Written by Michael Whitcraft
On a recent trip to Fatima, I stopped to spend a night in the city of Obidos, Portugal. As I stood atop the walls of that medieval city, I felt almost as though I were breathing history…but not just any history. I was filling my lungs with a Catholic combative history.
With each arrow loop I passed, my mind’s eye could see a twelth century Portuguese knight, bedecked with armor, ready to risk life and limb to defend Christian civilization against hordes of Muslim invaders. I could hear the alarm bell calling the peasants from the fields to seek shelter behind the walls on which I stood.

Standing on the castle bulwark with these reflections rekindled in me a crusading spirit.

 

As my mind drifted back and forth across a threshold of 900 years, I compared the society I envisioned to our own. The stark contrast overwhelmed me. Medieval Christian man possessed a vision of the Church that has been all but lost in our days.

Unlike modern man who sees the Church and asks: “What is in it for me?” he saw the Faith and asked: “How can I serve?” Thus, he was willing to make any sacrifice and oppose any enemy in defense of the Faith.

While these reflections passed through my mind, I remembered a lecture Brazilian TFP founder, Professor Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, once gave on the crusading spirit. In it he logically developed the theory that true adoration of God can only exist when one has the spirit of a crusader.

Original Sin and Self-seeking Friendship
Prof. Corrêa de Oliveira’s reasoning was very clear. After Original Sin, man’s tendency is to befriend only those who are pleasing to him, and furthermore to seek a personal advantage in such relationships.

The resulting friendship is based on self-love, not love of others. Thus, it cannot be considered true friendship.

Coupled with this self-seeking tendency, fallen man has a loathing of sacrifice. This tendency is so strong that it requires a tremendous effort to overcome.

Therefore, true adoration can only exist when one is willing to stand up for God and defend Him, even at the risk of losing his life. This willingness is the very definition of the crusading spirit.

A Friend in Need is a Friend Indeed
However, to develop true friendship both of these tendencies must be surmounted. Thus, true friendship only exists when one is willing to sacrifice himself for his friend without seeking personal advantage. The more one is willing to sacrifice for his friend, the deeper and truer that friendship is.

Our Lord stated this on the night before His Passion, saying: “Greater love than this no man hath, that a man lay down his life for his friends.” (John 15:13) Thus, the greatest love one can attain is one by which he is willing to sacrifice everything for his friend.

Additionally, friendship is tested when a friend is threatened. Then one’s willingness to sacrifice is proven. That is why many veterans attest that the greatest friends of their lives were made during war. The daily sacrifice a soldier is expected to make for his friends, seals a bond that is almost unbreakable.

Adoration and the Crusading Spirit
Applying these principles to God, we are not called simply to be His friend. We are obliged to adore Him. If simple friendship cannot exist without a selfless spirit of sacrifice, adoration definitely cannot exist without it. Therefore, true adoration can only exist when one is willing to stand up for God and defend Him, even at the risk of losing his life. This willingness is the very definition of the crusading spirit.

 

With each arrow loop I passed, my mind’s eye could see a twelth century Portuguese knight, bedecked with armor, ready to risk life and limb to defend Christian civilization against hordes of Muslim invaders.     Photo by Urban

Rekindling the Crusading Spirit
As I stood atop the walls of Obidos with these considerations running through my mind, I was able to put my finger on one main difference between the world of the Middle Ages and our own.

Medieval man had the crusading spirit. The Faith and God were of much more importance to him than technological advances or material prosperity. When the Faith called him to travel thousands of miles to a foreign land with little hope of return, without hesitation, he shouted a resounding: “Deus Vult!” (God wills it!)1

Could it be that the lack of this spirit has contributed, in large part, to the moral decadence of our days? If our society as a whole would stop living selfishly as though God does not exist and adore Him with the abnegated worship that characterized the Crusaders of old, society would undoubtedly be different.

Such reflections, standing on the castle bulwark rekindled in me a crusading spirit. I could only pray that Our Lady rekindle this crusading spirit among Catholics and thus establish the triumph of Her Immaculate Heart on earth.

Footnote

1. This was the response of the people gathered in Clermont, France when Blessed Urban II preached the First Crusade.

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St. Godelina

Born at Hondeforte-lez-Boulogne, c. 1049; died at Ghistelles, 6 July, 1070.

St. Godelina Painting by Jan Provoost

The youngest of the three children born to Hemfrid, seigneur of Wierre-Effroy, and his wife Ogina, Godelina was accustomed as a child to exercises of piety and was soon distinguished for a solidity of virtue extraordinary for one of her years. The poor flocked from all sides to the young girl, whose desires to satisfy their necessities often involved her in difficulties with her father’s steward and even with her pious father himself.

St. Godelina

By her eighteenth year the fame of her beauty and admirable qualities had spread far and wide through Artois and even into Flanders, and many suitors presented themselves; but, the decision being left with Godelina, she persisted in the resolution she had made of renouncing the world for the cloister. One of the young noblemen, Bertolf of Ghistelles, determined to leave nothing undone, invoked the influence of her father’s suzerain, Eustache II, Count of Boulogne, whose representations proved successful. After the wedding Bertolf and his bride set out for Ghistelles, where, however, Godelina found a bitter and unrelenting enemy in Bertolf’s mother, who induced her son to forsake his wife on the very day of their arrival, and immured Godelina in a narrow cell, with barely enough nourishment to support life. Even this, however, the saint contrived to share with the poor. Under the influence of his mother, Bertolf spread abroad foul calumnies about his bride. After some time Godelina managed to escape to the home of her father, who roused the Bishop of Tournai and Soissons and the Count of Flanders to threaten Bertolf with the terrors of Church and State. Seemingly repentant, he promised to restore his wife to her rightful position, but her return to Ghistelles was the signal for a renewal of persecution in an aggravated form.

Cropped panel from the Life and Miracles of St. Godelina, here showing her being strangled and her body being dumped in the river.
The entire altar panels showing more of St. Godelina’s life is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Medieval Sculpture Hall.  The altar panel was originally opened during Mass.

After about a year Bertolf, again feigning sorrow, easily effected a reconciliation, but only to avoid the suspicion of the crime he was mediating. During his absence two of his servants at his direction strangled Godelina causing it to appear that she had died a natural death. Bertolf soon contracted a second marriage, but the daughter born to him was blind from birth. Her miraculous recovery of sight through the intercession of St. Godelina so affected her father that, now truly converted he journeyed to Rome to obtain absolution for his crime, undertook a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and finally entered the monastery of St-Winoc at Bergues, where he expiated his sins by a life of severe penance.

At his desire his daughter erected at Ghistelles a Benedictine monastery dedicated to St. Godelina, which she entered as a religious. Devotion to St. Godelina dates from 1084, when her body was exhumed by the Bishop of Tournai and Noyon, and her relics, recognized at various times by ecclesiastical authority, are to be found in various cities of Belgium.

F.M. RUDGE (Catholic Encyclopedia)

Nobility.org Editorial comment: —

Prof. Plinio Correa de Oliveira mentioned once that it is wrong to think that there were no sinners in the Middle Ages. Of course there were. There were sinners then, just as there are sinners today.
Not only did the Middle Ages have sinners, it had great ones.
But the difference between the Middle Ages and today, Prof. de Oliveira observed, is that in the Middle Ages one had more than just great sinners. One also had great contritions, great repentances, great conversions, and great penances for lives of sin, and this is what we lack today.

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Bl. Thomas Alfield

(AUFIELD, ALPHILDE, HAWFIELD, OFFELDUS; alias BADGER).

Stone marking the site of the Tyburn tree on the traffic island at the junction of Edgware Road, Marble Arch and Oxford Street

Stone marking the site of the Tyburn tree on the traffic island at the junction of Edgware Road, Marble Arch and Oxford Street

Priest, born at Gloucestershire; martyred at Tyburn, 6 July, 1585. He was educated at Eton and Cambridge (1568). He was afterwards converted and came to Douai College in 1576, but the troubles there compelled him to intermit his studies for four years, and he was eventually ordained and sent forth from Reims in 1581. Here he was associated with the celebrated mission of Blessed Edmund Campion and Father Persons, and he persuaded the latter to take as his servant his brother Robert Alfield, then recently converted, but who afterwards became a traitor of note. Thomas seems to have laboured chiefly in the north, where after a time he was arrested and sent to the Tower of London, 2 May, 1582. Here he at first made a “glorious” confession, and even endured torture; but being afterwards sent back to the north, he fell, and went to the Protestant Church. Upon regaining liberty he was deeply penitent for his fall, and returned to Dr. Allen at Reims to gather new resolution. Returning again to England he was induced by the famous seaman John Davis (about March, 1584) to make for him offers — presumably insincere on Davis’s part — of services to Spain. In August of the same year Dr. Allen’s celebrated “True and modest Defence” appeared in answer to Burghley’s “Execution of Justice”. To circulate such books as Allen’s was of the greatest service to the Faith. Alfield undertook the dangerous task with the help of a dyer by the name of Thomas Webley, and of one Crabbe. After some months he was again arrested, and again sent to the Tower, whence he was removed to Newgate and tried. Crabbe renounced the pope and thereby saved his life; the other two were hanged. A reprieve had, for some unknown reason, been granted for Alfield, but it arrived too late.

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CHALLONER, Missionary Priests (Edinburgh, 1877); GILLOW, Bibl. Dict. Eng. Cath., s.v. Alfield, Thomas; KNOX, Letters of Cardinal Allen (London, 1882); there are also several references to Alfield in the Record Office, London, many of which are given by SIMPSON in The Rambler, new ser., VII, 420-431.

PATRICK RYAN (Catholic Encyclopedia)

[Ed. note: He was beatified in 1929]

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It was about this time that the king appeared to attach himself to Mademoiselle de La Motte-Houdancourt, maid of honor to the queen….

The Duchesse de Navailles, lady of honor to the queen, believed herself obliged, in the discharge of her duties, one of which is the care of the maids of honor, to oppose the king’s sentiments. She spoke to him often as a Christian and an honest woman. At first the king merely showed that he did not like these disagreeable little harangues; on other occasions also he seemed ill-pleased; but this was shown in so civil a manner that she thought she had no reason to fear his anger.

Some time went by in this way; but at last the desire for victory, and the annoyance that opposition causes in the breasts of men, particularly those of sovereigns, made themselves strongly felt in the king’s heart. He let Madame de Navailles know that she was exposing herself to the danger of displeasing him, and he commanded her, through Le Tellier, not to meddle any longer with the behavior of the queen’s maids of honor; and he even had several methods proposed to her of accommodating his wishes under honorable appearances. She answered the minister that it would not be fulfilling her obligations to cease to do her duty; and that so long as the king was pleased to leave her in her office, she should do the functions of it in the best manner possible to her.

Then the king became angry in good earnest, and told her she ought to fear what he could do against her; and that she had better refrain from disobeying him, out of consideration for her own interests. She replied that she had already considered them, and saw all the evils that the loss of his good graces might cause her; and then, enumerating herself her offices and those of her husband, she told him that the withdrawal of all those benefits could not change the resolution she had made to satisfy the duty of her conscience. She conjured him to seek elsewhere than in the household of the queen the objects of his pleasure and his inclinations, inasmuch as he appeared to have done so already in the person of Mademoiselle de La Vallière.
The king grumbled, and seemed vexed and out of temper; but that evening, or the next day, Madame de Navailles being in the queen’s bedroom, leaning against the silver balustrade, the king came up to her and, offering his hand with a gentle and favorable manner, asked for peace. He did this action not only as a great prince, striving to vanquish himself by triumphing over his weakness, but also as a very honest man who had too much sense to refuse to give his esteem to one who deserved it.
Madame de Navailles acted after this for quite a time without constraint, and the king seemed satisfied. He continued, however, to meet Mademoiselle de La Motte-Houdancourt at the rooms of the Comtesse de Soissons, who fostered this passion in the heart of the king as much as she could. She hated the Duchesse de Navailles…
The king’s heart was filled with the human follies which in youth make the false happiness of many an honorable man. He let himself be gently led by his passions, and chose to satisfy them. He was then at Saint-Germain, and had taken a habit of going to the apartment of the queen’s maids of honor. As the entrance to their chamber was forbidden by the sternness of the lady of honor, he often talked with Mademoiselle de La Motte-Houdancourt through a hole in the partition, which was made of pine boards.

