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About this book
James Gibbons was a popular, inclusive figure in the American Catholic Church, rising through the ranks as a bishop, archbishop, and cardinal over the course of his service. In the abidingly popular volume The Faith of Our Fathers, Gibbons sets forth the chief tenets, beliefs, doctrines, and practices of Catholicism in a clear and straightforward manner.
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Information
Chapter I - The Blessed Trinity, the Incarnation, Etc.
*
The Catholic Church teaches that there is but one God, who is infinite in
knowledge, in power, in goodness, and in every other perfection; who
created all things by His omnipotence, and governs them by His Providence.
In this one God there are three distinct Persons,âthe Father, the Son, and
the Holy Ghost, who are perfectly equal to each other.
We believe that Jesus Christ, the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, is
perfect God and perfect Man. He is God, for He "is over all things, God
blessed forever."[4] "He is God of the substance of the Father, begotten
before time; and He is Man of the substance of His Mother, born in
time."[5] Out of love for us, and in order to rescue us from the miseries
entailed upon us by the disobedience of our first parents, the Divine Word
descended from heaven, and became Man in the womb of the Virgin Mary, by
the operation of the Holy Ghost. He was born on Christmas day, in a stable
at Bethlehem.
After having led a life of obscurity for about thirty years, chiefly at
Nazareth, He commenced His public career. He associated with Him a number
of men who are named Apostles, whom He instructed in the doctrines of the
religion which He established.
For three years He went about doing good, giving sight to the blind,
hearing to the deaf, healing all kinds of diseases, raising the dead to
life, and preaching throughout Judea the new Gospel of peace.[6]
On Good Friday He was crucified on Mount Calvary, and thus purchased for
us redemption by His death. Hence Jesus exclusively bears the titles of
Savior and Redeemer, because "there is no other name under heaven
given to men whereby we must be saved."[7] "He was wounded for our
iniquities; He was bruised for our sins, ... and by His bruises we are
healed."[8]
We are commanded by Jesus, suffering and dying for us, to imitate Him by
the crucifixion of our flesh, and by acts of daily mortification. "If
anyone," He says, "will come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up
his cross daily and follow Me."[9]
Hence we abstain from the use of flesh meat on Fridayâthe day consecrated
to our Savior's sufferingsânot because the eating of flesh meat is sinful
in itself, but as an act of salutary mortification. Loving children would
be prompted by filial tenderness to commemorate the anniversary of their
father's death rather by prayer and fasting than by feasting. Even so we
abstain on Fridays from flesh meat that we may in a small measure testify
our practical sympathy for our dear Lord by the mortification of our body,
endeavoring, like St. Paul, "to bear about in our body the mortification
of Jesus, that the life also of Jesus may be made manifest in our
bodies."[10]
The Cross is held in the highest reverence by Catholics, because it was
the instrument of our Savior's crucifixion. It surmounts our churches and
adorns our sanctuaries. We venerate it as the emblem of our salvation.
"Far be it from me," says the Apostle, "to glory save in the cross of our
Lord Jesus Christ."[11] We do not, of course, attach any intrinsic virtue
to the Cross; this would be sinful and idolatrous. Our veneration is
referred to Him who died upon it.
It is also a very ancient and pious practice for the faithful to make on
their person the sign of the Cross, saying at the same time: "In the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." Tertullian, who
lived in the second century of the Christian era, says: "In all our
actions, when we come in or go out, when we dress, when we wash, at our
meals, before retiring to sleep, ... we form on our foreheads the sign of
the cross. These practices are not commanded by a formal law of Scripture;
but tradition teaches them, custom confirms them, faith observes
them."[12] By the sign of the cross we make a profession of our faith in
the Trinity and the Incarnation, and perform a most salutary act of
religion.
We believe that on Easter Sunday Jesus Christ manifested His divine power
by raising Himself to life, and that having spent forty days on earth,
after His resurrection, instructing His disciples, He ascended to heaven
from the Mount of Olives.
