MARRIAGE AND
THE MORAL LAW.
Two Addresses of Pope Pius XII.
VEGLIARE CON SOLLECITUDINE -
ADDRESS TO THE ITALIAN
ASSOCIATION OF CATHOLIC MIDWIVES.
(October 1951.)
NELL’ORDINE DELLA NATURA -
ADDRESS TO THE ASSOCIATION
KNOWN AS THE ‘FAMILY CAMPAIGN’
AND OTHER FAMILY ASSOCIATIONS. (November 1951.)
CATHOLIC TRUTH
SOCIETY No. S0231 (1957).
VEGLIARE CON SOLLECITUDINE -
ADDRESS TO THE ITALIAN
ASSOCIATION OF CATHOLIC MIDWIVES.
INTRODUCTION.
The midwife’s Christian duty.
BELOVED DAUGHTERS, the object of your profession, the secret of its grandeur
and its beauty lies in this, that you guard with care the silent, humble
cradle wherein Almighty God has infused an immortal soul into the seed provided
by the parents, and this you do in order to give your professional assistance
to the mother and to prepare a successful birth for the child she carried in
her womb.
When you reflect on the
wonderful collaboration of the parents, of nature and of God, as a result of
which a new human being is born to the image and likeness of the Creator (see Genesis
1:26-27), you cannot help valuing at its proper worth the precious co-operation
you contribute to an event of such importance. The heroic mother of the
Machabees said to her sons: ‘I know not how you were formed in my womb; for I
neither gave you breath nor soul, nor life, neither did I frame the limbs of
every one of you. But the Creator of the world formed the nativity of man’ (2
Mach. 7:22).
Hence whoever approaches this
cradle of the formation of life and plays a part there, in one way or another,
should know the order the Creator lays down to be followed and the laws that
rule this order. For here, it is not a question of physical or of biological
laws which are, automatically, obeyed by agents not endowed with reason, or of
blind forces, but it is a question of laws, the execution and the effects of
which are confided to the voluntary and free co-operation of man.
This order, founded by a supreme intellect, is directed to the end designed by the Creator. It embraces not only the external acts of man, but also the internal consent of his free will — it covers acts as well as omissions when duty so demands. Nature places at man's disposal the whole chain of the causes which give rise to a new human life; it is man's part to release the living force, and to nature pertains the development of that force, leading to its completion. Once man has fulfilled his part and set in motion the marvellous evolution of life, it is his duty to respect religiously its progress and the same duty forbids him either to halt the course of nature or to prevent its natural development.
Thus the part played by nature and the part played by man are precisely
determined. Your professional training and experience enable you to know the
part played by nature and by man, together with the rules and laws to which
both are subject. Your conscience, enlightened by reason and by faith under the
guidance of divine authority, teaches you on the one hand what you may lawfully
do and on the other hand, what you are in duty bound to refrain from doing.
In the light of these principles, We now propose to lay before you some
considerations on the apostolate to which your profession binds you. Every
profession willed by God carries with it a mission — the mission to carry out,
within the bounds of the profession itself, the plan and intention of the
Creator and to help man to understand the justice and the holiness of the
divine scheme and the benefit that will be given to those who carry it out.
I:
YOUR PROFESSIONAL APOSTOLATE IS CARRIED OUT
FIRST AND FOREMOST THROUGH YOUR PERSONAL INFLUENCE.
Your advice is expected.
Why is your service called for? Because people are convinced that you know your
business, because you know what is good for the mother and child, because you
are aware of the dangers to which both are exposed and how these same dangers
may be avoided and overcome. Your advice and help are expected, limited though
they may be and not infallible, but in keeping with the latest developments
both in theory and in fact of the profession in which you specialise.
And if all this is expected of you, it is because people have confidence in
you, and this confidence is, above all, something personal. Your character must
inspire it. That this confidence in you be not misplaced is not only your keen
desire, but also something demanded by your office and profession and consequently
your bounden duty. Hence, you strive to reach the summit of the knowledge of
your craft.
Your Professional competence.
But your professional skill is demanded, too, by the nature of your apostolate.
What weight, in point of fact, would your views on the moral and religious
issues connected with your office carry, if you were seen to be lacking in
professional knowledge? On the other hand your intervention in the moral and
religious field will be the more effective if, by your superior technical
ability, you command respect. To the favourable opinion that you will
deservedly win for yourselves there will be added also in the minds of those
who seek your help, the well founded belief that your Christian convictions
faithfully put into practice, far from being an obstacle to your professional
worth, will be its support and guarantee. It will be plain to all that in the
exercise of your profession you are aware of your responsibility before God — and
that it is your faith in God which is the strongest argument encouraging you to
give your assistance with greater devotion in proportion to the gravity of the
need. In this solid religious foundation, you find the strength to counter any
unreasonable and immoral claim from whatever quarter with a calm, undaunted and
unswerving denial.
Christian sincerity.
Esteemed and appreciated as you are for your personal conduct no less than for
your knowledge and experience, you will find the care of mother and child will
be readily confided to you, and, perhaps even without you yourselves realising
it, you will exercise a profound, often silent, but efficacious apostolate of a
living Christianity. Great, in fact, as may be the moral authority due to
qualities strictly professional, your personal influence will find its
fulfilment chiefly in the twofold guarantee of genuine human feeling and real
christian living.
II:
THE SECOND ASPECT OF YOUR APOSTOLATE IS
YOUR ZEAL TO UPHOLD THE VALUE AND
INVIOLABILITY OF HUMAN LIFE.
Your duty.
The world today has urgent need of conviction in this regard by the threefold
testimony of mind, heart and facts. Your profession offers you the possibility
of giving such testimony and even lays upon you the duty of doing so. Sometimes
this testimony will take the form of a simple word spoken tactfully at the
right moment to the mother or the father; more frequently, it will be expressed
in your demeanour and the conscientious way in which you act will have an
unobtrusive but effective influence on them both. You more than anyone else are
in a position to know and appreciate what human life is in itself and to
determine its worth in the light of sound reasoning, of your own moral
conscience, of civil society, of the Church, and, above all, in the eyes of
God. The Lord has made all the other things on earth for man, and man himself,
both in his existence and in his essence, has been fashioned for God and not
for other creatures, even though, in so far as his behaviour is concerned, he
has a duty to the community. Now even the unborn child is ‘man’ to the same
degree and by the same title as the mother.
The life of the infant, even unborn, belongs to God.