I was at this time in Paris, and had gone to the Val-de-Grâce in attendance on the queen-mother. There I met my friend, Madame de Navailles, and saw her anxiety. She told me of the position in which the king placed her by his eagerness for the girl, and said that she had just consulted a learned and pious man as to her duty in the matter, whose answer had been decisive. He told her she was bound to lose all her establishments rather than fail in her duty by criminal compliance. She seemed to me resolved to follow that advice; but it was not without shedding a great many tears, and feeling the anguish in which these two great alternatives threw her. On her return to Saint-Germain, she learned by her spies that men of good appearance had been seen at night on the gutters and around certain chimneys which from the roof could lead adventurers into the apartment of the maids of honor. The zeal of the Duchesse de Navailles was now so great that, without checking herself, or seeking means to prevent with less scandal the thing she feared, she at once ordered all these passages closed with iron gratings. By this action she preferred her duty to her fortunes, and the fear of offending God was greater in her than the desire to be agreeable to the king, which in the eyes of the people of the great world is the greatest pleasure to be enjoyed at a Court, when it can be done innocently.

It is not amazing that the king was now in good earnest irritated against the Duchesse de Navailles, saying that he only pressed the adventure in order to annoy her, and that her boastful virtue could no longer be borne. But as he had in all things a marvelous power over himself, he did not show at this time all that he felt about the iron gratings, and concealed his vexation under the ridicule and contempt with which he spoke of them. But he did not forget them, and his remembrance brought grievous results on those who had dared to resist him…. He complained to the Duc de Navailles for not restraining his wife from doing what might be disagreeable to him, and blamed him for seeming to approve of her conduct. The queen-mother valued the feelings of both husband and wife, and often told the Duchesse de Navailles to continue to act virtuously, assuring her that some day the king would praise her for it….

Shortly after, the king, followed by the queens and all the Court, went to establish himself at Fontainebleau for part of the summer. It was there that, on a mere word which the Duc de Navailles said to him in speaking of a matter of little consequence relating to the cavalry, the king showed anger to him publicly, and the ruin of himself and wife was determined. They received commands (June, 1664) to give in their resignation of Havre-de-Grâce, of the lieutenancy of the light-horse cavalry, and the office of lady-of-honor.

Memoirs of Madame De Motteville on Anne of Austria and Her Court, trans. Katharine Prescott Wormeley (Boston: Hardy, Pratt & Company, 1902), Vol. III, pp. 277-281, 296-297).

Short Stories on Honor, Chivalry, and the World of Nobility—no. 7

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Sts. Willibald and Winnebald

(WUNIBALD, WYNNEBALD).

Members of the Order of St. Benedict, brothers, natives probably of Wessex in England, the former, first Bishop of Eichstätt, born on 21 October, 700 (701); died on 7 July, 781 (787); the latter, Abbot of Heidenheim, born in 702; died on 18 (19) December, 761. They were the children of St. Richard, commonly called the King; their mother was a relative of St. Boniface.

Photo in St. Willibald Church in Deining by DALIBRI. The family of Saints: the parents, St. Richard the Pilgrim, St. Wuna and their children, St. Willibald, seated, St. Walburga and St. Winibald on the right.

Willibald entered the Abbey of Waltham in Hampshire at the age of five and was educated by Egwald. He made a pilgrimage to Rome in 722 with his father and brother. Richard died at Lucca and was buried in the Church of St. Frigidian. After an attack of malaria Willibald started from Rome in 724 with two companions on a trip to the Holy Land, passed the winter at Patara, and arrived at Jerusalem on 11 November, 725. He then went to Tyre, to Constantinople, and in 730 arrived at the Abbey of Monte Casino, after having visited the grave of St. Severin of Noricum in Naples. In 740 he was again at Rome, whence he was sent by Gregory III to Germany. There he was welcomed by St. Boniface, who ordained him on 22 July, 741, and assigned him to missionary work at Eichstätt. Possibly the ordination of Willibald was connected with Boniface‘s missionary plans regarding the Slavs. On 21 October, 741 (742), Boniface consecrated him bishop at Sülzenbrücken near Gotha. The Diocese of Eichstätt was formed a few years later. Winnebald had, after the departure of his brother for Palestine, lived in a monastery at Rome.

Photo of St. Willibald at the Eichstätt Cathedral by Mattana.

Photo of St. Willibald at the Eichstätt Cathedral by Mattana.

In 730 he visited England to procure candidates for the religious state and returned the same year. On his third visit to Rome, St. Boniface received a promise that Winnebald would go to Germany. Winnebald arrived in Thuringia on 30 November, 740, and was ordained priest. He took part in the Concilium Germanicum, 21 April, 744 (742), was present at the Synod of Liptine, 1 March, 745 (743), subscribed Pepin’s donation to Fulda, 753; joined the League of Attigny in 762; and subscribed the last will of Remigius, Bishop of Strasburg. With his brother he founded the double monastery of Heidenheim in 752; Winnebald was placed as abbot over the men, and his sister, St. Walburga, governed the female community. Winnebald’s body was found incorrupt eighteen years after his death. His name is mentioned in the Benedictine Martyrology. Willlbald blessed the new church of Heidenheim in 778. His feast occurs in the Roman Martyrology on 7 July, but in England it is observed by concession of Leo XIII on 9 July. A costly reliquary for his remains was completed in 1269.

FRANCIS MERSHMAN (Catholic Encyclopedia)

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St. Edelburga, Virgin, also called St. Æthelburh of Faremoutiers.

Map of Faremoutiers. The modern village of Faremoutiers grew up around the abbey which was endowed with lands by Saint Fara.

Map of Faremoutiers. The modern village of Faremoutiers grew up around the abbey which was endowed with lands by Saint Fara.

She was daughter to Anna king of the East Angles, and out of a desire of attaining to Christian perfection, went into France, and there consecrated herself to God in the monastery of Faremoutier, in the forest of Brie, in the government of which she succeeded its foundress St. Fara. After her death her body remained uncorrupt, as Bede testifies. [1]

She is honoured in the Roman, French, and English Martyrologies on this day. [2] In these latter her niece St. Earcongota is named with her. She was daughter to Earconbercht king of Kent, and of St. Sexburga; accompanied St. Edelburga to Faremoutier, and there taking the veil with her, lived a great example of all virtues, and was honoured after her happy death by many miracles, as Bede relates. Hereswide, the wife of king Anna, the mother of many saints, after the death of her husband, retired also into France, and consecrated herself to God in the famous monastery of Cale or Chelles, five leagues from Paris, near the Marne, (founded by St. Clotilda, but chiefly endowed by St. Bathildes,) where she persevered, advancing daily in holy fervour to her happy death.

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See the history of the monastery of Chelles in the sixth tome of the late history of the diocess of Paris, by Abbé Lebeuf, and Solier on this day, p. 481, etc.
_________________________
Note 1. Bede, b. 3, c. 6.
Note 2. On St. Edelburga, see Solier the Bollandist, ad diem 7 Julij, t. 2, p. 481. She is called in French St. Aubierge. See on her also Du Plessis, Hist. de Meaux.

(from: The Lives of the Saints, by Rev. Alban Butler (1711–73).  Volume VII: July, p. 43)

 

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Blessed Pope Benedict XI

(Nicholas Boccasini)

Pope Benedict XI

Born at Treviso, Italy, 1240; died at Perugia, 7 July, 1304. He entered the Dominican Order at the age of fourteen. After fourteen years of study, he became lector of theology, which office he filled for several years. In 1296 he was elected Master General of the Order. As at this time hostility to Boniface VIII was becoming more pronounced, the new general issued an ordinance forbidding his subjects to favour in any way the opponents of the reigning pontiff; he also enjoined on them to defend in their sermons, when opportune, the legitimacy of the election of Boniface. This loyalty of Boccasini, which remained unshaken to the end, was recognized by Boniface, who showed him many marks of favour and confidence. Thus with the two cardinal-legates, the Dominican General formed the important embassy, the purpose of which was the concluding of an armistice between Edward I of England and Philip IV of France, then at war with each other. In the year 1298 Boccasini was elevated to the cardinalate; he was afterwards appointed Bishop of Ostia and Dean of the Sacred College. As at that time Hungary was rent by civil war, the cardinal-bishop was sent thither by the Holy See as legate a latere to labour for the restoration of peace. At the time of the return of the legate to Rome, the famous contest of Boniface VIII with Philip the Fair had reached its height. When, in 1303, the enemies of the pope had made themselves masters of the sacred palace, of all the cardinals and prelates only the two Cardinal-Bishops of Ostia and Sabina remained at the side of the venerable Pontiff to defend him from the violence of William of Nogaret and Sciarra Colonna.

Tomb of Pope Benedict XI in San Domenico Church in Perugia, Italy. Photo by ho visto nina volare.

A month after this scene of violence, Boniface having died, Boccasini was unanimously elected Pope, 22 October, taking the name of Benedict XI. The principal event of his pontificate was the restoration of peace with the French court. Immediately after his election Philip sent three ambassadors to the pope bearing the royal letter of congratulation. The king, while professing his obedience and devotion, recommended to the benevolence of the pope the Kingdom and Church of France. Benedict, judging a policy of indulgence to be necessary for the restoration of peace with the French court, absolved Philip and his subjects from the censures they had incurred and restored the king and kingdom to the rights and privileges of which they had been deprived by Boniface. The Colonna cardinals were also absolved from their censures, but not reinstated in their former dignities. This policy of leniency Benedict carried out without compromising the dignity of the Holy See or the memory of Boniface VIII. Nogaret and Sciarra Colonna and those implicated in the outrage of Anagni were declared excommunicated and summoned to appear before the pontifical tribunal. After a brief pontificate of eight months, Benedict died suddenly at Perugia. It was suspected, not altogether without reason, that his sudden death was caused by poisoning through the agency of William of Nogaret. Benedict XI was beatified in the year 1773. His feast is celebrated at Rome and throughout the Dominican Order on the 7th of July. He is the author of a volume of sermons and commentaries on a part of the Gospel of St. Matthew, on the Psalms, the Book of Job, and the Apocalypse.

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Ptol. Luc., Hist. Eccl. III, 672; Bernardus Guidonis, Vit. pont. rom., IX, 1010; Script. Ord. Præd., I, 444; Grandjean, Les registres de Benoît XI (Paris, 1883); Funke, Papst Benedikt XI (Münster, 1891); Artaud de Montor, History of the Popes (New York, 1867), I, 481-484; Année Dominicaine, vii, 125-54; 874-77; and the monograph of Ferreton (Treviso, 1904).

