was prevented by neighboring tariff walls from obtaining sufficient foodstuffs or
markets for her industrial products, Versailles vetoed an Austrian resolution in favor of union with
the nascent German Republic, and in 1931 France blocked even so much as a customs union
with that state. Yet either union might well have preserved the Catholic and democratic regimes
in both lands.
Austrian parties trying to cope with her domestic problems included the Marxian Social
Democrats who were strong in Vienna, and the Christian Democrats prevailing in the rural areas-
Soviet envoys were rejected by the workers themselves. The 1920 Constitution strove to prevent
domination by either party, but mutual suspicions continued. In the absence of a national army,
outlawed by the Peace, Austria was plagued with the Social Democrat Schutzbund and the
semifascist Heimwehr of Ernst Stahremberg: militia which clashed annually. Christian
Democrats, led by Monsignor Ignatz Seipel, chancellor from 1922 to 1924, and 1926 to 1929,
administered the central government and preserved good relations with the Vatican with which a
concordat was reached in 1934. Nazi rise to power cooled Austrian desires for union with
Germany, and Monsignor Seipel's successor, Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss (1932-34), hitherto in
favor of it, accepted Heimwehr support in order to pursue an independent course. Governmental
authority was strongly asserted and a bickering parliament dissolved after the resignation of all its
presidents. Thereafter, Austria was ruled by decree. A new constitution proclaimed a "corporate
state" purporting to be based on papal teaching, but this never commanded the support of more
than a third of the people and was scarcely put into operation. Dollfuss suppressed the Socialist
Schutzbund by a veritable siege of Vienna, but himself fell victim to a Nazi assassination plot. His
successor, Kurt von Schuschnigg (1934-38), upright but inexperienced, tried to avert annexation
with Italian support. The forging of the Berlin-Rome Axis doomed independent Austria, which fell
to Nazi Germany by a bloodless invasion and a ninety-nine per cent "plebiscite," April, 1938.
Nazi Anschluss caused Austrian Catholics to share the trials of their German brethren
from 1938 to 1945, although as co-nationalists of the Herrenvolk they were spared some of the
persecution of Slavic Catholics. The 1934 Concordat was practically abrogated, schools closed,
and property confiscated. All public support or subsidies of the Catholic Church ceased in April,
1940, and this arrangement has been accepted as permanent.
Post-War Austria was reconstituted as an independent state, but lay under American-
British-Frencb-Soviet occupation until 1955. The 1945 elections gave the new Catholic People's
Party eighty-four seats, the Social Democrats seventy-six, and the Communists but five.
Although the veteran Socialist statesman Renner was given the titular presidency (1946-50), the
more influential chancellorship went to the Catholic Leopold Figl (1945-53). Under him and his
successor Julius Raab Austria regained her freedom which she retains precariously just outside
the Iron Curtain. After 1945 most of the confiscated church property was restored, Catholic
schools reopened, and deported priests returned. Catholic political newspapers, however, were
not revived: greater stress was now laid upon distinction of Church and state.
Kingless monarchy. From 1920 to 1945 Hungary was officially a kingdom, provisionally
ruled by a regent, Admiral Nicholas Horthy-who no longer had a navy in postwar landlocked
Hungary. An agrarian regime was begun which worked fairly well until the world depression
reduced the market for Hungarian wheat. Though a Calvinist, Horthy respected the
predominantly Catholic religion of the Hungarians. But despite protests of the Catholic hierarchy,
many Catholics as well as Protestants, claiming that Bela Kun's rule had been Jewish inspired,
retaliated with violent anti-Semitism. Jews were forbidden to lease land, own more than one
house, bold any position in the civil or military service, and efforts were made to deprive them of
cultural positions and advantages. Subsequent political alliance with Nazi Germany naturally did
nothing to discourage this sentiment, and Hungarians co-operated with the Nazis in
dismembering Czechoslovakia and in invading the Balkans. Hungarians as a whole opposed the
Nazis, but were forced into war against the Allies. Between the wars, the Catholic social leader
was Bishop Prohaszka, the future Cardinal Mindszenty's mentor.
Catacomb defiance. The Hungarian hierarchy refrained from useless protests, though
the pope denounced these persecutions in consistory, and the Holy Office in 1949 issued
censures on Catholics claiming membership in the Communist Party. By 1951 some fourteen
hundred priests were reported under arrest, and at least one hundred thousand of the faithful had
been deported. In 1952 Commissar Horvath deplored a "clerical reaction," and the Soviets
repeatedly shifted their governmental puppets. Stalin's death provoked protests against
collectivism, and Rakosi was ousted for Imre Nagy, a non-Communist. After two years of
economic failure, the Hungarians staged a desperate revolt which freed Cardinal Mindszenty,
who took refuge in the American embassy. But Russian military might was able to crush external
dissent in blood, and religious instruction, resumed during the rising, was again outlawed in
January, 1957. A new propaganda campaign against the clergy was launched.
Religious rivalry. Though three-fourths of the people were nominally Catholic, dissident
groups were more influential. In 1919 the government began to expropriate large estates for
redistribution to peasants. When church lands were taken with paltry compensation, pious
Slovak peasants clashed with Czech Liberals. The government, objecting to German and
Magyar bishops, sponsored in 1920 a "National Church," feted John Hus, and broke off relations
with the Vatican. At its height, the schism claimed a membership of 1,300,000 and obtained
possession of a number of Catholic churches. But sturdy Catholic resistance was aroused and in
1928 the government abandoned its attacks and reached a modus vivendi with the Holy See.
Diocesan boundaries were redrawn to correspond with national frontiers; some confiscated land
was restored; provision was made for religious instruction; and the government was allowed
some say in the choice of bishops. A few ritual concessions (e.g., chanting the Epistle and
Gospel in Slovenian) were made by the Holy See.
Nazi persecution followed soon after the Munich Conference awarded Czech territories to
Germany. Tiso became a Nazi collaborator in 1939 when Hitler incorporated the whole of
Czechoslovakia; once the Nazis had fallen, Tiso was executed-without Vatican intervention. The
Nazis withdrew state aid from Catholic education, and curbed all ecclesiastical organizations.
They arrested 371 priests, of whom 73 died in prison, and 70,000 persons were confined to
concentration camps.
Red persecution. Benes returned in 1945 with a pledge of collaboration with Soviet
Russia. He found himself practically subject to the local Communist boss, Klement Gottwald,
who soon replaced him as president (1948-53). The Reds nationalized industry and wooed
peasants with a schismatic church. In June, 1949, the Holy See had to denounce a Red-
sponsored "Catholic Action" group. In February, 1948, Archbishop Beran had been put under
house arrest, and from 1949 general prosecution of bishops and priests got under way, with the
government intruding collaborationist "vicars" into the places of those arrested. By 1955 thirteen
bishops had been thus replaced by "patriotic vicars." Despite the revolts in Hungary and Poland
during 1956, Communist control of Czechoslovakia continued to be one of the most complete.
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
Pre-Fascist situation. Democratic government had never been a reality in Savoyard Italy.
Cliques of professional politicians despoiled the land in turn by tacit agreement, perhaps the only
thing on which they agreed. In 1919 the Catholic Partito Popolare of Don Luigi Sturzo secured
120 seats in parliament, and tried to push through social and agrarian reforms. But the
anticlericals would neither co-operate with the Catholics nor remove the social disorders which
bred Socialism, represented by 156 Marxist deputies. From 1919 the Socialists used strikes to
paralyze industry. The capitalists and industrial managers were kidnapped or killed and
propertied classes terrorized. By September, 1920, they had six hundred industries under their
control while the Liberal ministries of Giolitti, Bonomi, and Facta seemed bankrupt in money and
ideas. Inflation contributed to disorganization of industry and trade; Italy's resources were
inadequate for a rapidly growing population, and national pride was wounded by the Allies' refusal
to grant all the Italian territorial demands, e.g., Fiume, Trentino. The time was ripe for energetic
action.
Benito Mussolini (1886-1945), an ex-Socialist educated in Italy and Switzerland under the
syndicalist Sorrel, had broken with the Socialists in regard to patriotic support of Italian
participation in World War I. After the war be and other ex-soldiers organized the Fascisti di
combatto (1919). With clubs, guns, and castor oil these Fascists set out to beat the Marxists at
their own game of violence. Rightly or wrongly, they took credit for a lessening of the strikes.
They fused with the poet D'Annunzio's Nationalists who had protested the government's pacific
Balkan policy. During a national Fascist congress early in 1922 Mussolini threatened to seize rule
if it were not surrendered to him. When in October, 1922, Fascists commenced a "march on
Rome," Premier Facta requested a state of siege order from the king. Victor Emmanuel III,
however, refused, and replaced Facta with Mussolini. It was the little king's last independent act
until he dismissed Il Duce in 1943.
Fascist theory had been ultimately based on Hegelian philosophy, but more proximately
on Nietzsche's double morality: a master code for the strong and virile, a "Christian-Democratic"
morality for the weak or humble. A new race of supermen were to discard the latter "servile"
standard, and glorify reckless force. At first Mussolini professed no official theory, for he claimed
that truth was less to be had by reasoning than by intuition: "Before all I trust to my insight. What
it is I don't know, but it is infallible." The masses, be contended, were emotional and irrational.
Fascism would force such men to be good by causing them to conform to their real wills: e.g., a
governmental fiat of the state. Guided by 11 Duce, the Fascist state would lay down the law, for
all men would prefer this if they really knew what was best for them. Since the Hegelian concept
of the state is "the divine idea on earth," Fascism remained in absolute possession of the truth,
and had no need of "dogmas, saints, salvation, heaven, charlatans." All is in the state and for it,
though in practice some expedient concessions might temporarily be made to the Holy See. In
aspiration, however, Fascists remained totalitarian, an absolute dictatorship of one man and his
party.
Foreign affairs at first exalted and then destroyed Fascism. Il Duce dreamed of making
the Adriatic an Italian lake: he bombed Corfu in reprisal for the deaths of members of an Italian
commission (1923); he reappropriated Fiume (1924); he annexed Albania (1939). From 1934 to
1936 be successfully defied the sanctions of the League of Nations in order to conquer Ethiopia,
thus avenging a rankling Italian reverse of 1898. Cries of "Tunisia, Savoja, Nizza" were permitted
to street agitators until in 1940 Mussolini allied himself with Hitler to "stab France in the back." But
in so doing the Italian dictator fatally antagonized the Pax Brittanica-Americana in a vain attempt
to resurrect the Pax Romana and Mare Nostrum. Dismissed in 1943 in the course of severe
military defeats, Mussolini lingered on as a Nazi puppet until he died in miserable fashion at the
hands of irregular troops. He had displayed intelligence and statesmanship in large measure, but
during the years of his power had revealed no true appreciation of supernatural Christianity.
Striving to make Italy a great power, he removed her from the ranks of European powers. It is
thought-provoking that after the vaunted Fascist suppression of Marxism by violence, the Italian
scene after Fascism greatly resembled the social chaos preceding the "march on Rome."
B. Fascist-Papal Polemics
(1) CONFLICTING IDEALS
Mussolini's view of Christianity--whatever his private opinion--was officially expressed in
reporting the Lateran Pact to the Senate: "Within the state, the Church is not sovereign and it is
not even free. It is not free because in its institutions and its men it is subjected to the general
laws of the state and is even subject to the special clauses of the Concordat. . . . Christianity was
born in Palestine, but became Catholic in Rome. If it had been confined to Palestine it would in
all probability never have been more than one of the numerous sects which flourished in that
overheated environment The chances are that it would have perished and left no trace We have
buried the popes' temporal. power, and not resuscitated it Any other regime than ours may
believe it useful to renounce the education of the younger generations. In this field I am
intractable. Education must be ours. Our children must be educated in our religious faith, but we
must round out this education and we need to give our youths a sense of virility and the power of
conquest. . . ."
Papal rebuttal, presented the next day, May 14, 1929, was firm: "The state should interest
itself in education, but the state is not made to absorb and annihilate the family, which would be
absurd and against nature, for the family comes before society and before the state. The state
should perfect the activities of the family in full correspondence with the desires of the father and
mother, and it should especially respect the divine right of the Church in education. . . . We
cannot admit that in its educational activities the state shall try to raise up conquerors or to
encourage conquests. What one state does in this line all the others can do. What would
happen if all the states educated their people for conquest? Does such education contribute to
general world pacification? We can never agree with anything which restricts or denies the right
which nature and God gave the Church and the family in the field of education. On this point we
are not merely intractable; we are uncompromising. We are uncompromising just as we would be
forced to be uncompromising if asked: how much does two plus two make? Two plus two makes
four and it is not our fault if it does not make five or six or fifty. When it is a question of saving a
few souls and impeding the accomplishment of greater damage to souls, we feel courage to treat
with the devil in person-and it was exactly with the purpose of preventing greater evil that we
negotiated with the devil some time ago when the fate of our dear Catholic Scouts was decided.
We have made great sacrifices in order to prevent greater evils, but we gave witness to the great
grief we felt at being so much restricted. Our rights and principles cannot even be discussed.
We have no material force to sustain our uncompromising attitude, but this is no disadvantage,
for truth and right have no need for material force." "I And when Mussolini published his speech to
the senate, the pope in a letter to Cardinal Gasparri, printed June 5, termed this discourse
"heretical, and worse than heretical." He went on to say that he did not object to the statement
that other religions were freely admitted in the Italian state, "provided it is clearly and loyally
understood that the Catholic religion, and the Catholic religion alone, is the state religion with all
the logical and juridical consequences, and provided that . . . the Catholic religion is not merely
one of the many tolerated or permitted religions, but is what the letter and spirit of the Lateran
Treaties and Concordat make it. "
Ethiopian invasion. Don Sturzo was of the opinion that the majority of Italian clerical and
lay publicists defended the Ethiopian contest as a "war for Christian civilization," of the merits of
which Italy, and not the League, was judge. Outside Italy, however, most Catholics denounced
the invasion, Cardinal Verdier of Paris being quite outspoken. The pope, obliged to neutrality by
the Lateran Pact, was in a difficult position. In an allocution of August 27, 1935, however, he
avoided undiscriminating nationalism. Pius XI remarked that if the threatened conflict, as was
believed abroad, were a war of conquest, an offensive war, it would be "truly an unjust war."
There was talk of a war of defense and expansion, but it ought to be recalled that "the right of
defense has its limits and moderation that must not be overstepped if defense is not to be
culpable." And the Osservatore Romano asserted that "the need of expansion is not a right in
itself; it is a fact that must be taken into account, but which is not identified with lawful right." But
Mussolini feared neither pope nor League and overran Ethiopia, setting a precedent for later Axis
seizures.
World War II. Pope Pius XII included Italy in his peace efforts despite Fascist designation
of him as persona non grata before the 1939 conclave. In December, 1939, the pope returned a
royal visit by himself visiting the Quirinal. When the Osservatore Romano reported the war
objectively, including papal letters of sympathy to invaded Belgium and Holland, Fascists again
confiscated its stocks and muzzled it. The Fascist government constrained Vatican freedom,
especially in communicating with the American ambassador, Myron Taylor, but the end of the war
revealed that the Holy See had survived another regime that had sought to dominate it.
Mussolini's fall discredited the monarchy which had so long acquiesced in his
dictatorship, and belated alliance with the Liberal Allies failed to restore its prestige. During 1946
a plebiscite expelled Umberto II and proclaimed the Italian Republic. A new constitution, put into
effect on January 1, 1948, proclaimed complete political, social, and economic Democracy, a
"democratic republic founded on labor." Women were given equal civil rights with men. The
Lateran Treaties were reconfirmed, but freedom of other religions asserted. From 1945 to 1953
Alcide di Gasperi, a disciple of Don Luigi Sturzo, presided over a coalition which successfully
maintained itself against a revived Marxist menace represented by Togliati's Communists. Di
Gasperi's less influential successors carried on an even more precarious ascendancy of the more
conservative elements.
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
Religious status. The Republic separated Church from state, a step usually of benefit to
the Catholic minority. Protestant monarchical summepiscopate ended, and Lutheran state
establishments became private corporations, though sometimes enjoying financial privileges.
During 1922 some twenty-two Lutheran groups formed the German Evangelical Federation which
endured until Nazi attacks. For Catholics, disestablishment swept away relics of Febronian
legislation interfering with discipline, education and communication with Rome, and terminated
vestiges of the Kulturkampf against religious orders. Favorable concordats were made with the
Holy See by Bavaria (1924), Prussia (1929), and Baden (1932). Financial subsidies in lieu of
past confiscations were continued. Although the Socialist President Ebert (1919-25) was
personally somewhat unfriendly toward the Catholic Church, his successor, Paul von Hindenburg
(1925-34), was scrupulously fair. The Weimar era witnessed free development of German
Catholic Action in many fields: youth organizations, social-labor movements, the Catholic press,
and liturgical revival.
