|
MAGNAE DEI MATRIS ENCYCLICAL
OF POPE LEO XIII ON THE ROSARY
To Our Venerable Brethren, the Patriarchs, Primates,
Archbishops, and other Ordinaries in Peace and Communion with the
Apostolic See.
As often as the occasion arises to stimulate
and intensify the love and veneration of the Christian people for Mary, the
great Mother of God, We are filled with wondrous satisfaction and joy, as by a
subject which is not only of prime importance in itself and profitable in
countless ways, but which also perfectly accords with the inmost sentiments of
Our heart. For the holy reverence for Mary which We experienced from Our
tenderest years, has grown greater and has taken firmer hold of Our soul with
Our advancing age.
The Holy Father's Devotion to Mary
2. As time went on, it became more and more
evident how deserving of love and honor was she whom God Himself was the first
to love, and loved so much more than any other that, after elevating her high
above all the rest of His creation and adorning her with His richest gifts, He
made her His Mother. The many and splendid proofs of her bounty and
beneficence toward us, which We remember with deep gratitude and which move Us
to tears, still further encourage and strongly inflame
Our filial reverence for her. Throughout the many dreadful events of every
kind which the times have brought to pass, always with her have We sought
refuge, always to her have We lifted up pleading and confident eyes. And in
all the hopes and fears, the joys and sorrows, that We confided to her, the
thought was constantly before Us to ask her to assist Us at all times as Our
gracious Mother and to obtain this greatest of favors: that We might be able,
in return, to show her the heart of a most devoted son.
Filial Trust in Mary
3. When, then, it came to pass in the secret
design of God's providence that We were chosen to fill this Chair of St. Peter
and to take the place of the Person of Christ Himself in the Church, worried
by the enormous burden of the office and finding no ground for reliance upon
Our own strength, We hastened with fervent zeal to implore the divine aid
through the maternal intercession of the ever blessed Virgin. Never has Our
hope, We are happy to acknowledge, at any time of Our life but more especially
since We began to exercise the Supreme Apostolate, failed in the course of
events to bear fruit or bring Us comfort. Thus encouraged, Our hope today
mounts more confidently than ever to beseech many more and even
greater blessings through her favor and mediation, which will profit alike the
salvation of Christ's flock and the happy increase of His Church's glory.
4. It is, therefore, a fitting and opportune
time, Venerable Brethren, for Us to induce all Our children-exhorting them
through you-to plan on celebrating the coming month of October, consecrated to
our Lady as the august Queen of the Rosary, with the fervent and wholehearted
devotion which the necessities weighing upon Us demand.
5. It is only too plain how many and of what
nature are the corrupting agencies by which the wickedness of the world
deceitfully strives to weaken and completely uproot from souls their Christian
faith and the respect for God's law on which faith is fed and depends for its
effectiveness. Already the fields cultivated by our Lord are everywhere
turning into a wilderness abounding in ignorance of the Faith, in error and
vice, as though blown upon by some hideous pest. And to add to the anguish of
this thought, so far from putting a check on such insolent and destructive
depravity, or imposing the punishment deserved, they who can and should
correct matters seem in many cases, by their indifference or open connivance,
to increase the spirit of evil.
6. We have good reason to deplore the public
institutions in which the teaching of the sciences and arts is purposely so
organized that the name of God is passed over in silence or visited with
vituperation; to deplore the license - growing more shameless by the day - of the
press in publishing whatever it pleases, and the license of speech in
addressing any kind of insult to Christ our God and His Church. And We deplore
no less the consequent laxity and apathy in the practice of the Catholic
religion which if not quite open apostasy from the Faith, is certainly going
to prove an easy road to it, since it is a manner of life having nothing in
common with faith. Nobody who ponders this disorder and the surrender of the
most fundamental principles will be astonished if afflicted nations everywhere
are groaning under the heavy hand of God's vengeance and stand anxious and
trembling in fear of worse calamities.
The Remedy
7. Now, to appease the might of an outraged God
and to bring that health of soul so needed by those who
are sorely afflicted, there is nothing better than devout and persevering
prayer, provided it be joined with a love for and practice of Christian life.
And both of these, the spirit of prayer and the practice of Christian life,
are best attained through the devotion of the Rosary of Mary.
