DECREE
ON THE APOSTOLATE OF THE LAITY
APOSTOLICAM ACTUOSITATEM
SOLEMNLY PROMULGATED BY HIS HOLINESS,
POPE PAUL VI
ON NOVEMBER 18, 1965
INTRODUCTION
1. To intensify the apostolic activity of the people of
God,(1) the most holy synod earnestly addresses itself to the laity, whose
proper and indispensable role in the mission of the Church has already been
dealt with in other documents.(2) The apostolate of the laity derives from their
Christian vocation and the Church can never be without it. Sacred Scripture
clearly shows how spontaneous and fruitful such activity was at the very
beginning of the Church (cf. Acts 11:19-21; 18:26; Rom. 16:1-16; Phil. 4:3).
Our own times require of the laity no less zeal: in
fact, modern conditions demand that their apostolate be broadened and
intensified. With a constantly increasing population, continual progress in
science and technology, and closer interpersonal relationships, the areas for
the lay apostolate have been immensely widened particularly in fields that have
been for the most part open to the laity alone. These factors have also
occasioned new problems which demand their expert attention and study. This
apostolate becomes more imperative in view of the fact that many areas of human
life have become increasingly autonomous. This is as it should be, but it
sometimes involves a degree of departure from the ethical and religious order
and a serious danger to Christian life. Besides, in many places where priests
are very few or, in some instances, deprived of due freedom for priestly work,
the Church could scarcely exist and function without the activity of the laity.
An indication of this manifold and pressing need is the
unmistakable work being done today by the Holy Spirit in making the laity ever
more conscious of their own responsibility and encouraging them to serve Christ
and the Church in all circumstances.(3)
In this decree the Council seeks to describe the
nature, character, and diversity of the lay apostolate, to state its basic
principles, and to give pastoral directives for its more effective exercise. All
these should be regarded as norms when the canon law, as it pertains to the lay
apostolate, is revised.
CHAPTER I
THE VOCATION OF THE LAITY TO THE APOSTOLATE
2. The Church was founded for the purpose of spreading
the kingdom of Christ throughout the earth for the glory of God the Father, to
enable all men to share in His saving redemption,(1) and that through them the
whole world might enter into a relationship with Christ. All activity of the
Mystical Body directed to the attainment of this goal is called the apostolate,
which the Church carries on in various ways through all her members. For the
Christian vocation by its very nature is also a vocation to the apostolate. No
part of the structure of a living body is merely passive but has a share in the
functions as well as life of the body: so, too, in the body of Christ, which is
the Church, "the whole body . . . in keeping with the proper activity of each
part, derives its increase from its own internal development" (Eph. 4:16).
Indeed, the organic union in this body and the
structure of the members are so compact that the member who fails to make his
proper contribution to the development of the Church must be said to be useful
neither to the Church nor to himself.
In the Church there is a diversity of ministry but a
oneness of mission. Christ conferred on the Apostles and their successors the
duty of teaching, sanctifying, and ruling in His name and power. But the laity
likewise share in the priestly, prophetic, and royal office of Christ and
therefore have their own share in the mission of the whole people of God in the
Church and in the world.(2)
They exercise the apostolate in fact by their activity
directed to the evangelization and sanctification of men and to the penetrating
and perfecting of the temporal order through the spirit of the Gospel. In this
way, their temporal activity openly bears witness to Christ and promotes the
salvation of men. Since the laity, in accordance with their state of life, live
in the midst of the world and its concerns, they are called by God to exercise
their apostolate in the world like leaven, with the ardor of the spirit of
Christ.
3. The laity derive the right and duty to the
apostolate from their union with Christ the head; incorporated into Christ's
Mystical Body through Baptism and strengthened by the power of the Holy Spirit
through Confirmation, they are assigned to the apostolate by the Lord Himself.
They are consecrated for the royal priesthood and the holy people (cf. 1 Peter
2:4-10) not only that they may offer spiritual sacrifices in everything they do
but also that they may witness to Christ throughout the world. The sacraments,
however, especially the most holy Eucharist, communicate and nourish that
charity which is the soul of the entire apostolate.(3)
One engages in the apostolate through the faith, hope,
and charity which the Holy Spirit diffuses in the hearts of all members of the
Church. Indeed, by the precept of charity, which is the Lord's greatest
commandment, all the faithful are impelled to promote the glory of God through
the coming of His kingdom and to obtain eternal life for all men-that they may
know the only true God and Him whom He sent, Jesus Christ (cf. John 17:3). On
all Christians therefore is laid the preeminent responsibility of working to
make the divine message of salvation known and accepted by all men throughout
the world.
For the exercise of this apostolate, the Holy Spirit
Who sanctifies the people of God through ministry and the sacraments gives the
faithful special gifts also (cf. 1 Cor. 12:7), "allotting them to everyone
according as He wills" (1 Cor. 12:11) in order that individuals, administering
grace to others just as they have received it, may also be "good stewards of the
manifold grace of God" (1 Peter 4:10), to build up the whole body in charity
(cf. Eph. 4:16). From the acceptance of these charisms, including those which
are more elementary, there arise for each believer the right and duty to use
them in the Church and in the world for the good of men and the building up of
the Church, in the freedom of the Holy Spirit who "breathes where He wills"
(John 3:8). This should be done by the laity in communion with their brothers in
Christ, especially with their pastors who must make a judgment about the true
nature and proper use of these gifts not to extinguish the Spirit but to test
all things and hold for what is good (cf. 1 Thess. 5:12,19,21).(4)
4. Since Christ, sent by the Father, is the source and
origin of the whole apostolate of the Church, the success of the lay apostolate
depends upon the laity's living union with Christ, in keeping with the Lord's
words, "He who abides in me, and I in him, bears much fruit, for without me you
can do nothing" (John 15:5). This life of intimate union with Christ in the
Church is nourished by spiritual aids which are common to all the faithful,
especially active participation in the sacred liturgy.(5) These are to be used
by the laity in such a way that while correctly fulfilling their secular duties
in the ordinary conditions of life, they do not separate union with Christ from
their life but rather performing their work according to God's will they grow in
that union. In this way the laity must make progress in holiness in a happy and
ready spirit, trying prudently and patiently to overcome difficulties.(6)
Neither family concerns nor other secular affairs should be irrelevant to their
spiritual life, in keeping with the words of the Apostle, "What-ever you do in
word or work, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, giving thanks to God
the Father through Him" (Col. 3:17).
Such a life requires a continual exercise of faith,
hope, and charity. Only by the light of faith and by meditation on the word of
God can one always and everywhere recognize God in Whom "we live, and move, and
have our being" ( Acts 17:28), seek His will in every event, see Christ in
everyone whether he be a relative or a stranger, and make correct judgments
about the true meaning and value of temporal things both in themselves and in
their relation to man's final goal.
They who have this faith live in the hope of the
revelation of the sons of God and keep in mind the cross and resurrection of the
Lord. In the pilgrimage of this life, hidden with Christ in God and free from
enslavement to wealth, they aspire to those riches which remain forever and
generously dedicate themselves wholly to the advancement of the kingdom of God
and to the reform and improvement of the temporal order in a Christian spirit.
Among the trials of this life they find strength in hope, convinced that "the
sufferings of the present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory to
come that will be revealed in us" (Rom. 8:18).
