Christum regem adoremus dominantem gentibus, qui se manducantibusdat spiritus pinguedinem.
Let us adore Christ, the King, who ruleth the nations; who giveth fatness of spirit to them that eat him.
God has satisfied the intense desires of man’s heart. The house of the marriage-feast, built by divine Wisdom on the top of mountains, has had flowing unto it all the nations of earth.[1] Yesterday, the whole Catholic world was animated with sentiments of love towards the adorable Sacrament; and the people said to each other, in a holy transport of gratitude: ‘Come! let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, and to the house of the God of Jacob.’ Yesterday, the Bud of the Lord was seen by us all in magnificence and glory;[2] this divine Bud, this rich ear of corn that has sprung up from our earth, was carried in triumph, and excited the enthusiasm of the faithful, making them rejoice before It, as they that rejoice in the harvest.[3] It was a heavenly harvest, that had been the expectation of nations. It was the precious ear of corn, despised indeed by Israel, but gleaned by Ruth, the stranger, in the field of the true Booz, in Bethlehem.
It is for this day of the great meeting of nations, foretold by Isaias, that the Lord had kept reserved on the mountain the feast on a victim such as had never been seen before, a feast of wine, the richest and purest.[4] The poor have eaten at this banquet, and they have given fervent praise to their God; the rich have eaten, and have fallen down in adoration; and all the ends of the earth, prostrate in His sacred Presence, have recognized that He who thus gave them to feast was Christ their King.[5] 'This,' they said, ‘is our God, we have waited for Him;[6] we have patiently waited for Him; He was the desire of our soul; we desired Him in the night, and, in the morning early, our first thoughts were upon Him; He is the Lord, and His remembrance could not be effaced, even through the long ages of expectation.[7] Thou, O Lord, art my God, I will exalt Thee, and give glory to Thy name, for Thou hast done wonderful things; Thy designs of old, faithful; faithfully hast Thou fulfilled Thy eternal decrees.’[8]
These expressions of love on the part of the human race were but a feeble echo to the infinite love which God vouchsafed to have for His creature man. The divine Spirit, who has achieved the wonderful union between the children of Adam and eternal Wisdom, shows us, everywhere in the Scriptures, that this Wisdom was impatient of delay, that He was taking each obstacle as it came, and removing it, and was preparing, in countless ways, for the marriage-feast so much longed for.
We will devote these first two days of the octave to considering the leading features in the history of this eucharistic preparation; we shall be well repaid by the additional light which these truths will reflect upon the dogma itself. We are going to review the loving ways whereby eternal Wisdom sought, for so many long ages, to bring about His own union with ourselves. As a matter of course, we clothe these truths in Scripture language, for the Scriptures are our guide in this research; it is they that tell us the workings of the divine intentions in our regard. How, then, do the Scriptures speak of these, before the mystery of the Incarnation was actually accomplished?
The second Person of the adorable Trinity is there brought before us under the name of Wisdom: until the time of His union with man being accomplished in the most perfect degree possible, that is, in our Lord Jesus Christ, this is the name under which He passes in the Scriptures, a name which gives Him the appearance of a Bride. But once the mystery of perfect union is achieved, another name is given Him, the name of Spouse, or Bridegroom. His other name of Wisdom seems almost forgotten; and yet, in the ages of lively faith, it was not so; the people of those days were too full of the Scriptures to forget it. Thus we find the first Christian emperor dedicating, to this ruler and centre of his every thought, the trophy of his victory over paganism, and that of the triumph of the martyrs. ‘All burning with love for the Wisdom of God,' says Eusebius,[9] Constantine consecrated the ancient Byzantium, which he called by his own name, to the God of the martyrs;[10] and dedicated to eternal Wisdom the grandest structure of this new Rome, Saint Sophia, which for many ages was the finest Christian church in the world. Like our forefathers in the faith, let us, too, honour divine Wisdom, and gratefully think upon the love which urged Him, from all eternity, to unite Himself to man!
It is this love that explains the mysterious joy, which, as the Scripture tells us, He had at the beginning of time, when this world of ours was being gradually developed in all the beauty of its fresh creation; for sin had not then come in, to break the harmony of this work of the Most High. At each additional manifestation of creative power, Wisdom takes delight, and by His delight, adds a new charm to this the future scene of the divine marvels, planned as those have been by His love. This Wisdom is delighted at the omnipotence which produces creation; He plays every day, as the creation goes on; He plays in this world, for each progress in its formation brings man nearer, man whose palace it is, and His delights are to be with the children of men.[11]
Incomprehensible love! It precedes, though it foresees sin; and though foreseeing it, loves not the less! It has its divine delights to be with us, and we have attractions for it, in spite of all the bitterness caused by the sight of our future black ingratitude! The fall of man will, as one of its terrific consequences, modify much and cruelly the earthly existence which Wisdom is to have upon our earth. But in order that we may the more easily understand, and more fully appreciate, how immense must that love be, which could be proof against such obstacles, let us turn our thoughts, to-day, to the course that these loving intentions would have taken, had man persevered in the state of innocence. Although the sacred Scriptures were written for the benefit of fallen man, and are ever telling us of the mystery of the restoration of the sinful world, yet do they make frequent allusions to God’s original intention; and with these to guide us, it is not difficult to mark out the leading features of the primitive plan.
