The Case of Fr. Leonard Feeney

   (c) Copyright 1996-2011 by Bishop Clarence Kelly

Part I

The Excommunication

   Introduction

   In the recent past there has been a resurgence of interest in the late
   Fr. Leonard Feeney. The number of his supporters seems to be growing at
   a rapid pace. The popularity of his ideas is on the upswing. More and
   more we see his name presented in a favorable light in traditionally
   oriented publications. More and more, it seems, he is looked upon as a
   hero of the Faith and a defender of Catholic orthodoxy.

   We are told that his excommunication in 1953 was unjust and invalid. It
   was invalid, they say, because of a defect of form. It was unjust, we
   are told, because he was excommunicated for his defense of Catholic
   orthodoxy in general and of the doctrine "outside the Church there is
   no salvation" in particular. Fr. Feeney stirred up the wrath of the
   liberals, his supporters say. And the liberals used all the forces at
   their disposal to persecute him. Thus was he excommunicated, they say,
   for his defense of the Church as the only means of salvation
   established by Our Lord Jesus Christ.

   The secular press, in some cases, has echoed the cry that Fr. Feeney
   was excommunicated for teaching that there is no salvation outside the
   Church. For example, the obituary that appeared in The New York Times
   on February 1, 1978, under the headline, "Leonard Feeney, Jesuit
   Priest, 80; Ousted in Dispute Over Salvation" said this: "AYER, Mass.,
   Jan. 31 (AP) - The Rev. Leonard Feeney, a Jesuit priest who was
   excommunicated for nearly 20 years for preaching that there was no
   salvation outside the Roman Catholic Church, died yesterday.  He was 80
   years old." [The New York Times, Feb. 1, 1978, p. B2.]

   So we ask, was Fr. Feeney "excommunicated . . . for preaching that
   there was no salvation outside the Roman Catholic Church?" Was he a
   great defender of Catholic orthodoxy and a hero of the Faith? Or was he
   a disobedient priest who deviated from sound Catholic doctrine? These
   are the questions that need to be answered. It is, therefore, my
   intention to answer them. And I propose to do this in two conferences
   -- one this evening and one tomorrow morning. This evening we will
   consider the question of Fr. Feeney's excommunication and the reason
   for it. Tomorrow we will deal with the question: Was Fr. Feeney a great
   defender of Catholic orthodoxy and a hero of the Faith; or was he a
   priest who deviated from sound Catholic doctrine? We will begin with
   some background.

Background

   Fr. Leonard Feeney was born in Lynn, Massachusetts on February 15,
   1897. He was the oldest of four children. There were three boys and one
   girl in his family. All the boys became priests. Fr. Feeney entered the
   seminary at an early age and was ordained in 1927. After ordination, he
   studied at Oxford University for a time, and upon his return to
   America, he taught at Boston College.

   Fr. Feeney was a very gifted writer and the author of many books. In
   1934 he published a collection of essays entitled Fish on Fridays which
   became a best seller. In one of the essays that appears in this book he
   made it quite plain that at that time he believed a well intentioned
   Protestant could be saved. In the mid-1930's, Fr. Feeney was the
   literary editor of America magazine. He published a biography of Mother
   Seton and other works as well. In 1952 Bread of Life appeared. This is
   a collection of lectures that were given by Fr. Feeney at St. Benedict
   Center from 1942 to 1952. In the Foreword to the first edition, Fr.
   Feeney wrote: "I have been persuaded by the members of my Order, The
   Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, to publish some of the talks I
   have been giving on Thursday evenings at Saint Benedict Center,
   Cambridge, Massachusetts, during the past ten years." Bread of Life is
   a significant work because in it, Fr. Feeney sets forth his theological
   position with regard to Justification, Salvation and Baptism. We will
   return to this work and to these terms when we consider the doctrinal
   teaching of Fr. Feeney.

St. Benedict Center

   The name of Fr. Leonard Feeney is, of course, bound up with that of St.
   Benedict Center. In fact it is so identified with St. Benedict Center
   that one can hardly think of one without the other. This is true even
   though Fr. Feeney was not the founder of St. Benedict Center. The
   Center was established by three lay persons in Cambridge, Massachusetts
   in March of 1940.

   The founders were: Mrs. Catherine Clarke, Christopher Huntington and
   Avery Dulles. This is the same Avery Dulles whose father was the late
   John Foster Dulles -- Secretary of State under President Eisenhower.
   Avery Dulles was a convert to the Catholic Church and went on to become
   a Jesuit priest.  The mission of St. Benedict Center was to provide a
   safe haven for Catholic university students. It was to be a place where
   these young people could go to learn about the Faith and to be
   bolstered in its practice. It was also to be a place where interested
   non-Catholics could go to find out about the Catholic Church.

   We have already alluded to the fact that support for Fr. Feeney and his
   theological views seems to be growing at a rapid pace in certain
   circles of traditionally-minded people. Among the supporters of Fr.
   Feeney is the journalist, Mr. Gary Potter. Mr. Potter was a founding
   editor of Triumph magazine. His articles have appeared in National
   Review, Human Events, The New York Times, The Wanderer, The Remnant and
   in many other publications. He recently published a book about Fr.
   Feeney and the controversy surrounding him. The title of the book is
   After the Boston Heresy Case. I personally believe that Mr. Potter made
   a sincere effort to present the facts about Fr. Feeney in an objective
   manner. Yet, at the same time, there is no doubt that he is a strong
   supporter of the man and his cause.

   According to Mr. Potter, Fr. Feeney was introduced to St. Benedict
   Center in 1942 by a friend of Mrs. Catherine Clarke. He was later asked
   to become spiritual director at the Center. This he agreed to do with
   the permission of his Jesuit superior. At first, Fr. Feeney worked at
   the Center on a part-time basis. But by 1945 his work at the Center was
   so time consuming that he sought and received permission from his
   superior to work there full time.

   It was about this same time, as well, that Fr. Feeney began his search
   for what may be called the doctrinal missing link that would explain
   the corruption of the Catholic Faith in America, as he perceived it. By
   1945, Fr. Feeney apparently considered that the Faith, as it was
   practiced in this country, was essentially defective. He reasoned, it
   seems, that this condition was caused by the neglect of a particular
   truth of the Catholic Faith.

   And so he sought to find this "displaced" doctrine. This missing link,
   he believed, would explain the transition from the teaching of sound
   Catholic doctrine to doctrinal corruption.  His search lasted two years
   until he discovered the missing doctrine in 1947. In July of 1947, he
   announced "to the center that surely extra ecclesiam nulla salus
   [outside the Church there is no salvation] was [to quote Gary Potter]
   the `displaced' linch-pin doctrine they sought and which the Church
   needed to reaffirm." [Gary Potter, After the Boston Heresy Case
   (Monrovia, CA: Catholic Treasures Books, 1995), p. 48.]

   The doctrine, extra ecclesiam nulla salus (outside the Church there is
   no salvation), thus became the celebrated cause of Fr. Feeney. In time,
   his name was so closely associated with it that many came to believe
   that his eventual excommunication was due to his fidelity to this
   doctrine. As we have already pointed out, even The New York Times
   reported that Fr. Feeney was "excommunicated . . . for preaching that
   there was no salvation outside the Roman Catholic Church." [The New
   York Times, Feb. 1, 1978, p. B2.]