Impelled by divine charity, they do good to all men,
especially to those of the household of the faith (cf. Gal. 6:10), laying aside
"all malice and all deceit and pretense, and envy, and all slander" (1 Peter
2:1), and thereby they draw men to Christ. This charity of God, "which is poured
forth in our hearts by the Holy Spirit who has been given to us" (Rom. 5:5),
enables the laity really to express the spirit of the beatitudes in their lives.
Following Jesus in His poverty, they are neither depressed by the lack of
temporal goods nor inflated by their abundance; imitating Christ in His
humility, they have no obsession for empty honors (cf. Gal. 5:26) but seek to
please God rather than men, ever ready to leave all things for Christ's sake
(cf. Luke 14:26) and to suffer persecution for justice sake (cf. Matt. 5:10), as
they remember the words of the Lord, "If anyone wishes to come after me, let him
deny himself and take up his cross and follow me" (Matt. 16:24) . Promoting
Christian friendship among themselves, they help one another in every need
whatsoever.
This plan for the spiritual life of the laity should
take its particular character from their married or family state or their single
or widowed state, from their state of health, and from their professional and
social activity. They should not cease to develop earnestly the qualities and
talents bestowed on them in accord with these conditions of life, and they
should make use of the gifts which they have received from the Holy Spirit.
Furthermore, the laity who have followed their vocation
and have become members of one of the associations or institutes approved by the
Church try faithfully to adopt the special characteristics of the spiritual life
which are proper to them as well. They should also hold in high esteem
professional skill, family and civic spirit, and the virtues relating to social
customs, namely, honesty, justice, sincerity, kindness, and courage, without
which no true Christian life can exist.
The perfect example of this type of spiritual and
apostolic life is the most Blessed Virgin Mary, Queen of Apostles, who while
leading the life common to all here on earth, one filled with family concerns
and labors, was always intimately united with her Son and in an entirely unique
way cooperated in the work of the Savior. Having now been assumed into heaven,
with her maternal charity she cares for these brothers of her Son who are still
on their earthly pilgrimage and remain involved in dangers and difficulties
until they are led into the happy fatherland.(7) All should devoutly venerate
her and commend their life and apostolate to her maternal care.
CHAPTER II
OBJECTIVES
5. Christ's redemptive work, while essentially
concerned with the salvation of men, includes also the renewal of the whole
temporal order. Hence the mission of the Church is not only to bring the message
and grace of Christ to men but also to penetrate and perfect the temporal order
with the spirit of the Gospel. In fulfilling this mission of the Church, the
Christian laity exercise their apostolate both in the Church and in the world,
in both the spiritual and the temporal orders. These orders, although distinct,
are so connected in the singular plan of God that He Himself intends to raise up
the whole world again in Christ and to make it a new creation, initially on
earth and completely on the last day. In both orders the layman, being
simultaneously a believer and a citizen, should be continuously led by the same
Christian conscience.
6. The mission of the Church pertains to the salvation
of men, which is to be achieved by belief in Christ and by His grace. The
apostolate of the Church and of all its members is primarily designed to
manifest Christ's message by words and deeds and to communicate His grace to the
world. This is done mainly through the ministry of the Word and the sacraments,
entrusted in a special way to the clergy, wherein the laity also have their very
important roles to fulfill if they are to be "fellow workers for the truth" (3
John 8). It is especially on this level that the apostolate of the laity and the
pastoral ministry are mutually complementary.
There are innumerable opportunities open to the laity
for the exercise of their apostolate of evangelization and sanctification. The
very testimony of their Christian life and good works done in a supernatural
spirit have the power to draw men to belief and to God; for the Lord says, "Even
so let your light shine before men in order that they may see your good works
and give glory to your Father who is in heaven" (Matt. 5:16).
However, an apostolate of this kind does not consist
only in the witness of one's way of life; a true apostle looks for opportunities
to announce Christ by words addressed either to non-believers with a view to
leading them to faith, or to the faithful with a view to instructing,
strengthening, and encouraging them to a more fervent life. "For the charity of
Christ impels us" (2 Cor. 5:14). The words of the Apostle should echo in all
hearts, "Woe to me if I do not preach the Gospel" (1 Cor. 9:16).(1)
Since, in our own times, new problems are arising and
very serious errors are circulating which tend to undermine the foundations of
religion, the moral order, and human society itself, this sacred synod earnestly
exhorts laymen-each according to his own gifts of intelligence and learning-to
be more diligent in doing what they can to explain, defend, and properly apply
Christian principles to the problems of our era in accordance with the mind of
the Church.
7. God's plan for the world is that men should work
together to renew and constantly perfect the temporal order.
All those things which make up the temporal order,
namely, the good things of life and the prosperity of the family, culture,
economic matters, the arts and professions, the laws of the political community,
international relations, and other matters of this kind, as well as their
development and progress, not only aid in the attainment of man's ultimate goal
but also possess their own intrinsic value. This value has been established in
them by God, whether they are considered in themselves or as parts of the whole
temporal order. "God saw that all He had made was very good" (Gen. 1:31). This
natural goodness of theirs takes on a special dignity as a result of their
relation to the human person, for whose service they were created. It has
pleased God to unite all things, both natural and supernatural, in Christ Jesus
"so that in all things He may have the first place" (Col. 1:18). This
destination, however, not only does not deprive the temporal order of its
independence, its proper goals, laws, supports, and significance for human
welfare but rather perfects the temporal order in its own intrinsic strength and
worth and puts it on a level with man's whole vocation upon earth.
In the course of history, the use of temporal things
has been marred by serious vices. Affected by original sin, men have frequently
fallen into many errors concerning the true God, the nature of man, and the
principles of the moral law. This has led to the corruption of morals and human
institutions and not rarely to contempt for the human person himself. In our own
time, moreover, those who have trusted excessively in the progress of the
natural sciences and the technical arts have fallen into an idolatry of temporal
things and have become their slaves rather than their masters.
The whole Church must work vigorously in order that men
may become capable of rectifying the distortion of the temporal order and
directing it to God through Christ. Pastors must clearly state the principles
concerning the purpose of creation and the use of temporal things and must offer
the moral and spiritual aids by which the temporal order may be renewed in
Christ.
The laity must take up the renewal of the temporal
order as their own special obligation. Led by the light of the Gospel and the
mind of the Church and motivated by Christian charity, they must act directly
and in a definite way in the temporal sphere. As citizens they must cooperate
with other citizens with their own particular skill and on their own
responsibility. Everywhere and in all things they must seek the justice of God's
kingdom. The temporal order must be renewed in such a way that, without
detriment to its own proper laws, it may be brought into conformity with the
higher principles of the Christian life and adapted to the shifting
circumstances of time, place, and peoples. Preeminent among the works of this
type of apostolate is that of Christian social action which the sacred synod
desires to see extended to the whole temporal sphere, including culture.(2)
8. While every exercise of the apostolate should be
motivated by charity, some works by their very nature can become specially vivid
expressions of this charity. Christ the Lord wanted these works to be signs of
His messianic mission (cf. Matt. 11:4-5).
