QUAMQUAM PLURIES ENCYCLICAL
OF POPE LEO XIII ON DEVOTION TO ST. JOSEPH
To Our Venerable Brethren the Patriarchs,
Primates, Archbishops, and other Ordinaries, in Peace and Union with Holy
See.
Although We have already many times ordered
special prayers to be offered up in the whole world, that the interests of
Catholicism might be insistently recommended to God, none will deem it matter
for surprise that We consider the present moment an opportune one for again
inculcating the same duty. During periods of stress and trial - chiefly when
every lawlessness of act seems permitted to the powers of darkness - it has been
the custom in the Church to plead with special fervour and perseverance to
God, her author and protector, by recourse to the intercession of the saints -
and chiefly of the Blessed Virgin, Mother of God - whose patronage has
ever been the most efficacious. The fruit of these pious prayers and of the
confidence reposed in the Divine goodness, has always, sooner or later, been
made apparent. Now, Venerable Brethren, you know the times in which we live;
they are scarcely less deplorable for the Christian religion than the worst
days, which in time past were most full of misery to the Church. We see faith,
the root of all the Christian virtues, lessening in many souls; we see charity
growing cold; the young generation daily growing in
depravity of morals and views; the Church of Jesus Christ attacked on every
side by open force or by craft; a relentless war waged against the Sovereign
Pontiff; and the very foundations of religion undermined with a boldness which
waxes daily in intensity. These things are, indeed, so much a matter of
notoriety that it is needless for Us to expatiate on the depths to which
society has sunk in these days, or on the designs which now agitate the minds
of men. In circumstances so unhappy and troublous, human remedies are
insufficient, and it becomes necessary, as a sole resource, to beg for
assistance from the Divine power.
2. This is the reason why We have considered
it necessary to turn to the Christian people and urge them to implore, with
increased zeal and constancy, the aid of Almighty God. At this proximity of
the month of October, which We have already consecrated to the Virgin Mary,
under the title of Our Lady of the Rosary, We earnestly exhort the faithful to
perform the exercises of this month with, if possible, even more piety and
constancy than heretofore. We know that there is sure help in the maternal
goodness of the Virgin, and We are very certain that We shall never vainly
place Our trust in her. If, on innumerable occasions, she has displayed her
power in aid of the Christian world, why
should We doubt that she will now renew the assistance of her power and
favour, if humble and constant prayers are offered up on all sides to her?
Nay, We rather believe that her intervention will be the more marvellous
as she has permitted Us to pray to her, for so long a time, with special
appeals. But We entertain another object, which, according to your wont,
Venerable Brethren, you will advance with fervour. That God may be more
favourable to Our prayers, and that He may come with bounty and
promptitude to the aid of His Church, We judge it of deep utility for the
Christian people, continually to invoke with great piety and trust,
together with the Virgin-Mother of God, her chaste Spouse, the Blessed
Joseph; and We regard it as most certain that this will be most pleasing
to the Virgin herself. On the subject of this devotion, of which We speak
publicly for the first time to-day, We know without doubt that not only is
the people inclined to it, but that it is already established, and is
advancing to full growth. We have seen the devotion to St. Joseph, which
in past times the Roman Pontiffs have developed and gradually increased,
grow into greater proportions in Our time, particularly after Pius IX., of
happy memory, Our predecessor, proclaimed, yielding to the request of a
large number of bishops, this holy patriarch the patron of the Catholic
Church. And as, moreover, it is of high importance that the devotion to
St. Joseph should engraft itself upon the daily pious practices of
Catholics, We desire that the Christian people should be urged to it above
all by Our words and authority.
3. The special motives for which St.
Joseph has been proclaimed Patron of the Church, and from which the Church
looks for singular benefit from his patronage and protection, are that
Joseph was the spouse of Mary and that he was reputed the Father of Jesus
Christ. From these sources have sprung his dignity, his holiness, his
glory. In truth, the dignity of the Mother of God is so lofty that naught
created can rank above it. But as Joseph has been united to the Blessed
Virgin by the ties of marriage, it may not be doubted that he approached
nearer than any to the eminent dignity by which the Mother of God
surpasses so nobly all created natures. For marriage is the most intimate
of all unions which from its essence imparts a community of gifts between
those that by it are joined together. Thus in giving Joseph the Blessed
Virgin as spouse, God appointed him to be not only her life's companion,
the witness of her maidenhood, the protector of her honour, but also, by
virtue of the conjugal tie, a participator in her sublime dignity. And
Joseph shines among all mankind by the most august dignity, since by
divine will, he was the guardian of the Son of God and reputed as His
father among men. Hence it came about that the Word of God was humbly
subject to Joseph, that He obeyed him, and that He rendered to him all
those offices that children are bound to render to their parents. From
this two-fold dignity flowed the obligation which nature lays upon the
head of families, so that Joseph became the guardian, the administrator,
and the legal defender of the divine house whose chief he was. And during
the whole course of his life he fulfilled those charges and those duties.
