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Padre
Pio on Salvation Outside the Church Frank M. Rega, S.F.O. This article was published in Christian Order, December 2006. It is quite unfortunate
that alleged quotations or viewpoints attributed to Padre Pio have frequently
been used to justify the stances, rumors, or agendas of various individuals
or groups. Often it is difficult to find reliable documentation to verify his
involvement in such scenarios as the “three days of darkness,”1
his alleged opposition to Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, 2 or his
purported support of Garabandal.3 Another area of speculation
focuses on what he would think of the current state of the Church – where
would this Tridentine rite Catholic, known for his lifelong obedience and
loyalty to the hierarchy, place his support along the Novus Ordo –
Traditionalist – reactionary spectrum? It is not surprising,
then, to find some who contend that St. Padre Pio held their own strict
interpretation of extra ecclesiam nulla salus – outside of the
Roman Catholic Church no one can be saved. The most notable proponents of
this presumed stance of Padre Pio are to be found among the Sedevacantists
(the See of Peter is vacant, since it has been occupied by invalidly elected
and/or heretical popes since Vatican II). In particular, “Brother” Michael
Dimond, a Sedevacantist from the non-canonical Most Holy Family Monastery in Another member of the
Most Holy Family Monastery, “Brother” Peter Dimond, has written a tome which examines
the historical documents and pronouncements of the Church on the issue of
salvation: Outside the Catholic Church There is Absolutely No Salvation.5
This extensively researched and detailed book attempts to present its case by
explaining away all references, regardless of their level of authority, to
any other means of salvation other than water baptism for Catholics. Thus,
only Roman Catholics who die faithful to the Church, loyal to the Holy
Father, and sealed by validly administered water baptism, can enter heaven.
Peter Dimond concludes his book with this uncompromising and explicit
statement: “In this document I have shown that it is the infallible teaching
of the Catholic Church – and therefore the true teaching of Jesus Christ –
that only those who die as baptized Catholics can be saved. Anyone who
refuses to accept this teaching is not a Catholic.” The full title of the
Monastery’s Padre Pio booklet, written by “Bro. Michael Dimond, O.S.B.” is Padre
Pio: A Catholic Priest who worked miracles and bore the wounds of Jesus
Christ on his body.6 On page 62 Michael Dimond writes:
“The letters from Padre Pio clearly prove that he didn’t respect false
religions and that he held firmly to the dogma that it is necessary for
salvation to be a Catholic.” On the next page he then quotes from a
meditation composed by Padre Pio in which he states: “He [Jesus] sees the
sacrileges with which priests and faithful defile themselves, not caring
about those sacraments instituted for our salvation as necessary means for
it; now, instead, made an occasion of sin and damnation of souls.” From this
it can be seen that Padre Pio viewed the sacraments as the “necessary means”
of salvation. However, in studying the course of his life and ministry as a
Catholic priest, evidence can be found that he understood the sacraments as
necessary for all in general, but not for all in particular. Thus, while he
believed that the sacraments of the Church are necessary as the normative
means of salvation, Padre Pio was willing to admit of exceptions on an
individual basis. But these exceptions did not compromise his conviction that
the one true Church founded by Jesus Christ is the Roman Catholic
Church. Lest anyone be deceived
into joining the Sedevacantist camp under the assumption that Padre Pio would
support their views if he were alive today, the following documented cases
are presented as evidence that Padre Pio believed that non-Catholics could be
saved. “She
will be saved because she has faith.” (Most of the
information for this first account comes from the English version of the book
Mary Pyle, by Bonaventura Massa.7 This work was diligently
compiled from written documents and taped oral testimonies, kept on file in
the Archives of Padre Pio’s friary in anticipation of the process for Miss
Pyle’s Cause for Beatification.) The wealthy
Presbyterian, Adelaide McAlpin Pyle, was the mother of Mary Pyle, a
well-known convert to Catholicism who renounced her family fortune in order
to spend her life near Padre Pio. The Pyle family was related by marriage to
the Rockefellers, and made their fortune in the soap and hotel business.