Trouble Preceded the Discovery

   It was in July of 1947 that Fr. Feeney announced his discovery of "the
   `displaced' linchpin doctrine," as Gary Potter put it. But contrary to
   a fairly common perception, Fr. Feeney's troubles did not begin with
   the discovery of the doctrine. There were already problems between Fr.
   Feeney and his Jesuit superiors and between St. Benedict Center and the
   Archdiocese of Boston even before Fr. Feeney's "great" discovery that
   the Catholic Church taught that she was the one institution established
   by Our Lord for the salvation of mankind.  One source of difficulty was
   the spirit of independence that prevailed at the Center. Gary Potter
   says: "When St. Benedict Center transformed its lecture program into
   St. Benedict Center School, neither the Society of Jesus nor the
   Archdiocese of Boston was consulted."   [Potter, op. cit., p. 85.]

   For the Center and Fr. Feeney to do such a thing without consulting the
   Archdiocese or his Jesuit superiors, would quite understandably cause
   difficulties. We are talking about the 1940's. In the 1940's, bishops
   ruled their dioceses with authority according to the provisions of the
   Code of Canon Law. Since the Code of Canon Law gave them authority over
   schools, it is not hard to understand that establishing a school in the
   1940's without the permission of the local ordinary would cause
   problems. In their commentary on Canon 1381 of the Code of Canon Law,
   the canonists Abbo and Hannan say this:

   "The religious training of youth in all schools whatever is subject to
   the authority and the supervision of the Church . . . In a similar way
   they [i.e, local ordinaries] have the right to approve the instructors
   in religion and the textbooks of religion; and even, to protect
   religion and morals, to demand that both the instructors and the
   textbooks be removed. The rights and duties set forth in this canon are
   not restricted to schools established by the Church." [John A. Abbo,
   S.T.L., J.C.D. and Jerome D. Hannan, A.M., LL.B., S.T.D., J.C.D., The
   Sacred Canons (St. Louis, MO: B. Herder Book Co., 1960), vol. II, p.
   611.]

   Furthermore, Fr. Feeney also refused to allow other Jesuits to help out
   at the Center. This refusal did not go over well with his Jesuit
   superior who had allowed him to work at the Center in the first place.
   After making it clear that Fr. Feeney's Jesuit superiors supported his
   work at the center, Gary Potter says of his superiors: "Their view
   would only begin to change when the man [i.e., Fr. Feeney] denied other
   Jesuits -- those enrolled at Harvard -- the opportunity to `help' at
   the center." [Potter, op. cit., p. 84.]

   Then, of course, there came the great controversy which followed Fr.
   Feeney's so-called discovery of the doctrine, extra ecclesiam nulla
   salus. Speaking of Fr. Feeney's Jesuit superiors, Gary Potter says:
   "Their changed view sharpened in the summer of 1947. It was that summer
   when Fr. Feeney, constantly discussing the matter with other center
   faculty and members, determined which was the `displaced' doctrine."
   [Ibid.]

Transfer to Holy Cross College

   The following summer -- on August 25, 1948, to be exact -- Fr. Feeney
   was informed by his Jesuit superior that he was being transferred from
   St. Benedict Center in Cambridge to Holy Cross College in Worcester,
   MA. Though Fr. Feeney was not happy about the transfer, he nevertheless
   obeyed. He was a Jesuit. He had a vow of obedience. He had been
   assigned to the Center by his superior. Now his superior was assigning
   him some place else, which he had every right to do.

   Fr. Feeney, for his part, packed his bags and left St. Benedict Center
   for his new assignment. But shortly after his departure from the Center
   he was visited at Holy Cross College by two young men from the Center.
   They pleaded with him to return. They wanted him to at least hear what
   the others at the Center had to say about the subject of why he should
   remain with them. Fr. Feeney agreed to go back to hear what they had to
   say. He met with the people at the Center. He listened to their plea
   that he stay. And he made his decision. His decision was to remain at
   St. Benedict Center in spite of the command of his Provincial Superior
   to leave.  He would disobey.

   Fr. Feeney's decision to stay was communicated to his Provincial
   Superior by the members of the Center. " `We are hereby informing you,'
   they wrote, `that by our unanimous request Father Feeney will continue
   to lead our work until we get a fair hearing from higher authorities.'
   " [Ibid., p. 93.] The letter to Fr. Feeney's Provincial was dated
   September 9, 1948. Gary Potter says that the Provincial "did not deign
   to answer the letter from St. Benedict Center, but he wrote Fr. Feeney
   the next day. His letter began: `For your sake and for the Society's, I
   plead with you to end all connection with St. Benedict's Center at once
   and to report to Holy Cross next Monday.'" [Ibid., p. 94.]

   The following month on December 29, 1948, Fr. Feeney's superior wrote
   to him again ordering him to leave St. Benedict Center and to report to
   his new assignment. He was told that another priest would be sent to
   the Center to replace him. He was also informed that his priestly
   faculties to hear confessions would cease on December 31 of that year.
   Again Fr. Feeney disobeyed.

Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary

   Fr. Feeney's refusal to obey was followed by the establishment of the
   Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary which he would later refer to as
   "my Order." This took place on January 17, 1949. The founders of the
   "order" were Fr. Feeney and Mrs. Catherine Clarke. Mrs. Clarke became a
   member of the order and took the name "Sr. Catherine." But she
   continued to live with her husband "Hank." At first the Slaves of the
   Immaculate Heart made a vow of obedience. Later they added a vow of
   chastity. This presented a major difficulty because many of the members
   were married with children. Their marital status and their children
   presented two serious problems.

   As for the marriage problem, Canon 542 of the Code of Canon Law makes
   it very plain that "Married persons for the duration of their marriage"
   "are invalidly admitted to the novitiate." [Abbo and Hannan, op. cit.,
   vol. I, pp. 559, 558.] This means that they cannot become religious as
   long as their spouse is alive even though they may be "separated" and
   even if "the other spouse consents that his spouse may enter religion."
   [Ibid., vol. I, p. 560.]

Communal Raising of Children

   The other problem was the children. What were they to do with the
   children? The solution they adopted was a strange one by any standard.
   It was to raise the children communally.  Gary Potter, who, as we
   mentioned, is very sympathetic to the cause of Fr. Feeney, explains:

   "Besides their farming, another of the Slaves' main activities after
   the move to Still River was the rearing of the community's children."
   [Potter, op. cit., p. 170.] The decision to raise them communally was
   made while everyone still lived in Cambridge. The center's married
   couples, it seems, wanted to live as religious. But how could they in
   light of the fact that they had children to raise?

   Mr. Potter says: "The decision to raise the children communally was the
   solution to that problem, it is what lay behind the decision. It also
   launched the Slaves into uncharted waters. In modern times, no Catholic
   religious association has attempted anything like it. If someone in the
   historical past has tried it, the example does not come to mind --
   apart from heretical movements like the Cathars [emphasis added]. In
   any event, once the zeal and earnestness

   of the married couples and other younger center members prevailed over
   the caution of Fr. Feeney and Sr. Catherine, some procedure had to be
   adopted." [Ibid.] For those who are not familiar with the group
   referred to by Mr. Potter, we would point out what the 1913 Catholic
   Encyclopedia says in this regard: "The Catharist system [the word
   Cathari comes from a Greek word which means pure] was a simultaneous
   attack upon the Catholic Church and the then-existing State. The Church
   was directly assailed in its doctrine and hierarchy . . . . But the
   worst danger was that the triumph of the heretical principles meant the
   extinction of the human race . . . For the Cathari, no salvation was
   possible without previous renunciation of marriage." [N.A. Weber,
   "Cathari," The Catholic Encyclopedia (NY: The Encyclopedia Press, Inc.,
   1913), vol. III, p. 437.]

