SERTUM LAETITIAE
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS XII ON THE HUNDRED AND FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY
OF THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE HIERARCHY IN THE UNITED STATES
To Our Beloved Sons: William O'Connell, Cardinal Priest of the Holy
Roman Church, Archbishop of Boston, Dennis Dougherty, Cardinal Priest of
the Holy Roman Church, Archbishop of Philadelphia, and to all the
Venerable Brethren, the Archbishops, Bishops and Ordinaries of the United
States of America in Peace and Communion with the Apostolic See.
Venerable Brethren, Health and Apostolic Benediction:
1. In our desire to enrich the crown of your holy joy We cross in spirit
the vast spaces of the seas and find Ourselves in your midst as you
celebrate, in company with all your faithful people, the one hundred and
fiftieth anniversary of the establishment of the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy
in the United States of America. And this We do with great gladness,
because an occasion is thus afforded Us, as gratifying as it is solemn, of
giving public testimony of Our esteem and Our affection for the youthfully
vigorous and illustrious American people.
2. To one who turns the pages of your history and reflects upon the
causes of what has been accomplished it is apparent that the triumphal
progress of Divine religion has contributed in no small degree to the
glory and prosperity which your country now enjoys. It is indeed true that
religion has its laws and institutions for eternal happiness but It is
also undeniable that it dowers life here below with so many benefits that
it could do no more even if the principal reason for its existence were to
make men happy during the brief span of their earthly life.
3. It is a pleasure for Us to recall the well remembered story.
When Pope Pius VI gave you your first Bishop in the person of the
American John Carroll and set him over the See of Baltimore, small and of
slight importance was the Catholic population of your land. At that time,
too, the condition of the United States was so perilous that its structure
and its very political unity were threatened by grave crisis. Because of
the long and exhausting war the public treasury was burdened with debt,
industry languished and the citizenry wearied by misfortunes was split
into contending parties. This ruinous and critical state of affairs was
put aright by the celebrated George Washington, famed for his courage and
keen intelligence. He was a close friend of the Bishop of Baltimore. Thus
the Father of His Country and the pioneer pastor of the Church in that
land so dear to Us, bound together by the ties of friendship and clasping,
so to speak, each the other's hand, form a picture for their descendants,
a lesson to all future generations, and a proof that reverence for the
Faith of Christ is a holy and established principle of the American
people, seeing that it is the foundation of morality and decency,
consequently the source of prosperity and progress.
4. Many are the causes to which must be ascribed the flowering of the
Catholic Church in your country. One of them We wish to point out as
worthy of attention. Numbers of priests, forced to flee to your shores
from lands where persecution raged, brought welcome aid to Bishop Carroll
and by their active collaboration in the sacred ministry sowed the
precious seed which ripened to an abundant harvest of virtues. Some of
them later became Bishops and thus had a more glorious share in the
progress of the Catholic cause. And thus, as history teaches us again and
again, the zeal of the apostle, provided that, nourished by unfeigned
faith and sincere charity, it burns within the breast of valiant men, is
not quenched by the storms of persecution but is carried farther across
the earth.
5. On the centenary of the event which now fills your hearts with
legitimate rejoicing, Pope Leo XIII of happy memory with his Letter Longinqua
Oceani recalled and examined the progress that had been made by the
Church in America and he accompanied his review with some admonitions and
directions whose wisdom equals their paternal benevolence.
6.What Our august predecessor then so well wrote is worthy of repeated
consideration. During these past fifty years the Church has not faltered
in her course but has extended her influence to wider fields and increased
her members. For in your country there prevails a thriving life which the
grace of the Holy Spirit has brought to flower in the inner sanctuary of
your hearts; the faithful throng your churches; around the Sacred Table
they gather to receive the Bread of Angels, the Food of the Strong; the
spiritual exercises of St. Ignatius are followed with great devotion in
your closed retreats; and many heeding the Divine Voice that calls them to
the ideals of a higher life receive the priesthood or embrace the
religious state.