Wisdom, speaking of Himself, says: ‘The Lord possessed me, ir the beginning of His ways.’[12] Is He not the first of all creatures?[13] Not, of course, as to that divine form of which the apostle speaks, and by which Wisdom is equal to God,[14] but in that human existence, which He has selected, in preference to all other possible natures, for the one whereby to unite Himself with finite being. That selection was one of an unlimited and most gratuitous love; it made the type and law of entire creation to be One who would so closely resemble us human beings. What an honour! We are told in holy Writ that the most high and almighty Creator created wisdom before all things, and created her in the Holy Ghost; and that, taking her as His type, and number, and measure, He poured her out upon all His works, and upon all flesh.[15] When the fullness of the appointed time came, divine Wisdom Himself was to come, giving to all creation, of which He was the head and centre, its purpose and meaning. He was to blend and unite with the infinite homage, which resulted from His own divine personality, the homage of every existing creature, and thus give perfection to the external glory of the Father by His own eternal and infinite adoration. Then was to appear the dignity of that human nature, chosen by divine Wisdom, from the beginning, to be His created form, and the instrument of that homage to the Father, which is perfect and divine, because of the personal union of this created nature with the Nature of God the Son. Eternal Wisdom will thus be one with the Son of the purest of virgins; the nuptial-song will be taken up by all creatures, both in earth and heaven; and through this Son of Man, who will then be called the Spouse, Wisdom will continue, to the end of time, in the soul of every individual that does not refuse the honour, the ineffable mystery of His divine marriage with our nature.
He wishes, then, to unite Himself with each one of us. But what means will He adopt for this deifying union? Of all the Sacraments, which our Lord might have instituted after His Incarnation, in the supposition of man’s not forfeiting his state of innocence, there is not one, says Suarez, which has so many probabilities on its side, as the Eucharist; there is not one which, in itself, is so desirable, and so independent of sin; for the notion of expiation, which, in our present state, lingers about It, as the memorial of Jesus’ Passion, may be prescinded from It without affecting the essence of the Sacrament—that essence being the real Presence of our Lord, and the close union whereby He unites us to Himself.[16] It is the same with the Eucharist as a Sacrifice: the primary notion of sacrifice, as we shall see further on, does not absolutely include the idea of sin. So that, when Christ, as the head of the human family, comes into this world, to offer up a Sacrifice in the name of us all, that Sacrifice will be one which is worthy of His Father and of Himself. Spouse as He is, and by virtue of the divine unction Priest too, it is by the Eucharist as a Sacrifice that He will act in this twofold character; for by that Sacrifice He brings the human race into union with Himself by the embrace of the sacred Mysteries; and, when He has divinized it by union with Himself, making it one body of which He is the Head, He offers it to His eternal Father.
But for the coming of the Spouse there must be a numerous retinue, to do Him honour and tell His praises, when the day arrives for His entrance into the banquet-hall; and from now till the time when earth, being peopled enough, shall have ready for her King-Priest a court that is worthy of Him, so many ages are to intervene! What will Wisdom be doing in the interval? We have already seen how in the early days of creation He played before His Father, and was all transported with delight. But when the work was done, the Creator withdrew into the repose and rest of the seventh day. Seated on His Father’s right hand, in the splendours of the Saints, will Wisdom wait inactive for that day to come, when He, who has begotten Him before the day-star and has betrothed Him to human nature, shall send Him down to this earth, there to consummate the alliance, for which He has been eternally longing? The sacred Scriptures give a very different description of Him, during the time preceding His actual coming. They tell us that Wisdom is so active, though so gentle, that He is more active than all active things, and was everywhere, and put Himself in every place, and in the Prophets, so that He was easily found by them that wished to find Him; He even anticipated their research, and was more ready to show Himself, than they could possibly be to find Him. If any soul was intent, like some early riser, to find Him, He soon met such a seeker; nay, Himself went about seeking for such as were worthy of Him, and when He met them in the ways, here or there in this wide world, this beautiful Wisdom would show Himself to them with all cheerfulness. Thus do the Scriptures describe Wisdom as engaged during the ages preceding His Incarnation. He does not, as yet, quit the throne of glory on which He sitteth, lighting up all heaven with His beauty, but He is preparing the day of His marriage, by impressing it on man’s mind and notice in every possible way; He meets him at every turn to speak of it, to tell him of how He, Wisdom, loves him; He selects certain symbols of the wondrous mysteries He intends to achieve when the time comes. Let us take one of these symbols for our lesson to-day, that we may not lose a particle of what Jesus has ever done to make Himself known. But before we go further, let us listen to the Scripture character drawn of this beautiful Wisdom: He is the brightness of eternal light, and the unspotted mirror of God’s majesty, and the image of His goodness; holy, one, manifold, subtle, eloquent, active, undefiled, sure, sweet, loving that which is good, quick, which nothing hindereth, beneficent, gentle, kind, steadfast, assured, secure, having all power, overseeing all things, and containing all spirits, intelligible, pure, subtile![17] And now to a choice symbol chosen by Jesus, whereby He spoke of Himself, before He came to the nuptials.
