Truly the following is a clarion call
to all those who seek eternal salvation, to all those who love
Holy Mother Church and wish to defend her, and wish not to be
found amongst the lukewarm, who on the last day will be vomited
from the mouth of God. This is indeed an example to be imitated.
Would that there were many living today who possessed the type
of manly piety, and the practical common-sense, which would put
a preface such as this in a book of devotions!
The following is the preface from
"Elevations to the Sacred Heart", translated from
the French of Abbe Felix Anizan by a priest, R. & T. Washbourne,
Ltd, Paternoster Row, London,1911. Nihil 0bstat : Franciscus
Canonicus Wyndham, Censor Deputatis. Imprimatur, Edmundus Canonicus
Surmont, Vicarius Generalis. Westmonasterii, Die 23 Martii,
1911.
We must rally round Christ, round Christ, Love and Heart, for there are men who have declared war on God.
What urges them on to attack God to
His face is a horrible sentiment which we should think impossible
if documents and facts did not multiply proofs of its existence
- hatred of God.
On the morrow of the publication of the Encyclical in which Pope Leo XIII denounced Freemasonry before the world, a Masonic sheet contained the following lines: "Freemasonry can but thank the Sovereign Pontiff for his latest Encyclical. Leo XIII, with an incontestable authority and a wealth of proof, has just demonstrated once again that there exists an impassable gulf between the Church, whose representative he is, and the Revolution, whose right hand is Freemasonry. It is well that they who are still hesitant should cease to entertain vain hopes. All men must accustom themselves to the thought that the hour has come to choose between the old order of things that rests upon Revelation and the new order that recognizes no basis other than science and human reason; between the spirit of authority and the spirit of liberty!"
Yes; it is hatred that inspires them.
It is from hatred of God that they have expelled from France the men of prayer.
It is from hatred of God that in the hospitals they hinder priests from bringing to the dying the means of reconciliation at the last.
It is from hatred of God that they wish to bring up the children in atheism.
It is from hatred of God that they have taken for themselves ecclesiastical property.
It is from hatred of God that with calculated carelessness they let our pious sanctuaries fall into ruin.
It is from hatred of God that of certain
high altars they have made pedestals for statues of Venus the
impure.
Such is the struggle, such the crisis:
a keen struggle, an acute crisis - a struggle against God to His
very face, a struggle of which the origin, the aim, the character
can only be called by one name: Satanism.
This is what Freemasonry understands
and means it to be. Now, the members of the Bloc in France,
the Liberals in Belgium, the Socialists in Germany, are only labouring
at the work of Freemasonry.
Many do not realize this, and sincerely
do not desire it. In spite of everything, in spite of themselves,
it is towards the realization of this infamous project that these
unconscious stilettos pierce the Church's bosom.
To look at things from this point of
view, we can understand the presentiment of most serious consequences
that the greatest minds have had. "The human race,"
wrote Joseph de Maistre, "cannot continue in this state.
Redoubtable oracles, besides, announce that the time has come.
"Several theologians, even Catholics,
have believed that facts of the greatest importance, and not to
be long delayed, were foretold in the Revelation of St. John..
One of these writers has even gone so far as to say that the event
had already begun, and that the French nation was to be the great
instrument of the greatest of revolutions. There is, perhaps,
not one truly religious man in Europe (I refer to the educated
classes) who is not just now expecting something extra-ordinary
to come to pass." (Oeuvres Completes, tom. v., p.
231.)
And Donoso Cortes: "The dreadful
Sphinx is before your eyes, and no Oedipus has been found who
knows how to read the enigma. The redoubtable problem stands,
and Europe cannot and knows not how to solve it! As for the sane
man who has common sense and penetration of mind, everything tells
him that a lamentable crisis is at hand, a cataclysm such as men
have never yet seen."
We can understand, too, with what anguish
in his tone His Holiness Pius X must have announced to the world
his accession when he said: "It is useless to remind you
with what tears and what ardent prayers We endeavoured to divert
from Ourselves so heavy a charge as that of the Supreme Pontificate..
We feel a kind of terror at the thought of the lamentable condition
of the human race at this present hour."
We can understand, in fine, that the
hour has come to pray, to labour, and to fight with all the energies
of our souls.
It were useless to hope for any compromise.
Satan will not parley, neither will Freemasonry. They want to
hold the empire of the world. Now, we cannot forget that war
has been declared under the direction of Satan and Freemasonry.