8. The well-known origin of the Rosary,
illustrated in celebrated monuments of which we have made frequent mention,
bears witness to its remarkable efficacy. For, in the days when the
Albigensian sect, posing as the champion of pure faith and morals, but in
reality introducing the worst kind of anarchy and corruption, brought many a
nation to its utter ruin, the Church fought against it and the other infamous
factions associated with it, not with troops and arms, but chiefly with the
power of the most holy Rosary, the devotion which the Mother of God taught to
our Father Dominic in order that he might propagate it. By this means the
Church triumphed magnificently over every obstacle and provided for the
salvation of her children not only in that trial but in others like it
afterward, always with the same glorious success. For this reason, now, when
human affairs have taken the course which We deplore, bringing affection to
the Church and ruin to the State, all of us have the duty to unite our voice
in prayer, with like devotion, to the holy Mother of God, beseeching her that
we too may rejoice, as we ardently desire, in experiencing the same power of
her Rosary.
The Mother of Mercy
9. When we have recourse to Mary in prayer, we
are having recourse to the Mother of mercy, who is so well disposed toward us
that, whatever the necessity that presses upon us especially in attaining
eternal life, she is instantly at our side of her own accord, even though she
has not been invoked. She dispenses grace with a generous hand from that
treasure with which from the beginning she was divinely endowed in fullest
abundance that she might be worthy to be the Mother of God. By the fullness of
grace which confers on her the most illustrious of her many titles, the
Blessed Virgin is infinitely superior to all the hierarchies of men and
angels, the one creature who is closest of all to Christ. "It is a great
thing in any saint to have grace sufficient for the salvation of many souls;
but to have enough to suffice for the salvation of everybody in the world, is
the greatest of all; and this is found in Christ and in the Blessed
Virgin."(1)
Jesus and Mary
10. It is impossible to say how pleasing and
gratifying to her it is when we greet her with the Angelic Salutation,
"full of grace"; and in repeating it, fashion these words of praise
into ritual crowns for her. For every time we say them, we recall the memory
of her exalted dignity and of the Redemption of the human race which God began
through her. We likewise bring to mind the divine and everlasting bond which
links her with the joys and sorrows, the humiliations and triumphs of Christ
in directing and helping mankind to eternal life.
11. It pleased Christ to take upon Himself the
Son of Man, and to become thereby our Brother, in order that His mercy to us
might be shown most openly; for "it behooved him in all things to be made
like unto his brethren that he might become a merciful and faithful high
priest before God."(2) Likewise because Mary was chosen to be the Mother
of Christ, our Lord and our Brother, the unique prerogative was given her
above all other mothers to show her mercy to us and to pour it out upon us.
Besides, as we are indebted to Christ for sharing in some way with us the
right, which is peculiarly His own, of calling God our Father and possessing
Him as such, we are in like manner indebted to Him for His loving generosity
in sharing with us the right to call Mary our Mother and to cherish her as
such.
Our Mother in Christ
12. While nature itself made the name of mother
the sweetest of all names and has made motherhood the very model of tender and
solicitous love, no tongue is eloquent enough to put in words what every
devout soul feels, namely how intense is the flame of affectionate and active
charity which glows in Mary, in her who is truly our mother not in a human way
but through Christ. Nobody knows and comprehends so well as she everything
that concerns us: what helps we need in life; what dangers, public or private,
threaten our welfare; what difficulties and evils surround us; above all, how
fierce is the fight we wage with ruthless enemies of our salvation. In these
and in all other troubles of life her power is most far-reaching. Her desire
to use it is most ardent to bring consolation, strength, and help of every
kind to children who are dear to her.
13. Accordingly, let us approach Mary confidently, wholeheartedly beseeching her by the
bonds of her motherhood which unite her so closely to Jesus and at the same
time to us. Let us with deepest devotion invoke her constant aid in the prayer
which she herself has indicated and which is most acceptable to her. Then with
good reason shall we rest with an easy and joyous mind under the protection of
the best of mothers.
The Rosary as Meditation
14. To this commendation of the Rosary which
follows from the very nature of the prayer, We may add that the Rosary offers
an easy way to present the chief mysteries of the Christian religion and to
impress them upon the mind; and this commendation is one of the most beautiful
of all. For it is mainly by faith that a man sets out on the straight and sure
path to God and learns to revere in mind and heart His supreme majesty, His
sovereignty over the whole of creation, His unsounded power, wisdom, and
providence. For he who comes to God must believe that God exists and is a
rewarder to those who seek Him. Moreover, because God's eternal Son assumed
our humanity and shone before us as the Way, the Truth, and the Life, our
faith must include the lofty mysteries of the august Trinity of divine Persons
and of the Father's only-begotten Son made Man: "This is eternal life:
that they may know thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou bast
sent."(3)
15. God gave us a most precious blessing when
He gave us faith. By this gift we are not only raised above the level of human
things, to contemplate and share in the divine nature, but are also furnished
with the means of meriting the rewards of heaven; and therefore the hope is
encouraged and strengthened that we shall one day look upon God, not in the
shadowy images of His creatures, but in the fullest light, and shall enjoy Him
forever as the Supreme Goodness. But the Christian is kept so busy by the
various affairs of life and wanders so easily into matters of little
importance, that unless he be helped with frequent reminders, the truths which
are of first importance and necessity are little by little forgotten; and then
faith begins to grow weak and may even perish.
