____________________________________________________
EXTRA ECCLESIAM NULLA SALUS
(OUTSIDE OF THE
CATHOLIC CHURCH THERE IS NO SALVATION)
CITATIONS FROM PAPAL
SOURCES
This portion of the website of the Apostolic See is devoted
to the ancient dogmatic Catholic teaching that there is absolutely no
salvation outside of the Roman Catholic Church. This is the dogma most conspicuously
denied by the leaders of the Vatican II sect. This dogma, more than any other, proves
that the Vatican II "popes" are not Popes at all, but are in fact
heretical imposters and frauds.
Pope Augustine, who holds to this dogma, is the true
Pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church.

The website of
the Apostolic See of Rome displays this portrait of Pope Boniface VIII, who
infallibly declared
Unam Sanctam, a
document that the Holy Father considers a signature document of his papacy.
The Papal Bull- Unam
Sanctam
Boniface VIII- 1302
AD
Furthermore,
we declare, we proclaim, we define that it is absolutely necessary for the
salvation of every human creature that they be subject to the Roman
Pontiff.
More Papal Statements on This Topic:
"The Holy Roman Church firmly believes, professes and preaches
that all those who are outside the Catholic Church, not only pagans
but also Jews or heretics and schismatics, cannot share in
eternal life and will go into the everlasting fire which was prepared for the
devil and his angels, unless they are joined to the Church before the end of
their lives; that the unity of this ecclesiastical body is of such
importance that only for those who abide in it do the Church’s sacraments
contribute to salvation and do fasts, almsgiving and other works of piety and
practices of the Christian militia productive of eternal rewards; and that nobody
can be saved, no matter how much he has given away in alms and even if he
has shed blood in the name of Christ, unless he has persevered in the bosom
and unity of the Catholic Church.” -Pope Eugene IV, Cantate
Domino, Council of Florence 1441 (infallible)
Pope
Paul III, The Council of Trent, Sess. 7, Can. 5 on the Sacrament of
Baptism, ex cathedra: “If anyone says that baptism is
optional, that is, not necessary for salvation (cf. Jn. 3:5): let him be
anathema.”
Pope
Pius IX, First Vatican Council, Sess. 3, Chap. 2 on Revelation, 1870, ex
cathedra: “Hence, also, that understanding of its sacred dogmas
must be perpetually retained, which Holy Mother Church has once declared;
and there must never be a recession from that meaning under the specious
name of a deeper understanding.”
Pope
St. Gregory the Great, quoted in Summo Iugiter Studio, 590-604:
“The
holy universal Church teaches that it is not possible to worship God truly
except in her and asserts that all who are outside of her will not be saved.”
Pope
Innocent III, Eius exemplo, Dec. 18, 1208:
“By the heart we believe and by the mouth we confess the one
Church, not of heretics, but the Holy Roman, Catholic, and
Apostolic Church outside of which we believe that no one is saved.”
Pope
Clement VI, Super quibusdam, Sept. 20, 1351:
“In the second place, we ask whether you and the Armenians
obedient to you believe that no man of the wayfarers outside the faith of
this Church, and outside the obedience to the Pope of Rome, can finally be
saved.”
Pius V,
Bull excommunicating the heretic Queen Elizabeth of England, Feb. 25, 1570:
“The sovereign jurisdiction of the one holy Catholic and Apostolic
Church, outside of which there is no salvation, has been given by
Him [Jesus Christ], unto Whom all power in Heaven and on Earth is given, the
King who reigns on high, but to one person on the face of the Earth, to
Peter, prince of the Apostles... If any shall contravene this Our decree,
we bind them with the same bond of anathema.”
Leo
XII, Ubi Primum (# 14), May 5, 1824:
“It
is impossible for the most true God, who is Truth itself, the best, the wisest
Provider, and the Rewarder of good men, to approve all sects who profess false
teachings which are often inconsistent with one another and contradictory, and
to confer eternal rewards on their members… by divine faith we hold one
Lord, one faith, one baptism… This is why we profess that there is
no salvation outside the Church.”
Leo
XII, Quod hoc ineunte (# 8), May 24, 1824: “We address all of you who are
still removed from the true Church and the road to salvation. In this universal rejoicing, one thing
is lacking: that having been called by the inspiration of the Heavenly Spirit
and having broken every decisive snare, you might sincerely agree with the
mother Church, outside of whose teachings there is no salvation.”
Gregory
XVI, Mirari Vos (# 13), Aug. 15, 1832:
“With the admonition of the apostle, that ‘there is one God,
one faith, one baptism’ (Eph. 4:5), may those fear who contrive the
notion that the safe harbor of salvation is open to persons of any religion
whatever. They should consider the
testimony of Christ Himself that ‘those who are not with Christ are
against Him,’ (Lk. 11:23) and that they disperse unhappily who do not
gather with Him. Therefore, ‘without
a doubt, they will perish forever, unless they hold the Catholic faith whole
and inviolate (Athanasian Creed).”
Gregory
XVI, Summo Iugiter Studio (# 2), May 27, 1832:
“Finally
some of these misguided people attempt to persuade themselves and
others that men are not saved only in the Catholic religion, but that even
heretics may attain eternal life.”
Pius
IX, Ubi primum (# 10), June 17, 1847: “For ‘there is one universal
Church outside of which no one at all is saved; it contains regular and secular
prelates along with those under their jurisdiction, who all profess one Lord,
one faith and one baptism.”
Pius
IX, Nostis et Nobiscum (# 10), Dec. 8, 1849: “In particular, ensure that
the faithful are deeply and thoroughly convinced of the truth of the doctrine
that the Catholic faith is necessary for attaining salvation. (This doctrine,
received from Christ and emphasized by the Fathers and Councils, is also
contained in the formulae of the profession of faith used by Latin, Greek and
Oriental Catholics).”
Pius
IX, Syllabus of Modern Errors, Dec. 8, 1864 - Proposition 16: “Man may,
in the observance of any religion whatever, find the way of eternal salvation,
and arrive at eternal salvation.” – Condemned
Leo
XIII, Tametsi futura prospicientibus (# 7), Nov. 1, 1900: “Christ is man’s
‘Way’; the Church also is his ‘Way’… Hence all
who would find salvation apart from the Church, are led astray and strive in
vain.”
Pius X,
Iucunda sane (# 9), March 12, 1904: “Yet at the same time We cannot but
remind all, great and small, as Pope St. Gregory did, of the absolute
necessity of having recourse to this Church in order to have eternal salvation…”
Pius X,
Editae saepe (# 29), May 26, 1910: “The Church alone possesses together
with her magisterium the power of governing and sanctifying human society. Through her ministers and servants (each
in his own station and office), she confers on mankind suitable and necessary
means of salvation.”
Pius
XI, Mortalium Animos (# 11), Jan. 6, 1928:
“The Catholic Church is alone in keeping the true worship. This is the fount of truth, this is the
house of faith, this is the temple of God: if any man enter not here, or if
any man go forth from it, he is a stranger to the hope of life and
salvation.”
The Church has
always Believed and Taught that Only those who Die as Catholics Can be Saved.
We have
compiled some quotes from the Bible, the Fathers, the Doctors, Saints and Popes
(i.e. surveyed the Tradition) in order to demonstrate this:
The Holy Bible: "And they, continuing daily with one accord in the
temple, and breaking bread from house to house, did eat their meat with
gladness and singleness of heart, praising God, and having favour with all the
people. And the Lord added unto
the Church daily such as should be saved." (Acts 2:46-7)
"Then
Paul and Barnabas waxed bold, and said, "It was necessary that the word of
God should first have been spoken to you [Jews:] but seeing ye put it from you,
and judge yourselves unworthy of everlasting life, lo, we turn to the Gentiles. For so hath the Lord commanded us,
saying, "I hath set thee to be a light to the Gentiles, that thou
shouldest be for salvation unto the ends of the earth."" And when the Gentiles heard this, they
were glad, and glorified the word of the Lord: and as many as were ordained
to eternal life believed." (Acts 13:46-8)
Pope St. Clement I, A.D. 88-97: "Heretical teachers pervert
Scripture and try to get into Heaven with a false key, for they
have formed their human assemblies later than the Catholic Church. From this previously-existing and most
true Church, it is very clear that these later heresies, and others which have
come into being since then, are counterfeit and novel inventions."
(Epistle to the Corinthians)
Saint Ignatius of Antioch, a disciple of Saint Peter and Saint Paul
(died A.D. 107): "Let no man deceive himself. Unless he believes that Christ Jesus has
lived in the flesh, and shall confess His cross and passion, and the blood
which He shed for the salvation of the world, he shall not attain eternal life,
whether he be a king, or a priest, or a ruler, or a private person, a master or
a servant, a man or a woman." (Epistle to the Smyrnaeans)
"For
as many as are of God and of Jesus Christ are also with the Bishop. And as many as shall, in the exercise of
repentance, return into the unity of the Church, these, too, shall belong to
God, that they may live according to Jesus Christ. Do not err, my brethren. If any man follows him that makes
a schism in the Church, he shall not inherit the kingdom of God. If any one walks according to a strange
opinion, he agrees not with the passion of Christ. (Epistle to the
Philadelphians)
Saint Justin Martyr (died A.D. 165): "And you deceive yourselves
while you fancy that, because you are the seed of Abraham after the flesh, therefore
you shall fully inherit the good things announced to be bestowed by God through
Christ. For no one, not even one
of them, has anything to look for, but only those who in mind are
assimilated to the faith of Abraham, and who have recognised all the
mysteries. [...] So that it becomes you to eradicate this
hope from your souls, and hasten to know in what way forgiveness of sins, and a
hope of inheriting the promised good things, shall be yours. But there is no other way than this,
- to become acquainted with this Christ, to be washed in the fountain spoken of
by Isaiah for the remission of sins, and for the rest to live sinless lives.
[...]
"Further,
I hold that those of the seed of Abraham who live according to the law, and do
not believe in this Christ before death, shall not be saved." (Dialogue
with Trypho the Jew.)
Saint Martial of Limoges (died A.D. 165): "All who do not confess Christ
to be true God shall go into eternal fire."
Saint Theophilus of Antioch (died A.D. 181): "And as, again, there are other
islands, rocky and without water, and barren, and infested by wild beasts, and
uninhabitable, and serving only to injure navigators and the storm-tossed, on
which ships are wrecked, and those driven among them perish, - so
there are doctrines of error - I mean heresies - which destroy
those who approach them. For they
are not guided by the word of truth; but as pirates, when they have filled
their vessels, drive them on the fore-mentioned places, that they may spoil
them: so also it happens in the case of those who err from the truth, that they
are all totally ruined by their error." (To Autolyctus)
Saint Irenaeus (died A.D. 202): "Since therefore we have such
proofs, it is not necessary to seek the truth among others [heretics] which it
is easy to obtain from the Church; since the apostles, like a rich man
[depositing his money in a bank,] lodged in her hands most copiously all things
pertaining to the truth: so that every man, whosoever will, can draw from her
the water of life. For she is the
entrance to life; all others are thiefs and robbers. On this account we are bound to avoid
them, but to make choice of the things pertaining to the Church with the utmost
diligence, and to lay hold of the tradition of the truth. [...]
"Wherefore
it is incumbent to obey the presbyters who are in the Church, those who, as I
have shown, possess the succession from the apostles; those who, together with
the succession of the episcopate, have received the certain gift of truth,
according to the good pleasure of the Father. But [it is also incumbent] to hold in
suspicion others who depart from the primitive succession, and assemble
themselves together in any place whatsoever, [looking upon them] either
as heretics of perverse minds, or as schismatics puffed up and
self-pleasing, or again as hypocrites, acting thus for the sake of lucre and
vainglory. For all these have
fallen away from the truth. And the
heretics, indeed, who bring strange fire to the alter of God - namely, strange
doctrines, - shall be burned up by the fire from heaven, as were Nadab
and Abiud. But such as rise up in
opposition to the truth, and exhort others against the Church of God, [shall]
remain among those in hell, being swallowed up by an earthquake, even as those
who were with Chore, Dathan, and, Abiron.
But those who cleave asunder, and separate the unity of the Church,
[shall] receive from God the same punishment as Jeroboam did." (Against
the Heresies)
Saint Pionius (died A.D. 250): "I am a Christian and belong to
the Catholic Church. Would to God I
could persuade all of you to become Christians, for it will be the worse for
you to burn eternally after death."
Origen (died A.D. 254): "Let no man deceive
himself. Outside this house, that
is, outside the Church no one is saved." (In Iesu Nave homiliae)
Saint Cyprian (died A.D. 258): "But if any one considers these
things carefully, he will need no long discourse or arguments. The proof is simple and convincing,
being summed up in a matter of fact.
The Lord says to Peter, "I say to thee, that thou art Peter and
upon this rock I will build my Church, and the gates of hell shall not overcome
it. It will give to thee the keys
to the kingdom of heaven. And what
thou shalt bind upon earth shall be bound also in heaven, and whatsoever thou
shalt loose on earth shall be loosed also in heaven." And He says to him again after the
resurrection, "Feed my sheep."
