On this date in 1844, Isaac Hecker, the future
founder of the Paulist Fathers, was received into the Roman Catholic Church,
being baptized at the Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York by Bishop John
McCloskey (later Archbishop of New York and the first American Cardinal).
According to an account he wrote of his early life
in 1858: “The Catholic Church burst upon my vision as the object to which all
my efforts had been unintentionally directed. It was not a change, but a sudden
realization of all that had hitherto obscurely captivated my mind, and secretly
attracted my heart.” In thus describing his spiritual quest, Hecker evidently
wanted to emphasize what would become his lifelong conviction that Catholicism
was consistent with and in fact the fulfillment of the aspirations of human
nature – a 19th-century version of the famous theme of St. Augustine’s
Confessions: You have made us for
yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.
In his early twenties, Hecker had examined the
principal Protestant sects, sampling as many as possible of the leading contemporary
religious ideas. Then as now, religion in the United States was a diverse
marketplace in which individuals could choose the religions that suited them.
Historically, there has always been a considerable amount of movement by
Americans from one religious group to another. Even today, according to The Pew
Forum on Religion and Public Life, more than one-in-four U.S. adults (28%) have
changed their religious affiliation from that in which they were raised.
Confident that “it is not reasonable to suppose
that [God] would implant in the soul such an ardent thirst for truth and not
reveal it,” Hecker continued his search for the truth until he found it in the
Catholic Church, “the place,” as he put it, “where it is supposed among
Protestants the least to exist.
Along the way, his searching had taken him to a
transcendentalist, utopian community near Boston. New England Transcendentalism
had its roots in the Unitarian rejection of classical Calvinist doctrine. Yet,
while benefiting from an environment that encouraged him to value and explore
his inner life, Hecker’s search led
to conclusions quite different from what the Transcendentalists believed. As he came to understand his inner spiritual
experience in terms of the action of the Holy Spirit, he found himself more and
more drawn to institutional Christianity. He studied the Catechism of the Council of Trent and was especially impressed by
Article IX, on the doctrine of the communion of saints. Writing in the Paulist
magazine The Catholic World, in 1887,
one year before his death, he recalled: “When, in 1843, I first read in the
catechism of the Council of Trent the doctrine of the communion of saints, it
went right home. It alone was to me a heavier weight on the Catholic side of
the scales than the best historical argument which could be presented.”
Reflecting
upon his experience years later, Hecker wrote: “An act of entire faith in the
personal guidance of the Holy Spirit, and complete confidence in its action in
all things – in its infinite love, wisdom, power; that it is under its
influence and promptings up to now my life has been led. Though not clearly
seen or known, He has directed every step. On this faith, on this principle,
promised to act now and in time to come. To be above fear, doubt, hesitation,
or timidity, but patient, obedient, and stable.”
The
very personal story of his spiritual search, of his intense attention to his
own inner spiritual sense, certainly speak to the spiritual longings of our own
spiritually hungry century, with its legions of souls claiming to be “spiritual
but not religious.” Hecker too was “spiritual but not religious” for much of
the first 25 years of his life. But he did not remain that way. Hecker
understood in the 19th century something many in the 21st century may find
harder to grasp - that “Joining a tradition doesn’t mean suppressing your
individuality. Applying an ancient tradition to a new situation is a creative,
stimulating and empowering act. Without a tradition, everything is impermanence
and flux.” [David Brooks, New York Times,
February 3, 2012].
Henceforth,
he would devote himself to helping others – especially other seekers, as he
himself had been – to find the truth in the Church. He would truly become, as
Edward Cardinal Egan of New York wrote in 2006, “a man of the Church.”
I have a great devotion to Isaac Hecker. Perhaps it is because this cradle Catholic departed for quite a long time... but my searching and seeking found me back in the Catholic church. My own SBNR journey took its appropriate turns I suppose!
ReplyDeleteA weekend at St. Mary's on the Lake in 2009 provided me with a bookmark with two Hecker quotes on it, one on each side. I have it in my morning prayer book and read it every day. Hecker always offers me hope.