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To Save Ourselves and Our Nations
Solemn Exposition and Eucharistic Adoration is More Urgent
Now Than Ever by St. Peter Julian Eymard
As we noted in The Fatima Crusader Issue No. 13-14 Pope John
Paul II has inaugurated for several years now, Solemn Public Exposition of the
Most Blessed Sacrament every day in the Vatican Basilica of St. Peter's. Also
at Fatima, God sent St. Michael the Archangel to teach the three children at
Fatima the vital importance of Eucharistic Adoration. In the book, Jesus Our
Eucharistic Love which is still available from The Fatima Crusader and which
was sent out to most of our regular readers at the time Crusader No. 15 was
sent, Father Stephen Manelli S.T.D. also explains further Eucharistic Adoration
as it is taught by the Saints by word and example.
This article was written by St. Peter Julian in July, 1864. What
the saint says of the 19th Century applies equally - even more fully - to our
own day, and - what is more - society, today, has an even greater need of
salvation. St. Peter Julian Eymard shows how Exposition of the Blessed
Sacrament once saved Rome and France. Today, not only Rome, not only France,
but the whole world is in peril! Should we not, then, make use again of
Exposition and Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, "this excellent means of
salvation, which is now offered to Christian Society"?
We can rightly call the 19th Century the great century of the
Holy Eucharist, just as it has been styled the century of Mary.
Never in all the past ages has the cult of the Blessed Sacrament
flourished so conspicuously.
Solemn Exposition was rare, even in the ages of Faith. Perhaps
there was some sort of misapprehension for the respect and majesty of the
Sacrament of love, were it to be exposed too often to the piety of the
faithful.
There was, then, no special need of this excellent means of
salvation, the last, perhaps, which is now offered to Christian society. But
today, Solemn Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament is the grace and need of our
times.
Exposition is the sovereign grace, the life-blood of the Church
and the faithful.
In 1810, when Rome, the city of the Prince of the Apostles,
mourned over the exile and enslavement of her Pastor, and found no hope except
in God, a few men found in Faith a thought which restored courage and
confidence. "We will save Rome by the grace of adoration," they said; "by this
help we will bring back in triumph our beloved Pontiff." This thought stirred
men to the quick; they grouped together around the altar; the ecclesiastical
authorities blessed and approved this work and it went into motion. Exposition
began, and in November, 1810, this heavenly flame was lit, never to be
extinguished. It became a powerful protection, a burning furnace; and Pius VII
re-entered Rome in triumph, as would also, in later years, his worthy
successor, Pope Pius IX.
How can things be otherwise. Jesus Christ, the eternal Pontiff,
possessed a throne surrounded with love and veneration in the old city of the
Popes, and His Vicar on earth would moan in exile! No, no, these two thrones,
that of the Savior and that of His august representative, must stand side by
side; the one must raise or sustain the other. You see how powerful is the work
of the Forty Hours.
In 1848, once more, Rome was trampled underfoot by hatred and
impiety. Monsignor Palmer was murdered at the very feet of the Pope, though it
was at the Pontiff that the blow was aimed. The Quirinal was set on fire,
churches desecrated, religious Orders were persecuted. The revolution had
triumphed and dispossessed the Pope of his lands, and the Pope took the road
into exile. But those fiends had forgotten something. They forgot to put out
the fire which would consume and exterminate them - the fire of perpetual
adoration. The Divine Host of propitiation had remained exposed in the heart of
Rome, to protect and defend the city, and prepare the triumphal entry of Pius
XI to Saint Peter's.
Indeed, all the malice, all the cleverness, all the treachery of
the impious and of the revolutionaries, who at this very moment are leagued
against the Eternal City, will crumble at the foot of the Eucharistic throne on
which reigns the omnipotent Master Who said to the sea: "Peace, be still."
Exposition has also proved the salvation of Paris and France.
How sad and gloomy were the days of the Revolution, when the king and his
servants were liquidated and the Tuileries, the Treasury, and the government
were seized. What would be the fate of disrupted France? Who could check the
flood waters which had been pent up for so long? Who could prevent wholesale
pillage and murder? The furies of '93 and its impiety are let loose ... and no
hope of salvation looming on the horizon. But a timely thought inspires a few
pious souls: they would save France by perpetual adoration. Jesus must be
adored day and night, He must have a throne of salvation and reparation. At
this thought hope is rekindled. People unite, enroll themselves, spare no
efforts, and on December 6, 1848, Exposition and Adoration are inaugurated in
Notre-Dame des Victoires. This great work, the solemn manifestation of
Jesus-Hostia, accomplished - Paris and France were saved.
Paris was saved by Perpetual Adoration, whatever others might
say to the contrary. For neither the eloquence of any man, nor the common sense
of the people, nor the wisdom of the government could extricate the nation. No,
no; neither soldiers, nor leaders, nor learned men could achieve such a feat.
Only a few modest men, who copied the gesture of Moses on the mountain, could
work such a miracle. They constituted themselves victims of adoration and
propitiation for their brethren, for the Church, and the world, at the feet of
Him Who holds in His hands the balance of peace and of war, of pardon and of
justice; and so long as Paris will have the Forty Hours, her thrones of
perpetual exposition, she will never bow to her enemies. Where the King is,
there is the capital; and its bulwarks, its strength, its glory spring from His
residing there. Now, Our Lord Jesus Christ is the King of kings. As long as He
resides on the altar-throne, He wants to reign, to pardon, and to save. If ever
this fire died out, if Jesus were to come down from His throne, if no longer He
had adorers, then, oh! yes, we needs must tremble and take to flight, for the
fatal hour will have struck, the hour of the prince of darkness.