Our Faith and the Mysteries of the Rosary
16. To ward off these exceedingly great dangers
of ignorance from her children, the Church, which never relaxes her vigilant
and diligent care, has been in the habit of looking
for the stanchest support of faith in the Rosary of Mary. And indeed in the
Rosary, along with the most beautiful and efficacious prayer arranged in an
orderly pattern, the chief mysteries of our religion follow one another, as
they are brought before our mind for contemplation: first of all the mysteries
in which the Word was made flesh and Mary, the inviolate Virgin and Mother,
performed her maternal duties for Him with a holy joy; there come then the
sorrows, the agony and death of the suffering Christ, the price at which the
salvation of our race was accomplished; then follow the mysteries full of His
glory; His triumph over death, the Ascension into heaven, the sending of the
Holy Spirit, the resplendent brightness of Mary received among the stars, and
finally the everlasting glory of all the saints in heaven united with the
glory of the Mother and her Son.
17. This uninterrupted sequence of wonderful
events the Rosary frequently and perseveringly recalls to the minds of the
faithful and presents almost as though they were unfolding before our eyes:
and this, flooding the souls of those who devoutly recite it with a sweetness
of piety that never grows weary, impresses and stirs them as though they were
listening to the very voice of the Blessed Mother explaining the mysteries and
conversing with them at length about their salvation.
18. It will not, then, seem too much to say
that in places, families, and nations in which the Rosary of Mary retains its
ancient honor, the loss of faith through ignorance and vicious error need not
be feared.
True Christian Living
19. There is still another and not lesser
advantage which the Church earnestly seeks for her children from the Rosary,
and that is the faithful regulation of their lives and their conduct in
keeping with the rules and precepts of their holy religion. For if, as we all
know from Holy Scripture, "faith without works is dead"(4)because
faith draws its life from charity and charity flowers forth in a profusion of
holy actions-then the Christian will gain nothing for eternal life from his
faith unless his life be ordered in accordance with what faith prescribes.
"What shall it profit, my brethren, if a man say he bath faith, but hath
not works? Shall faith be able to save him?"(5) A man of this sort will
incur a much heavier rebuke from Christ the Judge than those
who are, unfortunately, ignorant of Christian faith and its teaching: they,
unlike the former, who believes one thing and practices another, have some
excuse or at least are less blameworthy, because they lack the light of the
Gospel.
"And Dwelt Among Us"
20. In order therefore that the faith we
profess may the better bring forth a harvest of fruits in keeping with its
nature, while the mind is dwelling on mysteries of the Rosary the heart is
wonderfully enkindled by them to make virtuous resolutions. What an example we
have set before us! This shines forth everywhere in our Lord's work of
salvation. Almighty God, in the excess of His love for us, takes upon Himself
the form of lowly man. He dwells in our midst as one of the multitude,
converses with us as a friend, instructs and teaches the way of justice to
individuals and to multitudes. In His discourse He is the teacher unexcelled;
in the authority of His teaching He is God. To all He shows Himself a doer of
good; He relieves the sick of the ills of their bodies and, with paternal
compassion, heals the most serious sickness of their souls. Those above all
whom sorrow troubles or whom the weight of worry crushes, He comforts with the
gentle invitation: "Come to me, all you that labor, and are burdened, and
I will refresh you."(6) Then into us, at rest in His embrace, He breathes
that mystic fire which He has brought to all men, and benignly imbues us with
the meekness and humility of His own heart, with the hope that, by the
practice of these virtues, we may share the true and solid peace of which He
is the Author: "Learn of me, because I am meek, and humble of heart; and
you shall find rest to your souls."(7) For Himself, in return for that
light of heavenly wisdom and that stupendous abundance of blessings which only
He could merit for mankind, He suffers the hatred of men and their most
atrocious insults; and, nailed to the cross, He pours out His blood and yields
up His soul, holding it to be the highest glory to beget life in men by His
death.
