Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Robert A. KriegSeptember 01, 2003
Pope Pius XII is pictured at the Vatican in a file photo dated March 15, 1949. (CNS file photo)

Seventy years ago a fateful meeting occurred in Rome. The Vatican’s secretary of state, Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli (the future Pope Pius XII), and Germany’s vice chancellor, Franz von Papen, formally signed a concordat between the Holy See and the German Reich on July 20, 1933. This event ended negotiations that began after Adolf Hitler became Germany’s chancellor on Jan. 30, 1933. Among the witnesses to this event were Msgr. Giovanni Battista Montini (the future Pope Paul VI) and Msgr. Ludwig Kaas, the leader of Germany’s Catholic Center Party. Neither Pope Pius XI nor Hitler attended the meeting; both had already approved of the concordat. The pope ratified the agreement two months later on Sept. 10. The Concordat of 1933 specified the church’s rights in the Third Reich.

The political significance of the signing of the Concordat of 1933 was, however, ambiguous in its day and still remains so. Hitler interpreted the concordat to mean that he had won the church’s approval, thereby gaining international recognition of his Nazi regime. At least some German Catholics took the signing of the treaty as an indication that church officials had softened their opposition to National Socialism. Some political commentators, journalists and historiansthen and nowhave viewed this event as a manifestation of Pope Pius XI’s and Cardinal Pacelli’s underlying motives, which allegedly included their preference for dictatorships over democracies, their readiness to use Nazi Germany as a bulwark against the spread into Europe of Stalin’s Communism and their disregard for German Jews. The pope and his secretary of state insisted, however, that they approved the agreement simply to protect the church. Cardinal Pacelli said as much in August 1933 to Ivone Kirkpatrick, the British minister to the Vatican: The spiritual welfare of 20 million Catholic souls in Germany was at stake, and that was the first and, indeed, only consideration in agreeing to the concordat. The Holy See had to choose between an agreement on [Nazi] lines and the virtual elimination of the Catholic Church in the Reich.

This statement is noteworthy because it expresses the theology of church that shaped the words and deeds of Pope Pius XI, Cardinal Pacelli and the German bishops. As Cardinal Avery Dulles explained in Models of the Church (1974), this ecclesiology regards the church as a hierarchical institution, indeed as a perfect society, founded by Jesus Christ in order to make grace available to all people. Given this view, church officials saw themselves responsible before God for protecting the church’s organization and its functions of sanctifying, teaching and governing. In Pius XII and the Holocaust (2002), José M. Sánchez has pinpointed a pope’s first obligation according to the ecclesiology of perfect society: As head of an institutional church, he is charged with protecting that church; according to Catholic theology, the church is the necessary means of providing the sacraments which give the grace needed for salvation. Without the priests to administer the sacraments and the freedom to receive them, Catholics can be hindered in their search for salvation (p. 36).

Pius XI and Cardinal Pacelli judged that their first duty was to secure civil guarantees for the autonomy of ecclesiastical institutions and their activities. After the abdication of Kaiser Wilhelm II in 1918, the Holy See had tried to sign a concordat with the Weimar Republic but did not succeed. The sticking point was the church’s insistence on state support for Catholic schools and for Catholic religious instruction in the public schools. This stipulation was not acceptable to Weimar’s parliament, especially to its Socialists, who held that it violated the separation between church and state. As the Vatican’s nuncio to Bavaria (1917-20) and then to the Weimar Republic (1920-29), Eugenio Pacelli had arranged concordats with individual German statesnamely with Bavaria in 1925, Prussia in 1929 and Baden in 1932. Given this history, Pius XI and Pacelli had reason to be pleased when Vice Chancellor Franz von Papen came to Rome on April 7, 1933, to negotiate a concordat with the Reich’s new government.

