PRINCIPI APOSTOLORUM PETRO ENCYCLICAL OF POPE BENEDICT XV ON ST. EPHREM THE SYRIAN TO THE PATRIARCHS, PRIMATES, ARCHBISHOPS, BISHOPS, AND OTHER ORDINARIES IN PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE.
Venerable Brothers, Greetings and The Apostolic Benediction.
1. To Peter the Prince of the Apostles, the divine Founder of the Church
allotted the gifts of inerrancy [1] in matters of faith and of union with
God. This relationship is similar to that of a "Choir Director of the
Choir of the Apostles."[2] He is the common teacher and rector [3] of
all, so that he might feed the flock of Him who established His Church [4]
on the authority of Peter himself and his successors. And on this mystical
rock the foundation [6] of the entire ecclesiastical structure stands firm
as on a hinge. From it rises the unity of Christian charity as well as our
Christian faith.
2. Indeed the unique gift of Peter's primacy is that he might spread
everywhere and preserve the riches of charity and faith, as Ignatius
Theophorus, a man of Apostolic times, beautifully declared. For in those
noble letters he wrote to the Roman Church on his journey, announcing his
arrival in Rome to be martyred for Christ, he gave testimony to the
primacy of that Church over all others by calling it 'presiding officer
over the universal community of charity."[7] This was to signify not
only that the Universal Church was the visible image of divine charity,
but also that Blessed Peter, together with his primacy and his love for
Christ (affirmed by his triple confession), remains heir of the Roman See.
Accordingly the souls of all the faithful should be ignited by the same
fire.
3. The ancient Fathers, especially those who held the more illustrious
chairs of the East, since they accepted these privileges as proper to the
pontifical authority, took refuge in the Apostolic See whenever heresy or
internal strife troubled them. For it alone promised safety in extreme
crises. Basil the Great [8] did so, as did the renowned defender of the
Nicene Creed, Athanasius,[9] as well as John Chrysostom.[10] For these
inspired Fathers of the orthodox faith appealed from the councils of
bishops to the supreme judgement of the Roman Pontiffs according to the
prescriptions [11] of the ecclesiastical Canons. Who can say that they
were wanting in conformity to the command which they had from Christ?
Indeed, lest they should prove faithless in their duty, some went
fearlessly into exile, as did Librius and Silverius and Martinus. Others
pleaded vigorously for the cause of the orthodox faith and for its
defenders who had appealed to the Pope, or to vindicate the memory of
those who had died. Innocent I [12] is an example. He commanded the
bishops of the East to insert the name of St. John Chrysostom in the
liturgical list of the orthodox Fathers to be mentioned at mass.
4. However We, who embrace the Eastern Church with no less solicitude
and charity than our predecessors, truly rejoice, now that the frightful
war is ended. We rejoice that many in the Eastern community have achieved
liberty and wrested their holy things from the control of the laity. They
are now striving to set the nation in order, consistent with the character
of its people and the established customs of their ancestors. We propose,
appropriately, a splendid example of sanctity, learning, and paternal love
for them to diligently imitate and nurture. We speak of St. Ephrem the
Syrian, whom Gregory of Nyssa compared to the River Euphrates because he "irrigated
by his waters the Christian community to bring forth fruits of faith a
hundred-fold."[13] We speak of Ephrem, whom all the inspired orthodox
Fathers and Doctors, including Basil, Chrysostom, Jerome, Francis of
Sales, and Alphonsus Liguori, praise. We are pleased to join these heralds
of truth, who though separated from each other in talent, in time and
place, nevertheless perfect a harmony modulated by "one and the same
spirit."
5. This letter follows so shortly after Our Encyclical marking the
fifteenth centenary of the birth of St. Jerome because these two
illustrious men have much in common. They are almost contemporary, both
were monks, both lived in Syria, and both were outstanding for their study
and knowledge of the Scriptures. You may rightly compare them to "two
shining lights,"[14] one illuminating the West, the other the East.
Their writings, being of the same spirit, are equally valuable. Both the
Latin and the Eastern Fathers have agreed with those two and praise them
similarly.
