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Title: Christian Work to The Armagh Guardian.
ID3415
CollectionIrish Emigration Database
FileWork, Christian/5
Year1864
SenderWork, Christian
Sender Gendermale
Sender Occupationunknown
Sender Religionunknown
OriginNew York, USA
DestinationArmagh, N.Ireland
RecipientThe Armagh Guardian
Recipient Genderunknown
Relationshipwrites letter to newspapers regarding
SourceThe Armagh Guardian, 12 February 1864.
ArchiveThe Central Library, Belfast.
Doc. No.9410017
Date12/02/1864
Partial Date
Doc. TypeEMG
LogDocument added by LT, 06:10:1994.
Word Count1190
Genre
Note
TranscriptIn a former communication I referred to the well-as-certained
fact that of the very large number of Roman
Catholic emigrants that have found their way to this
country, a startling proportion have been irrecoverably
lost to the Papal Church, in the sparsely inhabited regions
of the west more particularly, whither the industrious
are wont to remove, and where churches of this
faith are rarer, and the more restive portion can escape
the extraction of the clergy with greater ease. But my
attention has, within a day or two, been drawn to an
editorial article in a Roman Catholic journal of Philadelphia,
which discloses the fact that the priesthood
stand aghast at the losses which their Church has sustained
even in our eastern cities, in which, if anywhere,
it ought to be practicable to control the superstitious
multitude and prevent any serious defection. The
editor addresses himself to the Irish, who he tells us,
in the main compose the Church; and he asks:
"What has come over ye? Where is the resplendent
Catholic spirit that distinguished ye in Ireland? In
that country, ye have suffered ten thousand martyrdoms
rather than collude with the enemies of the
faith. But in America that loftiness of heart expires,
and your own sons and daughters degenerate from St.
Patrick and St. Bridget. Have ye forgotten that the
most glorious ornament in the crown of old Ireland is
its supernatural firmness to the faith, in spite of the
dreadful sanguinary despotism of England for three
hundred years? Are the Protestant schools there
frequented by Catholic children? But what are, in the
eyes of the editor, the manifest tokens of the degeneracy?
"Go into St. John's Church: who occupy it's
pews? Not the descendants of the Irish people who
built it. The same thing is true of St. Mary's, of St.
Augustine's of every Catholic church in the city,
nay, of every Catholic church in the land. In the
great main, it is new emigrants that keep up the
Church in America. Why is this? Where are the
children of the early emigrants - of the builders of the
churches? They are lost to Rome!" And in conformation
of this general assertion, the writer states it as
the result of calculation, that had the Irish who have
come to Philadelphia during the last eighty years
"preserved in their own hearts the sublime Catholicity
that marked them at home", and instilled into the
hearts of their children, that single city would now
possess twenty-five more Catholic churches than it
now does, and 10,000 more adherents of that system
of belief. "Well might the illustrious Archbishop Kenrick
sorrowfully exclaim that the church in
America has lost more than it has gained!" And this
fearful state of things, the editor of the Catholic
Herald attributes to the influence of the "common
schools", from which it implores parents to remove
their children and to place them in the "parochial
schools". Of the former he writes: "The Holy
Fathers fear them. The bishops fear them. The
Church has lost - irretrievably lost - tens of thousands
of children by them."
No testimony could be more satisfactory to us than
this respecting the calcuable good that has been effected
in this country by the thorough and well-adjusted
common-school systems of the various Northern
States. For if many of those who renounce Romanism
assume no other religion, the greater part of their
children at least are sooner or later drawn into
Protestant churches. I may add in illustration of this
general defection of native Roman Catholics, that in a
suburban village of about 10,000 inhabitants, in which
a large number of merchants and other gentlemen
doing business in New York reside, although the Roman
Catholic church is thronged with Irish worshippers
the domestic servants, the labourers and artisans of
our manufactories, there are not, I believe, more than
two or three families of good social position which are
composed of native-born Roman Catholics.
The past month has witnessed the holding of a
number of very extensive fairs in various parts of the
loyal States in support of the great sanitary commmission.
All classes of persons have united on these occasions,
and receive large contributions, which it richly
merits, and which are indispensable to the prosection
of it's work of mercy.
The work exploring each State, and accurately
ascertaining the amount of destitution of the Holy
Scriptures which prevails, was undertaken upwards of
thirty years ago. It was the State of New Jersey that
set the example of making an effort, which proved successful.
to supply every family that would receive it
with the Word of God. Other States followed, and a
general effort was even made to furnish the Bible to
every family throughout the United States. But even
had the movement been fully carried out, it is evident
that only constant exertion could preclude the recurrence
of similar destitution in a few years, especially
in the newer States and Territories. Accordingly, we
find that in spite of all that has been done to circulate
the Bible, an exploration of the State of Iowa, under
the auspices of the Iowa Bible Society, has revealed
the fact that in eighty-seven out of its about one
hundred countries, there were 17,799 families which did not
is one which, by immigration, increased its
population from 192,000 in 1850, to 674,000 in 1860.
Archbishop Hughes, decidedly the most influential
prelate of the Roman Catholic Church in this country
died in this city, on Sunday, the 3rd inst. He was a
man of remarkable engery of character, a great
disputant, and more frequently involved in disputes with
clergymen of Protestant churches than any of his
especially that with "Kirwan", the late Nicholas Murray, D.D.,
have given him a notoriety which he might
otherwise never have attained. Both of these controversies
but the latter in particular, led numbers to examine
the claims of the Papacy, and brought some
candid minds to the knowledge of the truth. His
extraordinary irascibilty conduced not a little to his ill
success. Yet he was by no means a contemptible opponent.
An Irishman by birth, he entered the priesthood
not long after his advent to America, and by his
abilities he gradually rose until he became, in 1850
the recipient from the Pope's hands of the
archiepiscopal pallium. He signalised his connexion with the
Roman Catholics of the eastern part of the State of
New York, by an attempt to compel the trustees of
all churches to place the titles of the ecclesiastical
poverty in his name. In this endeavour he was unsuccessful.
The trustees in many instances were refractory,
and the alarm of other denominations of
Christians, as well as of mere politicians, at power
that he was gaining, gave rise to agitation, the result
of which was the passage of a law in the legislature of
this State, enjoining that all ecclesiastical property be
held in the names of trustees appointed by the religious
body represented. The opposition of the party
of the Archbishop to this law was persistent, and I
regret to say, that within a few months the statute has
been repealed. - Cor. CHRISTIAN WORK.
NEW YORK, Jan., 1864.