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Ingravescentibus
Malis
(De
sacro B.V. Mariae Rosario)
1.
More than once have We asserted - and We recently
repeated this in the Encyclical Letter Divini
Redemptoris - that there is no remedy for the
ever-growing evils of our times except a return to Our
Lord Jesus Christ and to His most holy precepts. Truly,
only He "hath the words of eternal life" (cf.
Jn 6:69), and individuals and society can only fall into
immediate and miserable ruin if they ignore the majesty
of God and repudiate His Law.
2.
However, anyone who studies with diligence the records
of the Catholic Church will easily recognize that the
true patronage of the Virgin Mother of God is linked
with all the annals of the Christian name. When, in
fact, errors everywhere diffused were bent upon rending
the seamless robe of the Church and upon throwing the
Catholic world into confusion, our fathers turned with
confident soul to her "alone who destroys all
heresies in the world" (Roman Breviary), and the
victory won through her brought the return of
tranquillity.
3.
When the impious Mohammedan power, trusting in its
powerful fleet and war-hardened armies, threatened the
peoples of Europe with ruin and slavery, then - upon the
suggestion of the Sovereign Pontiff - the protection of
the heavenly Mother was fervently implored and the enemy
was defeated and his ships sunk. Thus the Faithful of
every age, both in public misfortune and in private
need, turn in supplication to Mary, the benignant, so
that she may come to their aid and grant help and remedy
against sorrows of body and soul. And never was her most
powerful aid hoped for in vain by those who besought it
with pious and trustful prayer.
4.
But also in our day, dangers no less grave than in the
past beset civil and religious society. In fact, because
the supreme and eternal authority of God, which commands
and forbids, is despised and completely repudiated by
men, the result is that the consciousness of Christian
duty is weakened, and that faith becomes tepid in souls
or entirely lost, and his afterward affects and ruins
the very basis of human society.
5.
Thus on the one hand are seen citizens intent on an
atrocious struggle among themselves because some are
provided with abundant riches and others must gain bread
for themselves and their dear ones by the sweat of their
brows. Indeed, as we all know, in some regions the evil
had reached such a pitch that it seeks to destroy all
private right of property, so that everything might be
shared in common.
6.
On the other hand, there are not lacking men who declare
that they honor and exalt, above all, the power of the
State. They say they must use every means to assure
civil order and enforce authority, and pretend that only
thus are they able totally to repulse the execrable
theories of the Communists. However, they despise the
light of evangelic wisdom and endeavor to revive the
errors of the pagans and their way of life.
7.
To this is added the clever and lamentable sect of those
who, denying and hating God, declare themselves the
enemies of the Eternal, and who insinuate themselves
everywhere. They discredit and uproot all religious
belief from souls. Finally, they trample on every human
and Divine right. And while they cast scorn on the hope
of heavenly reward, they incite men to seek, even by
illicit means, false earthly happiness, and therefore
drive them with brazen temerity to the dissolution of
the social order, causing disorder, cruel rebellions and
even the conflagration of civil war.
8.
Nevertheless, Venerable Brethren, though such great and
numerous evils hang over us, and others still greater
are to be feared for the future, we must not lose heart
nor let the confident hope that rests solely on God
become fainter. He who "made the nations of the
earth for health" (cf. Ws 1:14) without doubt will
not let those perish whom He has redeemed with His
Precious Blood, nor will He abandon His Church. But
rather, as We said in the beginning, shall We beseech
God through the mediation of the Blessed Virgin, so
acceptable to Him, since, to use the words of St.
Bernard: "Such is the will of God, who has wished
that we should have all things through Mary"
(Sermon on the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary).
9.
Among the various supplications with which we
successfully appeal to the Virgin Mother of God, the
Holy Rosary without doubt occupies a special and
distinct place. This prayer, which some call the Psalter
of the Virgin or Breviary of the Gospel and of Christian
life, was described and recommended by Our Predecessor
of happy memory, Leo XIII, with these vigorous passages:
"Very admirable is this crown interwoven with the Angelic
Salutation which is interposed in the Lord's Prayer, and unites with it the obligation of interior
meditation. It is an excellent manner of prayer . . .
and very useful for the attainment of immortal
life" (Enc. Diuturni Temporis).
10.
