Humanum Genus
Encyclical on Freemasonry
His Holiness Pope Leo XIII
Promulgated on April 20, 1884
To the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops,
and Bishops of the Catholic World in Grace and Communion with the
Apostolic See.
THE RACE OF MAN, after its miserable fall from
God, the Creator and the Giver of heavenly gifts, "through the envy of
the devil," separated into two diverse and opposite parts, of which the
one steadfastly contends for truth and virtue, the other of those things
which are contrary to virtue and to truth. The one is the kingdom of God
on earth, namely, the true Church of Jesus Christ; and those who desire
from their heart to be united with it, so as to gain salvation, must of
necessity serve God and His only-begotten Son with their whole mind and
with an entire will. The other is the kingdom of Satan, in whose
possession and control are all whosoever follow the fatal example of
their leader and of our first parents, those who refuse to obey the
divine and eternal law, and who have many aims of their own in contempt
of God, and many aims also against God.
2. This twofold kingdom St. Augustine keenly
discerned and described after the manner of two cities, contrary in
their laws because striving for contrary objects; and with a subtle
brevity he expressed the efficient cause of each in these words: "Two
loves formed two cities: the love of self, reaching even to contempt of
God, an earthly city; and the love of God, reaching to contempt of self,
a heavenly one."[1] At every period of time each has been in conflict
with the other, with a variety and multiplicity of weapons and of
warfare, although not always with equal ardor and assault. At this
period, however, the partisans of evil seems to be combining together,
and to be struggling with united vehemence, led on or assisted by that
strongly organized and widespread association called the Freemasons. No
longer making any secret of their purposes, they are now boldly rising
up against God Himself. They are planning the destruction of holy Church
publicly and openly, and this with the set purpose of utterly despoiling
the nations of Christendom, if it were possible, of the blessings
obtained for us through Jesus Christ our Savior. Lamenting these evils,
We are constrained by the charity which urges Our heart to cry out often
to God: "For lo, Thy enemies have made a noise; and they that hate Thee
have lifted up the head. They have taken a malicious counsel against Thy
people, and they have consulted against Thy saints. They have said,
'come, and let us destroy them, so that they be not a nation'."[2]
3. At so urgent a crisis, when so fierce and so
pressing an onslaught is made upon the Christian name, it is Our office
to point out the danger, to mark who are the adversaries, and to the
best of Our power to make head against their plans and devices, that
those may not perish whose salvation is committed to Us, and that the
kingdom of Jesus Christ entrusted to Our charge may not stand and remain
whole, but may be enlarged by an ever-increasing growth throughout the
world.
4. The Roman Pontiffs Our predecessors, in
their incessant watchfulness over the safety of the Christian people,
were prompt in detecting the presence and the purpose of this capital
enemy immediately it sprang into the light instead of hiding as a dark
conspiracy; and, moreover, they took occasion with true foresight to
give, as it were on their guard, and not allow themselves to be caught
by the devices and snares laid out to deceive them.
5. The first warning of the danger was given by
Clement XII in the year 1738,[3] and his constitution was confirmed and
renewed by Benedict XIV.[4] Pius VII followed the same path;[5] and Leo
XII, by his apostolic constitution, Quo Graviora,[6] put together the
acts and decrees of former Pontiffs on this subject, and ratified and
confirmed them forever. In the same sense spoke Pius VIII,[7] Gregory
XVI,[8] and, many times over, Pius IX.[9]
6. For as soon as the constitution and the
spirit of the masonic sect were clearly discovered by manifest signs of
its actions, by the investigation of its causes, by publication of its
laws, and of its rites and commentaries, with the addition often of the
personal testimony of those who were in the secret, this apostolic see
denounced the sect of the Freemasons, and publicly declared its
constitution, as contrary to law and right, to be pernicious no less to
Christendom than to the State; and it forbade any one to enter the
society, under the penalties which the Church is wont to inflict upon
exceptionally guilty persons. The sectaries, indignant at this, thinking
to elude or to weaken the force of these decrees, partly by contempt of
them, and partly by calumny, accused the sovereign Pontiffs who had
passed them either of exceeding the bounds of moderation in their
decrees or of decreeing what was not just. This was the manner in which
they endeavored to elude the authority and the weight of the apostolic
constitutions of Clement XII and Benedict XIV, as well as of Pius VII
and Pius IX.[10] Yet, in the very society itself, there were to be found
men who unwillingly acknowledged that the Roman Pontiffs had acted
within their right, according to the Catholic doctrine and discipline.
The Pontiffs received the same assent, and in strong terms, from many
princes and heads of governments, who made it their business either to
delate the masonic society to the apostolic see, or of their own accord
by special enactments to brand it as pernicious, as, for example, in
Holland, Austria, Switzerland, Spain, Bavaria, Savoy, and other parts of
Italy.
