15 May 2026

Preparing for the Pontificate’s First Encyclical: Catholic Social Teachings before Vatican II

Over the life of this blog, I have shared most, if not all, of the documents mentioned in this essay. Simply search the Latin incipit, and you'll find them.

From Rorate Cæli

By Serre Verweij


Catholic Social Teachings before Vatican II


Pope Leo XIV's first encyclical is due to be released and almost certain to become a valuable addition to the collection of papal encyclicals dealing with social issues. This was to be expected, as he took the name Leo XIV as a reference to Pope Leo XIII, who became famous as the Pope who established Catholic Social Teaching (CST) through his encyclical Rerum Novarum in 1891. Pope Leo's teachings, and the tradition based on it, have unfortunately been frequently misunderstood or misrepresented, especially since the Second Vatican Council.


CST is not merely about economics. Sexual ethics, the protection of the family and children, the rights of the Church and so on are all part of CST. They are not only social matters, as they are also matters of sin, natural law and so on, but they are essential to the social order. CST does not supersede, and is not completely divorced from, moral theology. Economics are an important part of CST, as are guidelines of how the common good can be served and yet balanced with individual freedom and personal rights.


Beyond basic principles however, Catholic teachings on economics are far less stringent or unchanging than Catholic doctrine on faith and morals. This flows from the fact that economic policy is highly situational and that the Church has always taught the different spheres of the Church and the state. The application of CST is not micromanaged by the clergy, although certain progressive clergy often like to pretend it is.


To truly understand CST correctly, one has to start with Pope Leo XIII, all of his teachings (that provided the context for Rerum Novarum) as well as the magisterial background he was situated in. One thing that becomes clear from studying CST and its history is that the claim (pushed by the likes of Tony Annet), that CST is compatible with or remotely similar to “social democracy,” is a bald-faced lie.


A detailed analysis of Catholic social teachings, specifically the pre-Vatican II tradition, can help clear up myths and misconceptions. The tradition leans right rather than left.


Pope Leo XIII, Rerum Novarum and Conservative Capitalism


The rising threat of socialism and socialist revolution was the important threat to which Rerum Novarum responded. Contrary to what is often claimed, the encyclical did not proclaim some kind of third way or actively espouse distributism. The document condemned socialism by name many times, but did not do the same with capitalism. It affirmed repeatedly private property and the right to pass it on to one's children and not as some secondary or largely conditional right. It also affirmed natural inequality and social hierarchy and supported low taxes. The role it assigned to the state to regulate the economy was relatively limited. The state could have somewhat of a supervising role when labor conditions or wages were negotiated and should help ensure that property ends up being distributed as widely as possible.


Instead the encyclical advocated a return to traditional morality, hierarchy and Christian charity to deal with the effects of the Industrial Revolution. The encyclical had a holistic and transcendent view of the state and society, rather than a worldly or materialistic one.


"Now a State chiefly prospers and thrives through moral rule, well-regulated family life, respect for religion and justice, the moderation and fair imposing of public taxes, the progress of the arts and of trade, the abundant yield of the land — through everything, in fact, which makes the citizens better and happier."


Its most anti-liberal element was its rejection of a hypocritical tendency prominent among liberals of that time to prohibit all trade unions despite their professed support for freedom of association. Pope Leo XIII supported the existence of Catholic trade unions to counter socialist ones.


Rerum was in fact not even Pope Leo's first encyclical dealing with social issues, though it became his most well-known on the topic. Already in his election year (1878) he released the encyclical Quod Apostolici Muneris, which condemned socialism, communism and nihilism. In Graves de Communi Re in 1901, he would once again condemn socialism, as well as certain harmful tendencies within Christian Democracy. He specifically rejected attempts to democratize the Church or to reject Church supervision of Catholic politics. He even questioned the use of the name Christian Democracy itself.


Pope Benedict XV and Pope Saint Pius X


Pope Leo XIII's teachings were followed rather faithfully and without change. Pope Saint Pius X and Pope Benedict XV largely reaffirmed and repeated the themes of Rerum Novarum: the condemnation of socialism, defense of natural inequality, legitimate authority, private property and the family.


