[51]
SECTION II
A SUMMARY OF THE INDEX
1. Our Duties in Relation to Forbidden
Books.
Rule 1. We are not allowed to read
forbidden books, nor any considerable portion
of them, even if those portions be in
themselves harmless. If, however, a book
is forbidden merely on account of the one
or other objectionable passage it contains,
the objection ceases as soon as these passages
are expunged or rendered illegible.
Rule 2. No one, whether he be the
owner or not, is allowed to keep a forbidden
book. He must either destroy it, or
give or sell it to some one who has permission,
or he must obtain permission for himself.
Rule 3. It is not lawful for a Catholic
[52]
publisher or printer to issue, or print, or
reprint forbidden books. Nor may a bookseller
keep such books in stock, unless he
has obtained formal leave to do so.
Note 1. Although all the members of
a Catholic family should endeavor to keep
forbidden books out of the home, the head
of the household is chiefly responsible before
God. It is to be remarked, however,
that Catholic librarians or servants do not
violate this law by keeping, handling, or
cataloguing forbidden books for their employers,
e.g. in the latter's house, or in a
public library.
Note 2. If a book or any particular issue
of a forbidden periodical calls for a
speedy public refutation, and if permission
to peruse it cannot be waited for, any educated
Catholic, who may be reasonably presumed
to be competent to refute it by sermon,
lecture or newspaper article, may read
such book or periodical without awaiting
special permission.
Note 3. In all other cases, each and
every Catholic, be he priest or layman, professor
or student, must first obtain permission.
[53]
Neither piety, nor learning, nor position
exempts one from this law. The
permission is granted by bishops and their
vicars general, who can also delegate this
power to others. When asking for this
permission the applicant should mention
the book which he thinks he has good reasons
to read.
The juridical question, whether the bishop's
faculty is ordinaria, or quasi-ordinaria,
or extra-ordinaria, and how far it extends,
is not within the scope of this Summary.
Note 4. All who are dispensed from
the Church law regarding forbidden books,
must apply every possible precaution, in
order that they may not suffer injury to
their faith or purity of heart. Such precautions
are: the hearing of sermons, the
reading of Catholic books, the frequenting
of Catholic society, regular prayers, and the
frequent and humble reception of the sacraments.
2. Forbidden Books.
Rule 4. General Rule.---Translations
of a forbidden book into any language, if
[54]
they faithfully reproduce the original, are
also forbidden.
A. The General Decrees Prohibit the Following
Publications.
Rule 5, a. Books defending heresies,
i.e. doctrines contrary to divine revelation.
b. Books derogatory to God, the
Blessed Virgin, the Saints.
c. Books vilifying the sacraments, the
clerical or religious state, the hierarchy, the
Church.
Rule 6. Books professedly treating of,
narrating or teaching lewdness and obscenity.
Rule 7. Books teaching or recommending
sorcery, Spiritism, Christian Science,
or other superstitions.
Rule 8. Books defending as lawful or
harmless Freemasonry, divorce, Socialism,
suicide, duelling.
Rule 9. Those newspapers and periodicals
which, not only now and then, but
regularly and of set purpose, attack religion
or morality, or propagate anti-Catholic
views.
[55]
Rule 10. Episcopal approbation, to be
printed in the beginning or at the end of
the book, is required for all editions of the
Bible or parts of the Bible in any language,
likewise for all prayer books, books of devotion
and of practical piety. Without
episcopal authorization such publications
are forbidden, though they may have been
issued by the most learned and pious men.
Note 1. Leaflets which are so small
that they cannot be called books, or even
booklets or pamphlets, do not fall under
this law. But if they are not approved by
the bishop, the duty of making sure that
they contain nothing erroneous devolves
upon those who use them.
Summaries of indulgences, however, no
matter how small, always need episcopal
approbation and may not be circulated
without it.
Note 2. All editions of the Bible, edited
by non-Catholics, in ancient as well as
modern languages, are permitted to those,
and those only, who are engaged in
serious theological or biblical studies, provided,
however, that the PROLEGOMENA
[56]
AND ANNOTATIONS do not of set purpose
impugn the Catholic faith. It is not
enough that the text itself is faithfully and
completely rendered.
Note 3. An exception has also been
made in favor of those classics, ancient and
modern, which on account of their obscenity
fall under rule6. In as far as they are
models of style they may be read by persons
engaged in teaching university or
higher college classes of literature, by those
who are preparing for such a position in
the near future, and by those who, on account
of their profession, e.g. as critics or
authors of literary works, cannot well do
without them. (See note4 above.)
