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It is not to the nineteenth General Council that, in this summary, we dare
propose to link the history of the twentieth, which followed it almost
exactly three hundred years later. If we are to see the Vatican Council of
1869-70 in relation to any great formative world movement, it is with the
French Revolution that our business lies.
How the great crisis that opened in the year 1789 found the Catholic
religion everywhere in chains, in the various European states, its vitality
low indeed after generations of captivity to the Catholic kings, is one of
the commonplaces of history. And the death of the aged Pius VI, in 1799,
the actual prisoner of the French Republic, was hailed pretty generally by
the observant as the end of the spiritual empire he had ruled so long. But
this funeral of Christianity, as Chesterton once wrote, was interrupted by
the least expected incident of all--the corpse came to life.
The world, as the Revolution and Napoleon left it, would indeed be a new
world. But in the new world the Catholic Church, and its popes, would be
readily discernible. In that new world there would begin, on the very
morrow of the settlement of 1814-15, a grim struggle between the
dispossessed of 1789, now once more in the saddle, and those who had for a
quarter of a century kept them out. The struggle would be political,
social, cultural; and religion would sensitively react to every shift and
turn of the contenders. One political feature, common to the new world
everywhere, was the presence, now permanent, of the new idea that
"subjects" had a right to a say in the way they were governed--and over a
great part of western Europe the right was recognised. The "subjects" had
votes, they were citizens; there were parliaments, elections, parties,
public controversies, a political press; and everywhere politicians, able
and less able, endlessly planning, infinitely ambitious, and passionately
idealistic--the first, and romantic, generation to operate an organ of
national life still with us, and as important as ever, if long dulled and
mechanical, for us, after the daily use of a century and a half.
At the time of the Vatican Council the men were still alive, and active,
who in France and Belgium and Prussia and Austria and Italy and Spain had
seen this new thing come into existence, and in a hundred passionate fights
had brought it through its adolescence to a somewhat blase maturity. The
pope's call in 1869 to the bishops of the world to meet in a General
Council interested all these men enormously, for no subject had more
passionately possessed, and divided, the statesmen of the new Europe in the
first half century of its existence than the astonishing return to life of
the Catholic Church: the real revival of religious life, of practice and
belief, to which no country in Europe was a stranger; and with this, the
reappearance of those age-old claims-that the religion of Christ is a thing
sui iuris, independent of all earthly power, not to be controlled by the
state whether royal and absolutist or democratic and republican. Nowhere
had the struggle in the post-Waterloo world been tougher than where the
political reorganisation (of one school or another) had clashed with this
renascent Catholicism, in Prussia, in France, in Italy, to say nothing of
Latin America where the conflict seemed part of the national life.
We are in a better position to know what exactly happened at the council of
1869-70, and to understand why things then happened in a particular way,
than is the case for any of the General Councils that preceded it. It is an
event that belongs to the age in which we ourselves have grown up--ninety
years old though the event be. For if it belongs to the age of
parliamentary democracy, it belongs also to the new age of speedy, safe,
and reasonably cheap travelling: the bishops who made their way to Trent
made the journey with all the discomfort and hazards that were the lot of
the bishops who attended Nicaea, twelve hundred years before--and they
travelled at about the same speed, fifty or sixty miles a day if they were
lucky, and not too old to stand such a strain. By 1869, however, the great
revolutionary invention we call the railroad, barely forty years old, had
already linked all the principal cities and seaports of western Europe; and
the Atlantic passage had shrunk to a matter of days. And not only could
bishops, and statesmen, diplomatists and revolutionaries, travel now at
many times the speed of their own fathers, but the news of their doings
went even more swiftly. The electric telegraph, as it was called, had been
in operation for twenty years; and to spread the latest tidings (and the
rumours) and the desired commentary on all this, there was the highly
organised business of the modern newspaper--the daily press. Already the
power of this over public opinion had been demonstrated when, for example,
in 1855, the greatest of all the journals of the day, The Times (of London)
had, in the midst of a war, brought about a change of government by the
stories it published of tragic incompetence in the army medical services.
And in this country, on the very eve of the council, the extensive,
detailed, daily reporting of the battles of the Civil War had revealed to
the discerning that here was a new force which rulers--and indeed the great
men in all walks of life--must henceforth reckon with. Scarcely had the
official announcement been made that a General Council was to meet, than
from every country a host of special correspondents descended on Rome--to
create, by their inevitably incomplete stories, an unexpected problem for
the council's "publicity" chiefs, if this wholly anachronistic term be
allowed.
The reigning pope, Pius IX,[369] had, for nearly twenty-five years, been a
leading personage in the eyes of the newspapermen. Whether admired or hated
he had always been "news"; for in all that time he had never ceased to
denounce the wrongs done the Church by the revolution, or the Catholic
state's habit of ruling as though there were no God. Like all his
predecessors for a thousand years, Pius IX was also a temporal prince, with
a territory of some 18,000 square miles that, very strategically, covered
central Italy from the Mediterranean to the Adriatic. To the north of this
important state, there were the provinces of Lombardy and Venezia, annexed
in 1815 to Austria, where, naturally, patriots never ceased in their
schemes to drive out the foreign ruler. To the south there was that comic-
opera kingdom of Naples whose government had, to the best of its power,
deliberately restored in 1815 all the crazy incompetence of the years
before 1789--and all the petty restrictions that brought home to
nineteenth-century man that, in the eyes of his rulers, he was a mere
child. Here, too, for fifty years the national life never ceased to heave
with discontent. From both north and south defeated conspirators were
forever crossing the borders of the Papal State, in flight from their
oppressors. And in the northern part of that state--with Bologna its chief
city--the papal rule was as well hated as that of the Hapsburgs at Milan,
or of the Bourbons at Naples. For all the long reign of Pius IX, Italy had
continued to be the stage upon which the greatest opera of all time was
played with all Europe for audience. Little wonder, then, that the Vatican
Council was "news" everywhere.
To the mind of the general reader, mention of the Vatican Council will
usually recall two facts: that it was the occasion of the definition of the
doctrine popularly called Papal Infallibility, and that many of the bishops
present were opposed to the definition. The more erudite will add that
their opposition was not to the doctrine itself, but to the policy of
choosing this present moment to proclaim it--the definition, they would
say, was held not "opportune." These are, indeed, important considerations
for the historian of the council, but they are far from the full tale of
what the council accomplished, and still further from what the Pope had in
mind when he called it; nor did the matter of Papal Infallibility figure in
the original programme. How this particular question came to take such a
prominent place in the actual proceedings is a matter that is bound up very
closely with the history of the general Catholic revival in the years
immediately preceding the council. As the reader may have already
discovered, a good part of the story of any council must necessarily be the
story of what caused it to be summoned, and of the forces that shaped the
men who played the leading roles in it. How best to describe this, briefly,
in the case of the Vatican Council, is something of a problem. The leading
critics of the "definition policy" were French, German, and Hungarian--how
much can here be told of the Catholic history of these countries in the
twenty years between, let us say, the great revolutionary year 1848 and the
calling of the council?
