REVIEW OF HIS PONTIFICATE
March 19, 1902
THE TRIPLE CROWN
OR TIARA
THE POPE'S OFFICIAL HEADDRESS
Apostolical Letter of Pope Leo XIII
on
Review of His Pontiicate
To Our Venerable Brethren, All Patriarchs, Primates,
Archbishops and Bishops of The Catholic World
In Grace and Communion with the Apostolic See
Venerable Brethren
Health and Apostolic Benediction
Having come to the twenty-fifth year of Our
Apostolic Ministry, and being astonished Ourselves at the length of the
way which We have travelled amidst painful and continual cares, We are
naturally inspired to lift Our thoughts to the ever-blessed God, Who, with
so many other favors, has deigned to accord Us a Pontificate the length
of which has scarcely been surpassed in history. To the Father
of all mankind, therefore; to Him who holds in His Hands the Mysterious
Secret of life, ascends, as an imperious need of the heart, the Canticle
of Our Thanksgiving. Assuredly the eye of man cannot pierce all the
depths of the designs of God in thus prolonging Our old age beyond the
limits of hope: here We can only be silent and adore. But there is
one thing which We do well understand; namely, that as it has pleased Him,
and still pleases Him, to preserve Our existence, a great duty is incumbent
on Us--to live for the good and the development of His Immaculate Spouse,
the Holy Church; and far from losing courage in the midst of cares and
pains, to Consecrate to Him the remainder of Our strength unto Our last
sigh.
After paying a just tribute of gratitude to Our
Heavenly Father, to Whom be Honor and Glory for all Eternity, it is most
agreeable to Us to turn Our thoughts and address Our words to you, Venerable
Brothers, who, called by the Holy Ghost to Govern the appointed portions
of the flock of Jesus Christ, share thereby with Us in the struggle and
triumph, the sorrows and joys, of the Ministry of Pastors. No, they
shall never fade from Our memory, those frequent and striking testimonials
of Religious veneration which you have lavished upon Us during the course
of Our Pontificate, and which you still multiply with emulation full of
tenderness in the present circumstances. Intimately united with you already
by Our duty and Our Paternal love, We are more closely drawn by those proofs
of your devotedness, so dear to Our hearts, less for what was personal
in them in Our regard than for the inviolable attachment which they denote
to
this Apostolic See, center and mainstay of all the Sees of Catholicity.
If it has always been necessary that, according to the different grades
of the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, all the children of the Church should
be sedulously united by the bonds of mutual Charity and by the pursuit
of the same objects, so as to form but one heart and one soul, this union
is become in our day more indispensable than ever. For who can
igniore the vast conspiracy of hostile forces which aims today at destroying
and making disappear the great work of Jesus Christ, by endeavoring, with
a fury which knows no limits, to rob man, in the intellectual order, of
the treasure of Heavenly Truths, and, in the social order, to obliterate
the most Holy, the most salutary Christian Institutions. But
by all this you yourselves are impressed everyday. You who, more
than once, have poured out to Us your anxieties and anguish, deploring
the multitude of prejudices, the false systems and errors which are disseminated
with impunity amongst the masses of the people. What snares are set
one very side for the souls of those who believe! What obstacles
are multiplied to weaken, and if possible to destroy the beneficent action
of the Church! And, meanwhile, as if to add derision to injustice,
the Church herself is charged with having lost her pristine vigor, and
with being powerless to stem the tide of overflowing passions which threaten
to carry everything away.
