“Thou didst hear his words out of the midst of the fire” (Deuteronomy 4, 36)
Roberto de Mattei
Corrispondenza Romana
April 17, 2019
Why did
the fire of Notre Dame Cathedral generate such enormous shock all over the
world? Because apart from the intrinsic value of the monument, Notre Dame is a
symbol. It was written everywhere: a symbol of Christianity, a symbol of
Western conscience, a symbol of a collective cultural patrimony, a symbol of
European identity, a symbol of French national history.
We live
in a world that has lost the value of logic, but the power of symbols is still
extraordinary, given that symbols are used by the mass-media system to create
emotional-reactions, often replacing the role of reason. There are in fact two
ways of arriving at the truth: one through reason, the other through symbols.
But the two ways are complementary, not alternative. Jesus, for example, uses
the language of symbols, but also convincing logic. Rational language is
founded on the principal of non-contradiction, whereas symbolic language is
based on images and visible signs referring to an invisible reality. A symbol
renders immediately comprehensible that which is veiled to the eyes of reason.
Logic helps to decipher the language of symbols. Everything our senses
experience has a significance and leads to the invisible, of which it is a
reflex and imitation.
In the
case of the Notre Dame fire, everyone perceived the symbolic value of the
wounded cathedral, but few have sought to understand the symbolic significance
of what happened. Notre Dame, like all cathedrals, represents the Catholic
Church in its architectural impetus towards Heaven. How not to see in the smoke
and flames that enveloped it on April 15th, the image of the smoke
and flames enveloping the Church of Christ? As far back as 1972, Paul VI spoke
of the “smoke of Satan” penetrating the Temple of God. This smoke today is the
result of a fire that ravaged the
Church, until it carbonized the very top. Might it not be possible to see in the
collapse of the fleche - Notre Dame’s
tall spire - the fall of the pinnacle of the Church?
At this time, another symbolic image overlaps that of the Notre Dame blaze: a scene
with Pope Francis, Vicar of Christ, kissing the feet of three Sudanese Muslim
leaders, asking them “to extinguish the fires of war once and for all.” This
happened on April 11th at the end of a spiritual retreat in the Vatican,
conceived by the (schismatic) Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby.
Immediately afterwards, on the first day of Holy Week, the French cathedral –
the most famous and most visited in the world after St. Peter’s – was consumed
by flames.
In the
world of those faithful to Tradition, there is an ongoing discussion, at times heated
[in the attempt] to establish whether this or that verbal expression by Pope
Francis can be considered heretical. But this theological and canonical
investigation risks staying abstract and ignoring the language of gestures,
which expresses in a direct manner a reality that every baptized person who has
kept his sensus fidei can easily
discern. Well then, rarely has the Church been humiliated by gestures like the
one made by Pope Francis prostrated at the feet of political and other
religious leaders. Francis is in fact, the Vicar on Earth of the King of Kings,
to Whom everyone owes homage. There can never be any true peace outside the
Truth proclaimed by He Who is the only Prince of Peace. His dominion embraces
all men, as Pope Pius XI reminds us of in his encyclical Quas Primas, of December 11th 1925, citing the words of
his predecessor Leo XIII:
“The empire of Christ
extends not only over Catholic nations and those who, having been duly washed
in the waters of holy baptism, belong of right to the Church, although
erroneous opinions keep them astray, or dissent from her teaching cuts them off
from her care; it comprises also all those who are deprived of the Christian
faith, so that the whole human race is most truly under the power of Jesus
Christ(Enc. Annum Sacrum, del 25 May 1899.
Pius XI adds: “If the
kingdom of Christ, then, receives, as it should, all nations under its way,
there seems no reason why should we despair of seeing that peace which the King
of Peace came to bring on earth - He who came to reconcile all things, who came not to be ministered unto but to
minister?”
On April 11th Jesus Christ was
humiliated by His Vicar, with an act just as symbolic as the fire on April 15th.
In the tragedy of the blaze, Divine
Providence did not allow the Holy Crown of Thorns to be destroyed, redeemed at
great cost by St. Louis, who in 1239, wearing only a linen tunic, and barefoot,
welcomed it to Paris and carried it in procession. To safeguard this relic the
Sovereign commissioned the building of Sainte Chapelle, an
outstanding jewel of Gothic art. We must
be grateful to the firefighter’s Chaplain, Father Fournier, who, defying
danger, managed to save the Holy Species and the Crown of Thorns.*
Jesus,
after being scourged, insulted and besmirched with spit, was forced to wear a
purple garment; a crown of thorns was thrust on His head, and, in His right
hand, in the place of a scepter, a cane, to signify that His was a sham
Kingdom. Then His executioners knelt in
front of Him and adored Him in mockery, saying Ave Rex Judaeorum (Mt 27,
28-29). The Lord then came out in plain
sight of everyone, dressed in purple, crowned with thorns: portans coronam spineam et purpureum vestimentum (John 19, 5) and Pilate showed Him to the
people, with the words: Ecce Homo:
Behold the Man. The Prefect of the Praetorium, spoke unknowingly through the
mouth of the Holy Spirit, Who was saying: He appears to be merely a Man, but He
is the Son of God, the Messiah, promised by the law, the King of men and
Angels, the Saviour of the human race.
In the
same way, in this age of Passion we live in, the words Ecce Ecclesia seem to resound: behold the Bride of Christ, the only
depositary of the means of Salvation, the Queen of Peace, the Teacher of men,
the Kingdom, whose keys have been entrusted to Peter. Behold Holy Church,
covered in sores, disfigured, defiled. How is possible that She be treated this
way? Moved by sorrow and indignation, we adore the Church, directing our
veneration in particular to the adorable relic of the Crown of Thorns.
In
medieval cathedrals, like Notre Dame, the demons were represented under the
form of grotesque and deformed sculptures, on the exterior of the church, which
the wicked spirits cannot enter into. When flares of fire inside the temple of
God, replace the pure light of the stained-glass, it means that hell has
entered. “The Fires of Hell in Notre Dame”, was a headline on the front page of
the German newspaper Bild of April 16th.
The words of
St. Louis Maria Grignion de Montfort, in the entreaty of his Inflamed Prayer, resound prophetically. “Fire!
Fire! Fire! Help! Help! Help! There is fire in the house of God! There is fire
in souls! There is fire even in the sanctuary!”
But just as vibrantly the Saint’s final invocation resounds in our
hearts, on this Easter Eve: “Exsurge, Domine, quare abdormis? Rise Lord!
Why are you pretending to sleep? Rise with all Your omnipotence, mercy and
justice. Form a company of bodyguards chosen to protect Your House, defend Your
Glory and save souls, so that there is only one sheepfold and one Shepherd, and
all may glorify You in Your Temple. Et
in templo ejus omnes dicent gloriam. Amen.”
Translation:
Contributor Francesca Romana
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