The greatest commandment in the law is to love God with
one's whole heart and one's neighbor as oneself (cf. Matt. 22:37-40). Christ
made this commandment of love of neighbor His own and enriched it with a new
meaning. For He wanted to equate Himself with His brethren as the object of this
love when He said, "As long as you did it for one of these, the least of My
brethren, you did it for Me" (Matt. 25:40). Assuming human nature, He bound the
whole human race to Himself as a family through a certain supernatural
solidarity and established charity as the mark of His disciples, saying, "By
this will all men know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one
another" (John 13:35).
ln her very early days, the holy Church added the agape
to the eucharistic supper and thus showed itself to be wholly united around
Christ by the bond of charity. So, too, in every era it is recognized by this
sign of love, and while it rejoices in the undertakings of others, it claims
works of charity as its own inalienable duty and right. For this reason, pity
for the needy and the sick and works of charity and mutual aid intended to
relieve human needs of every kind are held in highest honor by the Church.(3)
At the present time, with the development of more rapid
facilities for communication, with the barrier of distance separating men
greatly reduced, with the inhabitants of the entire globe becoming one great
family, these charitable activities and works have become more urgent and
universal. These charitable enterprises can and should reach out to all persons
and all needs. Wherever there are people in need of food and drink, clothing,
housing, medicine, employment, education; wherever men lack the facilities
necessary for living a truly human life or are afflicted with serious distress
or illness or suffer exile or imprisonment, there Christian charity should seek
them out and find them, console them with great solicitude, and help them with
appropriate relief. This obligation is imposed above all upon every prosperous
nation and person.(4)
In order that the exercise of charity on this scale may
be unexceptionable in appearance as well as in fact, it is altogether necessary
that one should consider in one's neighbor the image of God in which he has been
created, and also Christ the Lord to Whom is really offered whatever is given to
a needy person. It is imperative also that the freedom and dignity of the person
being helped be respected with the utmost consideration, that the purity of
one's charitable intentions be not stained by seeking one's own advantage or by
striving for domination,(5) and especially that the demands of justice be
satisfied lest the giving of what is due in justice be represented as the
offering of a charitable gift. Not only the effects but also the causes of these
ills must be removed and the help be given in such a way that the recipients may
gradually be freed from dependence on outsiders and become self-sufficient.
Therefore, the laity should hold in high esteem and,
according to their ability, aid the works of charity and projects for social
assistance, whether public or private, including international programs whereby
effective help is given to needy individuals and peoples. In so doing, they
should cooperate with all men of good will.(6)
CHAPTER III
THE VARIOUS FIELDS OF THE APOSTOLATE
9. The laity carry out their manifold apostolate both
in the Church and in the world. In both areas there are various opportunities
for apostolic activity. We wish to list here the more important fields of
action, namely, church communities, the family, youth, the social milieu, and
national and international levels. Since in our times women have an ever more
active shale in the whole life of society, it is very important that they
participate more widely also in the various fields of the Church's apostolate.
10. As sharers in the role of Christ as priest,
prophet, and king, the laity have their work cut out for them in the life and
activity of the Church. Their activity is so necessary within the Church
communities that without it the apostolate of the pastors is often unable to
achieve its full effectiveness. In the manner of the men and women who helped
Paul in spreading the Gospel (cf. Acts 18:18, 26; Rom. 16:3) the laity with the
right apostolic attitude supply what is lacking to their brethren and refresh
the spirit of pastors and of the rest of the faithful (cf. 1 Cor. 16:17-18).
Strengthened by active participation in the liturgical life of their community,
they are eager to do their share of the apostolic works of that community. They
bring to the Church people who perhaps are far removed from it, earnestly
cooperate in presenting the word of God especially by means of catechetical
instruction, and offer their special skills to make the care of souls and the
administration of the temporalities of the Church more efficient and effective.
The parish offers an obvious example of the apostolate
on the community level inasmuch as it brings together the many human differences
within its boundaries and merges them into the universality of the Church.(1)
The laity should accustom themselves to working in the parish in union with
their priests,(2) bringing to the Church community their own and the world's
problems as well as questions concerning human salvation, all of which they
should examine and resolve by deliberating in common. As far as possible the
laity ought to provide helpful collaboration for every apostolic and missionary
undertaking sponsored by their local parish.
They should develop an ever-increasing appreciation of
their own diocese, of which the parish is a kind of cell, ever ready at their
pastor's invitation to participate in diocesan projects. Indeed, to fulfill the
needs of cities and rural areas,(3) they should not limit their cooperation to
the parochial or diocesan boundaries but strive to extend it to interparochial,
interdiocesan, national, and international fields. This is constantly becoming
all the more necessary because the daily increase in mobility of populations,
reciprocal relationships, and means of communication no longer allow any sector
of society to remain closed in upon itself. Thus they should be concerned about
the needs of the people of God dispersed throughout the world. They should
especially make missionary activity their own by giving material or even
personal assistance. It is a duty and honor for Christians to return to God a
part of the good things that they receive from Him.
11. Since the Creator of all things has established
conjugal society as the beginning and basis of human society and, by His grace,
has made it a great mystery in Christ and the Church (cf. Eph. 5:32), the
apostolate of married persons and families is of unique importance for the
Church and civil society.
Christian husbands and wives are cooperators in grace
and witnesses of faith for each other, their children, and all others in their
household. They are the first to communicate the faith to their children and to
educate them by word and example for the Christian and apostolic life. They
prudently help them in the choice of their vocation and carefully promote any
sacred vocation which they may discern in them.
It has always been the duty of Christian married
partners but today it is the greatest part of their apostolate to manifest and
prove by their own way of life the indissolubility and sacredness of the
marriage bond, strenuously to affirm the right and duty of parents and guardians
to educate children in a Christian manner, and to defend the dignity and lawful
autonomy of the family. They and the rest of the faithful, therefore, should
cooperate with men of good will to ensure the preservation of these rights in
civil legislation and to make sure that governments give due attention to the
needs of the family regarding housing, the education of children, working
conditions, social security, and taxes; and that in policy decisions affecting
migrants their right to live together as a family should be safeguarded.(4)
This mission-to be the first and vital cell of
society-the family has received from God. It will fulfill this mission if it
appears as the domestic sanctuary of the Church by reason of the mutual
affection of its members and the prayer that they offer to God in common, if the
whole family makes itself a part of the liturgical worship of the Church, and if
it provides active hospitality and promotes justice and other good works for the
service of all the brethren in need. Among the various activities of the family
apostolate may be enumerated the following: the adoption of abandoned infants,
hospitality to strangers, assistance in the operation of schools, helpful advice
and material assistance for adolescents, help to engaged couples in preparing
themselves better for marriage, catechetical work, support of married couples
and families involved in material and moral crises, help for the aged not only
by providing them with the necessities of life but also by obtaining for them a
fair share of the benefits of an expanding economy.
At all times and places but particularly in areas where
the first seeds of the Gospel are being sown, or where the Church is just
beginning, or is involved in some serious difficulty, Christian families can
give effective testimony to Christ before the world by remaining faithful to the
Gospel and by providing a model of Christian marriage through their whole way of
life.(5)
To facilitate the attainment of the goals of their
apostolate, it can be useful for families to be brought together into groups.(6)
12. Young persons exert very important influence in
modern society.(7) There has been a radical change in the circumstances of their
lives, their mental attitudes, and their relationships with their own families.
Frequently they move too quickly into a new social and economic status. While
their social and even their political importance is growing from day to day,
they seem to be unable to cope adequately with their new responsibilities.
