Traditional Roman Catholicism
Nostis Et Nobiscum

ON THE CHURCH IN THE PONTIFICAL STATES

ENCYCLICAL OF POPE PIUS IX

DECEMBER 8, 1849

To the Archbishops and Bishops of Italy

Venerable Brothers, We Give You Greetings and Our Apostolic Blessing.

You know as We do, venerable brothers, the recent wrongdoing which has strengthened some wretched enemies of all truth,
justice and honor, who strive both openly and deceitfully with plots of every sort to spread their disorders everywhere among
the faithful people of Italy. These disorders include the unbridled license of thinking, speaking and hearing every impious
matter. They spread these like the foaming waves of a savage sea, and they exert themselves not only to shake the Catholic
religion in Italy itself, but if possible to utterly destroy it. The method of their diabolical design has been made very clear both
elsewhere and particularly here in this fair city, the seat of Our pontificate, where upon Our forced withdrawal, they gave free
rein to their rage, although only for a few months. Here, in their wicked recklessness, as they cast divine and human affairs
into confusion, they finally grew enraged enough to interfere with the work of the respected clergy of the city, disregarding
the authority of their superiors, who, on Our orders, were attending fearlessly to religious matters. Consequently, when some
of their own number fell sick and struggled with death, they were deprived of all the helps of religion and compelled to
breathe their last in the arms of a wanton prostitute.

2. Subsequently, the city of Rome and the other provinces of the Papal State were restored to Our civil authority by God's
mercy and the arms of Catholic nations. The disturbance of wars ended in the other parts of Italy as well. Nonetheless, those
wicked enemies of God and men still continue their lawless work, if not by open force, at least in other deceitful ways which
are not always concealed. We find it formidable to be responsible for the supreme care of the whole of the Lord's flock in
these difficult times, and We are greatly pained by the particular dangers which beset the churches of Italy. However, We are
powerfully consoled in Our sufferings by your pastoral zeal, venerable brothers, which you not only proved to Us in the full
blast of the recent storm, but which you continue to demonstrate. However, the very gravity of this affair compels Us to exhort
you further, since you must steadfastly fight the battles of the Lord with Us. We must make all prudent provision for offsetting
the losses already incurred by most holy religion throughout Italy and for guarding against dangers which threaten in the
future.

3. These enemies of the Church usually employ a variety of deceits for turning the spirits of the Italian people away from the
Catholic faith. For instance, they shamelessly affirm and cry it abroad that the Catholic religion is opposed to the glory,
greatness and prosperity of the Italian nation. So they say that Protestantism should be brought in, set up and increased to
replace Catholicism. Then Italy could once more acquire its former splendor of ancient, that is, pagan, times. It is hard to
decide which is the more hateful aspect of this fiction of theirs -- the malice of their raving impiety or the effrontery of their
lying wickedness.

4. In fact, there is great spiritual advantage in being transferred from the power of darkness to the light of God, thereby being
justified by grace and becoming heirs of Christ in our hope of eternal life. This advantage for souls is, of course, so
worthwhile that all the glory and blessedness of this world must be reckoned as nothing in comparison with it. "For what does
it profit a man if he gains the whole world but suffers the loss of his soul? Or what exchange will a man make for his soul?"[1]
But it is untrue that the temporal losses of the Italian race occurred because they professed the true faith. This race should
indeed reckon among the benefits it received from the Catholic religion the fact that at the collapse of the Roman Empire, it
did not decline as much as the peoples of Assyria, Chaldaea, Media, Persia and Macedonia did when an alteration of the
times ended their dominion. In fact, every wise man knows that Catholicism not only rescued Italy from the darkness of the
many errors which were overwhelming it, but that amid the ruins of the ancient empire and the invasion of the barbarians, it
raised Italy nonetheless to a glory and a greatness beyond all the other nations of the world. Thus, because Christ placed
the holy See of Peter there, Italy exercises a more widespread and more real leadership by its divine religion than it once
exercised by its earthly empire.