And this can well be deduced from the very flowers that
form this mystic garland. What prayers in fact can be
found more adaptable and holy? This first is that which
our Divine Redeemer Himself pronounced when His
disciples asked Him: "Lord, teach us to pray"
(Lk 11:1); a very holy supplication which both offers us
the way - as far as it is possible for us - to render
glory to God, and also takes into account all the
necessities of our body and soul. How can the Eternal
Father, when prayed to with the very words of His Son,
refuse to come to our aid?
11.
The other prayer is the Angelic Salutation, which begins
with the eulogies of the Archangel Gabriel and of St.
Elizabeth, and ends with that very pious supplication by
which we beg the help of the Blessed Virgin now and at
the hour of our death. To these invocations, said aloud,
is added the contemplation of the sacred mysteries,
through which they place, as it were, under our eyes the
joys, sorrows and triumphs of Jesus Christ and of His
Mother, so that we receive relief and comfort in our
sorrows. Following those most holy examples, we ascend
to the happiness of the heavenly country by steps of
ever higher virtue.
12.
This practice of piety, Venerable Brethren, admirably
diffused by St. Dominic, not without the heavenly
suggestion and inspiration of the Virgin Mother of God,
is without doubt easy for all, even for the ignorant and
the simple. But those wander from the path of truth who
consider this devotion merely an annoying formula
repeated with monotonous singsong intonation, and refuse
it as good only for children and silly women!
13.
In this regard, it is to be noted that both piety and
love, though always renewing the same words, do not
always repeat the same thing but always express
something new issuing from the intimate sentiment of
devotion. And besides, this mode of prayer has the
perfume of evangelic simplicity and requires humility of
spirit; and, if we disdain humility, as the Divine
Redeemer teaches, it will be impossible for us to enter
the heavenly kingdom: "Amen, I say to you, unless
you become as little children you shall not enter the
kingdom of heaven" (Mt 18:3).
14.
Nevertheless, if men in our century, with its derisive
pride, refuse the Holy Rosary, there is an innumerable
multitude of holy men of every age and every condition
who have always held it dear. They have recited it with
great devotion, and in every moment they have used it as
a powerful weapon to put the demons to flight, to
preserve the integrity of life, to acquire virtue more
easily, and in a word to attain real peace among men.
15.
Nor are there lacking men famous as to doctrine and
wisdom who, although intensely occupied in scientific
study and researches, never even for a day fail to pray
fervently on bended knee, before the image of the
Virgin, in this most pious form. Thus kings and princes,
however burdened with most urgent occupations and
affairs, made it their duty to recite the Rosary.
16.
This mystic crown, then, not only is found in and glides
through the hands of the poor, but it also is honored by
citizens of every social rank. And We do not wish here
to pass over in silence the fact that the Blessed Virgin
herself, even in our times, has solicitously recommended
this manner of prayer, when she appeared and taught it
to the innocent girl in the Grotto of Lourdes.
17.
Therefore why should We not hope for every grace if We
supplicate Our Heavenly Mother in this manner with due
disposition and holiness? We desire very earnestly,
Venerable Brethren, that the Holy Rosary should be
recited in a special manner in the month of October and
with increased devotion both in the churches and in
homes.
18.
And so much the more must it be done since the enemies
of the Divine Name - that is, those who have rebelled
against and denied and scorned the Eternal God - spread
snares for the Catholic Faith and the liberty due to the
Church, and finally rebel with insane efforts against
divine and human rights, to send mankind to ruin and
perdition. Through efficacious recourse to the Virgin
Mother of God, they may be finally bent and led to
penance and return to the straight path, trusting to the
care and protection of Mary.
19.
The Holy Virgin who once victoriously drove the terrible
sect of the Albigenses from Christian countries, now
suppliantly invoked by us, will turn aside the new
errors, especially those of Communism, which reminds us
in many ways, in its motives and misdeeds, of the
ancient ones.
20.
And as in the times of the Crusades, in all Europe there
was raised one voice of the people, one supplication; so
today, in all the world, the cities, and even the
smallest villages, united with courage and strength,
with filial and constant insistence, the people seek to
obtain from the great Mother of God the defeat of the
enemies of Christian and human civilization, to the end
that true peace may shine again over tired and erring
men.
21.
If, then, all will do this with due disposition, with
great faith and with fervent piety, it is right to hope
that as in the past, so in our day, the Blessed Virgin
will obtain from her divine Son that the waves of the
present tempests be calmed and that a brilliant victory
crown this rivalry of Christians in prayer.