We might begin with a truism: religious revivals are times of enthusiasm,
and enthusiasm is not a critical thing. This particular Catholic revival
was very consciously, in France, a militant reaction against the classical
rationalism of the eighteenth century, the deism, the naturalism, the
atheism; and it found congenial allies among the new romantic writers--
Chateaubriand is one obvious example of this. Romantics also were the two
writers who, for the generation after 1815, most influenced the Catholic
mind, Joseph de Maistre and de Lamennais. That mind, when it turned from
the practice of religion to its defence, was all too easily satisfied that
with these magnificent rhetoricians the last word had been said. Seminaries
and schools of theology had been swept out of existence after 1789. Nor was
the long break in the traditional scholastic formation repaired by the time
the council met. Almost the only thinkers now were the apologists--amateurs
as always, whatever their intentions; the victory over the old adversary
seemed an easy business; and (what concerns us very closely) the Catholic
was regarded suspiciously who asked whether these literary superficialities
could really suffice, or who shifted uneasily as he heard these comforting
extravagances that no official voice ever rebuked.
"Inopportunism," when it arrived, would be, in great part, a reaction
against these extravagances. The prelates who were inopportunists at Rome
had long been fighting at home superficial untrained zealots, who not only
attacked the anti-Christian intellectuals of the nineteenth century with
the weapons of the eighteenth, but attacked no less violently their fellow
Catholics who refused to follow where they led; and in the press they
controlled they made no secret of their distrust of the very bishops. The
bitterness of the spirit that animated this faction-fighting in France, at
the time of the Second Empire, is hard to exaggerate. Here is one principal
cause, it might be argued, of the least pleasing incidents of the great
council of 1869-70.
In the country we today know as Germany, and in Austria, the reaction was
spared some of the weaknesses of the romantic literary apologetic. And the
theological formation of the clergy--including the bishops--was here more
solid. The divisions, which appeared here too, were divisions rather
between the various schools of theology, in the universities of Mainz,
Tubingen, and Munich, for example. But the German Catholics, from 1848
onward, began to organise nationally and in their annual congresses to work
out in open debate their attitude to all the questions of the day--very
notably to its social problems. One feature this revival had in common with
that in France--a dislike and suspicion of the Roman Curia's known desire
to centralise still more the general administration of the Church.
Particularly in the Austrian Empire was this feeling strong, where the
bishops still reigned over their sees very much as in feudal times, great
lords who were, socially, quasi-omnipotent. But although there was public
discussion and controversy between the various groups, these German and
Hungarian churches were spared--until Dollinger emerged as the anti-Roman
champion--the bitterness that aggravated the situation in France. Nowhere
was there in the German press such a scandal as the constant reviling of
bishops as untrustworthy religious guides.
What Pope Pius IX had in mind in summoning the council is set forth in his
bull convoking it (Aeterni Patris, June 29, 1868): to restate the faith in
certain matters where it had been attacked or misunderstood; to review the
whole matter of clerical life and its needs; to provide new safeguards for
Christian marriage and the Christian education of youth; and to take up in
this new age the ancient problems of the relations of Church and State and
provide appropriate guidance, so as to promote peace and prosperity in the
national life everywhere. That the state, everywhere, is labouring under an
infinity of ills, the pope says, is known to all, and the Church is at the
mercy of terrible storms. In fact, the malice of God's enemies continually
assails the Church's teaching, and the authority of the Holy See; it has
robbed the church of vast properties, brought about the dissolution of
religious orders, exiled and imprisoned bishops, set up systems of
education where the name of God is never even mentioned, allowed the
publication and sale of wicked books, and the organisation of societies
whose purpose is to spread these evils still further. This succinctly
describes what, in the reign of Pope Pius IX, had taken place at one time
or another in France, and Spain, and in every country of Latin America, and
in Italy too--even in what, until 1860, were the pope's own territories. It
is the pope's bounden duty to take counsel about these matters in
consultation with the whole body of his brethren, the bishops of the
Catholic Church. Whence this summons to the General Council, which will
meet at Rome in the Vatican Basilica (St. Peter's Church) on December 8,
1869.
In the twenty-three years he has reigned Pius IX, as he truthfully recalls,
has never failed to protest each time the rights of religion have been
violated. And if a reader would see, formally set forth, the anti-Christian
ideas whence these crimes derived he has only to read the great series of
the pope's encyclical letters and his public addresses; or he may find it
all succinctly stated in a kind of aide-memoire which Pius IX had sent to
the bishops in 1864, the document known to history as the Syllabus.
Pius IX had had the idea of a General Council in his mind for many years.
He was from the beginning of his reign consciously dedicated to the general
restoration of Catholic life, and the coming council should do for the
post-revolutionary world what Trent had done for the sixteenth century. It
was in 1864 that he laid the matter before the cardinals resident in Rome.
The majority favoured the idea (13-8) and a few months later the pope set
up a commission to study ways and means. He also consulted between thirty
and forty diocesan bishops in various countries as to the questions the
council should consider. Almost all of these, too, favoured the project.
What all wanted from such a council was the formal condemnation of the
various anti-Christian philosophies of the time, and of the new
rationalistic interpretations of Christianity and its sacred books. They
asked for a restatement of the Catholic faith, particularly about the kind
of thing the Church of Christ is, and about the rights and prerogatives of
the pope; only ten, out of the fifty or so consulted, referred to the
definition of infallibility. Another general demand was for the revision of
the Canon Law--a dense forest that had been growing unsystematically, and
unpruned, for hundreds of years. They wanted a reorganisation of clerical
life and of the religious orders; the regulation of all the host of such
new "inventions" as missions, sodalities, "devotions"; and a single
official catechism for the use of the whole Church. And they wanted,
finally, a statement about the relations of the Church to the new modern
democratic state, something that would show that the Church was not hostile
to all but absolutist regimes.
A body of a hundred experts, theologians and canonists for the most part,
was formed to prepare the first drafts of the laws which the council would
discuss; sixty of them were Italian "professionals," the rest called in
from elsewhere. The industry of this host of experts produced 51 drafts of
decrees, 23 relating to Catholic belief and 28 to what may be briefly
described as reorganisation of Catholic life. All that the council brought
to the stage of sanctioning, out of this vast mass, were two definitions of
belief: that called Dei Filius (a restatement of the fundamental truths of
the Christian religion against the new rationalism) and that called Pastor
Aeternus (that the pope is supreme head of the whole Church of Christ and
cannot err when as shepherd and teacher of all Christians he defines a
doctrine concerning faith or morals to be held by the whole Church). The
council, it will be seen, had indeed barely begun its work when, after
seven months of laborious discussions, political events brought it to a
halt.
The preparations for the council were interrupted for a time by the
political crisis of 1866-67,[370] but on June 29 of this last year the pope
made the first public announcement that the council would be held. One of
the men who did most to overcome his hesitation was the bishop of Orleans,
Felix Dupanloup. He was to be a leading figure in the next four years. The
first effect, in France and Germany, of the pope's announcement was to
bring to a head all the agitation of the previous twenty years. For the two
years and more that elapsed before the council met, the controversy was, in
both countries, continuous and acrimonious. The leading prelates on both
sides of the coming debate, "Is it opportune?", arrived at the council,
then, already well known to each other, and to the rest, as opponents
through their remarkable pamphleteering activities; the French bishop
Dupanloup very notably, the Englishman Manning, and--the most competent of
all these contestants, the most level-headed--the Cardinal Archbishop of
Mechlin, Victor Dechamps.