We would wish, Venerable Brothers, to entertain
you with subjects less sad and more in harmony with the great and auspicious
occasion which induces Us to address you. But nothing suggests such
tenor of discourse--neither the grievous trials of the church which call
with instance for prompt remedies; nor the conditions of contemporary society
which, already undermined from a moral and material point of view, tend
toward a yet more gloomy future by the abandonment of the great Christian
Traditions; a Law of Providence, confirmed by history, proving that the
great Religious Principles cannot be renounced without shaking at the same
time the foundations of order and social prosperity. In those circumstances,
in order to allow souls to recover, to furnish them with a new provision
of faith and courage, it appears to Us opportune and useful to weigh attentively,
in its origin, causes, and various forms, the implacable war that is waged
against the Church; and in denouncing its pernicious consequences to indicate
a remedy. May Our words, therefore, resound loudly, though they but
recall truths already asserted; may they be hearkened to, not only by the
children of Catholic Unity, but also by those who differ from Us, and even
by the unhappy souls who have no longer anyfaith; for they are all children
of one Father, all destined for the same supreme good: may Our words, finally,
be received as the testament which, at the short distance that separates
Us from eternity, We would wish to leave to the people as a presage of
the salvation which We desire for all.
During the whole course of her history the Church
of Christ has had to combat and suffer for Truth and Justice. Instituted
by the Divine Redeemer Himself to establish throughout the world the Kingdom
of God, she must, by the light of the Gospel Law, lead fallen humanity
to its immortal destinies; that is, to make it enter upon the possession
of the Blessings without end which God has promised us, and to which our
unaided natural power could never rise--a Heavenly mission in the pursuit
of which the church could not fail to be opposed by the countless passions
begotten of man's primal fall and consequent corruption--pride, cupidity,
unbridled desire of material pleasures; against all the vices and disorders
springing from those poisonous roots the Church has ever been the most
potent means of restraint. Nor should we be astonished at the persecutions
which have arisen, in consequence, since the Divine Master foretold them,
and they must continue as long as this world endures. What words
did He address to His Disciples when sending them to carry the treasure
of His Doctrines to all Nations? They are familiar to us all: "You
will be persecuted from city to city: you will be hated and despised for
My Name's sake: you will be dragged before the tribunals, and condemned
to extreme punishment." And wishing to encourage them for the hour
of trail, He proposed Himself as their example: if the world hate
you, know ye that it hath hated Me before you. (St.
John xv. 18.)
Certainly, no one who takes a just and unbiased
view of things can explain the motive of this hatred. What offence
was ever committed, what hostility deserved by the Divine Redeemer?
Having come down amongst men through an impulse of Divine Charity, He had
taught a Doctrine that was blameless, consoling, most efficacious to unite
mankind in a brotherhood of peace and Love; He had coveted neither earthly
greatness nor honor; He had usurped no one's right; on the contraty, He
was full of pity for the weak, the sick, the poor, the sinner, and the
oppressed: hence His life was but a passage to distribute with munificent
hand His benefits amongst men. We must acknowledge, in consequence,
that it was simply by an excess of human malice, so much the more deplorable
because unjust, that, nevertheless, He became, in Truth, according to the
Prophecy of Simeon, "a sign to be contradicted."
What wonder, then, if the Catholic Church, which
continues His Divine mission, and is the incorruptible depositary of His
Truths, has inherited the same lot. The world is always consistent
in its way. Near the sons of God are constantly present the satellites
of that great adversary of the human race, who, a rebel from the beginning
against the Most High, is named in the Gospel the prince of this world.
It is on this account that the spirit of the world, in the presence of
the Law of Him who announces it in the Name of God, swells with the measureless
pride of an independence that ill befits it. Alas, how often, in more stormy
epochs, with unheard of cruelty and shameless injustice, and to the evident
undoing of the whole social body, have the adversaries banded themselves
together for the foolhardy enterprise of dissolving the work of God! And
not succeeding with one manner of persecution, they adopted others.
For three long centuries, the Roman Empire, abusing its brute force, scattered
the bodies of martyrs through all its provinces, and bathed with their
blood every foot of ground in this Sacred City of Rome; while heresy, acting
in concert,whether hidden beneath a mask or with open effrontery, with
sophistry and snare, endeavored to destroy at least the harmony and unity
of Faith. Then were set loose, like a devastating tempest, the hordes
of barbarians from the north, and the Moslems from the south, leaving in
their wake only ruins in a desert. So has been transmitted from
age to age the melancholy heritage of hatred by which the Spouse of Christ
has been overwhelmed.