It is on him that he builds the Church, and to him that he entrusts the
sheep to feed. [...] If a man
does not hold fast to this oneness of Peter, does he imagine that he still
holds the faith? If he deserts
the Chair of Peter upon whom the Church was built, has he still confidence that
he is in the Church?" (On the Unity of the Catholic Church)
"For
whereas in the Gospels, and in the epistles of the Apostles, the name of Christ
is alleged for the remission of sins; it is not in such a way as that the Son
alone, without the Father, or against the Father, can be of advantage to
anybody; but that it might be shown to the Jews, who boasted as to their
having the Father, that the Father would profit them nothing, unless they
believed on the Son whom He had sent.
For they who know God the Father the Creator, ought also to know
Christ the Son, lest they flatter and applaud themselves about the Father
alone, without the acknowledgement of His Son, who also said, "No man
cometh to the Father but by me."
But He, the same, sets forth that it is the knowledge of the two
that saves, when he says, "And this is life eternal, that they may know
Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom Thou hast sent." Therefore, from the preaching and the
testimony of Christ Himself, the Father who sent must be known first, then
afterwards Christ, who was sent, and there cannot be a hope of salvation
except by knowing the two together. [...]
"Can
the power of baptism be greater or of more avail than confession, than
suffering, when one confesses Christ before men and is baptized in his own blood? And yet even this baptism does not benefit
a heretic, although he has confessed Christ, and been put to death outside
the Church, unless the patrons and advocates of heretics declare that the
heretics who are slain in a false confession of Christ are martyrs, and assign
to them the glory and the crown of martyrdom contrary to the testimony of
the apostle, who says that it will profit them nothing although they
were burnt and slain. [..] Not
even the baptism of a public confession and blood can profit a heretic,
because there is no salvation outside the Church." (Epistle LXXII)
Saint Firmilian (died A.D. 269): "What is the greatness of his
error, and what the depth of his blindness, who says that remission of sins can
be granted in the synagogues of heretics, and does not abide on the
foundation of the one Church." (Epistle to Cyprian)
Anonymous Third Century Bishop: "And he on whom, when he should be baptized,
invocation should be made in the name of Jesus, although he might obtain baptism
under some error [as a heretic], still would not be hindered from knowing
the truth at some time or other, and correcting his error, and coming to the
Church and to the bishop, and sincerely confessing our Jesus before men; so
that then, when hands were laid upon him by the bishop, he might also
receive the Holy Spirit, and he would not lose that former invocation of
the name of Jesus [his baptism as a heretic]. Which none of us may disallow, although
this invocation [his baptism as a heretic], if it be standing bare and by itself,
could not suffice for affording salvation, lest on this principle we
should also believe that even Gentiles and heretics, who abuse the name of
Jesus, could attain unto salvation without the true and entire thing."
(Treatise against the Rebaptism of Heretics coming to the Church)
Lactantius (died A.D. 310): "It is the Catholic Church alone
which retains true worship. This is
the fountain of truth, this is the abode of the Faith, this is the temple of
God; into which if anyone shall not enter, or from which if anyone
shall go out, he is a stranger to the hope of life and eternal salvation. No one ought to flatter himself with
persevering strife. For the contest
is respecting life and salvation, which, unless it is carefully and diligently
kept in view, will be lost and extinguished." (The Divine Institutes)
Council of Nicea (first ecumenical council, A.D. 325): "Let the
patriarch consider what things are done by the archbishops and bishops in their
provinces; and if he shall find anything done by them otherwise than it should
be, let him change it and order it, as seemeth to him fit; for he is the father
of all, and they are his sons. And
although the Archbishop be among the bishops as an elder brother, who hath the
care of his brethren, and to whom they owe obedience because he is over them;
yet the patriarch is to all those who are under his power, just as he who holds
the seat of Rome is the head and prince of all patriarchs; inasmuch as he is
first, as was Peter, to whom power is given over all Christian princes, and over
all their peoples, as he who is the Vicar of Christ our Lord over all peoples
and over the whole Christian Church, and whoever shall contradict this, is excommunicated
by the synod." (Arabic Canons, Canon XXXIX)
The Synod of Laodicea, A.D. 343-381: "Canon XXXIV. No Christian shall
forsake the martyrs of Christ, and turn to false martyrs, that is, to
those of the heretics, or those who formerly were heretics; for they are
aliens from God. Let those
who go after them be anathema."
"Ancient
Epitome of Canon XXXIV. Whosoever honours an heretical pseudo-martyr, let him
be anathema."
First Council of Constantinople, A.D. 381: "Canon VII. Those who from heresy
turn to orthodoxy, and to the number of those who are being saved,
we receive according to the following method and custom: Arians, and
Macerdocians, Quarto-decimans or Tetradites, and Appolinarians, we receive upon
their giving a written renunciation of their errors and anathematize every
heresy which is not in accordance with the Holy, Cathoilic and Apostolic Church
of God."
Saint Ambrose, Doctor, (died A.D. 397): "And He [Christ]
affirms that they act with devilish spirit who divide the Church of God, so
that he includes the heretics and schismatics of all times, to whom He
denies forgiveness, for every other sin is concerned with single persons, this
is a sin against all." (Concerning Repentance)
"The
Lord severed the Jewish people from his kingdom, and heretics and schismatics
are also severed from the kingdom of God and from the Church. Our Lord makes it perfectly clear that every
assembly of heretics and schismatics belongs not to God, but to the unclean
spirit." (Explanation of Luke)
""But
woe unto you who are rich!" We
may here however understand by the rich man the Jewish people, or the heretics,
or at least the Pharisees, who, rejoicing in an abundance of words, and
a kind of hereditary pride of eloquence, have overstepped the simplicity
of true faith, and gained to themselves useless treasures." (cf. Catena
Aurea by Saint Thomas Aquinas, Lk. 6:24)
"Peter
is he to whom the Lord said: "You are Peter, and on this rock I will build
the Church." Therefore where
Peter is, there is the Church; where the Church is, there is no death
but only eternal life. And
therefore Christ added: "And the gates of hell shall not prevail, and I
will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven."" (On Psalm XL)
Saint John Chrysostom, Doctor, (died A.D. 407): "We know that
salvation belongs to the Church alone, and that no one can
partake of Christ nor be saved outside the Catholic Church and the Catholic
Faith." (De Capto Eutropia)
"We
should mourn for those who are dying without the Faith. [...] And well should the pagan weep and
lament who, not knowing God, goes straight to punishment when he dies!"
(On the Consolation of Death)
Saint Gaudentius of Brescia (died A.D. 410): "It is certain that all men of
Noah's time perished, except those in the Ark, which was a figure of the
Church. Likewise, they cannot in any
way now be saved who are aliens from the Apostolic faith and the Catholic
Church." (De Lect. Evangel.)
The XII Council of Carthage, A.D. 419: "Canon LVII. Those who as were baptized by the
Donatists, and not yet being able to know the pernicious character of their
error, and afterward when they had come to the use of reason, had received the
knowledge of the truth, abhorred their former error, [...] having anathematized
their error may be received by the imposition of the hand into the one
Church, the pillar as it is called, and the one mother of all Christians,
where all these sacraments are received unto salvation and everlasting life;
even the same sacraments which obtain for those persevering in heresy
the heavy penalty of damnation.
So that which to those who are in the truth lighteneth to the obtaining
of eternal life, the same to them who are in error tends but to darkness
and damnation."
Saint Jerome, Doctor, (died A.D. 420): "As I follow no leader
save Christ, so I communicate with none but your blessedness, that is, with the
Chair of Peter. For this, I know,
is the rock on which the Church is built.
This is the house where alone can the paschal lamb be rightly
eaten. This is the ark of Noah, and
he who is not found in it shall perish when the flood prevails." (Letter
to Pope Damasus)
““Behold
we have left all thing and have followed thee. [...] shall possess life everlasting.”
(S. Matthew 19:27-29) [...] He said
not: “You who have left all things;” for even the philosopher
Crates did this, and many others have despised riches; but: “You who have
followed me;” which applies to the Apostles and all the Faithful.”
(Homily on St. Matthew)
Athanasian Creed circa A.D. 420: "Quiscumque vult salvus esse, *
ante omnia opus est, ut teneat catholicam fidem: quam nisi quisque integram
inviolatamque servaverit, * absque dubio in aeternum peribit. [...] Haec est fides catholica, * quam nisi
quisque fideliter firmiterque crediderit, salvus esse non poterit." (Roman
Breviary, Sunday Prime, 1950)
(D39):"Whoever wishes to be saved, before all things
it is necessary that he hold the Catholic faith, which unless each one
preserves whole and inviolate, without doubt he will perish
everlastingly. [...] This is the
Catholic faith, which unless each one believes faithfully and firmly, he cannot
be saved."
Saint Augustine, Doctor, (died A.D. 430): "No man can
find salvation except in the Catholic Church. Outside the Catholic Church one can have
everything except salvation. One
can have honour, one can have the sacraments, one can sing alleluia, one can
answer amen, one can have faith in the name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Ghost, and preach it too, but never can one find salvation
except in the Catholic Church." (Sermon to the People of Caesaria)
""But
I say," adds he, "have they not heard? "Yea, verily; their sounds went out
into all the earth, and their words to the ends of the world."" Before, however, all this had been
accomplished, before the actual preaching of the gospel reaches the ends of all
the earth - because there are some remote nations still (although it is said
that they are very few) to whom the preached gospel has not found its way,
- what must human nature do, or what has it done - for it has either not
heard that all this was to take place, or has not yet learned that it was
accomplished - but believe in God who made heaven and earth, by whom also
it perceived by nature that it had been created, and lead a right life, and
thus accomplish His will, uninstructed with any faith in the death and
resurrection of Christ? Well,
if this could have been done, or can still be done, then for my part I have to
say what the apostle said in regard to the law: "Then Christ died in
vain." For if he said this
about the law, which only the nation of the Jews received, how much more justly
may it be said of the law of nature, which the whole human race has received,
"If righteousness come by nature, then Christ died in vain." If, however, Christ did not die in vain,
then human nature cannot by any means be justified and redeemed from
God's most righteous wrath - in a word, from punishment - except by faith
and the sacrament of the blood of Christ." (On Nature and Grace)
"For
if, according to the word of truth, no one is delivered from the condemnation
which was incurred through Adam except through faith in Jesus Christ,
and yet from this condemnation they shall not deliver themselves who shall
be able to say that they have not heard the gospel of Christ, on the ground
that "faith cometh by hearing," how much less shall they
deliver themselves who shall say, "We have not received
perseverance!" [...] thou
mightest persevere if thou wouldest.
And, consequently, both those who have not heard the gospel, and
those who, having heard it and been changed by it for the better, have not
received perseverance, [...] are not made to differ from that mass which it is
plain is condemned, as all go from one into condemnation." (On Rebuke and
Grace)
"They
who are not liberated through grace, either because they are not yet able to
hear, or because they are unwilling to obey; or again because they did not
receive, at the time when they are unable on account of youth to hear,
that bath of regeneration, which they might have received and through which
they might have been saved, are indeed justly condemned; because they
are not without sin, either that which they have derived from their birth, or
that which they have added from their own misconduct. "For all have sinned" -
whether in Adam or in themselves - "and come short of the glory of God
(Romans 3:23.)"" (On Nature and Grace)
"The
comparison of the Church with Paradise shows us that men may indeed receive baptism
outside her pale, but that no one outside can either receive or retain
the salvation of eternal happiness.
For, as the words of the Scripture testify, the streams from the
fountain of Paradise flowed copiously even beyond its bounds. Record is indeed made of their names;
and through what countries they flow, and that they are situated beyond the
limits of Paradise, is known to all; and yet in Mesopotamia, and in Egypt, to
which countries those rivers extended, there is not found that blessedness of
life which is recorded in Paradise.
Accordingly, although the waters of Paradise are found beyond its
boundaries, yet its happiness is in Paradise alone. So, therefore, the baptism of the Church
may exist outside, but the gift of the life of happiness is found alone
within the Church, which has been founded on a rock, which has received the
keys of binding and losing. [...]
"This
indeed is true, that "baptism is not unto salvation except within the
Catholic Church." For in
itself it can indeed exist outside the Catholic Church as well; but there it is
not unto salvation, because there it does not work salvation; just as that
sweet savour of Christ is not unto salvation in them that perish, though from a
fault not in itself but in them." (On Baptism against the Donatists)
"Nor
indeed, is it of heresies alone that the apostle says, "that they
that do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God." But it may be worth while to look for a
moment at the things which he groups together. "The works of the flesh," he
says, "are manifest, which are these; fornication, uncleanness,
lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations, wrath,
strife, seditions, heresies, envyings, murders, drunkenness, revellings, and
such like: of the which I tell you before, as I have also told you in time
past, that they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of
God." Let us suppose someone,
therefore, chaste, continent, free from covetousness, no idolater,
hospitable, charitable to the needy, no man's enemy, not contentious, patient,
quiet, jealous of none, envying none, sober, frugal, but a heretic; it is
of course clear to all that for this one fault only, that he is a heretic, he
will fail to inherit the kingdom of God. [...]
"Our
faith - that is, the Catholic faith, - distinguishes the righteous from the
unrighteous not by the law of works, but be that of faith, because the just by
faith lives. By which distinction
it results that the man who leads his life without murder, without theft,
without false witness, without coveting other mens' goods, giving due honour to
his parents, completely chaste, most liberal in almsgiving, most patient of
injuries; who not only does not deprive another of his goods, but does not even
ask again for what has been taken away from himself; or who has even sold
all his own property and appointed it to the poor, and possesses nothing which
belongs to him as his own; - with such a character as this, laudable as it
seems to be, if he has not the true and Catholic faith in God, must yet depart
from life to condemnation. [...]
