Pope Pius XITo the
Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, Bishops, and other ordinaries
in peace and communion with the Apostolic See and to all the
faithful of the Catholic world.
Venerable Brethren and Beloved Children, Health and Apostolic
Benediction.
Representative on earth of that divine Master who while
embracing in the immensity of His love all mankind, even
unworthy sinners, showed nevertheless a special tenderness and
affection for children, and expressed Himself in those
singularly touching words: "Suffer the little children to
come unto Me," 1 We also on every occasion have
endeavored to show the predilection wholly paternal which We
bear towards them, particularly by our assiduous care and timely
instructions with reference to the Christian education of youth.
2. And so, in the spirit of the Divine Master, We have
directed a helpful word, now of admonition, now of exhortation,
now of direction, to youths and to their educators, to fathers
and mothers, on various points of Christian education, with that
solicitude which becomes the common Father of all the Faithful,
with an insistence in season and out of season, demanded by our
pastoral office and inculcated by the Apostle: "Be instant in
season, out of season; reprove, entreat, rebuke in all patience
and doctrine." 2 Such insistence is called for in
these our times, when, alas, there is so great and deplorable an
absence of clear and sound principles, even regarding problems
the most fundamental.
3. Now this same general condition of the times, this
ceaseless agitation in various ways of the problem of
educational rights and systems in different countries, the
desire expressed to Us with filial confidence by not a few of
yourselves, Venerable Brethren, and by members of your flocks,
as well as Our deep affection towards youth above referred to,
move Us to turn more directly to this subject, if not to treat
it in all its well-nigh inexhaustible range of theory and
practice, at least to summarize its main principles, throw full
light on its important conclusions, and point out its practical
applications.
4. Let this be the record of Our Sacerdotal Jubilee which,
with altogether special affection, We wish to dedicate to our
beloved youth, and to commend to all those whose office and duty
is the work of education.
5. Indeed never has there been so much discussion about
education as nowadays; never have exponents of new pedagogical
theories been so numerous, or so many methods and means devised,
proposed and debated, not merely to facilitate education, but to
create a new system infallibly efficacious, and capable of
preparing the present generations for that earthly happiness
which they so ardently desire.
6. The reason is that men, created by God to His image and
likeness and destined for Him Who is infinite perfection realize
today more than ever amid the most exuberant material progress,
the insufficiency of earthly goods to produce true happiness
either for the individual or for the nations. And hence they
feel more keenly in themselves the impulse towards a perfection
that is higher, which impulse is implanted in their rational
nature by the Creator Himself. This perfection they seek to
acquire by means of education. But many of them with, it would
seem, too great insistence on the etymological meaning of the
word, pretend to draw education out of human nature itself and
evolve it by its own unaided powers. Such easily fall into
error, because, instead of fixing their gaze on God, first
principle and last end of the whole universe, they fall back
upon themselves, becoming attached exclusively to passing things
of earth; and thus their restlessness will never cease till they
direct their attention and their efforts to God, the goal of all
perfection, according to the profound saying of Saint Augustine:
"Thou didst create us, O Lord, for Thyself, and our heart is
restless till it rest in Thee." 3
7. It is therefore as important to make no mistake in
education, as it is to make no mistake in the pursuit of the
last end, with which the whole work of education is intimately
and necessarily connected. In fact, since education consists
essentially in preparing man for what he must be and for what he
must do here below, in order to attain the sublime end for which
he was created, it is clear that there can be no true education
which is not wholly directed to man's last end, and that in the
present order of Providence, since God has revealed Himself to
us in the Person of His Only Begotten Son, who alone is "the
way, the truth and the life," there can be no ideally
perfect education which is not Christian education.
8. From this we see the supreme importance of Christian
education, not merely for each individual, but for families and
for the whole of human society, whose perfection comes from the
perfection of the elements that compose it. From these same
principles, the excellence, we may well call it the unsurpassed
excellence, of the work of Christian education becomes manifest
and clear; for after all it aims at securing the Supreme Good,
that is, God, for the souls of those who are being educated, and
the maximum of well-being possible here below for human society.
And this it does as efficaciously as man is capable of doing it,
namely by cooperating with God in the perfecting of individuals
and of society, in as much as education makes upon the soul the
first, the most powerful and lasting impression for life
according to the well-known saying of the Wise Man, "A young
man according to his way, even when he is old, he will not
depart from it." 4 With good reason therefore did
St. John Chrysostom say, "What greater work is there than
training the mind and forming the habits of the young?"
5
9. But nothing discloses to us the supernatural beauty and
excellence of the work of Christian education better than the
sublime expression of love of our Blessed Lord, identifying
Himself with children, "Whosoever shall receive one such
child as this in my name, receiveth me." 6
10. Now in order that no mistake be made in this work of
utmost importance, and in order to conduct it in the best manner
possible with the help of God's grace, it is necessary to have a
clear and definite idea of Christian education in its essential
aspects, viz., who has the mission to educate, who are
the subjects to be educated, what are the necessary accompanying
circumstances, what is the end and object proper to Christian
education according to God's established order in the economy of
His Divine Providence.
11. Education is essentially a social and not a mere
individual activity. Now there are three necessary societies,
distinct from one another and yet harmoniously combined by God,
into which man is born: two, namely the family and civil
society, belong to the natural order; the third, the Church, to
the supernatural order.
12. In the first place comes the family, instituted directly
by God for its peculiar purpose, the generation and formation of
offspring; for this reason it has priority of nature and
therefore of rights over civil society. Nevertheless, the family
is an imperfect society, since it has not in itself all the
means for its own complete development; whereas civil society is
a perfect society, having in itself all the means for its
peculiar end, which is the temporal well-being of the community;
and so, in this respect, that is, in view of the common good, it
has pre-eminence over the family, which finds its own suitable
temporal perfection precisely in civil society.
13. The third society, into which man is born when through
Baptism he reaches the divine life of grace, is the Church; a
society of the supernatural order and of universal extent; a
perfect society, because it has in itself all the means required
for its own end, which is the eternal salvation of mankind;
hence it is supreme in its own domain.
14. Consequently, education which is concerned with man as a
whole, individually and socially, in the order of nature and in
the order of grace, necessarily belongs to all these three
societies, in due proportion, corresponding, according to the
disposition of Divine Providence, to the coordination of their
respecting ends.
15. And first of all education belongs preeminently to the
Church, by reason of a double title in the supernatural order,
conferred exclusively upon her by God Himself; absolutely
superior therefore to any other title in the natural order.
16. The first title is founded upon the express mission and
supreme authority to teach, given her by her divine Founder:
"All power is given to me in heaven and in earth. Going
therefore teach ye all nations, baptizing them in the name of
the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, 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." 7 Upon this magisterial office Christ
conferred infallibility, together with the command to teach His
doctrine. Hence the Church "was set by her divine Author as
the pillar and ground of truth, in order to teach the divine
Faith to men, and keep whole and inviolate the deposit confided
to her; to direct and fashion men, in all their actions
individually and socially, to purity of morals and integrity of
life, in accordance with revealed doctrine." 8
17. The second title is the supernatural motherhood, in
virtue of which the Church, spotless spouse of Christ,
generates, nurtures and educates souls in the divine life of
grace, with her Sacraments and her doctrine. With good reason
then does St. Augustine maintain: "He has not God for father
who refuses to have the Church as mother." 9
18. Hence it is that in this proper object of her mission,
that is, "in faith and morals, God Himself has made the
Church sharer in the divine magisterium and, by a special
privilege, granted her immunity from error; hence she is the
mistress of men, supreme and absolutely sure, and she has
inherent in herself an inviolable right to freedom in teaching."
