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DOGMATIC CONSTITUTION ON THE CHURCH
LUMEN GENTIUM
SOLEMNLY PROMULGATED BY HOLINESS
POPE PAUL VI
ON NOVEMBER 21, 1964
CHAPTER I
THE MYSTERY OF THE CHURCH
1. Christ is the Light of nations. Because
this is so, this Sacred Synod gathered together in the Holy Spirit
eagerly desires, by proclaiming the Gospel to every creature,(1) to
bring the light of Christ to all men, a light brightly visible on the
countenance of the Church. Since the Church is in Christ like a
sacrament or as a sign and instrument both of a very closely knit
union with God and of the unity of the whole human race, it desires
now to unfold more fully to the faithful of the Church and to the
whole world its own inner nature and universal mission. This it
intends to do following faithfully the teaching of previous councils.
The present- day conditions of the world add greater urgency to this
work of the Church so that all men, joined more closely today by
various social, technical and cultural ties, might also attain fuller
unity in Christ.
2. The eternal Father, by a free and hidden
plan of His own wisdom and goodness, created the whole world. His plan
was to raise men to a participation of the divine life. Fallen in
Adam, God the Father did not leave men to themselves, but ceaselessly
offered helps to salvation, in view of Christ, the Redeemer "who is
the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of every creature".(2)
All the elect, before time began, the Father "foreknew and pre-
destined to become conformed to the image of His Son, that he should
be the firstborn among many brethren".(3) He planned to assemble in
the holy Church all those who would believe in Christ. Already from
the beginning of the world the foreshadowing of the Church took place.
It was prepared in a remarkable way throughout the history of the
people of Israel and by means of the Old Covenant.(1*) In the present
era of time the Church was constituted and, by the outpouring of the
Spirit, was made manifest. At the end of time it will gloriously
achieve completion, when, as is read in the Fathers, all the just,
from Adam and "from Abel, the just one, to the last of the elect,"(2*)
will be gathered together with the Father in the universal Church.
3. The Son, therefore, came, sent by the
Father. It was in Him, before the foundation of the world, that the
Father chose us and predestined us to become adopted sons, for in Him
it pleased the Father to re-establish all things.(4) To carry out the
will of the Father, Christ inaugurated the Kingdom of heaven on earth
and revealed to us the mystery of that kingdom. By His obedience He
brought about redemption. The Church, or, in other words, the kingdom
of Christ now present in mystery, grows visibly through the power of
God in the world. This inauguration and this growth are both
symbolized by the blood and water which flowed from the open side of a
crucified Jesus,(5) and are foretold in the words of the Lord
referring to His death on the Cross: "And I, if I be lifted up from
the earth, will draw all things to myself".(6) As often as the
sacrifice of the cross in which Christ our Passover was sacrificed, is
celebrated on the altar, the work of our redemption is carried on,
and, in the sacrament of the eucharistic bread, the unity of all
believers who form one body in Christ (8) is both expressed and
brought about. All men are called to this union with Christ, who is
the light of the world, from whom we go forth, through whom we live,
and toward whom our whole life strains.
4. When the work which the Father gave the
Son to do on earth (9) was accomplished, the Holy Spirit was sent on
the day of Pentecost in order that He might continually sanctify the
Church, and thus, all those who believe would have access through
Christ in one Spirit to the Father.(10) He is the Spirit of Life, a
fountain of water springing up to life eternal.(11) To men, dead in
sin, the Father gives life through Him, until, in Christ, He brings to
life their mortal bodies.(12) The Spirit dwells in the Church and in
the hearts of the faithful, as in a temple.(13) In them He prays on
their behalf and bears witness to the fact that they are adopted
sons.(14) The Church, which the Spirit guides in way of all truth(15)
and which He unified in communion and in works of ministry, He both
equips and directs with hierarchical and charismatic gifts and adorns
with His fruits.(16) By the power of the Gospel He makes the Church
keep the freshness of youth. Uninterruptedly He renews it and leads it
to perfect union with its Spouse. (3*) The Spirit and the Bride both
say to Jesus, the Lord, "Come!"(17)
Thus, the Church has been seen as "a people
made one with the unity of the Father, the Son and the Holy
Spirit."(4*)
5. The mystery of the holy Church is manifest
in its very foundation. The Lord Jesus set it on its course by
preaching the Good News, that is, the coming of the Kingdom of God,
which, for centuries, had been promised in the Scriptures: "The time
is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand"(18). In the word, in
the works, and in the presence of Christ, this kingdom was clearly
open to the view of men. The Word of the Lord is compared to a seed
which is sown in a field;(19) those who hear the Word with faith and
become part of the little flock of Christ,(20) have received the
Kingdom itself. Then, by its own power the seed sprouts and grows
until harvest time.(21) The Miracles of Jesus also confirm that the
Kingdom has already arrived on earth: "If I cast out devils by the
finger of God, then the kingdom of God has come upon you".(22) Before
all things, however, the Kingdom is clearly visible in the very Person
of Christ, the Son of God and the Son of Man, who came "to serve and
to give His life as a ransom for many:"(23)
When Jesus, who had suffered the death of the
cross for mankind, had risen, He appeared as the one constituted as
Lord, Christ and eternal Priest,(24) and He poured out on His
disciples the Spirit promised by the Father.(25) From this source the
Church, equipped with the gifts of its Founder and faithfully guarding
His precepts of charity, humility and self-sacrifice, receives the
mission to proclaim and to spread among all peoples the Kingdom of
Christ and of God and to be, on earth, the initial budding forth of
that kingdom. While it slowly grows, the Church strains toward the
completed Kingdom and, with all its strength, hopes and desires to be
united in glory with its King.
6. In the old Testament the revelation of the
Kingdom is often conveyed by means of metaphors. In the same way the
inner nature of the Church is now made known to us in different images
taken either from tending sheep or cultivating the land, from building
or even from family life and betrothals, the images receive
preparatory shaping in the books of the Prophets.
The Church is a sheepfold whose one and
indispensable door is Christ.(26) It is a flock of which God Himself
foretold He would be the shepherd,(27) and whose sheep, although ruled
by human shepherds; are nevertheless continuously led and nourished by
Christ Himself, the Good Shepherd and the Prince of the shepherds,(28)
who gave His life for the sheep.(29)
The Church is a piece of land to be
cultivated, the village of God.(30) On that land the ancient olive
tree grows whose holy roots were the Prophets and in which the
reconciliation of Jews and Gentiles has been brought about and will be
brought about.(31) That land, like a choice vineyard, has been planted
by the heavenly Husbandman.(32) The true vine is Christ who gives life
and the power to bear abundant fruit to the branches, that is, to us,
who through the Church remain in Christ without whom we can do
nothing.(33)
Often the Church has also been called the
building of God.(34) The Lord Himself compared Himself to the stone
which the builders rejected, but which was made into the
cornerstone.(35) On this foundation the Church is built by the
apostles,(36) and from it the Church receives durability and
consolidation. This edifice has many names to describe it: the house
of God (37) in which dwells His family; the household of God in the
Spirit;(38) the dwelling place of God among men;(39) and, especially,
the holy temple. This Temple, symbolized in places of worship built
out of stone, is praised by the Holy Fathers and, not without reason,
is compared in the liturgy to the Holy City, the New Jerusalem (5*).
As living stones we here on earth are built into it.(40) John
contemplates this holy city coming down from heaven at the renewal of
the world as a bride made ready and adorned for her husband.(41)
The Church, further, "that Jerusalem which is
above" is also called "our mother".(42) It is described as the
spotless spouse of the spotless Lamb,(43) whom Christ "loved and for
whom He delivered Himself up that He might sanctify her",(44) whom He
unites to Himself by an unbreakable covenant, and whom He unceasingly
"nourishes and cherishes",(45) and whom, once purified, He willed to
be cleansed and joined to Himself, subject to Him in love and
fidelity,(46) and whom, finally, He filled with heavenly gifts for all
eternity, in order that we may know the love of God and of Christ for
us, a love which surpasses all knowledge.(47) The Church, while on
earth it journeys in a foreign land away from the Lord,(48) is life an
exile. It seeks and experiences those things which are above, where
Christ is seated at the right-hand of God, where the life of the
Church is hidden with Christ in God until it appears in glory with its
Spouse.(49)
7. In the human nature united to Himself the
Son of God, by overcoming death through His own death and
resurrection, redeemed man and re-molded him into a new creation.(50)
By communicating His Spirit, Christ made His brothers, called together
from all nations, mystically the components of His own Body.
In that Body the life of Christ is poured
into the believers who, through the sacraments, are united in a hidden
and real way to Christ who suffered and was glorified.(6*) Through
Baptism we are formed in the likeness of Christ: "For in one Spirit we
were all baptized into one body"(51). In this sacred rite a oneness
with Christ's death and resurrection is both symbolized and brought
about: "For we were buried with Him by means of Baptism into death";
and if "we have been united with Him in the likeness of His death, we
shall be so in the likeness of His resurrection also"(52) Really
partaking of the body of the Lord in the breaking of the eucharistic
bread, we are taken up into communion with Him and with one another.
"Because the bread is one, we though many, are one body, all of us who
partake of the one bread".(53) In this way all of us are made members
of His Body,(54) "but severally members one of another".(55)
As all the members of the human body, though
they are many, form one body, so also are the faithful in Christ.(56)
Also, in the building up of Christ's Body various members and
functions have their part to play. There is only one Spirit who,
according to His own richness and the needs of the ministries, gives
His different gifts for the welfare of the Church.(57) What has a
special place among these gifts is the grace of the apostles to whose
authority the Spirit Himself subjected even those who were endowed
with charisms.(58) Giving the body unity through Himself and through
His power and inner joining of the members, this same Spirit produces
and urges love among the believers. From all this it follows that if
one member endures anything, all the members co-endure it, and if one
member is honored, all the members together rejoice.(59)
The Head of this Body is Christ. He is the
image of the invisible God and in Him all things came into being. He
is before all creatures and in Him all things hold together. He is the
head of the Body which is the Church. He is the beginning, the
firstborn from the dead, that in all things He might have the first
place.(60) By the greatness of His power He rules the things in heaven
and the things on earth, and with His all-surpassing perfection and
way of acting He fills the whole body with the riches of His glory
All the members ought to be molded in the
likeness of Him, until Christ be formed in them.(62) For this reason
we, who have been made to conform with Him, who have died with Him and
risen with Him, are taken up into the mysteries of His life, until we
will reign together with Him.(63) On earth, still as pilgrims in a
strange land, tracing in trial and in oppression the paths He trod, we
are made one with His sufferings like the body is one with the Head,
suffering with Him, that with Him we may be glorified.(64)
From Him "the whole body, supplied and built
up by joints and ligaments, attains a growth that is of God".(65) He
continually distributes in His body, that is, in the Church, gifts of
ministries in which, by His own power, we serve each other unto
salvation so that, carrying out the truth in love, we might through
all things grow unto Him who is our Head.(66)
In order that we might be unceasingly renewed
in Him,(67) He has shared with us His Spirit who, existing as one and
the same being in the Head and in the members, gives life to, unifies
and moves through the whole body. This He does in such a way that His
work could be compared by the holy Fathers with the function which the
principle of life, that is, the soul, fulfills in the human body.(8*)
Christ loves the Church as His bride, having
become the model of a man loving his wife as his body;(68) the Church,
indeed, is subject to its Head.(69) "Because in Him dwells all the
fullness of the Godhead bodily",(70) He fills the Church, which is His
body and His fullness, with His divine gifts (71) so that it may
expand and reach all the fullness of God.(72)
8. Christ, the one Mediator, established and
continually sustains here on earth His holy Church, the community of
faith, hope and charity, as an entity with visible delineation (9*)
through which He communicated truth and grace to all. But, the society
structured with hierarchical organs and the Mystical Body of Christ,
are not to be considered as two realities, nor are the visible
assembly and the spiritual community, nor the earthly Church and the
Church enriched with heavenly things; rather they form one complex
reality which coalesces from a divine and a human element.(10*) For
this reason, by no weak analogy, it is compared to the mystery of the
incarnate Word. As the assumed nature inseparably united to Him,
serves the divine Word as a living organ of salvation, so, in a
similar way, does the visible social structure of the Church serve the
Spirit of Christ, who vivifies it, in the building up of the body.(73)
(11*)
This is the one Church of Christ which in the
Creed is professed as one, holy, catholic and apostolic, (12*) which
our Saviour, after His Resurrection, commissioned Peter to
shepherd,(74) and him and the other apostles to extend and direct with
authority,(75) which He erected for all ages as "the pillar and
mainstay of the truth".(76) This Church constituted and organized in
the world as a society, subsists in the Catholic Church, which is
governed by the successor of Peter and by the Bishops in communion
with him,(13*) although many elements of sanctification and of truth
are found outside of its visible structure. These elements, as gifts
belonging to the Church of Christ, are forces impelling toward
catholic unity.
Just as Christ carried out the work of
redemption in poverty and persecution, so the Church is called to
follow the same route that it might communicate the fruits of
salvation to men. Christ Jesus, "though He was by nature God . . .
emptied Himself, taking the nature of a slave",(77) and "being rich,
became poor"(78) for our sakes. Thus, the Church, although it needs
human resources to carry out its mission, is not set up to seek
earthly glory, but to proclaim, even by its own example, humility and
selfsacrifice. Christ was sent by the Father "to bring good news to
the poor, to heal the contrite of heart",(79) "to seek and to save
what was lost".(80) Similarly, the Church encompasses with love all
who are afflicted with human suffering and in the poor and afflicted
sees the image of its poor and suffering Founder. It does all it can
to relieve their need and in them it strives to serve Christ. While
Christ, holy, innocent and undefiled(81) knew nothing of sin,(82) but
came to expiate only the sins of the people,(83) the Church, embracing
in its bosom sinners, at the same time holy and always in need of
being purified, always follows the way of penance and renewal. The
Church, "like a stranger in a foreign land, presses forward amid the
persecutions of the world and the consolations of God"(14*),
announcing the cross and death of the Lord until He comes."(84) By the
power of the risen Lord it is given strength that it might, in
patience and in love, overcome its sorrows and its challenges, both
within itself and from without, and that it might reveal to the world,
faithfully though darkly, the mystery of its Lord until, in the end,
it will be manifested in full light.
CHAPTER II
ON THE PEOPLE OF GOD
9. At all times and in every race God has
given welcome to whosoever fears Him and does what is right.(85) God,
however, does not make men holy and save them merely as individuals,
without bond or link between one another. Rather has it pleased Him to
bring men together as one people, a people which acknowledges Him in
truth and serves Him in holiness. He therefore chose the race of
Israel as a people unto Himself. With it He set up a covenant. Step by
step He taught and prepared this people, making known in its history
both Himself and the decree of His will and making it holy unto
Himself. All these things, however, were done by way of preparation
and as a figure of that new and perfect covenant, which was to be
ratified in Christ, and of that fuller revelation which was to be
given through the Word of God Himself made flesh. "Behold the days
shall come saith the Lord, and I will make a new covenant with the
House of Israel, and with the house of Judah . . . I will give my law
in their bowels, and I will write it in their heart, and I will be
their God, and they shall be my people . . . For all of them shall
know Me, from the least of them even to the greatest, saith the
Lord.(86) Christ instituted this new covenant, the new testament, that
is to say, in His Blood,(87) calling together a people made up of Jew
and gentile, making them one, not according to the flesh but in the
Spirit. This was to be the new People of God. For those who believe in
Christ, who are reborn not from a perishable but from an imperishable
seed through the word of the living God,(88) not from the flesh but
from water and the Holy Spirit,(89) are finally established as "a
chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a purchased people . .
. who in times past were not a people, but are now the people of
God".(90)
That messianic people has Christ for its
head, "Who was delivered up for our sins, and rose again for our
justification",(91) and now, having won a name which is above all
names, reigns in glory in heaven. The state of this people is that of
the dignity and freedom of the sons of God, in whose hearts the Holy
Spirit dwells as in His temple. Its law is the new commandment to love
as Christ loved us.(92) Its end is the kingdom of God, which has been
begun by God Himself on earth, and which is to be further extended
until it is brought to perfection by Him at the end of time, when
Christ, our life,(93) shall appear, and "creation itself will be
delivered from its slavery to corruption into the freedom of the glory
of the sons of God".(94) So it is that that messianic people, although
it does not actually include all men, and at times may look like a
small flock, is nonetheless a lasting and sure seed of unity, hope and
salvation for the whole human race. Established by Christ as a
communion of life, charity and truth, it is also used by Him as an
instrument for the redemption of all, and is sent forth into the whole
world as the light of the world and the salt of the earth.(95)
Israel according to the flesh, which wandered
as an exile in the desert, was already called the Church of God.(96)
So likewise the new Israel which while living in this present age goes
in search of a future and abiding city (97) is called the Church of
Christ.(98) For He has bought it for Himself with His blood,(99) has
filled it with His Spirit and provided it with those means which befit
it as a visible and social union. God gathered together as one all
those who in faith look upon Jesus as the author of salvation and the
source of unity and peace, and established them as the Church that for
each and all it may be the visible sacrament of this saving unity.
(1*) While it transcends all limits of time and confines of race, the
Church is destined to extend to all regions of the earth and so enters
into the history of mankind. Moving forward through trial and
tribulation, the Church is strengthened by the power of God's grace,
which was promised to her by the Lord, so that in the weakness of the
flesh she may not waver from perfect fidelity, but remain a bride
worthy of her Lord, and moved by the Holy Spirit may never cease to
renew herself, until through the Cross she arrives at the light which
knows no setting.
10. Christ the Lord, High Priest taken from
among men,(100) made the new people "a kingdom and priests to God the
Father".(101) The baptized, by regeneration and the anointing of the
Holy Spirit, are consecrated as a spiritual house and a holy
priesthood, in order that through all those works which are those of
the Christian man they may offer spiritual sacrifices and proclaim the
power of Him who has called them out of darkness into His marvelous
light.(102) Therefore all the disciples of Christ, persevering in
prayer and praising God,(103) should present themselves as a living
sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God.(104) Everywhere on earth they
must bear witness to Christ and give an answer to those who seek an
account of that hope of eternal life which is in them.(105)
Though they differ from one another in
essence and not only in degree, the common priesthood of the faithful
and the ministerial or hierarchical priesthood are nonetheless
interrelated: each of them in its own special way is a participation
in the one priesthood of Christ.(2*) The ministerial priest, by the
sacred power he enjoys, teaches and rules the priestly people; acting
in the person of Christ, he makes present the eucharistic sacrifice,
and offers it to God in the name of all the people. But the faithful,
in virtue of their royal priesthood, join in the offering of the
Eucharist.(3*) They likewise exercise that priesthood in receiving the
sacraments, in prayer and thanksgiving, in the witness of a holy life,
and by self-denial and active charity.
11. It is through the sacraments and the
exercise of the virtues that the sacred nature and organic structure
of the priestly community is brought into operation. Incorporated in
the Church through baptism, the faithful are destined by the baptismal
character for the worship of the Christian religion; reborn as sons of
God they must confess before men the faith which they have received
from God through the Church (4*). They are more perfectly bound to the
Church by the sacrament of Confirmation, and the Holy Spirit endows
them with special strength so that they are more strictly obliged to
spread and defend the faith, both by word and by deed, as true
witnesses of Christ (5*). Taking part in the eucharistic sacrifice,
which is the fount and apex of the whole Christian life, they offer
the Divine Victim to God, and offer themselves along with It.(6*) Thus
both by reason of the offering and through Holy Communion all take
part in this liturgical service, not indeed, all in the same way but
each in that way which is proper to himself. Strengthened in Holy
Communion by the Body of Christ, they then manifest in a concrete way
that unity of the people of God which is suitably signified and
wondrously brought about by this most august sacrament.
Those who approach the sacrament of Penance
obtain pardon from the mercy of God for the offence committed against
Him and are at the same time reconciled with the Church, which they
have wounded by their sins, and which by charity, example, and prayer
seeks their conversion. By the sacred anointing of the sick and the
prayer of her priests the whole Church commends the sick to the
suffering and glorified Lord, asking that He may lighten their
suffering and save them;(106) she exhorts them, moreover, to
contribute to the welfare of the whole people of God by associating
themselves freely with the passion and death of Christ.(107) Those of
the faithful who are consecrated by Holy Orders are appointed to feed
the Church in Christ's name with the word and the grace of God.
Finally, Christian spouses, in virtue of the sacrament of Matrimony,
whereby they signify and partake of the mystery of that unity and
fruitful love which exists between Christ and His Church,(108) help
each other to attain to holiness in their married life and in the
rearing and education of their children. By reason of their state and
rank in life they have their own special gift among the people of
God.(109) (7*) From the wedlock of Christians there comes the family,
in which new citizens of human society are born, who by the grace of
the Holy Spirit received in baptism are made children of God, thus
perpetuating the people of God through the centuries. The family is,
so to speak, the domestic church. In it parents should, by their word
and example, be the first preachers of the faith to their children;
they should encourage them in the vocation which is proper to each of
them, fostering with special care vocation to a sacred state.
Fortified by so many and such powerful means
of salvation, all the faithful, whatever their condition or state, are
called by the Lord, each in his own way, to that perfect holiness
whereby the Father Himself is perfect.
12. The holy people of God shares also in
Christ's prophetic office; it spreads abroad a living witness to Him,
especially by means of a life of faith and charity and by offering to
God a sacrifice of praise, the tribute of lips which give praise to
His name.(110) The entire body of the faithful, anointed as they are
by the Holy One,(111) cannot err in matters of belief. They manifest
this special property by means of the whole peoples' supernatural
discernment in matters of faith when "from the Bishops down to the
last of the lay faithful" (8*) they show universal agreement in
matters of faith and morals. That discernment in matters of faith is
aroused and sustained by the Spirit of truth. It is exercised under
the guidance of the sacred teaching authority, in faithful and
respectful obedience to which the people of God accepts that which is
not just the word of men but truly the word of God.(112) Through it,
the people of God adheres unwaveringly to the faith given once and for
all to the saints,(113) penetrates it more deeply with right thinking,
and applies it more fully in its life.