The Lord God, says Scripture, had planted a paradise of pleasure from the beginning, wherein He intended to place man, whom He was not to create till the sixth day. In the midst of this paradise there grew a tree of singular beauty, to which God had attached a great mystery; its name was the tree of life. A river, with four streams, watered this garden of delights;[18] it was shown later on to Saint john as a river of water of life, dear as crystal, proceeding from the throne of God and of the Lamb.[19]The tree and the river bear no allusion to future sin; they had been put in paradise, the abode of innocence, before man himself; they are portions of the primitive plan of God; and therefore, in themselves, signify only what has reference to the state of innocence. Now, an ancient writer, published under the name of St. Ambrose, says: ‘The tree of life in the midst of paradise, is Christ in the midst of His Church.’[20] ‘So then,’ says St. Augustine, ‘Christ was the tree of life; neither would God have man to live in paradise, without presenting to him mysteries of things spiritual under corporal forms. In the other trees, therefore, he had food; but in that one (of life), he had a sacred symbol (sacramentum). And what is it that was symbolized, but Wisdom, of which it is said, She is a tree of life to them that lay hold on her?[21] For it is right to give to Christ the name of a thing which had been made in order to signify Him.’[22] St. Hilary, too, bears testimony to this same traditional interpretation. After quoting the same text from Proverbs, he says: ‘Wisdom, which is Christ, is called the tree of life; because, as we are taught by the authority of the Prophets, on account of its being a symbol (sacramentum) of His future Incarnation and Passion, our Lord compared Himself to a tree, when He said: A tree is known by its fruit. . . . This tree, then, is living; yea, not living only, but rational also, for it gives its fruit when it wills, and, as the Psalm says, in its own time. And what is that time? That of which the apostle speaks, when he says that God might make known unto us the mystery of His will, according to His good pleasure which He had purposed in him, in the dispensation of the fullness of times: the dispensation of the fruit, then, is reserved for the fullness of times.’[23] But what is to be the fruit of this tree—the leaves of which fall not off,[24] and are for the healing of the nations[25]—but divine Wisdom, in His own very self and substance? In His divine form He is the food of the angels too; but He is to be that of man in His two Natures, that thus, by His Flesh, reaching man’s soul, He may fill that soul with His Divinity, as it was beautifully expressed in the Office composed by Blessed Juliana.[26]
Thus, therefore, divine Wisdom had preceded man in paradise: Adam was not yet there, but Wisdom was; for His love made Him hasten thither, and take up His abode there, ready to receive man on his arrival, in that tree of life, which He, together with the Most High, had planted in the garden of delights. Speaking of this tree, the bride of the Canticle said: ‘As the apple-tree among the barren trees of the woods, so is my Beloved among the sons of men; I sat down under His shadow whom I desired, and His fruit was sweet to my palate.’[27] This sweet fruit of the tree of life was a figure of the Eucharist.
But how is this? we were yesterday invited by Wisdom to eat bread in His house, and not fruit in His garden. What means this change of language? It is because man has brought about an immense change of purpose: in his pride, he has eaten of a fruit which was not good, a forbidden fruit, the eating of which has ruined him; he has been driven from the garden of delights; Cherubim and a flaming sword have been placed, to keep the way of the tree of life. Instead of fruits of paradise, the food of man is, henceforth, to be bread, which costs toil and sweat, bread, which means grinding under a millstone, and burning with fire. Such is the sentence passed on man by a justly angered God.[28] But alas! this most just condemnation is to go far beyond the guilty one; it will strike man, but it will strike divine Wisdom, too, who has given Himself to man to be his food and companion. In the immensity of His love, Wisdom will not abandon this fallen nature of man; He will, that He may save it, take upon Himself all the consequences of the fall, and, like fallen man, will become passible and mortal. The marriage-feast is not to be in Eden, as was first intended. Poor Eden! she had been so exquisitely prepared for that feast; she had her fragrant fields of loveliest emerald, and her fruit which was so fair to behold, and so pleasant to eat of,[29] and so immortalizing with a youth that was to last for ever! To reach man, now that he is fallen, eternal Wisdom must make His way through the briars and thickets of His new abode. The marriage-feast will be kept in a house, which it has cost Him infinite pains to build to Himself, as a cover against the miseries of the land of exile. And as to the food served for the banquet, it is not to be the fruit spontaneously yielded by the tree of life; it is to be the divine Wheat, ground by suffering, and baked on the altar of the cross.
All history culminates in the sacrifice of our Lord, and all creation converges to it, as to its centre. The reason of this is, that, in the creation and government of the world, God seeks His own glory, as the last end for which He does all His works. Now, the Sacrifice offered by the Incarnate Word alone gives to God the infinite glory due to His sovereign majesty. The Christians of the first ages of the Church thoroughly understood all this. It is the idea which inspired the fine Preface of the liturgy given under the name of St. James, in the eighth book of the Apostolic Constitutions. We wish we could give our readers the whole of this liturgy: we intend, however, to quote, during the days of this octave, some of the most striking passages.
Constitutio Jacobi.
Vere dignum et justum est ante omnia laudare te verum Deum, ex quo omnis paternitas in cœlo et in terra nominatur, solum ingenitum, omnis boni largitorem. Tu enim es primus natura, et lex existendi, ac omnem numerum superans.
Qui omnia ex nihilo in rerum naturam protulisti per unigenitum Filium tuum: ipsum vero ante omnia sæcula genuisti absque intermedio Verbum Deum, Sapientiam viventem, primogenitum omnis creaturæ, Angelum magni consilii tui, pontificem tuum, regem autem et Dominum omnis naturae quæ intelligi ac sentiri potest. Tu namque, Deus aeterne, cuncta per ipsum condidisti, et per ipsum cuncta dignaris convenienti providentia; per quem enim largitus es ut essent, per eumdem etiam ut bene essent dedisti.
Deus et Pater unigeniti Filii tui, per eum ante omnia fecisti cherubinos et seraphinos, exercitus, virtutes et potestates, principatus et thronos, archangelos et angelos.
Atque post haec omnia, per eum fabricasti hunc qui apparet mundum, cunctaque quæ in eo sunt. Nam tu es qui coelum ut pellem extendisti, et terram supra nihilum collocasti sola voluntate; qui noctem ac diem fabricatus es; qui in cœlo solem posuisti ad dominium diei, et lunam ad dominium noctis, atque chorum stellarum in cœlo delineasti in laudem magnificentiæ tuæ; qui mare magnum a terra separasti, et illud quidem animalibus parvis ac magnis refersisti, hanc autem cicuribus ac indomitis replevisti, herbis coronasti, floribus decorasti, seminibus ditasti.
