Iucunda
Semper Expectatione (Leo XIII) On the Rosary
Encyclical of Pope Leo XIII promulgated on September 8, 1894.
To the Partiarchs, Primates, Archbishops, Bishops, and other Ordinaries in Peace
and Communion with the Apostolic See.
Venerable Brethren, Greeting and Apostolic Benediction.
It is always with joyful expectation and inspired hope that We look forward to
the
return of the month of October. At Our exhortation and by Our express order this
month has been consecrated to the Blessed Virgin, during which for some years
now the devotion of her Rosary has been practiced by Catholic nations throughout
the world with sedulous earnestness. Our reasons for making this exhortation We
have made known more than once. For as the disastrous condition of the Church
and of Society proved to Us the extreme necessity for signal aid from God, it
was manifest to Us that that aid should be sought through the intercession of
His Mother, and by the express means of the Rosary, which Christians have ever
found to be of marvelous avail. This indeed has been well proved since the very
institution of the devotion, both in the vindication of Holy Faith against the
furious attacks of heresy, and in restoring to honor the virtues, which by
reason of the Age's corruption, required to be rekindled and sustained. And this
same proof was continued in all succeeding ages, by a never failing series of
private and public benefits, whereof the illustrious remembrance is everywhere
perpetuated and immortalized by monuments and existing institutions. Likewise in
Our age, afflicted with that tempest of various evils, it is a joy to Our soul
to relate the beneficent influence of the Rosary. Notwithstanding all this, you
yourselves, Venerable Brethren, behold with your own eyes the persistence--nay,
the increase--of the reasons for renewing again this year Our summons to the
Faithful to turn with increased ardor in prayer to Mary, the Queen of Heaven.
Besides, the more We fix Our thoughts upon the character of the Rosary, the
clearer its excellence and power appear to Us. Hence, while Our wish increases
that it may flourish, Our hope grows also that through Our recommendation it may
come to be more greatly prized, its holy use become more extended and flourish
abundantly. But We shall not now return to the various instructions which in
past years We have given upon this subject. We shall take instead the
opportunity of pointing out the particular ruling and designs of Providence
which ordains that the Rosary should have new power to instill confidence into
the hearts of those who pray, and new influence to move the compassionate heart
of Our Mother to comfort and succor Us with the utmost bounty.
2. The recourse we have to Mary in prayer follows upon the office she
continuously fills by the side of the throne of God as Mediatrix of Divine
grace; being by worthiness and by merit most acceptable to Him, and, therefore,
surpassing in power all the angels and saints in Heaven. Now, this merciful
office of hers, perhaps, appears in no other form of prayer so manifestly as it
does in the Rosary. For in the Rosary all the part that Mary took as our co-Redemptress
comes to us, as it were, set forth, and in such wise as though the facts were
even then taking place; and this with much profit to our piety, whether in the
contemplation of the succeeding sacred mysteries, or in the prayers which we
speak and repeat with the lips. First come the Joyful Mysteries. The Eternal Son
of God stoops to mankind, putting on its nature; but with the assent of Mary,
who
conceives Him by the Holy Ghost. Then St. John the Baptist, by a singular
privilege, is sanctified in his mother's womb and favored with special graces
that he might prepare the way of the Lord; and this comes to pass by the
greeting of Mary who had been inspired to visit her cousin. At last the expected
of nations comes to light, Christ the Savior. The Virgin bears Him. And when the
Shepherds and the wise men, first-fruits of the Christian faith, come with
longing to His cradle, they find there the young Child, with Mary, His Mother.
Then, that He might before men offer Himself as a victim to His Heavenly Father,
He desires to be taken to the Temple; and by the hands of Mary He is there
presented to the Lord. It is Mary who, in the mysterious losing of her Son,
seeks Him sorrowing, and finds Him again with joy. And the same truth is told
again in the sorrowful mysteries.
3. In the Garden of Gethsemane, where Jesus is in an agony; in the
judgment-hall,
where He is scourged, crowned with thorns, condemned to death, not there do we
find Mary. But she knew beforehand all these agonies; she knew and saw them.