10 By necessary consequence the Church is independent
of any sort of earthly power as well in the origin as in the
exercise of her mission as educator, not merely in regard to her
proper end and object, but also in regard to the means necessary
and suitable to attain that end. Hence with regard to every
other kind of human learning and instruction, which is the
common patrimony of individuals and society, the Church has an
independent right to make use of it, and above all to decide
what may help or harm Christian education. And this must be so,
because the Church as a perfect society has an independent right
to the means conducive to its end, and because every form of
instruction, no less than every human action, has a necessary
connection with man's last end, and therefore cannot be
withdrawn from the dictates of the divine law, of which the
Church is guardian, interpreter and infallible mistress.
19. This truth is clearly set forth by Pius X of saintly
memory:
Whatever a Christian does even in the order of things of
earth, he may not overlook the supernatural; indeed he must,
according to the teaching of Christian wisdom, direct all
things towards the supreme good as to his last end; all his
actions, besides, in so far as good or evil in the order of
morality, that is, in keeping or not with natural and divine
law, fall under the judgment and jurisdiction of the Church.11
20. It is worthy of note how a layman, an excellent writer
and at the same time a profound and conscientious thinker, has
been able to understand well and express exactly this
fundamental Catholic doctrine:
The Church does not say that morality belongs purely, in the
sense of exclusively, to her; but that it belongs wholly to
her. She has never maintained that outside her fold and
apart from her teaching, man cannot arrive at any moral
truth; she has on the contrary more than once condemned this
opinion because it has appeared under more forms than one.
She does however say, has said, and will ever say, that
because of her institution by Jesus Christ, because of the
Holy Ghost sent her in His name by the Father, she alone
possesses what she has had immediately from God and can
never lose, the whole of moral truth, omnem veritatem,
in which all individual moral truths are included, as well
those which man may learn by the help of reason, as those
which form part of revelation or which may be deduced from
it.12
21. Therefore with full right the Church promotes letters,
science, art in so far as necessary or helpful to Christian
education, in addition to her work for the salvation of souls:
founding and maintaining schools and institutions adapted to
every branch of learning and degree of culture.13 Nor
may even physical culture, as it is called, be considered
outside the range of her maternal supervision, for the reason
that it also is a means which may help or harm Christian
education.
22. And this work of the Church in every branch of culture is
of immense benefit to families and nations which without Christ
are lost, as St. Hilary points out correctly: "What can be
more fraught with danger for the world than the rejection of
Christ?" 14 Nor does it interfere in the least
with the regulations of the State, because the Church in her
motherly prudence is not unwilling that her schools and
institutions for the education of the laity be in keeping with
the legitimate dispositions of civil authority; she is in every
way ready to cooperate with this authority and to make provision
for a mutual understanding, should difficulties arise.
23. Again it is the inalienable right as well as the
indispensable duty of the Church, to watch over the entire
education of her children, in all institutions, public or
private, not merely in regard to the religious instruction there
given, but in regard to every other branch of learning and every
regulation in so far as religion and morality are concerned.15
24. Nor should the exercise of this right be considered undue
interference, but rather maternal care on the part of the Church
in protecting her children from the grave danger of all kinds of
doctrinal and moral evil. Moreover this watchfulness of the
Church not merely can create no real inconvenience, but must on
the contrary confer valuable assistance in the right ordering
and well-being of families and of civil society; for it keeps
far away from youth the moral poison which at that inexperienced
and changeable age more easily penetrates the mind and more
rapidly spreads its baneful effects. For it is true, as Leo XIII
has wisely pointed out, that without proper religious and moral
instruction "every form of intellectual culture will be
injurious; for young people not accustomed to respect God, will
be unable to bear the restraint of a virtuous life, and never
having learned to deny themselves anything. they will easily be
incited to disturb the public order." 16
25. The extent of the Church's mission in the field of
education is such as to embrace every nation, without exception,
according to the command of Christ: "Teach ye all nations;"
17 and there is no power on earth that may lawfully
oppose her or stand in her way. In the first place, it extends
over all the Faithful, of whom she has anxious care as a tender
mother. For these she has throughout the centuries created and
conducted an immense number of schools and institutions in every
branch of learning. As We said on a recent occasion.
Right back in the far-off middle ages when there were so
many (some have even said too many) monasteries, convents,
churches, collegiate churches, cathedral chapters, etc.,
there was attached to each a home of study, of teaching, of
Christian education. To these we must add all the
universities, spread over every country and always by the
initiative an under the protection of the Holy See and the
Church. That grand spectacle, which today we see better, as
it is nearer to us and more imposing because of the
conditions of the age, was the spectacle of all times; and
they who study and compare historical events remain
astounded at what the Church has been able to do in this
matter, and marvel at the manner in which she had succeeded
in fulfilling her God-given mission to educate generations
of men to a Christian life, producing everywhere a
magnificent harvest of fruitful results. But if we wonder
that the Church in all times has been able to gather about
her and educate hundreds, thousands, millions of students,
no less wonderful is it to bear in mind what she has done
not only in the field of education, but in that also of true
and genuine erudition. For, if so many treasures of culture,
civilization and literature have escaped destruction, this
is due to the action by which the Church, even in times long
past and uncivilized, has shed so bright a light in the
domain of letters, of philosophy, of art and in a special
manner of architecture.18
26. All this the Church has been able to do because her
mission to educate extends equally to those outside the Fold,
seeing that all men are called to enter the kingdom of God and
reach eternal salvation. Just as today when her missions scatter
schools by the thousand in districts and countries not yet
Christian, from the banks of the Ganges to the Yellow river and
the great islands and archipelagos of the Pacific ocean, from
the Dark Continent to the Land of Fire and to frozen Alaska, so
in every age the Church by her missionaries has educated to
Christian life and to civilization the various peoples which now
constitute the Christian nations of the civilized world.
27. Hence it is evident that both by right and in fact the
mission to educate belongs preeminently to the Church, and that
no one free from prejudice can have a reasonable motive for
opposing or impeding the Church in this her work, of which the
world today enjoys the precious advantages.
28. This is the more true because the rights of the family
and of the State, even the rights of individuals regarding a
just liberty in the pursuit of science, of methods of science
and all sorts of profane culture, not only are not opposed to
this pre-eminence of the Church, but are in complete harmony
with it. The fundamental reason for this harmony is that the
supernatural order, to which the Church owes her rights, not
only does not in the least destroy the natural order, to which
pertain the other rights mentioned, but elevates the natural and
perfects it, each affording mutual aid to the other, and
completing it in a manner proportioned to its respective nature
and dignity. The reason is because both come from God, who
cannot contradict Himself: "The works of God are perfect and
all His ways are judgments." 19
29. This becomes clearer when we consider more closely and in
detail the mission of education proper to the family and to the
State.
30. In the first place the Church's mission of education is
in wonderful agreement with that of the family, for both proceed
from God, and in a remarkably similar manner. God directly
communicates to the family, in the natural order, fecundity,
which is the principle of life, and hence also the principle of
education to life, together with authority, the principle of
order.