5. From this exceptional privilege of possessing the Apostolic See and the consequent deep roots which the Catholic religion
has put down among the people of Italy, very many other remarkable benefits have accrued. Christianity is the teacher of true
wisdom, the defender of mankind, and the fertile mother of all virtues. Thus, it rejects the splendor of the unhappy glory of the
Italian people. Their ancestors established that unhappy glory by an unending tumult of wars, by conquering foreigners, and
by very harshly imprisoning a great number of men; they could do this since their empire flourished by the law of war. But the
religion of Christ enlightened the Italians in truth, justice, and mercy; and consequently they became zealous in outstanding
works of piety towards God and in beneficent works towards men. So, in the chief Italian cities, many holy temples and other
reminders of Christian times have been erected not by the bloody toil of men groaning in captivity, but sincere and life-giving
charity. Pious institutions exist for religious exercises and for the education of the young and the proper study of literature,
arts and disciplines. They also exist for relieving the illness and want of the wretched. This then is the divine religion on
which, quite simply, the safety, prosperity and glory of Italy depends. Is this the religion which those men call on the Italian
people to reject? We cannot restrain Our tears, when We see that some Italians now are so wicked and so wretchedly
deceived that they admire the vile teachings of impious men. In fact, they are not afraid to plot with them for this great
destruction of Italy.

6. You are aware indeed, that the goal of this most iniquitous plot is to drive people to overthrow the entire order of human
affairs and to draw them over to the wicked theories of this Socialism and Communism, by confusing them with perverted
teachings. But these enemies realize that they cannot hope for any agreement with the Catholic Church, which allows neither
tampering with truths proposed by faith, nor adding any new human fictions to them. This is why they try to draw the Italian
people over to Protestantism, which in their deceit they repeatedly declare to be only another form of the same true religion
of Christ, thereby just as pleasing to God. Meanwhile they know full well that the chief principle of the Protestant tenets, i.e.,
that the holy scriptures are to be understood by the personal judgment of the individual, will greatly assist their impious
cause. They are confident that they can first misuse the holy scriptures by wrong interpretation to spread their errors and
claim God's authority while doing it. Then they can cause men to call into doubt the common principles of justice and honor.

7. But do not let Italy, which other peoples have used as a paradigm ever since the Holy See was established in Rome, be to
them a stone of offense and a rock of scandal in the coming time. Do not let this portion of the Lord's vineyard be given as
prey to all the beasts of the field: do not let the Italian people, maddened by draughts from the poisoned goblet of Babylon,
take up deadly arms against their mother the Church.

8. By the secret judgment of God, We and you have been detailed to fight this critical danger. We must beware of dreading
the deceit and attacks of the men who plot against the faith of Italy, as if they had to be vanquished by our own strength. For
our counsel and our bravery is Christ, without Whom we can do nothing but through Whom we can do all things.[2] So, watch
zealously over the flock entrusted to you and protect it energetically from the plots and attacks of ravening wolves. Share
your counsels with one another; continue to meet with one another so that by sharing the inquiry, you may detect the main
causes for the start of these dangerous evils in different districts. Thus you will be able to provide more timely remedies for
them under the authority and guidance of this Holy See. In this way, in union with Us you should attempt to nullify every
attack, artifice, plot and endeavor of the enemies of the Church.

9. So that all their efforts may be fruitless, sufficiently instruct the laity in Christian doctrine and the law of the Lord. Hopefully,
they are not too weakened by long license in manifold and increasing vices to be able to recognize the snares laid for them
and also the vileness of the errors proposed to them. So We earnestly require you, in your pastoral care, to ceaselessly
ensure that the faithful entrusted to you are carefully taught the holy doctrines and precepts of our religion in accordance with
their individual capacity; exhort and inspire them in every way to conform their lives and morals to these norms. For this
purpose, inflame the zeal of the Churchmen, who care for these souls. Instruct them to reflect seriously on their ministry, to
keep in view the prescripts of the Council of Trent,[3] and to devote great energy to instructing the Christian people, as the
state of the times demands. Let them be eager to sow in all hearts the words of God and the precepts of salvation. This they
can accomplish by declaring in concise and comprehensible sermons the vices Christians should avoid and the virtues they
should practice in order to escape eternal punishment and gain eternal glory.

