Bishop Buddy Scrapbook 1937 (2)

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l!tht to atta<"k . . Consec1·at1·0 11 Se1·mon <'X!Sl', and l'l'll1Pmbc·ring the words JUiplrJ}}!! , ist "" long- as human 11atur,• is what of thf' ~fastt>J·: --rr thou wilt he perfect, L.J It is-but the,· ha,l no right tu ,xag- go ,sell what thou hast and gi,·e to the "Th,- function of consecration may ed tu dt>ll.\' and destroy th,· unit~ and 19 ~I l. he din"st~d himself of them all. authority ut the divine-ly e~tablished di\'iding them among the pour and the 11roperly be_ dh:ided into the preli~i- l'hun:h, Pssaying to do wlu>t our educ~t_ional institutions. . nary exa1111nat1on, the consecration messt•d Lt1rd Himsl'lf d,·<:lared even the .\gam, as the household of the great prope1· anti the> im·estiture. The first "gat,•,; or hell" b<:otuld nebYefr arct' 0 1 mpllishd. \l'~hdioeese was trnditionally a princt•- . . . . The\' J·uled u not e 01e 1ey ia · · , 1 part mcludes the fo~·m of ascerta1n111g torn awa\· hair a duzen of th .. n_orthHn I~ ?.rn'-hP_ heard th.:,_ ,n,nl_s of st. Pau solemnly that the Bishop-elect has the ,at ions rrnm the c-..,nter of unity. In to l 11 1"' th ) th at < 1 . Bishop should b<- t Just now_ thne was m the dwc se 8eco1'.tl \ounc1l of. Baltimore.. In the t\;~~ ~~ 1d 1 ~n~~u ' I c1,_s01_-c1er. confusi_on: 1'.egl1:ct_- He ne_cded exammation the Bishop-elect 1s made Tt pleased their princes and rulers P•, •ests-:-:guod ~p, 1esb._.. > es, 1~1y b1,et,h- to profess categorically his belief in much . because it gave them a chance 1 '.n.d ~dI,Italn netlcled J)lt'" st8 d· 1 t 1lle " 011 ? · · · · . . to loot the chu1·ches and destroy the '"" e H'm ien-, nee s 1em now. the <11tferent matters ot faith that hl:ve monasteries (though these lalt r were 1::0~· thtc, pnes_t 1s anointed. of Goel to been particularly attacked by heretics, the patrimony or the pooi· and cl1~- s':' th, wo1 Id. , He must lead a'.1d especially the doctrine of the Incarna• tressed) 'l'hen what endowments m j teach. Henrn 5t "a,naga,nst the h 11 e- . I d . i:. . e, the·rs the rulers 1mg. H ,s 1s the care Jo,• souls. Tho11gh tion. These preliminaries having been an °. 1 1 eaSut e.s w ie .. 1 _ . nm- d ,seases come-infectious and deadly- duly gone through with, the ~fa 'S is Jti·a~sl; 1rred _to thd.,,dr cou~tu~'- ~1 agi;~ds to )·•·t he n-mains-unafraid even though . . . . ions. \\ 10 Pl t 1 cee e , on .. 0 e J I de-1th he all around hun He 11111st begun, its s1multan~ous celebrat1011 by fJL1ild up a new nobility._ .\~'.cl to ':om- p,-~ach justice and men·y· and truth. Consecrator anct Bishop-elect betoken- r lete the ta~k these I ule 1 ~ t_uok to He must defend the rights of God and ing the unily of their faith. tj 1 e 1~1s~h·,•s th e ?uty" of rulm!\:. 11 a~ th<> rights of man. He is sm· ther by ,, . · , . . 1• caesa1 all that "as Lft of th e h .. i e- tu arouse enmity, hatred and opposi- Immed1ately afte1_ the Gradual o dom of Guel. tion. .\nd, in so 111 ,, lands, as in Russia, Tract. thf' eonsecrat1on ceremony be· New Learning Takes the Place of Spaiu and :\Iexico, they think that for gins. ,\ith the solemn announcement A nci ent Fait h these preachments. he deserves death. b - t· , - •· [ . f th J •f J d ti , He falls with lus brothers before then· Y ne co 1 seci.i 01 0 e a" u u es The southern countries too had the!.- bullets-but though he falls he does \\'ith the fall' of Constanti- not fall, for the blood of the martyr :i \\ ealth of bPnPfiee~ and en- Jo!:, ratt th st: .. a·ousvs; and the) wet e pou1', and thou shalt have treasurP in Sublime Meaning of Consecration hop<'l,·ssly in error when thc-y pruceed- Hf'aven: and come folio" \It>" Olatt. of a B;shop. 