TODAY , IN THE TRADITIONAL CALENDAR OF THE CHURCH, IS THE FEAST OF POPE SAINT PIUS X WHOSE MOTTO WAS
" RESTAURARE OMNIA IN CHRISTO" "To restore all things in Christ."
POPE SAINT PIUS X |
E SUPREMI
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS X
ON THE RESTORATION OF ALL THINGS IN CHRIST
TO THE PATRIARCHS, PRIMATES,
ARCHBISHOPS, BISHOPS, AND OTHER ORDINARIES
IN PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE
ON THE RESTORATION OF ALL THINGS IN CHRIST
TO THE PATRIARCHS, PRIMATES,
ARCHBISHOPS, BISHOPS, AND OTHER ORDINARIES
IN PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE
Venerable Brethren,
Health and the Apostolic Benediction.
Health and the Apostolic Benediction.
In
addressing you for the first time from the Chair of the supreme
apostolate to which We have, by the inscrutable disposition of God, been
elevated, it is not necessary to remind you with what tears and warm
instance We exerted Ourselves to ward off this formidable burden of the
Pontificate. Unequal in merit though We be with St. Anselm, it seems to
us that We may with truth make Our own the words in which he lamented
when he was constrained against his will and in spite of his struggles
to receive the honor of the episcopate. For to show with what
dispositions of mind and will We subjected Ourselves to the most serious
charge of feeding the flock of Christ, We can well adduce those same
proofs of grief which he invokes in his own behalf. "My tears are
witnesses," he wrote, "and the sounds and moanings issuing from the
anguish of my heart, such as I never remember before to have come from
me for any sorrow, before that day on which there seemed to fall upon me
that great misfortune of the archbishop of Canterbury. And those who
fixed their gaze on my face that day could not fail to see it . . . I,
in color more like a dead than a living man, was pale for amazement and
alarm. Hitherto I have resisted as far as I could, speaking the truth,
my election or rather the violence done me. But now I am constrained to
confess, whether I will or no, that the judgments of God oppose greater
and greater resistance to my efforts, so that I see no way of escaping
them. Wherefore vanquished as I am by the violence not so much of men as
of God, against which there is no providing, I realize that nothing is
left for me, after having prayed as much as I could and striven that
this chalice should if possible pass from me without my drinking it, but
to set aside my feeling and my will and resign myself entirely to the
design and the will of God."
2.
In truth reasons both numerous and most weighty were not lacking to
justify this resistance of Ours. For, beside the fact that We deemed
Ourselves altogether unworthy through Our littleness of the honour of
the Pontificate; who would not have been disturbed at seeing himself
designated to succeed him who, ruling the Church with supreme wisdom for
nearly twenty six years, showed himself adorned with such sublimity of
mind, such lustre of every virtue, as to attract to himself
the admiration even of adversaries, and to leave his memory stamped in
glorious achievements?
3.
Then again, to omit other motives, We were terrified beyond all else by
the disastrous state of human society today. For who can fail to see
that society is at the present time, more than in any past age,
suffering from a terrible and deep rooted malady which, developing every
day and eating into its inmost being, is dragging it to destruction?
You understand, Venerable Brethren, what this disease is - apostasy from
God, than which in truth nothing is more allied with ruin, according to
the word of the Prophet: "For behold they that go far from Thee shall
perish" (Ps. 1xxii., 17). We saw therefore that, in virtue of the
ministry of the Pontificate, which was to be entrusted to Us, We must
hasten to find a remedy for this great evil, considering as addressed to
//'''''''''''''''''''Us that Divine command: "Lo, I have set thee this day over the nations
and over kingdoms, to root up, and to pull down, and to waste, and to
destroy, and to build, and to plant" (Jerem. i., 10). But, cognizant of Our weakness, We recoiled in terror from a task as urgent as it is arduous.
4.