Neque solum per Christum condidisti mundum, sed et in ipso mundi civem hominem efficisti, ac eum mundi mundum, seu ornatus ornatum constituisti. Dixisti enim Sapientiae tuæ: 'Faciamus hominem ad imaginem nostram, et ad similitudinem; et dominentur piscibus maris et volatilibus cœli.' Ideoque fecisti eum ex anima immortali et corpore dissipabili; et dedisti ei, in anima quidem rationalem dijudicationem, justi ac injusti discretionem; in corpore autem donasti quinquertium sensuum atque motum progressivum.
Tu namque, Deus omnipotens, per Christum in Edene ad orientem plantasti paradisum, omni genere esculentarum plantarum ornatum, et in eum tanquam in opiparam domum induxisti hominem; quem, cum efficeres, lege naturali ac insita donasti, quo intus ac ex se haberet cognitionis Dei semina. Introducens autem eum in paradisum deliciarum, potestatem quidem omnium ad participandum concessisti, unius vero solius gustatum in spem meliorum rerum interdixisti, ut si mandatum custodiret, illius servati mercedem ferret immortalitatem.
Cum autem mandatum neglexit, et, fraude serpentis mulierisque consilio, gustavit prohibitum fructum; ex paradiso quidem juste illum expulisti, bonitate vero tua funditus pereuntem non despexisti; sed qui ei subjeceras creaturam, dedisti ut suis sudoribus ac laboribus sibi pararet victum, te omnia producente, augente ac maturante: atque eum brevi somno affectum, per jusjurandum ad regenerationem vocasti; decreto mortis soluto, vitam ex resurrectione promisisti.
It is truly right and just, that, before all things, we should give praise to thee, who art true God, from whom all paternity in heaven and earth is named, who art the only unbegotten, the giver of every good thing. For thou art first by nature, and the law of existence, and surpassing all number.
Thou it is that broughtest all things, out of nothing, into the nature of things, by thine only-begotten Son: but him thou begottest before all ages, without an instrument, God the Word, living Wisdom, the first-born of every creature, the Angel of thy great counsel, thy Priest, the King, also, and Lord of every nature that can be understood or felt. For thou, eternal Godi createdst all things by him, and by him thou vouchsafest a suitable providence to all things; for, by whom thou gavest things to be, by the same thou gavest them well-being.
O God and Father of thy only-begotten Son! by him thou madest, before all things, the cherubim and seraphim, the hosts, the virtues and powers, the principalities and thrones, the archangels and angels. And, after all these, thou madest by him this visible world and all that is in it. For thou art he that stretchedst out the heavens as a tent, and settedst the earth upon nothing, by thine only will; that madest night and day; that, in the heavens, placedst the sun to rule the day, and the moon to rule the night, and inscribedst a choir of stars in heaven unto the praise of thy magnificence; thou dividedst the great sea from the land, replenishing the one with animals little and great, and filling the other with creatures, both tame and wild, crowning it with herbs, beautifying it with flowers, enriching it with seeds.
Neither only createdst thou the world by Christ, but in him, also, thou madest man citizen of the world, appointing him the world of the world, or the ornament of the ornament. For thou said8t unto thy Wisdom: ‘Let us make man to our image and likeness; and let them have dominion over the fishes of the sea, and the fowls of the air.’ Wherefore, also, thou madest him of an immortal soul and a body liable to dissolution; and thou gavest him, in his soul, rational judgment, and discernment between right and wrong; and in his body, five senses, and progressive motion.
For thou, O almighty God, plantedst by Christ, in Eden, at the east, a paradise, adorned with every sort of plant fit for food, and into it, as into a wellprovisioned house, thou didst lead man, to whom, when thou createdst him, thou gavest a natural and innate law, to the end that he might have within and of himself the seeds of the knowledge of God. And when introducing him into the paradise of delights, thou grantedst him leave to partake of all things save one, whereof, to give him the hope of better things, thou forbadest him to taste, that, if he kept that commandment, he might receive immortality, as the recompense of his observance.
But when he neglected the commandment, and, by the serpent’s guile, and the woman’s counsel, tasted the forbidden fruit, thou drovest him from paradise, justly indeed, yet, in thy goodness, thou despisedst him not, though utterly ruined; but, having previously subjected creation unto him, thou grantedst him to procure food by his own sweat and labour, though it was thou by whom all things are produced, increase, and ripen. And when he had slept the short sleep (of death), thou, by an oath, calledst him to a new birth; and, loosing the decree of death, thou promisedst him life, after the resurrection.
We will close this day with the several hymns, composed under the direction of Blessed Juliana; they were used for each of the Little Hours of the Office, which preceded that of St. Thomas. It was a custom of the Church of Liège to vary the hymns, at these Hours, according to the different seasons and feasts.
At Prime
Summe Deus clementiæ, Qui ob salutem mentium Coelestis alimouiæ Nobis præstas remedium;
Mores, vitam et opera Rege momentis omnibus, Et beatis accelera Vitam dare cum civibus.
Great God of mercy! who, for the salvation of souls, grantest us the remedy of a food that comes from heaven.
Direct thou our manners, and life, and works; and give us speedily to spend our life with the blessed citizens of heaven.
Hujus cultu memoriæ Diræ mortis supplicio Nos de lacu miseriae Educ, qui clamas: Sitio.
Præsta, Pater, per Filium, Præsta, per almum Spiritum: Quibus hoc das edulium Prosperum serves exitum.
Amen.
O thou, that art the eternal glory of heaven, the blessed light of believers, the victim of redemption, and the pasture of thy sheep!
