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Religion booknotes.


Today, every decent-sized museum displays one or two examples of those lavish medieval compendiums known as Books of Hours. With their beautiful illuminations and finely rubricated calligraphy calligraphy (kəlĭg`rəfē) [Gr.,=beautiful writing], skilled penmanship practiced as a fine art. See also inscription; paleography. European Calligraphy


In Europe two sorts of handwriting came into being very early.
, these books continue to be prized by collectors, and many noncollectors have bought single pages for their own enjoyment.

Marking the Hours

English People and Their Prayers, 1240-1570

Eamon Duffy

Yale University Press, $35, 208 pp.

The books (about eight hundred full manuscripts have come down to us) have been the object of study by art historians, but Eamon Duffy, the noted Cambridge historian, studied the parts of them that art historians deplore de·plore  
tr.v. de·plored, de·plor·ing, de·plores
1. To feel or express strong disapproval of; condemn: "Somehow we had to master events, not simply deplore them" 
: their jottings, erasures, and personal annotations, including pasted-in additions and penned-in family histories. Duffy's purpose is twofold: to discover what the markings may tell us about the history of personal piety in the medieval period; and to test the hypothesis that the widespread use of these books reveals a turning away from institutional piety to a more self-centered, privatized form of religious devotion. Duffy demurs when it comes to the latter issue, but given his fine historical sense, he has much to say concerning the former.

The Books of Hours, as the title indicates, were devotional books that included the prescribed canonical prayers for given periods of the day, usually the Little Office of the Blessed Virgin and/or the Office of the Dead in Latin, but with an admixture of the vernacular. There were also assorted prayers and such exercises of piety as recitations in honor of Our Lord, the Blessed Mother, and the saints. Owners would sometimes express their own reactions, petitions, and aspirations in the books. A number of the prayers seemed to have a talismanic tal·is·man·ic   also tal·is·man·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to talismans: talismanic formulas.

2.
 function: if such and such a prayer were said at such and such a time or for a certain period, the one who performed it would not die unshriven, would be saved from certain disaster, and so on. In one book that belonged to a soldier can be found a version of a prayer attributed to Charlemagne, with a Latin rubric RUBRIC, civil law. The title or inscription of any law or statute, because the copyists formerly drew and painted the title of laws and statutes rubro colore, in red letters. Ayl. Pand. B. 1, t. 8; Diet. do Juris. h.t.  indicating that whoever carried such a prayer or said it on a certain day would not be "killed by a weapon of iron, nor killed nor burned by fire, nor drowned by water." In case anyone thinks such superstitions ended with the Middle Ages, it is worth noting that many of our soldiers in Iraq carry a prayer card with Psalm 91 and its promise that "though a thousand fall at your side / ten thousand at your right / near you it shall not come."

Duffy has a wonderful chapter on the Book of Hours book of hours, form of prayer book developed in the 14th cent. from the prayers of clerics appended to the main service. The subjects of the miniature illustrations (see miniature painting) were frequently derived from the appendix of the Psalter.  that Thomas More had with him in the Tower of London Tower of London, ancient fortress in London, England, just east of the City and on the north bank of the Thames, covering about 13 acres (5.3 hectares). Now used mainly as a museum, it was a royal residence in the Middle Ages.  as he awaited execution. It includes many of More's own reflections and the famous petition, in More's hand, "Give me thy grace, good Lord / to set the world at naught." Another fascinating chapter discusses the changes made by those who lived during the reign of Henry VIII, when Catholic themes were either blanked out or crossed out (for example, the description of a saint as "pope"). After Henry, of course, the Book of Hours was replaced by approved manuals of prayer.

Duffy's book, reasonably priced and lavishly illustrated, is a feast for the eyes and reflects the judicious treatment of historical artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 that we have come to expect from this fine scholar. Many illustrations, some in color, some in black and white, accompany the text. I highly recommend the book to anyone interested in the history of prayer or church history in general.

Negotiating Darwin

The Vatican Confronts Evolution, 1877-1902

Mariano Artigas, Thomas F. Glick, and Rafael A. Martinez

The John Hopkins University Press, $50, 336 pp.