7. At the present time there are in the United States 19 ecclesiastical
provinces, 115 dioceses, almost 200 seminaries and innumerable houses of
worship, elementary and high schools, colleges, hospitals, asylums for the
poor and monasteries. It is with good reason then that visitors from other
lands admire the organization and system under which your schools of
various grades are conducted, the generosity of the faithful upon whom
they depend, the vigilant care with which they are watched over by the
directors. From these schools there comes forth a host of citizens, strong
in heart and mind, who, by reason of their reverence for Divine and human
laws, are justly considered to be the strength and the flower and the
honor of Church and of country.
8. Missionary associations also, notably the Society for the Propagation
of the Faith, are well established and active; they are outstanding
examples in assisting, by prayer, almsgiving and other means, the heralds
of the Gospel engaged in carrying the standard of the Cross of Salvation
into the lands of the infidel. In this connection, We cannot refrain from
a public expression of praise for those missionary enterprises proper to
your own nation which devote themselves with zeal and energy to the wider
diffusion of the Catholic Faith. They are: The Catholic Church Extension
Society, an organization which has gained glorious distinction for its
pious benefactions; The Catholic Near East Welfare Association, which
furnishes a providential aid to the interests of Christianity in the
Orient; The Indian and Negro Missions, an association approved by the
Third Council of Baltimore (Cf. Acts of the same Council, Chapter
II) which We confirm and recommend because it is imposed by a very
particular charity towards your fellow citizens.
9. We confess that We feel a special paternal affection, which is
certainly inspired of Heaven, for the Negro people dwelling among you; for
in the field of religion and education We know that they need special care
and comfort and are very deserving of it. We therefore invoke an abundance
of heavenly blessing and We pray fruitful success for those whose generous
zeal is devoted to their welfare.
10. Moreover, in order to render more fitting thanks to God for the
inestimable gift of the true Faith, your countrymen, eager for arduous
enterprise, are supplying to the ranks of the missionaries numerous
recruits whose capacity for toil, whose indomitable patience and whose
energy in noble initiative for the Kingdom of Christ, have gained merits
which earth admires and which Heaven will crown with due reward.
11. No less vigorous among you are those works of zeal which are
organized for the benefit of the children of the Church within the
confines of your country: the diocesan charity offices, with their wise
and practical organization, by means of the parish priests and through the
labors of the religious institutes, bring to the poor, to the needy and to
the sick the gifts of Christian mercy and relief from misery. In carrying
on this most important ministry the sweet discerning eyes of faith see
Christ present in the poor and afflicted who are the mystic suffering
members of the Most Benign Redeemer.
12. Among the associations of the laity - the list is too long to allow
of a complete enumeration - there are those which have won for themselves
laurels of unfading glory - Catholic Action, the Marian Congregation, the
Confraternity of Christian Doctrine; their fruits are the cause of joy and
they bear the promise of still more joyful harvest in the future. Likewise
the Holy Name Society, an excellent leader in the promotion of Christian
worship and piety.
13. Over a manifold activity of the laity, carried on in various
localities according to the needs of the times, is placed the National
Catholic Welfare Conference, an organization which supplies a ready and
well-adapted instrument for your Episcopal ministry.
14. The more important of these institutions We were able to view
briefly during the month of October, 1936, when We journeyed across the
ocean and had the joy of knowing personally you and the field of your
activities. The memory of what We then admired with Our own eyes will
always remain indelible and a source of joy in Our heart.
15. It is proper then that, with sentiments of adoration, We offer with
you thanks to God and that We raise to Him a canticle of thanksgiving: "Give
glory to the God of heaven; for his mercy endureth for ever" (Psalms
cxxxv: 26). The Lord Whose goodness knows no limits, having filled your
land with the bounty of His gifts, has likewise granted to your churches
energy and power and has brought to fruition the results of their tireless
labors. Having paid the tribute of Our gratitude to God, from Whom every
good thing takes its origin, We recognize, dearly beloved, that this rich
harvest which We joyfully admire with you today is due also to the spirit
of initiative and to the persistent activity of the pastors and of the
faithful; We recognize that it is due also to your clergy who are inclined
to decisive action and who execute your orders with zeal; to the members
of all the religious Orders and congregations of men who, distinguished in
virtue, vie with each other in cultivating the vineyard of the Lord: to
the innumerable religious women who, often in silence and unknown to men,
consecrate themselves with exemplary devotion to the cause of the Gospel,
veritable lilies in the Garden of Christ and delight of the Saints.
