Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Friday, December 23, 2022

Saturday, December 23, 1922. The Eve Before Christmas Eve

 The weekend news magazines were out.


The Saturday Evening Post went to press with a beloved Leyendecker cover illustration, Modern Madonna and Child.


The Country Gentleman chose instead a Lowenheim which featured a somewhat scary, and even inebriated looking, Santa Claus.


Colliers went with a Christmas theme, sort of, but it was rather ambiguous.

Pope Pius XI issued his first encyclical,  Ubi arcano Dei consilio.  It stated:

UBI ARCANO DEI CONSILIO

ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS XI

ON THE PEACE OF CHRIST IN THE KINGDOM OF CHRIST

TO OUR VENERABLE BRETHREN THE PATRIARCHS, PRIMATES,

ARCHBISHOPS, BISHOPS, AND OTHER ORDINARIES

IN PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE.

From the very hour when in the inscrutable designs of God, We though unworthy, were elevated to this Chair of Truth and Love, We earnestly desired to address a heartfelt message to you, Venerable Brothers, and to all Our beloved children who are under your immediate direction and care. This Our desire found its inspiration in the solemn benediction - Urbi et Orbi - which We gave to an immense multitude from the balcony of the Vatican Basilica following Our election to the Supreme Pontificate. This blessing of Ours was received with every manifestation of joy and gratitude by you, by people from every part of the world, and by the Sacred College of Cardinals. This fact was for Us a most comforting assurance, added to that other which comes from Our trust in the divine assistance, in preparing Us to take up the tremendous office which quite unexpectedly We have been called upon to assume.

2. We, therefore, write to you now, "our mouth is open to you" (II Cor. vi, 11) as the birthday of Our Lord Jesus Christ and the New Year approach, and wish this letter to be not only a message of glad greetings but a Christmas gift as well from a father to his loving children.

3. Many reasons prevented Us up to this time from fulfilling Our wish to write. In the first place, there was what one might call a contest of filial devotion by reason of which there came to us in letters without number the good wishes of Our brothers and children from every quarter of the globe, messages which bespoke a welcome to the newly elected Successor of St. Peter and offered him the well-wishes born of a devoted homage.

4. Following close upon these messages We were called upon to experience personally and for the first time what St. Paul has called "my daily instance, the solicitude for all the churches." (II Cor. xi, 28) To Our everyday duties there were added many extraordinary ones, as for example, those most important affairs already well advanced towards a solution before Our election and which We had to rush to completion, which had to do with the Holy Places, which affected the welfare of Christianity itself, or the status of dioceses numbered among the most important of the Catholic world. Then there were to be considered international meetings and treaties which deeply influenced the future of whole peoples and of nations. Faithful to the ministry of peace and reconciliation which has been confided to Our care by God, We strove to make known far and wide the law of justice, tempered always by charity, and to obtain merited consideration for those values and interests which, because they are spiritual, are none the less grave and important. As a matter of fact, they are much more serious and important than any merely material thing whatsoever. We were occupied, too, with the almost unbelievable sufferings of those peoples, living in districts far remote from Us, who had been stricken with famine and every kind of calamity. We hastened to send them all the help which Our own straitened circumstances permitted, and did not fail to call upon the whole world to assist Us in this task. Finally, there did not escape Us those uprisings accompanied by acts of violence which had broken out in the very midst of Our own beloved people, here where We were born, here where the hand of Divine Providence has set down the Chair of St. Peter. For a time these troubles seemed to threaten the very future of Our country, nor could We rest until We had done everything within Our power to quiet such serious disorders.

There were, on the other hand, certain extraordinary events which filled Our soul with joy. Such were, for example, the Twenty-Sixth International Eucharistic Congress and the Three Hundredth Anniversary of the establishment of the Sacred Congregation of the Propagation of the Faith. These celebrations brought to Us such inexpressible consolation and such great spiritual joy that We never imagined such a thing possible at the very outset of Our Pontificate. We also saw at that time practically all the members of the hundreds of bishops who had come to Rome from every part of the world. Under normal circumstances it would have taken several years to interview a like number of bishops. We gave audience also to many thousands of the faithful and blessed with Our fatherly blessing large and dignified representations of that immense family "from every tribe, tongue, people, and nation" as we read in the Book of the Apocalypse, (v, 9) which God has confided to Us. Together with them We were privileged to assist at spectacles which were little short of divine, for We witnessed Our Blessed Redeemer reassume His rightful place as King of all men, of all states, and of all nations when, though hidden behind the veils of the Eucharistic species, He was carried in a magnificent and truly royal triumph of faith through the streets of Our own city, Rome, accompanied by an immense concourse of people representing every nation on earth. We beheld, too, the Holy Spirit, as it were, descend into the hearts of both priests and faithful as He did on the first Pentecost Sunday, to rekindle in them the spirit of prayer and of the apostolate. We were overjoyed to behold the fervent faith of the inhabitants of Rome proclaimed once again to the world, to the great glory of God and to the edification of souls.

5. The Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God and Our own dear Mother, who had most lovingly looked down on us at the Sanctuaries of Czestochowa and of Ostrabrama as well as at the miraculous grotto of Lourdes and from the lofty spires of Our own city of Milan, to say nothing of that most holy Sanctuary of the Rho, deigned to accept the homage of Our love on the occasion when We gave back to the Venerable Basilica of Loreto, which had been restored after the serious damage caused to it by fire, her beautiful statue which had been not only done over at Our behest but had been blessed and crowned as well by Our own hands. That occasion was without question a veritable triumph for Mary. During the passage of her statue from Rome to Loreto, the faithful of each town rivaled one another in acclaiming her by a spontaneous and continuous outburst of profoundly religious sentiment, which showed forth a most tender affection for Our Blessed Lady, as well as a devoted attachment to the Vicar of Jesus Christ.

6. These different events, some sad and some joyful, the history of which We wish to record for the edification of posterity, spoke most eloquently to Us, making more and more clear to Our mind those objectives which seem to claim the foremost place in Our Apostolic Ministry and of which it behooves Us to speak now in as solemn a manner as possible in this, Our very first message to you.

7. One thing is certain today. Since the close of the Great War individuals, the different classes of society, the nations of the earth have not as yet found true peace. They do not enjoy, therefore, that active and fruitful tranquillity which is the aspiration and the need of mankind. This is a sad truth which forces itself upon us from every side. For anyone who, as We do, desires profoundly to study and successfully to apply the means necessary to overcome such evils, it is all-important that he recognize both the fact and the gravity of this state of affairs and attempt beforehand to discover its causes. This duty is imposed upon Us in commanding fashion by the very consciousness which We have of Our Apostolic Office. We cannot but resolve to fulfill that which is so clearly Our duty. This We shall do now by this Our first encyclical, and afterward with all solicitude in the course of Our sacred ministry.

8. Since the selfsame sad conditions continue to exist in the world today which were the object of constant and almost heartbreaking preoccupation on the part of Our respected Predecessor, Benedict XV, during the whole period of his pontificate, naturally We have come to make his thoughts and his solutions of these problems Our own. May they become, too, the thoughts and ideals of everyone, as they are Our thoughts, and if this should happen we would certainly see, with the help of God and the co-operation of all men of good will, the most wonderful effects come to pass by a true and lasting reconciliation of men one with another.

9. The inspired words of the Prophets seem to have been written expressly for our own times: "We looked for peace and no good came: for a time of healing, and behold fear," (Jer. viii, 15) "for the time of healing, and behold trouble." (Jer. xiv, 19) "We looked for light, and behold darkness . . . we have looked for judgment, and there is none: for salvation, and it is far from us." (Isaias lix, 9, 11)

10. The belligerents of yesterday have laid down their arms but on the heels of this act we encounter new horrors and new threats of war in the Near East. The conditions in many sections of these devastated regions have been greatly aggravated by famine, epidemics, and the laying waste of the land, all of which have not failed to take their toll of victims without number, especially among the aged, women and innocent children. In what has been so justly called the immense theater of the World War, the old rivalries between nations have not ceased to exert their influence, rivalries at times hidden under the manipulations of politics or concealed beneath the fluctuations of finance, but openly appearing in the press, in reviews and magazines of every type, and even penetrating into institutions devoted to the cultivation of the arts and sciences, spots where otherwise the atmosphere of quiet and peace would reign supreme.

11. Public life is so enveloped, even at the present hour, by the dense fog of mutual hatreds and grievances that it is almost impossible for the common people so much as freely to breathe therein. If the defeated nations continue to suffer most terribly, no less serious are the evils which afflict their conquerors. Small nations complain that they are being oppressed and exploited by great nations. The great powers, on their side, contend that they are being judged wrongly and circumvented by the smaller. All nations, great and small, suffer acutely from the sad effects of the late War. Neither can those nations which were neutral contend that they have escaped altogether the tremendous sufferings of the War or failed to experience its evil results almost equally with the actual belligerents. These evil results grow in volume from day to day because of the utter impossibility of finding anything like a safe remedy to cure the ills of society, and this in spite of all the efforts of politicians and statesmen whose work has come to naught if it has not unfortunately tended to aggravate the very evils they tried to overcome. Conditions have become increasingly worse because the fears of the people are being constantly played upon by the ever-present menace of new wars, likely to be more frightful and destructive than any which have preceded them. Whence it is that the nations of today live in a state of armed peace which is scarcely better than war itself, a condition which tends to exhaust national finances, to waste the flower of youth, to muddy and poison the very fountainheads of life, physical, intellectual, religious, and moral.

12. A much more serious and lamentable evil than these threats of external aggression is the internal discord which menaces the welfare not only of nations but of human society itself. In the first place, we must take cognizance of the war between the classes, a chronic and mortal disease of present-day society, which like a cancer is eating away the vital forces of the social fabric, labor, industry, the arts, commerce, agriculture - everything in fact which contributes to public and private welfare and to national prosperity. This conflict seems to resist every solution and grows worse because those who are never satisfied with the amount of their wealth contend with those who hold on most tenaciously to the riches which they have already acquired, while to both classes there is common the desire to rule the other and to assume control of the other's possessions. From this class war there result frequent interruptions of work, the causes for which most often can be laid to mutual provocations. There result, too, revolutions, riots, and forcible repression of one side or other by the government, all of which cannot but end in general discontent and in grave damage to the common welfare.

To these evils we must add the contests between political parties, many of which struggles do not originate in a real difference of opinion concerning the public good or in a laudable and disinterested search for what would best promote the common welfare, but in the desire for power and for the protection of some private interest which inevitably result in injury to the citizens as a whole. From this course there often arise robberies of what belongs rightly to the people, and even conspiracies against and attacks on the supreme authority of the state, as well as on its representatives. These political struggles also beget threats of popular action and, at times, eventuate in open rebellion and other disorders which are all the more deplorable and harmful since they come from a public to whom it has been given, in our modern democratic states, to participate in very large measure in public life and in the affairs of government. Now, these different forms of government are not of themselves contrary to the principles of the Catholic Faith, which can easily be reconciled with any reasonable and just system of government. Such governments, however, are the most exposed to the danger of being overthrown by one faction or another.

13. It is most sad to see how this revolutionary spirit has penetrated into that sanctuary of peace and love, the family, the original nucleus of human society. In the family these evil seeds of dissension, which were sown long ago, have recently been spread about more and more by the fact of the absence of fathers and sons from the family fireside during the War and by the greatly increased freedom in matters of morality which followed on it as one of its effects. Frequently we behold sons alienated from their fathers, brothers quarreling with brothers, masters with servants, servants with masters. Too often likewise have we seen both the sanctity of the marriage tie and the duties to God and to humankind, which this tie imposes upon men, forgotten.

14. Just as the smallest part of the body feels the effect of an illness which is ravaging the whole body or one of its vital organs, so the evils now besetting society and the family afflict even individuals. In particular, We cannot but lament the morbid restlessness which has spread among people of every age and condition in life, the general spirit of insubordination and the refusal to live up to one's obligations which has become so widespread as almost to appear the customary mode of living. We lament, too, the destruction of purity among women and young girls as is evidenced by the increasing immodesty of their dress and conversation and by their participation in shameful dances, which sins are made the more heinous by the vaunting in the faces of people less fortunate than themselves their luxurious mode of life. Finally, We cannot but grieve over the great increase in the number of what might be called social misfits who almost inevitably end by joining the ranks of those malcontents who continually agitate against all order, be it public or private.

15. It is surprising, then, that we should no longer possess that security of life in which we can place our trust and that there remains only the most terrible uncertainty, and from hour to hour added fears for the future? Instead of regular daily work there is idleness and unemployment. That blessed tranquillity which is the effect of an orderly existence and in which the essence of peace is to be found no longer exists, and, in its place, the restless spirit of revolt reigns. As a consequence industry suffers, commerce is crippled, the cultivation of literature and the arts becomes more and more difficult, and what is worse than all, Christian civilization itself is irreparably damaged thereby. In the face of our much praised progress, we behold with sorrow society lapsing back slowly but surely into a state of barbarism.

16. We wish to record, in addition to the evils already mentioned, other evils which beset society and which occupy a place of prime importance but whose very existence escapes the ordinary observer, the sensual man - he who, as the Apostle says, does not perceive "the things that are of the Spirit of God" (I Cor. ii, 14), yet which cannot but be judged the greatest and most destructive scourges of the social order of today. We refer specifically to those evils which transcend the material or natural sphere and lie within the supernatural and religious order properly so-called; in other words, those evils which affect the spiritual life of souls. These evils are all the more to be deplored since they injure souls whose value is infinitely greater than that of any merely material object.

17. Over and above the laxity in the performance of Christian duties which is so widespread, We cannot but sorrow with you, Venerable Brothers, over the fact that very many churches, which during the War had been turned to profane uses, have not yet been restored to their original purpose as temples of prayer and of divine worship; moreover, that many seminaries whose existence is vital for the preparation and formation of worthy leaders and teachers of the religious life have not yet been reopened; that the ranks of the clergy in almost every country have been decimated, either because so many priests have died on the battlefield in the exercise of their sacred ministry or have been lost to the Church because they proved faithless to their holy vocation, due to the unfavorable conditions under which they were compelled to live for so long; and, finally, that in many places even the preaching of the Word of God, so necessary and so fruitful for "the edifying of the body of Christ" (Ephesians iv, 12) has been silenced.