M. A. Waldron (Catholic Encyclopedia)

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Francis Patrick and Peter Richard Kenrick

Archbishops respectively of Baltimore, Maryland, and of St. Louis, Missouri. They were sons of Thomas Kenrick and his wife Jane, and were born in the older part of the city of Dublin, Ireland, the first-named on 3 December, 1797, and the second on 17 August, 1806. An uncle, Father Richard Kenrick was for several years parish priest of St. Nicholas of Myra in the same city, and he cultivated carefully the quality of piety which he observed at an early age in both children.

I. FRANCIS PATRICK KENRICK

Cardinal Francis Patrick Kenrick

Francis Patrick was sent by his uncle to a good classical school, and at the age of eighteen was selected as one of those who were to go to Rome to study for the priesthood. Here he became deeply impressed with the gentle bearing of Pius VII, who had just then been restored to his capital after long imprisonment by Napoleon Bonaparte, and the lesson it taught him bore fruit many years afterwards when he was called on to deal with the onslaughts on Catholics and their Church in the United States in the years of the Nativist and Know-nothing uprisings. His progress in his clerical studies was rapid, his sanctity conspicuous — so much so as to mark him out for early distinction. He confined himself to the study of his class-books, lectures, and the study of the Scriptures, and worked out in his own mind not a few weighty problems. He soon acquired a familiarity with the patristic writings and the Sacred Text that enabled him later on to give the Church in the United States valuable treatises on theological and Biblical literature. He consulted no translations, but took the Hebrew text or the Greek, and pondered on its significance in the light of his own reason and erudition. The rector of Propaganda College Cardinal Litta, had no hesitation in selecting him despite his youth, when a call came from Bishop Flaget for priests for the American field. He was chosen for the chair of theology at Bardstown Seminary, Kentucky. This post he held for nine years at the same time teaching Greek and history in the College of St. Joseph in the same state, and giving in addition professorial help in every educational institution in the state. He also did much valuable work in the missionary field, and engaged in controversy in the public press with some aggressive polemists of the Episcopal and Presbyterian communions. He made many converts at that time, and in 1826-7 had fifty to his credit, as well as a record of twelve hundred confirmations and six thousand communicants. His fame as a preacher was widespread, and his manner most winning.

In 1829 he attended the Provincial Council of Baltimore as theologian to Bishop Flaget, and was appointed secretary to the assembly. There, among the other weighty subjects, had to be considered the distracted state of the Diocese of Philadelphia, then labouring under the troubles begotten of the Hogan schism. Hogan was an excommunicated priest, who persisted in celebrating Mass and administering the sacraments despite the interdict, and had a considerable following in the city. Bishop Conwell had by this time become enfeebled and nearly blind, and Rev. William Matthews of Washington had been appointed vicar-general to assist him. Before the council rose it had named Father Kenrick as coadjutor bishop and forwarded the nomination to the Holy See. It was soon confirmed, Doctor Kenrick’s title being Bishop of Arath in partibus. He was consecrated in Bardstown by Bishop Flaget, assisted by Bishops England, Conwell, David, and Fenwick, on 6 June 1830, being then only thirty-four years old. A quarrel with the trustees of St. Mary’s broke out immediately on his arrival, resulting in an interdict being placed upon the church by the new bishop. This brought the trustees to their senses, and they gave up the contest for the control of the funds — the power by means of which they had been to browbeat the preceding ordinaries. Bishop Kenrick soon obtained the passage of a law to prevent the recurrence of such conflicts, by having the bishop’s name substituted for those of the trustees in all bequests for the Church. His first thought, after this trouble was over, was the erection of a seminary for the training of young men for the priesthood, the humble quarters in which he began the experiment eventually being succeeded by the present seminary of St. Charles Borromeo at Overbrook.

A terrible outbreak of cholera took place in Philadelphia soon after the bishop’s arrival, and he gained the gratitude of the authorities and the people at large for his exertions in the mitigation of the pest. He sent the Sisters of Charity to attend the stricken, and gave the parochial residence of St. Augustine’s as a temporary hospital; the local priests, at the same time, went about fearlessly among the stricken, ministering to their spiritual comforts. For these services he was voted public thanks by the mayor and councils of the city. To the Sisters of Charity was tendered a service of plate by the grateful authorities, but this offer was promptly and politely declined by those ladies. Soon after this episode Bishop Kenrick set about the utilization of the press for the spread of Catholic doctrine. He started the “Catholic Herald” placing the paper under the direction of the Reverend John Hughes, afterwards Archbishop of New York. He also began the erection of the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist to replace St. Mary’s, which had been so fruitful a source of trouble to him and his predecessor. Graver trouble soon started up in the form of the anti-Catholic Nativist outbreak of 1844. Furious mobs, maddened by inflammatory harangues about the Bible and the public schools, started out in Philadelphia, as in Boston and other cities, to attack churches and convents. They burned St. Augustine’s in Philadelphia and and attacked St. Michael’s and St. John’s, but were driven off by the military. They burned many houses in Kensington, the Catholic district, and killed many unoffending people, but were dispersed at Iength by the soldiery, leaving several of their number dead.

Engraving of St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, Overbrook, Pennsylvania.

Bishop Kenrick, during this reign of terror, did everything he could to stem the rioting. He ordered the doors of all the churches to be closed and cessation of Divine worship as a protest against the supineness of the authorities, the clergy went about in ordinary civil attire, and the sacred vessels and vestments were taken from the churches to places of security with private families. These prudent measures had the effect of restoring a state of peace to the city. The Diocese of Philadelphia had earlier included Pittsburg in a large part of New Jersey, and in 1843 it was divided, the Rev. Michael O’Connor being consecrated Bishop of Pittsburg in August of that year by Cardinal Fransoni at St. Agatha’s in Rome. This step proved a great relief to Bishop Kenrick, upon whom the care of his vast diocese and its arduous visitations at a period of primitive crudeness in travelling and accommodation, were beginning to leave a deep mark. In 1845 he visited Rome for the first time since his consecration and was received most graciously by the pope.

In August, 1851, Bishop Kenrick was transferred to Baltimore as successor to Archbishop Eccleston, who had just died. Moreover he received from the Holy See the dignity of Apostolic delegate, and in this capacity he convened and presided over the First Plenary Council of Baltimore in 1852. One of the results of that important gathering was the establishment of branches of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith. It was Archbishop Kenrick also who in 1853 introduced the Forty Hours’ devotion into the United States. In 1854 he was called upon by the Holy Father to collect and forward to him the respective opinions of the American bishops on the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception. The latter part of the same year found him back in Rome as a participant in the ceremonies attendant on the proclamation of that dogma.

A fresh outbreak of anti-Catholic fury took place soon after the archbishop’s return, occasioned by the arrival of Monsignor Bedini as papal nuncio, and the inflammatory and Iying speeches of the ex-priest Alessandro Gavazzi, on the nuncio’s action while in Bologna during the rising against Austria. Many churches and convents were burned as in the previous outbreak, and many lives were lost in New England and Kentucky, in Cincinnati and other cities. But no religious disturbances occurred in Maryland to perturb the archhishop’s closing years. The Civil War, however, soon came to rend his heart, and he died on the morning after the battle of Gettysburg (8 July, 1863), his end being hastened, it was believed, by rumours of the terrible slaughter that went on not far from his residence. When Bishop Kenrick went to Philadelphia in 1830 there were only four churches in the city and one in the suburbs, and ten priests, when he left at in 1857, the diocese contained 94 churches and many religious institutions, and was the home of 101 priests and 46 seminarians, besides numerous religious orders. The chief literary works of Archbishop Kenrick were a new translation of the Bible, with a commentary; a “Moral and Dogmatic Theology”; a “Commentary on the Book of Job”, “The Primacy of Peter”, and letters to the Protestant bishops of the United States on Christian unity.

I. PETER RICHARD KENRICK

Peter Richard had to work closely in the scriveners office of his father after the latter’s death in order to help to maintain his mother and himself, as well as carry on the business, but was enabled by his own industry and his uncle’s help to enter Maynooth College at the age of twenty-one. Previous to his entry he had been tolerably well trained in Latin and other essentials by Father Richard, while his taste for secular literature had been acquired through associations with the unfortunate poet and littérateur, James Clarance Mangan, who had for several years worked beside him as a clerk at the scrivener’s desk. After five years’ assiduous study he was ordained to the priesthood by Archbishop Murray of Dublin, and, on the death of his mother, after a few months of local missionary work, left for the United States on the invitation of his brother and took up work with him in Philadelphia. He was given the post of president of the seminary as well as that of rector of the cathedral and vicar-general of the diocese. This was in the latter part of 1833. During his seven years of missionary work with his brother he produced several works which built up his fame as a theologian, as “Validity of Anglican Ordinations examined” (Philadelphia, 1841), “New Month of Mary”, and “History of the Holy House of Loretto” in 1840 he left for Rome, with the idea of entering the Jesuit Order, but was dissuaded from carrying out his intention by the superior in Rome. Bishop Rosati met the young priest there, and requested the Holy See to give him to the See of St. Louis as his coadjutor, so pleased was he with his character and qualities. The Holy See assented, and both returned from Rome to have the ceremony of consecration performed in the United States. This was done in Philadelphia, Bishop Rosati officiating and the new prelate’s brother and Bishop Lefevre of Detroit assisting, while Bishop England delivered the consecration.

Archbishop Peter Richard Kenrick

The new bishop was given the title of Drasa, and had the right of succession in St. Louis. Bishop Rosati died a short time afterwards on a special mission in Haiti, and the care of the diocese devolved upon his young coadjutor at a much earlier period than either could have anticipated. It was no sinecure, for the financial affairs of the Church in St. Louis were in a deplorable condition. There was a very heavy debt on the cathedral, and he found the Catholics of the diocese by no means anxious to remove it. The bishop then saw that he must either resign or get other means of raising funds, and he took the bold course of getting into the real-estate business. He was most successful. A local gentleman named Thornton made a bequest of 300,000 dollars to the Church, others deposited their money with the bishop; he made fortunate investments in real estate; and, when values generally declined on the outbreak of the Civil War, he paid all his depositors in gold. The St. Louis diocese was enormous in extent at that time, as it embraced the whole of the States of Missouri and Arkansas, and half of Illinois, the task of visitation was one of immense toil, but the new bishop did not shrink from it. He had for helper and companion Rev. Thomas Cusack, with whom he had often to ride hundreds of miles on horseback, and sleep at night time in a log cabin or boarded hut. The paucity of churches in the diocese he also found a great drawback, the lack of clergy was another. He soon obtained much help from the Lazarists and Jesuits, as well as from the German population. The Visitation nuns and Sisters of St. Joseph, as well as the Sisters of Charity driven out by fire and flood from other places, came to St. Louis, and soon matters began to look brighter for the bishop. By a brief from Pope Pius IX, the dignity of archhishop was bestowed upon him; and at the Seventh Provincial Council of Baltimore a petition to have five suffragan bishops appointed — namely for St. Paul, Dubuque, Nashville, Chicago, and Milwaukee — was adopted, and was granted by the Holy See. After consecrating many bishops and ordaining many priests, the archbishop went to Baltimore to attend the First Plenary Council, and made a profound impression on the assembly by his logical keenness and his great erudition.