Something like a thousand personages had the right to take part in the
council, once the pope decided that titular bishops should be convoked as
well as bishops actually ruling a territory. Of these thousand, some 75 per
cent actually attended the council, 744[371] of them, at one time or another,
during the seven months it sat (December 8, 1869 July 18, 1870). Of these
744, 643 were bishops actually ruling a territory, and a bare 43 were
bishops either retired from active work or consecrated as auxiliaries to
some diocesan bishop, or because their high position in the Curia Romana
carried with it the episcopal dignity. The balance of the 744 was made up
of cardinals resident in Rome and the general superiors of the religious
orders.
As many as 200, and even more, of these diocesan bishops were from Italy
itself where, alone, the custom of the primitive church had continued, that
each city should have its bishop. Over 120 were English-speaking (from
England 12, Ireland 19, the United States 46). From France came 70, Germany
and the Austrian Empire 58, Spain 36, Latin America 30. There were 50
bishops from the various churches of the Oriental rites, and 100 missionary
bishops from Asia, Africa, and Oceania.
Exactly how many of these bishops took the view that it was not opportune
to define the infallibility of the pope, it is not easy to say. The highest
number ever claimed for the inopportunists was 200.[372] In the last of the
meetings called General Congregations (July 13, 1870) they mustered 88
votes, while another 76 stayed away rather than vote.
The procedure--devised for the council by the Curia[373]--was simple enough.
A draft of the proposed definition of belief, or of the reform (in the case
of ecclesiastical discipline), was sent to each of the bishops, and a day
fixed for the opening of the discussion. These discussion-sessions were
officially styled General Congregations. Bishops who wished to speak at
them sent in their names beforehand to the presidents of the council, five
cardinals appointed by the pope. There was no time limit fixed for their
speeches. When the discussion petered out, any changes they wished to see
made in the draft were studied by one of the four committees of the
bishops, elected by the general body for this purpose. Of these four
committees (for matters of the Faith, for disciplinary questions, Religious
Orders, the churches of the Eastern Rites) the only one which actually
played any great part in the council was the first named. These committees,
which had power to call in the experts who had prepared the draft, made a
technical report on the amendments to the council and prepared the amended
draft. This, together with the amendments and the report on them, were
circulated to the bishops in advance of the final discussion at which a
vote was taken. When the council had passed the definition, a day was
appointed for what was called a Public Session of the council. Here it was
the pope who presided. The draft as the bishops had finally adopted it was
read, and each bishop, rising in his place, gave his vote, saying placet or
non placet. Then the pope read the formula of definition, to which all the
bishops said "Amen." The only time the pope appeared at the council was at
these Public Sessions, of which there were four in all: December 8, 1869,
the formal opening of the council; January 6, 1870, when the bishops one by
one made their formal public profession of faith; April 24, for the
definition of the decree against rationalism; and July 18, for the
definition of the papal primacy and the infallibility. Of General
Congregations, amendments and speeches there was, as will be seen, almost
no end.
The first business of the bishops after the opening solemnities was to
elect the four revising committees mentioned (they were officially known as
deputations) . There was a fifth committee, named by the pope, whose
business it was to decide whether new matter proposed by a particular
bishop or a group--subjects additional, that is to say, to what the drafts
prepared by the theologians contained--should come before the council. This
fifth committee was known as the deputation Pro Postulatis (For Requests),
and it was a great series of petitions by bishops to this deputation that
brought the infallibility question before the council. It has often been
said that too little initiative was left to the bishops in 1869-70, but
there was sufficient for them to make the council what had never been
intended originally, viz., the council of the Infallibility of the Pope.
To the great annoyance of many of the bishops, these preliminary elections
took up the best part of a month. It was only on December 28 that the
council really got to work, when the debates opened on the draft of the
statement of Catholic belief which ultimately emerged as the Dogmatic
Constitution, Dei Filius. Each bishop had had three weeks to study his copy
of this draft. The general feeling was that the theologians had made a bad
job of it. It was, the bishops thought, "too long and elaborate,[374] too
abstract and obscure, and it did not meet the needs of the time."[375] The
bishops spoke their minds about this very bluntly, the Archbishop of
Vienna[376] leading, in the first speech the council heard. There was nothing
to be done with the draft, said Archbishop Connolly, of Halifax, but "to
bury it with honour." For six days--four hours a day--the bishops, thirty-
five of them in all, had their say and on January 10, "mangled and pulled
to pieces ... bleeding in every limb,"[377] the unfortunate draft was sent
back to the deputation For the Faith to be redesigned.
The deputation, despite the objections of the Jesuit theologian Franzelin
who was principally responsible for the draft, decided it must be
drastically remodelled. It gave the task to one of its own members, Conrad
Martin, bishop of Paderborn, a very distinguished theologian and a man with
an organising mind. With the help of another Jesuit, the great Kleutgen,
and a Frenchman Charles Gay,[378] he accomplished the task in something like
seven weeks. The deputation then spent eight sessions debating the text,
amending it in various ways, chiefly in matters of language, and on March
14 sent it to the bishops.
The general debate opened four days later. It did not end until April 19--
seventeen General Congregations, in which 107 bishops made speeches, many
proposing still further amendments, 281 in all. On April 12 a "trial
voting"[379] on the text as a whole showed 510 pro, and none contra; but
another 85 voted pro with reservations, i.e., these bishops still had 148
amendments to urge. These they had to put in writing, with their reasons.
The deputation took a week to consider them, recommended the adoption of
two (to which the bishops unanimously agreed) and reported the rest as
merely stylistic or as reopening points already discussed. On April 24, Low
Sunday, at the third Public Session, the final voting took place, the pope
presiding, and the 667 present unanimously approved.[380]
The ten pages of text of this constitution are so closely knit as to defy
summary. To give the reader a general idea of the subject matter it seems
better to print the canons attached--these are statements condemning, point
by point, all Catholics who say otherwise than the council, about the
doctrines it has just defined. In place of the conventional formula, "If
anyone says," or "If anyone denies," it makes easier reading to write "It
is an error to say," or "It is an error to deny," and this has been changed
accordingly. Given the importance of the matter, and the occasion, the word
"error" is, of course, charged with the maximum of seriousness, and each
canon ends with a malediction on the offender. There are eighteen canons in
all. The grouping and the headings follow those of the constitution, and
are the work of the council.[381]
I. GOD THE CREATOR OF ALL THINGS
It is an error to deny that there is one true God, Creator and Lord of all
things visible and invisible.
It is an error to say that nothing exists that is not matter; or that the
substance and essence of God is one and the same with the substance and
essence of all things; or that finite things, both corporal and spiritual,
have emanated from the divine substance; or that the divine essence, by the
manifestation and evolution of itself, becomes all things; or that, lastly,
God is universal or indefinite being, which by determining itself
constitutes the universe of things, distinct according to genera, species,
and individuals.
It is an error to deny that the world and all things contained in it, both
spiritual and material, have been, in their whole substance, produced by
God out of nothing; or to say that God created, not by His will free from
all necessity, but by a necessity like to that by which He loves Himself.
It is an error to deny that the world was made for the glory of God.
