In the Sacred History of Israel in the Old Testament, the emergence of the ruddy youth David as the Lord’s Anointed is a pivotal event in the progressive unfolding of the Divine Plan of Redemption. As we read in the First Book of Kings, Samuel is sent by the Lord to Bethlehem, to the House of a man named Jesse in order to make a sacred anointing as king of the son whom the Lord had chosen. Finally, the 8thand last son of Jesse, David, is brought before Samuel: “Now [David] was ruddy and beautiful to behold, and of a comely face. And the Lord said: Arise and anoint him for this is he. Then Samuel took the horn of oil, and anointed him in the midst of his brethren. And the Spirit of the Lord came upon David from that day forward...” (I Kings 16:12b-13a)
David is the Lord’s Anointed, the Messiah, who becomes the great heroic figure of Israel. And the Lord God makes him a promise that from his descendants shall come the long-foretold and long-awaited Great Messiah. David the Lord’s Anointed, the Ruler of Israel, is both Priest and King. He is the type and foreshadowing of his descendant Our Lord Jesus Christ who combines in His Person both Priesthood and Kingship.
After the Redemption, the Priesthood of Christ continues in the persons of His Apostles and their successors, the Bishops. But what of the Kingship of Christ? Is that to have no continuity on the earth? Or should Christians look for a sacred kingship to be found? Where shall the Church find the Righteous Sword to defend her rights and protect her against aggressors?
It is this element which is present in the sacred anointing of Pippin and his two sons Charles and Carloman by Pope Stephen III in 754. It is to this new Royal House from among the Frankish nation that the Holy See of Peter looks to provide its sword and shield amidst the ruins of the Roman Empire.
So many parallels there are between the boy-king David and the future Charlemagne. Charles/Charlemagne, anointed at 12 years-old, growing up since boyhood in the rigors of warfare alongside his father. Like David, he is heroic on the battlefield. Like David, he is blessed with qualities such as great personal attractiveness, and like David he is devoted to God and his religion.
In 768, Pippin divided his kingdom between his two royal sons shortly before he died. As David was betrayed by his son Absalom, so Charles was betrayed by his rivalrous younger brother Carloman, but by the death of this brother in 771, Charles inherited the whole of their father’s kingdom.
Pope Stephen died in 772 and his successor as Pope was Adrian I. Didier, the King of Lombardy, opposed this choice and resolved to make war on the Patrimony of St. Peter. Pope Adrian appealed to Charles for help, as his predecessor had given him the title Patricius Romanus (Nobleman of Rome). Charles took his army over the Alps in 773 for a great invasion of Lombardy and struck hard. The result was total victory and Charles King of the Franks entered Rome, the “Eternal City”, as its savior.
Everything was done to welcome Charlemagne as the old Roman generals had been welcomed in the pre-Christian times of ancient Rome. He was given the welcome of what was called a “Triumph”. The judges went forth to meet him 30 miles outside the City. The militia laid the banner of Rome at his feet and hailed him as “Imperator”, that is, “Emperor”. But Charlemagne came into Rome as a Christian Imperator. He prostrated himself to kiss the threshold of the Apostles, the limina apostolorum, and he spent seven days in conference with the Pope, days in which he was to conceive many great ideas of what he might do for the glory of God and the exaltation of Holy Church in time to come. On Easter Day, 774, Charlemagne was consecrated as first champion of the Catholic Church. It seemed as if the Sacred Priesthood of Christ had found its champion in a new Sacred Kingship–of Christ and for Christ.
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes is Newton and Needham Massachusetts' oldest Roman Catholic Parish. Founded as Saint Mary Parish in 1870, it was renamed "Mary Immaculate of Lourdes" when the new Church was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1910. In addition to being a regular territorial parish of the Archdiocese of Boston it is also a "Mission Parish" since 2007 with a special apostolate for the Traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal).
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