2. But now, as is well known to you, Venerable
Brethren, already, scarcely had we been elevated to this Chair of Peter (by the
hidden counsel of Divine Providence, certainly by no merit of our own), when,
seeing with the greatest grief of Our soul a truly awful storm excited by so
many evil opinions, and (seeing also) the most grievous calamities never
sufficiently to be deplored which overspread the Christian people from so many
errors, according to the duty of Our Apostolic Ministry, and following the
illustrious example of Our Predecessors, We raised Our voice, and in many
published Encyclical Letters and Allocutions delivered in Consistory, and other
Apostolic Letters, we condemned the chief errors of this most unhappy age, and
we excited your admirable episcopal vigilance, and we again and again admonished
and exhorted all sons of the Catholic Church, to us most dear, that they should
altogether abhor and flee from the contagion of so dire a pestilence. And
especially in our first Encyclical Letter written to you on Nov. 9, 1846, and
in two Allocutions delivered by us in Consistory, the one on Dec. 9, 1854, and
the other on June 9, 1862, we condemned the monstrous portents of opinion which
prevail especially in this age, bringing with them the greatest loss of souls
and detriment of civil society itself; which are grievously opposed also, not
only to the Catholic Church and her salutary doctrine and venerable rights, but
also to the eternal natural law engraven by God in all men's hearts, and to
right reason; and from which almost all other errors have their origin.
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