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Octobri
Mense
(De
Mariae Virginis Rosario)
1.
At the coming of the month of October, dedicated and
consecrated as it is to the Blessed Virgin of the
Rosary, we recall with satisfaction the instant
exhortations which in preceding years We addressed to
you, venerable brethren, desiring, as We did, that the
faithful, urged by your authority and by your zeal,
should redouble their piety towards the august Mother of
God, the mighty helper of Christians, and should pray to
her throughout the month, invoking her by that most holy
rite of the Rosary which the Church, especially in the
passage of difficult times, has ever used for the
accomplishment of all desires. This year once again do
We publish Our wishes, once again do We encourage you by
the same exhortations. We are persuaded to this in love
for the Church, whose sufferings, far from mitigating,
increase daily in number and in gravity. Universal and
well-known are the evils we deplore: war made upon the
sacred dogmas which the Church holds and transmits;
derision cast upon the integrity of that Christian
morality which she has in keeping; enmity declared, with
the impudence of audacity and with criminal malice,
against the very Christ, as though the Divine work of
Redemption itself were to be destroyed from its
foundation - that work which, indeed, no adverse power
shall ever utterly abolish or destroy.
2.
No new events are these in the career of the Church
militant. Jesus foretold them to His disciples. That she
may teach men the truth and may guide them to eternal
salvation, she must enter upon a daily war; and
throughout the course of ages she has fought, even to
martyrdom, rejoicing and glorifying herself in nothing
more than in the occasion of signing her cause with her
Founder's blood, the sure and certain pledge of the
victory whereof she holds the promise. Nevertheless we
must not conceal the profound sadness with which this
necessity of constant war afflicts the righteous. It is
indeed a cause of great sorrow that so many should be
deterred and led astray by error and enmity to God; that
so many should be indifferent to all forms of religion,
and should finally become estranged from faith; that so
many Catholics should be such in name only, and should
pay to religion no honour or worship. And still sadder
and more beset with anxieties grows the soul at the
thought of the fruitful source of most manifold evils
existing in the organisation of States that allow no
place to the Church, and that oppose her championship of
holy virtue. This is truly a terrible manifestation of
the just vengeance of God, Who allows blindness of soul
to darken upon the nations that forsake Him. These are
evils that cry aloud, that cry of themselves with a
daily increasing voice. It is absolutely necessary that
the Catholic voice should also call to God with
unwearied instance, "without ceasing" (1 Th
5:17); that the Faithful should pray not only in their
own homes, but in public, gathered together under the
sacred roof; that they should beseech urgently the
all-foreseeing God to deliver the Church from evil men (2
Th 3:2) and to bring back the troubled nations to good
sense and reason, by the light and love of Christ.
3.
Wonderful and beyond hope or belief is this. The world
goes on its laborious way, proud of its riches, of its
power, of its arms, of its genius; the Church goes
onward along the course of ages with an even step,
trusting in God only, to Whom, day and night, she lifts
her eyes and her suppliant hands. Even though in her
prudence she neglects not the human aid which Providence
and the times afford her, not in these does she put her
trust, which rests in prayer, in supplication, in the
invocation of God. Thus it is that she renews her vital
breath; the diligence of her prayer has caused her, in
her aloofness from worldly things and in her continual
union with the Divine will, to live the tranquil and
peaceful life of Our very Lord Jesus Christ; being
herself the image of Christ, Whose happy and perpetual
joy was hardly marred by the horror of the torments He
endured for us. This important doctrine of Christian
wisdom has been ever believed and practised by
Christians worthy of the name. Their prayers rise to God
eagerly and more frequently when the cunning and the
violence of the perverse afflict the Church and her
supreme Pastor. Of this the faithful of the Church in
the East gave an example that should be offered to the
imitation of posterity. Peter, Vicar of Jesus Christ,
and first Pontiff of the Church, had been cast into
prison, loaded with chains by the guilty Herod, and left
for certain death. None could carry him help or snatch
him from the peril. But there was the certain help that
fervent prayer wins from God. The Church, as the sacred
story tells us, made prayer without ceasing to God for
him (Ac 12:5); and the greater was the fear of a
misfortune, the greater was the fervour of all who
prayed to God. After the granting of their desires the
miracle stood revealed; and Christians still celebrate
with a joyous gratitude the marvel of the deliverance of
Peter. Christ has given us a still more memorable
instance, a Divine instance, so that the Church might be
formed not upon his precepts only, but upon His example
also. During His whole life He had given Himself to
frequent and fervent prayer, and in the supreme hours in
the Garden of Gethsemane, when His soul was filled with
bitterness and sorrow unto death, He prayed to His
Father and prayed repeatedly (Lk 22:44). It was not for
Himself that He prayed thus, for He feared nothing and
needed nothing, being God; He prayed for us, for His
Church, whose prayers and future tears He already then
accepted with joy, to give them back in mercies.