In 1910, Pope Pius X condemned the 'Christian socialist' Sillon movement in France in his encyclical Notre charge apostolique. He criticized the movement for suggesting God's authority is given directly to the people, rather than to the Church hierarchy. He also criticized them for promoting a one-world Church by promoting union with non-believers.


In his first encyclical, Ad Beatissimi Apostolorum, Pope Benedict XV fully and unequivocally repeated the condemnations of Socialism contained in Rerum Novarum. He also explicitly proclaimed the classical liberal notion that workers by working harder within the market system could improve their existence, rather than by embracing socialism.


Pope Pius XI, the Great Depression and Fascism


The second significant encyclical issued was Quadragesimo Anno by Pope Pius XI in 1931, exactly 40 years after Rerum Novarum and during the height of the Great Depression. Pope Pius XI was the first Pope to take a more critical stance on the free market and on unbridled capitalism, yet he also did not condemn capitalism as such, only unbridled capitalism. He favored a regulated (to whatever extent) market over the absolute free market.


Quadragesimo Anno strongly reaffirmed and sharpened Rerum Novarum. On private property, the condemnation of socialism and the affirmation of a society based on divinely granted authority, Quadragesimo Anno did both. Specifically it stated that the natural right to property was such that it could not be violated even when property is not used or misused. At the same time the encyclical introduced the distinction between the right to possession and the usage of private property, stating that the latter could be legitimately regulated by the state. Additionally, he explicitly rejected the notion of a fully unregulated market. He noted how the unlimited free market (that had been prominent during the Roaring Twenties) had ironically paved the way for economic dictatorship. The encyclical went further in supporting labor law than Rerum Novarum, was sympathetic toward workers getting influence or some ownership of the businesses they served and promoted cooperative orders. Yet, the encyclical acknowledged the profit motive and even that rich people could try to get richer as long as this was not done in immoral or harmful ways.


The encyclical also helped counter excessive statism or totalitarianism by popularizing the concept of subsidiarity, where whenever realistically possible, issues should be dealt with at the lowest and most local level possible, rather than centrally micromanaged. This concept became very influential within Christian democracy.


Quadragesimo Anno acknowledged the increasing separation and distinction between communism and (moderate) socialism, but clarified that even socialism that upholds private property and rejects class struggle, remains at odds with the Catholic faith.


As a result, with Quadragesimo Anno, both raw capitalism/laissez-faire capitalism, communism and (moderate) socialism (including social democracy) all became untenable positions for a Catholic, yet this still left a large spectrum of options between the extremes Catholics could choose from. Regulated market capitalism, ordo-liberalism and Christian democracy, moderate Dirigism, mixed ownership economy, conservative decentralized corporatism, statist corporatism and even neo-feudalism were all viable options. From the Rhineland model to the older model in the Netherlands, the encyclical and its ideal could be implemented in many contexts.


Quadragesimo Anno was strongly supportive of the more classical bottom-up corporatism popular among authoritarian conservative regimes such as Salazarist Portugal and Austria under the Fatherland Front. Both regimes have wrongly been called fascist by Marxists, while Salazar actually outlawed the fascist movement in Portugal and criticized both Nazism and Fascism, whereas the Austrian regime was the first government to actively fight the Nazis. While progressives and socialists have criticized these regimes for being anti-democratic, they prevented a democratic takeover by either Nazis or Communists. The Austrian chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss was in fact the only head of government to have been murdered by the Nazis.


On statist corporatism and related national syndicalism, Quadragesimo Anno was more ambiguous. The encyclical praised the corporatist system for promoting class cooperation and repressing socialism, while noting both the possible risks of statism and that it would mainly be used to serve certain political ends. Pope Pius XI was rather ambivalent about Italy in general even then, whereas he consistently and fiercely opposed Nazism along with Communism early on. Pope Pius XI would come to strongly oppose Mussolini after he abandoned his support for Austria, drifted toward Nazism and embraced anti-Semitism.


Overall the encyclical was crucial for both reaffirming and strengthening the affirmation of private property and the rejection of all forms of socialism, while at the same time allowing economic intervention that remains in line with Catholic doctrine.


