Can one be
“inside” the Catholic Church without being a “member”?
A Review of the book,
The Catholic Church and Salvation, by
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton
By Bro. Peter Dimond,
O.S.B.
Pope Pius XII, Mystici Corporis (# 22), June 29, 1943: “Actually only those are to be numbered
among the members of the Church who have received the laver of regeneration and
profess the true faith.”
*AN ARTICLE THAT
DEALS WITH KEY ISSUES RELATING TO THE BAPTISM OF DESIRE CONTROVERSY, AND THE
DOGMA OUTSIDE THE CHURCH THERE IS NO SALVATION
*Note:
this article deals with finer points and issues relating to the baptism of
desire controversy and the dogma Outside the Church There is No Salvation. Those who are not deeply interested in the
finer points of the issue, and the refutation of subtle arguments made by the
baptism of desire side, will probably find some of this article boring.
IN
THIS ARTICLE:
-
MSGR. FENTON CLAIMS TO HOLD THE DOGMA WITHOUT ANY EXCEPTIONS – AND HE CORRECTLY
ASSERTS THAT TO SAY THAT THERE ARE EXCEPTIONS TO OUTSIDE THE CHURCH THERE IS NO
SALVATION IS TO DENY THE DOGMA
-
MSGR. FENTON REJECTS AS HERETICAL THE IDEA THAT THE CHURCH IS ONLY THE ORDINARY
MEANS OF SALVATION, WHEREBY SOMEONE COULD BE SAVED EXTRAORDINARILY OUTSIDE THE
CHURCH
-MSGR.
FENTON CORRECTLY REJECTS AS FALSE THE IDEA THAT ONE CAN BELONG TO THE SOUL OF
THE CHURCH WITHOUT BELONGING TO ITS BODY, AND THUS REJECTS THE TEACHING OF THE
BALTIMORE CATECHISM, ETC.
-MSGR.
FENTON ATTEMPTING TO JUSTIFY THE MISTAKE OF ST. ROBERT BELLARMINE
-MSGR.
FENTON CORRECTLY REJECTS THE FALSE IDEA THAT THE DOGMA OUTSIDE THE CHURCH ONLY
APPLIES TO THOSE KNOWINGLY OUTSIDE THE CHURCH
-MSGR.
FENTON’S APPARENT RIGOROUS FIDELITY TO THE DOGMATIC FORMULAS
-MSGR.
FENTON’S MAIN ARGUMENT: ONE CAN BE “INSIDE” THE CHURCH WITHOUT BEING A “MEMBER”
-REFUTING
A FALSE EXAMPLE OF BEING “INSIDE” WITHOUT BEING A “MEMBER”
-MAGISTERIAL
EVIDENCE REFUTING FENTON’S MAIN ARGUMENT
-ANOTHER
CLEAR REFUTATION OF FENTON’S ARGUMENT
-FENTON
DEFENDS SUPREMA HAEC SACRA (PROTOCOL
122/49), WHICH DENIES THE DOGMA
-FENTON’S
DENIAL OF THE DOGMA
-YOU
TELL ME IF IT’S NOT RIDICULOUS
-FENTON
ADMITS THAT BASICALLY EVERYONE WHO DENIES THE DOGMA CLAIMS TO AFFIRM IT
-END
OF ARTICLE – [APPENDIX: AN ADDITIONAL ARGUMENT AGAINST BAPTISM OF DESIRE –
BAPTISM OF DESIRE CONTRADICTS THE POPE’S PRIMACY OF SUPREME JURISDICTION]
Presented
with the evidence that only baptized
Catholics are members of the Church, one way by which defenders of baptism of
desire attempt to “get around” this fact is by arguing that one can be within
the Catholic Church without being a member.
This is the primary argument of Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton in his
book, The Catholic Church and Salvation. I will now review this argument of Fr.
Fenton, as well as many of the other things he states in his book. Some of these are very interesting. (Fenton’s arguments and book are promoted by
Patrick Henry Omlor in The Robber Church. Fenton, now deceased, was the editor of The American Ecclesiastical Review
before Vatican II. His book, which is
still influencing many “traditionalists” today, was published in 1958.)
MSGR. FENTON CLAIMS
TO HOLD THE DOGMA WITHOUT ANY EXCEPTIONS – AND HE CORRECTLY ASSERTS THAT TO SAY
THAT THERE ARE EXCEPTIONS TO OUTSIDE THE CHURCH THERE IS NO SALVATION IS TO
DENY THE DOGMA
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
pp. 124, 126: “The teaching that the
dogma of the necessity of the Church for salvation admits of exceptions
is, in the last analysis, a denial of the dogma as it has been stated in
the authoritative declarations of the ecclesiastical magisterium and even as it
is expressed in the axiom or formula ‘Extra ecclesiam nulla salus.’ It is important to note that such teaching is
found in Cardinal Newman’s last published study on this subject… Obviously there could be no more effective
way of reducing the teaching on the necessity of the Church for the attainment of
eternal salvation to an empty formula than the explanation advanced by Newman…”
Fenton
points out that Cardinal Newman, the famous 19th century theologian beloved by
certain false traditionalists, denied the dogma Outside the Church There is No
Salvation by holding that it does admit of exceptions. This is very significant, for Fenton was the
editor of The American Ecclesiastical
Review. Thus, even Msgr. Fenton was
correctly admitting that heretical views on salvation were held by many
prominent pre-Vatican II clerics, including the famous Cardinal Newman.
MSGR. FENTON REJECTS
AS HERETICAL THE IDEA THAT THE CHURCH IS ONLY THE ORDINARY MEANS OF SALVATION,
WHEREBY SOMEONE COULD BE SAVED EXTRAORDINARILY OUTSIDE THE CHURCH
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 126: “Some Catholic authors attempted to explain the dogma of the Church’s
necessity for the attainment of salvation by saying that the Church is only the
ordinary means, and that it is still possible, in extraordinary cases, for a
man to attain the Beatific Vision outside the Church. At the same time they resolutely claimed, as
Newman had done, that it is a Catholic dogma that there is no salvation outside
the Church. Manifestly, according to this explanation, the dogma would be nothing
more than a vain formula, something which the very people who accept it as a
dogma would be expected to treat, for all practical purposes, as untrue.”
Fenton
correctly rejects the position held by many, including many among the traditional
movement, that the Catholic Church is the ordinary
means of salvation and that non-Catholics can be saved “extraordinarily”
outside the Church. Fenton correctly
rejects this as a denial of the dogma Outside the Church There is No Salvation.
MSGR. FENTON
CORRECTLY REJECTS AS FALSE THE IDEA THAT ONE CAN BELONG TO THE SOUL OF THE
CHURCH WITHOUT BELONGING TO ITS BODY, AND THUS REJECTS THE TEACHING OF THE
BALTIMORE CATECHISM, ETC.
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 127: “By all means the most important
and the most widely employed of all the inadequate explanations of the Church’s
necessity for salvation was the one that centered around a distinction between
the ‘body’ and the ‘soul’ of the Catholic Church. The individual who tried to explain the dogma
in this fashion generally designated the visible Church itself as the ‘body’ of
the Church and applied the term ‘soul of the Church’ either to grace and the
supernatural virtues or some fancied ‘invisible Church.’…there were several
books and articles claiming that, while
the ‘soul’ of the Church was in some way not separated from the ‘body,’ it was
actually more extensive than this ‘body.’
Explanations of the Church’s necessity drawn up in terms of this distinction
were at best inadequate and confusing and all too frequently infected with
serious error.”
Fenton
correctly rejects the idea that one can be united to Soul of the Church without
being united to the Body. This is very
interesting and significant because in
rejecting this idea Fenton is rejecting the teaching of the Baltimore
Catechism, the Catechism attributed to Pius X, and the teaching of St. Robert
Bellarmine. As we can see below, the
Baltimore Catechism, the Catechism attributed to Pius X and St. Robert
Bellarmine all taught that unbaptized persons can be inside the Church by
asserting that such a person belongs to the Soul of the Church without
belonging to its Body! [Note: St. Robert
Bellarmine only applied this idea to catechumens who believe in the Trinity and
Incarnation, whereas these Catechisms applied it to those who don’t know the
Catholic Faith.]