There followed a Caesarism as suspicious, as
powerful, jealous of all other power, no matter what development it might
itself have thence acquired, which incessantly attacked the Church, to
usurp her rights and tread her liberties under foot. The heart bleeds
to see this mother so often oppressed with anguish and woes unutterable.
However, triumphing over every obstacle, over all violence and all tyrannies,
she pitched her peaceful tents more and more widely; she saved from disaster
the glorious patrimony of arts, history, science, and letters; and imbuing
deeply the whole body of society with the Spirit of the Gospel, she created
Christian civilization--that civilization to which the Nations, subjected
to its beneficent influence, owe the equity of their Laws, the mildness
of their manners, the protection of the weak, pity for the afflicted and
the poor, respect for the rights and dignity of all men and thereby, as
far as it is possible amidst the fluctuations of human affairs, the calm
of social life which springs from the just and prudent alliance between
justice and liberty.
Those proofs of the intrinsic excellence of the
Church are as striking and sublime as they have been enduring. Nevertheless,
as in the Middle Ages and during the first centuries, so in those nearer
our own, we see the Church assailed more harshly, in a certain sense at
least, and more distressingly than ever. Through a series of well-known
historical causes, the pretended Reformation of the sixteenth century raised
the standard of revolt; and, determining to strike out straight into the
heart of the Church, audaciously attacked the Papacy. It broke the
precious link of the ancient Unity of faith and Authority, which, multiplying
a hundredfold Power, Prestige, and Glory, thanks to the harmonious pursuit
of the same objects, united all Nations under one Staff and one Shepherd.
This Unity being broken, a pernicious principle of disintegration was introduced
amongst all ranks of Christians.
We do not, indeed, hereby pretend to affirm that
from the beginning there was a set purpose of destroying the Principle
of Christianity in the heart of society; but by refusing, on the one hand,
to acknowledge the Supremacy of the Holy See, the effective cause and
bond of Unity, and by proclaiming, on the other, the principle of private
judgment, the Divine Structure of Faith was shaken to its deepest Foundations
and the way was opened to infinite variations, to doubts and denials of
the most important things, to an extent which the innovators themselves
had not foreseen. The way was opened. Then came the contemptuous
and mocking philosophism of the eighteenth century, which advanced farther.
It turned to ridicule the Sacred Canon of the Scriptures and rejected the
entire system of revealed Truths, with the purpose of being able ultimately
to root out from the conscience of the people all Religious belief and
stifling within it the last breath of the Spirit of Christianity.
It is from this source that have flowed rationalism, pantheism, naturalism,
and materialism--poisonous and destructive systems which, under different
appearances, renew the ancient errors triumphantly refuted by the Fathers
and Doctors of the Church; so that the pride of modern times, by excessive
confidence in its own lights, was stricken with blindness; and, like paganism,
subsisted thenceforth on fancies, even concerning the attibutes of the
human soul and the immortal destinies which constitute our Glorious Heritage.
The struggle against the Church thus took on
a more serious character than in the past, no less because of the vehemence
of the assault than because of its Universality. Contemporary
unbelief does not confine itself to denying or doubting Articles of Faith.
What
it combats is the whole body of Principles which Sacred Revelation and
sound Philosophy maintain; those fundamental and Holy Principles which
Teach man the Supreme Object of his earthly life, which keep him in the
performance of his duty, which inspire his heart with courage and resignation,
and which, in promising him incorruptible Justice and perfect happiness
beyond the tomb, enable him to subject time to eternity, earth to Heaven.
But
what takes the place of these Principles which form the incomparable strength
bestowed by Faith? A frightful scepticism, which chills the heart
and stifles in the conscience every magnanimous aspiration.
