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1821. Aug. 5.
Rid Yourselves
Lett 2. Interests concerned
and transitory life, the Catholic Religion
ought, above all things, to be preserved: preserved, in whatsoever degree of purity and perfection it possesses
or is susceptible of.
But, that, to the maintenance of this religion in any assignable
degree of perfection, not a maravedi is necessary to be provided by forced contributions, or by fixt masses
of property kept on foot for the purpose, is matter of experience. It is so
in all countries in which the Catholic Religion, while it has not only its professors
but also its functionaries, is not the established religion of the state. It is so accordingly, in England, in Scotland, in Ireland, in Denmark, in Sweden, in various parts of Germany to a great extent, in the Kingdom of Prussia
and in the Russian Empire: not to speak of the Anglo-American United States.
In Spain, as in other countries in which
the Catholic Religion stands established,- the whole body of the Clergy, taken in the aggregate, stands distinguishable into two very marked
divisions. The class called that of the regular clergy, and the class called that of the secular clergy. That of the regular clergy has this for its distinctive character: namely, that by none of
its Members as such, is religious
service rendered, in any shape, to any living
individual or assemblage of individuals in particular, to the exclusion of any
others. Accordingly, these have not, properly speaking, a place upon the list of functionaries.
To this part of the list belong - not only such of the clergy as
belong to this or that Monastick order, but the possessors
of all benefices to which no cure of
souls stands attached.
In regard to the secular clergy, no other assumption can I suppose on
this occasion, be preceeded upon, than that of the necessity of the demand for the
services of a number correspondent to that of the offical situations at present in existence. In the Catholic Church, the offices
possessed by them stand distinguishable into Sacerdotal and
Episcopal. The necessity of the office itself being in
each case admitted, and office and officers together thus perserved from the
retrenching knife, remain for a subject of proposable retrenchment the amounts of the
respective bands, tithes and
masses of emoluments in every other shape as to this
matter, the case of Ireland
would
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