Thanks to the recent opening of the archives of the former Holy Office (now the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) (Congregatio pro Doctrina Fidei), previously known as the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office, is the oldest of the nine congregations of the Roman Curia. ) and of what was once known as the Sacred Congregation of the Index, three scholars have examined the work of six authors whose writings came to the attention of the Vatican in the late nineteenth century because they seemed to support the theory of evolution. The disposition of the six cases differed widely, even though it was popularly assumed that all six were "condemned," an impression this careful study will help to correct.

The earliest case concerned an irascible i·ras·ci·ble  
adj.
1. Prone to outbursts of temper; easily angered.

2. Characterized by or resulting from anger.



[Middle English, from Old French, from Late Latin
 Italian parish priest and scientist, Raffaello Caverni. His work was put on the Index of Forbidden Books in 1878, but was mostly ignored. His official "condemnation" did not happen until the late 1890s. The French Dominican Dalmace Leroy also had his book condemned, but Leroy made a public retraction In the law of Defamation, a formal recanting of the libelous or slanderous material.

Retraction is not a defense to defamation, but under certain circumstances, it is admissible in Mitigation of Damages. Cross-references

Libel and Slander.
 and his condemnation was never publicized. The defense of evolution by Italian bishop Jeremiah Bonomelli was put on the Index but, after a public retraction, no further action was taken. Fr. John Zahm (for whom a residence hall at the University of Notre Dame is named, and whose memory is still venerated on campus) retracted his published defense of evolution; a decree of condemnation was never published by Rome. A British bishop, John Hedley, an admirer of Zahm's work, defended him in print and later took part in a bitter polemic with the Jesuit editors of La Civilta Cattolica. Hedley seems not to have drawn the attention of the Vatican. Finally, the famous convert scientist St. George Jackson Mivart St. George Jackson Mivart (November 30, 1827 - April 1, 1900) was an English biologist.

He was born in London, and educated at Clapham grammar school, Harrow School, and King's College London, and afterwards at St Mary's, Oscott (1844-1846; he was confirmed there on 11 May,
, while never condemned by Rome for his views on evolution, had three articles on the mitigation of eternal punishment in hell listed in the Index.

Each of these cases is examined in full--and sometimes tedious--detail, thanks to the authors' careful retrieval of archival materials. From my perspective, the most interesting threads running through the book are not related to Darwinism. They include the fact that both the Holy Office and the Congregation of the Index were keenly aware that the Vatican's peremptory peremptory adj. absolute, final and not entitled to delay or reconsideration. The term is applied to writs, juror challenges or a date set for hearing.


PEREMPTORY. Absolute; positive. A final determination to act without hope of renewing or altering.
 condemnation of scientific hypotheses would arouse memories of the Galileo affair and bring further discredit to the church. Some things had been learned from history.

While the subject of evolution is central to this story, the real debate at the time concerned the interpretation of the Bible, particularly the Book of Genesis Noun 1. Book of Genesis - the first book of the Old Testament: tells of Creation; Adam and Eve; the Fall of Man; Cain and Abel; Noah and the flood; God's covenant with Abraham; Abraham and Isaac; Jacob and Esau; Joseph and his brothers
Genesis
. What worried the commentators used by the Vatican was the historicity his·to·ric·i·ty  
n.
Historical authenticity; fact.


historicity
Noun

historical authenticity
 of the Genesis accounts, in particular the creation of Adam and Eve Adam and Eve

In the Judeo-Christian and Islamic traditions, the parents of the human race. Genesis gives two versions of their creation. In the first, God creates “male and female in his own image” on the sixth day.
. In 1893, the same year that Pope Leo XIII published his encyclical encyclical, originally, a pastoral letter sent out by a bishop, now a solemn papal letter, meant to inform the whole church on some particular matter of importance. Benedict XIV circulated the first known encyclical in 1740.  on Bible study, which included a grudging acceptance of newer modes of biblical interpretation, Alfred Loisy was removed from his chair at the Institut Catholique in Paris. Finally, it is fascinating to see how the rigid scholastic approach of the time was ill suited to assess a different way of thinking. That unsuitability was magnified by the intellectual struggles that marked the earlier Syllabus of Errors The Syllabus of Errors (Latin: Syllabus Errorum) was a document issued by Holy See under Pope Pius IX on December 8,1864, Feast of the Immaculate Conception, on the same day as the Pope's encyclical Quanta Cura.  and in the various condemnations of philosophical errors at the First Vatican Council Noun 1. First Vatican Council - the Vatican Council in 1869-1870 that proclaimed the infallibility of the pope when speaking ex cathedra
Vatican I