Weimar woes. Political and social, rather than religious, issues divided the new Republic.
Socialists and Centrists struggled heroically to meet the harsh terms of Versailles, but leadership
was deficient, the party system undeveloped, and the Moderate Coalition was attacked from each
side for selling out Germany: Communists accused the Socialists of repudiating Marx; Ludendorf
and Hitler developed the "stab in the back" theory that Germany had lost the war through the
cosmopolitan wiles of Socialists, Jews, and Catholics. Yet under Gustav Stresemann, foreign
minister and leading statesman from 1923 to 1929, Germany's rehabilitation seemed possible.
His death in 1929 coincided with the world depression which ended the American loans on which
German revival depended. Centrists divided: a left wing led by Erzberger and Wirth believed in
co-operation with Socialism; Rightists under Kaas and Bruening leaned toward monarchy.
Chancellor Bruening (1930-32) undertook to rule by presidential decree in default of a
parliamentary majority. His efforts to achieve economic readjustment through stringent economy
and orthodox finance imposed sacrifices which lent fuel to Red and Nazi agitation. French veto of
an Austro-German economic bloc and refusal of loans unless involving political commitments
frustrated Bruening abroad. When he proposed agrarian reforms in the Prussian Junker sanctum
be forfeited Hindenburg's confidence. The president turned to the Nationalists: Papen, a
renegade Centrist, Schleicher, a military politician, and at length-Hitler.
Nazi ideology, once completed, comprised these elements: 1) Racism and eugenics were
stressed. From men like MacDougal, Stoddard, Gobinow, Chamberlain, and Gunther was
evolved a theory that men are innately unequal and continue so despite environment. Superiority
is determined by blood and is rare; in fact, it is confined largely to Aryan, especially Nordic, races.
Nordics, predominating in Germany, were truthful, intelligent, taciturn, cautious, steady, technical,
warlike, dominant. Theirs had been the great deeds of the past. At present Jewish contamination
must be cast out of the German nation so that a pure Nordic strain can be restored. Anglo-
American ideas of equality to the contrary, inferior races need domination. In his Myth of the
Twentieth Century, Alfred Rosenberg gave the movement its Weltanschauung: a racial world
outlook based on "blood and soil." This is "inexpressible, ineluctable, untranslatable,
infallible"-and, it might be added, quite unscientific. 2) Irrationalism. People, Nazi philosophers
declared, are for the most part stupid and feminine: they do not think. Strong men feel and enjoy
intuition. The state ought to cultivate strong bodies and emotional attitudes, not logic, for "feeling
decides more accurately than reason." This theory Hitler used to justify his "leader-principle," a
rationalization of his own brilliant, but eventually tragically fallible, intuition. For the Nordic, morals
differ: what advances the group is moral; what profits the Nazis must be right. Physics, science,
religion, even mathematics, must be tinged with Nazi views, 3) Idealism. Hegel had stressed
mind and idea, but the Nazis reversed this to fit their blood theory. Their creed demanded virtue
more than pleasure: Liberalism is selfish: it says "I." Christianity is all-embracing: it invites
"All." The Nazis, however, cultivate an elite: "We." Self-abnegation subjecting an individual to the
folk must be the Nazi ideal. Only supermen ought to rule, and they will be determined by force,
not ballots. 4) Anti-Semitism. Since democracy is supposedly Jewish and unfair to the superman,
the Jew, already unpopular in Germany, was made a Nazi scapegoat, as Hitler's private phobia
was utilized as the personification of evil. Anything the Nazis opposed was discovered to be
Jewisb-and at length, of course, Christianity.
Nazi campaigning. Hitler, who claimed to have studied Barnum's showmanship and
American gangster methods, acquired a shrewd propaganda chief in Goebbels. From 1921
Hitler, scorning consistency or truth, adapted his views to the audience and grievance of the
moment. His Nazis appealed to all the discontented and uprooted, and to the middle class,
ruined by the currency collapse, they promised economic reforms. Capitalists were assured of
protection against Communism; workers were guaranteed jobs by a Nazi regime. Monarchists
were led to hope in a restoration of the throne. Patriots were aroused by denunciation of the
Versailles "dictated peace," and the continuing German political and military inferiority among
nations. Youth were inveigled by insignia, marching, noise, games. Hitler's first bid for power
through revolt in Bavaria during 1923 merely led to a jail sentence. He utilized this to turn out a
Nazi masterpiece, Mein Kampf. Soon liberated, his appeal thereafter varied in inverse ratio to
economic prosperity.
Nazi-dammerung. Hitler had predicted a thousand years for the Third Reich as for the
First. But his foreign propaganda erred; at least its frank arrogance and brutality found fewer
protagonists and white-washers than Communist crimes and lies. Nazi Germany had strained
every nerve to reverse the verdict of World War 1, and its armies far surpassed the military
conquests of the Second Reich. But peace with Britain and Russia could not be had, and behind
these stood the United States, involved in the conflict by Japanese treachery. Eventually,
superior Allied manpower and resources overcame the soldiers of the Third Reich and pushed
them back into their own lands. Amid a hail of bombs Hitler evaded human justice by committing
suicide in his Berlin hide-out.
Catholic concordat. In regard to the Catholic Church, of which he had been nominally a
member, Hitler adopted a temporizing policy, influenced by his hope of annexing the Catholic
Saarland by League plebiscite in 1935. He used Papen to negotiate a Concordat with the Holy
See, July 20, 1933. By its terms Catholics were to renounce political activity through Centrism in
exchange for religious liberty. Hitler easily promised all that was demanded by the Holy See,
with, it seems, the deliberate intention of repudiating his pledges as soon as practicable. Hitler's
real views were: "Religions are all alike, no matter what they call themselves. They have no
future-certainly none for the Germans. Fascism, if it likes, may come to terms with the Church.
So shall I, why not? That will not prevent me from tearing up Christianity root and branch and
annihilating it in Germany."
Persecution of the Church began in earnest in 1935 and proved severe despite Nazi
disclaimers of its existence. At first every effort was made to discredit the clergy by cartoons,
loud-speaking trucks, "exposes," and trials of clerics for alleged moral lapses. Chanceries were
searched for incriminating documents, communication with Rome hindered, mails and phones
tapped. Fines and imprisonment were inflicted upon outspoken clerics, but though the Nazis
claimed 7,000 convictions, actually of 25,634 German priests but 49 were accused and 21
convicted of moral frailty, Nazi propaganda represented the Church as unpatriotic, hoarding
wealth; its clerics as idle and avaricious. Catholic Action in all its forms was curtailed by threats,
decrees, or violence administered by party thugs. Catholic workers were forced into state unions;
Catholic youths into the Hitler-Jugend; Catholic welfare organizations restricted or abolished.
Catholic schools were at first annoyed, and then, by April 1, 1940, wholly converted to state or
party uses. Religious instruction by the clergy was confined to the church premises or the home,
while anti-Christian teaching was imparted in the public schools. Catholic libraries were gradually
"expurgated," and the Catholic press, especially after its bold publication of Mit Brennender Sorge
in 1937, confiscated or muzzled. The sermon-carefully monitored' by Nazi observers-remained
the sole means of communication for the hierarchy, but the German bishops spoke out boldly and
repeatedly. Clerics were forced into military service and recruitment cut off. Brazen use of
euthanasia on mental defectives, Jews, and other political prisoners revealed a regime that
rejected not merely Christian but natural standards of morality. Everywhere in Germany the
Cross of Christ was faced with the horrible caricature: the "twisted cross" of the Nazi Swastika.
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
Transition. Prewar France had been in a frenzied condition since the Franco-Prussian
War. Its elan had been nourished on hatred for Germany which alone united a host of
irreconcilable parties. Desire for revenge had been sufficient to rally even supposedly
cosmopolitan Socialists to France's support in 1914, and the military peril, combined with clerical
loyalty, had eased the anticlerical animus. After an exhausting struggle, victory had been won at
the cost of over a million casualties among a declining population of forty million. After the war,
then, the problems of reconstruction and of security were paramount.
Reparations. Local districts, devastated by the war, sent in reports of losses often
estimated at five times the 1914 valuation. Despite a depreciated franc, these claims were too
high, but the state reimbursed private individuals lavishly in the expectation of being
recompensed from German reparation payments. But while a "Budget of Recoverable
Expenditures" liberally and corruptly dispensed 21 billion francs, Germany eventually repaid only
250 millions. This and other causes produced severe economic crisis. In fear of Communism,
Rightists formed a bloc in which Millerand, Briand, and Poincare were prominent. An attempt to
make the Germans pay, culminating in seizure of the Ruhr, ended in failure. This and the Leftist
dissatisfaction with Rightist leniency toward clericalism, overthrew the bloc in the 1924 elections.
The Left Cartel (1924-26), led by Herriot, adopted a conciliatory police toward Germany,
but a hostile attitude toward the Vatican. The Soviet Union was recognized, but Herriot's attempt
to revive the anticlerical issue and to extend the ban on religious education to the newly
recovered Alsace-Lorraine found most Frenchmen apathetic. Interest on the national debt was
continually rising and reparations were barely trickling in from Germany. Afraid to tax cautious
French bourgeoisie, the Cartel attempted inflation in vain. Finally, failure to readjust finances
caused the Cartel's fall.
The National Union (1926-32) was a coalition of former President Poincare and six ex-
premiers. Armed with dictatorial financal powers, Poincare imposed heavy taxes, reduced
expenditures, balanced the budget, and stabilized the franc. Reparations resumed for a brief
period, the costs of reconstruction terminated, and 1927 proved a boom year. Hence, the Union
was endorsed in the 1928 election. Though Poincare himself retired in 1929, the Conservatives
remained in office until 1932 under the Rightist ministries of Laval and Tardieu. Having disposed
of the damage of the last war, every effort was made to secure future security for France by
isolating Germany through alliances. The Maginot Line was commenced. In 1930 France
evacuated the German Rhineland, ending her stranglehold on German recovery, but within six
years Nazi reoccupation and remilitarization of this crucial zone would signalize the shift of
military preponderance from France to Germany.
(2) FRENCH INSTABILITY (1932-44)
The Left Cartel returned after a victory in the 1932 elections, but its tenure of office was
brief. Anticlerical gestures by Herriot were again ignored by the populace in the face of renewed
economic stress. For France suffered by adhering to the gold standard after the rest of the world
had begun to desert it in the wake of the great depression. Production fell off in France and
unemployment increased. Hence, in December, 1932, the Herriot ministry was overthrown for
insisting on French debt repayment to the United States.
The totalitarian menace then loomed large during a period of unstable ministries. During
1934 severe Parisian riots were provoked by the Stavisky Case, in which leading politicians
seemed to be involved in fraudulent foreign speculation. Rightist agitation for the overthrow of
the Third Republic found its greatest opportunity since the Dreyfus Affair. Charles Maurras of
Action Francaise backed his youthful "Camelots du Roi," Colonel de la Roque organized a pro-
Fascist "Croix de Feu" group; and the "Blue Shirts" of the Solidarite Francaise made a good deal
of noise. Premier Daladier had a Parisian mob fired upon, killing eighteen. He was dismissed in
disgrace, and a coalition summoned to save the Republic. Ex-president Doumergue as premier
stabilized finances, but was overthrown in turn on proposing a conservative change in the
constitution. Abroad, Hitler's advent to power, Mussolini's defiance of the League in Ethiopia, and
his alliance with the Nazis, and Franco's rebellion in Spain frightened French Liberals with the
spectre of Fascist encirclement.
The Popular Front (1936-38) of Leon Blum and Camille Chautemps represented an
alliance of these Liberals with Communist and Socialist groups, who were then stressing
Moscow's propaganda line of cooperation with Democracy in a common front against Fascism.
Though Blum's government lent all but official assistance to Communist intervention in Spain, it
would seem that French Communists gave no sincere co-operation in return on the home front. If
they endorsed suppression of Fascist groups within France, their strikes, if not their sabotage,
weakened national defense against Germany. Blum's imitation of the American New Deal failed
to satisfy his supporters or to solve France's financial problems. Eventually the Popular Front
was turned out of office, and the grim Daladier returned with an austere defense program.
Failure of the Communists and Socialists to endorse the Munich Pact, momentarily hailed by
French Liberals, dissolved the Popular Front.
World War II revealed a decay of French spirit; at any rate, there was total
unpreparedness for modern methods of conflict. French Liberals, under the leadership of
Premiers Daladier and Reynaud, could offer little more consolation for military disasters than
frantic appeals to the United States for aid and vague exhortations to fight on in the French
colonies. Military realists, beaded by Marshall Petain, considered such plans visionary. Actuated
by a desire to spare France needless suffering, but also displaying a senile pessimism, Main
assumed a thankless premiership and capitulated to the Nazis on terms of German occupation of
two-thirds of France. On July 11, 1940, Main virtually abolished the Third Republic in favor of a
provisional dictatorship under himself as chief of state and Laval as active administrator. The
dictatorship (1940-44) had a distinctly Rightist tinge and made a few anti-Semitic gestures to
placate the Nazis. But despite public repudiation of De Gaulle's "Free French" forces and the
Allies, Petain secretly treated with the latter and never surrendered essential points to the Nazis.
Vatican relations. Such distinguished Catholic loyalty had elicited a tribute even from
Premier Clemenceau in 1919. Hence, the Rightist Bloc, chosen in 1919, proposed the reopening
of diplomatic relations with the Vatican. This move was delayed by an unexpected protest by
several French bishops that they were "unanimous in their respectful resistance." It is possible
that they feared that a Vatican accord would accrue to the prestige and longevity of the Third
Republic, for whose overthrow the popular Maurras clamored. Diplomatic relations were
nonetheless resumed in 1921, and in January, 1924, Pope Pius XI in the letter Maximam
proposed that the lay cultural associations be revised in keeping with both canon and civil law.
Though both President Millerand and Premier Poincare endorsed this solution, they were turned
out of office in May, 1924, by Herriot who again severed Vatican relations. The new premier
insisted on re-enforcement of the Ferry Laws against some religious who had returned to France.
When several clerical war veterans retorted, "We shall not go," they were well sustained by public
opinion. Herriot also met defeat in his effort to abolish religious schools in Alsace-Lorraine which
had been under German rule at the time of the French Separation Laws. Except for another brief
flurry in 1932, anticlericalism was thenceforth on the wane in the politics of the Third Republic.
Diplomatic relations were soon resumed with Rome, and became cordial while Abbe Charles-
Roux served as French ambassador from 1932 to 1940. Religious were allowed to resume
instructional tasks without molestation, and ecclesiastical authorities were not disturbed in the use
of church properties. The anticlerical laws, still on the statute books, were suspended by Petain
in 1940.
Catholic Action, in order to combat the mounting threat of Marxism in France, had
stressed workingmen's associations. ID 1887 Brother Dieron of the Christian Brothers had
organized the first Catholic trade union for men, and in 1902 a Daughter of Charity founded the
first for women. These and other Catholic social organizations were joined during 1919 into a
Confederation Francaise des Travailleurs Chretiens. This contributed to the defeat of a general
rail strike the following year. Among the younger workers, Canon Cardijn's Jocist movement
spread from neighboring Belgium into France in 1926, while priest-workers, some heroic, others
venturesome, returned to Pauline norms of the apostolate. A small political party, the Democrates
Populaires led by George Bidault, came into being, though scarcely prominence, during the
1930's.
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
A. Spain (1874-1953)
Monarchical retoration. The violently anti-Catholic First Republic had been overthrown
late in 1874 by the generals-who would serve the Second in like fashion. The restored monarch,
Alfonso XII (187485), self-styled "good Catholic and good Liberal," was the soul of tact in
appeasing factions, and the 1876 Constitution compromised between Carlist absolutism and
extreme Liberalism. Two parliamentary parties, the Conservatives under Canovas del Castillo (d.
1897) and the Liberals headed by Sagasta (d. 1903), alternated in office. In 1887 a "law of
associations" subjected religious to civil registry, and in 1901, 1906, and 1911-12 anticlericalism
tried to apply this and similar regulations to the detriment of clerical freedom and religious
instruction. None of these attempts had any lasting success; relations with Rome, momentarily
interrupted, were restored in 1912, and no major conflict occurred until 1931. But Maura's plan of
conservative modernization failed of enough support.
Social discontent. In Spain the Church and the Monarchy were the sole unifying
agencies; elsewhere a proud Catalan and Basque regionalism survived, and political co-operation
was hindered by traditional Iberian aversion to compromise. Yet some social changes were
imperative. Farming and industry were relatively undeveloped, although the fault lay as much
with Spain as with the Spaniards. It is possible that the Spanish hierarchy, in virtue of the royal
patronage, was somewhat too complacent to the status quo, but in any event it lacked the
material resources to effect a social transformation. Ever since extensive confiscation began
during the nineteenth century, clerical revenues were far from excessive. Peers I" estimated that
the average bishop had but $5,000 a year, while ordinary clerics might range between $150 and
$600. Yet the idea persisted in certain circles in Spain and abroad that the Church was
immensely wealthy. Beginning in 1910, Cardinal Aguirre publicized a program of Catholic Action,
but since 1879 Marxist Action had been at work as expounded by the Socialist Pablo Iglesias (d.