'J'l1e different rites and troubles. praYer,s sufficiently indicate their pur- nople there came to the west, and par- is pos·e The m·ti·esty of the plain chant ticularl_y tu France and l taly, all that Charles needed priests. · '· · was left of Onental culture. The glory Ch I · · · All in the Litanies. the Veni Creator. and that was Greece, with its rich tradi- a r es E st ablishes Seminaries the preface is perhaps unsurpassed by lions of lang-•iage, laws a~d litPraturf', So he set to work to found the sPmi- appeared to the _scholarn_of the west as nai·y. He equips it with learned and enthralled de,·uted l<·achers and begins the train- "The consecrat10n ceremony proper them by its beauty. Soon nothing wa~ ing of hundreds of young men in the vested with the crosin and rin" TJroper but what dated back to the pagan past truths of faith. He would have them · .._ of Greece and Rome. Now then· gods lw.-ome p1·iests whom he would com- I came to be reverently named. Diana n, ssion to go out to the scatte1·.-d flock, the SPed or the Church. Ye:s, St. color·ful w·as the procession. life seemed an" othe. JJOrtion of the liturav •' 1 . · " · a new revelation, which being finished, the new Bishop i~ in- hea1·d in the uniYersities and schools sci enc<' of the Saints; in learning· the the prayers ams and clergy lll black cassocks and and Precious Blood) the new Bishop while elsewhere they saw surplices. The modern note receives the mitre and gloves, which learning- take the place or the ancic:nt rarr courage and honesty as to believe faded a\\'ay as the colorful scarlet of I av been solemnly blessed by the con- faith. Truly. these were evil days for that Ju~t laws were made to be car- _. . 1 e · . the Church o[ God. 1·1l'd ,,ut, and he saw that they were. tlw _Mons1gnon made way .for the secrator. 1:'hen w_1lh the utmost pomp God Ra ise Great Men t o Meet Cr ises ' He does not ask of eithe_r _priests_ or medieval splendor of the Pnnces of the new Bishop rs enthroned on the s people the pel'formance of 1mposs,_ble tlw Church-Bishops and Archbishops Episcopal seat while the magnificent But in all great crises of humanity tasks. He aids them ,n the !mowing the latter two, Bishop Le Blond and 'Te Deum' is i~toned." -;;:;-a~eI~~\'.~e~11!~y~re~le e";;~~;ifi; 11 t{o t:~~;d:c-\Y,'~ 1 g~a 0 tfe3i1~i11 1 it f~!cc~t::~cU'.~~ Archbishop Glennon, in cappa magna During this hymn, Bishop Buddy, them. .Just as the reformers had c,~tc-chism which still rcn~ains as the and ermine with train-bearers. toaether with the two co-consecrators thought the ,·ictory complete, and the 111·st catec-h,sm of the Christian world, ' ..., ' unit;• (which the Papacy 1·pp1·-sented) and which was largPly o[ his creation. Trumpeteers left the sanctuary and blessed mem- was forevc-1· broken, came from 1Iont- He ol'g-anized th ir work by estab- bers of his family, including his sis- martre, with the blessing· of God and li~hing- th<> Confratrrnit;· or Chl'istian Trumpeteers heraldetl the approach ters Sister :\fary 1 1agdalyn C.S.C. Su- the Hol;· Father, lgnatius and his J>nt•trinc- and then, bl'ol,en_ by_ labors of the proC'ession as it entered the .' .. ' • '. brethren to fight the ba tles of the aud 1wnances, he went to Jorn his great porlals of the Cathedral between a penor of Sacred Heart Academy at Lord. to deff'nd and sustain His name, pr•·il,·c<'ss,,r, St. .