Editor’s Note:
On the occasion of the Papal Mass in St. Peter’s for the
canonization of St. Thomas More in 1935, Pope Pius XI
delivered the following sermon on St. John Fisher and
St. Thomas More. Upon reading this magnificent address
one is tempted to ask: What hath ecumenism wrought
and why can’t the post-conciliar Popes speak like this
anymore? Every line is thoroughly imbued with a
sensus Catholicus so desperately lacking today. This
single sermon of a modern pope serves as a snapshot of
everything we’ve lost in all of its sublimity, clarity,
Catholicity and beauty. May we never forget. MJM
"The
religion of Christ, founded on the mystery of the Cross,
cannot be destroyed by any sort of cruelty; persecutions
do not weaken, they strengthen the Church....Pope
Leo the Great
As Jesus Christ, according to
the words of St. Paul, is eternal and immutable,
"yesterday and today, and the same forever," so the
Church founded by Him is destined never to perish.
Generations follow and succeed each other with their
perennial vicissitudes. But whereas human institutions
give way and disappear before the levelling tide of
time, and human sciences, reflecting inconstant light,
undergo repeated transformations, the Cross of Christ,
reared steadfast above the engulfing billows, never
ceases to illumine mankind with the beneficent splendour
of Eternal Truth.
From time to time new heresies
make their appearance and, under the guise of truth,
gain strength and popularity; but the seamless garment
of Christ can never be rent in twain. Unbelievers and
enemies of the Catholic faith, blinded by presumption,
may indeed constantly renew their violent attacks
against the Christian name, but in wresting from the
bosom of the militant Church those whom they put to
death, they become the instruments of their martyrdom
and of their heavenly glory.
No less beautiful than true
are the words of St. Leo the Great: "The religion of
Christ, founded on the mystery of the Cross, cannot be
destroyed by any sort of cruelty; persecutions do not
weaken, they strengthen the Church. The field of the
Lord is ever ripening with new harvests, while the
grains shaken loose by the tempest take root and are
multiplied."
These thoughts, full of hope
and comfort, spring up in Our mind as We, in this
majestic Vatican Basilica, are about to proclaim briefly
the praises of our two new Saints after having raised
them to the honours of the altar. They, the bright
champions and the glory of their nation, were given to
the Christian people, in the words of the prophet
Jeremias, "as a fortified city, and a pillar of iron,
and a wall of brass." Therefore they could not be shaken
by the fallacies of heretics, nor frightened by the
threats of the powerful. They were, so to speak, the
leaders and chieftains of that illustrious band of men
who, from all classes of the people and from every part
of Great Britain, resisted the new errors with
unflinching spirit, and in shedding their blood,
testified their loyal devotedness to the Holy See.
John Fisher, gifted by nature
with a most gentle disposition, thoroughly versed in
both sacred and profane lore, so distinguished himself
among his contemporaries by his wisdom and his virtue
that under the patronage of the King of England himself,
he was elected Bishop of Rochester. In the fulfillment
of this high office so ardent was he in his piety
towards God, and in charity towards his neighbour, and
so zealous in defending the integrity of Catholic
doctrine, that his episcopal residence seemed rather a
Church and a University for studies than a private
dwelling.
He was wont to afflict his
delicate body with fastings, scourges, and hair cloth;
nothing was dearer to him than to be able to visit the
poor, in order to comfort them in their miseries and to
succour them in their needs. When he found someone
frightened at the thought of his faults and terrified by
chastisements to come, he brought comfort to the erring
soul by restoring confidence in God’s mercy. Often when
celebrating the Eucharistic Sacrifice, he was seen
shedding abundant tears, while his eyes were raised to
heaven in an ecstatic expression of love. When he
preached to the multitudes of the faithful that crowded
round to hear him, he seemed neither a man nor a herald
of men, but an angel of God clothed in human flesh.
Nevertheless, whilst he was
meek and affable towards the afflicted and the
suffering, whenever there was question of defending the
integrity of faith and morals, like a second Precursor
of the Lord, in whose name he gloried, he was not afraid
to proclaim the truth openly, and to defend by every
means in his power the divine teachings of the Church.
You are well aware, Venerable Brethren and Beloved Sons,
of the reason why John Fisher was called in judgment and
obliged to undergo the supreme test of martyrdom. It was
because of his courageous determination to defend the
sacred bond of Christian marriage—a bond indissoluble
for all, even for those who wear the royal diadem—and to
vindicate the Primacy with which the Roman Pontiffs are
invested by divine command.
