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Died on 07 February 1878 Pius
IX "Pio Nono", Born
on 13 May 1792 Giovanni Ferretti,
Pope whose pontificate (1846–1878) was the longest in history and
was marked by a transition from liberalism to conservatism. Notable
events of his reign included the declaration of the dogma of the Immaculate
Conception (1854) and the sessions of the First Vatican Council (1869–1870),
during which the doctrine of papal infallibility was authoritatively
defined. He was beatified by Pope John Paul II.[18 May 1920~] on 03
September 2000; his feast day being on the anniversaries of his death.
Pius IX was the fourth son of Girolamo
Mastai-Ferretti, gonfalonier of Senigallia, and the countess Caterina
Solazzi. He first came into prominence as archbishop of Spoleto from
1827 to 1832, a time of revolutionary disturbance. He was made bishop
of the important diocese of Imola in 1832, but it was not until 1840
that he received the hat, as cardinal priest of Saints Piero e Marcellino.
He was not, in 1846, the most prominent liberal candidate likely to
succeed Gregory XVI [18 Sep 1765 – 01 Jun 1846]; but it took
the conclave only two days to determine his election and so prevent
that of the conservative Luigi Lambruschini. He took the name of Pius
IX in deference to the memory of Pius IX VII, who had been his friend
and who had, like him, been bishop of Imola. The choice was in some
sense prophetic, for “Pio Nono,” as his predecessor had
done, began his career as a supporter of liberal ideas only to learn
from bitter experience that liberals often tended to be anticlerical.
In 1846, however, all this lay in the future and Europe was agog at
the unusual spectacle of a liberal pope.
The new pope was confronted by a difficult situation. All Europe,
save perhaps Metternich of Austria, considered the Papal States in
urgent need of reform. A memorandum of 1831 by the French, Austrian,
Russian, and Prussian ambassadors in Rome had suggested that councils
should be elected to assist in local government, that a central body,
composed partly of elected representatives, control finance, and that
the dominant position held by the clergy in the administration and
in the judicial system be terminated. Liberal opinion clung to these
measures as absolutely essential throughout the pontificate of Gregory
XVI. In addition, the papacy was constantly under attack by Italian
nationalists as one of the instruments through which Austria maintained
its domination over the peninsula.
The year of revolutions began in Sicily; soon all Europe was ablaze
and Pius IX was faced with demands, both liberal and nationalist,
much beyond what he had been prepared to grant (see Revolutions of
1848). On 14 March 1848 he was compelled to grant a constitution establishing
a two-chamber parliament with full legislative and fiscal powers subject
only to the pope's personal veto. On 23 March 1848 Charles Albert
[02 Oct 1798 – 28 Jul 1849] of Sardinia declared war on Austria.
For a time Pius IX continued to endeavor to steer a middle course,
claiming in his address to the cardinals of 29 April 1848 that he
was a disinterested spectator of the revolutionary activities sweeping
Italy and that his program of reform was merely the fulfillment of
the program long pressed upon the papacy by the powers. In the atmosphere
of the time such sentiments were judged as displaying absolute hostility
to the national cause, and the papacy was never again able to appear
in Italy as anything other than a bulwark of reaction.
To prevent revolution from breaking out in Rome itself, Pius IX consented
to the appointment of popular ministries, but none of the appointees
was able to control the situation. A steadily deteriorating situation
culminated in the assassination of one of them on 15 November 1848.