Pope Pius XII


While Pope Pius XII did not issue any major new encyclical on social issues, he did push the Church in a different direction on several issues (for better or worse). He has been criticized by some for not opposing Allied support for the Soviet Union sufficiently.


Pope Pius XII initially followed Pius XI in trying to prevent WWII and supporting (semi-)authoritarian conservative opposition to Nazism. He also took an active role in supporting the military German resistance that tried to assassinate Hitler. After the final attempt in July 1944 failed, the reactionary and ultraconservative (far right) military and political resistance in Germany was mostly exterminated.


When the plot failed, it became clear that a liberal Allied victory (with the help of the USSR) was inevitable, while reactionary and authoritarian conservative opposition had been decimated by Nazis and Communists. Corporatism and the third way, while not a part of Nazism but only of Fascism (and then only the statist form), nevertheless suffered from guilt by association.


Pope Pius XII chose Western capitalism and liberal democracy over the communist world and embraced the struggle against Stalin before the USA did. In his 1944 Christmas address he praised democracy as a legitimate and perhaps desirable form of government and contrasted it with pure mob-rule, which he discouraged (while still not rejecting monarchy or attacking absolute monarchy). At the same time his embrace of capitalism was more of the center-right and Christian democratic variety. He actively supported the (re)establishment of the Christian Democrats in Italy and hoped they could counter communism. While he moved away from corporatism or support for workers also getting a say over how businesses were run, he ironically also started to speak of the universal destination of goods and the importance of fairness toward less fortunate countries:


In the field of a new order founded upon moral principles, there is no place for narrow selfish calculations that tend to monopolize for themselves the economic resources and materials for common use, in such a way that nations less favored by nature are excluded. On this point, it is a great consolation to Us to see how the necessity of a participation by all in the goods of the earth is affirmed — even by those nations that, in the realization of this principle, would belong to the category of those "who give" and not to those "who receive." But equity demands that a solution to this question — decisive for the economy of the world — be achieved methodically and progressively, with the necessary guarantees, and that it profit from the lessons of the errors and omissions of the past.


Also, whereas Pope Benedict XV had promoted the ideal of an international organization dedicated to preserving peace, yet been openly skeptical regarding the League of Nations when it was founded, Pope Pius XII took a significantly more positive stance toward the United Nations. He also signaled a shift in the Church's stance on migration, promoting migration as a legal right in his encyclical Exsul Familia Nazarethana in 1952. He even supported the historically dubious claim that the Holy Family were migrants and refugees in Egypt (which like Judea fell under the Roman Empire). Ironically, Pope Leo XIV, while speaking strongly of the importance of the humane treatment of migrants, has spoken less of a right to migrate as such by comparison.


Overall, Pope Pius XII was significantly influenced by post-WWII optimism and moderate progressivism while remaining a firm anti-communist. This was also reflected in his greater openness toward the ecumenical movement. Yet his tendency toward Christian democracy remained right-leaning, and the anti-Nazi Pope had no conflict with either Francoist Spain or Salazarist Portugal.


Conclusion


Catholic social teachings always rejected not just materialism but a naturalistic or populist understanding of the faith. CST was and is anchored in reverence for God and His Church and respect for natural law.


Socialism has always been fought tooth and nail by the Church, including by the key heroes in the fight against Nazism. Christian Socialism is, as Blessed Pope Pius XI said, a contradictio in terminis. While under Pope Pius XII Rome started to act more sympathetic toward certain utopian novelties, the Catholic tradition of social justice has always been both anti-egalitarian and aimed at the Kingdom of God.

Which Way Is Paradise?

Mr Pearce reviews Dr Robert Lazu Kmita’s new book, The Ultimate Quest: Uncovering the Location of Paradisean examination of where Paradise is.

From The Imaginative Conservative

By Joseph Pearce

Robert Lazu Kmita’s “The Ultimate Quest” is a mystery story in the truest sense of the word. Confessing that the quest for the location of Paradise is not merely physical but is “theological-metaphysical”, he seeks clues from those who endeavour to read Genesis literally and those who read it allegorically, mystically, and symbolically.

