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1. You all of you know, assuredly,
Venerable Brethren, what was Our mind and Our purpose when, at the beginning of
the year, We proclaimed to the whole Catholic world an extraordinary Jubilee to
commemorate the anniversary of the day on which, having received the
consecration of the priesthood, We offered the divine Sacrifice for the first
time, fifty years ago. For as We solemnly declared in the Apostolic
Constitution Auspicantibus Nobis, published on January 6th, 1929,1
we were moved to this partly by the purpose of calling Our beloved children,
the great Christian household entrusted to Our heart by the Heart of the most
merciful God, to share in the joy of their common father and to join with us in
rendering thanks to the Supreme Giver of all good. But, besides this, we were
moved by the sweet hope, which pleased us greatly, that when with fatherly
liberality we unlocked the treasures of heavenly graces entrusted to our
dispensation, the Christian people would make use of this happy opportunity to
the strengthening of faith, to the increase of piety and perfection, and the
faithful reformation of private and public morals in the most joyful fruit of peace
and pardon obtained from God, the peace of all severally and of the whole
society might be confidently expected. And these hopes have not been falsified.
For the pious enthusiasm with which the Christian people welcomed the
promulgation of the Jubilee did not grow cold as time went on. On the contrary,
we saw it daily waxing stronger, by the help of God, who brought such things to
pass as will make this year, a veritable year of salvation, memorable in days
to come. We, for our part, have had abundant cause for rejoicing, since we have
seen, on many sides, such noble advance in faith and piety; and we have enjoyed
the sight of such a multitude of our most dear children whom we have been
enabled to receive, right willingly, into our home, and to press, most
lovingly, to our heart. And now, while we strive very earnestly to express our
heartfelt gratitude to the Father of mercies for the many and rich fruits which
He has vouchsafed to bring forth in the course of this year of expiation, our
pastoral solicitude moves us and impels us to draw from these auspicious
beginnings greater and abiding advantages, to provide for the happiness and
well-being of each and all, and the good estate of society. Now, while we were
considering how, or in what way, such fruits can be best secured, we thought
how Our predecessor Leo XIII, of happy memory, proclaiming a Holy Year on
another occasion, exhorted all the faithful in very weighty words, which we
ourselves repeated in the aforesaid Constitution Auspicantibus
Nobis, urging them "to recollect themselves
a little and to run their thoughts, now immersed in the earth, to better
things."2
2. In like manner we recalled Our
Predecessor Pius X of holy memory, who, after ceaselessly promoting sacerdotal
sanctity both by word and by example when he was keeping the fiftieth year from
ordination to the priesthood, addressed a most pious "Exhortation to the
Catholic Clergy,"3 replete with precious
and most choice lessons by which the edifice of the spiritual life is raised to
no mean altitude.
3. Accordingly following in the
footsteps of these Pontiffs, We have deemed it fitting to do somewhat in like
manner Ourselves, and establish something most excellent, which will, we trust,
prove a source of many rare advantages to the Christian people, We are speaking
of the practice of the Spiritual Exercises, which we earnestly desire to see
daily extended more widely, not only among the clergy both secular and regular,
but also among the multitudes of the Catholic laity; and it is Our pleasure to
bequeath this to our beloved children as a memorial of this Holy Year. And we
do this the more gladly at the end of the fiftieth year since Our first offering of the Divine Sacrifice. For nothing can
be more pleasing to us than the recollection of the heavenly graces and the
unutterable consolations which we have often experienced when occupied in the
Spiritual Exercises; and of the diligence we devoted to the sacred retreats,
marking our priestly course, as it were, by so many stages; of the light and
the impulse that we drew from them, enabling us to know the divine will and to
fulfil it; and lastly of the labour therein bestowed, in the whole course of
our priestly life, on instructing our neighbours in heavenly things, and that
so fruitfully and successfully, that we may rightly conclude that a singular
resource for the eternal salvation of souls is set in the Spiritual Exercises.
