|
SACRA VIRGINITAS
ENCYCLICAL
OF POPE PIUS XII ON CONSECRATED VIRGINITY TO OUR VENERABLE BROTHERS,
THE PATRIARCHS, PRIMATES, ARCHBISHOPS, BISHOPS, AND OTHER LOCAL
ORDINARIES IN PEACE AND COMMUNION WITH THE APOSTOLIC SEE
1.
Holy virginity and that perfect chastity which is consecrated to
the service of God is without doubt among the most precious treasures
which the Founder of the Church has left in heritage to the society
which He established.
2.
This assuredly was the reason why the Fathers of the Church confidently
asserted that perpetual virginity is a very noble gift which the
Christian religion has bestowed on the world. They rightly noted
that the pagans of antiquity imposed this way of life on the Vestals
only for a certain time;[1] and that, although in the Old Testament
virginity is ordered to be kept and preserved, it is only a previous
requisite for marriage;[2] and furthermore, as Ambrose writes,[3]
"We read that also in the temple of Jerusalem there were virgins.
But what does the Apostle say? 'Now all these things happened to
them in figure',[4] that this might be a foreshadowing of what was
to come "
3.
Indeed, right from Apostolic times this virtue has been thriving
and flourishing in the garden of the Church. When the Acts of the
Apostles[5] say that Philip the deacon was the father of four virgins,
the word certainly refers to their state of life rather than to
their age. And not much later Ignatius of Antioch salutes the virgins,[6]
who together with the widows, formed a not insignificant part of
the Christian community of Smyrna. In the second century, as St.
Justin testifies, "many men and women, sixty and seventy years
old, imbued from childhood with the teachings of Christ, keep their
integrity."[7] Gradually the number of men and women who had
vowed their chastity to God grew; likewise the importance of the
office they fulfilled in the Church increased notably, as We have
shown more at length in Our apostolic constitution, "Sponsa
Christi."[8]
4.
Further, the Fathers of the Church, such as Cyprian, Athanasius,
Ambrose, John Chrysostom, Jerome, Augustine, and many others, have
sung the praises of virginity. And this doctrine of the Fathers,
augmented through the course of centuries by the Doctors of the
Church and the masters of asceticism, helps greatly either to inspire
in the faithful of both sexes the firm resolution of dedicating
themselves to God by the practice of perfect chastity and of persevering
thus till death, or to strengthen them in the resolution already
taken.
5.
Innumerable is the multitude of those who from the beginning of
the Church until our time have offered their chastity to God. Some
have preserved their virginity unspoiled, others after the death
of their spouse, have consecrated to God their remaining years in
the unmarried state, and still others, after repenting their sins,
have chosen to lead a life of perfect chastity; all of them at one
in this common oblation, that is, for love of God to abstain for
the rest of their lives from sexual pleasure. May then what the
Fathers of the Church preached about the glory and merit of virginity
be an invitation, a help, and a source of strength to those who
have made the sacrifice to persevere with constancy, and not take
back or claim for themselves even the smallest part of the holocaust
they have laid on the altar of God.
6.
And while this perfect chastity is the subject of one of the three
vows which constitute the religious state,[9] and is also required
by the Latin Church of clerics in major orders[10] and demanded
from members of Secular Institutes,[11] it also flourishes among
many who are lay people in the full sense: men and women who are
not constituted in a public state of perfection and yet by private
promise or vow completely abstain from marriage and sexual pleasures,
in order to serve their neighbor more freely and to be united with
God more easily and more closely.
7.
To all of these beloved sons and daughters who in any way have consecrated
their bodies and souls to God, We address Ourselves, and exhort
them earnestly to strengthen their holy resolution and be faithful
to it.
8.
However, since there are some who, straying from the right path
in this matter, so exalt marriage as to rank it ahead of virginity
and thus depreciate chastity consecrated to God and clerical celibacy,
Our apostolic duty demands that We now in a particular manner declare
and uphold the Church's teaching on the sublime state of virginity,
and so defend Catholic truth against these errors.
9.
First of all, We think it should be noted that the Church has taken
what is capital in her teaching on virginity from the very lips
of her Divine Spouse.
10.
For when the disciples thought that the obligations and burdens
of marriage, which their Master's discourse had made clear, seemed
extremely heavy, they said to Him: "If the case stands so between
man and wife, it is better not to marry at all."[12] Jesus
Christ replied that His ideal is not understood by everybody but
only by those who have received the gift; for some are hindered
from marriage because of some defect of nature, others because of
the violence and malice of men, while still others freely abstain
of their own will, and this "for the kingdom of heaven."
And He concludes with these words, "He that can take it, let
him take it."[13]
11.
By these words the divine Master is speaking not of bodily impediments
to marriage, but of a resolution freely made to abstain all one's
life from marriage and sexual pleasure. For in likening those who
of their own free will have determined to renounce these pleasures
to those who by nature or the violence of men are forced to do so,
is not the Divine Redeemer teaching us that chastity to be really
perfect must be perpetual?
12.
Here also it must be added, as the Fathers and Doctors of the Church
have clearly taught, that virginity is not a Christian virtue unless
we embrace it "for the kingdom of heaven;"[14] that is,
unless we take up this way of life precisely to be able to devote
ourselves more freely to divine things to attain heaven more surely,
and with skillful efforts to lead others more readily to the kingdom
of heaven.
13.
Those therefore, who do not marry because of exaggerated self-interest,
or because, as Augustine says,[15] they shun the burdens of marriage
or because like Pharisees they proudly flaunt their physical integrity,
an attitude which has been condemned by the Council of Gangra lest
men and women renounce marriage as though it were something despicable
instead of because virginity is something beautiful and holy, -
none of these can claim for themselves the honor of Christian virginity.[16]
14.
Moreover, the Apostle of the Gentiles, writing under divine inspiration,
makes this point: "He that is without a wife is solicitous
for the things that belong to the Lord, how he may please God. .