Their heightened influence in society demands of them a
proportionate apostolic activity, but their natural qualities also fit them for
this activity. As they become more conscious of their own personalities, they
are impelled by a zest for life and a ready eagerness to assume their own
responsibility, and they yearn to play their part in social and cultural life.
If this zeal is imbued with the spirit of Christ and is inspired by obedience
and love for the Church, it can be expected to be very fruitful. They should
become the first to carry on the apostolate directly to other young persons,
concentrating their apostolic efforts within their own circle, according to the
needs of the social environment in which they live.(8)
Adults ought to engage in such friendly discussion with
young people that both age groups, overcoming the age barrier, may become better
acquainted and share the special benefits each generation can offer the other.
Adults should stimulate young persons first by good example to take part in the
apostolate and, if the opportunity presents itself, by offering them effective
advice and willing assistance. By the same token young people should cultivate
toward adults respect and trust, and although they are naturally attracted to
novelties, they should duly appreciate praiseworthy traditions.
13. The apostolate in the social milieu, that is, the
effort to infuse a Christian spirit into the mentality, customs, laws, and
structures of the community in which one lives, is so much the duty and
responsibility of the laity that it can never be performed properly by others.
In this area the laity can exercise the apostolate of like toward like. It is
here that they complement the testimony of life with the testimony of the
word.(9) It is here where they work or practice their profession or study or
reside or spend their leisure time or have their companionship that they are
more capable of helping their brethren.
The laity fulfill this mission of the Church in the
world especially by conforming their lives to their faith so that they become
the light of the world as well as by practicing honesty in all their dealings so
that they attract all to the love of the true and the good and finally to the
Church and to Christ. They fulfill their mission also by fraternal charity which
presses them to share in the living conditions, labors, sorrows, and aspirations
of their brethren with the result that the hearts of all about them are quietly
prepared for the workings of saving grace. Another requisite for the
accomplishment of their task is a full consciousness of their role in building
up society whereby they strive to perform their domestic, social, and
professional duties with such Christian generosity that their manner of acting
should gradually penetrate the whole world of life and labor.
This apostolate should reach out to all wherever they
may be encountered; it should not exclude any spiritual or temporal benefit
which they have the ability to confer. True apostles however, are not content
with this activity alone but endeavor to announce Christ to their neighbors by
means of the spoken word as well. For there are many persons who can hear the
Gospel and recognize Christ only through the laity who live near them.
Children also have their own apostolic work to do.
According to their ability they are true living witnesses of Christ among their
companions.
10. A vast field for the apostolate has opened up on
the national and international levels where the laity especially assist with
their Christian wisdom. In loyalty to their country and in faithful fulfillment
of their civic obligations, Catholics should feel themselves obliged to promote
the true common good. Thus they should make the weight of their opinion felt in
order that the civil authority may act with justice and that legislation may
conform to moral precepts and the common good. Catholics skilled in public
affairs and adequately enlightened in faith and Christian doctrine should not
refuse to administer pubic affairs since by doing this in a worthy manner they
can both further the common good and at the same time prepare the way for the
Gospel.
Catholics should try to cooperate with all men and
women of good will to promote whatever is true, whatever just, whatever holy,
whatever lovable (cf. Phil. 4:8). They should hold discussions with them, excel
them in prudence and courtesy, and initiate research on social and public
practices which should be improved in line with the spirit of the Gospel.
Among the signs of our times, the irresistibly
increasing sense of the solidarity of all peoples is especially noteworthy. It
is a function of the lay apostolate sedulously to promote this awareness and to
transform it into a sincere and genuine love of brotherhood. Furthermore, the
laity should be aware of the international field and of the questions and
solutions, doctrinal as well as practical, which arise in this field, with
special reverence to developing nations.(10)
All who work in or give help to foreign nations must
remember that relations among peoples should be a genuine fraternal exchange in
which each party is at the same time a giver and a receiver. Travelers, whether
their interest is international affairs, business, or leisure, should remember
that they are itinerant heralds of Christ wherever they go and should act
accordingly.
CHAPTER IV
THE VARIOUS FORMS OF THE APOSTOLATE
15. The laity can engage in their apostolic activity
either as individuals or together as members of various groups or associations.
16. The individual apostolate, flowing generously from
its source in a truly Christian life (cf. John 4:14), is the origin and
condition of the whole lay apostolate, even of the organized type, and it admits
of no substitute.
Regardless of status, all lay persons (including those
who have no opportunity or possibility for collaboration in associations) are
called to this type of apostolate and obliged to engage in it. This type of
apostolate is useful at all times and places, but in certain circumstances it is
the only one appropriate and feasible.
There are many forms of the apostolate whereby the
laity build up the Church, sanctify the world, and give it life in Christ. A
particular form of the individual apostolate as well as a sign specially suited
to our times is the testimony of the whole lay life arising from faith, hope,
and charity. It manifests Christ living in those who believe in Him. Then by the
apostolate the spoken and written word, which is utterly necessary under certain
circumstances, lay people announce Christ, explain and spread His teaching in
accordance with one's status and ability, and faithfully profess it.
Furthermore, in collaborating as citizens of this
world, in whatever pertains to the upbuilding and conducting of the temporal
order, the laity must seek in the light of faith loftier motives of action in
their family, professional, cultural, and social life and make them known to
others when the occasion arises. Doing this, they should be aware of the fact
that they are cooperating with God the creator, redeemer, and sanctifier and are
giving praise to Him.
Finally, the laity should vivify their life with
charity and express it as best they can in their works.
They should all remember that they can reach all men
and contribute to the salvation of the whole world by public worship and prayer
as well as by penance and voluntary acceptance of the labors and hardships of
life whereby they become like the suffering Christ (cf. 2 Cor. 4:10; Col. 1:24).
17. There is a very urgent need for this individual
apostolate in those regions where the freedom of the Church is seriously
infringed. In these trying circumstances, the laity do what they can to take the
place of priests, risking their freedom and sometimes their life to teach
Christian doctrine to those around them, training them in a religious way of
life and a Catholic way of thinking, leading them to receive the sacraments
frequently and developing in them piety, especially Eucharistic devotion.(1)
While the sacred synod heartily thanks God for continuing also in our times to
raise up lay persons of heroic fortitude in the midst of persecutions, it
embrace them with fatherly affection and gratitude.
The individual apostolate has a special field in areas
where Catholics are few in number and widely dispersed. Here the laity who
engage in the apostolate only as individuals, whether for the reasons already
mentioned or for special reasons including those deriving also from their own
professional activity, usefully gather into smaller groups for serious
conversation without any more formal kind of establishment or organization, so
that an indication of the community of the Church is always apparent to others
as a true witness of love. In this way, by giving spiritual help to one another
through friendship and the communicating of the benefit of their experience,
they are trained to overcome the disadvantages of excessively isolated life and
activity and to make their apostolate more productive.
18. The faithful are called to engage in the apostolate
as individuals in the varying circumstances of their life. They should remember,
nevertheless, that man is naturally social and that it has pleased God to unite
those who believe in Christ into the people of God (cf. 1 Peter 2:5-10) and into
one body (cf. 1 Cor. 12:12). The group apostolate of Christian believers then
happily corresponds to a human and Christian need and at the same time signifies
the communion and unity of the Church in Christ, who said, "Where two or three
are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them" (Matt.
18:20).
For this reason the faithful should participate in the
apostolate by way of united effort.(2) They should be apostles both in their
family communities and in their parishes and dioceses, which themselves express
the community nature of the apostolate, as well as in the informal groups which
they decide to form among themselves.