"It is an illusion to think that
with a large liberalism the victory will be gained over the combined
action of Jacobinism and Freemasonry.. They are blind who do
not see that, the programme of our adversaries being to dechristianize
France, we run away from the fight and betray our country if we
pretend to believe that the struggle lies elsewhere." So
spoke Brunetiere.
And Louis Veuillot said: "The time
for a middle course has passed away. There is in the world no
future for Catholics save such as we are, because the world has
arrived at a point where it must perish or be born again. All
the half-hearted will be crushed in the destruction or rejected
with disdain in the reconstruction."
And the illustrious Cardinal Pie has
told us: "Each and every human solution is henceforth impossible.
Our society has one only alternative left to it: to submit to
God or to perish. Nothing will have been accomplished until God
has been replaced high above all institutions. We of to-day hear
talk of a great party of order and reconciliation. One only party
can save the world: God's party. We hear talk of a reconciliation
to be effected; it must be a reconciliation between earth and
Heaven. The question which is debated, and with which the world
is agitated, is not between man and man, but between man and God."
And Donoso Cortes wrote: "The
destiny of the human race is a profound mystery of which two different
and contrary explanations have been given: that of Catholicism
and that of philosophy. Each of these explanations in its entirety
constitutes a complete civilization. Between these two civilizations
there is an impassable gulf, an absolute antagonism. The attempts
made to bring about a compromise between them have been, are,
and always will be, vain. The one is error; the other is the
truth."
And if anyone would know how doctrinal
uncompromisingness is reconcilable with evangelical mansuetude,
he has only to meditate on the axiom formulated by Bossuet: "Christian
condescension ought to be in charity, not in truth. I mean that
charity ought to pity and not truth grow lax."
"We must, roughly and frankly,
say evil of evil," writes the gentle Francis of Sales, "and
blame things that are blamable. No doubt, we must take care,
while condemning vice, to spare as much as we can the person in
whom it is found. I make exception especially of the declared
enemies of God and of His Church, for, as to them, we must discredit
them as much as ever we can. It is only charity to call out 'Wolf!'
when the wolf is among the sheep."
Goodwill towards individuals - let that
be, certainly! And yet, even for that such persons must not be
too evidently the incarnation of error. When Christ took the
scourge in hand it was not only on principles that fell His strokes;
and that State would be in a very serious plight that should be
reduced to cutting off the heads of only the ideas of the assassin.
But never let there be any compromise
with false principles! Tolerance of false ideas is not charity;
it is ignorance, incertitude, or weakness.
We must assert ourselves. We must stiffen
our backs. We must dare.
We must be prepared never to yield,
even if we are overwhelmed. It is martyrs who become victors.
This implies struggling with all the
energies of one's soul.
And yet our energies, necessary as they
all are, would be altogether insufficient for the task.
We need God.
On July 14, 1836, M. de Bonald wrote
to M. Scrift: "The imagination tires itself out in vain
seeking for some means of salvation. None is to be found in human
forces. Heaven must intervene."
According to M. Charles Perin: "The
best wills in the world will not get the better of the general
impotence and inertia caused by Modernism unless God gives them
unexpected assistance."
"The root of the present evils,"
said Pius IX, "lies in this, that men have expressly rejected
God far from them. So doing, they have placed themselves in such
a condition that they cannot be saved unless it be by some fact
so far outside the influence of secondary causes that the world
will be forced to recognize therein the hand of God; for the struggle
is so serious that He alone can triumph over our enemies."
On July 25, 1872, the same august
Pontiff said to the delegates of all nations who were then gathered
round about him: "Society has been closed up in a labyrinth
whence it cannot escape without the hand of God."
It is a question of public safety. Men
must return to Him Who is "the Way, the Truth, and the Life,"
the Saviour of individuals and of society as a whole. In the individual
soul and in society at large there must be a reintegration of
Christ our Lord.
Will it be necessary, as M. Blanc de
Saint-Bonnet asked, that God should work a miracle, and "Himself
interpose, since man is powerless?"
Must we believe, with Windthorst, that
there will come "another Constantine to conquer the actual
enemies of the Church"?
In any case, we shall effect nothing
without Christ.
Our enemies have Satan on their side.
We shall be powerless against them so long as we have not Christ
on our side. And as Satanic hate can be overcome only by Divine
love, against Satan, the Evil One, we must have Jesus, Who is
Love.