. And the unmarried woman and the virgin thinketh on the things
of the Lord, that she may be holy in body and spirit."[17]
15.
This then is the primary purpose, this the central idea of Christian
virginity: to aim only at the divine, to turn thereto the whole
mind and soul; to want to please God in everything, to think of
Him continually, to consecrate body and soul completely to Him.
16.
This is the way the Fathers of the Church have always interpreted
the words of Jesus Christ and the teaching of the Apostle of the
Gentiles; for from the very earliest days of the Church they have
considered virginity a consecration of body and soul offered to
God. Thus, St. Cyprian demands of virgins that "once they have
dedicated themselves to Christ by renouncing the pleasures of the
flesh, they have vowed themselves body and soul to God . . . and
should seek to adorn themselves only for their Lord and please only
Him."[18] And the Bishop of Hippo, going further, says, "Virginity
is not honored because it is bodily integrity, but because it is
something dedicated to God. . . Nor do we extol virgins because
they are virgins, but because they are virgins dedicated to God
in loving continence."[19] And the masters of Sacred Theology,
St. Thomas Aquinas[20] and St. Bonaventure,[21] supported by the
authority of Augustine, teach that virginity does not possess the
stability of virtue unless there is a vow to keep it forever intact.
And certainly those who obligate themselves by perpetual vow to
keep their virginity put into practice in the most perfect way possible
what Christ said about perpetual abstinence from marriage; nor can
it justly be affirmed that the intention of those who wish to leave
open a way of escape from this state of life is better and more
perfect.
17.
Moreover the Fathers of the Church considered this obligation of
perfect chastity as a kind of spiritual marriage, in which the soul
is wedded to Christ; so that some go so far as to compare breaking
the vow with adultery.[22] Thus, St. Athanasius writes that the
Catholic Church has been accustomed to call those who have the virtue
of virginity the spouses of Christ.[23] And St. Ambrose, writing
succinctly of the consecrated virgin, says, "She is a virgin
who is married to God."[24] In fact, as is clear from the writings
of the same Doctor of Milan,[25] as early as the fourth century
the rite of consecration of a virgin was very like the rite the
Church uses in our own day in the marriage blessing.[26]
18.
For the same reason the Fathers exhort virgins to love their Divine
Spouse more ardently than they would love a husband had they married,
and always in their thoughts and actions to fulfill His will.[27]
Augustine writes to virgins: "Love with all your hearts Him
Who is the most beautiful of the sons of men: you are free, your
hearts are not fettered by conjugal bonds . . . if, then, you would
owe your husbands great love, how great is the love you owe Him
because of Whom you have willed to have not husbands? Let Him Who
was fastened to the cross be securely fastened to your hearts."[28]
And this in other respects too is in harmony with the sentiments
and resolutions which the Church herself requires of virgins on
the day they are solemnly consecrated to God by inviting them to
recite these words: "The kingdom of this earth and all worldly
trappings I have valued as worthless for love of Our Lord Jesus
Christ, Whom I have seen, loved, believed, and preferred above all
else."[29] It is nothing else but love of Him that sweetly
constrains the virgin to consecrate her body and soul entirely to
her Divine Redeemer; thus St. Methodius, Bishop of Olympus, places
these beautiful words on her lips: "You yourself, O Christ,
are my all. For you I keep myself chaste, and holding aloft my shining
lamp I run to meet you, my Spouse."[30] Certainly it is the
love of Christ that urges a virgin to retire behind convent walls
and remain there all her life, in order to contemplate and love
the heavenly Spouse more easily and without hindrance; certainly
it is the same love that strongly inspires her to spend her life
and strength in works of mercy for the sake of her neighbor.
19.
As for those men "who were not defiled with women, being virgins,"[31]
the Apostle John asserts that, "they follow the Lamb wherever
he goes."[32] Let us meditate, then, on the exhortation Augustine
gives to all men of this class: "You follow the Lamb because
the body of the Lamb is indeed virginal. . . Rightly do you follow
Him in virginity of heart and body wherever He goes. For what does
following mean but imitation? Christ has suffered for us, leaving
us an example, as the Apostle Peter says 'that we should follow
in his footsteps'."[33] Hence all these disciples and spouses
of Christ embraced the state of virginity, as St. Bonaventure says,
"in order to become like unto Christ the spouse, for that state
makes virgins like unto Him."[34] It would hardly satisfy their
burning love for Christ to be united with Him by the bonds of affection,
but this love had perforce to express itself by the imitation of
His virtues, and especially by conformity to His way of life, which
was lived completely for the benefit and salvation of the human
race. If priests, religious men and women, and others who in any
way have vowed themselves to the divine service, cultivate perfect
chastity, it is certainly for the reason that their Divine Master
remained all His life a virgin. St. Fulgentius exclaims: "This
is the only-begotten Son of God, the only-begotten Son of a virgin
also, the only spouse of all holy virgins, the fruit, the glory,
the gift of holy virginity, whom holy virginity brought forth physically,
to whom holy virginity is wedded spiritually, by whom holy virginity
is made fruitful and kept inviolate, by whom she is adorned, to
remain ever beautiful, by whom she is crowned, to reign forever
glorious."[35]
20.
And here We think it opportune, Venerable Brothers, to expose more
fully and to explain more carefully why the love of Christ moves
generous souls to abstain from marriage, and what is the mystical
connection between virginity and the perfection of Christian charity.
From our Lord's words referred to above, it has already been implied
that this complete renunciation of marriage frees men from its grave
duties and obligations. Writing by divine inspiration, the Apostle
of the Gentiles proposes the reason for this freedom in these words:
"And I would have you to be without solicitude. . . But he
that is with a wife, is solicitous for the things of the world,
how he may please his wife; and he is divided."[36] Here however
it must be noted that the Apostle is not reproving men because they
are concerned about their wives, nor does he reprehend wives because
they seek to please their husbands; rather is he asserting clearly
that their hearts are divided between love of God and love of their
spouse, and beset by gnawing cares, and so by reason of the duties
of their married state they can hardly be free to contemplate the
divine. For the duty of the married life to which they are bound
clearly demands: "They shall be two in one flesh."[37]
For spouses are to be bound to each other by mutual bonds both in
joy and in sorrow.[38] It is easy to see, therefore, why persons
who desire to consecrate themselves to God's service embrace the
state of virginity as a liberation, in order to be more entirely
at God's disposition and devoted to the good of their neighbor.