Furthermore, every human being, even a child in the mother’s womb, has a right
to life directly from God and not from the parents or from any human society or
authority. Hence, there is no man, no human authority, no science, no medical,
eugenic, social, economic or moral ‘indication’ that can offer or produce a
valid juridical title to a direct deliberate disposal of an innocent human
life; that is to say, a disposal that aims at its destruction whether as an end,
or as a means to another end which is, perhaps, in no way unlawful in itself.
Thus for example, to save the life of the mother is a very noble end; but the
direct killing of the child as a means to that end is not lawful. The direct
destruction of the so-called ‘life without value’ whether born or yet to be
born, such as was practised very widely a few years ago, cannot in any way be
justified. Hence when this practice began, the Church formally declared that it
was against the natural law and the divine positive law, and consequently
unlawful to kill, even by order of the public authorities, those who were
innocent but, on account of some physical or mental defect, rendered useless to
the State and a burden upon it. Footnote: Decree of the Holy Office, 2nd
December 1940 - Acta Apostolic Sedis Volume 32, 1940, pages 553-554.
The life of one who is innocent is untouchable, and any direct attempt or
aggression against it is a violation of one of the fundamental laws without
which secure human society is impossible. We have no need to teach you in
detail the meaning and the gravity in your profession of this fundamental law.
But never forget that there rises above every man-made code and above every
‘indication’ the faultless law of God.
‘You shall not kill.’
The apostolate of your profession demands of you that you pass on to others
that knowledge of human life, that regard and respect for it, which your
christian faith nurtures in your hearts.
You must, when called upon, be prepared to defend resolutely and to protect,
when possible, the helpless and hidden life of the child, following the divine
precept ‘Non occides’: You shall not kill (Exodus 20:13). Such defensive action
becomes at times most necessary and urgent, but nevertheless, it is not the
most noble and important part of your mission. This, in fact, is not purely
negative, but is eminently constructive and it aims at encouraging, edifying
and strengthening.
The child is a gift from God’s love.
Instil into the minds and hearts of the mother and father the esteem and joyous
desire of the new-born child so that it is welcomed with love from the moment
of its birth. The child, formed in the womb of the mother, is a gift from God
(Psalm 126:3 in the Vulgate or Psalm 127:3 in the Hebrew), who confides its
care to the parents. With what a delicate and charming touch does Holy Writ
describe the children seated at table with their father! They form the reward of
the just man, whereas sterility is often the punishment of the sinner. Listen
to the divine utterance expressed with the matchless poetry of the Psalmist: ‘Your
wife as a fruitful vine, on the sides of your house. Your children as olive
plants, round about your table. Behold, thus shall the man be blessed that fears
the Lord!’ (Psalm 127:3-4 in the Vulgate or Psalm 128:3-4 in the Hebrew). But
of the wicked man, it is written: ‘May his posterity be cut off; in one
generation may his name be blotted out’ (Psalm 108:13 in the Vulgate or Psalm
109:13 in the Hebrew).
Hasten to lay the new-born
child in the arms of the father, as did the Romans of old, but do it for an
incomparably higher motive. With the Romans, it was a recognition of paternity
and of the authority that arises from it; with us, it will be to pay homage to
the Creator, to call down God’s blessing and to undertake to carry out with
devout affection the office which God has entrusted to him. If Our Lord praises
and rewards the faithful servant for having made good use of five talents (see
Matthew 25:21), what praise, what a recompense, will He not set aside for the
father who has protected and reared for Him the human life which was confided
to him; a treasure of greater value than all the gold and silver in the world.
Help the mother to enjoy her happiness.
Your apostolate, however, is concerned above all with the mother. Without doubt
the voice of nature speaks in her and places in her heart the desire, the
courage, the love and the will to take care of the child; but in order to
overcome the suggestions of faint-heartedness from whatever cause, that voice
needs to be strengthened and to strike, so to speak, a supernatural note. It
falls to you, by your bearing and manner of acting rather than by words, to
make the young mother realise the greatness, the beauty, the nobility of that
life which now is awakening, and which is being shaped and quickened in the
womb, the life that is born of her, that she carries in her arms and nourishes
at her breast. It rests with you to help her to appreciate the greatness of the
gift of God’s love for her and for her child. The Sacred Scriptures bring to
our ears with many examples an echo of the prayers of supplication and, then,
of the hymns of grateful joy of many mothers whose prayers at length were heard
after having long implored with tears the grace of motherhood. And those
sorrows, too, which, after original sin, the mother has to suffer to bring her
child into the world, help to bind more tightly the link which unites them. Her
love is in proportion to her suffering. This has been expressed with moving and
profound simplicity by Him who has formed the hearts of mothers: ‘A woman, when
she is in labour, has sorrow because her hour is come; but when she has brought
forth the child, she remembers no more the anguish, for joy that a man has been
born into the world’ (John 16: 21). Besides, the Holy Spirit, by the pen of the
Apostle Saint Paul, shows once again the grandeur and joy of motherhood; God
gives the child to the mother but in giving it, He makes her co-operate
effectively in the unfolding of the flower, the seed of which He had sown in
her, and this co-operation becomes the way that leads her to eternal salvation.
‘She shall be saved through child-bearing’ (1 Tim. 2:15).
This perfect agreement between
faith and reason gives you a guarantee that you are in the right and that you
can pursue with unconditional security your apostolate of appreciation and love
of the life that is being born. Should you succeed in exercising this
apostolate at the side of the cradle in which the newly-born utters its first
cries, it will not be difficult for you to achieve what your conscience as
midwives, in keeping with the law of God and of nature, expects you to prescribe
for the good of the mother and the child.
The ‘burden’ of children.
It is not, moreover, necessary for Us to prove to you who have experienced it,
how essential nowadays is that apostolate of appreciation and love for the new
life. Unfortunately, cases are not rare, in which even a cautious reference to
children as a ‘blessing’ is enough to provoke a downright denial and perhaps
even derision. Far more frequently, in thought and in words, the attitude of
considering children a heavy ‘burden’ predominates. How opposed is this frame
of mind to the mind of God and to the words of Holy Scripture, and, for that matter,
to sound reason and the sentiment of nature! Should there be conditions and
circumstances in which parents, without violating the law of God, can avoid the
‘blessing’ of children, such cases of force majeure, however, by no
means authorise the perversion of ideas, the disparaging of values, the
belittling of the mother who has had the courage and the honour to give life.
Be ready to baptise, if necessary.