The Catechism of Pope St. Pius X, The Apostles’ Creed, “The Church in
Particular,” Q. 29: “Q. But if a man through no fault of his own is outside
the Church, can he be saved? A. If he is
outside the Church through no fault of his, that is, if he is in good
faith, and if he has received
Baptism, or at least has the implicit desire of Baptism; and if, moreover, he
sincerely seeks the truth and does God’s will as best as he can, such a man is indeed separated from the
body of the Church, but is united to the soul of the Church and
consequently is on the way of salvation.”
Baltimore Catechism
No. 3, 1921, Imprimatur Archbishop Hayes of New York: “Q. 510. Is it ever possible for one to be saved who
does not know the Catholic Church to be the true Church? A. It is
possible for one to be saved who does not know the Catholic Church to be the
true Church, provided that person (1) has been validly baptized; (2) firmly
believes the religion he professes and practices to be the true religion, and
(3) dies without the guilt of mortal sin on his soul…. Q. 512 How are such
persons said to belong to the Church?
A. Such persons are said to belong to the “Soul of the Church”; that
is, they are really members of the Church without knowing it. Those who share in its Sacraments are said to
belong to the body or visible part of the Church.”
St. Robert Bellarmine, De ecclesia militante, c. 2: “Again, some are of the soul and not of the body, as catechumens and
excommunicated persons if they have faith and charity, as they can have them.”
It
is extremely interesting to see that Fenton rejected this position, for we often
receive the following complaint from the defenders of baptism of desire: “So you know more than the Baltimore
Catechism! So you reject the teaching of
the Catechism of Pius X! So you believe
that St. Robert Bellarmine, a Doctor of the Church, was in grave error! That’s absurd.” These same people are the type that holds
that Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton was a “wonderful, extraordinary, rock-solid,
pre-Vatican II, Catholic theologian.”
So, are they going to follow their favorite 20th century,
pre-Vatican II theologian, Msgr. Fenton, and reject the teaching of St. Robert
Bellarmine, the Baltimore Catechism, etc.?
Or vice versa? Who knows? It’s just one of the many contradictions in
which the defenders of baptism of desire are mired.
The
idea that one can belong to the Soul of the Church without belonging to its
Body is clearly false, as Fenton correctly states. The Church itself is the Mystical Body. To assert that one can be saved without
belonging to the Body is to assert that one can be saved without belonging to
the Church, since the Church is a Body.
Pope Eugene IV, in his famous Bull Cantate Domino, defined that
the unity of the ecclesiastical body (ecclesiastici corporis)
is so strong that no one can be saved outside of it, even if he sheds his blood
in the name of Christ. This destroys
the idea that one can be saved by belonging to the Soul of the Church without
belonging to its Body.
Pope Eugene IV, Council of Florence,
“Cantate Domino,” 1441, ex cathedra: “The Holy Roman Church firmly believes,
professes, and proclaims that none of those existing outside the Catholic
Church, not only pagans, but also Jews, heretics and schismatics can become
participants in eternal life, but they 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 flock; and that the unity of this
ecclesiastical body (ecclesiastici corporis) is so strong that
only for those who abide in it are the sacraments of the Church of benefit for
salvation, and do fasts, almsgiving, and other functions of piety and
exercises of a Christian soldier produce eternal rewards. No one, whatever almsgiving he has practiced,
even if he has shed blood for the name of Christ, can be saved, unless he has
persevered within the bosom and unity of the Catholic Church.”
Pope Pius XI, Mortalium Animos (# 10),
Jan. 6, 1928: “For since the mystical body of Christ, in the same manner as His
physical body, is one, compacted and fitly joined together, it were foolish and
out of place to say that the mystical body is made up of members which
are disunited and scattered abroad: whosoever therefore is not united
with the body is no member of it, neither is he in communion with Christ
its head.”
MSGR. FENTON
ATTEMPTING TO JUSTIFY THE MISTAKE OF ST. ROBERT BELLARMINE
As
we just saw, Fenton rejects the teaching of St. Robert Bellarmine, that one can
be united to the Soul of the Church without belonging to its Body. Since Doctors of the Church, like anyone
else, can make mistakes, even relating to dogmatic issues, Fenton should have
simply stated that St. Robert was wrong.
However, rather than honestly and plainly stating that St. Robert
Bellarmine was wrong, Fenton dishonestly confuses the issue by trying to
justify his teaching on the one hand, while rejecting it on the other. He dishonestly argues that it was all just a
misunderstanding:
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
pp. 173-174: “Yet, despite the perfection [sic] of St. Robert’s teaching and
the clarity of his exposition, this
section of the second chapter of his De
ecclesia militante [St. Robert Bellarmine’s work] was destined to be a
source of serious and highly unfortunate misunderstanding by subsequent
theologians. The weak part of this, perhaps the most important single passage in
the writings of any post-Tridentine theologian, was St. Robert’s use of the terms ‘soul’ and ‘body’ with reference
to the Church.”
We
already saw that Fenton flatly rejects the idea that the Soul is more extensive
than the Body of the Church. We also saw
that St. Robert taught that catechumens could be of the Soul without being of
the Body, thus making the Soul of the Church more extensive than the Body. So, instead of being honest, and stating that
St. Robert Bellarmine made an error, Fenton dishonestly says that this is an
“unfortunate misunderstanding” of St. Robert’s “weak” teaching. St. Robert’s teaching wasn’t merely weak; it
was wrong. Fenton even says:
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 179: “It is one of the ironical twists in history that St. Robert,
pre-eminent among the writers of the Catholic Church for the clarity of his
expression, should have offered the occasion for such serious
misunderstanding.”
Fenton
even goes on to explain how an entire
line of theological error stemmed from St. Robert’s mistake –oops, I mean,
the “misunderstanding” of St. Robert’s teaching:
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 181: “The misuse of St. Robert’s
terminology went a step farther at the beginning of the eighteenth century
in a well-written manual Elementa
theologica written by the Sorbonne professor, Charles du Plessis
d’Argentre.”
This serves to show
us again why Catholics don’t follow the teaching of theologians or Doctors of
the Church except when they repeat and are perfectly in line with infallible
Catholic teaching, or assert something that has been universally and constantly
believed by Catholics from the beginning. To
obstinately cling to the teaching of theologians (no matter how great or
esteemed they may have been), in the face of infallible teaching to the contrary,
leads to grave error or worse. As we can
see, here we have one of the favorite theologians of those who defend baptism
of desire, Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, denouncing the teaching of the
Baltimore Catechism, the Catechism attributed to Pius X, and St. Robert
Bellarmine. That is why the Catholic
Church teaches:
Pope Benedict XIV, Apostolica (# 6), June 26, 1749: “The Church’s judgment is preferable to that of a Doctor renowned
for his holiness and teaching.”
Errors of the Jansenists, #30: “When anyone finds a doctrine clearly
established in Augustine, he can absolutely hold it and teach it, disregarding
any bull of the pope.”- Condemned
by Pope Alexander VIII (Denz. 1320)
Pope Pius XII, Humani generis (# 21), Aug. 12, 1950: “This deposit of faith our Divine Redeemer
has given for authentic interpretation not to each of the faithful, not even
to theologians, but only to the Teaching Authority of the Church.’”
MSGR. FENTON
CORRECTLY REJECTS THE FALSE IDEA THAT THE DOGMA OUTSIDE THE CHURCH ONLY APPLIES
TO THOSE KNOWINGLY OUTSIDE THE CHURCH
Commenting
on the common misinterpretation of Pope Pius IX’s teaching, that the dogma
Outside the Church There is No Salvation only applies to those “knowingly”
outside the Church, Msgr. Fenton rejects this idea as contrary to the dogma:
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
pp. 64-65: “…if the Church were
necessary for the attainment of eternal salvation only in the sense that
individuals contumaciously separated from it could not be saved, it would
definitely not be true to say that no man could be saved outside the Catholic
Church… It is only by doing manifest violence to the text of his [Pius
IX’s] encyclical that his statement could be interpreted as applying only to
those who are willfully separated from the faith and from Catholic unity.”