31. The Angelic Doctor with his wonted clearness of thought
and precision of style, says: "The father according to the
flesh has in a particular way a share in that principle which in
a manner universal is found in God.... The father is the
principle of generation, of education and discipline and of
everything that bears upon the perfecting of human life."
20
32. The family therefore holds directly from the Creator the
mission and hence the right to educate the offspring, a right
inalienable because inseparably joined to the strict obligation,
a right anterior to any right whatever of civil society and of
the State, and therefore inviolable on the part of any power on
earth.
33. That this right is inviolable St. Thomas proves as
follows:
The child is naturally something of the father ...so
by natural right the child, before reaching the use of
reason, is under the father's care. Hence it would be
contrary to natural justice if the child, before the use of
reason, were removed from the care of its parents, or if any
disposition were made concerning him against the will of the
parents.21
And as this duty on the part of the parents continues up to the
time when the child is in a position to provide for itself, this
same inviolable parental right of education also endures.
"Nature intends not merely the generation of the offspring, but
also its development and advance to the perfection of man
considered as man, that is, to the state of virtue" 22
says the same St. Thomas.
34. The wisdom of the Church in this matter is expressed with
precision and clearness in the Code of Canon Law, can.
1113: "Parents are under a grave obligation to see to the
religious and moral education of their children, as well as to
their physical and civic training, as far as they can, and
moreover to provide for their temporal well-being." 23
35. On this point the common sense of mankind is in such
complete accord, that they would be in open contradiction with
it who dared maintain that the children belong to the State
before they belong to the family, and that the State has an
absolute right over their education. Untenable is the reason
they adduce, namely that man is born a citizen and hence belongs
primarily to the State, not bearing in mind that before being a
citizen man must exist; and existence does not come from the
State, but from the parents, as Leo XIII wisely declared:
"The children are something of the father, and as it were an
extension of the person of the father; and, to be perfectly
accurate, they enter into and become part of civil society, not
directly by themselves, but through the family in which they
were born." 24 "And therefore," says the
same Leo XIII, "the father's power is of such a nature that
it cannot be destroyed or absorbed by the State; for it has the
same origin as human life itself." 25 It does not
however follow from this that the parents' right to educate
their children is absolute and despotic; for it is necessarily
subordinated to the last end and to natural and divine law, as
Leo XIII declares in another memorable encyclical, where He thus
sums up the rights and duties of parents: "By nature parents
have a right to the training of their children, but with this
added duty that the education and instruction of the child be in
accord with the end for which by God's blessing it was begotten.
Therefore it is the duty of parents to make every effort to
prevent any invasion of their rights in this matter, and to make
absolutely sure that the education of their children remain
under their own control in keeping with their Christian duty,
and above all to refuse to send them to those schools in which
there is danger of imbibing the deadly poison of impiety."
26
36. It must be borne in mind also that the obligation of the
family to bring up children, includes not only religious and
moral education, but physical and civic education as well,27
principally in so far as it touches upon religion and morality.
37. This incontestable right of the family has at various
times been recognized by nations anxious to respect the natural
law in their civil enactments. Thus, to give one recent example,
the Supreme Court of the United States of America, in a decision
on an important controversy, declared that it is not in the
competence of the State to fix any uniform standard of education
by forcing children to receive instruction exclusively in public
schools, and it bases its decision on the natural law: the child
is not the mere creature of the State; those who nurture him and
direct his destiny have the right coupled with the high duty, to
educate him and prepare him for the fulfillment of his
obligations.28
38. History bears witness how, particularly in modern times,
the State has violated and does violate rights conferred by God
on the family. At the same time it shows magnificently how the
Church has ever protected and defended these rights, a fact
proved by the special confidence which parents have in Catholic
schools. As We pointed out recently in Our letter to the
Cardinal Secretary of State:
The family has instinctively understood this to be so, and
from the earliest days of Christianity down to our own
times, fathers and mothers, even those of little or no
faith, have been sending or bringing their children in
millions to places of education under the direction of the
Church.29
39. It is paternal instinct, given by God, that thus turns
with confidence to the Church, certain of finding in her the
protection of family rights, thereby illustrating that harmony
with which God has ordered all things. The Church is indeed
conscious of her divine mission to all mankind, and of the
obligation which all men have to practice the one true religion;
and therefore she never tires of defending her right, and of
reminding parents of their duty, to have all Catholic-born
children baptized and brought up as Christians. On the other
hand so jealous is she of the family's inviolable natural right
to educate the children, that she never consents, save under
peculiar circumstances and with special cautions, to baptize the
children of infidels, or provide for their education against the
will of the parents, till such time as the children can choose
for themselves and freely embrace the Faith.30
40. We have therefore two facts of supreme importance. As We
said in Our discourse cited above: The Church placing at the
disposal of families her office of mistress and educator, and
the families eager to profit by the offer, and entrusting their
children to the Church in hundreds and thousands. These two
facts recall and proclaim a striking truth of the greatest
significance in the moral and social order. They declare that
the mission of education regards before all, above all,
primarily the Church and the family, and this by natural and
divine law, and that therefore it cannot be slighted, cannot be
evaded, cannot be supplanted.31
41. From such priority of rights on the part of the Church
and of the family in the field of education, most important
advantages, as we have seen, accrue to the whole of society.
Moreover in accordance with the divinely established order of
things, no damage can follow from it to the true and just rights
of the State in regard to the education of its citizens.
42. These rights have been conferred upon civil society by
the Author of nature Himself, not by title of fatherhood, as in
the case of the Church and of the family, but in virtue of the
authority which it possesses to promote the common temporal
welfare, which is precisely the purpose of its existence.
Consequently education cannot pertain to civil society in the
same way in which it pertains to the Church and to the family,
but in a different way corresponding to its own particular end
and object.
43. Now this end and object, the common welfare in the
temporal order, consists in that peace and security in which
families and individual citizens have the free exercise of their
rights, and at the same time enjoy the greatest spiritual and
temporal prosperity possible in this life, by the mutual union
and co-ordination of the work of all. The function therefore of
the civil authority residing in the State is twofold, to protect
and to foster, but by no means to absorb the family and the
individual, or to substitute itself for them.
44. Accordingly in the matter of education, it is the right,
or to speak more correctly, it is the duty of the State to
protect in its legislation, the prior rights, already described,
of the family as regards the Christian education of its
offspring, and consequently also to respect the supernatural
rights of the Church in this same realm of Christian education.
45. It also belongs to the State to protect the rights of the
child itself when the parents are found wanting either
physically or morally in this respect, whether by default,
incapacity or misconduct, since, as has been shown, their right
to educate is not an absolute and despotic one, but dependent on
the natural and divine law, and therefore subject alike to the
authority and jurisdiction of the Church, and to the vigilance
and administrative care of the State in view of the common good.
Besides, the family is not a perfect society, that is, it has
not in itself all the means necessary for its full development.
In such cases, exceptional no doubt, the State does not put
itself in the place of the family, but merely supplies
deficiencies, and provides suitable means, always in conformity
with the natural rights of the child and the supernatural rights
of the Church.
