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The War for Christendom

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The War for Christendom

Tag Archives: World War II

The Legacy of Blessed Karl 100 Years Later: A Call to Act

21 Sunday Oct 2018

Posted by Matthew Scarince in Christendom, HRM Archive

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Authority, Blessed Karl of Austria, Canonization, christendom, Code of Conduct, Gene Wolfe, Otto von Habsburg, Politics, St. John Paul II, World War I, World War II

From the beginning, the Emperor Charles conceived of his office as a holy service to his people. His chief concern was to follow the Christian vocation to holiness also in his political actions.

-St. John Paul II, Homily for the Beatification of Blessed Karl

In a time of war and destruction, when all the safety and comfort of society was collapsing, a noble man gave his life for his peoples. For two long years he pleaded with his enemies to find some way to bring peace to his war-torn country. He began a wave of reform which swept away the corruption and decay which the war had brought to light. But he was alone, his enemies were relentless and his allies unwilling to give up on the phantom of total victory. In the end he died alone, exiled on an island far from his homeland. Yet his son took upon himself his father’s burden, and lived to see the evils his father had struggled so fiercely against utterly destroyed.

This story sounds so much like a myth, a fairy-tale to inspire children. But this is only because fairy-tales are the closest to true history of all stories we tell. You may well ask in this age of corrupt politicians and mob mentality, is it even possible that one man could stand against the world of his time, and so courageously that his impact on it remained long after his death? My answer to you is yes, that this man lived, and that his name was Karl von Habsburg-Lothringen, by the grace of God, Emperor and King. And most surprisingly of all, the time he lived in was much worse than our own.

Continue reading →

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 →

S. Mauritius

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