4. And, in very deed, Venerable
Brethren, the importance for more than one reason; the utility and the opportuneness of Sacred Retreats, will be readily
recognised by any one who considers, however lightly, the times in which we now
live. The most grave disease by which our age is oppressed, and at the same
time the fruitful source of all the evils deplored by every man of good heart,
is that levity and thoughtlessness which carry men hither and thither through
devious ways. Hence comes the constant and passionate absorption in external
things; hence, the insatiable thirst for riches and pleasures that gradually
weakens and extinguishes in the minds of men the desire for more excellent
goods, and so entangles them in outward and fleeting things that it forbids
them to think of eternal truths, and of the Divine laws, and of God Himself,
the one beginning and end of all created things, Who, nevertheless, for his
boundless goodness and mercy, even in these our days, though moral corruption
may spread apace, ceases not to draw men to himself by a bounteous abundance of
graces. Now, if we would cure this sickness from which human society suffers so
sorely, what healing remedy could we devise more appropriate for our purpose
than that of calling these enervated souls, so neglectful of eternal things, to
the recollection of the Spiritual Exercises? And, indeed, if the Spiritual Exercises
were nothing more than a brief retirement for a few days, wherein a man removed
from the common society of mortals and from the crowd of cares, was given, not
empty silence, but the opportunity of examining those most grave and
penetrating questions concerning the origin and the destiny of man:
"Whence he comes; and whither he is going"; surely, no one can deny
that great benefits may be derived from these sacred exercises. But pious
retreats of this kind do much greater things than this, for since they compel
the mind of a man to examine more diligently and intently into all the things
that he has thought, or said, or done; they assist the human faculties in a
marvellous manner; so that the mind becomes accustomed, in this spiritual
arena, to weigh things maturely and with even balance, the will acquires
strength and firmness, the passions are restrained by the rule of counsel; the
activities of human life, being in unison with the thought of the mind, are
effectively conformed to the fixed standard of reason; and, lastly, the soul
attains its native nobility and altitude, as the holy Pontiff St. Gregory
declares in his "Pastoral," by a concise similitude: "The human
mind, like water, when shut up around, is gathered up to higher things; because
it seeks that from which it descended; but when it is left loose, it perishes;
because it spreads itself uselessly on lowly things."4 Moreover, as St. Eucherius
Bishop of Lyons wisely observes; when exercising itself in these spiritual meditations;
"the mind rejoicing in the Lord is stirred up by a certain stimulus of
silence; and grows by unutterable increments."5 And not only so,
but it also acquires that "heavenly nourishment," concerning which Lactantius says "for no food is sweeter to the mind
than the knowledge of truth";6 and according to an ancient author,
who long passed as St. Basil, it is admitted to "the school of heavenly
doctrine and the discipline of the divine arts"7 wherein "God
is all that is learnt, the way by which we are directed, all that whereby the
knowledge of the supreme truth is attained."8 From all this it
clearly appears that the Spiritual Exercises avail both to perfect the natural
powers of man; and further, and more specially, to form the supernatural or
Christian man. Now, certainly in these days when so many impediments and
obstacles are raised against the true sense of Christ, and the supernatural
spirit, wherein alone our holy religion consists; when Naturalism, which
weakens the firmness of faith, and quenches the flames of Christian charity,
holds dominion far and wide; it is of the greatest importance that a man should
withdraw himself from that bewitching of vanity which obscureth
good things9 and hide himself in that blessed secrecy, where, cultured
by heavenly teaching, he may form a just estimate, and understand the value of
human life devoted to the service of God alone; he may abhor the turpitude of
sin; he may conceive the holy fear of God; he may clearly see unveiled the
vanity of earthly things; and, stirred up by the precepts and the example of
Him who is "the way, the truth and the life,"10 he may put
off the old man11 may deny himself, and with humility, obedience, and
voluntary chastisement of self, may put on Christ and strive to attain to the
"perfect man," and to that absolute "measure of the age of the fulness of Christ,"12 whereof the Apostle
speaks; nay, more, may endeavour, with all his soul, to be able to say himself,
with the same Apostle: "I live now not I; but Christ liveth
in me."13 By these degrees, indeed, the