First Vatican Council

The Civil War found him a resolute defender of the Church’s position, when the “Drake Constitution” which proposed a test oath for all ministers of religion, was passed in Missouri. He sent out an order that all his clergy must refuse to take the oath, as its terms were insulting. Some of the clergy were sent to prison for doing so, but the archbishop took their cases from court to court and ultimately succeeded in having the Drake Law declared unconstitutional. At the Vatican Council of December, 1869, he was one of the prelates who were opposed to the definition of the dogma of Papal Infallibility, and voted “non placet” at the preliminary private sitting. He did not attend the session at which the dogma was promulgated, but publicly submitted to the voice of the majority as the authority of the Church, when he learned of the proclamation. For coadjutor bishops he had firstly the Right Reverend P.J. Ryan, and secondly the Right Reverend John J. Kain, who on his death succeeded him. The archbishop’s golden jubilee was celebrated with great distinction in 1891, but he was then in very feeble health. He died on 3 March two years afterwards. His best known work, besides “Anglican Ordinations,” is the “Month of Mary” (Philadelphia, 1843). The growth of the St. Louis province under his rule was described by Archbishop Hennessy at the jubilee celebration in 1891 as “stupendous”. During his episcopate sixteen new Sees were carved out of the original Diocese of St. Louis, viz. Little Rock (1843), Santa Fe and St. Paul (1850); Leavenworth (1851); Alton and Omaha (1857); Green Bay, La Crosse, St. Joseph, and Denver (1868); Kansas City (1880) Davenport (1881) Wichita, Cheyenne, Concordia, and Lincoln (1887).

Kenrick, MS. Diary and Itinerary in Philadelphia Archives and Correspondence in Archives of Baltimore and St. Louis; CLARKE, Lives of Deceased Prelates (New York, 1872); SHEA, Catholic Church in the United States (New York, 1892); O’CONNER, Archbishop Kenrick and His Work (Philadelphia, 1867); SPALDLING, Sketches (Baltimore, 1800); WEBB, Centenary of Catholicism in Kentucky (Louisville, 1884); WALSH, Jubilee Memoir (St. Louis, 1891); VALETTE, Catholicity in Eastern Pennsylvania in Catholic Record (Philadelphia, 1800).

John J. O’Shea (Catholic Encyclopedia)

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Vasco da GamaAt Belém they were all kneeling at his side: Paulo da Gama, his brother, with Nicolau Coelho and Gonçalo Nunes, his other captains and their pilots, Pero de Alenquer, João de Coimbra, Pero Escolar, Afonso Gonçalves; and likewise the “secretaries” Diogo Dias, João de Sá and Álvaro de Braga. Bartolomeu Dias was also there, for his caravel was to leave with the fleet on its way to the castle of St. George. Their eyes were fixed on the standard hanging before the altar to receive the protection of the Holy Virgin Mary and her divine son. As they prayed, they laid their pride, their fears and their hopes at the feet of her whose name means in Hebrew “Star of the Sea.”

The departure of Vasco da Gama to India in 1497. Painting by Alfredo Roque Gameiro.

The departure of Vasco da Gama to India in 1497. Painting by Alfredo Roque Gameiro.

The glass in the windows lightened, and the flames of the candles grew yellow. A religious of the Order of Christ, one of those brought by King Henry from the convent at Tomar to be ever ready to administer the sacraments to departing sailors, mounted the altar and celebrated the divine sacrifice. Gama and all his captains, officers and pilots took Communion….

That July 8, 1497, was a feast consecrated to the Virgin. As the capitão-mor and his companions left the chapel, they paused for a moment, dazzled by the sight of the immense throng which even at that early hour covered the strand….

Painting of Vasco da Gama by António Manuel da Fonseca.

Painting of Vasco da Gama by António Manuel da Fonseca.

From all the neighboring parishes and nearby convents and monasteries, priests and religious had gathered in great numbers to join those of the Order of Christ and add their prayers to those just uttered before the altar of Our Lady of Belém…. The priests chanted the litany of the saints:

Kyrie, eleison!

Christe, eleison!

Kyrie, eleison!

Christe, audi nos!

Christe, exaudi nos!

“Miserere nobis!” cried the throng, responding to the invocations.

Subscription2

Gilbert Renault, The Caravels of Christ, trans. Richmond Hill (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1959), 157-8.

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Pope Blessed Eugene III

Bernardo Pignatelli, born in the neighbourhood of Pisa, elected 15 Feb., 1145; d. at Tivoli, 8 July, 1153. On the very day that Pope Lucius II succumbed, either to illness or wounds, the Sacred College, foreseeing that the Roman populace would make a determined effort to force the new pontiff to abdicate his temporal power and swear allegiance to the Senatus Populusque Romanus, hastily buried the deceased pope in the Lateran and withdrew to the remote cloister of St. Cæsarius on the Appian Way. Here, for reasons unascertained, they sought a candidate outside their body, and unanimously chose the Cistercian monk, Bernard of Pisa, abbot of the monastery of Tre Fontane, on the site of St. Paul’s martyrdom. He was enthroned as Eugene III without delay in St. John Lateran, and since residence in the rebellious city was impossible, the pope and his cardinals fled to the country. Their rendezvous was the monastery of Farfa, where Eugene received the episcopal consecration. The city of Viterbo, the hospitable refuge of so many of the afflicted medieval popes, opened its gates to welcome him; and thither he proceeded to await developments. Though powerless in face of the Roman mob, he was assured by embassies from all the European powers that he possessed the sympathy and affectionate homage of the entire Christian world.

Pope Eugene III

Concerning the parentage, birth-place, and even the original name of Eugene, each of his biographers has advanced a different opinion. All that can be affirmed as certain is that he was of the noble family of Pignatelli, and whether he received the name of Bernardo in baptism or only upon entering religion, must remain uncertain. He was educated in Pisa, and after his ordination was made a canon of the cathedral. Later he held the office of vice-dominus or steward of the temporalities of the diocese. In 1130 he came under the magnetic influence of St. Bernard of Clairvaux; five years later when the saint returned home from the Synod of Pisa, the vice-dominus accompanied him as a novice. In course of time he was employed by his order on several important affairs; and lastly was sent with a colony of monks to repeople the ancient Abbey of Farfa; but Innocent II placed them instead at the Tre Fontane.

Bernard of Clairvaux

St. Bernard received the intelligence of the elevation of his disciple with astonishment and pleasure, and gave expression to his feelings in a paternal letter addressed to the new pope, in which occurs the famous passage so often quoted by reformers, true and false: “Who will grant me to see, before I die, the Church of God as in the days of old when the Apostles let down their nets for a draught, not of silver and gold, but of souls?” The saint, moreover, proceeded to compose in his few moments of leisure that admirable handbook for popes called “De Consideratione”. Whilst Eugene sojourned at Viterbo, Arnold of Brescia, who had been condemned by the Council of 1139 to exile from Italy, ventured to return at the beginning of the new pontificate and threw himself on the clemency of the pope. Believing in the sincerity of his repentance, Eugene absolved him and enjoined on him as penance fasting and a visit to the tombs of the Apostles. If the veteran demagogue entered Rome in a penitential mood, the sight of democracy based on his own principles soon caused him to revert to his former self. He placed himself at the head of the movement, and his incendiary philippics against the bishops, cardinals, and even the ascetic pontiff who treated him with extreme lenity, worked his hearers into such fury that Rome resembled a city captured by barbarians. The palaces of the cardinals and of such of the nobility as held with the pope were razed to the ground; churches and monasteries were pillaged; St. Peter’s church was turned into an arsenal; and pious pilgrims were plundered and maltreated.

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Giovanni_di_Paolo_La_Procession_de_saint_Gregoire_au_chateau_saint_Ange.jpg

Many Medieval popes fled to Castel Sant’Angelo (Mausoleum of Hadrian) to escape the fickle Romans

But the storm was too violent to last. Only an idiot could fail to understand that medieval Rome without the pope had no means of subsistence. A strong party was formed in Rome and the vicinity consisting of the principal families and their adherents, in the interests of order and the papacy, and the democrats were induced to listen to words of moderation. A treaty was entered into with Eugene by which the Senate was preserved but subject to the papal sovereignty and swearing allegiance to the supreme pontiff. The senators were to be chosen annually by popular election and in a committee of their body the executive power was lodged. The pope and the senate should have separate courts, and an appeal could be made from the decisions of either court to the other. By virtue of this treaty Eugene made a solemn entry into Rome a few days before Christmas, and was greeted by the fickle populace with boundless enthusiasm. But the dual system of government proved unworkable. The Romans demanded the destruction of Tivoli. This town had been faithful to Eugene during the rebellion of the Romans and merited his protection. He therefore refused to permit it to be destroyed. The Romans growing more and more turbulent, he retired to Castel S. Angelo, thence to Viterbo, and finally crossed the Alps, early in 1146.

St. Bernard preaching the Second Crusade painted by Émile Signol.

Problems lay before the pope of vastly greater importance than the maintenance of order in Rome. The Christian principalities in Palestine and Syria were threatened with extinction. The fall of Edessa (1144) had aroused consternation throughout the West, and already from Viterbo Eugene had addressed a stirring appeal to the chivalry of Europe to hasten to the defence of the Holy Places.  St. Bernard was commissioned to preach the Second Crusade, and he acquitted himself of the task with such success that within a couple of years two magnificent armies, commanded by the King of the Romans and the King of France, were on their way to Palestine. That the Second Crusade was a wretched failure cannot be ascribed to the saint or the pope; but it is one of those phenomena so frequently met with in the history of the papacy, that a pope who was made to subdue to a handful of rebellious subjects could hurl all Europe against the Saracens. Eugene spent three busy and fruitful years in France, intent on the propagation of the Faith, the correction of errors and abuses, and the maintenance of discipline. He sent Cardinal Breakspear (afterwards Adrian IV) as legate to Scandinavia; he entered into relations with the Orientals with a view to reunion; he proceeded with vigor against the nascent Manichean heresies. In several synods (Paris, 1147, Trier, 1148), notably in the great Synod of Reims (1148), canons were enacted regarding the dress and conduct of the clergy. To ensure the strict execution of these canons, the bishops who should neglect to enforce them were threatened with suspension. Eugene was inexorable in punishing the unworthy. He deposed the metropolitans of York and Mainz, and for a cause which St. Bernard thought not sufficiently grave, he withdrew the pallium from the Archbishop of Reims. But if the saintly pontiff could at times be severe, this was not his natural disposition.

“Never”, wrote Ven. Peter of Cluny to St. Bernard, “have I found a truer friend, a sincerer brother, a purer father. His ear is ever ready to hear, his tongue is swift and mighty to advise. Nor does he comport himself as one’s superior, but rather as an equal or an inferior… I have never made him a request which he has not either granted, or so refused that I could not reasonably complain.” On the occasion of a visit which he paid to Clairvaux, his former companions discovered to their joy that “he who externally shone in the pontifical robes remained in his heart an observant monk”.

The prolonged sojourn of the pope in France was of great advantage to the French Church in many ways and enhanced the prestige of the papacy. Eugene also encouraged the new intellectual movement to which Peter Lombard had given a strong impulse. With the aid of Cardinal Pullus, his chancellor, who had established the University of Oxford on a lasting basis, he reduced the schools of theology and philosophy to better form. He encouraged Gratian in his herculean task of arranging the Decretals, and we owe to him various useful regulations bearing on academic degrees. In the spring of 1148, the pope returned by easy stages to Italy. On 7 July, he met the Italian bishops at Cremona, promulgated the canons of Reims for Italy, and solemnly excommunicated Arnold of Brescia, who still reigned over the Roman mob. Eugene, having brought with him considerable financial aid, began to gather his vassals and advanced to Viterbo and thence to Tusculum. Here he was visited by King Louis of France, whom he reconciled to his queen, Eleanor. With the assistance of Roger of Sicily, he forced his way into Rome (1149), and celebrated Christmas in the Lateran. His stay was not of long duration. During the next three years the Roman court wandered in exile through the Campagna while both sides looked for the intervention of Conrad of Germany, offering him the imperial crown. Aroused by the earnest exhortations of St. Bernard, Conrad finally decided to descend into Italy and put an end to the anarchy in Rome. Death overtook him in the midst of his preparations on 15 Feb., 1152, leaving the task to his more energetic nephew, Frederick Barbarossa. The envoys of Eugene having concluded with Frederick at Constance, in the spring of 1153, a treaty favorable to the interests of the Church and the empire, the more moderate of the Romans, seeing that the days of democracy were numbered, joined with the nobles in putting down the Arnoldists, and the pontiff was enabled to spend his concluding days in peace.