It is not only through the sacraments and the
ministries of the Church that the Holy Spirit sanctifies and leads the
people of God and enriches it with virtues, but, "allotting his gifts
to everyone according as He wills,(114) He distributes special graces
among the faithful of every rank. By these gifts He makes them fit and
ready to undertake the various tasks and offices which contribute
toward the renewal and building up of the Church, according to the
words of the Apostle: "The manifestation of the Spirit is given to
everyone for profit".(115) These charisms, whether they be the more
outstanding or the more simple and widely diffused, are to be received
with thanksgiving and consolation for they are perfectly suited to and
useful for the needs of the Church. Extraordinary gifts are not to be
sought after, nor are the fruits of apostolic labor to be
presumptuously expected from their use; but judgment as to their
genuinity and proper use belongs to those who are appointed leaders in
the Church, to whose special competence it belongs, not indeed to
extinguish the Spirit, but to test all things and hold fast to that
which is good.(116)
13. All men are called to belong to the new
people of God. Wherefore this people, while remaining one and only
one, is to be spread throughout the whole world and must exist in all
ages, so that the decree of God's will may be fulfilled. In the
beginning God made human nature one and decreed that all His children,
scattered as they were, would finally be gathered together as one.
(117) It was for this purpose that God sent His Son, whom He appointed
heir of all things,(118) that be might be teacher, king and priest of
all, the head of the new and universal people of the sons of God. For
this too God sent the Spirit of His Son as Lord and Life- giver. He it
is who brings together the whole Church and each and every one of
those who believe, and who is the well-spring of their unity in the
teaching of the apostles and in fellowship, in the breaking of bread
and in prayers.(119)
It follows that though there are many nations
there is but one people of God, which takes its citizens from every
race, making them citizens of a kingdom which is of a heavenly rather
than of an earthly nature. All the faithful, scattered though they be
throughout the world, are in communion with each other in the Holy
Spirit, and so, he who dwells in Rome knows that the people of India
arc his members"(9*). Since the kingdom of Christ is not of this
world(120) the Church or people of God in establishing that kingdom
takes nothing away from the temporal welfare of any people. On the
contrary it fosters and takes to itself, insofar as they are good, the
ability, riches and customs in which the genius of each people
expresses itself. Taking them to itself it purifies, strengthens,
elevates and ennobles them. The Church in this is mindful that she
must bring together the nations for that king to whom they were given
as an inheritance,(121) and to whose city they bring gifts and
offerings.(122) This characteristic of universality which adorns the
people of God is a gift from the Lord Himself. By reason of it, the
Catholic Church strives constantly and with due effect to bring all
humanity and all its possessions back to its source In Christ, with
Him as its head and united in His Spirit. (10*)
In virtue of this catholicity each individual
part contributes through its special gifts to the good of the other
parts and of the whole Church. Through the common sharing of gifts and
through the common effort to attain fullness in unity, the whole and
each of the parts receive increase. Not only, then, is the people of
God made up of different peoples but in its inner structure also it is
composed of various ranks. This diversity among its members arises
either by reason of their duties, as is the case with those who
exercise the sacred ministry for the good of their brethren, or by
reason of their condition and state of life, as is the case with those
many who enter the religious state and, tending toward holiness by a
narrower path, stimulate their brethren by their example. Moreover,
within the Church particular Churches hold a rightful place; these
Churches retain their own traditions, without in any way opposing the
primacy of the Chair of Peter, which presides over the whole assembly
of charity (11*) and protects legitimate differences, while at the
same time assuring that such differences do not hinder unity but
rather contribute toward it. Between all the parts of the Church there
remains a bond of close communion whereby they share spiritual riches,
apostolic workers and temporal resources. For the members of the
people of God are called to share these goods in common, and of each
of the Churches the words of the Apostle hold good: "According to the
gift that each has received, administer it to one another as good
stewards of the manifold grace of God".(123)
All men are called to be part of this
catholic unity of the people of God which in promoting universal peace
presages it. And there belong to or are related to it in various ways,
the Catholic faithful, all who believe in Christ, and indeed the whole
of mankind, for all men are called by the grace of God to salvation.
14. This Sacred Council wishes to turn its
attention firstly to the Catholic faithful. Basing itself upon Sacred
Scripture and Tradition, it teaches that the Church, now sojourning on
earth as an exile, is necessary for salvation. Christ, present to us
in His Body, which is the Church, is the one Mediator and the unique
way of salvation. In explicit terms He Himself affirmed the necessity
of faith and baptism(124) and thereby affirmed also the necessity of
the Church, for through baptism as through a door men enter the
Church. Whosoever, therefore, knowing that the Catholic Church was
made necessary by Christ, would refuse to enter or to remain in it,
could not be saved.
They are fully incorporated in the society of
the Church who, possessing the Spirit of Christ accept her entire
system and all the means of salvation given to her, and are united
with her as part of her visible bodily structure and through her with
Christ, who rules her through the Supreme Pontiff and the bishops. The
bonds which bind men to the Church in a visible way are profession of
faith, the sacraments, and ecclesiastical government and communion. He
is not saved, however, who, though part of the body of the Church,
does not persevere in charity. He remains indeed in the bosom of the
Church, but, as it were, only in a "bodily" manner and not "in his
heart."(12*) All the Church's children should remember that their
exalted status is to be attributed not to their own merits but to the
special grace of Christ. If they fail moreover to respond to that
grace in thought, word and deed, not only shall they not be saved but
they will be the more severely judged.(13*)
Catechumens who, moved by the Holy Spirit,
seek with explicit intention to be incorporated into the Church are by
that very intention joined with her. With love and solicitude Mother
Church already embraces them as her own.
15. The Church recognizes that in many ways
she is linked with those who, being baptized, are honored with the
name of Christian, though they do not profess the faith in its
entirety or do not preserve unity of communion with the successor of
Peter. (14*) For there are many who honor Sacred Scripture, taking it
as a norm of belief and a pattern of life, and who show a sincere
zeal. They lovingly believe in God the Father Almighty and in Christ,
the Son of God and Saviour. (15*) They are consecrated by baptism, in
which they are united with Christ. They also recognize and accept
other sacraments within their own Churches or ecclesiastical
communities. Many of them rejoice in the episcopate, celebrate the
Holy Eucharist and cultivate devotion toward the Virgin Mother of
God.(16*) They also share with us in prayer and other spiritual
benefits. Likewise we can say that in some real way they are joined
with us in the Holy Spirit, for to them too He gives His gifts and
graces whereby He is operative among them with His sanctifying power.
Some indeed He has strengthened to the extent of the shedding of their
blood. In all of Christ's disciples the Spirit arouses the desire to
be peacefully united, in the manner determined by Christ, as one flock
under one shepherd, and He prompts them to pursue this end. (17*)
Mother Church never ceases to pray, hope and work that this may come
about. She exhorts her children to purification and renewal so that
the sign of Christ may shine more brightly over the face of the earth.
16. Finally, those who have not yet received
the Gospel are related in various ways to the people of God.(18*) In
the first place we must recall the people to whom the testament and
the promises were given and from whom Christ was born according to the
flesh.(125) On account of their fathers this people remains most dear
to God, for God does not repent of the gifts He makes nor of the calls
He issues.(126); But the plan of salvation also includes those who
acknowledge the Creator. In the first place amongst these there are
the Mohamedans, who, professing to hold the faith of Abraham, along
with us adore the one and merciful God, who on the last day will judge
mankind. Nor is God far distant from those who in shadows and images
seek the unknown God, for it is He who gives to all men life and
breath and all things,(127) and as Saviour wills that all men be
saved.(128) Those also can attain to salvation who through no fault of
their own do not know the Gospel of Christ or His Church, yet
sincerely seek God and moved by grace strive by their deeds to do His
will as it is known to them through the dictates of conscience.(19*)
Nor does Divine Providence deny the helps necessary for salvation to
those who, without blame on their part, have not yet arrived at an
explicit knowledge of God and with His grace strive to live a good
life. Whatever good or truth is found amongst them is looked upon by
the Church as a preparation for the Gospel.(20*) She knows that it is
given by Him who enlightens all men so that they may finally have
life. But often men, deceived by the Evil One, have become vain in
their reasonings and have exchanged the truth of God for a lie,
serving the creature rather than the Creator.(129) Or some there are
who, living and dying in this world without God, are exposed to final
despair. Wherefore to promote the glory of God and procure the
salvation of all of these, and mindful of the command of the Lord,
"Preach the Gospel to every creature",(130) the Church fosters the
missions with care and attention.
17. As the Son was sent by the Father,(131)
so He too sent the Apostles, saying: "Go, therefore, make disciples of
all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things whatsoever
I have commanded you. And behold I am with you all days even to the
consummation of the world".(132) The Church has received this solemn
mandate of Christ to proclaim the saving truth from the apostles and
must carry it out to the very ends of the earth.(133) Wherefore she
makes the words of the Apostle her own: "Woe to me, if I do not preach
the Gospel",(134) and continues unceasingly to send heralds of the
Gospel until such time as the infant churches are fully established
and can themselves continue the work of evangelizing. For the Church
is compelled by the Holy Spirit to do her part that God's plan may be
fully realized, whereby He has constituted Christ as the source of
salvation for the whole world. By the proclamation of the Gospel she
prepares her hearers to receive and profess the faith. She gives them
the dispositions necessary for baptism, snatches them from the slavery
of error and of idols and incorporates them in Christ so that through
charity they may grow up into full maturity in Christ. Through her
work, whatever good is in the minds and hearts of men, whatever good
lies latent in the religious practices and cultures of diverse
peoples, is not only saved from destruction but is also cleansed,
raised up and perfected unto the glory of God, the confusion of the
devil and the happiness of man. The obligation of spreading the faith
is imposed on every disciple of Christ, according to his state.(21*)
Although, however, all the faithful can baptize, the priest alone can
complete the building up of the Body in the eucharistic sacrifice.
Thus are fulfilled the words of God, spoken through His prophet: "From
the rising of the sun until the going down thereof my name is great
among the gentiles, and in every place a clean oblation is sacrificed
and offered up in my name".(135)(22*) In this way the Church both
prays and labors in order that the entire world may become the People
of God, the Body of the Lord and the Temple of the Holy Spirit, and
that in Christ, the Head of all, all honor and glory may be rendered
to the Creator and Father of the Universe.
CHAPTER III
ON THE HIERARCHICAL STRUCTURE OF THE
CHURCH AND IN PARTICULAR ON THE EPISCOPATE
18. For the nurturing and constant growth of
the People of God, Christ the Lord instituted in His Church a variety
of ministries, which work for the good of the whole body. For those
ministers, who are endowed with sacred power, serve their brethren, so
that all who are of the People of God, and therefore enjoy a true
Christian dignity, working toward a common goal freely and in an
orderly way, may arrive at salvation.
This Sacred Council, following closely in the
footsteps of the First Vatican Council, with that Council teaches and
declares that Jesus Christ, the eternal Shepherd, established His holy
Church, having sent forth the apostles as He Himself had been sent by
the Father;(136) and He willed that their successors, namely the
bishops, should be shepherds in His Church even to the consummation of
the world. And in order that the episcopate itself might be one and
undivided, He placed Blessed Peter over the other apostles, and
instituted in him a permanent and visible source and foundation of
unity of faith and communion.(1*) And all this teaching about the
institution, the perpetuity, the meaning and reason for the sacred
primacy of the Roman Pontiff and of his infallible magisterium, this
Sacred Council again proposes to be firmly believed by all the
faithful. Continuing in that same undertaking, this Council is
resolved to declare and proclaim before all men the doctrine
concerning bishops, the successors of the apostles, who together with
the successor of Peter, the Vicar of Christ,(2*) the visible Head of
the whole Church, govern the house of the living God.
19. The Lord Jesus, after praying to the
Father, calling to Himself those whom He desired, appointed twelve to
be with Him, and whom He would send to preach the Kingdom of God;(137)
and these apostles(138) He formed after the manner of a college or a
stable group, over which He placed Peter chosen from among them.(139)
He sent them first to the children of Israel and then to all
nations,(140) so that as sharers in His power they might make all
peoples His disciples, and sanctify and govern them,(141) and thus
spread His Church, and by ministering to it under the guidance of the
Lord, direct it all days even to the consummation of the world.(142)
And in this mission they were fully confirmed on the day of
Pentecost(143) in accordance with the Lord's promise: "You shall
receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you, and you shall be
witnesses for me in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and in Samaria, and
even to the very ends of the earth".(144) And the apostles, by
preaching the Gospel everywhere,(145) and it being accepted by their
hearers under the influence of the Holy Spirit, gather together the
universal Church, which the Lord established on the apostles and built
upon blessed Peter, their chief, Christ Jesus Himself being the
supreme cornerstone.(146)(3*)
20. That divine mission, entrusted by Christ
to the apostles, will last until the end of the world,(147) since the
Gospel they are to teach is for all time the source of all life for
the Church. And for this reason the apostles, appointed as rulers in
this society, took care to appoint successors.
For they not only had helpers in their
ministry,(4*) but also, in order that the mission assigned to them
might continue after their death, they passed on to their immediate
cooperators, as it were, in the form of a testament, the duty of
confirming and finishing the work begun by themselves,(5*)
recommending to them that they attend to the whole flock in which the
Holy Spirit placed them to shepherd the Church of God.(148) They
therefore appointed such men, and gave them the order that, when they
should have died, other approved men would take up their ministry.(6*)
Among those various ministries which, according to tradition, were
exercised in the Church from the earliest times, the chief place
belongs to the office of those who, appointed to the episcopate, by a
succession running from the beginning,(7*) are passers-on of the
apostolic seed.(8*) Thus, as St. Irenaeus testifies, through those who
were appointed bishops by the apostles, and through their successors
down ln our own time, the apostolic tradition is manifested (9*) and
preserved.(10*)
Bishops, therefore, with their helpers, the
priests and deacons, have taken up the service of the community, (11*)
presiding in place of God over the flock,(12*) whose shepherds they
are, as teachers for doctrine, priests for sacred worship, and
ministers for governing.(13*) And just as the office granted
individually to Peter, the first among the apostles, is permanent and
is to be transmitted to his successors, so also the apostles' office
of nurturing the Church is permanent, and is to be exercised without
interruption by the sacred order of bishops. (14*) Therefore, the
Sacred Council teaches that bishops by divine institution have
succeeded to the place of the apostles, (15*) as shepherds of the
Church, and he who hears them, hears Christ, and he who rejects them,
rejects Christ and Him who sent Christ.(149)(16*)
21. In the bishops, therefore, for whom
priests are assistants, Our Lord Jesus Christ, the Supreme High
Priest, is present in the midst of those who believe. For sitting at
the right hand of God the Father, He is not absent from the gathering
of His high priests,(17*) but above all through their excellent
service He is preaching the word of God to all nations, and constantly
administering the sacraments of faith to those who believe, by their
paternal functioning(150) He incorporates new members in His Body by a
heavenly regeneration, and finally by their wisdom and prudence He
directs and guides the People of the New Testament in their pilgrimage
toward eternal happiness. These pastors, chosen to shepherd the Lord's
flock of the elect, are servants of Christ and stewards of the
mysteries of God,(151) to whom has been assigned the bearing of
witness to the Gospel of the grace of God,(152) and the ministration
of the Spirit and of justice in glory.(153)
For the discharging of such great duties, the
apostles were enriched by Christ with a special outpouring of the Holy
Spirit coming upon them,(154) and they passed on this spiritual gift
to their helpers by the imposition of hands,(155) and it has been
transmitted down to us in episcopal consecration.(18*) And the Sacred
Council teaches that by episcopal consecration the fullness of the
sacrament of Orders is conferred, that fullness of power, namely,
which both in the Church's liturgical practice and in the language of
the Fathers of the Church is called the high priesthood, the supreme
power of the sacred ministry.(19*) But episcopal consecration,
together with the office of sanctifying, also confers the office of
teaching and of governing, which, however, of its very nature, can be
exercised only in hierarchical communion with the head and the members
of the college. For from the tradition, which is expressed especially
in liturgical rites and in the practice of both the Church of the East
and of the West, it is clear that, by means of the imposition of hands
and the words of consecration, the grace of the Holy Spirit is so
conferred,(20*) and the sacred character so impressed,(21*) that
bishops in an eminent and visible way sustain the roles of Christ
Himself as Teacher, Shepherd and High Priest, and that they act in His
person.(22*) Therefore it pertains to the bishops to admit newly
elected members into the episcopal body by means of the sacrament of
Orders.
22. Just as in the Gospel, the Lord so
disposing, St. Peter and the other apostles constitute one apostolic
college, so in a similar way the Roman Pontiff, the successor of
Peter, and the bishops, the successors of the apostles, are joined
together. Indeed, the very ancient practice whereby bishops duly
established in all parts of the world were in communion with one
another and with the Bishop of Rome in a bond of unity, charity and
peace,(23*) and also the councils assembled together,(24*) in which
more profound issues were settled in common, (25*) the opinion of the
many having been prudently considered,(26*) both of these factors are
already an indication of the collegiate character and aspect of the
episcopal order; and the ecumenical councils held in the course of
centuries are also manifest proof of that same character. And it is
intimated also in the practice, introduced in ancient times, of
summoning several bishops to take part in the elevation of the newly
elected to the ministry of the high priesthood. Hence, one is
constituted a member of the episcopal body in virtue of sacramental
consecration and hierarchical communion with the head and members of
the body.
But the college or body of bishops has no
authority unless it is understood together with the Roman Pontiff, the
successor of Peter as its head. The pope's power of primacy over all,
both pastors and faithful, remains whole and intact. In virtue of his
office, that is as Vicar of Christ and pastor of the whole Church, the
Roman Pontiff has full, supreme and universal power over the Church.
And he is always free to exercise this power. The order of bishops,
which succeeds to the college of apostles and gives this apostolic
body continued existence, is also the subject of supreme and full
power over the universal Church, provided we understand this body
together with its head the Roman Pontiff and never without this
head.(27*) This power can be exercised only with the consent of the
Roman Pontiff. For our Lord placed Simon alone as the rock and the
bearer of the keys of the Church,(156) and made him shepherd of the
whole flock;(157) it is evident, however, that the power of binding
and loosing, which was given to Peter,(158) was granted also to the
college of apostles, joined with their head.(159)(28*) This college,
insofar as it is composed of many, expresses the variety and
universality of the People of God, but insofar as it is assembled
under one head, it expresses the unity of the flock of Christ. In it,
the bishops, faithfully recognizing the primacy and pre-eminence of
their head, exercise their own authority for the good of their own
faithful, and indeed of the whole Church, the Holy Spirit supporting
its organic structure and harmony with moderation. The supreme power
in the universal Church, which this college enjoys, is exercised in a
solemn way in an ecumenical council. A council is never ecumenical
unless it is confirmed or at least accepted as such by the successor
of Peter; and it is prerogative of the Roman Pontiff to convoke these
councils, to preside over them and to confirm them.(29*) This same
collegiate power can be exercised together with the pope by the
bishops living in all parts of the world, provided that the head of
the college calls them to collegiate action, or at least approves of
or freely accepts the united action of the scattered bishops, so that
it is thereby made a collegiate act.
23. This collegial union is apparent also m
the mutual relations of the individual bishops with particular
churches and with the universal Church. The Roman Pontiff, as the
successor of Peter, is the perpetual and visible principle and
foundation of unity of both the bishops and of the faithful.(30*) The
individual bishops, however, are the visible principle and foundation
of unity in their particular churches, (31*) fashioned after the model
of the universal Church, in and from which churches comes into being
the one and only Catholic Church.(32*) For this reason the individual
bishops represent each his own church, but all of them together and
with the Pope represent the entire Church in the bond of peace, love
and unity.
The individual bishops, who are placed in
charge of particular churches, exercise their pastoral government over
the portion of the People of God committed to their care, and not over
other churches nor over the universal Church. But each of them, as a
member of the episcopal college and legitimate successor of the
apostles, is obliged by Christ's institution and command to be
solicitous for the whole Church,(33*) and this solicitude, though it
is not exercised by an act of jurisdiction, contributes greatly to the
advantage of the universal Church. For it is the duty of all bishops
to promote and to safeguard the unity of faith and the discipline
common to the whole Church, to instruct the faithful to love for the
whole mystical body of Christ, especially for its poor and sorrowing
members and for those who are suffering persecution for justice's
sake,(160) and finally to promote every activity that is of interest
to the whole Church, especially that the faith may take increase and
the light of full truth appear to all men. And this also is important,
that by governing well their own church as a portion of the universal
Church, they themselves are effectively contributing to the welfare of
the whole Mystical Body, which is also the body of the churches.(34*)
The task of proclaiming the Gospel everywhere
on earth pertains to the body of pastors, to all of whom in common
Christ gave His command, thereby imposing upon them a common duty, as
Pope Celestine in his time recommended to the Fathers of the Council
of Ephesus.(35*) From this it follows that the individual bishops,
insofar as their own discharge of their duty permits, are obliged to
enter into a community of work among themselves and with the successor
of Peter, upon whom was imposed in a special way the great duty of
spreading the Christian name.(36*) With all their energy, therefore,
they must supply to the missions both workers for the harvest and also
spiritual and material aid, both directly and on their own account. as
well as by arousing the ardent cooperation of the faithful. And
finally, the bishops, in a universal fellowship of charity, should
gladly extend their fraternal aid to other churches, especially to
neighboring and more needy dioceses in accordance with the venerable
example of antiquity.
By divine Providence it has come about that
various churches, established in various places by the apostles and
their successors, have in the course of time coalesced into several
groups, organically united, which, preserving the unity of faith and
the unique divine constitution of the universal Church, enjoy their
own discipline, their own liturgical usage, and their own theological
and spiritual heritage. Some of these churches, notably the ancient
patriarchal churches, as parent-stocks of the Faith, so to speak, have
begotten others as daughter churches, with which they are connected
down to our own time by a close bond of charity in their sacramental
life and in their mutual respect for their rights and duties.(37*)
This variety of local churches with one common aspiration is splendid
evidence of the catholicity of the undivided Church. In like manner
the episcopal bodies of today are in a position to render a manifold
and fruitful assistance, so that this collegiate feeling may be put
into practical application.