How, for example, could a missionary such as the wonderful St. Francis
Xavier, a father of the poor such as the merciful St. Vincent de
Paul, a zealous educator of youth like St. John Bosco, a tireless
"mother of emigrants" like St. Francis Xavier Cabrini,
have accomplished such gigantic and painful labors, if each had
to look after the corporal and spiritual needs of a wife or husband
and children?
21.
There is yet another reason why souls desirous of a total consecration
to the service of God and neighbor embrace the state of virginity.
It is, as the holy Fathers have abundantly illustrated, the numerous
advantages for advancement in spiritual life which derive from a
complete renouncement of all sexual pleasure. It is not to be thought
that such pleasure, when it arises from lawful marriage, is reprehensible
in itself; on the contrary, the chaste use of marriage is ennobled
and sanctified by a special sacrament, as the Fathers themselves
have clearly remarked. Nevertheless, it must be equally admitted
that as a consequence of the fall of Adam the lower faculties of
human nature are no longer obedient to right reason, and may involve
man in dishonorable actions. As the Angelic Doctor has it, the use
of marriage "keeps the soul from full abandon to the service
of God."[39]
22.
It is that they may acquire this spiritual liberty of body and soul,
and that they may be freed from temporal cares, that the Latin Church
demands of her sacred ministers that they voluntarily oblige themselves
to observe perfect chastity.[40] And "if a similar law,"
as Our predecessor of immortal memory Pius XI declared, "does
not bind the ministers of the Oriental Church to the same degree,
nevertheless among them too ecclesiastical celibacy occupies a place
of honor, and, in certain cases, especially when the higher grades
of the hierarchy are in question, it is a necessary and obligatory
condition."[41]
23.
Consider again that sacred ministers do not renounce marriage solely
on account of their apostolic ministry, but also by reason of their
service at the altar. For, if even the priests of the Old Testament
had to abstain from the use of marriage during the period of their
service in the Temple, for fear of being declared impure by the
Law just as other men,[42] is it not much more fitting that the
ministers of Jesus Christ, who offer every day the Eucharistic Sacrifice,
possess perfect chastity? St. Peter Damian, exhorting priests to
perfect continence, asks: "If Our Redeemer so loved the flower
of unimpaired modesty that not only was He born from a virginal
womb, but was also cared for by a virgin nurse even when He was
still an infant crying in the cradle, by whom, I ask, does He wish
His body to be handled now that He reigns, limitless, in heaven?"[43]
24.
It is first and foremost for the foregoing reasons that, according
to the teaching of the Church, holy virginity surpasses marriage
in excellence. Our Divine Redeemer had already given it to His disciples
as a counsel for a more perfect life.[44] St. Paul, after having
said that the father who gives his daughter in marriage "does
well," adds immediately "and he that gives her not, does
better."[45] Several times in the course of his comparison
between marriage and virginity the Apostle reveals his mind, and
especially in these words: "for I would that all men were even
as myself. . . But I say to the unmarried and to widows: it is good
for them if they so continue, even as I."[46] Virginity is
preferable to marriage then, as We have said, above all else because
it has a higher aim:[47] that is to say, it is a very efficacious
means for devoting oneself wholly to the service of God, while the
heart of married persons will remain more or less "divided."[48]
25.
Turning next to the fruitful effects of virginity, our appreciation
of its value will be enhanced; for "by the fruit the tree is
known."[49]
26.
We feel the deepest joy at the thought of the innumerable army of
virgins and apostles who, from the first centuries of the Church
up to our own day, have given up marriage to devote themselves more
easily and fully to the salvation of their neighbor for the love
of Christ, and have thus been enabled to undertake and carry through
admirable works of religion and charity. We by no means wish to
detract from the merits and apostolic fruits of the active members
of Catholic Action: by their zealous efforts they can often touch
souls that priests and religious cannot gain. Nevertheless, works
of charity are for the most part the field of action of consecrated
persons. These generous souls are to be found laboring among men
of every age and condition, and when they fall worn out or sick,
they bequeath their sacred mission to others who take their place.
Hence it often happens that a child, immediately after birth, is
placed in the care of consecrated persons, who supply in so far
as they can for a mother's love; at the age of reason he is entrusted
to educators who see to his Christian instruction together with
the development of his mind and the formation of his character;
if he is sick, the child or adult will find nurses moved by the
love of Christ who will care for him with unwearying devotion; the
orphan, the person fallen into material destitution or moral abjection,
the prisoner, will not be abandoned. Priests, religious, consecrated
virgins will see in him a suffering member of Christ's Mystical
Body, and recall the words of the Divine Redeemer: "For I was
hungry, and you gave me to eat; I was thirsty, and you gave me to
drink; I was a stranger, and you took me in; naked, and you covered
me; sick, and you visited me; I was in prison, and you came to me.
. . Amen I say to you, as long you did it to one of these my least
brethren, you did it to me."[50] Who can ever praise enough
the missionaries who toil for the conversion of the pagan multitudes,
exiles from their native country, or the nuns who render them indispensable
assistance?" To each and every one We gladly apply these words
of Our Apostolic Exhortation, "Menti Nostrae:" ".
. . by this law of celibacy the priest not only does not abdicate
his paternity, but increases it immensely, for he begets not for
an earthly and transitory life but for the heavenly and eternal
one."[51]
27.
