Sinn Fein Celebrate Westminster's Abortion Edict

Westminster's allies Sinn Fein have today celebrated the imposition of abortion on Irish babies aa decreed by Westminster.

Despite carrying banners in recent years that stated ‘England Get Out of Ireland’, Sinn Fein's leaders Mary Lou McDonald and Michelle O'Neill are now avid supporters of London's rule in the North.

In recent years the party have become increasingly anti Catholic, even picketing a Catholic church in an Orange Order style event last month, using ‘homophobia’ as an excuse, despite later appearing at a major Islamic festival at Archbishop Croke Park.

Michelle O'Neill has referred to these new ‘services’ as ‘compassionate’ and has presented them as a victory against the DUP.

One can only wonder what level of idiocy it takes to think that allowing London to kill your own people's babies is a victory for either Irish people, Republicanism or for compassion.

Today is a victory for London. Sinn Fein and Michelle O'Neill are now de facto Unionists and so is anyone who votes for them at the ballot box. After decades of fears that Catholics would ‘outbreed’ Protestants, that reality is no longer a threat.

All of this has been allowed to happen under ‘Catholic' Prime Minister Boris Johnson with not a whisper of opposition from ‘Trad' Jacob Rees Mogg.

Archbishop Fisher And Others To Keep Latin Mass

Pope Francis's Motu Proprio Traditione Custodianes has been, by any objective measure, something of a disaster.

It has been criticised for being poorly written, it has been criticised for being divisive while claiming to be unifying, it has been criticised for claiming to have consulted bishops, while most of them have now claimed that they will essentially ignore it, citing the surprise of the news as a reason.

Almost a week has passed since the document was released, with the Vatican making no follow up statements to repair the damage done. This has been a complete PR disaster, yet no one in the Vatican seems to be aware, or at the least to care.

A growing chorus of high profile prelates are now rejecting what was essentially a call to suppress the Traditional Latin Mass. We could give the document the benefit of the doubt and state that it simply meant to afford the bishops more involvement with the decision to allow the TLM in their area, but the tone of the document suggests no such benignity.

In the United States, high profile prelates such as Cardinal Chaput have said they will be allowing Traditional Latin Mass communities to continue as normal. Even prelates in Germany have announced that they will be continuing as normal.

One of the most interesting replies has been from Archbishop of Sydney Anthony Fisher OP, who warned that to use the liturgy as a ‘weapon’ would ‘factionalist’ the church. He pointed out that there was a reference to the glib celebrations of the Novus Ordo in Traditione Custodianes, but only ‘in passing’.

Like any good Dominican, he explains the situation from a rational beginning, by pointing out that there are ‘24 Catholic Churches in full Communion with the Pope and with each other. 23 Eastern and One Western (Latin)’. Archbishop Fisher then explains the liturgical variety in each, stating: ‘Each has its particular liturgical rites, customs and spiritual traditions, and there are also varieties within each tradition. So, while we share one faith, we are a very ritually diverse Church! That is part of our richness’.

He then explains how with the Latin Rite, there are still countless diverse elements, the Dominican Rite being one, he writes ‘While we share one rite, Western Catholics are also ritually diverse’.

With more and more bishops expressing an appreciation for the Latin Mass in their dioceses, it may soon become the case that this Motu Proprio has strengthened rather than weakened the availability of the TLM and the fondness for it.

You can read the full text of Archbishop Fisher’s letter below:

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Far Left's Euthanasia Bill Stalls Because of 'Serious Flaws'

Since last year, the ironically named ‘Dying with Dignity’ Bill has been heavily promoted by the Irish Far Left and their ever obliging supporters in the Irish media (much of which is actually British owned).

Although it has seemed quite bizarre that the party promoting the bill, People Before Profit, were also calling for the most severe lockdown restrictions in order to ‘save lives’, the strange timing of a bill that would encourage higher and quicker deaths of elderly and disabled rarely received criticism from the Irish media, apart from those printed in their Letters sections.

What mostly received criticism in those instances was the poor wording of the bill. Put together by Gino Kenny, the bill seemed to completely lack any necessary safeguards towards stopping abuse of its system, it lacked all awareness of the potential for the right to die becoming the duty to die in a country with serious healthcare problems.

This was outlined repeatedly by Dr. Kevin Hay’s articles in Catholic Arena.

Hard Cases Make Bad Law — Catholic Arena

A Detailed Analysis of Ireland's Dying with Dignity Bill — Catholic Arena

Now, Gino Kenny is claiming that the current bill will make little to no further progress. He has tweeted:

It’s becoming evident that the Justice Committee will not be recommending the progress of the Dying with Dignity. This is a complete prevarication of the issue and the bill. There was no policy scrutiny just a legal opinion which could have been overcome. A shambolic process.

One of his supporters replied:

We're still under the thumb of the Church in Ireland. They will never relent.

The recent slew of ‘progressive’ bills in Ireland meant that People Before Profit may have expected this to progress in an easier manner than it did.

Despite Kenny’s claims that it would not progress, it will go to a Special Oireachtas Committee, as announced today. In recommending the Special Oireachtas Committee, the Joint Committee on Justice Report pointed out that the bill has many flaws, which they have given as reason for it not progress to the Committee Stage.

Following detailed scrutiny of the Dying with Dignity Bill 2020, the Joint Committee on Justice has recommended that an Oireachtas Special Committee be established to undertake an examination on the topic of assisted dying which should report within a specific timeframe.

The Dying with Dignity Bill 2020 is a Private Member’s Bill from Deputy Gino Kenny that seeks to allow for the provision of assisted dying to qualifying persons – those suffering from a terminal illness – with the aim of allowing them to achieve a dignified and peaceful end of life. If enacted, this Bill would give a medical practitioner the legal right to provide assistance to a qualifying person to end their life, according to the terms of this Act.

While conducting Pre-Committee scrutiny for this Bill, the Committee sought public submissions on the topic and over 1,400 submissions were received by the deadline in January 2021. These submissions fall under broad categories relating to legal, medical, personal, academic, faith-based and end-of-life or rights-based perspectives on the provisions contained within the Bill.

The Bill was also sent to the Office of the Parliamentary Legal Advisers (OPLA) to ascertain the legal and constitutional implications of such proposed legislation. An analysis of both these submissions and the OPLA analysis forms the basis of the Committee’s Report on Scrutiny of the Dying with Dignity Bill 2020.

Committee Cathaoirleach James Lawless TD said: “The Committee, in considering the matter, recognised that its function is to legislate, however, this comes with particular responsibilities and care must be taken when recommending the progression of legislative proposals. On foot of its deliberations, the Committee has made a number of observations and an overall recommendation, which can be found at the end of this report.

“Based on its consideration, the Committee has determined that the Bill has serious technical issues in several sections, that it may have unintended policy consequences – particularly regarding the lack of sufficient safeguards to protect against undue pressure being put on vulnerable people to avail of assisted dying – that the drafting of several sections of the Bill contain serious flaws that could potentially render them vulnerable to challenge before the courts, and that the gravity of such a topic as assisted dying warrants a more thorough examination which could potentially benefit from detailed consideration by a Special Oireachtas Committee.  

“Therefore, it reluctantly decided that the Bill should not progress to Committee Stage but that a Special Oireachtas Committee should be established, at the earliest convenience, to progress the matter.  In addition, all submissions received by the Justice Committee would be shared with any such Committee.”

Deputy Lawless added: “I would like to commend Deputy Kenny for his dedication in proposing and advocating for the progression of this legislation and for opening up a conversation which needs to be had. I would also like to express my gratitude on behalf of the Committee to all those who sent in written submissions and to the OPLA for their insight into this important Bill.”

The ‘Faith Based’ arguments that were given in submission were summarised as thus:

Individuals, groups, and organisations who sent submissions to the Committee on a religious basis accounted for approximately 435 submissions and all of these submissions fundamentally opposed this Bill on religious grounds, while also highlighting several other reasons for their opposition. Many of the submissions made on a personal religious basis used the same template to express their opposition to the Bill, which highlighted five key reasons to oppose assisted dying. Firstly, many of the submissions felt that assisted dying was always morally wrong and they equated assisted dying with murder, highlighting that it would breach the fifth Commandment of God, which proclaims ‘Thou shalt not kill’. They believe that human beings have been created in the image of God and that it is God who gives life, therefore the end of life should be entirely in God’s hands. As stated previously, many of the submissions based on religious beliefs expressed their displeasure with assisted dying and with the previous legalisation of abortion in 2018, drawing comparisons between the two and arguing both of these essentially allow for vulnerable individuals to be killed. They argued that Irish society is still nominally Christian and needs to reflect on itself and on its core values. Secondly, these submissions believed in the sanctity of life or that all lives have value, and repeated previous arguments that introducing assisted dying would further devalue human life. Thirdly, they argued that we have a duty to protect the vulnerable in society, who would face increasing pressure to avail of assisted dying if it were introduced. Some submissions even argued that allowing assisted dying would alter society’s attitudes towards the elderly and vulnerable and create a culture where these groups are not valued and they may begin to think that ‘they’re better off dead’. Finally, they also believe that assisted dying would be a step back for genuine healthcare and that it is unnecessary as palliative care is a sufficient method of assisting those who are terminally ill. These submissions highlighted research by the Irish Palliative Medicine Consultants’ Association (IPMCA) which had demonstrated that palliative care experts and other members of the medical profession were themselves strongly opposed to the introduction of assisted dying. A survey undertaken by the IMPCA in 2020 found that 88% of palliative medicine doctors are opposed to assisted suicide. This sentiment was also REPORT ON SCRUTINY OF THE DYING WITH DIGNITY BILL 2020 [PMB] Page 25 of 47 expressed by several palliative care professionals in their submissions in the medical section. Submissions questioned the rationale and fairness behind proposals to introduce assisted dying if those who were expected to undertake this task were themselves strongly opposed to it. One submission argued that despite the stated intention of the Bill to be motivated by compassion for the terminally ill, their understand having compassion to mean “suffering with” someone and that assisted dying reflects a failure of compassion on the part of society to respond to the challenges of caring for patients at the end of their lives. In addition to these five points, submissions in this category were also submitted from individuals in Northern Ireland who were concerned at the effect of the legislation on Northern Ireland and the prospect of ‘Euthanasia tourism’ where people from Northern Ireland could cross the border to avail of assisted dying. Finally, other submissions mentioned points previously highlighted in other categories which include the ‘slippery slope’ argument and the risk that assisted dying would be viewed as a cheaper option for insurance companies than conventional treatments for patients.

You can read the full report here: 2021-07-21_report-on-scrutiny-of-the-dying-with-dignity-bill-2020-pmb_en.pdf (oireachtas.ie)

Irish Government Confirms No Ban on Prolife Vigils

Despite a sustained campaign by left wing politicians and their supporters in the Irish media, the Irish government have declined to ban prolife vigils near abortuaries at this time.

Former prolifer Stephen Donnelly, now Minister for Health, was asked by Holly Cairns about the status of legislation on the ‘safe access to the Termination of Pregnancy Bill’ this past week in the Dail.

Cairns is infamous for once tweeting that she would get at an abortion for every minute of air time devoted to the papal conclave.

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Abortion had only been legalised for over a year when the lockdown crisis began, putting a dent in a growing prolife movement in Ireland.

For this reason, Stephen Donnelly responded:

nsuring access to termination of pregnancy services remains an ongoing priority for the Department of Health.  

It was originally intended to provide for safe access to termination of pregnancy services in the Health (Regulation of Termination of Pregnancy) Act 2018. However, a number of legal issues were identified which necessitated further consideration.  

Since services under the Health (Regulation of Termination of Pregnancy) Act 2018 commenced in January 2019, there has been a limited number of reports of protests or other actions relating to termination of pregnancy.  This is an extremely positive development. It suggests that these services have bedded in relatively smoothly to date and are becoming a normal part of the Irish healthcare system, as intended.   

Where problems do arise with protests outside healthcare services, there is existing public order legislation in place to protect people accessing services, staff and local residents.  

The Department of Health has liaised with An Garda Síochána on safe access to services. The Garda National Protective Services Bureau issued a notice to all Garda Stations raising awareness about the issue. It directed that any protests be monitored, and breaches of existing law dealt with. The Department has provided information on existing public order and other relevant legislation to the HSE for appropriate distribution.    

Termination of pregnancy services have continued to function during the COVID-19 pandemic. There is regular ongoing engagement between my Department and the HSE to facilitate the smooth-running of the service and to resolve any issues that may arise. 

There are prolife vigils still taking place quietly in a number of locations, many of which have had successes.

For the most part however, the location of abortuaries in Maternity Hospitals and Family GPs has been a clever means of ensuring that abortion protests are more difficult to carry out than at made for purpose abortion centers as in other countries.

The prolife movement in Ireland is still trying to find a clearer identity post 2018, we encourage people to get behind any prolife work or to initiate their own if none is readily available. The important thing is to start moving forward, with new ideas and a genuine belief that abortion can be removed from Irish society once again.

A recent story from the UK highlighted the importance of prolife witness near abortion clinics, despite the taunts of so called ‘secular’ prolifers who spend more time criticising the Catholic prolife movement than they do criticising abortion.

Catholic Prolife Vigil Leads to Abortion Clinic Closure — Catholic Arena

Seosamh O’Caoimh

Costa Rica BANS the Latin Mass

Despite having rapidly declining numbers of faithful, with many defecting to Evangelical churches instead, the Episcopal Conference of Costa Rica has made the shocking dictatorial decision to outright BAN the Traditional Latin Mass within their country. Seminarians are not allowed to learn it, priests are not allowed to say it.

Some of the important parts of the document:

‘‘There is no objective justification for the use among us of the liturgy prior to the 1970 reform."

"Those who express affinity for ancient forms do not always express their appreciation of the "validity and legitimacy of the liturgical reform, of the dictates of the Second Vatican Council and of the Magisterium of the Holy Pontiffs’’.

"With sometimes discreet statements or directly offensive comments they question the "sanctity of the new rite" (Summorum Pontificum). They do not seek the synergy that would give theological-pastoral validity to their ritual preferences,’’.

"Since the previous rules, instructions, concessions and customs have been "abrogated", the use of the Missale Romanum of 1962 or any other of the expressions of the pre-1970 liturgy is not authorized from now on. No priest is authorized to continue celebrating according to the ancient liturgy."

"According to these provisions, "the seminarians shall be educated and the new priests." Their formation should be clearly aimed at the appreciation and practice of the liturgy re-christianized by the Second Vatican Council, which is "the only expression of the lex orandi of the Roman Rite’’.

"In addition, the Episcopal Conference of Costa Rica joins the pain and reprobation that were once expressed by Benedict XVI and are now replicated by Pope Francis: it is necessary to celebrate according to the indications given by the different liturgical books, so that the sacred and cultural character is maintained, the absence of which some rightly claim. It is clear that the liturgy reformed by the Second Vatican Council has all the conditions to uplift the human being and strengthen his spiritual life, while responding in a balanced way to the authentic anthropological and cultural needs of the praying man of our times. It is only necessary an adequate application of the norms, orientations and possibilities that give the liturgical books".

"In particular, today we must remember that our liturgy, celebrated according to the books promulgated by Saints Paul VI and John Paul II, must be preserved from any element from the ancient forms. Prayers, vestments or rites that were typical of the liturgy prior to the 1970 reformation should not be introduced into our celebrations’’.

Although many expect the Motu Proprio to be mostly ignored by bishops across the world, there will be a select few dioceses who will use it to spitefully hurt and bully Traditionalists, or in this case, an entire country.

Translation: Costa Rican Bishops Ban Traditional Mass Throughout The Country (infovaticana.com)

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Pope John XXIII on how Latin must be given a 'Primary Place'

The following encyclical from 1962 is a reminder that Pope John XXIII greatly valued Latin and wanted it to retain its importance in the life of the church.

On the Promotion of the Study of Latin

Apostolic Constitution

The wisdom of the ancient world, enshrined in Greek and Roman literature, and the truly memorable teaching of ancient peoples, served, surely, to herald the dawn of the Gospel which Gods Son, “the judge and teacher of grace and truth, the light and guide of the human race,” proclaimed on Earth.

Such was the view of the Church Fathers and Doctors. In these outstanding literary monuments of antiquity, they recognized man’s spiritual preparation for the supernatural riches which Jesus Christ communicated to mankind “to give history its fulfillment.”

Thus the inauguration of Christianity did not mean the obliteration of man’s past achievements. Nothing was lost that was in any way true, just, noble and beautiful.

Venerable languages

The Church has ever held the literary evidences of this wisdom in the highest esteem. She values especially the Greek and Latin languages in which wisdom itself is cloaked, as it were, in a vesture of gold. She has likewise welcomed the use of other venerable languages, which flourished in the East. For these too have had no little influence on the progress of humanity and civilization. By their use in sacred liturgies and in versions of Holy Scripture, they have remained in force in certain regions even to the present day, bearing constant witness to the living voice of antiquity.

A primary place

But amid this variety of languages a primary place must surely be given to that language which had its origins in Latium, and later proved so admirable a means for the spreading of Christianity throughout the West.

And since in God’s special Providence this language united so many nations together under the authority of the Roman Empire — and that for so many centuries — it also became the rightful language of the Apostolic See. Preserved for posterity, it proved to be a bond of unity for the Christian peoples of Europe.

