IUCUNDA SANE
ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS X
ON POPE GREGORY THE GREAT
TO OUR VENERABLE BRETHREN, THE PATRIARCHS,
PRIMATES, ARCHBISHOPS, BISHOPS,
AND OTHER ORDINARIES
IN PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE.
Venerable Brethren,
Health and the Apostolic Benediction.
1. Joyful indeed comes the remembrance, Venerable Brethren, of that great and
incomparable man, the Pontiff Gregory, first of the name, whose centenary
solemnity, at the close of the thirteenth century since his death, we are about
to celebrate. By that God who killeth and maketh alive, who humbleth
and exalteth, it was ordained, not, We think, without a special providence,
that amid the almost innumerable cares of Our Apostolic ministry, amid all the
anxieties which the government of the Universal Church imposes upon Us, amid our
pressing solicitude to satisfy as best We may your claims, Venerable Brethren,
who have been called to a share in Our Apostolate, and those of all the faithful
entrusted to Our care, Our gaze at the beginning of Our Pontificate should be
turned at once towards that most holy and illustrious Predecessor of Ours, the
honor of the Church and its glory. For Our heart is filled with great confidence
in his most powerful intercession with God, and strengthened by the memory of
the sublime maxims he inculcated in his lofty office and of the virtues devoutly
practiced by him. And since by the force of the former and the fruitfulness of
the latter he has left on God's Church a mark so vast, so deep, so lasting, that
his contemporaries and posterity have justly given him the name of Great, and
today, after all these centuries, the eulogy of his epitaph is still verified:
"He lives eternal in every place by his innumerable good works" (Apud
Joann. Diac., Vita Greg. iv. 68) it will surely be given, with the help
of Divine grace, to all followers of his wonderful example, to fulfill the
duties of their own offices, as far as human weakness permits.
2. There is but little need to repeat here what public documents have made
known to all. When Gregory assumed the Supreme Pontificate the disorder in
public affairs had reached its climax; the ancient civilization had all but
disappeared and barbarism was spreading throughout the dominions of the
crumbling Roman Empire. Italy, abandoned by the Emperors of Byzantium, had been
left a prey of the still unsettled Lombards who roamed up and down the whole
country laying waste everywhere with fire and sword and bringing desolation and
death in their train. This very city, threatened from without by its enemies,
tried from within by the scourges of pestilence, floods and famine, was reduced
to such a miserable plight that it had become a problem how to keep the breath
of life in the citizens and in the immense multitudes who flocked hither for
refuge. Here were to be found men and women of all conditions, bishops and
priests carrying the sacred vessels they had saved from plunder, monks and
innocent spouses of Christ who had sought safety in flight from the swords of
the enemy or from the brutal insults of abandoned men. Gregory himself calls the
Church of Rome: "An old ship woefully shattered; for the waters are
entering on all sides, and the joints, buffeted by the daily stress of the
storm, are growing rotten and herald shipwreck" (Registrum i., 4 ad
Joannem episcop. Constantino.). But the pilot raised up by God had a strong
hand, and when placed at the helm succeeding not only in making the port in
despite of the raging seas, but in saving the vessel from future storms.
3. Truly wonderful is the work he was able to effect during his reign of
little more than thirteen years. He was the restorer of Christian life in its
entirety, stimulating the devotion of the faithful, the observance of the monks,
the discipline of the clergy, the pastoral solicitude of the bishops. Most
prudent father of the family of Christ that he was (Joann. Diac., Vita
Greg. ii. 51), he preserved and increased the patrimony of the Church, and
liberally succored the impoverished people, Christian society, and individual
churches, according to the necessities of each. Becoming truly God's
Consul (Epitaph), he pushed his fruitful activity far beyond the walls of
Rome, and entirely for the advantage of civilized society. He opposed
energetically the unjust claims of the Byzantine Emperors; he checked the
audacity and curbed the shameless avarice of the exarchs and the imperial
administrators, and stood up in public as the defender of social justice. He
tamed the ferocity of the Lombards, and did not hesitate to meet Agulfus at the
gates of Rome in order to prevail upon him to raise the siege of the city, just
as the Pontiff Leo the Great did in the case of Attila; nor did he desist in his
prayers, in his gentle persuasion, in his skillful negotiation, until he saw
that dreaded people settle down and adopt a more regular government; until he
knew that they were won to the Catholic faith, mainly through the influence of
the pious Queen Theodolinda, his daughter in Christ. Hence Gregory may justly be
called the savior and liberator of Italy - his own land, as he tenderly
calls her.