II. REVELATION
It is an error to say that the one true God, our Creator and Lord, cannot
be certainly known by the natural light of human reason through created
things; or to say that it is not possible that man can be taught by divine
revelation, nor suitable, about God and the worship to be paid to Him.
It is an error to say that man cannot be raised by divine power to a
knowledge and perfection higher than the natural, but that he can, and
ought, by a continuous progress, to arrive at length, of himself, at the
possession of all that is true and good.
It is an error to deny that the books of Holy Scripture, entire, with all
their parts, as the holy Council of Trent has listed them, are sacred and
canonical; or that they were inspired by God.
III. FAITH
It is an error to say that the human reason is so independent that faith
cannot be enjoined it by God; or that divine faith is indistinguishable
from the natural knowledge of God and of moral truths, and that, therefore,
it is not a requisite of divine faith that the truth revealed is believed
on account of the authority of God who is revealing it.
It is an error to say that divine revelation cannot be made credible by
outward signs, and that men therefore must be moved to faith solely by the
internal experience of each, or by a private inspiration.
It is an error to say that miracles are not possible and that, therefore,
all accounts concerning them, even those contained in Holy Scripture, are
to be dismissed as fables or myths. It is an error to say that miracles can
never be known with certainty, or that the divine origin of the Christian
religion cannot be truly proved by miracles.
It is an error to say that the assent of Christian faith is not a free act,
but is produced inevitably by the arguments of human reason; or to say that
the grace of God is only needed for living faith, the faith which works by
charity.
It is an error to say that the condition of the believers is on a par with
the condition of those who have not yet attained to the one only true
faith, so that Catholics can have a just cause for doubting, with suspended
assent, the faith which they have already received under the magisterium of
the Church, until they shall have obtained a scientific demonstration of
the credibility and truth of the faith.
IV. FAITH AND REASON
It is an error to say that in divine revelation there are no mysteries,
truly and properly so called, but that all the doctrines of faith can be
understood and demonstrated from natural principles, by properly cultivated
reason.
It is an error to say that human sciences are to be so freely treated, that
their assertions, even if opposed to revealed doctrine, may be held as
true, and cannot be condemned by the Church.
It is an error to say that it is possible that sometimes, according to the
progress of science, a sense is to be given to dogmas propounded by the
Church different from that which the Church has understood and understands.
The story of this first definition has been told at disproportionate length
in order to show how the Vatican Council actually functioned, as well as
how thoroughly the bishops did their work. Nor had they been idle while the
deputation De Fide was busy remodelling the draft of Dei Filius at their
behest. Only four days after they had sent back that draft, the bishops
received the first drafts of the proposed reforms in ecclesiastical
discipline, January 14. These were to occupy them for the next six weeks,
and to provoke criticisms still more outspoken, and some of the best
constructive speaking the council heard.
The subject matter of these two first drafts was bishops, synods, and
vicars-general; also the vacancies in episcopal sees. The first speaker was
the Cardinal Archbishop of Prague,[382] who complained that the reforms
should have begun with the Roman Curia which, it was common knowledge, many
bishops thought should be reorganised. A French cardinal[383] and the
primate of Hungary[384] supported this. The great speech was that of the
Archbishop of Paris[385] who took the opportunity to criticise the whole
scheme of procedure drawn up for the council. Why was not a complete agenda
sent to the bishops of what it was proposed to enact, not in the form of
rhetorical exercises, but set out with businesslike brevity? The drafts now
before the bishops were filled with trivialities, fit only for professional
canonists to discuss. The council's business was with more fundamental
things. Those who had drafted these schemata were utterly out of touch with
realities. Melchers, of Cologne, complained of the tendency to
overcentralisation, and bishops being given faculties, not for life, but
for five years only at a time. In something of the same spirit one of the
Orientals--the patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans--also spoke, begging
that the Easterns should not be subject to a regime suitable only for the
West, and that the composition of a code of law for the East be left to the
eastern bishops. This was a protest against changes recently made by the
Congregation of Propaganda. And the patriarch spoke of the oath he had
sworn at his consecration to preserve and transmit intact the privileges of
his see. Ketteler, of Mainz, spoke in this debate and also Dupanloup, at
whose appearance hundreds of bishops left their seats and crowded round the
pulpit, anxious not to lose a word, Manning (his chief adversary) in the
first ranks of them.
Other bishops raised the question of changes in the Breviary, the official
prayer book for clergy and religious. Finally there appeared a fourth draft
which renewed all the liveliness of the discussion at a moment when, after
"five weeks of interminable oratory,"[386] the mass of the bishops were
beginning to tire. The subject of this was the Catechism, a proposal to
have a single catechism--Bellarmine's--for the whole Church. In the six
meetings when this was debated, forty-one bishops spoke. The Germans
especially were hostile. It was impossible to put anything in the place of
the catechism of Canisius, used all over Germany since the time of its
author. And a Hungarian archbishop, Haynald, spoke of the right of every
bishop to settle the question for his own diocese. "If a catechism is
dictated to us, our sermons will next be dictated," he boldly said.[387] To
the end, this opposition to surrendering the work of Canisius was
maintained, reinforced by objections to the proposed new catechism being
drawn up by Roman theologians and imposed without a vote of the council.
Whence, in the "trial voting" (May 4), while there were 491 votes pro,
another hundred bishops voted either contra, or pro with a reservation. But
none of these four disciplinary drafts, discussed, amended and then
discussed anew, ever became law. The infallibility question had now been
placed before the bishops, and for the rest of the council this absorbed
all their time.
Before entering on the exciting events of the next nine weeks,[388]
something needs to be said about the "Minority" bishops. Not altogether
accurately they are often spoken of much as we speak of the opposition in a
modern democratic parliament. This image was continually in Butler's mind
as he described the proceedings of 1869-70, and we sometimes find
Ullathorne, also, thinking of the council in terms of the English House of
Commons.[389] The Minority, made up of bishops from many countries,[390] was
never of course anything like the closely organised, disciplined political
parties of the democratic state. In the first place, no one of these
bishops was in any way bound to another, or subject to any discipline
beyond his own sense of what was right, as was true of all the seven
hundred or more bishops who attended. For as a bishop, each bishop in the
Church is equal to any other bishop. The only superior any diocesan bishop
has is the pope.
Again, the bishops who opposed the definition were not all moved by the
same kind of reasons. Bishops from Great Britain and from the United
States, for example, argued that the definition would not be understood by
the vast Protestant population amidst which the Church was painfully making
its way; it would create yet another stumbling block in the way of the
Protestant attracted towards the Church and still influenced by the mental
habits of his upbringing. In France the difficulty alleged had to do with
Catholics. So loudly and so generally had the party that favoured
infallibility cried out their extravagant, untheological, untrained ideas
of the nature of the pope's prerogative, that--so the Minority feared--it
was just not possible that, for generations, the true meaning of the
definition would be understood. The definition, for years and years to
come, would be read in the light of the prevailing popular Catholic
misconceptions[391]--such misconceptions, all of recent growth, as that
infallibility was tantamount to a divine inspiration, that the pope had but
to express a wish or the hint of a wish and it was the Catholic's bounden
duty to think as he thought, to act as the pope would (presumably) want the
Catholic to act, in every walk of life. If the rationalists rejoiced, as
the greater part of the Catholic press poured out this flood of
affectionate adulation--protestations of loyalty to the pope seen as
besieged for twenty years by all the powers of hell--rejoiced at the chance
it offered to proclaim that the Catholic thought his pope a God on earth,
who shall be surprised? No matter in what terms the definition be couched,
said an English bishop, William Clifford, it will be said that we have made
the pope a despot.[392] Another aberration of leading Catholic publicists--
clerical no less than lay--disturbed many of the bishops: namely, the idea
that the council would be wasting its time examining and debating the pros
and cons of the infallibility. Did the Holy Ghost need time to think? they
said explicitly. The doctrine should be defined by acclamation. There was
something lacking in the faith of bishops who wanted the question studied
and discussed.