18. The evil results of the Great War, as they affect the spiritual life, have been felt all over the world, even in out-of-the-way and lonely sections of far-off continents. Missionaries have been forced to abandon the field of their apostolic labors, and many have been unable to return to their work, thus causing interruptions to and even abandonment of those glorious conquests of the Faith which have done so much to raise the level of civilization, moral, material, and religious. It is quite true that there have been some worthwhile compensations for these great spiritual misfortunes. Among these compensations is one which stands out in bold relief and gives the lie to many ancient calumnies, namely, that a pure love of country and a generous devotion to duty burn brightly in the souls of those consecrated to God, and that through their sacred ministry the consolations of religion were brought to thousands dying on the fields of battle wet with human blood. Thus, many, in spite of their prejudices, were led to honor again the priesthood and the Church by reason of the wonderful examples of sacrifice of self, with which they had become acquainted. For these happy results we are indebted solely to the infinite goodness and wisdom of God, Who draws good from evil.

19. Our letter so far has been devoted to a recital of the evils which afflict present-day society. We must now search out, with all possible care, the causes of these disorders, some of which have already been referred to. At this point, Venerable Brothers, there seems to come to Us the voice of the Divine Consoler and Physician Who, speaking of these human infirmities says: "All these evil things come from within." (Mark vii, 23.)

20. Peace indeed was signed in solemn conclave between the belligerents of the late War. This peace, however, was only written into treaties. It was not received into the hearts of men, who still cherish the desire to fight one another and to continue to menace in a most serious manner the quiet and stability of civil society. Unfortunately the law of violence held sway so long that it has weakened and almost obliterated all traces of those natural feelings of love and mercy which the law of Christian charity has done so much to encourage. Nor has this illusory peace, written only on paper, served as yet to reawaken similar noble sentiments in the souls of men. On the contrary, there has been born a spirit of violence and of hatred which, because it has been indulged in for so long, has become almost second nature in many men. There has followed the blind rule of the inferior parts of the soul over the superior, that rule of the lower elements "fighting against the law of the mind," which St. Paul grieved over. (Rom. vii, 23)

21. Men today do not act as Christians, as brothers, but as strangers, and even enemies. The sense of man's personal dignity and of the value of human life has been lost in the brutal domination begotten of might and mere superiority in numbers. Many are intent on exploiting their neighbors solely for the purpose of enjoying more fully and on a larger scale the goods of this world. But they err grievously who have turned to the acquisition of material and temporal possessions and are forgetful of eternal and spiritual things, to the possession of which Jesus, Our Redeemer, by means of the Church, His living interpreter, calls mankind.

22. It is in the very nature of material objects that an inordinate desire for them becomes the root of every evil, of every discord, and in particular, of a lowering of the moral sense. On the one hand, things which are naturally base and vile can never give rise to noble aspirations in the human heart which was created by and for God alone and is restless until it finds repose in Him. On the other hand, material goods (and in this they differ greatly from those of the spirit which the more of them we possess the more remain to be acquired) the more they are divided among men the less each one has and, by consequence, what one man has another cannot possibly possess unless it be forcibly taken away from the first. Such being the case, worldly possessions can never satisfy all in equal manner nor give rise to a spirit of universal contentment, but must become perforce a source of division among men and of vexation of spirit, as even the Wise Man Solomon experienced: "Vanity of vanities, and vexation of spirit." (Ecclesiastes i, 2, 14)

23. The same effects which result from these evils among individuals may likewise be expected among nations. "From whence are wars and contentions among you?" asks the Apostle St. James. "Are they not hence from your concupiscences, which war in your members?" (James iv, 1, 2)

24. The inordinate desire for pleasure, concupiscence of the flesh, sows the fatal seeds of division not only among families but likewise among states; the inordinate desire for possessions, concupiscence of the eyes, inevitably turns into class warfare and into social egotism; the inordinate desire to rule or to domineer over others, pride of life, soon becomes mere party or factional rivalries, manifesting itself in constant displays of conflicting ambitions and ending in open rebellion, in the crime of lese majeste, and even in national parricide.

25. These unsuppressed desires, this inordinate love of the things of the world, are precisely the source of all international misunderstandings and rivalries, despite the fact that oftentimes men dare to maintain that acts prompted by such motives are excusable and even justifiable because, forsooth, they were performed for reasons of state or of the public good, or out of love for country. Patriotism - the stimulus of so many virtues and of so many noble acts of heroism when kept within the bounds of the law of Christ - becomes merely an occasion, an added incentive to grave injustice when true love of country is debased to the condition of an extreme nationalism, when we forget that all men are our brothers and members of the same great human family, that other nations have an equal right with us both to life and to prosperity, that it is never lawful nor even wise, to dissociate morality from the affairs of practical life, that, in the last analysis, it is "justice which exalteth a nation: but sin maketh nations miserable." (Proverbs xiv, 34)

26. Perhaps the advantages to one's family, city, or nation obtained in some such way as this may well appear to be a wonderful and great victory (this thought has been already expressed by St. Augustine), but in the end it turns out to be a very shallow thing, something rather to inspire us with the most fearful apprehensions of approaching ruin. "It is a happiness which appears beautiful but is brittle as glass. We must ever be on guard lest with horror we see it broken into a thousand pieces at the first touch." (St. Augustine de Civitate Dei, Book iv, Chap. 3)

27. There is over and above the absence of peace and the evils attendant on this absence, another deeper and more profound cause for present-day conditions. This cause was even beginning to show its head before the War and the terrible calamities consequent on that cataclysm should have proven a remedy for them if mankind had only taken the trouble to understand the real meaning of those terrible events. In the Holy Scriptures we read: "They that have forsaken the Lord, shall be consumed." (Isaias i, 28) No less well known are the words of the Divine Teacher, Jesus Christ, Who said: "Without me you can do nothing" (John xv, 5) and again, "He that gathereth not with me, scattereth." (Luke xi, 23)

28. These words of the Holy Bible have been fulfilled and are now at this very moment being fulfilled before our very eyes. Because men have forsaken God and Jesus Christ, they have sunk to the depths of evil. They waste their energies and consume their time and efforts in vain sterile attempts to find a remedy for these ills, but without even being successful in saving what little remains from the existing ruin. It was a quite general desire that both our laws and our governments should exist without recognizing God or Jesus Christ, on the theory that all authority comes from men, not from God. Because of such an assumption, these theorists fell very short of being able to bestow upon law not only those sanctions which it must possess but also that secure basis for the supreme criterion of justice which even a pagan philosopher like Cicero saw clearly could not be derived except from the divine law. Authority itself lost its hold upon mankind, for it had lost that sound and unquestionable justification for its right to command on the one hand and to be obeyed on the other. Society, quite logically and inevitably, was shaken to its very depths and even threatened with destruction, since there was left to it no longer a stable foundation, everything having been reduced to a series of conflicts, to the domination of the majority, or to the supremacy of special interests.

29. Again, legislation was passed which did not recognize that either God or Jesus Christ had any rights over marriage - an erroneous view which debased matrimony to the level of a mere civil contract, despite the fact that Jesus Himself had called it a "great sacrament" (Ephesians v, 32) and had made it the holy and sanctifying symbol of that indissoluble union which binds Him to His Church. The high ideals and pure sentiments with which the Church has always surrounded the idea of the family, the germ of all social life, these were lowered, were unappreciated, or became confused in the minds of many. As a consequence, the correct ideals of family government, and with them those of family peace, were destroyed; the stability and unity of the family itself were menaced and undermined, and, worst of all, the very sanctuary of the home was more and more frequently profaned by acts of sinful lust and soul-destroying egotism - all of which could not but result in poisoning and drying up the very sources of domestic and social life.

30. Added to all this, God and Jesus Christ, as well as His doctrines, were banished from the school. As a sad but inevitable consequence, the school became not only secular and non-religious but openly atheistical and anti-religious. In such circumstances it was easy to persuade poor ignorant children that neither God nor religion are of any importance as far as their daily lives are concerned. God's name, moreover, was scarcely ever mentioned in such schools unless it were perchance to blaspheme Him or to ridicule His Church. Thus, the school forcibly deprived of the right to teach anything about God or His law could not but fail in its efforts to really educate, that is, to lead children to the practice of virtue, for the school lacked the fundamental principles which underlie the possession of a knowledge of God and the means necessary to strengthen the will in its efforts toward good and in its avoidance of sin. Gone, too, was all possibility of ever laying a solid groundwork for peace, order, and prosperity, either in the family or in social relations. Thus the principles based on the spiritualistic philosophy of Christianity having been obscured or destroyed in the minds of many, a triumphant materialism served to prepare mankind for the propaganda of anarchy and of social hatred which was let loose on such a great scale.

31. Is it to be wondered at then that, with the widespread refusal to accept the principles of true Christian wisdom, the seeds of discord sown everywhere should find a kindly soil in which to grow and should come to fruit in that most tremendous struggle, the Great War, which unfortunately did not serve to lessen but increased, by its acts of violence and of bloodshed, the international and social animosities which already existed?

32. Up to this We have analyzed briefly the causes of the ills which afflict present-day society, the recital of which however, Venerable Brothers, should not cause us to lose hope of finding their appropriate remedy, since the evils themselves seem to suggest a way out of these difficulties.

33. First, and most important of all, for mankind is the need of spiritual peace. We do not need a peace that will consist merely in acts of external or formal courtesy, but a peace which will penetrate the souls of men and which will unite, heal, and reopen their hearts to that mutual affection which is born of brotherly love. The peace of Christ is the only peace answering this description: "let the peace of Christ rejoice in your hearts." (Colossians iii, 15) Nor is there any other peace possible than that which Christ gave to His disciples (John xiv, 27) for since He is God, He "beholdeth the heart" (I Kings xvi, 7) and in our hearts His kingdom is set up. Again, Jesus Christ is perfectly justified when He calls this peace of soul His own for He was the first Who said to men, "all you are brethren." (Matt. xxiii, 8) He gave likewise to us, sealing it with His own life's blood, the law of brotherly love, of mutual forbearance - "This is my commandment, that you love one another, as I have loved you." (John xv, 12) "Bear ye one another's burdens; and so you shall fulfill the law of Christ." (Galatians vi, 2)

34. From this it follows, as an immediate consequence, that the peace of Christ can only be a peace of justice according to the words of the prophet "the work of justice shall be peace" (Isaias xxxii, 17) for he is God "who judgest justice." (Psalms ix, 5) But peace does not consist merely in a hard inflexible justice. It must be made acceptable and easy by being compounded almost equally of charity and a sincere desire for reconciliation. Such peace was acquired for us and the whole world by Jesus Christ, a peace which the Apostle in a most expressive manner incarnates in the very person of Christ Himself when he addresses Him, "He is our peace," for it was He Who satisfied completely divine justice by his death on the cross, destroying thus in His own flesh all enmities toward others and making peace and reconciliation with God possible for mankind. (Ephesians ii, 14) Therefore, the Apostle beholds in the work of Redemption, which is a work of justice at one and the same time, a divine work of reconciliation and of love. "God indeed was in Christ, reconciling the world to himself." (II Corinthians v, 19) "God so loved the world, as to give his only begotten Son." (John iii, 16)

35. Thomas Aquinas, the Angel of the Schools, also discovered in this fact the very formula and essence of our belief, for he writes that a true and lasting peace is more a matter of love than of justice. The reason for his statement is that it is the function of justice merely to do away with obstacles to peace, as for example, the injury done or the damage caused. Peace itself, however, is an act and results only from love. (Summa Theologica, II-II, Q. 29 Art. 3, Ad. III)

36. Of this peace of Christ, which dwells in our hearts and is, in effect, the love of God, We can repeat what the Apostle has said of the kingdom of God which also rules by love - "the kingdom of Christ is not meat and drink." (Romans xiv, 17) In other words, the peace of Christ is not nourished on the things of earth, but on those of heaven. Nor could it well be otherwise, since it is Jesus Christ Who has revealed to the world the existence of spiritual values and has obtained for them their due appreciation. He has said, "For what doth it profit a man, if he gain the whole world, and suffer the loss of his own soul?" (Matt. xvi, 26) He also taught us a divine lesson of courage and constancy when He said, "Fear ye not them that kill the body, and are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him that can destroy both soul and body in hell." (Matt. x, 28; Luke xii, 14)

37. This does not mean that the peace of Christ, which is the only true peace, exacts of us that we give up all worldly possessions. On the contrary, every earthly good is promised in so many words by Christ to those who seek His peace: "Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his justice, and all these things shall be added unto you." (Matt. vi, 33; Luke xii, 31)

38. This peace of Christ, however, surpasses all human understanding - "the peace of God which surpasseth all understanding" (Philippians iv, 7), and for this very reason dominates our sinful passions and renders such evils as division, strife, and discord, which result solely from the unrestrained desire for earthly possessions, impossible. If the desire for worldly possessions were kept within bounds and the place of honor in our affections given to the things of the spirit, which place undoubtedly they deserve, the peace of Christ would follow immediately, to which would be joined in a natural and happy union, as it were, a higher regard for the value and dignity of human life. Human personality, too, would be raised to a higher level, for man has been ennobled by the Blood of Christ and made kin to God Himself by means of holiness and the bond of brotherly love which unites us closely with Christ, by prayer and by the reception of the Sacraments, means infallibly certain to produce this elevation to and participation in the life of God, by the desire to attain everlasting possession of the glory and happiness of heaven which is held out to all by God as our goal and final reward.

39. We have already seen and come to the conclusion that the principal cause of the confusion, restlessness, and dangers which are so prominent a characteristic of false peace is the weakening of the binding force of law and lack of respect for authority, effects which logically follow upon denial of the truth that authority comes from God, the Creator and Universal Law-giver.