21. It would be utterly impossible for anyone
to meditate on and attentively consider these most precious memorials of our
loving Redeemer and not have a heart on fire with gratitude to Him. Such is
the power of a faith sincerely practiced that, through the light it brings to
man's mind and the vigor with which it moves his
heart, he will straightway set out in the footsteps of Christ and follow them
through every obstacle, making his own a protestation worthy of a St. Paul:
"Who then shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation?
or distress? or famine? or nakedness? or danger? or persecution? or the
sword?"(8) "I live, now not I; but Christ liveth in me."(9)
The Life of Mary
22. But lest we be dismayed by the
consciousness of our native weakness and grow faint when confronted with the
unattainable example which Christ, who is Man and at the same time God, has
given, along with mysteries which portray Him, we have before our eyes for
contemplation the mysteries of His most holy Mother.
23. She was born, it is true, of the royal
family of David, but she fell heir to none of the wealth and grandeur of her
ancestors. She passed her life in obscurity, in a humble town, in a home
humbler still, the more content with her retirement and the poverty of her
home because they left her freer to lift up her heart to God and to cling to
Him closely as the supreme Goodness for which her heart yearned.
24. The Lord is with her whom He has filled
with His grace and made blessed. She is designated by the heavenly messenger
sent to her as the Virgin from whom, by the power of the Holy Ghost, the
expected Saviour of nations is to come forth clothed in our humanity. The more
she wonders at the sublime dignity and gives thanks to the power and mercy of
God, the more does she, conscious of no merit in herself, grow in humility,
promptly proclaiming and consecrating herself the handmaid of God even while
she becomes His Mother.
25. Her sacred promise was as sacredly kept
with a joyous heart; henceforth she leads a life in perpetual union with her
son Jesus, sharing with Him His joys and sorrows. It is thus that she will
reach a height of glory granted to no other creature, whether human or
angelic, because no one will receive a reward for virtue to be compared with
hers; it is thus that the crown of the kingdoms of heaven and of earth will
await her because she will be the invincible Queen of Martyrs. It is thus that
she will be seated in the heavenly city of God by the side of her Son, crowned for all eternity, because she will
drink with Him the cup overflowing with sorrow, faithfully through all her
life, most faithfully on Calvary.
Mary, Our Model
26. In Mary we see how a truly good and
provident God has established for us a most suitable example of every virtue.
As we look upon her and think about her we are nor cast down as though
stricken by the overpowering splendor of God's power; but, on the contrary,
attracted by the closeness of the common nature we share with her, we strive
with greater confidence to imitate her. If we, with her powerful help, should
dedicate ourselves wholly and entirely to this undertaking, we can portray at
least an outline of such great virtue and sanctity, and reproducing that
perfect conformity of our lives to all God's designs which she possessed in so
marvelous a degree, we shall follow her into heaven.
27. Undaunted and full of courage, let us go on
with the pilgrimage we have undertaken even though the way be rough and full
of obstacles. Amid the vexation and toil let us not cease to hold out
suppliant hands to Mary with the words of the Church: "To thee do we send
up our sighs, mourning and weeping in this valley of tears; turn then, most
gracious advocate, thine eyes of mercy toward us... Keep our lives all
spotless, make our ways secure, till we find in Jesus joys that will
endure."(10)
28. Although she was never subject to the
frailty and perversity of our nature, Mary well knows its condition and is the
best and most solicitous of mothers. How willingly will she hasten to our aid
when we need her; with what love will she refresh us, and with what strength
sustain us. For those of us who follow the journey hallowed by the blood of
Christ and by the tears of Mary, our entrance into their company and the
enjoyment of their most blessed glory will be certain and easy.
Devout and Frequent Recitation of the Rosary
29. Therefore the Rosary of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, combining in a convenient and
practical form an unexcelled form of prayer, an instrument well adapted to
preserve the faith and an illustrious example of perfect virtue, should be
often in the hands of the true Christian and
be devoutly recited and meditated upon. We
address this commendation especially to the Confraternity of the Holy Family
which We recently praised and approved. Since the mystery of the hidden life
which Christ our Lord long led within the walls of the house in Nazareth is
the reason for the existence of this association, that its members may
constantly conform themselves to Christian life on the model of the Holy
Family established by God Himself, its intimate connection with the Rosary is
plain.