Vatican Council - each of two councils of the Roman Catholic Church
.

This book remains closely tied to its subject (except for a nice excursus ex·cur·sus  
n. pl. ex·cur·sus·es
1. A lengthy, appended exposition of a topic or point.

2. A digression.
 on "Americanism" in the chapter on John Zahm). As a consequence, it provides little broader cultural context. It is a study of individuals and their travails with the Roman authorities. They were denounced for their errors, given no chance to represent themselves, told post factum [Latin, Fact, act, or deed.] A fact in evidence, which is generally the central or primary fact upon which a controversy will be decided.  of their fate, and invited to recant. It would not be until our own time that these highhanded high·hand·ed  
adj.
Arrogant; overbearing: was annoyed by the manager's highhanded attitude.



high
 procedures would be modified. Still, it is a source of melancholy to reflect on our not-so-distant past.

As I read this book, I thought of John Henry Newman. His biographer Ian Ker has astutely noted that more than a decade before Darwin's On the Origin of Species (1859), Newman wrote a book on a certain kind of evolution--his 1845 essay on the development of doctrine Development of doctrine is a term used by John Henry Newman and other theologians influenced by him to describe the way Catholic teaching has become more detailed and explicit over the centuries, while later statements of doctrine remain consistent with earlier statements. . As Ker remarks, Newman had no problem with theories of evolution as they came to be discussed in the aftermath of Darwin's famous publication. Interestingly, Newman had also written words of consolation to St. George Mivart, when the latter's orthodoxy was impugned. "Those who would not allow Galileo to reason three hundred years ago," Newman wrote, "will not allow anyone else now. The past is no lesson for them for the present and the future: and their notion of stability in faith is ever to be repeating errors and then repeating retractions of them." Fortunately, Rome did learn a little, but with great reluctance. This book is both a cautionary tale and a welcome piece of historical research.

Eternity Today

On the Liturgical Year (2 volumes)

Martin Connell

Continuum, Vol. 1 $ 22.95, 256 pp.

Vol. 2 $19.95, 256 pp.

These two volumes are a wonderfully readable tour of the liturgical year. The first opens with a theological meditation on the Christian notion of time and takes the reader from the season of Advent through to Candlemas. Volume 2 discusses the season of Lent, the three days of Holy Week, the Easter season, and the "ordinary" time of the year. Each season is viewed from the vantage point of its development in the history of the church, followed by a substantive theological meditation on the meaning of a given season, including its liturgical and par-aliturgical aspects. To cite one example, Connell not only discusses the place of the Christmas tree Christmas tree

Evergreen tree, usually decorated with lights and ornaments, to celebrate the Christmas season. The use of evergreen trees, wreaths, and garlands as symbols of eternal life was common among the ancient Egyptians, Chinese, and Hebrews.
 in Christian history, but also provides information about how it (and the manger set) may be "blessed" for home use.

Although these volumes reflect a fine grasp of liturgical scholarship, they are written in an accessible style and will make an excellent addition to the bookshelf of anyone interested in a deeper knowledge of our common worship. I suspect they will be particularly useful to those who teach in schools of religious education and/or theology, and that they will be a goldmine for those preparing homilies or devotional exercises. Connell pays particular attention to the scriptural texts appropriate for the feasts and the seasons. He knows how they were used traditionally as well as how they are treated in contemporary Scripture scholarship. One of the more charming aspects of the volumes is Connell's use of poetry, both modern and historical, as he underscores the temper of a given season.

