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Augustissimae
Virginis Mariae (Leo XIII) On the Confraternity of the
Holy Rosary
Encyclical of Pope Leo XIII
promulgated on September 12, 1897.
To Our Venerable Brethren, The Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, Bishops, and
other Local Ordinaries having Peace and Communion with the Apostolic See.
Venerable Brethren, Health and the Apostolic Blessing.
1. Whoever considers the height of dignity and glory to which God has raised the
Most August Virgin Mary, will easily perceive how important it is, both for
public and for private benefit, that devotion to her should be assiduously
practised, and daily promoted more and more.
Mary's Place in the Incarnation and Redemption 2. God predestined her from all
eternity to be the Mother of the Incarnate Word, and for that reason so highly
distinguished her among all His most beautiful works in the triple order of
nature, grace and glory, that the Church justly applies to her these words: "I
came out of the mouth of the Most High, the first-born before all creatures" (Ecclus.
xxiv., 5). And when, in the first ages, the parents of mankind fell into sin,
involving theirposterity in the same ruin, she was set up as a pledge of the
restoration of peace and salvation. The Only-begotten Son of God ever paid to
His Most Holy Mother indubitable marks of honor. During His private life on
earth He associated her with Himself in each of His first two miracles: the
miracle of grace, when, at the salutation of Mary, the infant leaped in the womb
of Elizabeth; the miracle of nature, when He turned water into wine at the
marriage-feast of Cana. And, at the supreme moment of His public life, when
sealing the New Testament in His precious Blood, He committed her to his beloved
Apostle in those sweet words, "Behold, thy Mother!" John xix., 27).
3. We, therefore, who, though unworthy, hold the place of Vicar of Christ upon
earth, shall never cease to promote the glory of so great a Mother, as long as
life endures. And since, as old age draws on apace, We feel that life cannot now
last much longer, We are constrained to repeat to each and all of our beloved
children in Christ those last words of His upon the Cross, left to us as a
testament, "Behold, thy Mother!" Greatly rewarded indeed shall We be, if Our
exhortations succeed in making even one of the faithful hold nothing dearer than
devotion to Mary; so that those words which St. John wrote about himself may be
applied to each, "the disciple took her to his own"
(<Ibid.>).
4. As the month of October again approaches, Venerable Brethren, We would not
willingly leave you without Our letters this year, also once more urging you
with all possible earnestness to strive by the recitation of the Rosary to aid
both yourselves individually, and the Church in her need. This form of prayer
appears, under the guidance of Divine Providence, to have been wonderfully
developed at the close of the century, for the purpose of stimulating the
lagging piety of the faithful. This is witnessed by the splendid churches and
much-frequented sanctuaries of the Mother of God. To this Divine Mother we have
offered the flowers of the month of May; to her we would have also fruit-bearing
October dedicated with especial tenderness of devotion. It is fitting that both
parts of the year should be consecrated to her who said: "My flowers are the
fruit of honour and riches" (Ecclus. xxiv., 23).
5. The natural tendency of man to association has never been stronger, or more
earnestly and generally followed, than in our own age. This is not at all to be
reprehended, unless when so excellent a natural tendency is perverted to evil
purposes, and wicked men, banding together in various forms of societies,
conspire "against the Lord and against His Christ" (Ps ii., 2). It is, however,
most gratifying to observe that pious associations are becoming more and more
popular among Catholics also. They are frequently formed; indeed, all Catholics
are so closely drawn together and united by the bonds of charity, as members of
one household, that they both may be and are truly styled brethren. But if the
charity of Christ be absent, none may glory in the name and fellowship of
brethren. So wrote Tertullian long ago in pungent words: "We are your brethren
by right of a common mother, nature, yet are ye less than men, because unnatural
brothers. How much more justly are they called and esteemed as brethren who
acknowledge one and the same Father, God; who have drunk in one and the same
spirit of charity; who have been borne from one and the same womb of ignorance
into the one light of truth?" (<Apolog.> c. xxxix.)
6. There are many reasons for Catholics joining useful associations of this
kind. We include in these clubs, popular savings-banks, recreative classes,
associations for the care of youth, sodalities, and many other organizations for
excellent purposes. All these, though from their name, constitution, and special
ends, apparently of modern invention, are in reality of great antiquity. Traces
of societies of this kind are to be found even in the earliest ages of
Christianity. In later ages they were legally approved, distinguished by special
emblems, enriched with privileges, associated with divine worship in the
Churches, or devoted to works of spiritual or corporal mercy, and at different
epochs known under different names. Their numbers increased to such an extent,
especially in Italy, that no city or town, nay scarcely any parish, was without
one or more of them.