4. Through his incessant pastoral care the embers of heresy in Italy and
Africa die out, ecclesiastical life in the Gauls is reorganized, the Visigoths
of the Spains are welded together in the conversion which has already been begun
among them, and the renowned English nation, which, "situated in a corner
of the world, while it had hitherto remained obstinate in the worship of wood
and stone" (Reg. viii. 29, 30, ad Eulog. Episcop. Alexandr.), now
also receives the true faith of Christ. Gregory's heart overflowed with joy at
the news of this precious conquest, for his is the heart of a father embracing
his most beloved son, and in attributing all the merit of it to Jesus the
Redeemer, "for whose love," as he himself writes, "we are seeking
our unknown brethren in Britain, and through whose grace we find unknown ones we
were seeking" (Reg. xi. 36 (28), ad Augustin. Anglorum Episcopum).
And so grateful to the Holy Pontiff was the English nation that they called him
always: our Master, our Doctor, our Apostle, our Pope, our Gregory, and
considered itself as the seal of his apostolate. In fine, so salutary and so
efficacious was his action that the memory of the works wrought by him became
deeply impressed on the minds of posterity, especially during the Middle Ages,
which breathed, so to say, the atmosphere infused by him, fed on his words,
conformed its life and manners according to the example inculcated by him, with
the result that Christian social civilization was happily introduced into the
world in opposition to the Roman civilization of the preceding centuries, which
now passed away for ever.
5. This is the change of the right hand of the Most High! And well may
it be said that in the mind of Gregory the hand of God alone was operative in
these great events. What he wrote to the most holy monk Augustine about this
same conversion of the English may be equally applied to all the rest of his
apostolic action: "Whose work is this but His who said: My Father worketh
till now, and I work? (John v. 17). To show the world that He wished to
convert it, not by the wisdom of men, but by His own power, He chose unlettered
men to be preachers to the world; and the same He has now done, vouchsafing to
accomplish through weak men great things among the nation of the Angles" (Reg.
xi. 36 (28)). We, indeed, may discern much that the holy Pontiff's profound
humility hid from his own sight: his knowledge of affairs, his talent for
bringing his undertakings to a successful issue, the wonderful prudence shown in
all his provisions, his assiduous vigilance, his persevering solicitude. But it
is, nevertheless, true that he never put himself forward as one invested with
the might and power of the great ones of the earth, for instead of using the
exalted prestige of the Pontifical dignity, he preferred to call himself the Servant
of the Servants of God, a title which he was the first to adopt. It was not
merely by profane science or the "persuasive words of human wisdom (I Cor.
ii. 4) that he traced out his career, or by the devices of civil politics, or by
systems of social renovation, skillfully studied, prepared and put in execution;
nor yet, and this is very striking, by setting before himself a vast program of
apostolic action to be gradually realized; for we know that, on the contrary,
his mind was full of the idea of the approaching end of the world which was to
have left him but little time for great exploits. Very delicate and fragile of
body though he was, and constantly afflicted by infirmities which several times
brought him to the point of death, he yet possessed an incredible energy of soul
which was for ever receiving fresh vigor from his lively faith in the infallible
words of Christ, and in His Divine promises. Then again, he counted with
unlimited confidence on the supernatural force given by God to the Church for
the successful accomplishment of her divine mission in the world. The constant
aim of his life, as shown in all his words and works, was, therefore, this: to
preserve in himself, and to stimulate in others this same lively faith and
confidence, doing all the good possible at the moment in expectation of the
Divine judgment.
6. And this produced in him the fixed resolve to adopt for the salvation of
all the abundant wealth of supernatural means given by God to His Church, such
as the infallible teaching of revealed truth, and the preaching of the same
teaching in the whole world, and the sacraments which have the power of infusing
or increasing the life of the soul, and the grace of prayer in the name of
Christ which assures heavenly protection.
7. These memories, Venerable Brethren, are a source of unspeakable comfort to
Us. When We glance around from the walls of the Vatican We find that like
Gregory, and perhaps with even more reason than he, We have grounds for fear,
with so many storms gathering on every side, with so many hostile forces massed
and advancing against Us, and at the same time so utterly deprived are We of all
human aid to ward off the former and to help us to meet the shock of the latter.