If what We have said up to now deals with the protection and the care of the
natural life, it should hold all the more in regard to the supernatural life
which the newly-born infant receives with baptism. In the present economy,
there is no other way of communicating this life to the child who has not yet
the use of reason. But, nevertheless, the state of grace at the moment of death
is absolutely necessary for salvation. Without it, it is not possible to attain
supernatural happiness, the beatific vision of God. An act of love can suffice
for an adult to obtain sanctifying grace and supply for the absence of baptism;
for the unborn child or for the newly-born, this way is not open. If, then, we
hold that charity towards our neighbour imposes upon us the obligation of
helping him in case of necessity, this obligation is increased in proportion to
the importance of the good to be procured or the evil to be avoided. Again, it
is increased when the person in need is unable to help or save himself. It is,
therefore, easy to understand the importance of giving baptism to the infant
completely without the use of reason, when it is in serious danger or facing
certain death. Undoubtedly this obligation is binding in the first place on the
parents; but in urgent cases, where there is no time to lose, or it is
impossible to obtain a priest, yours is the sublime duty of administering
baptism. Do not, then, fail in performing this charitable service and in
exercising this active apostolate of your profession. Let the words of Jesus be
your comfort and your encouragement: ‘Blessed are the merciful, for they shall
obtain mercy’ (Matthew 5:7). And what act of mercy is greater or more beautiful
than to ensure for the soul of the infant between the threshold of life it has
just crossed and that of approaching death, the entrance into a glorious and
happy eternity.
III:
THE THIRD ASPECT OF YOUR APOSTOLATE
MAY BE DESCRIBED AS HELPING THE MOTHER
IN THE PROMPT AND GENEROUS FULFILMENT
OF HER MARITAL DUTIES.
Motherhood is a share in God’s goodness and power.
Scarcely had Mary most holy understood the Angel’s message than she replied:
‘Behold the handmaid of the Lord! Be it done unto me according to your word’
(Luke 1:38). An eager acceptance of the vocation of motherhood! Virginal
motherhood incomparably superior to any other; yet a real motherhood in the
true and proper meaning of the word (see Gal. 4:4). For this reason, when
reciting the Angelus and after recalling Mary’s acceptance, the faithful finish
at once with: ‘And the Word was made flesh’ (John 1:14).
It is one of the fundamental
requirements of the right moral order that, with the use of the conjugal
rights, there should correspond a sincere acceptance of the duties of
motherhood. On this condition, the woman follows the path traced by the Creator
to the end He has appointed for the creature, making her, by the exercise of
that function, a sharer in His goodness, His wisdom, and His omnipotence in
accordance with the Angel’s announcement; ‘Concipies in utero et paries’ -
‘You shall conceive in your womb and shall bring forth (a son)’ (Luke 1:31).
If such then is the biological
foundation of your professional activity, the urgent object of your apostolate
will be to strive to sustain, to reawaken and stimulate the mother’s instinct
and the mother’s love.
Lawful and unlawful requests.
When spouses value and appreciate the honour of producing a new life, and await
its coming with a holy impatience, your part is a very easy one; it will be
sufficient to cultivate this interior sentiment in them; the readiness to
welcome and cherish that growing life follows automatically. Unfortunately,
however, it is not always the case; the child is often not wanted; worse still,
its coming is often dreaded. In such conditions, how can there be a ready
response to the call of duty? Your apostolate in this case must be both
powerful and effective; primarily, in a negative way, by refusing any immoral
cooperation; then also in a positive way, by deftly applying yourselves to the
removal of preconceived ideas, various fears or faint-hearted excuses; and as
far as possible to remove also the external obstacles which may cause distress
where the acceptance of motherhood is concerned. You may come forward
unhesitatingly where you are asked to advise and help in the bringing forth of
new life, to protect it and set it on its way towards its full development.
But, unfortunately, in how many cases are you rather called upon to prevent the
procreation and preservation of this life, regardless of the precepts of the
moral order? To accede to such requests would be to abuse your knowledge and
your skill by becoming accessories to an immoral act; it would be the
perversion of your apostolate. It demands a calm but unequivocal refusal to
countenance the transgression of God’s law or the dictates of your conscience.
It follows, therefore, that your profession requires that you should have a
clear knowledge of this divine law, so that it may be respected and followed
without excess or defect.
The Church condemns birth Prevention.
Our Predecessor, Pius XI, of happy memory, in his Encyclical Casti Connubii,
December 31st, 1930, solemnly proclaimed anew the fundamental law governing the
marital act and conjugal relations; he said that any attempt on the part of the
husband and wife to deprive this act of its inherent force or to impede the procreation
of a new life, either in the performance of the act itself, or in the course of
the development of its natural consequences, is immoral, and furthermore, no
alleged ‘indication’ or need can convert an intrinsically immoral act into a
moral and lawful one. Footnote: see Acta Apostolic Sedis, volume, 22, 1930,
pages 559 and following. English translation Christian Marriage, Catholic
Truth Society.
This precept is as valid today
as it was yesterday, and it will be the same tomorrow and always, because it
does not imply a precept of human law but is the expression of a law which is
natural and divine.
Let these words be your
unfailing guide in all cases where your profession and your apostolate demand
of you a clear and unequivocal decision.
Direct sterilization is immoral.
It would be more than a mere want of readiness in the service of life if the
attempt made by man were to concern not only an individual act but should
affect the entire organism itself, with the intention of depriving it, by means
of sterilization, of the faculty of procreating a new life. Here, too, you have
a clearly established ruling in the Church’s teaching which governs your
behaviour both internally and externally. Direct sterilization — that is, the
sterilization which aims, either as a means or as an end in itself, to render
child-bearing impossible — is a grave violation of the moral law, and therefore
unlawful. Even public authority has no right, whatever ‘indication’ it may use
as an excuse, to permit it, and much less to prescribe it or to use it to the
detriment of innocent human beings. This principle has already been enunciated
in the above mentioned Encyclical of Pius XI on Christian Marriage (pages
564-565). So therefore, ten years ago, when sterilization came to be more
widely used, the Holy See was obliged to make an explicit and solemn
declaration that direct sterilization, whether permanent or temporary, of the
man or of the woman, is unlawful, and this by virtue of the natural law from
which the Church herself, as you well know, has no power to dispense. Footnote:
Decree of the Holy Office, February 22nd, 1940; Acta Apostolic Sedis, 1940,
page 73.