Statue of Pope Eugene III in Portugal

Eugene is said to have gained the affection of the people by his affability and generosity. He died at Tivoli, whither he had gone to avoid the summer heats, and was buried in front of the high altar in St. Peters, Rome. St. Bernard followed him to the grave (20 Aug.). “The unassuming but astute pupil of St. Bernard”, says Gregorovius, “had always continued to wear the coarse habit of Clairvaux beneath the purple; the stoic virtues of monasticism accompanied him through his stormy career, and invested him with that power of passive resistance which has always remained the most effectual weapon of the popes.” St. Antoninus pronounces Eugene III “one of the greatest and most afflicted of the popes”. Pius IX by a decree of 28 Dec., 1872, approved the cult which from time immemorial the Pisans have rendered to their countryman, and ordered him to be honored with Mass and Office ritu duplici on the anniversary of his death.

1913 Catholic Encyclopedia

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By John Horvat II

This year, we celebrate the 250th year of our nation’s birth. Over all those years, we have lived, suffered and triumphed together. We have known good times and bad. Overall, we have much to show for our efforts. Never has a more prosperous nation existed in history. It helps that God gave us a richly endowed nation. We have a vast and bountiful land full of natural resources and fertile soil.

He also created us as a practical people. We have many natural skills that help us to exploit this God-given bounty. Our people are industrious, resourceful and organized. Add daring, courage and persistence, and you have a formula for success. We are a generous people willing to share the fruits of our labor with those in need, here and abroad. We have even shed our blood, fighting around the world to defend good causes and to suppress evil and injustice.

More importantly, we are a very religious people. Perhaps we don’t think of ourselves in these terms, but we like religious matters. Those outside America marvel at our appetite for spiritual things. Perhaps our excessive materialism makes us feel our spiritual impoverishment more. Thus, we crave spiritual fulfillment. The topic of God resonates with us.

Despite our many falls and sins, God has blessed America. His Blessed Mother has looked with favor upon us, since through her, we have received so many graces and gifts. All these factors come together to give us reason to celebrate our 250 years. We can present our accomplishments and generosity to Our Lady on the spreadsheet of our good stewardship. We have been given much, and have used it well.

The Other Column

However, another column on our report sheet is not so good. Our time together has not been without its problems. We suffered through the Civil War and the Great Depression. We are shackled today in political and other strife. Individualism has made us lonely. A sexual revolution overturned our morals. The profound crisis inside the Church emptied our churches and suffocated vocations. A culture war now erodes what remains of our wholesome values. A new digital wasteland devastates our souls. Today, we find ourselves in a great crisis, unlike any we have seen before.

As we celebrate our 250th year, we find ourselves a disunited and polarized nation. There is no consensus about what we should do or where we should go. Thus, we must also present these afflictions to Our Lady on this august anniversary. She will not despise these petitions, but in her mercy will “hear and answer us.”

A Child’s Right

The key to being heard and answered is to ask, even if it seems that we do not have the right to do so in light of our many sins and failings. On special occasions like birthdays, we have a certain right to ask our mother for anything. We can invoke this child’s right and ask for everything. We should not limit ourselves to a few requests out of an ungrounded fear that we will disturb her or that our urgent and numerous needs will overwhelm her generosity. Like any mother, she takes delight in aiding those children who are most needy, especially if we present ourselves truly repentant and show her our love. Indeed, when kneeling before the Mother of Mercy, the more we ask, the better.

“A mother delights in answering the requests of her children. How much more does Our Lady delight in answering our prayers?”

Thus, we should ask her to join us in celebrating our joy at reaching this milestone, of being together as one nation, under God, for so many years. We must thank her for so many blessings. However, we must also present the seemingly insurmountable problems we face with childlike simplicity. We must ask her to come urgently to help unite our shattered nation. We must appeal to her wisdom to show us a way out of our affliction.

Invoking this child’s right, we have a window of opportunity to correct and straighten our ways. We must remember that she is not only our mother but the Queen of Heaven and Earth. Her power is not figurative but real. She can change things, not just for Catholics, but for the nation as a whole. She can better represent our interests before her Divine Son than we can.

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The 1986 Hereditary Register of the United States lists 109 hereditary associations, the oldest one founded in 1637 and the most recent one in 1976. Of course, some are more dynamic than others. They are normally described as cultural, historical, preservationist, and the like.

From a certain point of view, the most important of these hereditary associations is the Society of the Cincinnati. Members must be descendants of officers who fought at least three years in the War of Independence or who remained in the army to the end of the war. Moreover, in many states only one member from each qualifying family can belong to the society.

Major General Henry Knox, founder of the Society of the Cincinnati. Painting by Gilbert Stuart

The society, composed of officers of the Continental Army, was organized in 1783. Major General Henry Knox was its principal founder, and Major General Baron von Steuben presided at early organizational meetings. The society was named after the illustrious Roman Quinctius Cincinnatus, who left his farm to assume temporary leadership of the Roman army to save Rome when it was threatened by its enemies; after the victory, he relinquished his post and returned to his lands. George Washington was voted the first president general of this society, which had King Louis XVI as its patron in France.

In the early years of Independence, the society was known for the monarchical sympathies of some of its founders and members. According to various authors, they wanted to establish a military nobility in the country.(1)

Its membership represented distinguished families of the period. Myers relates that “several members came from the top ranks of wealth and social prominence…. Whether they saw themselves as a nascent or established aristocracy, there was a quality of grandeur—their critics thought pomposity—about many Cincinnati.”(2)

Baron Friedrich William von Steuben, pictured with The Society of the Cincinnati medal.. Painting by Charles Willson Peale

At its very inception, the society was furiously opposed by liberals like Jefferson, Samuel Adams, and Franklin. The French revolutionary Mirabeau wrote to caution the American liberals against the society’s aristocratic tone. According to Wood,

“The ferocious attacks on the Order of the Cincinnati in the 1780’s actually represented only the most notable expression of…egalitarian resentments. Because this ‘Barefaced and Arrogant’ attempt by former Revolutionary army officers to perpetuate their honor was considered by men like Aedanus Burke, James Warren, and Samuel Adams to be ‘as rapid a Stride towards an hereditary Military Nobility as was ever made in so short a Time.’”(3)

Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson repeatedly denounced the monarchical tendencies of the Cincinnati. The ultimate purpose of the Society of the Cincinnati, Jefferson contended, was “to ‘ingraft’ onto ‘the future frame of government’ a ‘hereditary order.’” Historian Daniel Sisson comments, “Jefferson, it seemed, always feared the latent monarchical tendencies in America.”(4)

Lacking official recognition of the republican government, the society retreated to the private sphere. As a rule, members only wore the badge of the society in public when they traveled abroad.(5)

“In the postwar years the Cincinnati served as a model for many other hereditary societies,” writes Myers. “By the end of the nineteenth century there were dozens of them, commemorating ancestors from all periods of America’s history. All were a distant reflection of the Cincinnati, and high society…moved discreetly, to find spots in the ‘right’ societies.”(6)

The logo for Military Order of the Stars and Bars

One of the associations inspired by the Cincinnati in our century is the Military Order of the Stars and Bars. Candidates to membership must be male descendants of a commissioned officer of the armed forces of the Confederate States honorably separated from the service. They must be members in good standing of the Sons of Confederate Veterans.

Other associations gather descendants from families who participated in the founding events of their respective states. Few states are without their exclusive hereditary associations to celebrate their “first families.”

One of the most notable of these associations is the Order of First Families of Virginia. This society was instituted in 1912 with the specific purpose of commemorating and preserving the singular distinction of descendants of Virginians of “dignity and consequence.” In addition to sponsoring social functions, the group studies the genealogies of these families and published their findings. Admission is restricted to persons who are direct descendants of settlers of Virginia.(7)

John Henry Livingston 1746–1825

Another group with special significance is the Order of Colonial Lords of Manors in America, founded in 1911 by John Henry Livingston, a descendant of one of the most eminent American lineages of lords of manors who played an important role in the history of the United States. Writing the history of his renowned family, Edwin Livingston has harsh words for those members who “through a false idea of modesty, or through ignorance, repudiate that nobility to which [they] are fully and legally entitled.”(8)

These are but a few examples of the many patriotic and hereditary associations existing in the United States.

(1) Cf. Minor Myers, Jr., Liberty without Anarchy: A History of the Society of the Cincinnati (Charlottesville, N.C.: The University Press of Virginia, 1983), p. 94.

(2) Ibid., p. 128.

(3) Gordon S. Wood, The Creation of the American Republic, 1776-1787 (New York: Harper & Row, 1957), pp. 399-400.

(4) Daniel Sisson, The American Revolution of 1800 (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1974), pp. 127-128.

(5) “It is likely no Englishmen feels a greater sense of pride in being a Knight of the Garter, or Scotsman, a Knight of the Thistle, than an American feels in being a member of the Society of the Cincinnati” (The Hereditary Register of the United States of America [Phoenix: The Hereditary Register Publications, 1981], p. 21). As the title suggests, this work is a directory of associations such as those discussed here. Unless otherwise noted, our descriptions of each of these associations are based largely on their respective entries in the Register.

(6) Myers, Liberty without Anarchy, p. 229.

(7) Cf. The Hereditary Register, p. 181.

(8) Quoted in Clare Brandt, An American Aristocracy: The Livingstons (New York: Doubleday & Co. 1986), p. 210.

Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, Nobility and Analogous Traditional Elites in the Allocutions of Pius XII: A Theme Illuminating American Social History (York, Penn.: The American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family, and Property, 1993), Appendix I, pp. 321-324.

 

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From the funeral oration for Philippe-Emanuel de Lorraine, Duke of Mercoeur and Penthièvre, delivered in the metropolitan church of Notre-Dame in Paris on April 27, 1602, by Saint Francis de Sales (1567-1622), Bishop-Prince of Geneva and Doctor of the Church:

“It is always God Who grants us salvation; He is its great architect, but He proceeds differently with His mercies, for He grants us certain favors unbeknownst to us, and others with the intervention of our desires, works, and will. Prince Philippe-Emmanuel, Duke of Mercoeur, received an abundance of favors of the first order, upon which he built an excellent edifice of perfection of those of the second order; for in the first order God had him born of two of the most illustrious, ancient, and Catholic houses among the princes of Europe [the Houses of Lorraine and of Savoy].

“It means a great deal to be the fruit of a good tree, metal of a good mine, river of a good source….

“[He] was born, I say, for military glory and the honor of the Church, this deceased prince, worthy scion of two such great stocks, from which he inherited the blood as well as the virtues; and just as two streams join to make a great and noble river, so these two houses of paternal and maternal ancestors of this prince, having joined their noble qualities in his soul, made him accomplished in all the gifts of nature, which is why he could well echo the divine sage in saying, ‘Puer autem eram ingeniosus, et sortitus sum animam bonam‘ [And I was a witty child and had received a good soul] (Wis. 8:19). It was good for his virtue to encounter so able an individual; it was a great boon for his ability to encounter a virtue such as this….

