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Isaac Hecker

Isaac Thomas Hecker (December 18, 1819 – December 22, 1888) was an American Catholic priest and founder of the Paulist Fathers, a North American religious society of men.


Isaac Hecker
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
ArchdioceseNew York
ProvinceNew York
SeeNew York
Orders
Ordination1849
by Nicholas Wiseman
RankPriest
Personal details
Born
Isaac Thomas Hecker

(1819-12-18)December 18, 1819
DiedDecember 22, 1888(1888-12-22) (aged 69)
New York City, New York, United States
NationalityAmerican
DenominationRoman Catholic
ParentsJohn Hecker and Caroline Freund
OccupationRoman Catholic priest, missionary
Signature

Hecker was originally ordained a Redemptorist priest in 1849. With the blessing of Pope Pius IX, he founded the Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle, now known as the Paulist Fathers, in New York on July 7, 1858. The Society was established to evangelize both believers and non-believers to convert America to the Catholic Church. Hecker sought to evangelize Americans using the popular means of his day, primarily preaching, the public lecture circuit, and the printing press. One of his more enduring publications is The Catholic World, which he created in 1865.[1]

Hecker's spirituality mainly centered on cultivating the action of the Holy Spirit within the soul as well as the necessity of being attuned to how the Lord prompts one in great and small moments in life. Hecker believed that the Catholic faith and American political culture of small government, property rights, civil society and liberal democracy were not opposed but could be reconciled.[2] The ideas of individual freedom, community, service, and authority were fundamental to Hecker when conceiving how the Paulists would be governed and administered.

Hecker was a friend and colleague of classic liberal thinker Lord Acton in the cause of liberal Catholicism—opposed to ultramontanism politics in the church.[3] Hecker's work was likened to that of Cardinal John Henry Newman, by the Cardinal himself. In a letter written to Augustine Hewit on the occasion of Hecker's death, Newman wrote: "I have ever felt that there was a sort of unity in our lives, that we had both begun a work of the same kind, he in America and I in England."[4]

Hecker's cause for sainthood was opened January 25, 2008, in the mother church of the Paulist Fathers on 59th St, New York City. He was thereafter named a Servant of God.

Early life edit

Isaac Hecker was born in New York City on December 18, 1819, the third son and youngest child of German immigrants, John and Caroline (Freund) Hecker. When barely twelve years of age, he had to go to work and pushed a baker's cart for his elder brothers who had a bakery on Rutgers Street. He studied at every possible opportunity, becoming immersed in Kant's Critique of Pure Reason and, while still a young man, took part in certain politico-social movements which aimed at the elevation of the working man.[5]

Brook Farm movement edit

It was at this juncture that he met Orestes Brownson, who exercised a marked influence over him.[4] Isaac was deeply religious, a characteristic for which he gave much credit to his prayerful mother, and remained so amid all the reading and agitating in which he engaged. Having grown into young manhood, he joined the Brook Farm movement, and he tarried in that colony some six months.

Conversion to Catholicism and ordination as a priest edit

 
Hecker, circa 1860

Shortly after leaving the Brook Farm in 1844, Hecker was baptized into the Roman Catholic Church by Bishop John McCloskey of New York. One year later, he was entered in the novitiate of the Redemptorists in Belgium, and there he cultivated to a high degree the spirit of lofty mystical piety which marked him through life.[5]

Ordained a priest in London by then Bishop Nicholas Wiseman in 1849, he spent a year as a parish priest and chaplain with the small Redemptorist community at Our Immaculate Lady of Victories in Clapham.[6] He returned to New York in March 1851 and worked until 1857 as a Redemptorist missionary. With all his mysticism, Isaac Hecker had the wide-awake mind of the typical American. He perceived that the Catholic Church's missionary activity in the United States must remain to a large extent ineffective unless it adopted methods suited to the country and the age. In this, he had the sympathy of four fellow Redemptorists, who like himself were of American birth and converts from Protestantism.[5]

