21
July 1773 A.D. “Shock
Trooper” Jesuits Temporarily Shut Down—Closed Down by Clement XIV.
Mr. Graves gives his side of the story.
The Society of Jesus (Jesuits) was founded during
the Reformation era in 1534. St. Ignatius of Loyola became the society's first
general when Pope Paul III approved it in 1540. Famed missionary, St. Francis
Xavier, was one of the original seven Jesuits.
Love of Christ and the Roman Church animated these
first Jesuits and many who followed them. Among the Jesuits were a number
martyrs in North America including Isaac Jogues and Jean Brebeuf, men of ardent
passion for Christ.
The Jesuits were a driving force in the
Counter-reformation. Their energy and drive carried Catholicism beyond its
pre-reformation bounds and regained much of the territory lost to Protestants.
By emphasizing missions and education, the Jesuits from the first exerted
influence beyond their numbers. Not that their numbers remained small. Even
before Ignatius' death the Society had almost a thousand members. In time it
became the largest Roman Catholic order. Jesuits became known as the
schoolmasters of Europe and were prominent as confessors to kings and emperors.
They made advances in science.
Their influence was resented. Partly this was their
own fault. The Jesuits developed a system of logic and morality called
casuistry which offered loopholes for all sorts of wrongdoing. In France,
Blaise Pascal wrote his blistering Provincial Letters to expose alleged
Jesuitical abuses. Elsewhere, Jesuitical controversies over rites, their
theological disputes, and their close adherence to Rome made them many foes.
Because Jesuits took their orders from no local
authority but only the popes and their own generals, they were viewed with
suspicion as foreign agents. Such was the case with the heroes Edmund Campion
and Robert Southwell, Jesuit missionaries to England. Both were executed
although there is no evidence either had committed treason, but had merely
administered the Catholic rites to congregations which had been driven
underground.
Cries against the Jesuits rose louder and louder
until on this day July 21, 1773, Pope
Clement XIV dissolved the order completely. It had already been abolished in
France and Spain. Clement refused to condemn the Society but merely noted he
was making an administrative move for the peace of the church.
The effect of the suppression was hurtful for the
Roman church, for it shut down much mission work and many schools. Some Jesuits
were allowed to remain in existence. In 1814 the Society was restored.
Today's Jesuits are sometimes as controversial as
their forebears. In South America many are closely identified with
"liberation theology" which many Catholics
consider heretical because of its emphasis on worldly aims and a materialistic
interpretation of doctrine.
Bibliography:
1. Durant, Will and Ariel. Rousseau
and Revolution. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1967.
2. "Jesuits." The Oxford
Dictionary of the Christian Church. Edited by F. L. Cross and E. A.
Livingstone. Oxford, 1997.
3. Martin, Malachi. The Jesuits; the
Society of Jesus and the betrayal of the Roman Catholic church. New York: Simon
and Schuster, 1987.
4. Novak, Michael. Will it Liberate?
Questions about liberation theology. New York, New York: Paulist Press, 1986.
5. O'Malley, William J. The Fifth
Week. Loyola Press, 1976.
6. Pollen, J.H. The Jesuits."
The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton, 1914.
7. Ridpath. Cyclopedia of Universal
History. 1980.
8. Various encyclopedia and internet
articles.
Last updated April, 2007.
No comments:
Post a Comment