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The Fruit and the Seed

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2025

Extract

Historically, by far the most interesting thing in the process of the Catholic Church is the embryonic character of every Catholic institution at its origin. In this the Catholic process is exactly consonant with creation.

Most moderns would say that this was true of all human institutions: it is the fashionable tag of the day based on a vague materialism, or Pantheism, and it is entirely wrong. In almost all human institutions except Catholic institutions, the work of man is deliberate, planned, and fails. It does not develop consonantly to its origins: you do not see in its growth the unfolding of a germ. Institutions very often grow up unconsciously from origins which have no sort of resemblance to or communion with their final form: but then their origins are exactly not embryonic. Such developments are but examples of the truth that the human will cannot impose itself upon the world. What is remarkable about Catholic institutions from the smallest to the greatest (until it is at last found to be true of the Church itself) is that the origins are (1) of one essence with the final thing, and yet are (2) simple, i.e. undifferentiated, and (3) apparently insignificant : and in those three lies the true meaning of the word embryonic.

On this account the mind of a wise man will discover in particular Catholic developments, and in that of the whole Church, the same mysterious action of a superior Will as is to be discovered in the development of natural growths in the material creation around us.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1924 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 By Father Bede Jarrett, O.P. (Bums, Oates and Washbourne, 6/-.)