7. But, what is of highest importance, the
course of events has demonstrated the prudence of Our predecessors. For
their provident and paternal solicitude had not always and every where
the result desired; and this, either because of the simulation and
cunning of some who were active agents in the mischief, or else of the
thoughtless levity of the rest who ought, in their own interest, to have
given to the matter their diligent attention. In consequence, the sect
of Freemasons grew with a rapidity beyond conception in the course of a
century and a half, until it came to be able, by means of fraud or of
audacity, to gain such entrance into every rank of the State as to seem
to be almost its ruling power. This swift and formidable advance has
brought upon the Church, upon the power of princes, upon the public
well-being, precisely that grievous harm which Our predecessors had long
before foreseen. Such a condition has been reached that henceforth there
will be grave reason to fear, not indeed for the Church--for her
foundation is much too firm to be overturned by the effort of men--but
for those States in which prevails the power, either of the sect of
which we are speaking or of other sects not dissimilar which lend
themselves to it as disciples and subordinates.
8. For these reasons We no sooner came to the
helm of the Church than We clearly saw and felt it to be Our duty to use
Our authority to the very utmost against so vast an evil. We have
several times already, as occasion served, attacked certain chief points
of teaching which showed in a special manner the perverse influence of
Masonic opinions. Thus, in Our encyclical letter, Quod Apostolici
Muneris, We endeavored to refute the monstrous doctrines of the
socialists and communists; afterwards, in another beginning "Arcanum,"
We took pains to defend and explain the true and genuine idea of
domestic life, of which marriage is the spring and origin; and again, in
that which begins "Diuturnum,"[11] We described the ideal of political
government conformed to the principles of Christian wisdom, which is
marvelously in harmony, on the one hand, with the natural order of
things, and, in the other, with the well-being of both sovereign princes
and of nations. It is now Our intention, following the example of Our
predecessors, directly to treat of the masonic society itself, of its
whole teaching, of its aims, and of its manner of thinking and acting,
in order to bring more and more into the light its power for evil, and
to do what We can to arrest the contagion of this fatal plague.
9. There are several organized bodies which,
though differing in name, in ceremonial, in form and origin, are
nevertheless so bound together by community of purpose and by the
similarity of their main opinions, as to make in fact one thing with the
sect of the Freemasons, which is a kind of center whence they all go
forth, and whither they all return. Now, these no longer show a desire
to remain concealed; for they hold their meetings in the daylight and
before the public eye, and publish their own newspaper organs; and yet,
when thoroughly understood, they are found still to retain the nature
and the habits of secret societies. There are many things like mysteries
which it is the fixed rule to hide with extreme care, not only from
strangers, but from very many members, also; such as their secret and
final designs, the names of the chief leaders, and certain secret and
inner meetings, as well as their decisions, and the ways and means of
carrying them out. This is, no doubt, the object of the manifold
difference among the members as to right, office, and privilege, of the
received distinction of orders and grades, and of that severe discipline
which is maintained.
Candidates are generally commanded to
promise--nay, with a special oath, to swear--that they will never, to
any person, at any time or in any way, make known the members, the
passes, or the subjects discussed. Thus, with a fraudulent external
appearance, and with a style of simulation which is always the same, the
Freemasons, like the Manichees of old, strive, as far as possible, to
conceal themselves, and to admit no witnesses but their own members. As
a convenient manner of concealment, they assume the character of
literary men and scholars associated for purposes of learning. They
speak of their zeal for a more cultured refinement, and of their love
for the poor; and they declare their one wish to be the amelioration of
the condition of the masses, and to share with the largest possible
number all the benefits of civil life. Were these purposes aimed at in
real truth, they are by no means the whole of their object. Moreover, to
be enrolled, it is necessary that the candidates promise and undertake
to be thenceforward strictly obedient to their leaders and masters with
the utmost submission and fidelity, and to be in readiness to do their
bidding upon the slightest expression of their will; or, if disobedient,
to submit to the direst penalties and death itself. As a fact, if any
are judged to have betrayed the doings of the sect or to have resisted
commands given, punishment is inflicted on them not infrequently, and
with so much audacity and dexterity that the assassin very often escapes
the detection and penalty of his crime.
10. But to simulate and wish to lie hid; to
bind men like slaves in the very tightest bonds, and without giving any
sufficient reason; to make use of men enslaved to the will of another
for any arbitrary act; to arm men's right hands for bloodshed after
securing impunity for the crime--all this is an enormity from which
nature recoils. Wherefore, reason and truth itself make it plain that
the society of which we are speaking is in antagonism with justice and
natural uprightness. And this becomes still plainer, inasmuch as other
arguments, also, and those very manifest, prove that it is essentially
opposed to natural virtue. For, no matter how great may be men's
cleverness in concealing and their experience in Iying, it is impossible
to prevent the effects of any cause from showing, in some way, the
intrinsic nature of the cause whence they come. "A good tree cannot
produce bad fruit, nor a bad tree produce good fruit."[12] Now, the
masonic sect produces fruits that are pernicious and of the bitterest
savor. For, from what We have above most clearly shown, that which is
their ultimate purpose forces itself into view--namely, the utter
overthrow of that whole religious and political order of the world which
the Christian teaching has produced, and the substitution of a new state
of things in accordance with their ideas, of which the foundations and
laws shall be drawn from mere naturalism.
