W w w. R o m a n C a t h o l i c i s m. o r g
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FROM THE HOUSETOPSVol.
III, No. 3 Spring,
1949 REPLY TO A LIBERAL By Raymond Karam
CONCLUSION Modern
liberalism, which makes membership in the Catholic Church unnecessary for
salvation, undermines something more than the dogma that there is no salvation
outside the Catholic Church. In postulating the existence of an Invisible
Church, or in suggesting that membership in the Visible Church can be
invisible and purely internal, liberals are actually, whether they realize it
or not, endangering the doctrine of the Incarnation. The whole point of the
Incarnation is that the Person of the Word assumed human flesh in order to
redeem us from our sins as Man, by dying on the Cross, and in order to
institute a visible society with a visible head and visible sacraments, in
which society every man must be visibly incorporated if he wishes to be
saved. Our
salvation, therefore, is Jesus Christ, the Incarnate God, who took His flesh
from the Blessed Virigin Mary. The Church prevents us from falsely
emphasizing the spiritual and invisible, as divorced from the sensible and
visible, by keeping constantly before us in infinite repetition the prayer
which ushered in the Incarnation, “the Lord is with thee; blessed art thou
among women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb.” The Son of God did
not will our salvation to be achieved apart from His Humanity and,
consequently, apart from His visibility. As Mary was
the gate through which our God came to us on Earth, so she is the gate
through which we go to Him in eternity. She is the great Mediatrix of all
Graces. Now, just as no man can be saved outside the Catholic Church, so, St.
Grignion de Montfort says, no man can be saved without Mary. This is what the
great Apostle of Our Lady says: “The
learned and pious Suarez, of the Society of Jesus, the erudite and devout
Justus Lipsius, doctor of Louvain, and many others have proved invincibly,
from the sentiments of the Fathers, among others, St. Augustine, St. Ephrem,
deacon of Edessa, St. Cyril of Jerusalem, St. Germanus of Constantinople, St.
John Damascene, St. Anselm, St. Bernard, St. Bernardine, St. Thomas and St.
Bonaventure, that devotion to our most Blessed Virgin is necessary to
salvation, and that (even in the opinion of Oecolampadius and some other
heretics) it is an infallible mark of reprobation to have no esteem and love
for the holy Virgin; while on the other hand, it is an infallible mark of
predestination to be entirely and truly devoted to her.” The figures and words of the Old and New Testaments prove this. The sentiments and the examples of the saints confirm it. Reason and experience teach and demonstrate it. Even the Devil and his crew, constrained by the force of truth, have often been obliged to avow it in spite of themselves. Among all the passages of the holy Fathers and Doctors, of which I have made an ample collection in order to prove this truth, I shall for brevity’s sake quote but one: “To be devout to you, O Holy Virgin,” says St. John Damascene, “is an arm of salvation which God gives to those whom He wishes to save.”[i] To conclude, therefore, may we say that, in the modern liberal presentation of the Church’s doctrine concerning salvation outside the Church, there are contained THE FOLLOWING ERRORS: 1. One can
be saved outside the Church. 2. One can
be saved without having the Catholic Faith. 3. Baptism
is not necessary for salvation. 4. To
confess the supremacy and infallibility of the Roman Church and of the Roman
Pontiff is not necessary for salvation. 5. One
can be saved without submitting personally to the authority of the Roman
Pontiff. 6. Ignorance
of Christ and His Church excuses one from all fault and confers justification
and salvation. 7. One
can be saved who dies ignorant of Christ and His Church. 8. One
can be saved who dies hating Christ and His Church. 9. God,
of His Supreme Goodness and Mercy, would not permit anyone to be punished
eternally unless he had incurred the guilt of voluntary sin. 10. A man
is sure of his salvation once he is justified. 11. One can
be saved by merely an implicit desire for Baptism. 12. There
are two Churches, the one visible, the other invisible. 13. There
are two kinds of membership in the Church. 14. Membership in
the Church can be invisible or even unconscious. 15. To know and
love the Blessed Virgin is not necessary for salvation. We feel that
nothing short of an infallible pronouncement on the matter by our Holy Father
will put an end to these heretical teachings, which are seriously injuring
the Faith of Catholics. Therefore, prostrate at the feet of His Holiness,
Pope Pius XII, and knowing that no one can be saved outside of the Church of
which he is the visible head, nor without that Faith of which he is the
protector, nor without personal submission to him, the Vicar of Christ on
Earth, we humbly present this paper, and beseech His Holiness to crush the
erroneous teachings listed above and to fulfill Christ’s promise to Peter,
that through him and his successors the gates of Hell shall not prevail
against His Church. |
[i] St. Louis Marie
Grignion de Montfort, True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin, (Fourth English
Edition, Ottawa-Eastview, Ontario, 1941,) Part I, Ch. I, Art. II, Cons. II, n.
1, p. 29.