A radical ministry was appointed; when the Swiss guards were disbanded
the pope was a virtual prisoner. On 24 and 25 November 1848, with
the aid of the French and Bavarian ambassadors, he fled to Gaeta in
the kingdom of Naples. In his absence, elections were held for a constituent
assembly; this, on 09 February 1849, declared the temporal power at
an end and a democratic republic to be established. The papacy thereupon
issued a formal appeal to the rulers of France, Austria, Spain, and
Naples for assistance. Although it was generally considered that the
pope's restoration could take place only with some sort of undertaking
to maintain constitutional government in the Papal States, and although
Louis-Napoléon [20 Apr 1808 – 09 Jan 1873], the newly
elected president of France, was in favor of such a policy, Pius IX
held out against any concessions and asserted his determination to
exercise his temporal power without any restrictions whatsoever. The
upshot of a period of military and diplomatic maneuvers on the part
of France and Austria was the unconditional restoration of papal rule,
and Pius IX returned to his capital on 12 April 1850. It
has often been asserted that Pius IX returned to Rome a changed man,
that the former liberal had become a narrow reactionary. That his
policy had changed there is no doubt, but his fundamental attitude
remained the same. The interests of the church had always been his
first concern. He had been prepared to countenance both nationalism
and liberalism while they left the church intact, but experience had
taught him that both led to revolution, which he had never been prepared
to countenance. Furthermore, political concessions on his part had
led to attacks on his spiritual power, and he considered that it could
be protected only by his continued exercise of a temporal authority.
Once these two aspects of his dominion had become indissolubly linked,
it is easy to see why Pius IX considered himself obliged to oppose
any alteration of his position as a temporal ruler.
In 1846 Pius IX had considered that a new departure was necessary
to meet the legitimate demands for reform within the Papal States
and perhaps also those for a change in the Italian system of states.
Most of the administrative reforms carried out immediately after Pius
IX's accession remained, and the papal territories benefited from
the general increase in European prosperity after 1850. But constitutional
government was never restored; the amnesty granted on the pope's return
was so riddled with exceptions as to be worthless; and to all expressions
of national sentiment the papacy was utterly hostile. It was not that
papal government was tyrannical but that it formed an absolute barrier
in the way of Italian unification upon which politically minded Italians
were set. On 20 September 1870,
Italian troops occupied Rome, and in October a plebiscite was held
in which an overwhelming majority of the votes cast were for the incorporation
of Rome in the kingdom of Italy. Pius IX remained for the rest of
his days a prisoner, as he regarded himself, in the Vatican. He refused
any intercourse with the Italian government, so that their relations
rested upon a law passed by the Italian parliament in November. The
sovereignty of the pope was declared to be untouched by the loss of
his dominion in compensation for which he was to receive an annual
sum of money. He was to be entitled to conduct his own diplomatic
relations with other powers and to have exclusive authority within
the Vatican itself and a small district around it. In the rest of
Italy, church and state were to be separated. So, though the papacy
did not formally recognize the fact until the concordat of 1929, the
Roman question had been settled.
Important as the events just described were for the papacy, the doctrinal
developments of Pius IX's pontificate, which spring directly out of
these political disasters, constitute its most significant contribution.
Ultramontanism began with Joseph de Maistre [01 Apr 1753 – 26
Feb 1821], as a reaction against Gallicanism and against Josephinism,
seeking to free the church from the chains of secular control by binding
it more closely with the papacy. Félicité Lamennais
[19 Jun 1782 – 27 Feb 1854] developed it by suggesting that
the church would benefit from a general increase in political freedom.
Gregory XVI condemned Lamennais's teaching because he saw that freedom
might mean freedom to deny religion altogether. Pius IX decided in
1846 to experiment with liberalism but later became convinced that
Gregory XVI had rightly suspected it. Nevertheless, if Italy taught
Pius IX one lesson, developments in France, where the church prospered
more under the liberal regime of Louis-Philippe than it had under
the clerical Charles X, suggested quite the opposite conclusions to
the liberal Catholics there, whose spokesman was Charles de Montalembert
[15 Apr 1810 – 13 Mar 1870]. On the other hand, the coming of
the Second Empire stimulated the party led by Louis Veuillot [11 Oct
1813 – 07 Mar 1883], whose Ultramontanism was of the older sort,
completely divorced from liberalism and seeking freedom for the church
in an authoritarian state that would guard it against revolution.