The Concordat of 1933 gave the papacy what it wanted most, but it also required some concessions from Pius XI and Pacelli, as Joseph Beisinger has described in Controversial Concordats (edited by Frank J. Coppa, 1999). It stipulated that the state would permit parishes to administer the sacraments to the faithful and to instruct its members in the faith and that civil authorities would not interfere in the naming of bishops and pastors. These safeguards were important, because the predominantly Protestant Prussian government had closed Catholic churches, imprisoned bishops and pastors, and stopped the appointment of new bishops during Otto von Bismarck’s Kulturkampf (1870-80). The concordat asserted, too, that the state would give financial support to the church’s schools and that it would make Catholic religious education available in the public schoolsreligious education taught only by instructors approved by the bishops.

The Holy See’s concessions included the concordat’s requirement that clergy not engage in political activities and not hold political offices. Bishops were required to swear an oath of loyalty to the Reich and its legally constituted government. The bishops would sponsor only those lay organizations dedicated to charitable works and to social activities of a religious nature. Although it was agreed that a list would specify which organizations were protected under the concordat, this list was never completed. In addition, diocesan newspapers and church-affiliated publishers were left vulnerable to the state’s interference and suppression, because the concordat did not explicitly protect them.

The Concordat of 1933 embodied a problematic theology of the church, for it implicitly reduced the church to an organization concerned solely about a private, otherworldly realm unrelated to the social and political aspects of human life. It devalued the fuller reality of the church expressed in German Catholicism’s rich tradition of social and political activism, as realized in the Kolping Society, the programs of Mainz’s Bishop Wilhelm Ketteler (d. 1877) and the Catholic Center Party. As a result, it lost sight of Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum (1891) and Pius XI’s Quadragesimo Anno (1931). Moreover, it cast ambiguity upon the church’s civil autonomy by requiring the bishops’ oath of loyalty to the Reich.

The concordat was also flawed in its timing and implementation. Cardinal Pacelli signed the agreement too early in the regime’s history, for this treaty gave Hitler the international respectability he craved. The signing of the concordat also demoralized German Catholics, who had stood with their bishops in opposing National Socialism from the early 1920’s until March 28, 1933. On that date the bishops, relying on Hitler’s solemn pledge to make the two churches [Catholic and Protestant] the cornerstone of our work of national renewal, rescinded their bans against membership in the Nazi Party. Pius XI and Pacelli may have operated in the best interests of the church as an institution, but they implicitly diminished the church as an advocate of human rights and justice. Here was one of the ill effects of the ecclesiology of perfect society. The metaphor of the church as a medieval castle or a Gothic cathedral so dominated Catholic thought that it lessened the role of the church as a proponent of universal human values as embodied in natural law.

The ecclesiology of perfect society had a negative impact also upon the implementation of the Concordat of 1933. Since this theology accentuated the church’s hierarchical character, it called for top-down decision making and secrecy. Pius XI, Pius XII and the German bishops avoided public disagreements with the Third Reich, choosing instead to voice their protests in confidential messages and behind closed doors. As a result, German Catholics were puzzled by the silence of church officials amid Nazi injustices, for example, after the national boycott of Jewish businesses on April 1, 1933, after the murder of Hitler’s political opponents on June 30, 1934, and after the destruction of synagogues and the imprisonment and murder of Jews on November 9-10, 1938. By contrast, German Catholics were heartened by the encyclical Mit Brennender Sorge (March 14, 1937), in which Pius XI criticized Hitler for violating the terms of the Concordat of 1933 and exhorted Catholics to uphold their Christian faith amid Nazi paganism.

Analyzing the Concordat of 1933, the Rev. John Jay Hughes has rightly observed that [t]oo much reliance was placed on diplomatic protests; and too little was done to acquaint rank and file Catholics in Germany with the existence and content of these protests and to mobilize them in support of church rights. Fueling this inadequate implementation of the concordat was the theology of the church as a hierarchical institution. The fundamental cause of this failure was theological: the view of the church as consisting of a more or less passive laity, an obedient body of pastoral clergy, and a hierarchy that directed and led both laity and clergy, making all decisions in lonely and splendid isolation.

