Maximum illud is an apostolic letter issued by Pope Benedict XV on 30 November 1919. As is traditional with such documents, it takes its title from the opening words of the original Latin text, meaning "that momentous". Benedict begins by recalling "that momentous and holy charge" found in Mark 16:15: "Go into the whole world and preach the gospel to all creation."[1]

It identified the principles and priorities of the Catholic missions. It represented a break with Eurocentric and colonialist thought. It proposed instead an appreciation for cultural differences, a separation of the Church's work from political alliances, and the need to develop the resources of local churches to thrive independently once the missionaries withdraw in favor of an indigenous priesthood and episcopacy. It established, according to Cardinal Fernando Filoni, that "the Church could no longer be linked to the reality of that moment where there were so many nationalisms and the desire to promote a certain colonialism through religion: a union that had to be broken. The Catholic missionary, Pope Benedict XV said, presents himself as an ambassador of Christ, not as a messenger of his own nation."[2]

Though not an encyclical, it is sometimes identified as the first of five papal encyclicals issued between 1919 and 1959 that redefined the Church’s missionary role.[3]

Background

In the second half of the 19th century, the Vatican recognized the need to overhaul the administration and spirit of missionary activities. Pope Leo XIII and Pope Pius X both tried to curb the authority of the French-dominated Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.[4]

The Belgian missionary to China Frédéric-Vincent Lebbe campaigned for the appointment of indigenous bishops to replace French missionary bishops. He immersed himself in Chinese culture from the time of his arrival and ordination in 1901, learning the language and adopting native attire. He criticized various foreign religious organizations for the practice of controlling Chinese Catholicism to the benefit of their home countries, proposing the slogan "Return China to the Chinese and the Chinese will go to Christ". He angered his superiors in the Lazarist order by promoting the appointment of bishops of Chinese nationality.[4][5][6]

At the same time, the ongoing rivalries of the European powers in Africa and Asia presented a challenge to the missionary enterprise, and the conclusion of World War I represented a break with the colonial past, as the Treaty of Versailles established mandates under the authority of the League of Nations that anticipated an end to colonial rule.[5]

Content

Benedict recalled the great apostles of the Gospel who contributed much to the expansion of missions. He reviewed the recent history of the missions.[7] The encyclical first turned to the bishops and superiors in charge of the Catholic missions, noting the need to train local clergy. Catholic missionaries are reminded that their goal is a spiritual one, which must be carried out in a selfless way.[8]

The pope underlined the necessity of proper preparation for the work in foreign cultures and the need to acquire language skills before going there. He requests a continued striving for personal sanctity and praises the selfless work of female religious in the missions.[9] Mission is not only for missionaries: all Catholics must participate, through their Apostolate of Prayer, by supporting vocations, and by helping financially.[10] The encyclical concludes by pointing out several organizations which organize and supervise mission activities within the Catholic Church.[11]

Noting the end of World War I, Benedict repeated the biblical mandate to go to the ends of the earth and preach the gospel. He recalled the examples of Francis Xavier in India and Bartolomé de las Casas in the Americas and others to show what individuals can do in the service of God. Many missionaries died as martyrs for their faith and many live like saints.[12] He noted great success to date: "Anyone who studies the facts of this great saga cannot help being profoundly impressed by them: by all the stupendous hardships our missionaries have undergone in extending the Faith, the magnificent devotion they have shown, and the overwhelming examples of intrepid endurance they have afforded us. And to anyone who weighs these facts the realization must come as a shock that right now, there still remain in the world immense multitudes of people who dwell in darkness and in the shadow of death. According to a recent estimate, the number of non-believers in the world approximates one billion souls."[13]

He emphasized the need for missionaries to develop local clergy to extend their work. Anyone who has charge of a mission must to secure and train local candidates for the ministry: "In this policy lies the greatest hope of the new churches. For the local priest, one with his people by birth, by nature, by his sympathies and his aspirations, is remarkably effective in appealing to their mentality and thus attracting them to the Faith. Far better than anyone else he knows the kind of argument they will listen to, and as a result, he often has easy access to places where a foreign priest would not be tolerated."[14]

Reception

Benedict's message divided the French missions in China into the "Lebbe Faction" and the "French Faction". The leadership of one of the most prominent missionary orders, the German Society of the Divine Word, had contributed to the anti-European Chinese uprising known as the Boxer Rebellion, and then criticized Lebbé and doubted that suitable Chinese candidates could be readied for episcopal ordination promptly.[15] Some resisted the Vatican through inaction or argued that the protected legal status granted foreigners in China gave the missionaries a more secure position than any indigenous clergy could enjoy.[4] Many nevertheless recognized that ordaining growing numbers of Chinese nationals to the priesthood was creating greater rivalry than rapprochement with their European counterparts.[15]

Benedict's successor, Pope Pope Pius XI, continued to press for a new approach to missionary work. In 1922 he appointed as Apostolic Delegate to China Celso Costantini, who persuaded two European-born bishops to yield territory to allow for the appointment of two indigenous Chinese as apostolic vicars in 1924.[4] Costantini identified six indigenous Chinese candidates for episcopal appointments and accompanied them to Rome where they received their episcopal consecration from Pius on 28 October 1926.[16][17] Pius reinforced the principles of Maximum illud in his encyclical Rerum ecclesiae of 8 February 1926.[16] In some regions progress came more quickly. Pius named the first India-born bishop of the Latin rite, the Jesuit Francis T. Roche, in 1923. By the time of his death in 1939, Pius had appointed forty indigenous bishops in missionary lands, the first of the modern era.[4]

