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The War for Christendom

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The War for Christendom

Category Archives: Christendom

The War for Catholic Civilization

08 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Barbarianism, christendom, Civilization, Death of Civilization, Islam, The War for Christendom

Carl_Friedrich_Lessing_-_The_Siege_(Defense_of_a_Church_Courtyard_During_the_Thirty_Years’_War)_-_Google_Art_Project

The highest end of a good Culture is a good Civilization. The end of an evil Culture is the destruction of Civilization. Now in order to understand this, it necessary to define both Culture and Civilization. To put it simply, Culture is the traditions, customs, and way of life and art rooted in religion that a people hold in common, while Civilization is the moral standard rooted in Culture by which we as individuals interact with others and make moral choices.

Now barbarians can and often have had Culture, which is not product but rather a cause of Civilization. The “Culture of Death” is as much a Culture as any authentic Catholic culture. The barbarians of today often tell us that we need to accept diversity and cultures. Yet they denounce Catholic Western Civilization. Why? Because Civilization is too hard for them, it requires them to make choices and change the way they live.

Their goal is to destroy Western Civilization, but the real danger is that if they succeed, something else will fill the void that they create. Islam is not a culture. Islam is a civilization that will replace the West if the barbarians win.  And we must not let that happen.

Engelbert Dollfuss: Fascist… or Hero?

25 Saturday Jul 2015

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Austria, Dollfuss, Fascism, Hero, Hitler, Holy Roman Empire, House of Hapsburg, Last Catholic State, Otto Von Hapsburg, Patriot, World War II

Engelbert_Dollfuss

I am convinced that it is the will of a higher power that we preserve our home country Austria with its glorious history, even though today in a smaller form, I am convinced that this Austria will be exemplary in the shaping of public life for other peoples, that in this Austria we must also have a great and valuable service to fulfill, and to fulfill to the whole of Germandom. This Austria remains our and our children’s homeland… Just as the crusaders were imbued with the same faith, as a Marco d’Aviano preached here before Vienna, “God wills it” – so we also see with great confidence in the future, in the conviction: God wills it 

-Engelbert Dollfuss, Trabrennplatzrede

Born in Texing in Lower Austria on the fourth of October 1892, Engelbert Dollfuss is perhaps the second most controversial Austrian of the Interwar Period.  A devout Catholic and Patriot, he is often accused by the Left of being a Fascist. His government is criticized as being Totalitarian and Nationalistic. But was it really? Continue reading →

G.K. Chesterton’s “AUSTRIA” 1935

25 Saturday Jul 2015

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom, HRM Archive

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Austria, Chesterton, Dollfuss, Hitler

AUSTRIA

LAST year, the representative of all that remains of the Holy Roman Empire was murdered by the barbarians. As an atrocity it has been adequately denounced; and it breeds in some of us rather a dumb sort of disgust, almost as if it had been done not by barbarians but by beasts. Perhaps the only further fact to be noted, on that side, is the fact that this is the only kind of effort in which these clumsy people are not merely clumsy. The Nordic man of the Nazi type in Germany is a very slow thinker, and incredibly backward and behind the times in science and philosophy. That is why, for instance, he clings to the word “Aryan,” as if he were his own great-grandfather laboriously poring over the first pages of Max Muller, under the concentrated stare of the astounded ethnologists of later days. He is slow in a great many things; as, for instance, in releasing prisoners who are admittedly innocent; or in answering questions put by foreign critics or Catholic bishops. We have good reason to know that he is slow in paying his debts; to the point of ceasing to pay them. He is very slow in bringing about the Utopia that he promised to the German people; the complete financial stability and the total disappearance of unemployment. He is slow in a thousand things, from the length of his meals to the lengthiness of his metaphysics. But in one thing he is not slow but almost slick. He is swift to shed innocent blood; he really has a certain technique in the matter of murdering other people; and the prospect of this sport alone can move him to an animation that is almost human. Hitler really killed quite a creditable number of people for one week-end holiday; and the assassination of Dollfuss did show some touch of that efficiency, which the Nazis once promised to display in other fields of activity.

But it is much more important to insist on the large human and historic matters mentioned at the beginning of this article. Dollfuss died like a loyal and courageous man, asking forgiveness for his murderers; and the souls of the just are in the hands of God, however much their enemies (with that mark of mere mud that is stamped over all they do) take a pleasure in denying them the help of their religion. But Dollfuss dead, even more than Dollfuss living, is also a symbol of something of immense moment to mankind, which is practically never mentioned by our politicians or our papers. We call it for convenience Austria; in a sense we might more truly call it Europe; but, above all (for this is the vital and quite neglected fact), it would be strictly correct and consistent with history to call it Germany. Continue reading →

A Historical Fiction

21 Tuesday Jul 2015

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

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Tags

Barbarianism, Civilization, Death of Civilization, Emperor and King, Fall of Rome, The Defence of Rome

Otto_Albert_Koch_Varusschlacht_1909

It’s a well known story. The brave, numerous, and blond Barbarians from beyond the Northern borders of the Roman Empire overran that corrupt entity, which had become too fat to protect itself. Rome was clearly in its last days anyway, and it was time for something new. It’s the story that gets told in the history books, in the news, and unfortunately on a good number of Catholic blogs.

