Showing posts with label Christendom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christendom. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Mitsui - Cathedrals ... in Color

Did you happen to know, asked the sadly ignorant blogger, that the great cathedral churches of Christendom were once rich in polychromatic color - both on their exteriors and interiors?

Once again, the inimitable church art historian (and extraordinary artist) Daniel Mitsui brings to light of day a fact of Truth, Goodness, and Beauty that yours truly did not until as of late have at his disposal.

I'll let our inestimable friend and brother in Christ show you what the above, Amiens Cathedral, looks like under the astonishing spotlights and lasers looks like by going, gentle reader, here. Enjoy.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Wise Men From the East

While the present "leaders" of the West do their utmost to ignore and castigate its truth and reality, Chinese thinkers recognize it as true. Now, mind; some of us already knew and rejoiced in it. Have a blessed and peaceful Passion Sunday, gentle reader.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

But No Longer a Monopoly

Penn State and Baylor professor, Phillip Jenkins, says that the Christian faith is alive and well in Europe, and will be even more alive a century from now.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Pax Christi in regno Christi - Knox

CHRISTENDOM HAS BEFORE NOW taken up arms in its own defence ... Christian princes, before now, have tried to spread the faith at the point of the sword, always, or nearly always, with disastrous results for religion. But the substantial victories of the Church have lain, always, in the sphere of the human conscience. Christ has reigned, not in the councils of nations, but in men's hearts. If every country in the world professed the Catholic religion, set up religious emblems in its market places and voted special honours, special privileges, special revenues to the clergy -- that would not be the reign of Christ on earth. It would not be the reign of Christ on earth if the homage which men paid to religion was merely external, merely political; if they treated the emblems of Christianity merely as an ancestral tradition they were proud of; and a convenient rallying-point for civic sentiment, no more. Christ will reign in the world only where, only in so far as, he rules in human hearts.

- Ronald A. Knox

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Benedict - On Immigration

A prophetic word comes from the Holy Father - a small thing, a cloud no larger than a man's hand - namely, states have the right to defend their borders and regulate migration flow, while - of course - treating migrants with human dignity here.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Hope - Christendom

Trinity (1408-25) - Andrei Rublev

First of all, let me apologize for the truncated manner of my posting. Sitting in an upright position less than two weeks out from my surgery leaves me at a disadvantage, so please forgive errors, etc.

An important hint I want to leave for those in search of breadcrumbs leading to cultural hope and the renewal of Christendom can, it seems to me, be found in this modern prophecy.

Conspiracy theories revolve around this document at quite a speed. It is vital, therefore, to slow down and realize a few things about this Fatima revelation. First, while there is an element that rightly sees "chastisement", in light of more recent events - namely, the cultural meltdown of the West rightly called suicide by the observant - there is a much more crucial element, one of theological hope.

Remnants of chivalry, of faithful sons and daughters of Our Lord's Catholic Church, of willingness not to buckle and give-in exist in old Europe, in new America, and elsewhere around the world.

Sadly, however, it is a well-documented reality that the West is emasculated, profligate, shamelessly promiscuous, literally de-generate, and no more forward-thinking than the next sensualist experience. It does not have the faith, morals, or virtuous wherewithal any longer to stand before the enemies of Christendom.

Not so, it seems, in Russia. Now"consecrated" to Our Lady as Fatima urged, Russia is just as sinful. Of course. As secularized? Perhaps ... but it seems not so. Russia has dealt as an entity with mightily violent foes for many long centuries - from the Tatars without to the Stalinists within. The West, except for the twentieth century's two huge bloodbaths, has become a mere batch of weathervanes, whiney sensualist splinters, avoiding mortal consciousness and distracting itself to death.

So, look with hope to the Holy Father. Be a Pope's man - or woman. Trust Catholic truth. Be strong in eucharistic grace, and all the other sacraments. And pray - pray - for our Orthodox brothers and sisters in Russia. They have NOT forgotten how to stand before the enemies of Christ our King and His holy Church.

We may learn and follow under the consecrated leadership of Our Lady, the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Queen of Heaven.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

BXVI - Affirming Our Christian Heritage

Carl Olson lifts up our Holy Father's inestimable reflections on the need to acclaim and affirm the cultural heritage that is still stamped on Western civilization:

"Modern culture, particularly in Europe, runs the risk of amnesia, of forgetting and thus abandoning the extraordinary heritage aroused and inspired by Christian faith, which is the essential framework of the culture of Europe, and not only of Europe. The Christian roots of the continent are, in fact, made up not only of religious life and the witness of so many generation of believers, but also of the priceless cultural and artistic heritage which is the pride and precious resource of the peoples and countries in which Christian faith, in its various expressions, has entered into dialogue with culture and the arts.

"Today too these roots are alive and fruitful in East and West, and can in fact inspire a new humanism, a new season of authentic human progress in order to respond effectively to the numerous and sometimes crucial challenges that our Christian communities and societies have to face: first among them that of secularism, which not only impels us to ignore God and His designs, but ends up by denying the very dignity of human beings, in view of a society regulated only by selfish interests."