Do all you can, therefore, in
your apostolate, to oppose these perverse tendencies, and refuse your
co-operation in them.
Natural sterility or the ‘infertile period’.
The further serious problem presents itself today whether and how far the
obligation of readiness to fulfil the duty of motherhood can be reconciled with
the ever increasing recourse to the periods of natural sterility (the so-called
agenesical periods in the woman), a practice which seems to be the clear
expression of a will opposed to that readiness.
You are rightly expected to be well informed, from the medical point of view, of this well-known theory and of the progress which can still be foreseen in this matter; and moreover, your advice and help are expected to be based, not on simple, popular publications, but on scientific facts and the authoritative judgment of conscientious specialists in medicine and biology. It is your office, and not that of the priest, to instruct married people, by private consultation or through serious publications, on the medical and biological aspect of the theory, without, however, allowing yourselves to be led into advocating this in a manner which is neither right nor discreet. But in this field, too, your apostolate demands of you as women and as Christians that you know and defend the moral law to which this theory is subordinated. And here the Church is competent to speak.
In the first place, there are two hypotheses to be considered. If the
application of this theory means nothing more than that married people use
their matrimonial rights even during the time of natural sterility, there is
nothing to be said against it; by so doing, they do not in any way prevent or
prejudice the consummation of the natural act and its further natural
consequences. It is precisely in this that the application of the theory We are
discussing is essentially distinct from the abuse of it already mentioned,
which consists of a perversion of the act itself. If, however, a further step
is made, that is, of restricting the marital act exclusively to that particular
period, then the conduct of the married couple must be examined more attentively.
Here, again, two alternatives must be considered.
The marital right itself.
If, even at the time of the marriage, it was the intention of the man or woman
to restrict the marital right itself to the periods of sterility and not merely
the use of that right, in such a way that the other partner would not even have
the right to demand the act at any other time, that would imply an essential
defect in the matrimonial consent. This would invalidate the marriage itself,
because the right deriving from the marriage contract is a permanent right,
uninterrupted and continuous, of each of the partners in respect of the other.
The use of the marital right.
If, on the other hand, the limitation of the act to the times of natural
sterility refers not to the right itself but only to the use of the right,
there is then no question of the validity of the marriage. Nevertheless, the
moral lawfulness of such conduct would be affirmed or denied according as to
whether or not the intention to keep constantly to these periods is based on
sufficient and reliable moral grounds. The sole fact that the couple do not
offend against the nature of the act and that they are willing to accept and
bring up the child that is born notwithstanding the precautions they have taken,
would not of itself alone be a sufficient guarantee of a right intention and of
the unquestionable morality of the motives themselves.
The primary duty.
The reason is that marriage binds to a state of life which, while conferring
certain rights, at the same time imposes the accomplishment of a positive work
which belongs to the very state of wedlock. This being so, the general
principle can now be stated that the fulfilment of a positive duty may be
withheld should grave reasons, independent of the good will of those obliged to
it, show that such fulfilment is untimely, or make it evident that it cannot
equitably be demanded by that which requires the fulfillment — in this case,
the human race.
The marriage contract, which
gives the spouses the right to satisfy the inclinations of nature, established
them in a state of life, the married state. Nature and Creator impose upon the
married couple who use that state by carrying out its specific act, the duty of
providing for the conservation of the human race. Herein we have the
characteristic service which gives their state its peculiar value — the good of
the offspring. Both the individual and society, the people and the State, and
the Church herself, depend for their existence on the order which God has established
on fruitful marriage. Hence, to embrace the married state, to make frequent use
of the faculty proper to it and lawful only in that state, while on the other
hand, always and deliberately to seek to evade its primary duty without serious
reasons, would be to sin against the very meaning of married life.
Reasons that may exempt.
Serious reasons, often put forward on medical, eugenic, economic and social
grounds, can exempt from that obligatory service even for a considerable period
of time, even for the entire duration of the marriage. It follows from this
that the use of the infertile periods can be lawful from the moral point of
view and, in the circumstances which have been mentioned, it is indeed lawful.
If, however, in the light of a reasonable and fair judgment, there are no such
serious personal reasons, or reasons deriving from external circumstances, then
the habitual intention to avoid the fruitfulness of the union, while at the
same time continuing fully to satisfy sensual intent, can only arise from a
false appreciation of life and from motives that run counter to true standards
of moral conduct.
Here you will perhaps urge a
point, and say that sometimes, whilst engaged in your profession, you find
yourselves face to face with very delicate cases, namely, those in which to run
the risk of motherhood cannot be demanded, nay, where motherhood must be
absolutely avoided, and where on the other hand the use of sterile periods
either does not afford a sufficient safeguard, or where, for other reasons, it
must be discarded. And so, you ask, how it is still possible to speak of an
apostolate in the service of motherhood?
God’s law may require complete abstention.
If, in your sure and experienced judgment, the circumstances definitely demand a
‘No’, that is to say, that motherhood is unthinkable, it would be a mistake and
wrong to prescribe a ‘Yes’. Here it is a question of concrete facts, and
therefore a medical, not a theological question, and so it is within your
competence. However, in such cases, the married couple do not ask you for a
medical answer, an answer which must necessarily be negative; they seek rather
your approval of a ‘technique’ of marital relationship that is proof against
the risk of motherhood. So, here again, you are called upon to exercise your
apostolate, in as much as you leave no doubt that, even in extreme cases, every
preventive practice and every direct attack on the life and development of the
seed is forbidden and banned in conscience, and that there is only one thing to
do, and that is, to abstain from any complete use of the natural faculty. In
this matter, your apostolate demands clear and certain judgment and a calm
firmness.
It will be objected, however,
that such abstinence is impossible, that heroism such as this is not feasible.
At the present time, you can hear and read of this objection everywhere, even
from those who, because of their duty and authority, should be of quite a
different mind. The following argument is brought forward as proof: No one is obliged
to do the impossible and no reasonable legislator is presumed to wish by his
law to bind persons to do the impossible. But for married people to abstain for
a long time is impossible. Therefore they are not bound to abstain: divine law
cannot mean that.
God’s help is a reality to those who want it.
