LITTERAS A VOBIS ENCYCLICAL
OF POPE LEO XIII ON CLERGY IN BRAZIL
To the Archbishops and Bishops of Brazil.
Last year We received your letter joyfully
announcing the addition of a new ecclesiastical province and the founding of
four new bishoprics. - This new indication of apostolic solicitude in your
nation was certainly cause for rejoicing. For among the many causes of the
decline of Catholicism among you, is that the number of bishops is too small
for the inordinate size of the region and the unequal distribution of its
inhabitants. As a result the bishops could not exercise the vigilance they
desired over the clergy and the flocks entrusted to them. They were unable
either to ward off the unsuitable or to promote the strength and dignity of
the Catholic name. Therefore you proved your pastoral zeal when, gathered at
Sao Paolo, you petitioned the Roman Pontiff to enlarge the episcopal
hierarchy. We gladly agreed to grant your request. - Now there is hope of a
fruitful increase of the Christian estate, since you have more bishops;
however, each one of you must apply opportune remedies to the spreading evils
increasing everywhere. In this regard, We wish to recommend some useful ideas
to you for increasing faith and Christian piety.
Responsibilities of Priests
2. In the first place, let men preparing for
sacred orders be taught the best things, those for which there is the greatest
need and which will enable them to teach Catholic truths and to defend them
strenuously against all assaults. All too often daily experience makes it
plain that where the ministers lack appropriate doctrinal knowledge, their
people generally suffer from ignorance of the faith and religion. For it is
from the mouth of the priest that the faithful ought to learn the law: He is
the angel of the Lord. For this reason we read the proclamation: the lips of
the priest shall keep knowledge.(1) The Apostle too mentions knowledge among
other reasons for proving himself your servant in Jesus.(2) And where this
knowledge is wanting, this evil also follows for the priests: they are
condemned by the people, with God also exacting a penalty for their neglect of
duty. Therefore have I also made you contemptible and base before all people.(3)
- But the embellishment of learning and its defense never leads to their goal
if they are separated from sanctity of life and morals. Indeed, knowledge
without love does not build up but inflates.(4) This is the usual practice of
man. Though Christ taught that learning is to be
accepted from the sacred ministers without regard for any deeds of theirs
which do not conform to the doctrine; nevertheless men are more influenced by
what they see than by what they hear. For this reason we read the clear
testimony concerning God the Saviour, who was not only the teacher of
shepherds but also became their model, that he began to do and to teach. Hence
the priest's actions must confirm the doctrine which he preaches and commends.
Before all else he who is appointed to rule a parish must not be impatient
with the labor. Called to the vineyard of the Lord, let him diligently
cultivate it, aware that he must render a serious account sometime for the
souls entrusted to him. Nor does he labor in vain if at all times and in all
matters he holds fast to learning. We must indeed fight strenuously for
Christ, but only at the will and authorization of those whom Christ has chosen
as leaders.
Seminaries and Teachers
3. To form such helpers for yourselves,
Venerable Brothers, is your task. Indeed experience teaches that future
priests will be the kind you have taken care to form. You have the place, the
sacred seminaries, where you can train ministers to your and the Church's
desires as approved by God, workmen who have no need to be ashamed.(5) The
very name seminary tells for what great purpose they have been erected.
Therefore encourage the growth and prosperity of the ecclesiastical seminaries
which you already have, both in the study of sacred learning and also in the
training of souls. To ensure that this training proceeds properly, the best
teachers are needed; they must not only be endowed with sound learning, but
they must also teach that doctrine agreeably and faithfully according to Our
precepts. In order that the young clergy become imbued with the true spirit of
the Church and that they cultivate virtue, spiritual guides are to be chosen
carefully. Moreover their work is to be aided and perfected with all the
solicitude of your labors. But in dioceses where there are as yet no
seminaries, let the bishops use every means to establish excellent ones as
soon as possible. The Council of Trent has overseen this, and We have also
considered it in Our apostolic letter of April 27, 1892. The freedom of
education which now prevails in your country gives you greater facility to do
what We have recommended with regard to the arrangement of studies. - For this
purpose you also have a great aid in the college for
clerics which Pius IX labored to established for the convenience of South
America and which We too have promoted and favored. Its outcome happily
fulfills Our expectations. We joyfully recall that many of you have been
graduated from this college. We encourage you to send young men of special
promise to Rome for their studies, and you should use them appropriately
afterwards as teachers or for any other purpose.