Theological ideas have concrete consequences. The notion of the church as a perfect society guided Pius XI, Cardinal Pacelli and the German bishops in 1933 to concentrate on the preservation of ecclesiastical structures and religious activities to the neglect of social justice. This monolithic ecclesiology no longer dominates Catholic thought, for the Second Vatican Council embraced a diversified ecclesiology, speaking of the church as mystery or sacrament, as people of God, as body of Christ, as collegial community and as servant of the world in the causes of justice, peace and human rights. The Second Vatican Council clarified, too, that the church has a duty to acknowledge, preserve and encourage the spiritual and moral truths found among non-Christians, especially among Jews.

The pope and the bishops now have theological resources that call them to promote human rights, even when their efforts jeopardize ecclesiastical structures. Pope John Paul II is conveying this rich ecclesiology in his inspiring statements and actions for the dignity of all people. The bishops are usually doing the same, though some have placed the interests of the institutional church ahead of the well-being of the victims of sexual abuse. If the Holy See and the bishops were facing the Third Reich today, one hopes they would be impelled by Vatican II’s ecclesiology to act differently than Pius XI, Cardinal Pacelli and the German bishops did in 1933.

 

More: Vatican
Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
21 years 3 months ago
The article confirms what had to be the case in history. It has always seemed intuitive to me that the Catholic Church must have made a pact with the devil in order to survive Hitler's grasp.

It was the conclusion of the article that surprised me.

Mr. Krieg's conclusion asserted that Vatican II redirected a church that was concerned only with the preservation of its political structure without regard to preservation of human dignity and life. The hundreds of victims of sexual abuse might disagee.

In light of the recent revelations regarding the "sexual abuse" scandals and the tenacious denials by church officials for the first year or two of discovery, how can anyone say the Church has changed from 1933? The poster child for the Church, Cardinal Law, went to Rome and was not summarily dismissed by the Pope in a public statement. How long did it take Cardinal Law to resign? If this wasn't old Church politics, what is?

Most bishops and higher officials knew of such indiscretions for decades, but they chose to look the other way. At the very least it was, "don't ask, don't tell." They chose to conceal the perpetrators within the Church political structure. This was placing the interest of the institution ahead of the victims of abuse.

The new rules and regulations are in place to make sure perpetrators of sexual abuse do not go undetected and unpunished. Those who look the other way, the rule makers, i.e. bishops and cardinals, continue to remain outside of the new rules.

21 years 2 months ago
Thanks to Robert A. Krieg for his valuable article, “The Vatican Concordat With Hitler’s Reich” (9/1). I agree that the Vatican, fearful that the negotiating window would soon close, was primarily concerned to ensure the survival of the sacramental system and to gain guarantees about Catholic education.

I have several critical observations. First, can we be so sure that Catholic opposition to the new regime was choked off by the concordat? One senses rather that the hierarchy, and the Center Party as well, were very worried about losing their people en masse to enthusiasm for Germany’s renewal.

Second, the ecclesiological inferences that Mr. Krieg wants to draw from Catholic self-preoccupation may be theologically valid but historically anachronistic. German Catholicism was still burdened by its minority self-consciousness. Catholic support for the Weimar Republic and its denominational pluralism came less from a love of democracy and of human rights for their own sake, and more from the pragmatic conviction that the Republic offered the most advantageous environment for Catholic flourishing. Today we rightly regret the church’s timidity in speaking for all the persecuted. But we should try to see more clearly what a momentous identity change that would have entailed—an unlikely development in any circumstance, and particularly so given the brutality and rapidity of the Nazi totalitarian takeover.

Third, the Rev. John Jay Hughes’s article actually defends the Vatican concordat, although one would not know this from Mr. Krieg’s quotation of it.