6. The birthplace of Blessed Ephrem could have been Nisibi or Edessa.
What is certain is that he was connected by blood with the martyrs of the
last persecution.[15] His parents brought him up as a Christian. If they
did not have the comforts of a wealthy life, they had the far greater and
more splendid distinction that "they had professed Christ in
judgment."[16] In his youth Ephrem, as he bewails in his little book
of confessions, was languid and remiss in resisting the temptations by
which that age is usually troubled. He was hot tempered, easily angered,
quarrelsome, and unrestrained in mind and language. But while in prison on
a false charge, he began to despise human things and the empty joys of
this world. Therefore, as soon as he was exonerated, Ephrem at once put on
the habit of a monk and ever after devoted himself completely to the
exercises of piety and to the study of the Sacred Scriptures. James, the
bishop of Nisibi, one of the three hundred eighteen Fathers of the Nicene
Council, who had established a renowned school of exegesis in the
episcopal city, became his patron. He not only fulfilled James'
expectations with his diligent and sharp-witted commentaries on the Bible,
but even surpassed them. As a result, he soon became the greatest of all
commentators of that school, earning the title Doctor of the Syrians. Soon
he had to interrupt his study of Sacred Literature because Persian troops
threatened the city. He urged on the citizens in their vigorous resistance
to the Persians. With the aid of the prayers of James the bishop, they
were defeated; however, after his death, the Persians again besieged the
city. This time, in 363, it did fall. Because Ephrem preferred exile to
serving infidels, he migrated to Edessa. There he diligently exercised the
duties of an ecclesiastical doctor.
7. The house on a suburban hill where he lived soon resembled an
illustrious academy with a great concourse of men eager to study the
divine books. To it came learned interpreters and students of Scripture,
including Zenobius, Maraba, and St. Isaac of Amidea, who acquired the
title Great [17] because of the profusion and importance of his writings.
Because of his learning and holiness, Ephrem's fame spread from that
retreat. Thus when he traveled to Caesarea to see Basil the Great, Basil,
learning of his approach by divine revelation, received him reverently and
spoke with him about divine concerns.[18] According to report, it was at
this time that Basil consecrated Ephrem deacon.[19]
8. Ephrem never left his solitude in Edessa except on fixed days to
preach. In his preaching, he defended the dogmas of faith from swelling
heresies. If, conscious of his lowliness, he did not dare to rise to the
priesthood, he nevertheless showed himself a most perfect imitator of St.
Stephen in the lower rank of the diaconate. He devoted all of his time to
teaching Scripture, to preaching, and to instructing the nuns in sacred
psalmody. Daily he wrote commentaries on the Bible to illustrate the
orthodox faith; he came to the aid of his fellow citizens, especially the
poor and the stricken. What he sought to teach others, he first did
absolutely and perfectly. In this way, he could serve as the example which
Ignatius Theophorus proposes to the deacons when he calls them "charges
of Christ"[20] and asserts that they express "the mystery of
faith in a pure conscience."[21]
9. How great and how active was the charity he showed his brethren in a
time of famine, even though by then he was worn out by age and labor! He
left the house where for so many years he had lived a heavenly rather than
a human life and ran to Edessa. By that eloquence which Gregory of Nyssa
characterized "as a key fashioned by divinity,"[22] to open the
minds and the coffers of the wealthy, he castigated those who were
hoarding grain and vehemently demanded that they feed the poor from their
surplus. And they were touched not so much by the hunger of the citizens,
as by the sincerity of Ephrem. With the money he begged, he himself
provided beds for those tortured by starvation and spread them in the
porticos of Edessa. There he nursed the sick and met the pilgrims who came
to the city from round about looking for bread.[23] Truly this man was
placed there by divine providence to aid his country! And he did not
return to solitude until the next harvest provided abundance.
10. The testament he left for his fellow citizens - memorable for its
faith, humility, and singular patriotism - reads as follows. "I,
Ephrem, am dying. With fear, but also with reverence, I entreat you,
citizens of Edessa, not to bury me under the altar or elsewhere in the
house of God. It is not fitting that a worm teeming with corruption be
buried in the temple and sanctuary of God. But lay me out in the tunic and
mantle which I used and wore daily. Accompany me with psalms and prayers.
