We
are happy to publish here Bishop Williamson's letter to friends and
benefactors of the Society's Seminary in Winona USA. Bishop Williamson
deals here in a profound and clear manner with some objections against
the 1988 episcopal consecrations by Archbishop Lefebvre, and especially
with the question of Jurisdiction.
Dear Friends
and Benefactors,
To this day there
must be many good Catholic souls longing to follow Archbishop Lefebvre
or his Society of St. Pius X, but who hesitate to do so because they
feel he went against Catholic principles, especially when he made
four bishops in Econe, Switzerland, on June 30, 1988. Let such souls
read a theological study of the consecrations that appeared three
months ago in the Italian biweekly, "Si Si No No", and many may hesitate
no longer. The article's first part proves that those episcopal consecrations
were even a duty for the Archbishop, the second part proves that the
Pope's explicit prohibition made no difference to that duty!
Not that the
Archbishop himself did not know what he was doing. He explained himself
clearly and often. Nor that Catholic souls following him then and
since have not known what they were doing, because all along they
have recognized the true Catholic bishop. "I am the good shepherd",
says Our Lord, "and I know mine and mine know me" an X, 14).
The problem is
rather that since in the circumstances of the 1970's and 1980's the
Archbishop had to break a number of the Church's normal rules in order
to maintain the Society of St. Pius X and in particular to consecrate
four bishops, then it always looks as though he had the Catholic rule-book
against him. And this is what made - and makes - so many Catholics
hesitate. At last, the article of "Hirpinus" in "Si Si No No" has
gone deep into those rule-books and shown, in a way I think nobody
has shown before, that the Archbishop's action was fully in conformity
with the truest principles of Catholic theology and Canon Law.
It stands to
reason. After all, how could the Archbishop's work have borne so much
good fruit if it was out of line with Catholic principles? That makes
no sense. Yet to this day enemies of his Society, even conservatives
whose survival is one of his fruits, cast in the Society's teeth the
Catholic rule-book: "Where the Pope is, there the Church is", "Catholics
must obey the Pope", "Obedience is a virtue", etc., etc. . . Let us
with Hirpinus take a good look at the Catholic rules, however briefly.
The first major
principle that comes into play is that while ordinary cases are dealt
with by ordinary laws, cases out of the ordinary, or emergency cases,
need to be dealt with by principles behind and above the ordinary
laws. That is common sense. For instance, in front of the hospital
there is normally no parking, but if I am rushing my wife to the emergency
room, then I can park wherever there is a space.
Now if, as the
Vatican claims, there is no emergency in the Catholic Church today,
then of course there can be no appeal to higher principles. However,
as Hirpinus points out, Popes Paul VI and John Paul II have themselves
by moments admitted that there is a very serious problem in the post-Vatican
II Church. Paul VI's references to the Church's "self-destruction"
(Dec. 7, '68) and to the "smoke of Satan in the temple of God" (John
30, '72) are famous. Similarly in a speech quoted in the "Osservatore
Romano" of Feb. 7, '81, John Paul II referred to the "upset, confusion,
perplexity, even delusion" of a "great part" of Christians. So Hirpinus'
article is not for those who deny there is a post-conciliar emergency,
rather it is for those who recognize the emergency, but fail to see
how the episcopal consecrations were justified by that emergency.
The whole first
part of the article examines, then, what are the duties and powers
of a bishop in an emergency. Grave
spiritual need is that of any soul whose Catholic faith or morals
are threatened. Extreme
spiritual need is that of any soul virtually unable to save
itself, without help. Grave general or public
spiritual need is where many souls are being threatened in their faith
or morals, for instance where heresy is being spread in public. Today
numberless Catholics are being threatened in their faith and morals
by the public spread of neo-modernism, which is the reinvigorated
"synthesis of all heresies." So today the Catholic Church is filled
with grave, general or public spiritual need.
Now wherever
there is grave public spiritual
need, the Catholic theologians teach that the situation is equivalent
to that of extreme individual spiritual
need, because for instance in a grave general need, many individuals
will be in extreme need. So what a bishop or priest may or must do
in an individual's extreme need, he may or must do in grave general
need, like today's.
Now all legitimate
pastors are bound in JUSTICE to help souls in a state of need, but
if these pastors fail for whatever reason, then in CHARITY anyone
else is bound to help who can, notably other bishops or priests. These
latter will have no normal Church jurisdiction
over souls coming under other pastors, but, by their
ordination as bishops or priests, charity includes
for them a duty of state to help
as they can.
Now as the duty
of charity binds under pain of mortal sin to help an
individual neighbour in extreme
need (especially spiritual), so it binds gravely to help a people
in grave need (see above), even
requiring if need be the sacrifice of life, reputation or property
(Archbishop Lefebvre certainly sacrificed his reputation!).
If then today's
neo-modernist errors and heresies are being put forward, or silently
approved, or at least left unopposed, by the legitimate pastors themselves,
Pope and bishops and priests, it follows that today's state of general
need is without hope of relief from the legitimate pastors, in which
case any other pastors are, by their ordination
which empowers them to give spiritual relief, gravely bound in charity
to help such needy souls as best they can (Just as, if a husband refuses
to look after his family, the wife under him must supply as best she
can, so if a Pope refuses to look after the Church, a bishop under
him must supply as best he can).