More here.

Friday, February 5, 2010

There Was a Time

A beautiful, if wistful, look back at London filmed in color in the 1920s. (ht: Baron Bodissey)

Monday, January 18, 2010

Whew

After the distinct possibility of this happening, gladly for Old London here is some good news:
In a rare setback for the would-be Islamizers of Europe, the plans for London’s “Mega-Mosque” have been abandoned. If the organizers’ goals had been realized, their huge mosque — the largest in Europe — would have dominated the skyline near the 2012 Olympics site.

Congratulations are in order for Alan Craig and his supporters, who led a massive and sustained opposition to the mosque. One may assume that the flood of negative publicity about the project was enough to give its financial backers cold feet..More>>

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Without Vision, the People Perish



Father Aidan Nichols is right. Europe and the West need a revitalized imaginative vision. The sole vision that is strong and vital is the transcendent vision of the Church. It is the present secular void into which western demographics and nihilism are falling. "Without vision the people perish" (Prov 29,18).

Islam, ironically, is a culture in doubling rivalry
from its inception with the faith and ethos of Judaism, embodied in the state of Israel, and Christianity, embodied in the "one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church." Both of the latter are emphatically still being rejected by secularist westerners.

Yet the Scimitar, being a post-Incarnational expression of what Girard calls the Sacred, anthropologically speaking, incessantly feeds on its rivalry with the Judeo-Christian, meager though Islam is theologically, intellectually, and psychologically.


If Christendom had its vision, there would be no contest with the Scimitar. But this is not the case. Many voices speak for renewal of vision. Father Aidan Nichols in his guide book, Christendom Awake!, apostolates within the Church, the Holy Father, of course, in his wooings of a shepherd to lost sheep, even J. R. R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings all implore this regaining of the Church's transcendent vision of Christian culture.

I repeat: there would be no contest between Christendom and the Scimitar if Christendom regained its vision of being a continuance of biblical salvation history; a furtherance of the in-breaking Kingdom of God empowered in the Incarnation, Passion, Death, and Resurrection of the Word made flesh (Jn 1,14), Jesus Christ. Islam could never overmaster with its thin religion and ethos.

I do not propose an attempt at nostalgic return to a romanticized past. Rather, I propose a rejection and ejection of all the enervating, hypocritical elements of western society that rob men and women, youth, and children of their - our - awareness of our God-given dignity, honor and birthrights.

Rejection? Ejection? Where? Who? In your life. In my life. Take personal responsibility. Make the sacrifices, expected and unexpected. BE an expression of the in-breaking Kingdom of God at your age, at your station in life.

It starts with you. It starts with me. Our honor in Marian chivalry comes with every single decision we make, every time we love and forgive, in every virtuous act of faith, hope, and charity.

Christendom must be acted into being, one fiefdom, one knight, at a time.

God bless and support us in this noble Quest to restore the vision of the Holy Spirit's grand experiment, the Church, in the hearts and lives of the West.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Truth, Faith, Morals - Chivalry

In light of my last post, I hasten to point to a prime indicator of truth vs. falsehood, good vs. evil, the Good vs. the satanic. It is this: who is satanic today?

"Satanic!? Whoa, Athos! Are you going fundy on us?" Fear not, gentle reader.

I am speaking from a vantage point of the Magisterium of the Church, and from what I consider a faithful servant of her Magisterium, mimetic theory of René Girard. And, for that matter, I am speaking from merely an etymological viewpoint.

In the New Testament, "Satan" (Gr. Σατάν ) means quite literally "the accuser." The accusatory gesture lies at the heart of fallen humanity and our conventional culture. The accuser of the mob becomes the arbiter of who the next victim will be. "It's HIS fault!" is the satanic gesture par excellence.

Today, there are more accusatory fingers pointing to truth, goodness, and beauty embodied in the Catholic Church than ever in prior ages. The Catholic Church refuses to relinquish truth, goodness, and beauty in an age of neo-pagan recrudescence, relativism, and ugliness. There ARE truth statements that will stand forever. There ARE faith values that are immutable. There ARE morals that shall not be brought down by the craven hoards.

May God Almighty remember Our Lord's promise that the gates of hell shall not prevail against His Church (Matthew 16, 18). And men and women of good will join arm in arm in chivalrous virtue.

It is the Adventure of faith, hope, and charity.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Grail Lore - Sacred and Profane

For one for whom the topic of Marian chivalry and knightly charity is not a closed book (switched off Kindle?) or moot topic, I found this fascinating.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Fr James Schall - Not-so Dark Ages


Some very good things from the French mind are appearing among us. Daniel Mahoney brought Pierre Manent to our attention. He re-presents Raymond Aron, Charles de Gaulle, and the pertinent French background to Solzhenitsyn’s work. Jean-Luc Marion, Alain Besançon, and Rémi Brague have become “must-reads” if we want to escape modern ideology – unfortunately, not everyone does.