Religious Orders Subject to Authority of the
Bishops
4. It is difficult to put into words the
advantages for your sacred ministry that the community of religious orders
will bring you. By Our Apostolic providence We have determined to restore the
original observance of their institutes from the losses of past times. To this
end, We decreed on September 3, 1890, that native religious communities be
subject to the authority of the bishops. - In a matter so useful and important
We trust that your cooperation will not be wanting. Pleasing results have been
obtained, transacted for this purpose under the direction of Venerable Brother
Jerome [Gotti], Archbishop of Petra, Internuncio of the Apostolic See to your
government. In order that these beginnings may make greater progress and be
brought to the desired end, We exhort you to labor diligently in this matter
for religion and especially for your flocks. Meanwhile religious communities
both of men and of women are to be congratulated for receiving Our commands
with good will and for showing themselves ready for the restitution of each
one's original institute.
Needs of the Faithful
5. These matters concern the proper upbringing
and application of the clergy to the sacred ministry. But the needs of the
faithful demand your efforts no less. In their regard, what has precedence is
that children and ignorant people are properly to be taught the elements of
our most holy religion; this calls for the unremitting diligence of the
pastors. Then, where it is publicly permitted, instruction is to be organized
for youth so that they will not be compelled to frequent the athletic
facilities of heretics or attend schools where Catholic discipline is not
mentioned unless to be calumniously derided, and this to the great detriment
of faith and good morals. - Besides, since minds are
strengthened and stimulated by counsel and reciprocal example to do and suffer
great things for religion, you will merit well on that account if you
encourage and persuade laymen, especially the young, to join Christian
societies. We have frequently praised them in exhortations as institutions
that strive to care for the needs of religion and improve the advantages of
the poor; at the same time, they diminish the appeal of those associations
that abuse the title of public charity, since they are very much opposed to
the welfare of Church and State.-Also do not fail to realize how much
influence for good and evil, especially in these our times, magazines and
similar popular writings have acquired. Use these weapons in defense of the
Christian name, with the leadership of the episcopate properly preserved and
with all respect due the civil power. Finally all Catholics should remember
that it is of the greatest concern to the Church what kind of men are elected
to the legislature. Thus, preserving the rights of civil law, everyone must
strive to elect those who join zeal for religion to their zeal for public
affairs. This will come about more readily if each individual obeys the
supreme authority governing the state and if everyone continuously advocates
those things We have published not long ago in encyclical letters concerning
the Christian constitution of the state.
6. For the rest, may suitable love and concord
of minds flourish among you by thinking alike with one soul and one mind.(6)
For this reason we strongly recommend that you share your plans frequently
among yourselves and hold episcopal synods in various places to satisfy the
obligations of your sacred office. You have with you the Legate of the
Apostolic See, who will tell you Our mind and Our counsels. Then too, because
of the paternal love with which We embrace you, you have Us at all times ready
to lend aid to your work.
7. May God very graciously grant you the gifts
of His heavenly blessings, which supply the strength needed to fill the
pastoral office in a holy and proper way. As a promise of these gifts,
Venerable Brothers, We very lovingly impart the Apostolic Blessing to you,
your clergy, and the people who have been entrusted to your care.
Given in Rome, at St. Peter's, July 2, 1894,
in the seventeenth year of Our pontificate.
LEO XIII
REFERENCES:
1. Mal 2.6. 2.
2 Cor 4.6.
3. Mal 2.9.
4. 1 Cor 8.1.
5. 2 Tm 2.15.
6. Phil 2.2.
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