Acting as their agent, and with his local superiors' consent, Hecker went to Rome to beg of the Rector Major of his Order that a Redemptorist novitiate might be opened in the United States, in order thus to attract American youths to the missionary life. In furtherance of this request, he took with him the strong approval of some American hierarchy members. The Rector Major, instead of listening to Hecker, expelled him from the Order for having made the journey to Rome without sufficient authorization.[5]

Hecker, determined to fight the expulsion, remained in Rome. He approached Cardinal Alessandro Barnabò, prefect of the Propaganda, the Congregation of the Roman Curia with supervisory responsibility for the church in the United States. Cardinal Barnabo, made aware by American bishops of Hecker's outstanding missionary work and personal holiness, arranged an interview with Pope Pius IX. The pontiff dispensed Hecker and his four companions from their vows as Redemptorists.[4]

Founding of the Paulist Fathers edit

 
Hecker in 1887

During his months in Rome, Isaac had determined that the best way to serve the church in the United States was to establish a congregation of priests to labor for the conversion of his native land. Pope Pius approved his plan and encouraged him to take the steps necessary for its realization. "To me, the future looks bright, hopeful, full of promise," he wrote home, "and I feel confident in God's providence and assured of his grace in our regard."[5]

The outcome was that Hecker, George Deshon, Augustine Hewit, Francis Baker, and Clarence Walworth, all of whom were American Redemptorists, were permitted by Pope Pius IX in 1858 to form the separate religious community of the Paulists.[7]

Hecker returned to America from Rome and gathered his American friends Hewit, Baker, and Deshon to plan their congregation. Archbishop John Hughes accepted the men into his New York archdiocese, giving them a parish on 59th Street for their home. The five men decided on calling themselves the "Missionary Priests of St. Paul the Apostle." The priests, popularly known as the Paulists, conducted parish missions and retreats for non-Catholics.[5]

Between 1867 and 1869, Hecker, directly addressing Protestants from lecture platforms, delivered more than 56 lecture series, traveling from Boston to Missouri, from Chicago to Hartford. During one Western tour, he traveled more than 4,500 miles and spoke to more than 30,000 people, two-thirds of whom were non-Catholics. Hecker's first biographer, Walter Elliot, wrote: "We can never forget how distinctly American was the impression of his personality. We heard the nation's greatest men then living. ...Father Hecker was so plainly a great man of this type, so evidently an outgrowth of our institutions, that he stamped American on every Catholic argument he proposed. ...Never was a man a more Catholic than Father Hecker, simply, calmly, joyfully, entirely Catholic."[5] Another writer quipped, "He is putting American machinery into the ancient ark and is getting ready to run her by steam."[7]

In April 1865, adding the written word to his speaking campaign, Isaac launched The Catholic World, a monthly magazine. A year later, he founded the Catholic Publication Society (now the Paulist Press) to disseminate Catholic doctrine on a large scale, primarily for non-Catholics. In 1870, he established The Young Catholic, a magazine for young boys and girls.[5]

In 1869-70, Hecker attended the First Vatican Council as a theologian for Bishop James Gibbons of North Carolina. On the trip, he visited Assisi, home of Francis of Assisi. "Francis touched the chords of feeling and aspiration of the hearts of his time and organized them for united action," Hecker wrote in his journal.[5]

Returning home in June 1870, the 55-year-old Hecker, full of enthusiasm, looked forward to resuming his American apostolate. But instead, he was stricken with painful, chronic leukemia. So rapidly did the disease progress that by 1871, he could not continue his work as Paulist director, pastor, lecturer, and writer. Hecker had great difficulty accepting that the God he served would allow him to be cut down in mid-career. When he left for Europe to seek a cure, he told his Paulist brothers: "Look upon me as a dead man. ...God is trying me severely in soul and body, and I must have the courage to suffer crucifixion." He wandered from one European spa to another, worn in body and sorely tried in spirit, struggling to believe that God was as much at work in him now as he was on the lecture platform.[5]

