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Dominicans and the Printed Word
An Address by the Most Reverend Father Stanislaus Martin Gillet, Master General of the Order of Preachers
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 October 2024
Extract
It has become a commonplace to repeat what has been so often said of St. Paul, that had he lived in our day he would have been a journalist. And had St. Dominic been living in our own times instead of in the 13th century, what would he have done? I believe that, for reasons similar to those which moved him to found his Order, he would not have changed any essential point of its Constitutions; but, because of the spirit which quickens them, essentially an apostolic spirit, he would have required his Order to make use of the Press as one of the most efficacious means of its apostolate. These are the two points that I shall endeavour to develop briefly, before referring to what the Order of St. Dominic has actually accomplished in the domain of the Press in order to remain faithful to the apostolic spirit of its Founder.
Why did St. Dominic found the Order of Preachers? For a simple answer to this question it suffices to recall in a few words the religious condition of society as it was then, at the beginning of the 13th century. Admittedly that century was one of faith; historical witness of every kind which has come down from those times will not allow us to think otherwise. But at the beginning of that same century the Faith throughout Europe was exposed to great danger, from two sources, firstly, because of the ignorance of religion prevalent among the faithful themselves, and then because of the spread of certain heresies fostered by this very ignorance.
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- Copyright © 1937 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers
Footnotes
This Address was delivered by his Paternity to the International Congress of Tertiaries of the Order during their visit to the Catholic Press Exhibition on May 6th 1937, when they were gathered in Rome for the reopening of Santa Sabina.