[The socialist] Mr.
Proudhon, in his Confessions of a Revolutionist, has
written these remarkable words: "It is surprising to observe
how constantly we find all our political questions
complicated with theological questions." There is nothing in
this to cause surprise, except it be the surprise of Mr.
Proudhon. Theology being the science of God, is the ocean
which contains and embraces all the sciences, as God is the
ocean in which all things are contained. . . .
He possesses political truth who understands the laws to
which governments are amenable; and he possesses social
truth who comprehends the laws to which human societies are
answerable. He who knows God, knows these laws; and he knows
God who listens to what He affirms of Himself, and believes
the same. Theology is the science which has for its object
these affirmations. Whence it follows that every affirmation
respecting society or government, supposes an affirmation
relative to God; or, what is the same thing, that every
political or social truth resolves itself into a theological
truth. . . .
Through Catholicism man recognized the law of order, and
through man this order entered society. The redemption
regained for the moral world the laws which it had lost
through prevarication and sin. Catholic dogma became the
criterion for the sciences, Catholic ethics the guide for
human actions, and Catholic charity the standard for the
affections. Human conscience, freed from the corrosive
action of error and sin, was thus enlightened. . . .
Order was thus transmitted from the religious into the
moral world, and passed from the moral into the political
world. The Catholic God, the creator and preserver of the
universe, subjects all things to the law of his Providence,
and governs them by his vicars. . . . The [very] idea of
authority is of Catholic origin. . . . There is nothing more
solemn, more impressive . . . than the words which the
Church addressed to Christian princes at their consecration:
"Receive this scepter as an emblem of the sacred power
confided to you in order that you may protect the weak,
sustain the wavering, correct the vicious, and conduct the
good in the way of salvation. Receive this scepter as the
rule of divine justice, which upholds the good and punished
the wicked; learn by it to love justice, and to abhor
iniquity". . . .
[The Church] has, in the defense of [true] liberty,
opposed those kings who have made a despotic use of power,
and she has maintained the principle of authority in
opposition to those nations who have attempted to effect an
absolute emancipation. . . . There is no truth that she has
failed to proclaim, no error that she has not anathematized.
Liberty in truth she has always held sacred, but liberty in
error is as hateful to her as error itself. She looks upon
error as born and existing without rights, and she has
therefore pursued, resisted, and extirpated it in the most
hidden recesses of the human mind. . . .
[T]he Church alone has the right of affirmation and
negation, and . . . there can exist no right to deny what
she asserts, or to assert what she denies. When society
forgot the doctrinal decisions of the Church, and consulted
either the press or the pulpit, the magazines or the public
assemblies, as to what was truth or what was error, then all
minds confounded truth and error, and society was plunged
into a region of shadows and illusions. . . .
The doctrinal intolerance of the Church has saved the
world from chaos. It has placed political, domestic, social,
and religious truths beyond controversy. These primitive and
sacred truths are not subject to discussion, because they
are the basis of all discussion. The moment there arises a
doubt about them, that moment the mind becomes unsettled,
being lost between truth and error, and the clear mirror of
human reason is obscured. . . .
As there is no good except in order, everything not in
conformity with order must be evil; nor can there be any
evil which does not consist in a subversion of order;
therefore, as order is the supreme good, disorder is the
supreme evil, because outside of disorder there can be no
evil, and outside of order no good. . . . [W]e can deduce .
. . that order, or what is the same thing, supreme good,
consists in the preservation of all things in that
connection in which God placed them, when he created them
out of nothing; and that disorder, or, what is its
equivalent, supreme evil, consists in breaking this
admirable connection and supreme harmony. . . .
Discussion . . . [is] the universal dissolvent. . . .
According to Catholic doctrine, man fell only because he
entered into an argument with the woman, and woman fell
because she listened to the devil. . . .
The fundamental error of liberalism is, that it considers
questions of government as alone important, when they are in
reality of no consequence whatever, compared to those of
religious and social order. . . .
But if we consider the rationalist theory, from which
[both liberalism and socialism] . . . have their origin, it
will be seen that rationalism is the sin that most resembles
original sin, being, like it, an actual error, and the
productive cause of all error. . . . In fact, rationalism is
at once deism, pantheism, humanism, manicheism, fatalism,
skepticism, and atheism. . . .
The liberal school holds it as certain, that there is no
evil except that which results from the political
institutions which we have inherited from past ages, and
that the supreme good consists in the overthrow of these
institutions. The greater number of socialists consider it
as established, that there is no other evil than that which
exists in society, and the great remedy is to be found in
the complete subversion of social institutions. The liberals
affirm that good may be realized even in the present day;
and the socialists assert that this golden era cannot
commence except in times yet to come.
Thus, both the one and the other, placing the realization
of the supreme good in the entire destruction of the present
order--the political order, according to the liberal school,
and the social order, according to the socialist
schools--they agree with regard to the real and intrinsic
goodness of man, who, they contend, must necessarily be the
intelligent and free agent in effecting this subversion.
This conclusion has been explicitly announced by the
socialist schools, and it is implicitly contained in the
theory maintained by the liberals. . . .
But the Catholic and rationalist theories are not only
utterly incompatible, but likewise antagonistic. All
subversion, whether it be in the political or social order,
is condemned by the Church as foolish and useless. The
rationalist theories condemn all moral reform in man as
stupid and of no avail. And thus, the ones as well as the
others are consistent in their condemnation; because, if
evil neither exists in the state nor in society, why and
wherefore require the overthrow of society and of the state?
And, on the contrary, if evil exists neither in individuals
nor proceeds from them, why and for what cause desire the
interior reformation of man? . . .
If we adopt the theory of the innate and absolute
goodness of man, then he is the universal reformer, and in
no need of being himself reformed. This view transforms man
into God, and he ceases to have a human nature and becomes
divine. Being in himself absolute goodness, the effect
produced by the revolutions he creates must be absolute
good. . . . Adoration is so imperative a necessity for man,
that we find the socialists, who are atheists, and as such
refusing to adore God, making gods of men, and in this way
inventing a new form of adoration [i.e., idolatry]. . . .