24. Bishops, as successors of the apostles,
receive from the Lord, to whom was given all power in heaven and on
earth, the mission to teach all nations and to preach the Gospel to
every creature, so that all men may attain to salvation by faith,
baptism and the fulfilment of the commandments.(161) To fulfill this
mission, Christ the Lord promised the Holy Spirit to the Apostles, and
on Pentecost day sent the Spirit from heaven, by whose power they
would be witnesses to Him before the nations and peoples and kings
even to the ends of the earth.(162) And that duty, which the Lord
committed to the shepherds of His people, is a true service, which in
sacred literature is significantly called "diakonia" or ministry.(163)
The canonical mission of bishops can come
about by legitimate customs that have not been revoked by the supreme
and universal authority of the Church, or by laws made or recognized
be that the authority, or directly through the successor of Peter
himself; and if the latter refuses or denies apostolic communion, such
bishops cannot assume any office.(38*)
25. Among the principal duties of bishops the
preaching of the Gospel occupies an eminent place.(39*) For bishops
are preachers of the faith, who lead new disciples to Christ, and they
are authentic teachers, that is, teachers endowed with the authority
of Christ, who preach to the people committed to them the faith they
must believe and put into practice, and by the light of the Holy
Spirit illustrate that faith. They bring forth from the treasury of
Revelation new things and old,(164) making it bear fruit and
vigilantly warding off any errors that threaten their flock.(165)
Bishops, teaching in communion with the Roman Pontiff, are to be
respected by all as witnesses to divine and Catholic truth. In matters
of faith and morals, the bishops speak in the name of Christ and the
faithful are to accept their teaching and adhere to it with a
religious assent. This religious submission of mind and will must be
shown in a special way to the authentic magisterium of the Roman
Pontiff, even when he is not speaking ex cathedra; that is, it must be
shown in such a way that his supreme magisterium is acknowledged with
reverence, the judgments made by him are sincerely adhered to,
according to his manifest mind and will. His mind and will in the
matter may be known either from the character of the documents, from
his frequent repetition of the same doctrine, or from his manner of
speaking.
Although the individual bishops do not enjoy
the prerogative of infallibility, they nevertheless proclaim Christ's
doctrine infallibly whenever, even though dispersed through the world,
but still maintaining the bond of communion among themselves and with
the successor of Peter, and authentically teaching matters of faith
and morals, they are in agreement on one position as definitively to
be held.(40*) This is even more clearly verified when, gathered
together in an ecumenical council, they are teachers and judges of
faith and morals for the universal Church, whose definitions must be
adhered to with the submission of faith.(41*)
And this infallibility with which the Divine
Redeemer willed His Church to be endowed in defining doctrine of faith
and morals, extends as far as the deposit of Revelation extends, which
must be religiously guarded and faithfully expounded. And this is the
infallibility which the Roman Pontiff, the head of the college of
bishops, enjoys in virtue of his office, when, as the supreme shepherd
and teacher of all the faithful, who confirms his brethren in their
faith,(166) by a definitive act he proclaims a doctrine of faith or
morals.(42*) And therefore his definitions, of themselves, and not
from the consent of the Church, are justly styled irreformable, since
they are pronounced with the assistance of the Holy Spirit, promised
to him in blessed Peter, and therefore they need no approval of
others, nor do they allow an appeal to any other judgment. For then
the Roman Pontiff is not pronouncing judgment as a private person, but
as the supreme teacher of the universal Church, in whom the charism of
infallibility of the Church itself is individually present, he is
expounding or defending a doctrine of Catholic faith.(43*) The
infallibility promised to the Church resides also in the body of
Bishops, when that body exercises the supreme magisterium with the
successor of Peter. To these definitions the assent of the Church can
never be wanting, on account of the activity of that same Holy Spirit,
by which the whole flock of Christ is preserved and progresses in
unity of faith.(44*)
But when either the Roman Pontiff or the Body
of Bishops together with him defines a judgment, they pronounce it in
accordance with Revelation itself, which all are obliged to abide by
and be in conformity with, that is, the Revelation which as written or
orally handed down is transmitted in its entirety through the
legitimate succession of bishops and especially in care of the Roman
Pontiff himself, and which under the guiding light of the Spirit of
truth is religiously preserved and faithfully expounded in the
Church.(45*) The Roman Pontiff and the bishops, in view of their
office and the importance of the matter, by fitting means diligently
strive to inquire properly into that revelation and to give apt
expression to its contents;(46*) but a new public revelation they do
not accept as pertaining to the divine deposit of faith.(47*)
26. A bishop marked with the fullness of the
sacrament of Orders, is "the steward of the grace of the supreme
priesthood," (48*) especially in the Eucharist, which he offers or
causes to be offered,(49*) and by which the Church continually lives
and grows. This Church of Christ is truly present in all legitimate
local congregations of the faithful which, united with their pastors,
are themselves called churches in the New Testament.(50*) For in their
locality these are the new People called by God, in the Holy Spirit
and in much fullness.(167) In them the faithful are gathered together
by the preaching of the Gospel of Christ, and the mystery of the
Lord's Supper is celebrated, that by the food and blood of the Lord's
body the whole brotherhood may be joined together.(51*) In any
community of the altar, under the sacred ministry of the bishop,(52*)
there is exhibited a symbol of that charity and "unity of the mystical
Body, without which there can be no salvation."(53*) In these
communities, though frequently small and poor, or living in the
Diaspora, Christ is present, and in virtue of His presence there is
brought together one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church.(54*) For
"the partaking of the body and blood of Christ does nothing other than
make us be transformed into that which we consume". (55*)
Every legitimate celebration of the Eucharist
is regulated by the bishop, to whom is committed the office of
offering the worship of Christian religion to the Divine Majesty and
of administering it in accordance with the Lord's commandments and the
Church's laws, as further defined by his particular judgment for his
diocese.
Bishops thus, by praying and laboring for the
people, make outpourings in many ways and in great abundance from the
fullness of Christ's holiness. By the ministry of the word they
communicate God's power to those who believe unto salvation(168) and
through the sacraments, the regular and fruitful distribution of which
they regulate by their authority,(56*) they sanctify the faithful.
They direct the conferring of baptism, by which a sharing in the
kingly priesthood of Christ is granted. They are the original
ministers of confirmation, dispensers of sacred Orders and the
moderators of penitential discipline, and they earnestly exhort and
instruct their people to carry out with faith and reverence their part
in the liturgy and especially in the holy sacrifice of the Mass. And
lastly, by the example of their way of life they must be an influence
for good to those over whom they preside, refraining from all evil
and, as far as they are able with God's help, exchanging evil for
good, so that together with the flock committed to their care they may
arrive at eternal life.(57*)
27. Bishops, as vicars and ambassadors of
Christ, govern the particular churches entrusted to them (58*) by
their counsel, exhortations, example, and even by their authority and
sacred power, which indeed they use only for the edification of their
flock in truth and holiness, remembering that he who is greater should
become as the lesser and he who is the chief become as the
servant.(169) This power, which they personally exercise in Christ's
name, is proper, ordinary and immediate, although its exercise is
ultimately regulated by the supreme authority of the Church, and can
be circumscribed by certain limits, for the advantage of the Church or
of the faithful. In virtue of this power, bishops have the sacred
right and the duty before the Lord to make laws for their subjects, to
pass judgment on them and to moderate everything pertaining to the
ordering of worship and the apostolate.
The pastoral office or the habitual and daily
care of their sheep is entrusted to them completely; nor are they to
be regarded as vicars of the Roman Pontiffs, for they exercise an
authority that is proper to them, and are quite correctly called
"prelates," heads of the people whom they govern.(59*) Their power,
therefore, is not destroyed by the supreme and universal power, but on
the contrary it is affirmed, strengthened and vindicated by it,(60*)
since the Holy Spirit unfailingly preserves the form of government
established by Christ the Lord in His Church.
A bishop, since he is sent by the Father to
govern his family, must keep before his eyes the example of the Good
Shepherd, who came not to be ministered unto but to minister,(170) and
to lay down his life for his sheep.(171) Being taken from among men,
and himself beset with weakness, he is able to have compassion on the
ignorant and erring.(172) Let him not refuse to listen to his
subjects, whom he cherishes as his true sons and exhorts to cooperate
readily with him. As having one day to render an account for their
souls,(173) he takes care of them by his prayer. preaching, and all
the works of charity, and not only of them but also of those who are
not yet of the one flock. who also are commended to him in the Lord.
Since, like Paul the Apostle, he is debtor to all men, let him be
ready to preach the Gospel to all,(174) and to urge his faithful to
apostolic and missionary activity. But the faithful must cling to
their bishop, as the Church does to Christ, and Jesus Christ to the
Father, so that all may be of one mind through unity,(61*) and abound
to the glory of God.(175)
28. Christ, whom the Father has sanctified
and sent into the world, (176) has through His apostles, made their
successors, the bishops, partakers of His consecration and His
mission.(62*) They have legitimately handed on to different
individuals in the Church various degrees of participation in this
ministry. Thus the divinely established ecclesiastical ministry is
exercised on different levels by those who from antiquity have been
called bishops, priests and deacons.(63*) Priests, although they do
not possess the highest degree of the priesthood, and although they
are dependent on the bishops in the exercise of their power,
nevertheless they are united with the bishops in sacerdotal
dignity.(64*) By the power of the sacrament of Orders,(65*) in the
image of Christ the eternal high Priest,(177) they are consecrated to
preach the Gospel and shepherd be faithful and to celebrate divine
worship, so that they are true priests of the New Testament.(66*)
Partakers of the function of Christ the sole Mediator,(178) on their
level of ministry, they announce the divine word to all. They exercise
their sacred function especially in the eucharistic worship or the
celebration of the Mass by which acting in the person of Christ (67*)
and proclaiming His Mystery they unite the prayers of the faithful
with the sacrifice of their Head and renew and apply (68*) in the
sacrifice of the Mass until the coming of the Lord(179) the only
sacrifice of the New Testament namely that of Christ offering Himself
once for all a spotless Victim to the Father.(180) For the sick and
the sinners among the faithful, they exercise the ministry of
alleviation and reconciliation and they present the needs and the
prayers of the faithful to God the Father.(181) Exercising within the
limits of their authority the function of Christ as Shepherd and
Head,(69*) they gather together God's family as a brotherhood all of
one mind,(70*) and lead them in the Spirit, through Christ, to God the
Father. In the midst of the flock they adore Him in spirit and in
truth.(182) Finally, they labor in word and doctrine,(183) believing
what they have read and meditated upon in the law of God, teaching
what they have believed, and putting in practice in their own lives
what they have taught.(71*)
Priests, prudent cooperators with the
episcopal order,(72*) its aid and instrument, called to serve the
people of God, constitute one priesthood (73*) with their bishop
although bound by a diversity of duties. Associated with their bishop
in a spirit of trust and generosity, they make him present in a
certain sense in the individual local congregations, and take upon
themselves, as far as they are able, his duties and the burden of his
care, and discharge them with a daily interest. And as they sanctify
and govern under the bishop's authority, that part of the Lord's flock
entrusted to them they make the universal Church visible in their own
locality and bring an efficacious assistance to the building up of the
whole body of Christ.(184) intent always upon the welfare of God's
children, they must strive to lend their effort to the pastoral work
of the whole diocese, and even of the entire Church. On account of
this sharing in their priesthood and mission, let priests sincerely
look upon the bishop as their father and reverently obey him. And let
the bishop regard his priests as his co-workers and as sons and
friends, just as Christ called His disciples now not servants but
friends.(185) All priests, both diocesan and religious, by reason of
Orders and ministry, fit into this body of bishops and priests, and
serve the good of the whole Church according to their vocation and the
grace given to them.
In virtue of their common sacred ordination
and mission, all priests are bound together in intimate brotherhood,
which naturally and freely manifests itself in mutual aid, spiritual
as well as material, pastoral as well as personal, in their meetings
and in communion of life, of labor and charity.
Let them, as fathers in Christ, take care of
the faithful whom they have begotten by baptism and their
teaching.(186) Becoming from the heart a pattern to the flock,(187)
let them so lead and serve their local community that it may worthily
be called by that name, by which the one and entire people of God is
signed, namely, the Church of God.(188) Let them remember that by
their daily life and interests they are showing the face of a truly
sacerdotal and pastoral ministry to the faithful and the infidel, to
Catholics and non-Catholics, and that to all they bear witness to the
truth and life, and as good shepherds go after those also,(189) who
though baptized in the Catholic Church have fallen away from the use
of the sacraments, or even from the faith.
Because the human race today is joining more
and more into a civic, economic and social unity, it is that much the
more necessary that priests, by combined effort and aid, under the
leadership of the bishops and the Supreme Pontiff, wipe out every kind
of separateness, so that the whole human race may be brought into the
unity of the family of God.
29. At a lower level of the hierarchy are
deacons, upon whom hands are imposed "not unto the priesthood, but
unto a ministry of service."(74*) For strengthened by sacramental
grace, in communion with the bishop and his group of priests they
serve in the diaconate of the liturgy, of the word, and of charity to
the people of God. It is the duty of the deacon, according as it shall
have been assigned to him by competent authority, to administer
baptism solemnly, to be custodian and dispenser of the Eucharist, to
assist at and bless marriages in the name of the Church, to bring
Viaticum to the dying, to read the Sacred Scripture to the faithful,
to instruct and exhort the people, to preside over the worship and
prayer of the faithful, to administer sacramentals, to officiate at
funeral and burial services. Dedicated to duties of charity and of
administration, let deacons be mindful of the admonition of Blessed
Polycarp: "Be merciful, diligent, walking according to the truth of
the Lord, who became the servant of all."(75*)
Since these duties, so very necessary to the
life of the Church, can be fulfilled only with difficulty in many
regions in accordance with the discipline of the Latin Church as it
exists today, the diaconate can in the future be restored as a proper
and permanent rank of the hierarchy. It pertains to the competent
territorial bodies of bishops, of one kind or another, with the
approval of the Supreme Pontiff, to decide whether and where it is
opportune for such deacons to be established for the care of souls.
With the consent of the Roman Pontiff, this diaconate can, in the
future, be conferred upon men of more mature age, even upon those
living in the married state. It may also be conferred upon suitable
young men, for whom the law of celibacy must remain intact.
CHAPTER IV
THE LAITY
30. Having set forth the functions of the
hierarchy, the Sacred Council gladly turns its attention. to the state
of those faithful called the laity. Everything that has been said
above concerning the People of God is intended for the laity,
religious and clergy alike. But there are certain things which pertain
in a special way to the laity, both men and women, by reason of their
condition and mission. Due to the special circumstances of our time
the foundations of this doctrine must be more thoroughly examined. For
their pastors know how much the laity contribute to the welfare of the
entire Church. They also know that they were not ordained by Christ to
take upon themselves alone the entire salvific mission of the Church
toward the world. On the contrary they understand that it is their
noble duty to shepherd the faithful and to recognize their miniseries
and charisms, so that all according to their proper roles may
cooperate in this common undertaking with one mind. For we must all
"practice the truth in love, and so grow up in all things in Him who
is head, Christ. For from Him the whole body, being closely joined and
knit together through every joint of the system, according to the
functioning in due measure of each single part, derives its increase
to the building up of itself in love".(190)
31. The term laity is here understood to mean
all the faithful except those in holy orders and those in the state of
religious life specially approved by the Church. These faithful are by
baptism made one body with Christ and are constituted among the People
of God; they are in their own way made sharers in the priestly,
prophetical, and kingly functions of Christ; and they carry out for
their own part the mission of the whole Christian people in the Church
and in the world.
What specifically characterizes the laity is
their secular nature. It is true that those in holy orders can at
times be engaged in secular activities, and even have a secular
profession. But they are by reason of their particular vocation
especially and professedly ordained to the sacred ministry. Similarly,
by their state in life, religious give splendid and striking testimony
that the world cannot be transformed and offered to God without the
spirit of the beatitudes. But the laity, by their very vocation, seek
the kingdom of God by engaging in temporal affairs and by ordering
them according to the plan of God. They live in the world, that is, in
each and in all of the secular professions and occupations. They live
in the ordinary circumstances of family and social life, from which
the very web of their existence is woven. They are called there by God
that by exercising their proper function and led by the spirit of the
Gospel they may work for the sanctification of the world from within
as a leaven. In this way they may make Christ known to others,
especially by the testimony of a life resplendent in faith, hope and
charity. Therefore, since they are tightly bound up in all types of
temporal affairs it is their special task to order and to throw light
upon these affairs in such a way that they may come into being and
then continually increase according to Christ to the praise of the
Creator and the Redeemer.
32. By divine institution Holy Church is
ordered and governed with a wonderful diversity. "For just as in one
body we have many members, yet all the members have not the same
function, so we, the many, are one body in Christ, but severally
members one of another".(191) Therefore, the chosen People of God is
one: "one Lord, one faith, one baptism"(192); sharing a common dignity
as members from their regeneration in Christ, having the same filial
grace and the same vocation to perfection; possessing in common one
salvation, one hope and one undivided charity. There is, therefore, in
Christ and in the Church no inequality on,the basis of race or
nationality, social condition or sex, because "there is neither Jew
nor Greek: there is neither bond nor free: there is neither male nor
female. For you are all 'one' in Christ Jesus".(193)
If therefore in the Church everyone does not
proceed by the same path, nevertheless all are called to sanctity and
have received an equal privilege of faith through the justice of
God.(194) And if by the will of Christ some are made teachers, pastors
and dispensers of mysteries on behalf of others, yet all share a true
equality with regard to the dignity and to the activity common to all
the faithful for the building up of the Body of Christ. For the
distinction which the Lord made between sacred ministers and the rest
of the People of God bears within it a certain union, since pastors
and the other faithful are bound to each other by a mutual need.
Pastors of the Church, following the example of the Lord, should
minister to one another and to the other faithful. These in their turn
should enthusiastically lend their joint assistance to their pastors
and teachers. Thus in their diversity all bear witness to the
wonderful unity in the Body of Christ. This very diversity of graces,
ministries and works gathers the children of God into one, because
"all these things are the work of one and the same Spirit".(195)
Therefore, from divine choice the laity have
Christ for their brothers who though He is the Lord of all, came not
to be served but to serve.(196) They also have for their brothers
those in the sacred ministry who by teaching, by sanctifying and by
ruling with the authority of Christ feed the family of God so that the
new commandment of charity may be fulfilled by all. St. Augustine puts
this very beautifully when he says: "What I am for you terrifies me;
what I am with you consoles me. For you I am a bishop; but with you I
am a Christian. The former is a duty; the latter a grace. The former
is a danger; the latter, salvation" (1*).
33. The laity are gathered together in the
People of God and make up the Body of Christ under one head. Whoever
they are they are called upon, as living members, to expend all their
energy for the growth of the Church and its continuous sanctification,
since this very energy is a gift of the Creator and a blessing of the
Redeemer.
The lay apostolate, however, is a
participation in the salvific mission of the Church itself. Through
their baptism and confirmation all are commissioned to that apostolate
by the Lord Himself. Moreover, by the sacraments, especially holy
Eucharist, that charity toward God and man which is the soul of the
apostolate is communicated and nourished. Now the laity are called in
a special way to make the Church present and operative in those places
and circumstances where only through them can it become the salt of
the earth (2*). Thus every layman, in virtue of the very gifts
bestowed upon him, is at the same time a witness and a living
instrument of the mission of the Church itself "according to the
measure of Christ's bestowal".(197)
Besides this apostolate which certainly
pertains to all Christians, the laity can also be called in various
ways to a more direct form of cooperation in the apostolate of the
Hierarchy (3*). This was the way certain men and women assisted Paul
the Apostle in the Gospel, laboring much in the Lord.(198) Further,
they have the capacity to assume from the Hierarchy certain
ecclesiastical functions, which are to be performed for a spiritual
purpose.
Upon all the laity, therefore, rests the
noble duty of working to extend the divine plan of salvation to all
men of each epoch and in every land. Consequently, may every
opportunity be given them so that, according to their abilities and
the needs of the times, they may zealously participate in the saving
work of the Church.
34. The supreme and eternal Priest, Christ
Jesus, since he wills to continue his witness and service also through
the laity, vivifies them in this Spirit and increasingly urges them on
to every good and perfect work.
For besides intimately linking them to His
life and His mission, He also gives them a sharing in His priestly
function of offering spiritual worship for the glory of God and the
salvation of men. For this reason the laity, dedicated to Christ and
anointed by the Holy Spirit, are marvelously called and wonderfully
prepared so that ever more abundant fruits of the Spirit may be
produced in them. For all their works, prayers and apostolic
endeavors, their ordinary married and family life, their daily
occupations, their physical and mental relaxation, if carried out in
the Spirit, and even the hardships of life, if patiently borne-all
these become "spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus
Christ".(199) Together with the offering of the Lord's body, they are
most fittingly offered in the celebration of the Eucharist. Thus, as
those everywhere who adore in holy activity, the laity consecrate the
world itself to God.
35. Christ, the great Prophet, who proclaimed
the Kingdom of His Father both by the testimony of His life and the
power of His words, continually fulfills His prophetic office until
the complete manifestation of glory. He does this not only through the
hierarchy who teach in His name and with His authority, but also
through the laity whom He made His witnesses and to whom He gave
understanding of the faith (sensu fidei) and an attractiveness in
speech(200) so that the power of the Gospel might shine forth in their
daily social and family life. They conduct themselves as children of
the promise, and thus strong in faith and in hope they make the most
of the present,(201) and with patience await the glory that is to
come.(202) Let them not, then, hide this hope in the depths of their
hearts, but even in the program of their secular life let them express
it by a continual conversion and by wrestling "against the
world-rulers of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of
wickedness.(203)
Just as the sacraments of the New Law, by
which the life and the apostolate of the faithful are nourished,
prefigure a new heaven and a new earth,(204) so too the laity go forth
as powerful proclaimers of a faith in things to be hoped for,(205)
when they courageously join to their profession of faith a life
springing from faith. This evangelization, that is, this announcing of
Christ by a living testimony as well as by the spoken word, takes on a
specific quality and a special force in that it is carried out in the
ordinary surroundings of the world.
In connection with the prophetic function,
that state of life which is sanctified by a special sacrament
obviously of great importance, namely, married and family life. For
where Christianity pervades the entire mode of family life, ala
gradually transforms it, one will find there both the practice and an
excellent school of the lay apostolate. In such a home husbands and
wives find their proper vocation in being witnesses of the faith and
love of Christ to one another and to their children. The Christian
family loudly proclaims both the present virtues of the Kingdom of God
and the hope of a blessed life to come. Thus by its example and its
witness it accuses the world of sin and enlightens those who seek the
truth.
Consequently, even when preoccupied with
temporal cares, the laity can and must perform a work of great value
for the evangelization of the world. For even if some of them have to
fulfill their religious duties on their own, when there are no sacred
ministers or in times of persecution; and even if many of them devote
all their energies to apostolic work; still it remains for each one of
them to cooperate in the external spread and the dynamic growth of the
Kingdom of Christ in the world. Therefore, let the laity devotedly
strive to acquire a more profound grasp of revealed truth, and let
them insistently beg of God the gift of wisdom.