This system of practical atheism must necessarily
cause, as in point of fact it does, a profound dis order in the domain
of morals; for, as the greatest Philosophers of antiquity have declared,
Religion
is the Chief Foundation of Justice and Virtue. When the bonds
are broken which unite man to God, Who is the Sovereign Legislator and
Universal Judge, a mere phantom of morality remains; a morality which is
purely civic and, as it is termed, independent, which, abstracting from
the Eternal Mind and the Laws of God, descends inevitably till it reaches
the ultimate conclusion of making man a law unto himself. Incapable,
in consequence, of rising on the Wings of Christian hope to the goods of
the world beyond, man will seek a material satisfaction in the comforts
and enjoyments of life. There will be excited in him a thirst for
pleasure, a desire of riches, and an eager quest of rapid and unlimited
wealth, even at the cost of Justice. There will be enkindled in him
every ambition and a feverish and frenzied desire to gratify them even
indefiance of law, and he will be swayed by a contempt for right and for
public authority,as well as by licentiousness of life which, when the condition
becomes general, will mark the real decay of society.
Perhaps We may be accused of exaggerating the sad
consequences of the disorders of which We speak. No; for the reality
is before our eyes and warrants but too truly Our forebodings. It
is manifest that if there is not some betterment soon, the bases of society
will crumble and drag down with them the great and eternal Principles of
Law and Morality.
It is in consequence of this condition of things
that the social body, beginning with the family, is suffering such serious
evils. For the lay State, forgetting its limitations and the essential
object of the Authority which it wields, has laid its hands on the marriage
bond to profane it and has stripped it of its Religious character; it has
dared as much as it could in the matter of that natural right which parents
possess to educate their children, and in many countries it has destroyed
the stability of marriage by giving a legal sanction to the licentious
institution of divorce. All know the result of these attacks.
More than words can tell they have multiplied marriages which are prompted
only by shameful passions, which are speedily dissolved, and which, at
times, bring about bloody tragedies, at others the most shocking infidelities.
We say nothing of the innocent offspring of these unions, the children
who are abandoned or whose morals are corrupted on one side by the bad
example of the parents, on the other by the poison which the officially
lay State constantly pours into their hearts.
Along with the family, the political and social
order is also endangered by doctrines which ascribe a false origin to Authority,
and which have corrupted the genuine conception of Government. For
if Sovereign Authority is derived formally from the consent of the people
and not from God, Who is the Supreme and Eternal Principle of all Power,
it loses in the eyes of the governed its most august characteristic and
degenerates into an artificial sovereignty which rests on unstable and
shifting bases, namely, the will of those from whom it is said to be derived.
Do we not see the consequences of this error in the caraying out of our
Laws? Too often these Laws instead of being sound reason formulated
in writing are but the expression of the power of the greater number and
the will of the predominant political party. It is thus that the
mob is cajoled in seeking to satisfy its desires; that a loose rein is
given to popular passion, even when it disturbs the laboriously acquired
tranquillity of the State, when the disorder in the last extremity can
only be quelled by violent measures and the shedding of blood.
Consequent upon the repudiation of those Christian
Principles which had contributed so efficaciously to unite the Nations
in the bonds of brotherhood, and to bring all humanity into one great family,
there has arisen little by little, in the international order, a system
of jealous egoism, in consequence of which the Nations now watch each other,
if not with hate, at least with the suspicion of rivals. Hence, in
their great undertakings they lose sight of the lofty Principles of Morality
and Justice and forget the protection which the feeble and the oppressed
have a right to demand. In the desire by which they are actuated
to increase their National riches, they regard only the opportunity which
circumstances afford, the advantages of successful enterprises, and the
tempting bait of an accomplished fact, sure that no one will trouble them
in the name of right or the respect which right can claim. Such are
the fatal principles which have consecrated material power as the Supreme
Law of the world, and to them is to be imputed the limitless increase of
military establishments and that armed peace which in many respects is
equivalent to a disastrous war.