The fruit of virginity is not only in these external works, to which
it allows one to devote oneself more easily and fully, but also
in the earnest prayer offered for others and the trials willingly
and generously endured for their sake, which are other very perfect
forms of charity toward one's neighbor. To such also the servants
and spouses of Christ, especially those who live within the convent
or monastery walls, have consecrated their whole lives.
28.
Finally, virginity consecrated to Christ is in itself such an evidence
of faith in the kingdom of heaven, such a proof of love for our
Divine Redeemer, that there is little wonder if it bears abundant
fruits of sanctity. Innumerable are the virgins and apostles vowed
to perfect chastity who are the honor of the Church by the lofty
sanctity of their lives. In truth, virginity gives souls a force
of spirit capable of leading them even to martyrdom, if needs be:
such is the clear lesson of history which proposes a whole host
of virgins to our admiration, from Agnes of Rome to Maria Goretti.
29.
Virginity fully deserves the name of angelic virtue, which St. Cyprian
writing to virgins affirms: "What we are to be, you have already
commenced to be. You already possess in this world the glory of
the resurrection; you pass through the world without suffering its
contagion. In preserving virgin chastity, you are the equals of
the angels of God."[52] To souls, restless for a purer life
or inflamed with the desire to possess the kingdom of heaven, virginity
offers itself as "a pearl of great price," for which one
"sells all that he has, and buys it."[53] Married people
and even those who are captives of vice, at the contact of virgin
souls, often admire the splendor of their transparent purity, and
feel themselves moved to rise above the pleasures of sense. When
St. Thomas states "that to virginity is awarded the tribute
of the highest beauty,"[54] it is because its example is captivating;
and, besides, by their perfect chastity do not all these men and
women give a striking proof that the mastery of the spirit over
the body is the result of a divine assistance and the sign of proven
virtue?
30.
Worthy of special consideration is the reflection that the most
delicate fruit of virginity consists in this, that virgins make
tangible, as it were, the perfect virginity of their mother, the
Church and the sanctity of her intimate union with Christ. In the
ceremony of the consecration of virgins, the consecrating prelate
prays God: "that there may exist more noble souls who disdain
the marriage which consists in the bodily union of man and woman,
but desire the mystery it enshrines, who reject its practice while
loving its mystic signification."[55]
31.
The greatest glory of virgins is undoubtedly to be the living images
of the perfect integrity of the union between the Church and her
divine Spouse. For this society founded by Christ it is a profound
joy that virgins should be the marvelous sign of its sanctity and
fecundity, as St. Cyprian so well expressed it: "They are the
flower of the Church, the beauty and ornament of spiritual grace,
a subject of joy, a perfect and unsullied homage of praise and honor,
the image of God corresponding to the sanctity of the Lord, the
most illustrious portion of Christ's flock. In them the glorious
fecundity of our mother, the Church, finds expression and she rejoices;
the more the number of virgins increases, the greater is this mother's
joy."[56]
32.
This doctrine of the excellence of virginity and of celibacy and
of their superiority over the married state was, as We have already
said, revealed by our Divine Redeemer and by the Apostle of the
Gentiles; so too, it was solemnly defined as a dogma of divine faith
by the holy council of Trent,[57] and explained in the same way
by all the holy Fathers and Doctors of the Church. Finally, We and
Our Predecessors have often expounded it and earnestly advocated
it whenever occasion offered. But recent attacks on this traditional
doctrine of the Church, the danger they constitute, and the harm
they do to the souls of the faithful lead Us, in fulfillment of
the duties of Our charge, to take up the matter once again in this
Encyclical Letter, and to reprove these errors which are so often
propounded under a specious appearance of truth.
33.
First of all, it is against common sense, which the Church always
holds in esteem, to consider the sexual instinct as the most important
and the deepest of human tendencies, and to conclude from this that
man cannot restrain it for his whole life without danger to his
vital nervous system, and consequently without injuring the harmony
of his personality.
34.
As St. Thomas very rightly observes, the deepest natural instinct
is the instinct of conversation; the sexual instinct comes second.
In addition, it is for the rational inclination, which is the distinguishing
privilege of our nature, to regulate these fundamental instincts
and by dominating to ennoble them.[58]
35.
It is, alas, true that the sin of Adam has caused a deep disturbance
in our corporal faculties and our passions, so that they wish to
gain control of the life of the senses and even of the spirit, obscuring
our reason and weakening our will. But Christ's grace is given us,
especially by the sacraments, to help us to keep our bodies in subjection
and to live by the spirit.[59] The virtue of chastity does not mean
that we are insensible to the urge of concupiscence, but that we
subordinate it to reason and the law of grace, by striving wholeheartedly
after what is noblest in human and Christian life.
36.
In order to acquire this perfect mastery of the spirit over the
senses, it is not enough to refrain from acts directly contrary
to chastity, but it is necessary also generously to renounce anything
that may offend this virtue nearly or remotely; at such a price
will the soul be able to reign fully over the body and lead its
spiritual life in peace and liberty. Who then does not see, in the
light of Catholic principles, that perfect chastity and virginity,
far from harming the normal unfolding of man or woman, on the contrary
endow them with the highest moral nobility.
37.
We have recently with sorrow censured the opinion of those who contend
that marriage is the only means of assuring the natural development
and perfection of the human personality.[60] For there are those
who maintain that the grace of the sacrament, conferred ex opere
operato, renders the use of marriage so holy as to be a fitter instrument
than virginity for uniting souls with God; for marriage is a sacrament,
but not virginity. We denounce this doctrine as a dangerous error.
Certainly, the sacrament grants the married couple the grace to
accomplish holily the duties of their married state, and it strengthens
the bonds of mutual affection that unite them; but the purpose of
its institution was not to make the employment of marriage the means,
most suitable in itself, for uniting the souls of the husband and
wife with God by the bonds of charity.[61]
38.
Or rather does not the Apostle Paul admit that they have the right
of abstaining for a time from the use of marriage, so that they
may be more free for prayer,[62] precisely because such abstinence
gives greater freedom to the soul which wishes to give itself over
to spiritual thoughts and prayer to God?