The nature of Latin

Of its very nature Latin is most suitable for promoting every form of culture among peoples. It gives rise to no jealousies. It does not favor any one nation, but presents itself with equal impartiality to all and is equally acceptable to all.

Nor must we overlook the characteristic nobility of Latin for mal structure. Its “concise, varied and harmonious style, full of majesty and dignity” makes for singular clarity and impressiveness of expression.

Preservation of Latin by the Holy See

For these reasons the Apostolic See has always been at pains to preserve Latin, deeming it worthy of being used in the exercise of her teaching authority “as the splendid vesture of her heavenly doctrine and sacred laws.”5 She further requires her sacred ministers to use it, for by so doing they are the better able, wherever they may be, to acquaint themselves with the mind of the Holy See on any matter, and communicate the more easily with Rome and with one another.

Thus the “knowledge and use of this language,” so intimately bound up with the Church’s life, “is important not so much on cultural or literary grounds, as for religious reasons.” These are the words of Our Predecessor Pius XI, who conducted a scientific inquiry into this whole subject, and indicated three qualities of the Latin language which harmonize to a remarkable degree with the Church’s nature. “For the Church, precisely because it embraces all nations and is destined to endure to the end of time … of its very nature requires a language which is universal, immutable, and non-vernacular.”

Universal

Since “every Church must assemble round the Roman Church,” and since the Supreme Pontiffs have “true episcopal power, ordinary and immediate, over each and every Church and each and every Pastor, as well as over the faithful” of every rite and language, it seems particularly desirable that the instrument of mutual communication be uniform and universal, especially between the Apostolic See and the Churches which use the same Latin rite.

When, therefore, the Roman Pontiffs wish to instruct the Catholic world, or when the Congregations of the Roman Curia handle matters or draw up decrees which concern the whole body of the faithful, they invariably make use of Latin, for this is a maternal voice acceptable to countless nations.

Immutable

Furthermore, the Church’s language must be not only universal but also immutable. Modern languages are liable to change, and no single one of them is superior to the others in authority. Thus if the truths of the Catholic Church were entrusted to an unspecified number of them, the meaning of these truths, varied as they are, would not be manifested to everyone with sufficient clarity and precision. There would, moreover, be no language which could serve as a common and constant norm by which to gauge the exact meaning of other renderings.

But Latin is indeed such a language. It is set and unchanging. it has long since ceased to be affected by those alterations in the meaning of words which are the normal result of daily, popular use. Certain Latin words, it is true, acquired new meanings as Christian teaching developed and needed to be explained and defended, but these new meanings have long since become accepted and firmly established.

Non-vernacular

Finally, the Catholic Church has a dignity far surpassing that of every merely human society, for it was founded by Christ the Lord. It is altogether fitting, therefore, that the language it uses should be noble, majestic, and non-vernacular.

In addition, the Latin language “can be called truly catholic.”

 It has been consecrated through constant use by the Apostolic See, the mother and teacher of all Churches, and must be esteemed “a treasure … of incomparable worth.”

It is a general passport to the proper understanding of the Christian writers of antiquity and the documents of the Church’s teaching. It is also a most effective bond, binding the Church of today with that of the past and of the future in wonderful continuity.

Educational value of Latin

There can be no doubt as to the formative and educational value either of the language of the Romans or of great literature generally. It is a most effective training for the pliant minds of youth. It exercises, matures and perfects the principal faculties of mind and spirit. It sharpens the wits and gives keenness of judgment. It helps the young mind to grasp things accurately and develop a true sense of values. It is also a means for teaching highly intelligent thought and speech.

A natural result

It will be quite clear from these considerations why the Roman Pontiffs have so often extolled the excellence and importance of Latin, and why they have prescribed its study and use by the secular and regular clergy, forecasting the dangers that would result from its neglect.

A resolve to uphold Latin

And We also, impelled by the weightiest of reasons — the same as those which prompted Our Predecessors and provincial synods  — are fully determined to restore this language to its position of honor, and to do all We can to promote its study and use. The employment of Latin has recently been contested in many quarters, and many are asking what the mind of the Apostolic See is in this matter. We have therefore decided to issue the timely directives contained in this document, so as to ensure that the ancient and uninterrupted use of Latin be maintained and, where necessary, restored.

We believe that We made Our own views on this subject sufficiently clear when We said to a number of eminent Latin scholars:

“It is a matter of regret that so many people, unaccountably dazzled by the marvelous progress of science, are taking it upon themselves to oust or restrict the study of Latin and other kindred subjects…. Yet, in spite of the urgent need for science, Our own view is that the very contrary policy should be followed. The greatest impression is made on the mind by those things which correspond more closely to man’s nature and dignity. And therefore the greatest zeal should be shown in the acquisition of whatever educates and ennobles the mind. Otherwise poor mortal creatures may well become like the machines they build — cold, hard, and devoid of love.”

Provisions for the Promotion of Latin Studies

With the foregoing considerations in mind, to which We have given careful thought, We now, in the full consciousness of Our Office and in virtue of Our authority, decree and command the following:

Responsibility for enforcement

  1. Bishops and superiors-general of religious orders shall take pains to ensure that in their seminaries and in their schools where adolescents are trained for the priesthood, all shall studiously observe the Apostolic See’s decision in this matter and obey these Our prescriptions most carefully.

  2. In the exercise of their paternal care they shall be on their guard lest anyone under their jurisdiction, eager for revolutionary changes, writes against the use of Latin in the teaching of the higher sacred studies or in the Liturgy, or through prejudice makes light of the Holy See’s will in this regard or interprets it falsely.

Study of Latin as a prerequisite

  1. As is laid down in Canon Law (can. 1364) or commanded by Our Predecessors, before Church students begin their ecclesiastical studies proper they shall be given a sufficiently lengthy course of instruction in Latin by highly competent masters, following a method designed to teach them the language with the utmost accuracy. “And that too for this reason: lest later on, when they begin their major studies . . . they are unable by reason of their ignorance of the language to gain a full understanding of the doctrines or take part in those scholastic disputations which constitute so excellent an intellectual training for young men in the defense of the faith.”

We wish the same rule to apply to those whom God calls to the priesthood at a more advanced age, and whose classical studies have either been neglected or conducted too superficially. No one is to be admitted to the study of philosophy or theology except he be thoroughly grounded in this language and capable of using it.

Traditional curriculum to be restored

  1. Wherever the study of Latin has suffered partial eclipse through the assimilation of the academic program to that which obtains in State public schools, with the result that the instruction given is no longer so thorough and well-grounded as formerly, there the traditional method of teaching this language shall be completely restored. Such is Our will, and there should be no doubt in anyone’s mind about the necessity of keeping a strict watch over the course of studies followed by Church students; and that not only as regards the number and kinds of subjects they study, but also as regards the length of time devoted to the teaching of these subjects.

Should circumstances of time and place demand the addition of other subjects to the curriculum besides the usual ones, then either the course of studies must be lengthened, or these additional subjects must be condensed or their study relegated to another time.

Sacred sciences to be taught in Latin

  1. In accordance with numerous previous instructions, the major sacred sciences shall be taught in Latin, which, as we know from many centuries of use, “must be considered most suitable for explaining with the utmost facility and clarity the most difficult and profound ideas and concepts.” For apart from the fact that it has long since been enriched with a vocabulary of appropriate and unequivocal terms, best calculated to safeguard the integrity of the Catholic faith, it also serves in no slight measure to prune away useless verbiage.

Hence professors of these sciences in universities or seminaries are required to speak Latin and to make use of textbooks written in Latin. If ignorance of Latin makes it difficult for some to obey these instructions, they shall gradually be replaced by professors who are suited to this task. Any difficulties that may be advanced by students or professors must be overcome by the patient insistence of the bishops or religious superiors, and the good will of the professors.

A Latin Academy

  1. Since Latin is the Church’s living language, it must be adequate to daily increasing linguistic requirements. It must be furnished with new words that are apt and suitable for expressing modern things, words that will be uniform and universal in their application. and constructed in conformity with the genius of the ancient Latin tongue. Such was the method followed by the sacred Fathers and the best writers among the scholastics.

To this end, therefore, We commission the Sacred Congregation of Seminaries and Universities to set up a Latin Academy staffed by an international body of Latin and Greek professors. The principal aim of this Academy — like the national academies founded to promote their respective languages — will be to superintend the proper development of Latin, augmenting the Latin lexicon where necessary with words which conform to the particular character and color of the language.

It will also conduct schools for the study of Latin of every era, particularly the Christian one. The aim of these schools will be to impart a fuller understanding of Latin and the ability to use it and to write it with proper elegance. They will exist for those who are destined to teach Latin in seminaries and ecclesiastical colleges, or to write decrees and judgments or conduct correspondence in the ministries of the Holy See, diocesan curias, and the offices of religious orders.

The teaching of Greek

  1. Latin is closely allied to Greek both in formal structure and in the importance of its extant writings. Hence — as Our Predecessors have frequently ordained — future ministers of the altar must be instructed in Greek in the lower and middle schools. Thus when they come to study the higher sciences — and especially if they are aiming for a degree in Sacred Scripture or theology — they will be enabled to follow the Greek sources of scholastic philosophy and understand them correctly; and not only these, but also the original texts of Sacred Scripture, the Liturgy, and the sacred Fathers.

A syllabus for the teaching of Latin

  1. We further commission the Sacred Congregation of Seminaries and Universities to prepare a syllabus for the teaching of Latin which all shall faithfully observe. The syllabus will be designed to give those who follow it an adequate understanding of the language and its use. Episcopal boards may indeed rearrange this syllabus if circumstances warrant, but they must never curtail it or alter its nature. Ordinaries may not take it upon themselves to put their own proposals into effect until these have been examined and approved by the Sacred Congregation.

Finally, in virtue of Our apostolic authority, We will and command that all the decisions, decrees, proclamations and recommendations of this Our Constitution remain firmly established and ratified, notwithstanding anything to the contrary, however worthy of special note.

Given at Rome, at Saint Peter’s, on the feast of Saint Peter’s Throne on the 22nd day of February in the year 1962, the fourth of Our pontificate.

Westminster Ally Criticises Islamophobia...Despite Party Picketing Catholic Church

Anyone who knows about Sinn Fein, knows that the one consistent thing about them, is that they are inconsistent on every single issue.

They are the ‘opposition’, who boast of their willingness to do whatever the government asks of them.

They hold banners saying ‘Get England out of Ireland’, while cackling for joy as they invite English abortion companies to abort Irish babies. They also complain of ‘sectarianism’ against Catholics in the North, while themselves picketing Catholic churches in the South for refusing to hang ‘Pride’ flags outside churches.

Better yet, they picket Catholic churches for ‘homophobia’, yet stand alongside a religion known for putting homosexuals to death by stoning.

Mary Lou McDonald, who runs for election in working class North Dublin despite receiving a private education in elitist South Dublin, appeared at the annual Festival of Sacrifice at Archbishop Croke Park today. Archbishop Croke Park has long been the home of the Gaelic Athletic Association and its preservation of Irish culture, in recent years however it has become mostly a commercial enterprise, entertaining rugby, soccer and even the Queen of England as well as concerts from Taylor Swift and others. The Festival of Sacrifice was held ‘temporarily’ in Archbishop Croke Park, this year and last year, but we expect, as happened in other countries, that this ‘temporary’ move will become permanent.

McDonald’s presence is particularly galling as only a number of weeks ago, her party stood outside a Catholic church in Ballyfermot in Dublin, screaming abuse about the ‘fascist, racist’ organisation of the Catholic Church. The racism comment was quite bizarre considering that Sinn Fein were reacting to a Rosary Rally led by a person of colour a few days earlier, but no one ever said that anything Sinn Fein do or say is ever intended to make any sense. Another wonderful contradiction was that one man in a Celtic top was videoed criticising the church and asking if the church opposed divorce, evidently unaware of the lives of either Brother Walfred or King Henry VIII.

Mary Lou spoke about the problem of ‘Islamophobia’, evidently, picketing people of the Catholic faith is a lesser crime to Sinn Fein, unless Protestants do it, but if they do do it it should be because of homophobia or something…again, no one said that Sinn Fein ever intended to make sense.

McDonald also took part in an anti Catholic protest a number of weeks ago alongside Fianna Fail’s candidate for Dublin Bay South, the event (get this) was designed to blame the church because the government wasn’t able to build a hospital by itself. No, seriously.

Nonetheless, she enjoyed herself today at Archbishop Croke Park (named after Archbishop Croke, one of many Catholic prelates who built the Gaelic Athletic Association in order to keep young men and women away from English and Protestant influence) and was praised by Amanaullah De Sondy for her words.

The GAA will no doubt enjoy the good press from today. They told Catholic Arena prior to the Ballyfermot picket that their club in Ballyfermot would not be attending, yet they did. The GAA never responded to our follow up email.

The group ‘Alliance of Former Muslims of Ireland’ criticised the event.

Ken Moore

Statues of St. Therese and Our Lady Destroyed by New York Thug

While terror attacks in Canada have been attracting headlines across the world, another epidemic of anti Catholic terrorism has been taking place slightly further south, in New York.

Over the past 12 months, we’ve reported on a number of attacks that have taken place in New York, stretching from Queens to the Bronx, with Catholic statues in particular a target for terrorists.

Now, another attack has taken place, this time with a statue of Our Lady and one of St. Therese of Lisieux being smashed to pieces at Our Lady of Mercy Church in Queens.

The terrorist appears to have arrived at the church three days earlier and thrown them to the ground, only to fail to smash them. This time, they returned and dragged the statues 180 feet before smashing them with a hammer.

The terrorist may have chosen the path of demonic anti Catholic bigotry, but the parishioners have taken the right path in putting a sign that says ‘Please pray for the person who did this’.

A video has been released of the disturbed individual carrying out the hate crime, an attack which has deeply upset Catholics in a parish that had those statues outside them since 1937.

It is not yet known if the terrorism is linked to media lies about ‘mass murders’ in Canada, but Catholics need to start calling out these attacks for what they are: terrorism.

Ken Moore

Desmond Fennell's Warning About Capitalism's Impact on Irish Catholicism

The following extract is taken from Desmond Fennell's 1962 essay ‘Will the Irish Stay Christian?’

You can read the full essay at the following link Will the Irish Stay Christian? | Lux Occulta (wordpress.com)

Fennell passed away today aged 92. Ar dheis Dé go raibh a anam.

Part of the current Catholic cant in Ireland is that the “Western world” from Sweden to Argentina, is somehow “good” and the Communist part of the world is “evil” — or at least that the former is “better” than the latter. “Communism” is seen as the main threat to the Christian Church or, in other words, to Christ among us. Now, if our clergy feel that they must talk to the faithful about Communism, it seems reasonable to request them to do some thinking about it. In practice communism means an arrangement of society which is more or less similar to the pagan Roman Empire. The One True God is denied, the State (Caesar) is deified and made the source of all moral authority. Caesar is the false god whom the Communists adore and we have Christ’s plain command: “Give unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s….” In other words, “Obey Caesar, but don’t adore him as God”. In no instance does Christ tell us to give anything to Mammon or to Ashtaroth. Surely only sluggish or interested thinking could allow us to overlook this very plain fact. The logic inherent in this differentiation of idols is obvious: Caesar (un-deified) is a legitimate part of the rational order: Mammon and Ashtaroth are intrinsically irrational. Caesar (un-deified) is necessary for the common good: deified Ego is the enemy of the common good. But many of the public statements of the Irish clergy could quite easily be understood as meaning that the faithful should prefer the followers of Mammon, Ashtaroth and Ego to the followers of Caesar. This could have dire consequences for many souls.

If the clergy feel compelled to preach against the distant atheism and practically to ignore (or to laud) the atheism surrounding us, then at least they might be requested, in the name of truth, reason and Christian doctrine, to make very clear what they are preaching against and why. Having told us that the Communist State is wrong to claim the things of God, but right to claim the things of Caesar, they can go on to point out that they are not inveighing against “classlessness” as a social ideal, nor against the social elevation of the masses, nor against state enterprise and public ownership as such (witness our own Catholic country as an exemplar of all of these!).  They can make clear that they are not against the measures which the Communist State takes in favour of public decency, for the protection of marriage and the discouragement of divorce and for the suppression of pornography; also, that they are far from opposing the massive efforts of Communist governments to bring education and culture to the people and to protect them from trash and from exploitation by commercial advertising.  They can point out that when Christian faith is not present — enabling conscience and God’s grace to restrain men from evil and make them good — then it is right that the State should use its power to enforce rational behaviour and the natural law, wrong for the State to fail in this duty; wrong also for the State to claim absolute ownership of the people. By not giving proper recognition to the Catholic Church and to that part of man which is God’s, the Communist State (it can be shown) does as most states do, but more openly and defiantly.

It will still remain to explain why Communism, which is distant from us, should be singled out for attack, while the atheism nearer home is glossed over or indirectly lauded. I cannot think of any justification other than “holy expediency” (if such there be) for lauding the atheism which is nearer to us, but I can suggestion a justification for glossing over it. It is likely that the Caesarian idolatry, because it is at least consistent and more nearly rational, will triumph over the cults of Mammon and Ashtaroth and confront the church for a long time to come. Lenin might be cited in support of this. In an interview with Osservatore Romano in 1924 he said: “A century from now there will be one form of government, the Soviet form; and one religion, Catholicism”. He will probably be proved more or less right.