The group apostolate is very important also because the
apostolate must often be performed by way of common activity both the Church
communities and the various spheres. For the associations established for
carrying on the apostolate in common sustain their members, form them for the
apostolate, and rightly organize and regulate their apostolic work so that much
better results can be expected than if each member were to act on his own.
In the present circumstances, it is quite necessary
that, in the area of lay activity, the united and organized form of the
apostolate be strengthened. In fact, only the pooling of resources is capable of
fully achieving all the aims of the modern apostolate and firmly protecting its
interests.(3) Here it is important that the apostolate encompass even the common
attitudes and social conditions of those for whom it is designed. Otherwise
those engaged in the apostolate are often unable to bear up under the pressure
of public opinion or of social institutions.
19. There is a great variety of associations in the
apostolate.(4) Some set before themselves the broad apostolic purpose of the
Church; others aim to evangelize and sanctify in a special way. Some purpose to
infuse a Christian spirit into the temporal order; others bear witness to Christ
in a special way through works of mercy and charity.
Among these associations, those which promote and
encourage closer unity between the concrete life of the members and their faith
must be given primary consideration. Associations are not ends unto themselves;
rather they should serve the mission of the Church to the world. Their apostolic
dynamism depends on their conformity with the goals of the Church as well as on
the Christian witness and evangelical spirit of every member and of the whole
association.
Now, in view of the progress of social institutions and
the the fast- moving pace of modern society, the global nature of the Church's
mission requires that apostolic enterprises of Catholics should more and more
develop organized forms in the international sphere. Catholic international
organizations will more effectively achieve their purpose if the groups
comprising them, as well as their members, are more closely united to these
international organizations.
Maintaining the proper relationship to Church
authorities,(5) the laity have the right to found and control such
associations(6) and to join those already existing. Yet the dispersion of
efforts must be avoided. This happens when new associations and projects are
promoted without a sufficient reason, or if antiquated associations or methods
are retained beyond their period of usefulness. Nor is it always fitting to
transfer indiscriminately forms of the apostolates that have been used in one
nation to other nations.(7)
20. Many decades ago the laity in many nations began to
dedicate themselves increasingly to the apostolate. They grouped themselves into
various kinds of activities and societies which, while maintaining a closer
union with the hierarchy, pursued and continue to pursue goals which are
properly apostolic. Of these associations, or even among similar and older
institutions, those are specially noteworthy which followed different methods of
operation and yet produced excellent results for Christ's kingdom. These
societies were deservedly recommended and promoted by the popes and many
bishops, from whom they received the title of "Catholic Action," and were often
described as the collaboration of the laity in the apostolate of the
hierarchy.(8)
Whether these forms of the apostolate have the name of
"Catholic Action" or some other title, they exercise an apostolate of great
value for our times and consist in the combination and simultaneous possession
of the following characteristics:
a) The immediate aim of organizations of this kind is
the Church's apostolic aim, that is, the evangelization and sanctification of
men and the formation of a Christian conscience among them so that they can
infuse the spirit of the Gospel into various communities and departments of
life.
b ) Cooperating with the hierarchy in their own way,
the laity contribute the benefit of their experience to, and assume
responsibility for the direction of these organizations, the consideration of
the conditions in which the pastoral activity of the Church is to be conducted,
and the elaboration and execution of the plan of things to be done.
c) The laity act together in the manner of an organic
body so that the community of the Church is more fittingly symbolized and the
apostolate rendered more effective.
d) Whether they offer themselves spontaneously or are
invited to action and direct cooperation with the apostolate of the hierarchy,
the laity function under the higher direction of the hierarchy itself, and the
latter can sanction this cooperation by an explicit mandate.
Organizations in which, in the opinion of the
hierarchy, the ensemble of these characteristics is realized, must be considered
to be Catholic Action even though they take on various forms and titles because
of the needs of different regions and peoples.
The most holy council earnestly recommends these
associations, which surely answer the needs of the apostolate of the Church
among many peoples and countries, and invites the clergy and laity working in
them to develop the above-mentioned characteristics to an ever greater degree
and to cooperate at all times with all other forms of the apostolate in a
fraternal manner in the Church.
21. All associations of the apostolate must be given
due appreciation. Those, however, which the hierarchy have praised or
recommended as responsive to the needs of time and place, or have ordered to be
established as particularly urgent, must be held in highest esteem by priests,
Religious, and laity and promoted according to each one's ability. Among these
associations, moreover, international associations or groups of Catholics must
be specially appreciated at the present time.
22. Deserving of special honor and commendation in the
Church are those lay people, single or married, who devote themselves with
professional experience, either permanently or temporarily, to the service of
associations and their activities. There is a source of great joy for the Church
in the fact that there is a daily increase in the number of lay persons who
offer their personal service to apostolic associations and activities, either
within the limits of their own nation or in the international field or
especially in Catholic mission communities and in regions where the Church has
only recently been implanted.
The pastors of the Church should gladly and gratefully
welcome these lay persons and make sure that the demands of justice, equity, and
charity relative to their status be satisfied to the fullest extent,
particularly as regards proper support for them and their families. They should
also take care to provide for these lay people the necessary formation,
spiritual consolation, and incentive.
CHAPTER V
EXTERNAL RELATIONSHIPS
23. Whether the lay apostolate is exercised by the
faithful as individuals or as members of organizations, it should be
incorporated into the apostolate of the whole Church according to a right system
of relationships. Indeed, union with those whom the Holy Spirit has assigned to
rule His Church (cf. Acts 20:28) is an essential element of the Christian
apostolate. No less necessary is cooperation among various projects of the
apostolate which must be suitably directed by the hierarchy.
Indeed, the spirit of unity should be promoted in order
that fraternal charity may be resplendent in the whole apostolate of the Church,
common goals may be attained, and destructive rivalries avoided. For this there
is need for mutual esteem among all the forms of the apostolate in the Church
and, with due respect for the particular character of each organization, proper
coordination.(1) This is most fitting since a particular activity in the Church
requires harmony and apostolic cooperation on the part of both branches of the
clergy, the Religious, and the laity.
24. The hierarchy should promote the apostolate of the
laity, provide it with spiritual principles and support, direct the conduct of
this apostolate to the common good of the Church, and attend to the preservation
of doctrine and order.
Indeed, the lay apostolate admits of different types of
relationships with the hierarchy in accordance with the various forms and
objects of this apostolate. For in the Church there are many apostolic
undertakings which are established by the free choice of the laity and regulated
by their prudent judgment. The mission of the Church can be better accomplished
in certain circumstances by undertakings of this kind, and therefore they are
frequently praised or recommended by the hierarchy.(2) No project, however, may
claim the name "Catholic" unless it has obtained the consent of the lawful
Church authority.
Certain forms of the apostolate of the laity are given
explicit recognition by the hierarchy, though in various ways.
Because of the demands of the common good of the
Church, moreover, ecclesiastical authority can select and promote in a
particular way some of the apostolic associations and projects which have an
immediately spiritual purpose, thereby assuming in them a special
responsibility. Thus, making various dispositions of the apostolate according to
circumstances, the hierarchy joins some particular form of it more closely with
its own apostolic function. Yet the proper nature and distinctiveness of each
apostolate must be preserved, and the laity must not be deprived of the
possibility of acting on their own accord. In various Church documents this
procedure of the hierarchy is called a mandate.