39.
Finally, it may not be asserted, as some do, that the "mutual
help,"[63] which is sought in Christian Marriage, is a more
effective aid in striving for personal sanctity than the solitude
of the heart, as they term it, of virgins and celibates. For although
all those who have embraced a life of perfect chastity have deprived
themselves of the expression of human love permitted in the married
state, nonetheless it cannot thereby be affirmed that because of
this privation they have diminished and despoiled the human personality.
For they receive from the Giver of heavenly gifts something spiritual
which far exceeds that "mutual help" which husband and
wife confer on each other. They consecrate themselves to Him Who
is their source, and Who shares with them His divine life, and thus
personality suffers no loss, but gains immensely. For who, more
than the virgin, can apply to himself that marvelous phrase of the
Apostle Paul: "I live, now not I; but Christ liveth in me."[64]
40.
For this reason the Church has most wisely held that the celibacy
of her priests must be retained; she knows it is and will be a source
of spiritual graces by which they will be ever more closely united
with God.
41.
We feel it opportune, moreover, to touch somewhat briefly here on
the error of those who, in order to turn boys and girls away from
Seminaries and Religious Institutes, strive to impress upon their
minds that the Church today has a greater need of the help and of
the profession of Christian virtue on the part of those who, united
in marriage, lead a life together with others in the world, than
of priest and consecrated virgins, who, because of their vow of
chastity, are, as it were, withdrawn from human society. No one
can fail to see, Venerable Brothers, how utterly false and harmful
is such an opinion.
42.
Of course, it is not Our intention to deny that Catholic spouses,
because of the example of their Christian life, can, wherever they
live and whatever be their circumstances, produce rich and salutary
fruits as a witness to their virtue. Yet whoever for this reason
argues that it is preferable to live in matrimony than to consecrate
oneself completely to God, without doubt perverts the right order.
Indeed We earnestly wish, Venerable Brothers, that those who have
already contracted marriage, or desire to enter this state, be properly
taught their serious obligations not only to educate properly and
carefully whatever children they have or will have, but also to
help others, within their capacity, by the testimony of their faith
and the example of their virtue. And yet, as Our duty demands, We
cannot but censure all those who strive to turn young people away
from the Seminary or Religious Orders and Institutes, and from the
taking of sacred vows, persuading them that they can, if joined
in marriage, as fathers and mothers of families pursue a greater
spiritual good by an open and public profession of their Christian
life. Certainly their conduct would be more proper and correct,
if, instead of trying to distract from a life of virginity those
young men and women, who desire to give themselves to the service
of God, too few alas today, they were to exhort with all the zeal
at their command the vast numbers of those who live in wedlock to
promote apostolic works in the ranks of the laity. On this point,
Ambrose fittingly writes: "To sow the seeds of perfect purity
and to arouse a desire for virginity has always belonged to the
function of the priesthood."[65]
43.
We think it necessary, moreover, to warn that it is altogether false
to assert that those who are vowed to perfect chastity are practically
outside the community of men. Are not consecrated virgins, who dedicate
their lives to the service of the poor and the sick, without making
any distinction as to race, social rank, or religion, are not these
virgins united intimately with their miseries and sorrows, and affectionately
drawn to them, as though they were their mothers? And does not the
priest likewise, moved by the example of his Divine Master, perform
the function of a good shepherd, who knows his flock and calls them
by name?[66] Indeed it is from that perfect chastity which they
cultivate that priests and religious men and women find the motive
for giving themselves to all, and love all men with the love of
Christ. And they too, who live the contemplative life, precisely
because they not only offer to God prayer and supplication but immolate
themselves for the salvation of others, accomplish much for the
good of the Church; indeed, when in circumstances like the present
they dedicate themselves to works of charity and of the apostolate,
according to the norms which We laid down in the Apostolic Letter
"Sponsa Christi,"[67] they are very much to be praised;
nor can they be said to be separated from contact with men, since
they labor for their spiritual progress in this twofold way.
44.
From the Church's teaching on the excellence of virginity, let Us
now come, Venerable Brothers, to some points which are of practical
application.
45.
In the first place, it must be clearly stated that because virginity
should be esteemed as something more perfect than marriage, it does
not follow that it is necessary for Christian perfection.
46.
Holiness of life can really be attained, even without a chastity
that is consecrated to God. Witness to this are the many holy men
and women, who are publicly honored by the Church, and who were
faithful spouses and stood out as an example of excellent fathers
and mothers; indeed it is not rare to find married people who are
very earnest in their efforts for Christian perfection.
47.
It should be pointed out, also, that God does not urge all Christians
to virginity, as the Apostle Paul teaches us with these words: "Now
concerning virgins, I have no commandment of the Lord; but I give
counsel."[68] We are, therefore, merely invited by counsel
to embrace perfect chastity, as something which can lead those "to
whom it is given"[69] more safely and successfully to the evangelical
perfection they seek, and to the conquest of the kingdom of heaven.
Wherefore it is "not imposed, but proposed," as St. Ambrose
so aptly observed.[70]
48.
Hence, perfect chastity demands, first, a free choice by Christians
before they consecrate themselves to God and then, from God, supernatural
help and grace.[71] Our Divine Redeemer Himself has taught us this
in the following words: "All men take not his word, but they
to whom it is given. . . He that can take it, let him take it."[72]
St. Jerome, intently pondering this sacred phrase of Jesus Christ,
exhorts all "that each one study his own powers, whether he
can fulfill the precepts of virginal modesty. For of itself chastity
is charming and attractive to all. But one's forces must be considered,
that he who can may take it. The Lord's word is as it were an exhortation,
stirring on His soldiers to the prize of purity. He that can take
it, let him take it: let him who can, fight, conquer and receive
his reward."[73]
49.