"And
it is brought about, on account of this great difference, that although with no
possibility of a doubt a persevering integrity of virginity is preferable to
conjugal chastity, yet a woman even twice married, if she be a Catholic, is
preferred to a professed virgin that is a heretic; nor is she in such
wise preferred because this one is better in God's kingdom, but because the
other is not there at all." (Against Two Letters of the Pelagians)
""Can
the power of baptism," says Cyprian, "be greater than confession?
than martyrdom? that a man should confess Christ before men, and be
baptized in his own blood? And
yet", he goes on to say, "neither does this baptism profit the heretic,
even though for confessing Christ he be put to death outside the
Church." This is most true.
[...] "Salvation,"
he says, "is not outside the Church." Who says that it is? And therefore whatever men have
that belongs to the Church outside the Church, it profits them nothing
toward salvation outside the Church." (On Baptism against the Donatists.)
Pope Saint Leo the Great, Doctor, A.D. 440-461: "But this mysterious
function, the Lord indeed wishes to be the concern of all the apostles, but in
such a way that he has placed the principle charge on the blessed Peter, chief
of the apostles: and from him as from the Head wishes His gifts to flow to all
the body: so that any one who dares to secede from Peter's solid rock
may understand that he has no part or lot in the divine mystery."
(Letter X)
"For
they who have received baptism from heretics are to be confirmed by the
imposition of hands with only the invocation of the Holy Ghost, because they
have received the bare form of baptism without the power of sanctification."
(Letter CLIX)
"Since
they have received the form of baptism in some way or other [from
heretics,] they are not to be baptized [again] but are to be united to the
Catholics by imposition of hands, after the invocation of the Holy Spirit's
power, which they could not receive from heretics." (Letter CLXVII)
Saint Prosper of Aquitaine, A.D. 463: “From every nation and every
condition thousands of aged people, thousands of youths, thousands of children
daily receive the grace of adoption. [...]
For all who at any time will be called and will enter into the kingdom
of God, have been marked out in the adoption which preceded all times. And just as none of the infidels
is counted among the elect, so none of the god-fearing is excluded from the
blessed.” (The Call of All Nations)
Pope Hormisdas, A.D. 514-523: "The first thing required for
salvation is to keep the norm of correct faith and to deviate in no way from
what the Fathers have established, because it is not possible to lay aside the
words of our Lord Jesus Christ who said, `You are Peter, and on this rock I
will build my Church.' These words
are proved true by their effects because, in the Apostolic See, the Catholic
religion has always been preserved immaculate. Desiring in no way to be separated from
this hope and faith and following in all things what has been established by the
Fathers, we anathematize all heretics." (Profession of faith prescribed
for the Church; Inter ea quae)
Saint Fulgentius (died A.D. 533): "Most firmly hold and never
doubt that not only all pagans, but also all Jews, all
heretics, and all schismatics who finish this life outside of the
Catholic Church, will go into the eternal fire which was prepared for the devil
and his angels." (To Peter on the Faith)
"I am glad indeed that you
have such a concern for keeping the true Faith with no shade of unbelief,
the Faith without which conversion not only would be of no use but would not
really be conversion at all. Indeed, apostolic authority tells us that,
"without faith, it is impossible to please God. For Faith is the foundation of all
things. Faith is the beginning of
human salvation. Without it, no one can belong to the number of the
children of God, because, without it, neither will anyone gain the grace
of justification in this world nor possess eternal life in the world to
come." (Ibid.)
"Whoever
is outside this Church which has received the keys of the kingdom of heaven is
not teaching the path to heaven but to hell; nor is he heading toward the house
of eternal life, but he is hurrying toward the punishment of eternal death; not
only if he remains a pagan without baptism but also, even if he perseveres as a
heretic after baptism." (On the Forgiveness of Sins. Fulgentius, Selected
Works, Catholic University Press, Washington, 1997.)
"Grace
[of justification] is not properly esteemed by any one who supposes that it is
given to all men, when not only does the faith not pertain to all, but even at
the present time some nations may yet be found to whom the preaching of the
faith has not yet come. But the
Blessed Apostle says: "How then are they to call upon Him in whom they
have not believed? or how shall they believe in Him whom they have not heard?
but how are they to hear, without preaching?" Grace, then, is not given
to all; for certainly they cannot be participants in that grace, who are not
believers; nor can they believe if it is found that the preaching of the faith
has never come to them at all." (Synodal Epistle of Saint Fulgentius
and other African Bishops. Rev.
William A. Jurgens, The Faith of the Early Fathers, volume three, Liturgical
Press.)
"Anyone
who has received the Sacrament of Baptism but remained away from the Catholic
Church is never prepared to obtain eternal life. Such a person, even if he is very
generous with almsgiving and even pours out his blood for the name of Christ,
because of the fact that in this life he has not held tightly to the unity of
the Catholic Church, he will not have eternal salvation. [...] Hold most firmly and never doubt that any
heretic or schismatic whatsoever, baptized in the name of the Father and of
the Son and of the Holy Spirit, if he will not have been gathered into the
Catholic Church, no matter how many alms he may have given, even if he shed
his blood for the name of Christ, can never be saved." (To
Peter on the Faith)
"In
this way, with Jesus coming, they can be found within that house. outside of
which no one can be freed from death, because just as in Jericho anyone
who was outside that house could gain no assistance for his life, so outside
the Catholic Church, no one will receive the forgiveness of sins; and
just as within the Catholic Church, "one believes with the heart and so is
justified," so outside the same Church, unorthodox faith does not
procure justification but punishment, and a wicked confession does not acquire
salvation for the one who confesses but brings death. Outside this Church, neither does the Christian
name help anyone, nor does baptism save, nor is a pure sacrifice
offered to God, nor is the forgiveness of sins received, nor is the
happiness of eternal life found." (On the Forgiveness of Sins.)
Pope Pelagius II, A.D. 578-590: "Consider the fact that whoever
has not been in the peace and unity of the Church cannot have the Lord.
[...] Although given over to flames
and fires, they burn, or, thrown to wild beasts, they lay down their lives,
there will not be that crown of faith but the punishment of faithlessness.
[...] Such a one can be slain, he
cannot be crowned. [... If] slain outside the Church, he cannot attain the
rewards of the Church." (Dilectionis Vestrae)
"We
can no more pray for a deceased infidel than we can for the devil, since
they are condemned to the same eternal and irrevocable damnation."
(Dialogues, IV)
Pope Saint Gregory the Great, Doctor, A.D. 590-604: "Now the holy Church
universal proclaims that God cannot be truly worshipped saving within herself,
asserting that all they that are without her shall never be saved."
(Moralia)
"Consider
that therefore whoever is not in the peace and unity of the Church
cannot have God." (Epistle to Schismatic Bishops)
"And
indeed we have learnt from the ancient institution of the Fathers that whosoever
among heretics are baptized in the name of the Trinity, when they return to
Holy Church, may be recalled to the bosom of mother Church either by unction of
chrism, or by imposition of hands, or by profession of faith only. Hence the West reconciles Arians to the
Catholic Church by imposition of hands, but the East by the unction of Holy
chrism. But mono-physites and
others are received by a true confession only, because holy baptism,
which they have received among heretics, then acquires in them the power
of cleansing, when either the former receive the Holy Spirit by
imposition of hands, or the latter are united to the bowels of the holy and
universal Church by reason of their confession of the true faith."
(Epistle LXVII)
“Since,
then, by my own public profession you know the entireness of our belief, it is
fitting that you have no further scruple concerning the Church of Saint Peter,
Prince of the Apostles. But persist
in the true Faith, and ground your life on the rock of the Church, that is, in
his confession: lest your many tears and your good works avail nothing,
if they be separated from the true Faith.
For as branches wither without a root, so works, however good
they seem, are nothing if separated from the solidity of the
Faith." (To Theodelinda, Queen of the Lombards)
John Moschus (died A.D. 619): "There dwelt on the sacred
river Jordan a certain old man, Cyriacus by name, of great merit before
God. To him came a stranger named
Theophanes to ask advice concerning temptations. The old man began to encourage him with
talk about temperance. Greatly
edified and strengthened, he said to the old man, "Truly, my father, if it
were not that in my own country I communicate with the Nestorians, I would
remain with you." Now, when
the aged man heard the name "Nestorians," distressed for the ruin of
a brother, he began to rebuke him, and entreated him to withdraw from that most
evil and baneful heresy, and to seek admission into the Holy, Catholic and
Apostolic Church, telling him at the same time that there is no other hope
of salvation. "But my
father and master," said the brother, "surely this is what all
heretics say: that, "Unless you communicate with us, you will not be
saved." Miserable that I am, I
do not know what to do! Therefore
beseech the Lord to make me know for certain which is the true
faith." The old man was full
of joy, and said to him, "Come; sit in the cave with me, and have complete
hope in God, for His goodness will discover to you the true faith." Then, leaving the brother in the cave,
Cyriacus went forth to the dead sea to pray to God for him.
"Now,
about the ninth hour the following day, the brother beheld some one standing
before him of terrible appearance, who said, "Come and see the
truth!" And, taking him, he
led him to a darksome and fetid place where their burned fire and flames; and,
in these flames he saw Nestorius, Eutyches, and certain others. And he who had appeared to him said,
"This place is prepared for heretics and for those who follow their
teachings. If this place
pleases you, then continue in your present doctrine; but if you do not want to
undergo this punishment, join yourself to the Holy, Catholic and Apostolic
Church which that old man is teaching you to do. For I tell you that, although a man
should practice all the virtues and yet not believe rightly, he will
have to suffer in this place!"
At these words, the brother regained consciousness, and told Cyriacus,
on his return, all that he had seen.
And then he joined the Holy Catholic Church." (The Spiritual
Meadow)
St. Maximus the Confessor (died A.D. 650): "Therefore if a man does not
want to be, or to be called, a heretic, let him not strive to please
this or that man [...] but let him hasten before all things to be in communion
with the Roman See. If he be
in communion with it, he should be acknowledged by all and everywhere as
faithful and orthodox. He speaks in
vain who tries to persuade me of the orthodoxy of those who, like himself,
refuse obedience to his Holiness the Pope of the most holy Church of Rome:
that is to the Apostolic See." (Quoted by Pope Leo XIII in Satis
Cognitum)
Saint Bede the Venerable O.S.B., Doctor, (died A.D. 735): "He who will not
willingly and humbly enter the gate of the Church will certainly be damned and
enter the gate of hell whether he wants to or not." (Sermon 16) "Without this confession, without
this faith, no one can enter the kingdom of God." (Sermon 16)
"Blessed
Peter in a special manner received the keys of the kingdom of heaven and the
headship of judiciary power, that all believers throughout the world might
understand that all those who in any way separate themselves from
the unity of this faith and communion, - such can neither be absolved from the
bonds of their sins, nor enter the gate of the heavenly kingdom." (Homily
on the day of Saints Peter and Paul)
Saint Peter Mavimenus (died A.D. 743): "Whoever does not
embrace the Catholic Christian religion will be damned, as was your false
prophet Mohammed." (Roman Martyrology, February 21st) [Upon this
profession of the faith, the infidel murdered him.]
Alcuin of York (died A.D. 780): "He then gives the reason why
he who believes not is condemned, viz. because he believeth
not on the name of the only begotten Son of God. For in this name alone is there
salvation." (cf. Catena Aurea by Saint Thomas Aquinas, Jn.
3:18)
"Behold,
thou art, most holy Father, the Pontiff chosen by God, the Vicar of the
Apostles, the heir of the Fathers, the Prince of the Church, the Nourisher of
the one Spotless Dove. In the
kindness of fatherly feeling, by thy most holy prayers, and sweetest
exhortations of sacred writings, gather us unto God's holy Church,
within the very strong bonds of the Church's soundness; lest any of us,
wandering about, should be met on the outside to be devoured by the
ravenousness of the wolf." (Epistle)
Saint George of San Saba (died A.D. 852): "Mohammed was a disciple of the
devil, and his followers are in a state of perdition." (In "Victories
of the Martyrs" by Saint Alphonsus)
Blessed Rhabanus Maurus (died A.D. 856): "But this power of binding and
loosing, though it seems given by the Lord to Peter alone, is indeed also given
to the other Apostles, and is even now in the Bishops and Presbyters in every
church. But Peter received
in a special manner the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and a supremacy of
judicial power, that all the faithful throughout the world might understand
that all who in any manner separate themselves from the unity of the
faith, or from communion with him, should neither be able to be loosed from the
bonds of sin, nor to enter the gate of the heavenly kingdom." (cf. Catena
Aurea by Saint Thomas Aquinas, Mt. 18:18)
"Without
this faith, no one can enter Heaven." (cf. Catena Aurea by Saint
Thomas Aquinas, Mk. 16:16)
Pope Hadrian II, A.D. 867-872: Council of Constantinople IV
against the schismatic heretic Photius: "The first thing required for
salvation is to keep the norm of correct faith and to deviate in no way from
what the Fathers have established, because it is not possible to lay aside the
words of our Lord Jesus Christ who said, `You are Peter, and on this rock I
will build my Church.' These words
are proved true by their effects because, in the Apostolic See, the Catholic
religion has always been preserved immaculate."
