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Author Topic: Lord of the World by Mgr. Hugh Benson  (Read 647 times)

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Offline PatrickG

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Lord of the World by Mgr. Hugh Benson
« on: June 14, 2013, 03:36:58 PM »
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  • http://www.authorama.com/lord-of-the-world-1.html
    This, written in 1907, is an excellent Catholic novel. It is the best and the only accurate portrait of the state of the world to which, God forbid, we are rapidly making strides towards.  It depicts ‘a future world in which humanism and subjectivist attitudes have triumphed and the Catholic Church has been reduced to a fugitive few’.

    Old-fashioned is good, modern is suicidal.
    - Bishop Richard N. Williamson.


    Offline PerEvangelicaDicta

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    Lord of the World by Mgr. Hugh Benson
    « Reply #1 on: June 14, 2013, 04:51:08 PM »
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  • This is such a coincidence!  A very dear trad catholic friend gave us a copy recently.  I was just looking at the book last night, anxious to begin reading it.  I believe the publisher was "Restoration Classics"?   Pardon my faulty memory - we're in the middle of moving and it is packed, so I cannot reference it to ascertain.

    Thank you PatrickG.


    Offline clare

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    Lord of the World by Mgr. Hugh Benson
    « Reply #2 on: June 15, 2013, 04:45:34 PM »
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  • The Dawn of All by Msgr Robert Hugh Benson

    Quote
    PREFACE

    IN a former book, called Lord of the World, I attempted to sketch the kind of developments a hundred years hence which, I thought, might reasonably be expected if the present lines of what is called "modern thought" were only prolonged far enough; and I was informed repeatedly that the effect of the book was exceedingly depressing and discouraging to optimistic Christians. In the present book I am attempting—also in parable form—not in the least to withdraw anything that I said in the former, but to follow up the other lines instead, and to sketch—again in parable—the kind of developments, about sixty years hence which, I think, may reasonably be expected should the opposite process begin, and ancient thought (which has stood the test of centuries, and is, in a very remarkable manner, being "rediscovered" by persons even more modern than modernists) be prolonged instead. We are told occasionally by moralists that we live in very critical times, by which they mean that they are not sure whether their own side will win or not. In that sense no times can ever be critical to Catholics, since Catholics are never in any kind of doubt as to whether or no their side will win. But from another point of view every period is a critical period, since every period has within itself the conflict of two irreconcilable forces. It has been for the sake of tracing out the kind of effects that, it seemed to me, each side would experience in turn, should the other, at any rate for a while, become dominant, that I have written these two books.

    Finally if I may be allowed, I should wish to draw attention to my endeavours to treat of the subject of "religious persecution," since I strongly believe that in some such theory is to be found the explanation of such phenomena as those of Mary Tudor's reign in England, and of the Spanish Inquisition. In practically every such case, I think, it was the State and not the Church which was responsible for so unhappy a policy; and that the policy was directed not against unorthodoxy, as such, but against an unorthodoxy which, under the circuмstances of those days, was thought to threaten the civil stability of society in general, and which was punished as amounting to treasonable, rather than to heretical, opinions.

    ROBERT HUGH BENSON.

    ROME Lent 1911