This last extraordinary idea had been given the greatest possible prestige
when, just ten months before the council met, a Roman review, the Civilta
Cattolica, popularly identified with what was current thought in the
highest circles, stated in an article headed "Correspondence from France"
(February 1, 1869), that the bulk of the Catholics of France were hoping
that "a unanimous outburst of the Holy Spirit would define [the pope's
infallibility] by acclamation by the mouth of the Fathers [i.e., the
bishops attending the council]."[393] This, to men already alarmed by what
lesser lights had been allowed to publish unreproved, sounded like the
beginning of official encouragement for this dangerous nonsense.
In German-speaking countries there had been nothing like these excesses.
Here the reluctance of the bishops was bound up partly with the idea that
the doctrine, although true, was not "definable." It was also thought that
the definition would make for papal interference with the freedom of
theological teaching, along the lines of Rome's recent reproof of the
congress of Catholic savants at Munich.[394] And there was a kind of fear
that the new prestige which would come to the papacy from the definition
would inevitably strengthen its hand in the unmistakable move towards a
closer Roman control of the general life of the Church. Also there were, in
Germany, a very small number of really great scholars who definitely held
that the pope was not infallible, and who grew more and more antipapal with
each year that passed. Of all parts of the Church, it was Germany that was
distinguished by an ecclesiastical scholarship equal to the best
scholarship of the day. The article in the Civilta Cattolica provoked from
Dollinger (or gave him the excuse to write) the famous letters of
Janus,[395] "the gravest and severest attack ... on the policy of Rome for a
thousand years," said Ullathorne.[396] Immediately Germany was all ablaze. A
Catholic gathering at Coblenz asked their bishop, in effect, for
reassurance that no new spiritual despotism was in preparation. The
Catholics of Berlin followed suit, and fourteen German bishops sent a
joint, private letter to the pope saying that, in view of the rising
excitement in Germany, they thought any definition of infallibility would
be inopportune.
The Minority bishops felt, often enough, that to the bishops of lands like
Italy and Spain their anxieties were simply not intelligible, for these
were "men who had never come into conflict with the unbelieving mind, or
into contact with the intellectual mind of the time."[397] "When I read the
school of theology in which they were trained," said this Irish bishop, "I
am not surprised that they treat every doubter as a heretic."
A last word, before we return to the council's proceedings--the bishops
debated amid a storm of excitement that held all western Europe. The chief
forces in the public life of Europe were hostile, not merely to the idea of
infallibility, in so far as they understood this, but to the whole vast
effort of Pius IX to rebuild the Church around a stronger central
headquarters. More than one government was "willing to wound, but yet
afraid to strike." Tentative gestures were in fact made by Austria and
Bavaria and France. In London even, Gladstone brought the question before
his cabinet. And some of these governments were encouraged, nay urged, so
to act, by Catholic subjects so hostile to the prospective definition that
they would gladly have seen it prevented by governmental threats to the
pope. So Dollinger worked at Munich, and Acton upon London, and one or two
of the French bishops at Paris.
These manoeuvres, known in great part at the time--for Rome, inevitably,
was the great whispering gallery of Europe in the winter of 1869-70--
reflected unfavourably, in the eyes of many Catholics, upon the whole
company of the Minority bishops, and most unfairly. When Wilfrid Ward,
forty years after the council, came to write his great life of Newman, he
felt it still necessary to spend time explaining that, until the council
had defined the doctrine, it was not a defined doctrine, and that a
Minority sympathiser was not, ipso facto, a less good Catholic than a man
of the Majority. And twenty years later still, Abbot Cuthbert Butler
considered it not time wasted to deal at length with the same point. So
long lasting, both these writers felt, were the effects of the slanderous
campaign waged against their Minority opponents by those extremists whom
Ullathorne, at the time, made no difficulty of calling plainly, "fanatics."
"I think myself," he wrote,[398] "that the opposition is in the order of
Providence, both to ensure searching investigation, and a proper balance of
expression in the decrees." This was very far from the view taken by the
quasi-official Tablet, of London, and its special weekly supplement, The
Vatican, the writers of which laid about them unsparingly, all too little
concerned with the origin of the stories they published or the theological
accuracy of their criticisms. The American Bishop of Rochester, McQuaid,
writing of the like extravagances of the Freeman's Journal, of New York,
could say, "He draws all his facts or supposed facts from the London
Tablet and Vatican. Many of these facts amuse us at the power of
invention, if not of malice, they display."[399]
It must not, however, be thought that these ultras were the only ones to
write rashly. Moriarty wrote to Newman: "On the other hand, if the Pope's
cause has been damaged by the intemperate advocacy of the Civilta, Univers
[Paris], and Tablet [London], we have been damaged also by some of the
pamphlets on our side.... They furnish our adversaries with arguments for
the necessity of an immediate definition."[400] Also, it needs to be pointed
out that, too often, Minority bishops wrote as though the views of the
extremists were shared by the Majority of the council.[401]
What the council's problem really was is put very simply by Ullathorne:
"... at a distance nothing could seem easier to a theologian than to word
it [i.e., the statement defining the pope's infallibility]; but with the
rapidly accumulating knowledge that spring up in the conflict of minds and
the very varied local bearings of the question with respect to different
regions, the same theologian, were he here, would find his cleverness
considerably tamed."[402]
As to the doctrine itself--that the pope is divinely preserved from error
when he makes a declaration, addressed to the whole Church, as to what is
the belief of the Church--no less authoritative a theologian than Canon
Aubert can speak of it as "in the background for centuries"[403] at the time
when Pius IX began his reign. What the position was a century earlier, no
less an authority than the then reigning pope can inform us, Benedict XIV,
who is rightly considered as one of the glories of Catholic theological
scholarship. Writing on July 13, 1748, to the Grand Inquisitor of Spain, he
says that the doctrine is held by the whole Church with the exception of
France.[404] And as to the France of those days, a Benedictine writing in
1724[405] of the French attachment to the view that "infallibility in
dogmatic judgments has been given only to the body of the bishops,"[406]
gives the warning that at least one half of the bishops, university
dignitaries, and clergy of France of all ranks held the doctrine of papal
infallibility. By the time the Vatican Council was summoned, it seems safe
to say that quasi the whole body of the French bishops accepted the
doctrine, and their people with them. The so-called Gallican theology on
the matter--as in the phrase just quoted--had by now all but withered away.