21 years 2 months ago
I found Robert A. Krieg’s highlighting of the ambiguity of “The Vatican Concordat With Hitler’s Reich” (9/1), a very interesting and important consideration. I find it all the more ambiguous because Pius XI was certainly not a pope whose principal aim was the “preservation of ecclesiastical structures and religious activists to the neglect of social justice.” Six years before he signed the concordat with Hitler, he had condemned the ultra-right French political movement Action Française, whose aim was to destroy the French Republic and restore the monarchy, at least for a time. The anticlerical laws aimed at the French Catholic Church in the early 1900’s would have given Pius XI a good excuse to use “politics in the service of religion”; for the monarchy, or an authoritarian government like that of Napoleon, always accorded a privileged position to the church. But Pius XI condemned the movement because it used “religion in the service of politics.” At the end of his life Pius XI asked the American Jesuit apostle of interracial justice, John LaFarge, S.J., to prepare an encyclical on the Jews and anti-Semitism. He died before it was made public, and Pius XII never saw fit to promulgate it.

Mr. Krieg points out clearly that the ecclesiology of the time was dominated by the conception of the church as a “perfect society,” the protection of whose institution and organization was the principal duty of the hierarchy. The French Catholic philosopher Jacques Maritain, who, to his profound regret, had let himself be duped into an ambiguous and distant relationship with Action Française by his conservative and traditional spiritual directors (Dom Delatte, O.S.B., Father Clerissac, O.P., Father Garrigou-Lagrange, O.P., and others) came to realize and to admit his naïveté, and supported the pope’s condemnation of the movement. He was never forgiven for this by the powerful members of the traditional ecclesiastical hierarchy.

In his last book, On the Church of Christ: The Person of the Church and Its Personnel, Maritain maintained that the person of the church—which Krieg identifies as “mystery or sacrament, as people of God, as the body of Christ, as collegial community and as servant”—this church is “indefectibly holy”; but, Maritain added, “its personnel is not.” It is composed of fallible, imperfect men, who, as Mr. Krieg mentions, all too often placed protecting the institution and its reputation above its mission to proclaim the truth—or defend the victims of sexual abuse. Recently a French scholar of Jacques Maritain wrote to me that the present tendency of Catholic neoconservatives (like Michael Novak, George Weigel, Deal Hudson and others) to use religion to promote certain political programs of the present American administration on economic justice, war and sexuality strikes him as a kind of “maurrassisme américain,” and I think he’s right.

21 years 3 months ago
The article confirms what had to be the case in history. It has always seemed intuitive to me that the Catholic Church must have made a pact with the devil in order to survive Hitler's grasp.

It was the conclusion of the article that surprised me.

Mr. Krieg's conclusion asserted that Vatican II redirected a church that was concerned only with the preservation of its political structure without regard to preservation of human dignity and life. The hundreds of victims of sexual abuse might disagee.

In light of the recent revelations regarding the "sexual abuse" scandals and the tenacious denials by church officials for the first year or two of discovery, how can anyone say the Church has changed from 1933? The poster child for the Church, Cardinal Law, went to Rome and was not summarily dismissed by the Pope in a public statement. How long did it take Cardinal Law to resign? If this wasn't old Church politics, what is?

Most bishops and higher officials knew of such indiscretions for decades, but they chose to look the other way. At the very least it was, "don't ask, don't tell." They chose to conceal the perpetrators within the Church political structure. This was placing the interest of the institution ahead of the victims of abuse.

The new rules and regulations are in place to make sure perpetrators of sexual abuse do not go undetected and unpunished. Those who look the other way, the rule makers, i.e. bishops and cardinals, continue to remain outside of the new rules.

21 years 2 months ago
Thanks to Robert A. Krieg for his valuable article, “The Vatican Concordat With Hitler’s Reich” (9/1). I agree that the Vatican, fearful that the negotiating window would soon close, was primarily concerned to ensure the survival of the sacramental system and to gain guarantees about Catholic education.

I have several critical observations. First, can we be so sure that Catholic opposition to the new regime was choked off by the concordat? One senses rather that the hierarchy, and the Center Party as well, were very worried about losing their people en masse to enthusiasm for Germany’s renewal.

