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I Vow to Thee, My CountryFATHER GEORGE W. RUTLERProvidential symmetry sets the plaintive anniversary of September 11, 2001, on a Sunday, which is always a celebration of the Resurrection.
These days pick up the pace from the pleasant torpor of summer, and on this particular day ten years later, we also move on into a new decade to engage a cultural war against the moral offences which have afflicted our time. The Second World War was won by people who knew the difference between good and evil. Things have changed, and there is a lot of ambiguity now about what constitutes integrity and truth itself. Many take the shortcut of denying that we are in a war at all. It was the mistake made by decadents in the 1930's, like the "Cliveden Set," who underestimated the pulsating hatred on the pages of Mein Kampf. Christian civilization is again under attack, and little resistance is shown by a society of indolence, promiscuity, infanticide, eugenics, extravagant debt, crime, collapsed family life, and marriage so surrealistically redefined by Gnostics that 44% of Americans between the ages of 18 and 29 think that matrimony is becoming obsolete. The battle of good against evil will not be won by a culture of narcissists led by leaders chosen because they make people feel good instead of being good. Christians do not confuse optimism and hope. They do not optimistically think that "wishing will make it so." They hopefully trust in God, who "made us to know Him, to love Him, and to serve Him in this world, and to be happy with Him forever in heaven." So today we sing a grand hymn by Cecil Spring-Rice, "I Vow to Thee, My Country." He wrote the first version as a diplomat in Stockholm in 1908. At the end of his career as British ambassador to Washington in 1918, Spring-Rice altered its bluster after the traumatic carnage of the First World War. It is set to the magnificent melody of Gustav Holst from the "Jupiter" section of The Planets, which sustains even the lame poesie of more recent alternative lyrics preferred by insensitive taste. Spring-Rice gave the strong chords for the moment, paraphrasing in cadence Proverbs 3:17:
The middle verse – played here and shown above – has
been classed as inappropriate and is almost never used today
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Father George William Rutler. "I Vow to Thee, My Country." From the Pastor (September 11, 2011). Reprinted with permission of Father George W. Rutler. THE AUTHOR
Since 1988 his weekly television program has been broadcast worldwide on EWTN. Father Rutler has published 17 books, including: Cloud of Witnesses - Dead People I Knew When They Were Alive, Coincidentally: Unserious Reflections on Trivial Connections, A Crisis of Saints: Essays on People and Principles, Brightest and Best, Saint John Vianney: The Cure D'Ars Today, Crisis in Culture, and Adam Danced: The Cross and the Seven Deadly Sins. Copyright © 2011 Father George W. Rutler |
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Not all articles published on CERC are the objects of official Church teaching, but these are supplied to provide supplementary information. |