He spent the winter of 1873-74 aboard a boat on the Nile River; the sail benefited him immensely. "This trip," he wrote, "has been in every respect much more to my benefit than my most sanguine expectations led me to hope. It seems to me almost like an inspiration."[5]

In 1875, the American Paulists invited Hecker to return to their midst. He came back and started to work once more, although on a limited basis. For 13 more years, he exerted his constantly diminishing strength to bring Catholicism to the hearts of his fellow Americans.[5] During these declining years, he also expanded his vision to the entire world, mainly Europe, where the prestige of the Roman Catholic Church was in decline. At the First Vatican Council, in an attempt to stem this decline, the church issued the doctrine of papal infallibility. Following the Council, Hecker wrote an essay describing the work of the Holy Spirit in the renewal of both church and state. Hecker's theology foreshadowed by 80 years the interest of the Second Vatican Council in the role of the Holy Spirit.

During his last years, Hecker always struggled with the feeling that God had abandoned him and that his life was useless. But, as the terrible blood cancer destroyed his body, his spirit found new strength. He turned back the despair; he accepted his lot as God's will for him. The spirit within him brought him new peace and serenity. Isaac Hecker died December 22, 1888, at the Paulist House on 59th Street in Manhattan.[5]

Hecker and Americanism edit

 
Pope Leo XIII

The name of Hecker is closely associated with Americanism. As part of this controversy, Hecker was accused by the French cleric Charles Maignen [fr] of subjectivism and crypto-Protestantism.[8] During the French Third Republic (which began in 1870), the power and influence of French Catholicism steadily declined. The French government passed laws bearing more and more stringently on the church, and most French citizens did not object. Indeed, they began to look toward legislators and not to the clergy for guidance.[1]

Observing this and encouraged by the action of Pope Leo XIII, who in 1892 called on French Catholics loyally to accept the Republic, several young French priests determined that because the church had held itself aloof from modern philosophies and practices, people had turned away from it. They also noted that Catholicism was not making much use of modern means of propaganda, such as social movements or the organization of clubs. In short, the church had not adapted to modern needs. They agitated for social and philanthropic projects, a closer relationship between priests and parishioners, and general cultivation of personal initiative, both in clergy and laity. Not unnaturally, they looked for inspiration to America.[1]

The French reformers took him as a kind of patron saint. His biography, written in English by Paulist priest Walter Elliott in 1891, was translated into French six years later. A long introduction by a liberal French priest made exaggerated claims for Hecker. Trends in liberal Catholic thought in Europe became associated with the church in the United States and particularly with Hecker.[7] Inspired by Hecker's life and character, the activist French priests undertook the task of persuading their fellow-priests to accept the political system, and then to break out of their isolation, put themselves in touch with the intellectual life of the country, and take an active part in the work of social amelioration. In 1897 the movement received an impetus O'Connell, former Rector of the Pontifical North American College in Rome, spoke on behalf of Hecker's ideas at the Catholic Congress in Friburg.[1]

Conservative Catholics took alarm at what they considered to be symptoms of pernicious modernism or Liberalism. They thought the "Allons au peuple" catchphrase had a ring of heresy, breaking down the divinely established distinction between the priest and the layman and giving lay people too much power in church affairs. The insistence upon individual initiative was judged to be incompatible with the fundamentals of Catholicism. Moreover, the conservatives were, almost to a man, anti-republicans who distrusted and disliked the democratic abbés (clergy). It was for this reason that Hecker acquired the reputation of being called "The Yellow Dart." The conservatives complained to the Pope, and in 1898 Abbé Charles Maignen wrote a violent polemic against the new movement called Le Père Hecker, est-il un saint? ("Is Father Hecker a Saint?").[1]

Many powerful Vatican authorities also detested the Americanist tendency. However, Pope Leo XIII was reluctant to chastise the American Catholics, whom he had often praised for their loyalty and faith. But he eventually made concessions to the pressures upon him, and in early February 1899 addressed to Cardinal James Gibbons the papal brief Testem Benevolentiae. This document condemned the following doctrines or tendencies:

  1. undue insistence on interior initiative in the spiritual life, as leading to disobedience,
  2. attacks on religious vows, and disparagement of the value of religious orders in the modern world,
  3. minimizing Catholic doctrine,
  4. minimizing the importance of spiritual direction.