In such manner of argument, a false conclusion is reached from premises which
are only partially true. To be convinced of this, one has simply to reverse the
terms of the argument: God does not oblige us to do the impossible. But God
obliges married people to abstain if their union cannot be accomplished
according to the rules of nature. Therefore, in such cases, abstinence is
possible. In confirmation of this argument, we have the doctrine of the Council
of Trent which, in the chapter on the necessary and possible observance of the
Commandments, referring to a passage in the works of Augustine, teaches: ‘God
does not command what is impossible, but when He commands, He commands, He
warns you to do what you can and to ask His aid for what is beyond your powers,
and He gives His help to make that possible for you.’ Footnote: Council of
Trent, session 6, chapter 11, Denzinger number 804 - Saint Augustine De
natura et gratia, chapter 43, number 50; Migne, Latin Patrology, volume 44,
column 271.
Do not be disturbed when, in
the practice of your profession and in your apostolate, you hear this clamour
about impossibility. Do not let it cloud your internal judgment, nor affect
your exterior conduct. Never lend yourselves to anything whatsoever which is
opposed to the law of God and your Christian conscience. To judge men and women
of today incapable of continuous heroism is to do them wrong. In these days,
for many reasons — perhaps through dire necessity, or even at times under
pressure of injustice — heroism is being practised to a degree and extent that
in times past would have been thought impossible. Why then, if circumstances
demand it, should this heroism stop at the limits prescribed by passion and the
inclinations of nature? It is obvious that he who does not want to master
himself, will not be able to do so; and he who thinks he can master himself,
relying solely on his own powers and not sincerely and perseveringly seeking
divine aid, will be miserably deceived.
Here, then, you see how your
apostolate can win married people over to a service of motherhood, that is, not
one of utter servitude to the promptings of nature, but to the exercise of
marital rights and duties, governed by the principles of reason and faith.
IV:
FINALLY, THERE IS AN ASPECT OF YOUR APOSTOLATE
THAT CONCERNS THE DEFENCE OF THE RIGHT ORDER OF VALUES
AND THE DIGNITY OF THE HUMAN PERSON.
A wrong principle.
‘Personal values’ and the need to respect them, is a subject that for the past
twenty years has kept writers busily employed. In many of their elaborate
works, the specifically sexual act, too, has a position allotted to it in the
service of the person in the married state. The peculiar and deeper meaning of
the exercise of the marital right should consist in this (they say) that the
bodily union is the expression and actuation of the personal and affective
union.
Articles, pamphlets, books and lectures, dealing in particular even with the
‘technique of love,’ have served to spread these ideas and to illustrate them
with warnings to the newly-wed as a guide to marriage that will prevent them
neglecting, through foolishness, misplaced modesty, or unfounded scrupulosity,
what God, who is Creator also of their natural inclinations, offers to them. If
a new life results from this complete reciprocal gift of the husband and wife,
it is a consequence that remains outside or, at the most, at the circumference,
so to say, of the ‘personal values’: a consequence that is not excluded, but is
not to be considered as a focal point of marital relations.
According to these theories, the dedication of yourselves to the welfare of the
life still hidden in the mother’s womb, or to helping the mother to be happily
delivered, would be of only minor importance and would take secondary place.
Now, if this relative appreciation merely emphasized the value of the persons
of the married couple rather than that of the offspring, such a problem could,
strictly speaking, be disregarded. But here there is a question of a serious
inversion of the order of values and of purposes which the Creator Himself has
established. We are face to face with the propagation of a body of ideas and
sentiments directly opposed to serene, deep and serious christian thought. Here
again your apostolate must play its part. You may become the confidantes of the
mother and wife and be asked questions about the most secret desires and
intimate acts of married life. If so, how could you, aware as you are of your
mission, make truth and right order prevail in the judgment and relationship of
the married couple, unless you yourselves have precise knowledge and a firmness
of character necessary to maintain what you know to be true and righteous?
The right principle.
The truth is that marriage, as a natural institution, is not ordered by the
will of the Creator towards personal perfection of the husband and wife as its
primary end, but to the procreation and education of a new life. The other ends
of marriage, although part of nature’s plan, are not of the same importance as
the first. Still less are these ends superior. On the contrary, they are
essentially subordinate to it. This principle holds good for all marriages,
even if they are unfruitful: just as it can be said that all eyes are intended
and constructed to see, even though in abnormal cases, because of particular
internal or external conditions, they can never be capable of giving sight.
It was precisely for the
purpose of putting an end to all uncertainty and wanderings away from the
truth, which were threatening to spread mistaken ideas about the order of
precedence in the purpose of marriage and the relationship between them, that
We ourselves, some years ago (10th March, 1944), drew up a statement placing
them in their right order. We called attention to what the very internal
structure of their natural disposition discloses, to what is the heritage of
christian tradition, to what the Sovereign Pontiffs have repeatedly taught, and
to what was afterwards definitely stated in the Code of Canon Law (Canon 1013,
paragraph 1 of the 1917 Code). Furthermore, a little while afterwards, to put
an end to conflicting opinions, the Holy See, by a public Decree, proclaimed
that the appeal of certain modern writers who deny that the procreation and
education of the child is the primary end of marriage, or teach that the
secondary ends are not essentially subordinate to the primary end, but rather
are of equal value and are independent of it, cannot be admitted. Footnote: Sacred
Congregation of the Holy Office, 1st April, 1944-Acta Apostolic Sedis, volume
36, 1944, page 103.
The truth about personal values.
Does that mean a denial or a diminishing of what is good and right in the
personal values which result from marriage and from the marriage act? Certainly
not, because in marriage the Creator has destined human beings, made of flesh
and blood and endowed with a mind and a heart, for the procreation of new life,
and they are called to be the parents of their progeny as human beings and not
irrational animals. It is to this end that God wills the union of married
people. Indeed Holy Writ says of God that He created human kind to His image,
created them male and female (Genesis. 1: 27), and willed — as we find
repeatedly stated in the Holy Bible — that a man ‘shall leave father and
mother, and shall cleave to his wife, and they shall be two in one flesh’ (Genesis
2:24; Matthew 19:5; Ephesians 5:31).
All this is therefore true and
willed by God; but it must not be disjoined from the primary function of
marriage, that is, from the duty to the new life. Not only the exterior common
life, but also all the personal wealth, the qualities of mind and spirit, and
finally all that there is more truly spiritual and profound in married love as
such, has been placed by the will of nature and the Creator at the service of
the offspring. Of its nature, perfect married life means also the complete
self-sacrifice of the parents on behalf of their children, and love of husband
and wife in its strength and tenderness is an essential need for the most
earnest care for the child and the guarantee that this care will be taken.
Footnote: see Saint Thomas, Summa 3rd part, question 29, article
2, in conclusion; Supplement, question 49, article 2, answer to
objection 1.
