.
He was wont to get quite a large mail from England and America, a large proportion of it from non-Catholics, writers in various social fields, who sought his advice and criticism.
One day holding up a sheaf of such correspondence he remarked in his high-pitch voice: “They said Father Fahey had a bee in his bonnet, but now they are all coming looking for the honey!!” In Church History class he was most interesting. He gave the minimum time to early and long-dead heresies and was much more concerned with the history of the Church in the making, of “the Mystical Body of Christ in the Modern World.” He was labelled “αnтι-ѕємιтє” by those who never tried to understand his careful distinction, who could lay claim neither to his erudition and competency in the subject in question nor to his spontaneous abhorrence of anything that offended against Truth or Charity.
It seems that was about the time that the term "αnтι-ѕємιтє" was first seen in use -- could it be that it was coined because of Fr. Fahey, and then after it seemed to prove useful, its use was later expanded?
Because he did not approve of Article 44 of the Constitution of Eire (1937) he was termed “unpatriotic” by many to whom the traditional Catholic teaching on the relations which should exist between Church and State was a closed book. Pointing out that such a disapproval flows from the principles of Catholic Social teaching as inevitably as water from a fountain, he said, one day with a humorous twinkle in his eye: “The Popes posit the major premise: Article 44 provides the minor premise - and they all jump on me because I draw the conclusion!” The humour in the situation was the humour of the logician.
I might not be quite a "logician" but I get the joke!
However, I might be able to APPRECIATE it better if I were to know what the CONTENT of the
Major,
Minor and
Conclusion were!
As it is, neglecting the specifics,
this is an IN-joke! As an Irish priest, however, he felt very keenly the infidelity to Christ contained in Article 44. It haunted his waking hours and disturbed his brief moments of repose.
Maybe it would be useful for us to have a copy of Article 44 so we can see:
What was so infidelic about it?!
The thought that his beloved Ireland, which had so loyally withstood through tortured centuries every effort to destroy her Faith in Christ, should fail in her official docuмent publicly to acknowledge His Kingship, - that thought, that fact blighted in his eyes all the beauties of nature, robbed the bird’s song of their sweetness and the countryside at large of it colour.
Few, perhaps, took such a serious view of the situation. But then, they were few indeed who were qualified as he to assess the problem at its true worth. For him it was a tragedy. Only on the day of judgement will we know how tragic it was for Ireland.
It probably was of little interest to the Menzingen-denizens!
Oh, right: they didn't exist yet. Sorry.
Like it says, Fr. Fahey was ahead of his time. :wink:
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