I
mention this because many in the traditionalist movement believe exactly what
Fenton rejects here. For instance:
Bishop Robert McKenna, “The Boston Snare,”
printed in the CMRI’s Magazine The Reign
of Mary, Vol. XXVI, No. 83: “The
doctrine, then, of no salvation outside the Church is to be understood in the
sense of knowingly outside the
Church… But, they may object, if such be the sense of the dogma in
question, why is the word ‘knowingly’ not part of the formula, ‘Outside the
Church no salvation’? For the simple reason that the addition is
unnecessary. How could anyone know
of the dogma and not be knowingly outside the Church? The
‘dogma’ is not so much a doctrine intended for the instruction of Catholics, since
it is but a logical consequence of the Church’s claim to be the true Church, but rather a solemn and material warning
or declaration for the benefit of those outside the one ark of salvation.”
Thus,
Msgr. Fenton correctly rejects the position advanced by the CMRI and Bishop
McKenna as a rejection of the dogma.
If this heretical “understanding” were true, Fenton correctly notes that
“it would definitely not be true to say
that no man could be saved outside the Catholic Church,” as the
Church infallibly does.
MSGR. FENTON’S
APPARENT RIGOROUS FIDELITY TO THE DOGMATIC FORMULAS
Unlike
most heretics who deal with the dogma Outside the Church There is No Salvation,
who give almost no attention or respect to the dogmatic formulas (i.e. to the words of the infallible definitions)
because their heretical positions are condemned by them, Msgr. Fenton gives
much attention to the words of the infallible texts. This is very interesting, first of all,
because it shows how this theologian (as wrong as he is in some of his
conclusions, as we will see) knows that
no position can be advanced on Outside the Church There is No Salvation that
contradicts, even in the slightest way, the actual words of the dogmatic
definitions. Fenton’s first chapter
concerns the dogmatic definition from the Fourth Lateran Council.
Pope Innocent III, Fourth Lateran Council,
Constitution 1, 1215, ex cathedra:
“There is indeed one universal Church
of the faithful (una…fidelium universalis
ecclesia), outside of which nobody at all is saved (extra quam nullus omnino salvatur)…” (Denz. 430)
Based
on this infallible declaration, Msgr. Fenton asserts:
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 12: “The Fourth General Council of the Lateran brought out the fact that it is absolutely impossible to attain to
eternal salvation if a man passes from this life ‘outside’ the true
Church… (2) There is absolutely no exception to this rule. Otherwise the statement ‘no one at all (nullus omnino)’ is saved outside of the
one universal Church of the faithful would not be true.”
Msgr.
Fenton is adamant: there are absolutely no exceptions to the dogma that there
is no salvation “outside” the Catholic Church.
He admits that it would be a rejection of the dogma to assert that
anyone could be saved who is “outside” or
not “inside/within” the Catholic
Church. Now, it is a fact that Msgr.
Fenton believed in baptism of desire; he believed that people could be saved
who were not baptized. So, how does he
handle the issue of whether the unbaptized, whom he believes can be saved, are
inside or outside the Church?
MSGR. FENTON’S MAIN
ARGUMENT: ONE CAN BE “INSIDE” THE CHURCH WITHOUT BEING A “MEMBER”
Pope Pius XII, Mystici Corporis (# 22), June 29, 1943: “Actually only those are to be numbered
among the members of the Church who have received the laver of regeneration and
profess the true faith.”
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 10: “Furthermore, they [the Fathers of the Fourth Lateran Council] knew that
there is no such thing as real
membership in the Church militant of the New Testament, the true and only ecclesia fidelium [Church of the
faithful], apart from the reception of the sacrament of baptism.”
Msgr.
Fenton readily admits that one cannot be a “member” of the Catholic Church
without having received the Sacrament of Baptism, but he “cleverly” asserts
that being “inside/within” the Church (which everyone must to be saved) is not
the same thing as being a “member.”
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
pp. 9-10: “It is not, and it has never
been, the teaching of the Catholic Church that only actual members of the
Church can attain eternal salvation.
According to the teaching of the Church’s own magisterium, salvation can
be attained and, as a matter of fact, has been attained by persons who, at the
moment of their death, were not members of this Church. The
Church has thus never confused the notion of being ‘outside the Church’ with
that of being a non-member of this society.”
This
is the central argument of his book: one can be “inside” the Catholic Church
without being a “member” of the Catholic Church. I’m sure many simple Catholics of good will
immediately reject this theory as patently ridiculous and contradictory. That’s because it is ridiculous, contradictory and false, as we will see.
The
Catholic Church never taught what Fenton said about non-members being inside
the Catholic Church. This is precisely
why he can quote nothing from the Traditional Catholic Magisterium to back it
up. He also asserts the blatant falsehood
that the Church’s Magisterium has declared that salvation can be and has been
attained by persons who were not members
of the Church. This is simply not
true.
To
refute Fenton’s main argument, that one can be “inside/within” the Church
without being a member of it, I will first examine how he defines the word
“member.” He discusses it on page 79 and
following:
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 79: “In what is still its primary meaning as indicated by some dictionaries
of the English language, and in what originally appears to have been its only
proper significance, the term ‘membrum’ had an anatomical connotation and
served to indicate a living part of a physical body…. Later, however, the term ‘member’ in common parlance came to mean in a
proper, and not merely in a metaphorical way, one of the individuals composing
a society. In accordance with this
tendency, and particularly through the influence of prominent theologians like
St. Robert Bellarmine and Francis Sylvius, the
Catholic schools came to abandon the practice of restricting the meaning of the
term ‘membrum ecclesiae’ to Catholics
in the state of grace and to use it to signify also what had previously been
designated as ‘pars ecclesiae.’ This
change, originally made to avoid any ambiguity or confusion that might have
followed from the earlier use of the term, was accepted everywhere. So it is that the ‘members of the Church,’
spoken of in the encyclical Mystici
Corporis Christi, are all of the individual human beings who together
constitute the organized society which is, in fact, the true and only
supernatural kingdom of God on earth in the dispensation of the New
Testament. When, in this book, the term ‘member of the Church’ is employed, it is
always and everywhere used with this meaning.”
Fenton
begins by noting that the term “member” (membrum
in Latin) has an anatomical significance.
For instance, my arm is one of my members. But “member” also has another meaning, and
this second meaning is the one that he intends by the word when he uses it (as
he says above). He explains that the
meaning of “membrum ecclesiae”
(member of the Church) came to mean – and was adopted “everywhere” to mean –
the same thing as “pars ecclesiae.” Pars
ecclesiae means “part” of the Church.
Thus, according to Fenton’s own
definition, the “member” of the Catholic Church signifies that he is “part” of the Catholic
Church. This is corroborated, for
instance, in Cassell’s Latin-English and
English-Latin Dictionary. If you
look up “member,” after giving the anatomical definition, it gives you:
“2- [member] = part of a discourse, or of a verse, a clause, membrum (e.g. of body, of a speech), pars…”
The
word “member” means a “part,” as Fenton himself admits. Therefore,
Fenton’s central argument is that one can be “inside” the Catholic Church
without being a “part” of the Catholic Church!
THIS IS COMPLETE NONSENSE AND A DIRECT CONTRADICTION. One cannot be “inside” something without
being a “part” of it.
Pope 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.”
Pope
Leo XIII teaches that it is false to think that one could find salvation “apart” from of the Catholic Church – member means part – thus contradicting Fenton’s assertion that the Church has
never taught that being a member (i.e. being a part) of the Church is necessary
for salvation.
Pope Pius XII, Mystici Corporis Christi (#16), June 29, 1943: “… so for this reason above all the Church is
called a body, that it is constituted by the coalescence of structurally
united parts….”
