Book Excerpt
PREFACE
The
two papers in Part I have been published in the American Church
Magazine. Of Part II Chapter 1 has been published separately; Chapters
2, 4, 7, 9 and 12 have been published in the Holy Cross Magazine. The
rest of the volume is here published for the first time.
I would emphasize the fact that the contents of Part II is a series of
sermons which were prepared as such, and were preached in the Church of
S. Mary the Virgin, New York City, for the most part in the Winter of
1921-22. In preparing them for publication in this volume no attempt
has been made to alter their sermon character. It is not a theological treatise on the Blessed Virgin that I have attempted, but a devotional presentation of her life.
I have added to the text as originally prepared certain prayers and
poems. The object of the selection of the prayers, almost exclusively
from the Liturgies of the Catholic Church, is to illustrate the prevalence of the address of devotion to our Lady throughout Christendom.
The poems are selected with much the same thought, and have been mostly
gathered from mediaeval sources, and so far as possible, from
British.
I have no special knowledge of devotional poetry, but have selected
such poems as I have from time to time copied into my note books. This
fact has made it impossible for me to give credit for them to the
extent that I should have liked. I trust that any one who is entitled
to credit will accept this apology.
Much of the
difficulty felt by Anglicans at expressions commonly found in prayers
and hymns addressed to our Lady is due to prevalent unfamiliarity with
the devotional language of the Catholic Church throughout the ages.
Those whose background of thought is the theology of the Catholic
Church, not in any one period, but in the whole extent of its life,
will have no difficulty in such language because the limitations which
are implied in it will be clear to them.
To others, I can only say that it is fair to assume that the great
saints of the Church of God in all times and in all places did not
habitually use language which was idolatrous, and our limitations are
much more likely to be at fault than their meaning. It is not true in any degree that the teaching of
Catholics as to the place of the Virgin intrudes on the prerogative of
our Lord. It is, as matter of fact Catholics, and not those who oppose
the Catholic Religion who are upholding that prerogative.
This has been excellently expressed by a modern French theologian. "We
are established in the friendship of God, in the divine adoption, in
the heavenly inheritance, solely in virtue of the covenent by which our
souls are bound to the Son of God, and by which the goods, the merits,
and the rights of the Son of God are communicated to our souls, as in
the natural order, the property of the husband becomes the property of
the wife.
Surely, one can say nothing more than we say here, and assuredly the
sects opposed to the Church have never said more: indeed, they are far
to-day from saying so much to maintain intact this truth, that Jesus Christ is our sole Redeemer, and to give that truth the entire extent that belongs to it."
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