   Mr. Potter goes on to say of Fr. Feeney's group and the communal
   raising of children: "The children's parents effectively ceased to
   exist as parents to the children, and more so as a child grew from
   three to five to ten and older. Care was taken that the children had no
   direct or special contact with their parents [emphasis added], save on
   a half-dozen major feast days during each year when the entire
   community would gather for socializing. On these occasions the children
   might chat with their parents, but after a certain time, the parents
   were seen by the children as scarcely more than another Big Brother or
   Big Sister." [Potter, op. cit., p. 171.] That a Catholic priest would
   sanction such a thing is nothing less than astonishing and raises very
   serious questions about his prudence, common sense and the soundness of
   his judgment.

Suspension and Excommunication

   On April 18, 1949, Fr. Feeney was suspended from his priestly duties
   and Catholics were forbidden to take part in the activities of St.
   Benedict Center. Fr. Feeney responded the next day by saying that his
   removal from St. Benedict Center was invalid. One of his superiors, Fr.
   Louis Gallagher, called Fr. Feeney to tell him that the sanctions would
   be lifted if he left St. Benedict Center and went to Holy Cross
   College. But Fr. Feeney refused to leave. He invoked his conscience as
   a justification for remaining at St. Benedict Center. He said in a
   statement prepared for the press: " `IT WAS AND IS A MATTER OF
   CONSCIENCE to me in the sanctity of my priesthood, as I openly declared
   to every superior I could contact.'"  [Ibid., p. 125.] A few days
   later, on April 21, 1949, Fr. Feeney received another command from his
   Provincial Superior to go to Holy Cross College. This command was given
   to him in virtue of Fr. Feeney's vow of obedience. It was therefore
   binding under pain of mortal sin. Fr. Feeney again refused to go.

   Three and a half months later, on August 8, 1949, the Sacred
   Congregation of the Holy Office wrote to Archbishop Cushing on the
   subject of the necessity of the Church for salvation. [NB: The full
   text of the letter was published in October of 1952 in The American
   Ecclesiastical Review CXXVII, 4 (Oct., 1952), pp. 307-315.] This decree
   of the Holy Office was voted on in plenary session on Wednesday, July
   27, 1949. The Prefect of the Holy Office, Pope Pius XII, approved the
   decree on Thursday, July 28, 1949. This decree was a
   response to the controversy that arose in the wake of Fr. Feeney's
   interpretation of the doctrine "outside the Church there is no
   salvation." Even though this decree was approved by Pope Pius XII who,
   as we mentioned, was the Prefect of the Holy Office, Fr. Feeney would
   later refer to it as "`This heretical letter....'" [Ibid.]

   Considering that the acts of disobedience on the part of Fr. Feeney
   were both grave and numerous and that he intended to persevere in the
   dispositions that produced these acts and thus had no intention of
   amending his ways, Fr. Feeney was expelled from the Jesuit Order on
   October 10, 1949. On September 4, 1952, Archbishop Cushing summoned Fr.
   Feeney to appear before him no later than October 4, 1952. He called
   upon Fr. Feeney to make his submission to the local ordinary and to the
   Holy See. Fr. Feeney was informed that the Congregation of the Holy
   Office, with the approval of Pope Pius XII, had put him, Fr. Feeney,
   and St. Benedict Center under interdict.

   On September 24, 1952, a letter was sent from St. Benedict Center to
   Pope Pius XII in which the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Holy
   Office was charged with heresy. The heresy, the letter said, was
   contained in the August 8, 1949, letter entitled "Letter of the Holy
   Office to the Archbishop of Boston."

   On October 25, 1952, Cardinal Pizzardo, who was then the Secretary of
   the Holy Office, wrote to Fr. Feeney from Rome, and in the name of the
   Holy Office. He said:

   "The Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office has been obliged
   repeatedly to make your teaching and conduct in the Church the object
   of its special care and attention, and recently, after having again
   carefully examined and calmly weighed all the evidence collected in
   your cause, it has found it necessary to bring this question to a
   conclusion.  "However, His Holiness, Pope Pius XII, in His tender
   regard and paternal solicitude for the eternal welfare of souls
   committed to His supreme charge, has decreed that, before any other
   measure be carried into effect, you be summoned to Rome for a hearing.
   Therefore, in accordance with the express bidding and by the special
   authority of the Supreme Pontiff, you are hereby ordered to proceed to
   Rome forthwith and there to appear before the Authorities of the
   Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office as soon as possible"
   [Ibid., p. 150.]

   Fr. Feeney did not obey this summons. He responded instead with a
   letter dated October 30, 1952. The following month, in November of
   1952, Fr. Feeney received a second letter summoning him to Rome. He was
   ordered to present himself before the Holy Office no later than
   December 31, 1952. He was told that if he failed to obey, his
   disobedience would be made public along with the canonical penalties.
   Fr. Feeney was also informed that his expenses for the trip to Rome
   would be paid by the Apostolic Delegate. But Fr. Feeney refused to
   comply with this second command to appear before the Holy Office.
   Instead he responded with a long letter dated December 2, 1952. In
   early January 1953, Fr. Feeney received yet a third letter from Rome.
   By this letter he was ordered to appear before the Holy Office no later
   than January 31, 1953, under pain of excommunication for failure to
   appear.

   Fr. Feeney refused to go. Once again he disobeyed the command of the
   Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office, and this for the third
   time. He responded with another letter, dated January 13, 1953, in
   which he accused the Holy Office of outrageous, barbarous behavior and
   with heresy. On February 4, 1953, the Holy Office met in Plenary
   Session and declared Fr. Leonard Feeney to be excommunicated. The
   decree of excommunication was dated February 13, 1953. The text is as
   follows:

   "Since the priest Leonard Feeney, a resident of Boston (Saint Benedict
   Center), who for a long time has been suspended from his priestly
   duties on account of grave disobedience of Church Authority, being
   unmoved by repeated warnings and threats of incurring excommunication
   ipso facto, has not submitted, the Most Eminent and Reverend Fathers,
   charged with safeguarding matters of faith and morals, in a Plenary
   Session held on Wednesday, 4 February 1953, declared him excommunicated
   with all the effects of the law. "On Thursday, 12 February 1953, Our
   Most Holy Lord Pius XII, by Divine Providence Pope, approved and
   confirmed the decree of the Most Eminent Fathers, and ordered that it
   be made
   a matter of public law. "Given at Rome, at the Headquarters of the Holy
   Office, 13 February 1953." [Ibid., p. 158.]

The Authority of the Holy Office

   Fr. Feeney was ordered in virtue of his vow of obedience -- and thus
   under pain of mortal sin -- to move from St. Benedict Center to Holy
   Cross College. He disobeyed. Subsequently he was ordered by the Supreme
   Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office to appear before it. Three times
   he was summoned. Three times he disobeyed. And in response to the third
   summons he accused the Holy Office of outrageous, barbarous and
   heretical behavior. Fr. Feeney accused the Holy Office of heresy
   despite the fact that the Prefect of the Holy Office was Pope Pius XII.

   The Holy Office, of course, had every right to summon Fr. Feeney. And
   he, for his part, was obliged under pain of mortal sin to obey the
   summons. But he chose not to do so. First he chose to disobey his
   Jesuit superiors. Then he chose to disobey the Holy Office. And in
   response to the third summons he received from the Holy Office, he
   charged the Holy Office with heresy, and thereby implicitly charged its
   Prefect, Pope Pius XII, with the same crime.