For virginity is a difficult virtue; that one be able to embrace
it there is needed not only a strong and declared determination
of completely and perpetually abstaining from those legitimate pleasures
derived from marriage; but also a constant vigilance and struggle
to contain and dominate rebellious movements of body and soul, a
flight from the importunings of this world, a struggle to conquer
the wiles of Satan. How true is that saying of Chrysostom: "the
root, and the flower, too, of virginity is a crucified life."[74]
For virginity, according to Ambrose, is as a sacrificial offering,
and the virgin "an oblation of modesty, a victim of chastity."[75]
Indeed, St. Methodius, Bishop of Olympus, compares virgins to martyrs,[76]
and St. Gregory the Great teaches that perfect chastity substitutes
for martyrdom: "Now, though the era of persecution is gone,
yet our peace has its martyrdom, because though we bend not the
neck to the sword, yet with a spiritual weapon we slay fleshly desires
in our hearts."[77] Hence a chastity dedicated to God demands
strong and noble souls, souls ready to do battle and conquer "for
the sake of the kingdom of heaven."[78]
50.
Prior, therefore, to entering upon this most difficult path, all
who by experience know they are too weak in spirit should humbly
heed this warning of Paul the Apostle: "But if they do not
contain themselves, let them marry. For it is better to marry than
to be burnt."[79] For many, undoubtedly, the burden of perpetual
continence is a heavier one than they should be persuaded to shoulder.
And so priests, who are under grave obligation of helping by their
advice young people who declare they are drawn by some movement
of soul to aspire to the priesthood or enter religious life, must
urge them to ponder the matter carefully, lest they enter a way
which they cannot hope to follow sturdily and happily to its end.
They should prudently examine the fitness of candidates, even obtaining,
as often as is proper, the opinion of experts; and then, if serious
doubt remains, especially if it is based on past experience, they
should make use of their authority to make candidates cease from
seeking a state of perfect chastity, nor should these latter ever
be admitted to Holy Orders, or to religious profession.
51.
And yet, although chastity pledged to God is a difficult virtue,
those who after serious consideration generously answer Christ's
invitation and do all in their power to attain it, can perfectly
and faithfully preserve it. For since they have eagerly embraced
the state of virginity or celibacy they will certainly receive from
God that gift* of grace through whose help they will be able to
carry out their promise. Wherefore, if there are any "who do
not feel they have the gift of chastity even though they have vowed
it,"[80] let them not declare they cannot fulfill their obligations
in this matter. "For," says the Council of Trent, quoting
St. Augustine, " 'God does not command the impossible, but
in commanding serves notice that one do what he can, and pray for
what he cannot,'[81] and He helps us to accomplish it."[82]
This truth, so full of encouragement, We recall to those also whose
will has been weakened by upset nerves and whom some doctors, sometimes
even Catholic doctors, are too quick to persuade that they should
be freed from such an obligation, advancing the specious reason
that they cannot preserve their chastity without suffering some
harm to their mental balance. How much more useful and opportune
it is to help the infirm of this type to strengthen their will,
and to advise them that not even to them is chastity impossible,
according to the word of the Apostle: "God is faithful, who
will not suffer you to be tempted above that which you are able:
but will make also with temptation issue, that you may be able to
bear it."[83]
52.
Here are the helps, commended to us by our Divine Redeemer, by which
we may efficaciously protect our virtue: constant vigilance, whereby
we diligently do all that we can; moreover, constant prayer to God,
asking for what we cannot attain by ourselves, because of our weakness.
"Watch and pray, that you enter not into temptation. The spirit
indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak."[84] A vigilance
which guards every moment of our lives and every type of circumstance
is absolutely necessary for us: "For the flesh lusteth against
the spirit: and the spirit against the flesh."[85] But if anyone
grants however little to the enticements of the flesh, he will see
himself quickly pulled toward those "works of the flesh"
which the Apostle lists,[86] the basest and ugliest vices of man.
53.
Hence we must watch particularly over the movements of our passions
and of our senses, and so control them by voluntary discipline in
our lives and by bodily mortification that we render them obedient
to right reason and God's law: "And they that are Christ's
have crucified their flesh, with its vices and concupiscences."[87]
The Apostle of the Gentiles says this about himself: "But I
chastise my body, and bring it into subjection: lest perhaps, when
I have preached to others, I myself should become a castaway."[88]
All holy men and women have most carefully guarded the movements
of their senses and their passions, and at times have very harshly
crushed them, in keeping with the teaching of the Divine Master:
"But I say to you, that whosoever shall look on a woman to
lust after her, hath already committed adultery with her in his
heart. And if thy right eye scandalize thee, pluck it out and cast
it from thee. For it is expedient for thee that one of thy members
should perish, rather than that thy whole body be cast into hell."[89]
It is abundantly clear that with this warning Our Savior demands
of us above all that we never consent to any sin, even internally,
and that we steadfastly remove far from us anything that can even
slightly tarnish the beautiful virtue of purity. In this matter
no diligence, no severity can be considered exaggerated. If ill
health or other reasons do not allow one heavier corporal austerities,
yet they never free one from vigilance and internal self-control.
54.
On this point it should be noted, as indeed the Fathers[90] and
Doctors[91] of the Church teach, that we can more easily struggle
against and repress the wiles of evil and the enticements of the
passions if we do not struggle directly against them, but rather
flee from them as best we may. For the preserving of chastity, according
to the teaching of Jerome, flight is more effective than open warfare:
"Therefore I flee, lest I be overcome."[92] Flight must
be understood in this sense, that not only do we diligently avoid
occasion of sin, but especially that in struggles of this kind we
lift our minds and hearts to God, intent above all on Him to Whom
we have vowed our virginity. "Look upon the beauty of your
Lover,"[93] St. Augustine tells us.
55.