The brief did not assert that Hecker and the Americans had held any unsound doctrine on the above points. Instead, it merely stated that if such opinions did exist, the Pope called upon the hierarchy to eradicate them. Cardinal Gibbons and many other prelates replied to Rome. With a near-unanimous voice, they declared that the incriminated opinions had no existence among American Catholics. Hecker had never countenanced the slightest departure from Catholic principles in their fullest and most strict application. The disturbance caused by the condemnation was slight; almost the entire laity and a considerable part of the clergy were unaware of this affair. However, the pope's brief did end up strengthening the position of the conservatives in France.[1]

When the church in America was struggling with the question of whether the assimilation of Catholics, many of whom were immigrants, into American culture would compromise their Catholic faith, Hecker saw no contradiction between being American and being Catholic.[9] According to Russell Shaw, "On the level of ideas, no one before or since has done more than Isaac Hecker did to promote Catholic assimilation into the secular culture of the United States."[7]

Cause for sainthood edit

Cardinal Edward Egan of New York formally opened Hecker's cause for sainthood on January 25, 2008, at St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church in New York City, mother church of the Paulist Fathers, at which time Hecker was given the title Servant of God.[10] In 2023, the United Conference of Catholic Bishops voted to advance the cause of Hecker.[11]

Works edit

  • Questions of the Soul
  • Aspirations of Nature

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Fox 1911.
  2. ^ Isaac Thomas Hecker. Religion and Liberty, 1994 issue. Acton Institute
  3. ^ Lord Acton by Roland Hill, pg 194. 1999
  4. ^ a b c Smith, Michael Paul. "Isaac Thomas Hecker." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 4 Oct. 2015
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hanley, OFM, Boniface. The Story of Isaac Hecker: Missionary to North America, Paulist Fathers 2015-10-06 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "History of St. Mary's Parish," St. Mary's RC Church, Clapham
  7. ^ a b c d . Archived from the original on November 15, 2017. Retrieved October 5, 2015.
  8. ^ Hecker Studies: Essays on the Thought of Isaac Hecker edited by John Farina, 1983, published by The Missionary Society of St. Paul
  9. ^ Hoover CSP, Brett. "Isaac Hecker: Living by the Holy Spirit," Busted Halo, July 27, 2012
  10. ^ The Paulist Fathers News February 17, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ CNA. "USCCB votes to advance canonization cause of American Catholic priest Isaac Hecker". Catholic News Agency. Retrieved 2023-12-23.

References edit

Attribution:

Sources edit

  • Behnke, John J. Isaac Thomas Becker: Spiritual Pilgrim. New York: Paulist Press.
  • Farina, John. An American Experience of God. New York: Paulist Press, 1981.
  • Farina, John, ed. Isaac Hecker. The Early Diary: Romantic Religion in Ante-bellum America. New York: Paulist Press, 1989.
  • Farina, John. Hecker Studies: Essays on the Thought of Isaac Hecker. New York: Paulist Press, 1983.
  • Hecker, Isaac. The Paulist Vocation. New York: Paulist Press, 2000.
  • Holden, Vincent F. Yankee Paul: Isaac Thomas Hecker. Milwaukee: Bruce Pub. Co, 1958.
  • Hostetter, Larry. The Ecclesial Dimension of Personal and Social Reform in the Writings of Isaac Thomas Hecker. Roman Catholic Studies 15. Lewistone, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 2001.
  • O'Brien, David J. Isaac Hecker: An American Catholic. New York: Paulist Press, 1992.
  • McSorley, Joseph. Isaac Hecker and his Friends. New York: Paulist Press, 1972.
  • Robichaud, Paul. A Future Brighter Than Any Past. New York: Paulist Press. 2017.