soul goes upward to consummate perfection, and is most sweetly united to God by
the help of divine grace, which is obtained in greater abundance, during these
days, by more fervent prayers, and more frequent reception of the sacred
mysteries. These things, assuredly, Venerable Brethren, are singular and most
excellent, and far surpassing nature; and in obtaining them alone are to be
found the quiet, and happiness, and true peace for which the human mind
longingly thirsts; and which the society of today, carried away by the heat of
temptations, vainly seeks in the hungry quest of uncertain and fleeting goods,
and in the tumult of a perturbed life. On the other hand, we are clearly taught
that in the Spiritual Exercises there is a wonderful power of bringing peace to
men and of carrying them upwards to holiness of life; which has been proved by
daily experience in former ages, and perhaps yet more clearly in our own: for
we can hardly number those who, being duly exercised in a sacred retreat, come
forth from it "rooted and built up"14 in Christ; filled with
light, heaped up with joy, and flooded with that "peace which surpasseth all understanding."15 Moreover, from this perfection of life, which is
manifestly obtained from the Spiritual Exercises; besides that inward peace of
the soul, there springs forth spontaneously another most choice fruit, which
redounds to the great advantage of the social life: namely that desire of
gaining souls to Christ which is known as the Apostolic Spirit. For it is the
genuine effect of charity that the just soul, in whom God dwells by grace,
burns in a wondrous way to call others to share in the knowledge and love of
that Infinite Good, which she has attained and possesses And, now, in this our
age, when human society is in so much need of spiritual graces; when the
foreign Mission fields, which "are white already to harvest"16
demand, more and more, the care of apostles adequate to their need; and our own
regions, likewise, require elect bands of men, of the secular and regular
clergy, as faithful dispensers of the mysteries of God; and compact companies
of pious laymen, who, united to the Apostolic Hierarchy by close bonds of
charity, may help it with active industry, by manifold works and labours devoting
themselves to the Catholic Action. And We, Venerable Brethren, being taught by
history, regard these sacred retreats for exercises as upper chambers raised by
God, wherein any one of generous mind, supported by the help of divine grace,
illuminated by eternal truths, and exhorted by the example of Christ, may not
only see clearly the value of souls, and be inflamed with the desire of helping
them, in whatsoever state of life, he sees, on careful examination, he is
called to serve his Creator; but many likewise, learn the ardent spirit of the
apostolate, its diligence, its labours, its deeds of daring.
5. Furthermore, our Lord often made
use of this method in forming the preachers of the Gospel. For the Divine
Master Himself, not content with having spent long years in the domestic
retreat of Nazareth, before he shone forth in full light before the nations,
and taught them heavenly things by his word, chose to
spend full forty days in desert wilderness. Nay more, in the midst of his
evangelical labours, he was wont to invite his Apostles to the friendly silence
of retreat: "Come apart into a desert place, and rest a little,"17
and when he left this earth of sorrows to go to heaven, he willed that these
same Apostles and his disciples should be polished and perfected in the upper
chamber at Jerusalem, where for the space of ten days "persevering with
one mind in prayer"18 they were made worthy to receive the Holy
Spirit: surely a memorable retreat, which first foreshadowed the Spiritual
Exercises; from which the church came forth endowed with virtue and perpetual
strength; and in which, in the presence of the Virgin Mary Mother of God, and
aided by her patronage, those also were instituted whom we may rightly call
precursors of the Catholic Action.
6. From that day, the use of the
Spiritual Exercises if not under the same name and in the modern manner, at
least in substance, "became familiar among the primitive Chirstians,"19 as St.
Francis of Sales taught, and as appears from clear indications in the writings
of the holy Fathers. For it is thus St. Jerome exhorts the noble lady Celantia "Choose to thyself a suitable place, remote
from the noise of the household, whither thou mayst
betake thyself as a haven. Let there be there so much care in divine readings,
such frequent turns of prayers, such steadfast thought of things to come, that
thou mayest redeem the occupations of other hours by
this vacation. We do not say this to withdraw thee from thine
own: nay, rather we say it that thou mayst learn
there and meditate how thou shouldst show thyself to thine own: nay, rather we say it that thou mayst learn there and meditate how thou shouldst
show thyself to thine own."20 And St.
