PAENITENTIAM AGERE
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE JOHN XXIII ON THE NEED FOR
THE PRACTICE OF INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR PENANCE
JULY 1, 1962
To His Venerable Brethren the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops,
Bishops, and other Local Ordinaries who are at Peace and Communion with the
Apostolic See.
Venerable Brethren, Health and Apostolic Benediction.
Doing penance for one's sins is a first step towards obtaining forgiveness
and winning eternal salvation. That is the clear and explicit teaching of
Christ, and no one can fail to see how justified and how right the Catholic
Church has always been in constantly insisting on this. She is the spokesman for
her divine Redeemer. No individual Christian can grow in perfection, nor can
Christianity gain in vigor, except it be on the basis of penance.
2. That is why in Our Apostolic Constitution officially proclaiming the
Second Ecumenical Vatican Council and urging the faithful to make a worthy
spiritual preparation for this great event by prayer and other acts of Christian
virtue, We included a warning to them not to overlook the practice of voluntary
mortification.(1)
A Request Repeated
3. And now, as the day for the opening of the Second Vatican Council draws
nearer, We wish to repeat that request of Ours and dwell on it at greater length. In
doing so We are confident that We are serving the best interests of this most
important and solemn assembly. For while admitting that Christ is present to His
Church "all days, even unto the consummation of the world,"(2) we must
think of Him as being even closer to men's hearts and minds during the time of
an Ecumenical Council, for He is present in the persons of His legates, of whom
He said quite emphatically "He who hears you, hears me."(3)
4. The Ecumenical Council will be a meeting of the successors of the
Apostles, men to whom the Saviour of the human race gave the command to teach
all nations and urge them to observe all His commandments.(4) Its manifest task,
therefore, will be publicly to reaffirm God's rights over mankind, whom Christ's
blood has redeemed, and to reaffirm the duties of redeemed mankind towards its
God and Saviour.
Calls to Penance in the Bible
5. Now we have only to open the sacred books of the Old and New Testament to
be assured of one thing: it was never God's will to reveal Himself in any solemn
encounter with mortal mento speak in human termswithout first
calling them to prayer and penance. Indeed, Moses refused to give the Hebrews
the tables of the Law until they had expiated their crime of idolatry and
ingratitude.(5)
6. So too the Prophets; they never wearied of exhorting the Israelites to
make their prayers acceptable to God, their supreme Overlord, by offering them
in a penitential spirit. Otherwise they would bring about their own exclusion
from the plan of divine Providence, according to which God Himself was to be the
King of His chosen people.
7. The most deeply impressive of these prophetic utterances is surely that
warning of Joel which is constantly ringing in our ears in the course of the
Lenten liturgy: "Now therefore, says the Lord, Be converted to me with all
your heart, in fasting and in weeping and in mourning. And rend your hearts and
not your garments... Between the porch and the altar the priests, the Lord's
ministers, shall weep and say: Spare, O Lord, spare thy people, and give not thy
inheritance to reproach, that the heathen should rule over them."(6)
8. Nor did these calls to penance cease when the Son of God became
incarnate. On the contrary, they became even more insistent. At the very outset
of his preaching, John the Baptist proclaimed: "Do penance, for the kingdom
of heaven is at hand."(7) And Jesus inaugurated His saving mission in the
same way. He did not begin by revealing the principal truths of the faith. First
He insisted that the soul must repent of every trace of sin that could render it
impervious to the message of eternal salvation: "From that time Jesus began
to preach and to say, Do penance, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand."(8)
9. He was even more vehement than were the Prophets in His demands that
those who listened to Him should undergo a complete change of heart and submit
in perfect sincerity to all the laws of the Supreme God. "For behold,"
He said "the kingdom of God is within you."(9)
10. Indeed, penance is that counterforce which keeps the forces of
concupiscence in check and repels them. In the words of Christ Himself, "the
kingdom of heaven has been enduring violent assault, and the violent have been
seizing it by force."(10)
11. The Apostles held undeviatingly to the principles of their divine
Master. When the Holy Spirit had descended on them in the form of fiery tongues,
Peter expressed his invitation to the multitudes to seek rebirth in Christ and
to accept the gifts of the most holy Paraclete in these words: "Do penance
and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ, for the
remission of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit."(11)
Paul too, the teacher of the Gentiles, announced to the Romans in no uncertain
terms that the kingdom of God did not consist in an attitude of intellectual
superiority or in indulging the pleasures of sense. It consisted in the triumph
of justice and in peace of mind. "For the kingdom of God does not consist
in food and drink, but in justice and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit."(12)
Penance and Baptismal Innocence
12. However, a rude awakening is in store for the person who thinks that
penance is necessary only for those aspiring to membership in the kingdom of
God. He who is already a member of Christ must learn of necessity to keep a rein
upon himself. Only so will he be able to drive away the enemy of his soul and
keep his baptismal innocence unsullied, or regain God's grace when it is lost by
sin.