10. In particular, ensure that the faithful are deeply and thoroughly convinced of the truth of the doctrine that the Catholic
faith is necessary for attaining salvation.[4] The Catholic laity and clergy should repeatedly offer special thanks to God in
public prayers for the priceless gift of the Catholic religion. They should also beseech God to protect the profession of this
faith in our country and to keep it unharmed.

11. Meanwhile, ensure that all the faithful receive from you at the proper time the sacrament of Confirmation; this confers the
strength of special grace for the steadfast profession of the Catholic faith in times of trouble. It would also be helpful if the
faithful, cleansed of their sins by the sacrament of Penance, devoutly receive more frequently the most holy sacrament of the
Eucharist. The Eucharist contains spiritual food and the antidote to free us from daily faults and keep us from mortal sin.
Furthermore, it is the symbol of Christ's Church which He hopes will unite us by faith, hope and charity; as the result of this
unity, we should all say the same thing and there should be no divisions among us.[5]

12. Indeed, We do not doubt that parish priests and their helpers, and other priests who are usually appointed to the ministry
of preaching on particular days, especially in periods of fasting, will earnestly aid your labor in all these affairs. Still their
efforts should be supplemented from time to time by the extraordinary measures of spiritual exercises and holy missions.
These will nourish the piety of good people and stir sinners to saving penitence, even those who have been depraved for a
long time. As a result, the faithful people will grow in the knowledge of God, bear fruit in every good work, and steadfastly
abhor the perverted teachings of the Church's enemies.

13. But in all these affairs, one of your aims should be to instill in the faithful a greater aversion for sins which scandalize
others; your priests should share this aim. You are aware of the increase in the number of those who sin in a scandalous
manner: those who blaspheme the

heavenly saints and the holy name of God as well; those who live in concubinage and sometimes in incest; those who openly
do servile work on holy days; those who despise in the presence of many the precepts of the Church on fasting and the
selection of food; and those who shamelessly commit various other sins in the same way. So, make the faithful consider the
seriousness of sins of this kind and the heavy penalties for them, both for the guilt of the sin itself and for the spiritual danger
in which they place their brothers by the infection of their bad example. For it is written: "Woe to the world because of
scandals . . . Woe to that man by whom the scandal comes!"[6]

14. The crafty enemies of the Church and human society attempt to seduce the people in many ways. One of their chief
methods is the misuse of the new technique of book-production. They are wholly absorbed in the ceaseless daily publication
and proliferation of impious pamphlets, newspapers and leaflets which are full of lies, calumnies and seduction. Furthermore,
under the protection of the Bible Societies which have long since been condemned by this Holy See,[7] they distribute to the
faithful under the pretext of religion, the holy bible in vernacular translations. Since these infringe the Church's rules,[8] they
are consequently subverted and most daringly twisted to yield a vile meaning. So you realize very well what vigilant and
careful efforts you must make to inspire in your faithful people an utter horror of reading these pestilential books. Remind
them explicitly with regard to divine scripture that no man, relying on his own wisdom, is able to claim the privilege of rashly
twisting the scriptures to his own meaning in opposition to the meaning which holy mother Church holds and has held. It was
the Church alone that Christ commissioned to guard the deposit of the faith and to decide the true meaning and interpretation
of the divine pronouncements.[9]

15. In order to check the contagion of bad books, it would be useful if your clerics who are renowned for sound doctrine
likewise publish short works, to build up the faith to instruct the people. You would, of course, have to approve these before
publication. Distribute these works and other useful and doctrinally sound authors among the faithful.

16. All who defend the faith should aim to implant deeply in your faithful people the virtues of piety, veneration, and respect
for this supreme See of Peter. Let the faithful recall the fact that Peter, Prince of Apostles is alive here and rules in his
successors,[10] and that his office does not fail even in an unworthy heir.[11] Let them recall that Christ the Lord placed the
impregnable foundation of his Church on this See of Peter[12] and gave to Peter himself the keys of the kingdom of
Heaven.[13] Christ then prayed that his fait would not fail, and commanded Peter to strengthen his brothers in the
faith.[14]Consequently the successor of Peter, the Roman Pontiff, holds a primacy over the whole world and is the true Vicar
of Christ, head of the whole Church and father and teacher of all Christians.[15]

