Activate Javascript or update your browser for the full Digital Library experience.
Previous Page
–
Next Page
OCR
THE CATHEDRAL
oph . _ UNITED STATES CATHOLIC MISCELLANY. VOL. IX.
. : . ’
. S| ADVANTAGES ACCRUING FROM CELIBACY. TO LI-| lary has been farther mi ep ted by PP q
US HOLIC MISCELLANY. ~ | TERATURE. - : ye hat shewed th tracted from the Con-
: ember of theS Kentuch ersin; and not ty be original and thus leading the rea-
FEBRUARY 6, 1830. A membe! onversing " vf
_ CHARLESTON, FE Catholic clergymen the probable success of he: Baptist |der to boli 8 OUTS.
rT] [Ky J observ- The object is. too ‘ovident to need any comment of. ours.,
- that laborious mission ; an
+ Genoralship of East Florida, from the
" made in the preceding 1
* but had failed, probably. through the mistaken idea that
Ji i i aimed ' b hee
The Committee appointed to effect the: ‘regulation of the
ed: oner can never succeed as you have done. They. have
What would aon enlightened and honest public say of us,
debt of the Church, having the
delivery, and the object for whieh they were created having
been attained, reque: imme-
diately after the Bigh: mass on to- -morrow, ‘Sunday, the 7th
inst. in ordor id deliver the certificates and to request their
disc
arge. * iw Macnatn, Chairman.
~The following preamite and + ‘resolutions were offered by
Capt. Ale lexander MeDonald, seconded by B. Carroll, Esq. at
(In
Finbar, of on Sunday, tho 2th ult. whjch being separately Pat,
were carried unanimous
nd disi intorested, are traits of
and of genius; an
individual possessing those attributes, whatever. bo his sta-
tion in life, cannot fail to. bo useft any cause or societ;
with which he ‘connects himself. congregation can
with truth assort that they have as-thoir established head a| op
os’
y conferred tho. holy order
has
elsewhere, out of college, He! cannot use the constant vigi-
pecting the cunduct of your pepils
ORDINATIONS. .
A
¢tocharge upon the Southern Protestant Episcopa-
liane the acts and opinions of “Bishop wnite regarding the
Cherokees? Would it be a fair mode of recommending our
religion to the Southern States, to iontvonte that all the,
| Evangolicals were hostile to Southern institutions, hecaups
e Rt. Rev. Benedict
1 PRard.
the
hood on the Rev. Simon Petit La Lumiere, i in the Cathedral
chureh.
of that country who received Holy’ Orders.
m the Jesuit.) ~
oN. On Friday, the 15th inst. the Bishop of Boston|
of Sub-dea n Cormac Jose;
Connally. the nephew oft “Connol ly former Bish-
2
resents | a beautiful illustration of
8
rk, in the Cathedral of the Holy Crass, in this’
city i on the follow’ doy ived the|
Gentleman, whose piety Pr
, an
a and North: and North West of our Union, : are declaim-
era against ot our inhumanity and injustice. “God fri that
terfuges. Whatever our
religion may ‘be—our vory “elf respect “would forbid it.
Haud tali aurilio., No: no:—We ‘leave those, weapons to -
those who have no better.
‘e would have noticed this before but we ony saw it this
week, by accident:
WITHHOLDING ID INFORMATION,
Ono of the omnes frequently made Against the Roman
at it
and keeps
tho Faith he professe oly Sunde tho 17th inst. he re- 8,
ancient faith, forgets not nly personal interest, but per: nalle eived, during Sol oh igh Mass, which was celebrated by | the people inignorance, for the purpose of clerical domina-
fort, ‘This con gregation have therefore beheld, with, tho the Right Rey. Bichon, in Pantin, the holy order of tion; this charge has been so frequently repeated, and- Ca:
deepest emotion, the disinterested fe eel ng ex tt liquid tholics are so little known by their fellow citizene-of other
Right Rev. Bishop ND, in contributi to he liquida- oo <
tion of the debt of this Chara from an income uncertai We un derstand that the! Right Rev. Bishop Fenwick has| 2°" opis look apes that Me fang din tr oe good ieee
and at no time eq what i is necessary for his Personal just purchased thre © acres of land at the si umiit of Bu nker | People look u itto 2 founded in trut! An article sign-
comfor ae 5 Hill fo urial und for Catholics, d Plain Truth e “.dlbany Christian
ed, That it isthe wish of this Congregation that the
nee of the Committee return to the Right Rev. Bishop
~ Enovanp, the amount of one hundred dollars paid as hi
“Bubseriptions
ther Resolved, That a Record be ‘mado of the
indivieudls hose liberality induced them to come forward
and pay off the debt of the Cathedral, and that the eof
the Right Rev. ngland, Bishop.of Chareston be
placed at tha hoad onthe ist as having contributed one
fred dolla
: Extract from tho Minutes.