This lamentable confusion in the realm of ideas
has produced restlessness among the people, outbreaks, and the general
spirit of rebellion. From these have sprung the frequent popular
agitations and disorders of our times which are only the preludes of much
more terrible disorders in the future. The miserable condition, also, of
a large part of the poorer classes, who assuredly merit our assistance,
furnishes an admirable opportunity for the designs of scheming agitators,
and especially of socialist factions, which hold out to the humbler classes
the most extravagant promises and use them to carry out the most dreadful
projects.
Those who start on a dangerous descent are soon
hurled down in spite of themselves into the abyss. Prompted by an
inexorable logic, a society of veritable criminals has been organized,
which, at its very first appearance, has, by its savage character, startled
the world. Thanks to the solidarity of its construction and its international
ramifications, it has already attempted its wicked work, for it stands
in fear of nothing and recoils before no danger. Repudiating all
union with society, and cynically scoffing at Law, Religion, and Morality,
its adepts have adopted the name of Anarchists, and propose to utterly
subvert the actual conditions of society by making use of every means that
a blind and savage passion can suggest. And as society draws its
unity and its life from the Authority which governs it, so it is against
Authority that anarchy directs its efforts. Who does not feel a quiver
of horror, indignation, and pity at the remembrance of the many victims
that of late have fallen beneath its blows, emperors, empresses, kings,
presidents of powerful Republics, whose only crime was the Sovereign Power
with which they were invested?
In presence of the immensity of the evils which
overwhelm society and the perils which menace it, Our Duty compels Us
to again warn all men of good will, especially those who occupy exalted
positions, and to conjure them as We now do, to devise what remedies the
situation calls for and with prudent energy to apply them without delay.
First of all, it behooves them to inquire what remedies
are needed, and to examine well their potency in the present needs.
We have extolled liberty and its advantages to the skies, and have proclaimed
it as a sovereign remedy and an incomparable instrument of peace and prosperity
which will be most fruitful in good results. But facts have clearly
shown us that it does not possess the Power which is attributed to it.
Economic conflicts, struggles of the classes are surging around us like
a conflagration on all sides, and there is no promise of the dawn of the
day of public tranquillity. In point of fact, and there is no one
who does not see it, liberty as it is now understood, that is to say, a
liberty granted indiscriminately to Truth and to error, to good and to
evil, ends only in destroying all that is Noble, Generous, and Holy, and
in opening the gates still wider to crime, to suicide, and to a multitude
of the most degrading passions.
The doctrine is also taught that the development
of public instruction, by making the people more polished and more enlightened,
would suffice as a check to unhealthy tendencies and to keep man in the
ways of uprightness and probity. But a hard reality has made us
feel every day more and more of how little avail is instruction without
Religion and Morality. As a necessary consequence of inexperience,
and of the promptings of bad passions, the mind of youth is enthralled
by the perverse teachings of the day. It absorbs all the errors
which an unbridled press does not hesitate to sow and broadcast which depraves
the mind and the will of youth and foments in them that spirit of pride
and insubordination which so often trouble the peace of families and cities.
So also was confidence reposed in the progress of
Science. Indeed the century which has just closed, has witnessed
progress that was great, unexpected, stupendous. But is it true that
it has given us all the fulness and healthfulness of fruitage that so many
expected from it? Doubtless the discoveries of Science have opened
new horizons to the mind; it has widened the empire of man over the forces
of matter, and human life has been ameliorated in many ways through its
instrumentality. Nevertheless, every one feels and many admit that
the results have not corresponded to the hopes that were cherished.
It cannot be denied, especially when we cast our eyes on the intellectual
and moral status of the world as well as on the records of criminality,
when we hear the dull murmurs which arise from the depths, or when we witness
the predominace which might has won over right. Not to speak of the
throngs who are a prey to every misery, a superficial glance at the condition
of the world will suffice to convince us of the indefinable sorrow which
weighs upon souls and the immense void which is in human hearts.
