IN AMPLISSIMO ENCYCLICAL
OF POPE LEO XIII
ON THE CHURCH IN THE UNITED STATES
To James Cardinal Gibbons and the
Archbishops, and Bishops of the United States.
Certainly We have reason to rejoice, and the Catholic world, on account of its
reverence for the Apostolic See, has reason to rejoice at the extraordinary fact
that We are to be reckoned as the third in the long line of Roman Pontiffs to
whom it has been happily given to enter upon the twenty-fifth year of the
Supreme Priesthood. But in this circle of congratulations, while the voices of
all are welcome to Us, that of the bishops and faithful of the United States of
North America brings Us special joy, both on account of the conditions which
give your country prominence over many other, and of the special love we
entertain for you.
2. You have been pleased, beloved Son and
Venerable Brothers, in your joint letter to Us to mention in detail what,
prompted by love for you, We have done for your churches during the course of
Our Pontificate. We on the other hand, are glad to call to mind the many
different ways in which you have ministered to Our consolation throughout this
period. If We found pleasure in the state of things which prevailed among you
when We first entered upon the charge of the Supreme Apostolate, now that We
have advanced beyond twenty-four years in the same
charge, We are constrained to confess that Our first pleasure has never been
diminished, but, on the contrary, has increased from day to day by reason of
the increase of Catholicity among you. The cause of this increase, although
first of all to be attributed to the providence of God, must also be ascribed
to your energy and activity. You have, in your prudent policy, promoted every
kind of Catholic organization with such wisdom as to provide for all
necessities and all contingencies, in harmony with the remarkable character of
the people of your country.
3. Your chief praise is that you have promoted
and sedulously continue to foster the union of your churches with this chief
of churches and with the Vicar of Christ on earth. Herein, as you rightly
confess, is the apex and centre of government, of teaching and of the
priesthood; the source of that unity which Christ destined for His Church, and
which is one of the most striking notes distinguishing it from all human
sects. As We have never failed to exercise with advantage this most salutary
office of teaching and government in every nation, so we have never permitted
that you or your people should suffer the lack of it. For We have gladly
availed Ourselves of every opportunity to testify the
constancy of Our solicitude for you and for the interests of religion among
you. And Our daily experience obliges Us to confess that We have found your
people, through your influence, endowed with perfect docility of mind and
alacrity of disposition. Therefore, while the changes and tendencies of nearly
all the nations which were Catholic for many centuries give cause for sorrow,
the state of your churches, in their flourishing youthfulness, cheers Our
heart and fills it with delight. True, you are shown no special favor by the
law of the land, but on the other hand your lawgivers are certainly entitled
to praise for the fact that they do nothing to restrain you in your just
liberty. You must, therefore, and with you the Catholic host behind, make
strenuous use of the favorable time for action which is now at your disposal
by spreading abroad as far as possible the light of truth against the errors
and absurd imaginings of the sects that are springing up.
4. We are not unaware, Venerable Brothers, of
all that has been done by every one of you for the establishment and the
success of schools and academies for the proper education of children. By your
zeal in this respect you have clearly acted in conformity with the
exhortations of the Apostolic See and the prescriptions of the Council of
Baltimore. Your magnificent work on behalf of the ecclesiastical seminaries
has assuredly been calculated to increase the prospects of good to be done by
the clergy and to add to their dignity. Nor is this all. You have wisely taken
measures to enlighten dissidents and to draw them to the truth by appointing
learned and worthy members of the clergy to go about from district to district
to address them in public in familiar style in churches and other buildings,
and to solve the difficulties that may be advanced. An excellent plan, and one
which We know has already borne abundant fruit. Nor has your charity been
unmindful of the sad lot of the negro and the Indian - you have sent them
teachers, helped them liberally, and you are most zealously providing for
their eternal salvation. We are glad to add a stimulus, if such be necessary,
to enable you to continue these undertakings with full confidence that your
work is worthy of commendation.
5. Finally, not to omit the expression of Our
gratitude, We would have you know what satisfaction you have caused Us by the
liberality with which your people are endeavoring to contribute by their
offerings to relieve the penury of the Holy See. Many indeed and great are the
necessities for which the Vicar of Christ as supreme Pastor and Father of the
Church is bound to provide in order to avert evil and to promote the faith.
Hence your generosity becomes an exercise and a testimony of your faith.
6. For all these reasons We wish to declare to you again and again Our affection
for you. Let the Apostolic blessing, which We bestow most lovingly in the Lord
upon you all and upon the flocks entrusted to each one of you, be taken as a
token of this affection and an augury of divine gifts.
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, the fifteenth
day of April, 1902, in the twenty-fifth year of Our Pontificate.
LEO XIII
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