Why the Excommunication?

   In light of the facts it is not hard to understand why Fr. Feeney was
   excommunicated. Indeed in this case Rome was quite indulgent. Clearly,
   Fr. Leonard Feeney was excommunicated for a disobedience that was both
   grave and scandalous. He was not excommunicated for upholding Catholic
   doctrine or "for preaching that there was no salvation outside the
   Roman Catholic Church." He remained "unmoved" in the face of "repeated
   warnings and threats of incurring excommunication ipso facto." He
   refused to submit to the legitimate authority of the Church as
   exercised by the Holy Office, whose Prefect was Pope Pius XII and was
   thus excommunicated.

   And what is so strange about the whole thing is that when Fr. Feeney
   was given the opportunity to appear before the Holy Office, where he
   could defend his charge of heresy and his interpretation of the
   doctrine "outside the Church there is no salvation," he refused to take
   it. Is that the behavior of a great defender of Catholic orthodoxy?
   Would not a great defender of Catholic truth welcome such an
   opportunity to defend the truth? But Fr. Feeney did not defend the
   truth as he saw it. He did not rise to the occasion. Instead he stayed
   home. He stayed home and was excommunicated for it. Finally, I would
   like to point out that to conclude that Fr. Feeney was excommunicated
   for grave disobedience is not to say that disobedience was the only
   problem. For it was not.

   There was another problem which was far more serious. It was the
   problem of unsound doctrine. For Fr. Feeney -- as we will see tomorrow
   -- was guilty of grave doctrinal errors related to Baptism,
   Justification and Sanctifying Grace.

Part II

The Doctrinal Teaching of Fr. Leonard Feeney

   In Part I of this talk we considered the question of Fr. Feeney's
   excommunication. We saw that he was not "excommunicated . . . for
   preaching that there was no salvation outside the Roman Catholic
   Church." [The New York Times, Feb. 1, 1978, p. B2.] He was
   excommunicated for a disobedience that was most grave and scandalous.
   Three times he was summoned to appear before the Holy Office. Three
   times he disobeyed. And in response to his third order to appear before
   the Holy Office, he accused the Holy Office of heresy.

   In accusing the Holy Office, he implicitly accused Pius XII of heresy
   as well, for as we have noted, Pope Pius XII was the Prefect of the
   Holy Office at the time. We now proceed to the question: Was Fr.
   Feeney, in his disobedience, a great defender of Catholic orthodoxy and
   a hero of the Faith? Was he then like traditional priests today who
   refuse to go along with the Modernist changes? Or was he a man who not
   only disobeyed but also deviated from sound Catholic doctrine? To
   answer this question, it is necessary to examine the theological
   teaching of Fr. Feeney and to evaluate it in the light of Catholic
   doctrine. This we will do.

The Linch-Pin Doctrine

   As we mentioned in the first part of this presentation, it was in 1945
   that Fr. Feeney began his search for the missing doctrine the
   abandonment of which would explain the decay of the Faith in this
   country as he saw it. In 1947, he discovered it. And in July of 1947,
   he announced it to the people at St. Benedict Center. He announced, as
   Gary Potter writes in his book, After the Boston Heresy Case, "that
   surely extra ecclesiam nulla salus [outside the Church there is no
   salvation] was the `displaced' linch-pin doctrine they sought and which
   the Church needed to reaffirm." [Gary Potter, After the Boston Heresy
   Case (Monrovia, CA: Catholic Treasures Books, 1995), p. 48.] From that
   point forward, the doctrine, extra ecclesiam nulla salus, became the
   celebrated cause of Fr. Feeney and St. Benedict Center. The theological
   dispute that followed revolved around this doctrine. It did not revolve
   around the existence of the doctrine. Rather, it revolved around the
   meaning of the doctrine.

   For Fr. Feeney, the doctrine meant very simply that to be saved one
   must actually be a baptized member of the Catholic Church. That is to
   say, one must have been incorporated into the Church by Baptism of
   Water. The position of Fr. Feeney could be summed up by saying: Without
   Baptism of Water there is no salvation. And this is so even though,
   contrary to a popular impression, Fr. Feeney did believe in Baptism of
   Desire. He quite readily admitted that a person could be justified and
   put into the State of Sanctifying Grace by desire for Baptism before he
   actually received the waters of Baptism. But while admitting this, he
   emphatically denied that such a person, in the State of Sanctifying
   Grace, as a result of the desire for Baptism, could be saved. In his
   book, Bread of Life, Fr. Feeney stated:

   In the New Testament, you cannot be justified unless you want the water
   Jesus bequeathed us on the Mount of Olives; and you cannot be saved
   until that water is poured on your head!  . . . It is now: Baptism of
   Water, or damnation! If you do not desire that Water, you cannot be
   justified. And if you do not get it, you cannot be saved. [Emphasis in
   the original] [Fr. Leonard Feeney, Bread of Life, (Still River: Saint
   Benedict Center, 1952), p. 25.] From these words of Fr. Feeney, three
   things are clear. The first is that an unbaptized person can be
   justified by Baptism of Desire. The second is that a person justified
   by Baptism of Desire can never be saved without Baptism of Water. And
   the third is that there is an essential distinction between
   Justification and Salvation.

   In these three points we have the fundamental position of Fr. Feeney.
   We will now consider each point in some detail. Then we will compare
   what Fr. Feeney taught with the teaching of the Catholic Church to see
   if Fr. Feeney was a defender of Catholic orthodoxy and a hero of the
   Faith, or a man who deviated from sound Catholic doctrine.

1. Justified by Desire

   The first point that we will consider is Justification by desire for
   Baptism. I have no doubt that it comes as a surprise to some that Fr.
   Feeney believed in Baptism of Desire, as mentioned. For it is quite
   commonly thought that he did not. Nor is it any wonder. For he did,
   after all, accuse Cardinal Gibbons and the Baltimore Catechism of
   heresy for teaching that " `There are three kinds of Baptism: Baptism
   of Water, Baptism of Desire, and Baptism of Blood.' " [Ibid., p. 117.]

   In light of this accusation one must wonder what Fr. Feeney would say
   about St. Thomas Aquinas who cites St. Paul's Epistle to the Hebrews
   chapter 6, verse 2 to the effect that St. Paul speaks "of the doctrine
   of baptisms." And St. Thomas says of this passage by St. Paul:

   "He uses the plural, [that is, `Baptisms'] because there is Baptism of
   Water, of Repentance, and of Blood." [St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa
   Theologica., Pt. III, Q. 66, Art. 11, On the contrary, vol. II, English
   Dominican translation, p. 2390.]

   In Bread of Life, Fr. Feeney says: "A man in the Old Testament waiting
   and wanting Baptism to be instituted, and a man in the New Testament
   waiting and wanting Baptism to be administered could both be
   justified." [Feeney, op. cit., p. 40.] And by justified, Fr. Feeney
   correctly understands "getting into" the State of Sanctifying Grace. He
   makes this very clear where he says: "Getting into the state of
   sanctifying grace is justification." [Ibid., p. 18.] Clearly then, Fr.
   Feeney admitted that desire for Baptism was sufficient for
   Justification and that by Justification he meant "getting into the
   state of sanctifying grace."

   So what does Justification mean? It means the remission of original sin
   and actual sin and getting into the State of Sanctifying Grace. Yet,
   while he admitted that a man could be justified and thereby put into
   the State of Sanctifying Grace by desire for Baptism, Fr. Feeney
   absolutely insisted that such a person could never be saved. In other
   words, such a person could never get into heaven. And this brings us to
   the second point.