13. To become a member of Holy Church by baptism is to be clothed in the
beauty with which Christ adorns His beloved Bride. "Christ loved the Church
and delivered Himself up for her; that he might sanctify her, cleansing her in
the bath of water by means of the word of life; in order that he might present
to himself the Church in all her glory, not having spot or wrinkle or any such
thing; but that she might be holy and without blemish."(13)
14. This being so, well may those sinners who have stained the white robe of
their sacred baptism fear the just punishments of God. Their remedy is "to
wash their robes in the blood of the Lamb"(14)to restore themselves
to their former splendor in the sacrament of Penanceand to school
themselves in the practice of Christian virtue. Hence the Apostle Paul's severe
warning: "A man making void the law of Moses dies without any mercy on the
word of two or three witnesses; how much worse punishments do you think he
deserves, who has trodden under foot the Son of God, and has regarded as unclean
the blood of the covenant through which he was sanctified, and has insulted the
Spirit of grace?... It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the
living God."(15)
The Bride of Christ, Holy and Unsullied
15. Certainly, Venerable Brethren, when one views the faith which
distinguishes the Church, the sacraments which nourish and perfect her, the
universal laws and precepts which govern her, the unfailing glory that is hers
by reason of the heroic virtue and constancy of so many of her elect, there can
be no doubt that the Bride of Christ, so dear to her divine Redeemer, has always
kept herself holy and unsullied.
Her Forgetful Children
16. But of her children there are some who nevertheless forget the
greatness of their calling and election. They mar their God-given beauty, and
fail to mirror in themselves the image of Jesus Christ. We cannot find it in Us
to threaten or abuse them, for the love We bear them is a father's love. Instead
We appeal to them in the words of the Council of Trentthe best restorative
for Catholic discipline. "When we put on Christ in baptism (Gal.
3.27), we become in Him an entirely new creature and obtain the full and
complete remission of every sin. It is only with great effort and with great
compunction on our part that we can obtain the same newness and sinlessness in
the sacrament of penance, for such is the stipulation of divine justice. That is
why the holy Fathers called penance 'a laborious kind of baptism'."(16)
Penance in the Prayers of the Church
17. The very frequency with which this call to penance is
reiterated makes it imperative for Christians to recognize it as coming from the
divine Redeemer for the purpose of bringing about their spiritual renewal. It is
transmitted to us by the Church, in her sacred liturgy, in the teaching of the
Fathers and the precepts of the Councils. "Make our souls to glow in Thy
sight with desire of Thee."(17) "Help us to repress our worldly
appetites, that we may the more easily obtain the blessings of heaven."(18)
That is how the Catholic Church prays to God's Supreme Majesty in these ancient
prayers from the Lenten liturgy.
Earlier Councils and Calls to Penance
18. Can we wonder, then, that Our predecessors, when they were preparing the
ground for an Ecumenical Council, made a point of exhorting the faithful to
perform salutary acts of penance?
