|
PATERNA CARITAS ENCYCLICAL
OF POPE LEO XIII ON REUNION WITH ROME
To Our Venerable Brothers Stephen Peter Patriarch of
Cilicia, the Archbishops, Bishops, and Beloved Sons the Clergy, Monks, and
People of the Armenian Rite in Grace and Communion with the Apostolic See.
Venerable Brethren, Beloved Children,
Health and the Apostolic Benediction.
The fatherly love with which We regard the
whole of the Lord's flock is so strong and deep that everything happening
among the Christian body is felt by Us with constant and ready sympathy. Hence
in proportion to the great and enduring sorrow with which Our soul was filled
because certain members of the Armenian race held themselves aloof from
fraternal communication with you, is the keen and long-desired joy which We
feel now that the difference, by God's blessing, has been appeased. But while
We congratulate you on the restoration of peace and unity, We cannot refrain
from exhorting you earnestly to preserve with care, and even to increase, this
evidence of God's goodness to you; but to obtain this grace, namely, to think
and feel in unity on the doctrines of faith it is necessary that you should
all preserve-as you now do - your obedience to the Apostolic See, and that
you, beloved children, should well and truly strive to obey with
all submission your Patriarch and the other Bishops who rightfully are placed
over you. But since so many temptations arise to wean you from this religious
unity - both from party strife connected with public life, and from distractions
among your domestic circles - you will find your great defence from these evils
in that loyal reverence and subjection of spirit, which is so conspicuous
among you, towards the head of the Ottoman Empire, whose fairness of feeling,
desire for peace, and good-will, evidenced on so many occasions towards Us,
have been matters of universal observation. Dissension and party strife will
cease among you if you preserve constantly the remembrance of what Paul, the
Apostle of the Gentiles, wrote on perfect charity, which "is patient, is
kind; envieth not, dealeth not perversely; is not ambitious, seeketh not her
own, is not provoked to anger, thinketh no evil."(1) But this admirable
unanimity of feeling, if accomplished among you, will be fraught with yet
another good, so that you may, as we have said, reap even richer harvests from
the restoration of peace and unity; it will turn to you the minds and hearts
of others who, although they boast to belong to the same race as yourselves,
still stand aloof from Us, and do not form part of the sacred sheepfolds of
the flock over which We are set. Thus, looking upon the
examples which you display of peace and brotherly love, they will be led
easily to understand that the spirit of Christ is ruling you, since He only is
powerful enough to join His followers in one mind and make them one body. May
they recognise this and resolve to return to that unity from which their
ancestors fell away! Hence, there will be in store for them untold gladness
when they find themselves joined in faith to Us and to you, yea, and to all
the faithful who call themselves Catholic, throughout the whole world; and
they will know by experience what it means to dwell in the halls of the
mystical Zion, to which it has been granted by the divine word to widen its
dwelling and stretch the skin of its tents over the face of the whole earth.