46. In general then it is the right and duty of the State to
protect, according to the rules of right reason and faith, the
moral and religious education of youth, by removing public
impediments that stand in the way. In the first place it
pertains to the State, in view of the common good, to promote in
various ways the education and instruction of youth. It should
begin by encouraging and assisting, of its own accord, the
initiative and activity of the Church and the family, whose
successes in this field have been clearly demonstrated by
history and experience. It should moreover supplement their work
whenever this falls short of what is necessary, even by means of
its own schools and institutions. For the State more than any
other society is provided with the means put at its disposal for
the needs of all, and it is only right that it use these means
to the advantage of those who have contributed them.32
47. Over and above this, the State can exact and take
measures to secure that all its citizens have the necessary
knowledge of their civic and political duties, and a certain
degree of physical, intellectual and moral culture, which,
considering the conditions of our times, is really necessary for
the common good.
48. However it is clear that in all these ways of promoting
education and instruction, both public and private, the State
should respect the inherent rights of the Church and of the
family concerning Christian education, and moreover have regard
for distributive justice. Accordingly, unjust and unlawful is
any monopoly, educational or scholastic, which, physically or
morally, forces families to make use of government schools,
contrary to the dictates of their Christian conscience, or
contrary even to their legitimate preferences.
49. This does not prevent the State from making due provision
for the right administration of public affairs and for the
protection of its peace, within or without the realm. These are
things which directly concern the public good and call for
special aptitudes and special preparation. The State may
therefore reserve to itself the establishment and direction of
schools intended to prepare for certain civic duties and
especially for military service, provided it be careful not to
injure the rights of the Church or of the family in what
pertains to them. It is well to repeat this warning here; for in
these days there is spreading a spirit of nationalism which is
false and exaggerated, as well as dangerous to true peace and
prosperity. Under its influence various excesses are committed
in giving a military turn to the so-called physical training of
boys (sometimes even of girls, contrary to the very instincts of
human nature); or again in usurping unreasonably on Sunday, the
time which should be devoted to religious duties and to family
life at home. It is not our intention however to condemn what is
good in the spirit of discipline and legitimate bravery promoted
by these methods; We condemn only what is excessive, as for
example violence, which must not be confounded with courage nor
with the noble sentiment of military valor in defense of country
and public order; or again exaltation of athleticism which even
in classic pagan times marked the decline and downfall of
genuine physical training.
50. In general also it belongs to civil society and the State
to provide what may be called civic education, not only for its
youth, but for all ages and classes. This consists in the
practice of presenting publicly to groups of individuals
information having an intellectual, imaginative and emotional
appeal, calculated to draw their wills to what is upright and
honest, and to urge its practice by a sort of moral compulsion,
positively by disseminating such knowledge, and negatively by
suppressing what is opposed to it.33 This civic
education, so wide and varied in itself as to include almost
every activity of the State intended for the public good, ought
also to be regulated by the norms of rectitude, and therefore
cannot conflict with the doctrines of the Church, which is the
divinely appointed teacher of these norms.
51. All that we have said so far regarding the activity of
the State in educational matters, rests on the solid and
immovable foundation of the Catholic doctrine of The
Christian Constitution of States set forth in such masterly
fashion by Our Predecessor Leo XIII, notably in the Encyclicals
Immortale Dei and Sapientiae Christianae. He
writes as follows:
God has divided the government of the human race between two
authorities, ecclesiastical and civil, establishing one over
things divine, the other over things human. Both are supreme,
each in its own domain; each has its own fixed boundaries which
limit its activities. These boundaries are determined by the
peculiar nature and the proximate end of each, and describe as
it were a sphere within which, with exclusive right, each may
develop its influence. As however the same subjects are under
the two authorities, it may happen that the same matter, though
from a different point of view, may come under the competence
and jurisdiction of each of them. If follows that divine
Providence, whence both authorities have their origin, must have
traced with due order the proper line of action for each. The
powers that are, are ordained of God.34
52. Now the education of youth is precisely one of those
matters that belong both to the Church and to the State,
"though in different ways," as explained above. Therefore,
continues Leo XIII, between the two powers there must reign a
well-ordered harmony. Not without reason may this mutual
agreement be compared to the union of body and soul in man. Its
nature and extent can only be determined by considering, as we
have said, the nature of each of the two powers, and in
particular the excellence and nobility of the respective ends.
To one is committed directly and specifically the charge of what
is helpful in worldly matters; while the other is to concern
itself with the things that pertain to heaven and eternity.
Everything therefore in human affairs that is in any way sacred,
or has reference to the salvation of souls and the worship of
God, whether by its nature or by its end, is subject to the
jurisdiction and discipline of the Church. Whatever else is
comprised in the civil and political order, rightly comes under
the authority of the State; for Christ commanded us to give to
Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and to God the things that
are God's.35
53. Whoever refuses to admit these principles, and hence to
apply them to education, must necessarily deny that Christ has
founded His Church for the eternal salvation of mankind, and
maintain instead that civil society and the State are not
subject to God and to His law, natural and divine. Such a
doctrine is manifestly impious, contrary to right reason, and,
especially in this matter of education, extremely harmful to the
proper training of youth, and disastrous as well for civil
society as for the well-being of all mankind. On the other hand
from the application of these principles, there inevitably
result immense advantages for the right formation of citizens.
This is abundantly proved by the history of every age.
Tertullian in his Apologeticus could throw down a
challenge to the enemies of the Church in the early days of
Christianity, just as St. Augustine did in his; and we today can
repeat with him:
Let those who declare the teaching of Christ to be opposed
to the welfare of the State, furnish us with an army of
soldiers such as Christ says soldiers ought to be; let them
give us subjects, husbands, wives, parents, children,
masters, servants, kings, judges, taxpayers and tax
gatherers who live up to the teachings of Christ; and then
let them dare assert that Christian doctrine is harmful to
the State. Rather let them not hesitate one moment to
acclaim that doctrine, rightly observed, the greatest
safeguard of the State.36
54. While treating of education, it is not out of place to
show here how an ecclesiastical writer, who flourished in more
recent times, during the Renaissance, the holy and learned
Cardinal Silvio Antoniano, to whom the cause of Christian
education is greatly indebted, has set forth most clearly this
well established point of Catholic doctrine. He had been a
disciple of that wonderful educator of youth, St. Philip Neri;
he was teacher and Latin secretary to St. Charles Borromeo, and
it was at the latter's suggestion and under his inspiration that
he wrote his splendid treatise on The Christian Education of
Youth. In it he argues as follows:
The more closely the temporal power of a nation aligns
itself with the spiritual, and the more it fosters and
promotes the latter, by so much the more it contributes to
the conservation of the commonwealth. For it is the aim of
the ecclesiastical authority by the use of spiritual means,
to form good Christians in accordance with its own
particular end and object; and in doing this it helps at the
same time to form good citizens, and prepares them to meet
their obligations as members of a civil society. This
follows of necessity because in the City of God, the Holy
Roman Catholic Church, a good citizen and an upright man are
absolutely one and the same thing. How grave therefore is
the error of those who separate things so closely united,
and who think that they can produce good citizens by ways
and methods other than those which make for the formation of
good Christians. For, let human prudence say what it likes
and reason as it pleases, it is impossible to produce true
temporal peace and tranquillity by things repugnant or
opposed to the peace and happiness of eternity.37
55. What is true of the State, is true also of science,
scientific methods and scientific research; they have nothing to
fear from the full and perfect mandate which the Church holds in
the field of education. Our Catholic institutions, whatever
their grade in the educational and scientific world, have no
need of apology. The esteem they enjoy, the praise they receive,
the learned works which they promote and produce in such
abundance, and above all, the men, fully and splendidly
equipped, whom they provide for the magistracy, for the
professions, for the teaching career, in fact for every walk of
life, more than sufficiently testify in their favor.38
56. These facts moreover present a most striking confirmation
of the Catholic doctrine defined by the [Ed’s note: the First]
Vatican Council:
Not only is it impossible for faith and reason to be at
variance with each other, they are on the contrary of mutual
help. For while right reason establishes the foundations of
Faith, and, by the help of its light, develops a knowledge
of the things of God, Faith on the other hand frees and
preserves reason from error and enriches it with varied
knowledge. The Church therefore, far from hindering the
pursuit of the arts and sciences, fosters and promotes them
in many ways. For she is neither ignorant nor unappreciative
of the many advantages which flow from them to mankind. On
the contrary she admits that just as they come from God,
Lord of all knowledge, so too if rightly used, with the help
of His grace they lead to God. Nor does she prevent the
sciences, each in its own sphere, from making use of
principles and methods of their own. Only while
acknowledging the freedom due to them, she takes every
precaution to prevent them from falling into error by
opposition to divine doctrine, or from overstepping their
proper limits, and thus invading and disturbing the domain
of Faith.39
57. This norm of a just freedom in things scientific, serves
also as an inviolable norm of a just freedom in things didactic,
or for rightly understood liberty in teaching; it should be
observed therefore in whatever instruction is imparted to
others. Its obligation is all the more binding in justice when
there is question of instructing youth. For in this work the
teacher, whether public or private, has no absolute right of his
own, but only such as has been communicated to him by others.
