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The War for Christendom

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The War for Christendom

Category Archives: Christendom

Vivat Pontifex!

11 Wednesday May 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom, HRM Archive

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Holy Catholic Church, Loyalty to the Pope, Pope Francis, Schism

Amédée_Varint_-_Christ_marchant_sur_la_mer

Pontiff, You are the vicar of Christ on earth,
a rock amidst the waves,
You are a beacon in the darkness;
You are the defender of peace,
You are the guardian of unity,
watchful defender of liberty;
in You is the authority.

These words of the Pontifical Anthem are as true today as the day on which they were written. The fact is that we cannot separate the Catholic Church and the Papal office, and all those who try will find that they have only separated themselves from the Church. We can no longer allow the falsehoods and misquotations of the Enemy to blind us into believing that we can simply reject Christ’s chosen Vicar, without at the same time ultimately rejecting Christ.

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“Protect Foreigners Benevolently”

10 Tuesday May 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

Customs, Foreigners, Roman Empire, Saint Stephan of Hungary

StefanIHongarije

My beloved son, delight of my heart, hope of your posterity, I pray, I command, that at very time and in everything, strengthened by your devotion to me, you may show favor not only to relations and kin, or to the most eminent, be they leaders or rich men or neighbors or fellow-countrymen, but also to foreigners and to all who come to you. By fulfilling your duty in this way you will reach the highest state of happiness…

The guests and newcomers are of so much service that they may rightly be ranked sixth among the royal dignities. As in the beginning the Roman Empire was in this manner formed, so were the Roman Emperors exalted and made honorable, so that many noble and wise men joined them in a better and better realm. For as the guests arrive from different parts and provinces, so they bring with them different tongues and customs, different examples and weapons, and all this adorns the country and enhances the splendor of the court while deterring foreigners from triumphalist contempt. For a country of one single language and one set of customs is weak and vulnerable. Therefore I enjoin on you, my son, to protect newcomers benevolently and to hold them in high esteem so that they should stay with you rather than dwell elsewhere.

-Saint Stephan of Hungary, Admonitions to Prince Emeric of Hungary  

The Evil We Face: the Death of Civilization

04 Wednesday May 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Civilization, Death of Civilization, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Identitarianism, Left, Politics of Emotion, Politics of Reason, Reason, Right

ruinedabbeychurch

Reason rather than sentiment is the distinguishing mark separating man from beast. Naturally reason, wrongly employed, perverted and under the yoke of emotions, is worse than mere sentimentalism-and this, precisely, was the “rationalism” of the Enlightenment. God created man, after all, in such a way that his head is above his heart.
–Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Leftism

Politics have long ago ceased to be about reasonably serving the Common Good, and if anything the general trend of politics these days only proves this. Not only has the rejection of reason influenced the political sphere, but every other important aspect of life as well. Reality is constantly being denied and in its place our “feelings” are enthroned, when we know that this is clearly wrong. Yet how can we know what is Right when it certainly seems that these mass movements of emotional politics are our last hope?

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Justice or Order: which is more important?

22 Friday Apr 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Catholic Tradition, Justice, Natural Rights, Order, Reactionaries, Reactionary Right, Rights

Sir_Frank_Dicksee_-_The_Two_Crowns_-_Google_Art_ProjectApparently the idea is floating around the Reactionary Right that Natural rights don’t exist. This is a compelling idea, considering how the Left is now using the concept of “human rights” to justify immoral license, as is all too obvious in these immoral days. The answer seems to be to reject any kind of inherent rights as incompatible with order in the society, and for those who would do so I have a question: Which is more important, Justice for the person or order for the society?

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Imperator Pacificus

18 Monday Apr 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

christendom, Holy Roman Empire, James Bryce, Supernationalism

HRE

To that position three cardinal duties were attached. He who held it must typify spiritual unity, must preserve peace, must be a fountain of that by which alone among imperfect men peace is preserved and restored, law and justice. The first of these three objects was sought not only on religious grounds, but also from that longing for a wider brotherhood of humanity towards which, ever since the barrier between Jew and Gentile, Greek and barbarian, was broken down, the aspirations of the higher minds of the world have been constantly directed. Placed in the midst of Europe, the Emperor was to bind its tribes into one body, reminding them of their common faith, their common blood, their common interest in each other’s welfare. And he was therefore above all things, professing indeed to be upon earth the representative of the Prince of Peace, bound to listen to complaints, and to redress the injuries inflicted by sovereigns or people upon each other; to punish offenders against the public order of Christendom; to maintain through the world, looking down as from a serene height upon the schemes and quarrels of meaner potentates, that supreme good without which neither arts nor letters, nor the gentler virtues of life, can rise and flourish. The mediæval Empire was in its essence what the modern despotisms that mimic it profess themselves: the Empire was peace: the oldest and noblest title of its head was ‘Imperator pacificus’.