One reason of course, why good priests, who don’t really think, prefer the reign of Mammon and Ashtaroth to that of Caesar, is that in the atheistic societies of the West the organised Church enjoys “freedom” and the clergy are honoured with a great deal of lip-service and enjoy social status. But is the nature of the “freedom” which the Church in the West enjoys ever really reflected on? Surely, in most countries, it is a purely nominal and legalistic freedom, freedom for the body of the Church, but not for its spirit. It is the sort of “freedom” which a farmer might get from the County Council to farm his land, while the Council reserves the right to spray his land daily with plant poison. In a sense, he is freer than another farmer who is allowed to cultivate his land (which is spread with cheap artificial fertiliser at public expense), but on condition that he himself never moves outside his dwelling-house. It is undeniable, however, that the freedom of the first farmer is not of much use to him, while nothing prevents the second farmer from producing good crops, though himself deprived of full freedom of movement. To make the analogy concrete: in Poland, Hungary or the Soviet Union the Church has better chances of making Christ triumph in the people’s hearts than it has in Britain, Sweden or France.

Often in the past the loss of a Christian people to Christ began with a false identification of Christian interests with the interests of a certain social class or a certain political regime. That is why I have stressed the importance of clear Christian thinking about Communism and the rival idolatries. If the temporal Church and the Christian faithful are led up a blind alley, the dire results of this false leadership must justly be blamed on the Catholic clergy. There is not part of the truth of things which they can afford to be careless about, no part where personal inclinations, laziness or lack of adequate information can be accepted as excuses for error. They claim, after all, to be our leaders in the truth. If they cannot be well-informed about certain matters, they should refrain from preaching about them.

If, in fact, Communist society is less inimical to Christian life and salvation than the society of atheistic capitalism — and I suggest that this is the case — then the faithful should be told this plainly. It is their right to know it. Truth which is played about with meretriciously returns some day like a boomerang.

The simple facts that we live in a world of atheistic idolaters and that, for the foreseeable future, Christians will be a tiny minority, are truths which it seems necessary for the clergy to reflect on and for the faithful to have brought home to them. For this realisation will help us to rebel against the present complacent acceptance of full churches as a “satisfactory state of affairs” and will make us pay much more attention to the development of sturdy, adult individualism in Christian devotion. We live in a world where the flock is always liable to be scattered suddenly. It will be the shepherds’ fault if, knowing this, they haven’t made the sheep aware of the realities of their situation and trained them in the arts of survival.

221,000 Left Ultra Liberal German Church Since Last Year

While some claim that becoming more liberal is the Catholic Church’s pass to increasing membership, the German church is an example of the inevitability of failure of this approach.

The most liberal Catholic region in the world, Germany, has offered same sex blessings and even Communion for Protestants, as well as offering ‘experimental’ liturgies.

Despite, or because of, this, membership has freefalled again and again for the past decade. New figures have shown that 221,000 Catholics walked away from the ultra liberal church in the past year. Similarly, 220,000 left the Evangelical Church.

In an article a few weeks ago, the Irish Times hilariously stated: German Catholic Church's survival may hinge on facing down Rome

It is fending off calls for women priests and blessings of same-sex couples amid criticism of its handling of sex abuse cases

The opposite is of course true, the church as a whole must do its best to try to limit the malignant failures of the borderline schismatic German Church before they spread elsewhere.

A significant factor in both its liberalism and its defections has been the church tax, which forces members to pay a standard amount of their incomes to their church. This has led to a panicked liberal hierarchy have tried to bring in such novelties as same sex blessings as a means of widening their tax base, but so far this has not worked.

Bizarrely, recent surveys have shown that young Germans have more faith in God than their European counterparts have.

There is no east answer to Germany’s problems, but liberalism will only make them worse.

Ken Moore


Reports of Latin Masses Already Being Shut Down

With the Catholic world still reeling from the Motu Proprio Traditionis Custodes, most bishops have met the announcement by either saying nothing or expressing their intention to allow the Latin Mass to proceed as normal.

Nonetheless, a number of reports today have suggested that some bishops are wasting no time in telling devotees of the Latin Mass that they will not be allowed so access the Traditional Mass immediately.

One such parish is the Latin Mass community in Glastonbury, England.

In a short statement released today, Fr. Bede Rowe wrote:

Following the Motu Proprio and instruction from Bishop Declan, the 12.30pm Latin Mass at Glastonbury will be the final Latin Mass here.

Our Community continues to offer our prayers for the parishes which have been entrusted to our care.


Dom Bede & Dom Ansel

Nonetheless, some high level liberal prelates such as Wilton Gregory have said that they will not be clamping down on the Latin Mass in the immediate future.

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BREAKING: Latin Mass Suppressed (FULL DOCUMENT)

The following is Pope Francis's document suppressing the Traditional Latin Mass.

Pray for the church on this sad day.

Rome, July 16, 2021

Dear Brothers in the Episcopate,

as my Predecessor Benedict XVI did with Summorum Pontificum, I too intend to accompany the Motu proprio Traditionis custodes with a letter, to illustrate the reasons that led me to this decision. I turn to you with trust and parrhesia, in the name of that sharing in "concern for the whole Church, which contributes supremely to the good of the universal Church", as the Second Vatican Council reminds us.[1] .

The reasons that moved Saint John Paul II and Benedict XVI to grant the possibility of using the Roman Missal promulgated by Saint Pius V, published by Saint John XXIII in 1962, for the celebration of the Eucharistic sacrifice are evident to all. The faculty, granted by indult of the Congregation for Divine Worship in 1984[2] and confirmed by Saint John Paul II in the Motu proprio Ecclesia Dei of 1988[3] , it was mainly motivated by the desire to favor the recomposition of the schism with the movement led by Archbishop Lefebvre. The request, addressed to the Bishops, to generously welcome the "just aspirations" of the faithful who asked for the use of that Missal, therefore had an ecclesial reason for recomposing the unity of the Church.

That faculty was interpreted by many within the Church as the possibility of freely using the Roman Missal promulgated by Saint Pius V, determining a parallel use to the Roman Missal promulgated by Saint Paul VI. To regulate this situation, Benedict XVI intervened on the question many years later, regulating a fact within the Church, in that many priests and many communities had "gratefully used the possibility offered by the Motu proprio" of St. John Paul II. Underlining how this development was not foreseeable in 1988, the Motu proprio Summorum Pontificum of 2007 intended to introduce "a clearer legal regulation"[4] . To facilitate access to those - including young people - "who discover this liturgical form, feel attracted by it and find there a particularly appropriate form for them, of encounter with the Mystery of the Most Holy Eucharist"[5] , Benedict XVI declared "the Missal promulgated by St. Pius V and re-edited by Blessed John XXIII as an extraordinary expression of the same lex orandi", granting a "wider possibility of using the 1962 Missal"[6] .

Supporting his choice was the conviction that this provision would not cast doubt on one of the essential decisions of the Second Vatican Council, thus undermining its authority: the Motu proprio fully recognized that "the Missal promulgated by Paul VI is the ordinary expression of the lex orandi of the Catholic Church of the Latin rite "[7] . The recognition of the Missal promulgated by St. Pius V "as an extraordinary expression of the lex orandi itself" did not in any way want to disregard the liturgical reform, but was dictated by the desire to meet the "insistent prayers of these faithful", allowing them to "celebrate the Sacrifice of the Mass according to the typical edition of the Roman Missal promulgated by Blessed John XXIII in 1962 and never abrogated, as an extraordinary form of the Liturgy of the Church "[8] . He was comforted in his discernment by the fact that those who wished "to find the form, dear to them, of the sacred Liturgy", "clearly accepted the binding nature of the Second Vatican Council and were faithful to the Pope and the Bishops"[9] . He also declared the fear of splits in parish communities unfounded, because "the two forms of the use of the Roman Rite could have enriched each other"[10] . Therefore he invited the Bishops to overcome doubts and fears and to receive the norms, "ensuring that everything goes on in peace and serenity", with the promise that "ways could be sought to find a remedy", should "serious difficulties come to light" in the application of the legislation after "the entry into force of the Motu proprio"[11] .

Thirteen years later I have instructed the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to send you a questionnaire on the application of the Motu proprio Summorum Pontificum. The responses received revealed a situation that pains and worries me, confirming the need to intervene. Unfortunately, the pastoral intent of my Predecessors, who had intended "to make every effort so that all those who truly desire unity may be made possible to remain in this unity or to find it again"[12] , it has often been seriously neglected. A possibility offered by Saint John Paul II and with even greater magnanimity by Benedict XVI in order to recompose the unity of the ecclesial body in respect of the various liturgical sensitivities was used to increase distances, harden differences, build contrasts that hurt the Church. and they hinder its progress, exposing it to the risk of divisions.

I am equally saddened by the abuses of both sides in the celebration of the liturgy. Like Benedict XVI, I too stigmatize that "in many places the prescriptions of the new Missal are not celebrated faithfully, but it is even understood as an authorization or even as an obligation to creativity, which often leads to distortions to the limit of what is bearable "[13]. But nevertheless I am saddened by an instrumental use of the Missale Romanum of 1962, increasingly characterized by a growing rejection not only of the liturgical reform, but of the Second Vatican Council, with the unfounded and unsustainable assertion that it has betrayed Tradition and " true Church ". If it is true that the path of the Church must be understood in the dynamism of Tradition, "which originates from the Apostles and which progresses in the Church under the assistance of the Holy Spirit" (DV 8), the Second Vatican Council constitutes the most important stage of this dynamism. recently, in which the Catholic episcopate listened to discern the path that the Spirit indicated to the Church. Doubting the Council means doubting the very intentions of the Fathers,[14] , and, ultimately, doubting the same Holy Spirit who guides the Church.

The Second Vatican Council itself sheds light on the meaning of the choice to review the concession permitted by my Predecessors. Among the votes that the Bishops have indicated most insistently, that of the full, conscious and active participation of all the People of God in the liturgy[15] , in line with what Pius XII already affirmed in the encyclical Mediator Dei on the renewal of the liturgy[16] . The constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium confirmed this request, deliberating on "the reform and increase of the liturgy"[17] , indicating the principles that were to guide the reform[18] . In particular, he established that those principles concerned the Roman Rite, while for the other legitimately recognized rites, he asked that they be "prudently revised in an integral way in the spirit of sound tradition and given new vigor according to the circumstances and needs of the time"[19] . On the basis of these principles the liturgical reform was carried out, which has its highest expression in the Roman Missal, published in editio typica by St. Paul VI.[20] and revised by Saint John Paul II[21] . It must therefore be assumed that the Roman Rite, adapted several times over the centuries to the needs of the times, has not only been preserved, but renewed "in faithful respect to Tradition"[22] . Anyone wishing to celebrate with devotion according to the antecedent liturgical form will have no difficulty in finding in the Roman Missal reformed according to the mind of the Second Vatican Council all the elements of the Roman Rite, in particular the Roman canon, which constitutes one of the most characterizing elements.

A final reason I want to add to the foundation of my choice: the close relationship between the choice of celebrations according to the liturgical books preceding the Second Vatican Council and the rejection of the Church and its institutions is increasingly evident in the words and attitudes of many. name of what they consider the "true Church". This is a behavior that contradicts communion, nourishing that drive to division - “I am Paul's; I, on the other hand, belong to Apollo; I am from Cephas; I am Christ's ”- against whom the Apostle Paul reacted firmly[23] . It is to defend the unity of the Body of Christ that I am forced to revoke the faculty granted by my Predecessors. The distorted use that has been made of them is contrary to the reasons that led them to grant the freedom to celebrate Mass with the Missale Romanum of 1962. Since "liturgical celebrations are not private actions, but celebrations of the Church, which is" sacrament of unity ""[24] , they must be done in communion with the Church. The Second Vatican Council, while reaffirming the external bonds of incorporation into the Church - the profession of faith, of the sacraments, of communion -, affirmed with Saint Augustine that it is a condition for salvation to remain in the Church not only "with the body", but also "with the heart"[25] .

Dear Brothers in the Episcopate, Sacrosanctum Concilium explained that the Church "sacrament of unity" is such because it is a "Holy People gathered and ordained under the authority of the Bishops"[26] . Lumen gentium, while it reminds the Bishop of Rome to be "perpetual and visible principle and foundation of unity both of the bishops and of the multitude of the faithful", says that you are "visible principle and foundation of unity in your local Churches, in which and starting from which there is the one and only Catholic Church "[27] .

Responding to your requests, I take the firm decision to abrogate all the norms, instructions, concessions and customs prior to this Motu Proprio, and to retain the liturgical books promulgated by the Holy Pontiffs Paul VI and John Paul II, in conformity with the decrees of the Second Vatican Council, as the only expression of the lex orandi of the Roman Rite. I am comforted in this decision by the fact that, after the Council of Trent, St. Pius V also abrogated all rites that could not boast a proven antiquity, establishing a single Missale Romanum for the whole Latin Church. For four centuries this Missale Romanum promulgated by Saint Pius V was thus the main expression of the lex orandi of the Roman Rite, carrying out a unifying function in the Church. Not to contradict the dignity and grandeur of that Rite, the Bishops gathered in an ecumenical council asked for it to be reformed; their intent was that "the faithful should not attend the mystery of faith as strangers or silent spectators, but, with a full understanding of the rites and prayers, participate in the sacred action consciously, piously and actively"[28] . Saint Paul VI, recalling that the work of adapting the Roman Missal had already been begun by Pius XII, declared that the revision of the Roman Missal, carried out in the light of the most ancient liturgical sources, had the purpose of allowing the Church to elevate, in the variety of languages, "one and the same prayer" expressing its unity[29] . I intend this unity to be re-established throughout the Roman Rite Church.

The Second Vatican Council, describing the catholicity of the People of God, recalls that "in ecclesial communion there are particular Churches, which enjoy their own traditions, without prejudice to the primacy of the chair of Peter which presides over the universal communion of charity, guarantees legitimate diversities and at the same time ensures that the particular not only does not harm unity, but rather serves it "[30] . While, in the exercise of my ministry at the service of unity, I take the decision to suspend the faculty granted by my Predecessors, I ask you to share this weight with me as a form of participation in concern for the whole Church. In the Motu proprio I wanted to affirm that it is up to the Bishop, as moderator, promoter and guardian of the liturgical life in the Church of which it is the principle of unity, to regulate liturgical celebrations. It is therefore up to you to authorize in your Churches, as local Ordinaries, the use of the Roman Missal of 1962, applying the norms of this Motu proprio. Above all, it is up to you to work to return to a unitary celebratory form, verifying case by case the reality of the groups that celebrate with this Missale Romanum.

The indications on how to proceed in the dioceses are mainly dictated by two principles: on the one hand, to provide for the good of those who are rooted in the previous celebratory form and need time to return to the Roman Rite promulgated by Saints Paul VI and John Paul II; on the other hand, to interrupt the erection of new personal parishes, linked more to the desire and will of individual priests than to the real need of the "holy faithful People of God". At the same time, I ask you to ensure that every liturgy is celebrated with decorum and fidelity to the liturgical books promulgated after the Second Vatican Council, without eccentricities that easily degenerate into abuses. To this fidelity to the prescriptions of the Missal and to the liturgical books, which reflect the liturgical reform desired by the Second Vatican Council,

For you I invoke the Spirit from the Risen Lord, so that he may make you strong and firm in the service to the People that the Lord has entrusted to you, so that for your care and vigilance he may express communion even in the unity of a single Rite, in which the great wealth of the Roman liturgical tradition. I pray for you. You pray for me.

FRANCIS

BLM Express Support for Cuban Crackdown that Led to Priest Arrest

In the past year, many people in the West have become convinced that it is impossible to oppose racism without being affiliated with American extremist group ‘Black Lives Matter’. Despite the fact that the Marxists have declared that one of their stated goals is to destroy the nuclear family, or perhaps because of it, many media outlets, sporting organisations and corporate entities have put forth the idea that a refusal to engage with the group was an embrace of racism itself.

Now, the controversial group has posted a rambling deranged message with seems to blame the United States government’s embargoes for anti Communist protests gripping the island.

According to the crazed statement, ‘the people of Cuba are being punished by the US government’. Yes you read that right, not by their own Communist government which is unleashing military and armed police onto the streets to brutally beat its own people, instead the USA are to blame because they won’t trade with the Cubans.

The BLM statement is a ringing endorsement of these tactics, choosing to see the protestors as pawns of the United States rather than people sick of living under a Communist regime.

It makes no mention of the viciousness of the beatings there, of the mass arrests nor of the priest who was dragged through the streets and beaten for praying in public this week.

This is what football fans were told to take the knee for during Euro 2020, not anti racism. They were taking the knee in order to increase the international standing of a group that supports totalitarianism and violence against citizens. BLM is the product not of Africa, not of the developing world, but of the richest country in the world.

There is a notable anti Catholic element to BLM also, one of their prominent Protestant Pastor members led calls for attacks on Catholic churches last year, which led to several arson attacks and statue destructions also.

Do not forget, Our Lady of Fatima’s warning about Communism didn’t become irrelevant when the Berlin Wall fell. Much of the world’s population now lives under nominal or full Communism.