But when We consider the place on which Our feet rest and on which this
Pontifical See is rooted, We feel Ourself perfectly safe on the rock of Holy
Church. "For who does not know," wrote St. Gregory to the Patriarch
Eulogius of Alexandria, "that Holy Church stands on the solidity of the
Prince of the Apostles, who got his name from his firmness, for he was called
Peter from the word rock? (Registr. vii. 37 (40)). Supernatural force has
never during the flight of ages been found wanting in the Church, nor have
Christ's promises failed; these remain today just as they were when they brought
consolation to Gregory's heartnay, they are endowed with even greater force for
Us after having stood the test of centuries and so many changes of circumstances
and events.
8. Kingdoms and empires have passed away; peoples once renowned for their
history and civilization have disappeared; time and again the nations, as though
overwhelmed by the weight of years, have fallen asunder; while the Church,
indefectible in her essence, united by ties indissoluble with her heavenly
Spouse, is here today radiant with eternal youth, strong with the same primitive
vigor with which she came from the Heart of Christ dead upon the Cross. Men
powerful in the world have risen up against her. They have disappeared, and she
remains. Philosophical systems without number, of every form and every kind,
rose up against her, arrogantly vaunting themselves her masters, as though they
had at last destroyed the doctrine of the Church, refuted the dogmas of her
faith, proved the absurdity of her teachings. But those systems, one after
another, have passed into books of history, forgotten, bankrupt; while from the
Rock of Peter the light of truth shines forth as brilliantly as on the day when
Jesus first kindled it on His appearance in the world, and fed it with His
Divine words: "Heaven and earth shall pass, but my words shall not
pass" (Matth. xxiv. 35).
9. We, strengthened by this faith, firmly established on this rock, realizing
to the full all the heavy duties that the Primacy imposes on Us - but also all
the vigor that comes to Us from the Divine Will - calmly wait until all the
voices be scattered to the winds that now shout around Us proclaiming that the
Church has gone beyond her time, that her doctrines are passed away for ever,
that the day is at hand when she will be condemned either to accept the tenets
of a godless science and civilization or to disappear from human society. Yet at
the same time We cannot but remind all, great and small, as Pope St. Gregory
did, of the absolute necessity of having recourse to this Church in order to
have eternal salvation, to follow the right road of reason, to feed on the
truth, to obtain peace and even happiness in this life.
10. Wherefore, to use the words of the Holy Pontiff, "Turn your steps
towards this unshaken rock upon which Our Savior founded the Universal Church,
so that the path of him who is sincere of heart may not be lost in devious
windings" (Reg. viii. 24, ad Sabin. episcop.). It is only the
charity of the Church and union with her which "unite what is divided,
restore order where there is confusion, temper inequalities, fill up
imperfections" (Registr. v. 58 (53) ad Virgil. episcop.). It is to
be firmly held "that nobody can rightly govern in earthly things, unless he
knows how to treat divine things, and that the peace of States depends upon the
universal peace of the Church" (Registr. v. 37 (20) ad Mauric.
Aug.). Hence the absolute necessity of a perfect harmony between the two powers,
ecclesiastical and civil, each being by the will of God called to sustain the
other. For, "power over all men was given from heaven that those who aspire
to do well may be aided, that the path to heaven may be made broader, and that
earthly sovereignty may be handmaid to heavenly sovereignty" (Registr.
iii. 61(65) ad Mauric. Aug.).
11. From these principles was derived that unconquerable firmness shown by
Gregory, which We, with the help of God, will study to imitate, resolved to
defend at all costs the rights and prerogatives of which the Roman Pontificate
is the guardian and the defender before God and man. But it was the same Gregory
who wrote to the patriarchs of Alexandria and Antioch: When the rights of the
Church are in question, "we must show, even by our death, that we do not,
through love of some private interest of our own want anything contrary to the
common weal" (Registr. v. 41). And to the Emperor Maurice: "He
who through vainglory raises his neck against God Almighty and against the
statutes of the Fathers, shall not bend my neck to him, not even with the
cutting of swords, as I trust in the same God Almighty" (Registr. v.
37). And to the Deacon Sabinian: "I am ready to die rather than permit that
the Church degenerate in my days. And you know well my ways, that I am
longsuffering; but when I decide not to bear any longer, I face danger with a
joyful soul" (Registr. v. 6 (iv. 47)).