Second, the ecclesiological inferences that Mr. Krieg wants to draw from Catholic self-preoccupation may be theologically valid but historically anachronistic. German Catholicism was still burdened by its minority self-consciousness. Catholic support for the Weimar Republic and its denominational pluralism came less from a love of democracy and of human rights for their own sake, and more from the pragmatic conviction that the Republic offered the most advantageous environment for Catholic flourishing. Today we rightly regret the church’s timidity in speaking for all the persecuted. But we should try to see more clearly what a momentous identity change that would have entailed—an unlikely development in any circumstance, and particularly so given the brutality and rapidity of the Nazi totalitarian takeover.

Third, the Rev. John Jay Hughes’s article actually defends the Vatican concordat, although one would not know this from Mr. Krieg’s quotation of it.

21 years 2 months ago
I found Robert A. Krieg’s highlighting of the ambiguity of “The Vatican Concordat With Hitler’s Reich” (9/1), a very interesting and important consideration. I find it all the more ambiguous because Pius XI was certainly not a pope whose principal aim was the “preservation of ecclesiastical structures and religious activists to the neglect of social justice.” Six years before he signed the concordat with Hitler, he had condemned the ultra-right French political movement Action Française, whose aim was to destroy the French Republic and restore the monarchy, at least for a time. The anticlerical laws aimed at the French Catholic Church in the early 1900’s would have given Pius XI a good excuse to use “politics in the service of religion”; for the monarchy, or an authoritarian government like that of Napoleon, always accorded a privileged position to the church. But Pius XI condemned the movement because it used “religion in the service of politics.” At the end of his life Pius XI asked the American Jesuit apostle of interracial justice, John LaFarge, S.J., to prepare an encyclical on the Jews and anti-Semitism. He died before it was made public, and Pius XII never saw fit to promulgate it.

Mr. Krieg points out clearly that the ecclesiology of the time was dominated by the conception of the church as a “perfect society,” the protection of whose institution and organization was the principal duty of the hierarchy. The French Catholic philosopher Jacques Maritain, who, to his profound regret, had let himself be duped into an ambiguous and distant relationship with Action Française by his conservative and traditional spiritual directors (Dom Delatte, O.S.B., Father Clerissac, O.P., Father Garrigou-Lagrange, O.P., and others) came to realize and to admit his naïveté, and supported the pope’s condemnation of the movement. He was never forgiven for this by the powerful members of the traditional ecclesiastical hierarchy.

In his last book, On the Church of Christ: The Person of the Church and Its Personnel, Maritain maintained that the person of the church—which Krieg identifies as “mystery or sacrament, as people of God, as the body of Christ, as collegial community and as servant”—this church is “indefectibly holy”; but, Maritain added, “its personnel is not.” It is composed of fallible, imperfect men, who, as Mr. Krieg mentions, all too often placed protecting the institution and its reputation above its mission to proclaim the truth—or defend the victims of sexual abuse. Recently a French scholar of Jacques Maritain wrote to me that the present tendency of Catholic neoconservatives (like Michael Novak, George Weigel, Deal Hudson and others) to use religion to promote certain political programs of the present American administration on economic justice, war and sexuality strikes him as a kind of “maurrassisme américain,” and I think he’s right.