Ken Moore

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Thousands of Protesters Surround Irish Government in Dublin

With news that the Irish government were about to pass legislation that would bar non v****nated people from restaurants and pubs, an estimated crowd of at least 5,000 took to the streets of Dublin to surround the government at the Convention Centre into the early hours of the morning.

Despite covering similar protests in France, Cuba and Belarus in the same day, the Irish media instituted a blackout for apparent fear of increasing hostility against the government, considering that the government has worked closely with leftist journalists in the past decade. Many Irish journalists have showed little shame in happily accepting appointments as aides to government ministers in recent years.

The large crowd grew as the night wore on, with thousands chanting ‘shame on you’ at the Irish government, outside the rainbow lit temporary home of the Convention Centre. It costs the taxpayer €25,000 a day to keep sittings at the venue, even though the Dail is still available.

The tone of the protest was mostly jovial, with the crowd singing and dancing for hours on end.

Another protest is planned for tonight at Aras na Uchtarain, the residence of Irish President Michael D. Higgins. He is due to sign the measures into law, crowds are expected to gather at 7pm.

Higgins was elected in 2011 after state media carried out a smear job on front runner Sean Gallagher. Gallagher received a settlement of €130,000 over the dirty tactic, which told a large tv audience that Gallagher had engaged in questionable fundraising practices.

Higgins is a long time admirer of authoritarian regimes in Venezuela and Cuba as well as being photographed alongside George Soros and Chinese Communist Dictator Xi Jinping. In 2014, an Irish Times article referred to Higgins and Xi as ‘kindred spirits’.

Higgins has also specialised in propaganda that would make Xi blush, with schools stocking up heavily on copies of his children’s books, ‘The President’s Glasses’ and ‘The President’s Cat’, which interestingly gloss over his party giving those children a lifetime of IMG debt while Higgins collected a cool €250,000 a year.

It is not not yet clear if these protests will be sustainable given the level of deranged aggression and violence that was used by the Irish government to quell previous protests last winter.

At least however, the world is now watching. Even if Irish journalists choose not to.

Basic Statistics of Ireland's Abortion Regime

The following is an analysis of Ireland’s abortions statistics, written by Jim Stack of Deise 4 Life.

The statistics presented here were compiled from (a)the 2019 and 2020 abortion reports from the Department of Health (b)replies to parliamentary questions (PQ’s) about abortion from the HSE (c) the 2019 report from the Irish Family Planning Association (IFPA), and(d) the ScienceDirect survey of START members (GP’s providing abortions) published in June 2021, but referring to the first six months of our new abortion regime.

All of the data presented here is already in the public domain, but none of it has received much attention in the mainstream media, and the public are largely unaware of it. It is hard to see how we can have a sensible review of our abortion legislation – a review that is scheduled for this year - without the public being informed of these basic facts. That is why this article has been written.

1.    Abortions and abortion rates in 2019 and 2020

We report the Irish abortion numbers given in the official report – the known legal abortions carried out on Irish soil. There were nearly 600 additional abortions in England and Wales on Irish women in the two years, but these are excluded here for lack of additional information.

(a)  We had 6666 abortions here in 2019, 6577 in 2020, a decrease of 1.3%. 

(b) According to the Central Statistics Office, we had 59,796 births here in 2019 and 55,959 births in 2020, a decrease of 6.4%

(c)  The abortion ratio (abortions per 1000 births) actually increased here by 5.5% between 2019 and 2020

(d) Abortions dropped off sharply here towards the end of 2020, almost certainly due to the effect of the Covid-19 restrictions on social gatherings. In the first quarter of 2020 (largely unaffected by Covid-19 restrictions) the abortion ratio was more than 30% higher than the first quarter of 2019. In total contrast, the Q4 ratio was 21.4% lower in 2020 compared with Q4 2019. The Q2 and Q3 ratios were 7.6% and 7.8% higher in 2020. Thus 2020 started off with massively higher abortion ratios compared with 2019, but this increase tapered off in the course of the year and turned into a large reduction in the abortion ratio in the final quarter.

The graph shows these variations in monthly/quarterly abortions in 2019 and 2020. In the early months of 2020 abortions were far higher than in 2019, in the final months the reverse is true.

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(e)  More than 98% of abortions in both years were classified in the official report as early-pregnancy abortions (by abortion pill, before 12 weeks gestation). So far as is known, therefore, in more than 98% of abortions, healthy babies of healthy mothers were aborted in both years. 


2.    Regional variation in abortion rates

There was large regional variation in abortion rates here in 2019, and again in 2020. Dublin, Louth and Waterford had the highest reported abortion rates in both years. Kerry, Monaghan and Roscommon had the lowest in 2019; Laois, Clare and Roscommon had the lowest in 2020. Twenty of the twenty-six counties had higher abortion ratios in 2020 than in 2019. In 2019 the county of residence information was not provided in 525 cases, and in 2020 this figure was 425. The figures quoted in the official reports for many counties are, therefore, underestimates. 

As so little other data was collected, it is difficult to explain either the observed huge variations among the counties, or the large variation in a few counties from one year to the next.  In other countries a lot more is known about the women who present for abortions – data is collected on their age, marital status, socioeconomic status, ethnicity, reasons for seeking abortion etc– but in Ireland in 2018 our legislators decided that this information was not required. 

[Abortion rates per county are presented and discussed in more detail in  Irish abortion figures by county in 2020 | The Iona Institute   6th July 2021]

3.    Number of GP’s providing early abortions = 390 (up from 250 in January 2019). Number of maternity hospitals doing abortions = 10 (out of 19)

The information about GP’s comes from the organisation START (an organisation of GP’s who provide abortions here). Of note, there are just under 3500 GP’s practising in Ireland currently, according to the Irish College of General Practitioners, suggesting that 11% of GP’s are currently doing terminations here. 

4.   Numbers changing their minds about abortion = 870 (at least) in first year

In response to a parliamentary question in 2020, from Carol Nolan TD, the HSE said that 7,536 initial consultations for termination of pregnancy took place in 2019.

There were 6,666 abortions here in 2019 under the new legislation. Since 7536 – 6666 = 870, this suggests that 870 women in 2019 decided against abortion during the 3-day reflection period. If we use the figure of 6542 early abortions in 2019, instead of the total 6,666 (which includes surgical abortions), we obtain 7536-6542=994 lives saved in 2019 attributable to the 3-day reflection period. That is about 15% of the early abortions, or more than 1 in 7.

The 2019 annual report from the Irish Family Planning Association (IFPA) conveys a similar message. The IFPA sampled 177 of their clients in 2019 and 22 of these did not proceed beyond the initial consultation. That is 1 in 8 women in the IFPA sample who changed their minds. The ScienceDirect article (June 2021) also reports a 1 in 8 figure for the first 6 months of the new abortion regime.

The only sensible conclusion from these numbers is that the 3-day reflection period is doing the job it was designed to do, saving a considerable number of lives. It is beyond belief that anyone would campaign for its abolition.

5.    Number of women experiencing serious health issues post medical abortions =300 approximately in first year

.  Carol Nolan TD also submitted a PQ to the Health Minister about the number of admissions to hospital here following early stage abortions, but got an evasive reply.

The only real sources of information here appear to be the IFPA annual report for 2019, based on a sample of 177 of their clients in 2019, and the START report mentioned above. In the IFPA data, 8% were admitted to hospital after taking the abortion pills, which (extrapolated to all 6542 early abortions here in 2019, not just the abortions in the IFPA Report) means that well over 500 women here who took abortion pills ended up in hospital in 2019. About 4.5% of the IFPA cases (which would equate to about 300 women per year nationally) were considered serious enough to be detained in hospital. 

The START figure for hospital referrals is almost identical to the IFPA figure: 7.9% of their clients were referred on to hospital in the first 6 months of the new regime.

6.   Numbers relating to state financing: €20m for abortion providers in first two years, €0 for agencies helping pregnant women to keep their babies

The state paid €20 million to abortion providers in 2019–2020 (reply to PQ from Peadar Tóibín TD). Some of this money had been earmarked for improvement of maternity services, and was diverted instead to finance abortions. Over the same period, the state paid €0 to organisations such as Gianna Care and Every Life Counts which assist women to have their babies.

The payment system for GP’s providing abortions, and GP’s managing continuing pregnancies, is bizarre. The following information was put in the public domain by a Dublin-based GP, a member of the Medical Council, as far back as 2nd January 2019 in a letter to the Irish Independent – that is, right at the start of the new regime: 

“ The fee to be paid to a doctor for a medical termination conducted over three to four visits is €450, whilst the fee paid for the management of a pregnancy over eight to ten visits is circa €250.This means that a GP is paid circa €110 per visit to terminate a pregnancy, whilst he/she is paid circa €25 per visit, to manage a pregnancy.”

Two and a half years later, that situation still persists. 

7.    Do we know anything at all about the women who sought abortions?

We know little or nothing from the 2019 official government report about women who sought abortions in 2019. The same applies to the 2020 official report, which is practically a carbon copy of the 2019 report. We have no official information at all about marital status, ethnicity, number of previous abortions, or economic status of these women. Neither do we know in how many cases coercion was involved. Other countries collect this type of data; we do not. 

The information below is from the 2019 IFPA report and is based on a sample of just 177 of IFPA clients in that year:

  • There was a broad age range, but more than 50% were in their twenties

  • More than 68% had not used any form of contraception

  • 49% were already mothers

  • 94% were less than 10 weeks pregnant

The START survey has some similar data. Just 33% of their clients had been using contraception. 99% were within the 12-week gestational limit (including the 3-day waiting period). 55% already had children. 65% were over 25 years of age.

Conclusions

In the current review of our abortion regime, the following conclusions seem inescapable based on the above data:

(i)            Women do change their minds about abortion, at least 1 in 8 of them in the first year of the new regime; the 3-day reflection period allows this to happen, and should be retained. 

(ii)          Abortion pills can cause health problems in women that are more serious, and more common, than is generally admitted; proposals to allow women to self-medicate seem, therefore, particularly ill-advised. 

(iii)        The existing payment system for GP’s is ridiculous, and needs to be replaced with a system that pays at least as much per visit for managing a pregnancy as for terminating a pregnancy. 

(iv)         Organisations that help women to have their babies should be funded by the state. 

(v)           All the evidence suggests that our abortion rate would have risen very sharply in 2020 had it not been for Covid-19 restrictions in the latter half of 2020. If we want to keep abortion numbers down, we need additional safeguards in the legislation.

(vi)         We should follow the example of other countries and start collecting necessary basic data about women who seek abortions here. 


Jim Stack, Deise 4 Life

Pope John Paul II on the French Revolution

The following remarks were given by Pope John Paul II in February 1984, on the ocassion of the Beatification of Guillaume Repin and the Martyrs of Angers

1. "Who can separate us from the love of Christ?" (Rom 8:35).

This is the question once asked by the Apostle Paul in his letter to the Romans. He then had before his eyes the sufferings and persecutions of the first generation of disciples, witnesses of Christ. The words distress, anguish, hunger, destitution, danger, persecution, torment, massacre "like slaughterhouse sheep" described very specific realities, which were – or were going to be – the experience of many who had attached themselves to Christ, or rather who had welcomed into the faith the love of Christ. He himself could have listed the trials he had already undergone(2 Cor 6:4-10), while waiting for his own martyrdom here in Rome. And the Church today, with the martyrs of the XVIIIand XIXth century, wonders in its turn: "Who will be able to separate us from the love of Christ?"

Saint Paul hastens to give a certain answer to this question: "Nothing can separate us from the love of God that is in Jesus Christ Our Lord", nothing, neither death, nor the mysterious forces of the world, nor the future, nor any creature(Rom 8,38-39).

Since God delivered His Only Begotten Son for the world, since this Son gave His life for us, such love will not be denied. It is stronger than anything. He keeps in eternal life those who have loved God to the point of giving their lives for Him. Regimes that persecute pass. But this glory of the martyrs remains. "We are the great victors thanks to him who loved us" (Ibid. 8, 37).

2.C is the victory won by the martyrs raised today to the glory of the altars by beatification.

(a) First of all, it was the very many martyrs who, in the diocese of Angers,at the time of the French Revolution, accepted death because they wanted, in the words of Guillaume Repin, "to preserve their faith and religion", firmly attached to the Catholic and Roman Church; priests, they refused to take an oath deemed schismatic, they did not want to give up their pastoral charge; laymen, they remained faithful to these priests, to the Mass celebrated by them, to the signs of their worship for Mary and the saints. Undoubtedly, in a context of great ideological, political and military tensions, it was possible to raise on them suspicions of infidelity to the homeland, they were accused, in the "recitals" of the sentences, of compromise with "the anti-revolutionary forces"; this is the case in almost all persecutions, past and present. But for the men and women whose names were retained – among many others no doubt also deserving – what they responded to the interrogations of the courts, leaves no doubt about their determination to remain faithful – at the risk of their lives – to what their faith required, nor about the deep reason for their conviction, the hatred of this faith that their judges despised as "unbearable devotion" and "fanaticism". We remain in awe of the decisive, calm, brief, frank, humble responses, which are not provocative, but which are clear and firm on the essential: fidelity to the Church. Thus speak the priests, all guillotined as their venerable dean Guillaume Repin, the nuns who refuse even to let believe that they have taken the oath, the four lay men: it is enough to quote the testimony of one of them (Antoine Fournier): "You would therefore suffer death for the defense of your religion?" – "Yes". So speak these eighty women, who cannot be accused of armed rebellion! Some had previously expressed the desire to die for the name of Jesus rather than renounce religion (Renée Feillatreau).

True Christians, they also testify by their refusal to hate their executioners, by their forgiveness their desire for peace for all: "I prayed to God only for peace and the union of everyone" (Marie Cassin). Finally, their last moments demonstrate the depth of their faith. Some sing hymns and psalms to the place of torment; "they ask for a few minutes to make God the sacrifice of their lives, which they did with such fervour that their executioners themselves were amazed." Sister Marie-Anne, Daughter of Charity, comforts her Sister thus: "We will have the happiness to see God, and to possess Him for all eternity... and we will be possessed of it without fear of being separated from it"(Tèmoignage de l'Abbé Gruget).

Today these ninety-nine martyrs of Angers are associated, in the glory of beatification, with the first of their own, Abbot Noël Pinot, beatified for almost 60 years.

Yes, the words of the Apostle Paul are confirmed here with brilliance: "We are the great victors thanks to him who loved us".

b) Analoga testimonianza di fede adamantina e di carità ardente è stata data alla Chiesa e al mondo dal padre Giovanni Mazzucconi, che consumò nel martirio la sua giovane esistenza di sacerdote e di missionario. Membro, tra i primi, del Pontificio Istituto Missioni Estere di Milano, sentiva che le missioni erano « il segreto desiderio » del suo cuore. All'orizzonte della sua vita egli intravedeva un'unione ancora più profonda con il Cristo, unione che lo avrebbe accomunato alle sofferenze e alla croce del suo Signore e Maestro, proprio a motivo del suo impegno instancabile per l'evangelizzazione: « Beato quel giorno in cui mi sarà dato di soffrire molto per una causa sì santa e sì pietosa , ma più beato quello in cui fossi trovato degno di spargere per essa il mio sangue e incontrare fra i tormenti la morte".

Sennonché il messaggio cristiano, che il Mazzucconi proclamava agli indigeni di Woodlark, era un'aperta condanna della loro condotta che giungeva fino agli orrori dell'infanticidio. E nonostante l'immensa carità e l'indefessa dedizione dal beato, la sua predicazione provocava irritazione e odio. Ma egli era soprannaturalmente sereno, in mezzo ai disagi, alle febbri, alle opposizioni, perché viveva intimamente unito a Dio. Parafrasando le parole di san Paolo, poteva scrivere: " So che Dio è buono e mi ama immensamente. Tutto il resto: la calma e la tempesta, il pericolo e la sicurezza, la vita e la morte, non sono che espressioni mutevoli e momentanee del caro Amore immutabile, eterno ".

3. Per tutti questi martiri, di epoche diverse, si sono adempiute le parole del Cristo agli apostoli: "Guardatevi dagli uomini, perché vi consegneranno ai loro tribunali . . . Sarete condotti davanti ai governanti . . . per causa mia . . . Il fratello darà morte al fratello . . . E sarete odiati da tutti a causa del mio nome " (Mt 10: 17-22). Difatti molti tra i martiri d'Angers sono stati arrestati nella loro casa o nel loro nascondiglio, perché altri li avevano denunciati. Ci si è accaniti contro di loro, uomini e donne senza difesa, con un disprezzo difficilmente comprensibile. Hanno conosciuto l'umiliazione della rappresaglia e delle prigioni insalubri; hanno affrontato tribunali ed esecuzioni sommarie.

Il Padre Mazzucconi, poi, ricevette il colpo mortale di scure da un indigeno, che, salito sulla nave e avvicinatosi, facendo finta di salutarlo amichevolmente gli porgeva la mano da stringere.