Flight and alert vigilance, by which we carefully avoid the occasions
of sin, have always been considered by holy men and women as the
most effective method of combat in this matter; today however it
does not seem that everybody holds the same opinion. Some indeed
claim that all Christians, and the clergy in particular, should
not be "separated from the world" as in the past, but
should be "close to the world;" therefore they should
"take the risk" and put their chastity to the test in
order to show whether or not they have the strength to resist; therefore,
they say, let young clerics see everything so that they may accustom
themselves to gaze at everything with equanimity, and thus render
themselves immune to all temptations. For this reason they readily
grant young clerics the liberty to turn their eyes in any direction
without the slightest concern for modesty; they may attend motion
pictures, even those forbidden by ecclesiastical censorship; they
may peruse even obscene periodicals; they may read novels which
are listed in the Index of forbidden books or prohibited by the
Natural Law. All this they allow because today the multitudes are
fed by this kind of amusement and publication and because those
who are minded to help them should understand their way of thinking
and feeling. But it is easily seen that this method of educating
and training the clergy to acquire the sanctity proper to their
calling is wrong and harmful. For "he that loveth danger shall
perish in it;"[94] most appropriate in this connection is the
admonition of Augustine: "Do not say that you have a chaste
mind if your eyes are unchaste, because an unchaste eye betrays
an unchaste heart."[95]
56.
No doubt this pernicious method is based upon serious confusion
of thought. Indeed Christ Our Lord asserted of His Apostles, "I
have sent them into the world;"[96] yet previously He had said
of them, "They are not of the world, as I also am not of the
world,"[97] and He had prayed to His Heavenly Father in these
words, "I pray not that thou shouldst take them out of the
world, but that thou shouldst keep them from evil."[98] Motivated
by the same principles, and in order to protect priests from temptations
to evil, to which all those are ordinarily subject who are in intimate
contact with the world, the Church has promulgated appropriate and
wise laws,[99] whose purpose is to safeguard sacerdotal sanctity
from the cares and pleasures of the laity.
57.
All the more reason why the young clergy, because they are to be
trained in the spiritual life, in sacerdotal and religious perfection,
must be separated from the tumult of the world before entering the
lists of combat; for long years they must remain in a Seminary or
Scholasticate where they receive a sound and careful education which
provides them with a gradual approach to and a prudent knowledge
of those problems which our times have brought to the fore, in accordance
with the norms which We established in the Apostolic Exhortation
"Menti Nostrae."[100] What gardener would expose young
plants, choice indeed but weak, to violent storms in order that
they might give proof of the strength which they have not yet acquired?
Seminarians and scholastics are surely to be considered like young
and weak plants who must still be protected and gradually trained
to resist and to fight.
58.
The educators of the young clergy would render a more valuable and
useful service, if they would inculcate in youthful minds the precepts
of Christian modesty, which is so important for the preservation
of perfect chastity and which is truly called the prudence of chastity.
For modesty foresees threatening danger, forbids us to expose ourselves
to risks, demands the avoidance of those occasions which the imprudent
do not shun. It does not like impure or loose talk, it shrinks from
the slightest immodesty, it carefully avoids suspect familiarity
with persons of the other sex, since it brings the soul to show
due reverence to the body, as being a member of Christ[101] and
the temple of the Holy Spirit.[102] He who possesses the treasure
of Christian modesty abominates every sin of impurity and instantly
flees whenever he is tempted by its seductions.
59.
Modesty will moreover suggest and provide suitable words for parents
and educators by which the youthful conscience will be formed in
matters of chastity. "Wherefore," as We said in a recent
address, "this modesty is not to be so understood as to be
equivalent to a perpetual silence on this subject, nor as allowing
no place for sober and cautious discussion about these matters in
imparting moral instruction."[103] In modern times however
there are some teachers and educators who too frequently think it
their duty to initiate innocent boys and girls into the secrets
of human generation in such a way as to offend their sense of shame.
But in this matter just temperance and moderation must be used,
as Christian modesty demands.
60.
This modesty is nourished by the fear of God, that filial fear which
is founded on the virtue of profound Christian humility, and which
creates in us utter abhorrence for the slightest sin, as Our predecessor,
St. Clement I, stated in these words, "he who is chaste in
flesh should not be proud, for he should know that he owes the gift
of continence to another."[104] How important Christian humility
is for the protection of virginity, no one perhaps has taught more
clearly than Augustine. "Because perpetual continence, and
virginity above all, is a great good in the saints of God, extreme
vigilance must be exercised lest it be corrupted by pride. . . The
more clearly I see the greatness of this gift, the more truly do
I fear lest it be plundered by thieving pride. No one therefore
protects virginity, but God Himself Who bestowed it: and 'God is
charity.'[105] The guardian therefore of virginity is charity; the
habitat of this guardian is humility."[106]
61.
Moreover there is another argument worthy of attentive consideration:
to preserve chastity unstained neither vigilance nor modesty suffice.
Those helps must also be used which entirely surpass the powers
of nature, namely prayer to God, the Sacraments of Penance and Holy
Eucharist, a fervent devotion to the most holy Mother of God.
62.
Never should it be forgotten that perfect chastity is a great gift
of God. For this reason Jerome wrote these succinct words, "It
is given to those,[107] who have asked for it, who have desired
it, who have worked to receive it. For it will be given to everyone
who asks, the seeker will find, to the importunate it will be opened."[108]
Ambrose adds that the constant fidelity of virgins to their Divine
Spouse depends upon prayer.[109] With that fervent piety for which
he was noted St. Alphonsus Liguori taught that there is no help
more necessary and certain for conquering temptations against the
beautiful virtue of chastity than instant recourse to God in prayer.[110]
63.
To prayer must be added frequent and fervent use of the Sacrament
of Penance which, as a spiritual medicine, purifies and heals us;
likewise it is necessary to receive the Eucharist, which as Our
predecessor of happy memory Leo XIII asserted, is the best remedy
against lust.[111] The more pure and chaste is a soul, the more
it hungers for this bread, from which it derives strength to resist
all temptations to sins of impurity, and by which it is more intimately
united with the Divine Spouse; "He who eats my flesh and drinks
my blood, abides in me and I in him."[112]
64.
