-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.catholicism.org/pages/mission.htm
<A HREF="http://www.catholicism.org/pages/mission.htm">SBC - Mission and
History</A>
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Well, gee whiz, I guess if'n ya ain't Catholic ya ain't . . .
Om
K
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Mission


Saint Benedict Center is a Catholic crusade which is dedicated to a
twofold purpose: (1) The propagation and defense of the Catholic
Church's unchangeable dogma, extra ecclesiam nulla salus (outside the
Church, there is no salvation); and (2) the conversion of the United
States of America to the Roman Catholic Faith. The Center's religious
brothers and sisters (The Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary) work
to meet these goals by a multifaceted apostolate of prayer, publishing,
study, instruction, and active missionary work while living a life
consecrated to God in the vows of religion. Third Order Members who live
in the lay state participate in our work by prayer, study, letter
writing, recruiting, and other special projects.

The Founder of our crusade was Father Leonard Feeney, M.I.C.M. And the
current Superior is Brother Francis, M.I.C.M.
History

How did Saint Benedict Center begin?


In 1940 a prominent Catholic laywoman, Catherine Goddard Clarke, sought
the permission of the then-Archbishop of Boston, William Cardinal
O'Connell, to establish an educational oasis of Catholic truth close to
the renowned secular universities that dominated the area. The Cardinal
readily agreed to the project, admonishing Mrs. Clarke to "teach the
Faith without compromise." So it was that Saint Benedict Center quietly
came into existence that year at the intersection of Bow and Arrow
Streets in Harvard Square, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

The Center's initial purpose was to provide religious instruction for
the Catholic students of the universities and, in keeping with the
instructions of Cardinal O'Connell, its policy was to teach the
authentic doctrines of the Church through the study of Holy Scripture,
and the writings of the Fathers, Doctors, and Saints of the Church. This
program of studies achieved immediate success, filling the spiritual
vacuum created by an obvious deficiency in the neighboring academic
institutions. The Center was attended in large and growing numbers.

In 1942 the well-known and loved Jesuit priest, Father Leonard Feeney,
became associated with the work of the Center, counseling students,
lecturing, and eventually becoming - by general demand and by
appointment from his superiors in the Society of Jesus and the
Archdiocesan authorities - theSpiritual Director of Saint Benedict
Center. An author and poet in his own right, Father Feeney was hailed by
his Jesuit Provincial as"... the greatest theologian we have in the
United States by far," and he was also acclaimed publicly as "America's
Chesterton." Before long, Father was lecturing on Holy Scripture to a
packed Center every Thursday evening, while Mrs. Clarke enjoyed equal
success with her Monday evening lectures on Church History.

Later in 1942, while on a research fellowship at Harvard University,
Professor Fakhri Maluf of Lebanon visited the Center. Within a short
time, Father Feeney asked Doctor Maluf to begin Tuesday evening lectures
on philosophy and theology. These Tuesday evening lectures by Professor
Maluf (now Brother Francis, MICM) have been presented right up to the
present time.

These three teachers formed a beautiful union which had a balance and
blend that captured and inspired the hearts and minds of those who were
studying their Catholic Faith at the Center. These three teachers were
the founders of the Saint Benedict Center which ultimately took form as
an educational institution devoted entirely to the teaching of the Faith
- and all of its dogmas - without compromise.

What is the Crusade of Saint Benedict Center?


During the years that saw the conclusion of World War II and immediately
thereafter, the influence ofthe Center continued to spread under the
guiding hand of Father Feeney. His powerful messages were attracting not
only students from the local academic institutions, but men and women
from all walks of life. Our hall was packed for all three lectures each
week. Conversions among both young and old increased by the hundreds.
And vocations were plentiful! The Center became distinguished for the
large number of men and women it directed into religious life.

The enthusiasm of those attending lectures at the Center clearly proved
that the Faith is indeed a "sleeping giant" in the United States. We
knew, therefore, that if we could present it to the American people in a
simple, but holy manner - as did Saint Patrick in Ireland, Saint
Augustine of Canterbury in England, and Saint Boniface in Germany - it
would be widely embraced. What a dramatic improvement would then follow
at all levels and in all activities of society! We also knew that we had
already established a pattern and a method which, given enough time,
would make America a Catholic nation. We resolved to make this dream
come true. Out of that initial resolve, and after a new and more urgent
consideration was later added to it, was formed the Crusade of Saint
Benedict Center. That "more urgent consideration" is the vital part of
the answer to the next question.
Who are The Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary? How are they related
to the Crusade of Saint Benedict Center?


During the balance of the 1940s, the growth of the influence of the
Center continued unabated. As was inevitable, however, the simple
Catholic affirmations being taught there began to clash with the
atheistic trends of thought spawned by the universities in the vicinity
- notably Harvard. Students - a number of them from influential families
- began to defend the Faith in their classrooms and protest against
teachings contrary to it. Some, especially those who had converted to
Catholicism through the Center, even went so far as to withdraw from
their respective academic institutions. Predictably, such actions caused
no small upset to both the universities and the families of many of
those students.

Despite the growing opposition and the odds it raised against us, the
Center, now conscious of a mission, gradually became an institute of
studies of intense interest to an ever-increasing number of men and
women who sought to be educated entirely by it. As the students studied
the Catholic Faith more deeply, they began to realize that it was the
displacement of one key dogma that had made possible the rise of
Catholic liberalism. That dogma was "Extra ecclesiam nulla salus" -
"Outside the Church there is no salvation."

