ON THE EVILS AFFECTING MODERN SOCIETY
(Inscrutabili)
THEIR CAUSES AND REMEDIES
April 21, 1878
THE TRIPLE CROWN
OR TIARA
THE POPE'S OFFICIAL HEADDRESS
To Our Venerable Brethren, All Patriarchs, Primates,
Archbishops and Bishops of the Catholic World
In Grace and Communium with the Apostolic See
POPE LEO XIII
Venerable Brethren
Health and Apostolic Benediction
When by God's unsearchable design, We, though
all unworthy, were raised to the height of Apostolic Dignity, at once We
felt Ourselves moved by an urgent desire and, as it were, necessity, to
address you by letter, not merely to express to you Our very deep feeling
of love, but further, in accordance with the task entrusted to Us from
Heaven, to strengthen you who are called to share Our solicitude, that
you may help Us to carry on the battle now being waged on behalf of the
Church of God and the salvation of souls.
For, from the very beginning of Our Pontidicate,
the sad sight has presented itself to Us of the evils by which the human
race is oppressed on every side: the widespread subversion of the primary
truths on which, as on its foundations, human society is based; the obstinacy
of mind that will not brook any authority however lawful; the endless sources
of disagreement, whence arrive civil strife, and ruthless war and bloodshed;
the contempt of law which molds characters and is the shield of righteousness;
the insatiable craving for things perishable, with complete forgetfulness
of things eternal, leading up to the desperate madness whereby so many
wretched beings, in all directions, scruple not to lay violent hands upon
themselves; the reckless mismanagement, waste, and misappropriation of
the public funds; the shamelessness of those who, full of treachery, make
semblance of being champions of country, of freedom, and every kind of
right; in fine, the deadly kind of plague which infects society in its
inmost recesses, allowing it no respite and foreboding ever fresh disturbances
and final disaster.
Now the source of these evils lies chiefly, We are
convinced, in this, that the Holy and Venerable Authority of the Church,
which
in God's Name rules mankind, upholding and defending all Lawful Authority,
has been despised and set aside. The enemies of public order, being
fully aware of this, have thought nothing better suited to destroy
the foundations of society than to make an unflagging attack upon the Church
of God, to bring her into discredit and odium by spreading infamous calumnies,
and accusing her of being opposed to genuine progress. They labor to
weaken her influence and power by wounds daily inflicted,
and to overthrow
the Authority of the Bishop of Rome, in whom the abiding and unchangeable
principles of right and good find their earthly guardian and champion.
From these causes have originated laws that shake the structure of the
Catholic Church, the enacting whereof we have to deplore in so many
lands; hence too have flowed forth contempt of Eepiscopal Authority; the
obstacles thrown in the way of the discharge of Ecclesiastical duties;
the dissolution of Religious Bodies; and the confiscation of property
that was once the support of the Church's Ministers and of the poor.
Thereby public institutions vowed to charity and benevolence, have been
withdrawn from the wholesome control of the Church; thence also has arisen
that unchecked freedom to teach and spread abroad all mischievous principles,
while the Church's claim to train and educate youth is in every way outraged
and baffled. Such too is the purpose of the seizing of the temporal
power, conferred many centuries ago by Divine Providence on the Bishop
of Rome, that he might without let or hindrance use the Authority
conferred by Christ for the eternal welfare of the nations.
We have recalled to your minds, Venerable
Brothers, this deathly mass of ills, not to increase the sorrow
naturally caused you by this most sad state of things, but because we believe
that from its consideration you will most plainly see how serious are
the matters claiming our attention as well as devotedness, and with what
energy We should work and, more than ever, under the present adverse conditions,
protect, so far as in Us lies, the Church of Christ and the honor of the
Apostolic See--the objects of so many slanders--and assert their claims.
It is perfectly clear and evident, Venerable Brothers,
that the very notion of civilization is a fiction of the brain if it rest
not
on the abiding Principles of Truth and the unchanging Laws of Virtue
and Justice,
and if unfeigned love knit not together the wills of men,
and gently control the interchange and the character of their mutual service.
Now, who would make bold to deny that the Church, by spreading the Gospel
throughout the nations, has brought the light of truth amongst people utterly
savage and steeped in foul superstition, and has quickened them alike to
recognize the Divine Author of nature and duly to respect themselves?
