'God does not need our lies'
Shelley, Thomas J.
THE LAST WORD 'God does not need our lies' THOMAS J. SHELLEY Forty years ago, Monsignor John Tracy Ellis wrote an essay, "American Catholics and the Intellectual Life" (Thought, Fall 1955), that...
...Nonetheless, Ellis was correct to praise Leo for his decision to open the archives, for, as Owen Chadwick, the former Regius Professor of Modem History in Cambridge University, once said, Leo's decision brought "new confidence among instructed non-Catholics that the Catholic church cared about the truth...
...Not until forty-two years after he began work on his history of the popes did Pastor obtain permission to visit the storerooms where the materials were kept...
...I wonder...
...Said Ellis proudly: "Such is the spirit in which Leo XIII would have history written...
...What young Mr...
...How much permanent good comes out of digging up the bones of dead bishops, spending years in musty archives to find in the end such sordid quarrels," asked O'Connell...
...THE LAST WORD 'God does not need our lies' THOMAS J. SHELLEY Forty years ago, Monsignor John Tracy Ellis wrote an essay, "American Catholics and the Intellectual Life" (Thought, Fall 1955), that left a lasting impression on American Catholicism...
...Only a few years earlier William Cardinal O'Connell of Boston had complained to Monsignor Peter Guilday, professor of church history at The Catholic University of America and Ellis's mentor, about the candid character of his biography of John England, the first bishop of Charleston [see page 18...
...Not all Catholic ecclesiastics shared the enlightened opinions of the Holy Father...
...Forty years ago, Commonweal praised Ellis's essay in Thought as a "trenchant analysis," and agreed with Ellis that American Catholics should do some soul searching about their meagre contribution to American intellectual life...
...Ellis used the occasion to call attention to "Another Anniversary" in the life of the great pontiff, not another encyclical (Leo issued no fewer than eighty-five of them), but the golden anniversary of a letter Leo wrote on August 18, 1883, on the subject of church history, when he opened the Vatican Archives to scholars and researchers...
...At that time Commonweal was only ten years old, and Ellis was Mr...
...From the day Leo's letter appeared," wrote Ellis, "it has, and must ever remain, the vade mecum of the Catholic historian...
...Ellis did not know, and could not know, was that Pastor's access to the materials in the Vatican Archives was much less complete than he thought...
...Thomas J. Shelley is professor of church history at Saint Joseph's Seminary, Yonkers, New York.rs, New York...
...Many pages in Pastor's history of the popes are not especially edifying, but Leo did not complain or seek to curb Pastor's independence...
...One of the first historians to take advantage of the Vatican Archives was Ludwig von Pastor of the University of Innsbruck, who was encouraged by the pope to write a scholarly history of the Renaissance and Counter-Reformation popes in response to the critical history of the popes that had been written by Leopold von Ranke...
...It was in Commonweal two decades earlier that Ellis served notice of his commitment to that cause...
...Through the materials which Leo's opening of the Vatican Archives brought to his hand," said Ellis, "[Pastor] was able to lay bare the full panorama of papal history in one of its most troubled periods, the religious revolution of the sixteenth century...
...Is all this edifying to the public...
...The Rev...
...facts are omitted in great histories, or glosses are put upon memorable acts, because they are thought not edifying, whereas of all scandals, such omissions, such glosses, are the greatest...
...In his later years, when he was the unquestioned dean of American Catholic church historians, Ellis rarely gave a speech or wrote an article without including a quotation from Cardinal Newman...
...A major theme in the essay was the need for intellectual integrity in Catholic scholarship...
...Ellis heaped praise upon Leo for making possible the scholarly work of Pastor...
...In opening the Vatican Archives to all scholars, the pontiff showed that he was practicing what he was preaching, at least to a degree...
...Ellis also praised Leo for recognizing that the object of history, including church history, is truth, not edification...
...One of the first places where Ellis ever spoke his mind publicly on this subject, however, was in the pages of Commonweal in an article that appeared on February 2, 1934...
...The Catholic press had recently been surfeited with articles commemorating the fortieth anniversary of Rerum novarum, Pope Leo XIII's seminal encyclical on Catholic social teaching...
...Indeed, Ellis was delighted to be able to quote from an all-but-forgotten encyclical of 1899 (Depuis lejour) Leo's caustic comment that "God does not want our lies...
...In the face of such episcopal obscurantism, it was comforting and clever for Ellis to invoke papal authority and to say that those church historians who wrote honest history, warts and all, were only fulfilling "the mandate given by Leo fifty years ago...
...Evidently the practice went back a long time, for he concluded his 1934 Commonweal article with a golden nugget from Newman's Historical Sketches, in which the English cardinal mentioned "the endemic perennial fidget which possesses us about giving scandal...
...In that letter, Leo quoted with approval the words of Cicero that the first duty of a historian is not to tell a lie, and the second duty is not to be afraid to tell the truth...
...John Tracy Ellis, an obscure twenty-nine-year-old layman who was teaching European history at the College of Saint Teresa in Win-ona, Minnesota (population 20,850...
...In that same encyclical, which was devoted to the education of the clergy, Leo told church historians that they would be better able to manifest the church's divine origin if they were "to keep back nothing of the trials which she has had to experience in the course of the ages through the frailty of her children, and sometimes even of her ministers...
Vol. 122 • April 1995 • No. 7