I had neither pouch nor staff, neither wallet nor silver and gold; nor did
I ever acquire or possess anything else earthly. Work diligently at my
precepts and doctrines; as my disciples, do not fall away from the
Catholic faith. With regard to the faith, be especially constant. Guard
against adversaries - I mean evildoers, boasters, and tempters to sin. And
may your city be blessed; for Edessa is the city and mother of the wise."
And so Ephrem died, but his memory lives on, to the blessing of the Church
Universal. Therefore when his name began to be mentioned in the sacred
liturgy, Gregory of Nyssa could say: "The splendor of his doctrine
and life illumined all the earth, for he is known in almost every place
where the sun shines."
11. There is no reason to list his many writings. "He is said to
have written three thousand myriad poems if one counts them all together."[24]
His writings cover almost all ecclesiastical doctrines. There are extant
commentaries on Sacred Scripture and the mysteries of the faith; sermons
on obligations and on the interior life; studies on the sacred liturgy;
hymns for the feastdays of our Lord and of the Blessed Virgin and of the
saints, for the processions of prayers and penitential days, for the
funerals of the departed. In all of these, his purity of soul shines forth
as a "burning and shining"[25] evangelical lamp. By illustrating
the truth he makes us love and embrace it. Indeed when Jerome testifies
about the writings of Ephrem in his day, he tells us that they were read
in public liturgical assemblies along with the works of the orthodox
Fathers and Doctors. He also affirms that he recognized "the
sublimity of Ephrem's genius even in the translations" of these same
works from the Syrian into Greek.[26]
12. It is indeed fitting to honor the blessed deacon of Edessa for his
desire that the preaching of the divine word and the training of his
disciples rest on the purity of Sacred Scripture. He also acquired honor
as a Christian musician and poet. He was so accomplished in both arts that
he was called the "lyre of the Holy Spirit." From this,
Venerable Brothers, you can learn what arts promote the knowledge of
sacred things. Ephrem lived among people whose nature was attracted by the
sweetness of poetry and music. The heretics of the second century after
Christ used these same allurements to skillfully disseminate their errors.
Therefore Ephrem, like youthful David killing the giant Goliath with his
own sword, opposed art with art and clothed Catholic doctrine in melody
and rhythm. These he diligently taught to boys and girls, so that
eventually all the people learned them. In this fashion he not only
renewed the education of the faithful in Christian doctrine and supported
their piety with the spirit of the sacred liturgy, but also happily kept
creeping heresy at bay.
13. The artistry introduced by Blessed Ephrem added dignity to sacred
matters as Theodoretus stresses.[27] The metric rhythm, which our saint
popularized, was widely propagated both among the Greeks and the Latins.
Indeed does it seem probable that the liturgical antiphonary with its
songs and processions, introduced at Constantinople [28] in the works of
Chrysostom and at Milan [29] by Ambrose (whence it spread throughout all
of Italy), was the work of some other author? For the "custom of
Eastern rhythm" deeply moved the catechumen Augustine in northern
Italy; Gregory the Great improved it and we use it in a more advanced
form. Critics acknowledge that that "same Eastern rhythm" had it
origins in Ephrem's Syrian antiphonary.
14. It is no wonder then that many of the Fathers of the Church stress
the authority of St. Ephrem. Nyssenus says of his writings, "Studying
the Old and New Scriptures most thoroughly, he interpreted them
accurately, word for word; and what was hidden and concealed, from the
very creation of the world to the last book of grace, he illumined with
commentaries, using the light of the Spirit."[30] And Chrysostom: "The
great Ephrem [is] scourge of the slothful, consoler of the afflicted,
educator, instructor and exhorter of youth, mirror of monks, leader of
penitents, goad and sting of heretics, reservoir of virtues, and the home
and lodging of the Holy Spirit."[31] Certainly nothing greater can be
said in praise of a man who, however, seemed so small in his own eyes that
he claimed to be the least of all and a most vile sinner."