For a period after 1850, Pius IX's
policy took little heed of either brand of Ultramontanism. Cardinal
Giacomo Antonelli [02 Apr 1806 – 06 Nov 1876], the papal secretary
of state, followed the paths of Ercole Consalvi [08 Jun 1757 –
24 Jan 1824], secretary of state of Pius IX VII, in seeking to procure
more favorable concordats with Catholic rulers. Such agreements might
be politically valuable but were no defense against intellectual anticlericalism,
and Pius IX became increasingly convinced that the real danger to
the church lay in the modern secular ideas that the liberal Catholics
were endeavoring to incorporate into its doctrines. The events of
1860 finally convinced him that the notion of a “free church
in a free state” was a snare. The encyclical Jamdudum Cernimus
(1861) denounced not only Piedmontese aggression but all modern political
doctrines. The Risorgimento not only convinced Pius IX that liberalism
in the church must be destroyed but also placed the liberal Catholics
in the difficult position of appearing to support those who had caused
him so much distress. The alternative to Montalembert's doctrine was
no longer an unconditional attachment to the principles of the ancien
régime but a new kind of Ultramontanism, asserting the need
for concentrating church authority in the pope's hands. The ground
was being prepared for the First Vatican Council and the doctrine
of papal infallibility. But first
the strong liberal party in the Catholic church had to be defeated.
In 1863 Montalembert was invited to address a large Catholic congress
at Malines, and he took the opportunity to defend the concept of a
free church in a free state and to condemn intolerance in principle.
Pius IX was content in reply to point out that on these two points
he was running counter to authoritative pronouncements of Pius IX
VI and Gregory XVI. This was sufficient to deter Montalembert from
accepting a second invitation to Malines in 1864, but his supporter
Félix-Antoine-Philibert Dupanloup [03 Jan 1802 – 11 Oct
1878] proved an able substitute. Meanwhile, at a congress at Munich
in 1863, Johann Joseph Ignaz von Döllinger [28 Feb 1799 –
10 Jan 1890] had pleaded for the right of a scholar to pursue independent
inquiry. It was clear to everyone that the church stood in need of
authoritative pronouncements about its relations with the state and
with modern society, and discussion began about the possibility of
calling an ecumenical council for this purpose. But once again the
Roman question intervened decisively in the struggle.
On 15 September 1864, the French and Italian governments came to an
agreement whereby the French garrison was to be withdrawn from Rome
within two years. In fact, it was not finally withdrawn until the
outbreak of the Franco-German War (19 Jul 1870 - 10 May 1871), but
the conclusion of the September convention was sufficient to make
Pius IX decide to take immediate action against liberalism. On 08
December 1864, he issued the encyclical Quanta Cura with,
attached to it, the famous Syllabus listing 80 of the “principal
errors of our times.” As the errors listed had already been
condemned in allocutions, encyclicals, and other apostolic letters,
the Syllabus said nothing new and so could not be contested. Its importance
lay in the fact that it published to the world what had previously
been preached in the main only to the bishops, and that it made general
what had been previously specific denunciations concerned with particular
events. Thus perhaps the most famous article, the 80th, stigmatizing
as an error the view that “the Roman Pontiff can and should
reconcile himself to and agree with progress, liberalism, and modern
civilization,” sought its authority in the pope's refusal, in
Jamdudum Cernimus, to have any dealings with the new Italian kingdom.
On both scores, the Syllabus undermined the liberal Catholics' position,
for it destroyed their following among intellectuals and placed their
program out of court. Though Dupanloup
tried to explain away the Syllabus by insisting upon its context and
by stressing its purely negative aspect, the Syllabus nevertheless
dealt a mortal blow at liberal Catholicism, which ceased after 1864
to be the main issue taxing Catholic controversialists. While some
of Louis Veuillot's followers hoped that at the forthcoming council
a positive statement of the orthodox doctrine of the position of the
church in society would replace the negative denunciations of the
Syllabus, the majority looked upon that battle as won and so turned
to the question of defining the pope's infallibility, the keystone
of the neo-Ultramontane program of centralizing the authority of the
church in Rome so as to escape from the control of the secular state.