17. Indeed one simple way to keep men professing Catholic truth is to maintain their communion with and obedience to the
Roman Pontiff. For it is impossible for a man ever to reject any portion of the Catholic faith without abandoning the authority
of the Roman Church. In this authority, the unalterable teaching office of this faith lives on. It was set up by the divine
Redeemer and, consequently, the tradition from the Apostles has always been preserved. So it has been a common
characteristic both of the ancient heretics and of the more recent Protestants -- whose disunity in all their other tenets is so
great -- to attack the authority of the Apostolic See. But never at any time were they able by any artifice or exertion to make
this See tolerate even a single one of their errors. For this reason the enemies of God and human society at the present time
are making every attempt to tear the Italian people from their allegiance to Us and to this Holy See. They think, no doubt, that
then at last, they could have the good fortune of contaminating Italy itself with their impious teaching and the plague of their
novel theories.

18. As regards this teaching and these theories, it is now generally known that the special goal of their proponents is to
introduce to the people the pernicious fictions of Socialism and Communism by misapplying the terms "liberty" and "equality."
The final goal shared by these teachings, whether of Communism or Socialism, even if approached differently, is to excite by
continuous disturbances workers and others, especially those of the lower class, whom they have deceived by their lies and
deluded by the promise of a happier condition. They are preparing them for plundering, stealing, and usurping first the
Church's and then everyone's property. After this they will profane all law, human and divine, to destroy divine worship and to
subvert the entire ordering of civil societies. In this critical period for Italy, it is your duty, venerable brothers, to help the
faithful realize that if they let themselves be deceived by such perverted doctrines and theories, these theories will cause
their temporal and their eternal destruction.

19. Therefore, warn your faithful that the very nature of human society obligates its members to obey its lawfully established
authority; nothing in the precepts of the Lord on this subject, which are proclaimed in holy scripture, can be altered. For it is
written: "Be subject to every human institution for God's sake, to the king as supreme or to governors as sent by him to
punish wrongdoers and to praise those who do right. For it is God's will that by doing right, you should put to silence the
ignorance of foolish men. Be as free men, yet without using freedom as a pretext for evil, but be as servants of God."[16] And
again: "Let ever soul be subject to the higher authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have
been instituted by God. Therefore, he who resists authority resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur
their own condemnation."[17]

20. Let them furthermore know that it is likewise a mark of the natural, and so of the immutable, condition of human affairs
that even among those who are not in higher authority, some surpass others in different endowments of mind or body or in
riches and such external goods; therefore it can never be lawful under any pretext of liberty or equality to usurp or injure in
any way the good or rights of other men. Divine precepts on this subject are clear and can be found throughout the holy
scriptures. They forbid us strictly even to desire the goods of other men, much less seize them.[18]

21. In addition, let the poor and all the wretched recall their great debt to the Catholic religion which keeps the teaching of
Christ unspoiled and preaches it publicly. For He proclaimed that whatever benefits are conferred on the poor and wretched
are likewise conferred on Himself.[19] Furthermore, He wishes that all be informed of the special account He will take of
these works of mercy on the Day of Judgment; that is, He will give the gift of eternal life to the faithful who engaged in works
of mercy, and He will punish with eternal fire those who neglected them.[20]

22. This proclamation of Christ and His other stern warnings on the use of wealth and its dangers[21] have meant that the
condition of the poor and wretched in Catholic nations is much less harsh than in any other nations. The poor would receive
even greater aid if the many institutions which our pious ancestors established for their relief had not been closed down or
plundered in the recent recurrent public demonstrations. Let Our poor recall the teaching of Christ Himself that they should
not be sad at their condition, since their very poverty makes lighter their journey to salvation, provided that they bear their
need with patience and are poor not alone in possessions, but in spirit too. For He says: "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for
theirs is the kingdom of heaven."[22]

23. All the faithful should know too that the old kings of the pagan nations and other chiefs of state misused their power in
more serious ways and more often. The faithful should reckon it to the credit of our most holy religion that princes in Christian
times feared "the stern judgment in store for governors," and the eternal punishment prepared for sinners, in which "the
strong will suffer strong torments."[23] Because of this fear, they have ruled the peoples subject to them more justly and
clemently.