Finally, the hierarchy entrusts to the laity certain
functions which are more closely connected with pastoral duties, such as the
teaching of Christian doctrine, certain liturgical actions, and the care of
souls. By virtue of this mission, the laity are fully subject to higher
ecclesiastical control in the performance of this work.
As regards works and institutions in the temporal
order, the role of the ecclesiastical hierarchy is to teach and authentically
interpret the moral principles to be followed in temporal affairs. Furthermore,
they have the right to judge, after careful consideration of all related matters
and consultation with experts, whether or not such works and institutions
conform to moral principles and the right to decide what is required for the
protection and promotion of values of the supernatural order.
25. Bishops, pastors of parishes, and other priests of
both branches of the clergy should keep in mind that the right and duty to
exercise this apostolate is common to all the faithful, both clergy and laity,
and that the laity also have their own roles in building up the Church.(3) For
this reason they should work fraternally with the laity in and for the Church
and take special care of the lay persons in these apostolic works.(4)
Special care should be taken to select priests who are
capable of promoting particular forms of the apostolate of the laity and are
properly trained.(5) Those who are engaged in this ministry represent the
hierarchy in their pastoral activity by virtue of the mission they receive from
the hierarchy. Always adhering faithfully to the spirit and teaching of the
Church, they should promote proper relations been laity and hierarchy. They
should devote themselves to nourishing the spiritual life and an apostolic
attitude in the Catholic societies entrusted to them; they should contribute
their wise counsel to the apostolic activity of these associations and promote
their undertakings. Through continuous dialogue with the laity, these priests
should carefully investigate which forms make apostolic activity more fruitful.
They should promote the spirit of unity within the association as well as
between it and others.
Finally, in keeping with the spirit and norms of their
societies, Religious Brothers and Sisters should value the apostolic works of
the laity and willingly devote themselves to promoting lay enterprises.(6) They
should also strive to support, uphold, and fulfill priestly functions.
26. In dioceses, insofar as possible, there should be
councils which assist the apostolic work of the Church either in the field of
evangelization and sanctification or in the charitable, social, or other
spheres, and here it is fitting that the clergy and Religious should cooperate
with the laity. While preserving the proper character and autonomy of each
organization, these councils will be able to promote the mutual coordination of
various lay associations and enterprises.(7)
Councils of this type should be established as far as
possible also on the parochial, interparochial, and interdiocesan level as well
as in the national or international sphere.(8)
A special secretariat, moreover, should be established
at the Holy See for the service and promotion of the lay apostolate. It can
serve as a well-equipped center for communicating information about the various
apostolic programs of the laity, promoting research into modern problems arising
in this field, and assisting the hierarchy and laity in their apostolic works
with its advice. The various movements and projects of the apostolate of the
laity throughout the world should also be represented in this secretariat, and
here clergy and Religious also are to cooperate with the laity.
27. The quasi-common heritage of the Gospel and the
common duty of Christian witness resulting from it recommend and frequently
require the cooperation of Catholics with other Christians, on the part of
individuals and communities within the Church, either in activities or in
associations, in the national or international field.(9)
Likewise, common human values not infrequently call for
cooperation between Christians pursuing apostolic aims and those who do not
profess Christ's name but acknowledge these values.
By this dynamic and prudent cooperation,(10) which is
of special importance in temporal activities, the laity bear witness to Christ,
the Savior of the world, as well as to the unity of the human family.
CHAPTER VI
FORMATION FOR THE APOSTOLATE
28. The apostolate can attain its maximum effectiveness
only through a diversified and thorough formation. This is demanded not only by
the continuous spiritual and doctrinal progress of the lay person himself but
also by the accommodation of his activity to circumstances varying according to
the affairs, persons, and duties involved. This formation for the apostolate
should rest upon those bases which have been stated and proclaimed by this most
holy council in other documents.(1) In addition to the formation which is common
for all Christians, many forms of the apostolate demand also a specific and
particular formation because of the variety of persons and circumstances.
29. Since the laity share in their own way in the
mission of the Church, their apostolic formation is specially characterized by
the distinctively secular and particular quality of the lay state and by its own
form of the spiritual life.
The formation for the apostolate presupposes a certain
human and well-rounded formation adapted to the natural abilities and conditions
of each lay person. Well-informed about the modern world, the lay person should
be a member of his own community and adjusted to its culture.
However, the lay person should learn especially how to
perform the mission of Christ and the Church by basing his life on belief in the
divine mystery of creation and redemption and by being sensitive to the movement
of the Holy Spirit who gives life to the people of God and who urges all to love
God the Father as well as the world and men in Him. This formation should be
deemed the basis and condition for every successful apostolate.
In addition to spiritual formation, a solid doctrinal
instruction in theology, ethics, and philosophy adjusted to differences of age,
status, and natural talents, is required. The importance of general culture
along with practical and technical formation should also be kept in mind.
To cultivate good human relations, truly human values
must be fostered, especially the art of living fraternally and cooperating with
others and of striking up friendly conversation with them.
Since formation for the apostolate cannot consist in
merely theoretical instruction, from the beginning of their formation the laity
should gradually and prudently learn how to view, judge and do all things in the
light of faith as well as to develop and improve themselves along with others
through doing, thereby entering into active service to the Church.(2) This
formation, always in need of improvement because of the increasing maturity of
the human person and the proliferation of problems, requires an ever deeper
knowledge and planned activity. In the fulfillment of all the demands of
formation, the unity and integrity of the human person must be kept in mind at
all times so that his harmony and balance may be safeguarded and enhanced.
In this way the lay person engages himself wholly and
actively in the reality of the temporal order and effectively assumes his role
in conducting the affairs of this order. At the same time, as a living member
and witness of the Church, he renders the Church present and active in the midst
of temporal affairs.(3)
30. The training for the apostolate should start with
the children's earliest education. In a special way, however, adolescents and
young persons should be initiated into the apostolate and imbued with its
spirit. This formation must be perfected throughout their whole life in keeping
with the demands of new responsibilities. It is evident, therefore, that those
who have the obligation to provide a Christian education also have the duty of
providing formation for the apostolate.
In the family parents have the task of training their
children from childhood on to recognize God's love for all men. By example
especially they should teach them little by little to be solicitous for the
material and spiritual needs of their neighbor. The whole family in its common
life, then, should be a sort of apprenticeship for the apostolate. Children must
be educated, too, in such fashion that transcending the family circle, they may
open their minds to both ecclesiastical and temporal communities. They should be
so involved in the local community of the parish that they will acquire a
consciousness of being living and active members of the people of God. Priests
should focus their attention on the formation of the laity for the apostolate in
their catechetics, their ministry of the word, their direction of souls, and in
their other pastoral services.
Schools, colleges, and other Catholic educational
institutions also have the duty to develop a Catholic sense and apostolic
activity in young persons. If young people lack this formation either because
they do not attend these schools or because of any other reason, all the more
should parents, pastors of souls, and apostolic organizations attend to it.
Teachers and educators on the other hand, who carry on a distinguished form of
the apostolate of the laity by their vocation and office, should be equipped
with that learning and pedagogical skill that are needed for imparting such
education effectively.