And what gives
such emergency pastors the right (or jurisdiction) to supply for the
legitimate pastors? The grave need of many Catholics. The Church teaches
that according as needy souls resort to emergency pastors, so these
pastors receive from the Church emergency, or "supplied", jurisdiction.
For as in a (genuine!) physical emergency all property belongs to
all men, so in a spiritual emergency all episcopal and priestly powers
are at the disposal of all souls. Divine and natural law then override
normal Church law restricting jurisdiction, otherwise too many souls
would be eternally lost. Jurisdiction is for souls, not souls for
jurisdiction.
Now this principle
of emergency rights, or "supplied jurisdiction", applies also to the
case of a bishop consecrating bishops without the Pope's approval,
because of grave public need. Certainly Christ instituted Peter as
head of His Church, with the fullest possession of Church power to
govern souls, towards eternal life. But that power, while wielded
by Peter, is owned by Christ. It is to benefit souls, not its possessor.
It is to save souls, not damn them. As for the machinery of Peter's
control of the consecration of bishops, Christ left it flexible, so
that Peter could, down the ages, tighten or loosen that machinery
according as different historical circumstances would require for
the good of the Church. Medieval popes tightened it, as did Pius XII
because of a problem in China, but the Church has approved of Eusebius
of Samosate consecrating bishops without the Pope's permission in
the 4th century. Therefore if a Pope by his fallibility were to tighten
that control to the grave harm of souls, the Church would supply jurisdiction
for a bishop to take that consecration into his own hands, as did
Archbishop Lefebvre. For the manner of episcopal consecrations is
a matter not of divine law, but of human Church law, allowing for
the exceptions possible in all human Church law.
Objection: but
Eusebius of Samosate consecrated bishops without,
but not against the Pope's express
will. How could Archbishop Lefebvre go against the known and expressed
"No" of the Pope? This question takes up the second part of Hirpinus'
article. The answer flows from the principles laid out in the first
part: however much the Pope said "No", he could not exonerate the
Archbishop from his higher duty in charity to help souls in grave
and general need.
Firstly, as to
the subject, charity looks to the need, not to the cause of the need.
When a road accident happens, helping the injured comes first, questions
come later. Charity binds whoever can succour souls in grave need
to do so, even if, especially if, legitimate Superiors are causing
that need.
Secondly, as
to the Superior, if he refuses to help souls in grave need, he has
no power to bind others from doing so, any more than a husband refusing
to provide for his children has power to bind his wife from doing
so. The Pope is no exception to this rule, because while his authority
is unlimited from below, it is limited from above by divine law, natural
and positive, which binds gravely in charity whoever can to succour
souls in need. Archbishop Lefebvre was uniquely able, by being a bishop
refusing neo-modernism, to succour souls wishing to remain Catholic.
Thirdly, as to
the situation, it is natural to necessity to know no law, or, to place
the subject in the impossibility of obeying the lower law, because
the subject could only do so by disobeying a higher law.
The Pope as Superior
is no exception because even he comes under divine law. And if it
is he who creates the necessity, as does John Paul II by favouring
neo-modernism, then it is the Superior himself who is making it impossible
for his subject to obey him!
Notice however
that whosoever disobeys in an emergency is disputing neither the authority
nor its lawful exercise, but merely its unlawful exercise. He is not
judging the lower law to be bad but merely inapplicable in the given
emergency. Thus Archbishop Lefebvre contested the Pope's right to
control episcopal consecrations not in general, but only in the particular
emergency of the grave need of souls for the Society of St. Pius X
to survive his own imminent death. The Church's supreme law is the
salvation of souls, to which the law of papal primacy must, if necessary,
give way. The Catholic's supreme virtue is charity, not obedience.
Therefore as
soon as the Archbishop had prudently established that divine law was
entering into play, he was not only entitled but even bound to disregard
the Pope's express prohibition. For when divine law came into play,
the Archbishop had to consider not the Superior's will
which may be what it may be, but his power, which is fixed by Catholic
theology and law. These say that once the emergency is reasonably
proved, the subject may and must act on his own authority without
recourse to the Superior, because the emergency need firstly to obey
God makes that recourse irrelevant, because even if the Superior wanted
to bind his subject against God, he could have no power to do so.
In conclusion,
Archbishop Lefebvre was bound in charity to help souls, once they
were in grave need with no hope of relief from their lawful superiors.
He was bound by his episcopal powers to consecrate bishops to ensure
for many needy souls the doctrine and sacraments owed
to souls by the Church for their salvation. He was
absolutely bound not to heed the Pope's "No", because by so doing
he would have sinned gravely against the higher duty of charity. By
consecrating bishops despite that "No", he neither denied the Pope's
primacy nor in any real sense disobeyed the Pope's authority which
cannot oppose divine law.
That is only
the skeleton of Hirpinus' article. Its muscle consists in a mass of
quotations from the most respected Catholic theologins, saints and
lawyers. Of course! Catholic principles are in line with common sense,
and Archbishop Lefebvre acted in line with both. Praise be to God!
Make sure to read the complete article when it appears in English
in the Angelus. Truth is mighty, and will prevail. Blessed are souls
who never took scandal from the Archbishop! As for world events, our
sins have deserved much tribulation. Pray mainly that souls be saved.
Most sincerely
yours in Christ,
+Richard Williamson