1925), while Bakunin's Anarchism advanced an ever more drastic program. The working class,
largely centered in Barcelona and Madrid, was roused by the new ideas and from 1909 a series
of strikes paralyzed industry. During the "Tragic Week" of riots (1909), moreover, sixtythree
churches and convents were burned in Barcelona.
Dictatorship, mildly imitative of Italian Fascism, was the cure proposed by Primo de
Rivera (1923-30). Though Rivera was not totalitarian, his son Jose founded the Falange (1933)
which exhibited such tendencies. The dictator indeed repressed Red disturbances and
maintained military discipline, but be solved no basic problems. Lacking political experience,
Rivera could administer efficiently, but failed to reconcile divergent groups. III health induced him
to resign in 1930, and when his successor, General Berenguer (1930-31) proved unable to carry
on, King Alfonso XIII (1886-1931) announced elections preparatory to the restoration of
parliamentary rule.
A moderate respite followed a Right-Center victory in the 1933 elections. The Right was
divided, however, among reactionary Carlists, moderate Alfonsists, and progressive Falangists,
while the Center comprised not only Robles' Republicans, but the moderate Liberals of Lerroux.
The latter served as premier (1933-35); he was adroit but superficial. Anticlerical legislation was
relaxed and severed relations with the Holy See resumed. But the Socialists refused to co-
operate in progressive legislation, and the Communists disrupted order with riots, strikes, and
assassinations. Effective government became impossible, and President Zamora called for new
elections.
Red terror commenced almost immediately after an electoral triumph of a Popular Front
of Liberals, Socialists, Communists, and Syndicalists. Incendiarism was no longer checked;
anticlerical riots and jailing of Rightists followed; Conservative military leaders were demoted,
sidetracked, or dismissed. On the technicality of having illegally authorized elections, Zamora
was replaced by Azana (1936-39) as head of the "Loyalist" government. In July, the Rightists
charged anarchy, and revolt and civil war followed. Though accuracy seems impossible, it is
conservatively estimated that within a year of February, 1936, ten bishops, six thousand priests,
and sixteen thousand religious or lay leaders were murdered. All churches within Leftist
jurisdiction were closed to worship, and two thousand were damaged or destroyed. Unrestrained
vandalism, iconoclasm, terrorism, lynch law came to be more the rule than the exception in
Loyalist territory down to the end of the Civil War-all these acts were supposedly justified by an
"Emergency Law in defense of the Republic." Anarchist and Communist hate reached insane
proportions. Juan Peiro asserted: "To kill God Himself if He existed . . . would be perfectly
natural." Yet Loyalist propaganda, largely directed from Moscow, was eminently successful in
representing its regime as defending the cause of democracy against "Fascist" aggression, and in
enlisting the sympathy, support, and even the military assistance of the Liberal West. Rightist
sources claim that the Reds killed twelve prelates, 6,700 priests, 2,545 brothers or nuns, 400,000
lay persons, and destroyed or profaned 20,000 churches.
Nationalist rule. The original revolt by the generals had been made in the name of the
Republic, although the leaders were probably monarchist in sentiment. But by October 1, 1936,
Franco had been designated as "chief of state" of a rival government at Burgos. During the Civil
War and the era of Axis supremacy down to 1942, Franco was largely dependent upon the semi-
totalitarian Falange. He was saluted as Il Caudillo, and in an early speech had declared: "Spain
will be organized according to a totalitarian concept . . . with the establishment of a severe
principle of authority." Franco's indebtedness to the Axis for military aid during the Civil War
caused him acute diplomatic distress during World War II, although the United States
Ambassador Carlton Hayes (1942-45) succeeded with President Franklin Roosevelt's backing in
averting a formal break between Spain and the United Nations. After the Allied triumph, however,
Franco's regime was long ostracized by Liberal statesmen to the detriment of economic
assistance urgently needed for Spanish reconstruction. Franco, nevertheless, proved to be a
well-intentioned and comparatively moderate dictator, recognized by most Spanish factions as the
only alternative to renewed partisan strife.
Ecclesiastical status. Few Spanish clerics could regard the Nationalist cause as other
than a crusade, and with Franco's victory the Concordat of 1851 was substantially restored. The
Fuero de los Espanoles of July 13, 1945, declared: "Profession and practice of the Catholic
religion, which is that of the Spanish state, shall enjoy official protection. None shall be molested
for their religious beliefs or their private practice. No other ceremonies or external
demonstrations than those of the Catholic religion are permitted." Although no actual persecution
of the few foreign Protestants followed, the avowed policy of the Fuero remained a hard saying to
Liberals throughout the world. In 1953 the Fuero on religion was incorporated in a new
Concordat with the Holy See. This confirmed the concession made in 1941 of a voice in the
choice of prelates to the Chief of state. Thus, Franco's Spain remained the traditional Catholic
Spain, and his religious policy at least seems to have met with the approbation of the majority of
Spaniards.
B. Portugal (1900-50)
(1) ANTICLERICALISM (1906-26)
Fall of the monarchy. Pseudo-parliamentary constitutional monarchy had existed in
Portugal since the expulsion of the absolutist and staunch clerical, Dom Miguel, in 1834. The
monarchy lost favor with intellectuals and since 1811 a Republican Party claimed the allegiance
of many extreme anticlericals. King Carlos (1889-1910) reputed something of a playboy like his
contemporary, Alfonso XIII of Spain, anticipated his brother monarch in resorting to dictatorship.
In 1906 Carlos entrusted full powers to Joao Franco, but this regime met an early demise in the
assassination of the king and crown prince in 1908. Dom Manoel II the Unfortunate (1908-10),
young and inexperienced, failed to cope with the Republican opposition, who proclaimed the
Portuguese Republic, October 5, 1910.
Religious persecution. The spirit of the new government was secular, and at first
anticlericalism united selfish Republican factions. Pombal's anti-jesuitical legislation was revived
by Afonso Costa, the minister of justice: schools were to be deprived of religious instruction;
ecclesiastical holy days denied civic recognition; and the army forbidden to assist at cult in
uniform. When the Portuguese hierarchy rebuked the government in a joint pastoral, December,
1910, Costa forbade its circulation. For defying the government, the bishop of Oporto was bidden
to Lisbon and "deposed." On April 20, 1911, Liberal anticlericalism took its standard course by
proclaiming separation of Church and state. The Portuguese government seems to have
patterned its legislation on that of the Third French Republic, for ecclesiastical property was
placed at the legal disposal of lay groups entitled "cultural associations." When these were
repudiated by the bishops, the Portuguese Republic broke off diplomatic relations with the
Vatican, protesting prelates were banished on one pretext or another, outspoken priests and
laymen imprisoned, and clerical subsidies suspended. Meanwhile Costa and his "Democratic
Party" publicly announced a program for "extinguishing Catholicism within two generations."
Costa, however, went out of office in January, 1914, and Premier Machado somewhat relaxed the
anticlerical laws and permitted the return of the exiled bishops.
Anarchy. Throughout its entire history the Portuguese Republic remained unstable. In
1915 General Pimenta de Castro overthrew the parliament and set up a dictatorship which
abolished the "cultural associations." But within four months his regime had collapsed and the
Democratic Party had returned to power. In a ministry largely dominated by Freemasons, the
"cultural associations" were restored, arid the patriarch of Lisbon and the bishop of Oporto sent
into exile. General Paiz, another militarist, revoked this legislation during 1918, but was promptly
assassinated. Anticlericalism came back to power in 1919, although ministerial instability and
attempted military uprisings followed one another with monotonous regularity. Inefficiency and
corruption reduced the government to bankruptcy prior to the successful revolt of General
Carmona during May, 1926. The Catholic Church in Portugal, heartened by the apparition of the
Blessed Virgin Mary at Fatima in 1917, had survived the ridicule and persecution of her foes, and
was now promised a respite from vexatious restrictions.
Ecclesiastical affairs. Tension between Church and state had eased after 1918 when the
Portuguese hierarchy at Benedict XV's suggestion had acknowledged the Republic without
reservations. By 1929 accord at last proved possible, though anticlerical habits of thought
persisted. In virtue of an understanding between Portugal and the Vatican in 1940, Church and
state remain formally separated, but the government undertakes to allow only Catholic rites in
connection with governmental celebrations. The bishops are named by the Holy See without any
governmental intervention. Religion remains an extracurricular subject in the state schools.
Catholic marriage as witnessed by priests is civilly recognized when the registration office is
notified, but civil marriage and divorce are available for non-Catholics, who are likewise allowed
freedom of worship in law and in fact.
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
A. Switzerland
Vatican infallibility became the pretext for attacks on the Church. After Liberal Catholics
had joined Protestants in spreading biased reports of the proceedings of the Vatican Council, the
Swiss federal and cantonal governments tried to prevent the bishops from promulgating its
decrees and encouraged the Old Catholic schism. In Basle, Bishop Lachat was driven into a
Catholic corner of his diocese when he suspended the priests Egli and Gechward for refusing to
accept the dogma; parishes were then given to the rebel clergy. During 1872 the Genevois
defied Gaspard Mermillod (1824-92), auxiliary of Bishop Marilley of Lausanne-Geneva, and exiled
him to France, along with the Daughters of Charity and the Little Sisters of the Poor. The Geneva
Civic Council then decreed that henceforth the clergy be named by the laity. In Berne, clerics
were expelled for refusing to accept a "civil constitution," and churches and university chairs
given to the Old Catholics. During 1874 civil positions were bestowed on the Old Catholic prelate
Herzog and the renegade Carmelite Loyson, while federal control over religious affairs in the
cantons was strengthened. Sees might not be established without governmental approval,
episcopal jurisdiction was scrutinized, Jesuits and "affiliates" banished, and neutral state schools
provided. When Pius IX condemned this Kulturkampf in Etsi Multa Luctuosa (1873) the papal
nuncio was dismissed for a decade (1874-84).
Reconciliation came during Leo XIII's pontificate. After the voting strength of Catholics
had been displayed in a referendum rejecting a federal minister of education (1874), negotiations
with the Vatican commenced. Although Bishop Lachat for the sake of peace exchanged the see
of Basle for a new diocese in the Ticino district, hitherto subject to Italian jurisdiction, Bishop
Mermillod returned to become bishop of Lausanne-Geneva and was subsequently named
cardinal. In time secularism mitigated Protestant bigotry, and during 1906 even Calvin's Geneva
separated Church and state. In 1955 anti-Jesuit legislation was mitigated.
B. The Netherlands
(1) HOLLAND (1870-1958)
Educational equality. Although Catholics had gained complete freedom of worship in
1848 and 1853, their interests were threatened by the Liberal-sponsored neutral public schools
established in 1857. When the Liberals confirmed this system in 1878, the Catholics made an
alliance with the Calvinists in order to secure recognition of religious instruction in private schools
(1889). In return for permitting government inspection, these private schools were given
subsidies. In 1894 a chair of Thomistic philosophy was set up at Amsterdam University, and in
1905 Catholics were authorized to erect their own university-though realization of this took time.
By 1909 the Catholic-Calvinist political coalition had defeated the Liberals and Socialists, so that
during 1917 an amended constitution provided complete state aid for private schools. Its Article
192 guaranteed that henceforth the entire cost of primary education, whether in public or private
schools, would be borne by the state. When this provision went into effect in 1921, public schools
had fifty-five per cent of the students; by 1947 over seventy-two per cent of the children were in
private schools teaching religion, and forty-two per cent of these were Catholic. During 1923,
moreover, a Catholic University had been erected at Nijmegen, and this was granted some state
aid in 1948. In 1922 and 1945 the state had pledged support of eighty per cent of the costs of
secondary education.
Political influence. The 1917 constitution, as revised in 1922, completed. the grant of
universal suffrage. In the 1918 elections the Catholic political party won about thirty per cent of
the votes, a proportion which it has generally continued to hold. Indeed, a Catholic, Ruys de
Beerenbrouck, became prime minister from 1918 to 1925. In 1915 a special envoy was sent to
the Vatican. Though this legation lapsed in 1925, it was revived during World War II. Along with
other Dutch organizations, the Catholic Party was dissolved during the Nazi occupation.
Catholics, directed by the courageous Archbishop De Jong of Utrecht, remained loyal to Queen
Wilbelmina (1890-1948). After the war, they reorganized their party, to which non-Catholics were
now admitted as members.
Social welfare has been a matter of keen interest to Dutch Catholics since 1888 when
Father Ariens began a guild of textile workers. After Rerum Novarum, this expanded into local,
diocesan, and national Catholic labor organizations, which helped defeat Socialist tactics during
the Railway Strike of 1903. After Quadragesimo Anno (1931) the Catholic Workers' Union, in co-
operation with the Catholic Peoples' Party, began to urge acceptance of its principles upon the
Dutch legislature. They inspired the Foreman Councils' Act (1933) and the Labor Contract Act
(1937). During the Nazi occupation these organizations were suppressed, but they revived after
the war in order to combat the Cornmunist-dominated United Trade Union. The better to fight
Communism, the Catholic labor groups allied with Protestant and Liberal organizations. Catholics
have also organized a Farmers' Union, which like all these vocational groups, is solicitous for the
religious and cultural welfare of its members, as well as for their economic well-being. In 1948
the Catholic vote was divided among Conservatives and Progressives, so that its influence was
diminished. But in response to an episcopal appeal for unity in 1954, there was a Catholic
resurgence in the 1958 elections, and a Catholic-Socialist alliance gave way to a CatholicLiberal
coalition.
The Social question at once succeeded the educational issue. In 1886 Marxist riots
portended a crisis for Belgian industrialized economy. The Catholic premier, Auguste Beernaert
(1884-94), and his successors met this problem with a thorough program of social legislation-
codes, mininum wages, insurance, etc-and thwarted a Socialist-inspired general strike during
1913. Catholic Social Action was stimulated by Bishop Doutreloux of Liege who presided over
Congresses of Social Work in 1886, 1887, and 1890. From these emerged the Democratic
Christian League for practical social reforms. In 1909 Cardinal Mercier, coming directly from his
neo-scholastic revival at Louvain University, assembled a great conference of three thousand
clerics and laymen to discuss moral and social welfare. A practical program was drawn up and
followed. In 1921 the various industrial and agrarian unions were confederated with religious and
cultural groups into the Belgian Catholic Union. Canon Cardijn initiated his highly successful
Jocist movement among Young Christian Workers in the course of 1925, and it spread to other
countries.
Political problems in a predominantly Catholic country often involved the Church. King
Albert (1909-34) and Cardinal Mercier of Malines (1906-26) co-operated heroically during
Belgium's trials in World War I and in 1919 consecrated the country to the Sacred Heart in token
of gratitude for its preservation. Racial-linguistic disputes between Flemings and Walloons
disturbed postwar politics, and during the 1930's Leon Degrelle's semi-Fascist Rexists made an
unsuccessful bid for power. During World War II, the surrender of the Belgian army to the
Germans by King Leopold III (1934-51) exposed him to Liberal and Socialist criticism. Although
the Catholics led a coalition which recalled Leopold by a fifty-seven per cent vote in 1950, strikes
and sabotage paralyzed his government. To avert possible civil war, the monarch abdicated in
favor of his son. The Catholic Party continued to hold about forty per cent of the parliamentary
seats, and were disturbed by a return of educational discrimination. Protests and appeals by the
hierarchy were long ignored, but in June, 1958, the Catholics won another landslide victory and
were able to take over the ministry.
C. Scandinavia
(1) DENMARK
Danish Catholic emancipation had taken place in 1849, and steady Catholic progress is
indicated by the establishment of a prefecture (1887) and a vicariate apostolic (1892). In the
latter year Bishop Euch became the first Catholic prelate in Copenhagen since 1536. Catholic
churches and property were incorporated, the bishop serving as head of the clerical-lay trustees.
Catholic schools and hospitals had an influence in excess of Catholic numbers, estimated as forty
priests and nine thousand faithful. But in 1896 the conversion of Johannes Jorgenson, a
distinguished writer, demonstrated non-Catholic interest in the Catholic Church. In 1953 the
Catholic residential hierarchy was formally restored in Denmark, as well as in the other
Scandinavian countries.
(2) ICELAND
Iceland was not visited by a Catholic priest from the sixteenth century until 1850. In 1896
the Montfort Fathers and the Sisters of St. Joseph took up residence. After Iceland became
politically autonomous in 1918, a vicariate apostolic was established (1929). To this post in 1942
was nominated the native Icelander, Johan Gunnarson, just two years before Iceland regained its
full independence, lost since 1262.