External links edit

  • Life of Father Hecker at Project Gutenberg by Walter Elliott (see also )
  • "Hecker, Isaac Thomas" . The American Cyclopædia. 1879.
  • The Brownson-Hecker Correspondence, Notre Dame studies in American Catholicism, Number 1 (1979).

isaac, hecker, isaac, thomas, hecker, december, 1819, december, 1888, american, catholic, priest, founder, paulist, fathers, north, american, religious, society, servant, godchurchroman, catholic, churcharchdiocesenew, yorkprovincenew, yorkseenew, yorkordersor. Isaac Thomas Hecker December 18 1819 December 22 1888 was an American Catholic priest and founder of the Paulist Fathers a North American religious society of men Servant of GodIsaac HeckerChurchRoman Catholic ChurchArchdioceseNew YorkProvinceNew YorkSeeNew YorkOrdersOrdination1849by Nicholas WisemanRankPriestPersonal detailsBornIsaac Thomas Hecker 1819 12 18 December 18 1819New York City New York United StatesDiedDecember 22 1888 1888 12 22 aged 69 New York City New York United StatesNationalityAmericanDenominationRoman CatholicParentsJohn Hecker and Caroline FreundOccupationRoman Catholic priest missionarySignature Hecker was originally ordained a Redemptorist priest in 1849 With the blessing of Pope Pius IX he founded the Missionary Society of St Paul the Apostle now known as the Paulist Fathers in New York on July 7 1858 The Society was established to evangelize both believers and non believers to convert America to the Catholic Church Hecker sought to evangelize Americans using the popular means of his day primarily preaching the public lecture circuit and the printing press One of his more enduring publications is The Catholic World which he created in 1865 1 Hecker s spirituality mainly centered on cultivating the action of the Holy Spirit within the soul as well as the necessity of being attuned to how the Lord prompts one in great and small moments in life Hecker believed that the Catholic faith and American political culture of small government property rights civil society and liberal democracy were not opposed but could be reconciled 2 The ideas of individual freedom community service and authority were fundamental to Hecker when conceiving how the Paulists would be governed and administered Hecker was a friend and colleague of classic liberal thinker Lord Acton in the cause of liberal Catholicism opposed to ultramontanism politics in the church 3 Hecker s work was likened to that of Cardinal John Henry Newman by the Cardinal himself In a letter written to Augustine Hewit on the occasion of Hecker s death Newman wrote I have ever felt that there was a sort of unity in our lives that we had both begun a work of the same kind he in America and I in England 4 Hecker s cause for sainthood was opened January 25 2008 in the mother church of the Paulist Fathers on 59th St New York City He was thereafter named a Servant of God Contents 1 Early life 2 Brook Farm movement 3 Conversion to Catholicism and ordination as a priest 4 Founding of the Paulist Fathers 5 Hecker and Americanism 6 Cause for sainthood 7 Works 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksEarly life editIsaac Hecker was born in New York City on December 18 1819 the third son and youngest child of German immigrants John and Caroline Freund Hecker When barely twelve years of age he had to go to work and pushed a baker s cart for his elder brothers who had a bakery on Rutgers Street He studied at every possible opportunity becoming immersed in Kant s Critique of Pure Reason and while still a young man took part in certain politico social movements which aimed at the elevation of the working man 5 Brook Farm movement editIt was at this juncture that he met Orestes Brownson who exercised a marked influence over him 4 Isaac was deeply religious a characteristic for which he gave much credit to his prayerful mother and remained so amid all the reading and agitating in which he engaged Having grown into young manhood he joined the Brook Farm movement and he tarried in that colony some six months Conversion to Catholicism and ordination as a priest edit nbsp Hecker circa 1860 Shortly after leaving the Brook Farm in 1844 Hecker was baptized into the Roman Catholic Church by Bishop John McCloskey of New York One year later he was entered in the novitiate of the Redemptorists in Belgium and there he cultivated to a high degree the spirit of lofty mystical piety which marked him through life 5 Ordained a priest in London by then Bishop Nicholas Wiseman in 1849 he spent a year as a parish priest and chaplain with the small Redemptorist community at Our Immaculate Lady of Victories in Clapham 6 He returned to New York in March 1851 and worked until 1857 as a Redemptorist missionary With all his mysticism Isaac Hecker had the wide awake mind of the typical