{Signed} Joun Maonarn, Chairmen
Cotupra—The Rev. J. FO O'Neill had been appointed
tothe charge of this district for the present year; but the
delicate state of his health not permitting | hin to undertake
of the most Golighttl spots in Charlestown!
" EXTREME KINDNESS.
" How far the above caption'will be applicable to the con-
duct of the Editors of the Gospel Messenger and Southern
Episcopal Register, for January t830,we leave it to the judg-
ment of our readers, after they shall have read the follow-
ig : cee : a
In our paper for November 28th, we had,‘in no very con-
| spicuous place the following paragraph,
From the Paris Contitutionth) ,
AVE TRADE:
“ Letters from Rome state that the Pope, being informed |
Fanci, and of the slave trade being carried on uit in a « wi
1 t
| Register,” is : well compile ‘short. answer to. a num
charges of which this is on: has we value | the | arti.
charge, the writer goes too far in assarting that every estab-
lishment for collegiate education in. Europe was endowed
exclusively by Catholics. ‘Such is not ‘the fact. - Some, as
Trinity College Dublin, in Ireland, were oriablished by Pro-
tesiants, with funds of which they had plundered Catholics 5 3
others w
Our friend would be well-jus'
most ancient, extensive, and vaefal Mterary ‘eatablishmenta
| were endowed by Catholic
‘ould beg leave to suggest thatin his answer to the
th
with tiie Rev. John Barry, who had | beon cppdinted to assist
in the-Cathedral, and this latter gentleman has "gone to tako
charge of Col jumbia.
"3 ) FLORIDA
t. Avaustins—The very Rev. Mr. Bourtet who had ac-
cepted the charge of this church, together with the Vicar
Right Rov, Doctor
Portier, Bishop of Mobile
: in hip charge, found it impossible to do the duties of the
d pre’
matter to the Barras Don Pedro, and | to obt tain from his
Imperial Majesty an act to prohibit this infamous traffic,
which dishonors a constitutional administration, ande can
suit only
against slavery, that Pius VIII. justly comes forward
vainst this odious traffic in slaves
age. is timated with Ory, ‘ole
such fine e works, “in order to brea 3 the chains eal” slaves in
the influence of the gospel.”
| Every one who knows any thing of France i is aware that
ss we Poets ot
of tho 1 and
ho Catholic rel}.
v | pretty, specimen of the
the] held, and Catholics undervalued and misrepresented.
d discipline with faith, when he-as-
sorted every article of faith from the existence of God.to-a’
| simple ordinance of the cl
ordinance of the church cannot be an article of faith.
Tho excellent article which we copy from
the Jesuit, is 2
manner in which information is with-
ARE TRE ‘ENEMIES OF INSTRUCTION ?
fied to permit tho ‘misconduct of their friends to rest in tho
shade. They are under th e impression that because some
Charleston d t th } ad
r opinions, In the next place the traffic which
{the Pope i is ‘aid to have condemned i is, distinetly THE SLAVE
Catholics of tho United States had neither a
periodical of their own, nor could* rely upon an Editor to do
tho om qn act of common justice, and wero consequently obli-
. Rost, a S:
riest in Rome L I
. months in this city, has left this lace a and arrived at St. Au-
gustine, whero he has succeeded Mr. Bourdet The Rev.