Man may subject nature to his sway, but matter cannot give him what it
has not, and to the questions which most deeply affect our gravest interests
human Science gives no reply. The thirst for Truth, for good, for
the Infinite, which devours us, has not been slaked, nor have the joys
and riches of earth, nor the increase of the comforts of life ever soothed
the anguish which tortures the heart. Are we then to despise and
fling aside the advantages which accrue from the study of Science, from
civilization and the wise and sweet use of our liberty? Assuredly
no. On the contrary, we must hold them in the highest esteem,
guard them and make them grow as a treasure of great price, for they are
means which of their nature are good, designed by God Himself, and ordained
by the Infinite Goodness and Wisdom for the use and advantage of the human
race. But we must subordinate the use of them to the intentions
of the Creator, and so employ them as never to eliminate the Religious
element in which their real advantage resides, for it is that which bestows
on them a special value and renders them really fruitful. Such
is the secret of the problem. When an organism perishes and corrupts,
it is because it had ceased to be under the action of the causes which
had given it its form and constitution. To make it healthy and flourishing
again it is necessary to restore it to the vivifying action of those same
causes. So society in its foolhardy effort to escape from God
has rejected the Divine Order and Revelation; and it is thus withdrawn
from
the salutary efficacy of Christianity which is manifestly the most
solid guarantee of order, the strongest bond of fraternity, and the inexhaustible
source of all public and private virtue. This sacrilegious divorce
has resulted in bringing about the trouble which now disturbs the world.
Hence it is the pale of the Church which this lost society must re-enter,
if it wishes to recover its well-being, its repose, and its salvation.
Just as Christianity cannot penetrate into the
soul without making it better, so it cannot enter into public life without
establishing order. With the idea of a God Who governs all, Who
is infinitely Wise, Good, and Just, the idea of duty seizes upon the consciences
of men. It assuages sorrow, it calms hatred, it engenders heroes.
If it has transformed pagan society--and that transformation was a veritable
resurrection--for barabrism disappeared in proportion as Christianity extended
its sway, so, after the terrible shocks which unbelief has given to the
world in our days, it will be able to put that world again on the True
road, and bring back to order the States and peoples of modern times. But
the return of Christianity will not be efficacious and complete
if it
does not restore the world to a sincere love of the one Holy Catholic and
Apostolic Church. In the Catholic Church Christianity is Incarnate.
It identifies Itself with that perfect, spiritual, and, in its own order,
sovereign society, which is the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ and which
has for Its visible head the Roman Pontiff, successor of the Prince of
the Apostles. It is the continuation of the mission of the
Savior, the daughter and the heiress of His Redemption. It has preached
the Gospel, and has defended it at the price of Its blood, and strong in
the Divine Assistance and of that immortality which has been promised It,
It makes no terms with error but remains faithful to the
Commands which It has received, to carry the Doctrine of Jesus Christ to
the uttermost limits of the world and to the end of time, and to protect
It in Its inviolable integrity. Legitimate dispenser of the Teachings
of the Gospel It does not reveal Itself only as the consoler and Redeemer
of souls, but It is still more the internal source of Justice and Charity,
and the Propagator as well as the Guardian of True Liberty, and of that
equality which alone is possible here below. In applying the Doctrine
of Its Divine Founder, It maintains a wise equilibrium and marks the
True Limits between the rights and privileges of society. The
equality which It proclaims does not destroy the distinction between the
different social classes. It keeps them intact, as nature itself
demands, in order to oppose the anarchy of reason emancipated from Faith,
and abandoned to its own devices. The liberty which it gives in no
wise conflicts with the rights of Truth, because those rights are superior
to the demands of liberty. Not does it infringe upon the rights of
Justice, because those rights are superior to the claims of mere numbers
or power. Nor does it assail the rights of God because they are Superior
to the rights of humanity.
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