40. The only remedy for such state of affairs is the peace of Christ since the peace of Christ is the peace of God, which could not exist if it did not enjoin respect for law, order, and the rights of authority. In the Holy Scriptures We read: "My children, keep discipline in peace." (Ecclesiasticus xli, 17) "Much peace have they that love the law, O Lord." (Psalms cxviii, 165) "He that feareth the commandment, shall dwell in peace." (Proverbs xiii, 13) Jesus Christ very expressly states: "Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's." (Matt. xxii, 21) He even recognized that Pilate possessed authority from on High (John xiv, 11) as he acknowledged that the scribes and Pharisees who though unworthy sat in the chair of Moses (Matt. xxiii, 2) were not without a like authority. In Joseph and Mary, Jesus respected the natural authority of parents and was subject to them for the greater part of His life. (Luke ii, 51) He also taught, by the voice of His Apostle, the same important doctrine: "Let every soul be subject to higher powers: for there is no power but from God." (Romans xiii, 1; cf. also 1 Peter ii, 13, 18)

41. If we stop to reflect for a moment that these ideals and doctrines of Jesus Christ, for example, his teachings on the necessity and value of the spiritual life, on the dignity and sanctity of human life, on the duty of obedience, on the divine basis of human government, on the sacramental character of matrimony and by consequence the sanctity of family life - if we stop to reflect, let Us repeat, that these ideals and doctrines of Christ (which are in fact but a portion of the treasury of truth which He left to mankind) were confided by Him to His Church and to her alone for safekeeping, and that He has promised that His aid will never fail her at any time for she is the infallible teacher of His doctrines in every century and before all nations, there is no one who cannot clearly see what a singularly important role the Catholic Church is able to play, and is even called upon to assume, in providing a remedy for the ills which afflict the world today and in leading mankind toward a universal peace.

42. Because the Church is by divine institution the sole depository and interpreter of the ideals and teachings of Christ, she alone possesses in any complete and true sense the power effectively to combat that materialistic philosophy which has already done and, still threatens, such tremendous harm to the home and to the state. The Church alone can introduce into society and maintain therein the prestige of a true, sound spiritualism, the spiritualism of Christianity which both from the point of view of truth and of its practical value is quite superior to any exclusively philosophical theory. The Church is the teacher and an example of world good-will, for she is able to inculcate and develop in mankind the "true spirit of brotherly love" (St. Augustine, De Moribus Ecclesiae Catholicae, i, 30) and by raising the public estimation of the value and dignity of the individual's soul help thereby to lift us even unto God.

43. Finally, the Church is able to set both public and private life on the road to righteousness by demanding that everything and all men become obedient to God "Who beholdeth the heart," to His commands, to His laws, to His sanctions. If the teachings of the Church could only penetrate in some such manner as We have described the inner recesses of the consciences of mankind, be they rulers or be they subjects, all eventually would be so apprised of their personal and civic duties and their mutual responsibilities that in a short time "Christ would be all, and in all." (Colossians iii, 11)

44. Since the Church is the safe and sure guide to conscience, for to her safe-keeping alone there has been confided the doctrines and the promise of the assistance of Christ, she is able not only to bring about at the present hour a peace that is truly the peace of Christ, but can, better than any other agency which We know of, contribute greatly to the securing of the same peace for the future, to the making impossible of war in the future. For the Church teaches (she alone has been given by God the mandate and the right to teach with authority) that not only our acts as individuals but also as groups and as nations must conform to the eternal law of God. In fact, it is much more important that the acts of a nation follow God's law, since on the nation rests a much greater responsibility for the consequences of its acts than on the individual.

45. When, therefore, governments and nations follow in all their activities, whether they be national or international, the dictates of conscience grounded in the teachings, precepts, and example of Jesus Christ, and which are binding on each and every individual, then only can we have faith in one another's word and trust in the peaceful solution of the difficulties and controversies which may grow out of differences in point of view or from clash of interests. An attempt in this direction has already and is now being made; its results, however, are almost negligible and, especially so, as far as they can be said to affect those major questions which divide seriously and serve to arouse nations one against the other. No merely human institution of today can be as successful in devising a set of international laws which will be in harmony with world conditions as the Middle Ages were in the possession of that true League of Nations, Christianity. It cannot be denied that in the Middle Ages this law was often violated; still it always existed as an ideal, according to which one might judge the acts of nations, and a beacon light calling those who had lost their way back to the safe road.

46. There exists an institution able to safeguard the sanctity of the law of nations. This institution is a part of every nation; at the same time it is above all nations. She enjoys, too, the highest authority, the fullness of the teaching power of the Apostles. Such an institution is the Church of Christ. She alone is adapted to do this great work, for she is not only divinely commissioned to lead mankind, but moreover, because of her very make-up and the constitution which she possesses, by reason of her age-old traditions and her great prestige, which has not been lessened but has been greatly increased since the close of the War, cannot but succeed in such a venture where others assuredly will fail.

47. It is apparent from these considerations that true peace, the peace of Christ, is impossible unless we are willing and ready to accept the fundamental principles of Christianity, unless we are willing to observe the teachings and obey the law of Christ, both in public and private life. If this were done, then society being placed at last on a sound foundation, the Church would be able, in the exercise of its divinely given ministry and by means of the teaching authority which results therefrom, to protect all the rights of God over men and nations.

48. It is possible to sum up all We have said in one word, "the Kingdom of Christ." For Jesus Christ reigns over the minds of individuals by His teachings, in their hearts by His love, in each one's life by the living according to His law and the imitating of His example. Jesus reigns over the family when it, modeled after the holy ideals of the sacrament of matrimony instituted by Christ, maintains unspotted its true character of sanctuary. In such a sanctuary of love, parental authority is fashioned after the authority of God, the Father, from Whom, as a matter of fact, it originates and after which even it is named. (Ephesians iii, 15) The obedience of the children imitates that of the Divine Child of Nazareth, and the whole family life is inspired by the sacred ideals of the Holy Family. Finally, Jesus Christ reigns over society when men recognize and reverence the sovereignty of Christ, when they accept the divine origin and control over all social forces, a recognition which is the basis of the right to command for those in authority and of the duty to obey for those who are subjects, a duty which cannot but ennoble all who live up to its demands. Christ reigns where the position in society which He Himself has assigned to His Church is recognized, for He bestowed on the Church the status and the constitution of a society which, by reason of the perfect ends which it is called upon to attain, must be held to be supreme in its own sphere; He also made her the depository and interpreter of His divine teachings, and, by consequence, the teacher and guide of every other society whatsoever, not of course in the sense that she should abstract in the least from their authority, each in its own sphere supreme, but that she should really perfect their authority, just as divine grace perfects human nature, and should give to them the assistance necessary for men to attain their true final end, eternal happiness, and by that very fact make them the more deserving and certain promoters of their happiness here below.

49. It is, therefore, a fact which cannot be questioned that the true peace of Christ can only exist in the Kingdom of Christ - "the peace of Christ in the Kingdom of Christ." It is no less unquestionable that, in doing all we can to bring about the re-establishment of Christ's kingdom, we will be working most effectively toward a lasting world peace.

Pius X in taking as his motto "To restore all things in Christ" was inspired from on High to lay the foundations of that "work of peace" which became the program and principal task of Benedict XV. These two programs of Our Predecessors We desire to unite in one - the re-establishment of the Kingdom of Christ by peace in Christ - "the peace of Christ in the Kingdom of Christ." With might and main We shall ever strive to bring about this peace, putting Our trust in God, Who when He called Us to the Chair of Peter, promised that the divine assistance would never fail Us. We ask that all assist and co-operate with Us in this Our mission. Particularly We ask you to aid us, Venerable Brothers, you, His sheep, whom Our leader and Lord, Jesus Christ, has called to feed and to watch over as the most precious portion of His flock, which comprises all mankind. For, it is you whom the "Holy Ghost hath placed to rule the Church of God" (Acts xx, 28), you to whom above all, and principally, God "hath given the ministry of reconciliation, and who for Christ therefore are ambassadors." (II Cor. v, 18, 20) You participate in His teaching power and are "the dispensers of the mysteries of God." (I Cor. iv, 1) You have been called by Him "the salt of the earth," "the light of the world" (Matt. v, 13, 14), fathers and teachers of Christian peoples, "a pattern of the flock from the heart" (I Peter v, 3), and "you shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven." (Matt. v, 19) In fine, you are the links of gold, as it were, by which "the whole body of Christ, which is the Church, is held compacted and fitly joined together" (Ephesians iv, 15, 16), built as it is on the solid rock of Peter.

50. Of your praiseworthy industry, We have had a quite recent proof on the occasion of the International Eucharistic Congress held in Rome and of the celebration of the Centenary of the Sacred Congregation of the Propagation of the Faith, when several hundred bishops from all sections of the globe were reunited with Us before the tomb of the Holy Apostles. That brotherly reunion, so solemn, because of the great number and high dignity of the bishops who were present, carried our thoughts to the possibility of another similar meeting of the whole episcopate here in the center of Catholic unity, and of the many effective results which might follow such a meeting toward the re-establishment of the social order after the terrible disorders through which we have just passed. The very proximity of the Holy Year fills Us with the solemn hope that this Our desire may be fully realized.

51. We scarcely dare to include, in so many words, in the program of Our Pontificate the reassembling of the Ecumenical Council which Pius IX, the Pontiff of Our youth, had called but had failed to see through except to the completion of a part, albeit most important, of its work. We as the leader of the chosen people must wait and pray for an unmistakable sign from the God of mercy and of love of His holy will in this regard. (Judges vi, 17)

52. In the meantime, though We are quite conscious that it is not necessary for Us to exhort you to greater and more zealous efforts but rather to bestow on you the praise which you so richly deserve, yet the very consciousness of Our Apostolic Office, of the fact that We are the Common Father of all, constrains Us to beseech you to exhibit at all times a very special and tender love toward that large family of spiritual children which is, in a very special way, committed to your immediate supervision. From the reports received from you by Us and by public fame, which is amply confirmed in the press and in many other ways, We know only too well what thanks we should, in union with you, render to the Good God for the great work which, as the occasion permitted, He has done through you and through your predecessors, both for your clergy and for your faithful people, a work which has come to maturity in our own times and which We see being multiplied on all sides in a most fruitful manner.

53. In particular, We refer to the numberless and diverse activities initiated for the education and development, as well as for the sanctification of both the clergy and laity, the organizations of clergy and laity formed to aid the missions in their manifold activities, both physical and moral, of the natural and the supernatural order, by the spreading far and wide of the Kingdom of Christ. We refer to the various organizations of young people which have helped to develop such ardent and true love for the Holy Eucharist and such tender devotion for the Blessed Virgin, virtues which have made certain their faith, their purity, and their union one with another: to the solemn celebrations in honor of the Blessed Sacrament, at which the Divine Prince of Peace is honored by truly royal triumphal processions, for about the Sacred Host, center of peace and love, gather multitudes from every country and the representatives of all peoples and nations, joined together in a union most wonderful by one and the same faith, in adoration, in prayer, and in the enjoyment of all heavenly graces.

54. The fruits of such piety are manifest, the widespread diffusion and great activity of the apostolate which, by prayer, word of mouth, by the religious press, by personal example, by works of charity seeks in every way possible to lead souls to the Sacred Heart of Jesus and to restore to the same Sacred Heart His sovereign rule over the family and over society. We refer also to the holy battle waged on so many fronts to vindicate for the family and the Church the natural and divinely given rights which they possess over education and the school. Finally, We include among these fruits of piety that whole group of movements, organizations, and works so dear to Our fatherly heart which passes under the name of "Catholic Action," and in which We have been so intensely interested.

55. All these organizations and movements ought not only to continue in existence, but ought to be developed more and more, always of course as the conditions of time and place seem to demand. There can be no question of the fact that these conditions are at times very difficult and exact of both pastors and the faithful a great and increasing amount of sacrifice and labor. But since such work is vitally necessary, it is without question an essential part of our Christian life and of the sacred ministry and is therefore indissolubly bound up with the restoration of the Kingdom of Christ and the re-establishment of that true peace which can be found only in His Kingdom - "the peace of Christ in the Kingdom of Christ."

56. Tell, therefore, your clergy, Venerable Brothers, whom We know have labored so devotedly in these different fields of activity for the Church of Christ, and whose work We have seen at close range and have even participated in and which We appreciate so highly, tell them that when they co-operate with you, they are united with Christ and guided by Him through you; that at the same time they also co-operate with Us, and that We bless them with Our fatherly blessing.

57. It is scarcely necessary to add, Venerable Brothers, how much We depend on the regular clergy to aid in the successful execution of the different parts of Our program. You know as well as We what a magnificent contribution they have made to the interior life of the Church and to the spread of the Kingdom of Christ. They are actuated not only by the precepts but by the counsels of Christ. Both in the holy silence of the cloister and in pious works outside convent walls they exhibit the high ideals of Christian perfection by their works of true piety, by their keeping uppermost in the minds of Christian people the pure ideals of Christ, by the example which they give due to their self-sacrificing renunciation of all worldly comforts and material goods, by their acquisition of spiritual treasures. Because of the consecration of their whole being to the common good, they undertake truly miraculous activities which succor every ill spiritual and bodily, and help all in finding a sure remedy or assistance from the evils which we must encounter. As the history of the Church bears witness, members of the religious orders under the inspiration of God's love, have often gone to such lengths in their work of preaching the Gospel that they have given up their lives for the salvation of souls, thus by their death spreading the unity of the faith and the doctrine of Christian brotherhood and at the same time extending farther and farther the boundaries of the Kingdom of Christ.

58. Tell your faithful children of the laity that when, united with their pastors and their bishops, they participate in the works of the apostolate, both individual and social, the end purpose of which is to make Jesus Christ better known and better loved, then they are more than ever "a chosen generation, a kingly priesthood, a holy nation, a purchased people," of whom St. Peter spoke in such laudatory terms. (I Peter ii, 9) Then, too, they are more than ever united with Us and with Christ, and become great factors in bringing about world peace because they work for the restoration and spread of the Kingdom of Christ. Only in this Kingdom of Christ can we find that true human equality by which all men are ennobled and made great by the selfsame nobility and greatness, for each is ennobled by the precious blood of Christ. As for those who are in authority, they are, according to the example of our Lord Jesus Christ, but ministers of the good, servants of the servants of God, particularly of the sick and of those in need.