2. No Salvation Without Baptism of Water

   The second point is that a person justified by Baptism of Desire could
   never be saved without Baptism of Water. Fr. Feeney presents a series
   of questions and answers to express his position on this matter:

   Q. What does "Baptism of Desire" mean?
   A. It means the belief in the necessity of Baptism of Water for
   salvation, and a full intent to receive it.
   Q. Can "Baptism of Desire" save you?
   A. Never.
   Q. Could "Baptism of Desire" save you if you really believed it could?
   A. It could not.
   Q. Could it possibly suffice for you to pass into a state of
   justification?
   A. It could.
   Q. If you got into the state of justification with the aid of "Baptism
   of Desire," and then failed to receive Baptism of Water, could you be
   saved?
   A. Never. [Ibid., p. 121.]

   For Fr. Feeney a man could be justified by desire for Baptism. He could
   get into the State of Sanctifying Grace in this fashion. But even
   though he was in the State of Grace he could "never" be saved; he could
   never get to heaven unless and until he was baptized with water. Nor
   did it matter to Fr. Feeney whether the person failed to receive
   Baptism of Water through his own fault or not. He said: "If you do not
   receive Baptism of Water, you cannot be saved, whether you are guilty
   or not guilty for not having received it. If it was not your fault that
   you did not receive it, then you just do not go to Heaven. You are
   lacking something required for Heaven. You did not add your own
   positive rejection of the requirement so as to give you a positive
   deficiency. Yours is a permanent lack of something required for eternal
   salvation." [Ibid., pp. 126-127.]

   But what happens to a person who is justified by desire for Baptism and
   who is thus in the State of Sanctifying Grace if that person dies
   before receiving Baptism of Water through no
   fault of his own? Fr. Feeney says: "I myself would say, my dear
   children, that a catechumen who dies before Baptism, is punished."
   [Ibid., p. 125.] Recall his words already quoted: "It is now: Baptism
   of Water, or damnation! If you do not desire that Water, you cannot be
   justified. And if you do not get it, you cannot be saved." [Emphasis in
   the original] [Ibid., p. 25.]

   Just think of the implications of Fr. Feeney's teaching. Here is a man
   who is justified by desire for Baptism. He is in the State of
   Sanctifying Grace. He, therefore, has within him a created
   participation in the very life of God. He is a child of God. He has the
   theological virtues of Faith, Hope and Charity. He believes in the
   Catholic Faith. He loves God above all things. He relies on the merits
   of Jesus Christ for his salvation. He has perfect contrition for his
   sins. He is devoted to the Blessed Virgin Mary and says her Rosary
   every day. He is preparing for Baptism. But before he receives it, he
   dies. Fr. Feeney would say that such a man cannot go to heaven because
   he was not baptized with water. Where does this man in the State of
   Sanctifying Grace go? Fr. Feeney says: "It is now: Baptism of Water, or
   damnation! If you do not desire that Water, you cannot be justified.
   And if you do not get it, you cannot be saved." [Ibid.]

3. Justification and Salvation According to Fr. Feeney

   We now come to the third point in Fr. Feeney's position. This is his
   distinction between Justification and Salvation. For Fr. Feeney, there
   is an essential difference between Justification and Salvation. For
   him, as we have shown, a person could be justified and could get into
   the State of Sanctifying Grace by desire for Baptism but such a person
   could
   never be saved without Baptism of Water. Recall his words:

   In the New Testament, you cannot be justified unless you want the water
   Jesus bequeathed us on the Mount of Olives; and you cannot be saved
   until that water is poured on your head!  . . . It is now: Baptism of
   Water, or damnation! If you do not desire that Water, you cannot be
   justified. And if you do not get it, you cannot be saved. [Emphasis in
   the original] [Ibid.]

   Justification and Salvation, for Fr. Feeney, are essentially different
   things.

   Nor is this difference simply a question of the fact that a justified
   person in the State of Grace is still capable of committing a mortal
   sin before death, and hence of falling from grace. We all know that. We
   know that until a person dies in the State of Grace, he is capable of
   falling from grace by mortal sin. But that is not what Fr. Feeney is
   talking about. He clearly teaches that a person who is justified and in
   the State of Sanctifying Grace can never be saved unless and until he
   is baptized with water. Therefore, for Fr. Feeney, there is an
   essential difference between Justification and Salvation in that
   Justification is not sufficient for Salvation.

   Here is what he says early on in Bread of Life: "Justification is only
   the divine courtyard of salvation: the preparation field, where you are
   given the grace to be tried out, as you move Godwards . . . . Do you
   see clearly that justification and salvation are not the same thing? .
   . . Justification is a divine probation. . . Is getting into the state
   of sanctifying grace salvation? No! What is it? Getting into the state
   of sanctifying grace is justification." [Ibid., pp. 17-18.]

   And finally he says: "But justification and salvation are two different
   things! Justification is the road to salvation, but it is not it. It is
   the journey, but not the goal." [Ibid., p. 19.] Now we certainly do
   agree with Fr. Feeney that: "We achieve salvation after our death."
   [Ibid., p. 39.] But we must reject the notion that Justification and
   Sanctifying Grace are not sufficient for Salvation. For such a notion,
   as we will show, is contrary to the teaching of the Church.

   This is not to say that there is no difference between a soul that is
   justified by desire for Baptism and one that is justified by Baptism of
   Water. It is simply to say that the difference is not sufficient to
   deprive a person of heaven who is justified by desire for Baptism. What
   then is the difference between a person justified by Baptism of Water
   and one justified by Baptism of Desire or of Blood? The difference is
   that a person who is justified by Baptism of Desire or of Blood does
   not receive the character which is imprinted on the soul by Baptism of
   Water. St. Thomas Aquinas says: "...Baptism imprints a character, which
   is indelible, and is conferred with a certain consecration." [Aquinas,
   op. cit., Pt. III, Q. 66, Art. 9, On the contrary, vol. II, English
   Dominican translation, p. 2388.]

   Baptism of Desire does not imprint this character -- this indelible
   mark -- on the soul even though the sins of the person are forgiven and
   the person is in the State of Sanctifying Grace. This is true as
   regards Baptism of Desire and Baptism of Blood. For neither is properly
   speaking a Sacrament; thus, neither imprints the character. St. Thomas,
   speaking of Baptism of Desire and of Blood, says that they "... are
   like Baptism of Water, not, indeed, in the nature of sign, but in the
   baptismal effect. Consequently they are not sacraments." [Ibid., Pt.
   III, Q. 66, Art. 11, Reply Obj. 2, vol. II, English Dominican
   translation, p. 2391.]

   It is precisely because they are not sacraments that they do not
   imprint the baptismal character on the soul. But otherwise they do
   produce "the baptismal effect." Thus "Baptism of desire . . . bestows
   Sanctifying Grace, which remits original sin, all actual sins, and the
   eternal punishments for sin." [Fr. Ludwig Ott, Fundamentals of Catholic
   Dogma, (St. Louis, MO: B Herder Book Company), 7 October 1954, p. 357.]
   Now Fr. Feeney would, of course, object to the notion that there are
   three Baptisms. He would say that such a thing is contrary to the
   teaching of St. Paul who speaks of "One Faith" and "One Baptism" in his
   Epistle to the Ephesians (4:5). But St. Thomas Aquinas anticipated this
   objection. Thus, he writes in the Summa Theologica: "The other two
   Baptisms are included in the Baptism of Water, which derives its
   efficacy, both from Christ's Passion and from the Holy Ghost.
   Consequently for this reason the unity of Baptismis not destroyed."
   [Aquinas, op. cit., Pt. III, Q. 66, Art. 11, Reply Obj. I, vol. II, p.
   2391.] In other words, Baptism of Blood and Desire are not outward
   signs instituted by Christ to give grace. They are not Sacraments
   properly speaking. But they are like the Sacrament of Baptism in "the
   baptismal effect" that is produced in the soul, namely: the remission
   of original sin and actual sin and the infusion of Sanctifying Grace
   into the soul.

