LAETAMUR ADMODUM
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS XII
RENEWING EXHORTATION FOR PRAYERS FOR PEACE
FOR POLAND, HUNGARY, AND THE MIDDLE EAST
TO THE VENERABLE BRETHREN, THE PATRIARCHS, PRIMATES,
ARCHBISHOPS, BISHIOPS, AND OTHER LOCAL ORDINARIES
IN PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE
Venerable Brethren,
Greetings and Apostolic Benediction.
We are most pleased to learn that the Consecrated Shepherds of the Catholic
world and the rest of the clergy and faithful have responded with generosity and
enthusiasm to the paternal entreaty of Our recent Encyclical Letter by
supplicating Heaven in public prayers. And so We give unceasing thanks to God
from Our heart that He has heard so many prayers, especially of innocent boys
and girls, and a new dawn of peace based on justice seems to be breaking at long
last for the people of Poland and Hungary.
2. With no less joy have We learned that Our beloved sons, Cardinals of the
Holy Roman Church, Stefan Wyszynski, Archbishop of Gniezno and Warsaw, and Jozef
Mindszenty, Archbishop of Esztergom, who had both been expelled from their Sees,
are acknowledged to be innocent men, unjustly accused of crime, and as such have
already been restored to their positions of honor and responsibility and
welcomed in triumph by rejoicing multitudes.
3. We are confident that this event will prove a happy omen for the
restoration and pacification of these two countries on a basis of sounder
principle and nobler law, and, above all, with proper respect for God's rights
and those of His Church.
4. Wherefore We call again and again upon all the Catholics of those
countries to unite themselves about their lawful shepherds with massed force and
drawn ranks, and thus apply themselves diligently to the advancement and
strengthening of this holy cause. For it is a cause which cannot be abandoned or
neglected without making true peace an impossibility.
5. But even while Our heart still fears on this account, We behold the threat
of another frightening crisis. As you know, Venerable Brothers, the flames of
another war are being fanned menacingly in the Near East, not far from that holy
land where angels descended from Heaven and hovered over the crib of the Divine
Child, announcing peace to men of good will. (Luke 2. 14).
6. What else can We do, who embrace all peoples with a father's affection,
but raise suppliant prayers to the Father of Mercies and God of all comfort
(cfr. II Cor. 1. 3), and urge all of you to join in them with Us? For
"the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but powerful before God."
(II Cor. 10. 4)
7. We trust solely in Him Who can illuminate the minds of men with His
heavenly light and incline their incited wills to those more temperate counsels
by which right order among nations may be established, to their common advantage
and with certainty that the legitimate rights of all interested parties are
being secured.
8. May all men, especially those who hold the destinies of nations in their
hands, remember that war brings no lasting benefit, but a host of misfortunes
and disasters. Differences among men are not resolved by arms, bloodshed, or
destruction, but only by reason, law, prudence, and justice.
9. When wise men who are motivated by a desire for lasting peace meet to
discuss such differences, they should certainly feel obliged to enter upon the
ways of justice rather than the rash road of violence if they reflect upon the
grave dangers of a war which may start as a tiny spark, but can burst into an
enormous conflagration.
10. Amidst these dangerous crises We wish especially to convince the heads of
governments. We cannot possibly doubt their realization that no other interest
motivates Us but the common good and prosperity of all, which can never be
achieved by the massacre of one's brothers.
11. And since, as We have said, We place Our hope above all in the providence
and mercy of God. We repeatedly, urge you, Venerable Brothers, not to cease
encouraging and promoting this zealous crusade of prayer. Through it - with the
intercession of His Mother, the Virgin Mary - may Almighty God in His goodness
grant an end to the threat of war, a happy solution to the conflicting claims of
nations, and assurance everywhere, to the common benefit of all, of those rights
granted the Church by her Divine Founder. Thus may "the whole human family,
which has been rent asunder by sin's wound, be brought under the sway of His
most sweet rule." (Prayer for the Feast of Christ the King)
12. Until then, lovingly in our Lord, We impart to all of you, Venerable
Brothers, and to the flocks entrusted to your care, who will certainly respond
like you to Our renewed exhortations, Our Apostolic Blessing, a pledge of
heavenly graces and evidence of Our fatherly good wishes.
Given at Rome, from St. Peter's on the first day of November, the Feast of
All Saints, in the year 1956, the eighteenth of Our Pontificate.
PIUS XII
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