The Church and
Salvation
The Church is sometimes called the
universal sacrament of salvation. That use of the word sacrament is
broad, not strict. It is true in as much as the Church is the
divinely instituted means of giving grace to all. But the Church is
not a visible rite - it rather confers these visible rites which we
call the seven Sacraments.
From the fact that the Church is
God's means of giving grace, is it is clear that there is no
salvation outside the Catholic Church. This truth has even been
defined by the Church more than once, e.g., in the Council of
Florence in 1442. However we must take care to understand this
teaching the way the Church understands it. We just saw that the
Church claims the exclusive authority to interpret both Scripture
and Tradition. So one like Leonard Feeney who interprets the
teaching on the necessity of the Church his own way is not acting
like a Catholic theologian at all. The Holy Office, on August 8,
1949, declared that L. Feeney was guilty of this error. Because of
his error, he rejected several teachings of the Magisterium, saying
they clashed with this definition - but they clash only with his
false interpretation, given in private judgment.
Pius IX (Quanto
conficiamur moerore, August 10, 1863) taught: "God... in His
supreme goodness and clemency, by no means allows anyone to be
punished with eternal punishments who does not have the guilt of
voluntary fault." Vatican II (Lumen
gentium # 16) taught the same: "They who without their own fault
do not know of the Gospel of Christ and His Church, but yet seek God
with sincere heart, and try, under the influence of grace, to carry
out His will in practice, known to them through the dictate of
conscience, can attain eternal salvation." Pius XII had said (Mystici
Corporis Christi) that one can "be related to the Church by a
certain desire and wish of which he is not aware", i.e., by the
desire to do what God wills in general.
Precisely how does this work out? We
saw on our very first page that St. Paul insists (Romans 3:29) that
God makes provision in some way for all. We saw that one of the
earliest Fathers, St. Justin Martyr (Apology
1:46) said that some, like Socrates could even be Christians because
they followed the divine Word. Now St. Justin also said that the
Divine Word is in the hearts of all. Then we notice in St. Paul's
Romans 2:14-16 that "The gentiles who do not have the law [revealed
religion] do by nature the things of the law; they show the work of
the law written on their hearts." And according to their response,
they will or will not be saved.
Clearly, it is this Divine Word, or
the Spirit of Christ, the Divine Word, that writes the law on their
hearts, i.e., makes known to them what they should do. If they
follow that, although they do not know that that is what they are
following, yet objectively, they do follow the Logos, the divine
Word. And so St. Justin was right in calling them Christians. We can
add that St. Paul in Romans 8:9 makes clear that if one has and
follows the Spirit of Christ, he "belongs to Christ." But, to belong
to Christ is the same as being a member of Christ, and that is the
same as being a member of the Church. Not indeed by formal
adherence, but yet substantially, enough to satisfy the requirement
of substantial membership. Indeed, Vatican II even wrote (LG # 49):
"All who belong to Christ, having His Spirit, coalesce into one
Church."
So, St. Paul was right: God does take
care of them; St. Justin was right too: they can be Christians
without knowing it. Otherwise, God would be sending millions upon
millions to hell without giving them any chance at all, if they
lived far from places where the Church was known, e.g., in the
western hemisphere before 1492.
That fact that salvation is possible
in this way does not mean that there should be no missions or
attempts to bring back the Protestants. Richer and more secure means
of salvation are to be had with formal explicit adherence to the
Catholic Church. Therefore we need to make every effort. In regard
to Ecumenism, it is good to keep in mind a rule from Vatican II, in
its Decree on Ecumenism (#
11): "It is altogether necessary that the complete doctrine be
clearly presented. Nothing is so foreign to true Ecumenism as that
false peace-making in which the purity of Catholic doctrine suffers
loss, and its true and certain sense is obscured."
-by Fr. William G. Most, taken from
Basic Catholic Catechism (PART FIVE: The Apostles' Creed IX - XII
Ninth Article: "The Holy Catholic Church; the Communion of Saints")