-James Viscount Bryce, The Holy Roman Empire

Europe is the Empire: Benedict Edition

09 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Benedict XVI, Charlemagne, christendom, Europe, Europe is the Empire, History, Holy Roman Empire, The West

vasari coronation charles v bologna detail

Because of the importance of this understanding of the West, I’ve decided to make my “Europe is the Empire” posts a regular feature on this site. Check out the original The West is Europe and Europe is the Empire, and the follow-up post, “Europe is the Empire”: Revisited.

Recently I came across the essay Europe and Its Discontents written by our Holy Father Benedict XVI, and published in First Things Magazine back in 2006. With the current crisis in Europe, it is imperative that Benedict’s keen understanding of the historical meaning of the West is more widely understood:

Europe is a geographic term only in a secondary sense: Europe is rather a cultural and historical concept.

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A Romano Pontifice

04 Monday Apr 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Byzantine Empire, Holy Roman Empire, Imperial Dignity, Imperium, Schism

Louis_le_Pieux

For the Frankish Princes were first Kings, then were truly declared Emperors, this to the extent that from the Roman Pontiff who for this purpose anointed them with holy oil, the title derived. Anointed in this manner by the Pontiff, Charlemagne, our great-grandfather, first of our House and lineage, abundant in piety, was rightly declared Emperor and made anointed Lord, especially when often such persons the Imperium received, who did not receive it by Divine will set forth through the Pontifical ministry, but only by the Senate and the people, these not being ordained to grant the Imperial Dignity. Some persons truly did not even have this, but were only acclaimed by soldiers and so confirmed in the Empire, likewise those who from women moreover and even in other ways received the Roman Sceptre. Further, if you accuse falsely the Roman Pontiff who confers the Imperium in this manner, would you not also accuse Samuel, who rejected Saul, whom he himself had anointed, and in his stead anointed David in Kingship?

-Louis II Emperor August of the Romans
to
Basil I King of the Greeks, styling himself Emperor

Translatio Imperii

02 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Byzantine Empire, Holy Roman Empire, Imperial Dignity, Schism

Louis_le_Pieux

We have received the government of the Roman Empire for our orthodoxy. The Greeks have ceased to be emperors of the Romans for their cacodoxy. Not only have they deserted the city and the capital of the Empire, but they have also abandoned Roman patriality and even the Latin language. They have migrated to another capital city and taken up a completely different patriality and language. Thus we received from heaven this people and city to guide and the mother of all the churches of God to defend and exalt… Moreover, you yourself are surprised, beloved brother Basil, that not Frankish Emperors but the Roman Emperors we are called, yet you know and must agree that unless I am Roman Emperor, assuredly neither then am I the Emperor of the Franks. Truly from the Romans that name and dignity are assumed, having departed from those upon whom this great sublimity first shone… The Imperial Dignity is not in the spoken name itself, but consists and culminates in glorious piety.

-Louis II Emperor August of the Romans
to
Basil I King of the Greeks, styling himself Emperor

Gloriam Vidi Resurgentis: the Sudden Joyous Turn

27 Sunday Mar 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

christendom, Easter, Restoration, Resurrection

sacred-Christ-in-santalfonso

Sing and be glad, all ye children of the West
for your King shall come again,
and He shall dwell among you,
all the days of your life.

And the Tree that was withered shall be renewed,
and He shall plant it in the high places,
and the City shall be blessed.

–The Return of the King

In the Darkest hour, when all that is Good and Holy seems lost, there rises like a small flame, the Light of Hope. Soon the tide of Darkness turns back, the glory of the Light spreading like the golden Dawn from end to end of the sky. The shadow of death fades away, powerless against Hope.

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There Once Was A High King…

20 Sunday Mar 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Charlemagne, christendom, Fairy tales, History, Holy Roman Empire, Legends

Léon_III_couronne_Charlemagne_empereur

Pay heed to the tales of old wives. It may well be that they alone keep in memory what it was once needful for the wise to know.- J.R.R. Tolkien

Legends are often dismissed in modern times as completely unhistorical, as children’s tales which have no relevance to modern man. History, they say, is just an endless pointless cycle driven by greed or lust for power- or history is always progressing, until it inevitably progresses past your “fairy tales.” However, to those who know the truth, there is more history in a single “Medieval” legend than there ever was in any modern book of history.

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