PASTORALIS ENCYCLICAL
OF POPE LEO XIII ON RELIGIOUS UNION
To Our Beloved Sons, Joseph Sebastian, S.R.E. Cardinal Netto, Patriarch of Lisbon, Americo S.R.E. Cardinal Dos Santos
Silva, Bishop of Oporto; and to Our Venerable Brethren Antony, Archbishop of
Braga, and to the other Archbishops and Bishops of Portugal.
Beloved Sons, Venerable Brethren: Health and the Apostolic Benediction.
The noble Congress lately held at Braga, the
news of which a very welcome letter on the part of those who were present
conveyed to Us at its completion, has given another proof of the Pastoral
watchfulness wherewith you devote your efforts to the preservation and
strengthening of religion. In reading that letter We were delighted both with
the solicitous zeal of the Bishop of the diocese where the Congress was
received - one who was the chief founder of the movement, and presided over it
to successful issues - and with the piety and energy of the Bishops who were
associated with him or had sent worthy representatives to the Congress, and
with the notable gathering of men chosen carefully from the clergy and laity,
pre-eminent in learning, virtue, and authority. "That Congress was the
more gratifying to Us on account of the admirable unanimity of principle in
the determination of such decisions as would most
powerfully work for the prosperity of the Church and the progress of
Catholicity. Nor will We conceal that, beside the resolutions which were
opportunely carried by unanimous consent as peculiarly appropriate to the time
and the place, those propositions which expressed the devoted sentiment and
zeal of the members towards the Apostolic See, to the effect that due honour
should ever be paid to its dignity, and that no title of its majesty or its
rights should be reft from it, brought to Us no little comfort.
2. We are indeed of good hope that the
resolutions which were agreed upon at that Congress, so long as they are
observed with care and perseverance, will effect a plentiful harvest of
fruitfulness; but We find Ourselves compelled to observe that a rich field
still remains that demands your labour and your industry. Wherefore, although
quite recently We addressed you by letter on the Catholic position and its
needs in Portugal, and of the course to be pursued for their most convenient
accomplishment, nevertheless We are induced to add to that letter some words
which We hold fitting to communicate to you, lest, since an occasion for
writing to you has occurred, We should seem to be wanting in duty.
3. You must be aware, beloved sons,
Venerable Brethren, of the truth which was perfectly appreciated at the Congress
of Braga, that it has come to pass that the faith itself is among many in
danger, and that every effort must be made, that, through ignorance or
indifference, it should not fall and fail from souls, but rather that it should
take deep root in hearts and should bring forth in good works and the practice
of virtue a glad and plentiful sweetness of perfect fruits. Strife must be made
against the attempts of the enemies of truth, lest the evil stain which drops
from their bad example and their widely disseminated teaching should spread more
and more. Many wounds are to be healed which the dishonest toil of such men, and
the unhappiness of the times, have struck in the flocks committed to your care,
many ruins are to be built up, many hardships still oppress the souls of the
faithful, which - though haply it is impossible to destroy them - may at least be
lightened.
4. These needs which, as We have said, demand your care and your industry, will
be more fully and more suitably attended to if day by day the concord between
the Bishops is strengthened, and if their work is made more co-operative in
remedying the needs of clergy and laity, in taking counsel and in making such
decisions as shall seem to align best with the common good, both for the
particular requirements of separate dioceses, and for those that reach farther
and rise higher, with which the prosperity and the weal of the whole people are
associated. The convenience of a stricter bond of union between the Bishops did
not escape the prudence of those who met at Braga. Wherefore those resolutions
of that great Congress were the most gratifying to Us which recommended the
founding of such a bond, through which the faithful look for ampler and lasting
benefits from those rulers who are their directors and their guides.
5. Now to achieve this permanent and perfect
union nothing is more effective than the custom already practised in other
countries, that besides the Congresses at which the laity assist (such as the
Congress of Braga) there should be every year special meetings of the Bishops,
a custom which you have at heart, and which We greatly desire to see
introduced among you, since the benefits accruing by its means to religion are
made evident by the manifold and constant testimony of experience. For from
the habit of such Congresses there first follows, as we have said,
a notable unanimity and compactness of strength, which of itself is potent to
bring great designs to successful issues; moreover, the hearts of the Bishops
are more keenly moved to action, confidence is confirmed, and minds are
enlightened by common counsel and the light of wisdom shining from one to
another. In addition to this, by these Conferences, the way is in a manner
prepared both for diocesan and for provincial Synods, and for the meeting of
the National Council, for the holding of which We rejoice to know that you are
anxious, since Our long experience of the advantage to be gained therefrom
strongly approves of it, and the prescriptions of the sacred canons commend it
in a marked manner. Moreover, from the Annual Congresses of Bishops, of which
We speak, this great benefit also flows, that the laity, moved to greater zeal
by new impulses, resolve to walk in the paths set for them, themselves to hold
meetings, to join in council, and by a union of strength to strive for the
common cause of religion, and in obedience to their pastors to perform
sedulously those duties which they accept from their teachings and
exhortations. Nor in your annual assemblies will you find that there is lack
of matter whereunto to devote your zeal and your energy. For beyond the
special business of the separate dioceses, which can more easily be furthered
under the light of a shared experience, the ordering of those works which are
most effective for rousing the zeal of the priesthood already labouring in the
Lord's vineyard, and for the education of students who will one day have to
shine in the house of God with the light of solid wisdom, with the merit of a
true ecclesiastical spirit, with every sacerdotal virtue this will afford a
large field of work to your prudence and your common deliberations. Another
matter which will require your fatherly watchfulness will be the diligent
inquiry into the means of best filling the mind of the people with the
rudiments of faith, of directing their morals, of circulating writings which
sow the seed of true faith and make for virtue, of setting a-foot works which
shall pour out the benefits of charity and of securing that those already
founded shall be confirmed in new strength. Finally, a very important subject
of your debates will consist in the opportunity afforded to you of founding
and affiliating religious societies in Portugal, the interests of which We
rejoiced to see that all who met at Braga had deeply at heart. For these
sodalities not only contribute as it were auxiliary
forces to the clergy who follow in your dioceses the sacred army of Christ,
but also-this is of crucial importance - they will supply apostolic men for the
work of the holy missions in countries subject to the dominion of Portugal in
lands beyond the seas. The fulfilment of this function will work both for the
prosperity of Christ's kingdom on earth, and for the glory and honour of the
Portuguese name. In truth your rulers and your ancestry have obtained a
deathless glory in that they carried to the vast regions discovered by them
the light of gospel truth, together with a higher civilisation, under the
favour and assistance of the Apostolic See. But that the strength and glory of
these noble beginnings may still remain and may never fail from that ancient
stability and splendour, there is need that they be upheld by the unwavering
care and support of eminent men, who filled with the Divine Spirit and ever
vigilant against the hostile attacks of heretics, shall devote all their zeal,
all their energy, that the benefits which have flowed out of Portugal into
these countries may, so far from waning, flourish with the infusion of a fresh
strength. It will be the duty of such men to effect that they who already
believe in God may be increased in faith; that they whose faith is strong may
practise the ideals of honourable living, religious worship, diligence in
duty's fulfilment; lastly, that they who still lie in darkness may be brought
to the knowledge of the true God and to the light of the Gospel.