Likewise, lay groups and associations dedicated to the
apostolate or other supernatural goals, should carefully and assiduously promote
formation for the apostolate in keeping with their purpose and condition.(4)
Frequently these groups are the ordinary vehicle for harmonious formation for
the apostolate inasmuch as they provide doctrinal, spiritual, and practical
formation. Their members meet in small groups with their associates or friends,
examine the methods and results of their apostolic activity, and compare their
daily way of life with the Gospel.
Formation of this type must be so organized that it
takes into account the whole lay apostolate, which must be carried on not only
among the organized groups themselves but also in all circumstances throughout
one's whole life, especially one's professional and social life. Indeed,
everyone should diligently prepare himself for the apostolate, this preparation
being the more urgent in adulthood. For the advance of age brings with it a more
open mind, enabling each person to detect more readily the talents with which
God has enriched his soul and to exercise more effectively those charisms which
the Holy Spirit has bestowed on him for the good of his brethren.
31. Various types of the apostolate demand also a
specially suitable formation.
a) In regard to the apostolate for evangelizing and
sanctifying men, the laity must be specially formed to engage in conversation
with others, believers, or non-believers, in order to manifest Christ's message
to all men.(5)
Since in our times, different forms of materialism are
spread far and wide even among Catholic, the laity should not only learn
doctrine more diligently, especially those main points which are the subjects of
controversy, but should also exhibit the witness of an evangelical life in
contrast to all forms of materialism.
b) In regard to the Christian renewal of the temporal
order, the laity should be instructed in the true meaning and value of temporal
things, both in themselves and in relation to all the aims of the human person.
They should be trained in the right use of things and the organization of
institutions, attentive always to the common good in line with the principles of
the moral and social teaching of the Church. Laymen should above all learn the
principles and conclusions of the social doctrine so as to become capable of
working for the development of this doctrine to the best of their ability and of
rightly applying these same principles and conclusions to individual cases.(6)
c) Since the works of charity and mercy express the
most striking testimony of the Christian life, apostolic formation should lead
also to the performance of these works so that the faithful may learn from
childhood on to have compassion for their brethren and to be generous in helping
those in need.(7)
32. There are many aids for lay persons devoted to the
apostolate, namely, study sessions, congresses, periods of recollection,
spiritual exercises, frequent meetings, conferences, books, and periodicals
directed toward the acquisition of a deeper knowledge of sacred Scripture and
Catholic doctrine, the nourishment.of spiritual life, the discernment of world
conditions, and the discovery and development of suitable methods.(8)
These aids in formation take into consideration the
various types of the apostolate in the milieu where it is exercised.
For this purpose also centers or higher institutes have
been erected, and they have already proved highly successful.
The most holy council rejoices over projects of this
kind which are already flourishing in certain areas, and it desires that they
may be promoted also in other areas where they may be needed. Furthermore,
centers of documentation and study not only in theology but also in
anthropology, psychology, sociology, and methodology should be established for
all fields of the apostolate for the better development of the natural
capacities of the laity-men and women, young persons and adults.
EXHORTATION
33. The most holy council, then, earnestly entreats all
the laity in the Lord to answer gladly, nobly, and promptly the more urgent
invitation of Christ in this hour and the impulse of the Holy Spirit. Younger
persons should feel that this call has been directed to them especially and they
should respond to it eagerly and generously. Through this holy synod, the Lord
renews His invitation to all the laity to come closer to Him every day,
recognizing that what is His is also their own (Phil. 2:5), to associate
themselves with Him in His saving mission. Once again He sends them into every
town and place where He will come (cf. Luke 10:1) so that they may show that
they are co-workers in the various forms and modes of the one apostolate of the
Church, which must be constantly adapted to the new needs of our times. Ever
productive as they should be in the work of the Lord, they know that their labor
in Him is not in vain (cf. 1 Cor. 15:58).
NOTES
Introduction:
1. cf. John
XXIII, apostolic constitution "Humani Salutis," Dec. 25, 1961: A.A.S. 54 (1962)
pp. 7-10.
2. cf.
Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Nature of the Church, nos.
33 ff.: A.A.S. 57 (1965) pp. 39 ff.; cf; also Constitution on the Liturgy, nos.
26-40; A.A.S. 56 (1964) pp. 107- 111; cf. Decree on Instruments of Social
Communication: A.A.S. 56 (1964) pp. 145-158; cf. Decree on Ecumenism: A.A.S. 57
(1965) pp. 90-107; cf. Decree on Pastoral Duties of Bishops, nos. 16, 17, 18;
cf. Declaration on Christian Education, nos. 3, 5, 7; cf. Decree on Missionary
Activity of Church, nos. 15, 21, 41; cf. Decree on Priestly Life and Ministry,
no. 9.
3. cf. Pius
XII, allocution to cardinals, Feb. 18, 1946: A.A.S. 38 (1946) pp. 101-102;
Idem., sermon to young Catholic workers, Aug. 25, 1957: A.A.S. 49 (1957) p. 843.
Chapter 1
Article 2:
1. cf. Pius
XI, encyclical "Rerum Ecclesiae:" A.A.S. 18 (1926) p. 65.
2. cf.
Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Nature of the Church, no.
31: A.A.S. 57 (1965) p. 37. Article 3:
3. cf.
ibid., no. 33, p. 39; cf. also no. 10, ibid., p. 14.
4. cf.
ibid., no. 12, p. 16. Article 4:
5. cf.
Second Vatican Council, Constitution on the Liturgy, Chap. 1, no. 11: A.A.S. 56
(1964) pp. 102-103.
6. cf.
Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Nature of the Church, no.
32: A.A.S. 57 (1965) p. 38; cf. also nos. 40-41: ibid., pp. 45-47.
7. ibid.,
no. 62, p. 63; cf. also no. 65. ibid., pp. 64-65. CHAPTER II Article 6:
1. cf. Pius
XI, encyclical "Ubi Arcano," Dec. 23, 1922: A.A.S. 14 (1922) p. 659; Pius XII,
encyclical "Summi Pontificatus," Oct. 20, 1939: A.A.S. 31 (1939) pp. 442-443.
Article 7:
2. cf. Leo
XIII, encyclical "Rerum Novarum:" A.A.S. 23 (1890-91) p. 47; Pius XI encyclical
"Quadragesimo anno:" A.A.S. 23 (1931) p 190; Pius XII, radio message of June 1,
1941: A.A.S. 33 (1941) p. 207. Article 8:
3. cf. John
XXIII, encyclical "Mater et Magistra:" A.A.S. 53 (1961) p. 402.
4. cf.
ibid., pp. 440-441.
5. cf.
ibid., pp. 442-443.
6. cf. Pius
XII, allocution to "Pax Romana" April 25, 1957: A.A.S. 49 (1957) pp. 298-299;
and especially John XXIII, "Ad Conventum Consilii" Food and Agriculture
Organization Nov. 10, 1959: A.A.S. 51 (1959) pp. 856-866.
Chapter III
Article 10:
1. cf. St.
Pius X, apostolic letter "Creationis Duarum Novarum Paroeciarum" June 1, 1905:
A.A.S. 38 (1905) pp. 65-67; Pius XII, allocution to faithful of parish of St.
Saba, Jan. 11, 1953: Discourses and radio messages of His Holiness Pius XII, 14
(1952-53) pp. 449- 454; John XXIII allocution to clergy and faithful of
suburbicarian diocese of Albano, "Ad Arcem Gandulfi Habita," Aug. 26, 1962:
A.A.S. 54 (1962) pp. 656-660.
