QUEMADMODUM
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS XII PLEADING FOR THE CARE OF THE WORLD'S DESTITUTE CHILDREN
TO THE VENERABLE BRETHREN: THE PATRIARCHS, ARCHBISHOPS, BISHIOPS, AND OTHER ORDINARIES HAVING PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE
1. While the terrible war raged We used all Our powers of persuasion and
appeal to bring to a speedy end a conflict which had lasted all too long
and to secure an agreement guaranteeing justice, equity and right. The
same way now that fighting has ceased, but peace has not yet been
restored, in virtue of Our apostolic office, We are leaving nothing undone
to provide timely relief for so many ills and all possible comfort for the
accumulated miseries that weigh on not a few nations. But of the almost
countless ills born of the dire struggle none so hurts or so wounds Our
paternal heart as that which involves a host of innocent children,
millions of whom it is estimated are in many countries without the
necessities of life and are suffering from cold, hunger and disease.
Often, too, in their utter dereliction they feel the want not only of
food, clothes and shelter but also of the affection which their tender
years so need.
2. As you know, Venerable Brethren, We have done all that We could to
solve this problem. And We gladly take this occasion to express Our
sincerest gratitude to those through whose liberality We have been able to
alleviate somewhat the need of these infants and children. We know, too,
that many have individually or as members of societies and organizations
undertaken to help or are already actively at work. To these, worthy of
all praise as they are, We pay due tribute and pray God to bless their
activities, their plans for the future, their achievements.
3. But since help of this kind is entirely inadequate to the immense
task, We have deemed it Our duty to turn to you and paternally urge you to
take to heart the extremely grave plight of these needy children, leaving
nothing undone that may contribute to ease their lot and bring relief.
4. We ordain, therefore, that in each of your dioceses you assign a day
on which public prayers will be offered to appease God's anger and on
which through your priests you will admonish the faithful of this urgent
need and exhort them to support by their prayers, good works and offerings
every movement that is directing its forces fully and effectively for the
succor of needy and abandoned children.
5. This is a problem, of course, which touches all citizens, whatever be
their views, if only their hearts respond to the appeals of nature and
religion. But it belongs, in a special sense, to Christians who should see
stamped on these poor destitute little brothers the image of the Divine
Child and who are bound to heed those words: "Amen I say to you, as
long as you did it for one of these, the least of my brethren, you did it
for me" (Matt. 25, 40).
6. Let all remember and reflect that these children will be pillars of
the next generation and that it is essential that they grow up healthy in
mind and body if we are to avoid a race infected with sickness and vice.
Nobody should hesitate, then, to contribute time and money to a cause so
opportune and essential. Those who are themselves less wealthy should give
what they can with open hand and willing heart. Those who live in luxury
should reflect and remember that the indigence, hunger and nakedness of
these children will constitute a grave and severe indictment of them
before God, the Father of mercies, if they harden their hearts and do not
contribute generously. All, finally, should be convinced that their
liberality will not be loss but gain, for we can safely say that one who
gives from his means to the poor is lending to God Who, in His own time,
will repay his generosity with abundant interest.
7. We firmly trust that, as in Apostolic times, when the Christian
population of Jerusalem was subjected to poverty and persecution, the rest
of the faithful throughout the world contributed their prayers and
material aid. (Cf. I Cor. 16,1) so now, too, all will be inspired
and animated by the same charity and will help as much as they can. This
they should do, as We have said, especially by fervent prayer to our most
merciful Redeemer. For, as you know, fervent prayer carries with it a
mystic power that penetrates Heaven and calls down supernatural light and
Divine impulses to illumine men's minds and incline their wills to good,
to persuade and move them to charity.
8. Let us recall that in every age the Church has exercised the most
diligent care of the young and has rightly deemed this as an official
mission assigned in a very special way to her charity. And as she did this
and continues to do it, she undoubtedly was following in the footsteps and
obeying the injunctions of her Divine Founder, Who, gently gathering the
children around Him, said to the Apostles who rebuked their mothers: "Let
the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for of such is the
kingdom of God" (Mark 10, 14). For Christ, as Our predecessor
of immortal memory, Leo the Great, very well says, "loves childhood
which He had first assumed in mind and body. Christ loves childhood, the
school of humility, the norm of innocence, the model of meekness. Christ
loves childhood towards which He directs morality, to which He leads back
the old age of men. Those whom He calls to His eternal kingdom above He
inspires to follow His example" (Serm. XXXVII C. 3, ML 54,
258 C).
9. In the light of such words and sentiments, Venerable Brethren, you
see with what love, diligence and care the Church looks after infants and
children following the lead of her Founder. While she exercises all
possible care to see that they be provided with food, shelter and clothing
for their bodies, she does not ignore or neglect their souls which - born,
so to speak, from the breath of God - seem to portray the radiant beauty
of Heaven. Her first care and endeavor is, then, to preserve their
innocence from stain and provide for their eternal salvation.
