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The War for Christendom

~ Center for Legitimist Documentation

The War for Christendom

Category Archives: Christendom

Liberty and Catholicism

11 Friday Mar 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 21 Comments

Tags

Authority, Catholicism, christendom, Common Good, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Freedom, Integralism, Liberalism, Liberty, Pope Leo XIII, Reactionaries, Tyranny

Krafft,_Peter_-_Zrínyi's_Charge_from_the_Fortress_of_Szigetvár_-_Google_Art_Project

This post was written with the help of my good friend The Catholic Professor.

“When it is all over, will ordinary people have any freedom left or will they have to fight for it, or will they be too tired to resist?”- J.R.R. Tolkien, Letters

Pope Leo XIII called Liberty “the highest of natural endowments”¹, yet in these modern times there are those who claim to represent the Catholic Tradition who wholeheartedly reject that Liberty can have anything but a negative position in the political order, if even that. By subscribing to an artificial, indeed Leftist definition of Liberty, they defeat the own cause. In the following body of the post I hope to demonstrate the traditional Catholic and Intergralist understanding of Liberty and its place in government.

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Losing One’s Head!

10 Thursday Mar 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Chesterton, Islam, Liberalism

Walka_o_sztandar_turecki

Someone with whom I was recently arguing* said:

if I had to choose between liberalism or Islam ruling the world, I would choose Islam.

Which is as much as saying:

if I had to choose between being guillotined or being decapitated with a scimitar, I would choose the scimitar.

As a Restorationist, I prefer to keep my head, as I sometimes find it useful. If I do lose it, I hope to lose it battle for the defense of Emperor, Christendom, and freedom or failing that by dying a martyr. A martyr does not choose death, rather, he chooses Christ and is killed for his choice. Indeed very much the same point was made by Chesterton at the end of an essay, appropriately named, On Losing One’s Head, if one substitutes “Liberal” and Muslim for anarchist and sophist:

The separation of body and head is a sort of symbol of that separation of body and soul which is made by all the heresies and the sophistries, which are the nightmares of the mind. The mere materialist is a body that has lost its head; the mere spiritualist is a head that has mislaid its body. Under the same symbol can be found the old distinction between the sinner and the heretic about which theology has uttered many paradoxes, more profitable to study than some modern people fancy. For there is one kind of man who takes off his head and throws it in the gutter, who dethrones and forgets the reason that should be his ruler and witness; and the horrible headless body strides away over cities and sanctuaries, breaking them down and treading them into mire and blood. He is the criminal; but there is another figure equally sinister and strange. This man forgets his body, with all its instinctive honesties and recurrent sanities and laws of God; he leaves his body working in the fields like a slave; and the head goes away to think alone. The head, detached and dehumanized, thinks faster and faster like a clock gone mad; it is never heated by any generous blood, never softened by any healthy fatigue, never checked or warned by any of the terrible tocsins of instinct. The head thinks because it cannot do anything else; because it cannot feel or doubt or know. This man is the heretic; and in this way all the heresies were made. The anarchist goes off his head and the sophist goes off his body; I will not renew the old dispute about which is the worse amputation; but I should recommend the prudent reader to avoid both.

*Out of fairness to the individual I am withholding his identity and where he said what I now quote. Some of you may know already.

“Europe is the Empire” Revisited

03 Thursday Mar 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Catholic Culture, christendom, Europe, Europe is the Empire, Holy Roman Empire, Pope Francis, the West is Europe

vasari coronation charles v bologna detail Recently our Holy Father Francis remarked in a French interview:

The only continent that can bring about a certain unity to the world is Europe. China has perhaps a more ancient, deeper, culture. But only Europe has a vocation towards universality and service.

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Churchill on the Destruction of Austria-Hungary

03 Thursday Mar 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom, HRM Archive

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Austria-Hungary, Holy Roman Empire, The Great War, Winston Churchill, World War I

Gsur_Abwehrkampf_einer_MG_Abteilung

The second cardinal tragedy [of the Great War] was the complete break-up of the Austro-Hungarian Empire by the treaties of St. Germain and Trianon. For centuries this surviving embodiment of the Holy Roman Empire had afforded a common life, with advantages in trade and security, to a large number of peoples none of whom in our own times had the strength or vitality to stand by themselves in the face of pressure from a revivified Germany or Russia. There is not one of these peoples or provinces that constituted the Empire of the Hapsburgs to whom gaining their independence has not brought the tortures which ancient poets and theologians had reserved for the damned.