Peter Chrysologus Bishop of Ravenna, in the same age
as St. Jerome urges the faithful with this famous invitation: "We have
given a year to the body, let us give days to the soul...Let us live to God a
little who have lived the whole time to the world. Let the divine voice sound
in our ears: let not the noise of the household confuse
our hearing...Being thus armed brethren and thus instructed let us declare war
on sins...secure of victory."21 But as time went on men were still
held by the desire of placid solitude wherein away from witnesses the soul
might give attention; nay more, it is found that in the most turbulent ages of
human society men athirst for justice and truth were the more vehemently urged
by the Divine Spirit seek the solitude "in order being free from bodily
desire they might more often be intent on the divine wisdom in the court of the
mind where all the tumult of earthly cares being silent, they may rejoice in
holy mediations and eternal delights."22 Now after God in his
supreme providence had raised up many men in his Church, abundantly endowed
with supernal gifts an conspicuous as masters of the supernatural life who set
forth wise rules, approved ascetical methods, whether from divine revelation,
or from their own practice, or from the experience of former times; by the
disposition of Divine Providence like manner, the Spiritual Exercises, properly
so called were given to the world by the work of the illustrious servant of God
St. Ignatius of Loyola - "a treasure," as is called by that venerable
man of the Order of St. Benedict, Louis of Blois,
whose opinion is cited by St. Alphonsus Liguori in a very beautiful letter "On making the
Exercises in solitude" - "A treasure which God has set open for his
Church in these last ages, and for which abundant thanksgiving should be
rendered to Him."23
7. From these Spiritual Exercises,
whose fame spread very rapidly in the Church, many drew a stimulus to make them
run with more alacrity in the paths of sanctity. And among these was one most
dear to Us on many grounds, the Venerable St. Charles Borromeo,
who as we have mentioned on another occasion, spread their use among the clergy
and the people;24 and by this care and
authority enriched them with appropriated rules and directions; and what is
more, established a house for the special purpose of cultivating the Ignatian meditations. This house, which he called the Asceterium, was, so far as we know, the first among the
many houses of this kind, which, by happy imitation have flourished everywhere.
For as the estimation of the Exercises grew continually greater in the Church,
there was a marvellous multiplication of these houses, which may be called most
opportune places of entertainment, set in the arid desert of the world, wherein
the faithful of both sexes are separately recreated and refreshed with spiritual
nourishment. And, indeed, after the cruel carnage of the war, which has so
bitterly troubled the human family, after so many wounds inflicted on the
spiritual and civil prosperity of the peoples, who can count the vast number of
those who having seen the fallacious hopes they cherished fail and fade away,
clearly understood that earthly things must give place to those of heaven, and,
by the most present aid of the Divine Spirit, fled to seek true peace of mind
in holy retreats? Let all those remain as a manifest proof, how, whether drawn
by the beauty of a more holy and more perfect life, or tossed by the turbid
tempests of the time, or moved by the solicitudes of life, or beset by the
frauds and fallacies of the world, or fighting against the deadly plague of
Rationalism, or allured by the fascination of the senses, withdrawing
themselves into those holy houses, have tasted again the peace of solitude, all
the sweeter to them because of the heavy labours they have borne, and
meditating on heavenly things, have ordered their life in accordance with
supernatural lessons.
8. We, therefore, Venerable Brethren,
rejoicing in these happy beginnings of a noble piety, and seeing in its further
extension a powerful help against the evils that assail us; must, at the same
time, endeavour, as far as in us lies, to second the most sweet counsel of the
Divine Goodness; so that this secret calling, breathed by the Holy Spirit into
the minds of men, may not be deprived of the much-desired abundance of heavenly
graces. Moreover, We do this the more willingly
because We see what has already been done by Our Predecessors. For, long since,
this Apostolic See, which had often commended the Spiritual Exercises by word,
taught the faithful by its own example and authority, converting the august Vatican temple into a Cenacle for
meditation and prayers; which custom We have willingly
received, with no small joy and consolation to Ourselves. And in order that we
may secure this joy and consolation, both for ourselves and for others who are
near us, We have already had arrangements made for
holding the Spiritual Exercises every year in the Vatican.
