I will tell you what the Lord requires of you |
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Those
who want to work for moral reform in the world must seek the glory of
God before all else. Because he is the source of all good, they must
wait for his help, and pray for it in this difficult and necessary
undertaking. They must then present themselves to those they seek to
reform, as mirrors of every virtue and as lamps on a lamp-stand. Their
upright lives and noble conduct must shine before all who are in the
house of God. In this way they will gently entice the members of the
Church to reform instead of forcing them, lest, in the words of the
Council of Trent, they demand of the body what is not found in the head,
and thus upset the whole order of the Lord’s household.
They will be like skilled physicians taking great
pains to dispose of all the diseases that afflict the Church and require
a cure. They will ready themselves to provide suitable remedies for
each illness.
As far as remedies applicable to the whole Church are
concerned, reform must begin with high and low alike, with superiors and
inferiors. Yet the reformers must look first to those who are set over
the rest, so that reform can begin at the point from which it may spread
to the others.
Be especially concerned with cardinals, patriarchs,
archbishops, bishops and priests, whose particular duty is the care of
souls, and make them men to whom guidance of the Lord’s flock can be
safely entrusted. So let us work down from the highest to the lowest,
from superiors to inferiors. Those men who must initiate ecclesiastical
reform must not be looked down upon.
Nothing should be left untried that can train children
from early childhood in good morals and in the earnest practice of
Christianity. To this end nothing is more effective than pious
instructions in Christian doctrine. Children should be entrusted only to
good and God-fearing teachers.
These are the thoughts, most holy Father, that the
Lord has chosen to inspire in me for the present on this most important
matter. If at first glance they appear difficult, compare them with the
magnitude of the situation. Then they will seem very easy indeed. Great
works are accomplished only by great men, and great men should be
involved in great works.
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