57. It is scarcely necessary to add,
Venerable Brothers, how much We depend on the regular clergy to aid in the
successful execution of the different parts of Our program. You know as well as
We what a magnificent contribution they have made to the interior life of the
Church and to the spread of the Kingdom of Christ. They are actuated not only by the
precepts but by the counsels of Christ. Both in the holy silence of the
cloister and in pious works outside convent walls they exhibit the high ideals
of Christian perfection by their works of true piety, by their keeping
uppermost in the minds of Christian people the pure ideals of Christ, by the
example which they give due to their self-sacrificing renunciation of all
worldly comforts and material goods, by their acquisition of spiritual
treasures. Because of the consecration of their whole being to the common good,
they undertake truly miraculous activities which succor
every ill spiritual and bodily, and help all in finding a sure remedy or
assistance from the evils which we must encounter. As the history of the Church
bears witness, members of the religious orders under the inspiration of God's
love, have often gone to such lengths in their work of preaching the Gospel
that they have given up their lives for the salvation of souls, thus by their
death spreading the unity of the faith and the doctrine of Christian
brotherhood and at the same time extending farther and farther the boundaries
of the Kingdom of Christ.
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