By our worship of this memorial of thy cruel death, lead us from the abyss of misery, O thou that criest: I thirst.
Grant, O Father, through thy Son, grant through the Spirit of love, that we, to whom thou givest such nourishment as this, may be brought by thee to a prosperous end.
Amen.
[1] Is. ii. 2. [2] Ibid. iv. 2. [3] Ibid. ix. 3. [4] Ibid. xxv. 6. [5] Ps. xxi. 27-30. [6] Is. xxv. 9. [7] Is. xxvi. 8, 9. [8] Ibid. xxv. 1. [9] De Vita Constant. lib. iii. cap. 48. [10] Ibid. [11] Prov. viii 30, 31. [12] Ibid. viii. 22. [13] Ecclus. i. 4. [14] Philipp, ii 6. [15] Ecclus. i. 4. 8-10. [16] De Sacr. Disp. iii. sect. 3. [17] Wisd. vii. 22-26; vi. 13-17; ix. 4, 10. [18] Gen. ii. 8-10. [19] Apoc. xxii. 1. [20] Append. Ambros, In Apocalyps. c. ii. v. 7. [21] Prov. iii. 18. [22] De Genes. ad Litt. lib. 8. [23] Tract in psalm. 1, 9, 10. [24] Ps. i. 3. [25] Apoc. xxii. 2. [26] Page 146. [27] Cant. ii. 3. [28] Gen. iii. 19. [29] Gen. ii. 9.
THE Son of Man, proclaimed King in the highest heavens on his triumphant Ascension day, leaves to his bride on earth the task of making his sovereign dominion recognized here below: this is her glory. Pentecost gives the signal for the Church's work of conquest; now does she awake, aroused by the breath of the Holy Ghost; replenished with this Spirit of love, she is all eagerness, as he is, to be possessed at once of the whole earth. We have already seen the Franks and the Anglo-Saxons pledging in her hands their oath of fealty to Christ, ‘to whom is given all power on earth and in heaven.’[1] To-day we see how Winfrid realizes the fair name of Boniface, or well-doer, given him by Pope Gregory II. He presents himself before us, surrounded by the multitudes he has snatched at one blow from paganism and barbarism. Thanks to the Apostle of Germany, the hour is nigh when the Church may constitute in this world, apart from the spiritual dominion of souls, an empire more powerful than any that has ever been or is to be.
The eternal Father draws to his Son[2] not men only but nations; these are his inheritance on earth no less than heaven is in eternity. The good pleasure that God takes in the Word made Flesh could never be content with merely seeing nations come, one here, another there, offering an isolated homage of recognition to Christ, as their Lord and Master. It was the whole world that was promised as his possession, without distinction of nations, without limits, save those of the earth itself:[3] recognized or not, his power is universal. In the case of many, no doubt, the contempt or the ignorance of this regal claim of the Man-God is to last on throughout ages; for revolt, alas! is always possible to all. But it was the duty of the Church to exercise her influence over baptized nations, so as to gather them together in one public acknowledgement of the royalty of Christ, which is the source of every kingly power. At the Pontiff’s side there seemed to be a fitting place for a mailed chieftain of Christendom to be the lieutenant of Christ, who alone is Lord of lords and King of kings. Thus would be realized, in all its plenitude, the magnificent principality announced by the prophets for the Son of David.[4]
Such an institution was indeed worthy of the name it was to receive, that of the Holy Empire: in it we have the final result of our glorious Pentecost, the consummation of the testimony rendered by the Holy Ghost to Jesus, both as Pontiff and as King.[5] In a few days, Leo III, the illustrious Pope called by the Holy Spirit to crown this his divine work, will proclaim, to the joy of the whole world, the establishment of this new empire beneath the sceptre-sway of the Man-God, in the person of Charlemagne, the representative of the King of kings. This marvellous work was not prepared all at once. Vast regions, destined to form the very nucleus of this future empire, for long centuries knew not so much as the very name of the Lord Jesus; or, at best, preserved but confused notions of truth, derived from some earlier evangelization that had been stifled in its birth by the turmoil of invasions—a mere mixture of Christian practices and idolatrous superstitions. At length we behold Boniface arise, endued with power from on high,[6] the worthy precursor of St Leo III. Bom of those angelfaced Angles, by whom ancient Britain was transformed into the Island of Saints, he bums to carry into the heart of Germany, whence his ancestors had sprung, the light which first shone upon them in the land of their conquest.
Thirty years of monastic life, begun in childhood despite the tears and caresses of a tender father, had braced his soul. Prepared by this long period of retreat and silence, filled with divine science, and accompanied by the prayers of his cloistered brethren, he could now in all security set forth to follow the attraction of a divine call. But, first and foremost, Rome beholds him at the feet of the Sovereign Pontiff, submitting his plans and prospects to him who is the only source of all mission in the Church. Gregory II, in every way worthy of the great Popes that have borne that name, was at that time watching with apostolic vigilance over the Christian world, and preparing for the glorious sovereignty that awaited the Church in the coming eighth century. In the humble monk prostrate at his feet, the immortal Pontiff recognizes a powerful auxiliary sent to him by heaven; and so, armed with the apostolic benediction, Winfrid, now become Boniface, feels the powerful attraction of the Holy Spirit drawing him irresistibly to conquests of which ancient Rome had never dreamed.
Beyond the Rhine, farther than Roman legions ever penetrated, the Church now advances into this barbarous land, along pathways tracked for her by Boniface; overturning in her victorious march the last idols of the false gods, civilizing and sanctifying those savage hordes, the scourge of the old world. This AngloSaxon, a true son of St Benedict, gives to his work a stability that will defy the lapse of ages. Everywhere monasteries arise, taking root in the very soil, for God's sake; and, by force of example and beneficence, fixing around them its various nomad tribes. From the river banks, from the forest depths, instead of cries of war and of vengeance, is wafted the accent of prayer and of praise to the Most High. Sturm, the beloved disciple of St Boniface, presides over these peaceful colonies far superior to those of pagan Rome, planted though they were by her noblest veterans and manned by the best forces of her empire.