Further, who will deny that the Church has done away with the curse of
slavery and restored men to the original dignity of their noble nature;
and--by uplifting the standard of Redemption in all quarters of the globe,
by introducing, or shielding under her protection, the Sciences and
Arts, by founding and taking into her keeping excellent Charitable Institutions
which provide relief for ills of every kind--has throughout the world,
in private or in public life, civilized the human race, freed it from degradation,
and with all care trained it to a way of living such as befits the dignity
and the hopes of man? And if any one of sound mind compare the age
in which We live, so hostile to Religion and to the Church of Christ, with
those happy times when the Church was revered as a mother by the nations,
beyond all question he will see that Our epoch is rushing wildly along
the straight road to destruction; while in those times which most abounded
in excellent institutions, peaceful life, wealth, and prosperity the
people showed themselves most obedient to the Church's Rule and Laws. Therefore,
if the many blessings We have mentioned, due to the agency and saving help
of the Church, are the true and worthy outcome of civilization, the Church
of Christ, far from being alien to or neglectful of progress, has a just
claim to all men's praise as its nurse, its mistress, and its mother.
Furthermore, that kind of civilzation which conflicts
with the Doctrines and Laws of Holy Church is nothing but a worthless imitation
and a meaningless name. Of this those peoples on whom the Gospel
Light has never shown afford ample proof, since in their mode of life a
shadowy semblance only of civilization is discoverable, while its true
and solid blessings have never been possessed. Undoubtedly that cannot
by any means be accounted the perfection of civilized life which sets
all Legitimate Authority boldly at definance; nor can that be regarded
as liberty which, shamefully and by the vilest means, spreading false principles,
and freely indulging the sensual gratification of lustful desires, claims
impunity for all crime and misdemeanor, and thwarts the goodly influence
of the worthiest citizens of whatsoever class. Delusive, perverse,
and misleading as are these principles, they cannot possibly have any inherent
power to perfect the human race and fill it with blessing, for sin
maketh nations miserable. (Prov. xiv. 34.)
Such principles, as a matter of course, must hurry nations, corrupted in
mind and heart, into every kind of infamy, weaken all right order, and
thus, sooner or later, bring the standing and peace of the State to the
very brink of ruin.
Again, if We consider the achievements of the See
of Rome, what can be more wicked than to deny how much and how well the
Roman Bishops have served civilized society at large? For Our predecessors,
to provide for the peoples' good, encountered struggles of every kind,
endured to the utmost burdensome toils, and never hesitated to expose
themselves to most dangerous trials. With eyes fixed on Heaven, they
neither bowed down their head before the threats of the wicked, nor allowed
themselves to be led by flattery or bribes into unworthy compliance. This
Apostolic Chair it was that gathered and held together the crumbling remains
of the old order of things; this was the kindly light by whose help the
culture of Christian times shone far and wide; this was an anchor of safety
in the fierce storms by which the human race has been convulsed; this was
the sacred bond of union that linked together nations distant in region
and differing in character; in short, this was a common center from which
was sought instruction in faith and Religion, no less than guidance and
advice for the maintenance of peace and the functions of practical life.
In very truth it is the glory of the supreme Pontiffs that they steadfastly
set themselves up as a wall and a bulwark to save human society from falling
back into its former superstition and barbarism.
Would that this healing authority had never been
slighted or set aside! Assuredly neither would the civil power have
lost that venerable and sacred glory, the lustrous gift of Religion, which
alone renders the state of subjection noble and worthy of man; nor would
so many revolutions and wars have been fomented to ravage the world with
desolation and bloodshed; nor would kingdoms, once so flourishing, but
now fallen from the height of prosperity, lie crushed beneath the weight
of every kind of calamity. Of this the peoples of the East also furnish
an example, who, by breaking the most sweet yoke that bound them to this
Apostolic See, forfeited the splendor of their former greatness, their
renown in science and art, and the dignity of their sway.
Of these remarkable benefits, however, which illustrious
monuments of all ages prove to have flowed upon every quarter of the world
from the Apostolic See, this land of Italy has had the most abounding experience.
For it has derived advantages from the See of Rome proportionate to the
greater nearness of its natural situation. Unquestionably to the
Roman Pontiffs it is that Italy must own herself indebted for the substantial
glory and majesty by which she has been pre-eminent amongst nations.