(3) NORWAY
Norway exhibited little bigotry toward Catholics. In 1887 a prefecture, and in 1892 a
vicariate came into being, and additional missionary districts were set up in 1931 and 1944. In
1894 and 1897 most civil disabilities were removed from the two thousand Catholics, and
religious orders were admitted into the country. Conversion in 1900 of the Norwegian "Newman,"
the Lutheran minister Dr. Krogh-Tonnin, and in 1922 a Nobel prize-winning novelist Sigrid Undset,
raised Catholic prestige among Protestants. By 1946 there were nearly five thousand Catholics
and in 1953 a bishopric was erected.
(4) SWEDEN
Sweden did not relax her ban on Catholic office holding until 1870, and only in 1873 were
dissenters allowed to open churches and acquire property without restriction. Even then minors
were not permitted to leave the established religion before their majority, and all religious save
nursing sisters were banned. The remains of the penal laws were removed on January 1, 1952.
Though Protestant bigotry remained stronger in Sweden than elsewhere in Scandinavia, Bishop
Erik Muller, vicar apostolic since 1923, attended the funeral of King Gustavus V (1907-50).
Catholics then numbered about five thousand.
(5) FINLAND
The few Finnish converts requested a vicar apostolic in 1906. What the Russian
government then denied was granted to independent Finland by the Holy See in 1920.
Diplomatic relations with the Holy See were established in 1942.
D. The Balkans
(1) GREECE
Greece was the first Balkan nation to establish its independence of Turkey (1820-29).
The European powers imposed freedom of worship as a condition of recognition of the Dew state
(1830), but popular sentiment has continued anti-Catholic. A Latin Rite bishopric was established
at Athens in 1875, and other sees were added so that there were six in 1950. The Latin clergy
were not allowed to wear clerical dress in public, but Catholic primary and secondary schools
flourished. By 1950 there were twenty-six thousand Catholics of the Latin Rite, with perhaps a
thousand more of the Greek Rite, but 93 1/2 per cent of the Greek nation remained dissident.
(2) YUGOSLAVIA
The Serbs began to agitate for independence in 1806, but were not recognized as fully
sovereign until 1878. The vast majority of the Serbs remained Orthodox Dissidents, but there
were fifty-five thousand Catholics of the Byzantine Rite under their bishop by 1945.
Croats and Slovenes, subject to the Habsburg Monarchy until 1918, added some six
million Latin Catholics to the new state of Yugoslavia set up after World War I. National and racial
disagreements disturbed the monarchy until the Nazi-Fascist occupation in 1941. During this
crisis, General Nedich essayed the role of Petain, and Colonel Mihailovich that of De Gaulle. The
latter for a time achieved considerable success, but eventually was outmaneuvered in
propaganda by the Croatian Communist leader, Broz, alias Tito.
Communist persecution of the Church began with Tito's accession to power in 1944. The
Catholic hierarchy, beaded by Archbishop Stepinac of Zagreb, were accused of collaboration with
the Fascist-inspired puppet Croatian monarchy. The archbishop was condemned to sixteen years
of forced labor, a sentence reduced to partial detention after six years. By 1956, four hundred
priests had been killed during or after the war, others were imprisoned, and at least five hundred
had been forced into exile.
(3) ALBANIA
Albanian independence (1913-39) granted religious toleration to Catholics, though the
majority of Albanians were Mohammedans or Dissidents. In 1944 Enver Hoxha, a sub-satellite of
Tito, gained control of the government. His Communist regime persecuted the some 100,000
Catholics and 250,000 Dissidents. Catholic prelates were forced from office on one pretext or
another, the majority of priests inhibited from priestly functions, nuns interned or exiled, and all
Catholic institutions suppressed.
(4) BULGARIA
In 1856 the Turkish government promised religious freedom and the Bulgarian Orthodox
clergy demanded reforms from the patriarch of Constantinople. When the latter refused to
concede these, the Bulgarian Nationalists obtained them by a grant of the Porte. In 1870 they
declared the Bulgarian Orthodox Church autocephalous, and in 1878 political autonomy was
achieved, full independence following in 1909. Although Prince Ferdinand (1887-1918) was a
Catholic, he allowed his heir, Boris, to apostasize in 1896. To the fifty thousand Latin Rite
Catholics were added sixty thousand converts from the Greek Rite Dissidents in 1861, although
only one-tenth of the latter persevered. Communist persecution at first concentrated upon the
Orthodox, but eventually Bishop Basilkov and three Catholic priests were executed, and the usual
constraints placed upon Catholic clerics and institutions.
(5) RUMANIA
Rumanian autonomy was obtained in 1829 and political independence was recognized in
1864. King Charles (1881-1914) was a Catholic, but his descendants conformed to Dissident
Orthodoxy. Of the three million Rumanian Catholics in the twentieth century, half were of the
Latin Rite and half of the Byzantine Rite. The latter were accordingly forced into external
apostasy when the Communists subjected them to the Muscovite puppet patriarchate (1949). At
the same time efforts were made to create a schism within the ranks of the Latin Catholics.
Eventually the Catholic clergy were executed, imprisoned, or inhibited, and the Church's many
social institutions destroyed or confiscated.
Materialist Agnosticism (1870- ) XII Totalitarian Shadow (1917- )
110. Militant British Catholicity
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
Readjustment to peace baffled the old Liberal creed of "free trade," and in 1922 Lloyd
George's resignation ended sixteen years of Liberal tenure; thereafter the party declined in
appeal. But Conservative Prime Ministers Bonar Law (1922-23) and Stanley Baldwin (1923-24)
fared little better. Deflation brought heavy taxation and high prices. Exports waned and wartime
tariffs were retained or revised. Unemployment and unrest were inadequately met by the "dole."
Hence the Fabian Socialist MacDonald, with Liberal support, formed the first Labor ministry. This
did not survive 1924, for financial interests opposed the government which they accused of an
alliance with Russian Communism. Baldwin returned (1924-29) and withstood a menacing
general strike (1926) when citizens rallied to take over essential transport and distribution
services. Within a few days the strike was broken, and moderate elements then retreated before
the peril of civil conflict. But charges of lack of sympathy with the workers cost Baldwin votes,
and MacDonald and the Laborites returned in the 1929 elections. This time the world depression
blighted their hopes of social reform, and all parties accepted the king's invitation to form a
"National Coalition," in which, however, the Conservatives dominated. MacDonald, retained as
premier (193135), grew cautious. American debt payments were suspended, taxes raised and
heavy tariffs imposed. For a time Great Britain was threatened with bankruptcy, but by 1935 the
pound was stabilized. The 1935 elections clearly favored the Conservatives.
Sword of the Spirit. Cardinal Hinsley, Bourne's successor at Westminster (1935-43), was
a doughty Yorkshireman, simple and direct. He rose to great leadership during World War II by
founding an organization for united social effort known as the Sword of the Spirit. It began in
August, 1940, and reached a climax the following December with public endorsement of Pius
XII's peace program by the cardinal, the Anglican prelates of Canterbury and York, and the
moderator of the Free Churches. Christopher Dawson was named the lay coordinator. But war
work hastened the cardinal's death, and the movement was hampered both by the social isolation
of some Catholics, and the doctrinal Latitudinarianism of non-Catholics. Yet it did demonstrate
that Catholicity could exercise no negligible influence upon English public life.
The Catholic Truth Society, founded in 1884 by James Britten, expanded its functions
about 1920. By its own definition, it is an "organization of members of the Catholic faith, clerical
and la, men and women founded to promulgate the truths of the Catholic religion by means of the
written word." After World War 1, interest in its pamphlets grew; by 1930 it had sold or distributed
over a million copies. In that year alone it disseminated seventy-five thousand, and a rack in
Westminster Cathedral had to be replenished thrice daily. It is understandable, then, that
conversions to Catholicity took place at a rate of ten thousand a year. In 1950 Father Philip
Hughes estimated Catholics at 2,750,000, about six per cent in a total population of 43,000,000.
Allied in purpose, the Catholic Evidence Guild commenced street preaching in 1918, and by 1931
had six hundred speakers, of whom one-third were women. All these unpaid lay volunteers were
carefully trained in Catholic doctrine and in platform technique. They were then allowed to speak
for twenty minutes on some subject. Neither preachers nor controversialists, they endeavored
rather to explain Catholic doctrine patiently and clearly to all inquirers. Some of the Guild
engaged to speak each week.
Pax Romana, an international federation of Catholic University Societies, which had been
founded at Freiburg in 1921, received the adherence of the British Catholic Federation during
1922. The organizational headquarters was moved to Rome in 1947, and it was given it cardinal-
protector. English Catholics continued to attend secular universities, not only Oxford and
Cambridge, but also eighteen provincial colleges. Full or part time chaplaincies were maintained
at all of these institutions for the sake of the Catholic students. Many of these chaplains, such as
Fathers Martindale and Knox, became influential beyond Catholic circles. Ronald Knox (1888-
1957) had immense influence, while "to be seen walking with the Jesuit, Father D'Arcy, helps
one's intellectual reputation. Catholicism has intellectual audacity at Oxford, and not a few of the
young intellects in revolt have become Catholics." Anglican recognition of the South India Church
prompted a new wave of defections to Catholicity.
C. Irish Catholicity
(1) POLITICAL INDEPENDENCE (1922-49)
The Irish Free State, inaugurated under Prime Minister William Cosgrave (1922-32),
enjoyed dominion status under the British crown. In 1930 the Statute of Westminster defined
such status as one of complete autonomy in constitution, administration, declaration of war and
peace, quite independently of the British parliament. Yet De Valera and his followers objected to
the formal oath of allegiance to the British crown. Until 1927 they boycotted the Free State
assembly, and then took the oath with the claim that it was a "mere formality." The Free State
constitution guaranteed "freedom of conscience and the free profession and practice of religion,"
so that "no law may be made either directly or indirectly to endow any religion or give any
preference" Indeed, the statesmen of Catholic Ireland have been meticulous in safeguarding the
interests of Protestants, hoping thereby to allay the prejudices of the defenders of the Ulster
counties constituting the separate government of Northern Ireland. In practice, however, the Free
State administration with Catholic principles worked on the following bases: divorce was not
granted, religious education was safeguarded; censorship of the press and of films decreed; and
an envoy named to the Vatican.
Eire was the revived Gaelic name for the Irish State after December, 1937, until 1949.
This was the work of De Valera, who defeated Cosgrave in the 1932 elections, abolished the oath
of allegiance (1933), and then, inaugurating a new constitution (1937), proclaimed Ireland's
"indefeasible and sovereign right to choose its own form of government." Governor-general
Buckley was replaced by President Douglas Hyde (1938-45), Gaelic scholar and non-Catholic.
Thenceforth, De Valera argued, Ireland was "of, but not in, the British Commonwealth," a status
advertised by Irish neutrality despite British belligerency during World War II. The new
constitution accorded the Catholic Church a privileged position, and explicitly acknowledged the
duty of public worship to God. The state, however, did not endow nor establish the Church. No
discrimination against Protestants took place, and Mr. Hyde's election was a symbol of religious
impartiality in politics.
Republic of Ireland. Although De Valera was defeated in the 1948 elections, the new
Prime Minister John Costello (1948-51) carried through the final severance of ties with Great
Britain. On December 21, 1948, the British king's function of accrediting Ireland's foreign
representatives was transferred to the new president of Ireland, Sean O'Kelly. Henceforth the
Republic of Ireland was completely independent in form as well as in fact. But Irish aspirations
for the recovery of the Ulster counties remained unfulfilled. In Northern Ireland voting districts
were gerrymandered, and financial discrimination practiced at the expense of Catholic education.
Vociferous disagreement sometimes erupted in border clashes.
Lay sodalities included the Third Order of St. Francis, many confraternities, six hundred
sodalities of Mary, the Apostleship of Prayer, the League of Daily Mass, the Catholic Truth Society
of Ireland, the St. Vincent de Paul Society, the Pioneer Abstinence Association, and others. A
Central Catholic Library, founded at Dublin in 1922, provided an arsenal of information for both
experts and inquirers.
Legion of Mary. But the Irish foundation which has attracted the greatest attention in the
field of Catholic Action is the Legion of Mary, founded at Dublin on September 7, 1921, by Mr.
Frank Duff and associates. Its professed object is "the sanctification of its members by prayer
and active co-operation in Mary's and the Church's work of crushing the head of the serpent and
advancing the reign of Christ." This organization soon spread beyond Irish frontiers, and received
papal endorsement. Unobtrusive but persistent, it has worked effectively at maintaining or
reviving the Faith in parishes in both Christian and missionary territories, and has been singled
out for special attack by Communists in China and elsewhere.
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
A. Canada
Religious discrimination. By the terms of the Treaty of Paris (1763), "His British Majesty
consents to grant the inhabitants of Canada the liberty of the Catholic religion," but the fine print
qualified this "insofar as the laws of England permit." The civil government introduced during 1764
contemplated a speedy Anglicizing of the new British province: English laws and courts were to
be instituted and the Anglican religious establishment officially recognized. Only in 1766 was
Bishop Briand of Quebec allowed to take up residence as "superintendent of the Roman Church
in Canada." The Jesuits had already been suppressed before the fall of Canada; they and the
Franciscans were now ordered to dispose of their property to British subjects and depart. This
left Canada to the ministrations of some 146 secular priests, including 28 Sulpicians, who tried to
keep some sort of a seminary going. The Ursulines, 28 in 1760, were also allowed to remain.
The new English law was frequently misused by adventurers to defraud the French natives who
failed to understand its intricacies. It was not long before English and Scottish settlers, though in
a minority of a few thousand to ten or fifteen times their number, had taken possession of local
government and strove to introduce the English penal laws against Catholic worship. British
officials insisted on interfering in the temporal concerns of parishes and in passing on
nominations for benefices.
Religious toleration. Sir Guy Carleton was an experienced colonial administrator and
enjoyed some foresight in his terms as Canadian governor (1766-78; 1786-96). He came to
recognize the danger of revolt pending in the American colonies and determined to enlist French
Canadian loyalty by concessions in the important matter of religion. The Quebec Act (1774)
designed to achieve this has been termed the French Canadian Magna Charta. This assured the
French settlers of the free exercise of their religion, and restored French law for civil cases.
French as Well as Anglo-Saxon Canadians were now summoned to an appointed gubernatorial
advisory council. Canadian loyalty during the revolt of the United States was thus secured, and
Bishop Briand declared in 1775: "Religion is perfectly free. I can exercise my ministry without
restriction." It is true that there were some cases of deportation of French sympathizers when
France joined the American States in the Revolutionary War, but on the whole the French clergy
held their people in allegiance to the British crown, and this was generally true as well of the War
of 1812 between Great Britain and the United States. Although the French Canadian Dative
clergy remained almost static during these years, the French Revolution proved Canada's
salvation in that many emigre clerics came to Canada to assist those priests already in Canada.
The Maritime Provinces and Ontario saw the influx of a considerable number of Irish and Scottish
Catholics who brought priests of their own nationality with them.
Separate Colonies. During 1791 Canada was divided into the separate provinces of
Quebec (Lower Canada) and Ontario (Upper Canada), largely on racial grounds. Although
religious liberty was reaffirmed, a Francophobe "Chateau Clique" about the governor long
schemed to coerce or persuade the French Canadians into abandoning their nationality, and if
possible, their religion as well. These designs were generally unsuccessful for the French
Canadians closed their ranks in defense of their customs, and the British government in London,
engaged in world-wide conflicts, was little disposed to encourage local dissensions among British
subjects. Hierarchical organization accordingly. became possible, and between 1817 and 1821
episcopal vicarsapostolic were named for Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Montreal, Upper Canada,
and the Northwest. Quebec, made metropolitan over these jurisdictions, did not officially employ
this style until 1844 in order to humor governmental susceptibilities. In Ontario, Catholic
population steadily increased, chiefly through immigration of Irish and Scottish Catholics, directed
by Father Alexander MacDonnell (1760-1840), vicar-apostolic from 1819. Jesuits and Oblates
worked among the Indians and Eskimos of the North and West.