Artificial Insemination.
To consider unworthily the cohabitation of husband and wife, and the marital
act as a simple organic function for the transmission of seed, would be the
same as to convert the domestic hearth, which is the family sanctuary, into a
mere biological laboratory. For this reason, in Our Address of September 29th,
1949, made to the International Congress of Catholic Doctors, We formally
rejected artificial insemination in marriage. The marital act, in its natural
setting, is a personal action. It is the simultaneous and direct co-operation
of husband and wife which, by the very nature of the agents and the inherent
quality of the act, is the expression of the mutual giving which, in the words
of Scripture, results in the union ‘in one flesh.’
This is much more than the union of two life-germs, which can be brought about even artificially, that is, without the co-operation of the husband and wife. The marital act, in the order of, and by nature’s design, consists of a personal cooperation which the husband and wife exchange as a right when they marry.
When, therefore, this interchange of rights is, from the beginning, permanently
impossible in its natural form, the object of the marriage contract is
essentially vitiated. And as We have already stated, ‘We must never forget
this: only when it is carried out according to the will and plan of the Creator
does the act of procreating a new life truly achieve, and in so wonderfully
perfect a way, the ends sought by it. For then at one and the same time it is
true to and satisfies the physical and spiritual nature of man and wife, their
dignity as persons, and the normal and happy development of the child.’
Footnote: Acta Apostolic Sedis, Volume 41, 1949, page 560.
It follows that it is for you
to tell the fiancée or the young wife who comes to discuss with you the values
of married life, that these personal values relating to the body, sense or
spirit, are really good and true, but that the Creator has put them in the
second place in the scale of values, and not in the first.
The dignity of virginity.
There is a further consideration which can easily be forgotten. All these
secondary values, in regard to generation and its processes, are part of the
specific duty of husband and wife, namely, to be the parents and educators of
the new living being. A high and noble duty! It does not, however, belong to
the essence of a complete human being, as though a human being who did not use
the generative faculty would suffer some loss of dignity. To renounce the use
of that power does not mean any mutilation of personal and spiritual values,
especially if a person refrains from the highest motives. Of such a free
renunciation made for the sake of the kingdom of God, the Creator has said: ‘Non
omnes cabiunt verbum istud, sed quibis datum est — All men take not this word
but they to whom it is given’ (Matthew 19:11).
It is therefore a mistake and a
departure from the way of moral truth to exalt too highly the generative
function even in its right moral setting of married life. This often happens
today. Again, it brings the risk of an error of understanding and of misguided
affection which hinders and stifles good and noble feelings, especially with
young people who have as yet had no experience and are unaware of life’s
snares. After all, what normal person, healthy in mind and body, would want to
belong to the number of those lacking character and spirit?
Do you, however, by your
apostolate, wherever you work professionally, enlighten people’s minds and
instil into them this right order of values, so that men may regulate their judgment
and their conduct by it.
Conjugal joy is God’s gift to the married.
Our explanation of the apostolic work of your profession would, however, be
incomplete were We not to add a few words more on the defence of human dignity
in the use of the generative inclination. The Creator in His goodness and
wisdom has willed to make use of the work of the man and woman to preserve and
propagate the human race, by joining them in wedlock.
The same Creator has arranged that the husband and wife find pleasure and happiness of mind and body in the performance of that function. Consequently, the husband and wife do no wrong in seeking out and enjoying this pleasure. They are accepting what the Creator intended for them.
Still, here too, the husband and wife ought to know how to keep within the
bounds of moderation. As in eating and drinking, they ought not to give
themselves over completely to the promptings of their senses, so neither ought
they to subject themselves unrestrainedly to their sensual appetite. This,
therefore, is the rule to be followed; the use of the natural, generative
instinct and function is lawful in the married state only, and in the services
of the purposes for which marriage exists. It follows from this that, only in
the married state and in the observance of these laws, are the desires and
enjoyment of that pleasure and satisfaction allowed; because pleasure is
subject to the law of action from which it springs, and not vice-versa — action
made subject to the law of enjoyment of pleasure. And this law, so reasonable,
looks not only to the substance but to the circumstances of the action; so
that, while the substance of the function is still preserved, sin can be
committed by the way it is carried out.
Human dignity thrives on mutual respect.
The transgression of this law is as old as original sin. However, at the
present time, there is a danger of losing sight of this fundamental principle.
Today, in fact, it is customary in speaking and in writing (even among some
Catholics) to uphold the necessity of personal freedom, the peculiar purpose
and value of sexual relationship and its use, independently of the purpose of
the procreation of offspring. They would like to submit the order established
by God to fresh examination and to a new regulation. They would like no other
check in the manner of satisfying this instinct than the observance of what is
essential to the instinctive act. For the moral obligation to master our
passions, they would substitute freedom to make use of the whims and
inclinations of nature blindly and without restraint. This must sooner or later
result in harm to morality, to conscience, and to human dignity.
If the exclusive aim of nature, or at least its primary aim, had been the mutual giving and possessing of husband and wife in joy and delight; if nature had arranged that act only to make their personal experience happy in the highest possible degree, and not as an incentive in the service of life, then the Creator would have made use of another plan in the formation and constitution of the natural act. Instead, the act is completely subordinate and ordered to the great and unique law, ‘generatio et educatio prolis’ (the generating and educating of children), that is, to the fulfilment of the primary end of marriage as the origin and source of life.
Unfortunately, waves of hedonism never cease to roll over the world. They are
threatening to overwhelm the whole of married life in a rising sea of ideas,
desires and acts, not without grave danger and to the serious prejudice of the
primary duty of husband and wife.
Too often people are not ashamed of exalting this antichristian hedonism as
though it were a doctrine, by inculcating the desire to make the pleasure in
the preparation and the act of conjugal union ever more intense; as if the
whole moral law governing marital relations consisted of the proper fulfilment
of this act — as if everything else, no matter how carried out, finds its
justification in the profuse expression of mutual affection, hallowed by the
sacrament of matrimony and worthy of praise and reward before God and the
conscience of man. All question of man’s dignity and of his dignity as a
Christian, both of which are a restraint on sensual excess, are set aside.
That is false. The seriousness and holiness of the christian moral law do not permit the unrestrained satisfying of the sexual instinct, nor such seeking merely for pleasure and enjoyment. It does not allow rational man to let himself be so dominated either by the substance or the circumstances of the act.