   Now this is not the teaching of 20th century liberals in Boston, Mass.
   It is the teaching of the Angelic Doctor, St. Thomas Aquinas himself.
   And it was upheld by the infallible teaching of the Council of Trent.
   The doctrine of Fr. Feeney and his distinction between Justification
   and Salvation thus flies in the face of the teachings of St. Thomas and
   of Holy Mother Church.

   Recall, if you will, the questions and answers of Fr. Feeney which we
   have already quoted:

   Q. Could "Baptism of Desire" save you if you really believed it could?
   A. It could not.
   Q. Could it possibly suffice for you to pass into a state of
   justification?
   A. It could.
   Q. If you got into the state of justification with the aid of "Baptism
   of Desire," and then failed to receive Baptism of Water, could you be
   saved?
   A. Never. [Feeney, op. cit., p. 121.]

   The essential error of Fr. Feeney, then, is rooted in his novel
   distinction between Justification and Salvation which involves errors
   touching both Justification and Sanctifying Grace. In these matters,
   Fr. Feeney departs from the doctrine of the Catholic Church. He does
   this in order to foster and to protect his own doctrine of no Salvation
   without Baptism of Water. To further demonstrate this we will now
   proceed to a consideration of the teaching of the Catholic Church on
   Justification and Sanctifying Grace.

The Catholic Doctrine on Justification

   The Protestant Reformation was rooted in a rejection of the teaching of
   the Catholic Church on Justification. Martin Luther held that human
   nature was completely corrupted by original
   sin. He taught that the Redemption did not bring about a restoration of
   human nature from this state of corruption. For Luther Justification
   was, therefore, nothing more than "a juridical act (actus forensis) by
   which God declares the sinner to be justified, although he remains
   intrinsically unjust and sinful." [Ott, op. cit., p. 250.] For Martin
   Luther, Justification did not effect an inner sanctification of man.
   For him the justified man remained inwardly corrupt although outwardly
   he was declared justified. Fr. Ludwig Ott in his Fundamentals of
   Catholic Dogma explains it this way. For Martin Luther, he says: "On
   the negative side, Justification is not a real eradication of sin, but
   merely a nonimputation or covering of sin. On the positive side, it is
   not an inner renewal and sanctification, but merely an external
   imputation of Christ's justice. The subjective condition of
   Justification is fiducial faith, that is, the confidence of man, which
   is associated with the certainty of salvation, that the merciful God
   will forgive him his sins for Christ's sake." [Ibid.]

   The Catholic doctrine on Justification is radically different from that
   of Martin Luther. In Catholic teaching, on the negative side, when a
   man is justified a "real eradication of sin" takes place. Sin is really
   and truly taken away. It is not just covered up. On the positive side,
   an "inner renewal and sanctification" of the soul occurs. This renewal
   and sanctification is caused by Sanctifying Grace. Thus a man in the
   State of Grace is truly sanctified. He is made in his soul
   supernaturally beautiful. He is a friend of God. He is a child of God.
   And he is an heir of heaven. He is all these things for one reason.
   That reason is Sanctifying Grace, which is a created participation in
   the life of God.

   And so it is that if a man dies in the State of Grace he must be saved.
   For he is a child of God by Grace and by Grace he has a right to
   heaven. And God could no more deprive him of heaven than He could
   bestow the beatific vision on the devil. To do so would be contrary to
   God's own nature and His own divine order. Nor does it matter how the
   person got into the State of Grace and became a child of God and an
   heir of heaven. If he is in the State of Grace when he dies he is a
   child of God, an heir of heaven and thus he is necessarily saved. To
   deny this is to deny the teaching of the Church on Justification and
   Grace. One has only to consider the infallible teaching of the Council
   of Trent on Justification to understand this.

The Council of Trent on Justification

   The Council of Trent was convened to counteract the errors of the
   Protestant Reformation. It opened on December 13, 1545, and closed on
   December 4, 1563. The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913 says this in its
   article on the Council: "Its main object was the definitive
   determination of the doctrines of the Church in answer to the heresies
   of the Protestants...." [J.P. Kirsch, "Trent, Council of," The Catholic
   Encyclopedia ( NY: The Encyclopedia Press, 1913), vol. XV, p. 30.]

   On January 13, 1547, the Council of Trent issued its "Decree on
   Justification." In the opening paragraph of the decree, the Council
   said:

   Whereas there is, at this time, not without the shipwreck of many souls
   and grievous detriment to the unity of the Church, a certain erroneous
   doctrine disseminated touching justification [emphasis added]; the
   sacred and holy, ecumenical and general Synod of Trent, lawfully
   assembled in the Holy Ghost . . . purposes, unto the praise and glory
   of Almighty
   God, the tranquillizing of the Church, and the salvation of souls, to
   expound to all the faithful of Christ the true and sound doctrine
   touching the said justification; which (doctrine) the Sun of Justice,
   Christ Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith, taught, which the
   Apostles transmitted, and which the Catholic Church, the Holy Ghost
   reminding her thereof, has always retained, most strictly forbidding
   that any henceforth presume to believe, preach, or teach otherwise than
   as by this present decree is defined and declared. [Dogmatic Canons and
   Decrees (NY: The Devin-Adair Company, 1912), pp. 21-22.]

   The decree of the Council proceeded, in sixteen chapters and
   thirty-three Canons, to present the infallible teaching of the Catholic
   Church on Justification. In the previous year, on June 17, 1546, the
   Council had issued its "Decree Concerning Original Sin." In that decree
   the Council declared that "Adam, when he had transgressed the
   commandment of God in Paradise, immediately lost the holiness and
   justice wherein he had been constituted; and that he incurred . . . the
   wrath and indignation of God, and consequently death, with which God
   had previously threatened him, and together with death, captivity under
   his power who thence forth had the empire of death, that is to say the
   devil...." [Ibid., p. 16.] Thus, the Council said that by original sin
   Adam had lost "holiness and justice." He "incurred the wrath and
   indignation of God." He was made subject to "death" and was a captive
   under the power of the devil.

   Jesus Christ came into this world to deliver man from this bondage,
   which deliverance was prefigured by the deliverance of the children of
   Israel from the bondage of Egypt by Moses. Thus, Christ came to
   eradicate sin and to restore man to "holiness and justice." He came to
   conquer death and to deliver man from the power of the devil. In other
   words, He came to move man from that state in which he was a child of
   Adam and under the dominion of the devil to a State of Grace and
   adoption as a child of God. The movement from the first state to the
   second state is called Justification. Thus the Council of Trent
   infallibly defined Justification "as being a translation from that
   state wherein man is born a child of the first Adam to the State of
   Grace and of the adoption of the sons of God through the second Adam,
   Jesus Christ, our Saviour." [Ibid., pp. 25-26.] Hence, those who are
   justified have been translated from the state of sin to the State of
   Grace and are thus adopted children of God by the merits of Jesus
   Christ. Clearly then, Justification is not "a divine probation," as Fr.
   Feeney taught. It is the translation of a person from the state of
   being a child of "Adam to the State of Grace and of the adoption of the
   sons of God through the second Adam, Jesus Christ, our Savior." A
   person who is justified is a child of God and an heir of heaven,
   whether he is justified by Baptism of Water or by the desire for the
   Sacrament. If he is in the State of Grace, he is a child of God whether
   he has or does not have the indelible mark of the Sacrament of Baptism
   on his soul.

