QUANTA CURA (Forbidding Traffic in
Alms)
Pope
Benedict XIV
Encyclical of Pope Benedict XIV promulgated on June 30, 1741.
To the Venerable Brothers, the Primates, the
Metropolitans, the Archbishops, and all the Bishops who are in Communion with the
Holy See.
Venerable Brothers, Greetings and Apostolic
Benediction.
There is no Catholic who does not know the care
required to ensure that the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is not only celebrated
with due reverence and veneration, but also that all semblance of payment of
any kind is removed from the dignity of such a sacrifice: both the base demand
- rather than request - for alms and other similar practices which are not far
removed from the sin of simony or at least from dishonest profit.
It is true that the avarice - which is the
bondage of idolatry - of many clerics and laymen has already progressed to the
point that they collect alms or stipends for the celebration of the
2. Everyone clearly understands how foreign
this is to the expressed or silent desire of those who give alms piously. Nor
is it to be judged otherwise. Everyone desires that the Masses be celebrated in
the church upon which he bestowed alms or in which he is buried, rather than in
another church, which may be unfamiliar to him. Such frustration of the
intentions of the faithful is motivated by the desire for base profit, just as
is the case in the conduct of trade. Accordingly, it is not immune to the
suspicion of avarice and vice, even of theft, whence it may be subject to
restitution. Thus many good people, gravely offended by the news of such
business, abstain from offering more alms for the celebration of Masses.
3. The Roman Pontiffs, Our predecessors,
detested this lethal abuse which gradually insinuated itself. For this reason
they wanted a decree both from the Congregation of the Cardinals of the
Universal Inquisition of the Holy Roman Church and from the Congregation of the
Cardinals Interpreters of the Council of Trent against the heretical depravity.
This decree stated that if a priest received a stipend or alms of a certain
value for the celebration of the Mass, a lesser fee must not be paid to another
priest for celebrating such a
4. For this reason, Venerable Brothers, We ask
and exhort you who share Our concerns and are associated with Us in the
apostolic ministry to keep watch over your flocks. Exert yourselves so that
this disease may spread no further, but rather may be entirely eradicated.
Avarice is the root of all evil. Some people who chased after it have strayed
from the faith and have brought upon themselves many sorrows. There is no
greater pestilence than avarice, which corrupts the opinion of priestly dignity
and perfection and casts it out. Avarice, which teaches people to esteem God
less than riches and to serve Mammon, causes the greedy to lose their
inheritance in the
5. Since by the fear of present punishment
there may be readier compliance with salutary warnings, make the following
pronouncement known in all your dioceses. If anyone collects alms or stipends
for the celebration of the Mass at the level which the customs of the place or synodical statutes demand and keeps part of this fee for
himself, causing the Mass to be celebrated either there or elsewhere where
lower fees are paid for celebrating Masses, he will be punished. A lay person
who does this will automatically incur the penalty of excommunication in
addition to the other penalties which you might invoke according to your
decision. The cleric will automatically incur the penalty of suspension, from
which no one can absolve except Ourselves or the Roman
Pontiff ruling at the time, unless there is danger of death. We trust in the
Lord that each one, mindful of his condition, wilt not belittle such salutary
laws and ecclesiastical censures. Meanwhile, We lovingly impart Our apostolic
blessing on your brotherhood and on the people entrusted to your care.
6. We also wish that the same confidence be
placed in copies of this letter - even printed ones - which are signed by a
notary public and guaranteed by the seal of an ecclesiastical official, as
would be placed in the original letter if it were displayed or shown.
Given in