jose maira oliu carbonell
16 years 5 months ago
En primer lugar debo felicitarlo por el articulo, soy doctor en derecho y ciencias sociales de Montevideo Uruguay, asimismo, soy catolico practicante, y mi familia tambien, en la actualidad hay una exposición sobre el holocausto en Montevideo, Uruguay, yo he visitado personalmente la casa de Ana Frank en Amsterdam y mi señora los campòs de concentracion en Polonia, nuestros hijos tienen 14 y 12 años son varones, catolicos practicos, firmes defensores del ecumenismo, ellos fueron a la exposicion y volvieron a casa muy tristes porque en la exposición se acusa a la Santa Iglesia Catolica de haber sido colaboradora de Hitler en el exterminio de los judios por intermedio de Pio Xll, atentamente, Jose Maria Oliu Carbonell y familia
15 years 7 months ago
Robert Krieg's article was interesting, but it still papers over the fact that the Nazi movement was overwhelmingly a Christian conservative movement. Certainly there was competition and nastiness between Catholics and Protestants jockeying for power and dominance in Germany and Europe, but the only Catholics who were persecuted by the Nazis were liberal Catholics or some others who may have been Catholic but whose interests were otherwise compromised by Nazi policy. There was also no mention that Hitler was a life-long Catholic who died in the good graces of the church and was never excommunicated nor rebuked. That fact remains today. The church will never excommunicate Hitler or his millions of conservative supporters who died of old age believing in the rightness of the Nazi cause including the murders of Jews. Now that the church is preparing to canonize Eugenio Pacelli, how long will it be until they begin the process of canonizing Adolph Hitler and many of his lieutenants?
15 years 3 months ago
This article was very helpful for me trying to understand how the Church in Germany got entagled with the Third Reich.
Pius XII is accused of selling out the Jews to the Nazis but Dr. Krieg points out that he and other church leaders valued hierarchical structures over justice to all people - Jews, Catholics and the integrity of the Church.
15 years 3 months ago
the church knew of hitlers plans ,,,  they knew of him hating jews and wanted to rule the world for 1000 years,,    as far as the jews where concerned,, the church loved the idea that hitler was going to exterminate them because to the church , the jews were just another competitve religion.. a win win for the church....  come on wake up...  they knew what they were doing...  and if all this is not true and the church signed a concorate with hitler because of fear,,,  shame on them,,,,jesus died and was tortured because he would not compromise.. they are suppose to be following in his steps...    there was a letter sent to the church before hitler came to power,, asking the church to excomminicate hitler,, because at that time if one was excommunicate and was in politics  he or she would  be shun by voters..  the church declined,  in case hitler would win even though being excommunicated... the church took no chance....  so because of fear of man they took sides with him,,  but then  ,, took sides with every one... they blessed troops on both sides..  saying go and kill in the name of god...  that is why the bible describes them as the mother of all harots,,  she makes relationships with all...  like a prostitute..   a real slut she is ...  and then telling the government that she , this church will help out by taking care of all the childred whose parents got kill during the war , if the government would finance orphanages..  they in turn abused these poor kids...  so they heip hitler,, give him cash for the war effort,,  and them abuse children,, all in the name of god...  at the same time they lead people to belive that there is a 800 pound man in the sky with reindeer that brings gift to children ,, and bunnies with chocolate , and tooth faries,,  christmas  just happens to fall before tax time...,, what a coincidence that they own all the rights  to any gift wrapping and christmas ordament companies... and share in profits for the retail world of people spending on christmas gifts.  jesus was born in september!!!!   these hyprocitical bastards and peodophiles are more then just blood guilty..  plus they own more that 1/3 of the highest commercial realisate properties and pay no tax,, all the while the markets are experinceing an economic resession...  they to this day have like the bible says,,    her sins have massed clear up to the heavens and her stench has gotten to gods nose...  she will pay,, she will be exposed...  bitch
15 years 2 months ago