This
is further demonstrated when we consider the verb separate. If you are parted or separated from the Church, you are outside of her. In the following quotation, we find Pope Leo
XIII teaching precisely that to be separated (not a part) is therefore
to be outside:
Pope Leo XIII, Satis Cognitum (#15), June 29, 1896: “For this it must be clearly
understood that Bishops are deprived of the right and power of ruling, if they
deliberately secede from Peter and his successors; because, by this secession, they are separated from the
foundation on which the whole edifice must rest. They
are therefore outside the edifice itself; and for this very reason they
are separated from the fold…”
Notice
that Pope Leo XIII teaches that to be “separated” from the Church (i.e., to
have no part/membership) is THEREFORE to be outside of her. You cannot be inside of that in which you
have no part. Leo XIII uses the concepts
of being “separated” and being “outside” interchangeably. And Pope Leo XIII is not merely applying this
to Bishops who have obstinately separated themselves from the Church, as some
may argue; he is giving the example of Bishops who have separated themselves
from the Church, and then declaring
that to be separated is therefore to be outside.
REFUTING A FALSE
EXAMPLE OF BEING “INSIDE” WITHOUT BEING A “MEMBER”
In
defense of Fenton’s idea, that one can be inside of something without being a
member, some may attempt to give the example: “you can be inside my house without being a member of it.” This is a specious example, but it appears
convincing because of the ambiguity of the terms.
In
this statement, “you can be inside my house without being a member of it,” the
“house” which the person is “inside” is clearly the building; but the “house”
which the person is not a member of is not the building, but the family which owns the house. What the
person is saying in the above example is that “you can be inside my house without being a member of my family which owns the house,” and that
is perfectly true; for in that case you can be inside of one thing (the house)
without being a member of a different thing (the family which owns the
house). Therefore, we are talking about
two different things in this case.
In order for the example to work, it must show that one can be inside,
yet not a member, OF THE EXACT SAME THING, for instance, the Catholic Church –
not two different things which have a close relationship. But the fact is that it is always the case
that if you are truly inside of something, then you are also necessarily a part
(member) of that very thing.
MAGISTERIAL EVIDENCE
REFUTING FENTON’S MAIN ARGUMENT
Remember,
Fenton’s main argument is that one can be “inside” the Church without being a
“member” of it.
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
pp. 9-10: “It is not, and it has never
been, the teaching of the Catholic Church that only actual members of the
Church can attain eternal salvation.
According to the teaching of the Church’s own magisterium, salvation can
be attained and, as a matter of fact, has been attained by persons who, at the
moment of their death, were not members of this Church. The
Church has thus never confused the notion of being ‘outside the Church’ with
that of being a non-member of this society.”
But
Pope Pius XII crushes Fenton’s argument and his entire book by teaching that
the Church is the members!
FENTON CONTRADICTED
BY POPE PIUS XII
Pope Pius XII, Mystici Corporis Christi (#30), June 29, 1943: “…it was on the tree
of the Cross, finally, that He
entered into possession of His Church, that is,
of all the members of His Mystical Body; for they would not have been united
to this Mystical Body through the waters of Baptism except by the salutary
virtue of the Cross, by which they had already been under the complete sway of
Christ.”
Pope Pius XII equates
the Church with “all the members of His Mystical Body”! Therefore, only the members are in the
Church! Since the
Church is THE MEMBERS, and there is no salvation outside the Church,
there is no salvation outside being a member.
Msgr. Fenton is simply wrong.
To
further prove the point, let’s look at the Council of Trent’s Decree on
Justification, Chap. 7.
FENTON CONTRADICTED
BY THE COUNCIL OF TRENT
Pope Paul III, Council of Trent, Sess.
6, Chap. 7 on Justification: “Hence man through Jesus Christ, into whom he is ingrafted, receives in
the said justification together with the remission of sins all these gifts
infused at the same time: faith, hope and charity. For faith, unless hope and charity
be added to it, neither unites one perfectly with Christ, nor makes him a
living member of his body.” (Denz. 800)
The
justified man is ingrafted into Christ.
The concept of being “ingrafted” is again that of membership: all the
justified are ingrafted into Christ as members.
This is proven by the Council’s declaration that becoming a
living member of the Church doesn’t happen “unless” (‘nisi’)
hope and charity are added to faith.
That means that if and when hope and charity are added to faith, one is
made a living member of the Church.
Well, hope and charity are
added to faith in every justified person.
A
person simultaneously receives faith, hope and charity infused into his soul at
the moment of justification, as Trent says above. Therefore, every person who is justified,
since they all have faith, hope and charity, is made a living member (‘vivum membrum’) of the Church.
This totally contradicts the teaching of Msgr. Fenton and Suprema haec sacra, which is that one
can be justified by baptism of desire (and thus have faith, hope and charity)
without being a “member” of Christ’s Body.
Msgr. Fenton is simply wrong.
FENTON CONTRADICTED
THE COUNCIL OF BASEL
To
further refute Msgr. Fenton, let’s take a look at what the Council of Basel,
the 17th General or Ecumenical Council of the Catholic Church, says
about “members” of the Church. [Note:
the Council of Basel (approved by Pope Eugene IV) is oecumenical, which means a binding General Council of the Catholic
Church, up to the 25th Session.
This is noted in The Catholic
Encyclopedia, “Councils,” Vol. 4, pp. 425-426.]
Pope Eugene IV, Council of Basel, Sess. 22, Oct. 15, 1435: “The holy synod especially condemns and censures… the propositions,
and ones similar to them, which the synod declares are contained in the
articles condemned at the sacred Council of Constance, namely the following: Not
all the justified faithful are members of Christ, but only the elect, who
finally will reign with Christ forever.
The members of Christ, from whom the Church is constituted… [are]…those
who are called according to his purpose of election [condemned]… To be a member of Christ, it is not enough to
be united with him in the bond of charity; some other union is needed [condemned].”
(Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils,
Vol. 1, p. 493)
This Decree of the
Council of Basel is extremely important for this discussion. In fact, this Decree serves to eliminate the
entire theory that one can be within the Catholic Church and be saved without
being a member. Everyone agrees that, in order to be saved,
one must be united with Christ in the bond of charity. As Fenton explains:
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
pp. 103-104: “… no will or desire of
entering the Church can be effective for the attainment of eternal salvation unless
it is enlightened by true supernatural faith and animated by perfect charity.”
According
to Fenton, the person who receives baptism of desire is inside the Church and united with Christ in the bond of charity
without being a “member.” But this
is contrary to the teaching of the Council of Basel, as we can see.
The
Council of Basel condemns the proposition that to be a “member” of
Christ it is not enough to be united with Him in the bond of charity. If to be a member of Christ it is enough to
be united with Christ in the bond of charity (Basel), this means that everyone who is united with Christ in the
bond of charity is a “member” of Christ! But Fenton’s argument is that one can be
united with Christ in the bond of charity without being a “member”!
To
summarize: Since no one can be saved without union with Christ in the bond of
charity (as all admit), and it is not
possible to be united with Christ in the bond of charity without also being
a “member” of Him (as the Council
of Basel teaches), this proves that no one can be saved without being a
“member” of Christ. (And please note: to
be “in Christ” is to be “in the Church,” as Fenton admits on page 23; likewise
to be a “member of Christ” is to be a “member of the Church.”)
Nothing
more really needs to be said to refute Fenton’s argument that one can be inside
the Church, and therefore saved, without being a member. Fenton’s argument is thoroughly false and
contrary to the teaching of these Magisterial Decrees. This
also proves that the teaching of Suprema
haec sacra (the 1949 Letter against Fr. Feeney, which is adhered to by the
SSPX, SSPV and CMRI) is contrary to the teaching of the Catholic Church, for it
teaches the same thing on membership in the Church.
“Cardinal”
Marchetti-Selvaggini, Suprema haec sacra,
“Protocol 122/49,” Aug. 8, 1949: “Therefore, that one may obtain eternal salvation, it is not always required that
he be incorporated into the Church actually as a member, but it is necessary
that at least he be united to her by desire and longing.”