Since, however, it has been pleasing to the Divine Will to raise Our
lowliness to such sublimity of power, We take courage in Him who
strengthens Us; and setting Ourselves to work, relying on the power of
God, We proclaim that We have no other program in the Supreme
Pontificate but that "of restoring all things in Christ" (Ephes. i., 10), so that "Christ may be all and in all" (Coloss.
iii, 2). Some will certainly be found who, measuring Divine things by
human standards will seek to discover secret aims of Ours, distorting
them to an earthly scope and to partisan designs. To eliminate all vain
delusions for such, We say to them with emphasis that We do not wish to
be, and with the Divine assistance never shall be aught before human
society but the Minister of God, of whose authority We are the
depositary. The interests of God shall be Our interest, and for these We
are resolved to spend all Our strength and Our very life. Hence, should
anyone ask Us for a symbol as the expression of Our will, We will give
this and no other: "To renew all things in Christ." In undertaking this
glorious task, We are greatly quickened by the certainty that We shall
have all of you, Venerable Brethren, as generous cooperators. Did We
doubt it We should have to regard you, unjustly, as either unconscious
or heedless of that sacrilegious war which is now, almost everywhere,
stirred up and fomented against God. For in truth, "The nations have
raged and the peoples imagined vain things" (Ps.ii., 1.) against their Creator, so frequent is the cry of the enemies of God: "Depart from us" (Job.
xxi., 14). And as might be expected we find extinguished among the
majority of men all respect for the Eternal God, and no regard paid in
the manifestations of public and private life to the Supreme Will - nay,
every effort and every artifice is used to destroy utterly the memory
and the knowledge of God.
LAST JUDGEMENT - SISTINE CHAPEL BY MICHELANGELO |
5.
When all this is considered there is good reason to fear lest this
great perversity may be as it were a foretaste, and perhaps the
beginning of those evils which are reserved for the last days; and that
there may be already in the world the "Son of Perdition" of whom the
Apostle speaks (II. Thess. ii., 3). Such, in truth, is the
audacity and the wrath employed everywhere in persecuting religion, in
combating the dogmas of the faith, in brazen effort to uproot and
destroy all relations between man and the Divinity! While, on the other
hand, and this according to the same apostle is the distinguishing mark
of Antichrist, man has with infinite temerity put himself in the place
of God, raising himself above all that is called God; in such wise that
although he cannot utterly extinguish in himself all knowledge of God,
he has contemned God's majesty and, as it were, made of the universe a
temple wherein he himself is to be adored. "He sitteth in the temple of
God, showing himself as if he were God" (II. Thess. ii., 2).
6.
Verily no one of sound mind can doubt the issue of this contest between
man and the Most High. Man, abusing his liberty, can violate the right
and the majesty of the Creator of the Universe; but the victory will
ever be with God - nay, defeat is at hand at the moment when man, under
the delusion of his triumph, rises up with most audacity. Of this we are
assured in the holy books by God Himself. Unmindful, as it were, of His
strength and greatness, He "overlooks the sins of men" (Wisd. xi., 24), but swiftly, after these apparent retreats, "awaked like a mighty man that hath been surfeited with wine" (Ps. 1xxvii., 65), "He shall break the heads of his enemies" (Ps. 1xxvii., 22), that all may know "that God is the king of all the earth" (Ib. 1xvi, 8), "that the Gentiles may know themselves to be men"(Ib. ix., 20).
7.
All this, Venerable Brethren, We believe and expect with unshakable
faith. But this does not prevent us also, according to the measure given
to each, from exerting ourselves to hasten the work of God - and not
merely by praying assiduously: "Arise, O Lord, let not man be
strengthened" (Ib. ix., 19), but, more important still, by
affirming both by word and deed and in the light of day, God's supreme
dominion over man and all things, so that His right to command and His
authority may be fully realized and respected. This is imposed upon us
not only as a natural duty, but by our common interest. For, Venerable
Brethren, who can avoid being appalled and afflicted when he beholds, in
the midst of a progress in civilization which is justly extolled, the
greater part of mankind fighting among themselves so savagely as to make
it seem as though strife were universal? The desire for peace is
certainly harbored in every breast, and there is no one who does not
ardently invoke it. But to want peace without God is an absurdity,
seeing that where God is absent thence too justice flies, and when
justice is taken away it is vain to cherish the hope of peace. "Peace is
the work of justice" (Is. xxii., 17). There are many, We are
well aware, who, in their yearning for peace, that is for the
tranquillity of order, band themselves into societies and parties, which
they style parties of order. Hope and labor lost. For there is but one
party of order capable of restoring peace in the midst of all this
turmoil, and that is the party of God. It is this party, therefore, that
we must advance, and to it attract as many as possible, if we are
really urged by the love of peace.
TRUE GOD AND TRUE MAN |
8.