all these things that the vatican and church have done is just testimony and proof of what they really are..  burden of proof..  now they are trapped..  never in their wildest dream did they ever think that one day all this would be  brought to light... for they have alway kept men in darkness..  they knew what they where doing..  power made them blind..  such power often leads to destruction when not used correctly .. they abused and abused,,,  and who is to fight them.. they control world leader by holding them accountable towards God..  they are powerful in many ways..  but now there own actions have been called into question..  they are in a bad spot..   basically they are going to go down..  they no longer serve any purpose..  they never really did anyway..  they will pay for their crimes... their in serious trouble and they know it!  their gig is up...  doing all these horrible things while making people believe in things like santa clause and easter bunnies and christmas ,, all things not even found in a book , in which they themselves used to burn people alive for just touching it ,,  the Bible..for they know that this book speaks of them,, and their dealings!  this book shows that they will be destroyed.. this book refers to them as a harlot,, because they commit fornication will all the kings of the earth.. death is there business..  its their main income...  when people die they do make their money , one way or the other...  so for them to sigh a deal with hitler was in their best interest..  wars cost money, and there is alot of money to be made in war... the church owns 85% of stocks in war armament companies.. when people get killed in wars , they government pays the church for the burials ..  ever notice there is alway a priest or bishop present at military funerals ,, regardless which side of the war is on..  they will bless tanks and guns , and tell troops to go ahead, go kill , its ok, God approves ,,,,  not so the case in the Bible,,  they are suppose to instruct man to live in peace...  they tell politicians that they have Gods backing., on both sides they tell them the same thing.. it like two different priest tell two different football teams that God is going to let them win.. thats a whore!  anyone, anytime..   no wonder the Bible describes them a The Mother of All Harlot..  but soon the  governments of this world ,, will get fed up with this harlot..  and will want to rid themselves of it...  the bible says that her sins have massed clear up to the heavens,, because she ,  has used the name of God in order to do her dealings..  it has worked till now..  The Bible also says that she lives in Shameless Luxury..  who is to argue.. the wealth of this conglomerate  is beyond imagination ,, just the gold on the ceiling in there libraries at the vatican .. is plenty to feed all the hungry children in Africa for the next 1000 years!!  shame on them,shame..  and to think , not only do they not help children,,  they also abuse them!!!   if will fall..  the church and vatican will be a thing of the past, soon......to hells with them...
Argelia Tejada Yangüela
10 years 1 month ago
I am a Dominican Republic Sociologist. Excuse my poor English. But the author speaks as if Vatican II was not derailed. And as if the church, in poor Latin American and African countries had changed. . The Nazi military Regime of Rafael Trujillo started in 1930. The Catholic Church did not even had legal recognition. In 1931 Trujillo financed the church and bought its support. The Concordat was signed in 1954, donating all the properties used since 1931, segregating the school system by social class, and making the Catholic Church praise him with Tedeums at every Sunday Mass and Days of precepts. Vatican II did not changed the Concordat, and religion is still taught in Public schools while pedophile priests are not prosecuted. Secrecy is its main operating tool. The author speaks from a vantage point of a rich country where there is separation of church and State. The Vatican benefits from the money american Catholics provide. In our poor nations, the Church get its money from all tax payers, including the very poor. They sit at the table of corrupt politicians and imposed their views on the Constitution to violate women's and gays human rights. Do not sit in a bubble. Francis knows the history and as a Cardenal in Argentina he was silent during their dirty war, and fought gays, calling them the work of the devil.

The latest from america

Delegates hold "Mass deportation now!" signs on Day 3 of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee July 17, 2024. (OSV News photo/Brian Snyder, Reuters)
Around the affluent world, new hostility, resentment and anxiety has been directed at immigrant populations that are emerging as preferred scapegoats for all manner of political and socio-economic shortcomings.
Kevin ClarkeNovember 21, 2024
“Each day is becoming more difficult, but we do not surrender,” Father Igor Boyko, 48, the rector of the Greek Catholic seminary in Lviv, told Gerard O’Connell. “To surrender means we are finished.”
Gerard O’ConnellNovember 21, 2024
Many have questioned how so many Latinos could support a candidate like DonaldTrump, who promised restrictive immigration policies. “And the answer is that, of course, Latinos are complicated people.”
J.D. Long GarcíaNovember 21, 2024
Vice President Kamala Harris delivers her concession speech for the 2024 presidential election on Nov. 6, 2024, on the campus of Howard University in Washington. (AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough)
Catholic voters were a crucial part of Donald J. Trump’s re-election as president. But did misogyny and a resistance to women in power cause Catholic voters to disregard the common good?
Kathleen BonnetteNovember 21, 2024