It
is also interesting to note that the Council of Basel (quoted already) condemns
the proposition that “Not all the justified
faithful are members of Christ.” In
view of this, baptism of desire advocates would have to argue that one can be
inside the Catholic Church without being one of the “faithful,” since all the
faithful are members; but this is clearly ridiculous in view, not only of the
Fourth Lateran Council’s infallible definition that the Church is “of the
faithful,” but also of the countless Papal documents which speak of the whole
Church as all “the faithful.” For
instance:
Pope Clement XI, Vineam Domini Sabaoth, July 16, 1705, binding the whole Church to
his apostolic constitutions: “…let it be known that by this constitution of
ours, to be valid forever, the obedience which is due to the aforesaid
apostolic constitutions is not satisfied by any obsequious silence; but the
sense of that book of Jansen which has been condemned in the five propositions
mentioned above… must be rejected and
condemned as heretical by all the faithful of Christ…” (Denz. 1350)
We
see this again in Vatican I’s dogmatic teaching:
Pope Pius IX, Vatican Council I, Sess. 4,
Chap. 2: “For this reason ‘it has always been necessary because of mightier
preeminence for every Church to come to the Church of Rome, that is those who
are the faithful everywhere’, so that in
this See, from which the laws of ‘venerable communion’ emanate over all,
they as members associated in
one head, coalesce into one bodily structure.” (Denz. 1824)
Notice,
Vatican I infallibly defines that from the See of Rome communion emanates over “all.”
“All” what? “All” in the Church,
of course. Vatican I: “all… as members associated in one head” form one bodily
structure. All in the Church are
“members”! Putting aside what has been
covered above which totally refutes the idea, in the face of the above infallible
teaching of Vatican I, the baptism of desire advocate is forced to argue that
communion doesn’t emanate from the See of Peter over “all” in the Church, but
only over those in the Church who are members! – not over the “others”
supposedly inside the Church without being members! How ridiculous is this!
ANOTHER CLEAR
REFUTATION OF FENTON’S ARGUMENT
We’ve
seen how Fenton’s argument and the teaching of Suprema haec sacra are refuted by numerous Magisterial
Decrees. They are especially refuted by
the teaching of the Council of Trent, the Council of Basel and Pope Pius XII’s
declaration in Mystici Corporis that
the Church is the members. Now we will
see that the very quotations Fenton uses to support his idea also refute his
idea. Fenton applies his false idea,
that one can be within the Catholic Church without being a member, not only to
unbaptized catechumens, but also to those who have an “unconscious or implicit
desire of entering” the Church. Later
on, I will show that Fenton’s meaning here is heretical and reduces the dogma
Outside the Church There is No Salvation to a meaningless formula.
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 87: “…this supernatural life of sanctifying grace can be possessed only by
those who are in some way ‘within’ or in vital contact with the Catholic
Church. The non-members of the Church
who have no explicit intention of joining or entering it can have the life of
grace, but only if they are ordered or disposed toward the Church by a certain
unconscious intention or desire.”
Fenton
thinks that he finds support for his idea that one can be “within/inside” the
Church without being a member in Pope Pius XII’s Encyclical Mystici Corporis. This passage from Mystici Corporis that the liberals love to quote is weak, but not
heretical. Here is Fenton’s translation
of the passage in Mystici Corporis,
and his comments on it:
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 85: “[Fenton quoting Pius XII] ‘As you
know very well, Venerable Brethren, from the beginning of Our Pontificate, We
have entrusted even those who do not belong to the visible structure of the
Catholic Church to the heavenly protection and direction, solemnly asserting
that, following the example of the Good Shepherd, We wanted nothing more than
that they should have life and have it more abundantly. Begging the prayers of the entire Church, We
wish to repeat Our solemn declaration in this encyclical letter in which We
have praised the great and glorious Body of Christ, most affectionately inviting
each and every one of them to co-operate generously and willingly with the
inward impulses of divine grace and to take care to extricate themselves from
that condition in which they cannot be secure about their own eternal
salvation. For even though they may be
directed towards the Redeemer’s Mystical Body by a sort of unconscious desire
and intention, they still lack so many and such great heavenly helps that can
be enjoyed only in the
Catholic Church.” [End of quote from Pius XII)
“[Fenton’s comments on Pius XII’s statement] “The people whom the Holy Father describes as not being ‘secure’ about
the affair of their own eternal salvation are non-members of the Church who
have no clear or explicit intention of entering this society…. [p. 87] Pope Pius XII asserts true Catholic
doctrine by teaching that a non-member of the Church who is within the Church
only in the sense that he has an unconscious or implicit desire of entering it
as a member can possess the supernatural life of sanctifying grace.”
This
is a very important part of Fenton’s book, for a careful examination of it
serves again to refute his position.
First,
it must be made clear that Pius XII did not say that these non-Catholics who
have a certain “unconscious desire and intention” are united or joined in any
way to the Church. He simply said that
this “desire and intention” could direct them
or dispose them or order them toward the Church. In other words, the only thing this
unconscious desire and intention can do is set them in order for entrance into, or return to, the Church. Thus, Fenton states another blatant falsehood
when he asserts that Pius XII taught that such people could be in the state of
grace. Pius XII taught no such thing.
Second,
and most important, notice that Fenton says that this group – the group
which has the “unconscious desire or intention” which directs it toward the
Church – consists of non-members who
are within the Catholic Church.
Fenton, p. 87: “Pope Pius XII asserts true Catholic doctrine by teaching that a non-member of the Church who is within the
Church only in the sense that he has an unconscious or implicit desire of
entering it as a member can possess the supernatural life of sanctifying
grace.”
Fenton
considers this group to be an example of those very people he is talking about:
men who are inside/within the Catholic Church by their implicit desire, without
being “members” of the Church. But if we
examine what Pope Pius XII says about these people, we see that Pius XII clearly
teaches that this group is not “in” the Catholic Church!
Pius XII: “…they still lack so many
and such great heavenly helps that can
be enjoyed only in the Catholic Church.”
This totally refutes
Msgr. Fenton’s argument, for Pius XII (speaking of the very group that Fenton
says is inside the Church without being members) indicates that they are
not “in” the Church. And no one who is
not “in” the Church can be saved, as Fenton repeats vociferously throughout his
book. Thus, those with the “unconscious
desire or intention” – according to the very teaching of Pius XII, upon which
Fenton claims to base himself – are not “in” the Church and cannot be
saved.
These
facts suffice to disprove the false idea that one can be “inside” the Catholic
Church without being a member of it. Now
we must examine how far Fenton goes with his grave error. What does Fenton mean by those people he says
can be inside the Church by “an implicit desire”? Does he mean only catechumens who know the
Trinity and Incarnation, but who have an implicit desire for the Sacrament of
Baptism? Or does he mean more than that?
FENTON DEFENDS SUPREMA HAEC SACRA (PROTOCOL 122/49),
WHICH DENIES THE DOGMA
It
is squarely on the teaching of Suprema
haec sacra that Msgr. Fenton bases his false teaching on “membership,”
which we have just shown is refuted by the teaching of the Magisterium. His teaching that people can be inside Church
by “unconscious desire” and “invincible ignorance” is also based on Suprema haec sacra (SHS). “Traditional” groups, such as the SSPX, SSPV
and CMRI, also accept and use the heretical teaching of SHS for their
“understanding” of Outside the Church There is No Salvation.
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 128: “The only method by which the
dogma can be explained satisfactorily is that employed in the Suprema haec sacra.”
Suprema haec sacra (a.k.a., Protocol
122/49) was the Aug. 8, 1949 letter of Cardinal Marchetti-Selvaggiani to the
Archbishop of Boston regarding the Fr. Feeney controversy. Suprema
haec sacra was written by Cardinal Marchetti-Selvaggiani to contradict Fr.
Feeney’s reaffirmation of Catholic dogma that all who die as non-Catholics will
not be saved. Suprema haec sacra (Protocol 122/49) was a false and heretical
letter which gave the entire world the impression that it’s wrong to teach that
only those who die as Catholics can saved.
That’s
why immediately after the publication of this heretical letter (Suprema haec sacra), The Worcester
Telegram ran a typical headline:
VATICAN RULES AGAINST [FR. FEENEY] HUB
DISSIDENTS – [Vatican] Holds No Salvation Outside Church Doctrine To Be
False
Suprema haec sacra was not
published in the Acts of the Apostolic See (Acta Apostolicae Sedis) but
in The Pilot, the news organ for the Archdiocese of Boston. Suprema
haec sacra was not infallible, as even Fenton admits.