9. We know well, Venerable Brethren,
how much store you also set by the Spiritual Exercises; for you gave yourselves
to them before you were adorned with the fulness of
the Priesthood; and often afterwards, in company with your Priests you have
sought them anew in order to refresh your souls with the contemplation of
heavenly things. This excellent practice, assuredly, is deserving of our solemn
and public commendation. And we commend, likewise, no less warmly those
bishops, whether of the Eastern or of the Western Church, who, as we know, have
sometimes come together, with their own Patriarch or Metropolitan, to make a
pious retreat adapted to their offices and duties. We hope that this luminous
example, so far as circumstances allow, may be followed with sedulous
emulation. And perchance there would be no great difficulty in this if a
retreat of this kind were instituted on the occasion of one of those synods
which all the Prelates of an ecclesiastical province celebrate ex officio,
whether to provide for the common salvation of souls, or to deliberate on those
things which the conditions of the time seem to require. And, indeed We ourselves
had determined to do this, with all the Bishops of Lombardy, during the brief
space of our rule over the Metropolitan Church of Milan; and, without doubt, we
should have accomplished it, in that first year of office, if the inscrutable
decrees of Divine Providence had not disposed otherwise of our lowliness. Wherefore,
We are well assured that those priests and religious
men who, anticipating the law of the Church, in this matter, already frequented
the Spiritual Exercises will, hereafter, use this means of acquiring sanctity
with yet greater diligence, now that they are more gravely bound to it by the
authority of the sacred Canons.
10. For this reason We earnestly exhort
all priests of the secular clergy to let the faithful see them following the
Spiritual Exercises, at least in that modest measure which the Code of Canon
Law prescribes for them:25 and let them approach and fulfil the
exercises with an ardent desire of their own perfection, so that they may
obtain that abundance of the supernatural spirit, which is very necessary for
them, if they would secure the spiritual advantage of their flock, and win a
multitude of souls to Christ. For this was the path trodden by all those
priests who, burning with zeal for the salvation of souls, were foremost in
guiding their neighbours on the way to holiness, and in educating the clergy;
as may be seen, to take a recent example, in B. Joseph Cafasso,
to whom We ourselves decreed the honours of the blessed in Heaven. For it was
the constant custom of this most holy man to labour assiduously in the
Spiritual Exercises, in order that, by this means, he might better nourish his
own sanctity, and that of other ministers of Christ, and might know the
heavenly counsels. And once, when he came forth from a sacred retreat, gifted
with divine light, he clearly showed this same path to a younger priest, whose
confessor he was; and he followed it up to the highest summit of sanctity. This
was the blessed John Bosco, whose name is beyond all
praise. As for those who, under whatever title, serve within the bounds of
religious discipline; since they are commanded by law to make the sacred
exercises every year26 there can be no doubt
that they will bring from these sacred retreats an abundance of heavenly goods
for which, as each one needs, they may draw draughts of greater perfection, and
all the graces enabling them to run the way of the evangelical counsels with
alacrity. For the annual Exercises are the mystical "tree of life"27
by which both individuals and communities may live in that fame of sanctity, in
which every religious family must needs flourish. Nor should the priests of the
Clergy, secular and regular, think that the time spent on the Spiritual
Exercises tends to the detriment of the apostolic ministry. On this matter, let
them hear St. Bernard, who did not hesitate to write thus to the Supreme
Pontiff, Blessed Eugene II, whose master he had been: "If thou wouldst
belong wholly to all, after the manner of him who became all things to all men;
I praise thy humanity, provided it be full. But, how is it full when thou art
excluded? Thou also art a man: therefore, that the humanity may be whole and
full, let it gather thee also into the bosom which receives all: else, what