Canadian autonomy became the chief issue at mid-century. Education was the subject of
lengthy controversies. The French Catholic majority insisted that state schools provide religious
instruction, while the Episcopalians demanded separate provision. This contest, reaching high
points in 1829, 1841, and 1863, was eventually settled by compromise: in Quebec, the state
schools would provide instruction in the Catholic religion, with separate provision for the
Protestant minority; in Ontario, religious instructions would be Protestant, with separate
arrangements for the Catholic minority. But all of the Canadians had grievances against British
administration, and French Canadian discontent erupted into rebellion during 1837 when patriots
called for the "right to legislate on the internal affairs of this colony." Yet the bishops of Quebec
and Montreal denied French Canadians any right to revolt, and in some instances denied the
sacraments and Christian burial to belligerent Catholics. The rebellion, indeed, was quickly
crushed, but the British government attempted to remove the causes for secession. The British
commissioner, Lord Durham, suggested that French Canadians be swamped by reuniting Upper
and Lower Canada and flooding the hybrid colony with British population and customs. This plan,
when tried, proved a failure, although his additional suggestion that limited responsible
government be conceded proved to be a political safety valve. For despite racial and religious
tensions, English and French Canadian statesmen like Cartier and MacDonald succeeded in
cooperating in the introduction of parliamentary government for the colony. Separate state
schools contributed to allaying sources of friction, and various privileges for the Anglicans were
abolished in Ontario while feudal dues were commuted in Quebec. The Catholic hierarchy strove
to reconcile French and Irish Catholics. Archbishop Turgeon presided over the first provincial
council in 1851 which, besides regulating discipline and liturgy, provided for Laval University
which came into being the next year with branches at Quebec and Montreal. Colonization
societies strove to preserve the Faith among Catholics moving to the West, and new vicariates or
dioceses were erected as the need arose.
Ultramontane disputes in French Canada also caused trouble during the nineteenth
century. Ultramontanism of the most violent type induced French Canadians to volunteer in the
Papal Zouaves for defense of the Papal States during the 1860's. Ultramontanism provoked
anticlerical Liberalism, such as that of Guibord's Institut Canadien, whose Year Book for 1868 was
blacklisted by the hierarchy. Nor did Guibord's death in 1869 bring peace, for until 1875 the Case
of Guibord's Grave agitated Montreal. When Bishop Bourget denied ecclesiastical burial, the
lawyer Doutre, after protracted, litigation had Guibord buried in Notre Dame cemetery by means
of a police escort but without benefit of clergy.
On the project of a Catholic political party, moreover, a "Holy War" was fought between
sections of the clergy from 1871 to 1886. When some cures went so far as to direct the voting of
their flocks from the pulpit under penalty of censures, justice Tascherau voided the elections as
subject to undue influence. The judge's brother, Cardinal Tascherau of Quebec, gained the
ascendancy in the hierarchy by advising the clergy to distinguish between political and theological
Liberalism, and Rome advised greater hierarchical unity and considerable prudence. Cardinal
Tascherau was also sustained by Pope Leo XIII in his defense of the instruction at Laval
University against accusations of Liberalism by Bishop La Fleche and the Ultras.
Colonization began in Australia on January 26, 1788, when Governor Arthur Phillip
landed the first convict contingent at Botany Bay. Those deported included many Irishmen
arrested for political reasons, and by 1792 Catholics in the colony were estimated at three
hundred. Until 1800 they were constrained to attend Protestant services. Then three priests,
accused of complicity in the 1798 Irish rising, were transported. One of these, James Dixon, was
permitted in 1802 to say Mass, using a tin chalice and a vestment cut from old damask curtains.
In 1804 Rome named him prefect apostolic, but the same year Catholic convicts were deprived of
leave to hear Mass and again constrained to Anglican services. Until 1817 they were without
Catholic ministrations. Father Jeremiah Flynn then attempted to defy the British Colonial Office
by going to the colony and exercising his priestly functions on behalf of an estimated six thousand
Catholics. But he was soon arrested and deported.
Hierarchical organization came in 1834 when John Polding (17941877) was appointed
vicar-apostolic for an estimated twenty thousand Catholics in the Australian colony. The bishop
was diligent in visiting his new and vast vicariate and in erecting churches and schools, although
the remoteness of New Zealand caused it to be included in the Oceanic vicariate of Bishop jean
Pompalier in 1835. Bishop Polding formed a seminary in 1838, and secured some governmental
subsidies for Catholic education from Governor Richard Bourke (1831-38). During 1842 the vicar
apostolic was named first archbishop of Sydney, with Hobart and Adelaide as suffragan sees, to
which Perth and Melbourne were added within five years. By this time there were twenty-four
priests and forty thousand Catholics distributed in eighteen parochial districts. Certain aspects of
trusteeism and other financial difficulties complicated the new ecclesiastical province; the former
problem was settled by compromise in 1857.
Catholic life. Archbishop Vaughan was succeeded by Cardinal Patrick Moran (1884-
1911) who became the first Australian member of the Sacred College, and as such presided over
the first plenary council convened in Australia. During World War 1, Archbishop Mannix of
Melbourne provoked hostility by opposing conscription and championing Irish independence, and
the ill feeling elicited by the attendant controversies lingered for some time. Catholics participated
in the labor movements, and Premiers Scullin and Lyons (1929-39) were members of the Church.
A Catholic worker movement, based on the BellocChesterton distributist thesis, was launched in
1936. During 1937 the, National Catholic Action Committee was formed with an episcopal board
of directors, to which were affiliated bureaus for Rural Life, Workers, Catholic Students, Christian
Girls, etc. By 1950 there were twenty-six dioceses with nine hundred religious and seventeen
hundred secular priests, assisted by fourteen hundred lay brothers and eleven thousand sisters.
In New Zealand, by 1954 there was a population of over two million of whom about
fourteen per cent were Catholic. In a society keenly alive to labor questions, Catholic social
action was important. Extensive missionary work among the Maori natives was conducted and
before 1860 the number of converts had reached forty thousand. But a native insurrection (1860-
70), provoked by white penetration of Maori lands, prejudiced the natives against the missionaries
and reduced the Catholic flock to ten thousand. Marists and Mill Hill Fathers, however,
courageously resumed work after the uprising. The Legion of Mary and the Catholic Youth
movement became popular among Catholic New Zealanders.
Dutch occupation. Capetown was founded in 1652 as an Indian way station by Jan van
Riebeeck, governor for the Dutch East India Company, which was supplanting the Portuguese in
the East Indies. Catholicity was denied public profession by the dominant Dutch Reformed sect,
though this did not prevent several Jesuits who stopped off at the Cape in 1685 en route to Siam
from ministering to a few scattered Catholics. During the French domination of Holland, three
priests were sent out to the Cape in 1805, but they were deported when the Cape Colony was
ceded to the British in 1806.
Ruthless British imperialism, however, considerably hampered any missionary effort. The
Boer War (1899-1902), though unsuccessful in restoring Dutch independence, did halt British
imperialism in South Africa. The British and Dutch joined forces against the blacks, and the
Boers were conciliated with responsible government under the British crown.
Catholics, however, were a small group among the whites and exercised a negligible
influence in parliament. Education had been left to the provinces by the Union constitution, and
thus Cape Colony and Natal continued subsidies to Catholic schools, while Transvaal and
Orange Free State did not. Communist infiltration proved a menace to labor unions, and the
bishops, forbidding Catholics to join such organizations, formed a Catholic group in their stead.
In 1922 an apostolic delegation was established, and in 1951 the vicariates were replaced by the
archdioceses of Cape Town, Pretoria, Durban, and Bloemfontein. These sees with their
suffragans comprised 20 dioceses and an abbacy nullius for a Catholic population of 107,000
Europeans, 707,000 Bantu, and 78,000 Negroes.
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
Financial ogres. The decade, 1919-29, saw the disappearance of 6,000 manufacturing
and mining firms, of 3,700 public utilities, of over 10,000 banks-all merged into giant corporations
which came to rule American business. In 1933, only 594 corporations, each capitalized at over
$50,000,000, owned fifty-three per cent of the corporate wealth-the other forty-seven per cent
was divided among 387,970 firms. J. P. Morgan alone controlled twenty-five per cent-
$74,000,000,000-by means of interlocking directorates. By 1940, some 200 corporations
controlled half the wealth. The leading financial groups were Morgan First National, Kuhn-Loeb,
Rockefeller, Mellon, and Du Pont.
Political views. The Republicans claimed credit for much of this prosperity as a result of
Harding's pledge of "less government in business and more business in government." Herbert
Hoover was to extol the "rugged individualism" of the Americans who had created such a society,
by making their own way in life without governmental aid. Yet one who had so made his way,
Alfred E. Smith, his opponent for the presidency in 1928, dissented that, "it is a fallacy that there
is inconsistency between progressive measures protecting the rights of the people, including the
poor and the weak, and a just regard for the rights of legitimate business. . . . Property to the
extent that we have it is unduly concentrated, and has not equitably touched the lives of the
farmer, the wage earner, and the individual business man." But Smith's analysis was rejected by
the electorate in 1928, although four years later they would bear Smith's heir excoriate "Toryism"
and pledge himself to a "New Deal for the American people."
Corruption unfortunately accompanied the new regime, through Harding's negligence and
moral obtuseness, though not with his connivance. Charles Forbes was convicted of wasting a
quarter of a billion dollars appropriated for veterans. Thomas Miller was detected in defrauding
the Government in the sale of alien property. Attorney General Daugherty resigned under fire for
lax prosecution of corporations and connivance with prohibition violation. Fall, secretary of the
interior, was convicted of bribery in leasing government oil reserves to private concerns, among
whom Sinclair was sentenced to prison. These scandals shook public confidence and probably
contributed to the president's death in August, 1923. He was succeeded by Vice-President
Coolidge who had not been directly involved. Despite Senator Walsh's probe of the Republican
scandals, the Republicans won the 1924 elections by default when the Liberal vote was divided
between John W. Davis, nominee of an acrimonious Democratic convention, and Progressive
Senator Robert La Follette.
Social hysteria, however, had long been increasing tensions to a breaking point.
Prohibition, more violated than observed, lowered respect for all law. Emancipation of women in
some instances was a pretext for excesses in feminine "freedom": abandon of restraints in
modesty and decorum, birth prevention and divorce. New inventions ever attracted society to
stress things rather than persons, gadgets more than ideas. Mass production in factories was
often paralleled by mass imitation and lack of personal initiative. Great advances in
communications and mobility tempted many from home life to public commercialized
amusements, and to more aimless activity. Impatience and avarice tempted others to widespread
installment buying, and to speculation on margin in stock market depths that they could not
fathom. Labor received no adequate protection, though the steel industry worked a twelve-hour
day and a seven-day week until 1923, and miners' conditions led to pitched battles as late as
1931. State minimum wage laws, sanctioned by the Supreme Court in 1916, were outlawed by a
reversal of the same court in 1923. Only ten per cent of the wage earners were organized by
1914, and during the 1920's the mild A.F.L. declined in membership by one to two millions. judges
usually favored employers with injunctions, lock-outs, upholding of "yellow-dog" contracts
exacting pledges against unionism, and tolerating black-lists, company spies and even
provocative agents.
Depression came in October, 1929, and by 1933 prices sank from an average of ninety-
five per cent to sixty-six per cent; wages from one hundred per cent to forty-four per cent;
employment from ninety-seven per cent to sixty-five per cent. Industrial stocks sank from 252 to
61; rails from 167 to 33, and utilities from 353 to 99. Some thirty-two thousand businesses failed
in 1932; within three years five thousand banks closed. Trade declined from nine to three billion,
national income from an estimated eighty-five billion in 1929 to thirty-seven billion in 1932.
Remedies offered by the Hoover Administration were few. Only in 1932 when the Democrats
were in control of Congress, was the Reconstruction Finance Corporation founded to lend money
to foundering businesses, while the Norris-La Guardia Act curbed injunctions. Hoover warned
that this was to head for disaster, socialistic schemes and "socalled New Deals" that would
destroy the American way of life. But in the 1932 elections the American peoples displayed their
weariness of Republican interpretations of the American way of life and turned to a "New Deal."
Financial reforms. President Roosevelt began with a dramatic closing of the nation's
banks, to be reopened only after satisfactory evidence of their solvency had been given. This
and subsequent New Deal measures he explained to the people in his "fireside chats" on the
radio. During April, 1933, the United States was taken off the gold standard to conform to action
already taken by other nations. Inflation was allowed until the dollar was fixed in 1934 at about
fifty-nine per cent of its 1900 value. To secure a "managed currency," commercial banks were
now obliged to become members of the Federal Reserve. This system was reorganized so that
its board of governors was given authority to control expansion and contraction of currency, and
to regulate security speculation by controlling loans. With the Secretary of the Treasury, the
Federal Reserve Board was given power to expand or contract credit by increasing or decreasing
the reserves that member banks were obliged to maintain with the system-as well as by other
means. In 1933 the Glass-Steagall Deposit Act provided insurance for deposits up to $5,000,
which actually covered ninety-eight per cent of the depositors. The Securities and Exchange Act,
passed in 1934 and revised in 1938, placed investment banking under federal supervision,
requiring publicity for all fees, remuneration, earnings, capitalization, stock structure, salaries,
etc., from investment firms. The board of governors was empowered to raise or lower stock
margins and control brokers' loans made by member banks. It might also require registration of
all securities, license stock exchanges, ban pools, options, and sharp practice. This regulatory
authority was extended by the Commodity Exchange Act (1936) and the Investment Advisers Act
(1940).
Agrarian relief. The New Deal's agricultural program began with the Agricultural
Adjustment Act (AAA), declared unconstitutional in 1936. This curtailed production and extended
credit. In 1934 the Farm Mortgage Refunding and Foreclosure Acts and the Bankruptcy Acts
sought to preserve farmers' holdings during hard times. After a series of Supreme Court
reversals, it was possible to pass the Farm Tenancy Act and Soil Conservation and Allotment Act
(1936). Finally in 1938 the definitive and constitutional AAA, after incorporating and codifying
previous measures, empowered the Department of Agriculture to fix acreages, arrange parity
prices, and grant subsidies to those farmers who co-operated in regulating production. It laid
down a policy of an "ever-normal granary" designed to store surpluses and provide insurance
against bad years.
Labor legislation. The NIRA laid down a charter for labor, which was more solidly and
legally established by the Wagner-Connery National Labor Relations Act of 1935. This vindicated
collective bargaining, and practically outlawed company spies and yellow dog contracts. The
National Labor Relations Board was established to arbitrate disputes. This legislation was
supplemented by the Child Labor Act (1936) and the Public Contracts Act (1938). The latter
measure, which regulated employment in any firm having a public contract of over $10,000, laid
down the principle of the eight-hour day and forty-hour week to be achieved by 1940. As
emergency measures, the Civilian Conservation Corps had provided disciplined employment and
lodging for indigent citizens working on public construction programs. These programs under the
Works Progress Administration (WPA) distributed ten billions in wages to employ the jobless on
governmental projects between 1935 and 1942, when it was discontinued. In 1935 the Social
Security Act was passed. This measure, revised in 1939 and 1949, offered a system of old-age
and unemployment insurance pensions from funds amassed through federal, state, and employer
contributions. In 1937 the Wagner-Steagall Housing Act came to the assistance of home-
seekers. Such legislation provided long denied social justice to workingmen, and its retention in
substance by succeeding administrations is an indication of its basic soundness. Nonetheless,
subsequent abuses by union racketeers demonstrated that government regulation of labor
organization would also be necessary.
Republican resurgence. The new president continued his predecessor's policies, but was
hampered by Communist infiltration of government personnel, facilitated by the wartime military
alliance. A postwar reaction to austerity and controls was seen in the Democratic defeat in the
1946 midterm elections, when the Republicans took over control of Congress for the first time
since 1931. The new Congress passed over the president's veto the Taft-Hartley Labor
Management Relations Act. This outlawed the "closed shop" employing only union members, but
permitted the "union shop" if desired by a majority of workers: the employer is free to hire anyone
but the latter must join the union. Injunctions against strikes "menacing public health and safety"
were sanctioned, and it was envisioned that these might be used against jurisdictional strikes,
strikes for compulsory hiring to "stand by," and secondary boycotts. Unions were made liable to
damage suits by employers, and political contributions, "featherbedding" and excessive dues
were forbidden, and a conciliation service set up outside the Labor Department. Congress also
restricted the presidency to two terms by constitutional amendment, and altered the presidential
succession in favor of the speaker and president pro tempore in preference to the cabinet. In
1947-49 the War and Navy Departments were consolidated into a unified Department of Defense.
Democratic comeback. The Taft-Hartley Act had roused labor's ire and its activity
surprised prognostications for the 1948 elections. But though President Truman was re-elected,
the Democrats were unable to reverse the Taft-Hartley Act by 1950 when the Korean War again
distracted attention from domestic issues. This dragged on to an inconclusive compromise and in
1952 the American electorate, without repudiating the New Deal, decided that there was no need
for further advance by a "Fair Deal." The war hero, General Dwight Eisenhower, was elected on
the Republican ticket, ending twenty years of Democratic occupancy of the White House. But the
Democrats remained in partial control of Congress, and regained complete control in 1954.
B. Church-State Tensions
(1) KLAN BIGOTRY
The Ku Klux Klan was founded on Thanksgiving Day, 1915, at Stone Mountain near
Atlanta. The founder, William Simmons, served as the "Imperial Wizard" until his resignation in
1922, prompted by an abortive Congressional investigation. Prior to 1920 the Klan was a local
group of but five thousand members, but during the 1920's under the direction of Edward Clarke
its propaganda captured from two to five millions for its anti-Catholic-Jewish-Negro movement. In
1922 Hiram Evans of Dallas replaced Simmons, and moved Klan headquarters to Indianapolis
Crude terrorism was abandoned for subtler but far more effective methods.
