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Forgotten
Treasures
The Counterrevolutionary Lion, Part II
by Peter A. Kwasniewski
In the last column we looked at a number
of masterful social encyclicals that Pope Leo XIII promulgated
for the universal Church in order to guide her in the midst
of delicate and difficult dealings with modern nation-states
and modern economic situations. What Leo was really grappling
with was the emergence of a thoroughly secularized way of
life and worldview, a worldview severed from the Christian
past and obsessed with the pursuit of worldly “progress.”
Setting Up the Defense
Pope Leo was among the first to size up the full magnitude
of the change that was taking place as the Western world abandoned
the Redeemer’s sweet yoke to run after fashionable “-isms”
such as liberalism, materialism, and consumerism. These promised
ever-expanding freedom while achieving little more than the
gradual destruction of the natural and supernatural institutions
that console and delight man during his sojourn on earth.
In response to so profound and multifarious a challenge,
we see the great Pope addressing not only the social themes
spoken of in the last article, but numerous others of larger
cultural and religious significance. Leo seems to address
these themes as if to erect a bulwark of defense, while also
providing a foundation for the positive Catholic response
that must, with God’s help, occur if we are to save
souls and save the Christian civilization that is our fitting
home.
For example, in his encyclical on Christian
matrimony, Arcanum (1880), Leo XIII speaks perspicuously
of the Creator’s original intention for marriage and
the family, and offers a forceful critique of the novel theories
and liberal legislation that were just beginning to undermine
the family at that time.
Read from our vantage more than 125 years later, we can see,
alas, how precisely accurate was every single dire prediction
made by the Pope about the deleterious effects of such ideas
and laws. But we can also see how well he develops the positive
side of his subject, in a way both beautiful and insightful,
and which remains entirely valid and fruitful for today’s
readers. In fact, it may be said without fear of exaggeration
that this encyclical single-handedly inaugurated modern Catholic
teaching on marriage and family, which from the time of Pope
Pius XI onward has been so very rich and well developed.
In the remainder of this article I shall speak briefly about
seven of Leo XIII’s encyclicals concerning the foundations
of our intellectual and spiritual life, the unique identity
and mission of the Church founded by Our Lord, and the need
to reject the pomp of secular humanism in a resolute return
to the grace of Jesus Christ.
The Catholic Intellect and the Holy Spirit
Certainly one of the most famous and
influential of Leo’s encyclicals is the one often entitled
“On the Restoration of Christian Philosophy,”
more familiarly known as Aeterni Patris (1879). Note
that the Pope, elected in 1878, wasted little time in making
sure this document reached the Catholic world. One of the
numerous unfinished matters of business that Bl. Pius IX had
assigned to the First Vatican Council, which had been forced
into suspension in late 1870 by the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian
War, was a thorough review and reform of Catholic studies
in philosophy and theology. This Leo himself undertook, drawing
upon his own experience of the systematic power, synthetic
genius, and timeless relevance of St. Thomas Aquinas. With
vigor, consistency, and pontifical pressure as needed, Pope
Leo XIII brought it about that seminaries and educational
institutions around the world took the Angelic Doctor as their
guide in studies.
Aeterni Patris was, as it
were, the Magna Charta of this movement of restoration, or
better, invigoration. It bears rereading today because of
the grand sweep of Christian intellectual history it presents
and the balanced but decisive preeminence granted to Aquinas
as leader and model. The Church would surely be better off
if Leo’s advice had been accepted in greater purity—that
is, if the actual writings of St. Thomas had become the backbone
of Catholic studies rather than countless and often inadequate
neoscholastic manuals. But the story of the rise and fall
of Neo-Thomism, as well as the more hopeful story of the resurgence
of Thomistic discipleship occurring in our own time, must
be left for another occasion.
Again, it was in keeping with the First Vatican Council’s
effort to articulate the harmony of faith and reason and to
respond to the haughty spirit of historical-critical reductionism
that Leo XIII issued his encyclical “On the Study of
Holy Scripture,” Providentissimus Deus (1893).
Like Pius XII’s equally important encyclical on Scripture
from a half-century later, Divino Afflante Spiritu
(1943), Leo’s has been the victim of a subtle but systematic
campaign waged by Catholic modernists who would prefer to
leave behind that “traditional stuff” about the
divine inspiration, inerrancy, and infallibility of the sacred
writings.
But Pope Leo, who was well aware of the attempt of liberal
Protestants in his own day to cut down the word of God to
merely human, and therefore fallible, proportions, would have
none of this heresy. He eloquently reaffirmed and explained
traditional Catholic doctrine on the dual authorship, divine
and human, of the books of Scripture; the consequent guarantee
of freedom from all error; the unbreakable connection between
Scripture, Tradition, and magisterium; and the various senses
of Scripture discerned by the Fathers of the Church. He also
touched on how to make use of modern tools of analysis without
imbibing the false philosophical views of their creators.
