13. As everyone knows,
several months intervene between the issue at Rome of the Bull proclaiming
the year of Jubilee and the actual start of this Holy Year. Continuing the
ancient practice of the Church, the holy door is opened on the next vigil of
the Birth of the Lord; then the Year of Jubilee begins. We use these
intervening months to hold missions in different districts of Rome. We highly
recommended their usefulness in Our pastoral Edicts when We were Archbishop
of Bologna. These appeared in print and were soon translated into Latin. We
impress upon the evangelical laborers in missions to instruct the people in
order to explain the Catholic doctrine of indulgences and of the universal
Jubilee, rather than in purely academic questions of Apologetic and Moral
Theology. The faithful must be fully aware that sin and its eternal
punishment are remitted by the Sacrament of Penance if one makes proper use
of it; however the entire temporal punishment is very seldom taken away. This
must be removed either by satisfactory works in this life or by the fire of
Purgatory after death. The holy Council of Trent in session 6, chap. 4, and
canon 30 of the same session teaches this under the heading de
Justificatione. Inform the Christian people of the unfailing treasury in
the Church which was constituted by the immeasurable abundance of the merits
of Christ and increased by the merits of His saints. Distribution from this
treasury has been entrusted by Christ the Lord to His vicar on earth, the
Roman Pontiff; consequently the Pontiff prudently decides when these merits
can be applied, either by way of absolution for the living or by way of
prayer for the dead, provided that the living have destroyed their sin and
its eternal punishment by Penance, and that the dead have departed this life
united with God in charity. This distribution of merits is in the form of
indulgences. When one obtains one, he is freed from the temporal punishment
due to sins to the extent granted and defined by the lawful distributor. This
we read in the constitutions of the Supreme Pontiffs and especially in the
famous Decretal of Our Predecessor Leo X to Cardinal Tommaso de Vio,
otherwise known as Cajetan, when he was serving as Apostolic Legate in
Germany. The result is that the practice of indulgences is most beneficial to
Christians; hence the evil idea which either denies the benefit of
indulgences or deprives the Church of the power of conferring them is to be
condemned. This was decided by the Council of Trent, session 25, in the
decree on Indulgences. Finally, the Christian people must be advised that the
Indulgence of the Jubilee year is a plenary one, but is distinguished from
other plenary indulgences also distributed on the occasion of the Jubilee by
the fact that in a holy year of Jubilee, confessors designated for this
purpose receive a wider power both of absolving from sins and of dispensing
from certain bonds and impediments which often ensnare the consciences of
penitents.
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