10. Accordingly, there are numberless institutions and organizations to
educate the young, form them to solid virtue, and satisfy their needs in
education as they grow in mind and body. In this important field, as you
know, many Religious Orders and congregations of men and women are
laboring with admirable zeal and effect, and their prudent, alert, devoted
activity is making a magnificent contribution to the progress of Church
and State. This is being done not only in civilized countries, with large
and excellent results, but also among uncultured peoples or those which
the light of Christian truth has not yet reached, where missionary
endeavor and, especially, the Pontifical Society of the Holy Childhood,
rescues so many children and infants from the slavery of the devil and of
wicked men, procuring for them the freedom of the children of God, and
trains them to be members of civilized society.
11. But at this tragic moment of history, when - alas - material and
spiritual ruins are piled high, these providential charitable enterprises,
which, perhaps, seemed capable of dealing with normal needs of this kind
are certainly inadequate. For, Venerable Brethren, We almost seem to see
with Our own eyes the vast hosts of children weakened or at death's door
through starvation. They hold out their little hands asking for bread "and
there is no one to break it unto them" (Lam. 4, 4). Without
home, without clothing, they shiver in the winter cold and die. And there
are no fathers or mothers to warm and clothe them. Ailing, or even in the
last stages of consumption, they are without the necessary medicines and
medical care. We see them, too, passing before Our sorrowful gaze,
wandering through the noisy city street, reduced to unemployment and moral
corruption, or drifting as vagrants uncertainly about the cities, the
towns, the countryside, while no one - alas - provides safe refuge for
them against want, vice and crime.
12. How, then, can We desist, Venerable Brethren, when We love those
children of Ours so intensely in the heart of Jesus Christ (Philip
1, 8); how can We desist from appealing again and again to you all
individually and collectively and to all throughout the world who, like
you, are inspired with a sense of mercy and piety, so that the full force
of Christian charity - and it is a mighty force - may be pooled by willing
and generous souls in order to mitigate and relieve their piteous
condition.
13. Let us use all the means that modern progress offers or recommends.
Let new methods be devised which may, through the cooperation of all
provide an effective remedy for present ills and for those which are
feared in the future. Thus, may it speedily come about that with God's
help and inspiration the snares of vice, which hold so many derelict
children as an easy prey, may give way to the attraction of a virtuous
life; that their blank idleness and gloomy sloth may give way to honest
and cheerful employment; that for their hunger, starvation and nakedness
they may have adequate relief from the Divine charity of Jesus Christ,
which should be most alive, eager and strong among His followers at a time
like this.
14. Such a change will contribute most effectively not only to the
increase of the Catholic Religion and of Christian virtue but also to the
good of the human family at large and of civil society. For, as all know,
there would not be such a mass of delinquents in the common jails if
greater and more suitable measures were taken to prevent especially
juvenile delinquency. And if everywhere there grew up a healthy, honest
and industrious youth, it would be easier to find citizens remarkable for
their probity, fortitude and other mental and physical qualities.
15. This was Our purpose, Venerable Brethren, in writing to you this
Encyclical about so grave a question, committing to you the task of
communicating Our paternal exhortation in the way you consider most
suitable to your flocks. And We firmly trust that this, Our exhortation
and appeal, will meet with a ready answer from all and with generous
contributions and collaboration.
16. Inspired by this hope, as a pledge of heavenly graces and a sign of
Our special benevolence with all affection in the Lord, We impart the
Apostolic Benediction to you all, Venerable Brethren, to the flocks
committed to your care, and especially to those who have already, in any
way, served this cause and to those who will serve it in the future.
Given at St. Peter's, Rome, on the 6th day of January, Feast of the
Epiphany of Our Lord Jesus Christ, in the year 1946, the seventh of Our
Pontificate.
PIUS XII
|