It was in the second month of the council, January 1870, that the
"infallibilist" bishops began to move, various groups sending in petitions
to the pope that the question be added to the agenda. In all, nearly five
hundred bishops signed one or another of these petitions. There were five
petitions in the contrary sense, signed by 136 more. The pope sent the
petitions to the deputation For Requests, and after some debate the
deputation, by a vote of 25 to 1, advised the pope on February 9 to add a
statement about the infallibility to the draft On the Church already given
out to the bishops on January 21.[407] On March 1 Pius IX accepted their
advice, and five days later the new addition was in the hands of the
bishops. It was not a satisfactory text at all. Drawn up months before the
council met, in case some such draft would be needed, it was inevitably not
suited, from its extreme tone and indefinite terminology, to the hour in
which it now appeared. And almost simultaneously rumours began to spread
among the bishops that the extremists were working for a decision "by
acclamation," and without any debate. Four bishops,[408] thereupon, sent in
a protest to the presidents, saying that if this were to be allowed they
would immediately leave the council "and make public the reason of our
departure." To whom the presidents replied that the "acclamation" scheme
none but madmen (insensati) would even think of, while the text now sent
out was but a draft for the bishops to shape as they chose. But it is a
fact that some of the madmen had actually sent in petitions to this effect.
There was, it may be imagined, less and less of "the coolness of the
unconcerned spectator" among the Minority bishops at this unhappy
coincidence, and from this moment many of them hardened considerably. They
also began to organise in earnest--a few of them outside the council as
well as within.
The leaders of the extreme right, heartened by their success in bringing
the great question before the council, now made a second move. They asked
that the question be taken out of its proper place in the draft--according
to which it would scarcely be discussed for another twelve months and more-
-and laid before the council immediately, i.e., as soon as the constitution
Dei Filius (at present in the hands of the revisers) had been dealt with
finally. Some two hundred bishops signed the petition prepared to this
effect. But there were many counter-petitions, and not from the Minority
only. There were "infallibilist" bishops who thought that common prudence
forbade such an appearance of forcing the pace, and others who were shocked
at the patent violation of the logical order of the important draft On the
Church. Among the Italians who protested was the cardinal who was to be the
next pope, Leo XIII. Another to object was the greatest of all the French
champions of the definition policy, Louis Edouard Pie, bishop of Poitiers.
The five cardinal presidents also objected to this change.
But the small inner group who were the heart of the extreme party--led by
Manning and the bishop of Regensburg (Senestrey)--did not give up. They
took their petition to the very presence of the pope (April 19) and,
mistakenly, thought they had won him over. But the opposition of so many of
the officials was impressive, and it was not until April 29 that Pius IX
consented. A greatly amended text was prepared, the draft of a separate,
short Dogmatic Constitution that would deal only with the pope's primacy of
jurisdiction over the whole Church and with the prerogative of
infallibility. This new text suffered from none of the blemishes of the
old. There was much greater care in the terms used, the drafting of what
was proposed to be defined was more precise--ruling out, inevitably, the
chances that extremists would be able easily to claim it as sanctioning
their own loose statements. Let one example illustrate this, where the
words in italics show the changes now introduced. The pope is declared to
be infallible when he declares to the Church: "Whatever in matters of faith
and morals is by the whole Church to be held as part of the faith (tamquam
de fide) or rejected as contrary to the faith (tamquam fidei
contrarium)."
The Minority--seventy-one of them--sent in a petition against this plan to
discuss a doctrine about papal prerogatives before determining the doctrine
about the Church generally. But the next day, May 9, the new text was
delivered to the bishops, and on May 13 the great debate began--the debate
in which the greatest speeches of the council were made.
The debate was in three "acts," so to speak: (I) the discussion of the
draft as a whole, May 13-June 3, 15 meetings of four hours each in these
three weeks, with 65 speakers in all, 39 pro and 26 of the Minority; (II)
the detailed discussion of the text dealing with the primacy of the pope,
June 6-13, 5 meetings, 32 speakers; (III) the detailed discussion of the
text of the infallibility proposal, June 15-July 4, 11 meetings, 57
speakers, 35 pro, 22 of the Minority. The bishops were fortified for the
work before them by a folio of 104 pages that contained the amendments
proposed by various of them to the original draft of the primacy section of
the Constitution, and a second folio of 242 pages with the like amendments
to the section on the infallibility. With the amendments were printed the
comments of the theological experts.
The proceedings began with a masterly recommendation of the text as
amended, delivered by Pie, bishop of Poitiers, on behalf of the deputation
On the Faith. Very speedily the debate developed into a battle over the
previous question, Was it opportune to define the prerogative of
infallibility? Feeling ran high from the outset, and after ten days of it
the bishop of Nancy, Foulon, could write, in a private letter, "Some
speakers give one the impression they speak with their fists clenched, or
with their finger on the trigger of a revolver."[409]
It would be unprofitable as well as tedious to name the sixty-five
speakers, and quite impossible to give anything like a resume of their
arguments.[410] Not all were masters of the art of oratory, nor all gifted
with original ideas. With the bores, as the days went by, the bishops began
to grow impatient; and the presidents with the irrelevancies. Of the great
speakers, Cardinal Cullen of Dublin, Manning of Westminster, and Dechamps
of Mechlin, seem to have most impressed the bishops, among the
"infallibilist" orators; and Hefele from the ranks of the Minority, made
"probably the most impressive adverse speech."[411] But the great historian,
who cited Chalcedon[!] in proof[!] that the pope was never held to be
infallible, found himself corrected in detail by the next speaker, the
Archbishop of Saragossa. And Manning's extraordinary slip--that the
infallibility was already an article of the Catholic faith--was immediately
picked up by the learned bishop of Galway, McEvilly.[412] A third Irishman
to distinguish himself was the Archbishop of Cashel, Leahy, Newman's
erstwhile colleague in the Catholic University,[413] while Clifford, of
Clifton in England, roused strong grunts of disapproval by his blunt
description of the likely effect of the definition on the non-Catholic
world. One American bishop also drew blood when, pleading against the
definition, he spoke of the battles of the churches placed among
aggressively hostile and prejudiced Protestants, and the present good hope
of making converts, which the definition, he feared, would destroy. In
another forty years, said this bishop of Pittsburgh, there will be more
Catholics in North America than in Italy, "and they will be not mere
nominal, but real practicing Catholics."[414] For this he was called to
order, and bidden speak more carefully about the faithful of Italy. With
Verot, the French bishop of Savannah, it was his sense of humour that got
out of control. He alternately annoyed and amused his audience, and was
told, "If you have nothing more to say except jokes, there is no use your
occupying the pulpit any longer"; at which, "Many Fathers: 'Come
Down.'"[415]
Such human incidents must, however, have been something of a relief as,
with the rapid onset of the torrid Roman summer, these hundreds of elderly
and aged men endured day after day speeches that rarely did more than
repeat the centuries-old arguments, or correct the ancient errors still
repeated. "Many bishops are getting leave to go home, unable to stand the
heat, or pressed by affairs," Ullathorne wrote on May 17. Others, in the
end, took advantage of a new regulation and, to the number of 150, besought
the cardinal-presidents to use their powers and bring the debate to an end.