Pope Sylvester II, A.D. 999-1003: "I profess that outside the
Catholic Church, no one is saved." (Profession of Faith made as
Archbishop of Rheims, June 991; Letters of Gerbert, NY: Columbia University
Press.) [This is the man that introduced Arabic numerals (the ones we use) into
the West.]
Pope Saint Leo IX, A.D. 1049-1054): [regarding the eastern so-called
"Orthodox" schismatics]: "If you live not in the body which is
Christ, you are none of His.
Whose, then, are you? You
have been cut off and will wither, and like the branch pruned from the vine, you
will burn in the fire - an end which may God's goodness keep far from
you."
"So little does the Roman
Church stand alone, as you think, that in the whole world any nation that in
its pride dissents from her is in no way a church, but a council of heretics,
a conventicle of schismatics, and a synagogue of Satan."
"As far as the pillars of
the empire are concerned and its wise and honoured citizens, the city is most
Christian and orthodox. But we, not
enduring the unheard-of offense and injury done to the Holy Apostolic and First
See, wishing to defend in every way the Catholic Faith, by the authority of the
Holy and Undivided Trinity and of the Apostolic See, whose legates we are,
declare that Michael, patriarch by abuse; [...] Leo called bishop of Achrida;
[...] and all their followers in the aforesaid errors and presumption
shall be: anathema, maranatha [...] with all the heretics and with the devil
and his angels, unless they repent.
Amen." (Sancta Romana Prima) [The "Orthodox" schismatics
were thus excommunicated to burn with the devil and his angels. When they came to the Council of
Florence to be momentarily reconciled, they professed to the pope that:
"We have come to you our head.
You are the foundation of the Church. Every member that has left you is sick,
and wild beasts have devoured the flock that has separated itself from you.
[...] You who have the power of the
heavenly keys, open to us the gates of eternal life."]
Saint Bruno of Segni (died A.D. 1123): "Because baptism consists not
in the faith of the giver but in the faith of those who receive it, it is good
regardless of by whom it is given.
But where there is no Catholic faith, baptism does not work. Consequently, whoever is baptized
outside the Church is not released from sin before he returns to the
Church. For the remission of sins in
no way occurs except within the Church. [...]
"Thus
it is clear that no one shall be saved outside the Church, whether he
was baptized within it or outside of it.
Why is this? Again, let the
Lord himself speak: "If someone does not remain in me, let him be cast out
like [dead] branches and they shall gather him up, throw him into the fire, and
he shall burn." (St. John 15:6)
Hence, if the person perishes who was sometimes in Christ but who does
not remain in Him, how shall the person not perish who was never in Him and did
not remain in Him? For whoever
is baptized outside the Church never was nor ever shall be in Christ unless he
should be joined to the Church before he departs this life – for he never
was nor ever shall be in the body of Christ. For if he is separated from the body of
Christ, he is no longer a member of Christ. Moreover, the body of Christ is not
outside the Church. Otherwise the
Church itself would be outside itself – since the Church is the body of
Christ – and this is impossible.
"Consequently,
baptism cannot be given and cannot benefit [the person] outside the
Church. For although baptism which
is given outside the Church does have the form of the sacrament, it does not
have the virtue of the sacrament; it has the form, of course, because it is
done in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. It does not have the virtue, because it
does not effect the remission of sins.
Why then are those who come from the heretics not rebaptized? Do you want to hear why? Because they have the form of baptism,
i.e. because they have already been reborn from the water at the invocation of
the Trinity. It still remains for
them to be reborn as well in the Holy Spirit who effects the remission of sins
in them – something which the visible form cannot give. For "unless someone should be
reborn from the water and the Holy Spirit, he shall not enter the
kingdom of God." (St. John 3:5) [...]
"We
have also stated that all sacraments outside the Church have the form,
to be sure, but they do not have the virtue [of the sacrament]. We have also said that no one is
saved outside the Church." (On Simoniacs)
Pope Innocent III, A.D. 1198-1216 (D423): "By the heart we believe
and by the mouth we confess the one Church, not of heretics but the Holy
Roman, Catholic, and Apostolic (Church) outside which we believe that no one
is saved." (Profession of Faith for the Waldensians, Eius Exemplo)
(D430)
***INFALLIBLE***: Ex cathedra: "One indeed is the universal Church of
the faithful, outside which no one at all is saved." (IV
Lateran Council, A.D. 1215)
Saint Francis of Assisi O.F.M., Founder, (died A.D. 1226): "And so the Friars
who are inspired by God to work as missionaries among the Saracens
[Mohammedans] and other unbelievers must get permission to go from their
minister, who is their servant. [...]
We Friars Minor, servants and worthless as we are, humbly beg and
implore everyone to persevere in the true faith and in a life of
penance; there is no other way to be saved. We beseech the whole world to do
this, all those who serve our lord and God within the Holy Catholic and
Apostolic Church, together with the whole hierarchy, priests, deacons,
subdeacons, acolytes, exorcists, lectors, porters, and all clerics and
religious, male or female; we beg all children, big and small, the poor and the
needy, kings and princes, labourers and farmers, servants and masters; we beg
all virgins and all other women, married or unmarried; we beg all lay folk, men
and women, infants and adolescents, young and old, the healthy and the sick,
the little and the great, all peoples, tribes, families and languages, all
nations and all men everywhere, present and to come; we Friars Minor beg
them all to persevere in the true faith and in a life of penance." (Rule
of 1221)
Saint Thomas Aquinas O.P., Doctor, (died A.D. 1274): "But the unity of the
Church exists primarily because of the unity of the faith; for the Church is nothing
else than the aggregate of the faithful. And because without faith it is impossible
to please God, for this reason there is no room for salvation outside
the Church." (Expositio Primae Decretalis ad Archdiaconum Tudertinum,
edited by Fr, Raymond A. Verardo, O.P., Opusculum Theologica, Vol. 1, Marietta,
Turin, 1954.)
"There
is no entering into salvation outside the Church, just as in the time of
the deluge there was none outside the ark, which denotes the
Church." (Summa Theologica III. 73, 3.)
"Unbelief
has a double sense. First, it can
be taken purely negatively; thus a man is called an unbeliever solely
because he does not possess faith.
Secondly, by way of opposition to faith; thus when a man refuses to hear
of the faith or even contemns it, according to Isaiah, Who has believed our
report? This is where the full
nature of unbelief, properly speaking is found, and where the sin lies.
"If,
however, unbelief be taken just negatively, as in those who have
heard nothing about the faith, it bears the character, not of fault, but of
penalty, because their ignorance of divine things is the result of the sin
of our first parents. Those who are
unbelievers in this sense are condemned on account of other sins,
which cannot be forgiven without faith; they are not condemned for the sin
of unbelief." (Summa Theologica II, II, 10, 1. Blackfriars, 1975. Eyre and Spottiswoode
Ltd.)
"The
Church's intention in baptizing is to cleanse from sin in accordance with
Isaiah, "This is full fruit that sin be taken away." Thus, as far as the Church is concerned,
it does not intend to give baptism except to those who have [the] true faith,
without which there is no forgiveness of sins. And for this reason, the one being
baptized is asked whether he believes.
If, however, a person without [the] true faith receives baptism
outside the Church, the sacrament does not work to his salvation. Hence, Augustine says, "The
Church compared to Paradise indicates to us that men can receive her baptism
even outside her, but the salvation of blessedness no one can receive or
hold outside her." (Summa Theologica III, 68, 8, 2. As above.)
"And
because the consecration of the Eucharist is an act based on the power of Holy
Orders, those [validly ordained priests] who are separated from the Church by heresy,
schism or excommunication, are able to consecrate the Eucharist, which when
consecrated contains Christ's true body and blood; yet they act not rightly
and sin by so doing. Consequently
they do not gather the fruit of the sacrifice, which is a spiritual sacrifice." (Summa Theolgica, IIIa, 82, 7. As
above.)
"On
the other hand, the power of jurisdiction is that which is conferred by a mere
human appointment. Such a power as
this does not adhere to the recipient immovably: so that it does not remain in heretics
or schismatics; and consequently they neither absolve nor
excommunicate, nor grant indulgence, nor do any thing of the kind, and if they
do, it is invalid." (Summa Theologica, II, II, 39, 3.)
"It
is shown also that it is necessary for salvation to be subject to the Roman
Pontiff." (Against the Errors of the Greeks. Opuscula Theologica, Vol. I,
Part 2, Chap. 36, edited by Fr. Raymond A. Verardo, O.P., Marietta, Turin,
1954)
Saint Bonaventure O.F.M., Doctor. (died A.D. 1274): "Once these
conditions [intention and Orders] are present, the sacraments may be
conferred by either the good or the wicked, the faithful or the heretical,
within the Church or outside it: but within the Church, they are conferred both
in fact and in effect, while outside it, although conferred in fact,
they are not effective. [...]
"Because
none may be saved outside of the communion of faith and love which makes
us members of the Church, whenever the sacraments are received outside
of it, they are received with no effect toward salvation, although they
are true sacraments. They may
become effective however, when the recipient returns to Holy Mother Church, the
only bride of Christ, whose sons are the only ones Christ the Spouse
deems worthy of the eternal inheritance.
Wherefore Augustine writes to the Donatists: "A comparison of the
Church with paradise reveals that while strangers to the Church may receive its
baptism, no one outside the Church may receive or possess beatific
salvation."" (Breviolquium VI.)
Pope Boniface VIII, A.D. 1294-1303: "We are compelled, our faith
urging us, to believe and to hold; and we do firmly believe and simply confess;
that there is one holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, outside of
which there is no salvation or remission of sins; her Spouse proclaiming it
in the canticles, "My dove, my undefiled is but one, she is the choice one
of her that bore her;" which represents one mystical body, of which body
the head is Christ, but of Christ, God.
In this Church there is one Lord, one Faith, and one
Baptism. There was one ark of Noah,
indeed, at the time of the flood, symbolizing one Church; and this being
finished in one cubit had, namely, one Noah as helmsman and commander. And, with the exception of this ark, all
things existing upon the earth were, as we read, destroyed.
"This
Church, moreover, we venerate as the only one, the Lord saying through
His prophet, "Deliver my soul from the sword, my darling from the power of
the dog." He prayed at the
same time for His Soul; that is, for Himself the Head, and for His Body; which
Body, namely, He called the one and only Church on account of the unity of the
Faith promised, of the sacraments, and of the love of the Church. She is that seamless garment of the Lord
which was not cut but which fell by lot.
Therefore of this one and only Church there is one body and one head;
not two heads as if it were a monster: Christ, namely, and the vicar of Christ,
Saint Peter [who are one head, Christ and His Vicar:] "Feed my
sheep." My sheep, He said,
using a general term, and not designating these or those particular sheep; from
which it is plain that He committed to him all His sheep.
"If,
then, the Greeks or others say that they were not committed to the care
of Peter and his successors, they necessarily confess that they are not of the
sheep of Christ; for the Lord says, in John, that there is one fold, one
shepherd, and one only.
"We
are told by the word of the Gospel that in this His fold there are two swords;
a spiritual, namely, and a temporal.
For when the apostles said, "Behold here are two swords", the
Lord did not reply that this was too much, but enough. Surely he who denies that the temporal
sword is in the power of Peter wrongly interprets the word of the Lord when He
says, "Put up thy sword in its scabbard." Both swords, the spiritual and the
material, therefore, are in the power of the Church; the one, indeed, to be
wielded for the Church, the other by the Church; the one by the hand of the
priest, the other by the hand of kings and knights, but at the will and
sufferance of the priest. One
sword, moreover, ought to, be under the other, and the temporal authority to be
subjected to the spiritual. For
when the Apostle says "There is no power but of God, and the powers that
are of God are ordained," they would not be ordained unless sword were
under sword and the lesser one, as it were, were led by the other to great
deeds.
"For
according to St. Dionysius the law of Divinity is to lead the lowest through
the intermediate to the highest things.
Not, therefore, according to the law of the universe are all things
reduced to order equally and immediately; but the lowest through the
intermediate, the intermediate through the higher. But that the spiritual exceeds any
earthly power in dignity and nobility we ought the more openly to confess, the
more spiritual things excel temporal ones.
This also is made plain to our eyes from the giving of tithes, and the
benediction and the sanctification; from the acceptation of this same power,
from the control over those same things.
For, the truth bearing witness, the spiritual power has to establish the
earthly power, and to judge if it be not good. Thus, concerning the Church and the
ecclesiastical power, is verified the prophecy of Jeremias: "See, I have
this day set thee over the nations and over the kingdoms," and the other
things which follow.
"Therefore
if the earthly power err, it shall be judged by the spiritual power; but if the
lesser spiritual power err, by the greater. But if the greatest, it can be judged by
God alone, not by man, the Apostle hearing witness. A spiritual man judges all things, but he
himself is judged by no one. This
authority, moreover, even though it is given to man and exercised through man,
is not human but rather divine, being given by divine lips to Peter and founded
on a rock for him and his successors through Christ Himself whom He has
confessed; the Lord Himself saying to Peter: "Whatsoever thou shalt bind,"
etc. Whoever, therefore, resists
this power thus ordained by God, resists the ordination of God, unless he makes
believe, like the Manichean, that there are two beginnings. This we consider false and heretical,
since by the testimony of Moses, not "in the beginnings," but
"in the beginning," God created the heavens and the earth.
