| PART FIVE: The Apostles' Creed IX - XII
Ninth Article: "The Holy Catholic Church; the Communion of
Saints"
1. The Mystical Body of Christ
Speaking of full membership in the Church, Pius XII, in
his Encyclical on the Mystical Body, said it is the
society of those who have been baptized, and who profess the
faith of Christ, and who are governed by their bishops under
the visible head, the Pope, the Bishop of Rome.
The Church came into being when Christ died on the Cross,
but it was formally inaugurated on Pentecost, when He sent
the Holy Spirit as He had promised. St. Paul speaks of all
Christians as members of Christ, so that with Him, they form
one Mystical Body (Cf. 1 Cor 12:12-31; Col 1:18; 2:18- 20;
Eph. 1:22-23; 3:19; 4:13). St. Paul did not use the word
Mystical. It was developed more recently to bring out the
fact that this union is unique, there is no parallel to it.
It is not the same as the union of a physical body, nor that
of a business corporation.
The Church, the Mystical Body, exists on this earth, and
is called the Church militant, because its members struggle
against the world, the flesh and the devil. The Church
suffering means the souls in Purgatory. The Church
triumphant is the Church in heaven. The unity and
cooperation of the members of the Church on earth, in
Purgatory, in Heaven is also called the Communion of Saints.
When St. Paul uses the word "Saints" in opening an Epistle,
he does not mean they are morally perfect. He has in mind
Hebrew qadosh , which means set aside for God, or coming
under the covenant. Being such means of course they are
called to moral perfection. But of course, not all have
reached it in this world.
The word Saint in the modern sense means someone who has
been canonized by the Church in recent times, or was
accepted as such by the Church in earlier times. If a person
is shown to have practiced heroic virtue — beyond what
people in general do — in all virtues, the title Venerable
is given; with two miracles by that one's intercession, the
title is Blessed; two more miracles can lead to canonization
and the title of Saint. 2. The Marks of the Church
We often speak of the four marks of the Church: one,
holy, Catholic and Apostolic. We do not mean that these are
distinctive enough to prove the Catholic Church is the only
Church of Christ. But they do help.
Christ established only one Church. "There is one Lord,
one faith, one baptism" (Ephesians 4:5). Presently we will
speak of the relation of members of other churches to the
Catholic Church.
We say the Church is holy, not in the sense that all
members are holy — far from it. But her Founder gave it all
the needed means to make people holy. The Church is Catholic
because it is universal: "God wills all to be saved, and to
come to the knowledge of the truth" (1 Timothy 2:4). It aims
to take in all persons, in fulfillment of the command of
Christ in Matthew 28:19.
We say the Church is apostolic because it goes back to
the Twelve Apostles chosen by Christ Himself. The Pope and
Bishops have their authority in succession from the
Apostles. The Pope is the visible Head as Vicar of Christ,
Christ is the invisible Head. We know Christ intended His
Church to last until the end of time, because He explicitly
said: "Behold, I am with you all days until the consummation
of the world" (Matthew 28:20). Again, many of His parables
make this clear, such as the parable of the net in which the
good will be separated from the evil at the end, or the
parable of the weeds in the wheat, with the same idea.
There can be, and are, bishops validly ordained who are
not in union with the Pope. These are called schismatics,
and lose many graces by their rejection of the Head of the
Church.
Vatican II taught that just as Peter and the Apostles
formed a sort of college, with Peter as the head, so in a
somewhat similar way, the Pope and the Bishops also form a
college (LG chapter 3). This relationship is called
collegiality. However Vatican II also taught in that same
chapter that the Pope can even, if he so wishes, give a
solemn definition of doctrine without consulting the
Bishops, and that He has immediate authority over everyone
in the Church, including each Bishop.
The Church is also called the People of God, that is,
those who come under the new and eternal Covenant (cf.
Exodus 19:5; Jeremiah 31:31-33). St. Paul in Romans 11:17-18
pictures Christians of his day — and so also today — as
being engrafted into the tame olive tree, which stands for
the original People of God, into places left empty by the
fallen branches, Jews who rejected Christ.