When she professed herself the handmaid of the Lord for the mother's office, and
when, at the foot of the altar, she offered up her whole self with her Child
Jesus--then and thereafter she took her part in the laborious expiation made by
her Son for the sins of the world. It is certain, therefore, that she suffered
in the very depths of her soul with His most bitter sufferings and with His
torments. Moreover, it was before the eyes of Mary that was to be finished the
Divine Sacrifice for which she had borne and brought up the Victim. As we
contemplate Him in the last and most piteous of those Mysteries, there stood by
the Cross of Jesus His Mother, who, in a miracle of charity, so that she might
receive us as her sons, offered generously to Divine Justice her own Son, and
died in her heart with Him, stabbed with the sword of sorrow.
4. Thence the Rosary takes us on to the Glorious Mysteries, wherein likewise is
revealed the mediation of the great Virgin, still more abundant in fruitfulness.
She rejoices in heart over the glory of her Son triumphant over death, and
follows Him with a mother's love in His Ascension to His eternal kingdom; but,
though worthy of Heaven, she abides a while on earth, so that the infant Church
may be directed and comforted by her "who penetrated, beyond all belief, into
the deep secrets of Divine wisdom" (St. Bernard). Nevertheless, for the
fulfillment of the task of human redemption there remains still the coming of
the Holy Ghost, promised by Christ. And behold, Mary is in the room, and there,
praying with the Apostles and entreating for them with sobs and tears, she
hastens for the Church the coming of the Spirit, the Comforter, the supreme gift
of Christ, the treasure that will never fail. And later, without measure and
without end will she be able to plead our cause, passing upon a day to the life
immortal. Therefore we behold her taken up from this valley of tears into the
heavenly Jerusalem, amid choirs of Angels. And we honor her, glorified above all
the Saints, crowned with stars by her Divine Son and seated at His side the
sovereign Queen of the universe.
5. If in all this series of Mysteries, Venerable Brethren, are developed the
counsels of God in regard to us--"counsels of wisdom and of tenderness" (St.
Bernard)--not less apparent is the greatness of the benefits for which we are
debtors to the Virgin Mother. No man can meditate upon these without feeling a
new awakening in his heart of confidence that he will certainly obtain through
Mary the fullness of the mercies of God. And to this end vocal prayer chimes
well with the Mysteries. First, as is meet and right, comes the Lord's Prayer,
addressed to Our Father in Heaven: and having, with the elect petitions dictated
by Our Divine Master, called upon the Father, from the throne of His Majesty we
turn our prayerful voices to Mary. Thus is confirmed that law of merciful
meditation of which We have spoken, and which St. Bernardine of Siena thus
expresses: "Every grace granted to man has three degrees in order; for by God it
is communicated to Christ, from Christ it passes to the Virgin, and from the
Virgin it descends to us." And we, by the very form of the Rosary, do linger
longest, and, as it were, by preference upon the last and lowest of these steps,
repeating by decades the Angelic Salutation, so that with greater confidence we
may thence attain to the higher degrees--that is, may rise, by means of Christ,
to the Divine Father. For if thus we again and again greet Mary, it is precisely
that our failing and defective prayers may be strengthened with the necessary
confidence; as though we pledged her to pray for us, and as it were in our name,
to God.
6. Nor can our prayers fail to ascend to Him as a sweet savor, commended by the
prayers of the Virgin. And He it is who, all-benign, invites her: "Let thy voice
sound in My ears, for thy voice is sweet." For this cause do we repeatedly
celebrate those glorious titles of her ministry as Mediatrix. Her do we greet
who found favor with God, and who was in a signal manner filled with grace by
Him so that the superabundance thereof might overflow upon all men; her, united
with the Lord by the most intimate of all conjunction; her who was blessed among
women, and who "alone took away the curse and bore the blessing" (St.
Thomas)--that fruit of her womb, that happy fruit, in which all the nations of
the earth are blessed. Her do we invoke, finally, as Mother of God; and in
virtue of a dignity so sublime what graces from her may we not promise to
ourselves, sinners, in life and in the agonies of the end?