*** INFALLIBLE ***: Ex
cathedra: "We declare, we say, we define, and we pronounce that it is wholly
necessary for the salvation of every human creature to be subject
to the Roman Pontiff. The
Lateran, November 14th, in our eighth year. As a perpetual memorial of this
matter." (Unam Sanctam, A.D. 1302)
Pope Clement VI, A.D. 1342-1352 (D 550 b,l): "We ask if you
believe and the Armenians obedient to you, that no man of those
travelling outside the faith of the same Church and obedience to the
Pontiff of the Romans can finally be saved; [...and] if you have believed
and believe that all those who have set themselves up against the Faith
of the Roman Church and have died in final impenitence have been damned and
have descended to the perpetual torments of hell." (Super Qibusdam)
Blessed Nicholas Talvilich (died 1391): "You Mohammedans are in a state of
everlasting damnation. Your Koran
is not God's law nor is it revealed by Him. Far from being a good thing, your law is
utterly evil. It is founded neither
in the Old Testament nor in the New.
In it are lies, foolish things, buffooneries, contradictions, and much
that leads not to virtue and goodness but to evil and to all manner of
vice."
Vincent Ferrer (died A.D. 1419): "One who dies a Jew will be
damned." [He converted tens of thousands of them by his preaching.]
Juliana of Norwich (died A.D. 1423): "I knew in my faith that the
Jews were accursed and condemned without end, except those who were
converted." (Sixteen Revelations of Divine Love)
Pope Eugenius IV, A.D. 1431-1447, at Council of Florence
***INFALLIBLE***: Ex cathedra: "It [the Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic
Church] firmly believes, professes, and proclaims that none of
those outside the Catholic Church, not only pagans, but neither Jews,
nor heretics and schismatics, can become participants in eternal
life, but will depart "into everlasting fire which was prepared for the
devil and his angels" [Matt. 25:41], unless before the end of life they
have been added to the Church; and that the unity of the ecclesiastical body is
so strong that only to those remaining in it are the sacraments
of the Church of benefit for salvation, and do fastings, almsgiving,
and other functions of piety and exercises of Christian service produce eternal
reward, and that no one, whatever almsgiving he has
practised, even if he has shed [his] blood for the name of Christ,
can be saved, unless he has remained in the bosom and unity of the
Catholic Church." (Cantate Domino, A.D. 1442)
Pope Paul III (A.D. 1534-1549) who convened the Council of Trent:
"To all faithful Christians to whom this writing may come, health in
Christ our Lord and the apostolic benediction. The sublime God so loved the human race
that He created man in suchwise that he might participate, not only in the good
that other creatures enjoy, but endowed him with capacity to attain to the
inaccessible and invisible Supreme Good and behold it face to face; and since man,
according to the testimony of the sacred scriptures, has been created to enjoy eternal
life and happiness, which none may obtain save through faith in our Lord
Jesus Christ, it is necessary that he should possess the nature and
faculties enabling him to receive that faith; and that whoever is thus endowed
should be capable of receiving that same faith. Nor is it credible that any one should
possess so little understanding as to desire the faith and yet be destitute of
the most necessary faculty to enable him to receive it. Hence Christ, who is the Truth itself,
that has never failed and can never fail, said to the preachers of the faith
whom He chose for that office "Go ye and teach all nations." He said "all," without
exception, for all are capable of receiving the doctrines of the faith. The enemy of the human race, who opposes
all good deeds in order to bring men to destruction, beholding and envying
this, invented a means never before heard of, by which he might hinder the
preaching of God's word of Salvation to the people: he inspired his satellites
who, to please him, have not hesitated to publish abroad that the Indians of
the West and the South, and other people of whom We have recent knowledge
should be treated as dumb brutes created for our service, pretending that they
are incapable of receiving the Catholic Faith. We, who, though unworthy, exercise on
earth the power of our Lord and seek with all our might to bring those sheep of
His flock who are outside into the fold committed to our charge, consider,
however, that the Indians are truly men and that they are not only capable of
understanding the Catholic Faith but, according to our information, they desire
exceedingly to receive it. Desiring
to provide ample remedy for these evils, We define and declare by these Our
letters, or by any translation thereof signed by any notary public and sealed
with the seal of any ecclesiastical dignitary, to which the same credit shall
be given as to the originals, that, notwithstanding whatever may have been or
may be said to the contrary, the said Indians and all other people who may
later be discovered by Christians, are by no means to be deprived of their
liberty or the possession of their property, even though they be outside the
faith of Jesus Christ; and that they may and should, freely and
legitimately, enjoy their liberty and the possession of their property; nor
should they be in any way enslaved; should the contrary happen, it shall be
null and have no effect. By virtue
of Our apostolic authority We define and declare by these present letters, or
by any translation thereof signed by any notary public and sealed with the seal
of any ecclesiastical dignitary, which shall thus command the same obedience as
the originals, that the said Indians and other peoples should be converted
to the faith of Jesus Christ by preaching the word of God and by the
example of good and holy living." (Sublimus Deus)
There
follows some quotes from the English martyrs before we return to the general
chronological presentation:
John Fisher (died A.D. 1535): "Consectanteum est vt quisquis
huius veritatis fidem aspernatur, is omnino periturus sit, quum extra
Catholicam ecclesiam, nemini salus obuenire queat." (Ver. Corp. 4. prooem,
Opera, p.998.)
Thomas More (died A.D. 1535): "Outside the Church there
is no salvation, and therefore if the claims of the pope be true at all,
then he who denies them imperils his soul." (Dialogue concerning
Heresies.)
Edmund Campion, S.J. (died A.D. 1581): "There is but one plain known
road: when you wander from this you are lost. You must be altogether within the
House of God, within the walls of salvation, to be sound and safe from
injury. If you wander or walk
abroad ever so little, if you carelessly thrust hand or foot out of the Ship,
you shall be thrust forth: the door is shut, the ocean roars, you are
undone." (Letters from the Saints, Fr. Claude Williamson, London: Wyman
and Sons, 1948.)
Henry Walpole, S.J. (died A.D. 1595): "He said that by the grace of
God he was in peace with all the world, and prayed God for all, particularly
those who were the cause of his death; yet he heartily prayed for them, that
God would enlighten them with His truth, bring them back to His Church, and
dispose them for His mercy. He also
said: "May His Divine Majesty never suffer me to consent to the least
thing by which He may be dishonoured, nor you to desire it of me, and God is my
witness, that to all here present, and particularly to my accusers, I wish as
to myself the salvation of their souls, and that to this end they may live in
the true Catholic Faith, the only way to eternal happiness.""
Robert Southwell, S.J. (died A.D. 1595): "Embrace His mercy before the
time of rigour and return to His Church lest He debar you from His
kingdom. He cannot have God for his
Father who does not possess the Catholic Church for his Mother. Turn now the bias of your heart towards
the Sanctuary of Salvation and the city of refuge."
"He
cannot have God for his Father that refuses the Catholic Church for his Mother;
neither can he attain to the Church Triumphant who is not a member of the
Church Militant."
James Duckett (A.D. 1602): "James Duckett showed great
alacrity in his mind, and spoke boldly and cheerfully, to the astonishment of
many beholders. He said of how he
professed that he died a Catholic, and that so he had lived; [...] telling the
people in general that he was most willing to die for that cause, and that it
was as impossible for any one to be saved outside of the Catholic Church
as for any to avoid the deluge that was outside of Noah's ark. [...] And so the cart was drawn from
him." (Life of James Duckett, Duckett's Bookshop)
Edmund Arrowsmith, S.J. (died A.D. 1628): "You gentlemen, who are come
hither to see my end, bear witness with me that I die a constant Roman
Catholic, and for Jesus Christ's sake.
Let not my death be a hindrance to your well-doing and going forward in
the Catholic religion, but rather an encouragement therein. For Jesus' sake have a care for your
souls, than which nothing is more precious; and become members of the true
Church as you tender your salvation; for hereafter that alone will do
you good. Nothing doth so much
grieve me as this England which I pray God soon convert."
Fr. William Ward or Webster (died A.D. 1641): "Hereunto the Sheriff replied,
saying, "You die not for point of religion, but for seducing the King's
liege subjects." To this the
Holy Martyr answered, he had seduced none, but reduced or converted many, the
which he was glad of, and did wish he could not only have converted more, but
even all England; because there was no other saving faith than that of
the Roman Catholic Church, "and as for this faith, I die myself most
willingly, so I say unto you all, that will hope for salvation, you must
die in the same faith at least, if not for it." He hung till he was dead."
Fr. Hugh Green or Ferdinand
Brooks (died A.D. 1642): "I am
here condemned to die for my religion, and for being a priest. [...] Against this Roman faith all the
sectaries cried out; and all heretics that have been since Christ oppugn this
faith, and yet truly out of it none can be saved."
Fr. Edward Morgan or Singleton (died A.D. 1642): "Before he spoke the servant of
God kneeled down in the cart, [...]
He began by signing himself with the sign of the cross, [...] "There is but one God," said
he, "one faith, one baptism, one true Church in which is found true hope
of salvation, out of which there can be none; and for this true Church
of Christ I willingly die." [...]
Then after he had recommended his departing soul by prayer to God, the
cart was drawn away, and he was suffered to hang until he was dead, and then he
was cut down, bowelled, and quartered."
Fr. Thomas Holland, S.J. (died A.D. 1642): "Arising from the sledge, and
perceiving the people to be very silent and attentive in expectation of what he
should say, he began to speak to them (making the sign of the cross) to this
effect: [...] Then he proceeded to
tell the people that there could be but one true faith, one true Church,
and no salvation out of it. [...]
Then shutting his eyes for a while in silent prayer, then looking
towards his confessor who was there in the crowd, at this signal given,
received his last absolution; after which the cart was drawn away and he was
left hanging till he quietly expired; his eyes being observed to remain fixed
on heaven, and his hands all the while joined before his breast."
Francis Bell O.S.F. (died A.D. 1643): "Many officers and other were
drawn to the place where he was imprisoned. One of them asked him what religion he
was of. [...] In fine, at parting,
he told them plainly and sincerely that no salvation could be hoped for
out of the Catholic Church, and that he wished them all to be even as he was,
excepting his present state of confinement. [...] Then being put up into the cart, and
having leave of the Sheriff (who treated him with a great deal of humanity) to
speak to the people, he delivered himself to them in these, or the like words:
"[...] But above all, I exhort you to renounce heresy, in which you
have been so long engaged; for this (with grief I speak it) has cut you off
like putrid members from the true body of Christ, and like dead branches
from the tree of His Church. [...]
There can be only one Catholic Church, of which I am a member. This, with the help of God, I will
profess till my dying hour. Rest
assured, outside the Catholic Church there is no salvation." He
hanged for the space of one Miserere, and then was cut down,
dismembered, bowelled, and quartered."
Henry Morse, S.J. (died A.D. 1645): "I am come hither to die for
my religion, for that religion which is professed by the Catholic Roman Church,
founded by Christ, established by the Apostles, propagated through the ages by
an hierarchy always visible to this day, grounded on the testimonies of holy
scriptures; upheld by the authority of fathers and councils, out of which, in
fine, there can be no hopes of salvation."
Fr. William Lloyd (died A.D. 1679): "In the name of the Father,
Son, and Holy Ghost; amen. Dearly
beloved countrymen: It is, even by God's holy providence, that now I am come to
the last hour of my mortal life in this miserable world and therefore am
desirous to give an account to all the world, in what faith and religion I
lived while I was in this world, and in which I am resolved to depart out of
this world, which is the only holy Catholic and Apostolical faith and
religion, that is, the very same in all points as the apostles themselves lived
and died in, [...] which is the only faith in which a man can be saved,
and no other. [...] And to
find out the apostolic faith, without which no man can please God, nor
consequently be saved, we must find out the eldest faith amongst Christians,
which was planted by our Saviour Himself amongst His apostles, which doth still
last, and will last for ever."
John Kemble (died A.D. 1679): ""It will be expected I
should say something, but as I am an old man, it cannot be much. [...] I die only for professing the old Roman
Catholic religion, which was the religion that first made this kingdom
Christian, and whoever intends to be saved must die in that
religion." [...] The cart was
drawn away, and he hanged at least half and hour before he was quite dead, the
knot of the rope not being rightly applied; though this, as it is believed,
happened rather by accident than design."
We
shall now return to the more general chronological presentation.
Francis Xavier, S.J. (died A.D. 1552): "Many, many people hereabouts
[the East] are not becoming Christians for one reason only: there is
nobody to make them Christians.
Again and again I have thought of going round the universities of
Europe, especially Paris, and everywhere crying out like a madman, riveting the
attention of those with more learning than charity: "What a tragedy: how
many souls are being shut out of heaven and falling into hell, thanks to
you!" (Letter to Saint Ignatius Loyola, S.J.)
"Eternal
God, Creator of all things, remember that the souls of unbelievers have
been created by Thee, and formed to Thine own image and likeness. Behold, O Lord, how hell is being
filled with these very souls.
