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Clement VIII, Pope
For an Everlasting Memorial
Since the Most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist by means of which Christ Our
Lord has made us partakers of His Sacred Body, and ordained to stay with us unto
the consummation of the world, is the greatest of all the Sacraments, and it is
accomplished in the Holy Mass and offered to God the Father for the sins of all
the people, it is highly fitting that we who are in one body which is the Church
and who share of the one Body of Christ, should use in this ineffable and
awe-inspiring Sacrifice the same manner of celebration and the same ceremonial
observance and rite.
Not only have the Roman Pontiffs, Our Predecessors, always desired, and for a
long time greatly striven to achieve, this aim, but above all Pope Pius V of
happy memory undertook, in accordance with the decree of the Council of Trent,
to bring the Roman Missal into conformity with the old and purer pattern and to
have it printed in Rome. Although he very severely forbade under many penalties
that anything should be added to it, or that anything for any reason be removed
from it, nevertheless, in the course of time, it has come to pass that, through
the rashness and boldness of the printers, or of others, many errors have crept
into the missals which have been produced in recent years. That very old (Latin)
version of the Holy Bible, which even before St. Jerome's time was held in honor
in the Church, and from which almost all the Introits, Graduals, and
Offertories of the Masses had been taken, has been entirely removed; the
texts of the Epistles and Gospels, which hitherto were read during
the celebration of the Mass, have been disturbed in many places; different and
utterly unusual beginnings have been prefixed to the Gospel texts; and finally
many things have been here and there arbitrarily altered.
All these changes seem to have been introduced under the pretext of
conforming everything to the standard of the Vulgate edition of Holy Writ, as if
it were allowable to anyone to do so on his own authority, and without the
advice of the Apostolic See.
Having considered these innovations, in Our pastoral solicitude which induces
us to earnestly protect and preserve in everything and especially in the sacred
rites of the Church the best and old norm, We have ordered in the first place
that the above mentioned printed Missals, so corrupted, be banned and declared
null and void and that their use be disallowed in the celebration of the Mass,
unless they be entirely and in everything emended according to the original text
published under Pius V We have also entrusted some of Our Venerable Brethren,
Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church, versed in Holy Writ and skilled in
ecclesiastical antiquity, with the business of restoring the Missal to its
primitive and purest form. In their loyalty to Us, and in their piety and
devotion to the Church, these Cardinals, employing also other learned men
trained in ecclesiastical scholarship and having searched for, and diligently
examined, old Missals and other books bearing upon the subject, have endeavored
to restore the Roman Missal to its original purity and to confirm and attest the
painstaking care and diligence of Pius V and of those appointed by him.
It happened, however, that in the carrying out of this task, as a result of
an accurate comparison of ancient books, some things have been improved upon
and, concerning the rules and rubrics, some points have been more fully and
clearly stated. These improvements, however, flowing as it were from the same
sources and principles, seem rather to represent and complete the meaning of the
rules and rubrics than to introduce anything new.
We have ordered, therefore, that the Missal which the same Pius V had edited,
thus revised, be printed as faultlessly as possible at Our Vatican printing
press and that it be published for the common benefit. In order that its use may
be preserved for all future time in perpetuity in every part of the Christian
world, We decree that this Missal may be printed in Our City of Rome at the same
printing press only and not elsewhere. We permit, however, that outside the
City, it may be printed according to the original now edited at the afore-named
printing press and not otherwise, on condition that any printer wishing to print
it, shall be allowed to do so, after having asked for, and obtained in writing,
the license of Our beloved Sons, the Inquisitors against heretical depravity, in
the places where they are established, and of the Ordinary of the place where
there is no Inquisitor. Otherwise, if without this permission, they dare to
print the above-mentioned Missal in whatever form, or the booksellers dare to
sell it, the printers and the booksellers established outside Our Ecclesiastical
State shall incur excommunication latae sententiae from which, save on
the point of death, they may not be absolved except by the Roman Pontiff. The
printers and booksellers established in the City and in other parts of the
Ecclesiastical State shall incur the fine of five hundred gold ducats of the
Treasury and forfeit unpardonably without any further declaration all their
books and types which are to be devolved on the said Treasury. And we forbid and
prohibit in perpetuity for all places and peoples under the same penalties the
use of such Missals as might be printed and sold without the necessary
permission.
Before granting this permission, the Inquisitors or the Ordinaries must very
diligently compare the Missals to be printed, both before and after they are
printed, with the standard text revised by Our Authority and now printed and
they must not allow anything to be added to, or removed from, it. Nor may they
maintain that they have not incurred the penalties set forth hereunder, by
pleading as an excuse the negligence of the printers or the lack of diligence on
the part of the proof-readers or perhaps of those engaged by them.
When issuing the original document granting the license, they must certify in
their own handwriting that, having made the collation, the Missals entirely
agree with the standard edition. This document must be printed always, at the
beginning or at the end of every Missal.
If they act otherwise, the Inquisitors shall incur on that account, the
penalty of being deprived of their office and of being debarred from getting it
back and obtaining other offices in the future; the Bishops and the Ordinaries
shall incur the penalty of suspension a divinis and of interdiction from
entering the Church; and their Vicars shall similarly be deprived of their
offices and benefices, they shall be debarred from obtaining these and other
offices and benefices in the future and they shall incur excommunication,
without any further declaration.
Wishing in Our Apostolic benignity to secure and protect from any loss all
poor churches, clerics and ecclesiastics, printers and booksellers, We allow
them to keep, use and sell respectively the Missals hitherto printed, which they
possess, excepting only those which, as has been stated above, have been banned
and declared null and void by Our Authority. Notwithstanding whatsoever
licenses, indults and privileges hitherto granted by Us or by the Roman
Pontiffs, Our Predecessors, to print the aforenamed Missal of Pius V, which by
these presents We expressly revoke and which We wish to be revoked; and also the
constitutions, Apostolic ordinances, general and special, granted in whatever
manner, contrary to the above prescriptions, confirmed and approved.
From all these ordinances and from all other prescriptions to the contrary,
for this time only, We specially and expressly derogate, albeit particular,
specific and express mention is to be made of them and of their whole tenor,
considering their tenor as expressed in these presents.
We wish that the same authority attaching to these presents, if exhibited and
shown, be attributed to their copies, even printed ones, bearing the signature
of a Notary Public and vouched for by the seal of a Church dignitary.
Given in Rome at St. Mark's under the ring of the Fisherman, on 7 July 1604,
the XIIIth year of Our Pontificate.
M. Vestrius Barbianus
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