36. Christ, becoming obedient even unto death
and because of this exalted by the Father,(206) entered into the glory
of His kingdom. To Him all things are made subject until He subjects
Himself and all created things to the Father that God may be all in
all.(207) Now Christ has communicated this royal power to His
disciples that they might be constituted in royal freedom and that by
true penance and a holy life they might conquer the reign of sin in
themselves.(208) Further, He has shared this power so that serving
Christ in their fellow men they might by humility and patience lead
their brethren to that King for whom to serve is to reign. But the
Lord wishes to spread His kingdom also by means of the laity, namely,
a kingdom of truth and life, a kingdom of holiness and grace, a
kingdom of justice, love and peace (4*). In this kingdom creation
itself will be delivered from its slavery to corruption into the
freedom of the glory of the sons of God.(209) Clearly then a great
promise and a great trust is committed to the disciples: "All things
are yours, and you are Christ's, and Christ is God's"(210)
The faithful, therefore, must learn the
deepest meaning and the value of all creation, as well as its role in
the harmonious praise of God. They must assist each other to live
holier lives even in their daily occupations. In this way the world
may be permeated by the spirit of Christ and it may more effectively
fulfill its purpose in justice, charity and peace. The laity have the
principal role in the overall fulfillment of this duty. Therefore, by
their competence in secular training and by their activity, elevated
from within by the grace of Christ, let them vigorously contribute
their effort, so that created goods may be perfected by human labor,
technical skill and civic culture for the benefit of all men according
to the design of the Creator and the light of His Word. May the goods
of this world be more equitably distributed among all men, and may
they in their own way be conducive to universal progress in human and
Christian freedom. In this manner, through the members of the Church,
will Christ progressively illumine the whole of human society with His
saving light.
Moreover, let the laity also by their
combined efforts remedy the customs and conditions of the world, if
they are an inducement to sin, so that they all may be conformed to
the norms of justice and may favor the practice of virtue rather than
hinder it. By so doing they will imbue culture and human activity with
genuine moral values; they will better prepare the field of the world
for the seed of the Word of God; and at the same time they will open
wider the doors of the Church by which the message of peace may enter
the world.
Because of the very economy of salvation the
faithful should learn how to distinguish carefully between those
rights and duties which are theirs as members of the Church, and those
which they have as members of human society. Let them strive to
reconcile the two, remembering that in every temporal affair they must
be guided by a Christian conscience, since even in secular business
there is no human activity which can be withdrawn from God's dominion.
In our own time, however, it is most urgent that this distinction and
also this harmony should shine forth more clearly than ever in the
lives of the faithful, so that the mission of the Church may
correspond more fully to the special conditions of the world today.
For it must be admitted that the temporal sphere is governed by its
own principles, since it is rightly concerned with the interests of
this world. But that ominous doctrine which attempts to build a
society with no regard whatever for religion, and which attacks and
destroys the religious liberty of its citizens, is rightly to be
rejected (5*).
37. The laity have the right, as do all
Christians, to receive in abundance from their spiritual shepherds the
spiritual goods of the Church, especially the assistance of the word
of God and of the sacraments (6*). They should openly reveal to them
their needs and desires with that freedom and confidence which is
fitting for children of God and brothers in Christ. They are, by un of
tho knowledge, competence or outstanding ability which they may enjoy,
permitted and sometimes even obliged to express their opinion on those
things which concern the good of the Church (7*). When occasions
arise, let this be done through the organs erected by the Church for
this purpose. Let it always be done in truth, in courage and in
prudence, with reverence and charity toward those who by reason of
their sacred office represent the person of Christ.
The laity should, as all Christians, promptly
accept in Christian obedience decisions of their spiritual shepherds,
since they are representatives of Christ as well as teachers and
rulers in the Church. Let them follow the example of Christ, who by
His obedience even unto death, opened to all men the blessed way of
the liberty of the children of God. Nor should they omit to pray for
those placed over them, for they keep watch as having to render an
account of their souls, so that they may do this with joy and not with
grief.(211)
Let the spiritual shepherds recognize and
promote the dignity as well as the responsibility of the laity in the
Church. Let them willingly employ their prudent advice. Let them
confidently assign duties to them in the service of the Church,
allowing them freedom and room for action. Further, let them encourage
lay people so that they may undertake tasks on their own initiative.
Attentively in Christ, let them consider with fatherly love the
projects, suggestions and desires proposed by the laity.(8*) However,
let the shepherds respectfully acknowledge that just freedom which
belongs to everyone in this earthly city
A great many wonderful things are to be hoped
for from this familiar dialogue between the laity and their spiritual
leaders: in the laity a strengthened sense of personal responsibility;
a renewed enthusiasm; a more ready application of their talents to the
projects of their spiritual leaders. The latter, on the other hand,
aided by the experience of the laity, can more clearly and more
incisively come to decisions regarding both spiritual and temporal
matters. In this way, the whole Church, strengthened by each one of
its members, may more effectively fulfill is mission for the life of
the world.
38. Each individual layman must stand before
the world as a witness to the resurrection and life of the Lord Jesus
and a symbol of the living God. All the laity as a community and each
one according to his ability must nourish the world with spiritual
fruits.(212) They must diffuse in the world that spirit which animates
the poor, the meek, the peace makers-whom the Lord in the Gospel
proclaimed as blessed.(213) In a word, "Christians must be to the
world what the soul is to the body."(9*)
CHAPTER V
THE UNIVERSAL CALL TO HOLINESS IN THE
CHURCH
39. The Church, whose mystery is being set
forth by this Sacred Synod, is believed to be indefectibly holy.
Indeed Christ, the Son of God, who with the Father and the Spirit is
praised as "uniquely holy," (1*) loved the Church as His bride,
delivering Himself up for her. He did this that He might sanctify
her.(214) He united her to Himself as His own body and brought it to
perfection by the gift of the Holy Spirit for God's glory. Therefore
in the Church, everyone whether belonging to the hierarchy, or being
cared for by it, is called to holiness, according to the saying of the
Apostle: "For this is the will of God, your sanctification".(215)
However, this holiness of the Church is unceasingly manifested, and
must be manifested, in the fruits of grace which the Spirit produces
in the faithful; it is expressed in many ways in individuals, who in
their walk of life, tend toward the perfection of charity, thus
causing the edification of others; in a very special way this
(holiness) appears in the practice of the counsels, customarily called
"evangelical." This practice of the counsels, under the impulsion of
the Holy Spirit, undertaken by many Christians, either privately or in
a Church-approved condition or state of life, gives and must give in
the world an outstanding witness and example of this same holiness.
40. The Lord Jesus, the divine Teacher and
Model of all perfection, preached holiness of life to each and
everyone of His disciples of every condition. He Himself stands as the
author and consumator of this holiness of life: "Be you therefore
perfect, even as your heavenly Father is perfect".(216)(2*) Indeed He
sent the Holy Spirit upon all men that He might move them inwardly to
love God with their whole heart and their whole soul, with all their
mind and all their strength(217) and that they might love each other
as Christ loves them.(218) The followers of Christ are called by God,
not because of their works, but according to His own purpose and
grace. They are justified in the Lord Jesus, because in the baptism of
faith they truly become sons of God and sharers in the divine nature.
In this way they are really made holy. Then too, by God's gift, they
must hold on to and complete in their lives this holiness they have
received. They are warned by the Apostle to live "as becomes
saints",(219) and to put on "as God's chosen ones, holy and beloved a
heart of mercy, kindness, humility, meekness, patience",(220) and to
possess the fruit of the Spirit in holiness.(221) Since truly we all
offend in many things (222) we all need God's mercies continually and
we all must daily pray: "Forgive us our debts"(223)(3*)
Thus it is evident to everyone, that all the
faithful of Christ of whatever rank or status, are called to the
fullness of the Christian life and to the perfection of charity;(4*)
by this holiness as such a more human manner of living is promoted in
this earthly society. In order that the faithful may reach this
perfection, they must use their strength accordingly as they have
received it, as a gift from Christ. They must follow in His footsteps
and conform themselves to His image seeking the will of the Father in
all things. They must devote themselves with all their being to the
glory of God and the service of their neighbor. In this way, the
holiness of the People of God will grow into an abundant harvest of
good, as is admirably shown by the life of so many saints in Church
history.
41. The classes and duties of life are many,
but holiness is one-that sanctity which is cultivated by all who are
moved by the Spirit of God, and who obey the voice of the Father and
worship God the Father in spirit and in truth. These people follow the
poor Christ, the humble and cross-bearing Christ in order to be worthy
of being sharers in His glory. Every person must walk unhesitatingly
according to his own personal gifts and duties in the path of living
faith, which arouses hope and works through charity.
In the first place, the shepherds of Christ's
flock must holily and eagerly, humbly and courageously carry out their
ministry, in imitation of the eternal high Priest, the Shepherd and
Guardian of our souls. They ought to fulfill this duty in such a way
that it will be the principal means also of their own sanctification.
Those chosen for the fullness of the priesthood are granted the
ability of exercising the perfect duty of pastoral charity by the
grace of the sacrament of Orders. This perfect duty of pastoral
charity (5*) is exercised in every form of episcopal care and service,
prayer, sacrifice and preaching. By this same sacramental grace, they
are given the courage necessary to lay down their lives for their
sheep, and the ability of promoting greater holiness in the Church by
their daily example, having become a pattern for their flock.(224)
Priests, who resemble bishops to a certain
degree in their participation of the sacrament of Orders, form the
spiritual crown of the bishops.(6*) They participate in the grace of
their office and they should grow daily in their love of God and their
neighbor by the exercise of their office through Christ, the eternal
and unique Mediator. They should preserve the bond of priestly
communion, and they should abound in every spiritual good and thus
present to all men a living witness to God.(7*) All this they should
do in emulation of those priests who often, down through the course of
the centuries, left an outstanding example of the holiness of humble
and hidden service. Their praise lives on in the Church of God. By
their very office of praying and offering sacrifice for their own
people and the entire people of God, they should rise to greater
holiness. Keeping in mind what they are doing and imitating what they
are handling,(8*) these priests, in their apostolic labors, rather
than being ensnared by perils and hardships, should rather rise to
greater holiness through these perils and hardships. They should ever
nourish and strengthen their action from an abundance of
contemplation, doing all this for the comfort of the entire Church of
God. All priests, and especially those who are called "diocesan
priests," due to the special title of their ordination, should keep
continually before their minds the fact that their faithful loyalty
toward and their generous cooperation with their bishop is of the
greatest value in their growth in holiness.
Ministers of lesser rank are also sharers in
the mission and grace of the Supreme Priest. In the first place among
these ministers are deacons, who, in as much as they are dispensers of
Christ's mysteries and servants of the Church,(9*) should keep
themselves free from every vice and stand before men as
personifications of goodness and friends of God.(225) Clerics, who are
called by the Lord and are set aside as His portion in order to
prepare themselves for the various ministerial offices under the
watchful eye of spiritual shepherds, are bound to bring their hearts
and minds into accord with this special election (which is theirs).
They will accomplish this by their constancy in prayer, by their
burning love, and by their unremitting recollection of whatever is
true, just and of good repute. They will accomplish all this for the
glory and honor of God. Besides these already named, there are also
laymen, chosen of God and called by the bishop. These laymen spend
themselves completely in apostolic labors, working the Lord's field
with much success.(10*).
Furthermore, married couples and Christian
parents should follow their own proper path (to holiness) by faithful
love. They should sustain one another in grace throughout the entire
length of their lives. They should embue their offspring, lovingly
welcomed as God's gift, with Christian doctrine and the evangelical
virtues. In this manner, they offer all men the example of unwearying
and generous love; in this way they build up the brotherhood of
charity; in so doing, they stand as the witnesses and cooperators in
the fruitfulness of Holy Mother Church; by such lives, they are a sign
and a participation in that very love, with which Christ loved His
Bride and for which He delivered Himself up for her.(11*) A like
example, but one given in a different way, is that offered by widows
and single people, who are able to make great contributions toward
holiness and apostolic endeavor in the Church. Finally, those who
engage in labor-and frequently it is of a heavy nature- should better
themselves by their human labors. They should be of aid to their
fellow citizens. They should raise all of society, and even creation
itself, to a better mode of existence. Indeed, they should imitate by
their lively charity, in their joyous hope and by their voluntary
sharing of each others' burdens, the very Christ who plied His hands
with carpenter's tools and Who in union with His Father, is
continually working for the salvation of all men. In this, then, their
daily work they should climb to the heights of holiness and apostolic
activity.
May all those who are weighed down with
poverty, infirmity and sickness, as well as those who must bear
various hardships or who suffer persecution for justice sake-may they
all know they are united with the suffering Christ in a special way
for the salvation of the world. The Lord called them blessed in His
Gospel and they are those whom "the God of all graces, who has called
us unto His eternal glory in Christ Jesus, will Himself, after we have
suffered a little while, perfect, strengthen and establish".(226)
Finally all Christ's faithful, whatever be
the conditions, duties and circumstances of their lives-and indeed
through all these, will daily increase in holiness, if they receive
all things with faith from the hand of their heavenly Father and if
they cooperate with the divine will. In this temporal service, they
will manifest to all men the love with which God loved the world.
42. "God is love, and he who abides in love,
abides in God and God in Him".(227) But, God pours out his love into
our hearts through the Holy Spirit, Who has been given to us;(228)
thus the first and most necessary gift is love, by which we love God
above all things and our neighbor because of God. Indeed, in order
that love, as good seed may grow and bring forth fruit in the soul,
each one of the faithful must willingly hear the Word of God and
accept His Will, and must complete what God has begun by their own
actions with the help of God's grace. These actions consist in the use
of the sacraments and in a special way the Eucharist, frequent
participation in the sacred action of the Liturgy, application of
oneself to prayer, self-abnegation, lively fraternal service and the
constant exercise of all the virtues. For charity, as the bond of
perfection and the fullness of the law,(229) rules over all the means
of attaining holiness and gives life to these same means.(12*) It is
charity which guides us to our final end. It is the love of God and
the love of one's neighbor which points out the true disciple of
Christ.
Since Jesus, the Son of God, manifested His
charity by laying down His life for us, so too no one has greater love
than he who lays down his life for Christ and His brothers.(230) From
the earliest times, then, some Christians have been called upon-and
some will always be called upon-to give the supreme testimony of this
love to all men, but especially to persecutors. The Church, then,
considers martyrdom as an exceptional gift and as the fullest proof of
love. By martyrdom a disciple is transformed into an image of his
Master by freely accepting death for the salvation of the world -as
well as his conformity to Christ in the shedding of his blood. Though
few are presented such an opportunity, nevertheless all must be
prepared to confess Christ before men. They must be prepared to make
this profession of faith even in the midst of persecutions, which will
never be lacking to the Church, in following the way of the cross.
Likewise, the holiness of the Church is
fostered in a special way by the observance of the counsels proposed
in the Gospel by Our Lord to His disciples.(13*) An eminent position
among these is held by virginity or the celibate state.(231) This is a
precious gift of divine grace given by the Father to certain
souls,(232) whereby they may devote themselves to God alone the more
easily, due to an undivided heart. (14*) This perfect continency, out
of desire for the kingdom of heaven, has always been held in
particular honor in the Church. The reason for this was and is that
perfect continency for the love of God is an incentive to charity, and
is certainly a particular source of spiritual fecundity in the world.
The Church continually keeps before it the
warning of the Apostle which moved the faithful to charity, exhorting
them to experience personally what Christ Jesus had known within
Himself. This was the same Christ Jesus, who "emptied Himself, taking
the nature of a slave . . . becoming obedient to death",(233) and
because of us "being rich, he became poor".(234) Because the disciples
must always offer an imitation of and a testimony to the charity and
humility of Christ, Mother Church rejoices at finding within her bosom
men and women who very closely follow their Saviour who debased
Himself to our comprehension. There are some who, in their freedom as
sons of God, renounce their own wills and take upon themselves the
state of poverty. Still further, some become subject of their own
accord to another man, in the matter of perfection for love of God.
This is beyond the measure of the commandments, but is done in order
to become more fully like the obedient Christ.(15*)
Therefore, all the faithful of Christ are
invited to strive for the holiness and perfection of their own proper
state. Indeed they have an obligation to so strive. Let all then have
care that they guide aright their own deepest sentiments of soul. Let
neither the use of the things of this world nor attachment to riches,
which is against the spirit of evangelical poverty, hinder them in
their quest for perfect love Let them heed the admonition of the
Apostle to those who use this world; let them not come to terms with
this world; for this world, as we see it, is passing away.(235)(16*)
CHAPTER VI
RELIGIOUS
43. The evangelical counsels of chastity
dedicated to God, poverty and obedience are based upon the words and
examples of the Lord. They were further commanded by the apostles and
Fathers of the Church, as well as by the doctors and pastors of souls.
The counsels are a divine gift, which the Church received from its
Lord and which it always safeguards with the help of His grace. Church
authority has the duty, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, of
interpreting these evangelical counsels, of regulating their practice
and finally to build on them stable forms of living. Thus it has come
about, that, as if on a tree which has grown in the field of the Lord,
various forms of solidarity and community life, as well as various
religious families have branched out in a marvelous and multiple way
from this divinely given seed. Such a multiple and miraculous growth
augments both the progress of the members of these various religious
families themselves and the welfare of the entire Body of Christ.(1*)
These religious families give their members the support of a more firm
stability in their way of life and a proven doctrine of acquiring
perfection. They further offer their members the support of fraternal
association in the militia of Christ and of liberty strengthened by
obedience. Thus these religious are able to tranquilly fulfill and
faithfully observe their religious profession and so spiritually
rejoicing make progress on the road of charity.(2*)
From the point of view of the divine and
hierarchical structure of the Church, the religious state of life is
not an intermediate state between the clerical and lay states. But,
rather, the faithful of Christ are called by God from both these
states of life so that they might enjoy this particular gift in the
life of the Church and thus each in one's own way, may be of some
advantage to the salvific mission of the Church.(3*)
44. The faithful of Christ bind themselves to
the three aforesaid counsels either by vows, or by other sacred bonds,
which are like vows in their purpose. By such a bond, a person is
totally dedicated to God, loved beyond all things. In this way, that
person is ordained to the honor and service of God under a new and
special title. Indeed through Baptism a person dies to sin and is
consecrated to God. However, in order that he may be capable of
deriving more abundant fruit from this baptismal grace, he intends, by
the profession of the evangelical counsels in the Church, to free
himself from those obstacles, which might draw him away from the
fervor of charity and the perfection of divine worship. By his
profession of the evangelical counsels, then, he is more intimately
consecrated to divine service.(4*) This consecration will be the more
perfect, in as much as the indissoluble bond of the union of Christ
and His bride, the Church, is represented by firm and more stable
bonds.
The evangelical counsels which lead to
charity (5*) join their followers to the Church and its mystery in a
special way. Since this is so, the spiritual life of these people
should then be devoted to the welfare of the whole Church. From this
arises their duty of working to implant and strengthen the Kingdom of
Christ in souls and to extend that Kingdom to every clime. This duty
is to be undertaken to the extent of their capacities and in keeping
with the proper type of their own vocation. This can be realized
through prayer or active works of the apostolate. It is for this
reason that the Church preserves and fosters the special character of
her various religious institutes.
The profession of the evangelical counsels,
then, appears as a sign which can and ought to attract all the members
of the Church to an effective and prompt fulfillment of the duties of
their Christian vocation. The people of God have no lasting city here
below, but look forward to one that is to come. Since this is so, the
religious state, whose purpose is to free its members from earthly
cares, more fully manifests to all believers the presence of heavenly
goods already possessed here below. Furthermore, it not only witnesses
to the fact of a new and eternal life acquired by the redemption of
Christ, but it foretells the future resurrection and the glory of the
heavenly kingdom. Christ proposed to His disciples this form of life,
which He, as the Son of God, accepted in entering this world to do the
will of the Father. This same state of life is accurately exemplified
and perpetually made present in the Church. The religious state
clearly manifests that the Kingdom of God and its needs, in a very
special way, are raised above all earthly considerations. Finally it
clearly shows all men both the unsurpassed breadth of the strength of
Christ the King and the infinite power of the Holy Spirit marvelously
working in the Church.
Thus, the state which is constituted by the
profession of the evangelical counsels, though it is not the
hierarchical structure of the Church, nevertheless, undeniably belongs
to its life and holiness.
45. It is the duty of the ecclesiastical
hierarchy to regulate the practice of the evangelical counsels by law,
since it is the duty of the same hierarchy to care for the People of
God and to lead them to most fruitful pastures.(236) The importance of
the profession of the evangelical counsels is seen in the fact that it
fosters the perfection of love of God and love of neighbor in an
outstanding manner and that this profession is strengthened by
vows.(6*) Furthermore, the hierarchy, following with docility the
prompting of the Holy Spirit, accepts the rules presented by
outstanding men and women and authentically approves these rules after
further adjustments. It also aids by its vigilant and safeguarding
authority those institutes variously established for the building up
of Christ's Body in order that these same institutes may grow and
flourish according to the spirit of the founders.
Any institute of perfection and its
individual members may be removed from the jurisdiction of the local
Ordinaries by the Supreme Pontiff and subjected to himself alone. This
is done in virtue of his primacy over the entire Church in order to
more fully provide for the necessities of the entire flock of the Lord
and in consideration of the common good.(7*) In like manner, these
institutes may be left or committed to the charge of the proper
patriarchical authority. The members of these institutes, in
fulfilling their obligation to the Church due to their particular form
of life, ought to show reverence and obedience to bishops according to
the sacred canons. The bishops are owed this respect because of their
pastoral authority in their own churches and because of the need of
unity and harmony in the apostolate.(8*).
The Church not only raises the religious
profession to the dignity of a canonical state by her approval, but
even manifests that this profession is a state consecrated to God by
the liturgical setting of that profession. The Church itself, by the
authority given to it by God, accepts the vows of the newly professed.
It begs aid and grace from God for them by its public prayer. It
commends them to God, imparts a spiritual blessing on them and
accompanies their self-offering by the Eucharistic sacrifice.