Later development of Catholic doctrine requires a revision of Benedict's assertion in Maximum illud that the missions targeted those who "lived in ignorance of God, and thus, bound by the chains of their blind and violent desires, are enslaved in the most hideous of all forms of slavery, the service of Satan".[18] The Church's view of other religions since Nostra aetate (1965) recognizes shared values and encourages respectful dialogue.[19][20]

Later recognition

In 2017, Pope Francis noted the approaching centennial of this apostolic letter and called for October 2019 to be celebrated as an "Extraordinary Missionary Month". He noted that in Maximum illud Benedict tried to promote evangelization "purified of any colonial overtones and kept far away from the nationalistic and expansionistic aims that had proved so disastrous". He wrote: "The Apostolic Letter Maximum illud called for transcending national boundaries and bearing witness, with prophetic spirit and evangelical boldness, to God's saving will through the Church’s universal mission."[21]

The idea for special recognition of the Church's missionary work derived from a proposal by the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples that called for renewed consideration of Ad gentes, a 1965 decree of the Second Vatican Council on the missionary activity of the Church.[22] He described Maximum illud as a milestone in the evolution of the Church's missionary work:[2]

First there was an aggregate form of colonialism, then something only of the Western Church, now missionary activity is extended to everyone and in particular to the Churches that find in the so-called missions countries: no one better than them can do a mission. If we take the mission lands, Africa, Asia, Oceania, we see that we have local Churches, "young Churches". As Paul VI said in Uganda: now it is your turn to be missionaries of yourselves.

Archbishop Giampietro Dal Toso, president of the Pontifical Mission Societies, said the missionary renewal was linked to the Synod of Bishops on the Amazon scheduled to take place the same month.[22]

See also

References

  1. "Maximum Illud – an extraordinary document", Catholic Mission
  2. 1 2 Scaramuzzi, Iacopo (30 November 2018). "Mese Missionario straordinario, al via il sito internet e la guida". La Stampa (in Italian). Retrieved 5 December 2018.
  3. Kroeger, James (2013). "Papal Mission Wisdom: Five Mission Encyclicals". In Bevans, Stephen B. (ed.). A Century of Catholic Mission. Regnum. pp. 93–100. The others are Rerum Ecclesiae (Pius XI, 1926), Evangelii praecones (Pius XII, 1951), Fidei donum (Pius XII, 1957), and Princeps pastorum (John XXIII, 1959).
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Clarke, Jeremy (2013). The Virgin Mary and Catholic Identities in Chinese History. Hong Kong University Press. pp. 114ff. ISBN 9789888139996. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
  5. 1 2 Pollard, John (2014). The Papacy in the Age of Totalitarianism, 1914-1958. Oxford University Press. p. 115. Retrieved 5 December 2018.
  6. Pollard, John (2005). Benedict XV: The Unknown Pope and the Pursuit of Peace. A&C Black. p. 203. ISBN 9780860124085. Retrieved 5 December 2018.
  7. Maximum illud 1919, § 5-7.
  8. Maximum illud 1919, § 19-21.
  9. Maximum illud 1919, § 30.
  10. Maximum illud 1919, § 30-36.
  11. Maximum illud 1919, § 37-40.
  12. Maximum illud 1919, § 3-5.
  13. Maximum illud 1919, § 6.
  14. Maximum illud 1919, § 14.
  15. 1 2 Wu, Albert Monshan (2016). From Christ to Confucius: German Missionaries, Chinese Christians, and the Globalization of Christianity,1860-1950. Yale University Press. pp. 126–7. ISBN 9780300217070. Retrieved 5 December 2018.
  16. 1 2 Mungello, D.E. (2015). The Catholic Invasion of China: Remaking Chinese Christianity. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 44. ISBN 9781442250505.
  17. "Les six premiers évêques d'origine chinoise consacrés à Rome en 1926" (in French). Agence Fides. 7 December 2006. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
  18. Maximum illud 1919, § 31.
  19. Baum, Gregory (2011). "Vatican Council II: A Turning Point in the Church's History". In Attridge, Michael; Clifford, Catherine E.; Routhier, Gilles (eds.). Vatican II: Expériences canadiennes – Canadian experiences. University of Ottawa Press. p. 363. ISBN 9782760319523. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
  20. Thomas, Norman E. (2010). Missions and Unity: Lessons from History, 1792–2010. Wipf & Stock. pp. 258–9. ISBN 9781621890973.
  21. Pope Francis (22 October 2017). "Letter of the Holy Father Francis for the Centenary of the Promulgation of the Apostolic Letter Maximum illd on the Activity of Missionaries in the World". Libreria Editrice Vaticana. Retrieved 29 November 2018.
  22. 1 2 Brockhaus, Hannah (30 November 2018). "Vatican official: There is a clear link between Amazon synod, missionary month". Retrieved 5 December 2018.
Additional sources
  • de Dreuzy, Agnes (2016). The Vatican and the Emergence of the Modern Middle East. Catholic University of America Press.
  • "Maximum illud" (in Latin). Libreria Editrice Vaticana. 30 November 1919. Includes links to multiple languages.
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