7. A soul that shall devoutly repeat these prayers, that shall ponder with faith
these
mysteries, will, without doubt, be filled with wonder at the Divine purposes in
this great Virgin and in the work of the restoration of mankind. Doubtless, this
soul, moved by the warmth of love for her and of confidence, will desire to take
refuge upon her breast, as was the sweet feeling of St. Bernard: "Remember, O
most pious Virgin Mary, that never was it heard that any who fled to thy
protection, called upon thy help, and sought thy intercession, was left
forsaken." But the fruits of the Rosary appear likewise, and with equal
greatness, in the turning with mercy of the heart of the Mother of God towards
us. How sweet a happiness must it be for her to see us all intent upon the task
of weaving crowns for her of righteous prayers and lovely praises! And if,
indeed, by those prayers we desire to render to God the glory which is His due;
if we protest that we seek nothing whatsoever except the fulfillment in us of
His holy will; if we magnify His goodness and graciousness; if we call Him Our
Father; if we, being most unworthy, yet entreat of Him His best blessings--Oh,
how shall Mary in all these things rejoice! How shall she magnify the Lord!
There is no language so fit to lead us to the majesty of
God as the language of the Lord's Prayer. Furthermore, to each of these things
for
which we pray, things that are righteous and are ordered, and are in harmony
with
Christian faith, hope, and charity, is added a special joy for the Blessed
Virgin. With our voices she seems to hear also the voice of her Divine Son, Who
with His own mouth taught us this prayer, and by His own authority commanded it,
saying: "You shall pray thus." And seeing how we observe that command, saying
our Rosary, she will bend towards us with the more loving solicitude; and the
mystical crowns we offer her will be to her welcome, and to us fruitful of
graces. And of this generosity of Mary to our supplications we have no slight
pledge in the very nature of a practice that has the power to help us in praying
well. In many ways, indeed, is man apt, by his frailty, to allow his thoughts to
wander from God and to let his purpose go astray. But the Rosary, if rightly
considered, will be found to have in itself special virtues, whether for
producing and continuing a state of recollection, or for touching the conscience
for its healing, or for lifting up the soul. As all men know, it is composed of
two parts, distinct but inseparable--the meditation of the Mysteries and the
recitation of the prayers. It is thus a kind of prayer that requires not only
some raising of the soul to God, but also a particular and explicit attention,
so that by reflection upon the things to be contemplated, impulses and
resolutions may follow for the reformation and sanctification of life.
8. Those same things are, in fact, the most important and the most admirable of
Christianity, the things through which the world was renewed and filled with the
fruits of truth, justice, and peace. And it is remarkable how well adapted to
every kind of mind, however unskilled, is the manner in which these things are
proposed to us in the Rosary. They are proposed less as truths or doctrines to
be speculated upon than as present facts to be seen and perceived. Thus
presented, with the circumstances of place, time, and persons, these Mysteries
produce the most living effect; and this without the slightest effort of
imagination; for they are treated as things learnt and en-graven
in the heart from infancy. Thus, hardly is a Mystery named but the pious soul
goes through it with ease of thought and quickness of feeling, and gathers there-from,
by the gift of Mary, abundance of the food of Heaven. And yet another ttle of
joy and of acceptation in her eyes do our crowns of prayer acquire. For every
time that we look once more with devotional remembrance upon these Mysteries we
give her a sign of the gratitude of our hearts; we prove to her that we cannot
often enough call to mind the blessings of her unwearied charity in the work of
our salvation. At such recollections, practiced by us with the frequency of love
in her presence, who may
express, who may even conceive, what ever-new joys overflow her ever-blessed
soul, and what tender affections arise therein, of mercy and of a mother's love!
Besides these recollections, moreover, as the sacred Mysteries pass by they
cause our prayers to be transformed into impulses of entreaty that have an
indescribable power over the heart of Mary. Yes, we fly to thee, we miserable
children of Eve, O holy Mother of God. To thee we lift our prayers, for thou art
the Mediatrix, powerful at once and pitiful, of our salvation. Oh, by the
sweetness of the joys that came to thee from thy Son Jesus, by thy participation
in His ineffable sorrows, by the splendors of His glory shining in thee, we
instantly beseech thee, listen, be pitiful, hear us, unworthy though we be!