3. Teaching Authority and Infallibility
By the Magisterium we mean the teaching office of the
Church. It consists of the Pope and Bishops. Christ promised
to protect the teaching of the Church : "He who hears you,
hears me; he who rejects your rejects me, he who rejects me,
rejects Him who sent me" (Luke 10. 16). Now of course the
promise of Christ cannot fail: hence when the Church
presents some doctrine as definitive or final, it comes
under this protection, it cannot be in error; in other
words, it is infallible. This is true even if the Church
does not use the solemn ceremony of definition. The day to
day teaching of the Church throughout the world, when the
Bishops are in union with each other and with the Pope, and
present something as definitive, this is infallible.
(Vatican II, LG # 25). It was precisely by the use of
that authority that Vatican I was able to define that the
Pope alone, when speaking as such and making things
definitive, is also infallible. Of course this infallibility
covers also teaching on what morality requires, for that is
needed for salvation.
A "theologian" who would claim he needs to be able to
ignore the Magisterium in order to find the truth is
strangely perverse: the teaching of the Magisterium is the
prime, God-given means of finding the truth. Nor could he
claim academic freedom lets him contradict the Church. In
any field of knowledge, academic freedom belongs only to a
properly qualified professor teaching in his own field. But
one is not properly qualified if he does not use the correct
method of working in his field, e.g., a science professor
who would want to go back to medieval methods would be
laughed off campus, not protected. Now in Catholic theology
, the correct method is to study the sources of revelation,
but then give the final word to the Church. He who does not
follow that method is not a qualified Catholic theologian.
Vatican II taught (On Revelation # 10): "The task of
authoritatively interpreting the word of God, whether
written or handed on [Scripture or Tradition], has been
entrusted exclusively to the living Magisterium of the
Church, whose authority is exercised in the name of Jesus
Christ."
3. No Salvation Outside the Church
The Church is sometimes called the universal sacrament of
salvation. That use of the word sacrament is broad, not
strict. It is true in as much as the Church is the divinely
instituted means of giving grace to all. But the Church is
not a visible rite — it rather confers these visible rites
which we call the seven Sacraments. From the fact that the
Church is God's means of giving grace, is it is clear that
there is no salvation outside the Catholic Church. This
truth has even been defined by the Church more than once,
e.g., in the Council of Florence in 1442. However we must
take care to understand this teaching the way the Church
understands it. We just saw that the Church claims the
exclusive authority to interpret both Scripture and
Tradition. So one like Leonard Feeney who interprets the
teaching on the necessity of the Church his own way is not
acting like a Catholic theologian at all. The Holy Office,
on August 8, 1949, declared that L. Feeney was guilty of
this error. Because of his error, he rejected several
teachings of the Magisterium, saying they clashed with this
definition — but they clash only with his false
interpretation, given in private judgment. Pius IX (Quanto
conficiamur moerore, August 10, 1863) taught: "God... in
His supreme goodness and clemency, by no means allows anyone
to be punished with eternal punishments who does not have
the guilt of voluntary fault." Vatican II (LG # 16)
taught the same: "They who without their own fault do not
know of the Gospel of Christ and His Church, but yet seek
God with sincere heart, and try, under the influence of
grace, to carry out His will in practice, known to them
through the dictate of conscience, can attain eternal
salvation." Pius XII had said (Encyclical On the Mystical
Body) that one can "be related to the Church by a
certain desire and wish of which he is not aware", i.e., by
the desire to do what God wills in general.
Precisely how does this work out? We saw on our very
first page that St. Paul insists (Romans 3:29) that God
makes provision in some way for all. We saw that one of the
earliest Fathers, St. Justin Martyr (Apology 1:46) said that
some, like Socrates could even be Christians because they
followed the divine Word. Now St. Justin also said that the
Divine Word is in the hearts of all. Then we notice in St.