Political activity. In 1924 the Klan threat halted the Underwood presidential candidacy
and divided the Democratic National Convention. McAdoo, though nominated by the Catholic
Phelan, was believed to be the Klan candidate. Al Smith, well-known Catholic Governor of New
York, was nominated by Franklin Roosevelt who excoriated "bogies and hobgoblins,
encouragement of false fears." Yet a motion to denounce the Klan by name lost by a vote of 543
to 540. Klan political activity revived on a national scale in 1928. Senator Heflin denounced
supposed Catholic machinations on the senate floor, and was rebuked by Senator Robinson.
Under the chairmanship of the Methodist prelate, James Cannon, Jr., the Klansmen made a
supreme effort to defeat Al Smith's candidacy for the presidency, and subsequently wrested five
Southern states from the Democratic column. During the campaign, Mabel Willebrant, assistant
attorney general, urged Methodist conventions to vote for Hoover. In contrast, the Catholic
hierarchy directed clerics to abstain from politics, and the attitude of the Catholic laity elicited
praise from fair-minded Protestants. The Klan, however, sent out postcards with these and
similar alarm calls: "Smith's success means the president on his knees in the White House
kissing the band of a Roman cardinal, just as he has previously done; a confessional box in the
White House, and the secrets of the government whispered into the ear of a representative of the
Vatican; Rome enthroned in the Supreme Court; America embroiled in war with Mexico in the
interest of papal despotism; the public school scuttled and wrecked in the interest of the parochial
school with its curriculum of thirteenth century superstition; the Romanizing of our postal system
and the destruction of the Protestant press; the nullification of the Prohibition Law as it has been
done in New York State and a free reign to every whiskey vandal. It means the pope above the
president, the Canon Law above the Constitution, and the papal rag above the American flag."
Klan propaganda spared nothing in its attack on Catholics and "convent horror" stories
revived, together with misrepresentations of Catholic doctrine. In a Chicago suburb, a sinister
development was seen: "Forces town to take new papist name: 'Area' becomes 'Mundelein'
honoring wearer of red hat. Cardinal, enthroned at Chicago, is godfather of unwilling little village."
Fears were expressed that soon Washington, D.C., would be changed to Piusville or St.
Patricksburg, while New York might become New Rome. But soon the great depression was
renaming towns "Hooverville" and the Klan was forgotten, dwindling to minor proportions.
Anti-Semitism. Father Charles Coughlin, pastor of Royal Oak, Michigan, from 1926,
began to devote himself to labor problems about 1930 and won a large following by his radio
addresses. But during 1932-35, his earlier exposition of Catholic social principles, turned into
denunciation of international bankers, largely Jewish, and advocacy of a dubious monetary
system. At first favorable to the New Deal, he turned against it in 1935 and made derogatory
remarks about President Roosevelt during 1936 which drew public rebukes from Archbishop
McNicholas and Monsignor Ryan. After his own candidate, Lemke, was overwhelmed by
Roosevelt in 1936, Father Coughlin turned to formation of a "Christian Front" against Jewry which
he linked with Communism. His weekly paper, Social Justice, was criticized by Catholic leaders
for its antiSemitism. Always submissive to his ordinary, Father Coughlin disassociated himself
from Social Justice in May, 1940, and later ceased his radio activity. Social Justice was denied
use of the mails in 1942.
Sectarian bigotry or Nativism also revived. The Jehovah Witnesses, founded by the
minister Charles Russell of Pittsburgh in 1876, became after Russell's death (1916) a militant
pacifist and anti-Catholic group under his successor, "Judge" Rutherford (d. 1942). They fell foul
of the law in many instances by forcing their propaganda upon individuals, or refusing to salute
the flag. A less violent attack was launched in 1949 by Paul Blanchard with his book, American
Freedom and Catholic Power. This and other books of the same author dreaded an international
dictatorship emanating from Rome, scarcely less menacing than Communism. With an
appearance of fairness and specious display of distorted documentation, Blanchard practically
roused a new nativist movement. Though Catholic patriotism was defended by James O'Neill in
Catholicism and American Freedom, 'Protestants and Other Americans United for Separation of
Church and State" (POAU) organized to deny Catholic schools any share in public funds or
services, such as bus transportation. Within Catholic ranks, a minor schism led by Leonard
Feeney, S.J., broke out at Boston in 1949 over "extra Ecclesiam nulla salus." But in 1952 the Holy
Office assured honest inquirers that the "good dispositions of soul whereby a person wishes his
will to be conformed to God's will" suffice for salvation in one ignorant of the truth of the Catholic
Church.
(4) POLITICS
Diplomatic relations between the Vatican and the United States, which had existed
between 1848 and 1867, were semi-officially resumed between 1939 and 1950. During his visit
to the United States in 1936, Cardinal Pacelli had visited President Roosevelt, and the latter after
the outbreak of World War II proposed collaboration in the search for peace. With the consent of
Pacelli, then Pius XII, the president named Myron Taylor his personal representative with the rank
of ambassador. Mr. Taylor, a friendly Protestant, continued to serve Presidents Roosevelt and
Truman in this capacity until his resignation in 1950. When President Truman nominated General
Mark Clark as Taylor's successor in 1951, a storm of protest from bigots led to discontinuance of
the mission.
Outstanding Catholic statesmen during the period included Alfred E. Smith (1873-1944),
governor of New York for four terms, and nominee for the presidency; the cabinet members were
Farley, Walker and Hannegan under Franklin Roosevelt; McGrath, Tobin, and McGranery under
Truman; and Mitchell, and Durkin under Eisenhower. Catholic Supreme Court justices were
Butler, Frank Murphy, and William Brennan. Catholics continued to constitute a percentage of
American senators and congressmen, and in 1960 one of these, John F. Kennedy of
Massachusetts, was elected President of the United States.
C. Catholic Apostolate
(1) ORGANIZED CATHOLIC CO-OPERATION
"The National Catholic Welfare Conference is the agency of the archbishops and bishops
of the United States for unified, corporate action on the national level to promote the welfare of
the Church and the country. It has for its incorporated purposes 'unifying, coordinating, and
organizing the Catholic people of the United States' in works of social welfare, education, and
other activities." 18
Origin of NCWC. The National Catholic War Council, organized in 1917 to co-ordinate
the Catholic war effort, proved so successful that in February, 1919, many American bishops
proposed to retain its organization during peacetime. With the concurrence of the papal
representative, Cardinal Ceretti, it was decided that henceforth the American hierarchy would
meet annually. At the first of these meetings, September, 1919, the War Council, renamed
Welfare Council, was expanded to include the entire American hierarchy. Between sessions,
administrative work was committed to a permanent board under the chairmanship of Archbishop
Hanna of San Francisco, who served in that capacity until 1935. Father John J. Burke, C.S.P.,
prominent in the formation of the War Council, served as secretary-general until 1936. The
original six departments were: Executive; Education; Press; Law; Social Action; and Lay
Organization, including the National Councils of Catholic Men and Women. Bishop McDonnell of
Brooklyn and several other prelates, fearing that the organization might invade diocesan
jurisdiction, criticized it at Rome with such effect that on the advice of Cardinal De Lai, Pope
Benedict XV withdrew his tentative approbation, and dissolved it in January, 1922, just before his
death. But when Bishop Schrembs as delegate of the American hierarchy had explained its work
to Pope Pius XI, the latter gave his approval to a decree of the Consistorial Congregation that
"nothing is to be changed concerning the National Catholic Welfare Council," July 2, 1922.
Renamed "Conference" in 1923 to avoid the canonical implications of "council," the NCWC was
firmly established with papal approbation.
Organization was presently expanded. The administrative board was increased to ten
members, with the United States cardinals holding ex officio membership. This board, elected
annually, meets at least twice a year to supervise the various departments, each under an
episcopal chairman. The Catholic Action and Youth departments were added to the original six,
and bureaus apportioned to existing departments to co-ordinate Catholic interests regarding
immigration, motion pictures, historical records, rural life, Christian doctrine, information, family
life, health, and hospitals. Other subordinate or affiliated agencies were concerned with United
Nations affairs, international affairs, publications, radio, the nurses' council, and a mission
secretariate. Archbishop Hanna was succeeded as general chairman by Archbishops Mooney of
Detroit, Stritch of Milwaukee and Chicago, and McNicholas of Cincinnati. Many NCWC activities
will be considered under specialized headings below; here certain miscellaneous undertakings
may be noted. During the early years of Prohibition, it provided for production and distribution of
Mass wine. Between 1926 and 1936 the NCWC intervened repeatedly on behalf of Mexican
Catholics, and Father Burke helped arrange a modus vivendi through Ambassador Morrow.
Depression and recovery evoked many statements, pamphlets, and outlines under NCWC
auspices which proved influential with several statesmen, e.g., Senator Wagner. During World
War II the Conference returned to its 1917 activities with better organization and experience.
NCWC Social guidance. The first episcopal statement through the NCWC was the
"Bishops' Program of Social Reconstruction" in 1919. This document was drafted under
hierarchical guidance by Monsignor Ryan, director of the Social Action Department of the NCWC
from 1920 to 1945. The document set forth the right of labor to organize, recommended greater
co-operation between management and labor, and endorsed a legal minimum wage and labor
insurance. To finance social improvements, there might be "heavy taxation of incomes, excess
profits and inheritances." This frank statement elicited a protest from Stephen Mason, president of
the National Manufacturers' Association. Yet it anticipated some of the recommendations of Pope
Pius XI'S Quadragesimo Anno, and during President Roosevelt's New Deal eleven of its twelve
proposals were enacted into law. In 1922 Bishop Edwin V. O'Hara organized the National
Catholic Rural Life Conference for the rural laborers, and this movement has been vigorously
championed by Monsignor Ligutti. In 1933 the bishops made an important "Statement on the
Present Crisis": unrestrained economic liberty and unlimited profits were excoriated as false
theories, and it was observed that by reaction this "extreme of individualism has led to the
extreme of Communism." Proposed remedies were fairer distribution of wealth, tax reforms,
stricter control of corporations, protection of just wages and unions, and destruction of
international economic barriers. In 1940 in the Church and Social Order the hierarchy reaffirmed
"the jurisdiction of the Church as the teacher of the entire moral law, and more particularly as it
applies to man's economic and social conduct in business, industry, and trade." The bishops
warned in 1948 that secularism was "threatening the religious foundations of our national life and
preparing the way for the advent of the omnipotent state." In order to prevent this, "Christ must be
the Master in our classrooms and lecture halls"; and "freely organized co-operation between
accredited representatives of capital and labor in each industry and in the economy as a whole"
should be fostered "under the supervision, but not the control of government."
Press. The Catholic Press Association, organized during 1908, was affiliated with the
NCWC in 1919. It has promoted greater interest in all forms of existing Catholic publications,
including the widely circulated Sunday Visitor and its pamphlet series founded in 1912 by Bishop
Noll of Fort Wayne, and the Register and its affiliates begun during the 1920's by Monsignor
Matthew Smith of Denver. More specialized reviews have appeared in each of the ecclesiastical
sciences, though these have had but a minor influence upon the non-Catholic reading public.
The work of the Catholic press has been supplemented by radio and television programs, in
which media Bishop Sheen has equaled the appeal of Lacordaire. The apostolate of the press
has also been extended by many editions of pamphlets, the Kenrick Home Study Service (1936),
and its imitators, and the Knights of Columbus advertising program.
Intellectual life among American Catholics has come under increasing self-criticism.
They have not been free from the mental isolationism of a minority and they have shared to some
extent American suspicion of booklearning, at least of such a nature as incapable of immediate
translation into practical gadgets. Probably the primary demands of the minimum essentials of
Catholic education and the apostolate will serve to excuse most of the failures of past
generations-though scarcely those of the future. And if scholarship is the product of leisure, there
has been very little leisure thus far for the majority of American priests, religious, teachers, and
educators.
Oriental Rites. Before major restrictions were laid upon immigration from 1921, many
Catholics of Eastern Rites had come to the United States. By 1954 there were about 860,000
distributed among ten rites. To take care of these, not only have chapels and parishes of their rite
been erected, but a Ukrainian diocese was created at Philadelphia in 1913, and a Greek Rite
diocese at Pittsburgh in 1924.
Recent immigration trends have stressed the importance of pastoral Spanish, since many
Mexicans have been imported as agrarian workers in the West, while Puerto Ricans have settled
in large numbers in the New York and Chicago metropolitan areas. Pending their incorporation
into parochial life, missionaries have tried to care for their needs in camps and special centers.
Native Americans in isolated rural areas have been contacted from the 1930's by the motor
missions conducted by diocesan and Vincentian priests, and in 1939 the Glenmary Missioners
were founded by Father Howard Bishop to work especially in the non-Catholic districts of the
country. Already in 1929 Father judge, C.M., had founded the Missionary Servants of the Most
Blessed Trinity for pastoral and missionary work, especially in the South. These clerical
communities have been assisted by numerous brotherhoods and sisterhoods of medical
missionaries, social workers, or parish visitors.
The Foreign Missions, meanwhile, have not been neglected. The annual American
Catholic monetary contribution reached $100,000 in 1904; it had passed $1,000,000 in 1919,
while in 1957 about sixty-six per cent of the Propagation of the Faith contribution came from the
United States. The Chicago International Eucharistic Congress (1926) helped publicize
missionary activity. Following upon the foundation of the Maryknoll missionary priests and
sisters, Dr. Anna Dengel, an Austrian, founded the Catholic Medical Missionaries in the United
States, and this foundation has been followed by others. A more recent development has been
the enlistment of lay medical or educational missionaries, usually for limited terms of service in
foreign lands.
D. International Relations
(1) SEARCH FOR PEACE
Armistice. Since the American Senate had rejected President Wilson's League of
Nations which was inextricably interwoven with the Peace of Versailles, the United States
remained technically at war with Germany until the new Republican Congress and President
Harding terminated hostilities by joint resolution in July, 1921. The League of Nations, repudiated
in the 1920 elections, became too dangerous a subject for any American politician to endorse.
Nevertheless the United States participated in more than forty League meetings through unofficial
observers. The World Court did not excite the same animosity, and the Americans, Moore,
Hughes, and Kellogg served as judges. But proposals for official American participation in the
World Court, periodically repeated under various administrations, culminated in the 1935 Senate
vote, seven short of the required two-thirds majority for treaties.
Economic internationalism, however, was manifest in the fact that despite the political
isolation of the United States, her trade increased fourfold between 1900 and 1929, and that from
being a debtor to the extent of three billion dollars before World War 1, America reached a credit
of seventeen billion by 1929. It is true that little of the American war loans was repaid. While
most Americans agreed with President Coolidge, "They hired the money, didn't they?" many
Europeans exclaimed against "Uncle Shylock." After France had failed to collect German
reparations assessed at thirty-three billion dollars, the Dawes Plan (1924) reduced the annual
payments. The Young Plan (1928) provided for further reduction of reparations and offered the
hope of mutual cancellation of reparations and war debts, though the last proposal was vetoed by
President Hoover. But from 1929 the great depression forced extensive withdrawals of American
funds advanced to Germany, and that country's artificially stimulated recovery collapsed to the
ultimate profit of Nazi malcontents. Progress of the depression in Europe finally prompted
President Hoover in 1931 to propose a moratorium on war debt payments, and the United States
acquiesced in tacit repudiation.
World War II erupted from totalitarian ambitions and hates as well as from Liberal
disunion and appeasement. Though the president as early as 1937 at Chicago had proposed to
"quarantine the aggressors," he evoked little support from a neutral Congress and war-shy public.
But when smaller nations in Europe were annexed one by one (193940) Americans became
convinced of the need of defense, and the Japanese sneak attack on Pearl Harbor (1941) rallied
all in prosecution of war. American Communists now changed their denunciation of the
"imperialist war" to cries for "united war effort." American military strength, however, contributed
mightily to the complete destruction of both the Nazi and Japanese forces.
Catholic participation. During 1939 and 1940, Catholic efforts were directed toward relief
of Polish refugees. During December, 1939, the presidential embassy to the Vatican was
inaugurated and frequent interchanges down to 1945 probably contributed to the preservation of
the city of Rome. When war came in December, 1941, the American Catholic hierarchy pledged
President Roosevelt "our whole-hearted cooperation in the difficult days that lie ahead. . . . We
will lead our priests and people in constant prayer that God may . . . strengthen us all to win a
victory that will be a blessing, not for our nation alone, but for the whole world." During the war,
the National Catholic Community Service, which had been set up during the prewar emergency,
participated in USO work among the armed forces, of whom an estimated twenty-five to thirty-five
per cent were Catholic. Catholic literature, rosaries, missals, prayer books, Bibles were provided
for the troops, and Catholic colleges participated in specialized training programs, Archbishop
Spellman of New York as military ordinary made four extensive inspection tours, and was
assisted by Bishop John O'Hara as chaplain general. Of 3,036 Catholic chaplains in the armed
forces, 83 died in the course of World War II. All Catholic organizations contributed to the
national defense work.