After In spite of an
unpleasant initial encounter, In 1936, Did Padre Pio receive a
revelation that Adelaide Pyle had secretly ‘in pectore” converted to
the Catholic Faith? If that were true, he most certainly would have told this
to her daughter Mary, who was obviously distraught from worrying over her
mother’s salvation. Further, it seems likely that if King George V of “Let
us pray for a soul . . .” One evening in 1936
Padre Pio was conversing with some dear friends in his cell. Among those
present were Dr. Guglielmo Sanguinetti and Angelo Lupi, who would
respectively become the medical director and the builder of Padre Pio’s
hospital years later. In the middle of their conversation, Padre Pio suddenly
interrupted the discourse with the words, “Let us pray for a soul soon to
appear before the tribunal of God.” With that he bowed his head, and his
guests, although astonished, kneeled and joined him in prayer. When they had
finished, Padre Pio announced that they had been praying for the king of An Anglican and the son
of the future King Edward In all likelihood, the
king was in his final agony or had already died when Padre Pio requested
prayers for him, since he was “at that moment” to appear before God. If he
believed that the soul of this Protestant were doomed to the everlasting
fire, why would he pray for him, and also ask others including another priest
to do likewise, other than to ask for his conversion. However, it is not
recorded or implied that he asked his confreres to pray for the deathbed
conversion of the king – an important intention that Padre Pio in all
likelihood would have explicitly stated, if such were his purpose. Although
he mentioned the king to his priest colleague, he did not tell the friends in
his room that they were praying for a non-Catholic until they had finished
their prayers. One cannot therefore say that it is to be assumed that as
Catholics they were praying for the king’s conversion. Since as far as is
known they were not specifically asked to pray for his deathbed conversion,
there are two alternatives. The first is that they were simply praying for
the salvation of a Protestant whom Padre Pio did not consider doomed because
of his non-Catholic religion; but this would not be acceptable to one who
holds that Padre Pio subscribed to a literal extra ecclesiam nulla salus
position. Those who hold that position are left with the unlikely alternative
that they were praying for a Catholic, and that Padre Pio had requested the
prayers because he was given a private revelation that King George V of
England was secretly a Roman Catholic, loyal to the Pope! Julius Fine, an
Unbaptized Devout Jew “Julius
Fine is saved . . .” Fr. Alessio Parente,
O.F.M. Cap., lived and worked alongside Padre Pio for many years in Our Lady
of Grace Friary at San Giovanni Rotondo. He wrote numerous books about his
confrere, and his works provide reliable source material for the saint. The
following information is from Fr. Alessio’s book The Holy Souls, 19
and was related by a “very good friend” of his, Mrs. Florence Fine Ehrman,
the daughter of the person in question. In 1965 her father,
Julius Fine, who had practiced the Jewish faith all his life and believed
firmly in God, was stricken with what is commonly called “Lou Gehrig’s
disease.” Mrs. Ehrman wrote to Padre Pio beseeching a cure for her father
from this fatal illness. A short time later she received the reply that Padre
Pio would pray for her father and would take him under his protection. When her father passed
away in February of the next year, she was able to accept his death
peacefully. However after some time, she began to worry about whether or not
he was saved, even though he had been a very loving and kind husband and
father. “This fear came about because I began to hear many people,
Protestants and Catholics alike, say that unless person had been baptized
they could not be saved.” On a visit to the
friary at San Giovanni Rotondo in the fall of 1967, she was told by a
personal friend (quite possibly Fr. Alessio himself) to write down whatever
she wished to ask Padre Pio, and this friend would present the letter to him.