The influence and fatherly care of the Popes have upon many occasions shielded
her from hostile attack and brought her relief and aid, the effect of which
is that the Catholic faith has been ever maintained inviolate in the hearts
of Italians.
These services of Our predecessors, to omit mention
of many others, have been witnessed to in a special manner by the records
of the times of St. Leo the Great, Alexander III., Innocent III., St. Pius
V., Leo X., and other Pontiffs, by whose exertions or protection Italy
has escaped unscathed from the utter destruction threatened by barbarians;
has kept unimpared her old faith, and, amid the darkness and defilement
of a ruder age, has cultivated and preserved in vigor the luster of science
and the splendor of art. To this furthermore bears witness Our Own
fostering city, the home of the Popes, which, under their rule, reaped
this special benefit, that it not only was the strong citadel of the faith,
but also became the refuge of the liberal arts and the very abode of culture,
winninig for itself the admiration and respect of the whole world.
As these facts in all their amplitude have been handed down in historical
records for the perpetual remembrance of posterity, it is easy to understand
that it is only with hostile design and shameless calumny--meant to mislead
men--that any one can venture in speech and in writing to accuse the Apostolic
See of being an obstacle to the civil progress of nations and to the prosperity
of Italy.
Seeing, therefore, that all the hopes of Italy and
of the whole world lie in the power, so beneficent to the common good and
profit, wherewith the authority of the Apostolic See is endowed, and in
the close union which binds all the faithful of Christ to the Roman Pontiff,
We recognize that nothing should be nearer Our heart than how to preserve
safe and sound the dignity of the Roman See, and to strengthen ever more
and more the union of members with the Head, of the children with their
Father.
Wherefore, that We may above all things, and in
every possible way, maintain the rights and freedom of this Holy See, We
shall never cease to strive that Our Authority may meet with due deference;
that obstacles may be removed which hamper the free exercise of Our Ministry
and that we may be restored to that condition of things in which the design
of God's Wisdom had long ago placed the Roman Pontiffs. We are moved
to demand this restoration, Venerable Brethren, not by any feeling of ambition
or desire of Supremacy, but by the nature of Our Office and by Our Sacred
Promise confirmed on oath; and further, not only because this Sovereignty
is essential to protect and preserve the full liberty of the spiritual
power but also because it is an ascertained fact that, when the temporal
Sovereignty of the Apostolic See is in question, the cause of the public
good and the well-being of all human society in general are also at stake.
Hence We cannot omit, in the discharge of Our duty, which obliges Us to
guard the rights of Holy Church, to renew and confirm in every particular
by this Our Letter those declarations and protests which Pius IX., of sacred
memory, Our predecessor, on many and repeated occasions published against
the seizing of the civil Sovereignty and the infringement of Rights belonging
to the Roman Church. At the same time We address ourselves to Princes
and Chief Rulers of the Nations, and earnestly beseech them in the august
Name of the Most High God, not to refuse the Church's aid, proffered them
in a season of such need, but with united and friendly aims to join themselves
to her as the source of Authority and Salvation, and to attach themselves
to her more and more in the bonds of hearty love and devotedness.
God grant that--seeing the truth of Our words and considering within themselves
that the teaching of Christ is, as Augustine used to say, "a great blessing
to the State, if obeyed," (Epistola 138 [vel 5], ad Marcel,
n. 15.) and that their own peace and safety, as well as that
of their people, is bound up with the safety of the Church and the Reverence
due to her--they may give their whole thought and care to mitigating the
evils by which the Church and its Visible Head are harassed, and so it
may at last come to pass that the peoples whom they Govern may enter on
the way of justice and peace, and rejoice in a happy era of prosperity
and glory.
In the next place, in order that the union of hearts
between their Chief Pastor and the whole Catholic flock may daily be strengthened,
We have call upon you, Venerable Brothers, with particular earnestness,
and strongly urge you to kindle, with Priestly zeal and Pastoral care,
the fire of the love of Religion among the faithful entrusted to you, that
their attachment to this Chair of Truth and Justice may become closer and
firmer, that they may welcome all its Teachings with thorough assent of
mind and will, wholly rejecting such opinions, even when most widely received,
as they know to be contrary to the Church's Doctrine. In this matter,
the Roman Pontiffs, Our predecessors, and last of all, Pius IX., of sacred
memory, especially in the General Council of the Vatican, have not neglected,
so often as there was need, to condemn wide-spreading errors and to
smite them with the Apostlic condemnation. This they did, keeping
before their eyes the words of St. Paul: Beware lest any man cheat
you by philosophy and vain deceit, according to the tradition of men, according
to the elements of the world and not according to Christ. (Coloss.