Tutto questo avverrà – diceva Gesù – "per dare una testimonianza a loro e ai pagani". Sì, i nostri martiri hanno potuto render testimonianza di fronte ai loro giudici, ai loro carnefici, e davanti a coloro che assistevano come spettatori al loro supplizio, al punto che costoro « non potevano trattenersi dall'essere stupiti e dal dire, allontanandosi, che c'era in quelle morti qualcosa di straordinario, che solo la religione può ispirare negli ultimi istanti » (Diario del sacerdote Simon Gruget). Gesù aveva annunciato tale mistero: " Chi persevererà sino alla fine sarà salvato " (Mt 10:22). E come persevererà? "Non preoccupatevi di come o di che cosa dovrete dire, perché vi sarà suggerito in quel momento ciò che dovrete dire . . . È lo Spirito del padre vostro che parla in voi"(Mt 10:19-20). Sì, quelli che restano fedeli allo Spirito Santo sono sicuri di poter contare sulla sua forza, nel momento di render testimonianza in una maniera che sconcerta gli uomini.

4. È mediante la potenza di Dio che i martiri hanno riportato la vittoria. Essi hanno contemplato la forza dell'amore di Dio: " Se Dio è per noi, chi sarà contro di noi? " (Rm 8:31). Essi hanno fissato il loro sguardo sul sacrificio di Cristo: "Dio . . . ha dato il proprio Figlio per tutti noi; come non ci donerà ogni cosa insieme con lui? (Rm 8:32).

In una parola, essi hanno partecipato al mistero della Redenzione, che consumato dal Cristo sul Calvario, si prolunga nel cuore degli uomini lungo il corso della loro storia. Ho recentemente invitato tutti i fedeli della Chiesa a meditare su questa sofferenza redentrice. Per i martiri, la croce di Cristo è stata, nello stesso tempo, la sorgente misteriosa del loro coraggio, il senso della loro prova, il modello per rendere testimonianza all'amore del Padre, mediante il loro sacrificio, unito a quello del Cristo, e per giungere con lui alla risurrezione.

5. La sicurezza dei martiri era così espressa dall'autore ispirato del Libro della Sapienza (cf. Sap 3, 1-9): "Le anime dei giusti . . . sono nelle mani di Dio . . . la loro fine fu ritenuta una sciagura, la loro dipartita da noi una rovina, ma essi sono nella pace. Anche se agli occhi degli uomini subiscono castighi, la loro speranza è piena di immortalità . . . Dio li ha provati e li ha trovati degni di sé' Nel 1793 e 1794, per i beati compagni di Guglielmo Repin; nel 1855, per il beato Giovanni Mazzucconi, coloro che li facevano morire, e un certo numero dei loro compatrioti, pensavano a un castigo e a un annientamento; si credeva che le fosse in cui erano stati ammucchiati alla rinfusa sarebbero state dimenticate per sempre. Ma essi "sono nelle mani di Dio". "Li ha graditi come un olocausto. Nel giorno del loro giudizio risplenderanno; come sparkle nella stoppia correranno qua e there. Governeranno the nazioni . . . e il Signore regnerà per sempre su di loro"(Sap 3, 6-8). La memoria della Chiesa non li ha dimenticati: molto presto sono stati venerati, si è ascoltato il loro messaggio, sono stati invocati, si è avuta fiducia nella loro intercessione presso Dio. E oggi essi risplendono, scintillano ai nostri occhi, perché la Chiesa sa che essi sono beati, e che "vivranno presso Dio nell'amore" (cf. Sap 3, 9).

6. This beatification will be a new stage for all of us, for the Church, and in particular for the bishops, priests, nuns and faithful of the dioceses of western France to which these blesseds belonged, as for the Pontifical Institute of Foreign Missions, for the city of Lecco and the entire archdiocese of Milan, not to mention Papua New Guinea. It is for all a profound joy to know from God those who are close to them by blood or country, to be able to admire the faith and courage of their compatriots and their confreres. But these martyrs also invite us to think of the multitude of believers who are suffering persecution even today, throughout the world, in a hidden, nagging way that is just as serious, because it involves the lack of religious freedom, discrimination, the impossibility of defending oneself, internment, civil death, as I said in Lourdes last August. : their trial has much in common with that of our blessed. Finally, we must ask for ourselves the courage of faith, of unfailing fidelity to Jesus Christ, to His Church, at the time of trial as in everyday life. Our world too often indifferent or ignorant expects from the disciples of Christ an unequivocal testimony, which is equivalent to saying to him, like the martyrs celebrated today: Jesus Christ is alive; prayer and the Eucharist are essential for us to live his life, devotion to Mary keeps us his disciples; our attachment to the Church is one with our faith; fraternal unity is the sign par excellence of Christians; true justice, purity, love, forgiveness and peace are the fruits of the Spirit of Jesus; missionary ardour is part of this testimony; we cannot keep our lamp on hidden.

7. This beatification takes place in the heart of the jubilee year of redemption. These martyrs exemptied the grace of redemption that they themselves received. May all the glory be to God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit! "God we praise you . . . It is You that bears witness to the lineage of martyrs."

Praise be to God for reviving the momentum of our faith, of our thanksgiving, of our life in this way! Today, it is with the blood of our blessed that the inspired words of St. Paul are written for us: "Who will separate us from the love of Christ? Neither life nor death . . . neither the present nor the future . . . nor any other creature, nothing can separate us from the love of God that is in Jesus Christ Our Lord! ». Amen.

French

1. « Qui pourra nous séparer de l’amour du Christ? » (Rom 8, 35).

Telle est la question que posait autrefois l’apôtre Paul dans sa lettre aux Romains. Il avait alors devant les yeux les souffrances et les persécutions de la première génération des disciples, témoins du Christ. Les mots de détresse, d’angoisse, de faim, de dénuement, de danger, de persécution, de supplice, de massacre « comme des moutons d’abattoir » décrivaient des réalités très précises, qui étaient – ou allaient être – l’expérience de beaucoup de ceux qui s’étaient attachés au Christ, ou plutôt qui avaient accueilli dans la foi l’amour du Christ. Lui-même aurait pu énumérer les épreuves qu’il avait déjà subies (2 Cor 6, 4-10), en attendant son propre martyre ici, à Rome. Et l’Eglise aujourd’hui, avec les martyrs du XVIIIème et du XIXème siècle, se demande à son tour: « Qui pourra nous séparer de l’amour du Christ? ».

Saint Paul s’empresse de donner une réponse certaine a cette question: « Rien ne pourra nous séparer de l’amour de Dieu qui est en Jésus-Christ Notre Seigneur », rien, ni la mort, ni les forces mystérieuses du monde, ni l’avenir, ni aucune créature (Rom 8, 38-39).

Puisque Dieu a livré son Fils unique pour le monde, puisque ce Fils a donné sa vie pour nous, un tel amour ne se démentira pas. Il est plus fort que tout. Il garde dans la vie éternelle ceux qui ont aimé Dieu au point de donner leur vie pour lui. Les régimes qui persécutent passent. Mais cette gloire des martyrs demeure. « Nous sommes les grands vainqueurs grâce à celui qui nous a aimés » (Ibid. 8, 37).

2. C’est la victoire qu’ont remportée les martyrs élevés aujourd’hui à la gloire des autels par la béatification.

a) Ce sont d’abord les très nombreux martyrs qui, au diocèse d’Angers, au temps de la Révolution française, ont accepté la mort parce qu’ils voulaient, selon le mot de Guillaume Repin, « conserver leur foi et leur religion », fermement attachés à l’Eglise catholique et romaine; prêtres, ils refusaient de prêter un serment jugé schismatique, ils ne voulaient pas abandonner leur charge pastorale; laïcs, ils restaient fidèles à ces prêtres, à la messe célébrée par eux, aux signes de leur culte pour Marie et les saints. Sans doute, dans un contexte de grandes tensions idéologiques, politiques et militaires, on a pu faire peser sur eux des soupçons d’infidélité à la patrie, on les a, dans les « attendus » des sentences, accusés de compromission avec « les forces anti-révolutionnaires »; il en est d’ailleurs ainsi dans presque toutes les persécutions, d’hier et d’aujourd’hui. Mais pour les hommes et les femmes dont les noms ont été retenus – parmi beaucoup d’autres sans doute également méritants –, ce qu’ils ont répondu aux interrogatoires des tribunaux, ne laisse aucun doute sur leur détermination à rester fidèles – au péril de leur vie – à ce que leur foi exigeait, ni sur le motif profond de leur condamnation, la haine de cette foi que leurs juges méprisaient comme « dévotion insoutenable » et « fanatisme ». Nous demeurons en admiration devant les réponses décisives, calmes, brèves, franches, humbles, qui n’ont rien de provocateur, mais qui sont nettes et fermes sur l’essentiel: la fidélité à l’Eglise. Ainsi parlent les prêtres, tous guillotinés comme leur vénérable doyen Guillaume Repin, les religieuses qui refusent même de laisser croire qu’elles ont prêté serment, les quatre hommes laïcs: il suffit de citer le témoignage de l’un d’eux (Antoine Fournier): « Vous souffririez donc la mort pour la défense de votre religion? » – « Oui ». Ainsi parlent ces quatre-vingts femmes, qu’on ne peut accuser de rébellion armée! Certaines avaient déjà exprimé auparavant le désir de mourir pour le nom de Jésus plutôt que de renoncer à la religion (Renée Feillatreau).

Véritables chrétiens, ils témoignent aussi par leur refus de haïr leurs bourreaux, par leur pardon leur désir de paix pour tous: « Je n’ai prié le Bon Dieu que pour la paix et l’union de tout le monde » (Marie Cassin). Enfin, leurs derniers moments manifestent la profondeur de leur foi. Certains chantent des hymnes et des psaumes jusqu’au lieu du supplice; « ils demandent quelques minutes pour faire à Dieu le sacrifice de leur vie, qu’ils faisaient avec tant de ferveur que leurs bourreaux eux-mêmes en étaient étonnés ». Sœur Marie-Anne, Fille de la Charité, réconforte ainsi sa Sœur: « Nous allons avoir le bonheur de voir Dieu, et de le posséder pour toute l’éternité... et nous en serons possédées sans crainte d’en être séparées » (Tèmoignage de l'Abbé Gruget).

Aujourd’hui ces quatre-vingt-dix-neuf martyrs d’Angers sont associés, dans la gloire de la béatification, au premier des leurs, l’Abbé Noël Pinot, béatifié depuis presque 60 ans.

Oui, les paroles de l’Apôtre Paul se vérifient ici avec éclat: « Nous sommes les grands vainqueurs grâce à celui qui nous a aimés ».

b) Analoga testimonianza di fede adamantina e di carità ardente è stata data alla Chiesa e al mondo dal padre Giovanni Mazzucconi, che consumò nel martirio la sua giovane esistenza di sacerdote e di missionario. Membro, tra i primi, del Pontificio Istituto Missioni Estere di Milano, sentiva che le missioni erano « il segreto desiderio » del suo cuore. All’orizzonte della sua vita egli intravedeva un’unione ancora più profonda con il Cristo, unione che lo avrebbe accomunato alle sofferenze e alla croce del suo Signore e Maestro, proprio a motivo del suo impegno instancabile per l’evangelizzazione: « Beato quel giorno in cui mi sarà dato di soffrire molto per una causa sì santa e sì pietosa, ma più beato quello in cui fossi trovato degno di spargere per essa il mio sangue e incontrare fra i tormenti la morte ».

Sennonché il messaggio cristiano, che il Mazzucconi proclamava agli indigeni di Woodlark, era un’aperta condanna della loro condotta che giungeva fino agli orrori dell’infanticidio. E nonostante l’immensa carità e l’indefessa dedizione dal beato, la sua predicazione provocava irritazione e odio. Ma egli era soprannaturalmente sereno, in mezzo ai disagi, alle febbri, alle opposizioni, perché viveva intimamente unito a Dio. Parafrasando le parole di san Paolo, poteva scrivere: « So che Dio è buono e mi ama immensamente. Tutto il resto: la calma e la tempesta, il pericolo e la sicurezza, la vita e la morte, non sono che espressioni mutevoli e momentanee del caro Amore immutabile, eterno ».

3. Per tutti questi martiri, di epoche diverse, si sono adempiute le parole del Cristo agli apostoli: « Guardatevi dagli uomini, perché vi consegneranno ai loro tribunali . . . Sarete condotti davanti ai governanti . . . per causa mia . . . Il fratello darà morte al fratello . . . E sarete odiati da tutti a causa del mio nome » (Mt 10, 17-22). Difatti molti tra i martiri d’Angers sono stati arrestati nella loro casa o nel loro nascondiglio, perché altri li avevano denunciati. Ci si è accaniti contro di loro, uomini e donne senza difesa, con un disprezzo difficilmente comprensibile. Hanno conosciuto l’umiliazione della rappresaglia e delle prigioni insalubri; hanno affrontato tribunali ed esecuzioni sommarie.

Il Padre Mazzucconi, poi, ricevette il colpo mortale di scure da un indigeno, che, salito sulla nave e avvicinatosi, facendo finta di salutarlo amichevolmente gli porgeva la mano da stringere.

Tutto questo avverrà – diceva Gesù – « per dare una testimonianza a loro e ai pagani ». Sì, i nostri martiri hanno potuto render testimonianza di fronte ai loro giudici, ai loro carnefici, e davanti a coloro che assistevano come spettatori al loro supplizio, al punto che costoro « non potevano trattenersi dall’essere stupiti e dal dire, allontanandosi, che c’era in quelle morti qualcosa di straordinario, che solo la religione può ispirare negli ultimi istanti » (Diario del sacerdote Simon Gruget). Gesù aveva annunciato tale mistero: « Chi persevererà sino alla fine sarà salvato » (Mt 10, 22). E come persevererà? « Non preoccupatevi di come o di che cosa dovrete dire, perché vi sarà suggerito in quel momento ciò che dovrete dire . . . È lo Spirito del padre vostro che parla in voi » (Mt 10, 19-20). Sì, quelli che restano fedeli allo Spirito Santo sono sicuri di poter contare sulla sua forza, nel momento di render testimonianza in una maniera che sconcerta gli uomini.

4. È mediante la potenza di Dio che i martiri hanno riportato la vittoria. Essi hanno contemplato la forza dell’amore di Dio: « Se Dio è per noi, chi sarà contro di noi? » (Rm 8, 31). Essi hanno fissato il loro sguardo sul sacrificio di Cristo: « Dio . . . ha dato il proprio Figlio per tutti noi; come non ci donerà ogni cosa insieme con lui? » (Rm 8, 32).

In una parola, essi hanno partecipato al mistero della Redenzione, che consumato dal Cristo sul Calvario, si prolunga nel cuore degli uomini lungo il corso della loro storia. Ho recentemente invitato tutti i fedeli della Chiesa a meditare su questa sofferenza redentrice. Per i martiri, la croce di Cristo è stata, nello stesso tempo, la sorgente misteriosa del loro coraggio, il senso della loro prova, il modello per rendere testimonianza all’amore del Padre, mediante il loro sacrificio, unito a quello del Cristo, e per giungere con lui alla risurrezione.

5. La sicurezza dei martiri era così espressa dall’autore ispirato del Libro della Sapienza (cf. Sap 3, 1-9): « Le anime dei giusti . . . sono nelle mani di Dio . . . la loro fine fu ritenuta una sciagura, la loro dipartita da noi una rovina, ma essi sono nella pace. Anche se agli occhi degli uomini subiscono castighi, la loro speranza è piena di immortalità . . . Dio li ha provati e li ha trovati degni di sé ». Nel 1793 e 1794, per i beati compagni di Guglielmo Repin; nel 1855, per il beato Giovanni Mazzucconi, coloro che li facevano morire, e un certo numero dei loro compatrioti, pensavano a un castigo e a un annientamento; si credeva che le fosse in cui erano stati ammucchiati alla rinfusa sarebbero state dimenticate per sempre. Ma essi « sono nelle mani di Dio ». « Li ha graditi come un olocausto. Nel giorno del loro giudizio risplenderanno; come scintille nella stoppia correranno qua e là. Governeranno le nazioni . . . e il Signore regnerà per sempre su di loro » (Sap 3, 6-8). La memoria della Chiesa non li ha dimenticati: molto presto sono stati venerati, si è ascoltato il loro messaggio, sono stati invocati, si è avuta fiducia nella loro intercessione presso Dio. E oggi essi risplendono, scintillano ai nostri occhi, perché la Chiesa sa che essi sono beati, e che « vivranno presso Dio nell’amore » (cf. Sap 3, 9).