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 103: “This letter, known as Suprema
haec sacra… is an authoritative [sic], though obviously not infallible, document. That is to say, the teachings contained in Suprema
haec sacra are not to be accepted as infallibly true on the authority of
this particular document.”
In
other words, according to Fenton, the teaching of Suprema haec sacra is not infallible and must be found in earlier
documents; but it isn’t. Fenton is
simply wrong when he says that Suprema
haec sacra is nevertheless authoritative.
Suprema haec sacra is neither
authoritative nor infallible, but heretical and false. We already saw that its teaching on membership
(which is the focus of Fenton’s book) is contrary to the teaching of the
Magisterium. Now, we will see that SHS
denies the necessity of belonging to the true Church in order to attain
salvation.
In
Humani Generis, Pope Pius XII
denounced those who would deny the dogma by reducing to a meaningless formula “the necessity of belonging to the true
Church in order to gain salvation.”
Fenton has an entire section on Humani
Generis in his book. Fenton fully
acknowledges that it is the teaching of the Church that one must “belong” to the Catholic Church in order to gain salvation,
but he defends SHS which denies the
necessity of belonging to the Church in order to gain salvation, as we see
here:
“Cardinal”
Marchetti-Selvaggini, Suprema haec sacra,
“Protocol 122/49,” Aug. 8, 1949: “Towards the end of the same encyclical
letter, when most affectionately
inviting to unity those who do not belong to the body of the Catholic Church
(qui ad Ecclesiae Catholicae
compagnem non pertinent), he
mentions those who are ‘ordered to the Redeemer’s Mystical Body by a sort of
unconscious desire and intention,’ and these
he by no means excludes from eternal salvation, but, on the contrary,
asserts that they are in a condition in which, ‘they cannot be secure about
their own eternal salvation,’ since ‘they still lack so many and such great
heavenly helps to salvation that can be enjoyed only in the Catholic Church.’”
(quoted and translated by Fenton, p. 102).”
In
the process of giving its false analysis of Mystici
Corporis, Suprema haec sacra
teaches that people who “do not belong” to the Body of the Church can be
saved. Remember, even Fenton admits
that one cannot say that the Soul of the
Church is more extensive than the Body.
Hence, to say that it is not necessary to belong to the Body is to say
that it is not necessary to belong to the Church. Therefore, by its statement above, SHS taught
the heresy that it is not necessary to
belong to the Catholic Church to be saved, the very thing denounced by
Pius XII.
Pope Pius XII, Humani Generis (#27), 1950: “Some say
they are not bound by the doctrine, explained in Our Encyclical Letter of a few
years ago, 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. Some reduce to a meaningless formula the necessity of belonging to
the true Church in order to gain eternal salvation.”
This
is extremely significant, for it proves
that the teaching of Suprema haec sacra
– and therefore the teaching of Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton who defended it –
is heretical. They both deny the
necessity of “belonging” to the true Church in order to gain eternal salvation.
Pope Leo X, Fifth Lateran Council, Session
11, Dec. 19, 1516, ex cathedra:
“For, regulars and seculars, prelates and
subjects, exempt and non-exempt, belong
to the one universal Church, outside of which no one at all is saved,
and they all have one Lord and one faith.
That is why it is fitting that, belonging
to the one same body, they also have the one same will…” (Decrees of the
Ecumenical Councils, Vol. 1, p. 646.)
FENTON’S DENIAL OF
THE DOGMA
So
far we’ve seen that, in defending Suprema
haec sacra, Msgr. Fenton’s position is that it is not necessary to belong
to the true Church in order to gain salvation.
We’ve also seen that his teaching that one can be inside the Church
without being a member is refuted by the teaching of the Magisterium. But Msgr. Fenton’s insistence on fidelity to
the dogmatic formulas which declared Outside the Church There is No Salvation
creates the impression that he believed that one must possess belief in the
essential mysteries of the Catholic Faith, the Trinity and Incarnation, to be
saved. This impression is further
created by statements Fenton makes in the book, such as the following:
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 22: “In fact one may say that the central message of the New Testament is
the fact that salvation and the remission of sins are possible only in and
through Our Lord.”
This
seems to indicate that Fenton holds that an adult cannot be ignorant of Our
Lord and be saved, as the Church has always taught.
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 116: “In the love of charity, as distinct from the merely natural love of
God which definitely does not suffice for the attainment of eternal salvation,
there is a love of friendship for God known, at least in a confused way, in the
Trinity of His Persons.”
This
seems to indicate that Fenton holds that an adult cannot be ignorant of the
Trinity and be saved, as the Church has always taught.
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 34: “The people who do not come into salvific contact with Our Lord do not
avail themselves of the salvation which is in Him alone. As a result they are not saved, and they
remain in the condition in which they have come into the world, or in the
condition in which they have placed themselves through their own personal and
mortal sins.”
This
seems to indicate that Fenton holds that those who die ignorant of the Gospel
are lost, as the Church has always taught.
However, all of this is thrown out the window by Msgr. Fenton on page
69:
Msgr.
Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic
Church and Salvation, 1958, p. 69: “The divine public revelation is
composed of a certain number of truths or statements. It is
quite manifest that genuine and supernatural divine faith can exist and does
exist in individuals who have no clear and distinct awareness of some of these truths, but who simply
accept them as they are contained or implied in other doctrines. But, in order that faith may exist, there certainly must be some minimum of
teachings which are grasped distinctly by the believer and within which theology
holds that it is possible to have genuine divine faith when two, or, according
to some writers, four, of these revealed truths are believed distinctly and
explicitly. There can be real divine
faith when a man believes explicitly, on the authority of God revealing, the
existence of God as Head of the supernatural order, the fact that God rewards
good and punishes evil, and the doctrines of the Blessed Trinity and of the
Incarnation.”
This
is perhaps the most important passage in Fenton’s entire book, for Fenton says
(in his defense of Suprema Haec Sacra on
pages 103-104) that unconscious or implicit desire can put one inside the
Church only if the person has supernatural Faith. So, once one sees what Fenton believes is the
minimum requirement for supernatural Faith, that is precisely what he thinks a
person must minimally and absolutely know and believe to be “inside” the Church
without being a member.
Fenton
begins by correctly stating that divine Faith can exist in individuals who have
no clear and distinct awareness of some truths of the Catholic Faith. That is absolutely true: a Catholic doesn’t
have to know or be aware of every Catholic teaching to have the Catholic Faith,
but he cannot reject any of them. Fenton
then correctly notes that in order to have supernatural Faith, a person must
distinctly grasp and know certain
truths. This is also true; there are
certain mysteries of Faith which must be known and believed in order to be
numbered among the elect. An adult
cannot be ignorant of them and be saved.
Pope St. Pius X, Acerbo
Nimis (# 2), April 15, 1905:
“And so 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.’”
What
are these minimum truths that an adult must know to be saved? The Church has always taught, as the
Athanasian Creed infallibly defined, that knowing the Trinity and the
Incarnation is a necessity of means in order to be saved. That is why missionaries risked everything to
go and preach the Gospel to heathen in far off lands. An adult who doesn’t know the Trinity and the
Incarnation cannot be saved, for these mysteries constitute “the Catholic
Faith” if broken down and defined in terms of its simplest mysteries.
Pope Eugene IV, Council of Florence,
Sess. 8, Nov. 22, 1439, ex cathedra: “Whoever wishes to
be saved, needs above all to hold the Catholic faith; unless each one preserves
this whole and inviolate, he will without a doubt perish in eternity.– But the Catholic faith is this, that
we worship one God in the Trinity, and the Trinity in unity; neither
confounding the persons, nor dividing the substance; for there is one person of
the Father, another of the Son, another of the Holy Spirit, their glory is
equal, their majesty coeternal...and in this Trinity there is nothing first or
later, nothing greater or less, but all three persons are coeternal and coequal
with one another, so that in every respect, as has already been said above,
both unity in Trinity, and Trinity in unity must be worshipped. Therefore let him who wishes to be saved,
think thus concerning the Trinity.