Here, too, where violence has hitherto reigned supreme, in these savage wilds, a novel kind of army is organized, formed of the gentle brides of Christ. The Spirit of Pentecost, like a mighty wind, has blown over the land of the Angles; and, even as in the cenacle holy women had a share in its influence, consecrated virgins, obedient to the heavenly impulse, have quitted the land of their birth, even the monastery that has sheltered them from childhood. Having for a while administered only at a distance to Winfrid's needs, and copied out for him the sacred books in letters of gold, they at length come to join the apostle. Fearlessly have they crossed the sea, and, guided by their divine Spouse, have come to share the labours undertaken for his glory. Lioba is at their head; she whose gentle majesty, whose heavenly aspect, uplifts the mind from earthly thoughts, and who by her knowledge of the scriptures, of the fathers, and of the sacred canons, is equal to any of the most celebrated doctors. But the Holy Ghost has still more richly gifted the soul of Lioba with humility and Christian heroism. Behold the chosen mother of the German nation! Germany's proud daughters, athirst for blood, who on their wedding-day disdained all other gift save a steed, a buckler, and a lance,[7] are to learn from her the true qualities of the valiant woman. No more shall they be seen, intoxicated with slaughter, leading back to the field of battle their vanquished husbands; but the virtues of the wife and of the mother shall replace in them the fury of the camp; family life is to be founded on German soil, and through it the fatherland.
This was Boniface's intention when he called to his aid Lioba, Walburga, and their companions. Worn out with toil, but still more with the incessant wear and fret of petty jealousies (never spared to men of God by such as would cover their paltry complaints under the cloak of false zeal), our athlete of Christ was not ashamed to come to Lioba, his well-beloved daughter, humbly seeking from her that enlightened counsel and comfort which was never denied. Estimating at its true worth the share she had borne in his work, he was desirous that she should be laid to rest in the same tomb prepared for him in his abbey of Fulda.
But not yet was his labour ended, nor was the evening of life at hand. The spiritual welfare of his numberless converts must be secured, and at their head must be placed such as the Holy Ghost designated for the government of God's Church.[8] By his means the hierarchy was constituted and developed; the land was covered with churches; and, beneath the rule of holy bishops chosen by God, these once wandering tribes now began to live a life to the glory of the most blessed Trinity, in a country but recently pagan, wherein Satan had hoped to perpetuate his own domination.
Nor was this our saint’s only work in Germany; in certain isolated parts, the seeds of Arianism and Manichæism had been silently taking root, by means of an intruded clergy, half pagan and half Christian in their rites; and these would inevitably prove a serious scandal to his recent converts that came within reach of their influence. Even as Christ, armed with a whip of cords, drove the buyers and sellers from the temple, so did Boniface, by vigorous measures, rid the land of these sectarian priests, who, with hands polluted by heathenish sacrifices to the vanquished deities of Valhalla, dared to offer also the spotless victim to the Most High.
The powerful action of Boniface, as the precursor of the Holy Empire, was not confined to preparing the German race alone for its share in so high a destiny. His beneficent influence was now to be exercised, at a most critical moment, upon France, the eldest daughter of the Church; for she was chosen, in the person of her princes, to be the first to bear the emblem of Christ’s universal kingship. The descendants of Clovis had preserved nought of his royal inheritance, save the vain title of a power that had now passed into the hands of a new family, a more vigorous branch of his stock. Charles Martel, the head of this race, measuring his strength with the Moors, had crushed their entire army near Poitiers: but, in the flush of victory, the hero of the day had wellnigh brought the Church of France to the brink of ruin, by distributing to his comrades in arms the episcopal sees and abbeys of the land. Unless a situation no less disastrous than would have been the triumph of Abderahman was to be accepted, these usurped croziers must at once be wrested from the hands of such strange titularies. To effect this, as much gentleness as firmness was needed, together with an ascendancy belonging only to virtue, if the hero of Poitiers and his noble race were to be gained over to respect the rights of holy Church. This victory, more glorious than had been the defeat of the Moors, was won by Boniface, a veritable triumph of unarmed holiness, as profitable to the vanquished as to the Church herself. Of this fierce warrior he was to make the worthy father of a second dynasty, the glory whereof should far surpass the brilliant hopes of the first race of the Frankish kings.
Boniface, now legate of Pope St Zachary as he had formerly been of Gregory III, fixed his episcopal see at Mainz, the better to keep within the fold both Germany the conquest of his earlier apostolate, and France more recently rescued by his labours. Like another Samuel, he himself, with his own hands, consecrated this new regal dynasty, by conferring the sacred unction on Pepin le Bref, son of Charles Martel. This was in the year 752. Another Charles, as yet a child, who was one day to inherit that throne thus firmly established, attracted the notice of the aged saint, and received his benediction; it was the future Charlemagne. But to the hand of a Sovereign Pontiff would be reserved the anointing of that royal brow; and a diadem more glorious still than that of a king of the Franks was one day to be his, exhibiting in his person the head of the new Roman Empire, the lieutenant of the King of kings.
