To Our Venerable Brothers
the Archbishops and Bishops as well as Our Beloved Sons, the Parish Priests
and Missionaries of the Province of Albania.
Venerable Brothers and Beloved Sons, We
give you Greeting and Our Apostolic Blessing.
Forbidding Use of Mohammedan Names
The Provincial Council of your province of
Albania, Venerable Brothers and Beloved Sons, was held in the year 1703
during the pontificate of Our predecessor Pope Clement XI. It decreed most
solemnly in its third canon, among other matters, as you know, that Turkish
or Mohammedan names should not be given either to children or adults in baptism.
It also decreed that the faithful of Christ should not allow themselves to be
called by Turkish or Mohammedan names which they had never received, for the
purpose of either exemption or immunity from taxes, or the advantage of free
trading, or avoiding penalties. We have confirmed and commanded the
observance of this decree in Our encyclical letter Inter Omnigenas,
addressed to the kingdom of Serbia and its neighboring regions. This
encyclical letter, covering many subjects of religion and discipline, was
published on the 2nd of February 1744 in the fourth year of Our pontificate.
This prudent and saving statute was established by your predecessors with
great wisdom and devotion as a shining example of your Catholic faith and
sincere Christian piety; in our 1744 encyclical, We strictly ordered it to be
imitated and fully observed by other churches. Just as adhering to it clearly
results in the greater fame and reputation of your province and in greater
benefits for securing the eternal salvation of souls, so if it should be
neglected, it would greatly dishonor your province and openly endanger these
souls.
In Our letter mentioned above, We
designated that abuse as a cowardly concealment of the Christian profession,
approaching infidelity. Since then, We have learned with great mental anguish
that many people in that province continue to take Turkish or Mohammedan
names despite the consideration of their eternal salvation. They do so not
only in order to be immune and free from those taxes and burdens which have
often been and continue to be imposed on the faithful of Christ, but also in
order that neither they themselves nor their parents may be thought to have
abandoned the Mohammedan sect, thereby avoiding the requisite penalties. For
all this cannot take place without a pretense of the errors of Mohammed, even
if the faith of Christ is adhered to in the heart, and this is at variance
with Christian sincerity. It involves a lie in a most serious matter and
includes a virtual denial of the Faith, most insulting to God and scandalous
to their neighbors. It even gives the Turks themselves a suitable opportunity
to rate all Christ's faithful as hypocrites and deceivers, and accordingly to
persecute them justly and deservedly.
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