39. Before the return to unity our dissident
brethren themselves lamented that our holy religion was in a ruinous state in
those regions, that the vice of simony everywhere prevailed in the choice of
bishops and other sacred ministers, that Church goods were dissipated, the
morals of monks corrupt, the discipline of monasteries in decay, and even the
bond of obedience between the faithful and their pastors every day further
weakened and imperiled. But, on the contrary, after the establishment of unity,
by the inspiration and help of God, the state of affairs gradually improved.
How great was the strength of mind and constancy needed by the bishops to
restore Church discipline everywhere, especially in the early days; so troubled
by every kind of disturbance and opposition! What persevering work and patient
labor they had to devote to raising up a clergy of the highest moral standard;
to consoling the flocks committed to them, harassed by such harsh
circumstances; and finally to sustaining and strengthening in every way those
whose faith was wavering and faltering! None the less, contrary to all human
calculation, not only did this auspicious union triumphantly overcome all the
contrary storms, but it emerged from its victorious battle with increased
vitality and strength. Thus it came about that it was not by the sword or the
scourge, not by promises or threats, but by an outstanding example of religious
life and a kind of manifest display of divine grace, that the Catholic
Ruthenians finally brought the dissident eparchies of Lvov and Przemysl to enter the one fold.
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