\rnbrose, at the early d f Ogden, Utah; '.vlrs. L. J. Dandurant, His Gospel and His Kingdom. .N.orth a1::;<; or -16. . . guar o honor of Fourth DE>gree Mrs. Daniel J. Redmond of Laurelton, and so:1th, ..ast and west, the spiritual I liuu~h dead, still 11,, Jl\·c-~.. In tl:e Knights of Columbus in formal uni- . . . d sons of 8L. Jgnat,us radiated as l!v,ng· !H<'al ,·1ty and D1oe1·s<' of :\.l ilan l11s form, with sworcl at salute. Long Island; l11s brothel, Dr. Edwar flames, breathing out of the trPasu ry of nil 1111\l')' is cherished by a grateful and P. Buddy of St. Louis; Mrs. Buddy, I the Church tlw truths they had learned c1,,,... tNI people. ~o n<'ed has the great Enlering the sanctuary, the vesting their son and LWO daughters Mr. Daniel so well, and to the exposition of which nuu,_no of one more sJ)11'e. to complete I bP.gan. . ' 1 . b ti -in school and rostrum-they had dcd- 1ls Jorn1. It holds 111 ,ts crypt the Officers of the Mass J. Redmond and Miss Ann E iza e 1 irated their li\•es. aslws of its saintly ctnd beloved A1·ch- Dandurant. Down in the southern countries, bi:sl!op. \\'hi!<> above it his ~pirit hov- Cunsec rator-Tlw "\lost Rev. C. JI. After bestowing his first Episcopal where luq1ry (\\'hich oriental ism con- •·rs, mcli11ting benc-diction O\'er the city L<' lllond, D.D. . 1 . . I t· B' h P notes), pr1d<' and the conceits of the ·11 d tlw pla111. <'o-Consecrators-The Most Rev. Ger- blessmg on US 1e a 1ves, IS O new J0arning· held sway, then, walked St Ch I nld Bt>r.c;an. D.D.. nishop of DPs :.\Ioines, Buddy went around the church bless- with cons<>c1·ation the Saint of sim- · ares a Mod e l B is hop nnn tlw :\lost Rc'v. 1•'.. r. ~1onaghan, ing the entire congregation, among plicity and sanc_tit;·_-PhiliJ?. '>eri-whu ,\!most four C<'nturic's ha,·,, passed. Coadjuto1· Bishop of Ogde1rnhurg. . '. _ . _ . 1 . . ·d . . _ laughed at their folly: \\ hat does Yet the Christian \\·oriel of today lool,s ~Prmon-Thc- :lfost RP\'..T.. T. Glennon. v;h1ch \\eIP many _re_igwu~ .01 eis, Ill your learning' lead to but ,·anity and to i:,t. Charles as a model Dishon-a n. n, .\rchhishop of St. Louis. eluding the Benedrctme Sisters, mem- affliction of spirit~ . . . Uod alone is g-r<'at reformer, according to the mind T'rPsbyter .-\ssi~tant-The ,·en· Re,·. bers of lhe Precious Blood Order, Sis- wisdom _suprem':', They lf'arn most who of Pius X, who would r.-storc all things Basil Od<'rmatt, 0.1'.B., Concepti,;n, 1Io. C ·t sel'Ye H,m Jwst. in Christ. He. was the Bishop of Cath-1 Rf'ader of "\landat0-The Yer)· Rev. ters of the Holy Ghost ~mmum _Y, ,\nd in this way. m 1 mely. in God's olic .\ction. as our present Holy Fa- ~fa111·icf' F. <'onnnr. 8.T.L. Sisters of St. Joseph, Franciscan Sis- "a-", Phil'p and Ignatius soon saw tlw th,•r, who wants the fullnc-ss of faith llPacons of Hono,·~The Rev..T. A. ters, Felician Sisters and Sisters of j bt:dimm,·d raith grnw brig-ht again, so tu P<'rmeate eYery 1rnrish-every dio- l\Turra,·. Ph.D.. D.D .. Chicago, 111.. and Ch ··t of St vi·ncent de Paul Sisters 1 11 111111ous. ,nc1,,,,d, that many dPvoted crs..-c-,•p1·v land. the> Rev. D. P. Mulcah~•. Brookfield, Mo. a11 Y · ' m,,n wprf' 1111pelled to s,,1z0 the burn- •.\nd no";· m,· friends, can l do bdter D<>acon of the "\Iass-The Rev. C. of U1e Holy Cross from Notre Dame, ing brands the!'<> of. and as n,is~ionariPs than hring before you the namP and l\Tarnsz. 