Each volume has a useful index, but, alas, there are no bibliographies. As a consequence, the reader must search Connell's ample footnotes in any given chapter. That small complaint aside, I think that these two volumes are a useful and welcome addition that will help readers gain a deeper knowledge of the liturgy. Connell underscores Vatican II's declaration that the promotion and restoration of the sacred liturgy are rightly held to be a "sign of the providential prov·i·den·tial  
adj.
1. Of or resulting from divine providence.

2. Happening as if through divine intervention; opportune. See Synonyms at happy.
 dispositions of God in our time" and "a movement of the Holy Spirit in the church" (Sacrosanctum concilium, 43).

Merton and Friends

James Harford

Continuum, $35.95, 320 pp.

James Harford met the late poet Robert Lax in the early 1950s in Paris and through that friendship got to know Edward Rice and, to a lesser degree, Thomas Merton. This volume is a joint biography of the three, who were once fellow students at Columbia University and remained lifelong friends. The three men are seen mainly though the lens of Harford's own friendship with Edward Rice and his frequent visits to the expatriate Robert Lax on the Greek island of Patmos.

I know a great deal about Thomas Merton and have contributed to the unwieldy torrent of literature on him. Of Robert Lax I know a fair amount because I have been a longtime admirer, both of him as a person and of his too-little-known work. I tend to agree with Harford that Lax (who spent many years living in Europe, where he is better known as a poet) was the eremitic er·e·mite  
n.
A recluse or hermit, especially a religious recluse.



[Middle English, from Late Latin er
 contemplative that Merton always desired to be. Rice, born a Catholic, served as godfather to both Lax and Merton when they converted.

What was most interesting to me is the picture of Rice that emerges in this fascinating book, and, more particularly, the role he played in initiating and sustaining that most wonderful of Catholic magazines, Jubilee (1952-67). It was one of the more innovative and forward-looking Catholic publications produced in the period before the Second Vatican Council Noun 1. Second Vatican Council - the Vatican Council in 1962-1965 that abandoned the universal Latin liturgy and acknowledged ecumenism and made other reforms
Vatican II

Vatican Council - each of two councils of the Roman Catholic Church
. I still like to go to Notre Dame's library and thumb through the bound volumes. After Jubilee folded, Rice lived as a freelance writer and editor, not always free of financial and personal woes (including Parkinson's disease Parkinson's disease or Parkinsonism, degenerative brain disorder first described by the English surgeon James Parkinson in 1817. When there is no known cause, the disease usually appears after age 40 and is referred to as Parkinson's disease. ), while Lax remained on his Greek island until illness made it necessary for him to return to his home town of Olean, New York Olean is a city in Cattaraugus County, New York, United States. The population was 15,347 at the 2000 census.

The City of Olean is within the Town of Olean and is located in the southeast part of the county.
. Just this past fall, when speaking at St. Bonaventure University Students and alumni refer to the university with an affectionate nickname—"Bona's"—which originates from the school's original name, St. Bonaventure's College. Location
The campus sits on 1,200 acres (4.
, I was able to pay a visit to Lax's grave. It was an act of pietas Pietas

goddess of faithfulness, respect, and affection. [Rom. Myth.: Kravitz, 192]

See : Faithfulness
 toward a truly saintly person.

The portraits of Lax and Rice are extremely well done, but the author's picture of Merton is badly out of focus, mainly because he sees Merton almost exclusively through these two friends. One would think that the breezy, hip, irreverent, self-mocking tone of Merton's letters to Rice and Lax defines Merton. But it is well known that Merton could exhibit a chameleon-like persona, depending on whom he was writing to. One would never get a sense of Merton as a contemplative monk by reading this account. In contrast, Harford's picture of Lax is both moving and deeply appreciative of Lax's considerable poetic gifts. It is my conviction that Lax was a true hidden saint who managed to combine a poetic gift, a wicked but never acidic sense of humor Noun 1. sense of humor - the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor"
sense of humour, humor, humour
, and the habit of prayer with an asceticism asceticism (əsĕt`ĭsĭzəm), rejection of bodily pleasures through sustained self-denial and self-mortification, with the objective of strengthening spiritual life.  that never touched on the fanatical. The author also does justice to Rice.