Let me make a suggestion for summer
reading or for a study group: If you seek an accurate grasp
of the Catholic understanding of Scripture and its role in
the life of faith, study these four documents and in this
order: Vatican I’s Dei Filius, Leo XIII’s
Providentissimus Deus, Pius XII’s Divino
Afflante Spiritu, and Vatican II’s Dei Verbum.
One of the more surprising encyclicals of Leo XIII is his
Divinum Illud Munus, (“On the Holy Spirit,”
1897.) Surprising to us, that is, because many Catholics have
been led to think that the Holy Spirit was the “forgotten
person” of the Holy Trinity until His rediscovery, so
to speak, by the charismatic movement in the twentieth century.
But nothing could be further from the truth, as anyone familiar
with traditional Catholic devotions and literature can attest;
indeed it could never have been true, since the Spirit of
God is at work in every sacrament, every liturgy, every motion
of the soul toward God, every holy person who has ever lived.
This encyclical itself, in its lucid exposition of the Holy
Spirit’s “place” in the Trinity and of His
presence and action in Christ, in the Church, in the human
soul, and in the world, is—quite apart from its authoritative
status as papal teaching—a true masterpiece of theological
and spiritual prose. We see in its pages a demonstration of
how the seemingly abstruse doctrine of St. Thomas can “come
alive” in the hands of one who really understands it.
One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic
In 1896 the indefatigable Leo XIII
brought out his encyclical Satis Cognitum, “On
the Unity of the Church,” which treats the fundamentals
of ecclesiology so well that Pope Paul VI in his inaugural
encyclical, Ecclesiam Suam (1964), drew special attention
to it as a key source for upcoming discussions at the Second
Vatican Council, which shortly thereafter produced the Dogmatic
Constitution on the Church, Lumen Gentium.
Leo’s encyclical has the great
merit of focusing precisely on the question: Did Jesus Christ
really intend to found a Church, a visible and hierarchically
structured body of believers on earth, charged with the mission
of carrying His Gospel and extending the effects of His redemption
to the ends of the earth? The Pope systematically, yet succinctly,
marshals scriptural evidence, the testimony of Tradition,
and rational arguments to bring home his conclusions about
the uniqueness and unicity of the Church of Christ with its
definitive episcopal structure. In all my years of studying
ecclesiology and apologetics, I have not seen any presentation
of these themes that is quite as direct, uncluttered, elegant,
and inspiring as Leo XIII’s. To say that it would make
a splendid text for a study group, an adult education class,
or a theology course at school is an understatement.
The Needs of Modern Man
Although each of the nearly 100 encyclicals
promulgated by Pope Leo XIII offers insightful commentary
on the situation of modern man, as well as consistent good
advice for Catholics, there are three encyclicals from around
the turn of the twentieth century that have struck me for
years as especially emblematic of this Pope’s acute
theological vision, uplifting religious fervor, and bold cultural
critique. They are Annum Sacrum, “On Consecration
to the Sacred Heart” (1899); Tametsi Futura,
“On Jesus Christ the Redeemer of Mankind” (1900);
and Mirae Caritatis, “On the Holy Eucharist”
(1902).
Each speaks of the immense love of God given to us in Christ
Jesus, the mercy extended to us castaways of Adam’s
shipwreck, and the divine truth in which alone our minds can
find peace amidst the storms of ever more bewildering and
contradictory philosophies of life. The Pope is not content
merely to assert that such is our dire condition and such
our salvation; he spells it out step by step: Here is where
the false philosophies will lead you, Modern Man, and here
is how God can rescue you from the pit of destruction that
grows with your neglect and contempt of His good news.
In these pages, Leo XIII issues an impassioned plea for conversion
from the heart, beginning with the Church herself and moving
outward in concentric circles to embrace all mankind. And
like all the popes before and after him, Leo beckons us to
gather around the most sublime of all sacred mysteries on
earth, the Holy Eucharist—the Body and Blood of our
Redeemer—and to let it gather us into one Church, one
Body, full of the lifeblood that heals the fallen sons of
Adam.
Those who read the encyclicals I have recommended will be
amazed to see how much of the essential work of Vatican II,
the evangelical impulse of John Paul II, and the pastoral
wisdom and witness of Benedict XVI is luminously anticipated
and lined out in them, like a well-wrought sketch in preparation
for a painting. Readers will begin to sense how deeply and
decisively the Church’s magisterium was shaped and set
on course by this remarkable pontiff in his quarter-century
reign (1878–1903), whose choice fruits continue to bloom
in the garden of the Church.
Peter Kwasniewski
is an associate professor of theology at Wyoming Catholic
College and a visiting professor at the International Theological
Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family in Gaming, Austria.
He received his BA in liberal arts from Thomas Aquinas College
in California and his MA and Ph.D. in philosophy from The
Catholic University of America.
Kwasniewski has published extensively
in scholarly and popular journals and directs Gregorian chant
and other sacred music. He and his wife, Clarissa, have two
children and are lay members of the Order of Preachers.
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