4.
But since the salvation of our race was accomplished by
the mystery of the Cross, and since the Church,
dispenser of that salvation after the triumph of Christ,
was founded upon earth and instituted, Providence
established a new order for a new people. The
consideration of the Divine counsels is united to the
great sentiment of religion. The Eternal Son of God,
about to take upon Him our nature for the saving and
ennobling of man, and about to consummate thus a
mystical union between Himself and all mankind, did not
accomplish His design without adding there the free
consent of the elect Mother, who represented in some
sort all human kind, according to the illustrious and
just opinion of St. Thomas, who says that the
Annunciation was effected with the consent of the Virgin
standing in the place of humanity (Summa Theol., III, q.
30, a. 1). With equal truth may it be also affirmed
that, by the will of God, Mary is the intermediary
through whom is distributed unto us this immense
treasure of mercies gathered by God, for mercy and truth
were created by Jesus Christ (Jn 1:17). Thus as no man
goeth to the Father but by the Son, so no man goeth to
Christ but by His Mother. How great are the goodness and
mercy revealed in this design of God! What a
correspondence with the frailty of man! We believe in
the infinite goodness of the Most High, and we rejoice
in it; we believe also in His justice and we fear it. We
adore the beloved Saviour, lavish of His blood and of
His life; we dread the inexorable Judge. Thus do those
whose actions have disturbed their consciences need an
intercessor mighty in favour with God, merciful enough
not to reject the cause of the desperate, merciful
enough to lift up again towards hope in the divine mercy
the afflicted and the broken down. Mary is this glorious
intermediary; she is the mighty Mother of the Almighty;
but - what is still sweeter - she is gentle, extreme in
tenderness, of a limitless loving-kindness. As such God
gave her to us. Having chosen her for the Mother of His
only begotten Son, He taught her all a mother's feeling
that breathes nothing but pardon and love. Such Christ
desired she should be, for He consented to be subject to
Mary and to obey her as a son a mother. Such He
proclaimed her from the cross when he entrusted to her
care and love the whole of the race of man in the person
of His disciple John. Such, finally, she proves herself
by her courage in gathering in the heritage of the
enormous labours of her Son, and in accepting the charge
of her maternal duties towards us all.
5.
The design of this most dear mercy, realised by God in
Mary and confirmed by the testament of Christ, was
comprehended at the beginning, and accepted with the
utmost joy by the Holy Apostles and the earliest
believers. It was the counsel and teaching of the
venerable Fathers of the Church. All the nations of the
Christian age received it with one mind; and even when
literature and tradition are silent there is a voice
that breaks from every Christian breast and speaks with
all eloquence. No other reason is needed that that of a
Divine faith which, by a powerful and most pleasant
impulse, persuades us towards Mary. Nothing is more
natural, nothing more desirable than to seek a refuge in
the protection and in the loyalty of her to whom we may
confess our designs and our actions, our innocence and
our repentance, our torments and our joys, our prayers
and our desires - all our of fairs. All men, moreover, are
filled with the hope and confidence that petitions which
might be received with less favour from the lips of
unworthy men, God will accept when they are recommended
by the most Holy Mother, and will grant with all
favours. The truth and the sweetness of these thoughts
bring to the soul an unspeakable comfort; but they
inspire all the more compassion for those who, being
without Divine faith, honour not Mary and have her not
for their mother; for those also who, holding Christian
faith, dare to accuse of excess the devotion to Mary,
thereby sorely wounding filial piety.
6.
