ANNUS IAM PLENUS ENCYCLICAL OF POPE BENEDICT XV ON CHILDREN OF CENTRAL EUROPE TO THE PATRIARCHS, PRIMATES, ARCHBISHOPS, BISHOPS, AND OTHER LOCAL ORDINARIES IN PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE.
Venerable Brethren,
Health and Apostolic Benediction.
A whole year has now passed since We (when the war was but a thing of
yesterday) called upon all to turn their hearts in pity towards the
children of Central Europe, who were so severely afflicted by hunger and
want that they were wasting away with disease and were face to face with
death. And, indeed, a wonderous joy it is to Us that Our appeal has not
fallen vainly to the ground - an appeal which was actuated by that charity
which enfolds in its kindly embrace all men, without distinction of race
or nation, whosoever bear within them the image of God. The happy issue of
our supplication, Venerable Brethren, is especially well known to you who
assisted Us zealously in so salutary an enterprise. For in truth, a
generous supply of money has been collected from the peoples of every
land. There has been, as it were, a noble competition in liberality, with
the result that the common father of so many, innocent children has been
able to look to their necessities and dissipate their sorrows. Nor do we
cease to proclaim the kindly providence of God, Whom it has pleased to use
Us as a channel whereby the manifold blessings of Christian charity might
flow to His abandoned little ones. In this matter We cannot desist from
offering a public tribute of praise to the society entitled the "Save
the Children Fund," which has exerted all possible care and diligence
in the collection of money, clothing, and food. But, indeed, the general
scarcity and the high cost of living, which the war has brought in its
train, are of such a complex and varied character that the assistance We
have rendered has perhaps neither succeeded in reaching those parts of
Europe where necessity pressed hard, nor, where help was given, has it
always been adequate to the actual need. To this must be added the fact
that in the course of the year following the Encyclical Letter which We
addressed to you, Venerable Brethren, on this very topic, there has been
no appreciable improvement in the lot of most of those areas where it is
evident that the people, and especially the young, find life growing yet
harder and harder owing to the shortage of the necessaries of life. Nay,
in some parts, war has flamed out anew and calamities of every kind, to
the serious loss of those very elements that it is necessary to
reestablish; in other parts where the civil State has been overthrown and
where most frightful and disgraceful massacres have been perpetrated, it
has come about that numberless families have been reduced to penury; that
wives have been bereft of their husbands, and children of their parents;
there are many districts, too, where it is so difficult to make provision
for the food supply that as a consequence the population is afflicted by
almost the same hardships which pressed upon it in the hideous days of the
war.
2. Wherefore once again, inspired by the consciousness of that universal
fatherhood which it is Our office to sustain, and with the words of the
Divine Master on our lips - "I have compassion on the multitude . . .
for they have nothing to eat" - now, when the anniversary day of the
birth of Christ draws nigh a second time We call loudly upon Christian
peoples to give us the means whereby we may offer some relief to the sick
and suffering children, of whatsoever nationality they may be. Yes, We
call on all who have hearts of kindness and pity to make a generous
offering, but in particular we turn to the young children who dwell in the
more prosperous cities of the world, to those who can with comparative
ease stretch out a helping hand to their poor little brothers in Christ.
Is not the birthday of Christ Jesus, in an especial manner the feast of
the young? See then how the desolate children of those scattered districts
strain suppliant hands to those other happier children, and seem to point
to the cradle where the Divine Infant cries in helplessness! Yet is not
that Infant the common brother of them all, He Who "being rich became
poor," Who from that manger, as from the throne of heavenly wisdom,
silently teaches us not only the value of brotherly love but also how men
from their tenderest years onward must detach themselves from the longing
for the goods of this world and share them with the poor, who in their
very poverty are so much nearer to Christ? Surely the children of the
richer parts of Europe will have it in their power to nourish and clothe
those little ones of their own age who languish in want, and especially
should this be so at the approaching season of the Nativity of Our Lord,
which parents are wont to render still happier for their children by
little gifts and presents. And shall we think that these last are endowed
with such a spirit as to be unwilling to contribute even a part of their
own little savings, whereby they might strengthen the weakness of children
who are in want? Oh, what a deep consolation, what joys they will secure
for themselves, if happily they become the means whereby those little
brothers of theirs, who are deprived of all help and all pleasure, should
spend the approaching Christmas time just a little more comfortably, just
a little more happily. For even as the Infant Jesus on the night of His
birth blessed with a most sweet smile the shepherds who came to Him with
gifts to lighten the burden of His poverty, and even as He brightened
their souls with the supreme gift of faith, so He will reward with his
blessing and heavenly graces those children who, fired with love for him,
shall soften the misery and the sorrow of their little brothers. Nay,
there is nothing else more acceptable to the Infant Jesus that thou could
do or offer at this season. And so we earnestly exhort all Christian
parents, to whom, the Heavenly father had committed the grave charge of
training up their offspring to the practice of charity and the other
virtues, to use this happy opportunity of exciting and cultivating in the
minds of their children sentiments of humanity and holy compassion. And in
this matter it pleases Us to set before you an example worthy of all
imitation; for we remember that last year many children of the Roman
nobility made their offerings to Us personally, offerings which, at the
suggestion of their parents, they had collected amongst themselves not
without some sacrifice of their individual pleasures.
3. We have said that this work of charity and kindness would be most
pleasing to the Infant Jesus. And, indeed, why does the name Bethlehem
mean one and the same thing as "House of Bread," unless it be
that there Christ was to be born into the light of day, Christ, Who,
solicitous for our weakness, gave Himself as food to nourish our souls,
and Who in the words "Give us this day our daily bread" taught
us to beg ardently every day of the Father for nourishment of soul and
body? Oh how Our heart would expand if We were certain that throughout the
Christmas festivities there would be no home destitute of consolation and
joy, that there would be no child whose sorrow should wring the dear heart
of its mother, and that there would be no mother who should look upon her
little ones with weeping eyes."
4. And so, Venerable Brethren, We entrust Our project to you, even as We
did a year ago, that you may bring it into effect, especially those of you
who dwell in districts which enjoy a happier fortune and a more tranquil
state of affairs.
5. And inasmuch as those words of Christ Our Lord should take deep
possession of your souls, "He that shall receive one such little
child in My name, receiveth Me," We beg that you leave no measure
untried whereby the liberality and generosity of the faithful over whom
you are set may correspond to the urgency of the present need. Accordingly
it is Our wish that you forthwith announce throughout the whole of your
several dioceses that a collection of alms is to be made on the
twenty-eighth day of this month, the feast of the Holy Innocents, or if
you prefer, on the Sunday immediately preceding, for the support of the
children made needy by the way and that you particularly recommend this
collection to the children in your diocese; further, that with all
diligence in your power you see that the money thus collected is sent
either to Us or to the "Save the Children Fund," which We have
before mentioned.
6. For Ourselves, in order that, after exhorting the faithful by Our
words, We may stir their generosity by Our example, We have set apart one
hundred thousand Italian lire for this most sacred work of charity.
Meanwhile, Venerable Brethren, to you and to all your Clergy and people,
we lovingly impart the apostolic benediction, a pledge of heavenly reward
and a token of Our own paternal good will.
Given at Rome at St. Peter's on the first day of the month of
December in the year nineteen hundred and twenty, the seventh of Our
Pontificate.
BENEDICT XV
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