ii. 8.) All such censures, We, following in the steps of Our
predecessors, do confirm and renew from this Apostolic Seat of Truth, whilst
We earnestly ask of the Father of Lights that all the faithful, brought
to thorough agreement in the like feeling and the same belief, may think
and speak even as Ourselves. It is your duty, Venerable Brothers,
sedulously to strive that the seed of Heavenly Doctrine be sown broadcast
in the field of God, and that the Teachings of the Catholic Faith may be
implanted early in the souls of the faithful, may strike deep root in them,
and be kept free from the ruinous blight of error. The more the enemies
of Religion exert themselves to offer the uniformed, especially the young,
such instruction as darkens the mind and corrupts morals, the more actively
should we endeavor that not only a suitable and solid method of education
may flourish, but above all that this education be wholly in harmony with
the Catholic Faith in its literature and system of training, and chiefly
in Philosophy, upon which the Foundation of other Sciences in great measure
depends. Philosophy seeks not the overthrow of Divine Revelation,
but delights rather to prepare its way, and defend it against assailants,
both by example and in wirtten works, as the great Augustine and the Angelic
Doctor, with all other teachers of Christian Wisdom, have proved to Us.
Now, the training of youth most conducive to the
defense of True Faith and Religion and to the preservation of morality
must find its beginning from an early stage within the circle of home life;
and this family Christian training, sadly undermined in these our times,
cannot possibly be restored to its due dignity, save by those Laws under
which it was established in the Church by her Divine Founder Himself.
Our Lord Jesus Christ, by raising to the dignity of a Sacrament the contract
of Matrimony, in which He would have His Own union with the Church typified,
not only made the marriage-tie more Holy, but in addition provided efficacious
sources of aid for parents and children alike, so that, by the discharge
of their duties one to another, they might with greater ease attain to
happiness both in time and in eternity. But when impious Laws, setting
at naught the Sanctity of this great Sacrament, put it on the same footing
with mere civil contracts, the lamentable result followed, that, outraging
the dignity of Christian Matrimony, citizens made use of legalized concubinage
in place of marriage; husband and wife neglected their bounden duty to
each other; children refused obedience and reverence to their parents;
the bonds of domestic love were loosened; and, alas! the worst scandal
and of all the most ruinous to public morality, very frequently an unholy
passion opened the door to disastrous and fatal separations. These
most unhappy and painful consequences, Venerable Brothers, cannot
fail to arouse your zeal and move you constantly and earnestly to warn
the faithful committed to your charge, to listen with docility to your
teaching regarding the Holiness of Christian marriage, and to obey the
Laws by which the Church controls the duties of married people and of their
offspring.
Then, indeed, will that most desirable result come
about, that the character and conduct of individuals also will be reformed;
for just as from a rotten stock are produced healthless branches or worthless
fruits, so do the ravages of a pestilence which ruins the household spread
wide their cruel infection to the hurt and injury of individual citizens.
On the other hand, when domestic society is fashioned in the mold of Christian
life, each member will gradually grow accustomed to the love of Religion
and Piety, to the abhorrence of false and harmful teaching, to the pursuit
of virtue, to obedience to elders, and to the restraint of that insatiable
seeking after self-interest alone, which so spoils and weakens the character
of men. To this end it will certainly help not a little to encourage
and promote those Pious Associations which have been established,in our
own times especially, with so great profit to the cause of the Catholic
Religion.
Great indeed and beyond the strength of man are
these objects of our hopes and prayers, Venerable Brothers; but since God
has made the nations of the earth for health, (Wisdom
i. 14.) when He founded the Church for the welfare of the
peoples, and promised that He will abide with her by His assistance to
the end of the world, We firmly trust that, through your endeavors, the
human race, taking warning from so many evils and visitations, will submit
themselves at length to the Church, and turn for health and prosperity
to the Infallible Guidance of this Apostolic See.
