Present at the Demolition
An interview with Dr. Alice von
Hildebrand - Summer 2001
The following conversation with Dr. Alice von
Hildebrand opens our discussion of this issue’s focus: The
Crisis in the Church: Scenarios for a Solution. Dr. von Hildebrand,
professor of philosophy emeritus of Hunter College (City University
of New York), has just completed The Soul of a Lion, a biography
of her husband, Dietrich.
TLM: Dr. von Hildebrand, at the time that Pope
John XXIII summoned the Second Vatican Council, did you perceive
a need for a reform
within the Church?
AVH:: Most of the insights about this come from my
husband. He always said that the members of the Church, due to the
effects of original
sin and actual sin, are always in need of reform. The Church’s
teaching, however, is from God. Not one iota is to be changed or
considered in need of reform.
TLM: In terms of the present crisis, when did
you first perceive something was terribly wrong?
AVH:: It was in February 1965. I was taking a sabbatical
year in Florence. My husband was reading a theological journal, and
suddenly
I heard
him burst into tears. I ran to him, fearful that his heart condition
had suddenly caused him pain. I asked him if he was all right.
He told me that the article that he had been reading had provided
him
with the certain insight that the devil had entered the Church.
Remember, my husband was the first prominent German to speak
out publicly against
Hitler and the Nazis. His insights were always prescient.
TLM: Had your husband ever talked about his fear for
the Church before this incident?
AVH:: I relate in my biography of
my husband, The Soul of a Lion, that a few years after his conversion
to Catholicism in
the 1920s,
he began teaching at the University of Munich. Munich was a
Catholic city. Most Catholics at the time went to Mass, but he always
said that it was there that he became aware of the loss of
a
sense of
the supernatural among Catholics. One incident especially offered
him sufficient proof, and it greatly saddened him.
When passing through a door, my husband would always
give precedence to those of his students who were priests. One day,
one of his
colleagues (a Catholic) expressed his astonishment and disapproval: “Why
do you let your students step ahead of you?” “Because
they are priests,” replied my husband. “But they do not
have a Ph.D.” My husband was grieved. To value a Ph.D. is a
natural response; to feel awe for the sublimity of the priesthood
is a supernatural response. The professor’s attitude proved
that his sense for the supernatural had been eroded. That was long
before Vatican II. But until the Council, the beauty and the sacredness
of the Tridentine liturgy masked this phenomenon.
TLM: Did your husband think that the decline
in a sense of the supernatural began around that time, and if so,
how did he explain
it?
AVH:: No, he believed that after Pius X’s condemnation of the
heresy of Modernism, its proponents merely went underground. He would
say that they then took a much more subtle and practical approach.
They spread doubt simply by raising questions about the great supernatural
interventions throughout salvation history, such as the Virgin Birth
and Our Lady’s perpetual virginity, as well as the Resurrection,
and the Holy Eucharist. They knew that once faith – the foundation – totters,
the liturgy and the moral teachings of the Church would follow suit.
My husband entitled one of his books The Devastated Vineyard. After
Vatican II, a tornado seemed to have hit the Church.
Modernism itself was the fruit of the calamity of
the Renaissance and the Protestant Revolt, and it took a long historical
process
to unfold. If you were to ask a typical Catholic in the Middle
Ages to name a hero or heroine, he would answer with the name
of a saint.
The Renaissance began to change that. Instead of a saint, people
would think of geniuses as persons to emulate, and with the oncoming
of the industrial age, they would answer with the name of a great
scientist. Today, they would answer with a sports figure or cinema
personality. In other words, the loss of the sense of the supernatural
has brought an inversion of the hierarchy of values.
Even the pagan Plato was open to a sense of the supernatural.
He spoke of the weakness, frailty and cowardice often evidenced
in
human nature. He was asked by a critic to explain why he had
such a low
opinion of humanity. He replied that he was not denigrating man,
only comparing him to God.
With the loss of a sense of the supernatural, there
is a loss of the sense of a need for sacrifice today. The closer
one comes
to
God, the greater should be one’s sense of sinfulness. The further
one gets from God, as today, the more we hear the philosophy of the
new age: “I’m OK, You’re OK.” This loss of
the inclination to sacrifice has led to the obscuring of the Church’s
redemptive mission. Where the Cross is downplayed, our need for redemption
is given hardly a thought.
The aversion to sacrifice and redemption has assisted
the secularization of the Church from within. We have been hearing
for many years
from priests and bishops about the need for the Church to adapt
herself
to the world. Great popes like St. Pius X said just the opposite:
the world must adapt itself to the Church.
TLM: From our conversation throughout this afternoon,
I must conclude that you don’t believe that the accelerating
loss of the sense of the supernatural is an accident of history.