59. However, these very social changes, which have created and increased the need of cooperation between the clergy and laity to which We have just referred, have themselves brought along in their wake new and most serious problems and dangers. As an after-effect of the upheaval caused by the Great War and of its political and social consequences, false ideas and unhealthy sentiments have, like a contagious disease, so taken possession of the popular mind that We have grave fears that even some among the best of our laity and of the clergy, seduced by the false appearance of truth which some of these doctrines possess, have not been altogether immune from error.

60. Many believe in or claim that they believe in and hold fast to Catholic doctrine on such questions as social authority, the right of owning private property, on the relations between capital and labor, on the rights of the laboring man, on the relations between Church and State, religion and country, on the relations between the different social classes, on international relations, on the rights of the Holy See and the prerogatives of the Roman Pontiff and the Episcopate, on the social rights of Jesus Christ, Who is the Creator, Redeemer, and Lord not only of individuals but of nations. In spite of these protestations, they speak, write, and, what is more, act as if it were not necessary any longer to follow, or that they did not remain still in full force, the teachings and solemn pronouncements which may be found in so many documents of the Holy See, and particularly in those written by Leo XIII, Pius X, and Benedict XV.

61. There is a species of moral, legal, and social modernism which We condemn, no less decidedly than We condemn theological modernism.

62. It is necessary ever to keep in mind these teachings and pronouncements which We have made; it is no less necessary to reawaken that spirit of faith, of supernatural love, and of Christian discipline which alone can bring to these principles correct understanding, and can lead to their observance. This is particularly important in the case of youth, and especially those who aspire to the priesthood, so that in the almost universal confusion in which we live they at least, as the Apostle writes, will not be "tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine by the wickedness of men, by cunning craftiness, by which they lie in wait to deceive." (Ephesians iv, 14)

63. From this Apostolic Center of the Church of Christ, We turn Our eyes toward those who, unfortunately in great numbers, are either ignorant of Christ and His Redemption or do not follow in their entirety His teachings, or who are separated from the unity of His Church and thus are without His Fold, although they too have been called by Christ to membership in His Church. The Vicar of the Good Shepherd, seeing so many of his sheep gone astray, cannot but recall and make his own the simple but expressive words of Christ, words which are permeated through and through by the longings born of divine desire: "And other sheep I have, that are not of this fold: them also I must bring." (John x, 16) He cannot but rejoice in the wonderful prophecy which filled even the Sacred Heart of Jesus with joy. "And they shall hear my voice, and there shall be one fold and one shepherd." May God, and We join with you and with all the faithful in this prayer, shortly bring to fulfillment His prophecy by transforming this consoling vision of the future into a present reality.

64. One of the outstanding manifestations of this religious unity, and a happy augury for the future, is that altogether unexpected, but well-known fact of which you have knowledge, Venerable Brothers, a fact not pleasing to some perhaps, but certainly very consoling both to us and to you, namely, that recently the representatives and rulers of practically every nation, motivated by a common and instinctive desire for union and peace, have turned to this Apostolic See in order to bind themselves closer to Us or to renew in some cases the bonds of amity and friendship which had joined us together previously. We rejoice at this fact, not merely because it increases the prestige of Holy Church, but because it is becoming increasingly evident on all sides, and especially from actual experience, what great possibilities for peace and happiness, even here below, such a union with Us possesses for human society. Although the Church is committed by God, first of all, to the attainment of spiritual and imperishable purposes, because of the very intimate and necessary connection of things one with another, such a mission serves likewise to advance the temporal prosperity of nations and individuals, even more so than if she were instituted primarily to promote such ends.

65. The Church does not desire, neither ought she to desire, to mix up without a just cause in the direction of purely civil affairs. On the other hand, she cannot permit or tolerate that the state use the pretext of certain laws of unjust regulations to do injury to the rights of an order superior to that of the state, to interfere with the constitution given the Church by Christ, or to violate the rights of God Himself over civil society.

66. We make Our very own, Venerable Brothers, the words which Benedict XV, of happy memory, used in the last allocution which he pronounced at the Consistory of November twenty-first of last year, when he spoke of the treaties asked for or proposed to Us by various states: "We cannot possibly permit that anything harmful to the dignity or liberty of the Church creep into these treaties, for it is all-important that the safety and freedom of the Church be guarded at all times, and especially in our own days, and this in the lasting interests of human society itself."

67. It is scarcely necessary to say here how painful it is to Us to note that from this galaxy of friendly powers which surround Us one is missing, Italy, Our own dear native land, the country where the hand of God, who guides the course of history, has set down the Chair of His Vicar on earth, in this city of Rome which, from being the capital of the wonderful Roman Empire, was made by Him the capital of the whole world, because He made it the seat of a sovereignty which, since it extends beyond the confines of nations and states, embraces within itself all the peoples of the whole world. The very origin and divine nature of this sovereignty demands, the inviolable rights of conscience of millions of the faithful of the whole world demand that this sacred sovereignty must not be, neither must it ever appear to be, subject to any human authority or law whatsoever, even though that law be one which proclaims certain guaranties for the liberty of the Roman Pontiff.

68. The true guaranties of liberty, in no way injurious, but on the contrary of incalculable benefit to Italy, which Divine Providence, the ruler and arbiter of mankind, has conferred upon the sovereignty of the Vicar of Christ here below, these guaranties which for centuries have fitted in so marvelously with the divine designs in order to protect the liberty of the Roman Pontiff, neither Divine Providence itself has manifested nor human ingenuity has as yet discovered any substitute which would compensate for the loss of these rights; these guaranties We declare have been and are still being violated. Whence it is that there has been created a certain abnormal condition of affairs which has grievously troubled and, up to the present hour, continues to trouble the consciences of the Catholics of Italy and of the entire world.

69. We, therefore, who are now the heirs and depositories of the ideals and sacred duties of Our Venerated Predecessors, and like them alone invested with competent authority in such a weighty matter and responsible to no one but God for Our decisions, We protest, as they have protested before Us, against such a condition of affairs in defense of the rights and of the dignity of the Apostolic See, not because We are moved by any vain earthly ambition of which We should be ashamed, but out of a sense of Our duty to the dictates of conscience itself, mindful always of the fact that We too must one day die and of the awful account which We must render to the Divine Judge of the ministry which He has confided to Our care.

70. At all events, Italy has not nor will she have in the future anything to fear from the Holy See. The Pope, no matter who he shall be, will always repeat the words: "I think thoughts of peace not of affliction" (Jeremias xxix, 11), thoughts of a true peace which is founded on justice and which permit him truthfully to say: "Justice and Peace have kissed." (Psalms lxxxiv, 11) It is God's task to bring about this happy hour and to make it known to all; men of wisdom and of good-will surely will not permit it to strike in vain. When it does arrive, it will turn out to be a solemn hour, one big with consequences not only for the restoration of the Kingdom of Christ, but for the pacification of Italy and the world as well.

71. We pray most fervently, and ask others likewise to pray for this much-desired pacification of society, especially at this moment when after twenty centuries the day and hour approach when all over the world men will celebrate the humble and meek coming among us of the Sweet Prince of Peace, at whose birth the heavenly hosts sang: "Glory be to God in the highest; and on ,earth peace to men of good will." (Luke ii, 14)

72. As an augury of this peace for mankind, may the Apostolic Blessing, which We invoke upon you and your flock, on your clergy, your people, on their families and homes bring happiness to the living, peace and eternal rest to the dead. From the depths of Our heart as a sign of Our fatherly love, We impart to you, to your clergy, and to your people, the Apostolic Blessing.

Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, on the twenty-third day of December, in the year 1922, the first of Our Pontificate,

The Encyclical noted the evils brought about by World War One, and one of those evils was the rise of Communism.  It had briefly taken hold in Hungary and had threatened to in Germany, but it seized control of Russia, while losing at the same time parts of what had been Imperial Russia.  One of those parts, Ukraine, had struggled to remain free of Soviet Russia, but had failed. That reflected itself in the events at the Tenth All Russian Congress of Soviets, which met at the Grand Opera House in Moscow.  Of the 3,000 legislators gathered, 90% were Communist Party members, not surprisingly.

Gee, that's odd for a country whose only fair election up tot hat point had not chosen the Communist to govern them and which was still fighting a civil war over the matter. . .

Anyhow, the Ukrainian Communist Party presented a proposal for a union of all of the Communist nations.

It's sometimes noted that Lenin stated that he stood for the self-determination of states. Whether he did nor not, Soviet Russia certainly did not.  If it had its way, it would have reincorporated all of the Russian Empire by now, and likely incorporated Germany as well.

Lenin began dictating his political "will", which cast doubts on Joseph Stalin.

Thursday, December 22, 2022

Friday, December 22, 1922. A radiant heater will be appreciated.

Bureau of Miners Christmas Tree, December 22, 1922.
 

BLEU, the Belgium–Luxembourg Economic Union, was created.  

The Cathedral-Basilica of Notre-Dame de Québec in Quebec City, originally built in 1647, was heavily damages in an early morning fire.


Friday, December 2, 2022

Saturday, December 2, 1922. Kuwait gets axed.


The Uqair Protocol was signed on this day in 1922, setting the boundaries between Iraq, the Sultanate of Nejd, and the Sheikdom of Kuwait.

Basically, the British High Commissioner to Iraq imposed it as a response to Bedouin raiders from Nejd loyal to Ibn Saud being a problem.

Kuwait lost 2/3s of its territory in the deal, setting is modern boundaries.  It had no say in the arrangement, resulting in anti-British feelings in Kuwait.  It did establish a Saudi Kuwait neutral zone of 2,230 square miles which existed until 1970 and a Saudi Iraqi neutral zone that existed until 1982.

Country Gentleman had a winter theme, but the Saturday Evening Post and Judge were already in the Christmas spirit, even though this was still the Thanksgiving holiday weekend in 1922.


Saturday, November 26, 2022

Thursday, November 26, 1942. Casablanca premiers, Battle of Brisbane

When I first posted this (written yesterday, went up early this morning) I failed to appreciate that this was Thanksgiving Day for 1942.

Now, of course, most of the day is gone.

Usually when something like this comes up, I ponder on what that must have meant for my family at the time, so I've added that below.



The legendary film Casablanca, truly one of the best movies ever filmed, premiered at the Hollywood Theater in New York in advance of its general release.

The movie is a fantastic film that holds up today.  Amazingly, the film as we know it barely came together, with casting changes and the like.  Paul Henreid proved aloof during the film, regarding the other actors as lessors, and the film was overall one that shouldn't have worked out as well as it truly did.

It's one of my favorite films.

Today In Wyoming's History: November 261942  Lusk announces they will forgo outdoor Christmas lights in accordance with a request from the War Production Board.  Attribution.  Wyoming History Calendar.

Riots broke out in Brisbane, Australia, between US servicemen and Australian servicemen.

This was not a minor incident, and one Australian serviceman was killed.  While generally Americans and Australians got along well, the disproportionately high pay of American serviceman was a source of problems all over the world, as merchants would cater to them, and it gave them an advantage with local women.  American soldiers were also freer with physical affection towards Australian women which offended Australians even though, ironically, the culture was much more libertine in the same arena behind closed doors.  

Additionally, Americans were dismissive of Australian soldiers in general, even though at the time they were all volunteer and had served in the war since 1939.  Australians were disdainful in turn of Americans who had, right up until about this time, a record of defeat.

The whole thing came to a head, resulting in two days of riots, the news of which was later suppressed.

President Franklin Roosevelt ordered gasoline rationing expanded to include the entire United States, effective December 1.

Speaking of a situation that involved the use of fuel, German 6th Army Commander Paulus, trapped at Stalingrad with his troops, wrote to his superior, Von Manstein, as follows:
For the past thirty-six hours I had received no orders or information from a higher level. In a few hours I was liable to be confronted with the following situation:
(a) Either I must remain in position on my western and northern fronts and very soon see the army front rolled up from behind (in which case I should formally be complying with the orders issued to me), or else

(b) I must make the only possible decision and turn with all my might on the enemy who was about to stab the army from behind. In the latter event, clearly, the eastern and northem fronts can no longer be held and it an only be a matter of breaking through to the south-west.

In case of (b) I should admittedly be doing justice to the situation but should also - for the second time - be guilty of disobeying an order.

(3) In this difficult situation I sent the Fuhrer a signal asking for freedom to take such a final decision if it should become necessary. I wanted to have this authority in order to guard against issuing the only possible order in that situation too late.
...
The airlift of the last three days has brought only a fraction of the calculated minimum requirement (600 tons = 300 Ju daily). In the very next few days supplies can lead to a crisis of the utmost gravity.

I still believe, however, that the army can hold out for a time. On the other hand - even if anything like a corridor is cut through to me - it is still not possible to tell whether the daily increasing weakness of the army, combined with the lack of accommodation and wood for constructional and heating purposes, will allow the area around Stalingrad to be held for any length of time.
While Paulus was asking for freedom of action, in Von Manstein's view the 6th Army lacked sufficient fuel to accomplish even minor movements, making a breakout by the 6th Army impossible.

As noted, this was Thanksgiving Day for 1942.

That is, US Thanksgiving Day.

Unlike Americans seem to think, most countries have a Thanksgiving of some sort.  It's very common for Christian countries. The U.S. can't really claim to have had "the first Thanksgiving", although we do.

However, not all countries have Thanksgiving on the same day by any means, so this was the holiday date for the U.S. in 1942.

On this day I know my father's family would have gathered for a Thanksgiving Dinner and it would have been the traditional type, turkey, etc.  It likely would have been, however, just my father's immediate family, but which I mean his parents and siblings.  No aunts or uncles lived nearby, they were living in Scotsbluff, and the grandparents were in Denver and Iowa respectively.

My father and his siblings would have been on a holiday break from school of course.  It was the first Thanksgiving of the war, but none of them were old enough to really be directly impacted by it yet.

Friday, January 7, 2022

Saturday January 7, 1922. Orthodox Christmas (for 1921, and 2021).

On the "Old Calendar" (Julian calendar) this was December 25, so this was the date for Christmas, 1921.