There were still another forty bishops who had put down their names as
intending to speak, besides the sixty-five who had spoken, when on June 3
the presidents put it to the council whether they wished to hear any more,
and by a huge majority the council voted that it had had enough, and the
presidents formally ended this preliminary discussion. "These words were
received with general applause," says the official record, "but there were
not wanting those who showed their displeasure...." And the Minority sent
in a formal protest, signed by eighty prelates, among them three
cardinals.[416]
Act II of the debate was the detailed consideration of a proposed
definition on the subject of the Papal Primacy over the whole Church of
Christ, i.e., that the pope is, by divine arrangement, the supreme ruler of
the Church, with full authority over every part of it. This doctrine, no
less vital than that about the prerogative called infallibility, had never
entered into the controversies which in recent years had occupied the
energies of so many Catholics; and while, as the debates in the council had
revealed, there were actually some bishops, Hefele for one, who doubted
that the pope was infallible, not a single bishop questioned the doctrine
of the primacy, whether in principle or in its practical implications.
There was here no question of the Minority, any more than there had been a
Minority movement re the definition Dei Filius. And with good reason--the
primacy had been defined doctrine for over four hundred years, ever since
the General Council of Florence, 1439-49; and it had been the general
belief of the Church and the constantly asserted teaching in act of the
popes, as far back as history goes.
The discussion, in the next five General Congregations, turned on the words
now to be used to express the matter defined; and the critics of the draft
were moved by the fear that the phrases used might lend themselves to
misconstruction. They also regarded it as a serious blemish that this
section on the pope's over-all authority had not a word to say about the
complementary Catholic belief that the diocesan bishop's authority is also
divine in its origin, that the bishop is not a mere vicar or delegate of
the pope. Some of the 140 bishops who had sent in reasoned amendments to
the deputation On the Faith also feared, it must be said, that this
seemingly one-sided statement was part and parcel of the Curia's desire to
develop still further the administrative centralisation of the universal
church.[417] A much more likely cause of their fears, it would seem, was the
suddenness of the resolve to change the order of the topics, and the
consequent proposal of this question outside its natural setting in the
general order of the theology regarding the Church. The council had been in
session now for six months, and no member of the Curia could have had any
doubt as to what the bishops would do with drafts that did not please them.
The most important speech made in these five congregations of June 6-13 was
perhaps that of Cardinal Rauscher, who improved the text of the definition
by introducing phrases already used by Innocent III in the General Council
of 1215. Cardinal Dechamps, injudiciously, surely, and
uncharacteristically, proposed a censure, in the very decree, of a new work
by a bishop present at the council, Maret, dean of the faculty of Theology
at the Sorbonne, the leading theologian of the Minority on the
infallibility question. This move fell flat, before the silence of the
startled bishops, and the hostility of the presidents. The bishop of Nice
also attracted the personal attention of these officers by explicitly
denying that the pope's power in sees other than Rome was "episcopal,
ordinary or immediate." The spokesman of the presidents interrupted to say
this doctrine was inadmissible. A Hungarian archbishop, Louis Haynald, also
proposed that these same words be left out--seemingly as not a suitable
description of the supreme authority. The Melchite Patriarch of Antioch
pleaded that, in order not to create new obstacles to the reconciliation of
the Orthodox Churches, the decree of Florence should be repeated but
nothing more, with no new anathemas, and that something should be added
explicitly safeguarding the rights of the patriarchates.
The last--thirty-third--speaker was the newly consecrated bishop of Angers,
Freppel, fresh from his chair of Theology at the Sorbonne, and about to
begin his great career in the hierarchy of France. He did the debate the
service of showing that there could be no clearer term to safeguard the
rights of the bishops than these traditional words, "ordinary," which goes
back to the Council of 1215, and "immediate," which has the authority of
St. Thomas behind it; terms with a history, then, in the technical
commentaries of six hundred years. He derided, in a learned way, "the
fantastic despotism or absolutism, that we have been hearing about."
Absolutism was the classic law of the ancient Roman Empire, yes. "But who
has ever said that the Roman Pontiff may govern the Church according to his
own sweet will, by arbitrary power, by fancy--that is, without the laws and
the canons? ... Is power arbitrary because it is supreme? ... Let us make
an end of this confusion of ideas."[418]
So the debate ended, in its own time,[419] and to the bishops of the
deputation On the Faith the seventy-two amendments proposed went for
consideration. They reported to the council on July 5-- the report being
made by the bishop[420] in whose diocese the future St. Pius X was a newly
appointed parish priest. The deputation proposed to reject all but four of
the amendments, and the bishops, sometimes by unanimous vote, and always by
huge majorities, supported their judgment.
Meanwhile, July 4, in the debate on the infallibility--i.e., on the
proposed text--the fifty-seventh speaker had just come down from the
pulpit, and the other sixty-three who had proposed to speak had, to the
general relief, nobly foregone their rights to immortal fame in Mansi.
Act III--the debate on the text of the infallibility decree--is what most
people have in mind when they speak of the Vatican Council. It began on
June 15 and occupied eleven meetings of the council, 120 of whose members
proposed themselves as speakers. Actually no more than 57 were heard, and
as, by the time the debate began, all the generalities of the subject had
been exhausted, the bishops were treated to a vast deal of rambling
exhortation and its repetition. The presidents, in this last section of the
council, were daily calling speakers back to the matter in hand, the
suitability of the proposed text. But nonetheless the text was thoroughly
discussed, and it was amended out of recognition.
The general sense of the directing mind of the council was to produce a
text of the strictest theological accuracy, that no particular party would
be able to cite as a warranty for the condemnation of other parties, the
subject of the definition being, as Cardinal Dechamps had already said, not
the controversial ideas of the moment but the traditional belief of the
Church, the belief set out by such classic teachers as Bellarmine and St.
Thomas. A powerful influence in all this was the Archbishop of Bologna,
Cardinal Guidi, a Dominican who spoke on June 18. He proposed to make the
title of the decree more exact--not to use in such a document the loose
phrase "the pope's infallibility," which might be taken to mean a permanent
quality in the pope. The divine assistance which preserves the pope as
universal teacher from error is a transient divine act, he pointed out,
making the pope's act infallible but not his person. It is the definition
that is infallible and not the person. Therefore, let the title be "The
infallibility of the pope's dogmatic pronouncements." To those more at home
with pulpit oratory than such cool theological analysis, this was far from
pleasing, and the cardinal was violently interrupted. Despite this
opposition--and the resentment of Pius IX, that a cardinal from the Papal
State should have opposed him[421]--the title of the decree was changed in
Guidi's sense, and so voted, and so promulgated, by the pope.
There were two other remarkable speeches, each time from a member of the
deputation De Fide that was responsible for proposing the definition, each
speaker desiring to amend it still more seriously. The first of these was
Cullen of Dublin, who proposed an entirely new form of words for the
definition itself. It is the form as it actually stands.[422] The other
speaker was a German, Martin, bishop of Paderborn, who proposed that the
whole section on infallibility (and not merely the definition itself) be
rewritten, and a long historical passage be written into it to make clearer
still what the definition did not do, e.g., confer new powers on the pope,
extend papal power in a way never before heard of, do away with the
traditional safeguards.