Paul's Romans 2:14-16 that
"The gentiles who do not have the law [revealed religion]
do by nature the things of the law; they show the work of
the law written on their hearts." And according to their
response, they will or will not be saved. Clearly, it is
this Divine Word, or the Spirit of Christ, the Divine Word,
that writes the law on their hearts, i.e., makes known to
them what they should do. If they follow that, although they
do not know that that is what they are following, yet
objectively, they do follow the Logos, the divine Word. And
so St. Justin was right in calling them Christians. We can
add that St. Paul in Romans 8:9 makes clear that if one has
and follows the Spirit of Christ, he "belongs to Christ."
But, to belong to Christ is the same as being a member of
Christ, and that is the same as being a member of the
Church. Not indeed by formal adherence, but yet
substantially, enough to satisfy the requirement of
substantial membership. Indeed, Vatican II even wrote (LG
# 49): "All who belong to Christ, having His Spirit,
coalesce into one Church."
So, St. Paul was right: God does take care of them; St.
Justin was right too: they can be Christians without knowing
it. Otherwise, God would be sending millions upon millions
to hell without giving them any chance at all, if they lived
far from places where the Church was known, e.g., in the
western hemisphere before 1492.
That fact that salvation is possible in this way does not
mean that there should be no missions or attempts to bring
back the Protestants. Richer and more secure means of
salvation are to be had with formal explicit adherence to
the Catholic Church. Therefore we need to make every effort.
In regard to Ecumenism, it is good to keep in mind a rule
from Vatican II, in its Decree on Ecumenism (# 11):
"It is altogether necessary that the complete doctrine be
clearly presented. Nothing is so foreign to true Ecumenism
as that false peace-making in which the purity of Catholic
doctrine suffers loss, and its true and certain sense is
obscured."
4. The Church and the State
The Church is of divine origin. The state is of human
origin, it is necessary to provide things for human needs
that are such that individuals each alone cannot obtain
them, e.g., a system of courts, police, fire dept. etc.
Since it was established by the Divine Redeemer, the
authority of the Church is higher than that of the state. We
should obey all legitimate orders of the state. We may and
must disobey immoral commands or laws contrary to those of
God and the Church.
In Romans 13:1-2 St. Paul says: "Let every person be
subject to higher authorities. For there is no authority
except from God. Those that exist, are put in place by God.
So one who resists, resists the ordinance of God."
There are chiefly three kinds of governments: monarchy,
aristocracy, and constitutional government, according to
Aristotle (Nichomachean Ethics 8:10. Each is good if
it promotes the common good. But if those with power use it
for their own selfish ends, it is evil. God is willing to
accept any of these, if it promotes the common good. He does
not specify how those in power are to be chosen. But, once
they are chosen, the power comes from Him, not from the
people, as St. Paul made clear in the verses we cited above.
St. Paul even says the state has the right of capital
punishment, in Romans 13:4: "It [the authority] is a
minister of God for good to you. But if you do evil, be
afraid. For not without reason does he carry the sword. For
he is the minister of God and agent of [God's] wrath on
evildoers." In the Roman situation, the right to carry the
sword meant the right of capital punishment. So we may not
say it is immoral or unchristian. We may only, if we wish,
debate if it is an effective deterrent.
It is important to notice that three things are needed to
make a democracy function as it should:
1) All who have the right to vote should use it , but
only,
2) if they are well informed on the issues (otherwise
they may be voting for
evil), and,
3) they must vote for the common good, not just for the
advantage of their
own group.
Vatican II (On Religious Liberty) taught that all
have religious freedom. This does not mean they have a right
to be wrong: God gives no one a claim to be wrong. They have
a claim not to be jailed, executed etc. for their beliefs.
They may hold and follow them in private and in public,
alone and in groups, "within due limits." However, Vatican
II further specifies (On Religious Liberty ## 4 and
7) that the state must exercise "due custody for public
morality" and that non-Catholic churches must abstain from
anything that involves "improper persuasion aimed at the
less intelligent or the poor."
Vatican II also taught that public authority must see to
it, as a matter of justice, that public funds for education
are given in such a way that parents are really free to
follow their consciences in choosing schools (On
Christian Education #6). For parents are the primary
educators of their children.