2. Now for the accomplishment of this
conversion it is necessary for you, Venerable Brethren, who rule the Armenian
dioceses, and who, We know, will never be wanting in zealous exhortation or
persuasive teaching, to give all your efforts. Moreover, We are anxious that
they, who do not acknowledge Us, should be called back through you, in Our
name and by Our words; for it is no shame - nay, it is praiseworthy in the
highest degree - that a father should himself call his wandering and long
expected children home - should even go forth with open arms to receive and
welcome them. Nor do We think it possible for your words and arguments to fall
on barren soil, for the great mercy of God which He has shown to the nations,
supported by the humble - mindedness and docility of the Armenian people give Us
hope for a favourable result. The testimony of history is full of manifold
examples of their readiness to embrace truth once recognized, and their
eagerness to retrace their steps if they see that they have fallen away from
the right path. Nay, even these very men who fulfil the duties of religion in
schism from you, boast that the Armenians were taught the faith of Christ by
Gregory, a man of eminent holiness, who earned the surname of "the
Enlightener," and they honour him as their father and patron with
displays of much reverence and devotion. It is moreover recorded amongst them
that this man undertook a journey to the City of Rome, to lay his faith and
his obedience at the feet of the Roman Pontiff, St. Sylvester, who, it is
said, received him with much affection and conferred upon him several
privileges. We know, moreover, that many of those who afterwards ruled the
Armenian Churches followed in the footsteps of Gregory - from
their letters, their pilgrimages to Rome, and especially from their Synodal
Decrees. Particularly memorable are the Decrees of the Armenian Fathers in the
Synod of Sizeboli, held in the year 1307, on the duty of obedience to this
Apostolic See: "As the body must obey the head, so the Universal Church
(which is the body of Christ) should obey him who has been appointed by Christ
the Lord, head of the whole Church." and explained more clearly in the
Council of Adano in the 16th year of the same century. You are well aware
also - to speak of less important embassies - what took place in the Synod of
Florence; for when the Legates of the Patriarch Constantine V arrived there,
they said that they had come to the head, to the shepherd, to the corner-stone
of the Church, entreating Eugene IV, Our predecessor in the Vicariate of the
Lord Christ, as head to sympathise with the members, as shepherd to gather
together the flock, as corner-stone to strengthen the Church;(2) and bringing
forth the symbol of their faith they asked, "If aught is wanting,
instruct us." Then the Constitution of the Council, Exultate Deo, was
published by the pope, in which he taught them all that he considered to be
necessary for the right knowledge of Catholic truth; and upon this, the
Legates, in the name of their Patriarch, and of the whole Armenian race,
declared that they received the Constitution in entire submission and
readiness to obey, "promising in the same name, as true sons of
obedience, loyally to obey the behests and commands of the Apostolic
See." On this account Azarias, Patriarch of Cilicia, wrote most truly in
letters addressed to Our predecessor, Gregory XIII, dated April 10th 1585;
"Behold we have found the Decrees of our predecessors on the obedience of
Catholics and our Patriarchs to the Roman Pontiff, and on the submission of
St. Gregory 'the Enlightener' to Pope St. Sylvester." Hence it has ever
been the custom of the Armenian race to receive with honour Legates sent on
any mission from the Apostolic See, and to carry out the commands of that See
with religious care.
3. We may consider these facts to be of such
force, that We trust many who hitherto have remained out of communion with Us
will incline now to the renewal of it; and if a fear that they will not find
the Holy See sufficiently interested in them, or will not be welcomed as
lovingly as they wish, is any reason for delay or obstinacy, bid them,
Venerable Brethren, recall to their minds the acts of Our predecessors, who
have never permitted the Armenians to feel the want of fatherly affection. For
the Roman Pontiffs have always offered them a cordial welcome - whether as
pilgrims or as refugees-and have even desired to open hospices for them. It is
well known that Gregory XIII intended to fund a school for the education of
Armenian youths, and when, cut off by death, he was unable to do this, Urban VIII partially effected it by receiving Armenians among other students into
the immense college founded by him for the propagation of the faith. We,
however, though Our lot has been cast in troublous times, were enabled by
God's help to carry out more completely the plans of Gregory XIII, and We
devoted a house of considerable size dedicated to St. Nicholas, at Tolentino,
for the needs of Armenian students - which We have formally erected into their
College. All this has been done in order to render due honour to the Armenian