12. Such were the fundamental maxims which the Pontiff Gregory constantly
proclaimed, and men listened to him. And thus, with Princes and peoples docile
to his words, the world regained true salvation, and put itself on the path of a
civilization which was noble and fruitful in blessings in proportion as it was
founded on the incontrovertible dictates of reason and moral discipline, and
derived its force from truth divinely revealed and from the maxims of the
Gospel.
13. But in those days the people, albeit rude, ignorant, and still destitute
of all civilization, were eager for life, and this no one could give except
Christ, through the Church, who "came that they may have life and have it
more abundantly" (John x. 10). And truly they had life and had it
abundantly, precisely because as no other life but the supernatural life of
souls could come from the Church, this includes in itself and gives additional
vigor to all the energies of life, even in the natural order. "If the root
be holy so are the branches," said St. Paul to the Gentiles, "and thou
being a wild olive art ingrafted in them, and art made partaker of the root and
of the fatness of the olive tree (Rom. xi. 16, 17).
14. Today, on the contrary, although the world enjoys a light so full of
Christian civilization and in this respect cannot for a moment be compared with
the times of Gregory, yet it seems as though it were tired of that life, which
has been and still is the chief and often the sole fount of so many blessings -
and not merely past but present blessings. And not only does this useless branch
cut itself off from the trunk, as happened in other times when heresies and
schisms arose, but it first lays the ax to the root of the tree, which is the
Church, and strives to dry up its vital sap that its ruin may be the surer and
that it may never blossom again.
15. In this error, which is the chief one of our time and the source whence
all the others spring, lies the origin of so much loss of eternal salvation
among men, and of all the ruins affecting religion which we continue to lament,
and of the many others which we still fear will happen if the evil be not
remedied. For all supernatural order is denied, and, as a consequence, the
divine intervention in the order of creation and in the government of the world
and in the possibility of miracles; and when all these are taken away the
foundations of the Christian religion are necessarily shaken. Men even go so far
as to impugn the arguments for the existence of God, denying with unparalleled
audacity and against the first principles of reason the invincible force of the
proof which from the effects ascends to their cause, that is God, and to the
notion of His infinite attributes. "For the invisible things of him, from
the creation of the world, are clearly seen, being understood by the things that
are made: his eternal power also and divinity" (Rom. i. 20). The way
is thus opened to other most grievous errors, equally repugnant to right reason
and pernicious to good morals.
16. The gratuitous negation of the supernatural principles, proper to knowledge
falsely so called, has actually become the postulate of a historical
criticism equally false. Everything that relates in any way to the supernatural
order, either as belonging to it, constituting it, presupposing it, or merely
finding its explanation in it, is erased without further investigation from the
pages of history. Such are the Divinity of Jesus Christ, His Incarnation through
the operation of the Holy Ghost, His Resurrection by His own power, and in
general all the dogmas of our faith. Science once placed on this false road,
there is no law of criticism to hold it back; and it cancels at its own caprice
from the holy books everything that does not suit it or that it believes to be
opposed to the pre-established theses it wishes to demonstrate. For take away
the supernatural order and the story of the origin of the Church must be built
on quite another foundation, and hence the innovators handle as they list the
monuments of history, forcing them to say what they wish them to say, and not
what the authors of those monuments meant.
17. Many are captivated by the great show of erudition which is held out
before them, and by the apparently convincing force of the proofs adduced, so
that they either lose the faith or feel that it is greatly shaken in them. There
are many too, firm in the faith, who accuse critical science of being
destructive, while in itself it is innocent and a sure element of investigation
when rightly applied. Both the former and the latter fail to see that they start
from a false hypothesis, that is to say, from science falsely so called, which
logically forces them to conclusions equally false. For given a false
philosophical principle everything deduced from it is vitiated. But these errors
will never be effectively refuted, unless by bringing about a change of front,
that is to say, unless those in error be forced to leave the field of criticism
in which they consider themselves firmly entrenched for the legitimate field of
philosophy through the abandonment of which they have fallen into their errors.
18. Meanwhile, however, it is painful to have to apply to men not lacking in
acumen and application the rebuke addressed by St. Paul to those who fail to
rise from earthly things to the things that are invisible: "They became
vain in their thoughts and their foolish heart was darkened; for professing
themselves to be wise they became fools" (Rom. i. 21, 22). And
surely foolish is the only name for him who consumes all his intellectual forces
in building upon sand.
