Clear Talking
I
had not read this before, but here is the papal decree, (or at least part of
it), excommunicating Martin Luther and any who follow his teaching. Well, at least the Pope makes clear he does
not approve of evangelical, biblical theology.
As far as I am aware this papal bull has never been rescinded:
Decet Romanum Pontificem
Papal
Bull on the Condemnation and Excommunication of Martin Luther, the Heretic, and
his Followers, January 3, 1521.
Preamble
Through
the power given him from God, the Roman Pontiff has been appointed to
administer spiritual and temporal punishments as each case severally deserves.
The purpose of this is the repression of the wicked designs of misguided men,
who have been so captivated by the debased impulse of their evil purposes as to
forget the fear of the Lord, to set aside with contempt canonical decrees and
apostolic commandments, and to dare to formulate new and false dogmas and to
introduce the evil of schism into the Church of God—or to support, help and
adhere to such schismatics, who make it their business to cleave asunder the
seamless robe of our Redeemer and the unity of the orthodox faith. Hence it
befits the Pontiff, lest the vessel of Peter appear to sail without pilot or
oarsman, to take severe measures against such men and their followers, and by
multiplying punitive measures and by other suitable remedies to see to it that
these same overbearing men, devoted as they are to purposes of evil, along with
their adherents, should not deceive the multitude of the simple by their lies
and their deceitful devices, nor drag them along to share their own error and
ruination, contaminating them with what amounts to a contagious disease.
It
also befits the Pontiff, having condemned the schismatics, to ensure their
still greater confounding by publicly showing and openly declaring to all
faithful Christians how formidable are the censures and punishments to which
such guilt can lead; to the end that by such public declaration they themselves
may return, in confusion and remorse, to their true selves, making an
unqualified withdrawal from the prohibited conversation, fellowship and (above
all) obedience to such accursed excommunicates; by this means they may escape
divine vengeance and any degree of participation in their damnation.
I [Here the Pope recounts his previous Bull Exsurge
Domine and continues]
II
We have been informed that after this previous missive had been exhibited in
public and the interval or intervals it prescribed had elapsed [60 days]—and we
hereby give solemn notice to all faithful Christians that these intervals have
and are elapsed—many of those who had followed the errors of Martin took
cognisance of our missive and its warnings and injunctions; the spirit of a
saner counsel brought them back to themselves, they confessed their errors and
abjured the heresy at our instance, and by returning to the true Catholic faith
obtained the blessing of absolution with which the self-same messengers had
been empowered; and in several states and localities of the said Germany the
books and writings of the said Martin were publicly burned, as we had enjoined.
Nevertheless
Martin himself—and it gives us grievous sorrow and perplexity to say this—the
slave of a depraved mind, has scorned to revoke his errors within the
prescribed interval and to send us word of such revocation, or to come to us
himself; nay, like a stone of stumbling, he has feared not to write and preach
worse things than before against us and this Holy See and the Catholic faith,
and to lead others on to do the same.
He
has now been declared a heretic; and so also others, whatever their authority
and rank, who have cared nought of their own salvation but publicly and in all
men's eyes become followers of Martin's pernicious and heretical sect, and
given him openly and publicly their help, counsel and favour, encouraging him
in their midst in his disobedience and obstinacy, or hindering the publication
of our said missive: such men have incurred the punishments set out in that
missive, and are to be treated rightfully as heretics and avoided by all
faithful Christians, as the Apostle says (Titus iii. 10-11).
III.
Our purpose is that such men should rightfully be ranked with Martin and other
accursed heretics and excommunicates, and that even as they have ranged
themselves with the obstinacy in sinning of the said Martin, they shall
likewise share his punishments and his name, by bearing with them everywhere
the title "Lutheran" and the punishments it incurs.
Our
previous instructions were so clear and so effectively publicised and we shall
adhere so strictly to our present decrees and declarations, that they will lack
no proof, warning or citation.
Our
decrees which follow are passed against Martin and others who follow him in the
obstinacy of his depraved and damnable purpose, as also against those who
defend and protect him with a military bodyguard, and do not fear to support
him with their own resources or in any other way, and have and do presume to
offer and afford help, counsel and favour toward him. All their names, surnames
and rank—however lofty and dazzling their dignity may be—we wish to be taken as
included in these decrees with the same effect as if they were individually
listed and could be so listed in their publication, which must be furthered
with an energy to match their contents.
On
all these we decree the sentences of excommunication, of anathema, of our
perpetual condemnation and interdict; of privation of dignities, honours and
property on them and their descendants, and of declared unfitness for such
possessions; of the confiscation of their goods and of the crime of treason;
and these and the other sentences, censures and punishments which are inflicted
by canon law on heretics and are set out in our aforesaid missive, we decree to
have fallen on all these men to their damnation.
IV
We add to our present declaration, by our Apostolic authority, that states,
territories, camps, towns and places in which these men have temporarily lived
or chanced to visit, along with their possessions—cities which house cathedrals
and metropolitans, monasteries and other religious and sacred places,
privileged or unprivileged—one and all are placed under our ecclesiastical
interdict, while this interdict lasts, no pretext of Apostolic Indulgence
(except in cases the law allows, and even there, as it were, with the doors
shut and those under excommunication and interdict excluded) shall avail to
allow the celebration of mass and the other divine offices. We prescribe and
enjoin that the men in question are everywhere to be denounced publicly as
excommunicated, accursed, condemned, interdicted, deprived of possessions and
incapable of owning them. They are to be strictly shunned by all faithful
Christians.
V We would make known to all the small store
that Martin, his followers and the other rebels have set on God and his Church
by their obstinate and shameless temerity. We would protect the herd from one
infectious animal, lest its infection spread to the healthy ones. Hence we lay
the following injunction on each and every patriarch, archbishop, bishop, on
the prelates of patriarchal, metropolitan, cathedral and collegiate churches,
and on the religious of every Order—even the mendicants—privileged or
unprivileged, wherever they may be stationed: that in the strength of their vow
of obedience and on pain of the sentence of excommunication, they shall, if so
required in the execution of these presents, publicly announce and cause to be
announced by others in their churches, that this same Martin and the rest are
excommunicate, accursed, condemned, heretics, hardened, interdicted, deprived
of possessions and incapable of owning them, and so listed in the enforcement
of these presents. Three days will be given: we pronounce canonical warning and
allow one day's notice on the first, another on the second, but on the third
peremptory and final execution of our order. This shall take place on a Sunday
or some other festival, when a large congregation assembles for worship. The
banner of the cross shall be raised, the bells rung, the candles lit and after
a time extinguished, cast on the ground and trampled under foot, and the stones
shall be cast forth three times, and the other ceremonies observed which are
usual in such cases. The faithful Christians, one and all, shall be enjoined
strictly to shun these men.
We
would occasion still greater confounding on the said Martin and the other
heretics we have mentioned, and on their adherents, followers and partisans:
hence, on the strength of their vow of obedience we enjoin each and every
patriarch, archbishop and all other prelates, that even as they were appointed
on the authority of Jerome to allay schisms, so now in the present crisis, as
their office obliges them, they shall make themselves a wall of defence for
their Christian people. They shall not keep silence like dumb dogs that cannot
bark, but incessantly cry and lift up their voice, preaching and causing to be
preached the word of God and the truth of the Catholic faith against the
damnable articles and heretics aforesaid.
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