Some would like to maintain that happiness in married life is in direct ratio
to the mutual enjoyment of marital relations. This is not so. On the contrary,
happiness in married life is in direct ratio to the respect the husband and
wife have for each other, even in the intimate act of marriage. Not that they
should regard what nature offers them and God has given them as immoral, and
refuse it, but because the respect and mutual esteem which arise from it, are
one of the strongest elements of a love which is all the more pure because it
is the more tender.
Defend the honour of Christian Marriage.
Whilst performing the duties of your profession, do your utmost to repel the
attack of this refined hedonism, which is spiritually an empty thing and
therefore unworthy of christian spouses. Make it clear that nature has
undoubtedly given the instinctive desire for pleasure and sanctioned it in
lawful wedlock, not as an end in itself, but in the service of life. Banish
from your hearts this cult of pleasure, and do your best to stop the spreading
of literature which considers it a duty to describe the intimacies of married
life under the pretext of giving instruction, guidance and reassurance. In general,
common sense, natural instinct, and a short instruction on the clear and simple
maxims of the christian moral law will suffice to give peace to husband and
wife of tender conscience. If, in certain special circumstances, a fiancée or
young married woman has need of further enlightenment on some particular point,
it is your duty prudently and tactfully to give them an explanation which is in
agreement with the natural law and a healthy christian conscience.
Our teaching has nothing to do with Manicheism or with Jansenism, as some would like to make out in self-justification. It is simply a defence of the honour of christian marriage and the personal dignity of husband and wife.
To give your services for such a purpose, is a pressing duty of your calling,
especially in these days.
So we conclude what We had in mind to explain to you.
Your profession offers you a vast and varied apostolate, an apostolate not so
much of word as of action and guidance; an apostolate that you will be able to
exercise usefully only if you are well-informed, in advance, of the object of
your mission and of the means to its fulfilment, and, moreover, if you are
gifted with a will strong in resolve that is rooted in a deep religious
conviction, inspired and enriched by your faith and by christian charity.
Whilst We implore for you the powerful help of divine light and strength, now
as a pledge and earnest of a generous bounty of heavenly graces, We bestow on
you from Our heart, Our Apostolic Blessing.
Rome, 29th October, 1951
NELL’ORDINE DELLA NATURA –
ADDRESS TO THE ASSOCIATION
KNOWN AS THE ‘FAMILY CAMPAIGN’
AND OTHER FAMILY ASSOCIATIONS.
The Church’s concern for the family.
IN THE NATURAL ORDER, among social institutions, there is none which the
Church has closer to her heart than the family. Marriage, which is its root,
was raised by Christ to the dignity of a sacrament. The family itself has
always found and will always find in the Church its defence, protection and
support in all that concerns its inviolable rights, its freedom and the
exercise of its lofty function.
Dangers threatening the family.
We have frequently and on various occasions spoken in favour of the christian
family, in most cases either to help it or to call upon others to help save it
from the gravest hardships; above all, to assist it in the calamitous time of
war. The damages caused by the First World War were far from having been fully
repaired when the second even more terrible conflagration came to increase
them. Much time will be needed yet, and much toil with much more divine aid,
before the deep wounds inflicted on the family by two wars can begin to heal,
as they should. Another evil, partly due to these devastating conflicts, but
also a consequence of increasing population and of various unsuitable or
selfish tendencies, is the housing crisis. All those who endeavour to remedy
this evil, be they legislators, statesmen or social workers, perform, even if
only in an indirect way, an apostolate of surpassing worth. The same holds in
the struggle with the scourge of unemployment, and in providing for a
sufficient family wage, so that the mother will not be obliged — as too often
happens — to seek employment outside the home, but may be able to dedicate
herself more to her husband and her children. To strive on behalf of the school
and religious education, this, again, is a precious contribution to the welfare
of the family, as also are the fostering therein of a healthy naturalness and
simplicity of conduct, the strengthening of religious convictions, the
encouragement of an atmosphere of Christian purity, which will free it from
harmful outside influences and from all morbid excitement which give rise to
unruly passions in the minds of youth.
But there is also a deeper misery from which the family must be preserved, namely, the degrading bondage to which it is reduced by that attitude that tends to make of it a mere organism at the service of the social community for the purpose of procreating for that community a sufficient mass of ‘human material.’
There is, however, another danger which has been threatening the family, not
merely since yesterday, but for a long time, and which, should it continue in
its present increase, could become fatal to the family because it attacks it in
its very roots: We refer to the subversion of conjugal morality in its widest
sense.
During these latter years We have taken every opportunity of expounding one or
other of the essential points of that moral doctrine, and more recently to
treat of it as a whole, not only refuting the errors which corrupt it, but also
giving a positive demonstration of its meaning and “purpose, of its importance
and value for the happiness of husband and wife as well as of the children and
the entire family,” and for the stability and the greater good of the entire
social structure reaching upwards from the home to the State and to the Church.
Innocent human life is inviolable.
At the very hub of that teaching, marriage appears as an institution at the
service of life. In close connection with this principle, We have illustrated,
following the constant teaching of the Church, a thesis which is one of the
essential foundations not only of conjugal morality, but of social morality in
general: namely, that any direct attempt on an innocent human life as a means
to an end — in this case to the end of saving another life — is unlawful.
Innocent human life, in
whatsoever condition it is found, is withdrawn, from the very first moment of
its existence, from any direct deliberate attack. This is a fundamental right
of the human person, which is of universal value in the christian conception of
life; hence as valid for the life still hidden within the womb of the mother,
as for the life already born and developing independently of her; as much
opposed to direct abortion as to the direct killing of the child before,
during, or after its birth. Whatever foundation there may be for the
distinction between these various phases of the development of life born or
still unborn, in profane and ecclesiastical law, and in certain civil and penal
consequences, all these cases involve a grave and unlawful attack upon the
inviolability of human life.
The child or the mother — a false alternative.
This principle holds good both for the life of the child as well as for that of
the mother. Never and in no case has the Church taught that the life of the
child must be preferred to that of the mother. It is erroneous to put the
question with this alternative: either the life of the child or that of the mother.
No, neither the life of the mother nor that of the child can be subjected to an
act of direct suppression. In the one case as in the other, there can be but
one obligation: to make every effort to save the lives of both, of the mother
and of the child. Footnote: see Pius XI, Encyclical ‘Casti Connubii,’
31 December, 1930 - Acta Apostolic Sedis, volume 22, pages 562-563, (1930),
English translation Christian Marriage, Catholic Truth Society.