St. Emerentiana -- An Unbaptised Saint

   There are, therefore, many saints in heaven who never received Baptism
   of Water and who have not, therefore, upon their souls, the indelible
   mark of the Sacrament of Baptism. For they were justified not by
   Baptism of Water but by Baptism of Desire or of Blood. Since they died
   in the State of Grace they were saved. The fact that they did not have
   the indelible mark on their souls which is placed there by the
   Sacrament of Baptism did not prevent them from entering heaven. They
   were justified. They died in the State of Grace. And they were saved.
   An example is St. Emerentiana, virgin and martyr. While still an
   unbaptised catechumen she was martyred at the grave of St. Agnes. Her
   feastday is January 23.

   Martin Luther denied that Justification brought about "an inner renewal
   and sanctification." Fr. Feeney admitted the "inner renewal and
   sanctification"; but denied an essential effect of the inner renewal
   and sanctification. For he held that a soul justified and in a State of
   Sanctifying Grace by means of desire for Baptism could "never" be saved
   without Baptism of Water. Recall his words: "It is now: Baptism of
   Water, or damnation! If you do not desire that Water, you cannot be
   justified. And if you do not get it, you cannot be saved." [Emphasis in
   the original] [Feeney, op. cit., p. 25.] St. Emerentiana did not "get
   it" and is yet a saint in heaven.

The Council of Trent and Baptism of Desire

   Thus the Council of Trent infallibly taught that Justification was "a
   translation from that state wherein man is born a child of the first
   Adam to the State of Grace and of the adoption of the sons of God
   through the second Adam, Jesus Christ, our Saviour." [Dogmatic Canons
   and Decrees, pp. 25-26.] The Decree of the Council says: "... and this
   translation, since the promulgation of the Gospel, cannot be effected
   without the laver of regeneration, or the desire thereof [emphasis
   added], as it is written: `Unless a man be born again of water and the
   Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.'" [Ibid., p. 26.]

   Please note that the Decree of the Council of Trent, which was
   infallible, did not distinguish between two kinds of Justification --
   one brought about by Baptism of Water and one brought about by desire
   for Baptism. It speaks of only one Justification which is "effected" by
   "the laver of regeneration [i.e., Baptism of Water], or the desire
   thereof...." That Justification is effected by "desire" for "the laver
   of regeneration" is an infallible truth. It is, therefore, the same
   State of Justification and the same State of Grace that results whether
   the person is put into that state by Baptism of Water or by Baptism of
   Desire. Justification by Baptism of Desire is the infallible teaching
   of the Church. It is not a mere theological opinion that Catholics are
   free to reject.

   Therefore, a person who dies in the State of Justification, whether
   justified by the waters of Baptism or the desire for them, would be
   saved. The status of two souls -- one justified by Baptism of Water and
   the other by Baptism of Desire -- as regards salvation is the same. And
   again -- this is true even though a person justified by desire for
   Baptism does not have upon his soul the character of Baptism which is
   the indelible mark put there by the Baptism of Water. As regards
   Justification and Grace, the baptismal effect is the same whether one
   is justified by the Sacrament of Baptism or the desire for the
   Sacrament.

   But until the reception of Baptism of Water "the Character of Baptism,
   is [not] imprinted" upon the soul. [Ott, op. cit., p. 310.] And that is
   why the person who has not received Baptism of Water cannot be admitted
   to the other Sacraments. He cannot be admitted because Baptism of
   Desire and Baptism of Blood are not Sacraments properly speaking and
   the Sacrament of Baptism -- properly speaking, i.e. Baptism of Water --
   must be received before the other Sacraments may be administered to a
   person. For by the Sacrament of Baptism one is actually incorporated
   into the Church. As Fr. Ott puts it in his Fundamentals of Catholic
   Dogma: "The so-called Baptism by blood and Baptism of desire, it is
   true, replace Sacramental Baptism in so far as the communication of
   grace is concerned, but do not effect incorporation into the Church, as
   they do not bestow the sacramental character by which a person becomes
   attached formally to the Church. In spite of the opinion of Suarez,
   catechumens are not to be counted among the members of the Church. Even
   if they have the desire (votum) to belong to the Church, they are not
   really (actu) accepted into it." [Ibid., p. 311.]

   From the teaching of the Council of Trent we see clearly the erroneous
   character of Fr. Feeney's doctrine touching Baptism of Water,
   Justification and Sanctifying Grace. Fr. Feeney substantially deviated
   from the teaching of the Church. Since his interpretation of the
   doctrine "outside the Church there is no salvation" involved the claim
   that one could never be saved without Baptism of Water, Fr. Feeney
   necessarily had to reject the teaching of the Church on Justification
   and Sanctifying Grace. He knew that one could be justified by the
   desire for Baptism. He also knew that a justified soul is one in the
   State of Sanctifying Grace. Admitting these things he nevertheless
   rejected the consequences of Justification and Grace in order to
   protect his own teaching on the absolute necessity of Baptism of Water
   for salvation. Recall his words in Bread of Life:

   Q. If you got into the State of Justification with the aid of "Baptism
   of Desire," and then failed to receive Baptism of Water, could you be
   saved?
   A. Never. [Feeney, op. cit., p. 121.]

   The essential error, therefore, of Fr. Leonard Feeney is not that he
   taught that there is no salvation outside the Church. It is rather his
   rejection of the teaching of the Church on Grace and Justification in
   the service of his doctrine that Baptism of Water was absolutely
   necessary for salvation. That he was wrong there is no doubt. Indeed
   his insistence that a justified person who has not been baptized with
   water could "never" be saved is essentially heretical.

The Sacramental Effect Without the Sacrament

   In Part III of the Summa Theologica, St. Thomas Aquinas, speaking first
   of Baptism of Blood and then of Desire or Repentance says: "I answer
   that, As stated above (Q. 62, A.5), Baptism of Water has its efficacy
   from Christ's Passion, to which a man is conformed by Baptism, and also
   from the Holy Ghost, as first cause. Now although the effect [i.e., the
   efficacy of Baptism of Water] depends on the first cause, [i.e., the
   Passion of Christ and the Holy Ghost] the cause far surpasses the
   effect, nor does it depend on it." [Aquinas, op. cit., Pt. III, Q. 66,
   Art. 11, On the contrary, p. 2390.] In other words, the power of
   Christ's Passion and that of the Holy Ghost far surpass the power of
   the Sacrament of Baptism. This power is not limited by the outward sign
   of the Sacrament of Baptism. As St. Thomas says:

   Consequently, a man may, without Baptism of Water, receive the
   sacramental effect [i.e., Justification and Sanctifying Grace] from
   Christ's Passion, in so far as he is conformed to Christ by suffering
   for Him. Hence it is written (Apoc. vii. 14): These are they who are
   come out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes and have
   made them white in the blood of the Lamb. In like manner, a man
   receives the effect of Baptism by the power of the Holy Ghost, not only
   without Baptism of Water, but also without Baptism of Blood: forasmuch
   as his heart is moved by the Holy Ghost to believe in and love God and
   to repent of his sins: wherefore this is also called Baptism of
   Repentance . . . . Thus, therefore, each of these other Baptisms is
   called Baptism, forasmuch as it takes the place of Baptism. Wherefore
   Augustine says (De Unico Baptismo Parvulorum, iv): The Blessed Cyprian
   argues with considerable reason from the thief to whom, though not
   baptized, it was said: `Today shalt thou be with Me in Paradise' that
   suffering can take the place of Baptism. Having weighed this in my mind
   again and again, I perceive that not only can suffering for the name of
   Christ supply for what was lacking in Baptism, but even faith and
   conversion of heart, if perchance on account of the stress of the times
   the celebration of the mystery of Baptism is not practicable." [Ibid.,
   pp. 2390 - 2391.]