7. We do not hesitate to assign a pre-eminent place among these societies to
that known as the Society of the Holy Rosary. If we regard its origin, we find
it distinguished by its antiquity, for St. Dominic himself is said to have been
its founder. If we estimate its privileges, we see it enriched with a vast
number of them granted by the munificence of our predecessors. The form of the
association, its very soul, is the Rosary of Our Lady, of the excellence of
which We have elsewhere spoken at length. Still the virtue and efficacy of the
Rosary appear all the greater when considered as the special office of the
Sodality which bears its name. Everyone knows how necessary prayer is for all
men; not that God's decrees can be changed, but, as St. Gregory says, "that men
by asking may merit to receive what Almighty God hath decreed from eternity to
grant them" (<Dialog.>, lib. i., c. 8). And St. Augustine says, "He who knoweth
how to pray aright, knoweth how to live aright" (<In Ps.> cxviii). But prayers
acquire their greatest efficacy in obtaining God's assistance when offered
publicly, by large numbers, constantly, and unanimously, so as to form as it
were a single chorus of supplication; as those words of the Acts of the Apostles
clearly declare whrein the
disciples of Christ, awaiting the coming of the Holy Ghost, are said to have
been "persevering with one mind in prayer" (Acts i., 14). Those who practice
this manner of prayer will never fail to obtain certain fruit. Such is certainly
the case with members of the Rosary Sodality. Just as by the recitation of the
Divine Office, priests offer a public, constant, and most efficacious
supplication; so the supplication offered by the members of this Sodality in the
recitation of the Rosary, or "Psalter of Our Lady," as it has been styled by
some of the Popes, is also in a way public, constant, and universal.
8. Since, as We have said, public prayers are much more excellent and more
efficacious than private ones, so ecclesiastical writers have given to the
Rosary Sodality the title of "the army of prayer, enrolled by St. Dominic, under
the banner of the Mother of God," - of her, whom sacred literature and the
history of the Church salute as the conqueror of the Evil One and of all errors.
The Rosary unites together all who join the Sodality in a common bond of
paternal or military comradeship; so that a mighty host is thereby formed, duly
marshaled and arrayed, to repel the assaults of the enemy, both from within and
without. Wherefore may the members of this pious society take to themselves the
words of St. Cyprian: "Our prayer is public and in common; and when we pray, we
pray not for one, but for the whole people, for we, the entire people, are one"
(<De Orat. Domin.>). The history of the Church bears testimony to the power and
efficacy of this form of prayer, recording as it does the rout of the Turkish
forces at the naval battle of Lepanto, and the victories gained over the same in
the last century at Temesvar in Hungary and in the island of Corfu. Our
predecessor, Gregory XIII., in order to perpetuate the memory of the first-named
victory, established the feast of Our Lady of Victories, which later on Clement
XI. distinguished by the title of Rosary Sunday and commanded to be celebrated
throughout the universal Church.
9. From the fact that this warfare of prayer is "enrolled under the name of the
Mother of God," fresh efficacy and fresh honor are thereby added to it. Hence
the frequent repetition in the Rosary of the "Hail Mary" after each "Our
Father." So far from this derogating in any way from the honor due to God, as
though it indicated that we placed greater confidence in Mary's patronage than
in God's power, it is rather this which especially moves God, and wins His mercy
for us. We are taught by the Catholic faith that we may pray not only to God
himself, but also to the Blessed in heaven (<Conc. Trid.> Sess. xxv.), though in
different manner; because we ask from God as from the Source of all good, but
from the Saints as from intercessors. "Prayer," says St. Thomas, "is offered to
a person in two ways - one as though to be granted by himself; another, as to be
obtained through him. In the first way we pray to God alone, because all our
prayers ought to be directed to obtaining grace and glory, which God alone
gives, according to those words of Psalm Ixxxiii., 12, "The Lord will give grace
and glory." But in the second way we pray to holy angels and men, not that God
may learn our petition through them, but that by their prayers and merits our
prayers may be efficacious. Wherefore, it is said in the Apocalypse (viii., 4):
"The smoke of the incense of the prayers of the Saints ascended up before God
from the hand of the angel" (<Summa Theol.> 2a 2ae, q. Ixxxiii. a. iv.). Now, of
all the blessed in heaven, who can compare with the august Mother of God in
obtaining grace? Who seeth more clearly in the Eternal Word what troubles
oppress us, what are our needs? Who is allowed more power in moving God? Who can
compare with her in maternal affection? We do not pray to the Blessed in the
same way as to God; for we ask the Holy Trinity to have mercy on us, but we ask
all the Saints to pray for us (<Ibid.>). Yet our manner of praying to the
Blessed Virgin has something in common with our worship of God, so that the
Church even addresses to her the words with which we pray to God: "Have mercy on
sinners." The members of the Rosary Sodality, therefore, do exceedingly well in
weaving together, as in a crown, so many salutations and prayers to Mary. For,
so great is her dignity, so great her favor before God, that whosoever in his
need will not have recourse to her is trying to fly without wings.
