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Modern-Day Knights

  • ELIZABETH LEV

Perhaps it has something to do with the King Arthur stories I read as a child, but I have always been fascinated with knights.


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Supreme Knight
Carl Anderson

The ideal of a noble and virtuous warrior, protective of the weak but deadly to enemies, seemed to be the perfect balance of manly qualities.

Through the years, I learned how faith inspired and upheld such men, whether the Knights of Malta -- hospitalers by day and Mediterranean SWAT team by night -- or the Templars, who had fought and died to protect the Christian faith.

But this week I had the pleasure of meeting modern knights, not armed with swords and shields, but employing the same bravery and virtue as they battle new threats in contemporary arenas. Like their predecessors of old they wear their deep love of the Gospel and their fervent commitment to the magisterium more proudly than any medal-of-honor or badge of distinction.

Last week, the administrative board of the Knights of Columbus came to Rome for a pilgrimage. This turned into a wonderful opportunity to learn more about them and the remarkable work they do.

The Knights of Columbus were founded in 1882 in Connecticut as a fraternal benefit society, intended to provide assistance, as well as life or injury insurance to its members.

In the late 19th century, the immigration boom brought many Catholics to the United States, but while they were readily employed, their jobs were often dangerous and without benefits.

Prejudice against Catholics excluded them from many workmen's associations, leaving families in a precarious position in the New World. It was a small group of laymen, led by a young priest Father Michael J. McGivney, who formed the fraternal organization in the basement of their parish church.

Today the Knights of Columbus still run one of the most highly-rated insurance companies in the world, highly esteemed for both economic success as well as ethical practice. The story of the Knights of Columbus provides an example of the American dream, the combination of enterprising spirit, hard work and success.

These men were from working class backgrounds, and their fine example shows how the Christian virtue of charity ennobles men more than any knighthood based on bloodline.

The Knights took Christopher Columbus to be their patron. One-hundred years ago, before Hollywood and revisionist historians began hacking away at his reputation, Columbus, a devout Catholic and an Italian immigrant to Spain, was revered as a hero for his brave and determined search for the New World.

In choosing Columbus, the Knights emphasized how much Catholics had contributed to the creation of this great nation. These men were from working class backgrounds, and their fine example shows how the Christian virtue of charity ennobles men more than any knighthood based on bloodline.

A century later, the Knights are just as chivalrous as ever, helping the weakest and most vulnerable from the poor to the disabled to the unborn.

Supreme Knight Carl Anderson, a professor, author (A Civilization of Love: What Every Catholic Can Do to Transform the World) and member of several Pontifical councils, besides heading this international organization of 1.7 million members, showed the same courage of a warrior taking the battlefield, by publishing an open letter to Senator Joseph Biden, the Democratic vice presidential candidate in the upcoming elections.

Senator Biden, who claims to be a practicing Catholic, defended his pro-abortion position on American television, citing St. Thomas Aquinas as his theological warrant. Anderson not only exposed Biden's faulty theology, but also firmly returned the focus of the argument back to the life of the unborn child.

Supreme Knight Anderson's championing of the unborn also demonstrated another great chivalric quality: leading by example. Like the greatest of generals, Anderson charged into the thickest fray of the battle heedless of the consequences to himself.

This witness was meant to galvanize the laity, reminding them that we should not be hiding behind the skirts of our bishops but out defending the teaching of the Church in every one of our lives.

Benedict XVI exhorted the Knights during their audience Oct. 3 "to discover, according to the spirit of their founder, the Venerable Michael McGivney, new forms of serving as leaven of the Gospel in the world and a force of renewal for the Church in holiness and pastoral zeal."

Now that's what I call Camelot.

This is Meaghen Gonzalez, Editor of CERC. I hope you appreciated this piece. We curate these articles especially for believers like you.

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Acknowledgement

Elizabeth Lev. "Modern-Day Knights." Zenit (October 9, 2008).

ZENIT is an International News Agency based in Rome whose mission is to provide objective and professional coverage of events, documents and issues emanating from or concerning the Catholic Church for a worldwide audience, especially the media.

Reprinted with permission from Zenit - News from Rome. All rights reserved.

The Author

lev121Elizabeth Lev is an art historian and writer based in Rome, where all of her three children were born. She teaches at Duquesne University's campus there, Pontifical University of the Angelicum, and Christendom College. She is the author of How Catholic Art Saved the Faith: The Triumph of Beauty and Truth in Counter-Reformation Art, The Tigress of Forli: Renaissance Italy's Most Courageous and Notorious Countess, Caterina Riario Sforza de' Medici, Roman Pilgrimage: The Station Churches with George Weigel, and A Body for Glory: Theology of the Body in the Papal Collections with Fr. Jose Granados. She also writes for Inside the Vatican, Aleteia, and Zenit news agency. Visit her website here

Copyright © 2008 Zenit

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