On the Feast of Pentecost, or Whitsunday, ten days after His Ascension,
our Savior sent, as He had promised, His Holy Spirit to His disciples,
while they were assembled together in prayer. The Holy Ghost purified
their hearts from sin, and imparted to them a full knowledge of those
doctrines of salvation which they were instructed to preach. On the same
Feast of Pentecost the Apostles commenced their sublime mission, from
which day, accordingly, we date the active life of the Catholic Church.
Our Redeemer gave the most ample authority to the Apostles to teach in His
name; commanding them to "preach the Gospel to every creature,"[13] and
directing all, under the most severe penalties, to hear and obey them: "He
that heareth you, heareth Me; and he that despiseth you, despiseth Me. And
He that despiseth Me, despiseth Him that sent Me."[14]
And lest we should be mistaken in distinguishing between the true Church
and false sects, which our Lord predicted would arise, He was pleased to
stamp upon His Church certain shining marks, by which every sincere
inquirer could easily recognize her as His only Spouse. The principal
marks or characteristics of the true Church are, her Unity, Sanctity,
Catholicity, and Apostolicity,[15] to which may be added the Infallibility
of her teaching and the Perpetuity of her existence.
I shall treat successively of these marks.
Chapter II - The Unity of the Church
*
By unity is meant that the members of the true Church must be united in the belief of the same doctrines of revelation, and in the acknowledgment of the authority of the same pastors. Heresy and schism are opposed to Christian unity. By heresy, a man rejects one or more articles of the Christian faith. By schism, he spurns the authority of his spiritual superiors. That our Savior requires this unity of faith and government in His members is evident from various passages of Holy Writ. In His admirable prayer immediately before His passion He says: "I pray for them also who through their word shall believe in Me; that they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in Me and I in Thee, that they also may be one in Us; that the world may believe that Thou hast sent Me,"[16] because the unity of the Church is the most luminous evidence of the Divine mission of Christ. Jesus prayed that His followers may be united in the bond of a common faith, as He and His Father are united in essence, and certainly the prayer of Jesus is always heard.
St. Paul ranks schism and heresy with the crimes of murder and idolatry, and he declares that the authors of sects shall not possess the Kingdom of God.[17] He also addresses a letter to the Ephesians from his prison in Rome, and if the words of the Apostle should always command our homage, with how much reverence are they to be received when he writes in chains from the Imperial City! In this Epistle he insists upon unity of faith in the following emphatic language: "Be careful to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace; one body and one Spirit, as you are called in one hope of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in us all."[18] As you all, he says, worship one God, and not many gods; as you acknowledge the same Divine Mediator of redemption, and not many mediators; as you are sanctified by the same Divine Spirit, and not by many spirits; as you all hope for the same heaven, and not different heavens, so must you all profess the same faith.
Unity of government is not less essential to the Church of Christ than unity of doctrine. Our Divine Saviour never speaks of His Churches, but of His Church. He does not say: "Upon this rock I will build my Churches," but "upon this rock I will build My Church,"[19] from which words we must conclude that it never was His intention to establish or to sanction various conflicting denominations, but one corporate body, with all the members united under one visible Head; for as the Church is a visible body, it must have a visible head.
The Church is called a kingdom: "He shall reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of His kingdom there shall be no end."[20] Now in every well-regulated kingdom there is but one king, one form of government, one uniform body of laws, which all are obliged to observe. In like manner, in Christ's spiritual kingdom, there must be one Chief to whom all owe spiritual allegiance; one form of ecclesiastical government; one uniform body of laws which all Christians are bound to observe; for, "every kingdom divided against itself shall be made desolate."[21]
Our Savior calls His Church a sheepfold. "And there shall be made one fold and one shepherd."[22] What more beautiful or fitting illustration of unity can we have than that which is suggested by a sheepfold? All the sheep of a flock cling together. If they are momentarily separated, they are impatient till reunited. They follow in the same path. They feed on the same pastures. They obey the same shepherd, and fly from the voice of strangers. So did our Lord intend that all the sheep of His fold should be nourished by the same sacraments and the same bread of life; that they should follow the same rule of faith as their guide to heaven; that they should listen to the voice of one Chief Pastor, and that they should carefully shun false teachers.