Many moons ago, I wrote an essay for this illustrious journal entitled “Which Way Is Heaven?” Was it above us? Was heaven in the heavens? Should we look up at the stars in childlike wonder to discover it? Is childlike wonder itself the way to heaven? Or should we look towards the east (ad orientem) in the expectation of the rising sun and the coming of the light? Does the rising sun orientate us towards the Rising Son? Is this why Christian liturgical worship has traditionally been ad orientem, with priest and people turning eastward in mystical expectation? Or should we look instead to the mystic west towards the Grey Havens to which Frodo and the Elves sail at the end of The Lord of the Rings? This earlier essay sprang to mind as I opened Robert Lazu Kmita’s new book, The Ultimate Quest: Uncovering the Location of Paradise (Angelico Press). But the quest on which Dr. Kmita embarks is not the quest for the eternal paradise of Heaven but the quest for the primal paradise of Eden, the lost Paradise from which our first parents were banished.

To be honest, I would normally have steered well clear of any book which promised to find the Paradise that we have lost. Such books are usually weird and wayward, promising the promised land without keeping the promise that Christ demands of us, the promise that we follow him faithfully and truthfully in the light of the Gospel as elucidated by theological orthodoxy. Those who seek to guide us to Eden (or Eldorado, or Atlantis) are usually seeking the new age in their old age, like aging hippies trying to get back to the Garden. Those seeking the paradise lost are defying and denying the divine prohibition on a quest for lost innocence. The seekers of this sort of innocence are guilty of egregious theological and philosophical ignorance. Indeed, the one thing that seems to unite all such guides is the fact that they are misguided.

The reason that I cracked open the pages of Dr. Kmita’s book, setting aside all misgivings, is my awareness that Dr. Kmita is not wayward and that he is only weird (wyrd) in the Anglo-Saxon sense of the word, which is to say that he has a keen sense of God’s mystical presence in all things. He has written for The Imaginative Conservative and for the St. Austin Review, the cultural journal which I have edited for 25 years, and for many other estimable journals, both in print and online. He has authored many books and has collaborated on others, including an Encyclopedia of J. R. R. Tolkien’s World in Romanian, his native tongue. Holding a PhD in philosophy, he is also a consummate theologian and is widely read in great literature. In brief and in sum, he is well rounded because he is well grounded in the roots of Christendom, picking its fruits to nourish his own writing.

Knowing that Dr. Kmita is worth reading, and that his views on any topic are worth hearing and probably heeding, I joined him on the “ultimate quest” for the “true location of Paradise”.

In his foreword, Dr. Kmita places himself in “the role of an improvised Sherlock Holmes” on the hunt for clues. He doesn’t look for them in the clueless volumes of the aforementioned new agers but in the ancient and ageless tomes of civilization, especially in the writings of the saints: Augustine, Aquinas, Ambrose, Isidore of Seville, Gregory of Nyssa, Gregory of Nazianzus, Athanasius the Great and Maximus the Confessor.

Confessing that the quest for the location of Paradise is not merely physical but is “theological-metaphysical”, he seeks clues from those who endeavour to read Genesis literally and those who read it allegorically, mystically, and symbolically. Which of these clues lead us closer to an understanding of Paradise and its location and which are merely red herrings leading us astray?

In the opening chapter, Dr. Kmita focuses on Christopher Columbus and the belief that the First World of our parents, “the Earthly Paradise”, might be found in the virgin territory of the New World. The following four chapters, which focus on the writing of Augustine and Aquinas, are on surer footing than Columbus’ first-footing in the New World, placing the quest on the terra firma of theological wisdom. The penultimate and longest chapter of the book brings Saints Gregory of Nyssa and Gregory of Nazianzus into the conversation, while the concluding chapter introduces the divinely comedic presence of Dante.

It is not for me to spoil the future reader’s enjoyment of the quest by giving away Dr. Kmita’s conclusion at the conclusion of the book, which is the conclusion of the quest. The Ultimate Quest is a mystery story in the truest sense of the word and Dr. Kmita is indeed in “the role of an improvised Sherlock Holmes”. Heaven forbid that any reviewer should reveal the answer to the mystery which the finding of the clues reveals. It is, after all, a mystical truth that doing what heaven forbids does not lead to the discovery of Paradise but its loss.