And it’s a lie. Continue reading →

The Prophecy of the Six Crowns

16 Thursday Jul 2015

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Austria, christendom, History, Holy Roman Emperor, Holy Roman Empire, House of Hapsburg, Imperial History, Prophecy, Reich, Rudolf I, Sacred Ages, Sacretemporal, The Line of Hapsburg

782px-Carl_Friedrich_Lessing_Romantische_Landschaft_mit_KlosteranlageAfter the death of Conradin, the grandson of the heretic Frederick II, the Empire was thrown into a lawless chaos now called the Interregnum. Men forsook the laws that had governed them and turned to robbery and violence, especially in the region of Southern Swabia (now Switzerland) near the High Rhine and the Aar. Below follows a proximate translation of the history of Count Rudolf IV von Hapsburg, taken from the Chronicon Helveticum (which in turn was taken from earlier sources such as the Chronik der Königsfelden ):

Rudolff Grav von Hapsburg als er einen Priester, der das heilige Sacrament über Feld in tieffen-schlammigten Wege angetroffen…

Continue reading →

The League of… Christendom?

15 Wednesday Jul 2015

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

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Tags

christendom, league of nations

“A new League of Nations should be a regular congress of the Christian monarchs and heads of nations with their ministers in a place of great and ancient Christian tradition — in Aix-la-Chapelle, in Rome, in Canterbury, in Jerusalem. A league of the very heads of the states will also be more efficient than a league of mere representatives of easily changeable parliamentary governments. The conventions of the kings, the [Holy Roman] emperor, and the presidents of the few republics would also have a greater symbolic effect upon the nations who will increasingly feel the uniting power of Christendom.”- Erik Ritter von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, The Menance of the Herd

Catholic Authors on the Holy Roman Empire

12 Sunday Jul 2015

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Austria, Catholic Writing, Chesterton, christendom, History, Holy Roman Empire, House of Hapsburg, Politics

 A Quotable Collection

Hapsburg_Eagle

Part I: G.K. Chesterton

The double eagle is the ancient emblem of the double empire of Rome and of Byzantium; the one head looking to the west and the other to the east, as if it spread its wings from the sunrise to the sunset.it had been the badge of Austria as the representative of the Holy Roman Empire.- The New Jerusalem

Very few authors have written on as many subjects as the great Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874-1936), a journalist converted to the faith as well as a poet and fiction writer, and he had very much to say on the subject of the Holy Roman Empire.

Continue reading →

Hapsburg of the Month: Archduke Karl, the Commander

11 Saturday Jul 2015

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom, HRM Archive

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Archduke Karl, Austria, christendom, Civilization, Hero, House of Hapsburg, Imperial History, Napoleon, Politics

Karl_Austria_Teschen_1771_1847_color

When Napoleon marched victoriously into Italy, his second-in-command was being forced back in defeat from the Rhine by none other than the Holy Roman Emperor’s own brother.

Considered one of the greatest military commanders of the Napoleonic Era, Archduke Karl Ludwig Johann was born on the fifth of September 1771, in the Duchy of Tuscany. His father, Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II, then the Duke of Tuscany, sent him in his youth to live with his childless aunt and uncle in Vienna. He later moved to the Austrian Netherlands (modern-day Belgium), where he began his military career, fighting against the army of the Revolutionary French Republic. Continue reading →

The Death of Civilization Part II

07 Tuesday Jul 2015

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

christendom, Civilization, Death of Civilization, Emperor, Holy Roman Empire, Imperial History, Nationalism, Pope

Edward_Robert_Hughes_-_Bertucciova_nevesta_(1895)

Allegory of the Painting: The Common Man has been despoiled of the Authority and Protection of the Holy Crown, and now must bow to the self-serving Mob who stole it.

As I said in my last post (The Death of Civilization Part I), Civilization is a moral choice, a constant struggle. Part of that choice is to accept God-given Authority, for God is the Author of Authority. To preserve any good, we cannot reject the Authority of God’s Vicar, or the Authority of Church to confer Authority, or even the Authority of the State to Govern us, for all of these have their ultimate source in God.

Our Civilization is dying and among the symptoms of its fatality is the rejection of Authority, yet if we hold fast in submission to authority and to the ultimate Authority, Christ our King, our Civilization will not die.

Part II The Revolt Against Authority

Continue reading →

The Death of Civilization Part I

01 Wednesday Jul 2015

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

christendom, Civilization, Death of Civilization, Just War, Pacifism, Peace

Civilization is not merely any complex society. Civilization is a constant Moral Choice, made every day. A constant fight, an uphill struggle, against fallen human nature. It is hardly the easiest way of life; indeed, it may be the hardest, yet it is the best, for the simple reason that the alternative is death. Death of the Body, Death of the Soul, Death of every Human decency, the victory of evil in our lives.

Yet our Civilization is failing, its defenders are in retreat and the forces which would destroy have won the field. This is how Civilization dies, with retreat. When its defenders cease fighting, when they sue for peace and are slaughtered. Yet so long as we keep fighting and never falter in our belief, we shall not be defeated.

Part I: The Failure of Pacifism

Continue reading →

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