Now, precisely, our Jesus - He Who in
the Gospel claimed to be Master, Law-giver, King, and Judge of
the whole world - made an apparition in the seventeenth century
in which He made a revelation of His Heart.
That manifestation He reserved for these
latter times. It is the latest effort of His tenderness and power.
He has made of His Heart the pledge
of salvation for the individual, for the family, for particular
communities, and for nations in general.
He has said that in the struggle He
will have the last word, and that His Heart shall reign.
That is not a Gospel truth. He who does
not believe it is not thereby a heretic.
But such is the character with which
it is invested, such are the facts accompanying it, such the ecclesiastical
documents relating to it, that anyone who denies it is most foolhardy
and temerarious.
Now, when the battle is at its height,
grave and deliberate imprudence has always been a crime.
Having recalled to mind the luminous
cross which was to Constantine a presage of his future victories,
the Pope, Leo XIII, exclaimed in a document addressed to the whole
world: "In our day, lo! another blessed and Divine emblem
presents itself before our eyes: the most Sacred Heart of Jesus,
above which rises up the Cross, and which shines with magnificent
splendour in the midst of flames.. In Him we must place our
hopes. From Him we must solicit and expect the salvation of men."
That, perhaps, is no dogmatic pronouncement.
In any case, it is a word of advice.
Now, in time of war, grave disobedience
to the commander has always been deemed a disastrous fault.
The evil from which France and Europe
in general are suffering is that their very core, the very marrow
of their bones, what one might call their moral heart, is gangrened.
They can be cured only by contact with the Heart of Jesus.
What we need at the present moment is,
along with the unchangeableness of the Catholic basis, a renewal
of form in harmony with all that is noble in modern aspirations.
De Maistre said this, and every living man feels the need of
this. Now, the renewal which makes no alteration in dogma or in
morals, but which rejuvenates while unfolding them, the true reform
which comes from the most intimate element, from, as it were,
the very core of Catholicism, and not from external influences
inapt to accomplish it - such renovation and reformation, resulting
from the influences of the Sacred Heart over souls, is comprised
in the turning of hearts towards the Sacred Heart.
What we need to do is to dilate our
hearts and inflame our souls, while leaving where they are the
immutable frontiers of the Truth; and this we can do if we draw
near to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
The Sacred Heart neither supplants nor
suppresses anything else - neither the work of Christian education,
nor clubs for the young, nor parochial committees, nor works in
favour of a Catholic Press - but animates and vivifies everything.
And this is just what we most have need of; for what we want is
not so much new foundations as a new inspiration breathing through
the institutions of the past.
Leibnitz said two hundred years ago:
"If it were our good fortune to find some great monarch
willing to take the interests of religion to heart, in order to
dedicate all our present and future discoveries to the praise
of the supreme Master of the universe and to the growth of Divine
love, more would be done in ten years for the glory of God and
the happiness of man than would otherwise accrue from the labours
of many centuries."
The "great monarch" who "has
at heart the interests of religion," that he may devote everything
to the development of Divine love, has really come. He is the
Sacred Heart!
The Sacred Heart is the Constantine
for whom Windthorst was waiting.
The Sacred Heart is the answer to "the
questions of the Sphinx."
That is the reason why we must rally
round the Sacred Heart. To accentuate by one point the convergence
of souls towards the Sacred Heart and to accelerate by one point
their progress towards Him, is to do a more profitable work than
building basilicas, or organizing pilgrimages, or creating twenty
other good works, however indispensable they may be; for He is
all in all; He is King, Mediator, Priest, Model, Teacher; He is
life, expiation, and the source of grace; and to bring souls into
contact with Him is to bring them into touch with the very source
of salvation.
He who will read and live the pages
of this little volume will understand all that the better.
He who has read them and lived them
will, there can be no doubt, live henceforth a grand life of love
in the clearness of principles and among the evidence of one great
object dominating all things else. And such a soul will be a
soul to whom the future belongs.
It is said that when Michelet was in
his agony - in that hour when, it seems, one gets in lightning-flashes
that are soon extinguished some glimpse of scenes of the past
- there appeared to him on a sudden the springtime vision of two
children of France - Henri and Louise, his pupils in days gone
by. And the smiling lips of the old man repeated mechanically
these words: "Feed them on lions' hearts - on...lions' ...hearts."
It is not with lions' hearts that the
rising generation must be fed, but with the Heart of God.