24. Finally, let the faithful recognize that Christian law protects true liberty and equality. God Almighty, who has made "the
small and the great" and who "takes equal care of everyone,"[24] "will not withdraw from anyone nor fear anyone's
greatness."[25] He has established a day "on which He will judge the world in justice"[26] in His Only-Begotten Son Christ
Jesus, "who will come in the glory of His Father with His angels and will then make return to each man according to his
works."[27]

25. But if the faithful scorn both the fatherly warnings of their pastors and the commandments of the Christian Law recalled
here, and if they let themselves be deceived by the present-day promoters of plots, deciding to work with them in their
perverted theories of Socialism and Communism, let them know and earnestly consider what they are laying up for
themselves. The Divine Judge will seek vengeance on the day of wrath. Until then no temporal benefit for the people will
result from their conspiracy, but rather new increases of misery and disaster. For man is not empowered to establish new
societies and unions which are opposed to the nature of mankind. If these conspiracies spread throughout Italy there can
only be one result: if the present political arrangement is shaken violently and totally ruined by reciprocal attacks of citizens
against citizens by their wrongful appropriations and slaughter, in the end some few, enriched by the plunder of many, will
seize supreme control to the ruin of all.

26. Now the life and example of the clergy help keep the faithful safe from the snares of the impious in their profession of the
Catholic religion and help stir them to the works of true virtue. But, alas! there have been in Italy some men of the Church,
although they were few, who by deserting to the Church's enemies, helped them greatly in deceiving the faithful. The lapse of
these men doubtless incited you afresh, venerable brothers, to watch daily with keener zeal over the discipline of the clergy.
And now since We desire to provide, as We should, for the future, We recommend what We emphasized in Our first
encyclical letter to the bishops of the whole world:[28] that you should lay hands on no one in haste,[29] but show the
greatest possible care in selecting soldiers for the Church's army. Candidates for holy orders especially must be examined at
thorough length to determine whether their learning, serious morals and zeal for divine worship indicate that they will by their
life and work edify and bring spiritual benefit to your flock, like lanterns burning in the house of the Lord.

27. Properly organized monasteries convey great honor and benefit for the Church of God, and the regular clergy also work
to save souls. Therefore, first of all, inform the religious families in your dioceses that We lament the particular troubles which
many of them suffered in the recent disasters. But We were inwardly consoled to observe their patient spirits and their
steadfast pursuit of virtue and religion; some though forgot their profession and vilely played a double role, scandalizing good
men and sorrowing Us and their brothers. Secondly, exhort the leaders and superior moderators of these families to ensure
that where regular discipline is preserved, it continues to thrive and flourish, and that where it has faltered, it is completely
revived and restored. Let those superiors insistently advise, convince and spur on the members of their families to seriously
consider their vows so that they are eager to observe them and the rules of their organization carefully and fully. They should
carry around in their body the mortification of Jesus and keep away from everything which is at variance with their particular
vocation. They should be actively engaged in works which evince a love of God and neighbor in the pursuit of perfect virtue.
Let these moderators of the Orders admit no one to a religious institution before they consider very carefully their former life,
morals and character; then they should admit to religious profession only those who indicate that they are embracing the
religious life for no reason except to live only for God and to obtain the salvation of themselves and others. But in addition,
they should observe all the statutes and prescripts for the good of religious families which are contained in the Decrees of
Our Congregation on the State of Regular Clergy published on January 25th last year and sanctioned by our Apostolic
authority.

28. To turn now to the selection of the secular clergy, We wish chiefly to recommend that you instruct and educate young
clerics, since most suitable ministers of the Church are those who from their earliest years have been duly molded for these
sacred duties. Continue then your energetic efforts to recruit very young men for God's holy army. Then nurture them in
religion, modesty, innocence of life, and ecclesiastical spirit. At the same time teach them literature and the major and minor
fields of study, especially the sacred ones. Their teachers should be carefully selected and should follow doctrine which is
free from all danger of error.

