Francis Patrick was sent by his uncle to a good classical school,
and at the age of eighteen was selected as one of those who were to
go to Rome to study for the priesthood. Here he became deeply
impressed with the gentle bearing of Pius VII, who had just then
been restored to his capital after long imprisonment by Napoleon
Bonaparte, and the lesson it taught him bore fruit many years
afterwards when he was called on to deal with the onslaughts on
Catholics and their Church in the United States in the years of the
Nativist and Know-nothing uprisings. His progress in his clerical
studies was rapid, his sanctity conspicuous -- so much so as to
mark him out for early distinction. He confined himself to the
study of his class-books, lectures, and the study of the
Scriptures, and worked out in his own mind not a few weighty
problems. He soon acquired a familiarity with the patristic
writings and the Sacred Text that enabled him later on to give the
Church in the United States valuable treatises on theological and
Biblical literature. He consulted no translations, but took the
Hebrew text or the Greek, and pondered on its significance in the
light of his own reason and erudition. The rector of Propaganda
College Cardinal Litta, had no hesitation in selecting him despite
his youth, when a call came from Bishop Flaget for priests for the
American field. He was chosen for the chair of theology at
Bardstown Seminary, Kentucky. This post he held for nine years at
the same time teaching Greek and history in the College of St.
Joseph in the same state, and giving in addition professorial help
in every educational institution in the state. He also did much
valuable work in the missionary field, and engaged in controversy
in the public press with some aggressive polemists of the Episcopal
and Presbyterian communions. He made many converts at that time,
and in 1826-7 had fifty to his credit, as well as a record of
twelve hundred confirmations and six thousand communicants. His
fame as a preacher was widespread, and his manner most winning.
In 1829 he attended the Provincial Council of Baltimore as
theologian to Bishop Flaget, and was appointed secretary to the
assembly. There, among the other weighty subjects, had to be
considered the distracted state of the Diocese of Philadelphia,
then labouring under the troubles begotten of the Hogan schism.
Hogan was an excommunicated priest, who persisted in celebrating
Mass and administering the sacraments despite the interdict, and
had a considerable following in the city. Bishop Conwell had by
this time become enfeebled and nearly blind, and Rev. William
Matthews of Washington had been appointed vicar-general to assist
him. Before the council rose it had named Father Kenrick as
coadjutor bishop and forwarded the nomination to the Holy See. It
was soon confirmed, Doctor Kenrick's title being Bishop of Arath in
partibus. He was consecrated in Bardstown by Bishop Flaget,
assisted by Bishops England, Conwell, David, and Fenwick, on 6 June
1830, being then only thirty-four years old. A quarrel with the
trustees of St. Mary's broke out immediately on his arrival,
resulting in an interdict being placed upon the church by the new
bishop. This brought the trustees to their senses, and they gave up
the contest for the control of the funds -- the power by means of
which they had been to browbeat the preceding ordinaries. Bishop
Kenrick soon obtained the passage of a law to prevent the
recurrence of such conflicts, by having the bishop's name
substituted for those of the trustees in all bequests for the
Church. His first thought, after this trouble was over, was the
erection of a seminary for the training of young men for the
priesthood, the humble quarters in which he began the experiment
eventually being succeeded by the present seminary of St. Charles
Borromeo at Overbrook.
A terrible outbreak of cholera took
place in Philadelphia soon after the bishop's arrival, and he
gained the gratitude of the authorities and the people at large for
his exertions in the mitigation of the pest. He sent the Sisters of
Charity to attend the stricken, and gave the parochial residence of
St. Augustine's as a temporary hospital; the local priests, at the
same time, went about fearlessly among the stricken, ministering to
their spiritual comforts. For these services he was voted public
thanks by the mayor and councils of the city. To the Sisters of
Charity was tendered a service of plate by the grateful
authorities, but this offer was promptly and politely declined by
those ladies. Soon after this episode Bishop Kenrick set about the
utilization of the press for the spread of Catholic doctrine. He
started the "Catholic Herald" placing the paper under the direction
of the Reverend John Hughes, afterwards Archbishop of New York. He
also began the erection of the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist
to replace St. Mary's, which had been so fruitful a source of
trouble to him and his predecessor. Graver trouble soon started up
in the form of the anti-Catholic Nativist outbreak of 1844. Furious
mobs, maddened by inflammatory harangues about the Bible and the
public schools, started out in Philadelphia, as in Boston and other
cities, to attack churches and convents. They burned St.
Augustine's in Philadelphia and and attacked St. Michael's and St.
John's, but were driven off by the military. They burned many
houses in Kensington, the Catholic district, and killed many
unoffending people, but were dispersed at Iength by the soldiery,
leaving several of their number dead.
Bishop Kenrick, during
this reign of terror, did everything he could to stem the rioting.
He ordered the doors of all the churches to be closed and cessation
of Divine worship as a protest against the supineness of the
authorities, the clergy went about in ordinary civil attire, and
the sacred vessels and vestments were taken from the churches to
places of security with private families. These prudent measures
had the effect of restoring a state of peace to the city. The
Diocese of Philadelphia had earlier included Pittsburg in a large
part of New Jersey, and in 1843 it was divided, the Rev. Michael
O'Connor being consecrated Bishop of Pittsburg in August of that
year by Cardinal Fransoni at St. Agatha's in Rome. This step proved
a great relief to Bishop Kenrick, upon whom the care of his vast
diocese and its arduous visitations at a period of primitive
crudeness in travelling and accommodation, were beginning to leave
a deep mark. In 1845 he visited Rome for the first time since his
consecration and was received most graciously by the pope.
In
August, 1851, Bishop Kenrick was transferred to Baltimore as
successor to Archbishop Eccleston, who had just died. Moreover he
received from the Holy See the dignity of Apostolic delegate, and
in this capacity he convened and presided over the First Plenary
Council of Baltimore in 1852. One of the results of that important
gathering was the establishment of branches of the Society for the
Propagation of the Faith. It was Archbishop Kenrick also who in
1853 introduced the Forty Hours' devotion into the United States.
In 1854 he was called upon by the Holy Father to collect and
forward to him the respective opinions of the American bishops on
the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception. The latter part of the
same year found him back in Rome as a participant in the ceremonies
attendant on the proclamation of that dogma.
A fresh outbreak
of anti-Catholic fury took place soon after the archbishop's
return, occasioned by the arrival of Monsignor Bedini as papal
nuncio, and the inflammatory and Iying speeches of the ex-priest
Alessandro Gavazzi, on the nuncio's action while in Bologna during
the rising against Austria. Many churches and convents were burned
as in the previous outbreak, and many lives were lost in New
England and Kentucky, in Cincinnati and other cities. But no
religious disturbances occurred in Maryland to perturb the
archhishop's closing years. The Civil War, however, soon came to
rend his heart, and he died on the morning after the battle of
Gettysburg (8 July, 1863), his end being hastened, it was believed,
by rumours of the terrible slaughter that went on not far from his
residence. When Bishop Kenrick went to Philadelphia in 1830 there
were only four churches in the city and one in the suburbs, and ten
priests, when he left at in 1857, the diocese contained 94 churches
and many religious institutions, and was the home of 101 priests
and 46 seminarians, besides numerous religious orders. The chief
literary works of Archbishop Kenrick were a new translation of the
Bible, with a commentary; a "Moral and Dogmatic Theology"; a
"Commentary on the Book of Job", "The Primacy of Peter", and
letters to the Protestant bishops of the United States on Christian
unity.
Information Givin From Michael McGee III- THis Goes
Out to all STGC students!!!! Yessard- says cristian green
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