AVH:: No, I do not. There have been two books published
in Italy in recent years that confirm what my husband had been suspecting
for
some time; namely, that there has been a systematic infiltration
of the Church by diabolical enemies for much of this century.
My husband was a very sanguine man and optimistic by nature.
During
the last ten years of his life, however, I witnessed him many
times in moments of great sorrow, and frequently repeating, “They
have desecrated the Holy Bride of Christ.” He was referring
to the “abomination of desolation” of which the prophet
Daniel speaks.
TLM: This is a critical admission, Dr. von Hildebrand.
Your husband had been called a twentieth-century Doctor of the Church
by Pope
Pius XII. If he felt so strongly, didn’t he have access
to the Vatican to tell Pope Paul VI of his fears?
AVH:: But he did! I shall never forget the private
audience we had with Paul VI just before the end of the Council.
It was on
June
21, 1965. As soon as my husband started pleading with him to
condemn the heresies that were rampant, the Pope interrupted
him with the
words, “Lo scriva, lo scriva.” (“Write it down.”)
A few moments later, for the second time, my husband drew the gravity
of the situation to the Pope’s attention. Same answer. His
Holiness received us standing. It was clear that the Pope was feeling
very uncomfortable. The audience lasted only a few minutes. Paul
VI immediately gave a sign to his secretary, Fr. Capovilla, to bring
us rosaries and medals. We then went back to Florence where my husband
wrote a long document (unpublished today) that was delivered to Paul
VI just the day before the last session of the Council. It was September
of 1965. After reading my husband’s document, he said to my
husband’s nephew, Dieter Sattler, who had become the German
ambassador to the Holy See, that he had read the document carefully,
but that “it was a bit harsh.” The reason was obvious:
my husband had humbly requested a clear condemnation of heretical
statements.
TLM: You realize, of course, Doctor, that as
soon as you mention this idea of infiltration, there will be those
who roll their
eyes in exasperation and remark, “Not another conspiracy
theory!”
AVH:: I can only tell you what I know. It is a matter
of public record, for instance, that Bella Dodd, the ex-Communist
who reconverted
to
the Church, openly spoke of the Communist Party’s deliberate
infiltration of agents into the seminaries. She told my husband and
me that when she was an active party member, she had dealt with no
fewer than four cardinals within the Vatican “who were working
for us.”
Many a time I have heard Americans say that Europeans “smell
conspiracy wherever they go.” But from the beginning, the Evil
One has “conspired” against the Church – and has
always aimed in particular at destroying the Mass and sapping belief
in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. That some people
are tempted to blow this undeniable fact out of proportion is no
reason for denying its reality. On the other hand, I, European born,
am tempted to say that many Americans are naïve; living in a
country that has been blessed by peace, and knowing little about
history, they are more likely than Europeans (whose history is a
tumultuous one) to fall prey to illusions. Rousseau has had an enormous
influence in the United States. When Christ said to His apostles
at the Last Supper that “one of you will betray Me,” the
apostles were stunned. Judas had played his hand so artfully that
no one suspected him, for a cunning conspirator knows how to cover
his tracks with a show of orthodoxy.
TLM: Do the two books by the Italian priest you mentioned
before the interview contain documentation that would provide evidence
of this infiltration?
AVH:: The two books I mentioned were published in 1998
and 2000 by an Italian priest, Don Luigi Villa of the diocese of
Brescia,
who
at the request of Padre Pio has devoted many years of his life
to the investigation of the possible infiltration of both Freemasons
and Communists into the Church. My husband and I met Don Villa
in
the sixties. He claims that he does not make any statement that
he cannot substantiate. When Paulo Sesto Beato? (1998) was published
the book was sent to every single Italian bishop. None of them
acknowledged
receipt; none challenged any of Don Villa’s claims.
In this book, he relates something that no ecclesiastical
authority has refuted or asked to be retracted – even though he names
particular personalities in regard to the incident. It pertains to
the rift between Pope Pius XII and the then Bishop Montini (the future
Paul VI) who was his Undersecretary of State. Pius XII, conscious
of the threat of Communism, which in the aftermath of World War II
was dominating nearly half of Europe, had prohibited the Vatican
staff from dealing with Moscow. To his dismay, he was informed one
day through the Bishop of Upsala (Sweden) that his strict order had
been contravened. The Pope resisted giving credence to this rumor
until he was given incontrovertible evidence that Montini had been
corresponding with various Soviet agencies. Meanwhile, Pope Pius
XII (as had Pius XI) had been sending priests clandestinely into
Russia to give comfort to Catholics behind the Iron Curtain. Every
one of them had been systematically arrested, tortured, and either
executed or sent to the gulag. Eventually a Vatican mole was discovered:
Alighiero Tondi, S.J., who was a close advisor to Montini. Tondi
was an agent working for Stalin whose mission was to keep Moscow
informed about initiatives such as the sending of priests into the
Soviet Union.