19. Not less deplorable are the injuries which accrue from this negation to
the moral life of individuals and of civil society. Take away the principle that
there is anything divine outside this visible world, and you take away all check
upon unbridled passions even of the lowest and most shameful kind, and the minds
that become slaves to them riot in disorders of every species. "God gave
them up to the desires of their heart, unto uncleanness, to dishonor their own
bodies among themselves" (Rom. i. 24). You are well aware, Venerable
Brethren, how truly the plague of depravity triumphs on all sides, and how the
civil authority wherever it fails to have recourse to the means of help offered
by the supernatural order, finds itself quite unequal to the task of checking
it. Nay, authority will never be able to heal other evils as long as it forgets
or denies that all power comes from God. The only check a government can command
in this case is that of force; but force cannot be constantly employed, nor is
it always available yet the people continue to be undermined as by a secret
disease, they become discontented with everything, they proclaim the right to
act as they please, they stir up rebellions, they provoke revolutions, often of
extreme violence, in the State; they overthrow all rights human and divine. Take
away God, and all respect for civil laws, all regard for even the most necessary
institutions disappears; justice is scouted; the very liberty that belongs to
the law of nature is trodden underfoot; and men go so far as to destroy the very
structure of the family, which is the first and firmest foundation of the social
structure. The result is that in these days hostile to Christ, it has become
more difficult to apply the powerful remedies which the Redeemer has put into
the hands of the Church in order to keep the peoples within the lines of duty.
20. Yet there is no salvation for the world but in Christ: "For there is
no other name under heaven given to men whereby we may be saved" (Acts
iv. 12). To Christ then we must return. At His feet we must prostrate ourselves
to hear from His divine mouth the words of eternal life, for He alone can show
us the way of regeneration, He alone teach us the truth, He alone restore life
to us. It is He who has said: "I am the way, the truth, and the life"
(John xiv. 16). Men have once more attempted to work here below without
Him, they have begun to build up the edifice after rejecting the corner stone,
as the Apostle Peter rebuked the executioners of Jesus for doing. And lo! the
pile that has been raised again crumbles and falls upon the heads of the
builders, crushing them. But Jesus remains for ever the corner stone of human
society, and again the truth becomes apparent that without Him there is no
salvation: "This is the stone which has been rejected by you, the builders,
and which has become the head of the corner, neither is there salvation in any
other" (Acts iv. 11, 12).
21. From all this you will easily see, Venerable Brethren, the absolute
necessity imposed upon every one of us to receive with all the energy of our
souls and with all the means at our disposal, this supernatural life in every
branch of society - in the poor working man who earns his morsel of bread by the
sweat of his brow, from morning to night, and in the great ones of the earth who
preside over the destiny of nations. We must, above all else, have recourse to
prayer, both public and private, to implore the mercies of the Lord and His
powerful assistance. "Lord, save us - we perish" (Matthew viii.
25), we must repeat like the Apostles when buffeted by the storm.
22. But this is not enough. Gregory rebukes the bishop who, through love of
spiritual solitude and prayer, fails to go out into the battlefield to combat
strenuously for the cause of the Lord: "The name of bishop, which he bears,
is an empty one." And rightly so, for men's intellects are to be
enlightened by continual preaching of the truth, and errors are to be
efficaciously refuted by the principles of true and solid philosophy and
theology, and by all the means provided by the genuine progress of historical
investigation. It is still more necessary to inculcate properly on the minds of
all the moral maxims taught by Jesus Christ, so that everybody may learn to
conquer himself, to curb the passions of the mind, to stifle pride, to live in
obedience to authority, to love justice, to show charity towards all, to temper
with Christian love the bitterness of social inequalities, to detach the heart
from the goods of the world, to live contented with the state in which
Providence has placed us, while striving to better it by the fulfillment of our
duties, to thirst after the future life in the hope of eternal reward. But,
above all, is it necessary that these principles be instilled and made to
penetrate into the heart, so that true and solid piety may strike root there,
and all, both as men and as Christians, may recognize by their acts, as well as
by their words, the duties of their state and have recourse with filial
confidence to the Church and her ministers to obtain from them pardon for their
sins, to receive the strengthening grace of the Sacraments, and to regulate
their lives according to the laws of Christianity.