11. What We have said, and are about to say,
must be understood of the sect of the Freemasons taken generically, and
in so far as it comprises the associations kindred to it and
confederated with it, but not of the individual members of them. There
may be persons amongst these, and not a few who, although not free from
the guilt of having entangled themselves in such associations, yet are
neither themselves partners in their criminal acts nor aware of the
ultimate object which they are endeavoring to attain. In the same way,
some of the affiliated societies, perhaps, by no means approve of the
extreme conclusions which they would, if consistent, embrace as
necessarily following from their common principles, did not their very
foulness strike them with horror. Some of these, again, are led by
circumstances of times and places either to aim at smaller things than
the others usually attempt or than they themselves would wish to
attempt. They are not, however, for this reason, to be reckoned as alien
to the masonic federation; for the masonic federation is to be judged
not so much by the things which it has done, or brought to completion,
as by the sum of its pronounced opinions.
12. Now, the fundamental doctrine of the
naturalists, which they sufficiently make known by their very name, is
that human nature and human reason ought in all things to be mistress
and guide. Laying this down, they care little for duties to God, or
pervert them by erroneous and vague opinions. For they deny that
anything has been taught by God; they allow no dogma of religion or
truth which cannot be understood by the human intelligence, nor any
teacher who ought to be believed by reason of his authority. And since
it is the special and exclusive duty of the Catholic Church fully to set
forth in words truths divinely received, to teach, besides other divine
helps to salvation, the authority of its office, and to defend the same
with perfect purity, it is against the Church that the rage and attack
of the enemies are principally directed.
13. In those matters which regard religion let
it be seen how the sect of the Freemasons acts, especially where it is
more free to act without restraint, and then let any one judge whether
in fact it does not wish to carry out the policy of the naturalists. By
a long and persevering labor, they endeavor to bring about this
result--namely, that the teaching office and authority of the Church may
become of no account in the civil State; and for this same reason they
declare to the people and contend that Church and State ought to be
altogether disunited. By this means they reject from the laws and from
the commonwealth the wholesome influence of the Catholic religion; and
they consequently imagine that States ought to be constituted without
any regard for the laws and precepts of the Church.
14. Nor do they think it enough to disregard
the Church--the best of guides--unless they also injure it by their
hostility. Indeed, with them it is lawful to attack with impunity the
very foundations of the Catholic religion, in speech, in writing, and in
teaching; and even the rights of the Church are not spared, and the
offices with which it is divinely invested are not safe. The least
possible liberty to manage affairs is left to the Church; and this is
done by laws not apparently very hostile, but in reality framed and
fitted to hinder freedom of action. Moreover, We see exceptional and
onerous laws imposed upon the clergy, to the end that they may be
continually diminished in number and in necessary means. We see also the
remnants of the possessions of the Church fettered by the strictest
conditions, and subjected to the power and arbitrary will of the
administrators of the State, and the religious orders rooted up and
scattered.
15. But against the apostolic see and the Roman
Pontiff the contention of these enemies has been for a long time
directed. The Pontiff was first, for specious reasons, thrust out from
the bulwark of his liberty and of his right, the civil princedom; soon,
he was unjustly driven into a condition which was unbearable because of
the difficulties raised on all sides; and now the time has come when the
partisans of the sects openly declare, what in secret among themselves
they have for a long time plotted, that the sacred power of the Pontiffs
must be abolished, and that the papacy itself, founded by divine right,
must be utterly destroyed. If other proofs were wanting, this fact would
be sufficiently disclosed by the testimony of men well informed, of whom
some at other times, and others again recently, have declared it to be
true of the Freemasons that they especially desire to assail the Church
with irreconcilable hostility, and that they will never rest until they
have destroyed whatever the supreme Pontiffs have established for the
sake of religion.
16. If those who are admitted as members are
not commanded to abjure by any form of words the Catholic doctrines,
this omission, so far from being adverse to the designs of the
Freemasons is more useful for their purposes. First, in this way they
easily deceive the simple-minded and the heedless, and can induce a far
greater number to become members. Again, as all who offer themselves are
received whatever may be their form of religion, they thereby teach the
great error of this age--that a regard for religion should be held as an
indifferent matter, and that all religions are alike. This manner of
reasoning is calculated to bring about the ruin of all forms of
religion, and especially of the Catholic religion, which, as it is the
only one that is true, cannot, without great injustice, be regarded as
merely equal to other religions.