16. We desire, however, that this Our praise be salutary. The
consideration of the good which has been done must not lead to slackening
which might degenerate into sluggishness; it must not issue in a
vainglorious pleasure which flatters the mind; it should stimulate renewed
energies so that evils may be avoided and those enterprises which are
useful, prudent and worthy of praise may more surely and more solidly
mature. The Christian, if he does honor to the name he bears, is always an
apostle; it is not permitted to the Soldier of Christ that he quit the
battlefield, because only death puts an end to his military service.
17. You well know where it is necessary that you exercise a more
discerning vigilance and what program of action should be marked out for
priests and faithful in order that the religion of Christ may overcome the
obstacles in its path and be a luminous guide to the minds of men, govern
their morals and, for the sole purpose of salvation, permeate the marrow
and the arteries of human society. The progress of exterior and material
possessions, even though it is to be considered of no little account,
because of the manifold and appreciable utility which it gives to life, is
nonetheless not enough for man who is born for higher and brighter
destinies. Created indeed to the image and likeness of God, he seeks God
with a yearning that will not be repressed and always groans and weeps if
he places the object of his love where Supreme Truth and the Infinite Good
cannot be found.
18. Not with the conquest of material space does one approach to God,
separation from Whom is death, conversion to Whom is life, to be
established in Whom is glory; but under the guidance of Christ with the
fullness of sincere faith, with unsullied conscience and upright will,
with holy works, with the achievement and the employment of that genuine
liberty whose sacred rules are found proclaimed in the Gospel. If,
instead, the Commandments of God are spurned, not only is it impossible to
attain that happiness which has place beyond the brief span of time which
is allotted to earthly existence, but the very basis upon which rests true
civilization is shaken and naught is to be expected but ruins over which
belated tears must be shed. How, in fact, can the public weal and the
glory of civilized life have any guarantee of stability when right is
subverted and virtue despised and decried? Is not God the Source and the
Giver of law? Is He not the inspiration and the reward of virtue with none
like unto Him among lawgivers (Cf. Job XXXVI:22)? This, according
to the admission of all reasonable men, is everywhere the bitter and
prolific root of evils: the refusal to recognize the Divine Majesty, the
neglect of the moral law, the origin of which is from Heaven, or that
regrettable inconstancy which makes its victims waver between the lawful
and the forbidden, between justice and iniquity.
19. Thence arise immoderate and blind egoists, that thirst for pleasure,
the vice of drunkenness, immodest and costly styles in dress, the
prevalence of crime even among minors, the lust for power, neglect of the
poor, base craving for ill-gotten wealth, the flight from the land, levity
in entering into marriage, divorce, the break-up of the family, the
cooling of mutual affection between parents and children, birth control,
the enfeeblement of the race, the weakening of respect for authority, or
obsequiousness, or rebellion, neglect of duty towards one's country and
towards mankind.
20. We raise Our voice in strong, albeit paternal, complaint that in so
many schools of your land Christ often is despised or ignored, the
explanation of the universe and mankind is forced within the narrow limits
of materialism or of rationalism, and new educational systems are sought
after which cannot but produce a sorrowful harvest in the intellectual and
moral life of the nation.
21. Likewise, just as home life, when the law of Christ is observed,
flowers in true felicity, so, when the Gospel is cast aside, does it
perish miserably and become desolated by vice: "He that seeketh the
law, shall be filled with it: and he that dealeth deceitfully, shall meet
with a stumbling block therein" (Ecclesiasticus XXXII: 19).
What can there be on earth more serene and joyful than the Christian
family? Taking its origin at the Altar of the Lord, where love has been
proclaimed a holy and indissoluble bond, the Christian family in the same
love nourished by supernal grace is consolidated and receives increase.