23. With these chief duties of the spiritual ministry it is necessary to
unite the charity of Christ, and when this moves us there will be nobody in
affliction who will not be consoled by us, no tears that will not be dried by
our hands, no need that will not be relieved by us. To the exercise of this
charity let us dedicate ourselves wholly; let all our own affairs give way
before it, let our personal interests and convenience be set aside for it,
making ourselves "all things to all men" (I Cor. ix. 22), to
gain all men to the Lord, giving up our very life itself, after the example of
Christ: "The good shepherd gives his life for his sheep (John x.
11).
24. These precious admonitions abound in the pages which the Pontiff St.
Gregory has left written, and they are expressed with far greater force in the
manifold examples of his admirable life.
25. Now since all this springs necessarily both from the nature of the
principles of Christian revelation, and from the intrinsic properties which Our
Apostolate should have, you see clearly, Venerable Brethren, how mistaken are
those who think they are doing service to the Church, and producing fruit for
the salvation of souls, when by a kind of prudence of the flesh they show
themselves liberal in concessions to science falsely so called, under the fatal
illusion that they are thus able more easily to win over those in error, but
really with the continual danger of being themselves lost. The truth is one, and
it cannot be halved; it lasts for ever, and is not subject to the vicissitudes
of the times. "Jesus Christ, today and yesterday, and the same for
ever" (Hebr. xiii. 8).
26. And so too are all they seriously mistaken who, occupying themselves with
the welfare of the people, and especially upholding the cause of the lower
classes, seek to promote above all else the material well-being of the body and
of life, but are utterly silent about their spiritual welfare and the very
serious duties which their profession as Christians enjoins upon them. They are
not ashamed to conceal sometimes, as though with a veil, certain fundamental
maxims of the Gospel, for fear lest otherwise the people refuse to hear and
follow them. It will certainly be the part of prudence to proceed gradually in
laying down the truth, when one has to do with men completely strangers to us
and completely separated from God. "Before using the steel, let the wounds
be felt with a light hand," as Gregory said (Registr. v. 44 (18) ad
Joannem episcop.). But even this carefulness would sink to mere prudence of the
flesh, were it proposed as the rule of constant and everyday action - all the
more since such a method would seem not to hold in due account that Divine Grace
which sustains the sacerdotal ministry and which is given not only to those who
exercise this ministry, but to all the faithful of Christ in order that our
words and our action may find an entrance into their heart. Gregory did not at
all understand this prudence, either in the preaching of the Gospel, or in the
many wonderful works undertaken by him to relieve misery. He did constantly what
the Apostles had done, for they, when they went out for the first time into the
world to bring into it the name of Christ, repeated the saying: "We preach
Christ crucified, a scandal for the Jews, a folly for the Gentiles" (I Cor.
i. 23). If ever there was a time in which human prudence seemed to offer the
only expedient for obtaining something in a world altogether unprepared to
receive doctrines so new, so repugnant to human passions, so opposed to the
civilization, then at its most flourishing period, of the Greeks and the Romans,
that time was certainly the epoch of the preaching of the faith. But the
Apostles disdained such prudence, because they understood well the precept of
God: "It pleased God by the foolishness of our preaching to save them that
believe (I Cor. i. 21). And as it ever was, so it is today, this
foolishness "to them that are saved, that is, to us, is the power of
God" (I Cor. i. 18). The scandal of the Crucified will ever furnish
us in the future, as it has done in the past, with the most potent of all
weapons; now as of yore in that sign we shall find victory.
27. But, Venerable Brethren, this weapon will lose much of its efficacy or be
altogether useless in the hands of men not accustomed to the interior life with
Christ, not educated in the school of true and solid piety, not thoroughly
inflamed with zeal for the glory of God and for the propagation of His kingdom.
So keenly did Gregory feel this necessity that he used the greatest care in
creating bishops and priests animated by a great desire for the divine glory and
for the true welfare of souls. And this was the intent he had before him in his
book on the Pastoral Rule, wherein are gathered together the laws
regulating the formation of the clergy and the government of bishops - laws most
suitable not for his times only but for our own. Like an "Argus full of
light," says his biographer, "he moved all round the eyes of his
pastoral solicitude through all the extent of the world" (Joann. Diac., lib
ii. c. 55), to discover and correct the failings and the negligence of the
clergy. Nay, he trembled at the very thought that barbarism and immortality
might obtain a footing in the life of the clergy, and he was deeply moved and
gave himself no peace whenever he learned of some infraction of the disciplinary
laws of the Church, and immediately administered admonition and correction,
threatening canonical penalties on transgressors, sometimes immediately applying
these penalties himself, and again removing the unworthy from their offices
without delay and without human respect.