The eminent way to protect and nourish an unsullied and perfect
chastity, as proven by experience time and again throughout the
course of centuries, is solid and fervent devotion to the Virgin
Mother of God. In a certain way all other helps are contained in
this devotion; there is no doubt that whoever is sincerely and earnestly
animated by this devotion is salutarily inspired to constant vigilance,
to continual prayer, to receive the Sacraments of Penance and the
Holy Eucharist. Therefore in a paternal way We exhort all priests,
religious men and women, to entrust themselves to the special protection
of the holy Mother of God who is the Virgin of virgins and the "teacher
of virginity," as Ambrose says,[113] and the most powerful
Mother of those in particular who have vowed and consecrated themselves
to the service of God.
65.
That virginity owes its origin to Mary is the testimony of Athanasius,[114]
and Augustine clearly teaches that "The dignity of virginity
began with the Mother of the Lord."[115] Pursuing the ideas
of Athanasius,[116] Ambrose holds up the life of the Virgin Mary
as the model of virgins. "Imitate her, my daughters. . . ![117]
Let Mary's life be for you like the portrayal of virginity, for
from her, as though from a mirror, is reflected the beauty of chastity
and the ideal of virtue. See in her the pattern of your life, for
in her, as though in a model, manifest teachings of goodness show
what you should correct, what you should copy and what preserve.
. . She is the image of virginity. For such was Mary that her life
alone suffices for the instruction of all. . .[118] Therefore let
holy Mary guide your way of life."[119] "Her grace was
so great that it not only preserved in her the grace of virginity,
but bestowed the grace of chastity upon those on whom she gazed."[120]
How true is the saying of Ambrose, "Oh the richness of the
virginity of Mary!'[121] Because of this richness it will be very
useful for religious men and women and for priests of our day to
contemplate the virginity of Mary, in order that they may more faithfully
and perfectly practice the chastity of their calling.
66.
But it is not enough, beloved sons and daughters, to meditate on
the virtues of the Blessed Virgin Mary: with absolute confidence
fly to her and obey the counsel of St. Bernard, "let us seek
grace and seek it through Mary."[122] In a special way entrust
to her during the Marian Year the care of your spiritual life and
perfection, imitating the example of Jerome who asserted, "My
virginity is dedicated in Mary and to Christ."[123]
67.
In the midst of the grave difficulties with which the Church must
contend today, the heart of the Supreme Pastor is greatly comforted,
Venerable Brothers, when We see that virginity, which is flourishing
throughout the world, is held in great honor and repute in the present
as it was in past centuries, even though, as We have said, it is
being attacked by errors which, We trust, will soon be dispelled
and pass away.
68.
Nevertheless We do not deny that this Our joy is overshadowed by
a certain sorrow since We learn that in not a few countries the
number of vocations to the priesthood and to the religious life
is constantly decreasing. We have already given the principal reasons
which account for this fact and there is no reason why We should
return to them now. Rather do We trust that those educators of youth
who have succumbed to errors in this matter, will repudiate them
as soon as they are detected, and will consequently seriously resolve
both to correct them and to do what they can to provide every help
for the youth entrusted to their care who feel themselves called
by divine grace to aspire to the priesthood or to embrace the religious
life, in order that they may be able to reach so noble a goal. May
God grant that new and larger ranks of priests, religious men and
women, equal in number and virtue to the current necessities of
the Church, may soon go forth to cultivate the vineyard of the Lord.
69.
Moreover, as the obligation of Our Apostolic Office demands, We
urge fathers and mothers to willingly offer to the service of God
those of their children who are called to it. But if this be a source
of trouble, sorrow or regret, let them seriously meditate upon the
admonition which Ambrose gave to the mothers of Milan. "The
majority of the young women whom I knew wanted to be virgins were
forbidden to leave by their mothers. . . If your daughters want
to love a man, the laws allow them to choose whom they will. But
those who have a right to choose a man, have no right to choose
God."[124]
70.
Let parents consider what a great honor it is to see their son elevated
to the priesthood, or their daughter consecrate her virginity to
her Divine Spouse. In regard to consecrated virgins, the Bishop
of Milan writes, "You have heard, parents, that a virgin is
a gift of God, the oblation of parents, the priesthood of chastity.
The virgin is a mother's victim, by whose daily sacrifice divine
anger is appeased."[125]
71.
Before We come to the end of this Encyclical Letter, We wish, Venerable
Brothers, to turn Our mind and heart in a special manner to those
men and women, who, vowed to the service of God, are suffering bitter
and terrible persecutions in not a few countries. Let them imitate
the example of the consecrated virgins of the early Church who with
courageous and indomitable hearts suffered martyrdom for the sake
of their virginity.[126]
72.
May all who have vowed to serve Christ, bravely persevere "even
to death."[127] May they realize that their pains, sufferings
and prayers are of great value in the sight of God for the restoration
of His Kingdom in their countries and in the universal Church; may
they be most certain that those "who follow the Lamb whither
He goeth,"[128] will sing forever a "new canticle,"[129]
which no one else can sing.
73.
Our paternal heart is filled with compassion for priests, religious
men and women, who are bravely professing their faith even to the
extent of martyrdom; and not only for them, but for all those who
in every part of the world are totally dedicated and consecrated
to the divine service, We implore God with suppliant prayer to sustain,
strength and console them. We earnestly invite each and every one
of you, Venerable Brothers, and your faithful to pray with Us and
to implore for all these souls the consolations, gifts and graces
which they need from God.
74.
Let the Apostolic Blessing, which with loving heart We impart to
you, Venerable Brothers, to all priests and consecrated virgins,
to those especially "who suffer persecution for justice's sake"[130]
and to all your faithful, be a pledge of heavenly grace and a testimony
of Our paternal benevolence.
Given
at Rome, at St. Peter's, March 25th, Feast of the Annunciation of
the Blessed Virgin Mary, 1954, in the sixteenth year of Our Pontificate.
PIUS XII
|