29. It is unlikely that you will succeed in educating all young clerics in seminaries. The other young men in the lay state
certainly pertain to your pastoral care also. Therefore be vigilant, with regard to all other schools, both public and private.
Strive to ensure that their studies conform to the standard of Catholic teaching. Furthermore, see to it that the students are
educated by suitable teachers. The students also must be taught to recognize the snares laid for them by the impious, to
avoid their pernicious errors, and so to adorn and benefit themselves and the Christian and civil commonwealth.

30. In these matters, you have authority over professors of the sacred disciplines and all other matters which belong to
religion or closely pertain to it. See to it that in the entire program of the schools and especially in the matters which belong to
religion, books are provided which are free from the suspicion of every error. Advise those who care for souls to be your
continuous helpers in matters concerning schools for the very young. Appoint respectable male and female teachers and
provide only books approved by this Holy See. Ministers should themselves set an example by daily instructing boys in the
rudiments of Christian doctrine. Furthermore, they should take this instruction seriously.[30] Advise these men, that when
they are instructing, to keep in view the Roman Catechism, which was published by a decree of the Council of Trent and the
order of St. Pius V Our Predecessor of immortal memory. Other supreme pontiffs, to name one, Clement XIII of happy
memory, recommended this book as "a most suitable aid for removing the deceits of bad opinions and for spreading and
establishing true and sound doctrine."[31]

31. You will hardly be surprised, venerable brothers, that We have written on these subjects with a slightly too fluent pen. For
you know that in these dangerous days, We must strive together with every effort and resolve, and must be vigilant in every
matter which pertains to schools and the education of the young, both male and female. For you know that our enemies
diabolically try to pervert young minds and hearts from their earliest years. And for this reason they try to remove schools
completely from the authority of the Church and the watchfulness of its holy pastors.

32. In addition, We strongly hope that the political leaders of Italy will support you with their powerful protection in performing
your duty more fruitfully in all these matters, and that they will also protect the Church and all its rights, both spiritual and
temporal. This indeed would befit their religion and the piety of their ancestors, which obviously inspires them in an
exemplary way. Furthermore, they realize that the evils that afflict us so grievously originate in the losses, which for a long
time now, but especially since the rise of Protestantism, have been inflicted on religion and the Catholic Church. They see
clearly that when the authority of bishops is oppressed and when increasing numbers of men infringe divine and
ecclesiastical commandments without penalty, then the respect of the people for civil authority is likewise diminished.
Similarly, the present enemies of public calm instigate revolts against the government more easily. They observe too that the
frequent seizure, robbery and open sale of temporal goods which belong to the Church shows a decrease in the people's
respect for property consecrated to the use of religion. Consequently the men who rashly proclaim Socialism and
Communism find many prepared to listen to them when they falsely claim that in other similar cases, the property of others
can be taken and divided or in some other way turned to the use of everyone. They furthermore observe that the
long-standing impediments preventing the pastors of the Church from exercising their sacred authority freely are now
gradually affecting civil authority. Finally, they observe that there is no readier or more effective remedy for the disasters
which harry us than to make religion and the Catholic Church flourish again throughout Italy; in the Church, there is no doubt
that men will get immediate and appropriate aid in accordance with their condition and need.

33. For, to use the words of St. Augustine, "the Catholic Church attaches itself not only to God Himself but also to love and
charity of one's neighbor, so that it excels in healing all the diseases which men suffer for their sins. It trains and teaches
boys in a boyish manner, young men strongly, old men calmly, in accordance with the individual's bodily and spiritual age. It
subjects wives to their husbands in chaste and faithful obedience, not for the gratification of lust but for the begetting of
progeny and the society of the family; and it places husbands over their wives not in scorn of the weaker sex but under the
law of pure love. It subordinates sons to their parents in a sort of free slavery and puts parents in charge of sons with a loving
control. It binds brother to brother with the bond of religion, which is stronger and tighter than the bond of blood. It
strengthens in reciprocal love all relationships of birth and marriage by preserving the ties of nature and of oaths. It teaches
slaves to remain true to their masters, not as much from the compulsion of their state as from delight in duty, and makes
masters kind to their slaves by the thought that the supreme God is their common Lord and more apt to advise than to
compel them. By recalling our first parents, it unites citizen with citizen, nation to nation, and all humanity in society and
brotherhood. It teaches kings to take care of their people, and people to submit to their kings. It teaches carefully who should
have honor, who love, who reverence, who fear, who consolation, who warning, who exhortation, who discipline, who
reprimand, who punishment, while showing how all things are not due to all men, but charity is due to all and harm to
none."[32]