By this first week of July the heat was such that the official records
speak of it. The practical men on both sides began to meet behind the
scenes--Manning and Haynald are especially named--and a joint effort was
made to induce the remaining sixty-three speakers to desist. It was
successful, and on July 4, after the speech of the bishop of Oran, the
presidents announced that as no one else wanted to speak, the debate was
closed--this, says the record, "amid general shouts of joy, and applause."
Before the deputation De Fide, however, there still remained many laborious
hours, studying the ninety-six amendments proposed by the speakers, and
another forty-eight sent in in writing. With the aid of their theologians
they had sorted it out, and were ready with their recommendations to the
council, by July 11. They then proposed, following Guidi, to change the
title and, following Martin, to put in the historical section. They
accepted the new--Cullen--wording of the definition, and so were able to
refuse the hundred proposed amendments of the old formula. The explanation
and justification of all this was left to the bishop of Brixen, Vincent
Gasser, "the most prominent theologian in the council,"[423] to whose great
speech Butler gives a whole chapter of his book. The council, without more
ado, voted as the deputation proposed.
The way was now open for the "trial voting" on this second Dogmatic
Constitution, Pastor Aeternus, the classic definition of the papal primacy
and the infallibility of the popes' ex cathedra pronouncements. This took
place on July 13. The votes were: Pro--451, Contra--88, Pro with some
reservations--62. There were another 76 bishops who, though still in Rome,
did not attend and vote.
Those who voted pro, but with a reservation (placet iuxta modum), had to
send in a note of the reservation, i.e., the change they wished to see
made. The schedule of these, prepared now for the use of the council, ran
to as many as 160 items, 200 alterations in all. By no means all of these
were from the Minority. The changes made in the text of the proposed
constitution had greatly displeased some of "the extreme papal school"[424]
among the bishops, and they called for the suppression of the new
historical passage, and asked that the infallibility be explicitly declared
to extend beyond the field of faith and morals. The deputation recommended
that all but two of these suggested changes be rejected. The two were,
first, the suppression of two quotations, from St. Augustine and St.
Irenaeus which were not really relevant to the matter they were introduced
to support, and secondly, a clause to make clear that the infallibility of
ex cathedra pronouncements did not depend on the assent of the Church to
them. These decisions of the deputation On the Faith the whole body of
bishops accepted, in the eighty-sixth General Congregation, July 16. The
solemn Public Session of voting and definition was announced for Monday,
July 18.
Meanwhile, what of the 88, who on July 13 had voted non placet? For them
this had been a week of anxiety and distress. They made every effort to
secure modifications that would save them from the need to vote non placet
at the coming solemn session. On July 15 they sent a deputation to the
pope. Ketteler, it is said, fell on his knees and with tears besought the
pope to make himself the changes which the council had rejected, chiefly
the addition of a phrase explicitly mentioning the role of the bishops and
the Church in the "evolution" of an infallible pronouncement. So little, it
may now seem, ninety years after the event, separated the Minority, at the
crucial hour, from their brethren--the question which is the better form of
words.[425] On the day after their audience some of the Minority were surely
among the 552 bishops who took part in the last General Congregation. Then,
on the very eve of the definitive voting, they met to decide finally on
their action. They were by no means unanimously resolved. Haynald won them
over to his idea of solemnly closing their long campaign of protest by a
public vote contra. And then came Dupanloup, very late, and, told of the
decision, he reopened the discussion, and carried the day, reversing the
Haynald plan. The bishops should keep away from the morrow's event. "We
could not vote placet," he urged, "for nobody would believe us. We could
not vote non placet, for the sake of the Catholic world, which would not
understand us, and which might be scandalised." By 36 votes to 28 the
bishops accepted this idea, and in a letter to the pope they explained
their action. "Filial piety and respect," they say, "do not allow us, in a
cause so closely affecting Your Holiness, to say non placet openly, face to
face with our Father."[426] Fifty-five signed, and eight others wrote
individually to the pope.
The great day came in with heavy showers of rain. It has often been
described how the long hour and a half of the voting--each of the 535
bishops present, vested in cope and mitre, called on by name, rising and
pronouncing his vote--took place to the accompaniment of a wonderful July
thunderstorm. "Nothing approaching to the solemn splendour of that storm
could have been prepared," wrote the correspondent of The Times, the Rev.
Thomas Mozley, Newman's brother-in-law and erstwhile pupil. At the close,
it was so dark in the basilica that lights were needed for the pope to read
the authoritative phrases, "We define and confirm by our apostolic
authority, the sacred council approving," the Dogmatic Constitution[427] as
it has been read. And then, from their places among the bishops, two
figures made their way to the foot of the papal throne, the two bishops who
had voted non placet. "Holy Father, now I believe," each of them said. One
was the bishop of Cajazzo in southern Italy, the other Edward Fitzgerald,
Bishop of Little Rock, Arkansas.[428]
Meanwhile, the fortnight between the close of the debate and the
promulgation of the constitution Pastor Aeternus had seen, in the world
outside the council, the swift emerging of a first-class international
crisis. When Dupanloup and Darboy met Melchers and Ketteler in that last
conference, the evening before the final session, their two countries were
already on the verge of war. Two days later the fateful Franco-German war
had begun. Napoleon III must now perforce recall his troops that were the
pope's protection against United Italy. On August 4 they began to embark.
From the Italians came a request that the pope would bless the now
inevitable invasion, and surrender Rome like a good Catholic and a good
Italian. On September 11 the invasion began, and on September 20 Rome
capitulated to the army of Cadoma--something like three weeks after a
revolution in Paris had overthrown the empire of Napoleon III. In all these
weeks of crisis the work of the General Congregations had continued, the
120 bishops who had not availed themselves of the "vacation" granted by the
pope toiling steadily through August at the unfinished project on
ecclesiastical discipline. But just a month to the day after the Italian
capture of Rome Pius IX suspended the council, indefinitely. It has never
been reassembled since.
The Minority bishops, once returned to their flocks, published their belief
and acceptance of the decree against which they had voted--some half dozen
of them after severe interior struggles. The Holy See bore no ill will for
their opposition. Of the Austro-Hungarians, Simor, Haynald and von
Furstenberg were made cardinals within the next few years; and had their
respective governments not hindered it, Leo XIII, it is said, would have
given the hat to Dupanloup and to Strossmayer.
It had ever been a very general consideration with the Minority prelates
that a definition of infallibility would be followed by schisms and
individual defections everywhere. An American bishop may be quoted as an
example: "... The damage to the Church will be immense. In some countries
there will be large schisms, and great losses to the Church in all
countries except Italy, Spain, and Ireland and among our poor people at
home."[429] But none of these fears were realised. Only in Germany and
Switzerland did a group of clergy--professors of Theology and Canon Law in
various state universities--win over a number of Catholics who organised
themselves as the Old Catholic Church. Since no bishop patronised the
little movement the chiefs were driven, for ordinations and the rite of
episcopal consecration, to the schismatic Jansenist bishop of Utrecht. And
although various governments gave the movement recognition it languished
from its birth. Nowhere in the Church, from the beginning of the Catholic
revival, had the renewed activity of the papacy been anything but welcome
to the generality of Catholics. Their whole-hearted acceptance of the
decrees of 1870 was natural, inevitable. It was an acceptance that was in
the nature of things, and that meant no more change than that they now
believed explicitly what, like their fathers for centuries, they always
implicitly had taken for granted.
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