But, Venerable Brethren, we shall never, however much we exert
ourselves, succeed in calling men back to the majesty and empire of God,
except by means of Jesus Christ. "No one," the Apostle admonishes us,
"can lay other foundation than that which has been laid, which is Jesus
Christ." (I. Cor.,iii., II.) It is Christ alone "whom the Father sanctified and sent into this world" (Is. x., 36), "the splendor of the Father and the image of His substance" (Hebr.i.,
3), true God and true man: without whom nobody can know God with the
knowledge for salvation, "neither doth anyone know the Father but the
Son, and he to whom it shall please the Son to reveal Him." (Matth.
xi., 27.) Hence it follows that to restore all things in Christ and to
lead men back to submission to God is one and the same aim. To this,
then, it behoves Us to devote Our care - to lead back mankind under the
dominion of Christ; this done, We shall have brought it back to God.
When We say to God We do not mean to that inert being heedless of all
things human which the dream of materialists has imagined, but to the
true and living God, one in nature, triple in person, Creator of the
world, most wise Ordainer of all things, Lawgiver most just, who
punishes the wicked and has reward in store for virtue.
9.
Now the way to reach Christ is not hard to find: it is the Church.
Rightly does Chrysostom inculcate: "The Church is thy hope, the Church
is thy salvation, the Church is thy refuge." (Hom. de capto Euthropio,
n. 6.) It was for this that Christ founded it, gaining it at the price
of His blood, and made it the depositary of His doctrine and His laws,
bestowing upon it at the same time an inexhaustible treasury of graces
for the sanctification and salvation of men. You see, then, Venerable
Brethren, the duty that has been imposed alike upon Us and upon you of
bringing back to the discipline of the Church human society, now
estranged from the wisdom of Christ; the Church will then subject it to
Christ, and Christ to God. If We, through the goodness of God Himself,
bring this task to a happy issue, We shall be rejoiced to see evil
giving place to good, and hear, for our gladness, " a loud voice from
heaven saying: Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of
our God and the power of his Christ." (Apoc. xii., 10.) But if
our desire to obtain this is to be fulfilled, we must use every means
and exert all our energy to bring about the utter disappearance of the
enormous and detestable wickedness, so characteristic of our time - the
substitution of man for God; this done, it remains to restore to their
ancient place of honor the most holy laws and counsels of the gospel; to
proclaim aloud the truths taught by the Church, and her teachings on
the sanctity of marriage, on the education and discipline of youth, on
the possession and use of property, the duties that men owe to those who
rule the State; and lastly to restore equilibrium between the different
classes of society according to Christian precept and custom. This is
what We, in submitting Ourselves to the manifestations of the Divine
will, purpose to aim at during Our Pontificate, and We will use all our
industry to attain it. It is for you, Venerable Brethren, to second Our
efforts by your holiness, knowledge and experience and above all by your
zeal for the glory of God, with no other aim than that Christ may be
formed in all.
10.
As to the means to be employed in attaining this great end, it seems
superfluous to name them, for they are obvious of themselves. Let your
first care be to form Christ in those who are destined from the duty of
their vocation to form Him in others. We speak of the priests, Venerable
Brethren. For all who bear the seal of the priesthood must know that
they have the same mission to the people in the midst of whom they live
as that which Paul proclaimed that he received in these tender words:
"My little children, of whom I am in labor again until Christ be formed
in you" (Gal. iv., 19). But how will they be able to perform this
duty if they be not first clothed with Christ themselves? and so
clothed with Christ as to be able to say with the Apostle: "I live, yet
not I, but Christ lives in me" (Ibid. ii., 20). "For me to live is Christ" (Phlipp.
i., 21). Hence although all are included in the exhortation "to advance
towards the perfect man, in the measure of the age of the fullness of
Christ" (Ephes. iv., 3), it is addressed before all others to
those who exercise the sacerdotal ministry; thus these are called
another Christ, not merely by the communication of power but by reason
of the imitation of His works, and they should therefore bear stamped
upon themselves the image of Christ.
SEMINARIANS IN PROCESSION - NORTH AMERICAN COLLEGE ROME |
11.
This being so, Venerable Brethren, of what nature and magnitude is the
care that must be taken by you in forming the clergy to holiness! All
other tasks must yield to this one. Wherefore the chief part of your
diligence will be directed to governing and ordering your seminaries
aright so that they may flourish equally in the soundness of their
teaching and in the spotlessness of their morals. Regard your seminary
as the delight of your hearts, and neglect on its behalf none of those
provisions which the Council of Trent has with admirable forethought
prescribed. And when the time comes for promoting the youthful
candidates to holy orders, ah! do not forget what Paul wrote to Timothy:
"Impose not hands lightly upon any man" (I. Tim. v., 22),
bearing carefully in mind that as a general rule the faithful will be
such as are those whom you call to the priesthood. Do not then pay heed
to private interests of any kind, but have at heart only God and the
Church and the eternal welfare of souls so that, as the Apostle
admonishes, "you may not be partakers of the sins of others" (Ibid.).