6. Cette béatification sera une étape nouvelle pour nous tous, pour l’Eglise, et en particulier pour les évêques, les prêtres, les religieuses et les fidèles des diocèses de l’ouest de la France auxquels ont appartenu ces bienheureux, comme pour l’Institut pontifical des Missions Etrangères, pour la cité de Lecco et tout l’archidiocèse de Milan, sans oublier la Papouasie-Nouvelle Guinée. C’est pour tous une joie profonde de savoir auprès de Dieu ceux qui leur sont proches par le sang ou le pays, de pouvoir admirer la foi et le courage de leurs compatriotes et de leurs confrères. Mais ces martyrs nous invitent aussi à penser à la multitude des croyants qui souffrent la persécution aujourd’hui même, à travers le monde, d’une façon cachée, lancinante tout aussi grave, car elle comporte le manque de liberté religieuse, la discrimination, l’impossibilité de se défendre, l’internement, la mort civile, comme je le disais à Lourdes au mois d’août dernier: leur épreuve a bien des points communs avec celle de nos bienheureux. Enfin, nous devons demander pour nous-mêmes le courage de la foi, de la fidélité sans faille à Jésus-Christ, à son Eglise, au temps de l’épreuve comme dans la vie quotidienne. Notre monde trop souvent indifférent ou ignorant attend des disciples du Christ un témoignage sans équivoque, qui équivaut à lui dire, comme les martyrs célébrés aujourd’hui: Jésus-Christ est vivant; la prière et l’Eucharistie nous sont essentiels pour vivre de sa vie, la dévotion à Marie nous maintient ses disciples; notre attachement à l’Eglise ne fait qu’un avec notre foi; l’unité fraternelle est le signe par excellence des chrétiens; la véritable justice, la pureté, l’amour, le pardon et la paix sont les fruits de l’Esprit de Jésus; l’ardeur missionnaire fait partie de ce témoignage; nous ne pouvons garder cachée notre lampe allumée.

7. Cette béatification a lieu au cœur de l’année jubilaire de la Rédemption. Ces martyrs illustrent la grâce de la Rédemption qu’ils ont eux-mêmes reçue. Que toute la gloire en soit à Dieu, Père, Fils et Saint-Esprit! « Dieu nous te louons . . . C’est Toi dont témoigne la lignée des martyrs ».

Loué soit Dieu de raviver ainsi l’élan de notre foi, de notre action de grâce, de notre vie! Aujourd’hui, c’est avec le sang de nos bienheureux que sont écrites pour nous les paroles inspirées de saint Paul: « Qui nous séparera de l’amour du Christ? Ni la vie, ni la mort . . . ni le présent, ni l’avenir . . . ni aucune autre créature, rien ne pourra nous séparer de l’amour de Dieu qui est en Jésus-Christ Notre Seigneur! ». Amen.

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn on the Vendée Genocide

Russian writer Alexsandr Solzhenitsyn spoke these words at an event in France to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the Genocide of the Vendee.

Two thirds of a century ago, while still a boy, I read with admiration about the courageous and desperate uprising of the Vendée. But never could I have even dreamed that in my later years I would have the honor of dedicating a memorial to the heroes and victims of that uprising.

Twenty decades have now passed, and throughout that period the Vendée uprising and its bloody suppression have been viewed in ever new ways, in France and elsewhere. Indeed, historical events are never fully understood in the heat of their own time, but only at a great distance, after a cooling of passions. For all too long, we did not want to hear or admit what cried out with the voices of those who perished, or were burned alive: that the peasants of a hard-working region, driven to the extremes of oppression and humiliation by a revolution supposedly carried out for their sake – that these peasants had risen up against the revolution!

That revolution brings out instincts of primordial barbarism, the sinister forces of envy, greed, and hatred – this even its contemporaries could see all too well. They paid a terrible enough price for the mass psychosis of the day, when merely moderate behavior, or even the perception of such, already appeared to be a crime. But the twentieth century has done especially much to tarnish the romantic luster of revolution which still prevailed in the eighteenth century.  As half-centuries and centuries have passed, people have learned from their own misfortunes that revolutions demolish the organic structures of society, disrupt the natural flow of life, destroy the best elements of the population and give free rein to the worst; that a revolution never brings prosperity to a nation, but benefits only a few shameless opportunists, while to the country as a whole it heralds countless deaths, widespread impoverishment, and, in the gravest cases, a long-lasting degeneration of the people.

The very word "revolution"  (from the Latin revolvo) means "to roll back," "to go back," "to experience anew," "to re-ignite," or at best "to turn over" – hardly a promising list. Today, if the attribute "great" is ever attached to a revolution, this is done very cautiously, and not infrequently with much bitterness.

It is now better and better understood that the social improvements which we all so passionately desire can be achieved through normal evolutionary development – with immeasurably fewer losses and without all-encompassing decay.  We must be able to improve, patiently, that which we have in any given "today".

It would be vain to hope that revolution can improve human nature, yet your revolution, and especially our Russian Revolution, hoped for this very effect.  The French Revolution unfolded under the banner of a self-contradictory and unrealizable slogan, "liberty, equality, fraternity."  But in the life of society, liberty and equality are mutually exclusive, even hostile concepts.  Liberty, by its very nature, undermines social equality, and equality suppresses liberty – for how else could it be attained?  Fraternity, meanwhile, is of entirely different stock; in this instance it is merely a catchy addition to the slogan.  True fraternity is achieved by means not social, but spiritual.  Furthermore, the ominous words "or death!" were added to the threefold slogan, thereby effectively destroying its meaning.

I would not wish a "great revolution" upon any nation. Only the arrival of Thermidor prevented the eighteenth-century revolution from destroying France.  But the revolution in Russia was not restrained by any Thermidor as it drove our people on the straight path to a bitter end, to an abyss, to the depths of ruin.

It is a pity that there is no one here today who could speak of the suffering endured in the depths of China, Cambodia, or Vietnam, and could describe the price they had to pay for revolution.   

One might have thought that the experience of the French revolution would have provided enough of a lesson for the rationalist builders of "the people's happiness" in Russia. But no, the events in Russia were grimmer yet, and incomparably more enormous in scale. Lenin's Communists and International Socialists studiously reenacted on the body of Russia many of the French revolution's cruelest methods – only they possessed a much greater and more systematic level of organizational control than the Jacobins.

We had no Thermidor, but to our spiritual credit we did have our Vendée, in fact more than one. These were the large peasant uprisings:  Tambov (1920-21), western Siberia (1921).  We know of the following episode: crowds of peasants in handmade shoes, armed with clubs and pitchforks, converged on Tambov, summoned by church bells in the surrounding villages – and were cut down by machine-gun fire. For eleven months the Tambov uprising held out, despite the Communists' effort to crush it with armored trucks, armored trains, and airplanes, as well as by taking families of the rebels hostage. They were even preparing to use poison gas. The Cossacks, too – from the Ural, the Don, the Kuban, the Terek – met Bolshevism with intransigent resistance that finally drowned in the blood of genocide.

And so, in dedicating this memorial to your heroic Vendée, I see double in my mind's eye – for I can also visualize the memorials which will one day rise in Russia, monuments to our Russian resistance against the onslaught of Communism and its atrocities.

We all have lived through the twentieth century, a century of terror, the chilling culmination of that Progress about which so many dreamed in the eighteenth century. And now, I think, more and more citizens of France, with increasing understanding and pride, will remember and value the resistance and the sacrifice of the Vendée.

The Genocide of French Catholics

The French Revolution included many mass murders, rapes and tortures of Catholics, but the most striking of all of these instances occurred in the peasant Vendee region of the West of France.

One need not look too far to find stories of the birth of the Modern World during the Revolution, with Maximilian Robespierre’s men carrying out drownings, guillotines and lynching of Catholics both lay and clerical. Even bishops were among those brutally killed as the French Revolution sought to destroy everything good and pure about the old world, remaking a new one.

They removed statues of Our Lady from Notre Dame and other cathedrals, replacing her with those dedicated to the Cult of Reason. They renamed the months of the year. They created 10 instead of 7 days in a week.

As the bloodthirsty Masonic Parisian rapist atheists ripped through France, imposing their ‘revolution’ on the people in the Reign of Terror, it was Catholics who bore the brunt of the viciousness.

When the French Republic instituted the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, demanding obedience from the church, it began a chain of events that would result in the massacre of thousands of Catholics in the Vendee. Churches closed, altars were desecrated and the traces of Catholicism were erased as far as humanly possible.

For the population of the Vendee, this was something that they could not accept. When they were drafted into the Revolutionary Army, they refused. Soon, priests were among those who were leading a rebellion against the Masonic Reign of Terror.

Although they pioneered new forms of guerrilla warfare in their efforts to keep the savages of the Revolution at bay, the Revolutionaries tried new tactics too, tying clergy and nuns up and drowning them together in ‘marriages’. They locked children in churches and set them on fire. Women were raped and murdered in large numbers, as a weapon against forming future enemies of the Revolution.

Many clergy, such as Guillaume Repin, have since been beatified.

The Vendee was the beginning of the modern world in many ways, a genocide against Catholics that was justified by those who told themselves that they were compassionate and kind. Lenin would later refer to the Russian people as his ‘Vendeans’, knowing that they were peasant obstructions to his plans.

Estimates of the numbers of dead in the Vendee range from 100,000 to 200,000, but the it is the brutality with which they were killed that makes it especially rotten.

Seosamh O’Caoimh

Hilaire Belloc on the French Revolution and the Catholic Church

THE FOLLOWING EXTRACT IS FROM HILLAIRE BELLOC’S BOOK The French Revolution

The last and the most important of the aspects which the French Revolution presents to a foreign, and in particular to an English reader, is the antagonism which arose between it and the Church.

As this is the most important so it is the most practical of the historical problems which the Revolution sets the student to solve; for the opposition of the Church's organisation in France has at once been the most profound which the Revolution has had to encounter, the most active in its methods, and the only one which has increased in strength as time proceeded. It is hardly too much to say that the Revolution would, in France at least, have achieved its object and created a homogeneous, centralised democracy, had not this great quarrel between the Republic and the Church[Pg 215] arisen; and one may legitimately contrast the ready pliancy of men to political suggestion and the easy story of their institutions where men knew nothing of the Church, with the great storms that arise and the fundamental quarrels that are challenged wherever men are acquainted with the burning truths of Catholicism.

Finally, the struggle between the Catholic Church and the Revolution is not only the most important and the most practical, but also by an unhappy coincidence the most difficult of comprehension of all the matters presented to us by the great change.

We have seen in this book that one department of revolutionary history, the second in importance, perhaps, to the religious department, was also difficult of comprehension—to wit, the military department. And we have seen (or at least I have postulated) that the difficulty of following the military fortunes of the Republic was due to the mass of detail, to the technical character of the information to be acquired and to the natural unfamiliarity of the general reader with the elements of military science. In other words, an accurate knowledge of great numbers of facts, the proper disposition of these facts in their order of military importance, and the correlation of a great number of disconnected actions and plans will alone permit us to grasp the function of the armies in the development and establishment of the modern State through the revolutionary wars.

Now in this second and greater problem, the problem of the function played by religion, it is an exactly opposite method which can alone be of service.

We must examine the field generally, and still more generally we must forget details that here only bewilder, and see in the largest possible outline what forces were really at issue, why their conflict occurred, upon what points that conflict was vital. Any more particular plan will land us, as it has landed so many thousands of controversialists, in mere invective on one side or the other, till we come to see nothing but a welter of treason on the part of priests, and of massacre upon the part of democrats.

Men would, did they try to unravel the skein by analysing the documents of the Vatican or of the French archives, come apparently upon nothing but a host of petty, base, and often personal calculations; or again, did they attempt to take a local sample of the struggle and to follow it in one department of thought, they would come upon nothing but a whirl of conflict with no sort of clue to the motives that lay behind.

The contrast between the military and the religious problem of the French Revolution is like the contrast between the geological composition and the topographical contours of a countryside. To understand the first we must bore and dig, we must take numerous samples of soil and subject them to analysis, we must make ourselves acquainted with detail in its utmost recesses. But for the second, the more general our standpoint, the wider our gaze, and the more comprehensive our judgment, the more accurately do we grasp the knowledge we have set out to seek.

We must, then, approach our business by asking at the outset the most general question of all: "Was there a necessary and fundamental quarrel between the doctrines of the Revolution and those of the Catholic Church?"

Those ill acquainted with either party, and therefore ill equipped for reply, commonly reply with assurance in the affirmative. The French (and still more the non-French) Republican who may happen, by the accident of his life, to have missed the Catholic Church, to have had no intimacy with any Catholic character, no reading of Catholic philosophy, and perhaps even no chance view of so much as an external Catholic ceremony, replies unhesitatingly that the Church is the necessary enemy of the Revolution. Again, the émigré, the wealthy woman, the recluse, any one of the many contemporary types to whom the democratic theory of the Revolution came as a complete novelty, and to-day the wealthy families in that tradition, reply as unhesitatingly that the Revolution is the necessary enemy of the Church. The reply seems quite sufficient to the Tory squire in England or Germany, who may happen to be a Catholic by birth or by conversion; and it seems equally obvious to (let us say) a democratic member of some Protestant Church in one of the new countries.

Historically and logically, theologically also, those who affirm a necessary antagonism between the Republic and the Church are in error. Those who are best fitted to approach the problem by their knowledge both of what the Revolution attempted and of what Catholic philosophy is, find it in proportion to their knowledge difficult or impossible to answer that fundamental question in the affirmative. They cannot call the Revolution a necessary enemy of the Church, nor the Church of Democracy.

What is more, minds at once of the most active and of the best instructed sort are the very minds which find it difficult to explain how any such quarrel can have arisen. French history itself is full of the names of those for whom not so much a reconciliation between the Revolution and the Church, as a statement that no real quarrel existed between them, was the motive of politics; and almost in proportion to a man's knowledge of his fellows in Catholic societies, almost in that proportion is the prime question I have asked answered by such a man in the negative. A man who knows both the Faith and the Republic will tell you that there is not and cannot be any necessary or fundamental reason why conflict should have arisen between a European Democracy and the Catholic Church.

When we examine those who concern themselves with the deepest and most abstract side of the quarrel, we find the same thing. It is impossible for the theologian, or even for the practical ecclesiastical teacher, to put his finger upon a political doctrine essential to the Revolution and to say, "This doctrine is opposed to Catholic dogma or to Catholic morals." Conversely, it is impossible for the Republican to put his finger upon a matter of ecclesiastical discipline or religious dogma and to say, "This Catholic point is at issue with my political theory of the State."

Thousands of active men upon either side would have been only too willing during the last hundred years to discover some such issue, and it has proved undiscoverable. In a word, only those Democrats who know little of the Catholic Church can say that of its nature it forbids democracy; and only those Catholics who have a confused or imperfect conception of democracy can say that of its nature it is antagonistic to the Catholic Church.

Much that is taught by the purely temporal theory of the one is indifferent to the transcendental and supernatural philosophy of the other. In some points, where there is contact (as in the conception of the dignity of man and of the equality of men) there is agreement. To sum up, the Republican cannot by his theory persecute the Church; the Church cannot by her theory excommunicate the Republican.

Why, then, it must next be asked, has there in practice arisen so furious and so enormous a conflict, a conflict whose activity and whose consequence are not narrowing but broadening to-day?

It may be replied to this second question, which is only less general than the first, in one of two manners.

One may say that the actions of men are divided not by theories but by spiritual atmospheres, as it were. According to this view men act under impulses not ideal but actual: impulses which affect great numbers and yet in their texture correspond to the complex but united impulses of an individual personality. Thus, though there be no conflict demonstrable between the theology of the Catholic Church and the political theory of the Revolution, yet there may be necessary and fundamental conflict between the Persons we call the Revolution and the Church, and between the vivifying principles by which either lives. That is one answer that can be, and is, given.

Or one may give a totally different answer and say, "There was no quarrel between the theology of the Catholic Church and the political theory of the Revolution; but the folly of this statesman, the ill drafting of that law, the misconception of such and such an institution, the coincidence of war breaking out at such and such a moment and affecting men in such and such a fashion—all these material accidents bred a misunderstanding between the two great forces, led into conflict the human officers and the human organisations which directed them; and conflict once established feeds upon, and grows from, its own substance."

Now, if that first form of reply be given to the question we have posed, though it is sufficient for the type of philosophy which uses it, though it is certainly explanatory of all human quarrels, and though it in particular satisfies a particular modern school of thought, it is evident that history, properly so called, cannot deal with it.

You may say that the Revolution was the expression of a spirit far more real than any theory, that this spirit is no more susceptible of analysis or definition than is the personality of a single human character, and that this reality was in conflict with another reality—to wit, the Catholic Church. You may even (as some minds by no means negligible have done) pass into the field of mysticism in the matter, and assert that really personal forces, wills superior and external to man, Demons and Angels, drove the Revolution against the Catholic Church, and created The Republic to be an anti-Catholic force capable of meeting and of defeating that Church, which (by its own definition of itself) is not a theory, but the expression of a Personality and a Will. To put it in old-fashioned terms, you may say that the Revolution was the work of antichrist;—but with that kind of reply, I repeat, history cannot deal.

If it be true that, in spite of an absence of contradictory intellectual theories, there is a fundamental spiritual contradiction between the Revolution and the Catholic Church, then time will test the business; we shall see in that case a perpetual extension of the quarrel until the Revolution becomes principally a force for the extinction of Catholicism, and the Catholic Church appears to the supporter of the Revolution not as his principal, but as his only enemy. Such a development has not arisen in a hundred years; a process of time far more lengthy will alone permit us to judge whether the supposed duello is a real matter or a phantasm.

The second type of answer, the answer which pretends to explain the antagonism by a definite series of events, does concern the historian.

Proceeding upon the lines of that second answer, he can bring his science to bear and use the instruments of his trade; and he can show (as I propose to show in what follows) how, although no quarrel can be found between the theory of the Revolution and that of the Church, an active quarrel did in fact spring up between the Revolution in action and the authorities of Catholicism; a quarrel which a hundred years has not appeased, but accentuated.

