INSIGNES ENCYCLICAL
OF POPE LEO XIII ON THE HUNGARIAN MILLENNIUM
To the Bishops of Hungary.
You have most rightly decreed that special, joyful thanksgiving be offered to
the eternal God of Hungary. For your nation, beyond all others, is bound to
recall the great abundance of benefits which it has received from God, the most
provident establisher and preserver of kingdoms, throughout many centuries and
in troublesome trials. The birthday of your country, as it most happily returns,
is a very suitable time for ".recollecting and celebrating these blessings.
For you are now marking the thousandth year since your ancestors established
their homes and residences in those lands and the history of Hungary began.
One Thousandth Birthday Celebration of
Hungary
2. We are in no doubt that the observances
planned will have an outcome worthy of the occasion and be productive of the
most noble advantages. For there can be no citizen with pure love whom the
glories of the country in which he has a share do not affect and to whom the
ancient glories of the past publicly remembered affects him with a keen desire
to imitate them. To all of this will be added the
unanimous approval of so many civilized nations who, as they share rejoicing
in friendship, will surely congratulate a kingdom founded on appropriate laws
and institutions, preserved by its civil prudence and valor in war and brought
by many deeds of excellence to its present longevity and growth.
3. Your prosperity affects Us in the most
delightful possible way, and We desire nothing more than to be present with
you among your people, Venerable Brothers, and to dwell there in mind and
spirit. This Our wish is prompted chiefly by Our special attraction towards
and loving care for Catholic Hungary and by their devoted feelings towards
this Apostolic See and Ourselves. Among other indications of devotions, in
recent years Rome has seen Hungarians in great numbers come, under your
leadership, to venerate the tombs of the Princes of the Apostles. They have
presented beautiful testimonies of faith, obedience, and love in the name of
all their fellow countrymen. They won Our benevolence and an exhortatory
address to strengthen their spirits in the duties of their holy profession.
Indeed We had purposely manifested this benevolence of Ours to the entire
nation in Our first and second letters to you. Now, however, recollecting the modesty and favor with
which the clergy and all good men received Our instructions, once again
may this letter convey Our love and may it both increase the joy of the
secular celebration and redouble its fruits.
4. In the preparation for your
celebrations, the power of the Catholic religion as an excellent promoter
of public safety and as the source or support of good things among the
peoples shines forth. Certainly, as your wiser historians state, the
Hungarian nation would not have held their occupied areas either very long
or very prosperously unless the Gospel had led it, freed from the yoke of
superstition, to accept these well-known principles: to respect natural
law, to do harm to no one, to be merciful, to pursue peace, to be subject
to princes as to God, and to practice brotherhood at home and abroad.
Beginnings of Catholicism in Hungary
5. In a wonderful manner, the beginnings of
the Catholic faith in your country were consecrated in the persons of
Prince Geza and the leaders of the nation, especially by the efforts of
the holy bishop Adalbert, a man famous for his apostolic labors and
finally, his martyr's crown. Those beginnings, however, were the more
remarkable in that, considering the times and the position of their
territories, they lay dangerously open to the lamentable separation from
the Roman Church which was breaking out among the Easterners. What his
father had begun, Stephan, a most exemplary Christian prince, persisted in
and completed. He is therefore rightly celebrated as the chief pillar and
light of your nation; he not only instructed it in the attainment of
eternal salvation, but he also increased its extent and renown.
Importance of Stephan
6. Under that same prince, who offered and
dedicated his sceptre to the Mother of God and blessed Peter, that
exchange of deeds of zeal and duty between the Roman pontiffs and the
kings and people of Hungary began, which we have already praised. A
permanent symbol of this bond was the royal crown adorned with images of
Christ the Savior and the Apostles which Our predecessor Sylvester II sent
as a gift to Stephan, when he conferred on him the title of king because
"he had greatly spread abroad the faith of Christ"(1) in your
country. That famous incident establishes the
constancy of the Hungarians in their obedience to Peter, for this crown
has borne the brunt of the shifting and dangerous squalls of critical
times unscathed, still radiant with its ancient honor; consequently it has
always been regarded as the great glory and defense of the kingdom, and
therefore protected religiously.