22. There is "marriage honorable in all, and the [nuptial] bed
undefiled" (Cf. Hebrews XIII: 4). Tranquil walls resound with
no quarreling voices nor do they witness the secret martyrdom which comes
when hidden infidelity is laid bare; unquestioning trust turns aside the
slings of suspicion; sorrow is assuaged and joy is heightened by mutual
affection. Within those sacred precincts children are considered not heavy
burdens but sweet pledges of love; no reprehensible motive of convenience,
no seeking after sterile pleasure, brings about the frustration of the
gift of life nor causes to fall into disuse the sweet names of brother and
sister. With what solicitude do the parents take care that the children
not only grow in physical vigor but also that, following in the footsteps
of their forbears whose memory is often recalled to them, they may shine
with the light which profession of the pure faith and moral goodness
impart to them. Moved by the numerous benefits received, such children
consider it their paramount duty to honor their parents, to be attentive
to their desires, to be the staff of their old age, to rejoice their gray
hairs with an affection which, unquenched by death, will be made more
glorious and more complete in the mansion of Heaven. The members of the
Christian family, neither querulous in adversity nor ungrateful in
prosperity, are ever filled with confidence in God to Whose sway they
yield willing obedience, in Whose will they acquiesce and upon Whose help
they wait not in vain.
23. That the family may be established and maintained according to the
wise teachings of the Gospel, therefore, the faithful should be frequently
exhorted by those who have the directive and teaching functions in the
churches, and these are to strive with unremitting care to present to the
Lord a perfect people. For the same reason it is also supremely necessary
to see to it that the dogma of the unity and indissolubility of matrimony
is known in all its religious importance and sacredly respected by those
who are to marry.
24. That this capital point of Catholic doctrine is of great value for
the solidity of the family structure, for the progress and prosperity of
civil society for the healthy life of the people and for civilization that
its light may not be false, is a fact recognized even by no small number
of men who, though estranged from the Faith, are entitled to respect for
their political acumen. Oh! If only your country had come to know from the
experience of others rather than from examples at home of the accumulation
of ills which derive from the plague of divorce; let reverence for
religion, let fidelity towards the great American people counsel energetic
action that this disease, alas so widespread, may be cured by extirpation.
25. The consequences of this evil have been thus described by Pope Leo
XIII, in words whose truth is incisive: "Because of divorce, the
nuptial contract becomes subject to fickle whim; affection is weakened;
pernicious incentives are given to conjugal infidelity; the care and
education of offspring are harmed; easy opportunity is afforded for the
breaking up of homes; the seeds of discord are sown among families; the
dignity of woman is lessened and brought down and she runs the risk of
being deserted after she has served her husband as an instrument of
pleasure. And since it is true that for the ruination of the family and
the undermining of the State nothing is so powerful as the corruption of
morals, it is easy to see that divorce is of the greatest harm to the
prosperity of families and of states" (Encyclical Letter Arcanum).
26. With regard to those marriages in which one or the other party does
not accept the Catholic teaching or has not been baptized, We are certain
that you observe exactly the prescriptions of the Code of Canon Law. Such
marriages, in fact, as is clear to you from wide experience, are rarely
happy and usually occasion grave loss to the Catholic Church. A very
efficacious means for driving out such grave evils is that individual
Catholics receive a thorough training in the Divine truths and that the
people be shown clearly the road which leads to salvation.
27. Therefore, We exhort the priests to provide that their own knowledge
of things Divine and human be wide and deep; that they be not content with
the intellectual knowledge acquired in youth; that they examine with
careful scrutiny the Law of the Lord, Whose oracles are purer than silver;
that they continually relish and enjoy the chaste charms of Sacred
Scripture; that with the passing of the years they study more deeply the
history of the Church, its dogmas, its Sacraments, its laws, its
scriptures, its liturgy, its language, so that they may advance in grace,
in culture and wisdom.
28. Let them cultivate also the study of letters and of the profane
sciences, especially those which are more closely connected with religion,
in order that they may be able to impart with clarity and eloquence the
teaching of grace and salvation which is capable of bending even learned
intellects to the light burden and yoke of the Gospel of Christ.