Whenever we know, or discover while
reading, that a book undoubtedly belongs
to any one of these classes, we may be sure
that it is a work which our Holy Mother
the Church does not wish to see in our
hands, and we must then act according to
the words of Christ: "He who heareth
you, heareth Me, and he who despiseth
you despiseth Me." No need of first
[57]
looking up the catalogue of forbidden
books; whether the volume in question is
mentioned there or not, makes no difference.
Nor does it matter what the literary
character of the book is. An apparently
learned history of the seizure of Rome in
1870, written with the obvious intention of
maligning PiusIX, is forbidden just as
well as a novel written for the same purpose,
or the prayer book of some Protestant
sect.
B. Books Forbidden by Particular Decrees.
The following list contains a number of
titles which every English-speaking Catholic
ought to know. All the books that
have been put on the Index during the last
few years have been mentioned, not so
much for completeness' sake, as because
they contain the palmary error of our time,
namely: Modernism, and among its doctrines
especially the unchristian treatment
of the Bible. None of these books are
written in English. But some have been
and others may soon be translated. Their
[58]
titles, as well as those of most other foreign
books, are given in English.
- Addison, Jos.
- Remarks on Several Parts of Italy.
- Bacon, Francis.
- De dignitate et augmentis scientiarum.
(On the Dignity and Increase of Science.)
- Balzac, Honor de.
- Bentham, Jeremy.
- Three Tracts, etc.
- Deontology or the Science of Morality.
- Bingham, Jos.
- Origines Ecclesiastic, or The Antiquities
of the Christian Church.
- Blunt, John James.
- Vestiges of Ancient Manners and Customs,
etc.
- Bois, Jules.
- Bruno, Giordano.
- The Conflict of Religion, Morals and Science
in Contemporary Education.
- [59]
Bunsen, Christian Chas. J.
- Hippolytus and His Age, or The Doctrine
and Practice of the Church of
Rome under Commodus and Alexander
Severus, etc.
- Bureau, Paul.
- The Moral Crisis in Modern Times.
Preface by M.Alfred Croiset.
- Burgess, Richard.
- Lectures on the Insufficiency of Unrevealed
Religion.
- Cudworth, Ralph.
- The True Intellectual System of the
Universe, etc.
- Darwin, Erasmus.
- Zonomia or the Laws of Organic Life.
- Denis, Chas.
- An Apologetic Lenten Course on the
Fundamental Dogmas, 1903.
- Church and State: The Lessons of the
Present Hour, 1903.
- Descartes, Ren.
- Meditations on Original Philosophy.
- Dimnet, Ernest.
- Catholic Thought in England.
- [60]
Dllinger, John Joseph Ignatius.
- The Pope and the Council.
- Janus.
- Draper, John William.
- History of the Conflicts Between Religion
and Science.
- Duggan, James.
- Dumas, Alexander (father and son).
- All novels, except The Count of Monte-cristo.
- Earle, John Chas.
- The Spiritual Body.
- The Forty Days, or Christ Between His
Resurrection and Ascension.
- Fnelon, Franois de Salignac.
- The Principles of the Saints.
- Ferrire, mile.
- The Soul a Function of the Brain.
- The Apostles.
- Darwinism.
- The Scientific Blunders of the Bible.
- Matter and Energy.
- Paganism of the Hebrews.
- Life and Soul.
- The Myths of the Bible.
- [61]
Ffoulkes, Edmund S.
- Christendom's Divisions.
- The Church's Creed or the Crown's
Creed.
- Fogazzaro, Antonio.
- Frohschammer, Jacob.
- Origin of the Human Soul.
- Introduction to Philosophy.
- On the Liberty of Science.
- Christianity and Modern Science.
- The Right of One's Own Conviction.
- The New Knowledge and the New
Faith.
- Georgel, Michl.
- Matter: Its Deification, Its Rehabilitation,
and Its Ultimate Destiny.
- Gibbon, Edward.
- History of the Decline and Fall of the
Roman Empire.
- Goblet d'Alviella, Eug.
- Goldsmith, Oliver.
- An Abridged History of England From
the Invasion of Julius Csar to the
Death of GeorgeII.
- [62]
Graf, Arthur.
- Gregorovius, Ferdinand.
- History of the City of Rome During
the Middle Ages.
- The Sepulchral Monuments of the Popes.
- UrbanVIII in Opposition to Spain and
the Emperor.
- Athenas: The History of a Byzantine
Empress.
- Wanderings in Italy (fifth volume),
Scenes in Apulia.
- Hallam, Henry.
- The Constitutional History of England,
etc.
- View of the State of Europe During the
Middle Ages.
- Heine, Heinrich.
- De l'Allemagne.
- De la France.
- Reisebilder.
- Neue Gedichte.
- Hilaire de Paris.
- Exposition of the Rule of St.Francis.