28. Moreover, he inculcated the maxims which we frequently find in his
writings in such form as this: "In what frame of mind does one enter upon
the office of mediator between God and man who is not conscious of being
familiar with grace through a meritorious life?" (Reg. Past.i. 10).
"U passion lives in his actions, with what presumption does he hasten to
cure the wound, when he wears a scar on his very face?" (Reg. Past.
i. 9). What fruit can be expected for the salvation of souls if the apostles
"combat in their lives what they preach in their words?" (Reg.
Past. i. 2). "Truly he cannot remove the delinquencies of others who is
himself ravaged by the same" (Reg. Past. i. 11).
29. The picture of the true priest, as Gregory understands and describes him,
is the man "who, dying to all passions of the flesh, already lives
spiritually; who has no thought for the prosperity of the world; who has no fear
of adversity; who desires only internal things; who does not permit himself to
desire what belongs to others but is liberal of his own; who is all bowels of
compassion and inclines to forgiveness, but in forgiveness never swerves unduly
from the perfection of righteousness; who never commits unlawful actions, but
deplores as though they were his own the unlawful actions of others; who with
all affection of the heart compassionates the weakness of others, and rejoices
in the prosperity of his neighbor as in his own profit; who in all his doings so
renders himself a model for others as to have nothing whereof to be ashamed, at
least, as regards his external actions; who studies so to live that he may be
able to water the parched hearts of his neighbors with the waters of doctrine;
who knows through the use of prayer and through his own experience that he can
obtain from the Lord what he asks" (Reg. Past. i. 10).
30. How much thought, therefore, Venerable Brethren, must the Bishop
seriously take with himself and in the presence of God before laying hands on
young levites! "Let him never dare, either as an act of favor to anybody or
in response to petitions made to him, to promote any one to sacred orders whose
life and actions do not furnish a guarantee of worthiness" (Registr.
v 63 (58) ad universos episcopos per Hellad.) With what deliberation should he
reflect before entrusting the work of the apostolate to newly ordained priests!
If they be not duly tried under the vigilant guardianship of more prudent
priests, if there be not abundant evidence of their morality, of their
inclination for spiritual exercises, of their prompt obedience to all the norms
of action which are suggested by ecclesiastical custom or proved by long
experience, or imposed by those whom "the Holy Ghost has placed as bishops
to rule the Church of God" (Acts xx. 28), they will exercise the
sacerdotal ministry not for the salvation but for the ruin of the Christian
people. For they will provoke discord, and excite rebellion, more or less tacit,
thus offering to the world the sad spectacle of something like division amongst
us, whereas in truth these deplorable incidents are but the pride and unruliness
of a few. Oh! let those who stir up discord be altogether removed from every
office. Of such apostles the Church has no need; they are not apostles of Jesus
Christ Crucified but of themselves.
31. We seem to see still present before Our eyes the Holy Pontiff Gregory at
the Lateran Council, surrounded by a great number of bishops from all parts of
the world. Oh, how fruitful is the exhortation that falls from his lips on the
duties of the clergy! How his heart is consumed with zeal! His words are as
lightnings rending the perverse, as scourges striking the indolent, as flames of
divine love gently enfolding the most fervent. Read that wonderful homily of
Gregory, Venerable Brethren, and have it read and meditated by your clergy,
especially during the annual retreat (Hom. in Evang. i. 17).
32. Among other things, with unspeakable sorrow he exclaims: "Lo, the
world is full of priests, but rare indeed it is to find a worker in the hands of
God; we do indeed assume the priestly office, but the obligation of the office
we do not fulfill" (Hom. in Evang. n. 3). What force the Church would have
today could she count a worker in every priest! What abundant fruit would the
supernatural life of the Church produce in souls were it efficaciously promoted
by all. Gregory succeeded in his own times in strenuously stimulating this
spirit of energetic action, and such was the impulse given by him that the same
spirit was kept alive during the succeeding ages. The whole mediaeval period
bears what may be called the Gregorian imprint; almost everything it had indeed
came to it from the Pontiff - the rule of ecclesiastical government, the
manifold phases of charity and philanthropy in its social institutions, the
principles of the most perfect Christian asceticism and of monastic life, the
arrangement of the liturgy and the art of sacred music.