29. Fortunate the Church, indeed, if thus it will lay its "foundations
with sapphires" (Cf. Isaias liv: 11). The needs of our times
then require that the laity, too, and especially those who collaborate
with the Hierarchy of the Church, procure for themselves a treasure of
religious knowledge, not a poor and meager knowledge, but one that will
have solidity and richness through the medium of libraries, discussions
and study clubs; in this way they will derive great benefit for themselves
and at the same time be able to instruct the ignorant, confute stubborn
adversaries and be of assistance to good friends.
30. We have learned with not little joy that your press is a sturdy
champion of Catholic principles, that the Marconi Radio, whose voice is
heard in an instant round the world - marvelous invention and eloquent
image of the Apostolic Faith that embraces all mankind - is frequently and
advantageously put to use in order to insure the widest possible
promulgation of all that concerns the Church, and We commend the good
accomplished. But let those who fulfill this ministry be careful to adhere
to the directives of the teaching Church even when they explain and
promote what pertains to the social problem; forgetful of personal gain,
despising popularity, impartial, let them speak "as from God, before
God, in Christ" (II Corinthians II: 17).
31. Because of Our constant desire that scientific progress in all its
branches be ever more universally affirmed, We gladly take this opportune
occasion to signify to you Our cordial interest in the University at
Washington. You remember well with what ardent wishes Pope Leo XIII
greeted this noble temple of learning when it came into being and on how
many occasions testimonies of particular affection were bestowed upon it
by Our immediate predecessor. He was intimately persuaded that if this
great school, however blessed already with success, should become still
stronger and gain even greater renown, not only would the growth of the
Church be aided but also the civil glory and prosperity of your fellow
citizens.
32. Sharing this hope, We ask you to do your very best, leaving nothing
untried, that this University, protected by your benevolence, may overcome
its difficulties and, with ever more gratifying increase, abundantly
fulfill the high hopes that have been placed in it. We greatly appreciate,
too, your desire to erect in Rome a more worthy and suitable building for
the Pontifical College which receives for their ecclesiastical education
students from the United States.
33. It is indeed true that the elite of our youth with profit travel
abroad to complete their education, a long and happy experience shows that
candidates for the priesthood derive very great profit when they are
educated here close to the See of Peter, where the source of faith is
purest, where so many monuments of Christian antiquity and so many traces
of the Saints incite generous hearts to magnanimous enterprises.
34. We desire to touch upon another question of weighty importance, the
social question, which, remaining unsolved, has been agitating States for
a long time and sowing amongst the classes the seeds of hatred and mutual
hostility. You know full well what aspect it assumes in America, what
acrimonies, what disorders it produces. It is not necessary therefore that
We dwell on these points. The fundamental point of the social question is
this, that the goods created by God for all men should in the same way
reach all, justice guiding and charity helping. The history of every age
teaches that there were always rich and poor; that it will always be so we
may gather from the unchanging tenor of human destinies. Worthy of honor
are the poor who fear God because theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven and
because they readily abound in spiritual graces. But the rich, if they are
upright and honest, are God's dispensers and providers of this world's
goods; as ministers of Divine Providence they assist the indigent through
whom they often receive gifts for the soul and whose hand - so they may
hope - will lead them into the eternal tabernacles.
35. God, Who provides for all with counsels of supreme bounty, has
ordained that for the exercise of virtues and for the testing of one's
worth there be in the world rich and poor; but He does not wish that some
have exaggerated riches while others are in such straits that they lack
the bare necessities of life. But a kindly mother of virtue is honest
poverty which gains its living by daily labor in accordance with the
scriptural saying: "Give me neither beggary, nor riches: give me only
the necessaries of life" (Proverbs XXX: 8).
36. Now if the rich and the prosperous are obliged out of ordinary
motives of pity to act generously towards the poor their obligation is all
the greater to do them justice. The salaries of the workers, as is just,
are to be such that they are sufficient to maintain them and their
families. Solemn are the words of Our predecessor, Pius XI, on this
question: "Every effort must therefore be made that fathers of
families receive a wage sufficient to meet adequately normal domestic
needs. If under present circumstances this is not always feasible, social
justice demands that reforms be introduced without delay which will
guarantee such a wage to every adult working man. In this connection We
praise those who have most prudently and usefully attempted various
methods by which an increased wage is paid in view of increased family
burdens and special provision made for special needs." (Encyclical
Letter Quadragesimo Anno.)
