Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada)

 - Class of 1932

Page 31 of 176

 

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 31 of 176
Page 31 of 176



Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 30
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Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 32
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Page 31 text:

LOYOLA churches, forty-one hundred clergy, and approximately two million five hun- dred thousand Catholics. There are some fifty religious orders and con- gregations for men, among the most prominent being the Ване ита апа the Jesuits. For women there аге about eighty congregations and orders, among them the Carmelites, the Bene- dictines, and the Sisters of Mercy. There are four Catholic weeklies— Tablet, Universe, Catholic Times, and Catholic | Herald—and, іп addition, several monthly periodicals. The most important of the Catholic Societies are the Catholic Truth Society” and the Catholic Evidence Guild.'' Notwithstanding their position and number, Catholics in England are still subject to certain legal disabilities. The “ВШ of Rights, passed in the reign of William and Mary, declares that no member of the reigning house who is a Catholic can succeed to the throne. It also provides that the sovereign on becoming a Catholic or on marrying a Catholic forfeits the crown. The 'Аст of Settlement,” passed іп the same reign, confirms the above and further enacts that ‘‘whosoever shall hereafter come to possession of the crown of England shall join in com- munion with the Church of England as by law established. The ee tion Act’’ of George IV provides that no emancipation shall extend, ог be construed, to enable any person, other- wise than he is now by law entitled, to hold the office of Lord Chancellor of England or Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.’ The common opinion is that Catholics cannot hold these positions. The same act also imposes fresh disabilities upon ‘Jesuits and members of other religious orders, communities, or societies of the Church of Rome, bound by monastic vows. These unrepealed sections, though seldom, if ever, enforced, have none the less the serious effect of dis- abling religious orders of men from holding property. COLLEGE REVIEW Cardinal Gasquet, in his ‘Short His- tory of the Catholic Church in Eng- land,” gives a succinct summary of the Catholic position: When we recall the state to which the long years of per- secution had reduced the Catholic Church at the dawn of the nineteenth century, we may well wonder at what has been accomplished since then . . . . Succisa virescit. Cut down almost to the ground, the tree planted by Augustine has manifested again the divine life within it; it has put forth once more new branches and leaves, and gives promise of abundant fruit.”’ There is an apparent discrepancy between the total number of those be- longing to the different churches and the population of England. Rev. R. D. Jones, chairman of the Congregational Union in 1926, accounts for this by stating that ‘‘seventy-five per cent of the manhood of the country is outside all the churches. This estimate would appear slightly exaggerated; statistics, however, show that at least sixty per cent are so. Dr. Jones further remarked that бе great mass of our people (the English) seem to be drifting away from religion; the habit of worship is falling into 418486.” It would be a mistake, however, to argue from these statistics that England is religiously indifferent. mom is far from being religiously indifferent. The fact is that the Established and the Free Churches have failed to satisfy a large number of men. This is the meaning of the opposition between Religion and Science. For example, Sir Arthur Keith's position, as outlined in an essay in Living Philosophies,’’ is simply a negation of the Bible-religion he was taught in Scotland in his youth, coupled with a fair sprinkling of the fallacies that the limited logic of scien- tific method does not reveal. But Sir Arthur is none the less profoundly re- spectful of religious feeling. What is but a gentlemanly respect in Sir Arthur is much more like some ‘‘divine dis- 19%

Page 30 text:

LOTOLA the clergy and laity of the Established Church. The High Church is numerically the strongest and is, as well, the most in- fluential of the three. It embraces, as do the others, men differing widely in doctrine and practice. There are those whose innovations do not extend be- yond surpliced choirs and altar lights; on the other hand, there are those whose acceptance of Catholic ceremonial is so complete as to lead one to suspect that he is in a Catholic Church. This party unanimously rejects the designation of Protestant and has more recently styled itself Catholic. In the extreme Churches you will find vestments, in- cense, and all the solemnity of High Mass, even, at times, the Roman Missal in place of the Book of Common Prayer; there will be holy water, con- fessionals, a Lady Chapel—in short all the external characteristics of a Cath- olic Church. Devotion to Our Lady, invocation of the saints, the doctrine of transubstantiation, and the primacy and infallibility of the Pope are taught. However, more moderate High Church- men teach only consubstantiation, and, though many allow the primacy, few admit the infallibility of the Pope. The attempt of the High Church party to introduce religious communities for men has been but indifferently success- ful. The Society of St. John the Baptist —the Cowley Fathers—and the Com- munity of the Resurrection are, perhaps, the most prominent. Among women the venture was more successful and some fifty congregations have been established. The Church Times, an ably- edited weekly, is the most advanced and the most widely read newspaper pub- lished by the High Church. The Church of England owes her position to-day in me part to the untiring devotion of her earnest and unselfish clergymen. One fatal flaw can readily be discerned in all three parties. Whether a man believes almost the whole cycle of Catholic doctrine COLLEGE REVIEW with the extreme High Church party, or scarcely believes in God with the extreme Broad Church party, or utterly denies the sacerdotal character of the ministry with the extreme Low party, it is always in the last analysis a matter of mere opinion, not of faith as Cath- olics understand the term. I can do no more than cast a super- ficial glance at the position of the Free Churches. These at one time or another have seceded from the Established Church; hence their name. The Congregationalists or Indepen- dents are the oldest of the Non-Con- formist bodies. They repudiated the authority of the Crown in spiritual matters and claimed complete liberty for each separate congregation to ar- range its doctrine and worship. The chaos that ensued was remedied by the Union of Congregational Churches. This union has about seven hundred thousand adherents. The strongest and most influential of the Free Churches is the Wesleyan Methodist, founded by the dynamic preacher, John Wesley. The Church is governed by the Wesleyan Methodist Conference, which meets annually. It has about one million seven hundred thousand members. The Baptist Church is governed by a Union as is the Congregational. If one includes the minor Baptist Churches— First Day, Seventh Day, and Cave Adullam—then there are some five hundred thousand adherents of this Church. The name ‘‘Baptist’’ is a con- traction of ‘‘Anabaptist,’’ and is derived from the main tenet that the baptism of children is invalid; Baptists advocate baptism by immersion as opposed to baptism by aspersion. After the Established Church, the Catholic is the strongest and most in- fluential religious organization in Eng- land. There are three provinces— Westminster, Birmingham, and Liver- pool— sixteen dioceses, two thousand 181:



Page 32 text:

LOYOLA content’ in many others who аге not at peace in their poe position, yet have not succeeded in transcending the Elizabethan tradition of anti-Catholic- ism and so in finding the real solution to their difficulties. England is in a period of transition, and, if we may place any confidence in the sound sense that is the boasted characteristic of Englishmen, then it is not over-opti- COLLEGE 7 REVIEW mistic to deny that the goal of the transition is irreligiousness. It would be both improper and un- fair to conclude without recording the sincere gratitude of the author to the Rev. Father Benedict Williamson, мин aid has made this article роз- sible. H. J. Hemens, 32. Reminiscence HE rainbow' s precious hues are not as vivid Before the very eye, as thinking has them grow; The angry blow of traitor' not as livid, As brooding hate would have it so. The glowing charm of lovers long since dead Was not so lustrous then, as now in thought; And sweeter far is ecstasy that's fled Than that which is our present lot. Youth's flaming ire was not so strong In youth's first days as in old аре з mind; Life's painful trail of woe was not so long In suffering itself, as retrospect shall find. For Time's a wondrous workman who can paint The past both duller and more bright, And make the rays of memory or faint, Or blinding with a piercing light. Eimer SHEA, 35 {10}

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