Add to this Pope Paul’s treatment of Cardinal Mindszenty. Against
his will, Mindszenty was ordered by the Vatican to leave Budapest.
As most everyone knows, he had escaped the Communists and sought
refuge in the American embassy compound. The Pope had given him his
solemn promise that he would remain primate of Hungary as long as
he lived. When the Cardinal (who had been tortured by the Communists)
arrived in Rome, Paul VI embraced him warmly, but then sent him into
exile in Vienna. Shortly afterwards, this holy prelate was informed
that he had been demoted, and had been replaced by someone more acceptable
to the Hungarian Communist government. More puzzling, and tragically
sad, is the fact that when Mindszenty died, no Church representative
was present at his burial.
Another of Don Villa’s illustrations of infiltration is one
related to him by Cardinal Gagnon. Paul VI had asked Gagnon to head
an investigation concerning the infiltration of the Church by powerful
enemies. Cardinal Gagnon (at that time an Archbishop) accepted this
unpleasant task, and compiled a long dossier, rich in worrisome facts.
When the work was completed, he requested an audience with Pope Paul
in order to deliver personally the manuscript to the Pontiff. This
request for a meeting was denied. The Pope sent word that the document
should be placed in the offices of the Congregation for the Clergy,
specifically in a safe with a double lock. This was done, but the
very next day the safe deposit box was broken and the manuscript
mysteriously disappeared. The usual policy of the Vatican is to make
sure that news of such incidents never sees the light of day. Nevertheless,
this theft was reported even in L’Osservatore Romano (perhaps
under pressure because it had been reported in the secular press).
Cardinal Gagnon, of course, had a copy, and once again asked the
Pope for a private audience. Once again his request was denied. He
then decided to leave Rome and return to his homeland in Canada.
Later, he was called back to Rome by Pope John Paul II and made a
cardinal.
TLM: Why did Don Villa write these works singling
out Paul VI for criticism?
AVH:: Don Villa reluctantly decided to publish the
books to which I have alluded. But when several bishops pushed for
the beatification
of Paul VI, this priest perceived it as a clarion call to print
the information he had gathered through the years. In so doing,
he was
following the guidelines of a Roman Congregation, informing the
faithful that it was their duty as members of the Church to relay
to the Congregation
any information that might militate against the candidate’s
qualifications for beatification.
Considering the tumultuous pontificate of Paul VI,
and the confusing signals he was giving, e.g.: speaking about the “smoke of Satan
that had entered the Church,” yet refusing to condemn heresies
officially; his promulgation of Humanae Vitae (the glory of his pontificate),
yet his careful avoidance of proclaiming it ex cathedra; delivering
his Credo of the People of God in Piazza San Pietro in 1968, and
once again failing to declare it binding on all Catholics; disobeying
the strict orders of Pius XII to have no contact with Moscow, and
appeasing the Hungarian Communist government by reneging on the solemn
promise he had made to Cardinal Mindszenty; his treatment of holy
Cardinal Slipyj, who had spent seventeen years in a Gulag, only to
be made a virtual prisoner in the Vatican by Paul VI; and finally
asking Archbishop Gagnon to investigate possible infiltration in
the Vatican, only to refuse him an audience when his work was completed – all
these speak strongly against the beatification of Paolo VI, dubbed
in Rome, “Paolo Sesto, Mesto” (Paul VI, the sad one).
That the duty to publish this depressing information
was onerous and cost Don Villa great sorrow cannot be doubted. Any
Catholic
rejoices when he can look up to a Pope with boundless veneration.
But Catholics
also know that even though Christ never promised He would give
us perfect leaders, He did promise that the gates of hell shall
not
prevail. Let us not forget that even though the Church has had
some very bad popes, and some mediocre ones, she has been blessed
with
many great popes. Eighty of them have been canonized and several
have been beatified. This is a success story that does not bear
parallel in the secular world.
God alone is the judge of Paul VI. But it cannot be
denied that his pontificate was a very complex and tragic one. It
was under
him that,
in the course of fifteen years, more changes were introduced
in the Church than in all preceding centuries combined. What
is worrisome
is that when we read the testimony of ex-Communists like Bella
Dodd,
and study Freemasonic documents (dating from the nineteenth century,
and usually penned by fallen-away priests like Paul Roca), we
can see that, to a large extent, their agenda has been carried
out:
the exodus of priests and nuns after Vatican II, dissenting theologians
not censured, feminism, the pressure put on Rome to abolish priestly
celibacy, immorality in the clergy, blasphemous liturgies (see
the
article by David Hart in First Things, April 2001, “The Future
of the Papacy”), the radical changes that have been introduced
into the sacred liturgy (see Cardinal Ratzinger’s book Milestones,
pp. 126 and 148, Ignatius Press), and a misleading ecumenism. Only
a blind person could deny that many of the Enemy’s plans have
been perfectly carried out.