37. May it also be brought about that each and every able-bodied man may
receive an equal opportunity for work in order to earn the daily bread for
himself and his own. We deeply lament the lot of those - and their number
in the United States is large indeed - who though robust, capable and
willing, cannot have the work for which they are anxiously searching.
38. May the wisdom of the governing powers, a far-seeing generosity on
the part of the employers, together with the speedy re-establishment of
more favorable conditions, effect the realization of these reasonable
hopes to the advantage of all.
39. Because sociability is one of man's natural requirements and since
it is legitimate to promote by common effort decent livelihood, it is not
possible without injustice to deny or to limit either to the producers or
to the laboring and farming classes the free faculty of uniting in
associations by means of which they may defend their proper rights and
secure the betterment of the goods of soul and of body, as well as the
honest comforts of life. But to unions of this kind, which in past
centuries have procured immortal glory for Christianity and for the
professions an untarnishable splendor, one can not everywhere impose an
identical discipline and structure, which therefore can be varied to meet
the different temperament of the people and the diverse circumstances of
time.
40. But let the unions in question draw their vital force from
principles of wholesome liberty; let them take their form from them, take
their form from the lofty rules of justice and of honesty and, conforming
themselves to those norms, let them act in such a manner that in their
care for the interests of their class they violate no one's rights; let
them continue to strive for harmony and respect the common weal of civil
society.
41. It is a source of joy to Us to know that the above cited Encyclical,
Quadragesimo Anno, as well as that of the Sovereign Pontiff Leo
XIII, Rerum Novarum, in which is indicated the solution of the
social question in accordance with the postulates of the Gospel and of the
eternal philosophy, are the object in the United States of careful and
prolonged consideration on the part of some men of keener intellect whose
generous wish pushes them on towards social restoration and the
restrengthening of the bonds of love amongst men, and that some employers
themselves have desired to settle the ever recurring controversies with
the working man in accordance with the norms of these Encyclicals,
respecting always the common good and the dignity of the human person.
42. What a proud vaunt it will be for the American people, by nature
inclined to grandiose undertakings and to liberality, if they untie the
knotty and difficult social question by following the sure paths
illuminated by the light of the Gospel and thus lay the basis of a happier
age! If this is to come to pass power must not be dissipated through
disunion but rather strengthened through harmony. To this salutary union
of thought and policy, whence flow mighty deeds, in all charity We invite
them, too, whom Mother Church laments as separated brethren. Many of
these, when Our glorious predecessor reposed in the sleep of the just and
when We, shortly after his death, through the mysterious disposition of
Divine Mercy ascended the throne of St. Peter; many of these - and this
did not escape Our attention - expressed by word of mouth and by letter
sentiments full of homage and noble respect. This attitude - We openly
confess - has encouraged a hope which time does not take from Us, which a
sanguine mind cherishes and which remains a consolation to Us in hard and
troublous times.
43. May the enormity of the labors which it will be necessary fervently
to undertake for the glory of the Most Benign Redeemer and for the
salvation of souls not daunt you, Dearly Beloved, but may it rather
stimulate you, whose confidence is in the Divine Help, since great works
generate more robust virtues and achieve more resplendent merits.
44. May the attempts with which the enemies secretly banded together
seek to pull down the Scepter of Christ be a spur to us to work in union
for the establishment and advancement of His reign. No greater fortune can
come to individuals, families, and nations than to obey the Author of
human salvation, execute His commands, accept His reign, in which we are
made free and rich in good works: ". . . a kingdom of truth and of
life; a kingdom of holiness and of grace; a kingdom of justice, love and
peace" (Preface of the Mass of Christ the King).
45. Wishing from Our heart that you and the spiritual flock for whose
welfare you, as diligent shepherds, provide, may advance always towards
better and higher goals and that also from the present solemn celebration
you may gather a rich harvest of virtue, We impart to you as a pledge of
Our benevolence the Apostolic Benediction.
Given at the Vatican, on the Feast of All Saints, in the Year of Our
Lord 1939, the first of Our Pontificate.
PIUS XII
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