He provided the Church with the benefits of peace and tranquility |
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After
the most blessed servant of God had been anointed king, he was not
satisfied with the anxieties of his realm; so, in order to attain the
crown of immortality, he determined to campaign for the King of all, for
to serve him is to rule. Accordingly, he applied the utmost energy to
the extension of religious worship and began to enrich the churches with
property and to furnish them with extensive adornment. He
re-established the see of Bamberg in his own domain, dedicating it to
Peter and Paul, the princes of the apostles, and to the most revered
Saint George, the martyr; by a special law he submitted it to the holy
Church of Rome, to pay the honour due by divine right to the first see
and also to secure his foundation under Rome’s patronage. But to show
more clearly how carefully this holy man provided his church with the
benefits of peace and tranquillity even after his death, we here include
his letter of establishment.
“Henry, king by the preordained mercy of God, to all
the sons of the Church, both future and present. By the most salutary
instructions of sacred eloquence we are taught and advised to abandon
temporal riches, to lay aside earthly goods, and to strive to reach the
eternal and everlasting dwelling-places in heaven. For present glory is
fleeting and meaningless, while it is possessed, unless in it we can
glimpse something of heaven’s eternity. But God’s mercy toward the human
race provided a useful remedy when he made the reward for earthly
existence a share in our heavenly country.
“Therefore, not unmindful of this clemency and aware
that by the gratuitous consideration of divine mercy we were raised up
to a position of regal dignity, we think it fitting not only to enlarge
the churches constructed by our ancestors, but for the greater glory of
God to build new ones and to raise them up as the most grateful gifts of
our devotion. Furthermore, not turning a deaf ear to the Lord’s
commandments and obediently following divine urgings, we desire to take
the treasures of divine generosity bestowed on us by his bounty and
store them in heaven, where thieves cannot dig them up or steal them and
rust or moth may not destroy them. Moreover, when we reflect upon all
that we have now stored up, our heart will be often drawn with longing
and love.
“Accordingly we wish to make known to all the faithful
that we have designated a portion of our paternal heritage called
Babenberch to be raised to the dignity of an episcopal see so that there
we ourselves and our parents may be held in glorious memory, and that
the sacrifice of salvation may be offered constantly for all the
faithful.”
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