17. But the naturalists go much further; for,
having, in the highest things, entered upon a wholly erroneous course,
they are carried headlong to extremes, either by reason of the weakness
of human nature, or because God inflicts upon them the just punishment
of their pride. Hence it happens that they no longer consider as certain
and permanent those things which are fully understood by the natural
light of reason, such as certainly are--the existence of God, the
immaterial nature of the human soul, and its immortality. The sect of
the Freemasons, by a similar course of error, is exposed to these same
dangers; for, although in a general way they may profess the existence
of God, they themselves are witnesses that they do not all maintain this
truth with the full assent of the mind or with a firm conviction.
Neither do they conceal that this question about God is the greatest
source and cause of discords among them; in fact, it is certain that a
considerable contention about this same subject has existed among them
very lately. But, indeed, the sect allows great liberty to its votaries,
so that to each side is given the right to defend its own opinion,
either that there is a God, or that there is none; and those who
obstinately contend that there is no God are as easily initiated as
those who contend that God exists, though, like the pantheists, they
have false notions concerning Him: all which is nothing else than taking
away the reality, while retaining some absurd representation of the
divine nature.
18. When this greatest fundamental truth has
been overturned or weakened, it follows that those truths, also, which
are known by the teaching of nature must begin to fall--namely, that all
things were made by the free will of God the Creator; that the world is
governed by Providence; that souls do not die; that to this life of men
upon the earth there will succeed another and an everlasting life.
19. When these truths are done away with, which
are as the principles of nature and important for knowledge and for
practical use, it is easy to see what will become of both public and
private morality. We say nothing of those more heavenly virtues, which
no one can exercise or even acquire without a special gift and grace of
God; of which necessarily no trace can be found in those who reject as
unknown the redemption of mankind, the grace of God, the sacraments, and
the happiness to be obtained in heaven. We speak now of the duties which
have their origin in natural probity. That God is the Creator of the
world and its provident Ruler; that the eternal law commands the natural
order to be maintained, and forbids that it be disturbed; that the last
end of men is a destiny far above human things and beyond this
sojourning upon the earth: these are the sources and these the
principles of all justice and morality.
If these be taken away, as the naturalists and
Freemasons desire, there will immediately be no knowledge as to what
constitutes justice and injustice, or upon what principle morality is
founded. And, in truth, the teaching of morality which alone finds favor
with the sect of Freemasons, and in which they contend that youth should
be instructed, is that which they call "civil," and "independent," and
"free," namely, that which does not contain any religious belief. But,
how insufficient such teaching is, how wanting in soundness, and how
easily moved by every impulse of passion, is sufficiently proved by its
sad fruits, which have already begun to appear. For, wherever, by
removing Christian education, this teaching has begun more completely to
rule, there goodness and integrity of morals have begun quickly to
perish, monstrous and shameful opinions have grown up, and the audacity
of evil deeds has risen to a high degree. All this is commonly
complained of and deplored; and not a few of those who by no means wish
to do so are compelled by abundant evidence to give not infrequently the
same testimony.
20. Moreover, human nature was stained by
original sin, and is therefore more disposed to vice than to virtue. For
a virtuous life it is absolutely necessary to restrain the disorderly
movements of the soul, and to make the passions obedient to reason. In
this conflict human things must very often be despised, and the greatest
labors and hardships must be undergone, in order that reason may always
hold its sway. But the naturalists and Freemasons, having no faith in
those things which we have learned by the revelation of God, deny that
our first parents sinned, and consequently think that free will is not
at all weakened and inclined to evil.[13] On the contrary, exaggerating
rather the power and the excellence of nature, and placing therein alone
the principle and rule of justice, they cannot even imagine that there
is any need at all of a constant struggle and a perfect steadfastness to
overcome the violence and rule of our passions.
Wherefore we see that men are publicly tempted
by the many allurements of pleasure; that there are journals and
pamphlets with neither moderation nor shame; that stage-plays are
remarkable for license; that designs for works of art are shamelessly
sought in the laws of a so-called verism; that the contrivances of a
soft and delicate life are most carefully devised; and that all the
blandishments of pleasure are diligently sought out by which virtue may
be lulled to sleep. Wickedly, also, but at the same time quite
consistently, do those act who do away with the expectation of the joys
of heaven, and bring down all happiness to the level of mortality, and,
as it were, sink it in the earth. Of what We have said the following
fact, astonishing not so much in itself as in its open expression, may
serve as a confirmation. For, since generally no one is accustomed to
obey crafty and clever men so submissively as those whose soul is
weakened and broken down by the domination of the passions, there have
been in the sect of the Freemasons some who have plainly determined and
proposed that, artfully and of set purpose, the multitude should be
satiated with a boundless license of vice, as, when this had been done,
it would easily come under their power and authority for any acts of
daring.