Meanwhile, Venerable Brothers, before bringing this
Letter to a close. We must express Our congratulations on the
striking harmony and concord which unites your minds among yourselves and
with this Apostolic See. This perfect union We regard as not
merely an impregnable bulwark against hostile attacks, but also as an auspicious
and happy omen, presaging better times for the Church; and, while it yields
great relief to Our weakness, it seasonably encourages Us to endure with
readiness all labors and all struggles on behalf of God's Church in the
arduous task which We have undertaken.
Moreover, from the causes of hope and rejoicing
which We have made known to you, We cannot separate those tokens of love
and obedience which you, Venerable Brethren, in these first days of Our
Pontificate, have shown Our lowliness, and with you so many of the Clergy
and the faithful, who, by letters sent, by offerings given, by Pilgrimages
undertaken, and by other works of love, have made it clear that the devotion
and Charity which they manifested to Our most worthy predecessor, still
lasts, so strong and steadfast and unchanged, as not to slacken towards
the person of a successor so much inferior. For these splendid tokens
of Catholic Piety We humbly confess to the Lord that He is good and gracious,
while to you, Venerable Brothers, and to all Our beloved children from
whom We have received them, We publicly, from the bottom of Our heart,
avow the grateful feelings of Our soul, cherishing the fullest confidence
that, in the present critical state of things and in the difficulties of
the times, this your devotion and love and the devotion and love of the
faithful will never fail Us. Nor have We any doubt that these conspicuous
examples of filial Piety and Christian Virtue will be of such avail as
to make Our most merciful God, moved by these dutiful deeds, look with
favor on His flock and grant the Church peace and victory. But as
We are sure that this peace and victory will more quickly and more readily
be given Us, if the faithful are unremitting in their Prayers and supplications
to obtain it, We earnestly exhort you, Venerable Brothers, to stir up for
this end the zeal and ardor of the faithful, taking the Immaculate Queen
of Heaven as their intercessor with God, and having recourse as their advocates
to St. Joseph, the Heavenly Patron of the Church, and to SS. Peter and
Paul, the Princes of the Apostles. To the Powerful Patronage of all
these We humbly commit Our lowliness, all ranks of the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy,
and all the flock of Christ Our Lord.
For the rest, We trust that these days, on which
We renew the memory of Jesus Christ, risen from the dead, may be to you,
Venerable Brothers, and to all the fold of God, a source of blessing and
salvation and fulness of Holy Joy, Praying our msot Gracious God that by
the Blood of the Lamb without spot, which blotted out the handwriting that
was against Us, the sins We have committed may be washed away, and the
judgment We are suffering for them may mercifully be mitigated.
The Grace of Our Lord Jesus Christ, and the
Charity of God, and the Communication of the Holy Ghost be with you all,
(2
Cor. xiii. 13.) Venerable Brothers; to each and all of whom,
as well as to Our beloved children, the Clergy and faithful of y our Churches,
as a pledge of Our special good-will and as an earnest of the protection
of Heaven, We lovingly impart the Apostolic Benediction.
Pope Leo XIII
DESCRIPTION OF MAGNIFICENT
PAPAL CORONATION
As Peter was given a new name so does the new Supreme
Pontiff become known by another. After the election he extends his first
blessing to the people -- a Benediction which was not given in the open
for years until Pope Pius XI established the custom.
The Coronation, one of the most magnificent of
Vatican Ceremonies, takes place shortly after the election. With
the Pope carried high in a golden chair and attended by brilliantly attired
chamberlains and soldiers, the Coronation Mass is an unrivaled spectacle
of beauty, dignity, and ancient pageantry. At the Coronation, in
the midst of the pomp and splendor, a master of ceremonies recites in Latin:
"Holy Father, thus does the glory of the world pass away." As the
first Cardinal Deacon places the three-crowned Tiara on the head of the
Pope, he says: "Receive the three-crowned Tiara, and know that thou art
the Father of Princes and Kings, the Pastor of the earth, and Vicar of
Jesus Christ, to whom be honor and glory forever. Amen."
The CORONATION of Pope Pius XII took place on
the balcony of St. Peter's in March, 1939. (From the book "The
Vatican and Holy Year" by Stephen S. Fenichell & Phillip Andrews. --
1950 edition.)
(Tradition is an equal part of the Authoritative teaching of the Church -- From the book "The Immaculate Way" by Brian Farrelly, S.M.M. -- 1963 edition.)
The True Answer To World Peace -- uswest site
Triumph Of Church -- uswest site
The True
Answer To World Peace -- reagan site
Triumph
Of Mary -- reagan site