In the doctrine of papal infallibility
itself there was nothing new. It had been employed to define, on 08
December 1854, the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, which asserted
that the freeing of the Virgin Mary from all taint of original sin
had occurred at the moment of her conception. The pope had previously
made extensive inquiries among the bishops and other divines and there
was little opposition to such an exercise of his undoubted prerogative.
When, however, at a gathering of bishops and other dignitaries of
the church in Rome in 1862 and again at another in 1867 it had been
suggested that the doctrine of infallibility should be authoritatively
defined, Dupanloup had led a successful opposition to the project.
It was objected that such a definition was inopportune, tending to
widen the breach between the church and modern society, and that it
would present a one-sided view of the source of authority in the church;
for while the pope possessed powers issuing directly from God, so
too did the bishops, for instance, whose ordinary jurisdiction arose,
not out of their nomination or institution but equally from divine
origin; so that the pope's powers ought not to be defined without
reference to other aspects of the nature of the church. The criticism
that must attach to Pius IX is that he allowed the council to put
aside discussion on the wider issue, which was its original program,
in favor of the narrower definition. This was, of course, precisely
what the Ultramontane party desired. The Ultramontanes, indeed, undoubtedly
possessed the backing of by far the greater part of the church, partly
because of the reaction engendered by the political misfortunes of
the last decade, partly because of the immense prestige enjoyed by
Pius IX as a result of his long and tragic pontificate, but to a larger
extent because of the contemporary movement away from intellectualism
and in favor of devotional religion.
The First Vatican Council opened on 08 December 1869. The opposition,
consisting of the German, French, and U.S. bishops, was strong enough
to prevent a definition of the doctrines and nature of the church
on the lines suggested by the Syllabus; but the Ultramontane party
brought forward the question of infallibility, upon which their position
was much stronger. Pius IX intervened decisively to alter the procedure
of the council on 20 February 1870, and again on 29 April 1870. The
outcome was to postpone all deliberation except that upon infallibility.
The decisive vote came on 13 July 1870 when 451 voted for it, 88 against
it, and 62 in favor of some amendment. Thereupon the minority left
Rome and the final definition was carried on 18 July 1870 by 533 votes
to 2. Infallibility was confined to those occasions upon which the
pope made pronouncements ex cathedra.
Pius IX reigned for another eight years, during which he became further
estranged from the Italian government and witnessed a general outbreak
of anticlericalism in western Europe. In Germany this culminated in
Bismarck's Kulturkampf, which Pius IX condemned in the encyclical
Quod Nunquam of 05 February 1875, leaving the solution of
the problem to his successor. Pius IX died three years later, having
seen in his long pontificate the creation of the modern papacy.
Bismarck
vs. Pius IX
The exact responsibility of Pius
IX for the events of his pontificate is still a matter for controversy.
The result is clearer. Church and state were finally separated, authority
in the church was centralized in Rome, and the church was ranged in
opposition to the dominant political forces.
Perhaps the most damaging criticism of Pius IX is that he assumed
almost the sole direction of events while never appreciating their
significance. The great events of his pontificate occurred despite
him rather than because of him. Thus he condemned in the Syllabus
that very separation of church and state which it was the work of
the First Vatican Council, to which for the first time the secular
Catholic rulers were not invited, to secure. At one time or another
Pius IX was served by the leaders of all the important movements of
his century, by liberal cardinals, by ecclesiastical statesmen, and
by the ascetic Henry Edward Manning [15 Jul 1808 – 14 Jan 1892],
a convert from Protestantism. Yet it is unfair to say that he changed
his political principles; rather he never possessed any, save in his
personal religious life, that were not rather naive, and so he was
always open to be guided by experience. In view, however, of the benefit
that has accrued to the church from the loss of the temporal power,
it should at least be asked whether it was not Pius IX's determination
to maintain it at all costs that contributed most to its loss.
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