21. What refers to domestic life in the
teaching of the naturalists is almost all contained in the following
declarations: that marriage belongs to the genus of commercial
contracts, which can rightly be revoked by the will of those who made
them, and that the civil rulers of the State have power over the
matrimonial bond; that in the education of youth nothing is to be taught
in the matter of religion as of certain and fixed opinion; and each one
must be left at liberty to follow, when he comes of age, whatever he may
prefer. To these things the Freemasons fully assent; and not only
assent, but have long endeavored to make them into a law and
institution. For in many countries, and those nominally Catholic, it is
enacted that no marriages shall be considered lawful except those
contracted by the civil rite; in other places the law permits divorce;
and in others every effort is used to make it lawful as soon as may be.
Thus, the time is quickly coming when marriages will be turned into
another kind of contract--that is into changeable and uncertain unions
which fancy may join together, and which the same when changed may
disunite.
With the greatest unanimity the sect of the
Freemasons also endeavors to take to itself the education of youth. They
think that they can easily mold to their opinions that soft and pliant
age, and bend it whither they will; and that nothing can be more fitted
than this to enable them to bring up the youth of the State after their
own plan. Therefore, in the education and instruction of children they
allow no share, either of teaching or of discipline, to the ministers of
the Church; and in many places they have procured that the education of
youth shall be exclusively in the hands of laymen, and that nothing
which treats of the most important and most holy duties of men to God
shall be introduced into the instructions on morals.
22. Then come their doctrines of politics, in
which the naturalists lay down that all men have the same right, and are
in every respect of equal and like condition; that each one is naturally
free; that no one has the right to command another; that it is an act of
violence to require men to obey any authority other than that which is
obtained from themselves. According to this, therefore, all things
belong to the free people; power is held by the command or permission of
the people, so that, when the popular will changes, rulers may lawfully
be deposed and the source of all rights and civil duties is either in
the multitude or in the governing authority when this is constituted
according to the latest doctrines. It is held also that the State should
be without God; that in the various forms of religion there is no reason
why one should have precedence of another; and that they are all to
occupy the same place.
23. That these doctrines are equally acceptable
to the Freemasons, and that they would wish to constitute States
according to this example and model, is too well known to require proof.
For some time past they have openly endeavored to bring this about with
all their strength and resources; and in this they prepare the way for
not a few bolder men who are hurrying on even to worse things, in their
endeavor to obtain equality and community of all goods by the
destruction of every distinction of rank and property.
24. What, therefore, sect of the Freemasons is,
and what course it pursues, appears sufficiently from the summary We
have briefly given. Their chief dogmas are so greatly and manifestly at
variance with reason that nothing can be more perverse. To wish to
destroy the religion and the Church which God Himself has established,
and whose perpetuity He insures by His protection, and to bring back
after a lapse of eighteen centuries the manners and customs of the
pagans, is signal folly and audacious impiety. Neither is it less
horrible nor more tolerable that they should repudiate the benefits
which Jesus Christ so mercifully obtained, not only for individuals, but
also for the family and for civil society, benefits which, even
according to the judgment and testimony of enemies of Christianity, are
very great. In this insane and wicked endeavor we may almost see the
implacable hatred and spirit of revenge with which Satan himself is
inflamed against Jesus Christ.--So also the studious endeavor of the
Freemasons to destroy the chief foundations of justice and honesty, and
to co-operate with those who would wish, as if they were mere animals,
to do what they please, tends only to the ignominious and disgraceful
ruin of the human race.
The evil, too, is increased by the dangers
which threaten both domestic and civil society. As We have elsewhere
shown, in marriage, according to the belief of almost every nation,
there is something sacred and religious; and the law of God has
determined that marriages shall not be dissolved. If they are deprived
of their sacred character, and made dissoluble, trouble and confusion in
the family will be the result, the wife being deprived of her dignity
and the children left without protection as to their interests and well
being.--To have in public matters no care for religion, and in the
arrangement and administration of civil affairs to have no more regard
for God than if He did not exist, is a rashness unknown to the very
pagans; for in their heart and soul the notion of a divinity and the
need of public religion were so firmly fixed that they would have
thought it easier to have city without foundation than a city without
God. Human society, indeed for which by nature we are formed, has been
constituted by God the Author of nature; and from Him, as from their
principle and source, flow in all their strength and permanence the
countless benefits with which society abounds. As we are each of us
admonished by the very voice of nature to worship God in piety and
holiness, as the Giver unto us of life and of all that is good therein,
so also and for the same reason, nations and States are bound to worship
Him; and therefore it is clear that those who would absolve society from
all religious duty act not only unjustly but also with ignorance and
folly.
25. As men are by the will of God born for
civil union and society, and as the power to rule is so necessary a bond
of society that, if it be taken away, society must at once be broken up,
it follows that from Him who is the Author of society has come also the
authority to rule; so that whosoever rules, he is the minister of God.