That is why he was imprisoned
and afterwards led to death. Serenely he advanced toward
the scaffold and with the words of the Te Deum on his
lips, he rendered thanks to God for being granted the
grace of having his mortal life crowned with the glory
of martyrdom, and he raised up to the Divine Throne a
fervent prayer of supplication for himself, for his
people and for his King. Thus did he give another clear
proof that the Catholic Religion does not weaken, but
increases the love of one’s country.
When finally he mounted the
scaffold, whilst a ray of sunlight cast a halo of
splendour about his venerable grey hairs, he exclaimed
with a smile: "Come ye to Him and be enlightened, and
your faces shall not be confounded." (Ps. xxxiii, 6.)
Most assuredly the heavenly hosts of angels and saints
hastened in joy to meet his holy soul, freed at last
from the fetters of the body and winging flight toward
eternal joys.
The other star of sanctity
that traced a luminous path across that dark period of
history was Thomas More, Lord Chancellor of the King of
England. Endowed with the keenest of minds and supreme
versatility in every kind of knowledge, he enjoyed such
esteem and favour among his fellow-citizens that he was
soon able to reach the highest grades of public office.
But he was no less distinguished for his desire of
Christian perfection and his zeal for the salvation of
souls. Of this we have testimony in the ardour of his
prayer, in the fervour with which he recited, whenever
he could, even the Canonical Hours, in the practice of
those penances by which he kept his body in subjection,
and finally in the numerous and renowned accomplishments
of both the spoken and the written word which he
achieved for the defence of the Catholic faith and for
the safeguarding of Christian morality.
A strong and courageous
spirit, like John Fisher, when he saw that the doctrines
of the Church were gravely endangered, he knew how to
despise resolutely the flattery of human respect, how to
resist, in accordance with his duty, the supreme head of
the State when there was question of things commanded by
God and the Church, and how to renounce with dignity the
high office with which he was invested. It was for these
motives that he too was imprisoned, nor could the tears
of his wife and children make him swerve from the path
of truth and virtue. In that terrible hour of trial he
raised his eyes to heaven, and proved himself a bright
example of Christian fortitude. Thus it was that he who
not many years before had written a work emphasizing the
duty of Catholics to defend their faith even at the cost
of their lives, was seen to walk cheerful and confident
from his prison to death, and thence to take his flight
to the joys of eternal beatitude.
Here, Venerable Brethren and
Beloved Sons, we may justly repeat the well-known saying
of St. Cyprian, Martyr: "O blessed prison which conveys
men to heaven! O blessed enchained feet which with
salutary steps are directed towards paradise!"
It was supremely fitting that
these holy martyrs who shed their blood for the
Christian faith and for the defence of the sacred rights
of the Roman Pontiff should receive, together with the
aureole of sanctity, their due glorification here in the
very centre of the Catholic world, close to the glorious
sepulchre of the Prince of the Apostles, through the
instrumentality of Us who are the heir and successor of
St. Peter.
And now it only remains for Us
to exhort, with paternal heart, all of you who filled
with veneration are grouped around Us, as well as those
who, wherever they may be, profess themselves Our sons
in Christ. We exhort you to imitate with all diligence
the great virtues of these holy martyrs, and to implore
for yourselves and for the Church militant their
powerful protection. If all of us are not called to shed
our blood for the defence of the holy laws of God, all
none the less, according to the expression of St. Basil,
with evangelical abnegation, with Christian
mortification of their bodies, with energetic striving
after virtue, "must be martyrs of desire, in order to
share with the martyrs their celestial reward."
We desire moreover that with
your ardent prayers, invoking the patronage of the new
Saints, you ask of the Lord that which is so dear to Our
heart, namely that England, in the words of St. Paul,
"meditating the happy consummation which crowned the
life" of those two martyrs, may "follow them in their
faith," and return to the Father’s house "in the unity
of faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God."
Let those who are still separated from Us consider
attentively the ancient glories of their Church which
were at once a reflection and an increment of the
glories of the Church of Rome. Let them consider,
moreover, and remember that this Apostolic See has been
waiting for them so long and so anxiously, not as coming
to a strange dwelling place, but as finally returning to
their paternal home. In conclusion, let us repeat the
divine prayer of Our Lord Jesus Christ: "Holy Father,
keep them in Thy name whom Thou hast given me; that they
may be one as we also are." Amen. ■