“But it is necessary for eternal salvation
that he faithfully believe also in the incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ...the
Son of God is God and man... This is the Catholic faith; unless
each one believes this faithfully and firmly, he cannot be saved.”
Response
of the Sacred Office to the Bishop of Quebec, Jan. 25, 1703:
“Q. 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 might put into practice
what has been commanded him.
“A. 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.” (Denz. 1349a)
This
is why every Doctor of the Church held that no adult could be saved without
knowledge of the Trinity and the Incarnation.
It is why the Doctors of the Church who believed in baptism of desire
(although they were wrong about this) only extended it to unbaptized
catechumens who believed in the Trinity and Incarnation.
However,
notice that Msgr. Fenton says:
Fenton, p. 69: “But, in order that faith may
exist, there certainly must be some
minimum of teachings which are grasped distinctly by the believer and within
which theology holds that it is possible to have genuine divine faith when
two, or, according to some writers, four, of these revealed truths are
believed distinctly and explicitly.
There can be real divine faith when a man believes explicitly, on the
authority of God revealing, the existence of God as Head of the supernatural order,
the fact that God rewards good and punishes evil, and the doctrines of the
Blessed Trinity and of the Incarnation.”
Fenton
list four things: 1) that God is the Head of the supernatural order; 2) that
God rewards good and punishes evil; 3) the Trinity; 4) the Incarnation.
Here’s
the key: while listing these four things, Fenton says that a person only has to know two of these things in order to
have true supernatural Faith, and be eligible for the “implicit” desire that
puts you inside the Catholic Church!!!
That is to say, according to Msgr. Fenton, a person can have
“supernatural Faith” and be inside the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church
by his “implicit desire” when he only believes that 1) God exists and 2) that
God rewards good and punishes evil, without knowing the Trinity and
Incarnation!
Fenton
does not hold that it is necessary to know the Trinity and the Incarnation for
salvation. Fenton’s position does not exclude Jews and Muslims from salvation, for
they believe in two out of the four.
Jews and Muslims believe 1) that God is the Head of the supernatural
order; and 2) that God rewards good and punishes evil. Fenton’s position is totally heretical and
reduces the dogma to a meaningless formula.
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 87: “The non-members of the Church
who have no explicit intention of joining or entering it can have the life of
grace, but only if they are ordered or disposed toward the Church by a
certain unconscious intention or desire.”
“A
certain unconscious intention or desire,” Fenton teaches, as long as it is
accompanied by belief in two of the four things – e.g. belief in God and that
He is a rewarder and a punisher – is sufficient to put the person inside the
Catholic Church (without being a member).
So, as long as the Jew or Muslim is “invincibly ignorant” and believes
that God is the Head of the supernatural order and that He rewards good and
punishes evil, he can be inside the Church and be saved. The “unconscious intention” the Jew or Muslim
has for the Church, even though he doesn’t believe in Our Lord, can
grant him supernatural “Faith” which, when combined with his “implicit desire,”
puts him inside the Catholic Church.
Thus,
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton was not a “wonderful theologian”; he was a dogma
denier and a dogma corrupter. In fact, he is all the more dangerous because
his heretical ideas are given the semblance of doctrinal fidelity by his
apparent rigorous adherence to the dogmatic formulas. I know numerous people who corrupt the dogma
but, having read Fenton’s book, have been persuaded that their views are
perfectly Catholic because of the “brilliant” way he supposedly harmonizes
these views with the dogmatic definitions.
The
truth is that once the Catholic has fully digested Fenton’s “theology” and his
treatment of the dogma, all that remains of the defined dogma Outside the
Church There is No Salvation is: unless
you believe in God, and that He rewards good and punishes evil, you cannot be
saved. The necessity of having the
“Catholic Faith” is gone; people who have the “Faith” of Jews and Muslims can
be “inside” the Church without being members.
Pope Pius IV, Council of Trent, Iniunctum
nobis, Nov. 13, 1565, ex cathedra: “This true Catholic faith, outside of
which no one can be saved… I now profess and truly hold…” (Denz.
1000)
Pope Eugene IV, Council
of Florence, “Cantate Domino,” 1441, ex cathedra:
“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 produce 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.”
YOU TELL ME IF IT’S
NOT RIDICULOUS
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 9: “Actually, in the traditional language of the Church, the term christianus itself had a wider
application than the word fidelis. A
catechumen might be designated as a christianus,
but never as a fidelis [a faithful]. A
man gained the dignity and the position of a fidelis through the reception of the sacrament of baptism. The man in whom the incorporating work of the
baptismal character remains unbroken is the fidelis,
the member of the Catholic Church. The
social unit composed of these fideles
is, according to the teaching of the Fourth Lateran Council, the true Church,
outside of which no one at all is saved.
“Now, the Council [Lateran IV] teaches that a man must be in some way
‘within’ the Church of the faithful in order to be saved. It
does not, however, in any way teach or even imply that no one other than one of
the fideles can actually attain to
the Beatific Vision.”
Msgr.
Fenton is fully aware that the Fourth Lateran Council infallibly defined that
there is one Church of the faithful (fideles)
outside of which no one at all is saved.
Pope Innocent III, Fourth Lateran Council,
Constitution 1, 1215, ex cathedra: “There is indeed one
universal Church of the faithful (una…fidelium
universalis ecclesia), outside of which nobody at all is saved (extra quam nullus omnino salvatur)…”
(Denz. 430)
He
also fully acknowledges (as we read above) that only the sacramentally baptized
are the fideles, as Church history
and Tradition show (e.g., by the dismissal of the catechumens before the Mass
of the faithful.)
St. John Chrysostom (Hom. in Io. 25, 3),
(4th Century):
“For the Catechumen is a stranger to the
Faithful...”
But
Fenton says that the Fourth Lateran Council’s definition that there is one
Church “of the faithful” outside of which no one at all is saved doesn’t mean
or even imply that only the
“faithful” are saved! That is so absurd
that a comment is almost unnecessary. What would be the point and the meaning of
declaring that it is the one Church “of the faithful” outside of which no one
at all is saved, if not only the faithful, but others, are inside the Church
and also saved? If Fenton were
correct, obviously there is no meaning or purpose in the Council’s definition
that it is one “Church of the faithful” outside of which no one at all is
saved, for, in that case, neither the
Church nor salvation is limited to the faithful. His assertion is therefore ridiculous,
without even considering the other points already covered in this article.
But
this ridiculous position on unbaptized catechumens, that unbaptized catechumens are not members of the Church and/or aren’t
among the faithful and/or do not belong to the Body of the Church but can
still be saved, is shared by basically every theologian who believed in baptism
of desire.
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
p. 182: “Like most of the books of its
period, the Elementa theologica
[a theology tract by D’Argentre] treats of the dogma of the necessity of the
Church in the section devoted to catechumens and their relation to the
Church. D’Argentre holds that ‘catechumens are certainly not of the body of the
Church, but still there is nothing to prevent their being of the Church by
reason of its soul. With the desire for
baptism this suffices for salvation.”
So,
basically every theologian who advances belief in baptism of desire proves that
it is not compatible with Catholic teaching by admitting that unbaptized
catechumens are not members of the Church and/or not in the Body of the Church
(which is the Church) and/or not among the faithful.
FENTON ADMITS THAT
BASICALLY EVERYONE WHO DENIES THE DOGMA CLAIMS TO AFFIRM IT
As
we’ve tried to point out to some of our readers, who refuse to believe that
their “good” SSPV or SSPX or CMRI priest actually believes in heresy on this
issue, everyone who denies this dogma claims to hold firmly to it. Thus, it is not enough for someone to say: I
believe in Outside the Church There is No Salvation. It is necessary to find out what that person
means by Outside the Church There is No Salvation. Does he hold that all who die as Jews,
pagans, heretics, schismatics are lost?
Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The Catholic Church and Salvation, 1958,
pp. 122-123: “These were the people who reduced the necessity of the Church for
the attainment of salvation to a mere empty formula. Of
course, they had to use a formula, and they usually employed either the Latin
expression ‘Extra ecclesiam nulla salus,’ or its English equivalent, ‘No
salvation outside the Church.’ Since there is hardly another dogma which
has been so constantly reasserted by the Church’s magisterium, no Catholic
writer could possibly get around the fact that the truth expressed in this
formula was an integral part of Catholic teaching. Most of the men who wrote imperfectly on this
subject were at least logical enough not to want to deny some statement which
had been set forth by the official teachers of the Church. Hence
they adopted the expedient of holding the formula itself, and then explaining
this formula in such a way as to make it appear to mean quite the opposite of
what it says. In their hands the
expression ‘Extra ecclesiam nulla salus’ became a mere empty or vain formula,
since they presented this statement as signifying, in effect, that there really
is salvation outside the Church.”
What
Fenton says is so true, but what is so sad is that what he wrote applies to
himself. He claimed to rigorously adhere
to the dogma Outside the Church There is No Salvation, but he reduced it to a
meaningless formula. According to his
teaching, the dogma simply meant that one only needs to believe in God to be
saved. The necessity of really
possessing the Catholic Faith for salvation was denied, and the true Faith of
Jesus Christ was corrupted. It was
pre-Vatican II heretics just like Msgr. Fenton who gave the world a reason and
a “theological justification” to believe in the Vatican II apostasy: salvation
for those who die as non-Catholics, “partial communion” with the Church, etc.
END
OF ARTICLE – [SEE APPENDIX BELOW FOR ADDITIONAL ARGUMENT]
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APPENDIX
A DEVASTATING
ARGUMENT AGAINST BAPTISM OF DESIRE – BAPTISM OF DESIRE CONTRADICTS THE POPE’S
PRIMACY OF SUPREME JURISDICTION
Vatican
I defined as a dogma that the Pope has supreme jurisdiction over the entire
Church. This includes everyone in the
Church. It would therefore have to
include those Msgr. Fenton asserts are “inside” without being “members.” If it did not include these people who are
supposedly “inside” without being members, then Vatican I’s declaration that the
Pope possesses supreme and full jurisdiction over the whole Church
wouldn’t be true.
Pope Pius IX, Vatican Council I, Sess. 4, Chap. 3, Canon, ex cathedra: “If anyone thus
speaks, that the Roman Pontiff has only the office of inspection or direction, but
not the full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the universal Church,
not only in things which pertain to faith and morals, but also in those which
pertain to the discipline and government of the Church spread over the whole
world; or, that he possesses only the more important parts, but not the whole
plenitude of this supreme power… let him
be anathema.” (Denz. 1831)
Now,
this supreme jurisdiction that the Pope has over the entire Church includes the
power of “judging,” as Pope Leo XIII declared in Satis Cognitum.
Pope Leo XIII, Satis Cognitum (#12), June 29, 1896: “It is consequently the office
of St. Peter to support the Church, and to guard it in all its strength and
indestructible unity. How could he fulfill this office without
the power of commanding, forbidding, and judging, which is properly called jurisdiction?”
As
we can see, this supreme jurisdiction includes the ability to judge.
But it is infallibly defined that the Church doesn’t judge anyone who
has not received the Sacrament of Baptism, for no one is under the jurisdiction
of the Church until he or she has received the Sacrament of Baptism.
Pope Leo XIII, Nobilissima
(# 3), Feb. 8, 1884:
“The Church, guardian
of the integrity of the Faith – which, in virtue of its authority, deputed from
God its Founder, has to call all nations to the knowledge of Christian lore,
and which is consequently bound to watch keenly over the teaching and
upbringing of the children placed under its authority by baptism…”
Pope Julius III, Council of Trent, On
the Sacraments of Baptism and Penance, Sess. 14, Chap. 2, ex cathedra: “… since the
Church exercises judgment on no one who has not previously entered it by the
gate of baptism. For what have I to do with those who are
without (1 Cor. 5:12), says the Apostle.
It is otherwise with those of the household of the faith, whom Christ
the Lord by the laver of baptism has once made ‘members of his own body’ (1
Cor. 12:13).” (Denz. 895)
It
is certain therefore that 1) that the Pope has jurisdiction over everyone in the Church; and 2)
this power of jurisdiction includes the power to judge everyone in the Church; but 3) the Pope cannot judge anyone who
hasn’t received the Sacrament of Baptism.
Thus, no one who hasn’t received the Sacrament of Baptism can possibly
be inside the Church. This
devastates the theory of baptism of desire, and the argument of Fenton’s book.
Will
our baptism of desire advocates now deny Vatican I by arguing that the Pope
doesn’t have supreme jurisdiction over the entire Church, but only over the “members” of the Church – not those “others” who are
supposedly “within” without being “members”?
ANOTHER ANGLE OF THE
ARGUMENT AGAINST BAPTISM OF DESIRE FROM THE PRIMACY OF PETER AND POPE EUGENE
IV’S CANTATE DOMINO
In
the most expansive definition of Outside the Church There is No Salvation, Pope
Eugene IV declared the following:
|
Pope
Eugene IV: “Firmiter credit,
profitetur et praedicat, nullos extra ecclesiam Catholicam exsistentes, non
solum paganos, sed nec Iudaeos aut haereticos atque schismaticos, aeternae
vitae fieri posse participes; sed in ignem aeternum ituros, qui paratus est
diabolo et angelis eius, nisi ante
finem vitae eidem fuerint aggregati: tantumque valere ecclesiastici
corporis unitatem, ut solum in ea manentibus ad salutem ecclesiastica
sacramenta proficiant, et ieiunia, eleemosynae ac cetera pietatis officia et
exercitia militiae christianae praemia aeterna parturient. Neminemque, quantascunque eleemosynas
fecerit, etsi pro Christi nomine sanguinem effuderit, posse
salvari, nisi in catholicae Ecclesiae gremio
et unitate permanserit.” |
Pope Eugene IV: “It
firmly believes, professes, and proclaims that none of those existing outside
the Catholic Church, not only pagans, but also Jews, heretics and schismatics
can become participants in eternal life, but they 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 flock; and that the unity of this ecclesiastical body (ecclesiastici corporis) is
so strong that only for those who
abide in it are the sacraments of the Church of benefit for salvation,
and do fasts, almsgiving, and other functions of piety and exercises of a
Christian soldier produce eternal rewards.
No one, whatever almsgiving he has practiced, even if he has shed
blood for the name of Christ, can be saved, unless he has persevered within the bosom and
unity of the Catholic Church. |
Pope Eugene IV
infallibly declared that no one who is not gathered into the Church or the
flock can be saved. The Latin for this
is “nisi ante finem vitae eidem fuerint
aggregati.” The key word here is aggregati,
which derives from “grex” – a flock,
which is used often in the New Testament to represent the body of
believers. “Eidem fuerint aggregati” means “have been gathered into the same flock”
– in other words, non-believers become members of the flock of believers. It is infallible that everyone who is saved
must be in “the flock.” Vatican I used a
similar word, “gregi,” to describe “the Lord’s flock” (dominico gregi, Denz. 1821). Vatican I also defined that the Pope has
supreme jurisdiction over the entire fold:
Pope Pius IX, Vatican Council I, Sess. 4, Chap. 1: “And upon Simon Peter alone Jesus after His resurrection conferred the
jurisdiction of the highest pastor and rector over his entire fold,
saying: ‘Feed my lambs,’ ‘Feed my sheep’…” (Denz. 1822)
The Latin is word there is ovile,
which means “fold or
sheepfold.” The point is that St. Peter
and his successors have jurisdiction over the entire fold of sheep. Since Pope Eugene IV infallibly declared that
all who are saved must be gathered into the flock of sheep, this means that all
who are saved must be in the flock over which the Pope has supreme
jurisdiction. But we already saw
that the Pope doesn’t have supreme jurisdiction over those who have not
received the Sacrament of Baptism.
Therefore, those who have not received baptism cannot be in the fold and
cannot be saved.
Pope Leo XIII, Annum Sacrum (#4), May 25, 1899: “…He
commanded His Apostles to preach His doctrine over the earth, to gather all men together into the one
body of the Church by the baptism of salvation...”
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