0.:11.c. Sisters of Charity from Leavenworth, hear these- to1·cbes of faith to the ends fam<' ancl work of the illustrious Bishop Rub-deacon-'l'hP Rev..John F. Ban- d ' f ti e e I th of "\I ilan-he who "·as and is for all nun. S. .T., 8t. Stanislaus Novitiate, and other Communities within the 10 · 0 1 a· · . tinw the model Bishop-the forerunner <'leYeland, Ohio. cese and from adjacent places. St. Charles Borrome o Noted for Piety and PX<>mplification of "·hat our pres- "\lasters of ('prc-moniess-The Yer:v F 11 ·ina this Bishop Buddy re- \Yp ,•om,· now to the th11·fl great name ent Tio!)· Father (whom may the Lord Rev Msgr LPo Binz PhD DD -n-ash O ow " · · . of the s1xt,•,•nth centur~•-the on~. 111- eonserve) designatt's as Catholic _\.c- ingto~,: D·. C'., and· u,· ··Re~-.-·Leo· i turned to thf' sanctuary. where he \\aS d<>t'd, tn "·hieh 1 pray your .sp,,cial at- tion. Can J do b,,tt,·r, l sn;-, than s,,t Ruggle. giYen the kiss of peace by Bishop Le tcntinn. <:t. Charles nonumPn "·:t.., befu1·e Your Excellency, Charles F.-an- ;\ssistant ,rasters nf Ceremonies- Bl nd and the Cl'remon, ended. Father hun1 of W<'allh~· and distinguished pai_-- c•is, b)· the grace of God and the favor The ReY Patric!· T O'Connor the Rev O . . - . Pnts. Frum a worldly standpoint his of th<' .\postolic See, today consc-e1ated Cnrnrlius _Clea~)-:· the Re'v. Denis Buddy beconung a direct successoi to futurP should he a brilliant one, for his Bishop of the Dioces,, of San Dieg-o-a o·nuignan. the Re,·. :\.1ichael J. the Apostles, a Prince of the Church, famib• wa~ of the De :\Iedic-i, and his mnre fitling mnd,·1 tu follow than your O'Rnurke and the Re\'. Charles S. Now- and the first Shepherd of the new See unclP of tha_t famous house was soon illustrious namrsakP-8t. CharlPs Dor- land. . . . . . to be- prnchunH•d Pope. He nnrnt have ron 1 co? of San Diego Ill Callfo1ma. bt>rn a child of dh_·ine prPdi_lection, be- But, , ..·ou ma" ask, ,yhy must we g·o \.Vhen all was ready, the Very Rev. 1 Id h d d d t e ' Archbishop Glennon's Sermon cause t'Yen as a c 11 e ec, e o g,_\ • back four hundred )·ears ro,· an ex- M. F. Connor, mounting the pulpit, !us hPr1tag·e to the poor, and l11s l1l changed-we are read the Papal Bulls in Latin and in Choosing the text. "Take heed to to God ass a priest. As a student i_n thel in a modern world. ;\lid th is modPrn E I' h yourselves, and to the whole flocl,, ,;emmar;· ht> becanH• noted foi h,s. wo.-Id has two duties. ,ts own d1ff1cul- '..l1g IS · . 1 H 1 . GI ·t I th I d, lt>arnmi,; and his de0p I)1<'ty-so much ties. J admit, my brethlt'n. our world M usic By Monks wherein t 1e O ) ' 10 ~ Ia Pace so that his uncle. Pope Pius IY, ealled is a modern "'"'''Id-a Yerv modern The Benedictine ~lonks from the you Bishops, to rule the Church of him at an ,·,u·I~· age to Rome, to aid in world. at that. But a Bisho.p's duties God which He hath purchased \\'ith the administration of th<> Univers,tl are sstill the same, since the e,•ils he Abbey at Conception sang the Greg- Hr. ' _ Bl od .. ( AC'tS ?Q ·? ) His Ex- <'hurch. _\s "''CrPtary of Stat cte,·olu- musician of international note, pre- Louis said: had lwt·n prorogued_ fur S<>Yei-al n•~rs tion of the so-called reform movement. sided at the organ. on aec-nunt of the d1ssens1ens and riv- The reformers of the si"x.teenth cen- In tie trouhhd sixt,·enth century alriP~ of the Europ,•an "\Ionarch~. \Yhen tun· suug-ht to release the pc-ople from thrt.e nH·n nf n1ai k beyond all 0th ers tht.