Catholic international views. While statesman began preliminary peace plans in 1944,
the Catholic hierarchy in the United States endorsed the Atlantic Charter and denounced "power
politics with its balance of power, spheres of influence in a system of puppet governments." But if
the United States did not sin in this respect, her troublesome ally, Soviet Russia, did. The
hierarchy also called for a sound international organization, but had to regret in November, 1945,
that, "the Charter which emerged from the San Francisco Conference, while undoubtedly an
improvement on the Dumbarton Oaks proposals, does not provide for a sound international
organization. . . . Nevertheless to participate in this world organization . . . is better than world
chaos." During 1946 the NCWC administrative board appealed for food for the children of the Far
East, and protested the injustice in the trial of Archbishop Stepinac. The Board in 1949 and 1950
echoed the pope's plea for internationalization of the Holy Places. In 1951, drawing a parallel
between the current national and international situation and the decadent Roman empire, the
Catholic hierarchy urged a return to God's law as the measure of man's conduct, closing with a
citation from President Washington's farewell address: "Of all the dispositions and habits which
lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports. . . . Reason and
experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of the religious
principle."
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
A. General Survey
Relations with the United States were on the whole cordial until 1845, for the Monroe
Doctrine was deemed a shield against the still existing threat of reconquest by Spain, aided by a
coalition of reactionary powers. The war with Mexico and the annexation of New Mexico and
California, however, raised Latin American suspicions of the United States, and these were
increased by the irresponsible demands of American jingoists. This mounting tension (1845-98)
was changed into acute fear and dislike by the Spanish-American War which found most of the
Latin Americans sympathizing with Spain. From 1898 to 1918 United States intervention in Cuba,
Nicaragua, Haiti, Dominica, and Mexico provoked a rabid anti-North American polemic in Latin
American lands. World War 1, however, forced these to resort to the United States, as much
trading with Europe was cut off, while American military prowess elicited new respect. Waning
North American intervention in the Caribbean, and the conciliatory policies of Presidents Hoover
and Franklin Roosevelt somewhat mitigated suspicion. World War II drove the American nations
together and culminated in the Declaration of Chapultepec, February, 1945, that "every attack of
a state against the integrity or the inviolability of territory or against the sovereignty or political
independence of an American state . . . shall be considered as an act of aggression against the
other states which sign this declaration."
Inter-American conflict, frequent during the nineteenth century, lessened during the
twentieth. The Chilean-Peruvian Nitrate dispute was arbitrated in 1929, and the Bolivian-
Paraguayan Chaco War between 1935 and 1938. There was increasing willingness to make use
of arbitral machinery, whether of a World Court, Pan-America. Union, or ABC powers. Union to
preserve hemispheric freedom against Totalitarianism furnished an enduring motive for Pan-
American solidarity, but fear of the United States still rendered Latin American non-co-operation
quite possible.
Pan-American Union had been originally suggested by President Bolivar of Columbia and
Secretary of State Clay, but the Panama Congress of 1826 was poorly attended and without
practical result. The project was revived by Secretary of State Blaine and an initial meeting held
at Washington during 1889. Other meetings followed at frequent intervals, and in addition there
were hemispheric conferences of American statesmen regarding World War II. "It has become
evident from the above that as the twentieth century progressed toward its middle point, Pan-
Americanism, as represented by the official congresses and the official but more especial
meetings, became increasingly identified with the Monroe Doctrine as it developed from a
unilateral instrument to a multilateral agreement. The example of international co-operation given
to the world since the 1930's by the free nations of the Western Hemisphere has been one to
edify and encourage."
Parochial life. "One of the weaknesses in the Church in South America is the lack of
parochial life as that is understood in other countries. There is not the same family spirit binding
the people to the priest, not the same interest in such parochial concerns as sodalities, as one
finds in countries where hampering traditions do not exist. Personal visits, the taking of a census,
the making of annual reports about the spiritual state of the parish, which are ordinary concerns
of a pastor in the United States, are practiced only in parts of the southern continent. That is a
serious matter since parochial life is the foundation of the Church and no degree of progress in
other fields-monasteries, universities, and the rest-can make up for the lack of a closely knit and
well organized parish life. Many of the younger clergy realize that and are trying to remedy the
situation, but the old traditions die hard and the type of parish priest who does little beyond saying
Mass, reciting the Breviary, and attending the sick when summoned is not yet extinct in South
America. The blame must, however, be placed on the shoulders of many of the laity themselves,
who are prone to misinterpret the motives of a priest who displays an eagerness to mingle with
his people and get to know them, the clergy being in consequence forced to forego many such
outlets for their zeal for fear of giving scandal." 21 Hierarchical concern was reflected in the
meeting of six hundred Latin American bishops at Rio during July, 1955, and the setting up of an
episcopal conference which first met at Bogota in 1956.
Francisco Madero, a doctrinaire idealist and wealthy landowner, was installed as Diaz's
successor in 1911 after a successful rising against the aging dictator who had neglected to infuse
new blood into his governmental system. Madero, though sincere and honest, was something of
a neurotic and in any event could not promptly redeem promises made to the divergent elements
of the coalition which had promoted him to the presidency. In February, 1913, Madero was
deposed by General Huerta and subsequently killed. A promising Catholic social party, founded
by Gabriel Fernandez Somellera in 1911, was denied an opportunity to initiate a reform program
and was later (1917) outlawed.
The Jacobin Constitution of 1917 proved the source of all modern persecution of the
Catholic Church in Mexico. Besides nationalizing certain natural resources and announcing a
division of the large estates, it attacked the Church which was declared separate from, but
subject to, the state. Article 3 banned religious from teaching in either public or private schools.
Article 27 secularized churches and other clerical institutions. Article 130, besides
disenfranchising ministers of religion, claimed the right to intervene in worship and discipline. All
priests were required to register with the civil authorities, who often took it upon themselves to
determine the number allowed to function within a given area. It is true that all of these measures
were not immediately put into operation, but Carranza was deposed in 1920 for trying to have
them amended.
President Alvaro Obregon (1920-24) avoided open persecution of the Church until he had
secured the recognition of the United States in 1923. But then he dismissed the apostolic
delegate for presuming to bless the cornerstone of a monument to the Sacred Heart, and during
1924 arrests were made of those who attended Eucharistic celebrations, even within church
buildings.
President Plutarco Calles (1924-28), like Obregon, was a capitalist exploiting the poor in
the name of Socialism. He prefaced his attack upon the Church by engineering an unsuccessful
plot to create a schism. But though a Padre Perez was installed in 1925 as the "Patriarch of the
Mexican Catholic Church," be drew only one clerical adherent and himself submitted to the
Church in 1931. Next Calles expelled some two hundred Spanish priests and other foreign
clerics or nuns, and began to close religious houses, schools, and shrines. The registration of
priests was insisted upon, and some states restricted the number of the clergy unreasonably;
e.g., Sonora allowed but one priest for every ten thousand.
The Ley Calles was a sweeping penal code announced by the president in June, 1926, to
go into effect the following July 31. This enforced a most rigorous and even extended
interpretation of the anticlerical provisions of the Constitution of 1917, and added to any violation
extreme penalties. Clerics might not officiate without authorization, teach, wear clerical garb, or
comment on the penal code itself.
Resistance. Although the Mexican hierarchy placed an interdict on public church
services, and Catholics presented a petition with two million signatures to Congress, no redress
was given. A nationwide boycott failed. From January, 1927, Flores and his Cristeros waged
guerilla warfare in Jalisco; though Flores was shot in April, 1927, some of his followers held out
until July, 1929. Calles himself struck back. Most of the bishops were exiled, and hundreds of
priests or laymen shot on one charge or another. Among these was Padre Miguel Pro, S.J.,
falsely accused with his brothers of trying to assassinate Obregon. When Obregon was actually
slain in July, 1928, Calles seems to have been frightened, for be entered into negotiations with
Archbishop Ruiz through the mediation of Father Burke of NCWC and Ambassador Morrow of the
United States. In September, 1928, Calles retired from the presidency in favor of Emilio Portes
Gil, though as minister of war be remained caudillo in all subsequent presidential administrations
until 1935.
The Arreglo or Pact of 1929 between President Portes Gil (192830) and Bishops Ruiz
and Diaz, promised: (1) restoration of churches, rectories, and seminaries; (2) respect for church
property in the future; (3) amnesty for the Cristeros. The president announced that officials
should not interpret the anticlerical laws unreasonably, nor interfere with ecclesiastical services
and instructions within the church buildings. Federal anticlericalism was thus considerably
mitigated during the next six years, despite occasional flare-ups, but Governor Canabal of
Tabasco continued to terrorize his province until expelled by a revolt in 1935.
Catholic Action, evoked by the persecutions, has labored in the narrow sphere allowed it.
Buena Prensa, begun in 1937, distributes Catholic literature. The national organization of
Catholic Action enlisted 345,000 members, and Bishop Miranda, a progressive sponsor of this
work, was promoted to the primatial see of Mexico City in 1956. While Mexican seminaries are
reviving, the mission seminary at Montezuma, New Mexico, founded during 1937, is still being
maintained. In 1917 a Mexican missionary congregation, Missionaries of the Holy Spirit, was
formed. Promotion of a Mexican prelate to the cardinalate, which in the past had encountered
governmental opposition, seemed a portent of better times in 1958.
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
Agnostic and materialistic assaults upon Christian truth had influenced many earnest
religiously minded persons to deplore the disunion of Christendom, and to discuss projects of co-
operation or union among all who revered Christ. The Holy See had never ceased to invite
Dissidents to return, and appeals to this effect were sent out prior to the First Vatican Council of
1869 and in preparation for the Second in 1959. Oriental Dissidents, if gradually thawing,
remained cool toward papal overtures, while the Protestants generally ignored any reunion upon
Rome's terms. The most promising reunion movement in the West, the Oxford, had failed of
mass conversion. In the United States, Lewis Wattson (1863-1940), an Episcopalian minister,
founded the Society of the Atonement on Franciscan models in 1898. As Father Paul Francis he
had worked and prayed for Christian reunion, instituting the Church Unity Octave in 1908.
Presently he applied to Rome and during 1909 was received with his community, numbering,
however, less than a score. Individual rather than group reunion continued to be the pattern,
despite many non-Catholic meetings and expressions of good will.
2) Union, however, must be attained without sacrifice of truth. "Unity can result only from one
single rule of faith and one same belief among all Christians." Hence: a) Differences in dogma
must not be deemed negligible, and Catholic dogma is not to be "accommodated" to suit
apologetic needs. b) "Bishops will not allow recourse to a perilous mode of speaking which
engenders false notions and raises deceitful hopes." c) In treating of accounts of the Protestant
Reformation, Catholic faults and foibles should not be exaggerated nor dwelt upon exclusively
without indicating the malice of rebellion. d) Catholic doctrines should not be adulterated or
suppressed, but expounded "whole and entire" without reservation or ambiguity.
3) Bishops ought, then, (a) exercise vigilance and care; (b) be well informed on prospects
through able priests; (c) lay down rules for mixed meetings held only after careful scrutiny and
authorization of the hierarchy, and when there is prospect of good result; (d) these reservations
are not to apply to catechetical instructions or conferences to non-Catholic inquirers, nor to non-
doctrinal meetings for promotion of joint social works with non-Catholics.
B. Protestant Attitudes
C. Byzantine Dissidents
(1) POLITICAL STATUS
Nationalistic movements of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries within the Ottoman
dominions occasioned the Byzantine patriarchate much grief. Now the patriarchs' co-operation
with the sultans in Hellenizing the Slavic churches led to their identification with the Turkish
regime by nationalist patriots. Thus, secular independence from Turkish rule as achieved in the
Balkans usually soon entailed repudiation of patriarchal jurisdiction as well. Eventually all of
these national churches became autocephalous, and the patriarch, while retaining an honorary
precedence, was reduced to jurisdiction over less than one hundred thousand subjects. The
patriarchs, indeed, excommunicated such rebels, but ultimately were obliged to concede a
grudging recognition of an accomplished fact. Moreover, as Russia grew powerful, her
secularized Holy Synod monopolized and regimented ecclesiastical discipline in all the Byzantine-
Slavic lands, asserting a protectorate over the Orthodox still under Turkish rule. Most Orthodox
bishops now took the title of metropolitan, which accordingly came to be meaningless. After the
overthrow of the Ottoman dynasty, there arose a secular leader, Mustapha Kemal Pasha (1923-
38), who knew not the Phanar. Not merely did the patriarch lose all of his official privileges, but
even the Mohammedan religion was disestablished.
D. Catholic Orientals
(1) BYZANTINE RITE
Greeks. Most of the Catholics in Turkey and Greece belonged to the Latin Rite, and
efforts to form a Catholic Byzantine Rite mission date only from Father Marango's arrival in
Constantinople in 1856. By 1861 he had a small congregation at Pera, and had reconciled two
Dissident bishops on their deathbeds. He was followed by Father Polycarp Anastides in 1878.
During 1895 Pope Leo XIII sent French Assumptionist Fathers who founded a seminary and two
parishes, going over to the Byzantine Rite in 1897 with the approbation of the Holy See. Their
review, Echos d'Orient, began to appear in 1907. In 1911 the Byzantine Catholics received an
episcopal exarch, Isaias Papadopoulos, subsequently an advisor of the Roman curia. After a
century of effort, however, only three thousand Greeks had been won to reunion, under episcopal
exarchs at Constantinople and Athens.
Albanian Catholics of the Greek Rite were but 120 in 1945, but there were 100,000 of the
Latin Rite.
Bulgarian Catholicity of the Latin Rite dated from Franciscan evangelization during the
sixteenth century, but Greek Rite converts began only in 1861 with the reconciliation of Bishop
Sokolsky with nearly sixty thousand followers. Though many of these relapsed, in 1945 there
were six thousand Byzantine Rite Catholics under an exarch, besides forty thousand Latins.
Ruthenians, forcibly subjected to Moscow by the czar in 1839, had been given liberty to
reunite with Rome openly during the twentieth century. The Communists forced them back into
the Greek Orthodox Church in 1946, although many refugees and emigrants had carried the
Ruthenian Rite to Poland, Austria-Hungary, the United States, Canada, and elsewhere.
Melkites were disturbed during the nineteenth century both by elements of Jansenism
and Gallicanism introduced from the Synod of Pistoia (1796) by Bishop Germanus Adama of
Acre, and by Turkish persecutions which claimed the lives of eleven Catholics in 1817, and exiled
many of the clergy. French intervention halted this persecution by 1831. The great Patriarch
Maximos III (1833-55) organized the Melkite Rite, and the healthy condition of the community
continued into the twentieth century when the Catholic Melkite patriarch of Antioch exercises
jurisdiction over 150,000 in the Levant, not counting a diaspora.
The Maronites had enjoyed comparative toleration under the autonomous Emirs of
Lebanon, but were exposed after 1840 to attacks by the Druzes, a fanatical sect of Moslems.
During May-June, 1860, over seven thousand Catholics were killed-eleven of the victims were
beatified in 1926. French intervention restored order, though still others were slain by the Turks
during World War 1. After the war, the Maronites were included in the Republic of Lebanon under
French protection. Withdrawal of this protection during and after World War II exposed the
Maronites alike to Communist attacks and Pan-Arabian Nationalism. In 1932 there were 10 sees
and 366,000 Catholics.
The Malankarese are a small group of Indian ex-Jacobites who returned to Catholic unity
under Mar Ivanios and Mar Theophilus during 1930. By 1946 their example had been followed by
fifty thousand of the faithful, including two more Dissident prelates.
The Malabarese are converts from Nestorian missions in India during the Portuguese
occupation. Though subjected to Latinizing and occasionally relapsing, numbers survived to
1887 when they received a native hierarchy, accorded full status in 1923.
XII
Totalitarian Shadow
A. African Missions
North African territories began to come under French rule early in the nineteenth century,
though at first anticlerical governors conciliated the Moslems by banning missionaries. A bishop
was admitted in 1838, but obliged to confine his ministrations to French colonists. In 1849
Fathers Schembri, S.J., and Girard, C.M., were recalled for trying to evangelize the natives. This
prohibition continued until 1867 when Charles Lavigerie (1825-92), named archbishop of Algiers,
secured greater freedom of action from the secular authorities. His foundation of the White
Fathers endeavored to adopt native dress and customs. Concentrating more on the immediate
promotion of good will than upon making of converts, they at first devoted themselves chiefly to
educational and charitable works. Proselytizing brought renewed difficulties, and Lavigerie,
archbishop of Carthage in 1884, forbade baptism until 1888 when three Kabylians implored the
sacrament during an audience with Pope Leo XIII. More exceptions were made thereafter, and
by 1906 there were eight hundred converts and two hundred catechumens from Islam. The
White Fathers subsequently extended their efforts to the Sudan and the Sahara where the work
of preparation had to be renewed. During the twentieth century the remarkable career of Charles
de Foucauld (1858-1916) again drew attention to the Moslem mission.