He set himself to protect with a mighty love and a daily solicitude his
spouse and the Divine Infant; regularly by his work he earned what was
necessary for the one and the other for nourishment and clothing; he
guarded from death the Child threatened by a monarch's jealousy, and found
for Him a refuge; in the miseries of the journey and in the bitternesses
of exile he was ever the companion, the assistance, and the upholder of
the Virgin and of Jesus. Now the divine house which Joseph ruled with the
authority of a father, contained within its limits the scarce-born Church.
From the same fact that the most holy Virgin is the mother of Jesus Christ
is she the mother of all Christians whom she bore on Mount Calvary amid
the supreme throes of the Redemption; Jesus Christ is, in a manner, the
first-born of Christians, who by the adoption and Redemption are his
brothers. And for such reasons the Blessed Patriarch looks upon the
multitude of Christians who make up the Church as confided specially to
his trust - this limitless family spread over the earth, over which, because
he is the spouse of Mary and the Father of Jesus Christ he holds, as it
were, a paternal authority. It is, then, natural and worthy that as the
Blessed Joseph ministered to all the needs of the family at Nazareth and
girt it about with his protection, he should now cover with the cloak of
his heavenly patronage and defend the Church of Jesus Christ.
4. You well understand, Venerable Brethren,
that these considerations are confirmed by
the ,opinion held by a large number of the Fathers, to which the sacred
liturgy gives its sanction, that the Joseph of ancient times, son of the
patriarch Jacob, was the type of St. Joseph, and the former by his glory
prefigured the greatness of the future guardian of the Holy Family. And in
truth, beyond the fact that the same name - a point the significance of which
has never been denied - was given to each, you well know the points of likeness
that exist between them; namely, that the first Joseph won the favour and
especial goodwill of his master, and that through Joseph's administration his
household came to prosperity and wealth; that (still more important) he
presided over the kingdom with great power, and, in a time when the harvests
failed, he provided for all the needs of the Egyptians with so much wisdom
that the King decreed to him the title "Saviour of the world." Thus
it is that We may prefigure the new in the old patriarch. And as the first
caused the prosperity of his master's domestic interests and at the same time
rendered great services to the whole kingdom, so the second, destined to be
the guardian of the Christian religion, should be regarded as the protector
and defender of the Church, which is truly the house of the Lord and the
kingdom of God on earth. These are the reasons why men of every rank and
country should fly to the trust and guard of the blessed Joseph. Fathers of
families find in Joseph the best personification of paternal solicitude and
vigilance; spouses a perfect example of love, of peace, and of conjugal
fidelity; virgins at the same time find in him the model and protector of
virginal integrity. The noble of birth will earn of Joseph how to guard their
dignity even in misfortune; the rich will understand, by his lessons, what are
the goods most to be desired and won at the price of their labour. As to
workmen, artisans, and persons of lesser degree, their recourse to Joseph is a
special right, and his example is for their particular imitation. For Joseph,
of royal blood, united by marriage to the greatest and holiest of women,
reputed the father of the Son of God, passed his life in labour, and won by
the toil of the artisan the needful support of his family. It is, then, true
that the condition of the lowly has nothing shameful in it, and the work of
the labourer is not only not dishonouring, but can, if virtue be joined to it,
be singularly ennobled. Joseph, content with his slight possessions,
bore the trials consequent on a fortune so slender, with greatness of soul, in
imitation of his Son, who having put on the form of a slave, being the Lord of
life, subjected himself of his own free-will to the spoliation and loss of
everything.
5. Through these considerations, the poor
and those who live by the labour of their hands should be of good heart and
learn to be just. If they win the right of emerging from poverty and obtaining
a better rank by lawful means, reason and justice uphold them in changing the
order established, in the first instance, for them by the Providence of God.
But recourse to force and struggles by seditious paths to obtain such ends are
madnesses which only aggravate the evil which they aim to suppress. Let the
poor, then, if they would be wise, trust not to the promises of seditious men,
but rather to the example and patronage of the Blessed Joseph, and to the
maternal charity of the Church, which each day takes an increasing compassion
on their lot.
6. This is the reason why - trusting much to
your zeal and episcopal authority, Venerable Brethren, and not doubting that
the good and pious faithful will run beyond the mere letter of the law - We
prescribe that during the whole month of October, at the recitation of the
Rosary, for which We have already legislated, a prayer to St. Joseph be added,
the formula of which will be sent with this letter, and that this custom
should be repeated every year. To those who recite this prayer, We grant for
each time an indulgence of seven years and seven Lents. It is a salutary
practice and very praiseworthy, already established in some countries, to
consecrate the month of March to the honour of the holy Patriarch by daily
exercises of piety. Where this custom cannot be easily established, it is as
least desirable, that before the feast-day, in the principal church of each
parish, a triduo of prayer be celebrated. In those lands where the 19th of
March - the Feast of St. Joseph - is not a Festival of Obligation, We exhort the
faithful to sanctify it as far as possible by private pious practices, in
honour of their heavenly patron, as though it were a day of Obligation.
7. And in token of heavenly favours, and in
witness of Our good-will, We grant most lovingly in the Lord, to you,
Venerable Brethren, to your clergy and to your people, the Apostolic blessing.
Given from the Vatican, August 15th, 1889,
the 11th year of Our Pontificate.
LEO XIII
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