15. Therefore, God, who has "exalted the humble," bestows
great glory on blessed Ephrem and proposes him to this age as a doctor of
heavenly wisdom and an example of the choicest virtues. And the
appropriateness of his example is truly singular today. The frightful war
is over and there is something of a new order for many nations, especially
in the East. We, along with you and all good men, must endeavor to restore
in Christ whatever remains of human and civil culture and to recall the
erring society of men to God and to His Holy Church. Though our ancestors'
institutions failed, public affairs are in tumult, and everything human is
confused, the Catholic Church alone never vacilates, but instead looks
confidently to the future. She alone is born for immortality, trusting in
the words addressed to Blessed Peter: "Upon this rock I will build my
Church and the gates of hell will not prevail against her."[32]
16. Would that other ecclesiastical teachers learn from him how
skilfully, how diligently they must work in preaching the doctrine of
Christ! And indeed the piety of the faithful has nothing stable and
advantageous except to adhere entirely to the mysteries and precepts of
the faith. Those who legitimately teach the Sacred Scriptures are warned
by the example of the Edessine not to distort the Sacred Scriptures to the
good pleasure of their own inclinations, nor, in investigating them, to
depart a finger's breadth from the constant interpretation of the Church.
"No prophecy of Scripture originates from private interpretation. For
never by will of man was prophecy brought forth. But holy men of God spoke
as they were moved by the Holy Spirit."[33] And that Spirit who has
spoken to men by the prophets is the same one who for the Apostles "opened
their minds that they might understand the Scriptures"[34] and the
same who constituted his Church to announce, interpret, and preserve
revelation, so that it might be "the pillar and mainstay of truth."[35]
17. Let honorable men, in the tradition of Ephrem - We mean the
illustrious offspring of the monastic orders - preserve the dignity which
arose with Anthony and Basil in the East. This was propagated later by
offshoots in the West, and in many ways has been noteworthy for the
Christian community. Therefore may these seekers of Evangelical perfection
never cease to look up to and imitate the anchorite of Edessa. For a monk
will profit the Church most when he exemplifies what his habit signifies
to God and men, that is, according to a saying of the ancient Fathers of
the East, he must be "a son of the covenant," and again "an
Angel whose mission is mercy, peace, and the sacrifice of praise," as
the blessed Nilus the Younger beautifully defines him.[36]
18. Finally, Venerable Brothers, all who are your subjects, both clergy
and people, may learn this from Blessed Ephrem: the love of the
fatherland, whose claims indeed rest on the profession of Christian wisdom
itself, must not be separated from the love of the heavenly fatherland,
nor be preferred to it. We speak of that fatherland which is nothing other
than the innermost rule of God in the souls of the just, begun here, then
perfected in heaven. Indeed the Catholic Church exhibits a mystical image
of this, since, transcending all differences of nationality and language,
she embraces all sons of the Lord as a single family under a common father
and pastor. Ephrem also teaches that the sources of spiritual life are in
the sacraments, in the observance of the Evangelical precepts, and in the
manifold exercises of piety which the liturgy supplies and the authority
of the Church proposes. On this subject, note what our saint has to say
about the sacrifice of the Altar: "With his hands the priest places
Christ on the altar to become food. He addresses the Father as a member of
the family saying, "Give me your Spirit, that in his coming he may
descend upon the altar and sanctify the bread placed there to become the
Body of your only begotten Son. He tells him of Christ's passion and death
and exposes His blows; nor is His divinity ashamed of those blows. He says
to the invisible Father: behold, your Son is nailed to the cross, his
garments are sprinkled with blood, his side pierced with a lance. He
recalls for him the passion and death of his Beloved, as though he had
forgotten them, and the Father, hearing, favors his request."[37] He
also remarks on the state of the just after death. In a singular manner,
these remarks augment the constant doctrine of the Church, later defined
in the council of Florence. "The deceased has been taken away by the
Lord and has already been introduced to the kingdom of heaven. The soul of
the deceased is received in heaven and inserted as a pearl in the crown of
Christ. The deceased even now resides with God and his saints."[38]
19. Regarding his devotion to the Virgin Mother of God, who can say
enough? "You, O Lord and your Mother" he says in a Nisibean
poem, "are the only ones who are in all respects perfect beauty; in
you, my Lord, there is no stain, nor in your Mother is there any dishonor."[39]
"The lyre of the Holy Spirit" never sounded sweeter than when he
was asked to sing the praises of Mary or to celebrate her perfect
virginity, her divine maternity, or her full patronage of mercy toward
man.