Behind the revolutionary quarrel lay the condition of the Church in the French State since the settlement of the quarrel of the Reformation.

With what that quarrel of the Reformation was, the reader is sufficiently familiar. For, roughly speaking, a hundred years, from the first years of the sixteenth century to the first years of the seventeenth (from the youth of Henry VIII to the boyhood of Charles I in England), a great attempt was made to change (as one party would have said to amend, as the other would have said to denaturalise) the whole body of Western Christendom. A general movement of attack upon the inherited form of the Church, and a general resistance to that attack, was at work throughout European civilisation; and either antagonist hoped for a universal success, the one of what he called "The Reformation of religion," the other of what he called "The Divine Institution and visible unity of the Catholic Church."

At the end of such a period it became apparent that no such general result had been, or could be, attained. All that part of the West which had rejected the authority of the See of Rome began to appear as a separate territorial region permanently divided from the rest; all that part of Europe which had retained the Authority of the See of Rome began to appear as another region of territory. The line of cleavage between the two was beginning to define itself as a geographical line, and nearly corresponded to the line which, centuries before, had divided the Roman and civilised world from the Barbarians.

The Province of Britain had an exceptional fate. Though Roman in origin and of the ancient civilisation in its foundation, it fell upon the non-Roman side of the new boundary; while Ireland, which the Roman Empire had never organised or instructed, remained, alone of the external parts of Europe, in communion with Rome. Italy, Spain, and in the main southern or Romanised Germany, refused ultimately to abandon their tradition of civilisation and of religion. But in Gaul it was otherwise—and the action of Gaul during the Reformation must be seized if its modern religious quarrels are to be apprehended.

A very considerable proportion of the French landed and mercantile classes, that is of the wealthy men of the country, were in sympathy with the new religious doctrines and the new social organisation which had now taken root in England, Scotland, Holland, northern Germany and Scandinavia, and which were destined in those countries to lead to the domination of wealth. These French squires and traders were called the Huguenots.

The succeeding hundred years, from 1615 to 1715, let us say, were a settlement, not without bloodshed, of the unsatisfied quarrel of the preceding century. All Englishmen know what happened in England; how the last vestiges of Catholicism were crushed out and all the social and political consequences of Protestantism established in the State.

There was, even in that same seventeenth century, a separate, but futile, attempt to destroy Catholicism in Ireland. In Germany a struggle of the utmost violence had only led to a similar regional result. The first third of that hundred years concluded in the Peace of Westphalia, and left the Protestant and Catholic territorial divisions much what we now know them.

In France, however, the peculiar phenomenon remained of a body powerful in numbers and (what was far more important) in wealth and social power, scattered throughout the territory of the kingdom, organised and, by this time, fixedly anti-Catholic, and therefore anti-national.

The nation had recovered its traditional line and had insisted upon the victory of a strong executive, and that executive Catholic. France, therefore, in this period of settlement, became an absolute monarchy whose chief possessed tremendous and immediate powers, and a monarchy which incorporated with itself all the great elements of the national tradition, including the Church.

It is the name of Louis XIV, of course, which symbolises this great time; his very long reign precisely corresponds to it. He was born coincidently with that universal struggle for a religious settlement in Europe, which I have described as characteristic of the time; he died precisely at its close; and under him it seemed as though the reconstructed power of Gaul and the defence of organised Catholicism were to be synonymous.

But there were two elements of disruption in that homogeneous body which Louis XIV apparently commanded. The very fact that the Church had thus become in France an unshakable national institution, chilled the vital source of Catholicism. Not only did the hierarchy stand in a perpetual suspicion of the Roman See, and toy with the conception of national independence, but they, and all the official organisation of French Catholicism, put the security of the national establishment and its intimate attachment to the general political structure of the State, far beyond the sanctity of Catholic dogma or the practice of Catholic morals.

That political structure—the French monarchy—seemed to be of granite and eternal. Had it indeed survived, the Church in Gaul would doubtless, in spite of its attachment to so mundane a thing as the crown, have still survived to enjoy one of those resurrections which have never failed it in the past, and would have returned, by some creative reaction, to its principle of life. But for the moment the consequence of this fixed political establishment was that scepticism, and all those other active forces of the mind which play upon religion in any Catholic State, had full opportunity. The Church was, so to speak, not concerned to defend itself but only its method of existence. It was as though a garrison, forgetting the main defences of a place, had concentrated all its efforts upon the security of one work which contained its supplies of food.

Wit, good verse, sincere enthusiasm, a lucid exposition of whatever in the human mind perpetually rebels against transcendental affirmations, were allowed every latitude and provoked no effective reply. But overt acts of disrespect to ecclesiastical authority were punished with rigour.

While in the wealthy, the bureaucratic, and the governing classes, to ridicule the Faith was an attitude taken for granted, seriously to attack the privileges or position of its ministers was ungentlemanly, and was not allowed. It did not shock the hierarchy that one of its Apostolic members should be a witty atheist; that another should go hunting upon Corpus Christi, nearly upset the Blessed Sacrament in his gallop, and forget what day it was when the accident occurred. The bishops found nothing remarkable in seeing a large proportion of their body to be loose livers, or in some of them openly presenting their friends to their mistresses as might be done by any great lay noble round them. That a diocese or any other spiritual charge should be divorced from its titular chief, seemed to them as natural as does to us the absence from his modern regiment of some titular foreign colonel. Unquestioned also by the bishops were the poverty, the neglect, and the uninstruction of the parish clergy; nay—and this is by far the principal feature—the abandonment of religion by all but a very few of the French millions, no more affected the ecclesiastical officials of the time than does the starvation of our poor affect, let us say, one of our professional politicians. It was a thing simply taken for granted.

The reader must seize that moribund condition of the religious life of France upon the eve of the Revolution, for it is at once imperfectly grasped by the general run of historians, and is also the only fact which thoroughly explains what followed. The swoon of the Faith in the eighteenth century is the negative foundation upon which the strange religious experience of the French was about to rise. France, in the generation before the Revolution, was passing through a phase in which the Catholic Faith was at a lower ebb than it had ever been since the preaching and establishment of it in Gaul.

This truth is veiled by more than one circumstance. Thus many official acts, notably marriages and the registration of births, took place under a Catholic form, and indeed Catholic forms had a monopoly of them. Again, the State wore Catholic clothes, as it were: the public occasions of pomp were full of religious ceremony. Few of the middle classes went to Mass in the great towns, hardly any of the artisans; but the Churches were "official." Great sums of money—including official money—were at the disposal of the Church; and the great ecclesiastics were men from whom solid favours could be got. Again, the historic truth is masked by the language and point of view of the great Catholic reaction which has taken place in our own time.

It is safe to say that where one adult of the educated classes concerned himself seriously with the Catholic Faith and Practice in France before the Revolution, there are five to-day. But in between lies the violent episode of the persecution, and the Catholic reaction in our time perpetually tends to contrast a supposed pre-revolutionary "Catholic" society with the revolutionary fury. "Look," say its champions, "at the dreadful way in which the Revolution treated the Church." And as they say this the converse truth appears obvious and they seem to imply, "Think how different it must have been before the Revolution persecuted the Church!" The very violence of the modern reaction towards Catholicism has exaggerated the revolutionary persecution, and in doing so has made men forget that apart from other evidence of the decline of religion, it is obvious that persecution could never have arisen without a strong and continuous historical backing. You could not have had a Diocletian in the thirteenth century with the spirit of the Crusaders just preceding him; you could not have had Henry VIII if the England of the fifteenth century just preceding him had been an England devoted to the monastic profession. And you could not have had the revolutionary fury against the Catholic Church in France if the preceding generation had been actively Catholic even in a considerable portion.

As a fact, of course it was not: and in the popular indifference to or hatred of the Church the principal factor was the strict brotherhood not so much of Church and State as of Church and executive Government.

But there was another factor. We were describing a little way back how in France there had arisen, during the movement of the Reformation, a wealthy, powerful and numerically large Huguenot body. In mere numbers it dwindled, but it maintained throughout the seventeenth century a very high position, both of privilege and (what was its characteristic) of money-power; and even to-day, though their birth-rate is, of course, lower than the average of the nation, the French Huguenots number close upon a million, and are far wealthier, upon the average, than their fellow citizens. It is their wealth which dominates the trade of certain districts, which exercises so great an effect upon the universities, the publishing trade, and the press; and in general lends them such weight in the affairs of the nation.

Now the Huguenot had in France a special and permanent quarrel with the monarchy, and therefore with the Catholic Church, which, precisely because it was not of the vivid and intense kind which is associated with popular and universal religions, was the more secretly ubiquitous. His quarrel was that, having been highly privileged for nearly a century, the member of "a State within a State," and for more than a generation free to hold assemblies separate from and often antagonistic to the national Government, these privileges had been suddenly removed from him by the Government of Louis XIV a century before the Revolution. The quarrel was more political than religious; it was a sort of "Home Rule" quarrel. For though the Huguenots were spread throughout France, they had possessed special cities and territories wherein their spirit and, to a certain extent, their private self-government, formed enclaves of particularism within the State.

They had held this position, as I have said, for close upon a hundred years, and it was not until a date contemporary with the violent settlement of the religious trouble in England by the expulsion of James II that a similar settlement, less violent, achieved (as it was thought) a similar religious unity in France. But that unity was not achieved. The Huguenots, though no longer permitted to exist as a State within a State, remained, for the hundred years between the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes and the outbreak of the Revolution, a powerful and ever-watchful body. They stood upon the flank of the attack which intellectual scepticism was making upon the Catholic Church, they were prepared to take advantage of that scepticism's first political victory, and since the Revolution they have been the most powerful and, after the Freemasons, with whom they are largely identified, the most strongly organised, of the anti-clerical forces in the country.

The Jews, whose action since the Revolution has been so remarkable in this same business, were not, in the period immediately preceding it, of any considerable influence, and their element in the coalition may be neglected.

Such, then, was the position when the Revolution was preparing. Within memory of all men living, the Church had become more and more official, the masses of the great towns had wholly lost touch with it; the intelligence of the country was in the main drawn to the Deist or even to the purely sceptical propaganda, the powerful Huguenot body was ready prepared for an alliance with any foe of Catholicism, and in the eyes of the impoverished town populace—notably in Paris, which had long abandoned the practice of religion—the human organisation of the Church, the hierarchy, the priesthood, and the few but very wealthy religious orders which still lingered on in dwindling numbers, were but a portion of the privileged world which the populace hated and was prepared to destroy.

It is upon such a spirit and in such conditions of the national religious life that the Revolution begins to work. In the National Assembly you have the great body of the Commons which determines the whole, touched only here and there with men in any way acquainted with or devoted to Catholic practice, and those men for the most part individual and eccentric, that is, uncatholic, almost in proportion to the genuineness of their religious feeling. Among the nobility the practice of religion was a social habit with some—as a mental attitude the Faith was forgotten among all but a very few. Among the clergy a very wealthy hierarchy, no one of them prepared to defend the Church with philosophical argument, and almost unanimous in regarding itself as a part of the old political machine, was dominant; while the representatives of the lower clergy, strongly democratic in character, were at first more occupied with the establishment of democracy than with the impending attack upon the material and temporal organisation of the Church.

Now, that material and temporal organisation offered at the very beginning of the debates an opportunity for attack which no other department of the old régime could show.

The immediate peril of the State was financial. The pretext and even to some extent the motive for the calling of the States-General was the necessity for finding money. The old fiscal machinery had broken down, and as always happens when a fiscal machine breaks down, the hardship it involved, and the pressure upon individuals which it involved, appeared to be universal. There was no immediate and easily available fund of wealth upon which the Executive could lay hands save the wealth of the clergy.

The feudal dues of the nobles, if abandoned, must fall rather to the peasantry than to the State. Of the existing taxes few could be increased without peril, and none with any prospect of a large additional revenue. The charge for debt alone was one-half of the total receipts of the State, the deficit was, in proportion to the revenue, overwhelming. Face to face with that you had an institution not popular, one whose public functions were followed by but a small proportion of the population, one in which income was most unequally distributed, and one whose feudal property yielded in dues an amount equal to more than a quarter of the total revenue of the State. Add to this a system of tithes which produced nearly as much again, and it will be apparent under what a financial temptation the Assembly lay.

It may be argued, of course, that the right of the Church to this ecclesiastical property, whether in land or in tithes, was absolute, and that the confiscation of the one or of the other form of revenue was mere theft. But such was not the legal conception of the moment. The wealth of the Church was not even (and this is most remarkable) defended as absolute property by the generality of those who enjoyed it. The tone of the debates which suppressed the tithes, and later confiscated the Church lands, was a tone of discussion upon legal points, precedents, public utility, and so forth. There was not heard in it, in any effective degree, the assertion of mere moral right; though in that time the moral rights of property were among the first of political doctrines.

It was not, however, the confiscation of the Church lands and the suppression of the tithe which founded the quarrel between the Revolution and the clergy. No financial or economic change is ever more than a preparation for, or a permissive condition of, a moral change. It is never the cause of a moral change. Even the suppression of the religious houses in the beginning of 1790 must not be taken as the point of departure in the great quarrel. The religious orders in France were at that moment too decayed in zeal and in numbers, too wealthy and much too removed from the life of the nation, for this to be the case. The true historical point of departure from which we must date the beginning of this profound debate between the Revolution and Catholicism, is to be found in the morning of the 30th of May, 1790, when a parliamentary committee (the Ecclesiastical Committee) presented to the House its plan for the reform of the Constitution of the Church in Gaul.

The enormity of that act is now apparent to the whole world. The proposal, at the bidding of chance representatives not elected ad hoc, to change the dioceses and the sees of Catholic France, the decision of an ephemeral political body to limit to such and such ties (and very feeble they were) the bond between the Church of France and the Holy See, the suppression of the Cathedral Chapters, the seemingly farcical proposal that bishops should be elected, nay, priests also thus chosen, the submission of the hierarchy in the matter of residence and travel to a civil authority which openly declared itself indifferent in matters of religion,—all this bewilders the modern mind. How, we ask, could men so learned, so enthusiastic, so laborious and so closely in touch with all the realities of their time, make a blunder of that magnitude? Much more, how did such a blunder escape the damnation of universal mockery and immediate impotence? The answer is to be discovered in what has just been laid down with so much insistence: the temporary eclipse of religion in France before the Revolution broke out.

The men who framed the Constitution of the Clergy, the men who voted it, nay, even the men who argued against it, all had at the back of their minds three conceptions which they were attempting to reconcile: of those three conceptions one was wholly wrong, one was imperfect because superficial, the third alone was true. And these three conceptions were, first, that the Catholic Church was a moribund superstition, secondly, that it possessed in its organisation and tradition a power to be reckoned with, and thirdly, that the State, its organs, and their corporate inheritance of action, were so bound up with the Catholic Church that it was impossible to effect any general political settlement in which that body both external to France and internal, should be neglected.

Of these three conceptions, had the first been as true as the last, it would have saved the Constitution of the Clergy and the reputation for common-sense of those who framed it.

It was certainly true that Catholicism had for so many centuries been bound up in the framework of the State that the Parliament must therefore do something with the Church in the general settlement of the nation: it could not merely leave the Church on one side.

It was also superficially true that the Church was a power to be reckoned with politically, quite apart from the traditional union of Church and State—but only superficially true. What the revolutionary politicians feared was the intrigue of those who commanded the organisation of the Catholic Church, men whom they knew for the most part to be without religion, and the sincerity of all of whom they naturally doubted. A less superficial and a more solid judgment of the matter would have discovered that the real danger lay in the animosity or intrigue against the Civil Constitution, not of the corrupt hierarchy, but of the sincere though ill-instructed and dwindling minority which was still loyally attached to the doctrines and discipline of the Church. But even this superficial judgment would not have been fatal, had not the judgment of the National Assembly been actually erroneous upon the first point—the vitality of the Faith.

Had the Catholic Church been, as nearly all educated men then imagined, a moribund superstition, had the phase of decline through which it was passing been a phase comparable to that through which other religions have passed in their last moments, had it been supported by ancient families from mere tradition, clung to by remote peasants from mere ignorance and isolation, abandoned (as it was) in the towns simply because the towns had better opportunities of intellectual enlightenment and of acquiring elementary knowledge in history and the sciences; had, in a word, the imaginary picture which these men drew in their minds of the Catholic Church and its fortunes been an exact one, then the Civil Constitution of the Clergy would have been a statesmanlike act. It would have permitted the hold of the Catholic Church upon such districts as it still retained to vanish slowly and without shock. It proposed to keep alive at a reasonable salary the ministers of a ritual which would presumably have lost all vitality before the last of its pensioners was dead; it would have prepared a bed, as it were, upon which the last of Catholicism in Gaul could peacefully pass away. The action of the politicians in framing the Constitution would have seemed more generous with every passing decade and their wisdom in avoiding offence to the few who still remained faithful, would have been increasingly applauded.

On the other hand, and from the point of view of the statesman, the Civil Constitution of the Clergy bound strictly to the State and made responsible to it those ancient functions, not yet dead, of the episcopacy and all its train. It was a wise and a just consideration on the part of the Assembly that religions retain their machinery long after they are dead, and if that machinery has ever been a State machinery it must remain subject to the control of the State: and subject not only up to the moment when the living force which once animated it is fled, but much longer; up, indeed, to the moment when the surviving institutions of the dead religion break down and perish.