Bishop Challoner's Meditations ~ Saturday After the Ascension


OTHER LESSONS TO BE LEARNT FROM THE ASCENSION OF OUR LORD

Consider first, that as in consequence of the ascension of our Lord we ought to be daily carried as it were upon the wings of love up to him in his heavenly kingdom, so we ought by this frequent ascending thither to be daily more and more enamoured with that kingdom of love; to conceive the highest ideas of that incomprehensible happiness of the soul’s being there eternally united to her God, and absorbed in him, and with the most ardent desires to long daily more and more for this fountain of life. But what then must the sentiments of the soul be, when after she has begun, by the practice of this devotion, to relish something of the sweetness of the good things of her Lord in the land of the living, she finds herself still a prisoner in this foreign land, in this earthly Babylon? O how does she wish to be delivered from this captivity! to see an end of this long pilgrimage! How does she lament her banishment in this vale of tears, at so great a distance from her true country! How does she despise this miserable world, and even loathe its choicest enjoyments! O my soul, that these were your sentiments.

Consider 2ndly, and give ear to the exhortation of the apostle, Coloss. iii. 1, &c., ‘If thou be risen with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God; and the things that are above, not the things that are on the earth. For you are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God. When Christ shall appear, who is your life, then shall you also appear with him in glory.’ How happy are those Christians that enter into these sentiments upon occasion of the ascension of our Lord; who consider Christ as the great object of their love and their true life; and, as he is in heaven, sitting at the right hand of God, turn all their intentions and affections towards heaven; who consider this their true life as absent arid as hidden from them here below, and therefore, continually aspire after that happy revolution when they shall cease to die and begin to live. And in the mean time, whilst they remain in this region of death, they seek, as much as they can, to divest themselves of this body of death, by mortifying, as the apostle admonishes, their members that are upon earth, and by crucifying the flesh with its vices and concupiscences.

Consider 3rdly, that as we are informed by church history, our Lord, at his ascension, left the last prints of his feet upon the top of Mount Olivet, in the place from whence he ascended, which no length of time, nor encampments of armies, or other accidents, nor even industry of man, could ever efface or cover over, that we might learn that the true way for all that desire to follow Christ, by ascending after him to heaven, is to have his footsteps always before their eyes, and to walk in them by a diligent imitation of his life and conversation. They that are careful to walk in his footsteps are his disciples indeed; and they that are his disciples indeed, will infallibly, if they persevere, ascend to heaven after him, and be for ever with him.

Conclude to lay up in thy heart all these lessons which Christ desires to teach thee in his ascension and so to adhere to his footsteps, that nothing in life or death may ever separate thee from him.

16 May, Antonio, Cardinal Bacci: Meditations For Each Day


The Refuge of Sinners


1. “Refuge of sinners, pray for us.” This is one of the most beautiful invocations in the Litany of Loreto. In the second half of the Hail Mary the Church, knowing that we are all sinners, teaches us to pray to our heavenly Mother: “Pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death.” When a mother sees her sons going astray or behaving badly, she does not cease to love them. One might say that she loves them all the more, because in addition to her natural affection she develops a sense of anxious compassion for them when she thinks of the way in which they have risked their eternal salvation by sinning. Mary’s attitude to us is like this. The only difference is that our earthly mothers suffer as a result of our transgressions and ingratitude without being able to do much to change us. Mary, on the other hand, being the Mother of Jesus as well as our Mother, is not only willing but able to help us. No matter how enormous our sins may be, no matter how irresistible our carnal instincts may seem, no matter how hopelessly we may have plunged into the depths of evil, it is enough for us to raise our eyes in confidence towards Mary. Like a merciful Mother, she will obtain for us from God forgiveness and the strength to return to the path of penitence and of peace. “Poor ship-wrecked sinners,” says St. Bonaventure, “have recourse to Mary and she will lead you to the port of salvation.” (In Ps. 8) Our good Mother, St. Bernard tells us, does not shrink in horror from the most wretched of sinners. He need only turn to her for help and she will save him from damnation. (Or. Pan. ad B.V.) How comforting it should be for us to realise that we have such a merciful and powerful Mother. Let us turn to her with trust and humility and she will certainly assist us.