Winston Churchill, The Gathering Storm

The Tyrolean Genocide

26 Friday Feb 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ Leave a comment

An important post by my friend The Imperial Traditionalist, about the much forgotten Italianization of South Tyrol.

The Imperial Traditionalist's avatarThe Imperial Traditionalist

640px-flag_of_tirol_28state29-svg

Although there were indeed a great many genocides in the twentieth century, most focus is given to the Holocaust, with a somewhat lesser focus given to the Rwandan Genocide, The Armenian Genocide, and occasionally the Holodomor in Ukraine. One of the many forgotten genocides is the genocide which occurred in the South Tyrol.

The origins of this tragedy lie in the irredentist aspirations of the Kingdom of Italy, a Kingdom which had come into being only through the viciously aggressive policies of the Savoy Kings of Piedmont-Sardinia, running roughshod over dozens of other kingdoms in their self-centered dreams of a single Italy, which is a foolish a notion as that of a single Germany. The Savoys had enamored themselves of the notion that all land up to the Brenner Pass, along with the Austrian Crown Lands of Istria and Littoral were Italian, and were willing to do nearly anything to…

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What made the West Great?

23 Tuesday Feb 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

christendom, Civilization, Divine Providence

Albrecht_Dürer_-_Adoration_of_the_Trinity_(Landauer_Altar)_-_Google_Art_Project

What is it that made Western Civilization the greatest of Civilizations? The short answer is Divine Providence. For some, however, the this short yet profound answer might require longer explanation.

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Pax Imperium

17 Wednesday Feb 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

christendom, Friedrich Heer, Holy Roman Empire, pax imperium

HRE

On earth the peace-giving function of the Emperor of the Heavens was exercised by the emperor ordained by God. The Empire was a federation of peoples led by the Emperor, a federation in which concordia provinciarum, harmony between the members, prevails…

For its fideles, the Holy Roman Empire was a zone in which peace prevailed. To have peace within the Empire it was necessary to fight the ‘infidel’, the ‘heathen’, the ‘heretic’. In his own interpretations of his office, the Emperor was the supreme defender and protector of the church.

– Friedrich Heer, The Holy Roman Empire

The European Union: What Went Wrong?

16 Tuesday Feb 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

christendom, EU, European Union, Holy Roman Empire, UN

Flag_of_Europe.svgIt is increasingly frustrating to the watch knee-jerk reaction into Leftist Nationalism which plagues so many “Conservatives” and Rightists. Suspicion of the ordered unity necessary for stability appears to be especially pandemic  in “pan-monarchists” among others (a side note but an important one: while monarchy is among the best forms of government, it is not the only legitimate form of government). Yet how is it possible that such a blatantly Leftist ideology as Nationalism could have infiltrated so far?

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The Goal of a Restorationist

09 Tuesday Feb 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom, HRM Archive

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

New Sacred Ages, Renovatio Romani Imperii, Restorationist, Sacretemporal World Order

vasari coronation charles v bologna detailHistory is full of the political manifestos of Communists, Leftists, and Revolutionists. Each has its own utopia, a perfect society, a “New World Order”. And each has failed, miserably failed.

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Defender of Christendom Against the Antichrist

06 Wednesday Jan 2016

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Antichrist, Bellarmine, christendom, Friedrich Heer, Holy Roman Empire

Hapsburg_Eagle

The [Holy Roman] Emperor is representative of the high priest, of Christ the Priest King, who succeeded the kings of God’s ancient people…

Men revered the Holy Roman Empire as the bastion built against the coming of the Antichrist. The Holy Roman Emperor saw himself as the chief defender of the Church, indeed of all Christendom…

The conception of the Holy Roman Empire as a unique barrier against the coming of antichrist still had a place in the thought of Bellarmine, one of the most important papal theorizers of the early modern period; more significant still, it is also implicit in the thought of constitutional philosophers and theorists of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries… The idea that while the Holy Roman Empire still existed — in one of its metamorphoses if not in its own person — the end of the world and the Last Judgment would be postponed was the great theme of the medieval theologians of the Holy Roman Empire and of its poets and literary champions at critical moments in its history.

-Friedrich Heer, The Holy Roman Empire

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