Besides every Christian child or youth has a strict right to
instruction in harmony with the teaching of the Church, the
pillar and ground of truth. And whoever disturbs the pupil's
Faith in any way, does him grave wrong, inasmuch as he abuses
the trust which children place in their teachers, and takes
unfair advantage of their inexperience and of their natural
craving for unrestrained liberty, at once illusory and false.
58. In fact it must never be forgotten that the subject of
Christian education is man whole and entire, soul united to body
in unity of nature, with all his faculties natural and
supernatural, such as right reason and revelation show him to
be; man, therefore, fallen from his original estate, but
redeemed by Christ and restored to the supernatural condition of
adopted son of God, though without the preternatural privileges
of bodily immortality or perfect control of appetite. There
remain therefore, in human nature the effects of original sin,
the chief of which are weakness of will and disorderly
inclinations.
59. "Folly is bound up in the heart of a child and the rod
of correction shall drive it away." 40 Disorderly
inclinations then must be corrected, good tendencies encouraged
and regulated from tender childhood, and above all the mind must
be enlightened and the will strengthened by supernatural truth
and by the means of grace, without which it is impossible to
control evil impulses, impossible to attain to the full and
complete perfection of education intended by the Church, which
Christ has endowed so richly with divine doctrine and with the
Sacraments, the efficacious means of grace.
60. Hence every form of pedagogic naturalism which in any way
excludes or weakens supernatural Christian formation in the
teaching of youth, is false. Every method of education founded,
wholly or in part, on the denial or forgetfulness of original
sin and of grace, and relying on the sole powers of human
nature, is unsound. Such, generally speaking, are those modern
systems bearing various names which appeal to a pretended
self-government and unrestrained freedom on the part of the
child, and which diminish or even suppress the teacher's
authority and action, attributing to the child an exclusive
primacy of initiative, and an activity independent of any higher
law, natural or divine, in the work of his education.
61. If any of these terms are used, less properly, to denote
the necessity of a gradually more active cooperation on the part
of the pupil in his own education; if the intention is to banish
from education despotism and violence, which, by the way, just
punishment is not, this would be correct, but in no way new. It
would mean only what has been taught and reduced to practice by
the Church in traditional Christian education, in imitation of
the method employed by God Himself towards His creatures, of
whom He demands active cooperation according to the nature of
each; for His Wisdom "reacheth from end to end mightily and
ordereth all things sweetly." 41
62. But alas! it is clear from the obvious meaning of the
words and from experience, that what is intended by not a few,
is the withdrawal of education from every sort of dependence on
the divine law. So today we see, strange sight indeed, educators
and philosophers who spend their lives in searching for a
universal moral code of education, as if there existed no
decalogue, no gospel law, no law even of nature stamped by God
on the heart of man, promulgated by right reason, and codified
in positive revelation by God Himself in the ten commandments.
These innovators are wont to refer contemptuously to Christian
education as "heteronomous," "passive", "obsolete," because
founded upon the authority of God and His holy law.
63. Such men are miserably deluded in their claim to
emancipate, as they say, the child, while in reality they are
making him the slave of his own blind pride and of his
disorderly affections, which, as a logical consequence of this
false system, come to be justified as legitimate demands of a
so-called autonomous nature.
64. But what is worse is the claim, not only vain but false,
irreverent and dangerous, to submit to research, experiment and
conclusions of a purely natural and profane order, those matters
of education which belong to the supernatural order; as for
example questions of priestly or religious vocation, and in
general the secret workings of grace which indeed elevate the
natural powers, but are infinitely superior to them, and may
nowise be subjected to physical laws, for "the Spirit
breatheth where He will." 42
65. Another very grave danger is that naturalism which
nowadays invades the field of education in that most delicate
matter of purity of morals. Far too common is the error of those
who with dangerous assurance and under an ugly term propagate a
so-called sex-education, falsely imagining they can forearm
youths against the dangers of sensuality by means purely
natural, such as a foolhardy initiation and precautionary
instruction for all indiscriminately, even in public; and, worse
still, by exposing them at an early age to the occasions, in
order to accustom them, so it is argued, and as it were to
harden them against such dangers.
66. Such persons grievously err in refusing to recognize the
inborn weakness of human nature, and the law of which the
Apostle speaks, fighting against the law of the mind;43
and also in ignoring the experience of facts, from which it is
clear that, particularly in young people, evil practices are the
effect not so much of ignorance of intellect as of weakness of a
will exposed to dangerous occasions, and unsupported by the
means of grace.
67. In this extremely delicate matter, if, all things
considered, some private instruction is found necessary and
opportune, from those who hold from God the commission to teach
and who have the grace of state, every precaution must be taken.
Such precautions are well known in traditional Christian
education, and are adequately described by Antoniano cited
above, when he says:
Such is our misery and inclination to sin, that often in the
very things considered to be remedies against sin, we find
occasions for and inducements to sin itself. Hence it is of
the highest importance that a good father, while discussing
with his son a matter so delicate, should be well on his
guard and not descend to details, nor refer to the various
ways in which this infernal hydra destroys with its poison
so large a portion of the world; otherwise it may happen
that instead of extinguishing this fire, he unwittingly
stirs or kindles it in the simple and tender heart of the
child. Speaking generally, during the period of childhood it
suffices to employ those remedies which produce the double
effect of opening the door to the virtue of purity and
closing the door upon vice.44
68. False also and harmful to Christian education is the
so-called method of "coeducation." This too, by many of its
supporters, is founded upon naturalism and the denial of
original sin; but by all, upon a deplorable confusion of ideas
that mistakes a leveling promiscuity and equality, for the
legitimate association of the sexes. The Creator has ordained
and disposed perfect union of the sexes only in matrimony, and,
with varying degrees of contact, in the family and in society.