will it profit, if thou gain all, and lost thyself? Wherefore, when all have
thee, be thyself one of them that have. Remember, I say not always, I say not
often, but at least sometimes, to render thyself to thyself."28
11. With no less care, Venerable
Brethren, would we have manifold cohorts of the Catholic Action polished or
cultivated fitly by the Spiritual Exercises. With all our power, we desire to
promote this Action; and we cease not, and will never cease, to commend it;
because the co-operation of the laity with the apostolic hierarchy is exceedingly
useful, not to say necessary. And, indeed, we can hardly find words to express
the joy we experienced, when we learnt that special series of sacred
meditations were established almost everywhere, for the cultivation of these
pacific and strenuous soldiers of Christ and in particular for bands of young
recruits. For while they crowd to this course, in order that they may be found
more ready and more prompt to fight the battles of the Lord, they will find
there not only the helps enabling them to express the form of the Christian
life more perfectly in themselves, but may also, not rarely, receive in their
hearts the secret voice of God, calling them to the sacred offices, and to work
for the salvation of souls, and urging them on to the full exercise of the
apostolate. This is, indeed, the glowing dawn of heavenly goods,
and in a short time it will be followed and completed by a perfect day; if only
the practice of the Spiritual Exercises is yet more widely extended and is
propagated with prudence and wisdom among the various associations of Catholics
and chiefly those of younger members.29
12. Now, even as in this age of ours,
temporal goods and the various advantages flowing from them, together with a
certain measure of wealth, have been extended somewhat freely to workmen and
others hiring out their labour, thereby raising them to a happier condition of
life, it must be ascribed to the bounty of the provident and merciful God, that
this treasure of the Spiritual Exercises also has been scattered abroad among
the common mass of the faithful so as to serve as a counterpoise to hold men
back, lest borne down by the weight of fleeting things and immersed in
pleasures and delights of life, they fall into the tenets and morals of
Materialism. For this reason we cordially commend the works of the Exercises
which have spring up already in certain regions, and the exceedingly fruitful
and opportune "Retreats for Workmen," together with the associated
sodalities of Perseverance; all which, Venerable Brethren, We recommend to your
care and solicitude.
13. Now in order that the joyful fruits
we have mentioned may flow forth from these sacred Exercises, these must needs be made with due care and diligence. For if the
exercises are performed merely for the sake of custom, or tardily, and with
hesitation, little or no advantage will be derived from them; wherefore before
all things it is necessary that the mind, assisted by solitude should devote
itself to the sacred meditations, leaving aside all the cares and solicitudes
of daily life. For as that golden book, the Imitation of Christ, clearly
teaches: " The devout soul makes progress in
silence and in peace."30 For this reason, although we regard those
meditations as worthy of praise and pastoral approval in which many make the
exercises together in public - for these have received many blessings from God
- still we most strongly recommend those Spiritual Exercises which are made in
private, and are called "closed." For in these a man is more easily
separated from intercourse with creatures and concentrates the dissipated
powers of his soul on God himself and on the contemplation of eternal truths.
14. Moreover, Spiritual Exercises,
truly so-called, require a certain space of time for their fulfilment. And
though, by reason of circumstances and persons, this may be reduced to a few
days, or extended to a whole month; nevertheless it should not be curtailed too
much if one wishes to obtain the benefits promised by the Exercises. For even
as the salubrity of a place can only contribute to
the health of the body of one who stays there for awhile, so the salutary art
of sacred meditations cannot effectively benefit the spirit unless it spends
some time in the Exercises.
15. Lastly it is of great moment for
making the Spiritual Exercises properly and deriving fruit from them that they
should be conducted in a wise and appropriate method.