6. Now the religious associations whose members, in the judgment of prudent men
(to which the experience of all time testifies) have fulfilled this ministry of
salvation no less gladly than laboriously, will be able to supply many men
burning with holy zeal. For the rule and discipline of the societies to which
they belong, as well as the virtue of each trained in constant exercise, is
likeliest to produce men efficient before all others for such work as this.
7. We are indeed persuaded that the Portuguese
Government lending a favourable hearing to your counsels, and judging at their
highest value those benefits which come before all others, will of its own
accord abolish all the obstacles that block the way to the liberty of those
societies, and will lend its aid to further your endeavours which are directed
to this end, that the Catholic religion may flourish and grow strong with its
ancestral glory, in Portugal and in all the lands
subjected to her sway.
8. We are the more easily persuaded of this,
inasmuch as none can be ignorant, since it is known fully to you, what are Our
desires and prayers in this matter. Moreover, while they are connected with
the good of religion, they no less work for the solid prosperity of the
Portuguese nation. For this gift, this possession, was granted to the Church
by her Divine Founder, that she should be in the common society of men a bond
of peace and the guardian of salvation. Wherefore the Church in no way weakens
the power of those who rule the State, rather she supports and strengthens it,
in conferring on the laws that spring from this power the sanction of
religion, in reckoning among the obligations laid upon mankind by God a due
reverence for authority, in warning citizens to refrain from sedition and all
disturbance in the State, in teaching all to practise virtue, and
conscientiously to fulfil the duties that belong to their condition in life.
Therefore is the Church the pinnacle of morality, and by her salutary
discipline she trains citizens to be upright, honourable, patriotic, faithful
and very steadfast to duty, to be such men in fine as stand for an immovable
foundation in the public ordering of the State, and as give to it an
unconquerable strength for the achievement of every noble and high ideal.
Therefore is it to the State's high advantage to leave to the Church that
liberty of action which she demands of right, and to prepare a friendly path
where she may be able to touch far lands with her beneficial powers, and to
employ all the gifts of her endowment for the common good.
9. Now although this doctrine is applicable to all nations, most specially does
it affect the Portuguese, among whom the influence of the Catholic religion in
training the character and disposition of men, in fostering the studies of
science, letters, and arts, in kindling the soul to every civic and military
virtue, has been so great, even so that she seems as it were the mother and
nurse given from on High to bring forth and train whatever gentleness, dignity,
and glory shone out in that race.
10. On this subject We have treated more fully
in the recorded Encyclical letter which lately We addressed to you; what is
important to recall at present is that the power of religion should suffer no
darkening, because those doctrines which the Church, under
God, teaches, are restrained by no limits of time and place, but are bound up
with the salvation and comfort of all people. This is the reason why those
high benefits and strong safeguards, which she brought of old time to your
noble nation, she is still ready to bring for the advancement of your
prosperity and your fame. And particularly at this unhappy time, when weakness
of spirit so abounds that the highest principles upon which the order and
tranquillity of human society depend are boldly attacked, nay are brought even
to totter, none can be ignorant how necessary is the observance of religion
and those holy counsels and teachings which religion enforces.
11. It is the unanimous agreement of all
principled and honourable men, that there is no remedy more efficacious and
potent against the evils by which Our age is oppressed, and against the perils
in store, than the Catholic doctrine, if it be received whole and incorrupt,
and if mankind walk in that way of life which its practice demands.
12. Wherefore We do not doubt, beloved sons, Venerable Brethren, that you will,
with your well-known pastoral zeal, hasten with
strength and constancy of spirit to set your hands to the work we have commended
to you. Thus will it be your high praise and just congratulation that in your
labours you were able to deserve most nobly of the religion which you uphold so
well, and of your country and your race, for whom you, no less than Ourselves,
greatly desire an unbroken tranquillity and a lease of perfect prosperity.
13. Meantime, praying God to fill you with His good gifts and graciously to
favour your designs, We grant lovingly in the Lord the Apostolic Benediction, in
witness of Our fatherly affection, to you and to the clergy and faithful
entrusted to your care.
Given at Rome, at St. Peter's, June 25,
1891, in the 14th year of Our Pontificate.
LEO XIII
© Copyright 1891 - Libreria
Editrice Vaticana
|