

To prove this, we are providing you here with pictorial evidence.

What, then, did the 1965 edition of Denzinger do with Pope Pius IX’s encyclical (“ Quanta Cura”) which condemned religious liberty? It simply cut out the portion where the Pope condemns what Vatican II approved! In 1965, the pseudo-Catholic “Second Vatican Council” decreed that every human being has the right to religious liberty, a doctrine strictly condemned by Pope Pius IX (and the Popes that followed him, until Pius XII, who died in 1958). In 1965, a revised edition of “Denzinger” - as Enchiridion Symbolorum is popularly called - was issued to include some of the documents promulgated under John XXIII (1958-1963) and some of the very first issued under Paul VI (1963-1978). The 30th edition (1954) is back in print, and that is the one most often used throughout Catholic traditional circles to refer to authoritative texts and decrees of the Popes and the Magisterium of Holy Church, as it is the last available English edition before the death of Pope Pius XII. The popular and authoritative collection of papal and magisterial documents, Enchiridion Symbolorum (in its original Latin title), or The Sources of Catholic Dogma (in its English title), edited originally by Heinrich Denzinger, has gone through over forty revisions and updates since the first edition was published in 1854, adding Church documents that followed over the course of time.

1965 Edition of Denzinger Omits Condemnation of Religious Liberty!