Philippe-Emanuel de Lorraine, Duke of Mercoeur and Penthièvre

“In such manner he was good enough to speak of his lineage, although to many it seems that nobility is a thing beyond our control, that only our actions are our own.

“And in truth lineage accounts for a great deal, and has a great power in our destinies, even in our very deeds, either through the passionate sympathies we often borrow from our predecessors or through the memory of their prowess that we preserve, or through the good and most curious nourishment we receive from them.”

Oeuvres completes de Saint François de Sales (Paris: Béthune Éditeur, 1836), Vol. 2, pp. 404-406 in Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, Nobility and Analogous Traditional Elites in the Allocutions of Pius XII: A Theme Illuminating American Social History (York, Penn.: The American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family, and Property, 1993), Documents IV, p. 476.

 

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Confederate General Robert E. Lee in 1863.

A new student once asked President Lee for a copy of the rules of Washington College. Lee replied, “Young gentleman, we have no printed rules. We have but one rule here, and it is that every student must be a gentleman.”
What did Lee mean when he used the word “gentleman?” Found among his papers after his death was the following statement:

“…the manner in which an individual enjoys certain advantages over others is the test of a true gentleman.

Robert E. Lee surrenders to Ulysses S. Grant Painting By English School

“The power which the strong have over the weak, the magistrate over the citizen, the employer over the employed, the educated over the unlettered, the experienced over the confiding, even the clever over the silly—the forbearing or inoffensive use of all this power or authority, or a total absence from it when the case admits it, will show the gentleman in plain light. The gentleman does not needlessly or unnecessarily remind an offender of a wrong he may have committed against him. He can not only forgive, he can forget; and he strives for that nobleness of self and mildness of character which impart sufficient strength to let the past be the past.

“A true gentleman of honor feels humbled himself when he cannot help humbling others.

A very interesting statement, this…

Lee’s one-rule standard produced the honor system, which soon became the practical definition of a “gentleman” at Washington College. A gentleman does not lie, cheat, or steal; nor does a gentleman tolerate lying, cheating, or dishonesty in those persons claiming to be gentlemen.

Washington College at Lexington, lithograph, by Henry Howe.

Emory M. Thomas, Robert E. Lee: A biography (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1995), p. 397 (Emphasis in the original.)

Short Stories on Honor, Chivalry, and the World of Nobility—no. 199

Nobility.org Editorial comment: —

A moral code of honor undergirds the true gentleman.
Consequently, and even though he may not have this in the forefront of his mind, the gentleman acts as though he understood clearly that his life unfolds in the presence of God, Who sees and judges each of our thoughts, actions, and omissions.
A true gentleman’s self-respect will make him live by this moral code of honor even in private or faraway settings where no one from his social milieu can possibly discover what he says or does.
This higher excellence that the gentleman is constantly striving to attain comes with a great advantage: It insulates and safeguards him from the pressures of his peers and society. No gentleman caves in and compromises on his principles in order to please others. This higher moral code of honor is his sole standard of conduct.

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By Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira

Le Nouvel Aperçu, no. 6,  July-August 1994, published in French by the TFP Association

Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, author of Noblesse et élites traditionnelles dans les allocutions de Pie XII, answers our questions

Question: Two hundred years after the French Revolution, do you think that French society still has something to expect from the nobility?

PLINIO CORRÊA DE OLIVEIRA: Without a doubt. History tells us that aristocracies are formed in such conditions that they last a great deal. Two hundred years! What is that for the French nobility, whose families are so old that their origin ‘is lost in the night of time,’ according to the consecrated expression?

Unlike what happens with individuals and families in a democratic society, where a famous man often disappears even before he dies, the noble condition is not made to have the mere duration of an individual life. The noble condition is made to have the duration of a family. And a family, hereditary by definition, is made to last centuries and centuries without wearing out; instead, it grows in value over time.

One might object that your question does not refer specifically to the passage of time but to the usury inherent in the historical events of the last two centuries, which began with the French Revolution. And one might wonder if, with these two hundred years of revolution fully directed against the nobility, the latter is not worn out to the point of being unable to render further service to the country.

Portrait of Marie-Antoinette of Austria by Jean-Baptiste Gautier Dagoty

The history of France, even of republican France, furnishes many examples to the contrary: eminent personalities who have rendered important services to the country in the most diverse branches of national public activity.

Q: You comment on the speeches of Pius XII, but after the Ralliement promoted by Leo XIII, should we not consider that the Church has definitely opted for the people and that the role of the nobility and traditional elites is relegated to the past, to the old regime?

PCO – Your question presupposes two statements that I do not share. The first is that there may be a contradiction between the teachings of two Popes: Pius XII would be in contradiction with Leo XIII. Moreover, if we admit, for the sake of argument, that such a contradiction exists, I see no reason why one could not freely choose the teachings of Pius XII instead of those of Leo XIII.

Pope Pius XII

Q: We understand that the descendants of the nobles of the past still have a role to play in Europe, but what is your “preferential option for the nobles” in countries like the United States, which have never seen nobility and whose supreme reference value seems to be money?

PCO – If wealth is an element in acquiring a social status, the most recent sociological studies show that it alone is not enough to accord member status in American high society.

This concept of high society based exclusively on wealth is part of a liberal myth from the last century, generalized in popular consciousness by authors like the French noble Alexis de Tocqueville in his work Democracy in America. Recent studies have totally debunked this myth. Sociologists show that society in the United States is no less hierarchized than it is in Europe. While nobility titles do not exist, family tradition, like in Europe, plays a predominant role in being accepted into the high society. In the absence of nobility titles, the oldest families of the various cities and states are designated by expressions emphasizing tradition and continuity. Thus one finds the Proper San Franciscans, the Genteel Charlestonians, the First Families of Virginia, the California Dons (allusion to families descended from the ancient Spanish aristocracy), etc. Many of these families retain their ancestral mansion.

Benjamin Harrison, 23rd President of the US. The Harrisons were among the First Families of Virginia.

If we pay attention to American society, we are bound to conclude that the United States is not guided by the masses but by the elites, both new and traditional. These are organized into hereditary associations, which impart their most refined character to good society. The public knows little about these organizations because most avoid the spotlight of publicity. Moreover, they only accept members from certain social groups in order to differentiate themselves in an anti-egalitarian sense.

Families of new rich people, who, after several generations, end up being admitted into these hereditary associations, must first pay homage to tradition by renouncing the presumptuous ostentation of their wealth, as they sometimes face impoverished aristocrats. The most important of these hereditary societies is probably that of the Cincinnati. To be a member, one must descend from an American or French officer who fought for at least three years in the American War of Independence or fought all the way to its end. Moreover, in many States, only one person from each qualifying family can be a member. This society exists since 1783 and owes its name in reference to the illustrious Roman Quintus Cincinnatus, who abandoned his plow to lead the army. King Louis XVI himself was chosen as its protector, and its members wanted to establish an authentic military nobility in the country.

One may say that all these hereditary groups form in America’s high society an elite analogous to the titled nobility of Europe.

Larz Anderson House. The Washington, DC residence of Ambassador Larz and Isabel Anderson from 1905 until 1937, the house now serves as the national headquarters of the Society of the Cincinnati, the nation’s oldest patriotic order.

Q: Who do you think these “traditional elites” analogous to the nobility are in France today?

PCO – The delimitation of the different classes in a society is always delicate and subject to many disputes. As regards the Ancien Régime, and specifically in France, the general public feels that the social classes—clergy, nobility, people—were distinguished from one another with the same clarity as the boundaries between countries of Europe or the three Americas. This is a mistake. First, it must be pointed out that the nobility was far from being an absolutely homogeneous body. There were several modalities of nobility: the nobility of the sword, the nobility of the robe, and others, perhaps ending with the nobility ‘de cloche’. Some historians speak of more than five “layers” of nobility in France. And even so, the boundaries between these different “layers” were often imprecise. In addition, it was easy for a family to move from one layer to another. To this end, a royal decree was sufficient to raise a family of plebeian status to the nobility, or a decision of the king or the justice system would downgrade someone from the noble condition to that of the people. This happened, for example because of a crime, especially a crime against the State such as high treason.

This delimitation has become even more difficult in a society such as ours, where the egalitarian principles of “liberty, equality, fraternity” have contributed to form the structure of the State and with it the structure of society.

In any case, I will try to give a notion. The elite of a people is constituted of elements—individuals or families—who have in their hands the driving forces of the State and of society. In a democracy, the elites are essentially dynamic. It is very difficult for a family to ensure its own duration for a sufficient time to be qualified as traditional.

Our society sought to be an open society, like a stream that is deep enough to receive without inconvenience all the smaller rivers that flow into it along its course. Whatever it wanted, our society had. It resembles a river that receives without discrimination all the waters that join it. But this lack of discrimination increases so much the volume of the liquid mass, with waters sometimes crystalline and sometimes polluted, that you have spills, floods and all kinds of problems. “Arrivism” then triumphs. A certain opportunist concept of EQUALITY also triumphs. Money establishes its dictatorship, either by harnessing politicking, or by placing itself at its service.

All that forms a set of circumstances which, combined with the terrible corruption of customs (vigorously served by a particular concept of FREEDOM), produces as a global result an agitation of rivalries at all levels, from the smallest communes to the whole nation, rather than the secular and hollow FRATERNITY which the dreamers of 1789 tried to substitute for Christian charity.

The traditional desire of good children, who aspire to be the followers of their good parents like recent rings of a chain that becomes all the stronger as it grows old, all that disappeared with the agony of traditions.

However, in the midst of this confused and polluted fog, the new and old elites succeeded in establishing themselves and overcoming the obstacles that surrounded them. This phenomenon is more frequent than most modern media suggest. In my book, Nobility and Traditional Elites in the Allocutions of Pius XII to the Roman Patriciate and Nobility, recently published in the United States by Hamilton Press, you will find an appendix packed with information and analysis on traditional elites in the United States. In that country, whose importance in the contemporary world is impossible to deny, here are some points that this appendix addresses: —The United States is not guided by masses but by the new and traditional elites. — Traditional elites in today’s USA: a healthy, living and flourishing reality. — Lineage: no other criterion, not even fortune, is just as decisive for conferring social status. — The inheritance of social status in the United States. — Events in American high society, the debutante ball. — The organization of traditional elites today. — Hereditary associations in the United States. — The rigorous conditions for admission of the new rich into the upper classes.

What are these elites in France today? How to distinguish them from one another? One certainly notices that these elites exist. But the laws and customs in force have powerfully combined to prevent them from being clearly differentiated in the eyes of the nation. Therefore, it is almost impossible to present a list of families constituting the French elite, as is the case indeed with almost all modern peoples. In this, the nobility is distinguished. That is what I would say in response to your question.

 

Q: Here in France, as you know, it is fashionable to refer to populism as a plank of salvation. What do you think of it?

PCO – Paying attention to the rights of the human masses described as “the man in the street” is certainly part of the mission of the State and of society, and it is even one of their primary obligations.

Belmead Mansion on the James, formerly was the site for St. Emma Military Academy, it operated between 1895 and 1971. The boys school was funded and operated by St. Katharine Drexel’s sister and brother in law, Louise and Edward Morrell. It is currently the main office for FrancisEmma, Inc. & is listed with the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

However, your question reflects a strictly egalitarian position that considers the rights of the people — which in the flavorful language of the Middle Ages were referred to as “the common people of God” to such a degree that it leaves no room for any other class. However, the existence of elites is a factor, which, in itself, responds to several legitimate and fundamental needs of the people. Note that I say “people” and not “masses”. By bearing in mind the concepts of “people” and “mass” as clarified by Pope Pius XII, one understands spontaneously and without effort the role of the elites:

1. “The people, and the shapeless multitude (or, as it is called, “the masses”) are two distinct concepts.