This is actually considerably more complicated than it might seem, as the New Calendar is not the Gregorian Calendar used by the West and the Latin Rite of the Church, but rather the New Julian Calendar adopted in May 1923 by the Greek Orthodox Church.  This caused a split over the calendar in the Orthodox Churches.  The Russian Orthodox Church kept the Old Calendar, although by that time the Russian Orthodox Church was engaged in a struggle for its existence inside the Soviet Union, which was dedicated to its distinction.  The civil government in Russia had adopted the Gregorian Calendar, used in the Western World, and now the whole world, on January 31, 1918.

Anyhow, in the Orthodox Churches, this was Christmas for 1921. With the largest Orthodox Church, the Russian Orthodox Church, under siege from the Communist government, and starvation rampant in Russia, it was not a happy one for the Orthodox.

The Dail approved the Anglo-Irish treaty, establishing the Irish Free State as a dominion.  The vote was 64 to 57.

Dogsomyn Bodoo, Prime Minister of Mongolia, resigns after his efforts to make Mongolia into a Soviet style state meet with widespread opposition.  He'd be arrested and executed the following August.

The Washington Naval Treaty agreed to ban the use of poison gas.

____________________________________________________________________________________

This is also, I'd note, Orthodox Christmas for those Orthodox Churches that retain the Old Calendar today, and such Eastern Rite churches as may retain it.

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Christmas, 1941


I've been running events from 21 and 41, as anyone who stops in here knows which unfortunately means that 2021 has more posts than any prior year.  I didn't mean for that to happen.

Anyhow, this post, which was written before December 25 and set to pre post, is one that I thought about not putting up at all. The reason for that is that posts on Christmas during World War Two tend to take on an ultra sappy character, and also tend to yield to the odd recent American trend of turning every day into Veterans Day, something we don't like and wish to avoid.

Be that as it may, as we have been looking at events of eighty years ago fairly regularly here, and as it would be sort of odd, in that context, not to discuss that here, we'll have a post about Christmas, 1941, but it's going to be a little different.

Christmas, Christ's Mass, is a Christian holiday dating back to the early history of the Church. Contrary to the modern net baloney that likes to make un-cited claims to the contrary, it seems to have been celebrated very early on and indeed is based on an early calculation of the date of Christ's birth.  Those who like to cite competing Roman holidays as the source fail to note that in fact the most commonly cited contender was established after Christ's Mass was.  Indeed, there's a term for it which I've forgotten, but if some borrowing went on, it may well be that Roman pagans were borrowing from Roman Christians in this regard, and not the other way around.

Anyhow, Christianity is the largest religion in the world, and it was in 1941, although it's actually larger now than it was then.  Christians were citizens of every single country in the war, including even Japan, which we don't tend to think of in this context, which even had one general officer who was Catholic.  This doesn't mean, by any means, that Christians were well treated in every combatant country. Quite the contrary.

The largest Christian denomination in the world is the Latin Rite of the Catholic Church, which was also the largest Christian denomination at the time.  Americans, who live in what is essentially a Protestant country, tend not to realize this, but it's quite true.  Of the nations involved in World War Two in 1941, the nation with the largest single Catholic population under repression was Poland.

Nazi Germany also contrary to what some armchair crabs like to claim, was virulently anti-Christian.  Indeed, by 1941 the Nazi regime had already attempted to co-opt the Lutheran Church and had failed.  It was hostile to Christianity of all types, and in Poland this meant an outright war on the church. The practice of the Catholic faith in Poland was essentially band and the German government was murdering priest.  It's one more black spot on the German people in regard to their conduct during the 1930s and 1940s.

Perhaps the second-largest oppressed Christian population in the warring countries was that of Germany's.  It remains an ultimate irony that in much of Germany Christianity was strong with it being particularly strong in the German Catholic south and west.  In the rest of the country the Lutheran faith predominated and a long history of association with the German monarchy had accordingly weakened it following the fall of the German Empire, but it remained very influential nonetheless.  Its surprising strength, moreover, caused the Nazi regime to hold off on full co-opting of the Lutheran faith which it had planned to do as part of an effort to completely replace Christianity.  Lutheranism reacted so strongly that the government had to back off.

Both Lutheran and Catholic clerics suffered during the war, but the Catholic ones far more as an overall percentage.  Unlike the right wing governments in Spain and France the Nazis did not see Christianity as party of their cultural heritage and sought to wipe it out.  By 1941 this was already causing a struggle in the Catholic regions of the country.  It would come into full fruition in 1944 when the July 20 plot saw an attempt to kill Hitler in which a large percentage of the actors were Catholics motivated by their faith (with this also being true of some of the Protestant participants).

Nazi Germany's hostility to Christianity was second only to Soviet Russia's, which is one of the odd was the extreme right wing government of Germany was similar, if perhaps only superficially, to the extreme left wing government of the Soviet Union.  While the German's liked to repeatedly claim that they were acting to save Europe from Bolshevism, in this aspect of their beliefs they were as hostile as the Communists were to the defining element of European civilization.

This takes us to the millions of people living under Soviet Communism.  In one of the numerous ironies of World War Two, the Allied Soviets were as murderous towards their Christian populations as the Nazi Germans were to theirs.

Russia, of course, was home to the largest population of Orthodox Christians on earth, with the Orthodox being the second-largest body of Christians.  The Soviets had been busy suppressing, often lethally, the Orthodox Church, or in their case Orthodox Churches, since 1917.  Beyond this, substantial bodies of Eastern Catholics lived withing the border of the Soviet Union which were completely suppressed and who were practicing their faith underground.  168,300 Russian Orthodox clergy of the then already heavily suppressed church were arrested in 1937 and 1938. Of these, 106,300 were shot.

In spite of this, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church had asked for Russians to support the war effort almost immediately after the Germans invaded the country.  The Germans in turn lifted the suppression of the Russian and Ukrainian churches on the territory they captured.  This created the supreme irony of the murderous German regime, which was suppressing Catholicism heavily in Poland and also suppressing Catholicism and Lutheranism in Germany, lifting the suppression in the USSR where they occupied portions of it.  Stalin in turn lifted the suppression of the Russian Orthodox Church in September.  So in 1941, Orthodox Christians in Russia, while suffering enormously due to the war, were nonetheless experiencing the freest Christmas in terms of being able to practice their faith since Red victory in the Civil War.  As the Orthodox used the "old calendar", Christmas however fell on a different day of the year.

In the rest of occupied or fascist Europe, Christians were left largely unhindered to practice their faith, although their relationships with their governments varied by country.  Christians were very closely watched, however, in the fascist countries or those which were part of the far right, although their relationship with their governments varied considerably by country.

In the largest Christian country in Asia, the Philippines, the suppression of the Catholic faith that would come under Japanese occupation had not yet arrived.  This would be the last Christmas in which the practice of Christianity would be unhindered by Japanese occupation, with the Japanese strongly associating Christianity with the West, and the Church constantly acting on behalf of the suppressed population.  Next to the Philippines, China had the next largest Christian population in Asia at the time, with that population suffering the hard ravishes of war that Japan had imposed upon all of the Chinese.

In the Allied countries, outside the Soviet Union, freedom of religion was unhindered and Christmas was generally normal, if very much constrained in countries that were at war.  In the United States, the big gift giving Christmas was already a thing, and had been for some time. In more materially constrained regions of North America, such as Canada, which had gone right from the Great Depression into World War Two, this was not nearly the case, with gifts, such as in my mother's family, often limited to one gift, often a book, and fruit, the latter being hard to get in the winter.

For most Americans and Canadians, Christmas meant attending Church. For Catholics and Orthodox it universally did, but it also did for members of most Protestant faiths.  In Mexico suppression of the church was being relaxed, starting in 1940, and the Church was reviving.  In the United Kingdom the Christmas seasons was a major seasonal event, although regular church participation by the British population had declined fairly substantially in the 20th Century.  Nonetheless, England remained strongly Anglican in character and Scotland strongly Presbyterian.  The then very conservative Lutheran churches of the Scandinavian countries had large-scale participation and impacted the celebration of Christmas in those countries.

What might be noted is that while celebration of Christmas was universal, it had strongly regional expressions everywhere at the time.  Everything was much less uniform than it is now, and much less Americanized as well.

For people like my folks, this day would have been a fairly normal Christmas for the regions where they lived.  My father's family would have gone to Mass, if they had not the night before, and would have opened up their presents in the early morning.  My mother's family would have done the same, but with there being less in the way of presents given the material constraints that Canadians were living under.  In both families there would have been a special Christmas dinner, likely consisting of ham or turkey, I suspect, in the case of my father's family even though they were in the beef and lamb industry.  My mother's family would likely have had ham as well, and both would have had a potato side.  My father's mother was a good cook and made candy and fudge, which undoubtedly would have featured in the Christmas meal.  My mother's family lived on the same block as her paternal grandparents and aunts and uncles, and they likely would have had a fairly large family presence at their Christmas celebration.

For the events of the day, on this day in 1941 Bing Crosby's song White Christmas was sung on NBC's Kraft's Music Hall.  Crosby had not yet recorded it as a single as he wasn't impressed with the song.

The North Platte Canteen was formally established in North Platte, Nebraska.

Hong Kong fell to the Japanese, which resluted in a formal British surrender in the afternoon.  Japanese entered St. Stephens Hospital in successive groups, first murdering a two doctors who went out to meet them, then killing wounded British and Canadian soldiers, and then finally raping the nurses and then murdering them.  Such behavior was already common for Japanese soldiers in China and would be repeated by them throughout the war whereever they went.

Hitler relieved Guderian of his command.  Guderian was flat out ignoring his orders in an effort to fight an effective defensive battle.

Sir Alan Brooke became Chief of the British General Staff.

Christmas, 1921




 

Friday, December 24, 2021

Wednesday December 24, 1941. Christmas Eve. The end of the Battle of Johnston and Palmyra Atolls. The Seizure of Saint Pierre and Miquelon. The Arcadia Conference

Just like now, people were traveling on December 24 in 1941, with these photographs taken at a Washington, D. C. bus terminal.









And they gathered as well, as these photos of a Christmas Eve gathering in the home of an Army doctor show, also in Washington D.C.






The White House Christmas Tree was illuminated.


Both Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, both in Washington, D. C. for the Arcadia Conference, delivered Christmas speeches.

Roosevelt stated:

Fellow workers for freedom:

There are many men and women in America- sincere and faithful men and women—who are asking themselves this Christmas:

How can we light our trees? How can we give our gifts?

How can we meet and worship with love and with uplifted spirit and heart in a world at war, a world of fighting and suffering and death?

How can we pause, even for a day, even for Christmas Day, in our urgent labor of arming a decent humanity against the enemies which beset it?

How can we put the world aside, as men and women put the world aside in peaceful years, to rejoice in the birth of Christ?

These are natural—inevitable—questions in every part of the world which is resisting the evil thing.

And even as we ask these questions, we know the answer. There is another preparation demanded of this Nation beyond and beside the preparation of weapons and materials of war. There is demanded also of us the preparation of our hearts; the arming of our hearts. And when we make ready our hearts for the labor and the suffering and the ultimate victory which lie ahead, then we observe Christmas Day—with all of its memories and all of its meanings—as we should.

Looking into the days to come, I have set aside a day of prayer, and in that Proclamation I have said:

"The year 1941 has brought upon our Nation a war of aggression by powers dominated by arrogant rulers whose selfish purpose is to destroy free institutions. They would thereby take from the freedom-loving peoples of the earth the hard-won liberties gained over many centuries.

"The new year of 1942 calls for the courage and the resolution of old and young to help to win a world struggle in order that we may preserve all we hold dear.

"We are confident in our devotion to country, in our love of freedom, in our inheritance of courage. But our strength, as the strength of all men everywhere, is of greater avail as God upholds us.

"Therefore, I... do hereby appoint the first day of the year 1942 as a day of prayer, of asking forgiveness for our shortcomings of the past, of consecration to the tasks of the present, of asking God's help in days to come.

"We need His guidance that this people may be humble in spirit but strong in the conviction of the right; steadfast to endure sacrifice, and brave to achieve a victory of liberty and peace."

Our strongest weapon in this war is that conviction of the dignity and brotherhood of man which Christmas Day signifies-more than any other day or any other symbol.

Against enemies who preach the principles of hate and practice them, we set our faith in human love and in God's care for us and all men everywhere.

It is in that spirit, and with particular thoughtfulness of those, our sons and brothers, who serve in our armed forces on land and sea, near and far- those who serve for us and endure for us that we light our Christmas candles now across the continent from one coast to the other on this Christmas Eve.

We have joined with many other Nations and peoples in a very great cause. Millions of them have been engaged in the task of defending good with their life-blood for months and for years.

One of their great leaders stands beside me. He and his people in many parts of the world are having their Christmas trees with their little children around them, just as we do here. He and his people have pointed the way in courage and in sacrifice for the sake of little children everywhere.

And so I am asking my associate, my old and good friend, to say a word to the people of America, old and young, tonight Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of Great Britain.

Churchill stated next:

I spend this anniversary and festival far from my country, far from my family, yet I cannot truthfully say that I feel far from home.  Whether it be the ties of blood on my mother’s side, or the friendships I have developed here over many years of active life, or the commanding sentiment of comradeship in the common cause of great peoples who speak the same language, who kneel at the same altars and, to a very large extent, pursue the same ideals, I cannot feel myself a stranger here in the centre and at the summit of the United States.  I feel a sense of unity and fraternal association which, added to the kindliness of your welcome,  convinces me that I have a right to sit at your fireside and share your Christmas joys.

This is a strange Christmas Eve.  Almost the whole world is locked in deadly struggle, and, with the most terrible weapons which science can devise, the nations advance upon each other.  Ill would it be for us this Christmastide if we were not sure that no greed for the land or wealth of any other people, no vulgar ambition, no morbid lust for material gain at the expense of others, had led us to the field.  Here, in the midst of war, raging and roaring over all the lands and seas, creeping nearer to our hearts and homes, here, amid all the tumult, we have tonight the peace of the spirit in each cottage home and in every generous heart.  Therefore we may cast aside for this night at least the cares and dangers which beset us, and make for the children an evening of happiness in a world of storm.  Here, then, for one night only, each home throughout the English-speaking world should be a brightly-lighted island of happiness and peace.