22.
The Holy Rosary, besides, not only serves admirably to
overcome the enemies of God and Religion, but is also a
stimulus and spur to the practice of evangelic virtues
which it injects and cultivates in our souls. Above all,
it nourishes the Catholic Faith, which flourishes again
by due meditation on the sacred mysteries, and raises
minds to the truth revealed to us by God.
23.
Every one can understand how salutary it is, especially
in our times wherein sometimes a certain annoyance of
the things of the spirit is felt even among the
Faithful, and a dislike, as it were, for the Christian
doctrine. Therefore, revive the hope of immortal
welfare, while the triumph of Jesus Christ and of His
Mother, meditated on by us in the last part of the
Rosary, shows us Heaven open and invites us to the
conquest of the Eternal Country.
24.
Thus while an unbridled longing for the things of this
earth has penetrated into the hearts of mortals and each
one more ardently longs for the short-lived riches and
ephemeral pleasures, all feel a fruitful call back to
the heavenly treasures "where thieves do not break
in and neither rust nor moth doth consume" (Lk 12:33),
and to the wealth that will never perish.
25.
And the charity which has been weakened and cooled in
many, how can it fail to be rekindled into love in the
souls of those who recall with a full heart the tortures
and death of our Redeemer and the afflictions of His
Sorrowful Mother? From this charity towards God, then,
there cannot but rise a more intense love of one's
neighbor if one dwells on the labors and sorrows that
Our Lord suffered for all, reinstating the lost
inheritance of the children of God.
26.
Therefore see to it, Venerable Brethren, that such a
fruitful practice shall be more diffused, more highly
esteemed by all, and that common piety be increased.
Through your work and that of the priests who help you
in the care of souls, its praises and advantages shall
be preached and repeated to the Faithful of every social
class.
27.
From it, the young will draw fresh energy with which to
control the rebellious tendencies to evil and to
preserve intact the stainless purity of the soul; also
in it, the old will again find repose, relief and peace
from their anxious cares. To those who devote themselves
to Catholic Action may it be a spur to impel them to a
more fervent and active work of apostolate; and to all
those who suffer in any way, especially the dying, may
it bring comfort and increase the hope of eternal
happiness.
28.
The fathers and mothers of families particularly must
give an example to their children, especially when, at
sunset, they gather together after the day's work,
within the domestic walls, and recite the Holy Rosary on
bended knees before the image of the Virgin, together
fusing voice, faith and sentiment. This is a beautiful
and salutary custom, from which certainly there cannot
but be derived tranquillity and abundance of heavenly
gifts for the household.
29.
When very frequently We receive newly married couples in
audience and address paternal words to them, We give
them rosaries, We recommend these to them earnestly, and
We exhort them, citing Our own example, not to let even
one day pass without saying the Rosary, no matter how
burdened they may be with many cares and labors.
30.
For these reasons, Venerable Brethren, We have thought
fit earnestly to exhort you, and through you, all the
Faithful, to carry out this pious practice. Nor do We
doubt that you, listening, with your usual response to
Our paternal invitation will bring about abundant fruits
once more.
31.
And in addressing this Encyclical to you, another motive
impels Us. We wish that, together with Us, Our many
children in Jesus shall unite and render thanks to the
Mother of God for the better health We have happily
regained.
32.
This grace, as We have had occasion to write (Letter to
Cardinal E. Pacelli), We attribute to the special
intercession of the virgin of Lisieux, St. Therese of
the Child Jesus. But We know, though, that everything
comes to us from Almighty God through the hands of Our
Lady.
33.
And lastly, as there has been launched in the public
press with rash insolence, a very grave injury to the
Blessed Virgin, We cannot do less than profit by this
occasion to offer, together with the Episcopate and the
people of that nation which venerates Mary as
"Queen of the Kingdom of Poland," and with the
homage of our piety, due reparation to the august Queen,
and denounce to the whole world this sacrilege committed
with impunity, as a painful and unworthy thing.
34.
Meanwhile, with a full heart We impart to you, Venerable
Brethren, and to the flock entrusted to the care of each
of you, the Apostolic Blessing as an augury of heavenly
graces and in token to Our Paternal benevolence.
Given
at Castel Gandolfo, near Rome, on the 29th day of the
month of September, on the Feast of the Dedication of
St. Michael the Archangel, in the year 1937, the
sixteenth of Our Pontificate.
PIUS XI
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