His Church is compared to a human body. "As in one body we have many members, but all the members have not the same office; so we, being many, are one body in Christ, and every one members one of the other."[23] In one body there are many members, all inseparably connected with the head. The head commands and the foot instantly moves, the hand is raised and the lips open. Even so our Lord ordained that His Church, composed of many members, should be all united to one supreme visible Head, whom they are bound to obey.
The Church is compared to a vine. "I am the Vine, ye the branches; he that abideth in Me and I in him, the same beareth much fruit, for without Me ye can do nothing."[24] All the branches of a vine, though spreading far and wide, are necessarily connected with the main stem, and from its sap they are nourished. In like manner, our Saviour will have all the saplings of His Vineyard connected with the main stem, and all draw their nourishment from the parent stock.
The Church, in fine, is called in Scripture by the beautiful title of bride or spouse of Christ,[25] and the Christian law admits only of one wife.
In fact, our common sense alone, apart from revelation, is sufficient to convince us that God could not be the author of various opposing systems of religion. God is essentially one. He is Truth itself. How could the God of truth affirm, for instance, to one body of Christians that there are three persons in God, and to another there is only one person in God? How could He say to one individual that Jesus Christ is God, and to another that He is only man? How can He tell me that the punishments of the wicked are eternal, and tell another that they are not eternal? One of these contradictory statements must be false. "God is not the God of dissension, but of peace."[26]
I see perfect harmony in the laws which govern the physical world that we inhabit. I see a marvelous unity in our planetary system. Each planet moves in its own sphere, and all are controlled by the central Sun.
Why should there not be also harmony and concord in that spiritual world, the Church of God, the grandest conception of His omnipotence, and the most bounteous manifestation of His goodness and love for mankind!
Hence, it is clear that Jesus Christ intended that His Church should have one common doctrine which all Christians are bound to believe, and one uniform government to which all should be loyally attached.
With all due respect for my dissenting brethren, truth compels me to say that this unity of doctrine and government is not to be found in the Protestant sects, taken collectively or separately. That the various Protestant denominations differ from one another not only in minor details, but in most essential principles of faith, is evident to every one conversant with the doctrines of the differen...
Table of contents
- THE FAITH OF OUR FATHERS
- Contents
- Preface to the Eleventh Edition
- Preface to the Forty-Seventh Edition
- Preface
- Preface to Eighty-Third Revised Edition
- Introduction
- Chapter I - The Blessed Trinity, the Incarnation, Etc.
- Chapter II - The Unity of the Church
- Chapter III - The Holiness of the Church
- Chapter IV - Catholicity
- Chapter V - Apostolicity
- Chapter VI - Perpetuity of the Church
- Chapter VII - Infallible Authority of the Church
- Chapter VIII - The Church and the Bible
- Chapter IX - The Primacy of Peter
- Chapter X - The Supremacy of the Popes
- Chapter XI - Infallibility of the Popes
- Chapter XII - Temporal Power of the Popes
- Chapter XIII - The Invocation of Saints
- Chapter XIV - Is it Lawful to Honor the Blessed Virgin Mary as a Saint, to Invoke Her as an Intercessor, and to Imitate Her as a Model
- Chapter XV - Sacred Images
- Chapter XVI - Purgatory and Prayers for the Dead
- Chapter XVII - Civil and Religious Liberty
- Chapter XVIII - Charges of Religious Persecution
- Chapter XIX - GraceâThe SacramentsâOriginal SinâBaptismâIts NecessityâIts EffectsâManner of Baptizing
- Chapter XX - The Sacrament of Confirmation
- Chapter XXI - The Holy Eucharist
- Chapter XXII - Communion Under One Kind
- Chapter XXIII - The Sacrifice of the Mass
- Chapter XXIV - The Use of Religious Ceremonies Dictated by Right Reason
- Chapter XXV - Ceremonials of the Mass
- Chapter XXVI - The Sacrament of Penance
- Chapter XXVII - Indulgences
- Chapter XXVIII - Extreme Unction
- Chapter XXIX - The Priesthood
- Chapter XXX - Celibacy of the Clergy
- Chapter XXXI - Matrimony
- Endnotes