46. Religious should carefully keep before
their minds the fact that the Church presents Christ to believers and
non-believers alike in a striking manner daily through them. The
Church thus portrays Christ in contemplation on the mountain, in His
proclamation of the kingdom of God to the multitudes, in His healing
of the sick and maimed, in His work of converting sinners to a better
life, in His solicitude for youth and His goodness to all men, always
obedient to the will of the Father who sent Him.(9*)
All men should take note that the profession
of the evangelical counsels, though entailing the renunciation of
certain values which are to be undoubtedly esteemed, does not detract
from a genuine development of the human persons, but rather by its
very nature is most beneficial to that development. Indeed the
counsels, voluntarily undertaken according to each one's personal
vocation, contribute a great deal to the purification of heart and
spiritual liberty. They continually stir up the fervor of charity. But
especially they are able to more fully mold the Christian man to that
type of chaste and detached life, which Christ the Lord chose for
Himself and which His Mother also embraced. This is clearly proven by
the example of so many holy founders. Let no one think that religious
have become strangers to their fellowmen or useless citizens of this
earthly city by their consecration. For even though it sometimes
happens that religious do not directly mingle with their
contemporaries, yet in a more profound sense these same religious are
united with them in the heart of Christ and spiritually cooperate with
them. In this way the building up of the earthly city may have its
foundation in the Lord and may tend toward Him, lest perhaps those who
build this city shall have labored in vain. (10*)
Therefore, this Sacred Synod encourages and
praises the men and women, Brothers and Sisters, who in monasteries,
or in schools and hospitals, or in the missions, adorn the Bride of
Christ by their unswerving and humble faithfulness in their chosen
consecration and render generous services of all kinds to mankind.
47. Let each of the faithful called to the
profession of the evangelical counsels, therefore, carefully see to it
that he persevere and ever grow in that vocation God has given him.
Let him do this for the increased holiness of the Church, for the
greater glory of the one and undivided Trinity, which in and through
Christ is the fount and the source of all holiness.
CHAPTER VII
THE ESCHATOLOGICAL NATURE OF THE PILGRIM
CHURCH AND ITS UNION WITH THE CHURCH IN HEAVEN
48. The Church, to which we are all called in
Christ Jesus, and in which we acquire sanctity through the grace of
God, will attain its full perfection only in the glory of heaven, when
there will come the time of the restoration of all things.(237) At
that time the human race as well as the entire world, which is
intimately related to man and attains to its end through him, will be
perfectly reestablished in Christ.(238)
Christ, having been lifted up from the earth
has drawn all to Himself.(239) Rising from the dead(240) He sent His
life-giving Spirit upon His disciples and through Him has established
His Body which is the Church as the universal sacrament of salvation.
Sitting at the right hand of the Father, He is continually active in
the world that He might lead men to the Church and through it join
them to Himself and that He might make them partakers of His glorious
life by nourishing them with His own Body and Blood. Therefore the
promised restoration which we are awaiting has already begun in
Christ, is carried forward in the mission of the Holy Spirit and
through Him continues in the Church in which we learn the meaning of
our terrestrial life through our faith, while we perform with hope in
the future the work committed to us in this world by the Father, and
thus work out our salvation.(241)
Already the final age of the world has come
upon us (242) and the renovation of the world is irrevocably decreed
and is already anticipated in some kind of a real way; for the Church
already on this earth is signed with a sanctity which is real although
imperfect. However, until there shall be new heavens and a new earth
in which justice dwells,(243) the pilgrim Church in her sacraments and
institutions, which pertain to this present time, has the appearance
of this world which is passing and she herself dwells among creatures
who groan and travail in pain until now and await the revelation of
the sons of God.(244)
Joined with Christ in the Church and signed
with the Holy Spirit "who is the pledge of our inheritance",(245)
truly we are called and we are sons of God(246) but we have not yet
appeared with Christ in glory,(247) in which we shall be like to God,
since we shall see Him as He is.(248) And therefore "while we are in
the body, we are exiled from the Lord (249) and having the
first-fruits of the Spirit we groan within ourselves(250) and we
desire to be with Christ"'.(251) By that same charity however, we are
urged to live more for Him, who died for us and rose again.(252) We
strive therefore to please God in all things(253) and we put on the
armor of God, that we may be able to stand against the wiles of the
devil and resist in the evil day.(254) Since however we know not the
day nor the hour, on Our Lord's advice we must be constantly vigilant
so that, having finished the course of our earthly life,(255) we may
merit to enter into the marriage feast with Him and to be numbered
among the blessed(256) and that we may not be ordered to go into
eternal fire(257) like the wicked and slothful servant,(258) into the
exterior darkness where "there will be the weeping and the gnashing of
teeth".(259) For before we reign with Christ in glory, all of us will
be made manifest "before the tribunal of Christ, so that each one may
receive what he has won through the body, according to his works,
whether good or evil"(260) and at the end of the world "they who have
done good shall come forth unto resurrection of life; but those who
have done evil unto resurrection of judgment".(261) Reckoning
therefore that "the sufferings of the present time are not worthy to
be compared with the glory to come that will be revealed in us",(262)
strong in faith we look for the "blessed hope and the glorious coming
of our great God and Saviour, Jesus Christ"(263) "who will refashion
the body of our lowliness, conforming it to the body of His
glory(264). and who will come "to be glorified in His saints and to be
marveled at in all those who have believed"(265).
49. Until the Lord shall come in His majesty,
and all the angels with Him (266) and death being destroyed, all
things are subject to Him,(277) some of His disciples are exiles on
earth, some having died are purified, and others are in glory
beholding "clearly God Himself triune and one, as He is";(1*) but all
in various ways and degrees are in communion in the same charity of
God and neighbor and all sing the same hymn of glory to our God. For
all who are in Christ, having His Spirit, form one Church and cleave
together in Him.(268) Therefore the union of the wayfarers with the
brethren who have gone to sleep in the peace of Christ is not in the
least weakened or interrupted, but on the contrary, according to the
perpetual faith of the Church, is strengthened by communication of
spiritual goods.(2*) For by reason of the fact that those in heaven
are more closely united with Christ, they establish the whole Church
more firmly in holiness, lend nobility to the worship which the Church
offers to God here on earth and in many ways contribute to its greater
edification.(269)(3*) For after they have been received into their
heavenly home and are present to the Lord,(270) through Him and with
Him and in Him they do not cease to intercede with the Father for
us,(4*) showing forth the merits which they won on earth through the
one Mediator between God and man,(271) serving God in all things and
filling up in their flesh those things which are lacking of the
sufferings of Christ for His Body which is the Church.(272)(5*) Thus
by their brotherly interest our weakness is greatly strengthened.
50. Fully conscious of this communion of the
whole Mystical Body of Jesus Christ, the pilgrim Church from the very
first ages of the Christian religion has cultivated with great piety
the memory of the dead,(6*) and "because it is a holy and wholesome
thought to pray for the dead that they may be loosed from their
sins",(273) also offers suffrages for them. The Church has always
believed that the apostles and Christ's martyrs who had given the
supreme witness of faith and charity by the shedding of their blood,
are closely joined with us in Christ, and she has always venerated
them with special devotion, together with the Blessed Virgin Mary and
the holy angels.(7*) The Church has piously implored the aid of their
intercession. To these were soon added also those who had more closely
imitated Christ's virginity and poverty,(8*) and finally others whom
the outstanding practice of the Christian virtues (9*) and the divine
charisms recommended to the pious devotion and imitation of the
faithful.(10*)
When we look at the lives of those who have
faithfully followed Christ, we are inspired with a new reason for
seeking the City that is to come (274) and at the same time we are
shown a most safe path by which among the vicissitudes of this world,
in keeping with the state in life and condition proper to each of us,
we will be able to arrive at perfect union with Christ, that is,
perfect holiness. (11*) In the lives of those who, sharing in our
humanity, are however more perfectly transformed into the image of
Christ,(275) God vividly manifests His presence and His face to men.
He speaks to us in them, and gives us a sign of His Kingdom,(12*) to
which we are strongly drawn, having so great a cloud of witnesses over
us (276) and such a witness to the truth of the Gospel.
Nor is it by the title of example only that
we cherish the memory of those in heaven, but still more in order that
the union of the whole Church may be strengthened in the Spirit by the
practice of fraternal charity.(277) For just as Christian communion
among wayfarers brings us closer to Christ, so our companionship with
the saints joins us to Christ, from Whom as from its Fountain and Head
issues every grace and the very life of the people of God.(13*) It is
supremely fitting, therefore, that we love those friends and coheirs
of Jesus Christ, who are also our brothers and extraordinary
benefactors, that we render due thanks to God for them (14*) and
"suppliantly invoke them and have recourse to their prayers, their
power and help in obtaining benefits from God through His Son, Jesus
Christ, who is our Redeemer and Saviour."(15*) For every genuine
testimony of love shown by us to those in heaven, by its very nature
tends toward and terminates in Christ who is the "crown of all
saints,"(16*) and through Him, in God Who is wonderful in his saints
and is magnified in them.(17*)
Our union with the Church in heaven is put
into effect in its noblest manner especially in the sacred Liturgy,
wherein the power of the Holy Spirit acts upon us through sacramental
signs. Then, with combined rejoicing we celebrate together the praise
of the divine majesty;(18*) then all those from every tribe and tongue
and people and nation (278) who have been redeemed by the blood of
Christ and gathered together into one Church, with one song of praise
magnify the one and triune God. Celebrating the Eucharistic sacrifice
therefore, we are most closely united to the Church in heaven in
communion with and venerating the memory first of all of the glorious
ever-Virgin Mary, of Blessed Joseph and the blessed apostles and
martyrs and of all the saints.(19*)
51. This Sacred Council accepts with great
devotion this venerable faith of our ancestors regarding this vital
fellowship with our brethren who are in heavenly glory or who having
died are still being purified; and it proposes again the decrees of
the Second Council of Nicea,(20*) the Council of Florence (21*) and
the Council of Trent.(22*) And at the same time, in conformity with
our own pastoral interests, we urge all concerned, if any abuses,
excesses or defects have crept in here or there, to do what is in
their power to remove or correct them, and to restore all things to a
fuller praise of Christ and of God. Let them therefore teach the
faithful that the authentic cult of the saints consists not so much in
the multiplying of external acts, but rather in the greater intensity
of our love, whereby, for our own greater good and that of the whole
Church, we seek from the saints "example in their way of life,
fellowship in their communion, and aid by their intercession."(23*) On
the other hand, let them teach the faithful that our communion with
those in heaven, provided that it is understood in the fuller light of
faith according to its genuine nature, in no way weakens, but
conversely, more thoroughly enriches the latreutic worship we give to
God the Father, through Christ, in the Spirit.(24*)
For all of us, who are sons of God and
constitute one family in Christ.(279) as long as we remain in
communion with one another in mutual charity and in one praise of the
most holy Trinity, are corresponding with the intimate vocation of the
Church and partaking in foretaste the liturgy of consummate
glory.(25*) For when Christ shall appear and the glorious resurrection
of the dead will take place, the glory of God will light up the
heavenly City and the Lamb will be the lamp thereof.(280) Then the
whole Church of the saints in the supreme happiness of charity will
adore God and "the Lamb who was slain",(281) proclaiming with one
voice: "To Him who sits upon the throne, and to the Lamb blessing, and
honor, and glory, and dominion forever and ever".(282)
CHAPTER VIII
THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY, MOTHER OF GOD IN
THE MYSTERY OF CHRIST AND THE CHURCH
I. Introduction
52. Wishing in His supreme goodness and
wisdom to effect the redemption of the world, "when the fullness of
time came, God sent His Son, born of a woman, ..that we might receive
the adoption of sons".(283) "He for us men, and for our salvation,
came down from heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy Spirit from the
Virgin Mary."(1*) This divine mystery of salvation is revealed to us
and continued in the Church, which the Lord established as His body.
Joined to Christ the Head and in the unity of fellowship with all His
saints, the faithful must in the first place reverence the memory "of
the glorious ever Virgin Mary, Mother of our God and Lord Jesus
Christ".(2*)
53. The Virgin Mary, who at the message of
the angel received the Word of God in her heart and in her body and
gave Life to the world, is acknowledged and honored as being truly the
Mother of God and Mother of the Redeemer. Redeemed by reason of the
merits of her Son and united to Him by a close and indissoluble tie,
she is endowed with the high office and dignity of being the Mother of
the Son of God, by which account she is also the beloved daughter of
the Father and the temple of the Holy Spirit. Because of this gift of
sublime grace she far surpasses all creatures, both in heaven and on
earth. At the same time, however, because she belongs to the offspring
of Adam she is one with all those who are to be saved. She is "the
mother of the members of Christ . . . having cooperated by charity
that faithful might be born in the Church, who are members of that
Head."(3*) Wherefore she is hailed as a pre-eminent and singular
member of the Church, and as its type and excellent exemplar in faith
and charity. The Catholic Church, taught by the Holy Spirit, honors
her with filial affection and piety as a most beloved mother.
54. Wherefore this Holy Synod, in expounding
the doctrine on the Church, in which the divine Redeemer works
salvation, intends to describe with diligence both the role of the
Blessed Virgin in the mystery of the Incarnate Word and the Mystical
Body, and the duties of redeemed mankind toward the Mother of God, who
is mother of Christ and mother of men, particularly of the faithful.
It does not, however, have it in mind to give a complete doctrine on
Mary, nor does it wish to decide those questions which the work of
theologians has not yet fully clarified. Those opinions therefore may
be lawfully retained which are propounded in Catholic schools
concerning her, who occupies a place in the Church which is the
highest after Christ and yet very close to us.(4*)
II. The Role of the Blessed Mother in
the Economy of Salvation
55. The Sacred Scriptures of both the Old and
the New Testament, as well as ancient Tradition show the role of the
Mother of the Saviour in the economy of salvation in an ever clearer
light and draw attention to it. The books of the Old Testament
describe the history of salvation, by which the coming of Christ into
the world was slowly prepared. These earliest documents, as they are
read in the Church and are understood in the light of a further and
full revelation, bring the figure of the woman, Mother of the
Redeemer, into a gradually clearer light. When it is looked at in this
way, she is already prophetically foreshadowed in the promise of
victory over the serpent which was given to our first parents after
their fall into sin.(284) Likewise she is the Virgin who shall
conceive and bear a son, whose name will be called Emmanuel.(285) She
stands out among the poor and humble of the Lord, who confidently hope
for and receive salvation from Him. With her the exalted Daughter of
Sion, and after a long expectation of the promise, the times are
fulfilled and the new Economy established, when the Son of God took a
human nature from her, that He might in the mysteries of His flesh
free man from sin.
56. The Father of mercies willed that the
incarnation should be preceded by the acceptance of her who was
predestined to be the mother of His Son, so that just as a woman
contributed to death, so also a woman should contribute to life. That
is true in outstanding fashion of the mother of Jesus, who gave to the
world Him who is Life itself and who renews all things, and who was
enriched by God with the gifts which befit such a role. It is no
wonder therefore that the usage prevailed among the Fathers whereby
they called the mother of God entirely holy and free from all stain of
sin, as though fashioned by the Holy Spirit and formed as a new
creature.(5*) Adorned from the first instant of her conception with
the radiance of an entirely unique holiness, the Virgin of Nazareth is
greeted, on God's command, by an angel messenger as "full of
grace",(286) and to the heavenly messenger she replies: "Behold the
handmaid of the Lord, be it done unto me according to thy word".(287)
Thus Mary, a daughter of Adam, consenting to the divine Word, became
the mother of Jesus, the one and only Mediator. Embracing God's
salvific will with a full heart and impeded by no sin, she devoted
herself totally as a handmaid of the Lord to the person and work of
her Son, under Him and with Him, by the grace of almighty God, serving
the mystery of redemption. Rightly therefore the holy Fathers see her
as used by God not merely in a passive way, but as freely cooperating
in the work of human salvation through faith and obedience. For, as
St. Irenaeus says, she "being obedient, became the cause of salvation
for herself and for the whole human race."(6*) Hence not a few of the
early Fathers gladly assert in their preaching, "The knot of Eve's
disobedience was untied by Mary's obedience; what the virgin Eve bound
through her unbelief, the Virgin Mary loosened by her faith."(7*)
Comparing Mary with Eve, they call her "the Mother of the living,"(8*)
and still more often they say: "death through Eve, life through
Mary."(9*)
57. This union of the Mother with the Son in
the work of salvation is made manifest from the time of Christ's
virginal conception up to His death it is shown first of all when
Mary, arising in haste to go to visit Elizabeth, is greeted by her as
blessed because of her belief in the promise of salvation and the
precursor leaped with joy in the womb of his mother.(288) This union
is manifest also at the birth of Our Lord, who did not diminish His
mother's virginal integrity but sanctified it,(10*) when the Mother of
God joyfully showed her firstborn Son to the shepherds and Magi. When
she presented Him to the Lord in the temple, making the offering of
the poor, she heard Simeon foretelling at the same time that her Son
would be a sign of contradiction and that a sword would pierce the
mother's soul, that out of many hearts thoughts might be
revealed.(289) When the Child Jesus was lost and they had sought Him
sorrowing, His parents found Him in the temple, taken up with the
things that were His Father's business; and they did not understand
the word of their Son. His Mother indeed kept these things to be
pondered over in her heart.(290)
58. In the public life of Jesus, Mary makes
significant appearances. This is so even at the very beginning, when
at the marriage feast of Cana, moved with pity, she brought about by
her intercession the beginning of miracles of Jesus the Messiah.(291)
In the course of her Son's preaching she received the words whereby in
extolling a kingdom beyond the calculations and bonds of flesh and
blood, He declared blessed(292) those who heard and kept the word of
God, as she was faithfully doing.(293) After this manner the Blessed
Virgin advanced in her pilgrimage of faith, and faithfully persevered
in her union with her Son unto the cross, where she stood, in keeping
with the divine plan,(294) grieving exceedingly with her only begotten
Son, uniting herself with a maternal heart with His sacrifice, and
lovingly consenting to the immolation of this Victim which she herself
had brought forth. Finally, she was given by the same Christ Jesus
dying on the cross as a mother to His disciple with these words:
"Woman, behold thy son".(295) (11*)
59. But since it has pleased God not to
manifest solemnly the mystery cf the salvation of the human race
before He would pour forth the Spirit promised by Christ, we see the
apostles before the day of Pentecost "persevering with one mind in
prayer with the women and Mary the Mother of Jesus, and with His
brethren",(296) and Mary by her prayers imploring the gift of the
Spirit, who had already overshadowed her in the Annunciation. Finally,
the Immaculate Virgin, preserved free from all guilt of original
sin,(12*) on the completion of her earthly sojourn, was taken up body
and soul into heavenly glory,(13*) and exalted by the Lord as Queen of
the universe, that she might be the more fully confimed to her Son,
the Lord of lords(297) and the conqueror of sin and death.(l4*)
III. On the Blessed Virgin and the
Church
60. There is but one Mediator as we know from
the words of the apostle, "for there is one God and one mediator of
God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself a redemption for
all".(298) The maternal duty of Mary toward men in no wise obscures or
diminishes this unique mediation of Christ, but rather shows His
power. For all the salvific influence of the Blessed Virgin on men
originates, not from some inner necessity, but from the divine
pleasure. It flows forth from the superabundance of the merits of
Christ, rests on His mediation, depends entirely on it and draws all
its power from it. In no way does it impede, but rather does it foster
the immediate union of the faithful with Christ.
61. Predestined from eternity by that decree
of divine providence which determined the incarnation of the Word to
be the Mother of God, the Blessed Virgin was in this earth the virgin
Mother of the Redeemer, and above all others and in a singular way the
generous associate and humble handmaid of the Lord. She conceived,
brought forth and nourished Christ. she presented Him to the Father in
the temple, and was united with Him by compassion as He died on the
Cross. In this singular way she cooperated by her obedience, faith,
hope and burning charity in the work of the Saviour in giving back
supernatural life to souls. Wherefore she is our mother in the order
of grace.
62. This maternity of Mary in the order of
grace began with the consent which she gave in faith at the
Annunciation and which she sustained without wavering beneath the
cross, and lasts until The eternal fulfillment of all the elect. Taken
up to heaven she did not lay aside this salvific duty, but by her
constant intercession continued to bring us the gifts of eternal
salvation.(15*) By her maternal charity, she cares for the brethren of
her Son, who still journey on earth surrounded by dangers and cultics,
until they are led into the happiness of their true home. Therefore
the Blessed Virgin is invoked by the Church under the titles of
Advocate, Auxiliatrix, Adjutrix, and Mediatrix.(16*) This, however, is
to be so understood that it neither takes away from nor adds anything
to the dignity and efficaciousness of Christ the one Mediator.(17*)
For no creature could ever be counted as
equal with the Incarnate Word and Redeemer. Just as the priesthood of
Christ is shared in various ways both by the ministers and by the
faithful, and as the one goodness of God is really communicated in
different ways to His creatures, so also the unique mediation of the
Redeemer does not exclude but rather gives rise to a manifold
cooperation which is but a sharing in this one source.
The Church does not hesitate to profess this
subordinate role of Mary. It knows it through unfailing experience of
it and commends it to the hearts of the faithful, so that encouraged
by this maternal help they may the more intimately adhere to the
Mediator and Redeemer.
63. By reason of the gift and role of divine
maternity, by which she is united with her Son, the Redeemer, and with
His singular graces and functions, the Blessed Virgin is also
intimately united with the Church. As St. Ambrose taught, the Mother
of God is a type of the Church in the order of faith, charity and
perfect union with Christ.(18*) For in the mystery of the Church,
which is itself rightly called mother and virgin, the Blessed Virgin
stands out in eminent and singular fashion as exemplar both of virgin
and mother. (19*) By her belief and obedience, not knowing man but
overshadowed by the Holy Spirit, as the new Eve she brought forth on
earth the very Son of the Father, showing an undefiled faith, not in
the word of the ancient serpent, but in that of God's messenger. The
Son whom she brought forth is He whom God placed as the first-born
among many brethren,(299) namely the faithful, in whose birth and
education she cooperates with a maternal love.
64. The Church indeed, contemplating her
hidden sanctity, imitating her charity and faithfully fulfilling the
Father's will, by receiving the word of God in faith becomes herself a
mother. By her preaching she brings forth to a new and immortal life
the sons who are born to her in baptism, conceived of the Holy Spirit
and born of God. She herself is a virgin, who keeps the faith given to
her by her Spouse whole and entire. Imitating the mother of her Lord,
and by the power of the Holy Spirit, she keeps with virginal purity an
entire faith, a firm hope and a sincere charity.(20*)
65. But while in the most holy Virgin the
Church has already reached that perfection whereby she is without spot
or wrinkle, the followers of Christ still strive to increase in
holiness by conquering sin.(300) And so they turn their eyes to Mary
who shines forth to the whole community of the elect as the model of
virtues. Piously meditating on her and contemplating her in the light
of the Word made man, the Church with reverence enters more intimately
into the great mystery of the Incarnation and becomes more and more
like her Spouse. For Mary, who since her entry into salvation history
unites in herself and re-echoes the greatest teachings of the faith as
she is proclaimed and venerated, calls the faithful to her Son and His
sacrifice and to the love of the Father. Seeking after the glory of
Christ, the Church becomes more like her exalted Type, and continually
progresses in faith, hope and charity, seeking and doing the will of
God in all things. Hence the Church, in her apostolic work also,
justly looks to her, who, conceived of the Holy Spirit, brought forth
Christ, who was born of the Virgin that through the Church He may be
born and may increase in the hearts of the faithful also. The Virgin
in her own life lived an example of that maternal love, by which it
behooves that all should be animated who cooperate in the apostolic
mission of the Church for the regeneration of men.