19. Consider, for example, the words of Innocent III before the Fourth
Lateran Council: "To your praying add fasting and almsgiving. It is on
these wings that our prayers fly the more swiftly and effortlessly to the holy
ears of God, that He may mercifully hear us in the time of need."(19)
20. Before the Second Ecumenical Council of Lyons, Gregory X wrote to all
his prelates and chaplains commanding them to observe a three-day fast.(20)
21. And finally, Pius IX exhorted all the faithful to prepare themselves
worthily and joyously for the First Vatican Council by ridding their souls of
every stain of sin and the punishment due to sin. "It is certain," he
said, "that men's prayers are more pleasing to God if they go up to Him
from a pure heart; from souls, that is, that are free from all sin."(21)
Prayer and Penance for the Coming Council
22. We too, Venerable Brethren, on the example of Our predecessors, are most
anxious that the whole Catholic world, both clerical and lay, shall prepare
itself for this great event, the forthcoming Council, by ardent prayer, good
works, and the practice of Christian penance.
23. Clearly the most efficacious kind of prayer for gaining the divine
protection is prayer that is offered publicly by the whole community; for Our
Redeemer said: "Where two or three are gathered together for my sake, there
am I in the midst of them."(22)
24. The situation, therefore, demands that Christians today, as in the days
of the early Church, shall be of "one heart and one soul,"(23)
imploring God with prayer and penance to grant that this great assembly may
measure up to all our expectations.
25. The salutary results we pray for are these: that the faith, the love,
the moral lives of Catholics may be so re-invigorated, so intensified, that all
who are at present separated from this Apostolic See may be impelled to strive
actively and sincerely for union, and enter the one fold under the one
Shepherd.(24)
Specific Steps to be Taken
26. To achieve greater unanimity in this prayer, Venerable Brethren, We
would have you organize a solemn novena to the Holy Spirit in all the parishes
of your diocese immediately preceding the Ecumenical Council. The object of this
novena will be to beg for an abundance of heavenly light and supernatural aid
for the Fathers in council. To all who join in this novena We impart from the
Church's treasury a plenary indulgence, obtainable on the usual conditions.
27. Then, too, a public act of prayer and propitiation might fittingly be
arranged in every diocese and, in conjunction with it, a special course of
sermons, to serve as a fervent invitation to the faithful to redouble their
works of mercy and penance. By this means they may hope to propitiate Almighty
God and thus obtain by their prayers that renewal of Christian life which is one
of the principal aims of the coming Council. As Our Predecessor Pius XI so aptly
observed: "Prayer and penance are the two potent inspirations sent to us at
this time by God, that we may bring back to Him our wayward human race that
wanders aimlessly without a guide. They are inspirations that will disperse and
remedy the first and foremost cause of all rebellion and unrest, man's revolt
against God."(25)
Internal Repentance
28. Our first need is for internal repentance; the detestation, that is, of
sin, and the determination to make amends for it. This is the repentance shown
by those who make a good Confession, take part in the Eucharistic Sacrifice and
receive Holy Communion. The faithful should be specially encouraged to do this
during the novena to the Holy Spirit, for external acts of penance are quite
obviously useless unless accompanied by a clear conscience and the detestation
of sin. Hence Christ's severe warning: "Unless you repent you will all
perish in the same manner."(26) God forbid that any of Our sons and
daughters succumb to this danger.
Outward Acts of Penance
29. But the faithful must also be encouraged to do outward acts of
penance, both to keep their bodies under the strict control of reason and faith,
and to make amends for their own and other people's sins. St. Paul was caught up
to the third heavenhe reached the summit of holinessand yet he had
no hesitation in saying of himself "I chastise my body and bring it into
subjection."(27) On another occasion he said: "They who belong to
Christ have crucified their flesh with its passions and desires."(28) St.
Augustine issued the same insistent warning: "It is not enough for a man to
change his ways for the better and to give up the practice of evil, unless by
painful penance, sorrowing humility, the sacrifice of a contrite heart and the
giving of alms he makes amends to God for all that he has done wrong."(29)
30. External penance includes particularly the acceptance from God in a
spirit of resignation and trust of all life's sorrows and hardships and of
everything that involves inconvenience and annoyance in the conscientious
performance of the obligations of our daily life and work and the practice of
Christian virtue. Penance of this kind is in fact inescapable. Yet it serves not
only to win God's mercy and forgiveness for our sins, and His heavenly aid for
the Ecumenical Council, but also sweetens, one might almost say, the bitterness
of this mortal life of ours with the promise of its heavenly reward. For "the
sufferings of the present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory to
come that will be revealed in us."(30)
Voluntary Acts as Part of External Penance
31. But besides bearing in a Christian spirit the inescapable annoyances and
sufferings of this life, the faithful ought also take the initiative in doing
voluntary acts of penance and offering them to God. In this they will be
following in the footsteps of our divine Redeemer who, as the Prince of the
Apostles said, "died once for sins, the Just for the unjust; that he might
bring us to God. Put to death indeed in the flesh, he was brought to life in the
spirit."(31) "Since, therefore, Christ has suffered in the flesh," it
is only fitting that we be "armed with the same intent."(32)
32. It is right, too, to seek example and inspiration from the great saints
of the Church. Pure as they were, they inflicted such mortifications upon
themselves as to leave us almost aghast with admiration. And as we contemplate
their saintly heroism, shall not we be moved by God's grace to impose on
ourselves some voluntary sufferings and deprivations, we whose consciences are
perhaps weighed down by so heavy a burden of guilt?