Remember that Jesus Christ Thine only Son, for their salvation, suffered
a most cruel death. Do not permit,
O Lord, I beseech Thee, that Thy Divine Don be any more slighted by
unbelievers, but rather being appeased by the prayers of Thy saints, and of the
Church, the most holy Spouse of Thy Son, deign to be mindful of Thy mercy, and
forgetting their idolatry and their unbelief, bring them to know Him Whom Thou
didst send, Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Our Lord, Who is our health, life and
resurrection, through Whom we have been redeemed and saved, to Whom be all
glory forever. Amen." (Saint
Francis Xavier's Prayer for Unbelievers)
Pius V (A.D. 1566-1572): "He Who reigns on high, to
Whom is given all power in Heaven and on earth, has entrusted His Holy Catholic
and Apostolic Church, outside of which there is no salvation to one
person on earth alone, namely: to Peter, the prince of the Apostles and to
Peter's successor, the Roman Pontiff, to be governed by Him with the fullness
of power." (Readings in Church History)
Pius issued the Roman
Catechism (1566), known also as that of the Council of Trent by
which it was ordered, the Council called to deal with the
"Protestant" apostasy, and edited under Saint Charles Borromeo:
"That faith thus understood
is necessary to salvation no man can reasonably doubt, particularly since it is
written: "without faith it is impossible to please God." For
as the end proposed to man as his ultimate happiness is far above the reach of
human understanding, it was therefore necessary that it should be made known to
him by God. This knowledge, however, is nothing else than faith, by which we
yield our unhesitating assent to whatever the authority of our Holy Mother the
Church teaches us to have been revealed by God." (Part One, The Creed)
"Infidels are outside the
Church because they never belonged to, and never knew the Church,
and were never made partakers of any of her Sacraments. Heretics and schismatics are excluded
from the Church, because they have separated from her and belong to her only as
deserters belong to the army from which they have deserted." (Part 1
article 9 section 3)
"Among
these figures [of the Church] the ark of Noah holds a conspicuous place. It was built by the command of God, in
order that there might be no doubt that it was a symbol of the Church, which God
has so constituted that all who enter therein through Baptism, may be safe from
danger of eternal death, while such as are outside the Church, like
those who were not in the ark, are overwhelmed by their own crimes." (Part
1 article 9 section 5)
"Moreover,
the Church alone has the legitimate worship of sacrifice, and the
salutary use of the Sacraments, which are efficacious instruments
of divine grace, used by God to produce true holiness. Hence, to possess true holiness, we must
belong to this Church. [...] All
other societies arrogating to themselves the name of "church," must
necessarily, because guided by the spirit of the devil, be sunk in the most
pernicious errors, both doctrinal and moral. [...] In Jerusalem only was it lawful
to offer sacrifice to God, and in the Church of God only are to be found
the true worship and true sacrifice which can at all be acceptable to
God." (Part 1 article 9)
Original Douay-Rheims Bible with
original commentary and marginal notes included (A.D. 1582) being the Bible of English speaking
Catholics for centuries:
1 Corinthians 13:3:
""And if I should distribute all my goods to be meat for the
poor, and if I should deliver my body so that I burn, and have not charity,
it doth profit me nothing."
"3.
"Deliver my body".]
"Believe (saith St. Augustine) assuredly and hold for certain, that
no Heretic and Schismatic that uniteth not himself to the Catholic
Church again, how great alms so ever he give, yea or shed his blood
for Christ's name, can possibly be saved." For, many Heretics by the cloak of
Christ's cause, deceiving the simple suffer much. But where true faith is not,
there is no justice, because the just liveth by faith. So it is also of Schismatics, because
where charity is not, justice can there be none: which if they had, they
would never pluck in pieces the body of Christ which is the Church. (Aug. seu.
Fulg. de fid. ad Pet. c. 39.) So
saith St. Augustine in divers places, not only of Heretics that died directly
for defense of their heresy, as the Anabaptists and Calvinists now a days
do (for that it is more damnable): but of some Heretics and Schismatics
that may die among the Heathen or Turks for defense of truth or some Article
of Christ's religion. (Aug. de verb. Do. sr. 50 c. 2. & in Psal. 34 conc.
2 prope finem.; Cypr. de unit. Ec. nu. 8.)"
Ephesians 5:23:
""Because the man is the head of the woman: as Christ is the head of
the Church. Himself, the Saviour of
his body."
"Marginal
note: No salvation out of the Catholic Church.
"23.
"Saviour of his body".] None
hath salvation or benefit by Christ, that is not of his body the Church. And what Church that is, St.
Augustine expresseth in these words.
"The Catholic Church only is the body of Christ, whereof he
is head. Out of the body the Holy
Ghost quickeneth no man.""
Hebrews 11:6: ""But
without faith it is impossible to please God. For he that cometh to God, must
believe that he is, and is a rewarder to them that seek him."
"6.
"He that cometh".] Faith
is the foundation and ground of all other virtues and worship of God, without
which no man can please God.
Therefore if one be a Jew, a heathen, or an heretic,
that is to say, he be without the Catholic faith, all his works
shall profit him no whit to salvation."
1 St. John 1:3: ""that
you also may have society with us, and our society may be with the Father and
with his Son JESUS Christ."
"Marginal
note: No salvation but in the Society of the Church.
"3.
"You may have society".]
St. John showeth manifestly, that whosoever desire to be partakers with
God, must first be united to the Church's society, learn that faith, and
receive those Sacraments, which the Disciples received of the Truth itself,
conversant with them in flesh. So
saith Venerable Bede upon this place. Whereby we see there is no
society with God in sects or schisms, nor anywhere but in the
unity, fellowship, and commandment of that Church which can prove itself to
descend from the Apostles."
Charles Borromeo, Founder, (died A.D. 1584): "I wish to die in
the Roman Catholic Apostolic Church in which all the saints since Jesus
Christ have died, and out of which there is no salvation." (Prayer
to Guardian Angel)
Peter Canisius S.J., Doctor, (died A.D. 1597): "Outside of this
communion, as outside of the ark of Noah, there is absolutely no salvation
for mortals: not for Jews or pagans who never received the faith
of the Church, nor for heretics who, having received it, corrupted it;
not for schismatics who left the peace and unity of the Church; and
finally neither for the excommunicated or those who for any other serious cause
deserve to be put away and separated from the body of the Church like
pernicious members. For the rule of
Cyprian and Augustine is certain: he will not have God for his Father
who would not have the Church for his mother." (Catechismi Latini et
Germanici)
Robert Bellarmine S.J., Doctor, (died A.D. 1621): "Outside the
Church there is no salvation [...] therefore in the symbol [Apostles Creed]
we join together the Church with the remission of sins: "I believe in the
Holy Catholic Church, the communion of Saints, the forgiveness of sins"
[...] For this reason the Church is
compared with the ark of Noah, because just as during the deluge, everyone
perished who was not in the ark, so now those perish who are not in the
Church." (On the Sacrament of Baptism)
"I
believe that for the good Christians there is eternal life full of every
happiness and free from every sort of evil; as, on the contrary, for the infidels
and bad Christians, there is eternal death full of every misery and deprived of
every good." (Compendium)
Francis de Sales, Doctor, Founder, (died A.D. 1622): "Neither
faith without the Church nor the Church without the faith can save you, any
more than the eye without the head or the head without the eye could see
light."
"Either you had the true
Faith, or you had it not. If not, O unhappy ones, you are damned! ~ Or else men
can be saved outside the true Church, which is impossible! Here is the
definition of the Church: The Church is a holy university or general company of
men united and collected together in the profession of the one same
Christian Faith; in the participation of the same Sacraments and
Sacrifice; and in obedience to the one same Vicar and lieutenant-General
on earth of Our Lord Jesus Christ and Successor of St. Peter; under the charge
of lawful bishops. Thank God we are not Jews; we are Catholics! [...] The Word of God is infallible; the Word
of God declares that Baptism is necessary for salvation; therefore, Baptism is
necessary for salvation." (Catholic Controversies)
“All Protestants will be
damned.” (In, On the Church of Christ by Jacques Maritain)
Peter Claver S.J. (died 1654): "Saint Ursula gave her life,
together with that of all her friends, for the sake of that faith which I am
now describing to you, and think how contrary is the religion you profess to
that which they professed; and that Saint Lucius, King of England, was
so obedient to the Roman Apostolic See, and had so great a respect for the
Chair of Peter, that every year he sent to Rome rich gifts and jewels as tokens
and tributes of his recognition. So
too did all his descendants until Henry VIII and Ann Boleyn. And consider how that you and all
your flock, misled, are following a road that ends in Hell!" (Peter
Claver: Saint of the Slaves, Fr. Angel Valtierra, S.J. Westminster, MD: Newman
Press, 1954.)
John Eudes (died A.D. 1680): "If I had died as a pagan,
a heretic, or an apostate, you would have reason indeed to weep.
[...] Weep! Weep! Burst into tears, tears of blood! For those are the people who are really
dead. [...] It is for such a death
that one must shed tears of blood, for those who have not lived as Christians.
[...] Let infidels and heretics,
let the relatives and the friends of bad Catholics weep without consolation and
weep unceasingly for the death of their departed ones!"
Clement XI (A.D. 1700-1721). Response of the Holy Office: (D. 1349a):
"QUESTION: Whether a minister is bound, before baptism is conferred on an
adult, to explain to him all the mysteries of our faith, especially if he is at
the point of death, because this might disturb his mind. Or, whether it is sufficient, if the one
at the point of death will promise that when he recovers from the illness, he
will take care to be instructed, so that he may put into practice what has been
commanded him. RESPONSE: A promise
is not sufficient, but a missionary is bound to explain to an adult, even a
dying one who is not entirely incapacitated, the mysteries of faith which
are necessary by a necessity of means, as are especially the mysteries of the
Trinity and the Incarnation."
Response
of the Holy Office: (D. 1349b): "QUESTION: Whether it is possible for a
crude and uneducated adult, as it might be with a barbarian, to be baptized, if
these were given to him only an understanding of God, and some of His
attributes, especially His justice in rewarding and in punishing, according to
the remark of the Apostle: "He that comes to God must believe that he is
and that he is a rewarder", from which it is inferred that a barbarian
adult, in a certain case of urgent necessity, can be baptized although he does
not believe explicitly in Jesus Christ.
RESPONSE: A missionary should not baptize one who does not believe
explicitly in the Lord Jesus Christ, but is bound to instruct him about all
those matters which are necessary, by a necessity of means, in accordance
with the capacity of the one to be baptized."
Louis Marie de Montfort, Founder, (died A.D 1716): "The learned and
pious Jesuit, Suarez, the erudite and devout Justus Lipsius, doctor of
Louvain, and many others have proved invincibly, from the
sentiments of the Fathers (among others, Saint Augustine, Saint Ephrem, deacon
of Edessa, Saint Cyril of Jerusalem, Saint Germanus of Constantinople, Saint
John Damascene, Saint Anselm, Saint Bernard, Saint Bernardine, Saint Thomas and
Saint Bonaventure), that devotion to our Blessed Lady is necessary to
salvation, and that 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." (True Devotion to Mary)
"The
heretics, all of whom are children of the devil and clearly bear
the sign of God's reprobation, have a horror of the Hail Mary." (The
Secret of the Rosary)
"My
heart is penetrated with grief when I think of the almost infinite number of
souls who are damned for lack of knowing the true God and the Christian
religion. The greatest misfortune,
O my God, is not to know thee, and the greatest of punishments not to love
thee."
Benedict XIV, A.D. 1740-1758 (D.1473): "Without this faith
of the Catholic Church no one can be saved." (Profession of Faith
for the Orientals, Nuper ad Nos)
Pompilio Mary Pirrotti (died A.D. 1756): "In the presence of the Most
Holy Trinity, the Blessed Virgin Mary, my Holy Guardian Angel, and the entire
heavenly host, I protest that I wish to live and die under the standard of the
holy cross. I firmly believe
everything our Holy Mother, the Catholic and Apostolic Roman Church, believes
and teaches. It is my steadfast
intention to die in this holy faith in which all the holy martyrs,
confessors and virgins of Christ have died, as well as all those who
have saved their souls." (The Raccolta)
Alphonsus Maria Liguori CSSR., Doctor, Founder, (died A.D. 1797): "We must
believe that the Roman Catholic Church is the only true Church; hence,
they who are out of our Church, or they who are separated from it, cannot
be saved." (Instructions on the Commandments and Sacraments)
"The
Holy, Roman, Catholic, and Apostolic Church is the only true Church, outside
the pale of which no one can be saved." (Instructions on the
Commandments and Sacraments)
"How
thankful we ought to be to Jesus Christ for the gift of faith! What would have become of us if we had
been born in Asia, Africa, America, or in the midst of heretics and
schismatics? He who does not
believe is lost. This, then, was the
first and greatest grace bestowed on us: our calling to the true faith. O Saviour of the world. what would have
become of us if Thou hadst not enlightened us? [...] we would all have
perished." (Preperation for Death)
"The
so called reformers have revived ancient heresies and have sought by
sophisms and false doctrines to destroy the faith of Jesus Christ, and, if
possible, to bring with themselves all souls to eternal perdition."
(on the Council of Trent.)