IV. The Cult of the Blessed Virgin in
the Church
66. Placed by the grace of God, as God's
Mother, next to her Son, and exalted above all angels and men, Mary
intervened in the mysteries of Christ and is justly honored by a
special cult in the Church. Clearly from earliest times the Blessed
Virgin is honored under the title of Mother of God, under whose
protection the faithful took refuge in all their dangers and
necessities.(21*) Hence after the Synod of Ephesus the cult of the
people of God toward Mary wonderfully increased in veneration and
love, in invocation and imitation, according to her own prophetic
words: "All generations shall call me blessed, because He that is
mighty hath done great things to me".(301) This cult, as it always
existed, although it is altogether singular, differs essentially from
the cult of adoration which is offered to the Incarnate Word, as well
to the Father and the Holy Spirit, and it is most favorable to it. The
various forms of piety toward the Mother of God, which the Church
within the limits of sound and orthodox doctrine, according to the
conditions of time and place, and the nature and ingenuity of the
faithful has approved, bring it about that while the Mother is
honored, the Son, through whom all things have their being (302) and
in whom it has pleased the Father that all fullness should dwell,(303)
is rightly known, loved and glorified and that all His commands are
observed.
67. This most Holy Synod deliberately teaches
this Catholic doctrine and at the same time admonishes all the sons of
the Church that the cult, especially the liturgical cult, of the
Blessed Virgin, be generously fostered, and the practices and
exercises of piety, recommended by the magisterium of the Church
toward her in the course of centuries be made of great moment, and
those decrees, which have been given in the early days regarding the
cult of images of Christ, the Blessed Virgin and the saints, be
religiously observed.(22*) But it exhorts theologians and preachers of
the divine word to abstain zealously both from all gross exaggerations
as well as from petty narrow-mindedness in considering the singular
dignity of the Mother of God.(23*) Following the study of Sacred
Scripture, the Holy Fathers, the doctors and liturgy of the Church,
and under the guidance of the Church's magisterium, let them rightly
illustrate the duties and privileges of the Blessed Virgin which
always look to Christ, the source of all truth, sanctity and piety.
Let them assiduously keep away from whatever, either by word or deed,
could lead separated brethren or any other into error regarding the
true doctrine of the Church. Let the faithful remember moreover that
true devotion consists neither in sterile or transitory affection, nor
in a certain vain credulity, but proceeds from true faith, by which we
are led to know the excellence of the Mother of God, and we are moved
to a filial love toward our mother and to the imitation of her
virtues.
V. Mary the sign of created hope and
solace to the wandering people of God
68. In the interim just as the Mother of
Jesus, glorified in body and soul in heaven, is the image and
beginning of the Church as it is to be perfected is the world to come,
so too does she shine forth on earth, until the day of the Lord shall
come,(304) as a sign of sure hope and solace to the people of God
during its sojourn on earth.
69. It gives great joy and comfort to this
holy and general Synod that even among the separated brethren there
are some who give due honor to the Mother of our Lord and Saviour,
especially among the Orientals, who with devout mind and fervent
impulse give honor to the Mother of God, ever virgin.(24*) The entire
body of the faithful pours forth instant supplications to the Mother
of God and Mother of men that she, who aided the beginnings of the
Church by her prayers, may now, exalted as she is above all the angels
and saints, intercede before her Son in the fellowship of all the
saints, until all families of people, whether they are honored with
the title of Christian or whether they still do not know the Saviour,
may be happily gathered together in peace and harmony into one people
of God, for the glory of the Most Holy and Undivided Trinity.
Each and all these items which are set forth
in this dogmatic Constitution have met with the approval of the
Council Fathers. And We by the apostolic power given Us by Christ
together with the Venerable Fathers in the Holy Spirit, approve,
decree and establish it and command that what has thus been decided in
the Council be promulgated for the glory of God.
Given in Rome at St. Peter's on November
21, 1964.
APPENDIX From the Acts of the Council*
'NOTIFICATIONES' GIVEN BY THE
SECRETARY GENERAL OF THE COUNCIL AT THE 123RD GENERAL CONGREGATION,
NOVEMBER 16, 1964
A question has arisen regarding the precise
theological note which should be attached to the doctrine that is set
forth in the Schema de Ecclesia and is being put to a vote.
The Theological Commission has given the
following response regarding the Modi that have to do with Chapter III
of the de Ecclesia Schema: "As is self-evident, the Council's text
must always be interpreted in accordance with the general rules that
are known to all."
On this occasion the Theological Commission
makes reference to its Declaration of March 6, 1964, the text of which
we transcribe here:
"Taking conciliar custom into consideration
and also the pastoral purpose of the present Council, the sacred
Council defines as binding on the Church only those things in matters
of faith and morals which it shall openly declare to be binding. The
rest of the things which the sacred Council sets forth, inasmuch as
they are the teaching of the Church's supreme magisterium, ought. to
be accepted and embraced by each and every one of Christ's faithful
according to the mind of the sacred Council. The mind of the Council
becomes known either from the matter treated or from its manner of
speaking, in accordance with the norms of theological interpretation."
**The following was published as an appendix
to the official Latin version of the Constitution on the Church.**
A preliminary note of explanation is being
given to the Council Fathers from higher-authority, regarding the Modi
bearing on Chapter III of the Schema de Ecclesia; the doctrine set
forth in Chapter III ought to be-explained and understood in
accordance with the meaning and intent of this explanatory note.
Preliminary Note of Explanation
The Commission has decided to preface the
assessment of the Modi with the following general observations.
1. "College" is not understood in a strictly
juridical sense, that is as a group of equals who entrust their power
to their president, but as a stable group whose structure and
authority must be learned from Revelation. For this reason, in reply
to Modus 12 it is expressly said of the Twelve that the Lord set them
up "as a college or stable group." Cf. also Modus 53, c.
For the same reason, the words "Ordo" or
"Corpus" are used throughout with reference to the College of bishops.
The parallel between Peter and the rest of the Apostles on the one
hand, and between the Supreme Pontiff and the bishops on the other
hand, does not imply the transmission of the Apostles' extraordinary
power to their successors; nor does it imply, as is obvious, equality
between the head of the College and its members, but only a pro-
portionality between the first relationship (Peter-Apostles) and the
second (Pope-bishops). Thus the Commission decided to write "pari
ratione, " not "eadem ratione," in n. 22. Cf. Modus 57.
2. A person becomes a member of the College
by virtue of episcopal consecration and by hierarchical communion with
the head of the College and with its members. Cf. n. 22, end of 1 1.
In his consecration a person is given an
ontological participation in the sacred functions [lmunera]; this is
absolutely clear from Tradition, liturgical tradition included. The
word "functions [munera]" is used deliberately instead of the word
"powers [potestates]," because the latter word could be understood as
a power fully ready to act. But for this power to be fully ready to
act, there must be a further canonical or juridical determination
through the hierarchical authority. This determination of power can
consist in the granting of a particular office or in the allotment of
subjects, and it is done according to the norms approved by the
supreme authority. An additional norm of this sort is required by the
very nature of the case, because it involves functions [munera] which
must be exercised by many subjects cooperating in a hierarchical
manner in accordance with Christ's will. It is evident that this
"communion" was applied in the Church's life according to the
circumstances of the time, before it was codified as law.
For this reason it is clearly stated that
hierarchical communion with the head and members of the church is
required. Communion is a notion which is held in high honor in the
ancient Church (and also today, especially in the East). However, it
is not understood as some kind of vague disposition, but as an organic
reality which requires a juridical form and is animated by charity.
Hence the Commission, almost unanimously, decided that this wording
should be used: "in hierarchical communion." Cf. Modus 40 and the
statements on canonical mission (n. 24).
The documents of recent Pontiffs regarding
the jurisdiction of bishops must be interpreted in terms of this
necessary determination of powers.
3. The College, which does not exist without
the head, is said "to exist also as the subject of supreme and full
power in the universal Church." This must be admitted of necessity so
that the fullness of power belonging to the Roman Pontiff is not
called into question. For the College, always and of necessity,
includes its head, because in the college he preserves unhindered his
function as Christ's Vicar and as Pastor of the universal Church. In
other words, it is not a distinction between the Roman Pontiff and the
bishops taken collectively, but a distinction between the Roman
Pontiff taken separately and the Roman Pontiff together with the
bishops. Since the Supreme Pontiff is head of the College, he alone is
able to perform certain actions which are not at all within the
competence of the bishops, e.g., convoking the College and directing
it, approving norms of action, etc. Cf. Modus 81. It is up to the
judgment of the Supreme Pontiff, to whose care Christ's whole flock
has been entrusted, to determine, according to the needs of the Church
as they change over the course of centuries, the way in which this
care may best be exercised-whether in a personal or a collegial way.
The Roman Pontiff, taking account of the Church's welfare, proceeds
according to his own discretion in arranging, promoting and approving
the exercise of collegial activity.
4. As Supreme Pastor of the Church, the
Supreme Pontiff can always exercise his power at will, as his very
office demands. Though it is always in existence, the College is not
as a result permanently engaged in strictly collegial activity; the
Church's Tradition makes this clear. In other words, the College is
not always "fully active [in actu pleno]"; rather, it acts as a
college in the strict sense only from time to time and only with the
consent of its head. The phrase "with the consent of its head" is used
to avoid the idea of dependence on some kind of outsider; the term
"consent" suggests rather communion between the head and the members,
and implies the need for an act which belongs properly to the
competence of the head. This is explicitly affirmed in n. 22, 12, and
is explained at the end of that section. The word "only" takes in all
cases. It is evident from this that the norms approved by the supreme
authority must always be observed. Cf. Modus 84.
It is clear throughout that it is a question
of the bishops acting in conjunction with their head, never of the
bishops acting independently of the Pope. In the latter instance,
without the action of the head, the bishops are not able to act as a
College: this is clear from the concept of "College." This
hierarchical communion of all the bishops with the Supreme Pontiff is
certainly firmly established in Tradition.
N.B. Without hierarchical communion the
ontologico-sacramental function [munus], which is to be distinguished
from the juridico-canonical aspect, cannot be exercised. However, the
Commission has decided that it should not enter into question of
liceity and validity. These questions are left to theologians to
discuss-specifically the question of the power exercised de facto
among the separated Eastern Churches, about which there are various
explanations."
+ PERICLE FELICI
Titular Archbishop of Samosata
Secretary General of the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council
NOTES
1 Cf. Mk. 16, 15.
2 Col. 1, 15.
3 Rom. 8, 29.
4 Cf. Eph. 1, 4-5 and 10.
5 Cf. Jn. 19, 34.
6 Jn. 12, 32.
7 1 Cor 5, 7.
8 Cf. 1 Cor. 10, 17.
9 Cf. Jn. 17, 4.
10 Cf Eph. 1, 18.
11 Cf Jn. 4, 14; 7, 38-39.
12 Cf. Rom. 8, 10-11.
13 Cf. Cor. 3, 16; 6, 19.
14 Cf. Gal. 4,6; Rom. 8, 15-16 and 26.
15 Cf. Jn. 16, 13.
16 Cf. Eph. 1, 11-12; 1 Cor. 12, 4 Gal. 5 22.
17. 22, 17
18. Mk. 1, 15; cf. Mt. 4, 17.
19. Mk. 4, 14.
20 Lk. 12, 32.
21 Cf. Mk. 4, 26-29.
22 Lk. 11, 20; cf. Mt.12, 28.
23 Mk. 10, 45.
24 Cf. Act. 2, 36; Hebr. 5, 6; 7, 17-21.
25 Cf. Act. 2, 33.
26 Jn. 10, 1-10.
27 Cf. Is. 40, 11; Ex. 34, llf.
28 Cf Jn. 10, 11; 1 Pet. 5, 4.
29 Cf. Jn. 10, 11-15.
30 l Cor. 3, 9.
31 I Rom. 11, 13-26.
32 Mt. 21, 33-43; cf.15, 5, 1f.
33 Jn. 15, 1-5.
34 1 Cor. 3, 9.
35 Mt 21, 42; cf. Act. 4, 11; 1 F 2, 7; Ps.
117, 22.
36 Cf. 1 Cor. 3, 11.
37 1 Tim. 3, 15.
38 Eph. 2, 19-22.
39 Apoc. 21, 3.
40 1 Pet. 2, 5.
41 Apoc. 21, 16.
42 Gal. 4, 26; cf. Apoc. 12, 17.
43 Apoc. 19, 7; 21, 2 and 9; 22, 17
44 Eph. 5, 26.
45 Eph. 5, 29.
46 Cf. Eph. 5, 24.
47 Cf. Eph. 3, 19.
48 Cf. 2 Cor. 5, 6.
49 Cf. Col. 3, 1-4.
50 Cf Gal. 6, 15; 2 Cor. 5,17.
51 Cor. 12, 13.
52 Rom. 6, 15.
53 1 Cor. 10, 17.
54 Cf 1 Cor 12, 27.
55 Rom. 12, 5.
56 Cf. 1 Cor. 12, 12.
57 Cf. 1 Cor. 12, 1-11.
58 Cf. 1 Cor. 14.
59 Cf. l Cor. 12, 26.
60 Cf. Col. 1, 15-18.
61 Cf. Eph. 1, 18-23.
62 Cf. Gal. 4, 19.
63 Cf. Phil. 3, 21, 2 Tim. 2, 11; Eph. 2, 6;
Col. 2, 12 etc.
64 Cf. Rom. 8, 17.
65 Col. 2, 19.
66 Cf. Eph. 4, 11-16.
67 Cf. Eph. 4,23.
68 Cf. Eph. 5, 25-28.
69 Ibid. 23-24.
70 Col. 2, 9.
71 Cf. Eph. 1, 22-23.
72 Cf. Fph. 3,19.
73 Cf. Eph. 4, 16.
74 Jn. 21, 17.
75 Cf. Mt. 28, 18, f.
76 1 Tim. 3, 15.
77 Phil. 2, 6.
78 2 Cor. 8, 9.
79 Lk. 4, 18.
80 Lk. 19, 1O.
81 Hebr. 7, 26.
82 2 Cor. 5, 21.
83 Cf. Hebr. 2, 17.
84 Cf. 1 Cor. 11,26.
85 Cf. Acts 10, 35.
86 Jer. 31, 31-34.
87 Cf. 1 Cor. 11, 25.
88 Cf. 1 Pet. 1, 23.
89 Cf. Jn. 3, 5-6.
90 1 Pet. 2, 9-10.
91 Rom. 4, 25.
92 Cf. Jn. 13, 34.
93 Cf. Col. 3, 4.
94 Rom. 8, 21.
95 Cf. Mt. 5, 13-16.
96 2 Esdr 13, 1; cf. Deut. 23 1 ff; Num. 20,
4.
97 Cf. Heb. 13, 14.
98 Cf. Matt. 16,18.
99 Cf. Acts 20, 28.
100 Cf. Heb. 5, 1-5.
101 Cf Apoc. 6,cf.S. 9-10
102 Cf. 1 Pet.2, 4-10.
103 Cf. Acts 2, 42, 47.
104 Cf. Rom. 12, 1.
105 Cf 1 Pet. 3, 15
107 Cf. Rom; 8,17 Col. 1, 24; 2 Tim. 2,
11-12; 1 Pet. 4, 13.
108 Cf. Eph. 5, 32.
109 Cf. 1 Cor. 7, 7.
110 Cf. Heb. 13, 15.
111 Cf. Jn. 2, 20, 27
112 Cf. 1 Thess. 2, 13.
113 Cf. Jud. 3
114 1 Cor. 12, 11.
115 Cf. 1 Thess 5, 12, 19-21.
116 Cf. Jn. 11, 52.
117 Cf. Heb. 1, 2.
119 Cf. Acts 2, 42.
120 Cf. Jn. 18, 36
121 Cf. Ps. 2, 8.
122 Cf. Ps. 71 (72), 10; Is. 60, 4-7; Apoc.
21, 24.
123 1 Pet. 4, 10.
124 Cf. Mc 16, 16; Jn. 3, 5.
125 Cf. Rom. 9, 4-5
126 Cf. Rom. 1 l, 28-29.
127 Cf. Acts 17,25-28.
128 Cf. 1 Tim. 2, 4.
129 Cf Rom. 1, 21, 25.
130 Mk. 16, 16.
131 Cf. ln. 20, 21.
132 Mt. 21,18-20.
133 Cf. Acts 1, 8.
134 I Cor. 9 16.
135 Mal. 1, 11
136 Jn. 20, 21.
137 Mk. 3, 13-19; Mt. 10, 1-42.
138 Cf Lk. 6, 13.
139 Cf. Jn. 21, 15-17.
140 Rom. 1, 16.
141 Cf. Mt. 28, 16-20; Mk. 16, 15; Lk. 24,
45-48; Jn. 20, 21-23.
142 Cf. Mt. 28, 20.
143 Cf. Acts 2, 1-26.
144 Acts 1, 8.
145 Cf. Cf. Mk. 16, 20.
146 Cf. Apoc. 21, 14; Mt. 16, 18; Eph. 2, 20.
147 Cf. Mt. 28, 20.
148 Cf. Act. 20, 28.
149 Cf. Lk. 10, 16.
150 Cf. 1 Cor. 4, 15.
151 Cf. 1 Cor. 4, 1.
152 Cf. Rom. 15, 16; Act. 20, 24.
153 Cf. 2 Cor. 3, 8-9.
154 Cf Acts 1, 8 2 4, Jn. 20, 22-23.
155 Cf 1 Tim. 4 14; 2 Tim. 1, 6-7.
156 Cf. Mt. 16, 18-19.
157 Cf. Jn. 21, 15 ff.
158 Mt. 16, 19.
159 Mt. 18, 18; 28, 16-20.
160 Cf . Mt. 5, 10.
161 Cf. Mt. 28, 18; Mk. 16, 15-16; Acts 26,17
ff.
162 Cf Acts 1, 8- 2, 1 ff; 9, 15.
163 Cf Acts 1 17, 25; 21, 19; Rom. 11, 13; i
Tim. 1, 12.
164 Cf. Mt. 13, 52.
165 Cf.2 Tim. 4, 1-4.
166 Cf. Lk. 22, 32.
167 Cf. 1. Thess. 1, 5.
168 Cf. Rom. 1, 16.
169 Cf. Lk. 22, 26-27.
170 Cf. Mt. 20, 28; Mk. 10, 45.
171 Cf. Jn. 10, 11.
172 Cf. Heb. 5, 1-2.
173 Cf. Heb. 13,17.
174 cf Rom.. 1, 14-15.
175 Cf 1 Cor. 4, 15.
176 Jn. 10.36.
177 Heb. 5, 1-10; 7,24; 9, 11-28.
178 1 Tim. 2, 5.
179 Cf. 1 Cor. 11, 26.
180 Cf. Heb. 9, 11-28.
181 Heb. 5, 1-4.
182 ln. 4, 24.
183 Cf. 1 Tim. 5, 17.
184 Cf. Eph. 4, 12.
185 Cf. Jn. 15, 15.
186 Cf. 1 Cor. 4, 15; 1 Pet. 1, 23.
187 1 Pet. 5,3.
188 Cf 1 Cor. 1, 2; 2 Cor. 1, 1.
189 Cf Lk. 15, 4-7.
190 Eph. 4, 15-16.
191 1 Rom. 12, 4-5
192 cf Eph. 4, 5.
193 Gal. 3, 28; cf. Col. 3, 11.
194 Cf. 2 pt. 1,1.
195 1 Cor. 12, 11.
196 Cf. Mt. 20, 28.
197 Eph. 4, 7.
198 Cf. Phil. 4, 3; Rom. 16, 3ff.
199 Pet. 2, 5.
200 Cf. Act. 2, 17-18; Apoc. 19, 10.
201 Cf. Eph. 5, 16; Col. 4, 5.
202 Cf. Rom. 8, 25.
203 Eph. 6, 12.fi3
204 Cf. Apoc. 21, 1.
205 Cf. Heb. 11-1
206 Cf. Phil. 2, 8-9.
207 Cf 1 Cor. 15, 27
208 Cf. Rom. 6, 12.
209 Cf Rom. 8, 21.
210 I Cor. 3, 23.
211 Cf. Heb. 13, 17.
212 Cf. Gal. 5, 12.
213 Cf Mt. 5, 3-9.
214 Cf Eph. 5, 25-26.
215 l Thess. 4, 3; Eph.
216 Mt. 5, 48.
217 Cf. Mc. 12, 30.
218 Cf Jn. 13, 34; 15, 12.
219 Eph. 5, 3.
220 Col . 3, 12.
221 Cf. Gal. 5, 22; Rom. 6, 22.
222 Cf. Jas. 3, 2.
223 1 Mt. 6, 12.
224 Cf. 1 Pet. 5, 3.
225 Cf. 1 Tim. 3,, 8-10 and 12-1
226 1 pt 5, 10.
227 1 Jn. 4, 16.
228 Cf. Rom 5. 5.
229 Cf. Col. 3, 14; Rom. 13, 10.
230 Cf. 1. Jn. 3, 16; Jn. 15, 13.
231 Cf 1 Cor. 7, 32-34.
232 Cf Mt. l9, 11; 1 Cor.7,7.
233 Phil. 2, 7-8.
234 2 Cor. 8, 9.
235 Cf 1. Cor. 7, 31ff.
236 Ezech. 34, 14.
237 Acts 3, 21.
238 Cf Eph. 1, 1O; Col. 1, 20; 2 3, 10-13.
239 Cf. Jn. 12, 32.
240 cf. Rom. 6, 9.
241 Cf. Phil. 2, 12.
242 Cf 1 Cor. 10. 11.
243 Cf. 2. Pet. 3, 13.
244 Cf. Rom. 8, 19-22.
245 Eph. 1, 14.
246 Cf. 1 Jn. 3, 1.
247 Cf. Col- 3. 4
248 Cf. 1 Jn. 3, 2
249 2 Cor. 5, 6.