Let the children have their night of fun and laughter.  Let the gifts of Father Christmas delight their play.  Let us grown-ups share to the full in their unstinted pleasures before we turn again to the stern task and the formidable years that lie before us, resolved that, by our sacrifice and daring, these same children shall not be robbed of their inheritance or denied their right to live in a free and decent world.

I'm sure other Allied leaders also addressed their nations, if they had a Christian culture.  I don't know what they said, however.  Prime Minister King of Canada would have been in Washington, D.C., of course.

Pope Pius XII delivered a message on Vatican Radio, in which he stated a five point plan for peace:

Nell'alba e nella luce che rifulge previa alla festa del Santo Natale, attesa sempre con vivo anelito di gioia soave e penetrante, mentre ogni fronte si prepara a curvarsi e ogni ginocchio a piegarsi in adorazione davanti all'ineffabile mistero della misericordiosa bontà di Dio, che nella sua carità infinita volle dare, quale dono più grande e augusto, all'umanità il suo Figliuolo Unigenito; il Nostro cuore, diletti figli e figlie, sparsi sulla faccia della terra, si dilata a voi, e, pur non obliando la terra, si eleva e si profonda nel cielo.

La stella, indicatrice della culla del neonato Redentore, da venti secoli ancora splende meravigliosa nel cielo della Cristianità. Si agitino pure le genti, e le nazioni congiurino contro Dio e contro il suo Messia (cf. Sal 2,1-2): attraverso le bufere del mondo umano la stella non conobbe, non conosce né conoscerà tramonti; il passato, il presente e l'avvenire sono suoi. Essa ammonisce a mai non disperare: splende sopra i popoli, quand'anche sulla terra, come su oceano mugghiante per tempesta, si addensino i cupi turbini, generatori di stragi e di miserie. La sua luce è luce di conforto, di speranza, di fede incrollabile, di vita e certezza nel trionfo finale del Redentore, che traboccherà, quale torrente di salvezza, nella pace interiore e nella gloria per tutti quelli che, elevati all'ordine soprannaturale della grazia, avranno ricevuto il potere di farsi figli di Dio, perché nati da Dio.

Onde Noi, che, in questi amari tempi di sconvolgimenti guerreschi, siamo straziati dei vostri strazi e doloranti dei vostri dolori, Noi che viviamo come voi sotto il gravissimo incubo di un flagello, dilaniante un terzo anno ancora l'umanità, nella vigilia di tanta solennità amiamo di rivolgervi con commosso cuore di padre la parola, per esortarvi a restar saldi nella fede, e per comunicarvi il conforto di quella verace, esuberante e trasumanante speranza e certezza, che si irradiano dalla culla del neonato Salvatore.

Per vero, diletti figli, se il nostro occhio non mirasse più su della materia e della carne, appena è che troverebbe qualche ragione di conforto. Diffondono, sì, le campane il lieto messaggio del Natale, si illuminano chiese e oratori, le armonie religiose rallegrano gli spiriti, tutto è festa e ornamento nei sacri templi; ma la umanità non cessa dal dilaniarsi in una guerra sterminatrice. Nei sacri riti echeggia sulle labbra della Chiesa la mirabile antifona: «Rex pacificus magnificatus est, cuius vultum desiderat universa terra»;(2) ma essa risuona in stridente contrasto con avvenimenti, che rombano per piani e per monti con fracasso pieno di spavento, devastano terre e case per estese regioni, e gettano milioni di uomini e le loro famiglie nell'infelicità, nella miseria e nella morte. Certo, ammirevoli sono i molteplici spettacoli di indomato valore nella difesa del diritto e del suolo natìo; di serenità nel dolore; di anime che vivono come fiamme di olocausto per il trionfo della verità e della giustizia. Ma pure con angoscia che Ci preme l'animo pensiamo e, come sognando, guardiamo ai terribili scontri di armi e di sangue di quest'anno che volge al tramonto; alla infelice sorte dei feriti e dei prigionieri; alle sofferenze corporali e spirituali, alle stragi, alle distruzioni e rovine che la guerra aerea porta e rovescia su grandi e popolose città, su centri e vasti territori industriali, alle dilapidate ricchezze degli Stati, ai milioni di gente, che l'immane conflitto e la dura violenza vengono gettando nella miseria e nell'inedia.

E mentre il vigore e la salute di larga parte di gioventù, che andava maturando, si vengono scuotendo per le privazioni imposte dal presente flagello, vanno per contro salendo ad altezze vertiginose le spese e i gravami di guerra, che, originando contrazione delle forze produttive nel campo civile e sociale, non possono non dar fondamento alle ansie di coloro che volgono l'occhio preoccupato verso l'avvenire. L'idea della forza soffoca e perverte la norma del diritto. Rendete possibile e offrite porta aperta a individui e gruppi sociali o politici di ledere i beni e la vita altrui; lasciate che anche tutte le altre distruzioni morali turbino e accendano l'atmosfera civile a tempesta; e voi vedrete le nozioni di bene e di male, di diritto e d'ingiustizia perdere i loro acuti contorni, smussarsi, confondersi e minacciare di scomparire. Chi in virtù del ministero pastorale ha la via di penetrare nei cuori, sa e vede qual cumulo di dolori e di ansietà inenarrabili s'aggravi e si amplifichi in molte anime, ne scemi la brama e la gioia di lavorare e di vivere; ne soffochi gli spiriti e li renda muti e indolenti, sospettosi e quasi senza speranza in faccia agli eventi e ai bisogni: turbamenti d'animo che nessuno può prendere alla leggiera, se tiene a cuore il vero bene dei popoli, e desidera promuovere un non lontano ritorno a condizioni normali e ordinate di vita e di azione. Davanti a tale visione del presente, nasce un'amarezza che invade il petto, tanto più in quanto non appare oggi aperto alcun sentiero d'intesa tra le parti belligeranti, i cui reciproci scopi e programmi di guerra sembrano essere in contrasto inconciliabile.

Quando si indagano le cause delle odierne rovine, davanti a cui l'umanità, che le considera, resta perplessa, si ode non di rado affermare che il cristianesimo è venuto meno alla sua missione. Da chi e donde viene siffatta accusa? Forse da quegli apostoli, gloria di Cristo, da quegli eroici zelatori della fede e della giustizia, da quei pastori e sacerdoti, araldi del cristianesimo, i quali attraverso persecuzioni e martirii ingentilirono la barbarie e la prostrarono devota all'altare di Cristo, iniziarono la civiltà cristiana, salvarono le reliquie della sapienza e dell'arte di Atene e di Roma, adunarono i popoli nel nome cristiano, diffusero il sapere e la virtù, elevarono la croce sopra i pinnacoli aerei e le volte delle cattedrali, immagini del cielo, monumenti di fede e di pietà, che ancora ergono il capo venerando fra le rovine dell'Europa? No: il Cristianesimo, la cui forza deriva da Colui che è via, verità e vita, e sta e starà con esso fino alla consumazione dei secoli, non è venuto meno alla sua missione; ma gli uomini si sono ribellati al Cristianesimo vero e fedele a Cristo e alla sua dottrina; si sono foggiati un cristianesimo a loro talento, un nuovo idolo che non salva, che non ripugna alle passioni della concupiscenza della carne, all'avidità dell'oro e dell'argento che affascina l'occhio, alla superbia della vita; una nuova religione senz'anima o un'anima senza religione, una maschera di morto cristianesimo, senza lo spirito di Cristo; e hanno proclamato che il Cristianesimo è venuto meno alla sua missione!

Scaviamo in fondo alla coscienza della società moderna, ricerchiamo la radice del male: dove essa alligna? Senza dubbio anche qui non vogliamo tacere la lode dovuta alla saggezza di quei Governanti, che o sempre favorirono o vollero e seppero rimettere in onore, con vantaggio del popolo, i valori della civiltà cristiana nei felici rapporti fra Chiesa e Stato, nella tutela della santità del matrimonio, nella educazione religiosa della gioventù. Ma non possiamo chiudere gli occhi alla triste visione del progressivo scristianamento individuale e sociale, che dalla rilassatezza del costume è trapassato all'indebolimento e all'aperta negazione di verità e di forze, destinate a illuminare gl'intelletti sul bene e sul male, a corroborare la vita familiare, la vita privata, la vita statale e pubblica. Un'anemia religiosa, quasi contagio che si diffonda, ha così colpito molti popoli di Europa e del mondo e fatto nell'anime un tal vuoto morale, che nessuna rigovernatura religiosa o mitologia nazionale e internazionale varrebbe a colmarlo. Con parole e con azioni e con provvedimenti, da decenni e secoli, che mai di meglio o di peggio si seppe fare se non strappare dai cuori degli uomini, dalla puerizia alla vecchiezza, la fede in Dio, Creatore e Padre di tutti, rimuneratore del bene e vindice del male, snaturando l'educazione e l'istruzione, combattendo e opprimendo con ogni arte e mezzo, con la diffusione della parola e della stampa, con l'abuso della scienza e del potere, la religione e la Chiesa di Cristo?

Travolto lo spirito nel baratro morale con lo straniarsi da Dio e dalla pratica cristiana, altro non rimaneva se non che pensieri, propositi, avviamenti, stima delle cose, azione e lavoro degli uomini si rivolgessero e mirassero al mondo materiale, affannandosi e sudando per dilatarsi nello spazio, per crescere più che mai oltre ogni limite nella conquista delle ricchezze e della potenza, per gareggiare di velocità nel produrre più e meglio ogni cosa che l'avanzamento o il progresso materiale pareva richiedere. Di qui, nella politica, il prevalere di un impulso sfrenato verso l'espansione e il mero credito politico incurante della morale; nell'economia il dominare delle grandi e gigantesche imprese e associazioni; nella vita sociale il riversarsi e pigiarsi delle schiere di popolo in gravosa sovrabbondanza nelle grandi città e nei centri d'industria e di commercio, con quella instabilità che consegue e accompagna una moltitudine di uomini, i quali mutano casa e residenza, paese e mestiere, passioni e amicizie. 

Ne nacque allora che i rapporti reciproci della vita sociale presero un carattere puramente fisico e meccanico. Con dispregio di ogni ragionevole ritegno e riguardo l'impero della costrizione esterna, il nudo possesso del potere si sovrappose alle norme dell'ordine, reggitore della convivenza umana, le quali, emanate da Dio, stabiliscono quali relazioni naturali e soprannaturali intercorrano fra il diritto e l'amore verso gl'individui e la società. La maestà e la dignità della persona umana e delle particolari società venne mortificata, avvilita e soppressa dall'idea della forza che crea il diritto; la proprietà privata divenne per gli uni un potere diretto verso lo sfruttamento dell'opera altrui, negli altri generò gelosia, insofferenza e odio; e l'organizzazione, che ne seguiva, si convertì in forte arma di lotta per far prevalere interessi di parte. In alcuni Paesi, una concezione dello Stato atea o anticristiana con i suoi vasti tentacoli avvinse a sé talmente l'individuo da quasi spogliarlo d'indipendenza, non meno nella vita privata che nella pubblica.

Chi potrà oggi meravigliarsi se tale radicale opposizione ai principi della cristiana dottrina venne infine a tramutarsi in ardente cozzo di tensioni interne ed esterne, così da condurre a sterminio di vite umane e distruzione di beni, quale lo lediamo e a cui assistiamo con profonda pena? Funesta conseguenza e frutto delle condizioni sociali ora descritte, la guerra, lungi dall'arrestarne l'influsso e lo svolgimento, lo promuove, lo accelera e amplia, con tanto maggior rovina, quanto più essa dura, rendendo la catastrofe ancor più generale.

Dalla Nostra parola contro il materialismo dell'ultimo secolo e del tempo presente male argomenterebbe chi ne deducesse una condanna del progresso tecnico. No; Noi non condanniamo ciò che è dono di Dio, il quale, come ci fa sorgere il pane dalle zolle della terra, nelle viscere più profonde del suolo nei giorni della creazione del mondo nascose tesori di fuoco, di metalli, di pietre preziose da scavarsi dalla mano dell'uomo per i suoi bisogni, per le sue opere, per il suo progresso. La Chiesa, madre di tante Università d'Europa, che ancora esalta e aduna i più arditi maestri delle scienze, scrutatori della natura, non ignora però che di ogni bene e della stessa libertà del volere si può far un uso degno di lode e di premio ovvero di biasimo e di condanna. Così è avvenuto che lo spirito e la tendenza, con cui fu spesso usato il progresso tecnico, fanno sì che, all'ora che volge, la tecnica debba espiare il suo errore ed esser quasi punitrice di se stessa, creando strumenti di rovina, che distruggono oggi ciò che ieri essa ha edificato.

Di fronte alla vastità del disastro, originato dagli errori indicati, non si offre altro rimedio, se non il ritorno agli altari, a' pie' dei quali innumerevoli generazioni di credenti attingevano già la benedizione e l'energia morale per il compimento dei propri doveri; alla fede, che illuminava individui e società e insegnava i diritti e i doveri spettanti a ciascuno; alle sagge e incrollabili norme di un ordine sociale, le quali nel terreno nazionale, come in quello internazionale, ergono un'efficace barriera contro l'abuso della libertà, non altrimenti che contro l'abuso del potere. Ma il richiamo a queste benefiche sorgenti ha da risonare alto, persistente, universale, nell'ora in cui il vecchio ordinamento sarà per scomparire e cedere il passo e il posto a un nuovo.