Edward Mayne,
ly uséfal 1 befére tho arrival of those, gentlemen; has assisted
‘them, but is about to return, as wo are informed to the Dio-
cess of Philedelphia, for which he was ordained. ,
LEGISLATURE OF KENTUCKY, |
Sisters or. Cuarsry anv. Lavrgrans.—A dgtaile d ac.
count of the proceedings of tho Kentucky Legislature i in re-
land supremo law of tho Southern States as
well as of the eer Staton of our Union since the year. 1808,
now over twenty-one e years, and our Southern naval cere
ployed in vessels in the |
|trade; dnd persons detectod therein would be condemned
and punished by.our Southern courts. If the paragtaph|
then n bo truo, the Popo only used his efforts to bring the Em
ae of Brazil'to adopt the Inw which is in force, and s
orted in every one of our Southorn. and Northern, Easter
and Western and Middlo Republics.
Nay, in those very Republics our Southern writers and |
; the relintonre clues} , ve
ged to bear wi succumb to insult, that their
opponents fave secured a patent for irresponsible vitupera-"
tion, It. will tend tp the preservation of peace and the
creation of good-will to rebuke them into good manners,
and accustom them to publish only truth, and that, in be.
coming lunguage--Catholics have lately been vilified as
enemtes to instruction, we shall oceasionally shew who are
its cnemies:
HE NETHERLANDS,
In tho numbef before our last we gave a an outline of the
manner in which the king of this country defvated the great
oniete which his concordat with the P
ce SI
gar
in the Wostern Merald of the 30th Dee. which ins ‘been for-
warded to the Office of the Miscellany. An effort hail | been
was to have a legal sanction for the —— of the
perty, so that the literary and ben ends of th onati
tutes might bo perpotually fulGtted. The iBerality of the pre-
sent Legislature has seceded or thie just desires of the Pious
and now when the French Paper praises the Pope for dis-
ig the traffic; ‘the Gospel Messenger insults us
ith tho nick SAP
ing remark from “a Southern Man :?—
FoR. THE. Gosrzt, MESSENGER,
SLAVERY.
« Tho information contained in tho subjoined paragraph,
should be extensively * “circulated for the benefit the Soue
iP ig P i Co
lics, because Catholic nations were engaged’ in the traffic, wi
gions which shall be’ at least now nameless.
this _purpose wransiate some extracts from a
whiéh made appea Tanee rat: Ant
Ke entucky the permanency of their labours in the’ caus
not a word was dropt ii in the discuasion in the least degree
dieeopoote to the institutions,;or their members, not even
r. Rucker, whose objections all eprang fiom the Pope of
home’ cloven foot, which perhaps ho feared the.free sons of
Kentucky wou! ld one day have to kiss, wero » her daughters See.
tue
in the West, Tho mombers of the Legislature generally, |
amilod at the gentleman ‘8 curious spprehensions.
fern States, oft
28th Nov. last, and shows us the opinion es the Pes See.
on ‘matters of yital importanca to See .
SOUTHERN N MAN.”
And prints thetwo concluding Tinos which wo ‘have marked
by inverted commas, in Ita Hics,
We complain, Ist. That tho opinion expressed in Italice
whieh is that of the Frenoh writer, is attributed to the Papal
. That, the Eater forgot his manners by using nick-
es. 3a That @ has been a substitution of "Slavery
tor it Slave: trade, the deesiving the readers of the Messenger,
[and misropresenting the Mieellaty. 4th, That the Miscel-|
of teaching in the Lowe count
The writer of this ens puts some very cross ays ons
ongst them is the following. :
Jam
“ Why in the law of the 14th of June, 1825, is jet
that: all anauthorised secondury schools are sup sed
the purpose of better regulating the study of Gr, id
i
din :.and yot the minister of tho Interior doubtle®
this peremptory reason, doclares in his report ¢e
January, 1829, that they were suppressed only ia
ofthe Jésuits: yet, at this very moment,
their debates, the press of the liberals, the ei
| papers, and we might cite cven'the minists/
»
ria!
“elves
cle, wo must ee leave to say that'in answering this third ,
hurch ; for surely he knowsthat an ,
Wi
Some of our thoughtless contenipornrics will not be satis-"_