Tenth Article "The forgiveness of sins"
This forgiveness was won for us through the sacrifice of
Calvary. It is dispensed through the Church, though even
without the Sacraments, God will forgive one who is truly
repentant, i.e., sorry for sinning because God is good not
just to us, but in Himself.
Eleventh Article: "The resurrection of the body"
Death entered into this world by sin (Romans 5:12). So
all will die, with the exception that those who are alive at
the return of Christ at the end, will never die (First
Thessalonians 4:13-17). In verse 17: "Then [at His return,
and after the resurrection of the dead] we the living, will
be taken together with them [the risen dead] in the clouds
to meet the Lord" (Cf. 1 Cor 15:51).
There will be a resurrection of all, as St. Paul explains
in First Corinthians chapter 15. Those who have been
faithful to Christ will rise glorious, their bodies
transformed on the model of the risen body of Christ, who
could travel instantly at will, could ignore closed doors
and come through anyway, but yet had real flesh. St. Paul
says the risen body is "spiritual " (15:44). It is still
flesh, but such that the flesh is completely dominated by
the soul, so that it can no longer suffer or die.
St. Paul insists that because Christ our Head rose, those
who are members of Him must also rise. So, to deny the
general resurrection would imply a denial of Christ's
resurrection (1 Cor 15:13).
No matter what happens to the body after death, the
omnipotence of God can recall the material of the body. In
fact, we now know that because of metabolism — in which
every cell is constantly being torn down and rebuilt — in a
normal life span a person has the material for many bodies.
We will, of course be the same persons after the
resurrection as we were before death.
Twelfth Article "And life everlasting. Amen".
In commenting on article VII we spoke of Purgatory and
Hell. Now we consider Heaven. The Second Epistle of Peter
1:4 says by grace we are "sharers in the divine nature." We
learn from John 1:1 that the Father speaks a Word. It is not
a vibration in the air, but it is substantial, it is the
Second Divine Person, coming from the Father by as it were
an infinite stream of knowledge. Between Father and Son
arises love, which again is substantial, is the Third
Person, the Holy Spirit, coming forth by a stream of
infinite love. Only a being that is part divine could as it
were plug into these infinite streams. Grace here gives us
the basic ability to do that.
As we saw in speaking of hell, death breaks the bond
between our spiritual intellect and the material brain. Then
the lights go on, and one knows God greatly even without
seeing Him. The soul, if properly purified, and if all debts
to the objective order are paid, will finally reach that
vision. We are all finite, limited receptacles, trying to
take in the Infinite. In this life our capacity for that can
grow indefinitely, with increases of sanctifying grace. Then
whatever capacity the soul has will be completely filled,
fully satisfied. Since the vision is infinite, it can never
become dull. Further, St. Augustine says (City of God
10:7) that the angels participate in God's eternity.
Eternity for God is timeless. Things do not just go on and
on, He takes in everything in one view, as it were.
Similarly the soul in that vision does not just go on and
on: it simply is unbelievably fulfilled, happy, satisfied.
St. Augustine said well (Confessions 1:1): "You have
made us for yourself, and restless are our hearts until they
rest in you."
When the glorified body at the resurrection is joined to
the soul, it too will share in its own way in the reward the
person has earned. It will be as we said, on the pattern of
the glorified body of Christ.
The Blessed too will be united with others there,
especially those close and dear to them in this life.
And as a secondary but immense source of blessedness they
will see Our Lady. Of it Pius XII said well:
Surely, in the face of His own Mother, God has
gathered together all the splendors of His divine
artistry... . You know, beloved sons and daughters, how
easily human beauty lifts up and makes a gentile heart
ecstatic. What would it ever do if it could contemplate
clearly the beauty of Mary! That is why Dante saw in
Paradise, in the midst of "more than a million rejoicing
Angels, a beauty smiling — what joy! it was in the eyes
of all the other Saints"; Mary! (Pius XII, To
Catholic Action Youth, December 8, 1953. Acta
Apostolicae Sedis 45: 850. Internal quote is from
Dante, Paradiso 31. 130-35)
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