Elizabeth Mother Seton of New
York, Founder, (died A.D. 1821) to
Mrs. Livingston a protestant: "I told her it was a curious contradiction
in principles which allowed every sect that could obtain a name to be right and
in the way of salvation." (Mother Seton by Father Feeney, Ravensgate
Press, 1975.)
Leo XII, A.D. 1823-1829: "It is impossible for
the most true God, who is Truth Itself, the best, the wisest Provider, and
rewarder of good men, to approve all sects who profess false teachings
which are often inconsistent with one another and contradictory, and to confer eternal
rewards on their members. For
we have a surer word of the prophet, and in writing to you We speak wisdom
among the perfect; not the wisdom of this world but the wisdom of God in a
mystery. By it we are taught, and
by divine faith we hold, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, and that no other
name under heaven is given to men except the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth
by which we must be saved. This is
why we profess that there is no salvation outside the Church. [...] For the Church is the pillar and ground
of the truth. With reference to
those words Augustine says: "If any man be outside the Church he
will be excluded from the number of sons, and will not have God for Father
since he has not the Church for mother."" (Ubi Primum)
Pius VIII, A.D. 1829-1830: "Among these heresies
belongs that foul contrivance of the sophists of this age who do not admit any
difference among the different professions of faith and who think that the
portal of eternal salvation opens for all from any religion. [...] Against these experienced sophists the
people must be taught that the profession of the Catholic faith is uniquely
true, as the apostle proclaims: one Lord, one faith, one baptism. Jerome used to say it this way: he who
eats the lamb outside this house will perish as did those during the flood who
were not with Noah in the ark.
Indeed, no other name than the name of Jesus is given to men, by which
they may be saved. He who believes
shall be saved; he who does not believe shall be condemned." (Traditi
Humilitati)
Gregory XVI, A.D. 1831-1846 (D.1613): "Now we examine
another prolific cause of evils by which, we lament, the Church is at
present afflicted, namely indifferentism, or that base opinion
which has become prevalent everywhere through the deceit of wicked men,
that eternal salvation of the soul can be acquired by any profession of faith
whatsoever, if morals are conformed to the standard of the just and the
honest. Surely, in so clear a
matter, you will drive this deadly error far from the people committed
to your care. With the admonition
of the apostle that "there is one God, one faith, one baptism" may
those fear who contrive the notion that the safe harbour of salvation is open
to persons of any religion whatever.
They should consider the testimony of Christ Himself that those
who are not with Christ are against Him, and that they disperse unhappily who
do not gather with Him. Therefore
"without a doubt, they will perish forever, unless they hold the Catholic
faith whole and inviolate."
Let them hear Jerome who, while the Church was torn into three
parts by schism, tells us that whenever someone tried to persuade him to join
his group he always exclaimed: "He who is for the See of Peter is for
me." A schismatic flatters
himself falsely if he asserts that he, too, has been washed in the waters
of regeneration. Indeed Augustine
would reply to such a man: "The branch has the same form when it has been
cut off from the vine; but of what profit for it is the form, if it does not
live from the root?"" (Mirari Vos Arbitramur)
"For
in fact, you know as well as We do, Venerable Brothers, with what constancy
our Fathers endeavoured to inculcate this article of faith which these
innovators dare to deny, namely, the necessity of Catholic faith and unity
to obtain salvation. This is what
was taught by one of the most famous of the disciples of the Apostles, Saint
Ignatius Martyr, in his Epistle to the Philadelphians: "Do not deceive
yourselves," he wrote to them, "he who adheres to the author of a
schism will not possess the kingdom of God." Saint Augustine and the other
bishops of Africa, assembled in 412 in the Council of Cirta expressed
themselves in the following terms on the subject: "He who is separated
from the body of the Catholic Church, however laudable his conduct may
otherwise seem, will never enjoy eternal life, and the anger of God
remains on him by reason of the crime of which he is guilty in living separated
from Christ." And without
citing here the witness of almost innumerable other ancient Fathers, We
will limit Ourselves to quoting Our glorious predecessor, Saint Gregory the
Great, who gives explicit testimony to the fact that such is the teaching
of the Catholic Church on this head.
"The holy universal Church," he says, "teaches that God
cannot be truly adored except within its fold: she affirms that all those
who are outside her will not be saved." It is also stated in the decree on faith
published by another of Our predecessors, Innocent III, in concert with
the Fourth Ecumenical Council of the Lateran, "one indeed is the
universal Church of the faithful, outside of which no one at all is
saved." Finally, the same
teaching is expressed in the professions of faith which have been
proposed by the Apostolic See; in the one which all the Latin Churches use;
as also in the two others, one of which is received by the Greeks, and
the other by all other Eastern Catholics. If we have cited these authorities among
so many others We might have added to them, it was not, Venerable
Brothers, with the intention of teaching you an article of faith as if you were
ignorant of it. Far be it from us
to entertain so absurd and so damaging a suspicion in your regard! But the astonishing boldness with which
certain innovators have dared to attack one of our most important and
obvious dogmas has made so painful an impression upon Us that We could not
prevent Ourselves from speaking at some length on this matter. Strive to eradicate these slithering
errors with all your strength." (Summo Iugiter Studio)
Pius IX, A.D. 1846-1878: "It is necessary that you
inculcate this salutary teaching in the souls of those who exaggerate the power
of human reason to such a point that they dare, by its power, to investigate
and explain the mysteries themselves, than which nothing is more foolish,
nothing more insane. Strive to call
them back from such a perversity of mind, explaining indeed that nothing was
granted to men by God's Providence more excellent than the authority of the divine
faith, that this faith is to us like a torch in the darkness, that it is
the leader that we follow to Life, that it is absolutely necessary for
salvation, since "without faith it is impossible to please
God," and "he that believeth not shall be condemned (Mark 16,
16)."" (Singulari Quadam)
I
Vatican Council, A.D. 1870:
(D. 1791): "Moreover, although the assent of faith is by no means a blind
movement of the intellect, nevertheless, no one can "assent to the
preaching of the gospel" as he must to attain salvation,
"without the illumination and inspiration of the Holy Spirit, who gives to
all a sweetness in consenting to and believing in the truth." [... (D.
1793):] Since without faith it is impossible to please God, no one
is justified without it, nor will anyone attain eternal life unless he
perseveres to the end in it.
Moreover, in order that we may satisfactorily perform the duty of
embracing the true faith and of continuously persevering in it, God, through
His only-begotten Son, has instituted the Church, and provided it with clear
signs of His institution, so that it can be recognized by all as the guardian
and teacher of the revealed word. [... (D. 1833):] The first condition of
salvation is to keep the rule of the right faith."
"The
true Church is one, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman; unique: the
Chair founded on Peter by the Lord's words; outside her fold is to be found
neither the true faith nor eternal salvation, for it is impossible to
have God for Father if one has not the Church for Mother, and it is in vain
that one flatters oneself on belonging to the Church, if one is separated from
the Chair of Peter on which the Church is founded. There could be no greater crime, no more
detestable injury than opposition to Christ, than the rending of the Church
purchased and engendered in His divine Blood, than the furious attacks of
pernicious discord against the peaceful and single-minded people of God, to the
detriment of evangelical charity." (Source?)
The
following three propositions are condemned as errors: (D1716): "In the
worship of any religion whatever, men can find the way to eternal salvation,
and can attain eternal salvation."
(D1717): "We must have at least good hope concerning the eternal
salvation of all those who in no wise are in the true Church of
Christ." (D1718):
"Protestantism is nothing else than a different form of the same true
Christian religion, in which it is possible to serve God as well as in the Catholic
Church." (Syllabus of Errors)
William Joseph Chaminade (died 1850): "Since our lamentable fall in the
garden of Eden, faith in Jesus Christ has been indispensably necessary to
salvation, so that whoever has not believed in Him has not been
saved." (Mary in our Christ-Life.
Bruce, Milwaukee, 1961.)
"The
union of Christ with the members of the Mystical Body is obtained only
by membership in the Church, for outside this chaste Spouse there is no
union with the Bridegroom. She alone
has the advantages of this divine union, and she alone has received the
keys which are a mark of the power attached to the union. She alone is united to the
Bridegroom, and she alone possesses the fecundity which is the fruit of
this union. There is no life
outside the Church for all the life that is to be had can come only from
her, and no one possesses this life unless he belongs to her. Outside the Church there is no
salvation." (Mary in Our Christ-Life)
John Marie Vianney (died 1859): "My children, why are there no
Sacraments in other religions? Because
there is no salvation there! We
have the Sacraments at our disposal because we belong to the religion of
salvation."
"The
Cur of Ars once gave a medal to a Protestant who visited him, who exclaimed:
"Dear sir, you have given a medal to one who is a heretic. At least I am a heretic from your point
of view. But although we are not of
the same religion, I hope we shall both one day be in heaven." The holy priest took the gentleman's
hand in his own, and giving him a look which seemed to reach into his very
soul, answered him, "Alas! My
friend, we cannot be together in heaven, unless we have begun to live so
in this world. Death makes no
change in that. As the tree falls
so shall it lie. Jesus Christ
has said, "He that does not hear the Church, let him be to thee as a
heathen and a publican." And
He said again, "There shall be one fold and one shepherd." and He
made Saint Peter the chief shepherd of His flock." Then in a voice full of sweetness, he
added, "My dear friend, there are not two ways of serving Jesus Christ;
there is only one way, and that is to serve Him as He Himself wishes to
be served." Saying this the
priest left him. But these words
sank deeply into the good man's heart, and led him to renounce the errors in
which he had been brought up, and he became a fervent Catholic." (Life of
the Cure of Ars)
"The
angels sin, and are cast into Hell.
Man sins, and God promises him a Deliverer. What have we done to deserve this
favour? What have we done to
deserve to be born in the Catholic religion, while so many souls are every day
lost in other religions? What have
we done to deserve to be baptized, while so many little children in France, as
well as in China and America, die without baptism?" (The Little Catechism
of the Cure of Ars)
John Neumann (died 1860): "Can we be saved in every
religion? No, we can be saved only
in the religion that Jesus Christ has taught. Where do we find this religion of Jesus
Christ? We find it in the Roman
Catholic Church." (Catechism of the Christian Religion)
Peter Julian Eymard (died 1868): "Unfortunate are the nations that
do not live in the Church of Jesus Christ.
They are like men outside the Ark at the time of the flood. Outside the Church, these poor
travellers wander without a guide in the desert. They are like a sailor on a boat without
either rudder or pilot. Alas,
unfortunate children, abandoned on the road, without a mother to nourish and
love them; they will soon die of cold and hunger! The gift of the Church as our mother and
teacher in the Faith is therefore the greatest grace Jesus Christ could bestow
upon us. And the greatest
charity we can do to a man is to lead him to the true Church, outside
which there is no salvation." (Eucharistic Handbook)
Anthony Mary Claret (died A.D. 1870): "When we say, I believe in the
Holy Catholic Church, we are not speaking of the material church, the place in
which we faithful unite to pay God that tribute of love, honour, and attention
which we owe to Him, and which is called religion. In this sense "church" means
temple, house of God, or house of prayer.
But by those words of the Creed, we affirm belief in the Church
as the society or congregation of the faithful, united by the profession
of one and the same Faith, united also by participation in the same
Sacraments, and by submission to the legitimate prelates, principally to the
Roman Pontiff. [...] In the
first place He made it One.
Not having more than One God, nor been given more than One Faith,
as Saint Paul says, and One Baptism, which is the door of His Church and of the
other Sacraments, neither can there be more than One True Religion in which men
can please God and accomplish His most holy will. [...] By this the true Church is distinguished
from the synagogues of Satan or heretical sects, of which some teach one
thing, others another. [...] And,
actually, there have been, there are now, and there always will be saints
in the Catholic Church. But
heretical sects can count not even one, nor will they ever have
them. Do you know how they evade
this argument? They make fun of the
saints and even of the Most Holy Virgin Mary. But they will stop laughing when they
are presented to the tribunal of God, where they will find that those Catholics
who observed the laws and doctrine taught by our Holy Church are saved ‑
while heretics, even though they observed their own laws, are condemned!
[...] She is Catholic also with
respect to places, or to Her reach and diffusion throughout all the world,
clasping to Her breast all groups of people without distinction of nations,
classes, ages, or sexes. In all
times, in all countries, and in all groups of people where She is found, She
has held, and will continue to hold, one and the same Faith, one and the
same doctrine or morality, and one and the same form of government under the
Roman Pontiff. And Her members,
wherever they are found, will always be united by the same beliefs, by
the same hope, and by charity, being alive by grace. Thus, She embraces all those who
are to be saved. For She is
another ark of Noah. Outside of the
ark everyone drowned in the flood; and so also will everyone
drown or be damned who does not choose to enter into this mystical ark, the
Church of Jesus Christ. "Who
does not have the Church for a mother," says Saint Cyprian,
"cannot have God for a father." [...] Here you have explained for you, my son,
the four marks which I told you God left us in order that we may know the true
Church. By these we cannot confuse
Her with the many synagogues of Satan, which also pretend to be the
Church of God. We can see that none
are in peace or unity except ours.
Furthermore, we can conclude that ours is the only truth, in
which and with which we must live and die united in order to be able to
go to heaven. [...] Consequently,
the evasions of the heretics are futile.