Besides there is not in nature itself, which fashions the two
quite different in organism, in temperament, in abilities,
anything to suggest that there can be or ought to be
promiscuity, and much less equality, in the training of the two
sexes. These, in keeping with the wonderful designs of the
Creator, are destined to complement each other in the family and
in society, precisely because of their differences, which
therefore ought to be maintained and encouraged during their
years of formation, with the necessary distinction and
corresponding separation, according to age and circumstances.
These principles, with due regard to time and place, must, in
accordance with Christian prudence, be applied to all schools,
particularly in the most delicate and decisive period of
formation, that, namely, of adolescence; and in gymnastic
exercises and deportment, special care must be had of Christian
modesty in young women and girls, which is so gravely impaired
by any kind of exhibition in public.
69. Recalling the terrible words of the Divine Master:
"Woe to the world because of scandals!" 45 We
most earnestly appeal to your solicitude and your watchfulness,
Venerable Brethren, against these pernicious errors, which, to
the immense harm of youth, are spreading far and wide among
Christian peoples.
70. In order to obtain perfect education, it is of the utmost
importance to see that all those conditions which surround the
child during the period of his formation, in other words that
the combination of circumstances which we call environment,
correspond exactly to the end proposed.
71. The first natural and necessary element in this
environment, as regards education, is the family, and this
precisely because so ordained by the Creator Himself.
Accordingly that education, as a rule, will be more effective
and lasting which is received in a well-ordered and
well-disciplined Christian family; and more efficacious in
proportion to the clear and constant good example set, first by
the parents, and then by the other members of the household.
72. It is not our intention to treat formally the question of
domestic education, nor even to touch upon its principal points.
The subject is too vast. Besides there are not lacking special
treatises on this topic by authors, both ancient and modern,
well known for their solid Catholic doctrine. One which seems
deserving of special mention is the golden treatise already
referred to, of Antoniano, On the Christian Education of
Youth, which St. Charles Borromeo ordered to be read in
public to parents assembled in their churches.
73. Nevertheless, Venerable Brethren and beloved children, We
wish to call your attention in a special manner to the
present-day lamentable decline in family education. The offices
and professions of a transitory and earthly life, which are
certainly of far less importance, are prepared for by long and
careful study; whereas for the fundamental duty and obligation
of educating their children, many parents have little or no
preparation, immersed as they are in temporal cares. The
declining influence of domestic environment is further weakened
by another tendency, prevalent almost everywhere today, which,
under one pretext or another, for economic reasons, or for
reasons of industry, trade or politics, causes children to be
more and more frequently sent away from home even in their
tenderest years. And there is a country where the children are
actually being torn from the bosom of the family, to be formed
(or, to speak more accurately, to be deformed and depraved) in
godless schools and associations, to irreligion and hatred,
according to the theories of advanced socialism; and thus is
renewed in a real and more terrible manner the slaughter of the
Innocents.
74. For the love of Our Savior .Jesus Christ, therefore, we
implore pastors of souls, by every means in their power, by
instructions and catechisms, by word of mouth and written
articles widely distributed, to warn Christian parents of their
grave obligations. And this should be done not in a merely
theoretical and general way, but with practical and specific
application to the various responsibilities of parents touching
the religious, moral and civil training of their children, and
with indication of the methods best adapted to make their
training effective, supposing always the influence of their own
exemplary lives. The Apostle of the Gentiles did not hesitate to
descend to such details of practical instruction in his
epistles, especially in the Epistle to the Ephesians, where
among other things he gives this advice: "And you, fathers,
provoke not your children to anger." 46 This
fault is the result not so much of excessive severity, as of
impatience and of ignorance of means best calculated to effect a
desired correction; it is also due to the all too common
relaxation of parental discipline which fails to check the
growth of evil passions in the hearts of the younger generation.
Parents therefore, and all who take their place in the work of
education, should be careful to make right use of the authority
given them by God, whose vicars in a true sense they are. This
authority is not given for their own advantage, but for the
proper up-bringing of their children in a holy and filial "fear
of God, the beginning of wisdom," on which foundation alone all
respect for authority can rest securely; and without which,
order, tranquillity and prosperity, whether in the family or in
society, will be impossible.
75. To meet the weakness of man's fallen nature, God in His
Goodness has provided the abundant helps of His grace and the
countless means with which He has endowed the Church, the great
family of Christ. The Church therefore is the educational
environment most intimately and harmoniously associated with the
Christian family.
76. This educational environment of the Church embraces the
Sacraments, divinely efficacious means of grace, the sacred
ritual, so wonderfully instructive, and the material fabric of
her churches, whose liturgy and art have an immense educational
value; but it also includes the great number and variety of
schools, associations and institutions of all kinds, established
for the training of youth in Christian piety, together with
literature and the sciences, not omitting recreation and
physical culture. And in this inexhaustible fecundity of
educational works, how marvelous, how incomparable is the
Church's maternal providence! So admirable too is the harmony
which she maintains with the Christian family, that the Church
and the family may be said to constitute together one and the
same temple of Christian education.
77. Since however the younger generations must be trained in
the arts and sciences for the advantage and prosperity of civil
society, and since the family of itself is unequal to this task,
it was necessary to create that social institution, the school.
But let it be borne in mind that this institution owes its
existence to the initiative of the family and of the Church,
long before it was undertaken by the State. Hence considered in
its historical origin, the school is by its very nature an
institution subsidiary and complementary to the family and to
the Church. It follows logically and necessarily that it must
not be in opposition to, but in positive accord with those other
two elements, and form with them a perfect moral union,
constituting one sanctuary of education, as it were, with the
family and the Church. Otherwise it is doomed to fail of its
purpose, and to become instead an agent of destruction.
78. This principle we find recognized by a layman, famous for
his pedagogical writings, though these because of their
liberalism cannot be unreservedly praised. "The school,"
he writes, "if not a temple, is a den." And again:
"When literary, social, domestic and religious education do not
go hand in hand, man is unhappy and helpless." 47
79. From this it follows that the so-called "neutral" or
"lay" school, from which religion is excluded, is contrary to
the fundamental principles of education. Such a school moreover
cannot exist in practice; it is bound to become irreligious.
There is no need to repeat what Our Predecessors have declared
on this point, especially Pius IX and Leo XIII, at times when
laicism was beginning in a special manner to infest the public
school. We renew and confirm their declarations,48 as
well as the Sacred Canons in which the frequenting of
non-Catholic schools, whether neutral or mixed, those namely
which are open to Catholics and non-Catholics alike, is
forbidden for Catholic children, and can be at most tolerated,
on the approval of the Ordinary alone, under determined
circumstances of place and time, and with special precautions.49
Neither can Catholics admit that other type of mixed school,
(least of all the so-called "école unique," obligatory on
all), in which the students are provided with separate religious
instruction, but receive other lessons in common with
non-Catholic pupils from non-Catholic teachers.