• Council re-convt.:>nfd at 111s, \\·h1ch the autho1·it,· of the C'hurch-to destroy wrought \·aliantly for God ar:iq Hyh~ \Va~ the Pnntiff'B, call. he- ha~ its s~s- it~ nod-give'n n1ark of unity. Church-Ignatius of Loyola, Philip :'\en ~ions held continuo11sly, and its van,·<'! Thi' revoluti.onists of the t'ightcenth and CharJ.,s nu -romeo. d0cree~ on faith and morals prPs,•ntec1 century applied this principle to the Manua l F urnished Congregat ion the new served. He was a legislator of such white I On the feasr day of St. Thoma:; che Aposlle. ::\fonday, Dec. 21, 1936, St. Jo- seph's Cathedral, adorned in crimson glory, saw the consecration of the beloYed pastor, Charles F. Buddy, eh·ated to the crimson of the Episco- pate. Never has St. Joseph's stately Cathedral appeared so regal. In the arch abo,·e each marble side altar ap- peared a sheered rosette of crimson, upon which were mounted the coats of anus of the Papacy and Bishop Buddy, respectively. Crimson also were the satin drapes OY_er the tabernacle of the main altar; cnmson, too, were th<' poinsettias banked abo,·e the tabernacle, betray- ing the near approach of the festal Rf'ason. Tall vases of American Beau- 1ies against a background of green palms completed the color scheme, which blended beautifully with the rich gold of the tabernacle, can- delabrum and the gold crests of the Bishops' thrones, one on the south of the sanctuary, occupied by His Grace Archbishop Glennon, and the other on the north side, by Bishop Le Blond. Procession Starts Colorful was this beautiful setting, but perhaps 11101 .e pageantry of the phasPs of our Catholic represented. · The modei·ii Catlioli·c Youth ~iovement, in the military swing of the Boy Scouts carrying Papal and American flag , followed by the trim clad nurses of St. Joseph's Hospital to the Episcopal Order, School of Nursing in spotless uniforms and admonitions accompanying the in- of the I<;ph_esians grew great again, and tu the neglected churches, to do the d ·th ti · . , . d' • th •, Bacchus, \ enus and the rest had their work of God. .\s one seminary was an caps ,n 1e1r Crismon lined vesture clea!ly in 1cat111g en uses literar,·, if nut their religious, voto- noL enough, he established several. military capes of gray. the Sacred Hearl ConYent girls, whose white caps and gowns were in strik- Next came and purposes. , ries. Simple faith was ridiculed, and Next he calls together the priests in "The :\lass proceeds with the con- Christian morality fell before the as- 8~•nod. He lays before them the teach- secrator and the new Bishop celebrat- saNurlot o,,f,oa11dsee,'.1$utal1la,tpacgal1n1··,sptle1111ldooso111PhY,v·as ings of the great Council. These de- c,·ees he helped to enact he would put ing contrasts to the gray caps and ing in unison at the same altar. After distraught-no wonder that the many in effect. gowns of the C. B. H. S. boys. the Communion (the new Bishop com- faithful began to lose heart as they ~ow we find him visiting pal'ish everywhere ob- Following tlwse came the seminari- municating both of the Sacred Host saw 111 the n_o,·th co_untry the seamles• arte1· parish to see that the enactments torn asunder, of the Council we1·e . ' I . robe o( Chnst,an faith

A manual furnished by the Abbey at Conception was handed each member of the congregation attending the sen'- ices, and enabled all to follow closely as the ceremonies progressed.

tu the Holy Father. fe,Y years ci\·il po"·Pr. which men wPre told was thr Cou11t.·il ,\ a~ ready to conclude it~ an incuhuR fro111 which tlH'Y should bt>- "urk. St. Charles haYing isnbmittecl free. the Council:--· findings to the Holy Fa- ther. and ohtaine-rl hiR approval, pro1npt1~- set to \\·ork. to pron1ulgale tlwm to the Chri~tian "·orld, ther<'b.v setting h"forc, a troubled pc-ople the l'lrnrrh's tPaching 01, eYe1•y disputed In a

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