She of course wrote down her concerns about the eternal state of her father’s
soul – this good and gentle Jewish man who had never been baptized. The reply
from Padre Pio, which she received in writing, was this: “Julius Fine is
saved, but it is necessary to pray much for him.” Her mind was put at ease by
such a “sure and definite” statement,” since she understood that her father
was in Purgatory, his salvation guaranteed. Whether Padre Pio was
enlightened by his Guardian Angel, the Holy Spirit, interior locution, or
some other means is not known. What is known, however, is his ability to make
such determinations after intense prayer, nourished by his mystical union
with Christ during his Mass and Holy Communion, and by the offering up of his
sufferings, especially the painful bloody wounds of his stigmata. In this
instance, Padre Pio committed himself to assuring a grieving daughter that
her father, who was not baptized, and was not a Roman Catholic, was saved. As
in the case of King George V, someone who wishes to force Padre Pio into the
strict “absolutely no salvation outside the Church” camp, is only left with
this improbable scenario: it was revealed to Padre Pio that the devout Jew,
Julius Fine, was secretly a baptized Roman Catholic! Padre
Pio Not a Catholic? From the above examples
it appears that Padre Pio did not blindly adhere to the proposition that only
Catholics can be saved. Yet, it would be difficult to find someone more
committed to the Catholic Church throughout his life than was Padre Pio. His
obedience to the hierarchy was legendary, and he humbly submitted to
Vatican-authorized suppression and even persecution without resistance. The
spirituality of his epistles astonished even Carmelites, and his writings and
teachings, born of the school of suffering, are the basis of an effort to
make him a Doctor of the Church. 20 “Brother” Peter Dimond
concludes his book on salvation with this dogmatic quote: “
. . . only those who die as baptized Catholics can be saved. Anyone
who refuses to accept this teaching is not a Catholic.” The bizarre
conclusion forced by this statement is that Padre Pio was not a Catholic, at
least according to the Sedevacantist followers of the Most Holy Family
Monastery. And yet they publish a booklet about him that appears designed to
mislead others into thinking that Padre Pio would support their reactionary
interpretation of the teachings of the Catholic Church! Padre Pio lived by the
Spirit of God, not by the letter of the law, except when his superiors in
religion routinely commanded obedience of him. His ingenuous openness to the
plenitude of God’s mercy anticipated the explicit declarations of the Church
during and after the Second Vatican Council on the possibility that
non-Catholic churches can be a “means of salvation,”21 and on the
reception by non-Catholics of the sacraments in certain cases.22
Padre Pio actually believed that the gospel of Jesus Christ was Good News! References 1. http://www.spiritdaily.org/New-world-order/threedays.htm
2. http://www.sspx.org/miscellaneous/padre_pio_and_archbishop.htm
3. http://www.garabandal.us/padre_pio.html
4. http://www.mostholyfamilymonastery.com/
5. http://www.mostholyfamilymonastery.com/Outside_the_Catholic 6. Dimond, Michael, Padre
Pio: A Catholic Priest who worked miracles and bore the wounds of Jesus
Christ on his body, 7. Massa, Bonaventura, Mary
Pyle, She Lived Doing Good to All, San Giovanni Rotondo, Our Lady of
Grace Capuchin Friary, 1986. 8. Ibid., p. 101. 9. Ibid., p. 116. 10. Ibid., p. 108. 11. Ruffin, C. Bernard,
Padre Pio: the True Story (Revised and Expanded), 13. Ibid., p. 101. 14. Parente, Fr.
Alessio, The Holy Souls: “Viva Padre Pio,” San Giovanni Rotondo, Our
Lady of Grace Capuchin Friary, 1990, pp. 151-152. 15. Capobianco, Padre
Costantino, Detti e Anedotti di Padre Pio, San Giovanni Rotondo,
Convento S. Maria delle Grazie, 1996, p. 49. 16. Parente, The
Holy Souls, p. 151. 17. Ruffin, Padre
Pio, p. 241, (Ruffin correctly identifies the King who died in 1936 as
George V, while the other two sources incorrectly call him Edward VI). 18. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13213a.htm
19. Parente, The
Holy Souls, pp. 104-106. 20. Rega, Frank M., Padre
Pio and 21. Decree on
Ecumenism, Unitatis Redintegratio, n. 3, (www.vatican.va) “It follows
that the separated Churches and Communities as such, though we believe them
to be deficient in some respects, have been by no means deprived of
significance and importance in the mystery of salvation. For the Spirit of
Christ has not refrained from using them as means of salvation which derive
their efficacy from the very fullness of grace and truth entrusted to the
Church.” 22. On commitment to
Ecumenism, Ut Unum Sint, n. 46, (www.vatican.va). “In this context, it
is a source of joy to note that Catholic ministers are able, in certain
particular cases, to administer the Sacraments of the Eucharist, Penance and
Anointing of the Sick to Christians who are not in full communion with the
Catholic Church but who greatly desire to receive these sacraments, freely
request them and manifest the faith which the Catholic Church professes with
regard to these sacraments.” |
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