Home
Who We Are
Online Publications
TFP Viewpoint
What We Do
Student Action
America Needs Fatima
LulaWatch
Crusade Magazine
Online Store
Donate
Search
Links
Press Room
Contact Us
TFP Viewpoint

Cultural Revolution

Catholic Perspective

TFP Recommends

TFP Commentary

Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira

Our Lady the Queen

Online Library

American Studies

The History of Western Civilization

Reflections of Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira






Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira

Equality at the Starting Point - What an Injustice

Doctrine and Art: A Connetion that the Communists Understand


Spiritual Decoration vs. Materialist Decoration

The Problem of Old Age: Is it Maturity or Decadence

Two Styles Two Ways of Being

The Machine, Crude and Deformed Idol of a Materialistic World

Spiritual Richness in the Common Life of the People

Catholic Universality and Pagan Internationalism

Equalizing Everything: A Mania, Not a Necessity

Can Only Sacred Art Be Christian?

Symptoms of a Great Transformation

Clothing, Mirror of an Epoch

Barbarians, Pagans Neo-Barbarians, Neo-Pagans

Refinement without Weakness, Strength without Brutality

The Three Falls of Our Lord and the Three Degrees of Tiredness

Two Feminine Ideals

Painting the Human Soul

Medieval Paternalism and Progressivist Neo-Slavery

When Society is Corrupt: Is There a Solution?

Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira: His Early Years

Dignified Pride is the Harmonious Complement of Humility

Being Modern: Apostasy or Sacred Obligation

Sacred Art and Naturalism

Two Ways of Looking at Country Life

A Monument Raised from a Ruin, an Institution from a Custom

Two Paintings, Two Mentalities, Two Doctrines

Love and Fear in Christian Piety

Regionalism, Tradition and Good Taste

St. Joseph: Martyr of Grandeur

Pagan Manliness and False Christian Patience

Defying the Law of Gravity

A Precarious State That Always Ends Badly

The Termite Man

Reflections on a Café

Homosexuality is the Opposite of the Family

The Social Function, the Club, and the Knife

The Insidious Question

Tradition Family and Property

Embracing Christ and the Cross

The Return Flight with Gogo

On the Airplane with Gogo

An Oasis in the Sahara

At the Pizzeria with the Moderates

Right? or Left?

Who is the Madman?

The Importance of Tradition Today

The Cubbyhole

TFP: Tradition

The Rabbit

Mediocrologists

Private Property

 

A Monument Raised from a Ruin, an Institution from a Custom

by Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira

"CONSIDER the diversity of the Middle Ages: on the one hand, there is the razing of cities, the fall of empires, the struggle between races, the confusion of peoples, violence and lamentations; there is corruption, barbarianism; institutions fall and institutions rise; men disperse and make nations, whole peoples are led to unknown destinations; and yet still enough light remains to know that everything is out of place and there is no place for anything: Europe is chaos itself.

"But amidst this chaos, something stands; it is the immaculate Spouse of Our Lord; and one great success never before seen by mankind prevails: it is a second creation, worked by the Church. In the Middle Ages, only one thing seems astounding to me and that is this second creation, and only one thing seems adorable to me and that is the Church. And to work this great prodigy, God chose these obscure times, eternally famous both for the explosion of all brutal forces and the manifestation of human impotence. Nothing exalts the Divine Majesty and the divine grandeur more than to have worked in this world, where men, peoples and races struggled in confusion while no one acted. On two solemn occasions, God willed to show that only corruption is sterile and that only virginity is fertile: God Our Lord willed to be born of Mary and He desired to espouse Himself to the Holy Church; thus was the Church the mother of nations just as Mary was His mother.

"Then that immaculate Virgin, His Church, sharing the solicitude of her Divine Spouse to do good, lifted the spirits of the fallen and moderated the impetus of the violent, giving to some a taste of the bread of the strong and to others the bread of the meek. Those fierce children of the North, who had humiliated and mocked Roman majesty, fell conquered by love at the feet of this defenseless Virgin; and for many centuries the whole world watched in astonishment and wonder as the Church renewed the prodigy of Daniel, who suffered no harm in the lions' den.

"After having lovingly soothed those great wraths and after having calmed those furious tempests with her gaze alone, the Church raised a monument from a ruin, an institution from a custom, a principle from an event, a law from an experience; to say it in a word, order from chaos, harmony from confusion. Undoubtedly, all the instruments used for Her creation, like chaos itself, were taken from that chaos; Hers was only the enlivening and creating force. In that chaos there was, in embryonic form, everything that would be born and live, the Church, bereft of everything, possessed the being and the life, everything came into being and everything came alive when the world lent an attentive ear to her loving words and fixed its gaze on her resplendent beauty.

"No, men had not seen anything like it because they had not seen the first creation, neither will they see it again for there will not be three creations. One might say that God, regretting that He had not made man a witness of the first, allowed His Church a second creation just so man could behold it. "-DONOSO CORTES

With their elevated topics, forceful thought and distinguished language, the great debates so characteristic of the nineteenth century usually retained something of the nobility of European society before the Revolution. Thus, they contrast with our century where man conforms to everything provided it has no economic interest and where today's rare elevated debates do not interest a public hypnotized by movies and sports.

Today we bring an echo of those high, fulgent intellectual tournaments to the attention of our readers.

Albert de Broglie, a liberal Catholic, published an article in the Revue des Deux Mondes (11 / 1 / 1852) claiming that the enthusiasm for the Middle Ages of certain Catholic writers was excessive.

One of the targeted personalities, the celebrated Spanish thinker Donoso Cortes, Marquis of Valdegamas, wrote a reply to de Broglie. Although the author never sent it to the Revue des Deux Mondes, it was later published in his complete works (Obras Completas de D. Juan Donoso Cortes, BAC, Madrid, 2:630).

 

The text printed above, an excerpt from that reply, is a brief and brilliant analysis of the history of the Middle Ages from the theological point of view. It illustrates the elevated tone of the debate and, at the same time, makes a definitive reply to liberals who are disturbed at finding so much enthusiasm for that period of history among Catholics.

With masterly precision, he shows the difference between what was barbaric, weak and chaotic in that period and the order, strength and triumphal progress of Christian civilization. Thus, Donoso Cortes annihilates the accusation that so many Catholics-in his time and today- admire those centuries of Faith with neither discernment nor restrictions. At the same time, he focuses with admirable clarity on what in the Middle Ages deserves unrestricted enthusiasm: the vivifying and ordering action of the Church, the life and order she gave to institutions, laws and customs.

The Gothic style was born of a society that had been made from the decaying ruins of the Roman world mixed with elements of barbarianism and swept by furious tempests.

But through the work of the Church, which knew how to raise "a monument from a ruin, an institution from a custom, a principle from an event, a law from an experience; to say it in a word, order from chaos, harmony from confusion," this admirable style was born from this regenerated decay and barbarianism. This style, more than any other, is able to express the gravity, strength and nobility of the Christian soul.

The picture shows the cathedral of Burgos in Old Castile, one of the greatest marvels of Gothic architecture and an eloquent symbol of the Christian order generated by the Church in the Middle Ages.




To locate information on a specific topic, enter keywords or phrase above.
 
Send To Friend | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Search | Top Of Page | Site Map
© 2007 by the American TFP. All rights reserved.