American He perceived that the Catholic Church s missionary activity in the United States must remain to a large extent ineffective unless it adopted methods suited to the country and the age In this he had the sympathy of four fellow Redemptorists who like himself were of American birth and converts from Protestantism 5 Acting as their agent and with his local superiors consent Hecker went to Rome to beg of the Rector Major of his Order that a Redemptorist novitiate might be opened in the United States in order thus to attract American youths to the missionary life In furtherance of this request he took with him the strong approval of some American hierarchy members The Rector Major instead of listening to Hecker expelled him from the Order for having made the journey to Rome without sufficient authorization 5 Hecker determined to fight the expulsion remained in Rome He approached Cardinal Alessandro Barnabo prefect of the Propaganda the Congregation of the Roman Curia with supervisory responsibility for the church in the United States Cardinal Barnabo made aware by American bishops of Hecker s outstanding missionary work and personal holiness arranged an interview with Pope Pius IX The pontiff dispensed Hecker and his four companions from their vows as Redemptorists 4 Founding of the Paulist Fathers edit nbsp Hecker in 1887During his months in Rome Isaac had determined that the best way to serve the church in the United States was to establish a congregation of priests to labor for the conversion of his native land Pope Pius approved his plan and encouraged him to take the steps necessary for its realization To me the future looks bright hopeful full of promise he wrote home and I feel confident in God s providence and assured of his grace in our regard 5 The outcome was that Hecker George Deshon Augustine Hewit Francis Baker and Clarence Walworth all of whom were American Redemptorists were permitted by Pope Pius IX in 1858 to form the separate religious community of the Paulists 7 Hecker returned to America from Rome and gathered his American friends Hewit Baker and Deshon to plan their congregation Archbishop John Hughes accepted the men into his New York archdiocese giving them a parish on 59th Street for their home The five men decided on calling themselves the Missionary Priests of St Paul the Apostle The priests popularly known as the Paulists conducted parish missions and retreats for non Catholics 5 Between 1867 and 1869 Hecker directly addressing Protestants from lecture platforms delivered more than 56 lecture series traveling from Boston to Missouri from Chicago to Hartford During one Western tour he traveled more than 4 500 miles and spoke to more than 30 000 people two thirds of whom were non Catholics Hecker s first biographer Walter Elliot wrote We can never forget how distinctly American was the impression of his personality We heard the nation s greatest men then living Father Hecker was so plainly a great man of this type so evidently an outgrowth of our institutions that he stamped American on every Catholic argument he proposed Never was a man a more Catholic than Father Hecker simply calmly joyfully entirely Catholic 5 Another writer quipped He is putting American machinery into the ancient ark and is getting ready to run her by steam 7 In April 1865 adding the written word to his speaking campaign Isaac launched The Catholic World a monthly magazine A year later he founded the Catholic Publication Society now the Paulist Press to disseminate Catholic doctrine on a large scale primarily for non Catholics In 1870 he established The Young Catholic a magazine for young boys and girls 5 In 1869 70 Hecker attended the First Vatican Council as a theologian for Bishop James Gibbons of North Carolina On the trip he visited Assisi home of Francis of Assisi Francis touched the chords of feeling and aspiration of the hearts of his time and organized them for united action Hecker wrote in his journal 5 Returning home in June 1870 the 55 year old Hecker full of enthusiasm looked forward to resuming his American apostolate But instead he was stricken with painful chronic leukemia So rapidly did the disease progress that by 1871 he could not continue his work as Paulist director pastor lecturer and writer Hecker had great difficulty accepting that the God he served would allow him to be cut down in mid career When he left for Europe to seek a cure he told his Paulist brothers Look upon me as a dead man God is trying me severely in soul and body and I must have the courage to suffer crucifixion He wandered from one European spa to another worn in body and sorely tried in spirit struggling to believe that God was as much at work in him now as he was on the lecture platform 5 He spent the winter of 1873 74 aboard a boat