From Paris perpetual adoration spread far and wide; the Forty
Hours has been instituted in nearly every diocese of France, and those which
have not yet organized this royal service of Jesus are preparing to do so, and
what is more remarkable is the fact that it is the more remote and poor
parishes which first fall in line with this Eucharistic movement.
I am not afraid to say it: the cult of Solemn Exposition is the
great need of our times; this public and solemn profession of faith in the
divinity of Christ and in the reality of His Sacramental Presence is a
necessity. It is the best refutation which can be leveled at the renegades, the
apostates, the impious and the indifferent. It will crush them like a mountain
of fire, but a fire of love and goodness.
This solemn cult of exposition is also necessary to arouse the
slumbering faith of many good people who have forgotten Jesus Christ, because
they have lost sight of the fact that He is their Neighbor, their Friend, and
their God.
This cult is needed to stimulate true piety, alas, so long held
up at the gates of the sanctuary where Jesus is always ready to bless us and
open His Heart to us.
It is needed to save society. For society is dying out, because
it no longer has a vital principle of truth and charity, no family spirit. Each
one shifts for himself, becomes self-centered and self-sufficient. So
dissolution is at hand. But society will revive when all its members group
themselves around our Emmanuel.
Our judgment will naturally become healthy if it is inspired by
a common principle; the bonds of true friendship will be tightened by a common
love; the beautiful days of the Cenacle, the family feast, the banquet of the
great King, will be re-lived. These are the effects of the Forty Hours on
Christian peoples.
A devout French Bishop used to say: "Ever since the Forty Hours
has been established in my diocese, religion has flourished again; three days
of adoration are worth a mission. Besides, and this, especially, is what
rejoices me, the good effected is more lasting." Behold the best proof of the
power of adoration.
Zealous priests in many a parish easily get discouraged, because
priests are regarded merely as professionals, and the Church as a sort of
religious town hall. The house of God is often deserted, even on Sundays, and
men seem to have lost the way to church. How attract them to the priest, to the
church, to Jesus Christ Himself? In many countries the only way is through
Solemn Exposition, with its grandiose religious exercises and its torrents of
graces.
Even if success seems at first imperceptible, hope must continue
to flicker; it is already very much that Our Lord has deigned to visit His
people and mount His throne of mercy. When He comes a second or a third time,
hearts will become more docile. It takes time before an arid land can yield an
abundant harvest. As with all living things, so, too, souls must expand their
vitality by degrees before reaching full maturity.
There is even a stronger reason for establishing solemn
exposition as a real means of salvation: it is the impotency of secondary means
for saving the world. It is unfortunately too true that Christian societies are
dissolving into religious individualism. And yet there are still many priests,
zealous and learned; good books abound in our shops; Catholic organizations are
to be found wherever some good may be achieved; Catholic charities reach out
far and wide. Whence, then, comes this indifference, incredulity, hostility?
Whence, the foul air? Whence the moral epidemic which rages and weakens so many
souls?
Missioners can't understand why their spiritual exercises, even
the most consoling, merely streak the sky like a brilliant meteor, or, like
torrential rains, flow over hard soil without sinking in; or, like a bolt of
lightning, flash and disappear; in a word, why the thermometer of piety soon
falls to its former level.
Formerly a good book could work up a revolution in the minds of
men; today, men barely cast a fleeting glance at one. A new movement of grace
produced salutary effects in whole nations; today we are afraid of the
supernatural and start out with feelings of apprehension or aversion in
everything we do.
In the past, whenever our Christian civilization was going on
the rocks, you could always find some lighthouse of safety; these beacons were
certain saints, who were showing the way to perplexed souls or guiding
religious works. But, at present, few are to be found. Now, there is nothing
astonishing about this, for the planets cease to reflect light when the sun is
eclipsed. Devotion to saints has a meaning only when it spells glory for Jesus
Christ, in Whom it must terminate. When a King is without court, his ministers
have no prestige, and when a sovereign is insulted, so also all his subjects
are humiliated.
The great evil of the day lies in the fact that we don't go to
Jesus as to a Savior and a God. We abandon the only basis, the only law, the
only grace of salvation. The trouble about empty piety is that it fails to
spring from Jesus Christ, or terminate in Him. People stop or loiter on the
way. A divine love which does not derive its fervor, its center, in the
Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist, lacks the essential conditions of power: it
will soon die out like the hearth without fuel. This love will soon become
merely human.
What then, must we do? Go back to the source of life which is
Jesus. But we must cease viewing Jesus only in His earthly life, or in the
glory of Heaven; we must see Him especially in the Holy Eucharist. We must take
Him from the back seat and place Him at the head of our Christian civilization,
which He will guide and bring to safety. We must rebuild His palace, a royal
throne, a court of devoted servants, a family of friends, a people of adorers.
Behold the mission and the glory of our age; that will make it
the greatest and holiest of centuries.
Let us never forget that an age prospers or dwindles in
proportion to its devotion to the Holy Eucharist. This is the measure of its
spiritual life and its faith, of its charity and its virtue.
May the glorious kingdom of Jesus Eucharistic come! Too long,
much too long, have impiety and ingratitude ruled the earth.
Adveniat regnum tuum!
To start perpetual adoration in your parish contact: Father
Martin Lucia, Eucharistic Adoration Inc., 660 Club View Drive,
Los Angeles, California 90024 U.S.A.
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