7. Thus it came about that Hungary, as it
grew in resources, entered on the same paths as the peoples of youthful
Christian Europe were travelling; because of the outstanding character of
the race, it attained virtue and humanity more rapidly. For this reason,
many men came forth who brought true fame to their country and themselves
by holiness of life, teaching, literature, arts, and the fulfilling of
their duties.
The Church as Guardian of Liberty
8. We have heard that a project has been
undertaken which We fully approve for the current celebration. It is
planned to publish the ancient forgotten evidence of services conferred by
religion. Furthermore, the letters, both those from you and those in Our
Apostolic records, bear concordant witness to the fact that religion has
benefited mankind. It is of great importance to reflect upon this,
especially at the present time. Consider what functions the Church
fulfilled for your ancestors in establishing and administrating public
law; certainly its wisdom, order, and fairness permeated everywhere at the
request of all classes. Moreover, the Roman pontiffs have shown themselves
guardians and defenders of civil liberty whenever it was placed in
critical danger, either when requested to or of their own accord. Your
people have also never ceased to fight for this liberty. This has happened
many times in the past, especially when the attacks of the bitter enemies
of the holy faith had to be beaten back. When the Turks invaded, everyone
without exception agrees that the terrible defeat which was threatening
most of the Western peoples was averted by the unconquerable courage of
the Hungarians. Nevertheless, Our predecessors contributed greatly to the
success of the events by supplying money, sending reinforcements,
arranging treaties of alliance, and by effective prayer for heavenly
support.
Innocent XI
9. Innocent XI in particular gave aid in
this struggle. His name is famous in connection with two
extraordinary deeds: the liberation of Vienna from enemy siege and the
great deliverance of Buda, your chief city, after long oppression.
Gregory XIII
10. Likewise Gregory XIII performed an
undying service for your nation when your religion was dangerously
afflicted by the influence of revolutionary movements which spread from
neighboring peoples. He undertook for Hungary the sound measure which he
had already carried through for other countries. We refer of course to the
College which he established for you in Rome, which he then combined with
the German College, in which chosen students would be thoroughly educated
in the learning and virtues worthy of the priesthood. Then afterwards,
they would work with greater effect in your churches. And this indeed was
the richly productive result, since many who were educated there also held
episcopal rank and brought equal glory to Church and state.
John Hunyadi
11. These and similar benefits from the
continuous favor of the Church are not so much recalled in history books
as they are deeply etched on the minds of your citizens. A witness whose
credibility is equal to all the rest is the famous John Hunyadi in the
fifteenth century, whose strategy and bravery Hungary will always remember
and praise. He declared in a welcome and eloquent manner, "This
country would never have stood fast on its resources, I think, if it had
not stood fast in its faith." And while the same man was governor of
the kingdom, all classes in a common letter to Nicholas V professed:
"Whatever our condition is, it is especially due to the support of
your Apostolic favor that we hold our own." Far from reducing the
importance of these testimonies, succeeding ages have clearly added
substantially to them as their benefits increased.
King Machias
12. The Hungarians have always striven to
keep their kingdom bound as closely as possible to the Apostolic See as
its "very own and most devoted possession." The register of
public proceedings records many proofs of this, whether in the form of
letters written by kings and nobles to the Roman pontiffs, or in the form
of examples of heroic and energetic virtue which
assisted the Church to protect its rights or to avenge its loss of rights
on its enemies. This was even before the struggle began against the
invading forces of the Moslems. The relationship of mutual service between
King Louis the Great and Innocent VI and Urban V indicate this. And when
Paul II urgently requested that the Catholic cause should be given strong
help against the attack of the Hussites in Bohemia, King Mathias replied:
"I have dedicated myself and my kingdom entirely to the Holy Roman
Church and to your Beatitude. The Vicar of God on earth, nay, God Himself,
cannot command any deed so difficult for me, or any so dangerous, that I
should not think it dutiful and salutary to undertake, that I should not
fearlessly attempt, especially when it is a case of strengthening the
Catholic faith and crushing the perfidy of the impious .... Whatever
enemies of religion it is necessary to meet in battle, behold, Mathias
together with Hungary ... remain devoted to the Apostolic See and to
your Beatitude and will remain so for ever." And the event did not
fall short of the words of the king nor of the Pope's expectation; and it
remains an evidence of great importance for later times.