Wherefore, as the end and nature of human society so requires, it is
right to obey the just commands of lawful authority, as it is right to
obey God who ruleth all things; and it is most untrue that the people
have it in their power to cast aside their obedience whensoever they
please.
26. In like manner, no one doubts that all men
are equal one to another, so far as regards their common origin and
nature, or the last end which each one has to attain, or the rights and
duties which are thence derived. But, as the abilities of all are not
equal, as one differs from another in the powers of mind or body, and as
there are very many dissimilarities of manner, disposition, and
character, it is most repugnant to reason to endeavor to confine all
within the same measure, and to extend complete equality to the
institutions of civil life. Just as a perfect condition of the body
results from the conjunction and composition of its various members,
which, though differing in form and purpose, make, by their union and
the distribution of each one to its proper place, a combination
beautiful to behold, firm in strength, and necessary for use; so, in the
commonwealth, there is an almost infinite dissimilarity of men, as parts
of the whole. If they are to be all equal, and each is to follow his own
will, the State will appear most deformed; but if, with a distinction of
degrees of dignity, of pursuits and employments, all aptly conspire for
the common good, they will present the image of a State both well
constituted and conformable to nature.
27. Now, from the disturbing errors which We
have described the greatest dangers to States are to be feared. For, the
fear of God and reverence for divine laws being taken away, the
authority of rulers despised, sedition permitted and approved, and the
popular passions urged on to lawlessness, with no restraint save that of
punishment, a change and overthrow of all things will necessarily
follow. Yea, this change and overthrow is deliberately planned and put
forward by many associations of communists and socialists; and to their
undertakings the sect of Freemasons is not hostile, but greatly favors
their designs, and holds in common with them their chief opinions. And
if these men do not at once and everywhere endeavor to carry out their
extreme views, it is not to be attributed to their teaching and their
will, but to the virtue of that divine religion which cannot be
destroyed; and also because the sounder part of men, refusing to be
enslaved to secret societies, vigorously resist their insane attempts.
28. Would that all men would judge of the tree
by its fruit, and would acknowledge the seed and origin of the evils
which press upon us, and of the dangers that are impending! We have to
deal with a deceitful and crafty enemy, who, gratifying the ears of
people and of princes, has ensnared them by smooth speeches and by
adulation. Ingratiating themselves with rulers under a pretense of
friendship, the Freemasons have endeavored to make them their allies and
powerful helpers for the destruction of the Christian name; and that
they might more strongly urge them on, they have, with determined
calumny, accused the Church of invidiously contending with rulers in
matters that affect their authority and sovereign power. Having, by
these artifices, insured their own safety and audacity, they have begun
to exercise great weight in the government of States: but nevertheless
they are prepared to shake the foundations of empires, to harass the
rulers of the State, to accuse, and to cast them out, as often as they
appear to govern otherwise than they themselves could have wished. In
like manner, they have by flattery deluded the people. Proclaiming with
a loud voice liberty and public prosperity, and saying that it was owing
to the Church and to sovereigns that the multitude were not drawn out of
their unjust servitude and poverty, they have imposed upon the people,
and, exciting them by a thirst for novelty, they have urged them to
assail both the Church and the civil power. Nevertheless, the
expectation of the benefits which was hoped for is greater than the
reality; indeed, the common people, more oppressed than they were
before, are deprived in their misery of that solace which, if things had
been arranged in a Christian manner, they would have had with ease and
in abundance. But, whoever strive against the order which Divine
Providence has constituted pay usually the penalty of their pride, and
meet with affliction and misery where they rashly hoped to find all
things prosperous and in conformity with their desires.
29. The Church, if she directs men to render
obedience chiefly and above all to God the sovereign Lord, is wrongly
and falsely believed either to be envious of the civil power or to
arrogate to herself something of the rights of sovereigns. On the
contrary, she teaches that what is rightly due to the civil power must
be rendered to it with a conviction and consciousness of duty. In
teaching that from God Himself comes the right of ruling, she adds a
great dignity to civil authority, and on small help towards obtaining
the obedience and good will of the citizens. The friend of peace and
sustainer of concord, she embraces all with maternal love, and, intent
only upon giving help to mortal man, she teaches that to justice must be
joined clemency, equity to authority, and moderation to lawgiving; that
no one's right must be violated; that order and public tranquillity are
to be maintained and that the poverty of those are in need is, as far as
possible, to be relieved by public and private charity. "But for this
reason," to use the words of St. Augustine, "men think, or would have it
believed, that Christian teaching is not suited to the good of the
State; for they wish the State to be founded not on solid virtue, but on
the impunity of vice."[14] Knowing these things, both princes and people
would act with poitical wisdom,[15] and according to the needs of
general safety, if, instead of joining with Freemasons to destroy the
Church, they joined with the Church in repelling their attacks.