Last semester a French exchange student attended one of my classes. Her father, a medical doctor from Nice, visited one day. I mentioned a review of Sylvain Gouguenheim’s Aristote au Mont Saint-Michel: Les racines grecques de l’Europe Chrétienne (“Aristotle at Mont Saint-Michel: The Greek Roots of Christian Europe”). Weeks later, his daughter presented me with a copy from Nice. I have now read this remarkable, enormously learned book.

It examines the now often heard and widely popular assumption that civilization was stimulated to become “modern” because of “enlightened” Islamic philosophy that arrived in the stagnant West through Toledo and Sicily. The Christian Dark and Middle Ages are pictured as be-knighted, populated mostly by primitive folks just vegetating till the Enlightenment came from Islam to early modern Europe ...

This book is eye-opening. It is far more realistic than most things we read about the ease of multicultural “adaption” or endless dialogue. Gouguenheim’s approach is blunter than we usually encounter in the discussion of different religions: “Fundamentally, European civilization remains Greco-Roman, Judeo-Christian in inspiration. In its further course, European philosophy or science developed its own proper and original conceptions. Islam was, from the redaction of the Koran on, the bearer of another global system. From that point of view, Greek knowledge was able to be integrated only in a particular manner, limited to certain sectors or to certain thinkers.”

Islamic scholars, as Gueguenheim shows, go through contortions to demonstrate that the Koran preceded the Old and New Testament. Therefore, Jews and Christians must have deliberately rewritten the text so that the Muslim interpretation of its own revelation would still hold.

Gueguenheim concludes that Western civilization does not owe its genius or energy to Islam. It has its own roots. In its dynamic form, Islam was not itself able to assimilate the Greek heritage. It proved too dangerous to the Koranic understanding of reality.
Read all here.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Coulombe - BXVI and "wolves"

Charles A. Coulombe, an adroit man about town, weighs in on the Holy Father, the "wolves" that beset him, and the enormous tasks set before this remarkable German Shepherd in By His Enemies You Shall Know Him

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Music, Mozart, Polyphony, & Western Civ

Interesting and sage comments from Fjordmann:
The Christian Church was the dominant social institution in post-Roman Europe and deeply affected the future development of European music. The ancient Greek system of notation had apparently been forgotten by the seventh century AD, when Isidore of Seville (ca. 560-636) wrote that “Unless sounds are remembered by man, they perish, for they cannot be written down.” But with the development of complex chants, what was needed to stabilize them was notation, a way to write down the music. The earliest surviving European books of chant with music notation date from the ninth century. During the early Christian era, the Classical legacy was used, but modified. From the Jews came the practices of singing psalms and chanting Scripture. Church leaders drew on Greek musical theory but rejected pagan customs, and elevated worship over entertainment and singing over instrumental music.

It is instructive to consider the fact that Middle Eastern Muslims, too, had access to Greek musical theory, yet they decided not use it, just like they did not utilize the Greek artistic legacy. Both music and pictorial arts were integrated into religious worship in Christian Europe in a way that never happened in the Islamic world. In fact, it was Gregorian chant and the growth of polyphonic music in medieval European monasteries and cathedrals which established the musical tradition that would eventually culminate in the works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Ludwig van Beethoven centuries later. There was no Mozart or Beethoven in the Islamic world, just like there was no Copernicus, Galileo or Newton.

The invention of musical notation enabled musicians to build upon the work of the past. It may have been a necessary condition for the expansion and development of musical expression, but it is not alone sufficient to explain later advances. The discovery of the connection between mathematical ratios and musical intervals attributed to Pythagoras – and independently the Chinese – was important, but not as important as polyphony. According to Charles Murray, “Just as linear perspective added depth to the length and breadth of painting, polyphony added, metaphorically, a vertical dimension to the horizontal line of melody.”
Read all here.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Heirs to Fortuyn

Bruce Bawer writes on the reasons for the right-swing among voters in the European Union here.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Corpus Christianum - Merry, Come Join Us

I have been remiss in inviting new friends to join our merry, devout band united as one in Marian chivalry. Corpus Christianum is a joyous international association dedicated to praying for the renewal of Christendom - not as a nostalgic yearning for a past greatness, but an in-breaking harbinger of God's Kingdom in faithful obedience to Mother Church.

As such, we pray for:

- The renewal, unity, and spread of Christendom
- The Supreme Pontiff and all priests/religious
- The protection of Christians around the world
- The restoration of the family
- The conversion of sinners and the sanctification of all people

We are looking for courageous souls who are willing to take up the standard of Christ the King! We invite you to review the association's statutes for more information about the organization and its obligations.

You are most welcome, brother and sister. Pro Christo et Ecclesia!

Monday, April 20, 2009

Inevitable 'Pushback'

The Baron at Gates of Vienna says a "pushback like this is inevitable," as people in Luton, England protest Scimitar extremism.

Is this good news, or bad news? Why? Explain.