The personal work of Boniface was now accomplished; like the old man Simeon, his eyes had seen the object of all his ambition, of his life-long toil, the salvation prepared by God for this new Israel. He too had now no desire left save that of departing in peace to our Lord; but could such an apostle enter into peace by any other gate than that of martyrdom? He understands this well: his hour has sounded: the old warrior has chosen his last battlefield. Friesland is still pagan: half a century ago, at the opening of his apostolic career, he had avoided this country, in order to escape the bishopric which St Willibrord, at that early date, was anxious to bestow upon him: but now that it has nought save death to offer him, he will enter this land. In a letter of sublime humility, prostrate at the feet of Pope Stephen III, he submits to the correction of the Apostolic See, the 'awkward mistakes,' as he terms them, and the many faults of his long life;[9] to Lullus, his dearest son, he leaves the Church of Mainz; he recommends to the care of the Frankish king the several priests scattered all through Germany, the monks and virgins, who from distant homes have followed him hither. Then ordering to be placed amongst the few books which he is taking with him the winding sheet that is to enwrap his body, he designates the companions chosen by him for the journey, and sets out to win the martyr's palm.
Let us now read the liturgical record of this grand life.
Bonifacius, antea Winfridus appellatus, apud Anglos natus est, exeunte sæculo septimo, et ab ipsa infantia mundum aversatus, vitam monasticam in votis habuit. Cum ejus pater animum sæculi illecebris permutare frustra tentasset, monasterium ingreditur, et sub beati Wolphardi disciplina omnium virtutum ac scientiarum genere imbuitur. Annum agens trigesimum sacerdotio insignitur, ac verbi divini prædicator assiduus, magno animarum lucro hoc in munere versatur. Attamen regnum Christi adaugere desiderans, continuo flebat ingentem multitudinem barbarorum, qui ignorantiæ tenebris immersi dæmoni famulabantur. Qui quidem animarum zelus cum in dies inexstinguibili ardore accresceret, divino Numine per lacrymas et orationes explorato, facultatem a monasterii præposito obtinuit ad Germanicas oras proficiscendi.
Ex Anglia duobus cum sociis navim solvens, Dorestadium in Frisiæ oppidum venit. Cum autem bellum gravissimum inter Frisonum regem Radbodum, et Carolum Martellum exarsisset, sine fructu Evangelium prædicavit; quapropter in Angliam reversus ad suum redivit monasterium, cui invitus præficitur. Post elapsum biennium, ex consensu episcopi Vintoniensis munus abdicavit, et Romam profectus est, ut Apostolica auctoritate ad gentilium conversionem delegaretur. Cum ad Urbem pervenisset, a Gregorio Secundo benigne excipitur, pro Winfrido Bonifacius a Pontifice nominatur. In Germaniam directus, Thuringiæ Saxoniæque populis Christum annuntiavit. Cum interea Radbodus Frisiæ Rex ac infestissimus Christiani nominis hostis occubuisset, Bonifacius ad Frisones rediit, ubi Sancti Willibrordi socius per triennium tanto cum fructu Evangelium prædicavit, ut destructis idolorum simulacris, innumeræ vero Deo ecclesiæ excitarentur.
A sancto Wililbrordo ad episcopale munus expetitus, illud detrectavit, ut promptius infidelium saluti instaret. In Germaniam profectus plura Hassorum millia a dæmonis superstitione avocavit. A Gregorio Pontifice Romam evocatus, post insignem fidei professionem episcopus consecratur. Exinde ad Germanos redux, Hassiam et Thuringiam ab idololatriæ reliquiis penitus expurgavit. Tanta propter merita Bonifacius a Gregorio Tertio ad dignitatem archiepiscopalem evehitur, et tertio Romam profectus a Summo Pontifice Sedis Apostolicæ Legatus constituitur: qua insignitus auctoritate, quatuor episcopatus instituit, et varias synodos celebravit, inter quas concilium Leptinense memorabile est apud Belgas in Cameracensi diœcesi celebratum, quo quidem tempore ad fidem in Belgio adaugcndam egregie contulit. A Zacharia Papa creatus Moguntinus Archiepiscopus, ipso Pontifice jubente, Pipinum in regem Francorum unxit. Post mortem Sancti Willibrordi Ultrajectensem ecclesiam gubernandam suscepit, primo per Eobanum, deinde per seipsum, dum ab ecclesia Moguntina absolutus, Ultrajecti resedit. Frisonibus ad idololatriam relapsis Evangelium prædicare rursus aggreditur; cumque officio pastorali occuparctur, a barbaris et impiis hominibus, juxta Bornam fluvium, cum Eobano coepiscopo multisque aliis cruenta cæde peremptus martyrii palma condecoratur. Corpus sancti Bonifacii Moguntiam translatum, et, ut ipse vivens petierat, in Fuldensi monasterio, quod exstruxerat, reconditum fuit, ubi multis miraculis inclaruit. Pius autem Nonus, Pontifex Maximus, ejus Officium et Missam ad universam Ecclesiam extendit.
Boniface, formerly called Winfrid, was a native of England, born towards the end of the seventh century. From his very childhood, he turned away from the world and set his heart upon becoming a monk. When his father tried in vain to divert him from his wishes by the beguilements of the world, he entered a monastery, where under blessed Wulphard he was instructed in all virtuous discipline and every kind of knowledge. At the age of twenty-nine years he was ordained priest, and became an unwearied preacher of the word of God, wherein he had a special gift, which he used with great profit to souls. Nevertheless, his great desire was to spread the kingdom of Christ, and he continually bewailed the vast number of barbarians, who were plunged in the darkness of ignorance and were slaves of the devil. This zealous love of souls increased in him in intensity day by day, till having implored the divine aid by prayers and tears, he at last obtained the permission of the Prior of the monastery to set out for Germany.