30. Whatever the future may be, in this grave
and widespread evil it is Our duty, venerable brethren, to endeavor to
find a remedy. And because We know that Our best and firmest hope of a
remedy is in the power of that divine religion which the Freemasons hate
in proportion to their fear of it, We think it to be of chief importance
to call that most saving power to Our aid against the common enemy.
Therefore, whatsoever the Roman Pontiffs Our predecessors have decreed
for the purpose of opposing the undertakings and endeavors of the
masonic sect, and whatsoever they have enacted to enter or withdraw men
from societies of this kind, We ratify and confirm it all by our
apostolic authority: and trusting greatly to the good will of
Christians, We pray and beseech each one, for the sake of his eternal
salvation, to be most conscientiously careful not in the least to depart
from what the apostolic see has commanded in this matter.
31. We pray and beseech you, venerable
brethren, to join your efforts with Ours, and earnestly to strive for
the extirpation of this foul plague, which is creeping through the veins
of the body politic. You have to defend the glory of God and the
salvation of your neighbor; and with the object of your strife before
you, neither courage nor strength will be wanting. It will be for your
prudence to judge by what means you can best overcome the difficulties
and obstacles you meet with. But, as it befits the authority of Our
office that We Ourselves should point out some suitable way of
proceeding, We wish it to be your rule first of all to tear away the
mask from Freemasonry, and to let it be seen as it really is; and by
sermons and pastoral letters to instruct the people as to the artifices
used by societies of this kind in seducing men and enticing them into
their ranks, and as to the depravity of their opinions and the
wickedness of their acts. As Our predecessors have many times repeated,
let no man think that he may for any reason whatsoever join the masonic
sect, if he values his Catholic name and his eternal salvation as he
ought to value them. Let no one be deceived by a pretense of honesty. It
may seem to some that Freemasons demand nothing that is openly contrary
to religion and morality; but, as the whole principle and object of the
sect lies in what is vicious and criminal, to join with these men or in
any way to help them cannot be lawful.
32. Further, by assiduous teaching and
exhortation, the multitude must be drawn to learn diligently the
precepts of religion; for which purpose we earnestly advise that by
opportune writings and sermons they be taught the elements of those
sacred truths in which Christian philosophy is contained. The result of
this will be that the minds of men will be made sound by instruction,
and will be protected against many forms of error and inducements to
wickedness, especially in the present unbounded freedom of writing and
insatiable eagerness for learning.
33. Great, indeed, is the work; but in it the
clergy will share your labors, if, through your care, they are fitted
for it by learning and a well-turned life. This good and great work
requires to be helped also by the industry of those amongst the laity in
whom a love of religion and of country is joined to learning and
goodness of life. By uniting the efforts of both clergy and laity,
strive, venerable brethren, to make men thoroughly know and love the
Church; for, the greater their knowledge and love of the Church, the
more will they be turned away from clandestine societies.
34. Wherefore, not without cause do We use this
occasion to state again what We have stated elsewhere, namely, that the
Third Order of St. Francis, whose discipline We a little while ago
prudently mitigated,[16] should be studiously promoted and sustained;
for the whole object of this Order, as constituted by its founder, is to
invite men to an imitation of Jesus Christ, to a love of the Church, and
to the observance of all Christian virtues; and therefore it ought to be
of great influence in suppressing the contagion of wicked societies.
Let, therefore, this holy sodality be strengthened by a daily increase.
Amongst the many benefits to be expected from it will be the great
benefit of drawing the minds of men to liberty, fraternity, and equality
of right; not such as the Freemasons absurdly imagine, but such as Jesus
Christ obtained for the human race and St. Francis aspired to: the
liberty, We mean, of sons of God, through which we may be free from
slavery to Satan or to our passions, both of them most wicked masters;
the fraternity whose origin is in God, the common Creator and Father of
all; the equality which, founded on justice and charity, does not take
away all distinctions among men, but, out of the varieties of life, of
duties, and of pursuits, forms that union and that harmony which
naturally tend to the benefit and dignity of society.
35. In the third place, there is a matter
wisely instituted by our forefathers, but in course of time laid aside,
which may now be used as a pattern and form of something similar. We
mean the associations of guilds of workmen, for the protection, under
the guidance of religion, both of their temporal interests and of their
morality. If our ancestors, by long use and experience, felt the benefit
of these guilds, our age perhaps will feel it the more by reason of the
opportunity which they will give of crushing the power of the sects.
Those who support themselves by the labor of their hands, besides being,
by their very condition, most worthy above all others of charity and
consolation, are also especially exposed to the allurements of men whose
ways lie in fraud and deceit. Therefore, they ought to be helped with
the greatest possible kindness, and to be invited to join associations
that are good, lest they be drawn away to others that are evil. For this
reason, We greatly wish, for the salvation of the people, that, under
the auspices and patronage of the bishops, and at convenient times,
these gilds may be generally restored. To Our great delight, sodalities
of this kind and also associations of masters have in many places
already been established, having, each class of them, for their object
to help the honest workman, to protect and guard his children and
family, and to promote in them piety, Christian knowledge, and a moral
life. And in this matter We cannot omit mentioning that exemplary
society, named after its founder, St. Vincent, which has deserved so
well of the lower classes. Its acts and its aims are well known. Its
whole object is to give relief to the poor and miserable. This it does
with singular prudence and modesty; and the less it wishes to be seen,
the better is it fitted for the exercise of Christian charity, and for
the relief of suffering.