La futura ricostruzione potrà presentare e dare preziosa facoltà di promuovere il bene, non scevra anche di pericoli di cadere in errori, e con gli errori favorire il male; ed esigerà serietà prudenti e matura riflessione, non solo per la gigantesca arduità dell'opera, ma ancora per le gravi conseguenze che, qualora fallisse, cagionerebbe nel campo materiale e spirituale; esigerà intelletti di larghe vedute e volontà di fermi propositi, uomini coraggiosi e operosi, ma, sopra tutto e avanti tutto, coscienze, le quali nei disegni, nelle deliberazioni e nelle azioni siano animate e mosse e sostenute da un vivo senso di responsabilità, e non rifuggano dall'inchinarsi davanti alle sante leggi di Dio; perché, se con la vigoria plasmatrice nell'ordine materiale non si accoppierà somma ponderatezza e sincero proposito nell'ordine morale, si verificherà senza dubbio la sentenza di S. Agostino: «Bene currunt, sed in via non currunt. Quanto plus currunt, plus errant, quia a via recedunt».(3)

Né sarebbe la prima volta che uomini, i quali stanno nell'aspettazione di cingersi del lauro di vittorie guerresche, sognassero di dare al mondo un nuovo ordinamento, additando nuove vie, a loro parere, conducenti al benessere, alla prosperità e al progresso. Ma ogni qualvolta cedettero alla tentazione d'imporre la loro costruzione contro il dettame della ragione, della moderazione, della giustizia e della nobile umanità, si trovarono caduti e stupiti a contemplare i ruderi di speranze deluse e di progetti abortiti. Onde la storia insegna che i trattati di pace, stipulati con spirito e condizioni contrastanti sia con i dettami morali sia con una genuina saggezza politica, mai non ebbero vita, se non grama e breve, mettendo così a nudo e testimoniando un errore di calcolo, umano senza dubbio, ma non per questo meno esiziale. 

Ora le rovine di questa guerra sono troppo ingenti, da non dovervisi aggiungere anche quelle di una pace frustrata e delusa; e perciò ad evitare tanta sciagura, conviene che con sincerità di volere e di energia, con proposito di generoso contributo, vi cooperino, non solo questo o quel partito, non solo questo o quel popolo, ma tutti i popoli, anzi l'intera umanità. È un'intrapresa universale di bene comune, che richiede la collaborazione della Cristianità, per gli aspetti religiosi e morali del nuovo edificio che si vuol costruire.

Facciamo quindi uso di un Nostro diritto o, meglio, adempiamo un Nostro dovere, se oggi, alla vigilia del Santo Natale, divina aurora di speranza e di pace per il mondo, con l'autorità del Nostro ministero apostolico e il caldo incitamento del Nostro cuore, richiamiamo l'attenzione e la meditazione dell'universo intero sui pericoli che insidiano e minacciano una pace, la quale sia acconcia base di un vero nuovo ordinamento e risponda all'aspettazione e ai voti dei popoli per un più tranquillo avvenire.

Tale nuovo ordinamento, che tutti i popoli anelano di veder attuato, dopo le prove e le rovine di questa guerra, ha da essere innalzato sulla rupe incrollabile e immutabile della legge morale, manifestata dal Creatore stesso per mezzo dell'ordine naturale e da Lui scolpita nei cuori degli uomini con caratteri incancellabili; legge morale, la cui osservanza deve venir inculcata e promossa dall'opinione pubblica di tutte le Nazioni e di tutti gli Stati con tale unanimità di voce e di forza, che nessuno possa osare di porla in dubbio o attenuarne il vincolo obbligante.

Quale faro splendente, essa deve coi raggi dei suoi principi dirigere il corso dell'operosità degli uomini e degli Stati, i quali avranno da seguirne le ammonitrici, salutari e proficue segnalazioni, se non vorranno condannare alla bufera e al naufragio ogni lavoro e sforzo per stabilire un nuovo ordinamento. Riassumendo pertanto e integrando quel che in altre occasioni fu da Noi esposto, insistiamo anche ora su alcuni presupposti essenziali di un ordine internazionale, che, assicurando a tutti i popoli una pace giusta e duratura, sia feconda di benessere e di prosperità.

1. Nel campo di un nuovo ordinamento fondato sui principi morali, non vi è posto per la lesione della libertà, dell'integrità e della sicurezza di altre Nazioni, qualunque sia la loro estensione territoriale o la loro capacità di difesa. Se è inevitabile che i grandi Stati, per le loro maggiori possibilità e la loro potenza, traccino il cammino per la costituzione di gruppi economici fra essi e le azioni più piccole e deboli; è nondimeno incontestabile - come per tutti, nell'ambito dell'interesse generale - il diritto di queste al rispetto della loro libertà nel campo politico, alla efficace custodia di quella neutralità nelle contese fra gli Stati, che loro spetta secondo il gius naturale e delle genti, alla tutela del loro sviluppo economico, giacchè soltanto in tal guisa potranno conseguire adeguatamente il bene comune, il benessere materiale e spirituale del proprio popolo.

2. Nel campo di un nuovo ordinamento fondato sui principi morali, non vi è posto per la oppressione aperta o subdola delle peculiarità culturali e linguistiche delle minoranze nazionali, per l'impedimento e la contrazione delle loro capacità economiche, per la limitazione o l'abolizione della loro naturale fecondità. Quanto più coscienziosamente la competente autorità dello Stato rispetta i diritti delle minoranze, tanto più sicuramente ed efficacemente può esigere dai loro membri il leale compimento dei doveri civili, comuni agli altri cittadini.

3. Nel campo di un nuovo ordinamento fondato sui principi morali, non vi è posto per i ristretti calcoli egoistici, tendenti ad accaparrarsi le fonti economiche e le materie di uso comune, in maniera che le Nazioni, meno favorite dalla natura, ne restino escluse. Al qual riguardo Ci è di somma consolazione il vedere affermarsi la necessità di una partecipazione di tutti ai beni della terra anche presso quelle Nazioni, che nell'attuazione di questo principio apparterrebbero alla categoria di coloro «che danno» e non di quelli «che ricevono». Ma è conforme a equità che una soluzione di tale questione, decisiva per l'economia del mondo, avvenga metodicamente e progressivamente con le necessarie garanzie, e tragga ammaestramento dalle mancanze e dalle omissioni del passato. Se nella futura pace non si venisse ad affrontare coraggiosamente questo punto, rimarrebbe nelle relazioni tra i popoli una profonda e vasta radice germogliante amari contrasti ed esasperate gelosie, che finirebbero col condurre a nuovi conflitti. Decorre però osservare come la soddisfacente soluzione di questo problema strettamente vada connessa con un altro cardine fondamentale di un nuovo ordinamento, del quale parliamo nel punto seguente.

4. Nel campo di un nuovo ordinamento fondato sui principi morali, non vi è posto - una volta eliminati i più pericolosi focolai di conflitti armati - per una guerra totale né per una sfrenata corsa agli armamenti. Non si deve permettere che la sciagura di una guerra mondiale con le sue rovine economiche e sociali e le sue aberrazioni e perturbazioni morali si rovesci per la terza volta sopra la umanità. La quale perché venga tutelata lungi da tale flagello, è necessario che con serietà e onestà si proceda a una limitazione progressiva e adeguata degli armamenti. Lo squilibrio tra un esagerato armamento degli Stati potenti e il deficiente armamento dei deboli crea un pericolo per la conservazione della tranquillità e della pace dei popoli, e consiglia di scendere a un ampio e proporzionato limite nella fabbricazione e nel possesso di armi offensive.

Conforme poi alla misura, in cui il disarmo venga attuato, sono da stabilirsi mezzi appropriati, onorevoli per tutti ed efficaci, per ridonare alla norma Pacta sunt servanda, «i patti devono essere osservati», la funzione vitale e morale, che le spetta nelle relazioni giuridiche fra gli Stati. Tale norma, che nel passato ha subìto crisi preoccupanti e innegabili infrazioni, ha trovato contro di sé una quasi insanabile sfiducia tra i vari popoli e i rispettivi reggitori. Perché la fiducia reciproca rinasca devono sorgere istituzioni, le quali, acquistandosi il generale rispetto, si dedichino al nobilissimo ufficio, sia di garantire il sincero adempimento dei trattati, sia di promuoverne, secondo i principi di diritto e di equità, opportune correzioni o revisioni.

Non Ci nascondiamo il cumulo di difficoltà da superarsi, e la quasi sovrumana forza di buona volontà richiesta a tutte le parti, perché convengano a dare felice soluzione alla doppia impresa qui tracciata. Ma questo lavoro comune è talmente essenziale per una pace duratura, che nulla deve rattenere gli uomini di Stato responsabili dall'intraprenderlo e cooperarvi con le forze di un buon volere, il quale, guardando al bene futuro, vinca i dolorosi ricordi di tentativi non riusciti nel passato, e non si lasci atterrire dalla conoscenza del gigantesco vigore, che si domanda per tale opera.

5. Nel campo di un nuovo ordinamento fondato sui principi morali, non vi è posto per la persecuzione della religione e della Chiesa. Da una fede viva in un Dio personale trascendente si sprigiona una schietta e resistente vigoria morale che informa tutto il corso della vita; perché la fede non è solo una virtù ma la porta divina per la quale entrano nel tempio dell'anima tutte le virtù, e si costituisce quel carattere forte e tenace che non vacilla nei cimenti della ragione e della giustizia. Ciò vale sempre; ma molto più ha da splendere quando così dall'uomo di Stato, come dall'ultimo dei cittadini si esige il massimo di coraggio e di energia morale per ricostruire una nuova Europa e un nuovo mondo sulle rovine, che il conflitto mondiale con la sua violenza, con l'odio e la scissione degli animi ha accumulate. Quanto alla questione sociale in particolare, che al finir della guerra si presenterà più acuta, i Nostri Predecessori e anche Noi stessi abbiamo segnato norme di soluzione; le quali però convien considerare che potranno seguirsi nella loro interezza e dare pieno frutto solo se uomini di Stato e popoli, datori di lavoro e operai, siano animati dalla fede in un Dio personale, legislatore e vindice, a cui devono rispondere delle loro azioni. Perché, mentre l'incredulità, che si accampa contro Dio, ordinatore dell'universo, è la più pericolosa nemica di un giusto ordine nuovo, ogni uomo, invece, credente in Dio ne è un potente fautore e paladino. Chi ha fede in Cristo, nella sua divinità, nella sua legge, nella sua opera di amore e di fratellanza fra gli uomini, porterà elementi particolarmente preziosi alla ricostruzione sociale; a maggior ragione, più ve ne porteranno gli uomini di Stato, se si dimostreranno pronti ad aprire largamente le porte e spianare il cammino alla Chiesa di Cristo, affinché, libera e senza intralci, mettendo le sue soprannaturali energie a servigio dell'intesa tra i popoli e della pace, possa cooperare col suo zelo e col suo amore all'immenso lavoro di risanare le ferite della guerra.

Ci riesce perciò inspiegabile come in alcune regioni disposizioni molteplici attraversino la via al messaggio della fede cristiana, mentre concedono ampio e libero passo a una propaganda che la combatte. Sottraggono la gioventù alla benefica influenza della famiglia cristiana e la estraniano dalla Chiesa; la educano in uno spirito avverso a Cristo, instillandovi concezioni, massime e pratiche anticristiane; rendono ardua e turbata l'opera della Chiesa nella cura delle anime e nelle azioni di beneficenza; disconoscono e rigettano il suo morale influsso sull'individuo e la società: determinazioni tutte che lungi dall'essere state mitigate o abolite nel corso della guerra, sono andate sotto non pochi riguardi inasprendosi. Che tutto questo, e altro ancora, possa essere continuato tra le sofferenze dell'ora presente è un triste segno dello spirito con cui i nemici della Chiesa impongono ai fedeli, in mezzo a tutti gli altri non lievi sacrifici, anche il peso angoscioso di un'ansia d'amarezza, gravante sulle coscienze.

Noi amiamo, Ce n'è testimonio Dio, con uguale affetto tutti i popoli senza alcuna eccezione; e per evitare anche solo l'apparenza di essere mossi da spirito di parte, Ci siamo imposti finora il massimo riserbo; ma le disposizioni contro la Chiesa e gli scopi, che esse perseguano, sono tali da sentirci obbligati in nome della verità a pronunziare una parola, anche perché non ne nasca, per disavventura, smarrimento tra i fedeli.

Noi guardiamo oggi, diletti figli, all'Uomo-Dio, nato in una grotta per risollevare l'uomo a quella grandezza, dond'era caduto per sua colpa, per ricollocarlo sul trono di libertà, di giustizia e d'onore, che i secoli degli dei falsi gli avevano negato. Il fondamento di quel trono sarà il Calvario; il suo ornamento non sarà l'oro o l'argento, ma il sangue di Cristo, sangue divino che da venti secoli scorre sul mondo e imporpora le gote della sua Sposa, la Chiesa, e, purificando, consacrando, santificando, glorificando i suoi figli, diventa candore di cielo.

O Roma cristiana, quel sangue è la tua vita: per quel sangue tu sei grande e illumini della tua grandezza anche i ruderi e le rovine della tua grandezza pagana, e purifichi e consacri i codici della sapienza giuridica dei pretori e dei Cesari. Tu sei madre di una giustizia più alta e più umana, che onora te, il tuo seggio e chi ti ascolta. Tu sei faro di civiltà, e la civile Europa e il mondo ti devono quanto di più sacro e di più santo, quanto di più saggio e di più onesto esalta i popoli e fa bella la loro storia. Tu sei madre di carità: i tuoi fasti, i tuoi monumenti, i tuoi ospizi, i tuoi monasteri e i tuoi conventi, i tuoi eroi e le tue eroine, i tuoi araldi e i tuoi missionari, le tue età e i tuoi secoli con le loro scuole e le loro università testimoniano i trionfi della tua carità, che tutto abbraccia, tutto soffre, tutto spera, tutto opera per farsi tutto a tutti, tutti confortare e sollevare, tutti sanare e chiamare alla libertà donata all'uomo da Cristo, e tranquillare tutti in quella pace, che affratella i popoli, e di tutti gli uomini, sotto qualunque cielo, qualunque lingua o costume li distingua, fa una sola famiglia, e del mondo una patria comune.