16. Now it is recognised that among
all the methods of Spiritual Exercises which very laudably adhere to the
principles of sound Catholic asceticism one has ever held the foremost place
and adorned by the full and repeated approbation of the Holy See and honoured
by the praises of men, distinguished for spiritual doctrine and sanctity, has
borne abundant fruits of holiness during the space of well nigh four hundred
years; we mean the method introduced by St. Ignatius of Loyola, whom we are
pleased to call the chief and peculiar Master of Spiritual Exercises whose
"admirable book of Exercises"31 ever since it was solemnly
approved, praised, and commended by our predecessor Paul III of happy memory,32
already to repeat some words we once used, before our elevation to the Chair of
Peter, already we say "stood forth and conspicuous as a most wise and
universal code of laws for the direction of souls in the way of salvation and
perfection; an unexhausted fountain of most excellent
and most solid piety; as a most keen stimulus, and a well instructed guide
showing the way to secure the amendment of morals and attain the summit of the
spiritual life."33 And when at the beginning of Our pontificate
satisfying the most ardent desires and vows of sacred Prelates of almost the
whole Catholic world from both Rites in the Apostolic Constitution Summorum Pontificum,
given on July 22, 1922, We declared and constituted St. Ignatius of Loyola
"the heavenly Patron of all Spiritual Exercises, and, therefore, of
institutes, sodalities and bodies of every kind assisting those who are making
the "Spiritual Exercises",34 we did little else but sanction
by our supreme authority what was already proclaimed by the common feeling of
Pastors and of the faithful; and what together with the aforesaid Paul III, our
illustrious Predecessors Alexander VII,35 Benedict XIV,36 Leo
XIII,37 had often said implicitly, when praising the Ignatian meditations, and what all those who, in the words
of Leo XIII, had been most conspicuous "in the discipline of ascetic, or
in sanctity or morals," during the last four hundred years38 had
said by their praises and yet more by the example of the virtues which they had
acquired in this arena. And in very deed, the excellence of spiritual doctrine
altogether free from the perils and errors of false mysticism, the admirable
facility of adapting the exercises to any order or state of man, whether they
devote themselves to contemplation in the cloisters, or lead an active life in
the affairs of the world, the apt co-ordination of the various parts, the
wonderful and lucid order in the meditation of truths that seem to follow
naturally one from another; and lastly the spiritual lessons which after
casting off the yoke of sin and washing away the diseases inherent in his
morals lead a man through the safe paths of abnegation and the removal of evil
habits39 up to the supreme heights of prayer and divine love; without
doubt all these are things which sufficiently show the efficacious nature of
the Ignatian method and abundantly commend the Ignatian meditations.
17. It remains, Venerable Brethren, in
order to guard and preserve the fruit of the Spiritual Exercises which we have
been praising and to revive its salutary memory that we should earnestly
recommend a pious custom which may be called a brief repetition of the
Exercises namely a monthly or trimestrial
recollection. This custom which, to borrow the words of Our Predecessor of holy
memory, Pius X, "We gladly see introduced in many places"40
and flourishing especially in religious communities and among pious priests of
the secular clergy we earnestly desire to see adopted by the laity also. For it would prove a real benefit more especially for those who are
prevented by the cares of their family from using the Spiritual Exercises.
For these recollections might supply in some measure the advantages to be
derived from the Spiritual Exercises. In this manner, Venerable Brethren, may
these Spiritual Exercises be extended everywhere through all the orders of
Christian society and if they are diligently performed a spiritual regeneration
will follow. Piety will be enkindled, the forces of religious will be
nourished, the apostolic office will unfold its fruit bearing branches, and
peace will reign in society and in the hearts of all.
18. When the heavens were serene and
earth was silent and night lay on the world, in secret, far from the crowd of
men, the Eternal Word of the Father, having assumed the nature of man, appeared
to mortals, and the heavenly regions echoed the heavenly hymn, "Glory to
God in the highest and on earth peace to men of good will."41 This praise of Christian peace - the Peace of Christ in
the Kingdom of Christ - setting forth the supreme desire of Our Apostolic heart
to which all our aims and our labours are directed, nearly touches the minds of
Christians who withdrawn from the tumult and the vanities of the world in deep
and hidden solitude have pondered on the truth of faith and the example of Him
who brought peace to the world and left it as a heritage: "My peace I give
to you."42
19. This peace truly so called We wish
for you from our heart, Venerable Brethren, on this very day on which by the
Divine bounty the fiftieth year of Our Priesthood is completed, and as the
sweet festival of the Nativity of Our Lord Jesus Christ approaches, which may
be called the mystery of peace approaches, we with fervent prayer supplicate
for that gift for him who is hailed as the Prince of Peace.
And with our mind raised by these thoughts a joyful and firm hope as an omen of
divine gifts, and as a pledge of Our affection to you,
Venerable Brethren, and to your clergy and people - that is, to all our most
beloved Catholic family - We impart the Apostolic Benediction most loving in
the Lord.
Given at St. Peter's Rome, on the twentieth day of December,
1929, the eighth year of Our Pontificate .
PIUS XI
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