36. In the fourth place, in order more easily
to attain what We wish, to your fidelity and watchfulness We commend in
a special manner the young, as being the hope of human society. Devote
the greatest part of your care to their instruction; and do not think
that any precaution can be great enough in keeping them from masters and
schools whence the pestilent breath of the sects is to be feared. Under
your guidance, let parents, religious instructors, and priests having
the cure of souls use every opportunity, in their Christian teaching, of
warning their children and pupils of the infamous nature of these
societies, so that they may learn in good time to beware of the various
and fraudulent artifices by which their promoters are accustomed to
ensnare people. And those who instruct the young in religious knowledge
will act wisely if they induce all of them to resolve and to undertake
never to bind themselves to any society without the knowledge of their
parents, or the advice of their parish priest or director.
37. We well know, however, that our united
labors will by no means suffice to pluck up these pernicious seeds from
the Lord's field, unless the Heavenly Master of the vineyard shall
mercifully help us in our endeavors. We must, therefore, with great and
anxious care, implore of Him the help which the greatness of the danger
and of the need requires. The sect of the Freemasons shows itself
insolent and proud of its success, and seems as if it would put no
bounds to its pertinacity. Its followers, joined together by a wicked
compact and by secret counsels, give help one to another, and excite one
another to an audacity for evil things. So vehement an attack demands an
equal defense--namely, that all good men should form the widest possible
association of action and of prayer. We beseech them, therefore, with
united hearts, to stand together and unmoved against the advancing force
of the sects; and in mourning and supplication to stretch out their
hands to God, praying that the Christian name may flourish and prosper,
that the Church may enjoy its needed liberty, that those who have gone
astray may return to a right mind, that error at length may give place
to truth, and vice to virtue. Let us take our helper and intercessor the
Virgin Mary, Mother of God, so that she, who from the moment of her
conception overcame Satan may show her power over these evil sects, in
which is revived the contumacious spirit of the demon, together with his
unsubdued perfidy and deceit. Let us beseech Michael, the prince of the
heavenly angels, who drove out the infernal foe; and Joseph, the spouse
of the most holy Virgin, and heavenly patron of the Catholic Church; and
the great Apostles, Peter and Paul, the fathers and victorious champions
of the Christian faith. By their patronage, and by perseverance in
united prayer, we hope that God will mercifully and opportunely succor
the human race, which is encompassed by so many dangers.
38. As a pledge of heavenly gifts and of Our
benevolence, We lovingly grant in the Lord, to you, venerable brethren,
and to the clergy and all the people committed to your watchful care,
Our apostolic benediction.
Given at St. Peter's in Rome, the twentieth day
of April, 1884, the sixth year of Our pontificate.
REFERENCES
1. De civ. Dei, 14, 28 (PL 41, 436).
2. Ps. 82:24.
3. Const. In Eminenti, April 24, 1738.
4. Const. Providas, May 18, 1751.
5. Const. Ecclesiam a Jesu Christo, Sept. 13, 1821.
6. Const. given March 13, 1825.
7. Encyc. Traditi, May 21, 1829.
8. Encyc. Mirari, August 15, 1832.
9. Encyc. Qui Pluribus, Nov. 9, 1846; address Multiplices inter, Sept.
25, 1865. etc.
10. Clement Xll (1730-40); Benedict XIV (1740-58), Pius Vll
(1800-23);Pius IX (1846-78).
11. See nos. 79, 81, 84.
12. Matt. 7:18.
13. Trid., sess. vi, De justif, c. 1. Text of the Council of Trent:
"tametsi in eis (sc. Judaeis) liberum arbitrium minime extinctum esset,
viribus licet attenuatum et inclinatum. "
14. See Arcanum, no. 81.
15. Epistola 137, ad Volusianum, c. v, n. 20 (PL 33, 525).
16. (Sept. 17, 1882), in which Pope Leo XIII had recently glorified St.
Francis of Assisi on the occasion of the seventh centenary of his birth.
In this encyclical, the Pope had presented the Third Order of St.
Francis as a Christian answer to the social problems of the times. The
constitution Misericors Dei filius (June 23, 1883) expressly recalled
that the neglect in which Christian virtues are held is the main cause
of the evils that threaten societies. In confirming the rule of the
Third Order and adapting it to the needs of modern times, Pope Leo XIII
had intended to bring back the largest possible number of souls to the
practice of these virtues. |