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The only revolution that truly counts

  • FATHER GEORGE W. RUTLER

It may be the seasonal heat that incubates revolutionary sentiments, since both Independence Day and Bastille Day occurred in the feverish days of July.


george3One admires the temperance of our Founding Fathers meeting in Philadelphia in un-airconditioned rooms.  The other revolution unleashed more violent passions against a devout monarch who, like Charles I and later Nicholas II, inherited the consequences of less benign forebears.  There were excesses in the American colonies, but pulling down the statue of George III was unlike the French actually beheading their king and queen.

Inasmuch as the "infamy" that excited the tarring and feathering by Americans was a matter of parliamentary representation and taxation, it was genteel compared to the "infâme" in Paris which meant destruction of the Christian social order.  In Philadelphia, no Goddess of Reason was enthroned on the communion table of Christ Church, nor was George Washington drenched in blood when he prayed in Saint Paul's Chapel before his inauguration.  I say this not in a pejorative spirit, for I think many Frenchmen would agree with me, and I have been exhilarated by several Bastille Day celebrations in Paris, with their unsurpassed elegance, albeit absent the concomitant enormities of the Reign of Terror.

What differentiates the two revolutions, is the invocation versus the rejection of God.  In one sense, the American Revolution was not a revolution at all, for it asserted the historic claims of citizens as Englishmen mantled with the protestations of the Magna Carta, which had been neglected by more recent German occupiers of the throne.  My prejudices are compromised by the fact that my French paternal antecedents were compatriots with Rochambeau and Lafayette, and my English maternal ancestors in their Cheshire regiment may even have taken aim at the Massachusetts militiaman who fired the shot heard round the world.

In America, there were fanatics like Sam Adams, whose eponymous beer should be a caution to God-fearing men, and Tom Paine, who disdained religion.  But many more thoughtful American patriots invoked John Locke and, with a few unmeasured exceptions, would have found zealots like the Jacobins ridiculous.

French Revolutionaries tried to substitute the Catholic Church with a mockery of it, rather like what is going on in today's China.  The Constitutional Church would have no pope and its clergy would be compliant state agents, and so forth.  The Devil knows how to choreograph religious anarchy.  Because Washington did not contradict divine order, he did not end up on the chopping block like Robespierre.

All of that pales in comparison with the only revolution that truly counts, for it changed the world permanently: when Christ rose from the dead, he set free vital germs of human rights, social progress, philanthropy, the philosophical matrix for science, universities, the consciousness of a Creator who made the world a channel of grace strengthened by moral order, and, finally — shown by a mercy divine — the prospect of life eternal.

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Acknowledgement

Rutler5smFather George W. Rutler. "The only revolution that truly counts." From the Pastor (July 15, 2018).

Reprinted with permission from Father George W. Rutler.

The Author

witwisdomrFather George W. Rutler is the pastor of St. Michael's church in New York City.  He has written many books, including: The Wit and Wisdom of Father George Rutler, The Stories of Hymns, Hints of Heaven: The Parables of Christ and What They Mean for You, Principalities and Powers: Spiritual Combat 1942-1943, 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 Bestand Adam Danced: The Cross and the Seven Deadly Sins.

Copyright © 2018 Father George W. Rutler