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LICET MULTA ENCYCLICAL
OF POPE LEO XIII ON CATHOLICS IN BELGIUM
To Our Beloved Son Victor Augustus, Cardinal Deschamps, Primate of Belgium, and
to All the Other Belgian Bishops.
Dear Son and Venerable Brethren, Health and
Apostolic Benediction!
During these last years the cause of
Catholicism has undergone, in Belgium, multiplied trials. We have, however,
found comfort and consolation in the tokens of persistent love and fidelity
which Belgian Catholics have furnished us so abundantly whenever they have had
an occasion. And, above all, what has strengthened us, and still gives us
strength, is your signal attachment to our person, and the zeal which you
exert in order that the Christian people confided to your care may persevere
in the sincerity and unity of the Catholic Faith, and may progress each day in
its love for the Church of Christ and his Vicar. It is pleasant for us to give
special praise to your solicitude in encouraging by all the means possible a
good education for the young, and in insuring to the children of the primary
schools a religious education established on broad foundations. Your zeal is
applied with equal watchfulness to all that tends to the advantage of
Christian education in the Colleges and Institutes, as
well as to the Catholic University of Louvain.
2. On the other hand, we cannot remain
indifferent, or at peace, in presence of events which would seem to imperil
amongst Belgians the good understanding between Catholic citizens, and to
divide them into opposing camps. It would be superfluous to recall here the
causes and occasions of these differences, and the encouragement they have met
with where it ought least to have been expected. All these details, Dear Son
and Venerable Brethren, you know better than any one; and you deplore them
with us, knowing perfectly that at no other epoch could the necessity of
assuring and maintaining union amongst Catholics be so great as at this
moment, when the enemies of the name of Christianity rage on all sides against
the Church in an unanimous attack.
3. Full of solicitude for this union, we
point out the dangers which threaten it arising from certain controversies
concerning public law; a subject which, amongst you, engenders a strong
difference of feeling. These controversies have for their object the necessity
or opportuneness of conforming to the prescriptions of Catholic doctrine the
existing forms of government, based on what is commonly called modern law.
Most assuredly we, more than any one, ought heartily to
desire that human society should be governed in a Christian manner, and that
the divine influence of Christ should penetrate and completely impregnate all
orders of the State. From the commencement of our Pontificate we manifested,
without delay, that such was our settled opinion; and that by public
documents, and especially by the Encyclical Letters we published against the
errors of Socialism, and, quite recently, upon the Civil Power. Nevertheless,
all Catholics, if they wish to exert themselves profitably for the common
good, should have before their eyes and faithfully imitate the prudent conduct
which the Church herself adopts in matters of this nature: she maintains and
defends in all their integrity the sacred doctrines and principles of right
with inviolable firmness, and applies herself with all her power to regulating
the institutions and the customs of public order, as well as the acts of
private life, upon these same principles. Nevertheless, she observes in this
the just measure of time and place; and, as commonly happens in human affairs,
she is often constrained to tolerate at times evils that it would be almost
impossible to prevent, without exposing herself to calamities and troubles
still more disastrous.
4. Moreover, in polemical discussions, care
should be taken not to overstep those just limits that justice and charity
alike mark out, and not rashly to throw blame or suspicion upon men otherwise
devoted to the doctrines of the Church; and, above all, upon those who in the
Church itself are raised to dignity and power. We deplore that this has been
done in your case, Dear Son, who, in your quality of archbishop, administer
the diocese of Malines; and who, for your signal services to the Church, and
for your zeal in defending Catholic doctrine, have been judged worthy by our
Predecessor of blessed memory, Pius IX., to take a place in the College of
most Eminent Cardinals. It is manifest that the facility with which unfounded
accusations are levelled vaguely against one's neighbour, does injury to the
good name of others, and weakens the bonds of charity; and that it outrages
those "whom the Holy Ghost has placed to govern the Church of God."
For this reason do we desire with all our power, and hereby most seriously
enjoin, that Catholics abstain from this conduct. Let it suffice to them to
remember that it is to the Apostolic See and to the
Roman Pontiff, to whom all have access, that has been confided the charge of
defending everywhere Catholic truths, and of watching that no error
whatsoever, capable of doing injury to the doctrine of faith and morals, or
apparently in contradiction with it, be spread or propagated in the Church.
5. In what concerns yourselves, Dear Son and
Venerable Brethren, use all your vigilance so that all men of science, and
those, most especially, to whom you have confided the charge of teaching
youth, be of one accord, and unanimous in all those questions upon which the
teaching of the Holy See allows no freedom of opinion. And as to points left
to the discussion of the learned, may their intellects, owing to your
inspiration and your advice, be so exercised upon them that the divergences of
opinion destroy not union of heart and concord of will. On this subject the
Sovereign Pontiff, Benedict XIV., our immortal predecessor, has left in his
Constitution Sollicita ac provides, certain rules for men of study, full of
wisdom and authority. He has even proposed to them, as a model to imitate in
this matter, St. Thomas Aquinas, whose moderation of language and maturity of
style are maintained as well in the combat against adversaries, as in the
exposition of doctrine and the proofs destined for its defence. We wish to
renew to learned men the recommendations of our predecessor, and to point out
to them this noble model, who will teach them not only the manner of carrying
on controversy with opponents, but also the character of the doctrine to be
held and developed in the cultivation of philosophy and theology. On many
occasions, Dear Son and Venerable Brethren, we have expressed to you our
earnest desire of seeing the wisdom of St. Thomas reinstated in Catholic
schools, and everywhere treated with the highest consideration. We have
likewise exhorted you to establish in the University of Louvain the teaching
of higher philosophy in the spirit of St. Thomas. In this matter, as in all
others, we have found you entirely ready to condescend to our wishes and to
fulfill our will. Pursue then, with zeal, the task which has been begun, and
watch with care that in this same University the fruitful sources of Christian
philosophy, which spring from the works of St. Thomas, be open to students in
a rich abundance, and applied to the profit of all other branches of
instruction. In the execution of this design, if you
have need of our aid or our counsels, they shall never be wanting to you.
6. In the meantime, we pray God, the Source
of Wisdom, the Author of Peace, and the Friend of Charity, to accord you His
favourable help in the present conjuncture, and we ask him for all an
abundance of Heavenly gifts. As an augury of these graces, and as a sign of
our special benevolence, we accord, with a loving heart, our Apostolic
benediction to you, Dear Son and Venerable Brethren, to
all your Clergy, and to the people confided to your charge.
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, the 3rd of
August, 1881, the fourth year of Our Pontificate.
LEO XIII
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