  1. “The people lives and moves by its own life energy; the masses are inert of themselves and can only be moved from outside.
  2. “The people lives by the fullness of life in the men that compose it, each of whom—at his proper place and in his own way—is a person conscious of his own responsibility and of his own views. The masses, on the contrary, wait for the impulse from outside, an easy plaything in the hands of anyone who exploits their instincts and impressions; ready to follow in turn, today this flag, tomorrow another.
  3. “From the exuberant life of a true people, an abundant rich life is diffused in the State and all its organs, instilling into them, with a vigor that is always renewing itself, the consciousness of their own responsibility, the true instinct for the common good. The elementary power of the masses, deftly managed and employed, the State also can utilize: in the ambitious hands of one or of several who have been artificially brought together for selfish aims, the State itself, with the support of the masses, reduced to the minimum status of a mere machine, can impose its whims on the better part of the real people: the common interest remains seriously, and for a long time, injured by this process, and the injury is very often hard to heal.”[1]

The complementarity and interdependence between elites and other social classes, on the one hand, and a rich and flexible concept of the common good, on the other hand, contradicts many of the presuppositions of your question and at the same time gives it a valid answer.

Q: After the fall of the Berlin Wall, one successively witnessed the disappearance of the old Communist regime, soon followed, in many places, by a return of the communists through elections. Do you think that the old “apparatchiks” today form an elite in those countries? From the perspective of your book, what is the solution to chaos if there is only one alternative between the masses molded by seventy years of communism and the old nomenklatura?

PCO – In this perspective, there is no solution. Chaos is really the sad epilogue of the various evolutions through which the communist world has passed. Where will this chaos end? That is a separate and very different question. History presents us with several cases of chaotic situations that eventually lead to the liquidation of the components of chaos and, consequently, to the formation of various situations, some of which are brilliant. However, in most cases, these are dull, expressionless and melancholic. They are peoples “sitting on the cusp of death,” so to speak.

Tsar Nicholas II of Russia with the family (left to right): Olga, Maria, Tsarina Alexandra Fyodorovna, Anastasia, Alexei, and Tatiana. Photo taken in 1913.

This is what happened to ancient Egypt, to Greece dominated by Rome, to India before the great navigations of the West, and to almost all the peoples of the East and Asia.

A brilliant example in the opposite direction was the outbreak of chaos in the territory of the ancient Roman Empire of the West with the almost simultaneous invasion of barbarians and Arabs. The result was real chaos. However, not everything was chaos. While the authorities of the Roman Empire abandoned their posts and shamefully fled as the barbarians approached, the ecclesiastical authorities remained where they were. Very often at the risk of their lives, they began to give a first rate moral formation to these peoples, who, albeit barbarian, had noteworthy characteristics of innocence and moral rectitude.

The Church supported all that she found positive in that primitive morality of the barbarians; she fought what was censurable and constituted a factor of chaos; and from this amalgamation, enlivened by the regenerative force of the Gospel, was born the Middle Ages, from which, in turn, Western Christian civilization germinated.

Obviously, it is an error to suppose that chaos alone managed to generate all that is positive in the centuries that followed the Middle Ages. In fact, the barbarian masses found in the ancient Roman territory an incomparable factor of organization, orientation, cultural and social structuring. It was the ferment of the Gospel, capable of giving life to any people. It was the moral value of the clergy that gave rise to the Middle Ages.

Russian Revolution of 1917

One might add that one hardly sees this factor throughout the Soviet world today. The Greek-schismatic Church, also called “Orthodox”, cannot be regarded purely and simply as a valid continuator of the Catholic Church, of which it is, in many respects, an opponent. During the period of communist domination, it is well known that the clergy of this church, dominated by the “orthodox” Tsar-papist doctrines that placed the ecclesiastical organization under the direction of the Tsars, felt obliged to obey the successive Leninist communists as it had previously obeyed the successive tsars. Instead of being a factor of regeneration and of fighting communism, it associated itself with the regime in order not to disappear. Conversely, it was the willingness of every priest to perish if necessary, but not to give way to barbarism, that gave rise to the Middle Ages.

In any case, the Greek-schismatic church cannot be considered a sufficient factor for the regeneration of the former Soviet peoples. On the other hand, the penetration of the Catholic Church into these territories is very limited due to a series of circumstances of which the West has only an imprecise idea. Finally, a considerable number of Catholics entering the ex-Soviet world are almost always influenced by modern progressive doctrines originating in the West, where the crisis of the Catholic Church, of progressive origin, produces the disturbances which we all know and deplore. It seems that the clergy belonging to this tendency are in no way capable of any restructuring action. From where, then, should we expect a solution? From some well-intentioned individuals especially blessed by God? Only they will be able, with the support of Rome, to raise the remains of the communist “colossus” lying on the ground. However, do these elements exist in the ex-Soviet world? I think so; but they exist in such a small number that they must be sought with a magnifying glass; and one should pray for them and help them as much as possible.

 

[1] Radio message of Christmas 1944, in Discorsi e Radiomessaggi di Sua Santità Pio XII, Vol. VI, pp. 238-239.

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The Forest of Fontainebleau by François-Auguste Ortmans.

But her best-known deed, and the one which made the greatest sensation, was that which is known as the incident of Achères. It was at Fontainebleau, during the hunt again, on Oct 16, 1773. The deer, being at bay, took refuge in a small enclosure of the village of Achères.  Finding no issue thence, and rendered furious by his despair, he turned upon a peasant who was cultivating the enclosure, and gored him twice with his antlers, – once in the thigh and once in the body. The man was thrown down, severely wounded. His wife, wild with grief, flew toward the hunters and fell in a faint. The king, after giving orders that she should be looked after, withdrew.

Deer in the forest at Fontainebleau, by Rosa Bonheur.

The dauphiness descended from her carriage, made the unfortunate woman inhale her salts, and after having brought her out of her faint, showered upon her money, consolation, and tears. She then made her get into her carriage and commanded that she should be taken to her house; nor did she rejoin the hunt until she had assured herself that the two invalids would receive the necessary attention. The entire court, moved by her noble example, hastened to aid the unfortunate ones. The dauphin emptied his purse into their hands; the Comtesse de Provence did the same. On the following day, Marie Antoinette did not fail to send to inquire after the wounded man, whose condition had at first seemed critical, but who recovered, nevertheless, thanks to the care that the surgeons of the court, on the order of the young princess, bestowed upon him.

Marie Antoinette’s act of compassion was immortalized in a pencil and ink drawing by Jean-Michel Moreau the Younger. The print, titled “Act of Kindness by the Dauphine, October 16, 1773”, now hangs in a museum in Vienna.

The public, on learning these details, and delighted with the tears of sympathy that the dauphiness had shed, was inexhaustible in its praises of her. There was but one cry of admiration for her. At Fontainebleau the people crowded together wherever there was a chance of seeing her. At Marly, at Versailles, they greeted her with such enthusiasm and acclamation when she went out as almost to frighten her.

The Life of Marie Antoinette, Volume 1 By Maxime de La Rocheterie, Chapter VII, Page 78-79.

Short Stories on Honor, Chivalry, and the World of Nobility—no. 793

 

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Nathaniel Bacon, 1647 – 1676, was a colonist of the Virginia Colony, instigator of the Rebellion of 1676.

Claiming to lead “the people,” Bacon defied the government at Jamestown and demanded reform….

Endangered by their leader’s vacillation, Berkeley’s supporters chose to scatter…. but not Richard.

Richard Lee II 1647-1714

He had the courage of his convictions. Richard believed all social order, including Virginia’s, was imposed by God and should be maintained, no matter the “zealous inclination of the multitude.” It was the public’s “hopes of leveling” which drew it to Bacon, Richard contended. Otherwise, he insisted, “all his [Bacon’s] specious pretences would not have persuaded them.” Were it not,” Lee said, “for the evil in the hearts of the populace, Bacon’s rebellion would never have occurred.”

Since he refused to keep his views to himself, Richard was carried off in chains by those who paid no heed to his insistence that the lawfulness imposed by the King and his representatives came from heaven. Anyone acquainted with Richard’s library knew his choice of books preached that Englishmen, whether they lived along the Thames or along the Potomac, owed absolute fidelity to the Crown and to the structure of society endorsed by God and Sovereign.

Warner Hall served for a time as Nathaniel Bacon’s headquarters during “Bacon’s Rebellion” in 1676.

Richard became a prisoner and was forced on a grueling four-day ride to Bacon’s headquarters at the village of Middle Plantation, about five miles from Jamestown. There he was held for nearly two months, suffering hardships which impaired his health. Somehow he survived, while Bacon was less fortunate. After burning Jamestown and taking other drastic steps which raised doubt and confusion among his followers, Bacon fell ill and died suddenly in late October 1676. The agitation ended soon afterwards.

Nobility.org Editorial comment: —

At the core of being a member of the nobility lie certain virtues: loyalty, honor, unyielding attachment to principle.
Is it surprising that we see these virtues shine in Gen. Robert E. Lee in the 19th century, when his great-great grandfather suffered imprisonment for them in the 17th? While individual virtue is always precious, the most solid of all is that virtue that becomes habitual in a family and is handed down from one generation to another. It is dependable. It can be relied on for it does not break easily.

Paul C. Nagel, The Lees of Virginia: Seven Generations of an American Family (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990), pp. 24-25.

Short Stories on Honor, Chivalry, and the World of Nobility—no. 183

 

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Washingtonian Social Etiquette

The wife of the chief-justice, and not the wife of the President, is the first lady in the land, and takes precedence of all others. She holds receptions and receives calls, but she alone is excluded from all duty of returning calls.

Lady Washington’s Reception Day by Daniel Huntington

The life of a lady in society at Washington is exceedingly onerous, and more especially so if she be the wife of any official.

Next in rank comes the wife of the President.

Social Duties Of The President

It is made the duty of the President to give several state dinners and official receptions during each session of Congress. Besides these, there are the general receptions, at which time the White House is open to the public and every citizen of the United States has a recognized right to pay his respects to the President.

Presidential Receptions

On the days of the regular ” levees” the doors of the White House are thrown open, and the world is indiscriminately invited to enter them.

No “court “-dress is required to make one presentable at this republican court, but every one dresses according to his or her own means, taste or fancy. The fashionable carriage- or walking-dress is seen side by side with the uncouth homespun and homemade of the backwoodsman and his wife.

General Washington at Christ Church, Easter Sunday, 1795 Painting by Jean Leon Gerome Ferris

Neither are there any forms and ceremonies to be complied with in gaining admittance to the presidential presence. You enter, an official announces you, and you proceed directly to the President and his lady and pay your respects. They exchange a few words with you, and then you pass on, to make room for the throng that is pressing behind you. You loiter about the rooms for a short time, chatting with acquaintances or watching the shifting panorama of faces, and then you go quietly out, and the levee is ended for you.

Private Call Upon The President

If any one wishes to make a private call upon the President, he will find it necessary to secure the company and influence of some official or special friend of the President. Otherwise, though he will be readily admitted to the White House, he will probably fail in obtaining a personal interview.