This storm of evils, in the midst of which the Church
struggles so strenuously, reveals to all her pious
children the holy duty whereto they are bound to pray to
God with instance, and the manner in which they may give
to their prayers the greater power. Faithful to the
religious example of our fathers, let us have recourse
to Mary, our holy Sovereign. Let us entreat, let us
beseech, with one heart, Mary, the Mother of Jesus
Christ, our Mother. "Show thyself to be a mother;
cause our prayers to be accepted by Him Who, born for
us, consented to be thy Son" (Sacred Liturgy).
7.
Now, among the several rites and manners of paying
honour to the Blessed Mary, some are to be preferred,
inasmuch as we know them to be most powerful and most
pleasing to our Mother; and for this reason we specially
mention by name and recommend the Rosary. The common
language has given the name of corona to this manner of
prayer, which recalls to our minds the great mysteries
of Jesus and Mary united in joys, sorrows, and triumphs.
The contemplation of these august mysteries,
contemplated in their order, affords to faithful souls
a wonderful confirmation of faith, protection against
the disease of error, and increase of the strength of
the soul. The soul and memory of him who thus prays,
enlightened by faith, are drawn towards these mysteries
by the sweetest devotion, are absorbed therein and are
surprised before the work of the Redemption of mankind,
achieved at such a price and by events so great. The
soul is filled with gratitude and love before these
proofs of Divine love; its hope becomes enlarged and its
desire is increased for those things which Christ has
prepared for such as have united themselves to Him in
imitation of His example and in participation in His
sufferings. The prayer is composed of words proceeding
from God Himself, from the Archangel Gabriel, and from
the Church; full of praise and of high desires; and it
is renewed and continued in an order at once fixed and
various; its fruits are ever new and sweet.
8.
Moreover, we may well believe that the Queen of Heaven
herself has granted an especial efficacy to this mode of
supplication, for it was by her command and counsel that
the devotion was begun and spread abroad by the holy
Patriarch Dominic as a most potent weapon against the
enemies of the faith at an epoch not, indeed, unlike our
own, of great danger to our holy religion. The heresy of
the Albigenses had in effect, one while covertly,
another while openly, overrun many countries, and this
most vile off spring of the Manicheans, whose deadly
errors it reproduced, were the cause in stirring up
against the Church the most bitter animosity and a
virulent persecution. There seemed to be no human hope
of opposing this fanatical and most pernicious sect when
timely succour came from on high through the instrument
of Mary's Rosary. Thus under the favour of the powerful
Virgin, the glorious vanquisher of all heresies, the
forces of the wicked were destroyed and dispersed, and
faith issued forth unharmed and more shining than
before. All manner of similar instances are widely
recorded, and both ancient and modern history furnish
remarkable proofs of nations saved from perils and
winning benedictions therefrom. There is another signal
argument in favour of this devotion, inasmuch as from
the very moment of its institution it was immediately
encouraged and put into most frequent practice by all
classes of society. In truth, the piety of the Christian
people honours, by many titles and in multiform ways,
the Divine Mother, who, alone most admirable among all
creatures, shines resplendent in unspeakable glory. But
this title of the Rosary, this mode of prayer which
seems to contain, as it were, a final pledge of
affection, and to sum up in itself the honour due to Our
Lady, has always been highly cherished and widely used
in private and in public, in homes and in families, in
the meetings of confraternities, at the dedication of
shrines, and in solemn processions; for there has seemed
to be no better means of conducting sacred solemnities,
or of obtaining protection and favours.
9.
Nor may we permit to pass unnoticed the especial
Providence of God displayed in this devotion; for
through the lapse of time religious fervour has
sometimes seemed to diminish in certain nations, and
even this pious method of prayer has fallen into disuse;
but piety and devotion have again flourished and become
vigorous in a most marvellous manner, when, either
through the grave situation of the commonwealth or
through some pressing public necessity, general recourse
has been had - more to this than to even other means of
obtaining help - to the Rosary, whereby it has been
restored to its place of honour on the altars. But there
is no need to seek for examples of this power in a past
age, since we have in the present a signal instance of
it. In these times - so troublous (as we have said before)
for the Church, and so heartrending for ourselves - set as
We are by the Divine will at the helm, it is still given
Us to note with admiration the great zeal and fervour
with which Mary's Rosary is honoured and recited in
every place and nation of the Catholic world. And this
circumstance, which assuredly is to be attributed to the
Divine action and direction upon men, rather than to the
wisdom and efforts of individuals, strengthens and
consoles Our heart, filling Us with great hope for the
ultimate and most glorious triumph of the Church under
the auspices of Mary.
