St Thomas High School - Thomist Yearbook (Rockford, IL)

 - Class of 1927

Page 17 of 182

 

St Thomas High School - Thomist Yearbook (Rockford, IL) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 17 of 182
Page 17 of 182



St Thomas High School - Thomist Yearbook (Rockford, IL) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 16
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Page 17 text:

'1-Z-e,,,,,, ,,,, , Q , Y , ,, L ,, Y , ,- 4 4 lt is not, indeed. enough that a great charity for the people and a consuming care for their salvation be the full extent of a Bishop's endowment or achievement -he needs something which, owing to the different forms under which it may be manifested, might seem different from this absorbing interest, but which in reality is an outgrowth of it. One must be of a sufficiently simple faith to believe that. He needs social vision, the uncom- mon gift of common sense, and a sheaf of other qualities. Someone has said that a Bishop must be a man who answers letters and suffers fools gladly. These other qualities are noted elsewhere with relation to the subject of these para- graphs, but just here it seems we must not depart from the conviction that per- sonal consecration to an arduous task is absolutely indispensable in a man whom one would honestly attempt to designate as a great churchman. Great business acumen and organizing ability are not, indeed, gifts to be flouted or minimized and when a churchman possesses them he can render a notable service to the cause of Christ-but failing in the highest type of personal devotion, forgetting that he must walk with kings nor lose the com- mon touch he falls short of eminence. And he falls short of eminence because it is exactly there in that unspectacular quality of the Shepherd's soul, genuine love for his people, that the vitality of his function resides. All else may pass away, but the Worcl that breathes into his heart across a span of 1900 years must not pass away. Secondary to this intimate dedication of self to the cure of souls in an eminent churchman should be a faculty for self- criticism, or to avoid the harshness which , M A A , 'E ,, is associated with that word, let us say self-examination and self-judgment. By that is meant the faculty of judging hon- estly the group of which the individual is an integral part and in the tradition of which his work is carried on. A distin- guished convert once said to the writer Bishop Muldoon has the best faculty of standing outside the Church and looking in of any man T have ever encountered. If there is anything the matter with the Church in America, Bishop Muldoon knows what it is-nor would he be afraid to voice his opinion. Human defects in- here wherever humanity carries on its work-but it is not usual to find an indi- vidual who is himself responsible for an important department in that work and who is not at the same time afflicted with that paralyzing discretion which fears to point out defects of method, the ulterior motives of some of its inspiration, or the general disabilities, predicated of bias, prejudice, and personal interest which mar the outline or halt the progress of that work-and this even at the highly personal cost of including himself in the indictment. To acknowledge an error of judgment, of practice, and to be willing to begin humbly again to work over the ground and submit to the discipline of so searching an experience-well, for that task, in any branch of human endeavor requires an honest man, a sincere man and a truly humble one. When the field of endeavor is the Church, where a cer- tain reverence and many cherished amenities would give pause to criticism from even a member of the hierarchy we may offer a sincere tribute, more preci- ous than conventional words of praise, to the Bishop of intellectual integrity, who mixes equitably in his nature the .... ....,.,... ...., N. ...... , ,.,.- . .,..,. ..,., . H ..,. , M .e ,,.. , ,e ., -E, fe' ' 1 A 'F 'f .... . -'ffif i I-'!a2e21:Si2s3f:i. 41: :sees-V :ssl-' ass. 'taizgsgersfzzfegfm as-, 'Rigs safe--1-.are!2s5'E:5sif ia5si::ff,: Y --'W e:asezv::15:':ggzea.. an M, 24242 4.1: - -, ff, 'xt '-yjf 'H ..,. as-If .VM 1 ,... 1fAt45f2-iff-122:21--.gifgr vdf A-1 Qiifi- QQ, 3::'l'?2 '2---if-----1-21---1-f.-1,-I IIS

Page 16 text:

