Alexander VII – “Sollicitudem Omnium Ecclesiarum” and the Immaculate Conception (Pontifical Doctrine IV, nos. 190-193)

## Apostolic Constitution *Sollicitudo omnium Ecclesiarum* by Alexander VII (December 8, 1661)

The Apostolic Constitution *Sollicitudo omnium Ecclesiarum* by Alexander VII (December 8, 1661), is the most significant papal document on the Immaculate Conception between Sixtus IV (1483) and Pius IX (1854). With this document, the Pontificate for the first time took a clear position in favor of the Immaculate Conception without, however, defining the dogma.

**Collection:** *Doctrina Pontificia IV: Marian Documents*, nn. 190-193.

**Pope:** Alexander VII (1655-1667).

**Document:** Apostolic Constitution *Sollicitudo omnium Ecclesiarum*, December 8, 1661.

**Topic:** Immaculate Conception, clear papal position in favor.

## Context: The 17th Century Controversy

In the 17th century, a dispute between Franciscans (pro-Immaculate Conception) and Dominicans (Thomistic maculists) had reignited with particular intensity in Spain and Portugal. Philip IV of Spain had requested the Pope to define the dogma. Alexander VII responded with *Sollicitudo omnium*, not yet the definitive definition, but the most clear step taken by the Pontificate up to that point.

## Original Latin Text, nn. 190-193

> **”Sedes Apostolica sententiam illam asserit animam Beatissimae Virginis Mariae in prima sui creatione et infusione in corpus fuisse speciali Dei gratia et privilegio praeventam et preservatam ab originalis peccati labe et macula esse piam et consonam cultui ecclesiastico, festis et officiis, definitionibus conciliorum et constitutionibus Apostolicis…”**

> The Apostolic See declares that the sentence which asserts that the soul of the Most Holy Virgin Mary, in her first creation and infusion into the body, was by special grace and privilege of God prevented and preserved from the stain and mácula of original sin, is a sentence pious and consonant with the ecclesiastical cult, feasts and offices, conciliar definitions and apostolic constitutions…

## Innovations of *Sollicitudo omnium*

– **Positive Affirmation:** For the first time, a Pope affirmatively states that the pro-Immaculate Conception position is **”pious”** and **”consonant”** with the Church’s faith; it is not merely an tolerated opinion.
– **Legal Protection:** It prohibits any publication, sermon or public act which attacks the Immaculate Conception.
– **Symbolic Date:** Signed on December 8, the same date that would later be chosen for the dogmatic definition of 1854.
– **Dogmatic Preparation:** The arguments of Alexander VII will be literally taken up by Pius IX in *Ineffabilis Deus*.

## Historical Impact

*Sollicitudo omnium* effectively ended the public controversy. Although Dominicans continued to deny the Immaculate Conception internally, they could no longer do so publicly without facing papal censure. This paved the way directly to 1854.

## Further Reading

Explore *Mariologia*, *Ineffabilis Deus* (the dogmatic definition of Pius IX in 1854), *Lumen Gentium* chapter VIII, and *Post-Graduate Mariology*.

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