Maria Theresa
13. Moreover, the cooperation of nation and
Church is shown by those commendations, neither few nor faint, with which
this Apostolic See has honored your people, and likewise by the
extraordinary titles of honor and privileges which it has given to your
kings. We desire, however, and it is completely suited to the present
celebration-to produce a glorious page from the long official document in
which Clement XIII, in accordance with his power, confirmed to Maria
Theresa, Queen of Hungary, and to her successors in the same kingdom, the
title of Apostolic King. That title was to supersede previous privilege
and custom. So as their fathers and grandfathers have already done, let
the grandchildren themselves rejoice in this Papal proclamation: "The
flourishing Kingdom of Hungary has been accurately considered the best
fitted of all for extending the boundaries of Christian authority and
glory, both by reason of the bravery of a most intrepid nation and the
nature of its territories. And indeed, everyone knows the Hungarians' many
outstanding deeds for the protection and expansion of Our religion. They
have often engaged in battle with terrible enemies;
by blocking as with their own bodies the advance of the same enemies, who were
bent on destroying the Christian state, they wrested great victories from
them. These famous events have been published in well-known literary works.
But We can in no way pass over in silence Stephan, that most holy and brave
King of Hungary, consecrated with heavenly honors and placed among the number
of the Saints. The imprint of his virtue, his holiness, and his bravery
survives in your country to the eternal praise of the Hungarian name. And all
his successors in the kingship have at all times imitated his beautiful
examples of virtue. So it should seem strange to no one that the Roman
pontiffs have always honored with great praises and privileges the Hungarian
nation and its leaders and kings for their outstanding services to the
Catholic faith and the Roman See. The principal mark of honor, of course, is
the right to have the Cross carried in front of the kings in public procession
as the most shining symbol of the Apostolate; this is in order to show that
the Hungarian nation and its kings glory only in the Cross of Our Lord Jesus
Christ and that in this sign, they are accustomed always to fight for the
Catholic faith and to be victorious."(2)
Exhortations to Hungary
14. We greatly enjoy gracing your religious
festivities with these recollections of famous men and their deeds. But this
event itself prompts some additional action, which will bring with it real
improvement for the common good. Hungary should reflect upon itself and,
inspired by a consciousness of the nobility of its most religious ancestors
together with a knowledge of the present time, devote its efforts to worthy
ends. The exhortation of the Apostle certainly summons you, whatever your
rank: "Stand fast in the faith, act manfully and be strong."(3) To
this all ought to respond with one mind and voice: "Let us hold fast the
confession of our hope without wavering."(4) "Let us have no cause
to question our honor."(5)
15. When we observe the tendency of this age as
a whole, it is lamentable some Catholic men everywhere do not practice the
Catholic religion as they should, either in thought or in action. It is also
lamentable that men make Catholicism almost the same as the form of any other
religion and, in fact, even hold the former in suspicion
and hatred. It is scarcely any use to say what sort of act it is to reject
with degenerate spirit this outstanding inheritance from their ancestors. Nor
is it any use to note how much it is the mark of an ungrateful and
uncircumspect mind, both to be unwilling to recognize the longstanding
benefits of the Catholic religion, and to neglect those anticipated benefits.
In Catholic wisdom and doctrine, a power and effectiveness inheres which is
thoroughly wonderful and works in many ways for the good of human society.