2. Mary is called the Star of the Sea because, as St. Thomas says, “even as sailors are guided into port by means of a star, so Christians are guided towards Heaven by means of Mary.” (Opusc. 7) This absolute guarantee of the protection of our heavenly Mother should increase our trust in her and lead us to turn towards her in every difficulty and temptation. It should not, however, result in an unhealthy attitude of spiritual inactivity, a passive dependence on Mary’s favours without any co-operation on our part. Such behaviour would be the height of filial ingratitude. Mary will certainly save repentant sinners who have recourse to her, but she cannot pay any attention to hardened sinners who pray to her with their lips while their hearts remain willfully steeped in sin. We must have complete confidence in her, but we must also have a sincere intention of raising ourselves under her protection from the slavery of sin to the friendship of God.

3. Mary, my merciful mother, you see how wretched I am and how often I have fallen. I wish to reform and sanctify myself, but I am not able. Without your powerful assistance, the weakness of my nature is an insurmountable obstacle. Come to my aid, O Mother of mercy. Obtain forgiveness for me from your divine Son. Obtain for me also the grace of a complete change of heart, so that I may be truly your son here upon earth and share in your glory in Heaven. Amen.

Byzantine Saints: Venerable Theodore the Sanctified, Disciple of Ven. Pachomius the Great

Eastern Rite ~ Feasts of 16 May AM 7534

Today is the Feast of Our Venerable Father Theodore the Sanctified, Disciple of Saint Pachomius.
✠✠✠✠✠

Saint Theodore was called “Sanctified” because he was the first in his monastery ordained to the priesthood.

Saint Theodore came from Egypt and was the son of rich and illustrious Christian parents. The yearning for monastic life appeared early in him. Once there was a large party at the house of his parents during the feast of Theophany. The boy did not want to take part in the festivities, grieving that because of earthly joys he might be deprived of joys in the life to come. He secretly left home when he was fourteen and entered one of the monasteries.

Hearing about Pachomius the Great, he burned with the desire to see the ascetic. Saint Pachomius received the young man with love, having been informed by God beforehand about his coming. Remaining at the monastery, Saint Theodore quickly succeeded in all his monastic tasks, particularly in his full obedience to his guide, and in his compassion towards the other brethren. Theodore’s mother, learning that he was at the Tabennisi monastery, came to Saint Pachomius with a letter from the bishop, asking to see her son. Saint Theodore did not wish to break his vow to renounce the world, so he refused to meet with his mother.

Seeing Saint Theodore’s strength of mind and ability, Saint Pachomius once told him to instruct the brethren on Holy Scripture. Saint Theodore was then only twenty years old. He obeyed and began to speak, but some of the older brethren took offence that a new monk should teach them, and they departed. Saint Pachomius said to them, “You have given in to the devil and because of your conceit, your efforts will come to nought. You have not rejected Theodore, but rather the Word of God, and have deprived yourselves of the Holy Spirit.”

Saint Pachomius appointed Saint Theodore as overseer of the Tabennisi monastery and withdrew to a more solitary monastery. Saint Theodore with filial love continued to concern himself over his instructor, and he looked after Saint Pachomius in his final illness, and when the great abba reposed in the Lord, he closed his eyes. After the death of Saint Pachomius, Saint Theodore directed the Tabennisi monastery, and later on, he was at the head of all the Thebaid monasteries. Saint Theodore the Sanctified was famed for his holiness of life and a great gift of wonderworking, and he was well known to Saint Athanasius, Patriarch of Alexandria. Saint Theodore reposed in his old age in the year 368.

Troparion — Tone 1

Dweller of the desert and angel in the body, / you were shown to be a wonder-worker, our God-bearing Father Theodore. / You received heavenly gifts through fasting, vigil, and prayer: / Healing the sick and the souls of those drawn to you by faith. / Glory to Him who gave you strength! / Glory to Him who granted you a crown! / Glory to Him who through you grants healing to all!