10.
But there are some who, whilst they honestly agree with
what We have said, yet because their hopes - especially
as regard the peace and tranquillity of the Church -
have not yet been fulfilled, nay, rather because
troubles seem to augment, have ceased to pray with
diligence and fervour, in a fit of discouragement. Let
these look into themselves and labour that the prayers
they address to God may be made in a proper spirit,
according to the precept of our Lord Jesus Christ. And
if there be such, let them reflect how unworthy and how
wrong it is to wish to assign to Almighty God the time
and the manner of giving His assistance, since He owes
nothing to us, and when He hearkens to our supplications
and crowns our merits, He only crowns His own
innumerable benefits (St. Augustine, Ep. 194 (al. 105)
ad Sixtum, c. V, n. 19); and when He complies least with
our wishes it is as a good father towards his children,
having pity on their childishness and consulting their
advantage. But as regards the prayers which we join to
the suffrages of the heavenly citizens, and offer humbly
to God to obtain His mercy for the Church, they are
always favourably received and heard, and either obtain
for the Church great and imperishable benefits, or their
influence is temporarily withheld for a time of greater
need. In truth, to these supplications is added an
immense weight and grace - the prayers and merits of
Christ Our Lord, Who has Loved the Church and has
delivered Himself up for her to sanctify her . . . so
that He should be glorified in her (Ep 5:25-27). He is
her Sovereign Head, holy, innocent, always living to
make intercession for us, on whose prayers and
supplication we can always by divine authority rely. As
for what concerns the exterior and temporal prosperity
of the Church, it is evident that she has to cope with
most malicious and powerful adversaries. Too often has
she suffered at their hands the abolition of her rights,
the diminution and oppression of her liberties, scorn
and affronts to her authority, and every conceivable
outrage. And if in their wickedness her enemies have not
accomplished all the injury they had resolved upon and
striven to do, they nevertheless seem to go on
unchecked. But, despite them the Church, amidst all
these conflicts, will always stand out and increase in
greatness and glory. Nor can human reason rightly
understand why evil, apparently so dominant, should yet
be so restricted as regards its results; whilst the
Church, driven into straits, comes forth glorious and
triumphant. And she ever remains more steadfast in
virtue because she draws men to the acquisition of the
ultimate good. And since this is her mission, her
prayers must have much power to effect the end and
purpose of God's providential and merciful designs
towards men. Thus, when men pray with and through the
Church, they at length obtain what Almighty God has
designed from all eternity to bestow upon mankind (Summa
Theol., II-II, q. 83, a. 2, ex S. Greg. M.). The
subtlety of the human intelligence fails now to grasp
the high designs of Providence; but the time will come
when, through the goodness of God, causes and effects
will be made clear, and the marvellous power and utility
of prayer will be shown forth. Then it will be seen how
many in the midst of a corrupt age have kept themselves
pure and inviolate from all concupiscence of the flesh
and the spirit, working out their sanctification in the
fear of God (2 Co 7:1); how others, when exposed to the
danger of temptation, have without delay restrained
themselves gaining new strength for virtue from the
peril itself; how others, having fallen, have been
seized with the ardent desire to be restored to the
embraces of a compassionate God. Therefore, with these
reflections before them, We beseech all again and again
not to yield to the deceits of the old enemy, nor for
any cause whatsoever to cease from the duty of prayer.
Let their prayers be persevering, let them pray without
intermission; let their first care be to supplicate for
the sovereign good - the eternal salvation of the whole
world, and the safety of the Church. Then they may ask
from God other benefits for the use and comfort of life,
returning thanks always, whether their desires are
granted or refused, as to a most indulgent father.
Finally, may they converse with God with the greatest
piety and devotion according to the example of the
Saints, and that of our Most Holy Master and Redeemer,
with great cries and tears (Heb 5:7).
11.