So argued the National Assembly and its committee, and, I repeat, the argument was just and statesmanlike, prudent and full of foresight, save for one miscalculation. The Catholic Church was not dead, and was not even dying. It was exhibiting many of the symptoms which in other organisms and institutions correspond to the approach of death, but the Catholic Church is an organism and an institution quite unlike any other. It fructifies and expands immediately under the touch of a lethal weapon; it has at its very roots the conception that material prosperity is stifling to it, poverty and misfortune nutritious.

The men of the National Assembly would have acted more wisely had they closely studied the story of Ireland (then but little known), or had they even made themselves acquainted with the methods by which the Catholic Church in Britain, after passing in the fifteenth century through a phase somewhat similar to that under which it was sinking in Gaul in the eighteenth, was stifled under Henry and Elizabeth.

But the desire of the men of 1789 was not to kill the Church but to let it die; they thought it dying. Their desire was only to make that death decent and of no hurt to the nation, and to control the political action of a hierarchy that had been wealthy and was bound up with the old society that was crumbling upon every side.

The Civil Constitution of the Clergy failed: it lit the civil war, it dug the pit which divided Catholicism from the Revolution at the moment of the foreign invasion, it segregated the loyal priest in such a fashion that his order could not but appear to the populace as an order of traitors, and it led, in the furnace of 1793, to the great persecution from the memories of which the relations between the French democracy and the Church have not recovered.

It is important to trace the actual steps of the failure; for when we appreciate what the dates were, how short the time which was left for judgment or for revision, and how immediately disaster followed upon error, we can understand what followed and we can understand it in no other way.

If we find an enduring quarrel between two families whose cause of contention we cannot seize and whose mutual hostility we find unreasonable, to learn that it proceeded from a cataclysm too rapid and too violent for either to have exercised judgment upon it will enable us to excuse or at least to comprehend the endurance of their antagonism. Now, it was a cataclysm which fell upon the relations of the Church and State immediately after the error which the Parliament had committed; a cataclysm quite out of proportion to their intentions, as indeed are most sudden disasters quite out of proportion to the forces that bring them about.

It was, as we have seen, in the summer of 1790—upon the 12th of July—that the Civil Constitution of the Clergy was approved by the Assembly. But it was not until the 26th of August that the King consented to sign. Nor was there at the moment any attempt to give the law effect. The protests of the bishops, for instance, came out quite at leisure, in the month of October, and the active principle of the whole of the Civil Constitution—to wit, the presentation of the Civic Oath which the clergy were required to take, was not even debated until the end of the year.

This Civic Oath, which is sometimes used as a bugbear in the matter, was no more than an engagement under the sanction of an oath that the bishop or priest taking it would maintain the new régime—though that régime included the constitution of the clergy; the oath involved no direct breach with Catholic doctrine or practice. It was, indeed, a folly to impose it, and it was a folly based upon the ignorance of the politicians (and of many of the bishops of the day) as to the nature of the Catholic Church. But the oath was not, nor was it intended to be, a measure of persecution. Many of the parish clergy took it, and most of them probably took it in good faith: nor did it discredit the oath with the public that it was refused by all save four of the acting bishops, for the condition of the hierarchy in pre-revolutionary France was notorious. The action of the bishops appeared in the public eye to be purely political, and the ready acceptance of the oath by so many, though a minority, of the lower clergy argued strongly in its favour.

Nevertheless, no Catholic priest or bishop or layman could take that oath without landing himself in disloyalty to his religion; and that for the same reason which led St. Thomas of Canterbury to make his curious and fruitful stand against the reasonable and inevitable, as much as against the unreasonable, governmental provisions of his time. The Catholic Church is an institution of necessity autonomous. It cannot admit the right of any other power exterior to its own organisation to impose upon it a modification of its discipline, nor, above all, a new conception of its hieratic organisation.

The reader must carefully distinguish between the acceptation by the Church of a detail of economic reform, the consent to suppress a corporation at the request of the civil power, or even to forego certain traditional political rights, and the admission of the general principle of civil control. To that general principle the Assembly, in framing the Constitution of the Clergy, was quite evidently committed. To admit such a co-ordinate external and civil power, or rather to admit a superior external power, is in theory to deny the principle of Catholicism, and in practice to make of the Catholic Church what the other State religions of Christendom have become.

I have said that not until the end of the year 1790 was the debate opened upon the proposition to compel the clergy to take the oath.

It is a singular commentary upon the whole affair that compulsion should have been the subject for debate at all. It should have followed, one would have imagined, normally from the law. But so exceptional had been the action of the Assembly and, as they now were beginning to find, so perilous, that a special decree was necessary—and the King's signature to it—before this normal consequence of a measure which had been law for months, could be acted upon.

Here let the reader pause and consider with what that moment—the end of 1790—coincided.

The assignats, paper-money issued upon the security of the confiscated estates of the Church, had already depreciated 10 per cent. Those who had first accepted them were paying throughout France a penny in the livre, or as we may put it, a penny farthing on the shilling, for what must have seemed to most of them the obstinacy of one single corporation—and that an unpopular one—against the decrees of the National Assembly.

It was now the moment when a definite reaction against the Revolution was first taking shape, and when the populace was first beginning uneasily to have suspicion of it; it was the moment when the Court was beginning to negotiate for flight; it was the moment when (though the populace did not know it) Mirabeau was advising the King with all his might to seize upon the enforcement of the priests' oath as an opportunity for civil war.

The whole air of that winter was charged with doubt and mystery: in the minds of all who had enthusiastically followed the march of the Revolution, the short days of that rigorous cold of 1790-91 contained passages of despair, and a very brief period was to suffice for making the clerical oath not only the test of democracy against reaction, but the wedge that should split the nation in two.

With the very opening of the new year, on the 4th of January, the bishops and priests in the Assembly were summoned to take the oath to the King, the Nation, and the Law; but that law included the Civil Constitution of the Clergy, and they refused. Within three months Mirabeau was dead, the flight of the King determined on, the suspicion of Paris at white heat, the oath taken or refused throughout France, and the schismatic priests introduced into their parishes—it may be imagined with what a clamour and with how many village quarrels! In that same fortnight appeared the papal brief, long delayed, and known as the Brief "Caritas," denouncing the Civil Constitution of the Clergy. Six weeks later, at the end of May, the papal representative at the French Court was withdrawn, and in that act religious war declared.

Throughout this quarrel, which was now exactly of a year's duration, but the acute phase of which had lasted only six months, every act of either party to it necessarily tended to make the conflict more violent. Not only was there no opportunity for conciliation, but in the very nature of things the most moderate counsel had to range itself on one side or the other, and every public act which touched in any way upon the sore point, though it touched but indirectly, and with no desire on the part of the actors to rouse the passions of the moment, immediately appeared as a provocation upon one side or the other.

It was inevitable that it should be so, with a population which had abandoned the practice of religion, with the attachment of the clerical organisation to the organisation of the old régime, with the strict bond of discipline that united the priesthood of the Church in France into one whole, and above all with the necessity under which the Revolution was, at this stage, of finding a definite and tangible enemy.

This last point is of the very first importance. Public opinion was exasperated and inflamed, for the King was known to be an opponent of the democratic movement; yet he signed the bills and could not be overtly attacked. The Queen was known to be a violent opponent of it; but she did not actually govern. The Governments of Europe were known to be opponents; but no diplomatic note had yet appeared of which public opinion could make an object for attack.

The resistance, therefore, offered by the clergy to the Civil Constitution, had just that effect which a nucleus will have in the crystallisation of some solution. It polarised the energies of the Revolution, it provided a definite foil, a definite negative, a definite counterpoint, a definite butt. Here was a simple issue. Men wearing a special uniform, pursuing known functions, performing a known part in society—to wit, the priests—were now for the most part the enemies of the new democratic Constitution that was in preparation. They would not take the oath of loyalty to it: they were everywhere in secret rebellion against it and, where they were dispossessed of their cures, in open rebellion. The clergy, therefore, that is the non-juring clergy (and the conforming clergy were an experiment that soon became a fiction), were after April 1791, in the eyes of all the democrats of the time, the plainest and most tangible form of the opposition to democracy.

To the way in which I have presented the problem a great deal more might be added. The very fact that the democratic movement had come after a period of unfaith, and was non-Catholic in its springs, would have tended to produce that quarrel. So would the necessary attachment of the Catholic to authority and the easy confusion between the principle of authority and claims of a traditional monarchy. Again, the elements of vanity, of material greed, and of a false finality which are to be discovered in any purely democratic theory of the State, will between them always bring this theory into some conflict with religion. The centuries during which the throne and the altar had stood as twin symbols, especially in France, the very terminology of religious metaphor which had been forged during the centuries of monarchical institutions in Europe, helped to found the great quarrel. But, I repeat, the overt act without which the quarrel could never have become the terribly great thing it did, the master blunder which destroyed the unity of the revolutionary movement, was the Civil Constitution of the Clergy.

So much for the first year of the schism, May 1790 to May 1791. The second year is but an intensification of the process apparent in the first.

It opens with the King's flight in June 1791: that is, with the first open act of enmity taken against the authority of the National Parliament since, two years before, the National Parliament had declared itself supreme. Already the Court had been generally identified with the resistance of the clergy, and a particular example of this had appeared in the opinion that the King's attempted journey to St. Cloud in April had been prompted by a desire to have communion at the hands of a non-juring priest.

When, therefore, the King fled, though his flight had nothing whatsoever to do with the clerical quarrel, it was associated in men's minds with the clerical quarrel through his attempt to leave Paris in April and from a long association of the Court with the clerical resistance. The outburst of anti-monarchical feeling which followed the flight was at the same time an outburst of anti-clerical feeling; but the clergy were everywhere and could be attacked everywhere. The Declaration of Pillnitz, which the nation very rightly interpreted as the beginning of an armed European advance against the French democracy, was felt to be a threat not only in favour of the King but in favour also of the rebellious ecclesiastics.

And so forth. The uneasy approach of war throughout that autumn and winter of 1791-92, the peculiar transformation of the French temperament which war or its approach invariably produces—a sort of constructive exaltation and creative passion—began to turn a great part of its energy or fury against the very persons of the orthodox priests.

The new Parliament, the "Legislative" as it was called, had not been sitting two months when it passed, upon November 29, 1791, the decree that non-juring priests should be deprived of their stipend. And here again we must note the curious lack of adjustment between law and fact in all this clerical quarrel! For more than a year public money had been paid to men who, under the law, should not during the whole of that year have touched any salary! Yet, as in the case of the oath, special action was necessary, and moreover the Parliament added to this tardy and logical consequence of the law a declaration that those who had not so taken the oath within eight days of their decree should be rendered "suspect."

The word "suspect" is significant. The Parliament even now could not act, at least it could not act without the King; and this word "suspect," which carried no material consequences with it, was one that might cover a threat of things worse than regular and legal punishment. It was like the mark that some power not authorised or legal makes upon the door of those whom that power has singled out for massacre in some city.

Three weeks later Louis vetoed the decree refusing stipends to non-jurors, and the year 1791 ended with the whole matter in suspense but with exasperation increasing to madness.

The first three months of 1792 saw no change. The non-juring clergy were still tolerated by the Executive in their illegal position, and, what is more extraordinary, still received public money and were still for the most part in possession of their cures; the conception that the clergy were the prime, or at any rate the most obvious, enemies of the new régime now hardened into a fixed opinion which the attempted persecution of religion, as the one party called it, the obstinate and anti-national rebellion of factious priests, as the other party called it, was rapidly approaching real persecution and real rebellion.

With April 1792 came the war, and all the passions of the war.

The known hostility of the King to the Revolution was now become something far worse: his known sympathy with an enemy under arms. To force the King into the open was henceforward the main tactic of the revolutionary body.

Now for those whose object was forcing Louis XVI to open declarations of hostility against the nation, his religion was an obvious instrument. In no point could one come to closer grips with the King than on this question of the Church, where already, in December 1791, he had exercised his veto.

On May 27, 1792, therefore, Guadet and Vergniaud, the Girondins, moved that a priest who had refused to take the oath should be subjected to transportation upon the mere demand of any twenty taxpayers within that assembly of parishes known as a "Canton." It was almost exactly two years since the Civil Constitution of the Clergy had first been reported to the House by the Ecclesiastical Committee of the Constituent or National Assembly.

It must not be forgotten under what external conditions this violent act, the first true act of persecution, was demanded. It was already a month since, upon the 20th of April, the war had opened upon the Belgian frontier by a disgraceful panic and the murder of General Dillon; almost contemporaneous with that breakdown was the corresponding panic and flight of the French troops in their advance to Mons. All Europe was talking of the facile march upon Paris which could now be undertaken; and in general this decree against the priests was but part of the exasperated policy which was rising to meet the terror of the invasion.

It was followed, of course, by the decree dismissing the Royal Guard, and, rather more than a week later, by the demand for the formation of a camp of volunteers under the walls of Paris. But with this we are not here concerned. The King vetoed the decree against the non-juring priests, and in the wild two months that followed the orthodox clergy were, in the mind of the populace, and particularly the populace of Paris, identified with the cause of the re-establishment of the old régime and the success of the invading foreign armies.

With the crash of the 10th of August the persecution began: the true persecution, which was to the growing bitterness of the previous two years what a blow is to the opening words of a quarrel.

The decree of the 27th of May was put into force within eleven days of the fall of the Tuileries. True, it was not put into force in that crudity which the Parliament had demanded: the non-juring priests were given a fortnight to leave the kingdom, and if they failed to avail themselves of the delay were to be transported.

From this date to the end of the Terror, twenty-three months later, the story of the relations between the Revolution and the Church, though wild and terrible, is simple: it is a story of mere persecution culminating in extremes of cruelty and in the supposed uprooting of Christianity in France.

The orthodox clergy were everywhere regarded by this time as the typical enemies of the revolutionary movement; they themselves regarded the revolutionary movement, by this time, as being principally an attempt to destroy the Catholic Church.

Within seven months of the fall of the monarchy, from the 18th of March, 1793, the priests, whether non-juring or schismatic, might, on the denunciation of any six citizens, be subjected to transportation.

There followed immediately a general attack upon religion. The attempted closing of all churches was, of course, a failure, but it was firmly believed that such attachment as yet remained to the Catholic Church was due only to the ignorance of the provincial districts which displayed it, or to the self-seeking of those who fostered it. The attempt at mere "de-christianisation," as it was called, failed, but the months of terror and cruelty, the vast number of martyrdoms (for they were no less) and the incredible sufferings and indignities to which the priests who attempted to remain in the country were subjected, burnt itself, as it were, into the very fibre of the Catholic organisation in France, and remained, in spite of political theory one way or the other, and in spite of the national sympathies of the priesthood, the one great active memory inherited from that time.

Conversely, the picture of the priest, his habit and character, as the fatal and necessary opponent of the revolutionary theory, became so fixed in the mind of the Republican that two generations did nothing to eliminate it, and that even in our time the older men, in spite of pure theory, cannot rid themselves of an imagined connection between the Catholic Church and an international conspiracy against democracy. Nor does this non-rational but very real feeling lack support from the utterances of those who, in opposing the political theory of the French Revolution, consistently quote the Catholic Church as its necessary and holy antagonist.

The attempt to "de-christianise" France failed, as I have said, completely. Public worship was restored, and the Concordat of Napoleon was believed to have settled the relations between Church and State in a permanent fashion. We have lived to see it dissolved; but this generation will not see, nor perhaps the generation succeeding it, the issue of the struggle between two bodies of thought which are divided by no process of reason, but profoundly divorced by the action of vivid and tragic historical memories.

Cuban Priest Arrested After Defying Communism With Public Prayers

Cubans have taken to the streets in large numbers this week, protesting against the country’s Communist rulers.

According to some media outlets, Covid has played a role in these protests, that is yet to be confirmed. It is believed however, that problems with food and power have been the instigators of such an unprecedented outpouring of peoples onto the streets of Havana and other cities on the island.

The protestors have chanted ‘Libertad’ and ‘Patria y vida’, ‘freedom’ and ‘fatherland or death’.

Some in Western media have claimed that the protests have been engineered by the United States, while this is always plausible, it would be strange for the indifferent Biden administration to take effective action on anything, let alone Cuba. That does not mean that there could not be some other US intervention in events, but perhaps this really is a relatively organic revolt against Communist rule in Cuba. Nonetheless, it seems inevitable that a ‘free’ Cuba will not be far away from being told to allow large US corporations and banks to take root, but perhaps the people will be able to resist that.

In the midst of the protests however, a priest was seen carrying Nuestra Señora de la Caridad del Cobre (Our Lady of Charity of El Cobre), Patron Saint of Cuba. The large crowd can be seen praying and venerating the statue.

Later social media reports claimed that the priest, Padre Castor José Álvarez Devesa, had been arrested.

A Spanish priest claimed that Communists based in Spain were using social media to slander Fr. Devesa.

There were images on social media of protestors being brutally attacked by the Cuban police, others of them being rounded up and arrested.

It is now being reported that social media is being blamed for the protests and that there is a brutal crackdown under way, rest assured that Catholics will suffer under this coming repression. Please pray for the people of Cuba.