250 Cf. Rom. 8, 23.
251 Cf. Phil. 1. 23.
252 Cf. 2 Cor 5, 15.
253 Cf. 2 Cor. 5, 9.
254 Cf.Eph.6, 11-13.
255 Cf. Heb 9, 27.
256 Cf. Mt. 25, 31-46.
257 Cf. Mt. 25, 41.
258 Cf. Mt. 25, 26.
259 Mt. 22, 13 and 25. 30.
260 2 Cor. 5, 10.
261 Jn. 5, 29; Cf. Matt. 25, 46.
262 Ram. 8, 18; cf. 2 Tim. 2, 11-12.
263 Tit. 2, 13.
264 Phil. 3, 21.
265 2 Thess. 1, 10.
266 Cf. Mt. 25, 31.
267 Cf. 1 Cor. 15, 26-27.
268 Cf. Eph. 4, 16.
269 Cf. 1 Cor. 12, 12-27.
270 Cf. 2 Cor. 5, 8.
271 Cf. 1 Tim. 2, 5.
272 Cf. Col. 1, 24.
273 2 Mach. 12, 46.
274 Cf. Heb. 13, 14; 11, 10.
275 cf. 2 Cor. 3, 18.
276 Cf. Heb. 12, 1.
277 Cf Eph 4, 1-6.
278 Cf. Apoc. 5, 9.
279 Cf. Heb. 3, 6.
280 Cf. Apoc. 21, 24.
281 Apoc. 5, 12.
282 Apoc. 5, 13-14.
283 Gal. 4, 4-5.
284 Cf. Gen. 3. 15.
285 Cf Is 7, 14; cf. Mich. 5, 2-3; Mt. 1,
22-23.
286 Cf. Lk. 1, 28.
287 Lk. 1 , 38.
288 Cf. Lk. 1, 41-45.
289 Cf. Lk. 2, 34-35
290 Cf. Lk. 2, 41-51.
291 Cf. Jn. 2, 1-11.
292 Cf. Mk. 3. 35; 27-28.
293 Cf. Lk. 2, 19, 51.
294 Cf. Jn. 19, 25.
295 Cf. Jn. 19, 26-27.
296 Acts 1, 14.
297 Cf Apoc. 19. 16
298 1 Tim. 2, 5-6.
299 Rom. 8, 29.
300 Cf. Eph 5, 27.
301 Lk. 1, 48.
302 Cf. Col. 1, 15-16.
303 Col 1, 19.
304 Cf. 2 Pet. 3, 10.
SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES (*)
Chapter I
(1) Cfr. S. Cyprianus, Epist. 64, 4: PL 3,
1017. CSEL (Hartcl), III B p. 720. S. Hilarius Pict., In Mt 23, 6: PL
9, 1047. S. Augustinus, passim. S. Cyrillus Alex., Glaph in Gen. 2,
10: PG 69, 110 A.
(2) Cfr. S. Gregorius M., Hom in Evang. 19,
1: PL 76, 1154 B. S Augustinus, Serm. 341, 9, 11: PL 39, 1499 s. S.
Io. Damascenus, Adv. Iconocl. 11: PG 96, 1357.
(3) Cfr. S. Irenaeus, adv. Haer, 111 24, 1:
PG 7, 966 B; Harvey 2, 13i, ed. Sagnard, Sources Chr., p 398.
(4) S. Cyprianus, De Orat Dom. 23: PL 4, 5S3,
Hartel, III A, p. 28S. S. Augustinus, Serm. 71, 20, 33: PL 38, 463 s.
S. Io. Damascenus, Adv. Iconocl. 12: PG 96, 1358 D.
(5) Cfr. Origenes, In Matth. 16, 21: PG 13,
1443 C, Tertullianus Adv. Marc. 3, 7: PL 2, 357 C, CSEL 47, 3 p. 386.
Pro documentis liturgicis, cfr. Sacramentarium Gregorianum: PL 78, 160
B.Vel C. Mohlberg, Liber Sactamentorum romanae ecclesiae, Romao 195O,
p. 111, XC:.Deus, qui ex omni coaptacione sanctorum aeternum tibi
condis habitaculum..... Hymnus Urbs Ierusalem beata in Breviario
monastico, et Coclest urbs Ierusalem in Breviario Romano.
(6) Cfr. S. Thomas, Sumtna Theol. III, q. 62,
a. 5, ad 1.
(7) Cfr. Pius XII, Litt. Encycl Mystici
Corporis, 29 iun. 1943 AAS 35 (1943), p. 208.
(8) Cfr. Leo XIII, Epist. Encycl Divinum
illud, 9 maii 1897: AAS 29 (1896-97) p. 6S0. Pius XII, Litt Encyl.
Mystici Corporis, 1. c., pp 219-220; Denz. 2288 (3808).S. Augustinus,
Serm. 268, 2: PL 38 232, ct alibi. S. Io. Chrysostomus n Eph. Hom. 9,
3: PG 62, 72. idymus Alex., Trin. 2, 1: PG 39 49 s. S. Thomas, In Col.
1, 18 cet. 5 ed. Marietti, II, n. 46-Sieut constituitur unum eorpus ex
nitate animae, ita Ecelesia ex unil atc Spiritus.....
(9) Leo XIII, Litt. Encycl. Sapientiae
christianae, 10 ian. 1890 AAS 22 (1889-90) p. 392. Id., Epist. Encycl.
Satis cognitium, 29 iun. 1896; AAS 28 (1895-96) pp. 710 ct 724 ss.
Pius XII, Litt. Eneyel. Mystici Corporis, 1. c., pp. 199-200.
(10) Cfr. Pius XII, Litt. Encycl. Mystici
Corporis, 1. c., p. 221 ss. Id., Lin. Encycl. Humani genesis, 12 Aug.
1950: AAS 42 (1950) p. 571.
(11) Leo XIII, Epist. Encycl. Satis cognitum,
1. c., p. 713.
(12) Cfr. Symbolum Apostolicum: Denz. 6-9
(10-13); Symb. Nic.-Const.: Denz. 86 (150), coll. Prof. fidei Trid.:
Denz. 994 et 999 (1862 et 1868).
(13) Dieitur. Saneta (catholica apostolica)
Romana Ecelesia .: in Prof. fidei Trid., 1. c. et Concl. Vat. I, Sess.
III, Const. dogm. de fide cath.: Denz. 1782 (3001).
(14) S. Augustinus, Civ. Dei, XVIII, 51, 2:
PL 41, 614.
Chapter II
(1) Cfr. S. Cyprianus, Epist. 69, 6: PL 3,
1142 B; Hartel 3 B, p. 754: inseparabile unitatis sacramentum ..
(2) Cfr. Pius XII, Alloc. Magnificate Dominum,
2 nov. 1954: AAS 46 (1954) p. 669. Litt. Encycl. Mediator Dei, 20 nov.
1947: AAS 39 (1947) p. 555.
(3) Cfr. Pius XI, Litt. Encycl.
Miserentissimus Redemptor, 8 maii 1928: AAS 20 (1928) p. 171 s. Pius
XII Alloc. Vous nous avez, 22 sept. 1956: AAS 48 (1956) p. 714.
(4) Cfr. S. Thomas, Summa Theol. III, q. 63,
a. 2.
(5) Cfr. S. Cyrillus Hieros., Catech. 17, de
Spiritu Sancto, II, 35-37: PG 33, 1009-1012. Nic. Cabasilas, De vita
in Christo, lib. III, de utilitate chrismatis: PG 150, 569-580. S.
Thomas, Summa Theol. III, q. 65, a. 3 et q. 72, a. 1 et 5.
(6) Cfr. Pius XII, Litt. Encycl. Mediator Dei
20 nov. 1947: AAS 39 (1947), paesertim p. 552 s.
(7) I Cor. 7, 7: . Unusquisque proprium donum
(idion charisma) habet ex Deo: alius quidem sic alius vero sic .. Cfr.
S. Augustinus, De Dono Persev. 14, 37: PL 45, 1015 s.: Non tantum
continenti Dei donum est, sed coniugatorum etiam castitas.
(8) Cfr. S. Augustinus, D Praed. Sanct. 14,
27: PL 44, 980.
(9) Cfr. S. Io. Chrysostomus, In Io. Hom. 65,
1: PG 59, 361.
(10) Cfr. S. Irenaeus, Adv. Haer. III, 16, 6;
III, 22, 1-3: PG 7, 925 C-926 Aet 955 C - 958 A; Harvey 2, 87 s. et
120-123; Sagnard, Ed. Sources Chret., pp. 290-292 et 372 ss.
(11) Cfr. S. Ignatius M., Ad Rom., Praef.:
Ed. Funk, I, p. 252.
(12) Cfr. S. Augustinus, Bapt. c. Donat. V,
28, 39; PL 43, 197: Certe manifestum est, id quod dicitur, in Ecdesia
intus et foris, in corde, non in corpore cogitandum. Cfr. ib., III,
19, 26: col. 152; V, 18, 24: col. 189; In Io. Tr. 61, 2: PL 35, 1800,
et alibi saepe.
(13) Cfr. Lc. 12, 48: Omni autem, cui multum
datum est, multum quaeretur ab eo. Cfr. etiam Mt. 5, 19-20; 7, 21-22;
25 41-46; Iac., 2, 14.
(14) Cfr. Leo XIII, Epist. Apost. Praeclara
gratulationis, 20 iun. 1894; AAS 26 (1893-94) p. 707.
(15) Cfr. Leo XIII, Epist. Encycl. Satis
cognitum, 29 iun. 1896: ASS 28 (1895-96) p. 738. Epist. Encycl.
Caritatis studium, 25 iul. 1898: ASS 31 (1898-99) p. 11. Pius XII,
Nuntius radioph. Nell'alba, 24 dec. 1941: AAS 34 (1942) p. 21.
(16) Cfr. Pius XI, Litt. Encycl. Rerum
Orientalium, 8 sept. 1928: AAS 20 (1928) p. 287. Pius XII, Litt.
Encycl Orientalis Ecclesiae, 9 apr. 1944: AAS 36 (1944) p. 137
(17) Cfr. Inst. S.S.C.S. Officii 20 dec.
1949: AAS 42 (1950) p.142.
(18) Cfr. S. Thomas, Summa Theol. III, q. 8,
a. 3, ad 1.
(19) Cfr. Epist. S.S.C.S. Officii ad Archiep.
Boston.: Denz. 3869-72.
(20) Cfr. Eusebius Caes., Praeparatio
Evangelica, 1, 1: PG 2128 AB.
(21) Cfr. Benedictus XV, Epist. Apost.
Maximum illud: AAS 11 (1919) p. 440, praesertim p. 451 ss. Pius XI,
Litt. Encycl. Rerum Ecclesiae: AAS 18 (1926) p. 68-69. Pius XII, Litt.
Encycl. Fidei Donum, 21 apr. 1957: AAS 49 (1957) pp. 236-237.
(22) Cfr. Didache, 14: ed. Funk I, p. 32. S.
Iustinus, Dial. 41: PG 6, 564. S. Irenaeus, Adv. Haer. IV 17, 5; PG 7,
1023; Harvey, 2, p. 199 s. Conc. Trid., Sess. 22, cap. 1; Denz. 939
(1742).
Chapter III
(1) Cfr. Conc. Vat. I, Sess. IV, Const. Dogm.
Pastor aeternus. Denz. 1821 (3050 s.).
(2) Cfr. Conc. Flor., Decretum pro Graecis:
Denz. 694 (1307) et Conc. Vat. I, ib.: Denz. 1826 (3059)
(3) Cfr. Liber sacramentorum S. Gregorii,
Praefatio in Cathedra S. Petri, in natali S. Mathiae et S. Thomas: PL
78, 50, 51 et 152. S. Hilarius, In Ps. 67, 10: PL 9, 4S0; CSEL 22, p.
286. S.Hieronymus, Adv. Iovin. 1, 26: PL 23, 247 A. S. Augustinus, In
Ps. 86, 4: PL 37, 1103. S. Gregorius M., Mor. in lob, XXVIII, V: PL
76, 455-456. Primasius, Comm. in Apoc. V: PL 68, 924 BC. Paschasius
Radb., In Matth. L. VIII, cap. 16: PL 120, 561 C. Cfr. Leo XIII, Epist.
Et sane, 17 dec. 1888: AAS 21 (1888) p. 321.
(4) Cfr. Act 6, 2-6; 11, 30; 13, 1, 14, 23;
20, 17; 1 Thess. 5, 12-13; Phil. 1, 1 Col. 4, 11, et passim.
(5) Cfr. Act. 20, 25-27; 2 Tim. 4, 6 s. coll.
c. I Tim. 5, 22; 2 Tim. 2, 2 Tit. 1, 5; S. Clem. Rom., Ad Cor. 44, 3;
ed. Funk, 1, p. 156.
(6) S. Clem. Rom., ad Cor. 44, 2; ed. Funk,
I, p. 154 s.
(7) Cfr. Tertull., Praescr. Haer. 32; PL 2,
52 s.; S. Ignatius M., passim.
(8) Cfr. Tertull., Praescr. Haer. 32; PL 2,
53.
(9) Cfr. S. Irenaeus, Adv. Haer. III, 3, 1;
PG 7, 848 A; Harvey 2, 8; Sagnard, p. 100 s.: manifestatam.
(10) Cfr. S. Irenaeus, Adv. Haer. III, 2, 2;
PG 7, 847; Harvey 2, 7; Sagnard, p. 100: . custoditur ,., cfr. ib. IV,
26, 2; col. 1O53, Harvey 2, 236, necnon IV, 33, 8; col. 1077; Harvey
2, 262.
(11) S. Ign. M., Philad., Praef.; ed. Funk,
I, p. 264.
(12) S. Ign. M., Philad., 1, 1; Magn. 6, 1;
Ed. Funk, I, pp. 264 et 234.
(13) S. Clem. Rom., 1. c., 42, 3-4, 44, 3-4;
57, 1-2; Ed. Funk. I, 152, 156, 171 s. S. Ign. M., Philad. 2; Smyrn.
8; Magn. 3; Trall. 7; Ed. Funk, I, p. 265 s.; 282; 232 246 s. etc.; S.
Iustinus, Apol., 1, 6S G 6, 428; S. Cyprianus, Epist. assim.
(14) Cfr. Leo XIII, Epist. Encycl. Satis
cognitum, 29 iun. 896: ASS 28 (1895-96) p. 732.
(15) Cfr. Conc. Trid., Sess. 23, ecr. de sacr.
Ordinis, cap. 4; enz. 960 (1768); Conc. Vat. I, ess. 4 Const. Dogm. I
De Ecclesia Christi, cap. 3: Denz. 1828 (3061). Pius XII, Litt. Encycl.
Mystici Cororis, 29 iun. 1943: ASS 35 (1943) p. 209 et 212. Cod. Iur.
Can., c. 29 1.
(16) Cfr. Leo XIII, Epist. Et sane, 17 dec.
1888: ASS 21 (1888) p. 321 s.
(17) S. Leo M., Serm. 5, 3: PL 54, 154.
(18) Conc. Trid., Sess. 23, cap. 3, citat
verba 2 Tim. 1, 6-7, ut demonstret Ordinem esse verum sacramentum:
Denz. 959 (1766).
(19) In Trad. Apost. 3, ed. Botte, Sources
Chr., pp. 27-30, Episcopo tribuitur primatus sacerdotii. Cfr.
Sacramentarium Leonianum, ed. C. Mohlberg, Sacramentarium Veronense,
Romae, 195S, p. 119: ad summi sacerdotii ministerium... Comple in
sacerdotibus tuis mysterii tui summam.... Idem, Liber Sacramentorum
Romanae Ecclesiae Romae, 1960, pp. 121-122: Tribuas eis, Domine,
cathedram episcopalem ad regendam Ecclesiam tuam et plebem universam..
Cfr. PL 78, 224.
(20) Trad. Apost. 2, ed. Botte, p. 27.
(21) Conc. Trid., Sess. 23, cap. 4, docet
Ordinis sacramentum imprimere characterem indelebilem: Denz. 960
(1767) . Cfr. Ioannes XXIII, Alloc. Iubilate Deo, 8 maii 1960: AAS S2
(1960) p. 466. Pall1us VI, Homelia in Bas, Vaticana, 20 oct. 1963: AAS
55 (1963) p. 1014.
(22) S. Cyprianus, Epist. 63, 14: PL 4, 386;
Hartel, III B, p. 713: Saccrdos vice Christi vere fungitur .. S. Io.
Chrysostomus, In 2 Tim. Hom. 2, 4: PG 62, 612: Saccrdos est symbolon .
Christi. S. Ambrosius, In Ps. 38, 25-26: PL 14, 105 1-52: CSEL 64,
203- 204. Ambrosiascr In I Tim. S 19: PL 17, 479 C ct in Eph. 4,
1;-12: col. 387. C. Theodorus Mops., from. Catech. XV, 21 ct 24: ed.
Tonneau, pp. 497 et 503. Hesychiu Hieros., In Lcv. L. 2, 9, 23: PG 93,
894 B.
(23) Cfr. Eusebius, Hist. ecl., V, 24, 10:
GCS II, 1, p. 49S; cd. Bardy, Sources Chr. II, p. 69 Dionysius, apud
Eusebium, ib. VII 5, 2: GCS 11, 2, p. 638 s.; Bardy, II, p. 168 s.
(24) Cfr. de antiquis Conciliis, Eusebius,
Hist. Eccl. V, 23-24: GCS 11, 1, p. 488 ss.; Bardy, 11, p. 66 ss. et.
passim. Conc. Nicaenum. Can. S: Conc. Oec. Decr. p. 7.
(25) Tertullianus, de Iciunio, 13: PL 2, 972
B; CSFL 20, p. 292,lin. 13-16.
(26) S. Cyprianus, Epist. 56, 3: Hartel, 111
B, p. 650; Bayard, p.154.
(27) Cfr. Relatio officialis Zinelli, in
Conc. Vat. I: Mansi S2,1 109 C.
(28) Cfr. Conc. Vat. 1, Schema Const. dogm.
11, de Ecclesia Christi, c. 4: Mansi S3, 310. Cfr. Relatio Kleutgen de
Schemate reformato: Mansi S3, 321 B - 322 B et declaratio Zinelli:
Mansi 52 1110 A. Vide etiam S. Leonem M. Scrm. 4, 3: PL 54, 151 A.
(29) Cfr. Cod. Iur. Can., c. 227.
(30) Cfr. Conc. Vat. I, Const.Dogm. Pastor
aeternis: Denz. 1821 (3050 s.).
(31) Cfr. S. Cyprianus, Epist. 66, 8: Hartel
111, 2, p. 733: .. Episcopus in Ecclesia et Ecclesia in Episcopo ..
(32) Cfr. S. Cyprianus, Epist. SS, 24: Hartel,
p. 642, line. 13: . Una Ecclesia per totum mundum in multa membra
divisa .. Epist. 36, 4: Hartel, p. 575, lin. 20-21.
(33) Cfr. Pius XII, Litt. Encycl. Fidci Donum,
21 apr. 1957: AAS 49 (1957) p. 237.
(34) Cfr. S. Hilarius Pict., In Ps. 14, 3: PL
9, 206; CSEL 22, p. 86. S. Gregorius M., Moral, IV, 7, 12: PL 75, 643
C. Ps.Basilius, In Is. 15, 296: PG 30, 637 C.
(35) S. Coelestinus, Epist. 18, 1-2, ad Conc.
Eph.: PL 50, 505 AB- Schwartz, Acta Conc. Oec. 1, I, i, p. 22. Cfr.
Benedictus XV, Epist. Apost. Maximum illud: AAS 11 (1919) p. 440, Pius
XI. Litt. Encycl. Rerum Ecclesiae, 28 febr. 1926: AAS 18 (1926) p. 69.
Pius XII, Litt. Encycl. Fidei Donum, 1. c.
(36) Leo XIII, Litt. Encycl. I Grande munus,
30 sept. 1880: ASS 13 (1880) p. 14S. Cfr. Cod. Iur. | Can., c. 1327;
c. 13S0 2.
(37) De iuribus Sedium patriarchalium, cfr.
Conc. Nicaenum, I can. 6 de Alexandria et Antiochia, et can. 7 de
Hierosolymis: Conc. I Oec. Decr., p. 8. Conc. Later. IV, anno 1215,
Constit. V: De dignigate Patriarcharum: ibid. p. 212.-| Conc.
Ferr.-Flor.: ibid. p. 504.
(38) Cfr. Cod. luris pro Eccl. I Orient., c.
216-314: de Patriarchis; c. 324-399: de Archiepiscopis I maioribus; c.
362-391: de aliis dignitariis; in specie, c. 238 3; 216; 240; 251;
255: de Episcopis a Patriarch nominandis.
(39) Cfr. Conc. Trid., Decr. de I reform.,
Sess. V, c. 2, n. 9; et Sess. I XXlV, can. 4; Conc. Oec. Decr. pp. 645
et 739.
(40) Cfr. Conc. Vat. I, Const. dogm. Dei
Filius, 3: Denz. 1712l (3011). Cfr. nota adiecta ad Schema I de Eccl.
(desumpta ex.S. Rob. Bellarmino): Mansi 51, I 579 C, necnon Schema
reformatum I Const. II de Ecclesia Christi, cum I commentario Kleutgen:
Mansi 53, 313 AB. Pius IX, Epist. Tuas libener: Denz. 1683 (2879).
(41) Cfr. Cod. Iur. Can., c. 1322-1323.
(42) Cfr. Conc. Vat. I, Const. dogm. Pastor
Aecrnus: Denz. 1839 (3074).
(43) Cfr. ecplicatio Gasscr in Conc. Vat. I:
Mansi 52, 1213 AC.
(44) Gasser, ib.: Mansi 1214 A.
(45) Gasser, ib.: Mansi 1215 CD, 1216-1217 A.
(46) Gasser, ib.: Mansi 1213.
(47) Conc. Vat. I, Const. dogm. Pastor
Aesernus, 4: Denz. 1836 (3070) no. 26
(48) Oratio consecrationis cpiscopalis in
ritu byzantino: Euchologion to mega, Romae, 1873, p. 139.
(49) Cfr. S. Ignatius M. Smyrn 8, 1: ed.
Funk, 1, p. 282.
(50) Cfr. Act. 8, 1; 14, 22-23; 20, 17, et
passim.
(51) Oratio mozarabica: PL 96 7S9 B
(52) Cfr. S. Ignatius M., Smyrn 8, 1: ed.
Funk, I, p. 282.