2. cf. Leo
XIII, allocution Jan. 28, 1894: Acts, 14 (1894) pp. 424- 425.
3. cf. Pius
XII, allocution to pastors, etc., Feb. 6, 1951: Discourses and Radio Messages of
His Holiness Pius XII, 12 (1950-51) pp. 437- 443; 852: ibid, 14 (1952-53) pp.
5-10; March 27, 1953: ibid., 15 (1953-54) pp. 27-35; Feb. 28, 1954: ibid., pp.
585-590. Article 11:
4. cf. Pius
XI, encyclical "Casti Connubii:" A.A.S. 22 (1930) p. 554; Pius XII, Radio
Messages, Jan. 1, 1941: A.A.S. 33 (1941) p. 203; idem., to delegates of the
convention of the members of the International Union to Protect the Rights of
Families, Sept. 20, 1949; A.A.S. 41 (1949) p. 552; idem., to heads of families
on pilgrimage from France to Rome, Sept. 18, 1951: A.A.S. 43 (1951) p. 731,
idem., Christmas Radio Message of 1952: A.A.S. 45 (1953) p. 41; John XXIII,
encyclical "Mater et Magistra" May 15, 1961: A.A.S. (1961) pp. 429, 439.
5. cf. Pius
XII, encyclical "Evangelii Praecones," June 2, 1951: A.A.S. 43 (1951) p. 514.
6. cf. Pius
XII, to delegates to the convention of members of the International Union for
the Defense of Family Rights, Sept. 20, 1949: A.A.S. 41 (1949) p. 552. Article
12:
7. cf. St.
Pius X, allocution to Association of French Catholic Youth on piety, knowledge
and action, Sept. 25, 1904: A.A.S. 37 (1904- 05) pp. 296-300.
8. cf. Pius
XII, letter "Dans Quelques Semaines" to Archbishop of Montreal, Canada, to be
relayed to the Assemblies of Canadian Young Christian Workers, May 24, 1947:
A.A.S. 39 (1947) p. 257; radio message to Young Christian Workers, Brussels,
Sept. 3, 1950: A.A.S. 42 (1950) pp. 640-641. Article 13:
9. cf. Pius
XI, encyclical "Quadragesimo Anno," May 15, 1931: A.A.S. 23 (1931) pp. 225-226.
Article 14:
10. cf.
John XXIII, encyclical "Mater et Magistra" May 15, 1961: A.A.S. 53 (1961) pp.
448-450.
Chapter IV
Article 17:
1. cf. Pius
XII, allocution to the first convention of laymen representing all nations on
the promotion of the apostolate, Oct. 15, 1951: A.A.S. 43 (1951) p. 788. Article
18:
2. cf. Pius
XII, allocution to the first convention of laymen representing all nations on
the promotion of the apostolate Oct. 15, 1951: A.A.S. 43 (1951) pp. 787-788.
3. cf. Pius
XII, encyclical "Le Pelerinage de Lourdes," July 2, 1957: A.A.S. 49 (1957) p.
615. Article 19:
4. cf. Pius
XII, allocution to the assembly of the International Federation of Catholic Men,
Dec. 8, 1956: A.A.S. 49 (1957) pp. 26- 27.
5. cf. in
Chap. 5, no. 24.
6. cf.
Sacred Congregation of the Council, concerning the dissolution of the Corrientes
diocese in Argentina, Nov. 13, 1920: A.A.S. 13 (1921) p. 139.
7. cf. John
XXIII, encyclical "Princeps Pastorum," Dec. 10, 1959: A.A.S. 51 (1959) p. 856.
Article 20:
8. cf. Pius
XI, letter "Quae Nobis" to Cardinal Bertram, Nov. 13, 1928: A.A.S. 20 (1928) p.
385. cf. also Pius XII, allocution to Italian Catholic Action, Sept. 4, 1940:
A.A.S. 32 (1940) p. 362.
Chapter V
Article 23:
1. cf. Pius
XI, encyclical "Quamvis Nostra," April 30, 1936: A.A.S., 28 (1936) pp. 160-161.
Article 24:
2. cf.
Sacred Congregation of the Council on the dissolution of the diocese of
Corrientes, Argentina, Nov. 13, 1920; A.A.S. 13 (1921) pp. 137-140. Article 25:
3. cf. Pius
XII, allocution to the second convention of laymen representing all nations on
the promotion of the apostolate, Oct. 5 1957: A.A.S. 49 (1957) p. 927.
4. cf.
Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Nature of the Church, no.
37. A.A.S. 57 (1965) pp. 442-443.
5. cf. Pius
XII, apostolic exhortation "Menti Nostrae," Sept. 23 1950: A.A.S. 42 (1950) p.
660.
6. cf.
Second Vatican Council, Decree on the Renovation of Religious Life, no. 8.
Article 26:
7. cf.
Benedict XIV, On the Diocesan Synod, I, 3, Chap. 9, no. 7.
8. cf. Pius
XI, encyclical "Quamvis Nostra," April 30, l936: A.A.S. 28 (1936) pp. 160-161.
Article 27:
9. cf. John
XXIII, encyclical "Mater et Magistra," May 15, 1961: A.A.S. 53 (1961) pp.
456-457. cf. Second Vatican Council, Decree on Ecumenism, no. 12: A.A.S. 57
(1965) pp. 99-100.
10. cf.
Second Vatican Council, Decree on Ecumenism, no. 12: A.A.S. 57 (1965) p. 100.
Also cf. Dogmatic Constitution on the Nature of the Church, no. 15: A.A.S. 57
(1965) pp. 19-20.
CHAPTER VI
Article 28:
1. cf.
Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Nature of the Church,
Chaps. 2, 4 and 5: A.A.S. 57 (1965) pp. 12- 21, 37-49; also cf. Decree on
Ecumenism, nos. 4, 6, 7 and 12: A.A.S. 57 (1965) pp. 94, 96, 97, 99, 100; cf.
also above, no. 4. Article 29:
2. cf. Pius
XII, allocution to the first international Boy Scouts congress, June 6, 1952:
A.A.S. 44 (1952) pp. 579-580; John XXIII, encyclical, "Mater et Magistra," May
15, 1961: A.A.S. 53 (1961) p. 456.
3. cf.
Second Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution on the Nature of the Church, p.
33: A.A.S. 57 (1965) p. 39. Article. 30:
4. cf. John
XXIII, encyclical "Mater et Magistra," May 15, 1961: A.A.S. 53 (1961) p. 455.
Article 31:
5. cf. Pius
XII, encyclical "Sertum Laetitiae," Nov. 1, 1939: A.A.S. 31 (1939) pp. 653-654;
cf. idem., to graduates of Italian Catholic Action, May 24, 1953.
6. cf. Pius
XII, allocution to the universal congress of the World Federation of Young
Catholic Women, April 18, 1952: A.A.S. 42 (1952) pp. 414-419. cf. idem.,
allocution to the Christian Association of Italian Workers, May 1, 1955: A.A.S.
47 (1955) pp. 403-404.
7. cf. Pius
XII, to delegates of the Assembly of Charity Associations, April 27,1952:
pp.470-471.
Article 32:
8 cf. John
XXIII, encyclical "Mater et Magistra," May 15 1961: A.A.S. 53 (1961) p. 454.