20. Nor is he less zealous when, from faraway Edessa, he looks to Rome
to extol the Primacy of Peter: "Hail, holy kings, Apostles of Christ,"
and to the choir of Apostles, "Hail, light of the world.... Christ is
the light and the lampstand is Peter; the oil, however, is the activity of
the Holy Spirit. Hail, O Peter, gate of sinners, tongue of the disciples,
voice of preachers, eye of the Apostles, guardian of heaven, the
first-born of the keepers of the keys."[40] And in another place, "Blessed
are you, O Peter, the head and tongue of the body of your brothers, the
body which is joined together with the disciples, in which both sons of
Zebedi are the eye. They indeed are blessed, who contemplating the throne
of the Master, seek a throne for themselves. The true revelation of the
Father singles out Peter, who becomes the firm rock.''[41] In another hymn
he introduces the Lord Jesus speaking to his first vicar on earth: "Simon,
my disciple, I have made you the foundation of the holy Church. I called
you "rock" that you might sustain my entire building. You are
the overseer of those who build a church for me on earth. If they should
wish to build something forbidden, prevent them, for you are the
foundation. You are the head of the fountain from which my doctrine is
drawn. You are the head of my disciples. Through you all nations shall
drink. Yours is that vivifying sweetness that I bestow. I have chosen you
to be as a firstborn in my institution and heir to all my treasures. The
keys of the kingdom I have given to you, and behold I make you prince over
all my treasures."[42]
21. As We recalled all these things, We humbly entreated God to return
the Eastern church at long last to the bosom and embrace of Rome. Their
long separation, contrary to the teachings of their ancient Fathers, keeps
them miserably from this See of Peter. Irenaeus testifies (and he received
the doctrine of St. John the Apostle from his master Polycarp) that "it
is necessary for all to join the Church because of its greater authority,
that is, all of those who are faithful."[43] Meanwhile We received
letters from the Venerable Brothers Ignatius Ephrem II Rahmani, Patriarch
of Syria at Antioch; Elias Petrus Huayek, Maronite Patriarch at Antioch;
and Joseph Emmanuel Thomas, Chaldean Patriarch at Babylon. They presented
weighty arguments beseeching Us earnestly to bestow upon Ephrem, the
Syrian Deacon of Edessa, the title and honors of Doctor of the Universal
Church. In addition to these requests, a number of Cardinals, Bishops,
Abbots and Generals of religious orders of the Greek and Latin rites sent
their supporting petitions. We decided promptly to consider a matter so
agreeable to our own desires. We recalled that these Eastern Fathers have
always considered Blessed Ephrem a teacher of the truth and an inspired
doctor of the Catholic Church. Nor were We unaware that his authority had
great weight from the very beginning, not only with the Syrians, but also
with the neighboring Chaldeans, Armenians, Maronites, and Greeks. In fact,
they had each translated the writings of the Deacon of Edessa into their
own languages, and read them eagerly both in liturgical celebrations and
at home. Even today his songs can be found among the Slavs, Copts,
Ethiopians, and even the Jacobites and Nestorians. We also recalled that
the Roman Church has honored him before this. From ancient times it
commemorated Blessed Ephrem in the Martyrology for February first and not
without special praise for his holiness and learning. During the sixteenth
century, a church was built on the Viminal hill in Rome itself to honor
the Blessed Virgin and St. Ephrem. Our predecessors Gregory XIII and
Benedict XIV instructed first Vossius and then Assemanus, to collect,
edit, and publish the works of St. Ephrem in order to illustrate the
Catholic faith and nourish the piety of the faithful. More recently, in
1909, St. Pius X approved for the Benedictine monks of the Priory of St.
Benedict and Ephrem in Jerusalem, a proper mass and office in honor of
this same saint and deacon of Edessa, with excerpts for the most part from
the Syrian liturgy. Therefore, in order to further glorify the great
anchorite, and at the same time to grat fy the Christian peoples of the
East, We have sent to the Sacred Congregation of Rites a recommendation to
proceed in this matter, in accordance with the prescriptions of the sacred
canons and current discipline. The result was most gratifying, since the
cardinals at the head of this same congregation responded through its
prefect, Our Venerable Brother Anthony S.R.E. Cardinal Vico, Bishop of
Portuensis and St. Rufina, that they too desired and humbly asked Us the
same thing the others had asked in their suppliant letters.