(53) S. Thomas, Summa Theol. III, q. 73, a.
3.
(54) Cfr. S. Augustinus, C. Faustum, 12, 20:
PL 42, 26S Serm. 57, 7: PL 38, 389, etc.
(55) S. Leo M., Serm. 63, 7: PL 54, 3S7 C.
(56) Traditio A postolica Hippolyti, 2-3: ed.
Botte, pp. 26-30.
(57) Cfr. textus examinis in initio
consecrationis episcopalis, et Oratio in fine vissae eiusdem
consecrationis, post Te Deum.
(58) Benedictus XIV, Br. Romana Ecclesia, 5
oct. 1752, p 1: Bullarium Benedicti XIV, t. IV, Romae, 1758, 21: .
Episcopus Christi typum gerit, Eiusque munere fungitur. Pius XII, Litt.
Encycl. Mystici Corporis, 1. c., p. 211: . Assignatos sibi greges
singuli singulos Christi nomine pascunt et regunt.
(59) Leo XIII, Epist. Encycl. Satis cognitum,
29 iun. 1896: ASS 28 (1895-96) p. 732. Idem, Epist. Officio
sanctissimo, 22 dec. 1887: AAS 20 (1887) p. 264. Pius IX itt. Apost.
ad Episcopol Geraniae, 12 mart. 1875, et alloc. onsist., 15 mart.
187S: Denz. 112-3117, in nova ed. tantum.
(60) Conc. Vat. I, Const. dogm. Pastor
aeternus, 3: Denz. 1828 ( 3061) . Cfr. Relatio Zinelli: Mand 1 2, 1114
D.
(61) Cfr. S. Ignatius M., ad ephes. 5, 1: ed.
Funk, I, p. 216.
(62) Cfr. S. Ignatius M., ad phes. 6, 1: cd.
Funk, I, p. 218.
(63) Cfr. Conc. Trid., Sess. 23, sacr.
Ordinis, cap. 2: Denz. 958 (1765), et can. 6: Denz. 966 (1776).
(64) Cfr. Innocentius I, Epist. d Decentium:
PL 20, 554 A; sansi 3, 1029; Denz. 98 (215): Presbyteri, licet secundi
sint sa erdotcs, pontificatus tamen api em non habent.. S. Cyprianus,
Epist. 61, 3: ed. Hartel, p. 696.
(65) Cfr. Conc. Trid., l. c., Denz. 962-968
(1763-1778), et in specie l an. 7: Denz. 967 (1777). Pius l II, Const.
Apost. Sacramentum ordinis: Denz. 2301 (38S7-61).
(66) Cfr. Innocentius I, 1. c. S. Gregorius
Naz., Apol. II, 22: PGS, 432 B. Ps.-Dionysius, Eccl. ier., 1, 2: PG 3,
372 D.
(67) Cfr. Conc. Trid., Sess. 22: Denz. 940
(1743). Pius XII, Litt. Encycl. Mediator Dei, 20 nov. 1947: AAS 39
(1947) p. 553; Denz. 2300 (3850).
(68) Cfr. Conc. Trid. Sess. 22: Denz. 938
(1739-40). Conc. Vat.II, Const. De Sacra Liturgia, n. 7 et n. 47.
(69) Cfr. Pius XII, Litt. Encycl. Mediator
Dei, 1. c., sub. n. 67.
(70) Cfr. S. Cyprianus, Epist. 11, 3: PL 4,
242 B; Hartel, II, 2, p. 497.
(71) Ordo consecrationis sacerdotalis, in
impositione vestimentorum.
(72) Ordo consecrationis sacerdotalis in
praefatione.
(73) Cfr. S. Ignatius M. Philad. 4: ed. Funk,
I, p. 266. S. Cornelius I, apud S. Cyprianum, Epist. 48, 2: Hartel,
III, 2, p. 610.
(74) Constitutiones Ecclesiac aegyptiacae,
III, 2: ed. Funk, Didascalia, II, p. 103. Statuta Eccl. Ant. 371:
Mansi 3, 954.
(75) S. Polycarpus, Ad Phil. 5, 2: ed. Funk,
I, p. 300: Christus dicitur . omnium diaconus factus .. Cfr. Didache,
15, 1: ib., p. 32. S.Ignatius M. Trall. 2, 3: ib., p. 242.
Constitutiones Apostolorum, 8, 28, 4: ed. Funk, Didascalia, I, p. 530.
Chapter IV
(1) S. Augustinus, Serm. 340, 1: PL 38, 1483.
(2) Cfr. Pius XI, Litt. Encycl. Quadragesimo
anno 15 maii 1931: AAS 23 (1931) p. 121 s. Pius XII, Alloc. De quelle
consolation, 14 oct. 1951: AAS 43 (1951) p. 790 s.
(3) Cfr. Pius XII, Alloc. Six ans se sont
ecoules, 5 oct. l9S7: AAS 49 (19S7) p. 927. De mandato et missione
canonica, cfr. Decretum De Apostolatu laicorum, cap. IV, n. 16, cum
notis 12 et 15.
(4) Ex Praefatione festi Christi Regis.
(5) Cfr. Leo XIII, Epist. Encycl. Immortale
Dei, 1 nov. 188S: ASS 18 (188S) p. 166 ss. Idem, Litt. Encycl.
Sapientae christianae, 10 ian. 1890: ASS 22 (1889-90) p. 397 ss. Pius
XII, Alloc. Alla vostra filfale. 23 mart. l9S8: AAS S0 (145R ) p. 220:
Ia Iegittima sana laicita dello Stato ..
(6) Cod. Iur. Can., can. 682.
(7) Cfr. Pius XII, Alloc. De quelle
consolation, 1. c., p. 789: Dans les batailles decisives, c'est
parfois du front que partent les plus heureuses initiatives..Idem
Alloc. L'importance de la presse catholique, 17 febr. 1950: AAS 42
(1950) p. 256.
(8) Cfr. l Thess. S, 19 et 1 lo. 4, 1.
(9) Epist. ad Diogneum, 6: ed. Funk, I, p.
400. Cfr. S. Io.Chrysostomus, In Matth. Hom. 46 (47) 2: PG 58, 78, de
fermento in massa.
Chapter V
(1) Missale Romanum, Gloria in excelsis. Cfr.
Lc. 1, 35; Mc. 1, 24, Lc. 4, 34; Io. 6, 69 (ho hagios tou theou); Act.
3, 14; 4, 27 et 30;Hebr. 7, 26, 1 Io. 2, 20; Apoc. 3, 7.
(2) Cfr. Origenes, Comm. Rom. 7, 7: PG 14,
1122 B. Ps.- Macarius, De Oratione, 11: PG 34, 861 AB. S. Thomas,
Summa Theol. II-II, q. 184, a. 3.
(3) Cfr. S. Augustinus Retract. II, 18: PL
32, 637 s. Pius XII Litt. Encycl. Mystici Corporis, 29 iun. 1943: AAS
35 (1943) p. 225.
(4) Cfr. Pius XI, Litt. Encycl. Rerum omnium,
26 ian. 1923: AAS 15 (1923) p. 50 ct pp. 59-60. Litt. Encycl. Casti
Connubii, 31 dec. 1930: AAS 22 (1930) p. 548. Pius XII, Const. Apost.
Provida Mater, 2 febr. 1947: AAS 39 (1947) p. 117. Alloc. Annus sacer,
8 dec. 1950: AAS 43 (1951) pp. 27-28. Alloc. Nel darvi, 1 iul. 1956:
AAS 48 (1956) p. 574 s.
(5) Cfr. S. Thomas, Summa Theol. II-II, q.
184, a. 5 et 6. De perf . vitae spir., c. 18. Origenes, In Is. Hom. 6,
1: PG 13, 239.
(6) Cfr. S. Ignatius M., Magn. 13, 1: ed.
Funk, I, p. 241.
(7) Cfr. S. Pius X, Exhort. Haerent animo, 4
aug. 1908: ASS 41 (1908) p. 560 s. Cod. Iur. Can., can. 124. Pius XI,
Litt. Encycl. Ad catholici sacerdotii, 20 dec. 1935: AAS 28 (1936) p.
22 s.
(8) Ordo consecrationis sacerdotalis, in
Exhortatione initiali.
(9) Cfr. S. Ignatius M., Trall. 2, 3: cd.
Funk, l, p. 244.
(10) Cfr. Pius XII, Alloc. Sous la maternclle
protection, 9 dec. 1957: AAS 50 (19S8) p. 36.
(11) Pius XI, Litt. Encycl. Castf Connubii,
31 dec. 1930. AAS 22 (1930) p. 548 s. Cfr. S. Io Chrysostomus, In
Ephes. Hom. 20, 2: P. 62, 136 ss.
(12) Cfr. S. Augustinus, Enchir. 121, 32: PL
40 288. S. Thomas Summa Theol. II-II, q. 184, a. 1. Pius XII, Adhort.
Apost. Menti nostrae, 23 sept. 1950: AAS 42 (1950) p. 660.
(13) De consiliis in genere, cfr. Origenes,
Comm. Rom. X, 14: PG 14 127S B. S. Augustinus, De S. Viginitate, 15,
15: PL 40, 403. S. Thomas, Summa Theol. I-II, q. 100, a. 2 C (in
fine); II-II, q. 44, a. 4 ad 3
(14) De praestantia sacrae virginitatis, cfr.
Tertullianus, Exhort. Cast. 10: PL 2, 925 C. S. Cyprianus, Hab. Virg.
3 et 22: PL 4, 443 B et 461 A. A. S. Athanasius (?), De Virg.: PG 28,
252 ss. S. Io. Chrysostomus, De Virg.: PG 48, 533 u.
(15) De spirituali paupertate et oboedientia
testimonia praccipua S.Scripturae et Patrum afferuntur in Relatione
pp. 152-153.
(16) De praxi effectiva consiliorum quae non
omnibus imponitur, cfr. S. Io. Chrysostomus, In Matth. Hom. 7, 7: PG
S7, 8 I s. 5. Ambrosius, De Vidu s, 4, 23: PL 16, 241 s.
Chapter VI
(1) Cfr. Rosweydus, Viqae Patrum, Antwerpiae
1628. Apophtegmata Patrum: PG 65. Palladius, Historia Lausiaca: PG 34,
995 ss.; ed. C. Butler, Cambridge 1898 (1904). Pius XI, Const. Apost.
Umbratilem, 8 iul. 1924: AAS 16 (1924) pp. 386-387. Pius XII, Alloc.
Nous sommes heureux, 11 apr.1958: AAS 50 (1958) p. 283.
(2) Paulus VI, Alloc. Magno gaudio, 23 maii
1964: AAS 56 (1964) p. 566.
(3) Cfr. Cod. Iur. Can., c. 487 et 488, 40.
Pius XII, Alloc. Annus sacer, 8 dec. 1950, AAS 43 (1951) p. 27 s. Pius
XII, Cons. Apost. Provida Mater, 2 Febr. 1947: AAS 39 (1947) p. 120 ss.
(4) Paulus VI, 1. c., p. S67.
(5) Cfr. S. Thomas, Summa Theol. II-II, q.
184, a. 3 et q. 188, a. 2. S. Bonaventura, Opusc. X, Apologia Pauperum,
c. 3, 3: cd. Opera, Quaracchi, t. 8, 1898, p. 245 a.
(6) Cfr. Conc. Vat. I. Schema De Ecclesia
Christi, cap. XV, et Adnot. 48: Mansi 51, 549 s. et 619 s. Leo XIII,
Epist. Au milieu des consolations, 23 dec. 1900: AAS 33 (1900-01) p.
361. Pius XII, Const. Apost. Provida Mater, 1. c., p. 1145.
(7) Cfr. Leo XIII, Const. Romanos Pontifices,
8 maii 1881: AAS 13 (1880-81) p. 483. Pius XII, Alloc. Annus sacer, 8
dec. 1950: AAS 43(1951) p. 28 8.
(8) Cfr. Pius XII, Alloc. Annus sacer, 1. c.,
p. 28. Pius XII, Const. Apost. Sedes Sapientiae, 31 maii 19S6: AAS 48
(1956) p. 355. Paulus VI, 1. c., pp. 570-571.
(9) Cfr. Pius XII Litt. Encycl. Mystici
Corporis, 19 iun. 1943: AAS 35 (1943) p. 214 s.
(10) Cfr. Pius XII, Alloc. Annus sacer, 1.
c., p. 30. Alloc. Sous la maternelle protecrion, 9 dec. l9S7: AAS 50
(19S8) p. 39 s.
Chapter VII
(1) Conc. Florentinum, Decretum pro Graecis:
Denz. 693 (1305).
(2) Praeter documenta antiquiora contra
quamlibet formam evocationis spirituum inde ab Alexandro IV (27 sept.
1958), cfr Encycl. S.S.C.S. Officii, De magne tismi abusu, 4 aug.
1856: AAS (1865) pp. 177-178, Denz. 1653 1654 (2823-2825);
responsioner S.S.C.S. Offici, 24 apr. 1917: 9 (1917) p. 268, Denz. 218
(3642).
(3) Videatur synthetiea espositi huius
doctrinae paulinae in: Piu XII, Litt. Encycl. Mystici Corporis AAS 35
(1943) p. 200 et passilr
(4) Cfr., i. a., S. Augustinus, Enarr. in Ps.
85, 24: PL 37, 1095 S. Hieronymus, Liber contra Vigl lantium, b: PL
23, 344. S. Thomas In 4m Sent., d. 45, q. 3, a. 2. Bonaventura, In 4m
Sent., d. 45, a. 3, q. 2; etc.
(5) Cfr. Pius XII, Litt. Encycl. Mystici
Corporis: AAS 35 (1943) p. 245.
(6) Cfr. Plurimae inseriptione in Catacumbis
romanis.
(7) Cfr. Gelasius I, Decretalis De libris
recipiendis, 3: PL 59, 160, Denz. 165 (353).
(8) Cfr. S. Methodius, Symposion, VII, 3: GCS
(Bodwetseh), p. 74
(9) Cfr. Benedictus XV, Decretum
approbationis virtutum in Causa beatificationis et canonizationis
Servi Dei Ioannis Nepomuecni Neumann: AAS 14 (1922 p. 23; plures
Allocutiones Pii X de Sanetis: Inviti all'croismo Diseorsi... t.
I-III, Romae 1941-1942, passim; Pius XII, Discorsi Radiomessagi, t.
10, 1949, pp 37-43.
(10) Cfr. Pius XII, Litt. Encycl : Mediator
Dei: AAS 39 (1947) p . 581.
(11) Cfr. Hebr. 13, 7: Eccli 44-50, Nebr. 11,
340. Cfr. etia Pius XII, Litt. Encycl. Mediati Dei: AAS 39 (1947) pp.
582-583
(12) Cfr. Cone. Vaticanum Const. De fide
catholica, cap. 3 Denz. 1794 (3013).
(13) Cfr. Pius XII, Litt. Encycl. Mystici
Corporis: AAS 35 (1943) p. 216.
(14) Quoad gratitudinem erga ipsos Sanctos,
cfr. E. Diehl, Inscriptiones latinae christianae vereres, 1, Berolini,
1925, nn. 2008 2382 et passim.
(15) Conc. Tridentinum, Sess. 25, De
invocatione... Sanctorum: Denz. 984 (1821) .
(16) Breviarium Romanum, Invitatorium infesto
Sanctorum Omnium.
(17) Cfr. v. g., 2 Thess. 1, 10.
(18) Conc. Vaticanum II, Const. De Sacra
Liturgia, cap. 5, n. 104.
(19) Canon Missae Romanae.
(20) Conc. Nicaenum II, Act. VII: Denz. 302
(600).
(21) Conc. Florentinum, Decretum pro Graecis:
Denz. 693 (1304).
(22) Conc. Tridentinum Sess. 35, De
invocatione, veneratione et reliquiis Sanctorum et sacris imaginibus:
Denz. 984-988 (1821-1824); Sess. 25, Decretum de Purgatorio: Denz. 983
(1820); Sess. 6, Decretum de iustificatione, can. 30: Denz. 840
(1580).
(23) Ex Praefatione, aliquious dioecesibus
concessa.
(24) Cfr. S. Petrus Canisius, Catechismus
Maior seu Summa Doctrinae christianae, cap. III (ed. crit. F.
Streicher) pas I, pp. 15-16, n. 44 et pp. 100-1O1, n. 49.
(25) Cfr. Conc. Vaticanum II Const. De Sacra
Liturgia, cap. 1 n. 8.
Chapter VIII
(1) Credo in Missa Romana: Symbolum
Constantinopolitanum: Mansi 3, 566. Cfr. Conc. Ephesinum, ib. 4, 1130
(necnon ib. 2, 665 et 4, 1071); Conc. Chalcedonense, ib. 7, 111-116;
Cow. Constantinopolitanum II, ib. 9, 375-396.
(2) Canon Missae Romanae.
(3) S. Augustine, De S. Virginitate. 6: PL
40, 399.
(4) Cfr. Paulus Pp. VI, allocutio in Concilio,
die 4 dec. 1963: AAS 56 (1964) p. 37.
(5) Cfr. S. Germanus Const., Nom. in annunt.
Deiparae: PG 98, 328 A; In Dorm. 2: col. 357. Anastasius Antioch.,
Serm. 2 de Annunt., 2: PG 89, 1377 AB; Serm. 3, 2: col. 1388 C. S.
Andrcas Cret. Can. in B. V. Nat. 4: PG 97, 1321 B. In B. V. Nat., 1:
col. 812 A. Hom. in dorm. 1: col. 1068 C. - S. Sophronius, Or. 2 in
Annunt., 18: PG 87 (3), 3237 BD.
(6) S. Irenaeus, Adv. Hacr. III, 22, 4: PG 7,
9S9 A; Harvey, 2, 123.
(7) S. Irenaeus, ib.; Harvey, 2, 124.
(8) S. Epiphanius, Nacr. 78, 18: PG 42, 728
CD; 729 AB.
(9) S. Hieronymus, Epist. 22, 21: PL 22, 408.
Cfr. S. Augwtinus, Serm. Sl, 2, 3: PL 38, 33S; Serm. 232, 2: col.
1108. - S. Cyrillus Hieros., Catech. 12, 15: PG 33, 741 AB. - S. Io.
Chrysostomus, In Ps. 44, 7: PG SS, 193. - S. Io. Damasccnus, Nom. 2 in
dorm. B.M.V., 3: PG 96, 728.
(10) Cfr. Conc. Lateranense anni 649, Can. 3:
Mansi 10, 1151. S. Leo M., Epist. ad Flav.: PL S4, 7S9. - Conc.
Chalcedonense: Mansi 7, 462. - S. Ambrosius, De inst. virg.: PL 16,
320.
(11) Cfr. Pius XII, Litt. Encycl. Mystici
Corporis, 29 iun. 1943: AAS 35 (1943) pp. 247-248.
(12) Cfr. Pius IX, Bulla Ineffabilis 8 dec.
1854: acta Pii IX, I, I, p. 616; Denz. 1641 (2803).
(13) Cfr. Pius XII, Const. Apost.
Munificensissimus, 1 no. 1950: AAS 42 (1950) ú Denz. 2333 (3903). Cfr.
S. Io. Damascenus, Enc. in dorm. Dei gcnitricis, Hom. 2 et 3: PG 96,
721-761, speciatim col. 728 B. - S. Germanus Constantinop., in S. Dei
gen. dorm. Serm. 1: PG 98 (6), 340-348; Serm. 3: col. 361. - S.
Modestus Hier., In dorm. SS. Deiparae: PG 86 (2), 3277-3312.
(14) Cfr. Pius XII Litt. Encycl. Ad coeli
Reginam, 11 Oct. 1954: AAS 46 (1954), pp. 633-636; Denz. 3913 ss. Cfr.
S. Andreas Cret., Hom. 3 in dorm. SS. Deiparae: PG 97, 1089-1109. - S.
Io. Damascenus, De fide orth., IV, 14: PG 94, 1153-1161.
(15) Cfr. Kleutgen, textus reformstus De
mysterio Verbi incarnati, cap. IV: Mansi 53, 290. cfr. S. Andreas Cret.,
In nat. Mariac, sermo 4: PG 97, 865 A. - S. Germanus Constantinop., In
annunt. Deiparae: PG 98, 321 BC. In dorm. Deiparae, III: col. 361 D.
S. Io. Damascenus, In dorm. B. V. Mariae, Hom. 1, 8: PG 96, 712 BC-713
A.
(16) Cfr. Leo XIII, Litt. Encycl. Adiutricem
populi, 5 sept. 1895: ASS 15 (1895-96), p. 303. - S. Pius X, Litt.
Encycl. Ad diem illum, 2 febr. 1904: Acta, I, p. 154- Denz. 1978 a
(3370) . Pius XI, Litt. Encycl. Miserentissimus, 8 maii 1928: AAS 20
(1928) p. 178. Pius XII, Nuntius Radioph., 13 maii 1946: AAS 38 (1946)
p. 266.
(17) S. Ambrosius, Epist. 63: PL 16, 1218.
(18) S. Ambrosius, Expos. Lc. II, 7: PL 15,
1555.
(19) Cfr. Ps.-Petrus Dam. Serm. 63: PL 144,
861 AB. Godefridus a S. Victore. In nat. B. M., Ms. Paris, Mazarine,
1002, fol. 109 r. Gerhohus Reich., De gloria ct honore Filii hominis,
10: PL 194, 1105AB.
(20) S. Ambrosius, l. c. et Expos. Lc. X,
24-25: PL 15, 1810. S.Augustinus, In lo. Tr. 13, 12: PL 35 1499. Cfr.
Serm. 191, 2, 3: PL 38 1010; etc. Cfr. ctiam Ven. Beda, In Lc. Expos.
I, cap. 2: PL 92, 330. Isaac de Stella, Serm. 51. PL 194, 1863 A.
(21) Sub tuum praesidium
(22) Conc. Nicaenum II, anno 787: Mansi 13.
378-379; Denz. 302 (600-601) . Conc. Trident., sess. 2S: Mansi 33,
171-172.
(23) Cfr. Pius XII, Nunius radioph., 24 oct.
1954: AAS 46 (1954) p. 679. Litt. Encycl. Ad coeli Reginam, 11 oct.
1954: AAS 46 (1954) p. 637.
(24) Cfr. Pius XI, Litt. Encycl. Ecclesiam
Dei, 12 nov. 1923: AAS 15 (1923) p. 581. Pius XII, Litt. Encycl.
Fulgens corona, 8 sept. 1953: AAS 45 (1953) pp. 590-591.
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