Then again be not lacking in solicitude for young priests who have just
left the seminary. From the bottom of Our heart, We urge you to bring
them often close to your breast, which should burn with celestial fire -
kindle them, inflame them, so that they may aspire solely after God and
the salvation of souls. Rest assured, Venerable Brethren, that We on
Our side will use the greatest diligence to prevent the members of the
clergy from being drawn to the snares of a certain new and fallacious
science, which savoureth not of Christ, but with masked and cunning
arguments strives to open the door to the errors of rationalism and
semi-rationalism; against which the Apostle warned Timothy to be on his
guard, when he wrote: "Keep that which is committed to thy trust,
avoiding the profane novelties of words, and oppositions of knowledge
falsely so called which some promising have erred concerning the faith"
(I. Tim. vi., 20 s.). This does not prevent Us from esteeming
worthy of praise those young priests who dedicated themselves to useful
studies in every branch of learning the better to prepare themselves to
defend the truth and to refute the calumnies of the enemies of the
faith. Yet We cannot conceal, nay, We proclaim in the most open manner
possible that Our preference is, and ever will be, for those who, while
cultivating ecclesiastical and literary erudition, dedicate themselves
more closely to the welfare of souls through the exercise of those
ministries proper to a priest jealous of the divine glory. "It is a
great grief and a continual sorrow to our heart" (Rom. ix., 2) to
find Jeremiah's lamentation applicable to our times: "The little ones
asked for bread, and there was none to break it to them" (Lam.
iv., 4). For there are not lacking among the clergy those who adapt
themselves according to their bent to works of more apparent than real
solidity - but not so numerous perhaps are those who, after the example
of Christ, take to themselves the words of the Prophet: "The Spirit of
the Lord hath anointed me, hath sent me to evangelize the poor, to heal
the contrite of heart, to announce freedom to the captive, and sight to
the blind" (Luke iv., 18-19).
12.
Yet who can fail to see, Venerable Brethren, that while men are led by
reason and liberty, the principal way to restore the empire of God in
their souls is religious instruction? How many there are who mimic
Christ and abhor the Church and the Gospel more through ignorance than
through badness of mind, of whom it may well be said: "They blaspheme
whatever things they know not" (Jude ii., 10). This is found to
be the case not only among the people at large and among the lowest
classes, who are thus easily led astray, but even among the more
cultivated and among those endowed moreover with uncommon education. The
result is for a great many the loss of the faith. For it is not true
that the progress of knowledge extinguishes the faith; rather is it
ignorance, and the more ignorance prevails the greater is the havoc
wrought by incredulity. And this is why Christ commanded the Apostles:
"Going forth teach all nations" (Matth. xxvii., 19).
13.
But in order that the desired fruit may be derived from this apostolate
and this zeal for teaching, and that Christ may be formed in all, be it
remembered, Venerable Brethren, that no means is more efficacious than
charity. "For the Lord is not in the earthquake" (III Kings xix.,
II) - it is vain to hope to attract souls to God by a bitter zeal. On
the contrary, harm is done more often than good by taunting men harshly
with their faults, and reproving their vices with asperity. True the
Apostle exhorted Timothy: "Accuse, beseech, rebuke," but he took care to
add: "with all patience" (II. Tim.iv., 2). Jesus has certainly
left us examples of this. "Come to me," we find Him saying, "come to me
all ye that labor and are burdened and I will refresh you" (Matth.
xi., 28). And by those that labor and are burdened he meant only those
who are slaves of sin and error. What gentleness was that shown by the
Divine Master! What tenderness, what compassion towards all kinds of
misery! Isaias has marvelously described His heart in the words: "I will
set my spirit upon him; he shall not contend, nor cry out; the bruised
reed he will not break, he will not extinguish the smoking flax" (Is. xlii., I, s.). This charity, "patient and kind" (I. Cor.
xiii., 4.), will extend itself also to those who are hostile to us and
persecute us. "We are reviled," thus did St. Paul protest, "and we
bless; we are persecuted and we suffer it; we are blasphemed and we
entreat" (I. Cor., iv., 12, s.). They perhaps seem to be worse
than they really are. Their associations with others, prejudice, the
counsel, advice and example of others, and finally an ill advised shame
have dragged them to the side of the impious; but their wills are not so
depraved as they themselves would seek to make people believe. Who will
prevent us from hoping that the flame of Christian charity may dispel
the darkness from their minds and bring to them light and the peace of
God? It may be that the fruit of our labors may be slow in coming, but
charity wearies not with waiting, knowing that God prepares His rewards
not for the results of toil but for the good will shown in it.