Somehow or other in this emancipated day, even among those who are always traditionally respectful in their attitude toward ecclesiastical superiors, the word churchman may have an ominous sound. This is a world in which things and words become quickly standardized and the reputation of an entire class will be made to suffer from the estimate men make of its most poorly equipped representative. VVhole sets of men are, so to say, tarred with the stick of deprecation where only a small minority may deserve to be stig- matized. Therefore if the word church- man is not always and everywhere a popular term it is because to many in- telligences it bespeaks a crystallization, a rigidity and a general lack of sweet rea- sonableness. Now, historically, the title I12l churchman has a noble connotation-it has indicated constructive effort, of a very high order, great personal sacrifice, and a sense of nearness to the people. Hut in the America of card-indexes, loose-leaf ledgers, efficiency experts, vast programs discharged vicariously, outer offices where many serve who only stand and wait, even this term of respect suffers the implication of high voltage go-getting and is, to that extent, the child of this time. There is in the position of the ecclesiastical executive an added difficulty -for in the very nature of his place he has an entrenched position accompanied by very deiinite authority in things tem- poral and spiritual. There is indeed noth- ing alarming in all this of course. On the contrary it is one of the most encour- aging of things to discover, as discover one must who knows only a little of these matters, that so few churchmen, with these dangerous armaments in things spiritual and temporal, are carried away from their pristine fervor. VVhenever this temptation to become institutionalized and remote is manfully resisted by a churchman of episcopal rank, and a lively and sincere interest is retained in folks: when a brotherly con- cern and not a mere professional interest with fraternal terminology as a mask, is exercised toward the priests of the diocese: when a painstaking and unequi- vocal effort is made hy a prelate in all things to please all men that they may be savedl'g in short, in so far as he walks back in spirit to the moment when his Divine Master said ul have compassion on the multitudel' and hnds there the out- line of his method in living out the higli adventure of being a father in Godg-by that much is he a great churchman.



Page 18 text:

honesty of humility and the unquestioned power of an almost unassailable position of authority. In forty years of ecclesi- astical career, all of which years have been spent in very influential position, with a Held of labor that has never been merely parochial or diocesan, Bishop Mul- doon, as a churchman has won the golden opinions and the troops of friends that should be the solace of his latter years. He has preserved a mellow humor and, with a broad smile, assumes the role of advocatus diaboli in his own case and steadfastly resists the extra-legal can- onizationsfi which ever and anon are bestowed on him by that large group of admirers who see his importance as an American churchman, in every best sense of that term, much clearer than he will ever see it himself. Long association is supposed to give insight. It may be true in principle that to be much with another is to have some estimate of his character. But it is not always true that the faculty of expressing appreciation accompanies the opportunity of observing. This is the writer's apology for concluding with the words of another observer who had only a brief time in which to make his estimate of the Bishop, but who did it with commendable pre- cision and a high sense of values. The exact degree of responsibility to be at- tributed to Bishop Muldoon for the Bishops' program issued by the National Catholic Welfare Conference immediately after the war is not sufficiently known to the writer to render him competent to discuss it. However, so great was his share in contributing to the inspiration of the whole movement which was reflected in that document, and so well known was it that a celebrated correspondent from VVashington journeyed to Rockford to in- terview the Chairman of the Bishops' Executive Committee. This man is him- self a political observer, a sociologist, a writer of international repute-he is a also non-Catholic. He had this very illuminating thing to say about Bishop Muldoon, and it is repeated here in con- clusion because in short space it says everything important and says it with rare understanding. In that printed in- terview Mr. William Hard made this comment-I recommend it to all who have an appreciation of terseness and truth, and I recommend it also because it was written with great respect and was well deserved g- The Bishop is a burly person, fatherly yet companionable - seeming very near with an errand from very far away. U f14l

Suggestions in the St Thomas High School - Thomist Yearbook (Rockford, IL) collection:

St Thomas High School - Thomist Yearbook (Rockford, IL) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

St Thomas High School - Thomist Yearbook (Rockford, IL) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

St Thomas High School - Thomist Yearbook (Rockford, IL) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

St Thomas High School - Thomist Yearbook (Rockford, IL) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 7

1927, pg 7

St Thomas High School - Thomist Yearbook (Rockford, IL) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 19

1927, pg 19

St Thomas High School - Thomist Yearbook (Rockford, IL) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 43

1927, pg 43


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