22. Therefore, having invoked the Holy Spirit, by Our Supreme Authority,
We confer upon St. Ephrem the Syrian, Deacon of Edessa, the title and the
honors of Doctor of the Universal Church. We decree that his feastday,
which is the 18th of June, is to be celebrated everywhere the birthdays of
the other doctors of the Universal Church are celebrated.
23. Therefore, Venerable Brothers, since We rejoice at this increase of
honor and glory for our holy Doctor, at the same time We trust that he
will be an ever present and eager intercessor for the entire Christian
family in these difficult times. May this also be a new testimony to the
Eastern Catholics of the special care and interest which the Roman
Pontiffs extend to those separated churches. We desire, just as our
predecessors did, that their legitimate liturgical customs and canonical
prescriptions always remain in integral safety. Would that by the grace of
God and the aid of St. Ephrem those obstacles might collapse which
separate so large a part of the Christian flock from the mystical rock
upon which Christ founded his Church. May that happy day come as soon as
possible, on which the words of Evangelical truth will be like "goads
and nails firmly fixed" in all minds, words "which are given
through authoritative deliberation by one shepherd."[44]
24. Meantime as a sign of heavenly gifts and a witness of Our paternal
charity, We impart to you most lovingly, Venerable Brothers, and to all
your clergy and the people entrusted to each one of you, the Apostolic
Benediction.
Given at Rome at St. Peter's, Oct. 5, 1920, the seventh year of Our
Pontificate.
BENEDICT XV
1. Lk 22.32.
2. St. Theodore the Studite, epistle 2 to the Emperor Michael.
3. St. Cyril of Alexandria, De Trinit., dialogue 4.
4. Epistle 2 to the Emperor Michael.
5. Mt. 16.18.
6. St. Cyril of Alexandria, Comm. in Luc, 22.32.
7. St. Ignatius, Epist. ad Rom.
8. St. Basil the Great, epistle, cl. 2, ep. 69.
9. St. Felix, second epistle and decree-epistle of Athanasius and
the bishop of the Egyptians.
10. St. John Chrysostom, epistle to Innocent, bishop of Rome.
11. Sardic., canons 3, 4, 5.
12. Theodoret., 1. v, chap. 34.
13. St. Gregory Nyssa, Life of Ephrem, chap. 1, n. 4.
14. Ap 11.4.
15. Vita S. Ephrem.
16. Confession of St. Ephrem, n. 9.
17. Sozomenus, Hist. eccl., 1.iii chap. 15.
18. Vita S. Ephrem chap. 4, n. 17.
19. St. Amphilochius [?], Vit. S. Basil.
20. St. Ignatius, epistle to Thrall., n. 3.
21. 1 Tm 3.9.
22. Vita S. Ephrem, chap. 6, n. 23.
23. Hist. eccl., 1.iii chap. 15.
24. Ibid.
25. Jn 5.35.
26. St. Jerome, De script. eccl., chap. 115.
27. Theodoret., I.iv chap. 27.
28. Hist. eccl., chap. 8, 1. 3.
29. St. Augustine, Confess., 1.ix chap. 7.
30. Vita S. Ephrem.
31. St. John Chrysostom, Orat. de consumm. saec.
32. Mt 16.18.
33. 2 Pt 1.20-21.
34. Lk 24.45.
35. I Tm 3.15.
36. St. Barthol. Crypt. Abb., Vita S. Nili Iunioris.
37. See Rahmani, I Fasti della Chiesa Patriarcale Antiochena
8-9.
38. Carm. Nisib., chap. 6, pp. 24-28.
39. Ibid., n. 27.
40. St. Ephrem, Encom. in Petrum et Paulum.
41. See Rahmani, Hymni S. Ephr. De Virginitate, p. 45.
42. Lamy, S. Ephr. Hymn. et Serm., vol. 1, pr. 411.
43. St. Irenaus, c. haer, 1.iii chap. 3.
44. Eccl 12.11.
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