Kontakion — Tone 2

You flourished like a palm tree in the house of God, / bringing forth the fruit of virtues for the Lord through your ascetic efforts. / Therefore, you are called blest, venerable Father Theodore, / for you are equal to the bodiless ones!

IN LUMINE FIDEI: 16 MAY – SATURDAY AFTER THE ASCENSION


IN LUMINE FIDEI: 16 MAY – SATURDAY AFTER THE ASCENSION: Dom Prosper Gueranger: Jesus, then, the Man who dwelt on the Earth and was perfect in all holiness, has ascended into Heaven. This ear...

16 May, The Chesterton Calendar

MAY 16th

Philosophy is not the concern of those who pass through Divinity and Greats, but of those who pass through birth and death. Nearly all the more awful and abstruse statements can be put in words of one syllable, from 'A child is born' to 'A soul is damned.' If the ordinary man may not discuss existence, why should he be asked to conduct it?

'George Bernard Shaw.'

16 May, The Holy Rule of St Benedict, Patriarch of Western Monasticism


CHAPTER II. What kind of man the Abbot ought to be

15 Jan. 16 May. 15 Sept.

Above all let him not, overlooking or under-valuing the salvation of the souls entrusted to him, be too solicitous for fleeting, earthly, and perishable things; but let him ever bear in mind that he hath undertaken the government of souls, of which he shall have to give an account. And that he may not complain for want of worldly substance, let him remember what is written: “Seek first the kingdom of God and His justice, and all these things shall be added unto you.” And again: “Nothing is wanting to them that fear Him.”

And let him know that he who hath undertaken the government of souls, must prepare himself to render an account of them. And whatever may be the number of the brethren under his care, let him be certainly assured that on the Day of Judgment he will have to give an account to the Lord of all these souls, as well as of his own. And thus, being ever fearful of the coming inquiry which the Shepherd will make into the state of the flock committed to him, while he is careful on other men’s account, he will be solicitous also on his own. And so, while correcting others by his admonitions, he will be himself cured of his own defects.

17 May, The Roman Martyrology


S
extodécimo
 Kaléndas Iúnii Luna tricésima Anno Dómini 2026
May 17th 2026, the 30th day of the Moon, were born into the better life:

At Villa Real, in the kingdom of Valencia, the holy Paschal, of the Order of Friars Minors, a man of wonderful innocency, and wonderful contrition.
At Pisa, in Tuscany, is commemorated the holy martyr Torpes. He was a great official in the house of Nero, and was one of those of whom the Apostle Paul writeth from the city of Rome unto the Philippians (iv. 22,) "All the Saints salute you, chiefly they that are of Caesar's household." But later on, at the command of Satellicus, because of his belief in Christ, he was buffeted, grievously scourged, and thrown to beasts to be devoured; but he was not hurt thereby, and finished his testimony by being beheaded, upon the 29th day of April; but his feast day is kept upon the 17th day of May on account of the translation of his body.
On the same day, the holy Virgin and martyr Restituta. In the reign of the Emperor Valerian, Proculus, the judge in Africa, caused her to be tortured in diverse ways, and put into a ship with pitch and tow that she might burn on the sea, but when fire was put to it the flame turned upon them that kindled it. Restituta gave up her spirit to God in prayer, and, by the will of God, the ship containing her body came to shore in the island of Ischia, near Naples, where her remains were received with great worship by the Christians. In after-days the Emperor Constantine the Great caused a church to be built in her honour at Naples.
At Noyon, [in the reign of the Emperor Diocletian,] the holy martyrs Heradius, Paul, and Aquilinus, along with two others.
At Chalcedon, under the Emperor Maximian, the holy martyrs Solochan, and the soldiers, his Companions.
At Alexandria, the holy martyrs Adrion, Victor, and Basilla.
At Wurzburg, [in the year 1045,] the holy Confessor Bruno, Bishop [of that see.]
℣. And elsewhere many other holy martyrs, confessors, and holy virgins.
℟. Thanks be to God.

