HE Ourth Ession: Enth Ntervention
HE Ourth Ession: Enth Ntervention
HE Ourth Ession: Enth Ntervention
TENTH INTERVENTION
On The Subject of Schema 13 for the Constitu-
tion
on the Church in the Modern World
SEPTEMBER 9, 1965
At the Fourth Session a deeper study of the
schema on The Church in the Modern World led
me to the discovery that those who had drawn it
up lacked the spirit of the Catholic faith. At least
implicitly all the theories of Liberalism and
Modernism are to be found in it.
There had been a good deal of opposition to
the original text. Yet the very fact that it was
possible, unashamedly, to present such a
schema to the Fathers clearly demonstrates the
progress made by these false ideas in
ecclesiastical circles.
1
True liberty, befitting the true dignity
of the human person, is the faculty that man pos-
sesses, enlightened by grace and encouraged by an
upright civil legislation, to cling to truth, to practice
good, to choose the true religion revealed by God,
and to remain attached to it, Without succumbing to
the obstacle of sin and error. Freedom ftom all ex-
ternal constraint is good if it serves the good, and
bad if it is used in the service of evil. Consequently,
the Conciliar schemas, putting the libertas a coac-
tione (freedom from constraint) in the foreground, in-
vert the values and pervert the sense of liberty
which, if it does not lead to good, is nothing.
62 I Accuse the Council!
In conclusion
This pastoral Constitution is not pastoral, nor
does it emanate from the Catholic Church. It
does not feed Christian men with the Apostolic
truth of the Gospels and, moreover, the Church
has never spoken in this manner. We cannot
listen to this voice, because it is not the voice of
the Bride of Christ, This voice is not that of the
Spirit of Christ. The voice of Christ, our
Shepherd, we know. This voice we do not know.
The clothing is that of the sheep. The voice is not
the voice of the shepherd, but perhaps that of
the wolf.
ELEVENTH INTERVENTION
On The Subject of The Declaration on Religious
Liberty
SEPTEMBER 1965
(Intervention read at the Council)
Venerable Fathers,
It seems to me that the principles of the
Declaration of
Religious Liberty could be briefly expressed
as follows:
Founded on the dignity of the human person,
religious liberty demands equal rights in civil
society for all forms of worship. Society must
then be neutral and guarantee the protection of
every religion, within the limits of public order.
Such is the conception of religious liberty
proposed to us by those who drafted the
declaration.
Is this conception new or has it already
received clear support over many centuries?
The writer himself has already answered this
question. On p.43, he writes:
A fairly long historical evolution, both moral
and positive, has led to this conception—which
has been in force only since the 18th century.
Such an admission destroys ipso facto the
whole line of argument of the declaration.
Where, in point of fact, did this conception
come into force? In the tradition of the Church or
outside the Church’! Clearly it made its
appearance among the self-styled philosophers
of the eighteenth century: Hobbes, Locke,
Rousseau, Voltaire. In the name of the dignity of
human reason they tried to destroy the Church
68 I Accuse the Council!
TWELFTH INTERVENTION
On The Schema on The Missionary Activity of the
Church
OCTOBER 2, 1965
Venerable Fathers,
The new schema on The Missionary Activity
of the Church seems to us very much better than
the former one, above all because its object is
better defined: “Missions to nations and human
communities who have not yet the faith or
among” whom the Church has not yet
sufficiently taken root.” These are the words in
which the writer has expressed himself.
The order followed in the schema, too, seems
more in conformity with truth and reality.
Allow me, however, to call attention once
again to some very grave defects on points of
the greatest importance.