So, in September, 1947, the Fall issue of From the Housetops, the
publication of the Center, featured an article by Doctor Maluf entitled
'Sentimental Theology" which stated in part:

...I know I am not wasting punches at a straw man. Sentimental thinking
about religious matters is very much with us today. A great deal of what
is being said by Catholics today sounds in very sharp contrast with the
accent of the authentic voice of the Church, teaching, warning and
defining. The sharp weapons ofChrist are being blunted, and the strong,
virile doctrines of thc Church are being put aside in a conspiracy of
silence.. .The Catholic Church does not proclaim the exclusive salvation
of one race of people, but invites every man to the great joy of being
united with Christ in the communion of Saints. The Catholic truth is not
a sad story for which we need to apologize; it is the proclamation of
the greatest good news that could ever be told. No matter how sternly
its message is phrased, it is still the one and only hope in the world.
Only hope and security can afford to be severe. When we say that outside
of the Church there is no salvation, we are also and at the same time
announcing that inside the Church there is salvation... This is not a
story which can be taught with the subdued and hesitant voice of
sentimental theology.

This and ensuing articles which pinpointed the basic error underlying
the religious liberalism of the day caused a considerable stir. In the
distance, the storm clouds were beginning to gather.

The following month, October, 1947, Archbishop (later Cardinal) Richard
J. Cushing of Boston, who himself had contributed two articles to the
"Housetops," made an official visit to the Center, on which occasion he
addressed a packed house, lavishing praise on the work of Father Feeney
and his associates. Citing the many conversions and, even more, the many
religious vocations credited to Saint Benedict Center, the Archbishop
declared no less than five times that the Center had the official
sanction and gratitude of the Archdiocese. But plans were being made to
change his mind for him.

Throughout the following year, 1948, opposition to the Center continued
to grow and become more vocal. As Father Denis Fahey had put it: "Satan
wants men to forget that there is one true religion." Pressure was put
on the Jesuits, therefore, to transfer Father Feeney out of the
Archdiocese of Boston; pressure was put on the Archdiocese to stop the
provocation of Harvard; and pressure was put on three professors at
Boston College who were members of the Center to give up both the
Church's doctrine on salvation and their support of Father Feeney in
upholding it. Then suddenly, to our great dismay, we found in league
with the opposition those whose office and duty it was to protect us -
Archbishop Cushing and his then-auxiliary Bishop John Wright (later
Cardinal Wright, Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy, now
deceased).

It was in this climate of increasing persecution that Saint Benedict
Center became a new religious congregation in the Church. Sister
Catherine described our feelings in these words:

"We were beginning to realize the character of the battle before us, not
only for the preservation of the sacred dogmas of the Church, but
actually for their restoration. It was to prepare ourselves by prayer
and discipline, and to secure graces enough to enable us to face such a
battle, that we became a religious order." (Gate of Heaven.)

The date of this important development was January 17, 1949. We took as
our name "The Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary" (Mancipia
Immaculati Cordis Mariae). All of us - and at that time, with the
exception of Father Feeney, we were all lay members of the Center - all
of us bound ourselves by a vow to a crusade to preserve and defend - and
where necessary, restore - all of the truths of our Holy Faith, especi
ally those which were most unpopular.

It should be clear, then, that The Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of
Mary and the Crusade of Saint Benedict Center are one and the same
thing. To be a Crusade is the principal reason for the existence of the
Order.

That "more urgent consideration" which prompted our formation was the
by-now-firm conviction that the key dogma of the Church - Extra
ecclesiam nulla salus - was being deliberately suppressed by liberal
modernist heretics within the Church.
What is the present status of Saint Benedict Center? Why a new location
in New Hampshire?


After the Modernist Mafia in the Church had thoroughly humiliated Father
Feeney by their disgraceful abuse of authority, Saint Benedict Center in
Cambridge was isolated. The world and the Church treated us like a
colony of lepers. There was not a bishop or priest anywhere who had
courage enough to come to our defense publicly, lest he too be tarred
with the same brush.

So, we prayed, and we worked, and we studied. We preached to thousands
on Boston Common every Sunday. We published instructional books,
pamphlets and periodicals about the Faith which we carried on foot to
every corner of this nation and sold in order to support ourselves.

In 1958, we left Cambridge and moved to Still River in the Town of
Harvard, Massachusetts, about forty miles west of Boston. Sister
Catherine died in 1968, and God called the aged and saintly Father
Leonard Feeney to Himself in 1978.

Where once there was one religious Order, bound by vow to the Crusade,
there are now two "camps," as it were. The larger camp consists of the
Brothers and Sisters who, in 1973, were enticed into becoming
Benedictines, taking most of the real property and buildings with them
into the Benedictine Order.

The smaller camp is made up of the Brothers and Sisters who did not
become Benedictines. Our group is in this camp, and with us is Brother
Francis, the lone survivor of the three teachers who brought the dogma
Extra ecciesiam nulla salus to the attention of the entire world.

Having been dispossessed of our property in Still River, we have built
new headquarters in Richmond, New Hampshire - a project which has been
our major preoccupation for over two years. Now that the first phase of
this project has been completed, we are anxious to expand the Crusade
dramatically.



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Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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