He sailed from England with two companions and reached the town of Dorestadt in Friesland. On account of a great war then raging between Radbod, king of the Frieslanders, and Charles Martel, his preaching was without fruit: so he returned to England, and to his former monastery, the government of which, against his will, he was forced to accept. After two years, he obtained the consent of the Bishop of Winchester to resign his office, and he then went to Rome, that by the Apostolic authority he might be delegated to the mission for converting the heathens. When he arrived at the City, he was courteously welcomed by Gregory II, who changed his name from Winfrid to Boniface. He departed thence to Germany and preached Christ to the tribes in Thuringia and Saxony. Radbod, King of Friesland, who bitterly hated the Christian name, being dead, Boniface went a second time among the Frieslanders, and there, with his companion St Willibrord, preached the Gospel for three years with so much fruit, that the idols were hown down, and countless churches arose to the true God.
Saint Willibrord urged him to accept the office of bishop, but he refused, so that he might the more instantly toil for the salvation of unbelievers. Advancing into Germany, he reclaimed thousands of the Hessians from diabolic superstition. Pope Gregory sent for him to Rome, and after receiving from him a noble profession of his faith, consecrated him a bishop. He again returned to Germany, and thoroughly purged Hesse and Thuringia from all remains of idolatry. On account of such great works, Gregory III advanced Boniface to the dignity of archbishop, and on the occasion of a third journey to Rome, he was invested by the Sovereign Pontiff with the powers of legate of the Apostolic See. As such, he founded four bishoprics and held divers synods, among which is especially to be remembered that of Lessines held in Belgium, in the diocese of Cambrai, at which time he made great efforts to spread the faith among the Belgians. By Pope Zachary he was named Archbishop of Mainz, and by command of the same Pope, he anointed Pepin king of the Franks. After the death of St Willibrord, he undertook the government of the Church of Utrecht, at first by the ministry of Eoban, but afterwards, being released from the care of the Church of Mainz, he established his see at Utrecht. The Frieslanders having again fallen back into idolatry, he went once more to preach the Gospel among them, and while he was busied in this duty he won the palm of martyrdom, being slain by some impious barbarians, who attacked him together with his fellow-bishop Eoban, and many others, on the river Born. In accordance with his wish expressed during life, the body of St Boniface was carried to Mainz and buried in the monastery of Fulda, of which he had been the founder, and which he has rendered illustrious by numerous miracles. Pope Pius IX ordered his Office and Mass to be extended to the universa Church.
Thou wast, O great apostle, the faithful servant of him who chose thee as the minister of his word and the propagator of his kingdom. When the Son of Man quitted earth to receive the delighted homage of the heavenly hosts in recognition of his kingship over them, he none the less remained King of this lower world which he has left but for a little while.[10] He counted on his Church to guard his principality here below. Small indeed was the number of those who recognized him, on the day of his glorious Ascension, as their Master and Lord. But that faith deposited in those first chosen souls was a treasure which they, like skilful bankers, knew how to work with, and how to multiply by apostolic commerce. Transmitted from generation to generation, up to the day of the Lord's return, this precious capital was to go on yielding to the absent Lord more and more accumulated interest. Thus was it with thee, O Winfrid, in that age wherein thou didst bring into the Church that tribute of labour which she requires, though in very different proportion, from each of her sons. In her gratitude, for thy works which appeared to her well done and profitable above those of others, forestalling the Spouse himself, she would, even in this world, call thee by that new name[11]whereby thou art known in heaven.
Indeed, when did riches, such as thou didst bring, come pouring at once into the hands of the bride? When did the Spouse appear to be so fully and truly head of the whole world, as in the eighth century, in which the Frankish princes, formed by thee to their noble destinies, constituted the temporal sovereignty of the Church, and gloried in being the lieutenants of Christ standing at the side of his Vicar on earth? To thee, O Boniface, is the Holy Empire indebted for its very existence. But for thee, France would have perished, debased by a simoniacal clergy, even before a Charlemagne had appeared; but for thee, Germany would have remained a prey to pagan barbarians, enemies of all civilization and progress. O thou that didst rescue both Germans and Franks, receive our grateful homage.
At the sight of thy works, and remembering the great popes and magnificent princes, whose glory is indeed derived from thee, our admiration equals our gratitude. But pardon us, dear saint, if the thought of those grand centuries of yore, so far removed, alas, from these our days, should mingle sadness with our joy. Viewed in the light of thy holy policy and its results, O glorious precursor of the confederation of Christian nations, how we must bewail the fatal errors of those princes and statesmen, so renowned in the seventeenth century, and so foolishly admired by a world whose ruin they were hastening! For, by the isolation of Catholic nations from one another, the ties that bound them to the Vicar of Christ became loosened: princes, forgetful of their true position as representatives of the divine King, made friends with heresy, in order to assert their independence of Rome, or to lower one another’s power. Therefore Christendom is no more. Upon its ruins, like a woful mimicry of the Holy Empire, Protestantism has raised its false evangelical empire, formed of nought but encroachments, and tracing its recognized origin to the apostasy of that felon knight Albert of Brandenburg.
The complicities that rendered such a thing possible have received their chastisement. May God’s justice be satisfied at last! O Boniface, cry out with us unto the God of armies for mercy. Raise up in the Church servants of Christ, powerful in word and work, as thou wast. Save France from anarchy; and restore to Germany a right appreciation of true greatness, together with the faith of her ancient days.
[1] St Matt. xxviii 18. [2] St John vi 44. Pi. ii 6, 8. [3] Ps. ii 6, 8. [4] Ps. lxxi. [5] St John xv 26. [6] Acts i 8. [7] Tacit. De mor. Germ. 18. [8] Acts xx 28. [9] Epist lxxviii. [10] St Luke xix 12-15. [11] Apoc. ii 17.
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