For this reason you cannot doubt that the only true Church is our
Catholic, Apostolic, and Roman Church, in which you must persevere, inwardly
and outwardly. And with all
preciseness must you observe Her holy laws if you want to save your soul. Otherwise, you will be lost
forever." (The Catechism Explained)
Leo XIII, A.D. 1878-1903: "He scatters and gathers not
who gathers not with the Church and with Jesus Christ, and all who fight
not jointly with Him and with the Church are in very truth contending against
God." (Sapientiae Christianae)
"By
the ministry of this Church so gloriously founded by Him, He willed to
perpetuate the mission which He had Himself received from His Father; and, on
the one hand, having put within her all the means necessary for man's
salvation, on the other hand, He formally enjoined upon men the duty of obeying
His Church as Himself, and religiously taking her as a guide of their whole
lives. "He that heareth you, heareth Me; he that despiseth you, despiseth
Me." Therefore, it is from the
Church alone that the law of Christ must be asked: and consequently, if for man
Christ is the way, the Church, too, is the way, the former of Himself
and by His nature, the latter by delegation and communication of power. Consequently, all those who wish
to reach salvation outside the Church, are mistaken as to the way and are
engaged in a vain effort. [...]
"Man
is able by the right use of reason to know and to obey certain principles of
the natural law. But though he
should know them and keep them inviolate through life - and even this is
impossible without the grace of our Redeemer - still it is in vain for
any one without faith to promise himself eternal salvation. "If any one abide not in Me, he
shall be cast forth as a branch, and shall wither, and they shall gather him up
and cast him into the fire, and he burneth." "He that believeth not shall be
condemned (Mark 16:16.)"" (Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus)
"Another
head like to Christ must be invented, that is, another Christ, if besides the one
Church, which is His body, men wish to set up another. 'See what you must beware of; see what
you must avoid; see what you must dread.
It happens that, as in the human body, some member may be cut off ‑
a hand, a finger, a foot. Does the
soul follow the amputated member? As
long as it was in the body, it lived; separated, it forfeits its life. So the Christian is a Catholic as long
as he lives in the body: cut off from it he becomes a heretic; the life
of the spirit follows not the amputated member' (St. Augustine).
"The
Church of Christ, therefore, is one and the same for ever; those who
leave it depart from the will and command of Christ, the Lord; leaving the path
of salvation they enter on that of perdition. 'Whosoever is separated from the
Church is united to an adulteress.
He has cut himself off from the promises of the Church, and he who
leaves the Church of Christ cannot arrive at the rewards of Christ. [...] He who observes not this unity observes
not the law of God, holds not the faith of the Father and the Son, clings not
to life and salvation' (St.
Cyprian). [...]
"The
Church, founded on these principles and mindful of her office, has done nothing
with greater zeal and endeavour than she has displayed in guarding the
integrity of the faith. Hence she
regarded as rebels and expelled from the ranks of her children
all who held any beliefs one point of doctrine different from her
own. The Arians, the Montanists,
the Novatians, the Quartodecimans, the Eutychians, did not certainly reject all
Catholic doctrine: they abandoned only a certain portion of it. Still who does not know that they were
declared heretics and banished from the bosom of the Church? In like
manner were condemned all authors of heretical tenets who followed them
in subsequent ages. 'There can be
nothing more dangerous than those heretics who admit nearly the whole
cycle of doctrine, and yet by one word, as with a drop of poison, infect
the real and simple faith taught by our Lord and handed down by Apostolic
tradition' (Auctor, died A.D. 254).
"The
practice of the Church has always been the same, as is shown by the unanimous
teaching of the Fathers, who were wont to hold as outside Catholic
communion, and alien to the Church, whoever would recede in the
least degree from any point of doctrine proposed by her authoritative
Magisterium. Epiphanius, Augustine,
Theodore, drew up a long list of the heresies of their times. St. Augustine notes that other heresies
may spring up, to a single one of which, should any one give his
assent, he is by the very fact cut off from Catholic unity. 'No one who merely disbelieves in all
(these heresies) can for that reason regard himself as a Catholic or call
himself one. For there may be or
may arise some other heresies, which are not set out in this work of ours, and,
if any one holds to one single one of these he is not a Catholic'
(St. Augustine). [...]
"Let
all those, therefore, who detest the wide‑spread irreligion of our times,
and acknowledge and confess Jesus Christ to be the Son of God and the Saviour
of the human race, but who have wandered away from the Spouse [the Church], listen
to Our voice. Let them not refuse
to obey Our paternal charity.
Those who acknowledge Christ must acknowledge Him wholly and entirely. 'The Head and the body are Christ wholly
and entirely. The Head is the only‑begotten
son of God, the body is His Church; the bridegroom and the bride, two in one flesh. All who dissent from the
Scriptures concerning Christ, although they may be found in all places in which
the Church is found, are not in the Church; and again all those who
agree with the Scriptures concerning the Head, but do not communicate in the
unity of the Church, are not in the Church' (St. Augustine).
"And
with the same yearning Our soul goes out to those whom the foul breath of
irreligion has not entirely corrupted, and who at least seek to have the
true God, the Creator of Heaven and earth, as their Father. Let such as these take counsel with
themselves, and realize that they can in no wise be counted among the
children of God, unless they take Christ Jesus as their Brother, and at the same
time the Church as their mother." (Satis Cognitum)
"This
is Our last lesson to you: receive it, engrave it in your minds, all of you: by
God's commandment salvation is to be found nowhere but in the Church; the
strong and effective instrument of salvation is none other than the Roman
Pontificate." (Allocution for the 25th Anniversary of His Election,
February 20, 1903)
John Bosco (died A.D. 1888): "If you die as an unbeliever,
you will be damned and lost." (Don Bosco: A Spiritual Portrait)
Pius X, A.D. 1903-1914: "And while We wait, it is Our
duty to recall to everyone, great and small, as the Holy Pontiff Gregory
did in ages past, the absolute necessity which is ours to have recourse
to this Church to effect our eternal salvation, to obtain peace, and
even prosperity in our life here below.
That is why, to use the words of the Holy Pontiff, we say: "Make
firm the progress of your souls, as you have begun to do, with the firmness of
this rock: on it, as you know, Our Redeemer founded the Church throughout the
world, so that sincere hearts, guiding their steps by her, would not stray on
to the wrong road."" (Jucunda Sane)
"Our
Predecessor, Benedict XIV, had just cause to write: "We declare
that a great number of those who are condemned to eternal punishment suffer
that everlasting calamity because of ignorance of those mysteries of
faith which must be known and believed in order to be numbered among the
elect."" (Acerbo Nimis)
The
Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, under Pope Saint Pius X, in 1907, in answer to a question as to whether
Confucius could have been saved, wrote: "It is not allowed to
affirm that Confucius was saved.
Christians, when interrogated, must answer that those who die as infidels
are damned."
Benedict XV, A.D. 1914-1922: "Such is the nature of the
Catholic faith that it does not admit of more or less, but must be held as a
whole, or as a whole rejected: This is the Catholic faith, which unless
a man believe faithfully and firmly, he cannot be saved." (Ad Beatissimi
Apostolorum)
Frances Xavier Cabrini, Founder, (died 1917): "Many Protestants
have almost the same practices as we, only they do not see their way to submit
to the Holy Father and attach themselves to the true Ark of Salvation.
[...] They do not want to become
Catholics and unite themselves under the banner of truth wherein alone there is
true salvation. [...] He who does
not enter by the door of the fold shall not have salvation. The door of the fold is the Catholic
Church and union with the Head who represents Jesus. [...] Of what avail is it children, if
Protestants lead naturally pure, honest lives, yet possess virtues which
lack the interior impulse of the Holy Ghost? They may well say: "We do no halm;
we lead good lives;" but, if they do not enter the true fold of Christ, all
their protestations are in vain, because a really good life is that which
is so formed and ordered as to lead to the Way that is blessed and
Eternal. Without this admirable
order and relationship, a good life is of no value. These poor people do not enter the door
of the true fold of Christ because they do not know Christ perfectly, or at
least do not follow His commands in their entirety." (Travels of F. X. Cabrini)
Pius XI, A.D. 1922-1939: "Furthermore, in this one
Church of Christ no man can be or remain who does not accept, recognize
and obey the authority and supremacy of Peter and his legitimate successors. Did not the ancestors of those who are
now entangled in the errors of Photius [the eastern "Orthodox"
schismatics] and the reformers [the Protestants], obey the Bishop of
Rome, the chief shepherd of souls?
Alas their children left the home of their fathers, but it did not fall
to the ground and perish for ever, for it was supported by God. Let them therefore return to
their common Father, who, forgetting the insults previously heaped on the
Apostolic See, will receive them in the most loving fashion. For if, as they continually state, they
long to be united with Us and ours, why do they not hasten to enter the Church,
"the Mother and mistress of all Christ's faithful?" Let them hear Lactantius crying out:
"The Catholic Church is alone in keeping the true worship. This is the fount of truth, this is the
house of Faith, this is the temple of God: if any man enter not here, or
if any man go forth from it, he is a stranger to the hope of life and
salvation. Let none delude himself
with obstinate wrangling. For life
and salvation are here concerned, which will be lost and entirely destroyed,
unless their interests are carefully and assiduously kept in mind.""
(Mortalium Animos. The Papal
Encyclicals, Claudia Carlen, I.H.M., McGrath Publishing Co., 1981)
Pius XII, A.D. 1939-1958: "By divine mandate the
interpreter and guardian of the Scriptures, and the depository of Sacred
Tradition living within her, the Church alone is the entrance to
salvation: She alone, by herself, and under the protection and guidance of the
Holy Spirit, is the source of truth." (Allocution to the Gregorian,
October 17, 1953)
"No
one can depart from the teaching of Catholic truth without loss of faith and
salvation." (Ad Apostolorum Principis)
"O
Mary Mother of Mercy and Refuge of Sinners! We beseech thee to look with
pitying eyes on poor heretics and schismatics. Do thou, who art the Seat
of Wisdom, enlighten the minds wretchedly enfolded in the darkness of ignorance
and sin, that they may clearly recognize the Holy, Catholic, Roman Church to be
the only true Church of Jesus Christ, outside of which neither sanctity
nor salvation can be found." (The Raccolta, Benzinger Brothers, Boston,
1957, No. 626. The prayer was also
indulgunced by Pope Pius IX.)
"If
we would define and describe this true Church of Jesus Christ - which is the
One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic and Roman Church - we shall find nothing more
noble, more sublime or more divine than the expression "the mystical Body
of Christ" - an expression which springs from and is, as it were, the fair
flowering of the repeated teaching of the Sacred Scriptures and the Holy
Fathers.
"That
the Church is a body is frequently asserted in the Sacred Scriptures. "Christ," says the Apostle,
"is the head of the Body of the Church." If the Church is a body, it must be an
unbroken unity, according to those words of Paul: "Though many we are one
body in Christ." But it is not
enough that the Body of the Church should be an unbroken unity; it must
also be something definite and perceptible to the senses as Our
predecessor of happy memory, Leo XIII, in his Encyclical Satis Cognitum
asserts: "the Church is visible because she is a body." Hence they err in a matter of
divine truth, who imagine the Church to be invisible, intangible, a
something merely "spiritual" as they say, by which many Christian
communities, though they differ from each other in their profession of faith,
are united by an invisible bond. [...]
"Actually
only those are to be included as members of the Church who have been baptized
and profess the true faith, and who have not been so unfortunate as to
separate themselves from the unity of the Body, or been excluded by legitimate
authority for grave faults committed.
"For in one spirit" says the Apostle, "were we all baptized
into one Body, whether Jews or Gentiles, bond or free." As therefore in the true Christian
community there is only one Body, one Spirit, one Lord and one Baptism, so
there can be only one faith.
And therefore if a man refuses to hear the Church, let him be considered
- so the Lord commands - as a heathen and a publican. It follows that those who are divided
in faith or government cannot be living in the unity of such a Body, nor
can they be living the life of its one Divine Spirit. [...]
"They,
therefore, walk in the path of dangerous errors who believe that they can
accept Christ as the head of the Church, while not adhering loyally to His
Vicar on earth. They have taken
away the visible head, broken the visible bonds of unity and left the Mystical
Body of the Redeemer so obscured and so maimed, that those who are seeking the
haven of eternal salvation can neither see it nor find it. [...]
"We
deplore and condemn the pernicious error of those who dream of an
imaginary Church, a kind of society that finds its origin and growth in
charity, to which, somewhat contemptuously, they oppose another, which they
call juridical." (Mystici
Corporis (on the Mystical Body of Christ;)
cf. The Papal Encyclicals 1939-1958, Claudia Carlen, I.H.M., McGrath Publishing
Co., 1981)
"Some
think that they are not bound by the doctrine proposed in Our Encyclical Letter
of a few years ago [Mystici Corporis] and based on the sources of revelation,
which teaches that the Mystical Body of Christ and the Roman Catholic Church
are one and the same thing. Some
reduce to a meaningless formula the necessity of belonging to the true Church
in order to gain eternal salvation." (Humani Generis)
St. Maximilian Mary Kolbe (died A.D. 1942): "Jesus, in establishing His
religion, required that everyone believe what that religion teaches under pain
of eternal damnation." (Maria Was His Middle Name)
Holy Mother the Church (A.D. always): "And may the souls of the
departed Faithful, through the mercy of God, rest in peace; amen."