- Hobbes, Thomas.
- [63]
Houtin, Albert.
- The Biblical Question among the Catholics
of France in the XIXCentury.
- The Biblical Question in the XXCentury.
- My Troubles with My Bishop.
- Americanism.
- The Crisis of the Clergy.
- Hugo, Victor.
- Notre Dame de Paris.
- Les Misrables.
- Hume, David.
- JamesI, King of England.
- Basilikon dron (Royal Gift) divided
into three books.
- Triplici nodo triplex cuneus, etc.
- Meditatio in Orationem dominicam.
- Meditatio in caput XXVII evangelii S.Matthali.
- Kant, Immanuel.
- Laberthonnire, Lucien.
- Essays on Religious Philosophy.
- Christian Realism and Grecian Idealism.
- [64]
Lacaze, Flix.
- Lang, Andrew.
- Myth, Ritual and Religion.
- Lasserre, Henri.
- Lefranc, E. (pseudonym).
- The Conflicts of Science and the Bible.
- Le Morin, Jean.
- Lenau, Nicolaus.
- Lenormant, Franois.
- The Beginnings of History.
- LeRoy, Edouard.
- Locke, John.
- An Essay Concerning Human Understanding.
- The Reasonableness of Christianity, etc.
- Loisy, Alfred.
- Gospel Studies.
- The Gospel and the Church.
- The Fourth Gospel.
- Apropos of a Little Book.
- The Religion of Israel.
- [65]
Maurice, Frederick D.
- Mill, John Stuart.
- Principles of Political Economy.
- Milton, John.
- Liter pseudo-senatus Anglicani, Cromwellii
reliquorumque perduellium nomine
conscript.
- Mivart, St. George.
- Montesquieu, Chas. de Secondat de.
- The Spirit of the Laws.
- Persian Letters.
- Mller, Joseph.
- Negri, Ada.
- Olive, Jos.
- Letters to the Members of the Pious and
Devout Society of the Heart of Jesus,
etc.
- Osborne, Francis.
- Payot, Jules.
- About Faith.
- Before Entering Life.
- [66]
Program of Modernism (a reply to the
encyclical).
- Planchet, Franc. Regis.
- Episcopal Absolutism in the Mexican
Republic.
- Pufendorf, Samuel von.
- Introduction to the History of the Principal
States of Europe.
- (Also four Latin works.)
- Quivreux, Camille.
- Paganism in the XIX Century.
- Ranke, Leopold.
- The Roman Popes: Their Church and
Their State in the XVI and XVII
Centuries.
- Renan, Ernest.
- Practically all his works (the Index
names nineteen).
- Renouf, Peter LePage.
- The Condemnation of Pope Honorius.
- Richardson, Samuel.
- Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded.
- Robertson, Wm.
- The History of the Reign of the Emperor
CharlesV.
- [67]
Rohling, August.
- The Kingdom of the Future. (Der
Zukunftsstaat.)
- Roscoe, William.
- The Life and Pontificate of LeoX.
- Rosmini-Serbati, Antonio.
- The Constitution according to Social
Justice.
- Of the Five Wounds of Holy Church.
- Rousseau, Jean-Jacques.
- Emile, or About Education.
- The Social Contract.
- Letter to Christopher de Beaumont,
Archbishop of Paris.
- Letters Written from a Mountain.
- Julia, or the New Helose.
- Sabatier, Paul.
- Life of St.Francis of Assisi.
- Saintyves, P.
- The Intellectual Reform of the Clergy
and the Freedom of Education.
- The Saints as Successors of the Gods.
- Miracles and Historical Criticism.
- Miracles and Scientific Criticism.
- Sand, George (pseudonym).
- [68]
Schell, Hermann.
- Catholic Dogma (Katholische Dogmatik).
- Catholicism as a Principle of Progress.
- The Divine Truth of Christianity.
- The New Time and the Old Faith.
- Seymour, Michael H.
- Souli, Frdric.
- Stendhal, H.B. de.
- Sterne, Laurence.
- Strauss, David F.
- Stroud, William.
- Treatise on the Physical Cause of the
Death of Christ.
- Sue, Eugne.
- Taine, H.-A.
- A History of English Literature.
- Tolstoy, Dmitry.
- Roman Catholicism in Russia.
- [69]
Vericour, L.R. de.
- Historical Analysis of Christian Civilization.
- Viollet, Paul.
- The Infallibility of the Pope and the
Syllabus.
- Vogrinec, Anton.
- Nostra maxima culpa (Our Greatest
Fault).
- Voltaire, F.-M. Arouet.
- Practically all his works.
- Whateley, Richard.
- White, Thomas.
- Wiese, Sigismund.
- Zola, Emile.