liturgy and language, which are immortalised in an abundance of writings which
are at once ancient, graceful, and polished; for this object also it has been
long the custom for one of the bishops professing your rite to remain always
in Rome, and it is his duty to ordain the young Armenians whom the Lord has
chosen for His vineyard. For these reasons a class of the Armenian language
has long been an institution in the Urban College, and Pius IX, Our
predecessor, arranged that there should be a professor in the Roman Pontifical
Seminary to teach Our own students the language, literature, and history of
the Armenian nation. Nor was the care of the Roman Pontiffs for that people
confined to the limits of this city, for there are few things which they had
so constantly at heart as extricating your Church from complication, healing
the wounds inflicted upon it by the evils of the times, and consulting its
interests. No one is ignorant of the zeal with which Benedict XIV strove that
your liturgy might be kept in its entirety like that of other Eastern
Churches, and that the succession of the Catholic Patriarchs of Armenia in the
See of Sizeboli might be restored. You are also well aware of the action taken
by Leo XII and Pius VIII towards obtaining a prefect of civil affairs in the
chief city of the Armenian Ottoman Empire, as was the privilege of other
nations acknowledging the same rule. Finally, the action of Gregory XVI and
Pius IX in the increase of episcopal sees in your
country, and in giving to the Armenian Bishop of Constantinople an honourable
rank and prestige, are of recent date; this being first accomplished when the
Archiepiscopal and Primatial See was constituted, and again by the union made
with it and the Patriarchate of Cilicia - under this condition, that the
Patriarch should dwell in the capital of the empire. Lest, moreover, the
distance intervening between the Armenian faithful and the Roman See might
weaken the bonds between them, it was prudently arranged that there should be
an Apostolic Delegate in the capital of the empire to take the place of the
Pope. To the anxious care which We have felt for your nation you yourselves
can bear witness, and We in Our turn testify to your goodwill towards Us, of
which We have received proof many times.
4. Wherefore, since on the one hand popular
feeling, inherited inclinations, and all the associations of the past unite in
drawing the separated Armenians to the truth, and in a manner too strong to be
resisted by a longer delay; and, on the other hand, the Holy See has always
striven for a complete union with that nation, and for a recall to former
obedience at times when they had fallen from it; you have, indeed, Venerable
Brethren, many and most weighty arguments at hand to aid you in your
persuasions, giving Us great hope that the old harmony will be completely
restored; and this will prove not only of universal benefit in the eternal
salvation of souls, but also in earthly happiness and glory, which may be
piously desired. For history testifies that among the bishops of Armenia,
those shone above all the others with starlike splendour who adhered most
closely to the Roman Church, and the nation fulfilled its greatest glory in
the days when the Catholic religion was the most widespread.
5. That matters will end prosperously and as
We wish, God the ruler of all can grant, Who "calleth whom he holdeth
worthy, and to whom He willeth giveth the grace of faith."(3) Send up
your prayers to Him, with Us, Venerable Brethren and beloved sons, that those
of your nation who have brought by baptism into the Christian body and yet are
separated from Us, may be moved by His bending grace, and may fill up the
measure of Our joy by their return, "being of one mind, having the same
charity, being of one accord, agreeing in sentiment."(4) Pray (in the
words of the Armenian antiphon) that she may approach the throne of grace as
intercessor who is the "glorious blessed, holy Mary, ever Virgin,
Mother of God, Mother of Christ," that she may offer "Our
prayers to her Son and Our God."(5) May the illustrious martyr
Gregory "the Enlightener," lend his prayers to hers, that the
work which he began in toil and in the heroic suffering of cruel torments,
may be perfected and strengthened by him as the servant of the divine
strength. Lastly, pray with Us, that the docility of the Armenians, and
their return to Catholic unity may be an example and guiding light to
others who indeed are Christians, but have seceded from Rome, so that all
having returned to the home from which they fell away, there may be one
fold and one shepherd.
6. And while We look forward to this in
Our prayers, and in Our hopes, with heartfelt affection We grant to you in
token of our kindness, Venerable Brethren, and to you all,
beloved children, the Apostolic Blessing.
Given at Rome at St. Peter's, July 25th,
1888, the 11th year of our Pontificate.
LEO XIII
REFERENCES:
1. 1 Cor xiii, 4-5.
2. Labbaei Conc. Collect., Suppl. v. 210.
3.
S. Ambros. in Luc. c. iv.
4. Phil. ii, 2.
5. Antiph. Liturg. Arm.
© Copyright 1888 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
|