80. For the mere fact that a school gives some religious
instruction (often extremely stinted), does not bring it into
accord with the rights of the Church and of the Christian
family, or make it a fit place for Catholic students. To be
this, it is necessary that all the teaching and the whole
organization of the school, and its teachers, syllabus and
text-books in every branch, be regulated by the Christian
spirit, under the direction and maternal supervision of the
Church; so that Religion may be in very truth the foundation and
crown of the youth's entire training; and this in every grade of
school, not only the elementary, but the intermediate and the
higher institutions of learning as well. To use the words of Leo
XIII:
It is necessary not only that religious instruction be given
to the young at certain fixed times, but also that every
other subject taught, be permeated with Christian piety. If
this is wanting, if this sacred atmosphere does not pervade
and warm the hearts of masters and scholars alike, little
good can be expected from any kind of learning, and
considerable harm will often be the consequence.50
81. And let no one say that in a nation where there are
different religious beliefs, it is impossible to provide for
public instruction otherwise than by neutral or mixed schools.
In such a case it becomes the duty of the State, indeed it is
the easier and more reasonable method of procedure, to leave
free scope to the initiative of the Church and the family, while
giving them such assistance as justice demands. That this can be
done to the full satisfaction of families, and to the advantage
of education and of public peace and tranquillity, is clear from
the actual experience of some countries comprising different
religious denominations. There the school legislation respects
the rights of the family, and Catholics are free to follow their
own system of teaching in schools that are entirely Catholic.
Nor is distributive justice lost sight of, as is evidenced by
the financial aid granted by the State to the several schools
demanded by the families.
82. In other countries of mixed creeds, things are otherwise,
and a heavy burden weighs upon Catholics, who under the guidance
of their Bishops and with the indefatigable cooperation of the
clergy, secular and regular, support Catholic schools for their
children entirely at their own expense; to this they feel
obliged in conscience, and with a generosity and constancy
worthy of all praise, they are firmly determined to make
adequate provision for what they openly profess as their motto:
"Catholic education in Catholic schools for all the Catholic
youth." If such education is not aided from public funds, as
distributive justice requires, certainly it may not be opposed
by any civil authority ready to recognize the rights of the
family, and the irreducible claims of legitimate liberty.
83. Where this fundamental liberty is thwarted or interfered
with, Catholics will never feel, whatever may have been the
sacrifices already made, that they have done enough, for the
support and defense of their schools and for the securing of
laws that will do them justice.
84. For whatever Catholics do in promoting and defending the
Catholic school for their children, is a genuinely religious
work and therefore an important task of "Catholic Action." For
this reason the associations which in various countries are so
zealously engaged in this work of prime necessity, are
especially dear to Our paternal heart and are deserving of every
commendation.
85. Let it be loudly proclaimed and well understood and
recognized by all, that Catholics, no matter what their
nationality, in agitating for Catholic schools for their
children, are not mixing in party politics, but are engaged in a
religious enterprise demanded by conscience. They do not intend
to separate their children either from the body of the nation or
its spirit, but to educate them in a perfect manner, most
conducive to the prosperity of the nation. Indeed a good
Catholic, precisely because of his Catholic principles, makes
the better citizen, attached to his country, and loyally
submissive to constituted civil authority in every legitimate
form of government.
86. In such a school, in harmony with the Church and the
Christian family, the various branches of secular learning will
not enter into conflict with religious instruction to the
manifest detriment of education. And if, when occasion arises,
it be deemed necessary to have the students read authors
propounding false doctrine, for the purpose of refuting it, this
will be done after due preparation and with such an antidote of
sound doctrine, that it will not only do no harm, but will an
aid to the Christian formation of youth.
87. In such a school moreover, the study of the vernacular
and of classical literature will do no damage to moral virtue.
There the Christian teacher will imitate the bee, which takes
the choicest part of the flower and leaves the rest, as St.
Basil teaches in his discourse to youths on the study of the
classics.51 Nor will this necessary caution,
suggested also by the pagan Quintilian,52 in any way
hinder the Christian teacher from gathering and turning to
profit, whatever there is of real worth in the systems and
methods of our modern times, mindful of the Apostle's advice:
"Prove all things: hold fast that which is good." 53
Hence in accepting the new, he will not hastily abandon the old,
which the experience of centuries has found expedient and
profitable. This is particularly true in the teaching of Latin,
which in our days is falling more and more into disuse, because
of the unreasonable rejection of methods so successfully used by
that sane humanism, whose highest development was reached in the
schools of the Church. These noble traditions of the past
require that the youth committed to Catholic schools be fully
instructed in the letters and sciences in accordance with the
exigencies of the times. They also demand that the doctrine
imparted be deep and solid, especially in sound philosophy,
avoiding the muddled superficiality of those "who perhaps
would have found the necessary, had they not gone in search of
the superfluous." 54 In this connection Christian
teachers should keep in mind what Leo XIII says in a pithy
sentence:
Greater stress must be laid on the employment of apt and solid
methods of teaching, and, what is still more important, on
bringing into full conformity with the Catholic faith, what is
taught in literature, in the sciences, and above all in
philosophy, on which depends in great part the right orientation
of the other branches of knowledge.55
88. Perfect schools are the result not so much of good
methods as of good teachers, teachers who are thoroughly
prepared and well-grounded in the matter they have to teach; who
possess the intellectual and moral qualifications required by
their important office; who cherish a pure and holy love for the
youths confided to them, because they love Jesus Christ and His
Church, of which these are the children of predilection; and who
have therefore sincerely at heart the true good of family and
country. Indeed it fills Our soul with consolation and gratitude
towards the divine Goodness to see, side by side with religious
men and women engaged in teaching, such a large number of
excellent lay teachers, who, for their greater spiritual
advancement, are often grouped in special sodalities and
associations, which are worthy of praise and encouragement as
most excellent and powerful auxiliaries of "Catholic Action."
All these labor unselfishly with zeal and perseverance in what
St. Gregory Nazianzen calls "the art of arts and the science
of sciences," 56 the direction and formation of
youth. Of them also it may be said in the words of the divine
Master: "The harvest indeed is great, but the laborers few."
57 Let us then pray the Lord of the harvest to send
more such workers into the field of Christian education; and let
their formation be one of the principal concerns of the pastors
of souls and of the superiors of Religious Orders.
89. It is no less necessary to direct and watch the education
of the adolescent, "soft as wax to be moulded into vice,"
58 in whatever other environment he may happen to be,
removing occasions of evil and providing occasions for good in
his recreations and social intercourse; for "evil
communications corrupt good manners." 59
90. More than ever nowadays an extended and careful vigilance
is necessary, inasmuch as the dangers of moral and religious
shipwreck are greater for inexperienced youth. Especially is
this true of impious and immoral books, often diabolically
circulated at low prices; of the cinema, which multiplies every
kind of exhibition; and now also of the radio, which facilitates
every kind of communications. These most powerful means of
publicity, which can be of great utility for instruction and
education when directed by sound principles, are only too often
used as an incentive to evil passions and greed for gain. St.
Augustine deplored the passion for the shows of the circus which
possessed even some Christians of his time, and he dramatically
narrates the infatuation for them, fortunately only temporary,
of his disciple and friend Alipius.60 How often today
must parents and educators bewail the corruption of youth
brought about by the modern theater and the vile book!