Da questa Roma, centro, rocca e maestra del Cristianesimo, città più per Cristo che per i Cesari eterna nel tempo, Noi, mossi dal desiderio ardente e vivissimo del bene dei singoli popoli e dell'intera umanità, a tutti rivolgiamo la Nostra voce, pregando e scongiurando che non tardi il giorno che in tutti i luoghi, dove oggi l'ostilità contro Dio e Cristo trascina gli uomini alla rovina temporale ed eterna, prevalgano maggiori conoscenze religiose e nuovi propositi; il giorno, in cui sulla culla del nuovo ordinamento dei popoli risplenda la stella di Betlemme, annunziatrice di un nuovo spirito che muova a cantare con gli angeli: Gloria in excelsis Deo, e a proclamare, come dono alfine largito dal cielo, a tutte le genti: Pax hominibus bonae voluntatis. Spuntata l'aurora di quel giorno, con qual gaudio Nazioni e Reggitori, sgombro l'animo dai timori di insidie e di riprese di conflitti, trasformeranno le spade, laceratrici d'umani petti, in aratri, solcanti, al sole della benedizione divina, il fecondo seno della terra, per strapparle un pane, bagnato sì di sudore, ma non più di sangue e di lacrime!

In tale attesa e con questa anelante preghiera sulle labbra, mandiamo il Nostro saluto e la benedizione Nostra a tutti i Nostri figli dell'universo intero. Scenda la Nostra benedizione più larga su quelli - sacerdoti, religiosi e laici - che soffrono pene e angustie per la loro fede: scenda anche su quelli che, pur non appartenendo al corpo visibile della Chiesa cattolica, sono a Noi vicini per la fede in Dio e in Gesù Cristo, e con Noi concordano sopra l'ordinamento e gli scopi fondamentali della pace; scenda con particolare palpito d'affezione su quanti gemono nella tristezza, nella dura ambascia dei travagli di quest'ora. Sia scudo a quanti militano sotto le armi; farmaco ai malati e ai feriti; conforto ai prigionieri, agli espulsi dalla terra natìa, ai lontani dal domestico focolare, ai deportati in terre straniere, ai milioni di miseri che lottano a ogni ora contro gli spaventosi morsi della fame. Sia balsamo a ogni dolore e sventura; sia sostegno e consolazione a tutti i miseri e bisognosi i quali aspettano una parola amica, che versi nei loro cuori forza, coraggio, dolcezza di compassione e di aiuto fraterno. Riposi infine la Nostra benedizione su quelle anime e quelle mani pietose, che con inesauribile generoso sacrificio Ci hanno dato di che potere, sopra le strettezze dei Nostri mezzi, asciugare le lacrime, lenire la povertà di molti, specialmente dei più poveri e derelitti tra le vittime della guerra, facendo in tal modo sperimentare come la bontà e benignità di Dio, la cui somma e ineffabile rivelazione è il Bambino del presepe che della sua povertà volle farci ricchi, mai non cessano, per volger di tempi e sciagure, di esser vive e operanti nella Chiesa.

A tutti impartiamo con profondo amore paterno dalla pienezza del Nostro cuore la Benedizione Apostolica.

The New York Times would report the Pope's plan as essentially the fitting well with the eight point plan laid out by Roosevelt and Churchill.

The German government was a dedicated opponent of Christianity, but it remained something it had to contend with. While it would be a topic for elsewhere, early German efforts to completely co-opt the Lutheran Church had failed and the Catholic Church remained too unified and outside of the influence of the government to take on.  Given that, the long term plan was to suppress Christianity where it could, and destroy it later.  At least within the SS, the long term plan was to create a new paganistic German national religion.

As Christmas remained a large feature of German culture notwithstanding, Joespeh Goebbels to to the air to deliver a Christmas Eve message to the German people.  It went:

As I speak on Christmas Eve over the radio to the German people, I am the spokesman for the homeland to all our soldiers who are far from home during this war Christmas of 1941. I know that countless people envy my ability to speak over the aether to millions of Germans in many lands and continents. How many men and women, fathers, sons and daughters, wish they could stand in my place and greet their sons, husbands, brothers, or fathers! How many soldiers and Germans abroad wish they could step to the microphone and speak to their mothers, fathers, children, or brothers and sisters.

I must today speak for them all. I must extend the greetings and deepest wishes from here to there and from there to here. I will say little of politics this evening. We all know what we Germans have to say about world conditions and the future. Everyone knows that we must withstand the storms of the age until victory is ours. That has become clear in recent years, and I do not need to say anything about it.

Instead, I want to talk of the thoughts and feelings that move all of us this Christmas Eve. I will speak for half an hour as one person to another. We will consider the difficulties of the century in which we stand, and look both backwards and forwards.

There are few presents under the Christmas tree this year. The effects of the war are evident there as well. We have sent our Christmas candles to the Eastern Front, where our soldiers need them more than we do. Rather than producing dolls, castles, lead soldiers, and toy guns, our factories have been producing things essential for the war effort. Our troops are the first priority.

But gifts are not the most important thing about Christmas anyway. Since we can no longer celebrate Christmas as generously and wastefully as in the past, perhaps we will remember even more its spiritual nature. Instead of giving outward gifts to our family, friends, and community, today we will express our love to one another and our faith in all that holds us together. We long for a golden bridge to extend to all those whom we love across the distant reaches, countries, oceans, and continents.

All eyes look to the homeland. Our soldiers and Germans abroad above all have learned how beautiful it is in the past year. That may be why they have fought so bravely and loyally for it. They wanted to protect it from the horrors of war. All that they left behind when they heeded duty’s call they hope to find upon their return just as it was when they left. The war has become a school that has increased the love all of us have for the homeland. Whatever the difficulties of today or tomorrow, the individual finds there the meaning of his devotion, his sacrifice, his bravery. In this third war Christmas, we celebrate more spartanly and more modestly than before, but we are protected and guarded against the threats of our enemies. We must thank those who defend us, our sons, fathers, and brothers, who have learned only in distant lands among foreign peoples how dear their fatherland and their people are.

The great task demands the same sacrifice from us! The hardest demands are on our soldiers. They are spending their third Christmas away. The homeland is the center about which all their thoughts and wishes circle. Their greatest pride must be that they are defending the homeland and protecting it from the fury of war. They have learned the terrors of modern warfare, with which they are daily surrounded. It is surely worth their great and brave exertions to see to it that their village and their Fatherland do not meet the same fate as countless villages and cities in enemy countries. Think of what would have become of their parents, their wives and their children if they had not defended the homeland! Each German soldier should remember that. The homeland can only be as they imagine, and as they hope to find it upon their return, if millions of its fathers and sons defend it.

The same is true for all Germans abroad. They often live in an entirely foreign, sometimes hostile, world. It should not surprise us that we are not always loved as we defend our right to life. Envy and distrust, hatred and persecution often surround our fellow countrymen. We read about it occasionally in the newspapers, but they experience it every day. In a tiny minority, they are the targets of propaganda hostile to Germany. They are mocked, harassed, see their houses searched, and are put in prison. Why else would they bear it all with pride and dignity? They love the homeland even more deeply than we, and give their full devotion. For us, speaking German is a matter of course, but they are spat on for it. We read German newspapers every day, they get them months later and pass them from hand to hand as a message from the beloved homeland. We listen to the German radio every night, they tinker for hours with their sets to get a few words from the homeland. We see our German films and newsreels whenever we care to, but they have to gather secretly to watch a copy of a film like “The Western Campaign,” which we have practically forgotten about.

They, too, would rather be at home than abroad, but they stay at their post to serve the fatherland. They are not worn down by hatred and suspicion. They are the pioneers of Germandom in the world. They are not out to conquer the world, as our enemies say, but to defend their ethnicity. This Christmas Eve we think of them as well as our soldiers, because we know that Christmas is a deeply German holiday that binds us all together. Perhaps they think today that although their tasks are difficult, they still have it easier than Germans abroad had it during the World War, during which they often learned nothing from the homeland other than what our enemies wanted them to hear. Today, they are at least connected to us by radio. They receive our news and speeches, hear German music and German songs, learn of the heroic battles of our troops. In brief, their imaginations have a bridge that each day carries them back home.

And they can be at ease. They will not experience the shame of 1918, when the German people’s collapse struck them like a numbing blow. Today the homeland knows what is expected of it, and is giving its full efforts. They have not deserted us and we will not desert them. The homeland would not be worth the sacrifices that millions are making for it were it not ever striving to be worthy of them. Certainly it is not easy. It must give up many familiar habits and accept a thousand large and small privations. Those who live in areas being attacked from the air have much to bear, and deserve the highest praise and warmest recognition.

The whole nation is worthy of the great era in which we live. Still, all the burdens of the homeland are but a fraction of the sacrifices, burdens and privations, the actions and the dangers, that our soldiers endure, or of the persecutions that Germans abroad constantly endure. We at home, God knows, have no reason to complain. We have to accept the war’s demands. The war has only made us harder. We will not win by weakness. We must be brave and ever ready. Victory will not be given to us; we have to earn it. Everyone must do his part. Even on this Christmas Eve that must be the focus of our thoughts. The time will come when the war’s demands are past. At a later Christmas, we will look back on this Christmas Eve. In the fond light of memory, none of us will wish we had missed it. All the dead of the war will stand as shining heroes before our eyes, those who gave their lives to win a better life for their nation.

There is probably no one among us who in this hour does not look up to heaven. The war has taught us not only be to strong against our enemies, but also to accept our fate and the will of its godly ruler. We thank the Almighty for the proud victories that he again has given us. We will continue fighting until total victory is ours.

Our time together has come to an end. Our soldiers sit together and talk of home. At home we think only of them, and speak in spirit with them. Germans abroad think once more of the great Reich of the Germans. Then we will all return to the troubles and difficulties, burdens, sacrifices, and privations of everyday life. We may never forget that we all have a responsibility, each in his own way, to work and fight for a rapid victory.

We keep our eye fixed on it. We do not doubt it for a minute. In thinking of the Führer, who on this evening, too, is everywhere where Germans gather, we are reminded of the Fatherland. It will be larger, more beautiful, more prosperous after the war is over. It will be a proud and free homeland for us all. We want to thank the Führer for that. He can depend on his people at the front, at home, and in the wide world. He leads us, and we follow him. Without a shadow of doubt, we follow him bearing the flag and the Reich. The flag and the Reich shall be pure and unstained when the great hour of victory comes.

I greet you from the depths of my heart. Earlier we sang of peace on earth in our songs. Now the time has come to fight for it. Peace through victory! That is our slogan.

May my words bring a scent of the homeland far to the East and the West, to the front against Bolshevism, to North Africa’s deserts, to the seas where our submarines and warships sail, to the most distant nations and continents and the farthest corner of the earth where a German heart still beats, but also to the homeland itself, to the cities and the countryside, to every hut and every home.

 In the Northern Hemisphere, and involving the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and France, Free French forces landed on Saint Pierre and Miquelon, small French islands off of southwestern Newfoundland.  They were dispatched there by a Free French flotilla consisting of three corvettes and a submarine.

The administration of the islands had declared loyalty to Vichy but there was no opposition to the Free French, who took possession of the islands in twenty minutes in the very early morning.  The landing had been over the objection of Canada and the United States.  Newfoundland, which was not yet part of Canada, had wanted the Free French takeover, however.  The US position was in part out of fear that radio installations on the island would be destroyed in a takeover.

Free French Submarine Surcouf which lead the invading flotilla.

A vote on the islands' allegiance was held on December 25, Christmas Day, with 98% of the men, the only ones allowed to vote, voting for allegiance to the Free French effort.  The United States objected to the takeover as a violation of the Monroe Doctrine and compared the act to German and Japanese aggression.

On Christmas Eve, or at least the day before Christmas, 1941, the Japanese gave up shelling Johnston and Palmyra by submarine.  The result of the odd naval duel was inconclusive, but it was significant in that at this point the Japanese were meeting with some difficulties.  They had to expend considerably more effort to take Wake than they had anticipated, and now they had failed to destroy airbases at Johnston and Palmyra.


Most of the attacks had been at night, when the aircraft stationed on both islands were hampered in potential operations and the counterfire was by Marine Corps shore battery.

Both islands are absolutely tiny, with Palmyra being larger and forested.  Johnston Atoll is barren and pretty much uninhabitable but for support.  Palmyra has no evidence of human contact at all before being discovered in 1802.  Johnston Atoll was known to Hawaiians, but because of its exceedingly barren nature, they did not attempt to inhabit it.

Both islands were reinforced following this engagement, and they'd remain occupied by the Navy and Marine Corps throughout World War Two.  In 1941 and early 1942, they were the critical front line for the Hawaiian Islands, some 700 miles distant.  Palmyra would become an important way station for the US in the war in the Pacific.

The seat of the Filipino government was moved to Corregador.


The Japanese Navy torpedoed the SS Absaroka off of California, but she'd survive the war.  She was beached at Fort MacArthur due to the attack, which was named for Gen. Douglas MacArthur's father, a hero of the Civil War.

It was a day for submarines.  The Dutch submarine K XVI sank the Japanese destroyer Sagiri off of Borneo.  The German U-568 sank the British corvette Salvia off of Alexandria.  The British submarine H31 disappeared in the Bay of Biscay, probably the victim of a mine.

Japanese machine gunner in the Battle of Changsha.

On the same day the Japanese launched an offensive in China, starting the Battle of Changsha.  This was the first Japanese offensive in China following Pearl Harbor and the first during which the Japan and China were officially at war.  Going well at first, the Japanese would ultimately meet fierce resistance from the under sung Chinese Nationalist Army resulting in a Japanese defeat, the first such defeat following December 7, 1941.

In the US, the California Coastal Patrol of the United States Army Air Corps was engaged in training, including with this B-18, a little considered US aircraft of the period.


B-18s were envisioned as significant American two engined bombers, but they never really panned out.  Many were destroyed on the ground by the Japanese in the Philippines and the surviving examples in the US continued on in the anti-submarine role until mid-war, when B-24s replaced them.  Some B-18s were converted to cargo planes at that time.

Haiti declared war on Bulgari, Hungary and Romania.

Closer to home:

I can probably accurately state part of what my parents did on this day in 1941.  It would have obviously been a day off for a Christmas break from school for both of them.

They may have gone to Midnight Mass, although I don't know that.  My father spoke of having attended Midnight Masses more than my mother, but always in the context of being an altar server.  If he was not serving, chances are that they would have gone to an early morning Mass.  

In any event, both of them likely listened to the radio addresses given by Roosevelt and Churchill.  They would have been big events, given the massive uncertainty of the times, the ongoing conference in Washington, D.C., and the recent entry of the United States into the war.