on the Nile River the sail benefited him immensely This trip he wrote has been in every respect much more to my benefit than my most sanguine expectations led me to hope It seems to me almost like an inspiration 5 In 1875 the American Paulists invited Hecker to return to their midst He came back and started to work once more although on a limited basis For 13 more years he exerted his constantly diminishing strength to bring Catholicism to the hearts of his fellow Americans 5 During these declining years he also expanded his vision to the entire world mainly Europe where the prestige of the Roman Catholic Church was in decline At the First Vatican Council in an attempt to stem this decline the church issued the doctrine of papal infallibility Following the Council Hecker wrote an essay describing the work of the Holy Spirit in the renewal of both church and state Hecker s theology foreshadowed by 80 years the interest of the Second Vatican Council in the role of the Holy Spirit During his last years Hecker always struggled with the feeling that God had abandoned him and that his life was useless But as the terrible blood cancer destroyed his body his spirit found new strength He turned back the despair he accepted his lot as God s will for him The spirit within him brought him new peace and serenity Isaac Hecker died December 22 1888 at the Paulist House on 59th Street in Manhattan 5 Hecker and Americanism edit nbsp Pope Leo XIII The name of Hecker is closely associated with Americanism As part of this controversy Hecker was accused by the French cleric Charles Maignen fr of subjectivism and crypto Protestantism 8 During the French Third Republic which began in 1870 the power and influence of French Catholicism steadily declined The French government passed laws bearing more and more stringently on the church and most French citizens did not object Indeed they began to look toward legislators and not to the clergy for guidance 1 Observing this and encouraged by the action of Pope Leo XIII who in 1892 called on French Catholics loyally to accept the Republic several young French priests determined that because the church had held itself aloof from modern philosophies and practices people had turned away from it They also noted that Catholicism was not making much use of modern means of propaganda such as social movements or the organization of clubs In short the church had not adapted to modern needs They agitated for social and philanthropic projects a closer relationship between priests and parishioners and general cultivation of personal initiative both in clergy and laity Not unnaturally they looked for inspiration to America 1 The French reformers took him as a kind of patron saint His biography written in English by Paulist priest Walter Elliott in 1891 was translated into French six years later A long introduction by a liberal French priest made exaggerated claims for Hecker Trends in liberal Catholic thought in Europe became associated with the church in the United States and particularly with Hecker 7 Inspired by Hecker s life and character the activist French priests undertook the task of persuading their fellow priests to accept the political system and then to break out of their isolation put themselves in touch with the intellectual life of the country and take an active part in the work of social amelioration In 1897 the movement received an impetus O Connell former Rector of the Pontifical North American College in Rome spoke on behalf of Hecker s ideas at the Catholic Congress in Friburg 1 Conservative Catholics took alarm at what they considered to be symptoms of pernicious modernism or Liberalism They thought the Allons au peuple catchphrase had a ring of heresy breaking down the divinely established distinction between the priest and the layman and giving lay people too much power in church affairs The insistence upon individual initiative was judged to be incompatible with the fundamentals of Catholicism Moreover the conservatives were almost to a man anti republicans who distrusted and disliked the democratic abbes clergy It was for this reason that Hecker acquired the reputation of being called The Yellow Dart The conservatives complained to the Pope and in 1898 Abbe Charles Maignen wrote a violent polemic against the new movement called Le Pere Hecker est il un saint Is Father Hecker a Saint 1 Many powerful Vatican authorities also detested the Americanist tendency However Pope Leo XIII was reluctant to chastise the American Catholics whom he had often praised for their loyalty and faith But he eventually made concessions to the pressures upon him and in early February 1899 addressed to Cardinal James Gibbons the papal brief Testem Benevolentiae This document condemned the following doctrines or tendencies