33. And who does not know that this sort of penance is the more acceptable
to God in that it springs not from the natural infirmities of soul or body, but
from a free and generous resolve of the will, and as such is a most welcome
sacrifice in God's sight?
A Share in the Work of Eternal Salvation
34. Finally, the object of the Ecumenical Council, as everyone knows, will
be to render more effective that divine work which our Redeemer accomplished.
Christ our Lord accomplished it by being "offered... because it was his
own will."(33) He accomplished it not merely by teaching men His heavenly
doctrine, but also, and more especially, by pouring out His most precious blood
for their salvation. Yet each of us can say with St. Paul: "I now rejoice
in my sufferings... and fill up those things that are wanting of the
sufferings of Christ, in my flesh, for his body, which is the Church."(34)
35. Let us then be alert and generous, and take full advantage of this
opportunity of offering up our sorrows and sufferings to God "for building
up the body of Christ,"(35) the Church. No fairer, no more desirable fate
could befall us than to be given a share in that work which has as its object
the eternal salvation of men who have strayed far too often from the right path
of truth and virtue.
A Necessary Repudiation
36. Jesus Christ taught us self-discipline and self-denial when He
said: "If anyone wishes to come after me, let him deny himself and take up
his cross daily and follow me."(36) Yet there are many people, alas, who
join instead the immoderate quest for earthly pleasures, thus debasing and
weakening the nobler powers of the human spirit. It is all the more necessary,
therefore, for Christians to repudiate this unworthy way of life which gives
frequent rein to the turbulent emotions of the soul and seriously endangers its
eternal salvation. They must repudiate it with all the energy and courage
displayed by the martyrs and those heroic men and women who have been the glory
of the Church in every age of her history. If everyone does this, each in his
own station in life, he will be enabled to play his individual part in making
this Second Ecumenical Vatican Council, which is especially concerned with the
refurbishing of Christian morality, an outstanding success.
Preparing to Receive the Good Seed
37. So much for the subject of Our letter, Venerable Brethren, and it is Our
confident hope that both you yourselves and, at your instigation, all Our sons
throughout the world, both clerical and lay, will give a whole-hearted and
generous response to Our fatherly appeals. Everyone wants the forthcoming
Ecumenical Council to give all possible impetus to the spread of Christianity.
It must give louder and louder utterance to that "word by which the kingdom
is preached" mentioned in the parable of the sower,(37) and help to bring
about the wider extension of "the kingdom of God" in the world. But
all this must depend to a large extent on the dispositions of the souls which
the Council will be endeavoring to inspire to truth and virtue, to the worship
of God both in private and in public, to a disciplined life and to missionary
zeal.
38. Do your utmost, Venerable Brethren; explore every avenue that is open to
you; have no hesitation in mustering all your authority and available resources
in an effort to persuade the faithful under your charge to purify their souls by
penance and to enkindle them with the fervor of piety. The "good seed"
which the Council will scatter far and wide over the Church in those days must
not be allowed to go to waste; it must find its way into hearts that are ready
and prepared, loyal and true. If such is the case, then the forthcoming Council
will indeed be for the faithful, a fruitful source of eternal salvation.