In the end, this volume captures a certain period when American Catholicism was on the cusp of the great changes that would take place at the council. It was a time of great energy, hope, and intellectual ferment ferment /fer·ment/ (fer-ment´) to undergo fermentation; used for the decomposition of carbohydrates.

fer·ment
n.
1.
, a period reflected in the spirit and substance of journals like Jubilee, CrossCurrents, and later Continuum. Harford catches the excitement of that era in his homage to three extraordinary American Catholics who represented the best of the American church at a time that is now only memory.

Catherine Laboure

Visionary of the Miraculous Medal

Rene Laurentin

Pauline Books, $24.95, 230 pp.

This year marks the sixtieth anniversary of the canonization canonization (kăn'ənĭzā`shən), in the Roman Catholic Church, process by which a person is classified as a saint. It is now performed at Rome alone, although in the Middle Ages and earlier bishops elsewhere used to canonize.  of Catherine Laboure (1806-1876), whose name is inextricably in·ex·tri·ca·ble  
adj.
1.
a. So intricate or entangled as to make escape impossible: an inextricable maze; an inextricable web of deceit.

b.
 linked to the "miraculous medal," a sacramental image still worn by countless Catholics. The iconography of that medal was revealed to Laboure in 1830, during a series of apparitions she experienced as a young nun in a convent on the Rue de Bac in Paris. How she managed to persuade her skeptical confessor CONFESSOR, evid. A priest of some Christian sect, who receives an account of the sins of his people, and undertakes to give them absolution of their sins.
     2.
, first to accept as authentic her apparitions and then to have the medal cast, is a story that seems almost fictional. What is clear, though, is that, within a very short time, wearing the medal became so popular that it seemed almost talismanic in its power. The noted Jewish convert Alphonse Ratisbon said it was instrumental in his baptism, and John Henry Newman began to wear one around his neck two months before his own reception into the Catholic Church in 1845. Since the medal incorporates the phrase "Mary conceived without sin," it may have been a motivating force for the subsequent definition of the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception in 1854.

Rene Laurentin writes that even during the ferocious battles for the Commune in 1870, the rigidly anticlerical an·ti·cler·i·cal  
adj.
Opposed to the influence of the church or the clergy in political affairs.



an
 and skeptical communards would wear the medal, convinced it had protective powers for those going into battle. It is still popularly worn, and I remember well the countless times I was an altar server at the weekly "Miraculous Medal Novena novena (nōvē`nə) [Lat.,=a group of nine], in the Roman Catholic Church, primarily a series of public or private prayers extending over nine consecutive days, especially nine days preceding a feast. They often carry an indulgence. " held in our parish on a weekday evening.

Laurentin is easily the most productive scholar of Marian matters in modern France. Anyone faintly familiar with the Lourdes story is in his debt for his enormous documentary and scholarly reflection on that most famous of shrines. The new book, translated from the French original of 1983, is a detailed biography of the saint based largely on archival research. What is most curious about the story of Catherine, however, is that after those illuminating experiences of 1830, she spent the next forty-odd years of her life in relative obscurity. (For a long time, only a small coterie knew that she was the recipient of the apparitions.) She tended a garden, raised chickens, pigeons, and a few milk cows; and she cared for the destitute old men the nuns housed and other people who came to the door for food, clothing, and other needs. Her life was very much like that of Bemadette Soubirous, who also sank into cloistered anonymity after the initial Lourdes apparitions. In a way, Lourdes, and not Bernadette, was the story after she entered the convent and, to a lesser degree, the same thing was true of Catherine.

What struck me in reading this book is how French Catholic life after the revolution was profoundly shaped by the piety generated from the experiences of a few women and men whose approach to the faith and whose revelatory experiences were a kind of living reproach to the Age of Reason promised by the revolution. If ever there was proof that a saint is one who does the ordinary in an extraordinary fashion, it is the life of Catherine Laboure.

Lawrence S. Cunningham is the John A. O'Brien Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame.
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Author:Cunningham, Lawrence S.
Publication:Commonweal
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Date:Apr 6, 2007
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