It is one of the finest and most noble aspirations of the medical profession to
search continually for new means of ensuring the life of both mother and child.
But if, notwithstanding all the progress of science, there still remain, and
will remain in the future, cases in which one must reckon with the death of the
mother, when it is the mother’s wish to bring to birth the life that is within
her, and not to destroy it in violation of the command of God: You shall not
kill! — nothing else remains for the man, who will make every effort till the
very last moment to help and save, but to bow respectfully before the laws of
nature and the dispositions of Divine Providence.
Which life is of more value?
But — it is objected — the life of the mother, especially the mother of a large
family, is of incomparably greater value than that of a child not yet born. The
application of the theory of the equivalation of values to the case which
occupies Us has already been accepted in juridical discussions. The reply to
this harrowing objection is not difficult. The inviolability of the life of an
innocent human being does not depend on its greater or lesser value. It is
already more than ten years since the Church formally condemned the destruction
of life considered to be ‘without value’; and whosoever knows the sad events
that preceded and provoked that condemnation, whosoever is able to weigh the
direct consequences that would result, from measuring the inviolability of
innocent life according to its value, can well appreciate the motives that
determined that condemnation. Footnote: Decree of the Holy Office, 2nd
December 1940 - Acta Apostolic Sedis Volume 32, 1940, pages 553-554.
Besides, who can judge with certainty which of the two lives is in fact the
more precious? Who can know what path that child will follow and to what
heights of achievement and perfection he may reach? Two greatnesses are being
compared here, one of them being an unknown quantity.
Moral and immoral operations.
In this regard, We wish to cite an example which may perhaps be already known
to some of you but which, notwithstanding that fact, loses none of its suggestiveness.
It goes back to the year 1905.
At that time there was a young lady of noble birth and of still nobler
sentiments, but who was frail and of delicate constitution. As a young girl she
had been ill with a slight apical pleurisy, which seemed cured; when, however,
after a happy marriage, she felt a new life springing in her womb, she soon
became aware of a peculiar physical indisposition, which alarmed two able
doctors who were attending her with every care and solicitude. The old apical
trouble, the cicatrized lesion had become active again; in their opinion, there
was no time to lose; if the gentle lady was to be saved, a therapeutic abortion
would have to be provoked without the least delay. The husband also realized
the gravity of the case and gave his consent to the distressful operation. But
when the midwife in attendance duly made known the decision of the doctors and
brought her to defer to their opinion, she replied with firm voice: ‘I thank
you for your merciful advice; but I cannot suppress the life of my child! I
cannot, I cannot! I feel it already throbbing in my womb; it has the right to
live; it comes from God and should know God so as to love and enjoy Him.’
Her husband also entreated, begged and implored her; she remained unyielding
and quietly awaited the event. A baby girl was regularly born; but, immediately
after, the health of the mother began to get worse. The pulmonary lesion
spread; the condition worsened. Two months later she was at the end of her
strength; she once again saw her little child, who was growing healthily under
the care of a robust nurse; her lips broke into a sweet smile, and she died
peacefully. Many years went by. In a religious Institute, a young Sister might
be particularly noticed, totally dedicated to the care and education of
abandoned children, bending over sick children with motherly love, as if to
give them life. It was she, the daughter of the sacrifice, who now with her
generous heart was doing so much good among abandoned children. The heroism of
her fearless mother had not been in vain! Footnote: See Andrea Majocchi. Tra
bistori e forbici, (“With Surgical Knives and
Scissors”) 1940, page 21, and following pages.
But We ask — Is it possible that christian feeling, even also purely human
feeling, has been dulled to the point that it cannot any longer appreciate the
sublime holocaust of the mother and the visible hand of Divine Providence,
which brought forth such splendid fruit from that holocaust?
Deliberately We have always
used the expression ‘direct attempt on the life of an innocent person,’ ‘direct
killing’; because if, for example, the saving of the life of the future mother,
independently of her pregnant condition, should urgently require a surgical act
or other therapeutic treatment which would have as an accessory consequence, in
no way desired nor intended, but inevitable, the death of the foetus, such an
act could no longer be called a direct attempt on an innocent life. Under these
conditions, the operation can be lawful, like other similar medical
interventions, granted always that a good of high worth is concerned, such as
life, and that it is not possible to postpone the operation until after the
birth of the child, nor to have recourse to other efficacious remedies.
A lawful method of regulation of birth.
Since, too, the primary function of matrimony is to be at the service of life,
the expression of Our chief satisfaction and of Our fatherly gratitude goes to
those generous mothers and fathers who, for love of God and with trust in Him,
courageously raise a large family.
On the other hand, the Church
knows how to consider with sympathy and understanding the real difficulties of
the married state in our day. Therefore, in Our last Allocution on conjugal
morality, We affirmed the lawfulness and at the same time the limits — in truth
very wide — of a regulation of offspring, which, unlike so-called
‘birth-control,’ is compatible with the law of God. One may even hope (yet in
this matter, the Church naturally leaves the judgment to medical science) that
science will succeed in providing this lawful method with a sufficiently secure
basis. The most recent information seems to confirm such a hope. [This is 1951.
The Billings method had not yet been discovered.]
Strength and courage from faith and the sacraments.
For the rest, to overcome the manifold trials of married life, what is of the
greatest worth is a living faith and a frequent reception of the sacraments,
whence pour forth torrents of strength, of whose efficacy those living outside
the Church cannot easily form a clear idea. And with this call to supernatural
aid, We desire to conclude Our Address. It may be, beloved sons and daughters,
that one day it will fall to you to find your courage wavering under the
violence of the storm which doctrines subversive of a healthy and normal
conception of christian marriage unleash around you and even more dangerously
in the bosom of the family. Have confidence! The workings of nature, and
especially the strength of grace with which Our Lord has enriched your souls in
the sacrament of matrimony, are as a firm rock, against which the waves of a
storm-tossed sea break in vain. And if the tragedies of the war and the
aftermath of war have inflicted on marriage and the family wounds that are
still bleeding, nevertheless, in these years the constant faith and firm
perseverance of married couples, and the mother’s love, ever ready for untold
sacrifices, have, in cases without number, won true and splendid triumphs.
Carry on your work, therefore, with vigour, confident in divine aid, in pledge of which We impart from Our heart to you and to your families Our fatherly Apostolic Blessing.
Rome, 26th November, 1951
*****