Meme of the Momemt

Today is the 225th anniversary of his birth.

Traditional Catholic Evening Prayers in English | May


Traditional Catholic evening devotional prayers to close your day with your mind, heart, tongue, and soul on our Lord! The month of May is dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Begin and end each day with prayer. This video is a compilation of many traditional evening prayers Catholics say, and should not be considered a replacement for those who have an obligation to pray the Divine Office evening prayers.

Compline

From St Thomas Aquinas Seminary. You may follow the Office at Divinum Officium.

Byzantine Saints: Saint Isaiah the Wonderworker, Bishop of Rostov

Ss Bertha & Rupert of Bingen: Butler's Lives of the Saints

Stations of the Cross According to St Alphonsus Liguori


From the Apostolic Penitentiary:

A plenary indulgence is granted to those who piously make the Way of the Cross. The gaining of the indulgence is regulated by the following rules:

1. Must be done before stations of the cross legitimately erected.

2. 14 stations are required. Although it is customary for the icons to represent pictures or images, 14 simple crosses will suffice.

3. The common practice consists of fourteen pious readings to which some vocal prayers are added.. However, nothing more is required than a pious meditation on the Passion and Death of the Lord, which need not be a particular consideration of the individual mysteries of the stations.

4. A movement from one station to the next is required. But if the stations are made publicly and it is not possible for everyone taking part to go from station to station, it suffices if at least the one conducting the exercise goes from station to station, the others remaining in their places.

5. Those who are "impeded" can gain the same indulgence if they spend at least one half and hour in pious reading and meditation on the Passion and Death of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Vespers for St John Baptist de la Salle, Confessor

From the Canons Regular of the New Jerusalem. You may follow the Office at Divinum Officium.

Summa Contra Gentiles Book I: Reasons of Those Who Deny God the Knowledge of Particulars

From Contemplating History


Saint Thomas Aquinas (1225 – 7 March 1274), was a Doctor of the Church, Philosopher, Theologian, Jurist, Dominican Friar, and Priest. Known as Doctor Angelicus "Angelic Doctor," and the Doctor Communis "Universal Doctor" his writings serve as a defense and proof of the validity of Christ's authority over all. The Summa contra Gentiles (also known as Liber de veritate catholicae fidei contra errores infidelium, "Book on the truth of the Catholic faith against the errors of the unbelievers"). The Summa contra Gentiles consists of four books. The structure of Saint Thomas's work is designed to proceed from general philosophical arguments for monotheism, to which Muslims and Jews are likely to consent even within their own respective religious traditions, before progressing to the discussion of specifically Christian doctrine. Book I begins with general questions of truth and natural reason, and from chapter 10 investigates the concept of a monotheistic God. Chapters 10 to 13 are concerned with the existence of God, followed by a detailed investigation of God's properties (chapters 14 to 102). When demonstrating a Truth about God which can be known through reason, St. Thomas gives multiple arguments, each proving the same Truth in a different way. Whether you are a history enthusiast, a student of religion, or simply curious about the impact of the Roman Catholic Church on the world, this playlist is designed to provide an informative and engaging journey through its captivating past. Subscribe to the Contemplating History channel for more educational content and immerse yourself in the rich tapestry of history.

He Made ChatGPT Learn Everything About Catholicism | Matthew Sanders


Matthew Sanders is a technologist working at the intersection of artificial intelligence and Catholic evangelisation, building digital tools that are shaping how people encounter faith in the modern world.
In this conversation, he discusses the rise of AI as a space for spiritual inquiry, the millions of users engaging with Magisterium AI, and the kinds of personal and religious questions being asked through these systems. The discussion explores whether AI can serve as a form of pre-evangelization, the risks of mediating spiritual authority through technology, and what Catholics can expect Pope Leo to say in his forthcoming encyclical on AI. Guest bio: Matthew Sanders is a Catholic technologist who has designed and developed major digital platforms for the Church, including projects for the Vatican Observatory and the Vatican’s Office for Migrants and Refugees. He is the creator of Magisterium AI, an initiative aimed at bringing the Church’s intellectual and spiritual tradition into conversation with users through artificial intelligence.