Our fatherly solicitude urges Us to implore of God, the
Giver of all good gifts, not merely the spirit of
prayer, but also that of holy penance for all the sons
of the Church. And whilst We make this most earnest
supplication, We exhort all and each one to the practice
with equal fervour of both these virtues combined. Thus
prayer fortifies the soul, makes it strong for noble
endeavours, leads it up to divine things: penance
enables us to overcome ourselves, especially our bodies
- most inveterate enemies of reason and the
evangelical law. And it is very clear that these virtues
unite well with each other, assist each other mutually,
and have the same object, namely, to detach man born for
heaven from perishable objects, and to raise him up to
heavenly commerce with God. On the other hand, the mind
that is excited by passions and enervated by pleasure is
insensible to the delights of heavenly things, and makes
cold and neglectful prayers quite unworthy of being
accepted by God. We have before Our eyes examples of the
penance of holy men whose prayers and supplications were
consequently most pleasing to God, and even obtained
miracles. They governed and kept assiduously in
subjection their minds and hearts and wills. They
accepted with the greatest joy and humility the
doctrines of Christ and the teachings of His Church.
Their unique desire was to advance in the science of
God; nor had their actions any other object than the
increase of His glory. They restrained most severely
their passions, treated their bodies rudely and harshly,
abstaining from even permitted pleasures through love of
virtue. And therefore most deservedly could they have
said with the Apostle Paul, our conversation is in
Heaven (Ph 3:20): hence the potent efficacy of their
prayers in appeasing and in supplicating the Divine
Majesty. It is clear that not every one is obliged or
able to attain to these heights; nevertheless, each one
should correct his life and morals in his own measure in
satisfaction to the Divine justice: for it is to those
who have endured voluntary sufferings in this life that
the reward of virtue is vouchsafed. Moreover, when in
the mystical body of Christ, which is the Church, all
the members are united and flourish, it results,
according to St. Paul, that the joy or pain of one
member is shared by all the rest, so that if one of the
brethren in Christ is suffering in mind or body the
others come to his help and succour him as far as in
them lies. The members are solicitous in regard of each
other, and if one member suffer all the members suffer
in sympathy, and if one member rejoice all the others
rejoice also. But you are the body of Christ, members of
one body (1 Co 12:25-27). But in this illustration of
charity, following the example of Christ, Who in the
immensity of His love gave up His life to redeem us from
sin, paying Himself the penalties incurred by others, in
this is the great bond of perfection by which the
faithful are closely united with the heavenly citizens
and with God. Above all, acts of holy penance are so
numerous and varied and extend over such a wide range,
that each one may exercise them frequently with a
cheerful and ready will without serious or painful
effort.
12.
And now, venerable brethren, your remarkable and exalted
piety towards the Most Holy Mother of God, and your
charity and solicitude for the Christian flock, are full
of abundant promise: Our heart is full of desire for
those wondrous fruits which, on many occasions, the
devotion of Catholic people to Mary has brought forth;
already We enjoy them deeply and abundantly in
anticipation. At your exhortation and under your
direction, therefore, the faithful, especially during
this ensuing month, will assemble around the solemn
altars of this august Queen and most benign Mother, and
weave and offer to her, like devoted children, the
mystic garland so pleasing to her of the Rosary. All the
privileges and indulgences We have herein before
conceded are confirmed and ratified.
13.
How grateful and magnificent a spectacle to see in the
cities, and towns, and villages, on land and sea -
wherever the Catholic faith has penetrated - many
hundreds of thousands of pious people uniting their
praises and prayers with one voice and heart at every
moment of the day, saluting Mary, invoking Mary, hoping
everything through Mary. Through her may all the
faithful strive to obtain from her Divine Son that the
nations plunged in error may return to the Christian
teaching and precepts, in which is the foundation of the
public safety and the source Of peace and true
happiness. Through her may they steadfastly endeavour
for that most desirable of all blessings, the
restoration of the liberty of our Mother, the Church,
and the tranquil possession of her rights - rights which
have no other object than the careful direction of men's
dearest interests, from the exercise of which
individuals and nations have never suffered injury, but
have derived, in all time, numerous and most precious
benefits.
14.
And for you, venerable brethren, through the
intercession of the Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, We
pray Almighty God to grant you heavenly gifts, and
greater and more abundant strength, and aid to
accomplish the charge of your pastoral office. As a
pledge of which We most lovingly bestow upon you and
upon the clergy and people committed to your care, the
Apostolic Benediction.
Given
at Rome, St. Peter's, the 22nd day of September, 1891,
in the fourteenth year of Our Pontificate.
LEO XIII
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