Since it does not vanish with the passage of time, it is always the same and
vigorous; in the same way, it is likely to be beneficial in modern times
provided it is not stifled.
16. As to what pertains more nearly to your
people, in former letters and similar pronouncements, We have denounced
dangers from which religion should be protected, and We have proposed aids
which would lead more suitably to its freedom and dignity. And since civil
affairs cannot be separated from religious, We have been extremely eager to
give Our attention and help to the former as well, since this is clearly an
integral part of Our Apostolic duty. For the frequent advice and commands
which We gave you as your circumstances required, contributed not a little, as
you rightly remember, to the public safety and prosperity as well. But if, in
this very people, the actions of good men comply more strongly each day with
Our advice and warnings, why should We not embrace the hope which blossoms
more abundantly on the occasion of this secular commemoration, and which
foreshadows to a rapid fulfillment of all men's prayers? For surely all good
citizens pray that by removing causes for disagreement, the Church will not be
denied its proper honor. Then the proper honor of the state too will shine
more brilliantly in alliance with and under the guidance of the ancestral
religion. This will result in the authority of governments, the mutual duties
of the classes, the education of youth, and many other matters like these
maintaining themselves in truth, in justice, and in love: for on these
foundations and supports especially, states depend and thrive.
Anticipated Results
17. Not the least effective means of your
enjoying this combination of good things, as your famous forefathers did, is
to allow your feeling of piety towards the Roman Church
to be inspired by their example, as under new auspices. The most honorable
crown of Stephan will be borne on a set day through the capital city in an
unusually solemn procession; this will be in the course of the public
rejoicings for the dedication of the House of Assembly. Indeed, nothing is
more closely connected with the glory of your nation and your kings, nothing
so suitable to the right organization of civil affairs, than that sacred
symbol of royal power. But We anticipate that a twofold permanent result will
arise without difficulty from this occasion: first that among the nobility and
the common people, obedient and faithful allegiance to the august House of
Hapsburg will be strengthened. That House has always worn this same crown,
which was conferred on it by your ancestors of their own accord. The second
anticipated result is that the consequent recollection of the very close
relations of your ancestors with the Chair of Peter, which are plainly
approved and consecrated by this papal gift, may add firmness and strength to
these same bonds.
18. Let the illustrious people of Hungary know,
however, that they can and ought to entrust themselves completely to the
authority and favor of the Apostolic See. This See will never forget their
famous deeds for the Catholic cause; it retains and will continue to retain
its former disposition of forethought and maternal kindness towards them.
19. If up to now We have helped you, may God
help you to prosper even more. During this celebration in particular, may He
be concerned for your Apostolic King, for the nobility, for the clergy, and
for the whole people; and may He make them abound with those good things which
He has Himself promised to nations and kingdoms which preserve
justice and peace. And may your great lady Mary be concerned for you all
likewise, together with Stephan and Adalbert, who are apostles and heavenly
patrons of your kingdom. Under their salutary protection, which your
forefathers experienced, you rejoice in more abundant fruit as the days go by.
We add a special prayer with the greatest love: may all the citizens whom a
single love of this country inspires, and whom this occasion of public
thanksgiving joins in a brotherly fashion, be bound together some day by one
and the same faith in the blessed embrace of Mother Church.
20. You, however, Venerable Brothers, continue
as you are doing watchfully and attentively so that you deserve well of your
people and the state: receive, as an auspice of divine rewards and as a
witness of Our special kindness, the Apostolic blessing which We impart most
lovingly to each one of you and to the whole of Hungary in its joy.
Given in Rome at St. Peter's, 1 May 1896, in
the nineteenth year of Our Pontificate.
LEO XIII
REFERENCES:
1. Clement XIII in his address Si qui
militari, I October 1758.
2. Epistle Quum multa alia, 19 August
1758.
3. 1 Cor 16.13.
4. Heb 10.23.
5. 1 Mc 9.10.
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