39. "Behold, now is the acceptable time; behold, now is the day of
salvation."(38) These are words which We consider most applicable to that
period of time which will shortly be upon us when the Ecumenical Council is in
session. But when God in His Providence decrees to give His supernatural gifts
to men, He does so in the measure of their own individual desires and
dispositions. Hence Our long-continued insistence on the spiritual preparation
of Christians for this great event. Hence, too, the supreme importance of giving
heed to this final invitation of Ours addressed to those who are willing to be
guided by Our demands.
High Hopes
40. We, Venerable Brethren, must lead the way; and may all the faithfulespecially
priests, monks and nuns, children, the sick and the afflictedjoin us in
praying and doing penance, that God may give His Church the abundance of light
and grace that is so necessary for her at this time. For will not Almighty God
surely be lavish with His gifts, after receiving so many gifts from His
children; gifts which breathe the scent of myrrh, the sweet fragrance of their
filial devotion?
41. Then, too, what a wonderful, what a heartening spectacle of religious
fervor it will be to see the countless armies of Christians throughout the world
devoting themselves to assiduous prayer and voluntary self-denial in response to
Our appeals! This is the sort of religious fervor with which the Church's sons
and daughters should be imbued. May their example be an inspiration to those who
are so immersed in the affairs of this world as to be neglectful of their duties
towards God.
42. If you can implement these desires of Ours; if when you leave your
dioceses to come to Rome for the Council, you can come laden with such spiritual
riches as these, then we may hope indeed to see the dawning of a new and fairer
age for the Catholic Church throughout the world.
A Blessing
43. Buoyed up by this assurance, Venerable Brethren, We lovingly impart to
you and to all the clergy and faithful committed to your loyal care, that pledge
of heaven's graces, that earnest of Our fatherly good will, Our Apostolic
Blessing.
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, on the 1st day of July, the Feast of the
Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ, in the year 1962, the fourth of
Our Pontificate.
JOHN XXIII
NOTES
LATIN TEXT: Acta Apostolicae Sedis, 54 (1962), 481-91.
ENGLISH TRANSLATION: The Pope Speaks, 8 (October, 1962), 111-19.
REFERENCES:
(1) Cf. apostolic constitution Humanae salutis, AAS 54 (1962) 12.
English translation in TPS VII, 353-61.
(2) Matt. 28.20
(3) Luke 10.16.
(4) Cf. Matt. 28.19-20.
(5) Cf. Exod. 32.6-35; and 1 Cor. 10.7
(6) Joel 2.12-13, 17.
(7) Matt. 3.2.
(8) Ibid. 4.17.
(9) Luke 17.21.
(10) Matt. 11.12.
(11) Acts 2.38.
(12) Rom. 14.17.
(13) Eph. 5.25-27.
(14) Cf. Apoc. 7.14.
(15) Heb. 10.28-29 and 31.
(16) Council of Trent, Sess. XIV, doctrina de Sacramento Paenitentiae,
ch. 2; cf. St. Greg. Naz., Orat. 39.17: PG 36.356; St. John Dam., De
fide orthod. 4.9; PG 94.11,24.
(17) Collect for Tuesday in the first week in Lent.
(18) Collect for Wednesday in the fourth week in Lent.
(19) Epist. ad Concil. Later. IV spectantes, Epist. 28 ad fideles
per Moguntinas provincias constitutos, Mansi, Amplissimi Coll. Concil.
22, Paris and Leipzig, 1903, col. 959.
(20) Cf. Mansi, loc. cit. 24, col. 62.
(21) Cf. Act. et Decr. Sacr. Concil. Recent., Coll. Lac. tom. VII,
Freiburg im Breisgau, 1890, col. 10.
(22) Matt. 18.20.
(23) Acts 4.32.
(24) Cf. John 10.16.
(25) Encyclical letter Caritate Christi compulsi, AAS 24 (1932)
191.
(26) Luke 13.5.
(27) 1 Cor. 9.27.
(28) Gal. 5.24.
(29) Serm. 351, 5.12; PL 39.1549.
(30) Rom. 8.18.
(31) 1 Peter 3.18.
(32) Cf. ibid. 4.1.
(33) Isa. 53.7.
(34) Col. 1.24.
(35) Eph. 4.12.
(36) Luke 9.23.
(37) Matt. 13.19.
(38) 2 Cor. 6.2.
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