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Tolerating
the Secular State, the Enemy of Faith
by Plinio Correa de Oliveira

Let us pass from the general principles
set forth in our theological considerations to a great
historical example, the question of separation of Church and
State.
Prior to the French Revolution, a united regime of Church
and State existed in all the Catholic nations of Europe. In
the Protestant states, the most powerful sects were United
to the Crown. As a result of the secular principles of the
Revolution, separation of Church and State was gradually
introduced throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Today, the State is secularist in most of the West. Where
it is not, the privileges of the official church are virtually
meaningless.
This immense transformation, the natural and typical fruit
of a tendency towards laicization that has made itself progressively
felt in the various sectors of Western culture, in society,
and in life itself, was inherently prejudicial to the Holy
Catholic Church.
As faith is the root of all virtues and virtue is the essential
condition for the salvation of souls, laicization is
contrary to faith. It is easy to see the risks souls face
in the secularist milieu in which we live. If the end
of the Church is the salvation of souls, it is easy to understand
why she opposes every form of laicism. We state these elementary
matters in such detail and clarity because even the most elementary
things are either entirely forgotten today or run the imminent
risk of being forgotten. Not only atheistic materialism but
liberal laicism is contrary to the Catholic faith.
By a mystery of Providence and, above all, through the deplorable
culpability of men, the Catholic reaction lacked the force
necessary to impede the laicization of the West. Faced with
the lamentable reality of the separation of the Church and
the State, what can we do? If we lacked sufficient strength
to prevent this separation, much less do we have the power
to reverse it immediately. The only recourse, therefore, is
to tolerate it.
Now, even the gravest evils may bear advantages that, while
secondary, are nevertheless valuable. This can be said of
the separation of Church and State. In the regime of the union
of Church and State, the life of the Church was hampered by
numerous governmental interferences, each more irritating
and perilous. With their separation, the interferences ceased
legally. Given the inestimable worth of the Church's liberty,
one can understand, from this viewpoint, the benefits this
new situation may provide. We should take every advantage
of them.
On the other hand, separation imposed burdens. The gravest
is the explicit, solemn, and provocative affirmation that
religion is merely a matter of personal prerogative, whereas
the domains of the State and of public life are - and should
remain - lay affairs.
This principle would easily influence not only social institutions
but every sphere of the Nation's mental life, a typical case
of a fruit that gives additional force to the effect of its
own cause. With this would come a debilitation of the sensus
ecclesiae (the mind of the Church), adulterating the roots
and contaminating the fruits of the nation's religious life.
It is necessary to tolerate the inevitable, but we must also
use all available means to prevent its disastrous consequences.
Otherwise, rather than being upright and wise, tolerance would
cause a disaster so great no words could suffice to describe
it.
How should we react? The Magisterium has ably fulfilled its
solemn duty by endowing the faithful with an admirable body
of doctrine on the relations between Church and State. It
falls to Catholic intellectuals to comment upon and disseminate
these principles with an amplitude, an insistence, and an
attractiveness proportional to the immense gravity of the
evil. It falls to the directors of Catholic works to constantly
call the attention of their members to the growing secularization
of life wrought by the secularization of the State, the injury
thus rendered God, the harm done to souls, and so on. It falls
to the Catholic press to spread to the furthest ends of the
earth zeal for the principles jeopardized by separation of
Church and State. And finally, it falls to all the children
of the Church to prepare, over time but indefatigably, a reaction
that may attain the suppression of this terrible evil.
Much has already happened. We are not among those for whom
the history of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries is but
a mere narration of the errors and failings or Catholics -
clearly this way of seeing things is unacceptably deformed.
But we must recognize that if much has been done by us who
are Catholic, far more remains to be done.
No one in the Catholic ranks is dispensed from professing
the thesis that the Church ought to be united to the State.
But, in the light of the legitimate distinction between thesis
and hypothesis, a regime of dangerous co-existence between
one and the other was created.
In other words, everyone continued to profess the thesis that
separation is an evil, but, in the present hypothesis, a lesser
evil. Everyone accepted this. Consequently, it behooved us
to tolerate separation - morbidly, impassively, lazily. The
thesis being stated, the hypothesis was uttered with resignation,
giving us to understand that it was destined to last for centuries,
without profound harm to the Church. As a result, little or
nothing was done to inculcate a clear notion of the risks
of this regime, of their gravity, and of the continual
action that was indispensable to prevent them from becoming
reality.
On the anti-Catholic side, the most efficient, powerful, and
refined means of forming public opinion were employed to the
effect of laicizing the nations of the West to their inmost
core. The result was stated in an impressive and profoundly
wise affirmation by His Excellency, the Most Rev. Msgr. Angelo
Dell' Aqua, substitute for the Vatican secretary of state,
in a letter to his Excellency the Cardinal Archbishop
of Sao Paulo, Carlos Carmelo de Vasconcellos Molta: "Because
of the religious agnosticism of the states, the Catholic sense
of modern society has been weakened or almost lost."
Those who know what faith is and what its role in salvation
is can appreciate the tragedy of this affirmation, made with
a frankness and resolution that demands due homage. It is
possible that our means, much less than those of the adversary,
have not garnered results in the human plane, even if ably
employed. But God does not neglect those who do everything
possible. He chastises those who, not confiding principally
in Providence, neglect to employ the few resources they have
at hand. A slingshot seems inadequate to stop a giant, but
with one David felled Goliath.
If we had but prayed. If we had but acted. If we had but fought.
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When all is said and done, the past
is the past. Is it not best left buried? Why exhume it?
Because the problem of tolerance looms before us. We are speaking
of knowing, on a thousand occasions. To what point we
may and should be tolerant. We have every reason to fear that
contemporary man will often lazily and apathetically tolerate
what should be vigilantly, firmly, and astutely tolerated
and even opposed.
We offer these reflections, written in a spirit of ardent
sympathy, fraternal frankness, and loyal cooperation, in order
that such a monstrous evil may be avoided.
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