   This teaching of St. Cyprian, St. Augustine and St. Thomas is reflected
   in the teaching of the Council of Trent and is found, as well, in the
   Catechism of the Council of Trent which says: " . . . should any
   unforeseen accident make it impossible for adults to be washed in the
   salutary waters, their intention and determination to receive Baptism
   and their repentance for past sins, will avail them to grace and
   righteousness." [Catechism of the Council of Trent, Translated into
   English by John A. McHugh, O.P. and Charles J. Callan,
   O.P., (New York: Joseph F. Wagner, Inc., 1936, p.179.] Fr. Feeney's
   accusation of heresy, therefore, against Cardinal Gibbons and the
   Baltimore Catechism for their teaching on Baptism of Desire and Blood
   is an outrage and an absurdity. For in this accusation of heresy he
   would have to include St. Cyprian, St. Augustine and St. Thomas
   Aquinas, not to mention the Council of Trent and the Catechism of the
   Council of Trent. It may be that at one time Fr. Feeney had a valid
   point to make in opposing the liberal tendencies of his day which
   sought to water down the doctrine of the necessity of the Church for
   salvation so as to make it almost meaningless. But that is no excuse
   for him to deviate from Catholic Tradition and the infallible teaching
   of the Church on Baptism, Justification and Sanctifying Grace. His
   errors are most grave. For they involve the implicit denial of certain
   dogmas of the Faith -- which is the very meaning of heresy.

The Heresy in Fr. Feeney's Position

   A dogma in the strict sense of the term is a truth that has been
   divinely revealed and infallibly taught by the Church -- the denial of
   which constitutes heresy. Here is how Fr. Ludwig Ott explains it in his
   Fundamentals of Catholic Dogma. He says: "Dogma in its strict
   signification is the object of both Divine Faith (Fides Divina) and
   Catholic Faith (Fides Catholica); it is the object of the Divine Faith
   (Fides Divina) by reason of its Divine Revelation; it is the object of
   Catholic Faith (Fides Catholica) on account of its infallible doctrinal
   definition by the Church. If a baptized person deliberately denies or
   doubts a dogma properly so-called, he is guilty of the sin of heresy
   (CIC 1325, Par. 2), and automatically becomes subject to the punishment
   of excommunication (CIC 2314, Par. 1)." [Ott, op. cit., p. 5.]

   Now the following truths are taught by the Council of Trent as dogmas
   of Faith in the strict sense -- the denial of which would constitute
   heresy: One: "Sanctifying Grace sanctifies the soul. (De fide.)
   According to the teaching of the Council of Trent justification is `a
   sanctifying and renewal of the inner man.' " [Ibid., p. 257.] Two:
   "Sanctifying Grace makes the just man a friend of God. (De fide.)
   According to the teaching of the Council of Trent, one is changed by
   justification `from an unjust person into a just person and from an
   enemy into a friend (of God).' " [Ibid., p. 258.] And Three:
   "Sanctifying Grace makes the just man a child of God and gives him a
   claim to the inheritance of Heaven. (De fide.) According to the
   teaching of the Council of Trent, justification is `a translation into
   the State of Grace and of acceptance into the kinship of God.' "
   [Ibid.] A person who is justified is in the State of Grace -- as Fr.
   Feeney himself admits. Such a soul is therefore truly sanctified; is a
   friend of God; and is a person who has "a claim to the inheritance of
   Heaven." Thus one who dies in the State of Grace must be saved, as we
   have already pointed out, whether that person is justified by Baptism
   of Water or by Baptism of Desire. For "Sanctifying Grace makes the just
   man a child of God and gives him a claim to the inheritance of Heaven."

   Fr. Feeney denied that claim unless a man was baptized with water. He
   explicitly admitted that desire for Baptism was sufficient for
   Justification; and that a justified soul was one in the State of
   Sanctifying Grace: "Getting into the state of grace is justification."
   [Feeney, op. cit., p. 18.] But he went on to most emphatically declare
   that such a justified person did not have "a claim to the inheritance
   of Heaven."

   Fr. Feeney wrote:

   "Q. If you got into the State of Justification with the aid of `Baptism
   of Desire,' and then failed to receive Baptism of Water, could you be
   saved?

   A. Never." [Ibid., p. 121.] To say such a thing is to deny or doubt "a
   dogma properly so-called . . . [which] is . . . the sin of heresy."

Conclusion

   And so we return to the place where we began. For now we are in a
   position to answer the question that we posed at the beginning: Was Fr.
   Feeney a great defender of Catholic orthodoxy and a hero of the Faith?
   Or was he a man who deviated from sound Catholic doctrine? Clearly he
   was a man who deviated from sound Catholic doctrine. It is impossible
   therefore that he was a great defender of Catholic orthodoxy and a hero
   of the Faith. Fr. Feeney was a gifted writer and a zealous soul. But so
   was Martin Luther. And while they are not equivalent men, they did
   similar things. Luther sacrificed Catholic Truth on the altar of his
   own doctrine of salvation by Faith alone. Fr. Feeney sacrificed
   Catholic Truth on the altar of his doctrine of No Salvation Without
   Baptism of Water. For traditional Catholic people, however, Fr. Feeney
   is actually a greater danger than Martin Luther. For while Lutheranism
   poses no threat to the remnant of faithful Catholics; the teaching of
   Fr. Feeney certainly does as is evidenced by his growing popularity
   among traditionally minded Catholics.

   It is my belief that the rising popularity of Fr. Feeney and his
   teaching is little more than the latest assault of the devil on the
   remnant of faithful Catholics. First, there were the Modernists. Then
   came the dubious Thuc bishops and the Mount St. Michael sect imposing
   doubtful Sacraments and an unholy alliance on the faithful. Now it is
   Fr. Feeney and his doctrinal errors on Baptism, Justification and
   Grace. Let us not be fooled. In his Second Epistle to Timothy, St. Paul
   said: "I charge thee, before God and Jesus Christ, who shall judge the
   living and the dead, by his coming, and his kingdom: Preach the word:
   be instant in season, out of season: reprove, entreat, rebuke in all
   patience and doctrine. For there shall be a time, when they will not
   endure sound doctrine; but, according to their own desires, they will
   heap to themselves teachers having itching ears: And will indeed turn
   away their hearing from the truth, ... unto fables. But be thou
   vigilant...." (2 Timothy 4:1-5.)

   Let us then, my dear people, be vigilant. Let us hold fast to "sound
   doctrine." Let us reject the "teachers" with "itching ears." Let us
   have nothing to do with the religion of the Modernists; the dubious and
   sacrilegious sacraments of the so-called Thuc bishops; or the grave
   doctrinal errors of Fr. Feeney. Rather, let us, as St. Paul says, hold
   fast to the traditions that we have received.

   God bless you.

   Delivered at The Roman Catholic Forum on Friday, July 12, 1996, and