“Fanny” Allen―daughter of American Revolutionary War General Ethan Allen–was the first New England woman to become a Catholic nun. 1784-1819

Social Duties Of Cabinet Officers And Their Families

The ladies of the family of a Cabinet officer must hold receptions every Wednesday during the season from two or three o’clock to half-past five. On these occasions the houses must be open to all who choose to call. Refreshments and an extra number of servants are provided. The refreshments for these receptions may be plain, consisting of chocolate, tea, cakes, etc.

George Washington At Bartram’s Garden. Painting by Jean Leon Gerome Ferris

Every one who has called and left a card at a Wednesday reception is entitled to two acknowledgments of the call. The first must be a returning of the call by the ladies of the family, who at the same time leave the official card of the minister. The second acknowledgment of the call is an invitation to an evening reception.

The visiting-list of the family of a Cabinet minister cannot contain less than two or three thousand names. Cabinet officers are also expected to entertain at dinners Senators, Representatives, justices of the Supreme Court, the diplomatic corps, and many other public officers, with the ladies of their families.

The season proper for receptions is from the first of January to the beginning of Lent. The season for dinners lasts until the adjournment of Congress.

The President is not expected to offer refreshments to the crowds who attend his receptions. The Vice-president and Speaker of the House are also freed from the expense of feeding the hungry public.

Sarah Livingston Jay married to John Jay in 1774. She was the fifth daughter of William Livingston, the War Governor of New Jersey.

Social Duties Of Congressmen And Their Families

It is optional with Senators and Representatives, as with all officers except the President and members of the Cabinet, whether they shall “entertain.” There is a vast expense in all this, but that is not all. The labor and fatigue which society imposes upon the ladies of the family of a Cabinet officer are fairly appalling. To stand for hours during receptions at her own house, to stand at a series of entertainments at the houses of others whose invitations courtesy requires should be accepted, and to return in person all the calls made upon her, are a few of the duties of the wife of a high official. It is doubtful if her husband, with the cares of state, leads so really laborious a life.

In Washington society one end of a card turned down denotes a call in person.

 

From “The Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Etiquette, A Complete Manual of the Manners and Dress of American Society” by E. B. Duffey ~ 1877

Taken from Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia by Maura J. Graber.

Short Stories on Honor, Chivalry, and the World of Nobility—no. 579

 

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by Plinio Correa de Oliveira

The reader might notice…an apparent contradiction among the pronouncements of the different popes who dealt with the trilogy Liberty, Equality, Fraternity.

A Sans-culotte, painted by Louis-Léopold Boilly.

This impression fades the more the reader bears in mind that, properly considered in themselves—and therefore in the light of Catholic principles—each of these words designates concepts worthy of approval. This is what some popes sought to stress.

As a rule, however, the thinkers and writers who laid the groundwork for the French Revolution, the men of action who contrived the tremendous sociopolitical commotion that shook France after 1789, and also the pamphleteers and demagogues who carried it to the streets, prompting so many injustices and such terrible crimes, did not understand these words in this light. Rather, they hurled themselves as one to the demolition of Religion, to the hatred of all legitimate authority, and to the furious denial of all inequalities, even when just and necessary.

Olympe de Gouges was the author of the Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen, which advocated such things as divorce.

To praise the trilogy Liberty, Equality, Fraternity in itself does not imply approval of the radical and absurd errors that the revolutionaries, as a group, inferred therein. The full meaning of these errors was revealed in the final and extreme thrust of the French Revolution: the communist insurrection of Babeuf.* This insurrection showed the extent to which the 1789 Revolution bore the seeds of communism—synthesis of religious, philosophical, political, social, and economic errors—that caused the unspeakable moral and material misfortunes confronting Eastern European people today.

One of the most successful ruses of the French Revolution consisted in sowing confusion among many simple and unsuspecting people by labeling a monstrous mass of doctrinal errors and criminal events with honest and even commendable words. Many such people were led to think that at root the doctrines of the French Revolution were good even though most of its events were severely reprehensible. Others understood that the principles which produced such events could not be less censurable than the results, and therefore deduced that the trilogy preached as the synthesis of these perverse principles deserved the same rejection.

Although it is slowly being dispelled, this harmful confusion persists.

Some popes, addressing a public that included many such-minded people, strove to correct unilateral and overly severe opinions regarding this astutely manipulated trilogy. Other popes endeavored to prevent the intrinsic innocuousness of the trilogy’s terms from leading people to overlook the French Revolution’s essential perversity, which traversed the last century and most of our own using the labels of socialism and communism, and which, in its most genuine content, is now agonizing in Eastern Europe. Or, to put it better, it is undergoing a metamorphosis, searching for new words, new formulas, new wiles to attain its goals, which are radically atheistic when not pantheistic and, at any rate, absolutely and universally egalitarian.

 

The apostate priest and communist leader François-Noël Babeuf (1760–1797)

* François Noël Babeuf (1760-1797). This French revolutionary led the “Conspiracy of the Equals,” which was active in the winter of 1795-1796 and constituted “the first attempt to realize communism.” His “Plebeian Manifesto” advocated community of goods and duties. It was “the first form of the revolutionary ideology of the new society born of the Revolution itself. Communism, until then a utopian dream, became with Babeufism an ideological system; through the Conspiracy of the Equals it entered political history” (Albert Aoboul, La Revolution Française [Paris: Gallimard, 1962], Vol. 2, pp.216, 219).

Regarding the role played by Babeuf in the continuity of the revolutionary spirit, Marx wrote in a work he blasphemously titled The Holy Family: “The revolutionary movement that began in 1789 in the social circle—which during its evolution had as its principal representatives Leclerc and Roux and which temporarily collapsed with Babeuf’s conspiracy—was already spreading the communist idea that Babeuf’s friend Buonarroti would reintroduce into France after the revolution of 1830. This idea, developed in all its consequences, marks the beginning of the modern world” (quoted in François Furet, Dictionnaire Critique de la Revolution Française [Paris: Flammarion, 1988], p. 199).

The Directory opposed Babeuf’s movement. He was imprisoned and executed in 1797.

 

Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira, Nobility and Analogous Traditional Elites in the Allocutions of Pius XII: A Theme Illuminating American Social History (York, Penn.: The American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family, and Property, 1993), Appendix III, pp. 388-389.

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Pierre Gaxotte

Pierre Gaxotte

In his classic work on the French Revolution, Pierre Gaxotte shows the abysmal difference that exists between the respect shows by the Ancien Regime for the legitimate liberties of the individual and the family and the strong inclination of the modern State to meddle in the intimate lives of its citizens, a tendency which appeared with the advent of liberalism.

Before the nineteenth century, men lived freely in the intimacy of their homes and family circles; a man was investigated only if he was seriously suspected of committing a crime, professing a heresy, or fomenting a conspiracy. A citizen of the liberal State, however, is always treated as a suspect, even before doing something dangerous.

French Revolution

He is measured, weighed, and cataloged by the agents of the State. File cards are kept on him by the most different agencies, as personal data on him and his family are filed, compared, and cross-examined. The State wants to know what his ideas and habits are, how much he earns and where he invests his money, whether he has a car or owns real estate, and so on.

Having written his book a few decades ago, Pierre Gaxotte could not cover the most sophisticated devices for investigating people’s private lives. Such devices now permit not only the State but just about any person or organization to record what people discuss with their friends and relatives; whether it be on the telephone, in their offices, or in their bedrooms.

A microphone masquerading as a smoke detector.

A microphone masquerading as a smoke detector.

Gaxotte referred only to the liberal State. But out of liberalism came its offspring, the totalitarian State. Whether it be of the fascist or communist variety, totalitarianism always has the goal of implanting socialism. Since socialism is contrary to human nature, it makes its habitat only in an atmosphere of police oppression, in which the needs of the individual and the family are sacrificed in behalf of the interests of the Party.

In countries where totalitarian regimes were not installed, the consequences of the French Revolution led to the implantation, to a greater or lesser degree, of societies having a totalitarian tendency, a set of conditions either imposed by a Messianic party or determined by the idolatry of technology.

Storming of the Bastile

Storming of the Bastile

When technology replaces morality and society “emancipates” itself from the maternal tutelage of the Church, there is a withering of legitimate individual and family freedoms. Whether it is imposed by the State of by technology, totalitarian society is the stepmother of the “emancipated” man of the twentieth century.

Mental Pollution

Idolatry of technology has made life unbearable for men. In the 50’s and 60’s, TFP leaders wrote a number of articles characterizing what people are presently calling environmental pollution. Now it has become a fad to talk against smoke, noise of motors, devastation of forests, and congested traffic.

A 1952 Ad of the False Face of Communism in the Saturday Evening Post Magazine.

A 1952 Ad of the False Face of Communism in the Saturday Evening Post Magazine.

In Lenin and Stalin’s time, international Communism promoted the development of super workmen to function more or less as robots serving the dictatorship of the proletariat. Now Communism preaches against the environmental pollution caused by the industry when this helps to explain the economic decadence of the socialist countries or to weaken the economic and military strength of the West.

Environmental pollution is obviously an evil, but we must keep a sharp eye on those who are fighting against it. Above all, it is necessary to struggle against another, much more pernicious pollution, one that the leftist intelligentsia hardly mentions if at all. We refer to the mental and moral pollution created by a mass media that wants to form people’s thoughts and habits and to break down their families by aggressive provocations to immorality, as well as that produced by the continuous barrage of advertising and propaganda and by the modern art that is deforming people’s mentalities.

A 2005 Banner at the 18th Congress of Communist Party of India (Marxist). Photo by Soman.

A 2005 Banner at the 18th Congress of Communist Party of India (Marxist). Photo by Soman.

In the midst of this noisy traffic assaulting the mind, who can find the calm to think about the pell-mell of events with discernment? Isn’t it true that contemporary man feels dazed under the daily load of disconcerting and illogical reports on international affairs?

The "Insectothopter", an micro unmanned aerial vehicle developed by the CIA for espionage purposes in the 1970s.

The “Insectothopter”, an micro unmanned aerial vehicle developed by the CIA for espionage purposes in the 1970s.

Consider just one of the thousand frauds imposed on people every day: for many years now, the media have painted any anti-communist government as dictatorial and corrupt. Why is so little said about the crimes of communist governments such as those of Russia, China, Cuba, Yugoslavia, and so on? Why is there such an outcry for free elections in every part of the non-communist world but no uproar demanding free elections in the communist countries?

The Technological “All Seeing Eye”

Separated from morality, technology makes life intolerable for man even in what was formerly his most intimate privacy. Today, recorders and listening devices have become so developed that no one can be certain that his conversation is not being monitored.

A 2013 photo by Dator66 taken in Kungsgatanm, Stockholm showing a warning sign on the left about the presence of surveillance cameras which are suspended above the streets. There are four cameras; one of each side of the street.

It has always been relatively easy to intercept telephone communications. But now the science of bugging telephones has reached the point where conversations on a multiple wire cable can be picked by electronic means and recorded without any physical contact with the wire. Private conversations can be monitored from a distance even through walls of solidly constructed houses. Pages of a confidential report being typed by a secretary can easily be photographed from another building over 100 yards away. Our technology in this field is so advanced that the Soviet Chamber of Commerce invited several American companies to Russia to exhibit their most modern anti-crime technology, such as machines that identify people by their voices, lie detectors, etc. No doubt the KGB will find many uses for these machines…

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So then, the unlimited liberty that was promised as a pretext for overthrowing the Ancien Regime and “emancipating” society from the tutelage of the Church has proven to be a baseless chimera. Never has the human race has a tyranny so oppressive and detailed as that imposed in the name of liberty by the French Revolution.

 

(Crusade for a Christian Civilization #3, 1980, Page 23 & 24)

 

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