History, we are often reminded, is not a morality tale. The human chronological record as a whole is vast, contradictory, and incoherent. At the same time it is maddeningly incomplete–so much of the past is fragmentary or has simply been lost altogether. The best we can do is try to construct narrative frameworks to make sense of it, or at least parts of it.
Sacred History, which is connected to our Profession of Faith, is our Catholic Christian way of making sense of human chronology based upon our belief in Divine Revelation. It overlaps so-called “scientific history” but it is not confined by it. Sacred History encompasses every mode in which humans have remembered their past by the telling of stories.History, we are often reminded, is not a morality tale. The human chronological record as a whole is vast, contradictory, and incoherent. At the same time it is maddeningly incomplete–so much of the past is fragmentary or has simply been lost altogether. The best we can do is try to construct narrative frameworks to make sense of it, or at least parts of it.
Bolstered by this Sacred History then we expect to find (and we do) all kinds of golden threads of God’s Divine Providence in the historical record. Only in Eternity will we be able to see the “Big Picture” and how exactly it all worked out, but here and now we get glimpses and revealing threads which we try to follow.
One of these “Golden Threads”, I suggest to you, is the relationship of the Roman Empire to Sacred History. In Our Lord’s Day, the Jewish People in their national homeland were a conquered, tributary people subject to the heathen Roman overlords. At the same time, the Roman Imperium enabled the migration and mingling of many peoples, including the Jews. In Our Lord’s Day there were millions more Jews living in the Diaspora across the Roman Empire than were living in Judea or Galilee.
The Early Christian Church was fiercely persecuted by Rome, across three centuries. Rome is the Seat of the Anti-Christ, the “Belly of the Beast”, “Babylon”. And yet, it was to this Rome that Peter the Chief Apostle went to set up his Chair of teaching authority, his “cathedra”. The eventual conversion of the Roman Empire to Christianity, practically as a result of the long Age of Martyrs, embedded the sense into Christian people that Rome and all that was the Roman Empire now belonged to God and was a very providential thing in sustaining the life of the Church and in the spreading of the Gospel. The “Pax Romana”, the “Roman Peace”, is fulfilled in the Peace of the Church, the “Pax Ecclesia Catholica”.
The decline of Rome, especially in the western half of the Empire after the barbarian chieftain Alaric the Goth sacked Rome in 410 A.D., was therefore viewed by Catholics as a calamity and a trial for the Church. The idea of the Roman Imperium as an arm of Christ’s Church and of Christian Civilization persisted, especially as the Pope in Rome, the successor to Saint Peter, was a visible embodiment of what God had done in history to make the heathen Roman Empire the holy Roman Empire. We think of the Popes: St. Gregory the Great, St. Leo the Great, “Leo Magnus”!
In 754 A.D., Pope Stephen III made an arduous journey across the Alps to go to the household of Pippin, the son of Charles Martel, who held the title “Mayor the Palace” and was, in effect the chief of the Christian Franks. At St. Denis on the Seine, on July 28th, 754, Pope Stephen anointed Pippin as King of the Franks, and not only Pippin but his two young sons as well: the older, Charles (our “Charlemagne”), who was but 12 years-old, and the younger, Carloman. All three were anointed with the oil of kingship by the Pope, Bishop of Rome and Successor to the Apostle Peter. Furthermore, the Pope commanded that the Frankish nation, under the gravest spiritual penalties, was henceforth “never to choose their kings from any other family.”
Why this favor to the Franks and to their leader Pippin and his two boys? The Franks were rightly seen by the Popes as the defenders and the vindicators of the rights and liberties of the Roman Church. Even when Rome, as a political reality, had fallen the spirit of Christian Rome still lived strong.
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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