9. Thus the excellence of the Rosary; considered under the double aspect We have
here set forth, will convince you, Venerable Brethren, of the reasons We have
for an incessant eagerness to commend and to promote it. At the present day--and
on this We have already touched--there is a signal necessity of special help
from Heaven, particularly manifest in the many tribulations suffered by the
Church as to her liberties and her rights, as also in the perils whereby the
prosperity and peace of Christian society are fundamentally threatened. So it is
that it belongs to Our office to assert once again that We place the best of Our
hopes in the holy Rosary, inasmuch as more than any other means it can impetrate
from God the succor which We need. It is Our ardent wish that this devotion
shall be restored to the place of honor; in the city and in the village, in the
family and in the workshop, in the noble's house and in the peasant's; that it
should be to all a dear devotion and a noble sign of their faith; that it may be
a sure way to the gaining of the favor of pardon. To this end it is
indispensable that zeal should be redoubled, while impiety daily redoubles its
efforts and labors to move the justice of God and to provoke, for the general
ruin, His terrible vengeance. Amongst so many causes of grief to all good men,
and to Ourself, not the least is this, that in the
very midst of Catholic nations there exist persons who are ever ready to rejoice
in that which insults and outrages our august religion; and that they
themselves, with incredible effrontery and with all publicity, seize every
opportunity of teaching the multitude to hold reverend things in contempt and of
persuading them from their old confidence in the intercession of the Blessed
Virgin. During the last months the very person of Our Divine Redeemer has not
been spared. Such a depth of shameless indignity has been reached that Jesus
Christ Himself has been dragged upon the stage of a theater often contaminated
with corruptions, and has been represented there discrowned of that Divinity
upon which rests the whole work of human salvation. And the last touch of shame
was added in an attempt to rescue from the execration of ages the guilty name of
him who was the very sign of perfidy, the betrayer of Christ. At the
consummation of such excesses in the cities of Italy there arose a general cry
of indignation, and energetic protest against the violation and trampling under
foot of the inviolable rights of religion, and this in a nation that has for its
greatest and most righteous boast that it is Catholic. The Bishops rose at once,
on fire with holy zeal. And first they made their vigorous appeal to those whose
sacred duty it is to safeguard the decorum of the religion of the country. Next,
they informed their people of the gravity of the scandal, and exhorted them to
special acts of reparation towards our most loving Savior exposed to such
slanders.
10. We have pleasure, however, in rendering praise to the free and fruitful
faith manifested by men of good will; and this has brought Us comfort in the
bitterness
inflicted upon the very quick of Our heart. And having regard to the duties of
Our
supreme ministry, We take this occasion to lift up Our voice and to unite Our
complaints and protests to those of the Bishops and of their people,
authenticated by Our Apostolic authority. And with a like ardor to that
wherewith we condemned this sacrilegious offense, do We preach faith to all
Catholics, and particularly to the Italians. Let them with jealous care guard
this inestimable inheritance received from their fathers, let them defend it
with courage, let them not cease from magnifying it with good actions of which
their faith is the inspiring motive. This is a motive the more for the
enkindling, in private and in common prayer, throughout the coming month of
October, of a holy emulation in celebrating and honoring the Mother of God, the
mighty succorer of the Christian people, the most glorious Queen of Heaven. For
Our own part, We confirm with all Our heart the favors and indulgences We have
already awarded upon this point.
11. Now may God, "Who in His most merciful Providence gave us this Mediatrix."
and "decreed that all good should come to us by the hands of Mary" (St.
Bernard), receive propitiously our common prayers and fulfill our common hopes.
May you receive a pledge thereof in the Apostolic Benediction which We give to
you, to your clergy, and to your people, with all affection in Our Lord.
Given in Rome at St. Peter's, on September 8, 1894, in the seventeenth year of
our Pontificate.