33. The times are indeed greatly changed. But, as We have more than once
repeated, nothing is changed in the life of the Church. From her Divine Founder
she has inherited the virtue of being able to supply at all times, however much
they may differ, all that is required not only for the spiritual welfare of
souls, which is the direct object of her mission, but also everything that aids
progress in true civilization, for this follows as a natural consequence of that
same mission.
34. For it cannot be but that the truths of the supernatural order, of which
the Church is the depository, promote also everything that is true, good, and
beautiful in the order of nature, and this the more efficaciously in proportion
as these truths are traced to the supreme principle of all truth, goodness and
beauty, which is God.
35. Human science gains greatly from revelation, for the latter opens out new
horizons and makes known sooner other truths of the natural order, and because
it opens the true road to investigation and keeps it safe from errors of
application and of method. Thus does the lighthouse show many things they
otherwise would not see, while it points out the rocks on which the vessel would
suffer shipwreck.
36. And since, for our moral discipline, the Divine Redeemer proposes as our
supreme model of perfection His heavenly Father (Matthew v. 48), that is,
the Divine goodness itself, who can fail to see the mighty impulse thence
accruing to the ever more perfect observance of the natural law inscribed in our
hearts, and consequently to the greater welfare of the individual, the family,
and universal society? The ferocity of the barbarians was thus transformed to
gentleness, woman was freed from subjection, slavery was repressed, order was
restored in the due and reciprocal independence upon one another of the various
classes of society, justice was recognized, the true liberty of souls was
proclaimed, and social and domestic peace assured.
37. Finally, the arts modeled on the supreme exemplar of all beauty which is
God Himself, from whom is derived all the beauty to be found in nature, are more
securely withdrawn from vulgar concepts and more efficaciously rise towards the
ideal, which is the life of all art. And how fruitful of good has been the
principle of employing them in the service of divine worship and of offering to
the Lord everything that is deemed to be worthy of him, by reason of its
richness, its goodness, its elegance of form. This principle has created sacred
art, which became and still continues to be the foundation of all profane art.
We have recently touched upon this in a special motu proprio, when speaking of
the restoration of the Roman Chant according to the ancient tradition and of
sacred music. And the same rules are applicable to the other arts, each in its
own sphere, so that what has been said of the Chant may also be said of
painting, sculpture, architecture; and towards all these most noble creations of
genius the Church has been lavish of inspiration and encouragement. The whole
human race, fed on this sublime ideal, raises magnificent temples, and here in
the House of God, as in its own house, lifts up its heart to heavenly things in
the midst of the treasures of all beautiful art, with the majesty of liturgical
ceremony, and to the accompaniment of the sweetest of song.
38. All these benefits, We repeat, the action of the Pontiff St. Gregory
succeeded in attaining in his own time and in the centuries that followed; and
these, too, it will be possible to attain today, by virtue of the intrinsic
efficacy of the principles which should guide us and of the means we have at our
disposal, while preserving with all zeal the good which by the grace of God is
still left us and "restoring in Christ" (Ephes. i. 10) all that
has unfortunately lapsed from the right rule.
39. We are glad to be able to close these Our Letters with the very words
with which St. Gregory concluded his memorable exhortation in the Lateran
Council: "These things, Brethren, you should meditate with all solicitude
yourselves and at the same time propose for the meditation of your neighbor.
Prepare to restore to God the fruit of the ministry you have received. But
everything we have indicated for you we shall obtain much better by prayer than
by our discourse. Let us pray: O God, by whose will we have been called as
pastors among the people, grant, we beseech Thee, that we may enabled to be in
Thy sight what we are said to be by the mouths of men" (Hom. cit.,
ii. 18).
40. And while We trust by the intercession of the holy Pontiff Gregory that
God may graciously hear Our prayer, We impart to all of you, Venerable Brethren,
and to your clergy and people the Apostolic benediction with all the affection
of Our heart, as a pledge of heavenly favors and in token of Our paternal good
will.
Given at Rome at St. Peter's on March 12, of the year 1904, on the feast of
St. Gregory I. Pope and Doctor of the Church, in the first year of Our
Pontificate.
PIUS X
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