One should not forget that the world was shocked at
what Hitler did. People like my husband, however, actually read what
he had
said in Mein Kampf. The plan was
there. The world simply chose not to believe it.
But grave as the situation is, no committed Catholic
can forget that Christ has promised that He will remain with His
Church to the very end of the world.
We
should meditate on the scene related in the Gospel when the apostles’ boat
was battered by a fierce storm. Christ was sleeping! His terrified followers
woke Him up: He said one word, and there was a great calm. “O ye of little
faith!”
TLM: I take it by your remarks about ecumenism that
you don’t agree with
the current policy of “convergence” rather than “conversion”?
AVH:: Let me relate an incident that caused my husband
grief. It was 1946, just after the war. My husband was teaching at
Fordham, and there appeared
in one
of his classes a Jewish student who had been a naval officer during
the war. He would eventually tell my husband about a particularly
stunning
sunset
in the Pacific and how it had led him to the quest for the truth about
God. He
first
went to Columbia to study philosophy, and he knew that this was not
what he was looking for. A friend suggested he try philosophy at
Fordham and
mentioned the
name Dietrich von Hildebrand. After just one class with my husband,
he knew he had found what he was looking for. One day after class
my husband
and
this
student
went for a walk. He told my husband during this time that he was surprised
at the fact that several professors, after discovering he was Jewish,
assured him
that they would not try to convert him to Catholicism. My husband,
stunned, stopped, turned to him and said, “They said what?!” He repeated the story
and my husband told him, “I would walk to the ends of the earth to make
you a Catholic.” To make a long story short, the young man became a Catholic,
was ordained a Carthusian priest, and went on to enter the only Charter House
in the United States (in Vermont)!
TLM: You spent many years teaching
at Hunter College.
AVH:: Yes, and several of my students became Catholics.
Oh, the beautiful conversion stories I could relate if I had time – young people who were swept up by
truth!
I want to make one point very clear, however. I did
not convert my students. The most we can do is to pray to be God’s instruments. To be an instrument
we must strive to live the Gospel every day and in every circumstance. Only God’s
grace can give us the desire and ability to do that.
It is one of the fears I have about traditional Catholics.
Some flirt with fanaticism. A fanatic is one who considers truth
to
be his personal
possession
instead of
God’s gift. We are servants of the truth, and it is as servants that we
seek to share it.
I am very concerned that there are “fanatical” Catholics who use
the Faith and the truth it proclaims as an intellectual toy. An authentic appropriation
of the truth always leads to a striving for holiness. The Faith, in this present
crisis, is not an intellectual chess game. For anyone not striving for holiness,
that’s all it will ever be. Such people do more harm to the Faith, particularly
if they are proponents of the traditional Mass.
TLM: So you see the only scenario for a solution
to the present crisis as the renewal of a striving for sanctity?
AVH:: We should not forget that we are fighting not
only against flesh and blood, but against “powers and principalities.” This should elicit sufficient
dread in us to make us strive more than ever for holiness, and to pray fervently
that the Holy Bride of Christ, who is right now at Calvary, comes out of this
fearful crisis more radiant than ever.
The Catholic answer is always the same: absolute fidelity
to the holy teaching of the Church, faithfulness to the Holy See,
frequent
reception
of the
sacraments, the Rosary, daily spiritual reading, and gratitude
that we have been given
the fullness of God’s revelation: “Gaudete, iterum dico vobis, Gaudete.”
TLM: I cannot end the interview without asking
your reaction to a well-worn canard. There are those critics of the
ancient
Latin
Mass
who point
out that the crisis
in the Church developed at a time when the Mass was offered throughout
the world. Why should we then think its revival is intrinsic
to the solution?
AVH:: The devil hates the ancient Mass. He hates it
because it is the most perfect reformulation of all the teachings
of the
Church.
It was
my husband
who gave
me this insight about the Mass. The problem that ushered in the
present crisis was not the traditional Mass. The problem was
that priests
who offered it
had already lost the sense of the supernatural and the transcendent.
They rushed
through the prayers, they mumbled and didn’t enunciate them. That is a
sign that they had brought to the Mass their growing secularism. The ancient
Mass does not abide irreverence, and that was why so many priests were just as
happy to see it go.
TLM: Thank you, Dr. von Hildebrand, for this
time and the opportunity to speak with you.