In Ethiopia, missionary efforts were resumed in 1839 by Blessed Justin de Jacobis and
his Vincentian confreres from the Alexandrian mission. The martyred Blessed Ghebre Michael
was won from the Coptic schism. Capuchins followed in the same field and Father Massaja, later
cardinal, established a close friendship with Prince Menelik of Shoa, who as king (1889-1911)
terminated persecution and allowed foundation of Catholic schools and orphanages. Italian-held
Moslem lands, such as Libya, were evangelized according to Lavigerie's methods. These
Catholic outposts were tested severely in the Pan-Arabic nationalist movement in North Africa
and the Levant against European colonialism after World War II.
(2) PAGAN AREAS
Negro missions called forth the labors of the White Fathers, the Lyons Missionaries, who
lost 283 members within 65 years, and the Fathers of the Holy Ghost, founded by Father
Liebermann, 600 of whom died in service between 1843 and 1900. Within a century they had
converted 2,000,000 and reorganized declining earlier missions, which included the mid-century
efforts of Fathers Barron and Kelly of Pennsylvania, in Liberia. The Holy Ghost Fathers, settled at
Dakar under Bishop Truffet in 1847, struggled against Moslem influence in Guinea throughout the
nineteenth century; only during the twentieth century was success marked. Marion de Bresillac
and his missionaries from Lyons labored in Dahomey under similar handicaps. Missionaries in
the Congo at first found anticlerical restrictions, but in 1888 King Leopold II of Belgium opened
the field to the Belgian Sheutveld Fathers, who achieved noteworthy success. Even in British
territories Catholic missionaries have as a rule outdistanced Episcopalians in making converts.
The discouraging prospect of the nineteenth century has yielded to a phenomenal twentieth-
century harvest, menaced, indeed, by the ever-extending tentacles of Communism. In 1800
there were but 50 missionaries and about 50,000 Catholics; in 1957 there were 20,000,000
Catholics distributed in 257 vicariates and prefectures, served by 9,000 foreign and 1,688 native
missionaries. There were but 66 native priests in 1923; in 1957 there were 1,700 and 20 native
bishops, the first of whom was consecrated in 1939. Yet but ten per cent of Africa's 213,000,000
were Catholic at mid-twentieth century.
Patronage crisis. Clerical discipline had seriously declined within the Portuguese
patronal patriarchate of Goa, and yet the Liberal monarchy clung to the privileges bestowed upon
more apostolic kings. Finally when Pope Gregory XVI intervened within the patronal jurisdiction
in the sees of Cochin, Cranganore, and Mylapore, a serious schism ensued. Patriarch Silva y
Torres excommunicated papally designated vicars apostolic, and promoted unworthy individuals
to the priesthood. A partial accord in 1857 failed to reach the root of the difficulties, and peace
was not entirely restored before 1886 when Pope Leo XIII reached a settlement which permitted
him to reorganize the Indian hierarchy into eight provinces and twenty-nine dioceses or vicariates.
Goa, raised to patriarchal honors, saw its patronal rights reduced to Portuguese India. Double
jurisdiction of reorganized patronal sees continued until 1928, when it ceased.
Native progress. After these ancient barriers had been removed, the drive for a native
clergy was pressed. By 1914 there were eighteen hundred native priests, and in 1923 the first
native bishop of the Latin Rite was consecrated. In 1930 the submission of the Jacobite bishops,
Mar Ivanios and Mar Theophilus, with several thousands of their followers, paved the way for a
new Catholic Malankarese Rite. Meanwhile greater autonomy had been accorded the
Malabarese Catholics: in 1887 they were given a separate hierarchical jurisdiction, and in 1923
the metropolitan see of Ernakulum and three suffragan dioceses were erected, directly subject to
the Holy See. Though the nineteenth and twentieth centuries had witnessed renewed missionary
activity by European and later American religious in India, their status became precarious with the
establishment of Indian independence (1947; 1950). The Holy See endeavored to dissipate this
suspicion of foreign missionaries by promoting more native Indians to the hierarchy and naming
Archbishop Gracias of Bombay to the college of cardinals. During 1950, Cardinal Gilroy of
Sydney, Australia, presided as papal legate over the first Indian Plenary Council at Bangalore, a
step toward uniform legislation. At the same time many foreign missionaries applied for Indian
citizenship. Father Souza, S.J., was a member of the Indian constitutional convention, and a
delegate to the United Nations. Communist pressure from within and without was an ever-
present danger, though when Communist control of Kerala state threatened Catholic schools,
President Krasad of India vetoed a hostile measure (1957-58).
In French Annam, now Vietnam, despite repeated persecutions there were three hundred
thousand Christians by 1800. Nor was their ordeal over. Despite, or because of, French
intervention, the princes showed themselves fanatical persecutors until the French occupation of
the country in 1886. The Edict of Minh (1825) forbade entry of foreign missionaries. Isidore
Gagelin was executed in 1833, and other missionaries and catechists shared his fate in following
years. As the Church went underground, another edict (1836) imposed the death penalty on both
missionaries and those who hid them. Prince Tue-Duc (1847-82) was one of the worst of the
persecutors, but Bishop Retord (d. 1858) was the soul of the resistance. Theophile Venard was
slain in 1861; the following year French intervention began to lessen the persecution. Within a
half century of persecution, 115 priests and 100,000 of the faithful had been slain, of whom 100
have been beatified. Yet there were 500,000 Christians in 1886 and this number had doubled by
1930. French colonialism, however, furnished fuel for Communist propaganda and half of the
country was occupied by Communists in 1954. Of 860,000 refugees from this area, 676,000
were Catholics. The Viet-Namese have shown staunch loyalty to the Catholic Church, andthe
fact that four-fifths of their priests are natives refutes anti-Western propaganda.
In Burma, evangelization proceeded on a small scale; but 3,000 converts had been made
by the nineteenth century. The great upsurge of missionary activity came with Monsignor
Bigandet in 1856, who lived to ordain fourteen native priests. New vicariates were formed in
1870, and the hierarchy completely reorganized under the archdioceses of Mandalay and
Rangoon in 1955. There were then 160,000 Catholics and 226 priests, of whom 80 were natives.
In Indonesia, where Dutch domination had blighted the Catholic missions begun by the
Portuguese, temporary French control of Holland under Bonaparte permitted Catholic
missionaries to re-enter, and the Dutch later relaxed some of their restrictions in certain areas.
By 1848 when complete missionary freedom was accorded, it is estimated that there were but
four Catholic churches and 5,500 Catholics. Though in the interval of exclusion the greater
number of natives had become Protestant or Mohammedan, considerable progress was made.
By the end of the century the priests had increased to 46, and the Catholics to 45,000; by 1948
there were 459 priests and some 467,000 Catholics, and counting outlying districts, 784,000
according to another estimate.
Malay, for a time under the flourishing vicariate of Malacca (1558), had also declined after
Dutch occupation (1641) until the jurisdiction was merged with the vicariate of Siam (1669). But a
limited mission among the Chinese and Indians was permitted from 1787, and in 1841 the
Malacca vicariate was re-established; it became a metropolitan see in 1953. Though the Malays
remain Moslem, converts among Eurasians had reached one hundred thousand.
Oceania, or the South Sea Isles of Polynesia and Melanesia, had been opened to
European exploration during the eighteenth century by the English Captain Cook and the French
explorer Bougainville. French missionaries followed in the wake of French occupation, the Picpus
Fathers leading the way in 1827, to be followed by the Marists and Sacred Heart Missionaries.
Vicariates were established in East Oceania (1833), West (1836), and Central (1842). Excessive
reliance upon French military protection may sometimes have prejudiced missionary success, but
nothing can detract from the heroism of Bishop jean Pompalier, late: ordinary in New Zealand,
and of St. Pierre Chanel (1803-41) martyred in the not yet Friendly Isles. In British territories,
pioneer Catholic missionaries encountered opposition from rival Protestant evangelists at first, but
eventually room was found for all. World War 11, besides disturbing the missions, revolutionized
life in Oceania and ended the colonial era. The Bandoeng, Java Congress in 1955 stressed
anticolonialism and anti-Caucasian aims of the Oceanic peoples, so that here, too, the future of
the Catholic missions was likely to lie with the native clergy.
The Philippine Islands, for the most part evangelized by the nineteenth century, continued
on their tranquil course until the SpanishAmerican War. The Church was then threatened by
nationalistic antagonism to the Spanish clergy culminating in the Aglipayan Schism and American
Protestant proselytizing. American Catholic missionaries largely repaired these damages, and
the ultimate good faith of the United States government in conceding independence voluntarily
(1946) probably saved the islands from succumbing to Communism, although for their
preservation they were chiefly indebted to their own great President Magsaysay (1953-57).
Communist persecution soon dimmed this bright prospect after World War II. Mao Tse-
tung, who had set up a Communist government at Hankow as early as 1928, not only survived
nationalist Chinese and Japanese attacks, but after World War II extended his rule to embrace
most of the Chinese mainland, forcing the nationalist leader Chiang Kaishek to take refuge on
Formosa. On October 1, 1949, the Communists could proclaim the People's Republic at Peking.
In 1945 there were about 4,000,000 Chinese Catholics with 105 sees, 39 prefectures, ruled by 27
Chinese ordinaries with the aid of 3,000 foreign missionaries and about 2,500 native priests.
Communist attacks were at first chiefly directed against the foreigners so that the 5,496 foreign
priests, brothers, and sisters of 1947 had by 1956 been reduced by death or exile to 23, and all of
these were in detention. Under such circumstances lay guidance became extremely important.
Morale was maintained by the Legion of Mary, organized by Monsignor Riberi, the papal nuncio,
assisted by Father Aidean McGrath and Miss Joan Hsiao, who was later imprisoned by the
Communists. The most serious development, however, was the establishment of a schismatic
hierarchy during 1958. The Communists reported the consecration of twenty priests to fill the
"vacant" sees held by legitimate bishops who had been imprisoned or exiled. Five of the
legitimate hierarchy are reported to have participated in these consecrations which were
denounced by Pius XII in an encyclical of June 29, 1958-published only in September.
(2) JAPAN
Christian resurrection. So far as Western Christendom knew, the savage persecutions of
the seventeenth century had extinguished Catholicity in Japan. Yet in 1812 a Russian traveler in
the Orient reported a crucifixion of Japanese Christians, and in 1829 twenty Japanese sailors
shipwrecked in Manila displayed medals and asked for baptism. P'ere Forcade finally succeeded
in entering Japan in 1844 but was unable to evangelize. After years of detention, he was
expelled. During 1858 the Japanese government admitted chaplains for the French embassy, but
denied them missionary activities. The chaplains nonetheless established contact with the native
Christians in 1865, after passing their three tests: clerical celibacy, veneration for Mary, and
obedience to the pope. When these secret communications were discovered by the government,
several thousand Japanese were deported for professing Christianity, until Japan yielded to
European protests in 1872 to the extent of releasing native Christians. In 1875 religious toleration
was formally sanctioned.
Catholic progress. At once two vicariates were erected, and in 1882 Bishop Petitjean
ordained the first native Japanese priest in modern times, a son of a confessor of the 1867
persecution. By 1891 it became possible to erect the archdiocese of Tokyo with three suffragan
sees. The Paris Missionary Society took the lead in re-evangelizing Japan and reported fifty
thousand Christians by 1900. At this time (1899) also the Japanese government decreed full
religious liberty. The drive for a native clergy was accentuated, and in 1927 Pius XI consecrated
the first native Japanese bishop of the new hierarchy. During 1936 a decision of the Holy See
permitted Catholic participation in the now secularized State Shinto rite, since "the civil authorities
and the common estimation of cultured persons attribute to the ceremonies held at the national
shrines a mere civil significance of patriotism; namely, a feeling of filial reverence toward the
Imperial Family and to the heroes of the country." The discrediting of militarism and imperialism
during World War 11 portended a promising mission field, provided that Indifferentism or
Communism did not anticipate the missionaries. Since 1940 all of the hierarchy have been
Japanese, and by 1955 there were ten dioceses or vicariates and five prefectures. The number
of Japanese Catholics mounted from 59,000 in 1905, to 105,000 in 1935, to 227,000 in 1956.
(3) KOREA
Christianity penetrated into Korea from China in 1785 through the Chinese convert, Peter
Ly. Despite repeated persecutions, the number of Korean Christians had increased to ten
thousand by the nineteenth century. In 1831 a vicariate was created, but the first vicar-apostolic
was unable to reach Korea, and the second, Monsignor Imbert, was martyred in 1839. In 1866
Bishop Berneux and most of his missionaries were slain and another persecution occurred in
1887. By the time that Japan annexed Korea (1895), she had already conceded religious
toleration, so that Korean Catholics at length enjoyed liberty. Bishop Mutel saw the Catholic
population increase from 18,000 in 1890 to 78,000 in 1911. At the outbreak of World War II, there
were 125 foreign and 121 native priests. In 1941 Paul Ro became the first native Korean bishop.
During World War II American missionaries were arrested and the vicariates filled with native or
Japanese bishops. More serious was the Red persecution which took the lives of Bishop Byrne
and many others. In Communist dominated Northern Korea the Church was driven underground,
but in the South Catholics still numbered 189,000 in 1955, with 56 foreign and 189 native priests.
D. Missionary Direction
Catholic missionary resources were severely strained during the years following the
French Revolution by the disruption of the religious congregations in Europe, although
occasionally persecution at home temporarily freed priests for service abroad. As the nineteenth
century advanced, the material advantages, combined with vexatious meddling of the Iberian
patronage system, dwindled, though these were partially replaced by the new colonial
imperialism. This new imperialism was frankly secular, and yet it often patronized and defended
missionaries for its own objectives, perhaps to the ultimate detriment of the missionary effort.
The Congregation of Propaganda was reconstituted in 1817 after Pope Pius VII's return
to Rome, and continually perfected its organization. In 1862 a separate administration was
provided for the missions of the Oriental Rite, and in 1908 many European and American
countries were restored to normal hierarchical jurisdiction and thereby withdrawn from
Propaganda's supervision. The Congregation could now rely on the missionary resources of
reorganized religious communities, as well as upon new societies formed specifically for
missionary work abroad, such as the Milan Society, the White Fathers, the Lyons Society, the Mill
Hill Fathers, and Maryknoll. The laity responded generously and founded no less than 250
associations within a century to assist the foreign missions. Chief among these was the Society
for the Propagation of the Faith, begun by Pauline Jaricot at Lyons in 1822, and transferred by
Pius XI to Rome in 1922. Missionary literature, both in books and pamphlets, has increased
interest and financial support, and technical courses in Missiology have analyzed methods from
the records of the past. During the twentieth century the objective of the Holy See to form a
native and self-recruiting clergy came nearer to realization. Benedict XV and Pius XI issued
noteworthy missionary encyclicals (1919; 1926). The latter pontiff also sponsored a Missionary
Exhibit in 1925, specified a monthly mission intention for the Apostleship of Prayer, established
the Fides Mission News Service, and dramatically inaugurated native hierarchies in China and
Japan, a course continued in India and Africa by Pius XII.
Missionary revival began chiefly with the pontificate of Gregory XVI, former prefect of
Propaganda, and continued without interruption. In 1800 there were twenty missionary vicariates
and prefectures; in 1956, some six hundred existed. Missionary support comes to Propaganda,
which has always issued documents gratis, from the Propagation of the Faith Society, the Peter
the Apostle Fund for Native Seminarians, and the Holy Childhood. In 1957, the sums from the
first two categories amounted to over $18,000,000, of which sixty-six per cent came from the
United States. And yet missionary goals remain immense: by midtwentieth century, Catholics
were but seventeen per cent of an estimated world population of 2,655,000,000, and non-
Christians were still sixty-five per cent of the children of Adam.
Conclusion. During the proletarian era of mass production and in face of totalitarian
mobilization of manpower, stress has been laid upon imperialistic control of the minds and
resources of the masses. Ideological conflicts have led to contests for the support of mankind the
world
over. These trends have but heightened the emphasis on the Catholicity of the Christian Church,
and have laid new stress upon the ever present duty of missionary evangelization, last injunction
of the Master until He comes again: "Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing
them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit; teaching them to observe
all that I have commanded you; and behold, I am with you all days, even unto the consummation
of the world" (Matt. 28:19).