91. Worthy of all praise and encouragement therefore are
those educational associations which have for their object to
point out to parents and educators, by means of suitable books
and periodicals, the dangers to morals and religion that are
often cunningly disguised in books and theatrical
representations. In their spirit of zeal for the souls of the
young, they endeavor at the same time to circulate good
literature and to promote plays that are really instructive,
going so far as to put up at the cost of great sacrifices,
theaters and cinemas, in which virtue will have nothing to
suffer and much to gain.
92. This necessary vigilance does not demand that young
people be removed from the society in which they must live and
save their souls; but that today more than ever they should be
forewarned and forearmed as Christians against the seductions
and the errors of the world, which, as Holy Writ admonishes us,
is all "concupiscence of the flesh, concupiscence of the eyes
and pride of life." 61 Let them be what
Tertullian wrote of the first Christians, and what Christians of
all times ought to be, "sharers in the possession of the
world, not of its error." 62
93. This saying of Tertullian brings us to the topic which we
propose to treat in the last place, and which is of the greatest
importance, that is, the true nature of Christian education, as
deduced from its proper end. Its consideration reveals with
noonday clearness the pre-eminent educational mission of the
Church.
94. The proper and immediate end of Christian education is to
cooperate with divine grace in forming the true and perfect
Christian, that is, to form Christ Himself in those regenerated
by Baptism, according to the emphatic expression of the Apostle:
"My little children, of whom I am in labor again, until Christ
be formed in you." 63 For the true Christian must
live a supernatural life in Christ: "Christ who is your
life," 64 and display it in all his actions:
"That the life also of Jesus may be made manifest in our mortal
flesh." 65
95. For precisely this reason, Christian education takes in
the whole aggregate of human life, physical and spiritual,
intellectual and moral, individual, domestic and social, not
with a view of reducing it in any way, but in order to elevate,
regulate and perfect it, in accordance with the example and
teaching of Christ.
96. Hence the true Christian, product of Christian education,
is the supernatural man who thinks, judges and acts constantly
and consistently in accordance with right reason illumined by
the supernatural light of the example and teaching of Christ; in
other words, to use the current term, the true and finished man
of character. For, it is not every kind of consistency and
firmness of conduct based on subjective principles that makes
true character, but only constancy in following the eternal
principles of justice, as is admitted even by the pagan poet
when he praises as one and the same "the man who is just and
firm of purpose." 66 And on the other hand, there
cannot be full justice except in giving to God what is due to
God, as the true Christian does.
97. The scope and aim of Christian education as here
described, appears to the worldly as an abstraction, or rather
as something that cannot be attained without the suppression or
dwarfing of the natural faculties, and without a renunciation of
the activities of the present life, and hence inimical to social
life and temporal prosperity, and contrary to all progress in
letters, arts and sciences, and all the other elements of
civilization. To a like objection raised by the ignorance and
the prejudice of even cultured pagans of a former day, and
repeated with greater frequency and insistence in modern times,
Tertullian has replied as follows:
We are not strangers to life.We are fully aware of the
gratitude we owe to God, our Lord and Creator. We reject
none of the fruits of His handiwork; we only abstain from
their immoderate or unlawful use. We are living in the world
with you; we do not shun your forum, your markets, your
baths, your shops, your factories, your stables, your places
of business and traffic. We take shop with you and we serve
in your armies; we are farmers and merchants with you; we
interchange skilled labor and display our works in public
for your service. How we can seem unprofitable to you with
whom we live and of whom we are, I know not.67
98. The true Christian does not renounce the activities of
this life, he does not stunt his natural faculties; but he
develops and perfects them, by coordinating them with the
supernatural. He thus ennobles what is merely natural in life
and secures for it new strength in the material and temporal
order, no less then in the spiritual and eternal.
99. This fact is proved by the whole history of Christianity
and its institutions, which is nothing else but the history of
true civilization and progress up to the present day. It stands
out conspicuously in the lives of the numerous Saints, whom the
Church, and she alone, produces, in whom is perfectly realized
the purpose of Christian education, and who have in every way
ennobled and benefited human society. Indeed, the Saints have
ever been, are, and ever will be the greatest benefactors of
society, and perfect models for every class and profession, for
every state and condition of life, from the simple and
uncultured peasant to the master of sciences and letters, from
the humble artisan to the commander of armies, from the father
of a family to the ruler of peoples and nations, from simple
maidens and matrons of the domestic hearth to queens and
empresses. What shall we say of the immense work which has been
accomplished even for the temporal well-being of men by
missionaries of the Gospel, who have brought and still bring to
barbarous tribes the benefits of civilization together with the
light of the Faith? What of the founders of so many social and
charitable institutions, of the vast numbers of saintly
educators, men and women, who have perpetuated and multiplied
their life work, by leaving after them prolific institutions of
Christian education, in aid of families and for the inestimable
advantage of nations?
100. Such are the fruits of Christian education. Their price
and value is derived from the supernatural virtue and life in
Christ which Christian education forms and develops in man. Of
this life and virtue Christ our Lord and Master is the source
and dispenser. By His example He is at the same time the
universal model accessible to all, especially to the young in
the period of His hidden life, a life of labor and obedience,
adorned with all virtues, personal, domestic and social, before
God and men.
101. Now all this array of priceless educational treasures
which We have barely touched upon, is so truly a property of the
Church as to form her very substance, since she is the mystical
body of Christ, the immaculate spouse of Christ, and
consequently a most admirable mother and an incomparable and
perfect teacher. This thought inspired St. Augustine, the great
genius of whose blessed death we are about to celebrate the
fifteenth centenary, with accents of tenderest love for so
glorious a mother:
O Catholic Church, true Mother of Christians! Not only doest
thou preach to us, as is meet, how purely and chastely we
are to worship God Himself, Whom to possess is life most
blessed; thou does moreover so cherish neighborly love and
charity, that all the infirmities to which sinful souls are
subject, find their most potent remedy in thee. Childlike
thou are in molding the child, strong with the young man,
gentle with the aged, dealing with each according to his
needs of mind of body. Thou does subject child to parent in
a sort of free servitude, and settest parent over child in a
jurisdiction of love. Thou bindest brethren to brethren by
the bond of religion, stronger and closer then the bond of
blood .... Thou unitest citizen to citizen, nation to
nation, yea, all men, in a union not of companionship only,
but of brotherhood, reminding them of their common origin.
Thou teachest kings to care for their people, and biddest
people to be subject to their kings. Thou teachest
assiduously to whom honor is due, to whom love, to whom
reverence, to whom fear, to whom comfort, to whom rebuke, to
whom punishment; showing us that whilst not all things nor
the same things are due to all, charity is due to all and
offense to none.68
102. Let us then, Venerable Brethren, raise our hands
and our hearts in supplication to heaven, "to the Shepherd
and Bishop of our Souls," 69 to the divine King
"who gives laws to rulers," that in His almighty power He
may cause these splendid fruits of Christian education to be
gathered in ever greater abundance "in the whole world,"
for the lasting benefit of individuals and of nations.
As a pledge of these heavenly favors, with paternal affection
We impart to you, Venerable Brethren, to your clergy and your
people, the Apostolic Benediction.
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, the thirty-first day of
December, in the year 1929, the eighth of Our Pontificate.
Pius XI
FOOTNOTES