10. We must not omit to mention another excellence of this Sodality. As often
as, in reciting the Rosary, we meditate upon the mysteries of our Redemption, so
often do we in a manner emulate the sacred duties once committed to the Angelic
hosts. The Angels revealed each of these mysteries in its due time; they played
a great part in them; they were constantly present at them, with countenances
indicative now of joy, now of sorrow, now of triumphant exultation. Gabriel was
sent to announce the Incarnation of the Eternal Word to the Virgin. In the cave
of Bethlehem, Angels sang the glory of the new-born Savior. The Angel gave
Joseph command to fly with the Child into Egypt. An Angel consoled, with his
loving words, Jesus in His bloody sweat in the garden. Angels announced His
resurrection, after He had triumphed over death, to the women. Angels carried
Him up into Heaven; and foretold His second coming, surrounded by Angelic hosts,
unto whom He will associate the souls of the elect, and carry them aloft with
Him to the heavenly choirs, "above whom the Holy Mother of God is exalted." To
those, therefore, who make use of the pious prayers of the Rosary in this
Sodality, may be well applied the words with which St. Paul addressed the new
Christians: "You are come to Mount Sion, and to the city of the living God, the
Heavenly Jerusalem, and to the company of many thousands of Angels" (Heb. xii.,
22). What more divine, what more delightful, than to meditate and pray with the
Angels? With what confidence may we not hope that those who on earth have united
with the Angels in this ministry will one day enjoy their blessed company in
Heaven?
11. For these reasons the Roman Pontiffs have ever given the highest praise to
this Sodality of Our Lady. Innocent VIII. calls it "a most devout confraternity"
(<Splendor Paternae Gloriae>, Feb. 26, 1491.) Pius V declares that by its virtue
"Christians began suddenly to be transformed into other men, the darkness of
heresy to be dispelled, and the light of Catholic faith to shine forth" (<Consueverunt
Romani Pontifices>, September17, 1569). Sixtus V, noting how fruitful for
religion this Sodality was, professed himself most devoted to it. Many others,
too, enriched it with numerous and very special indulgences, or took it under
their particular patronage, enrolling themselves in it and giving it many
testimonies of their goodwill.
12. We also, Venerable Brethren, moved by the example of Our predecessors,
earnestly exhort and conjure you, as We have so often done, to devote special
care to this sacred warfare, so that by your efforts fresh forces may be daily
enrolled on every side. Through you and those of your clergy who have care of
souls, let the people know and duly appreciate the efficacy of this Sodality and
its usefulness for man's salvation. This We beg all the more earnestly as of
late that beautiful devotion to our Blessed Mother, called "the living Rosary,"
has once more become popular. We have gladly blessed this devotion, and We
earnestly desire that you would sedulously and strenuously encourage its growth.
We cherish the strongest hope that these prayers and praises, rising incessantly
from the lips and hearts of so great a multitude, will be most efficacious.
Alternately rising by night and by day, throughout the different countries of
the earth, they combine a harmony of vocal prayer with meditation upon the
divine mysteries. In ages long past this perennial stream of praise and prayer
was foretold in those inspired words with which Ozias in his song addressed
Judith: "Blessed art thou, O daughter, by the Lord, the Most High God, above all
women upon the earth . . . because He hath so magnified thy name this day that
thy praise shall not depart out of the mouth of man." And all the people of
Israel acclaimed him in these words: "So be it, so be it!" Judith xiii., 23, 24,
26).
13. Meanwhile, as a pledge of heavenly blessings, and a testimony of Our
paternal affection, We lovingly impart to You, in the name of the Lord,
Venerable Brethren, and to all the clergy and people committed to your faithful
care, the Apostolic Benediction.
Given at St. Peter's, in Rome, on the 12th day of September, 1897, in the 20th
year of Our Pontificate.
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