30. Especially is this so in the joyful
mysteries, which end with the one in which Jesus, after manifesting His wisdom
in the temple, came with Mary and Joseph to Nazareth and was subject to them,
preparing, as it were, for the other mysteries which are more closely
connected with the instruction and the Redemption of mankind. From this all
the members may understand that it is their duty to be devotees of the Rosary
themselves and to be diligent in propagating deviation to it among others.
31. For Our part, We confirm and ratify the
grants of sacred indulgences made in years past in favor of the faithful who
spend the month of October in the manner We have prescribed. Because of your
authority and zeal, Venerable Brethren, We know that the Catholic people will
be fired with devotion and holy emulation in venerating through the Rosary,
the Blessed Virgin, Help of Christians.
The Holy Father's Source of Consolation
32. And now let Us bring Our exhortation to a
close in the way it began, proclaiming once more and even more openly the
devotion we cherish toward the great Mother of God, a devotion both mindful of
past blessings and full of joyous hope. We ask the prayers of the Christian
people in devout supplication before her altars on behalf of the Church,
tormented by such adverse and turbulent times, and on behalf of Ourself as
well. Advanced in age, worn out with labors, fettered by distressingly
difficult events with no human help to rely upon, We must yet carry on the
government of the Church. Our hope in Mary, powerful and benign Mother, is
daily more confirmed and more sweetly consoling. To her intercession We
attribute the many and remarkable gifts We have obtained from God; with thanks
still more profuse do we attribute the fact that it has been given Us to reach the
fiftieth anniversary of Our episcopal consecration.
33. It is, indeed, a great comfort to us,
looking back over the long years of Our pastoral charge, troubled as they have
been by daily worry, that We are still engaged in ruling the whole Christian
flock. During that time We have had, as happens in men's lives and as the
mysteries of Christ and Mary illustrate, reasons for joy mixed with reasons
for many and bitter sorrows, as well as occasions to glory in gains won for
Christ. All of this We, with a mind submissive to God and with a grateful
heart, have tried to turn to the good and the honor of the Church. And now - for
the rest of Our life will run a course not unlike the past - should new joys
come to gladden Our heart, or sorrow to threaten Us, or honors to glory in,
We, steadfast in the same heart and mind, yearning only for the heavenly glory
which God confers, say with David: "Blessed be the name of the
Lord";(11) Not to us, but to thy name give glory."(12)
The Shepherd's Plea to His Flock
34. From Our devoted children, whose filial and
affectionate concern for us We know burns bright, We look for heartfelt thanks
to God, prayers, and holy aspirations, rather than for congratulations and
honors. It will be a special joy to Us if they ask for Us this grace, that all
the strength and life that remain to Us, all the authority and grace with
which We are invested, may profit the Church, and in the first place bring
back into her fold her enemies and those who have wandered from the right way,
to whom our voice has this long time been appealing for reconciliation.
35. Upon all of Our dearly beloved children may
there flow, from the happiness and joy of Our coming Jubilee, God granting,
gifts of justice, peace, prosperity, holiness, and all good things. This, with
paternal love, We beg God; this do We exhort in the words of His Holy
Scriptures: "Hear me. . . and bud forth as the rose planted by the brooks
of waters: Give ye a sweet odor as frankincense. . . Send forth flowers, as
the lily, and yield a smell, and bring forth leaves in grace and praise with
canticles and bless the Lord in his works. Magnify his name, and give glory to
him with the voice of your lips, and with the canticles of your mouths, and
with harps. . . With the whole heart and mouth praise ye him, and bless
the name of the Lord."(13)
36. If these plans, so ardently desired, be
scoffed at by the wicked who blaspheme that of which they are ignorant, may
God mercifully spare them. But that He may give Our hopes His propitious aid
through the prayers of the Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, take as a token of
divine favor and at the same time as a pledge of Our affection, Venerable
Brethren, the Apostolic Benediction, which We, lovingly in the Lord, bestow on
each of you, on your clergy, and on your people.
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, the eighth of
September, 1892, in the fifteenth year of Our Pontificate.
LEO XIII
REFERENCES:
1. St. Thomas Aquinas, Super Salut. Ang.
2. Hebr. 2:17.
3. ]n. 17:3.
4. James 2:20.
5. James 2:14.
6. Mt. 11:28.
7. Mt. 11:29.
8. Rom. 8:35.
9. Gal. 2:20.
10. Sacred Liturgy.
11. Ps. 112:2.
12. Ps. 113:1.
13. Ecclus. 39:17-20, 41.
Copyright © Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
|