34. Therefore, it is our mutual duty to spare no effort and to shrink from no problem in protecting the practice of the Catholic
religion among the Italian people. It is also our duty to eagerly resist the attempts of the impious who are engaged in
separating Italy from the bosom of the Church, as well as to vigorously recall to the way of salvation those degenerate sons
of Italy who have already let themselves be won over by the artifices of their enemies.

35. But since every good gift and every perfect gift comes down from above, let us ceaselessly supplicate and entreat the
heavenly Father of lights and mercies, in public and private prayers, to turn His face from our sins and graciously illuminate
the minds and hearts of all with the strength of His grace. May He gather to Himself the wills of rebels and enlarge His holy
Church with new victories and triumphs, so that in all Italy and everywhere in the whole world, the people who serve Him may
increase in merit as in number. Let us also call on the most blessed Mother of God, the Virgin Mary Immaculate, who by her
powerful patronage with God obtains what she asks for and who cannot be denied. In addition let us call on Peter, the Prince
of Apostles, on Paul, his fellow-apostle, and on all the heavenly saints to pray that the most clement Lord may take away the
scourges of His anger from His faithful people and graciously give His grace to all who are accounted Christians; then they
could reject all that is at variance with the Christian name and pursue what is in accord with it.

Finally, venerable brothers, receive Our Apostolic Blessing as an indication of Our eager benevolence towards you. With
deep feeling We impart it lovingly to yourselves and to the clergy and faithful laity who are entrusted to your watchfulness.

Given at Naples in the Suburban Portico on the 8th day of December in the year 1849 in the fourth year of Our Pontificate.


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ENDNOTES

1. Mt 16.26.
2. St. Leo the Great, epistle to Rusticus, Bishop of Narbonne .
3. Sess. 5, chap. 2 -- session 24, chaps. 4 and 7 on Reformation .
4. This doctrine, received from Christ and emphasized by the Fathers and Councils, is also contained in the formulae of rhe
profession of faith used by Latin, Greek, and Oriental Catholics.
5. Council of Trent, session 13, decree on the Sacrament of the most holy Eucharist, chap. 2.
6. Mt 18.
7. On this matter, apart from earlier decrees there is the encyclical letter of Gregory XVI Inter praecipuas machinationes (8
May 1844) whose sanctions We upheld in Our encyclical letter (9 November 1846).
8. See Rule 4 of the Rules drawn up by a committee of Council Fathers at Trent and approved by Pius IV in the constitution
Dominici gregis (24 March 1564) and the addition made to it (17 June 1757) by the Congregation of the Index by authority of
Benedict XIV. (This addition is usually placed in the front of the Index of Forbidden Books.)
9. Council of Trent, session 4, decree on the publication and use of the sacred books.
10. Council of Ephesus Acts 3 and St. Peter Chrysologus' epistle to Eutyches.
11. Leo the Great, Sermon on anniversary of his elevation.
12. Mt 16.18.
13. Mt 16.19.
14. Lk 22.31-32.
15. Council of Florence, definition or decree on union.
16.I Pt 2.13f.
17.Rom 13:1f.
18. Ex 20.45, 17. Dt 5.19, 21.
19.Mt 18.15; 25.40-45.
20.Mt 25.34f.
21.Mt 19.23f -- Lk 6.4; 18.22f -- Jas 5.1f.
22. Mt 5.3.
23. Wis 6.6, 7.
24. Wis 6.8.
25. Ibid.
26. Acts 17.31.
27. Mt 16.27.
28. 9 November 1846.
29. I Tm 5.22.
30. Council of Trent, session 24, 4 -- Benedict XIV, constitution Etsi minime, 7 February 1742.
31. In his encyclical epistle 14 June 1761.
32 St. Augustine, de Moribus Cathol. Ecclesiae, bk. 1.