undue insistence on interior initiative in the spiritual life as leading to disobedience attacks on religious vows and disparagement of the value of religious orders in the modern world minimizing Catholic doctrine minimizing the importance of spiritual direction The brief did not assert that Hecker and the Americans had held any unsound doctrine on the above points Instead it merely stated that if such opinions did exist the Pope called upon the hierarchy to eradicate them Cardinal Gibbons and many other prelates replied to Rome With a near unanimous voice they declared that the incriminated opinions had no existence among American Catholics Hecker had never countenanced the slightest departure from Catholic principles in their fullest and most strict application The disturbance caused by the condemnation was slight almost the entire laity and a considerable part of the clergy were unaware of this affair However the pope s brief did end up strengthening the position of the conservatives in France 1 When the church in America was struggling with the question of whether the assimilation of Catholics many of whom were immigrants into American culture would compromise their Catholic faith Hecker saw no contradiction between being American and being Catholic 9 According to Russell Shaw On the level of ideas no one before or since has done more than Isaac Hecker did to promote Catholic assimilation into the secular culture of the United States 7 Cause for sainthood editCardinal Edward Egan of New York formally opened Hecker s cause for sainthood on January 25 2008 at St Paul the Apostle Catholic Church in New York City mother church of the Paulist Fathers at which time Hecker was given the title Servant of God 10 In 2023 the United Conference of Catholic Bishops voted to advance the cause of Hecker 11 Works editQuestions of the Soul Aspirations of NatureSee also editInstitutes of consecrated lifeNotes edit a b c d e f Fox 1911 Isaac Thomas Hecker Religion and Liberty 1994 issue Acton Institute Lord Acton by Roland Hill pg 194 1999 a b c Smith Michael Paul Isaac Thomas Hecker The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 7 New York Robert Appleton Company 1910 4 Oct 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hanley OFM Boniface The Story of Isaac Hecker Missionary to North America Paulist Fathers Archived 2015 10 06 at the Wayback Machine History of St Mary s Parish St Mary s RC Church Clapham a b c d Shaw Russell Hecker was father of American evangelization OSV Weekly March 26 2014 Archived from the original on November 15 2017 Retrieved October 5 2015 Hecker Studies Essays on the Thought of Isaac Hecker edited by John Farina 1983 published by The Missionary Society of St Paul Hoover CSP Brett Isaac Hecker Living by the Holy Spirit Busted Halo July 27 2012 The Paulist Fathers News Archived February 17 2008 at the Wayback Machine CNA USCCB votes to advance canonization cause of American Catholic priest Isaac Hecker Catholic News Agency Retrieved 2023 12 23 References editAttribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Fox James Joseph 1911 Hecker Isaac Thomas In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 194 195 Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1892 Hecker Isaac Thomas Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton Sources editBehnke John J Isaac Thomas Becker Spiritual Pilgrim New York Paulist Press Farina John An American Experience of God New York Paulist Press 1981 Farina John ed Isaac Hecker The Early Diary Romantic Religion in Ante bellum America New York Paulist Press 1989 Farina John Hecker Studies Essays on the Thought of Isaac Hecker New York Paulist Press 1983 Hecker Isaac The Paulist Vocation New York Paulist Press 2000 Holden Vincent F Yankee Paul Isaac Thomas Hecker Milwaukee Bruce Pub Co 1958 Hostetter Larry The Ecclesial Dimension of Personal and Social Reform in the Writings of Isaac Thomas Hecker Roman Catholic Studies 15 Lewistone NY Edwin Mellen Press 2001 O Brien David J Isaac Hecker An American Catholic New York Paulist Press 1992 McSorley Joseph Isaac Hecker and his Friends New York Paulist Press 1972 Robichaud Paul A Future Brighter Than Any Past New York Paulist Press 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Isaac Thomas Hecker Life of Father Hecker at Project Gutenberg by Walter Elliott see also createspace com Hecker Isaac Thomas The American Cyclopaedia 1879 The Brownson Hecker Correspondence Notre Dame studies in American Catholicism Number 1 1979 Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Catholicism nbsp United States nbsp Saints Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Isaac Hecker amp oldid 1217799364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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