14.
It is true, Venerable Brethren, that in this arduous task of the
restoration of the human race in Christ neither you nor your clergy
should exclude all assistance. We know that God recommended every one to
have a care for his neighbor (Eccli. xvii., 12). For it is not
priests alone, but all the faithful without exception, who must concern
themselves with the interests of God and souls - not, of course,
according to their own views, but always under the direction and orders
of the bishops; for to no one in the Church except you is it given to
preside over, to teach, to "govern the Church of God which the Holy
Ghost has placed you to rule" (Actsxx., 28). Our predecessors
have long since approved and blessed those Catholics who have banded
together in societies of various kinds, but always religious in their
aim. We, too, have no hesitation in awarding Our praise to this great
idea, and We earnestly desire to see it propagated and flourish in town
and country. But We wish that all such associations aim first and
chiefly at the constant maintenance of Christian life, among those who
belong to them. For truly it is of little avail to discuss questions
with nice subtlety, or to discourse eloquently of rights and duties,
when all this is unconnected with practice. The times we live in demand
action - but action which consists entirely in observing with fidelity
and zeal the divine laws and the precepts of the Church, in the frank
and open profession of religion, in the exercise of every kind of
charitable works, without regard to self interest or worldly advantage.
Such luminous examples given by the great army of soldiers of Christ
will be of much greater avail in moving and drawing men than words and
sublime dissertations; and it will easily come about that when human
respect has been driven out, and prejudices and doubting laid aside,
large numbers will be won to Christ, becoming in their turn promoters of
His knowledge and love which are the road to true and solid happiness.
Oh! when in every city and village the law of the Lord is faithfully
observed, when respect is shown for sacred things, when the Sacraments
are frequented, and the ordinances of Christian life fulfilled, there
will certainly be no more need for us to labor further to see all things
restored in Christ. Nor is it for the attainment of eternal welfare
alone that this will be of service - it will also contribute largely to
temporal welfare and the advantage of human society. For when these
conditions have been secured, the upper and wealthy classes will learn
to be just and charitable to the lowly, and these will be able to bear
with tranquillity and patience the trials of a very hard lot; the
citizens will obey not lust but law, reverence and love will be deemed a
duty towards those that govern, "whose power comes only from God" (Rom.
xiii., I). And then? Then, at last, it will be clear to all that the
Church, such as it was instituted by Christ, must enjoy full and entire
liberty and independence from all foreign dominion; and We, in demanding
that same liberty, are defending not only the sacred rights of
religion, but are also consulting the common weal and the safety of
nations. For it continues to be true that "piety is useful for all
things" (I. Tim. iv., 8) - when this is strong and flourishing "the people will" truly "sit in the fullness of peace" (Is. xxxii., 18).
15. May God, "who is rich in mercy" (Ephes.ii.,
4), benignly speed this restoration of the human race in Jesus Christ
for "it is not of him that willeth, or of him that runneth, but of God
that showeth mercy" (Rom. ix., 16). And let us, Venerable Brethren, "in the spirit of humility" (Dan.
iii., 39), with continuous and urgent prayer ask this of Him through
the merits of Jesus Christ. Let us turn, too, to the most powerful
intercession of the Divine Mother - to obtain which We, addressing to
you this Letter of Ours on the day appointed especially for
commemorating the Holy Rosary, ordain and confirm all Our Predecessor's
prescriptions with regard to the dedication of the present month to the
august Virgin, by the public recitation of the Rosary in all churches;
with the further exhortation that as intercessors with God appeal be
also made to the most pure Spouse of Mary, the Patron of the Catholic
Church, and the holy Princes of the Apostles, Peter and Paul.
16.
And that all this may be realized in fulfillment of Our ardent desire,
and that everything may be prosperous with you, We invoke upon you the
most bountiful gifts of divine grace. And now in testimony of that most
tender charity wherewith We embrace you and all the faithful whom Divine
Providence has entrusted to Us, We impart with all affection in the
Lord, the Apostolic Blessing to you, Venerable Brethren, to the clergy
and to your people.
Given at Rome at St. Peter's, on the 4th day of October, 1903, in the first year of Our Pontificate.
PIUS X
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