To
the Venerable Brethren the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, Bishops, and
other Local Ordinaries in Peace and Communion with the Apostolic See: Commemorating
the fifteenth centenary of the death of St. Leo the Great, Pope and Doctor of
the Church.
Venerable
Brethren Health and Apostolic Benediction
God's
eternal wisdom "reacheth from end to end mightily and ordereth all things
sweetly."1 Its light shone with exceptional brilliance in the soul
of Pope St. Leo I, for it would seem to have burned into it the very image of
itself; so fearless the moral courage displayed by this Pope -"the
greatest among the great," as Our later predecessor Pius XII rightly
called him2-yet so gentle his fatherly concern.
2.
The wisdom of his government, the wealth and scope of his teaching, the
loftiness of his mind, his unfailing charity-these are the things which St. Leo
the Great brought to enhance the fame of Peter's See, to which Almighty God in
His providence has also raised Us. And now, on this fifteenth centenary of his
death, We feel it incumbent upon Us to highlight his virtues and his immortal
merits, confident that these can be of great spiritual value to us all, and
increase the prestige and promote the spread of the Catholic Faith.
Life-long Brilliance
3.
Wherein, then, lies the true greatness of this Pope? In moral courage?-in that
moral courage which he showed when, at the River Mincius in 452, with no other
armor to protect him than his high-priestly majesty, he boldly confronted the
barbarous king of the Huns, Attila, and persuaded him to retreat with his
armies across the Danube? That was certainly an heroic act and one which
accorded well with the Roman pontificate's mission of peace. Yet we must think
of it as but one isolated instance of a life-long activity of remarkable
brilliance devoted to the religious and social welfare, not merely of Rome and of Italy, but of the whole Church
throughout the world.
"The Path of the Just. . . "
4.
"The path of the just, as a shining light, goeth forwards and increaseth
even to perfect day."3 These words of Holy Scripture may well be
applied to the life and activity of St. Leo. To be convinced of this we have
but to consider St. Leo in his three main characteristic roles: 1) as a man
singularly dedicated to the service of the Apostolic See, 2) as Christ's chief
Vicar on earth, and 3) as Doctor of the universal Church.
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