"in
those days there was no king in Israel; everyone did what was right in their
own sight."
By Fr. Tim Henderson: It must have been very difficult for St. Robert
Bellarmine to be the rock solid man that he was. He defended the Church against the Protestant
Rebellion when the Protestants could level credible Charges against the priests
and bishops of the day. Luther and his
theology of corruption must have been difficult for Cardinal Bellarmine to
refute when the bishops and priests of the Luther’s day were pretty corrupt,
and the Church was only then beginning to come out of its malaise.
Then there is
the other side of this: the Church was coming down pretty hard on just about
anyone who had a thought that was different from what she was teaching at the
time. Galileo Galilei is a much
celebrated case, but the Truth is that Cardinal Bellarmine had long since
exonerated Galileo Galilei of any wrong doing, much to the surprise of the
people trying Galileo in the Ecclesiastical courts.
One of the
secondary infections of the Protestant Rebellion was that anyone could believe
what they wanted… and did. The Church began
its slow and painful disintegration that continues to this day.
St. Paul tells
us it was occurring in his day, ‘First of
all, I hear that when you meet as a Church there are divisions among you, and
to a degree I believe it; there have to be factions among you in order that
also those who are approved among you may become known. When you meet in one
place, then, it is not to eat the Lord's supper, for in eating, each one goes
ahead with his own supper it is.’
St. Paul is complaining about a surface, superficial unity, as was
occurring during the Protestant Rebellion, as was occurring at the end of the
Book of Judges, when the writer tells us, ‘in
those days there was no king in Israel; everyone did what was right in their
own sight.’ Surface, superficial
unity. It occurs to this day…
In the day of
St. Robert Bellarmine, people were trying to pull the Church right or left or
up or down. St. Robert Bellarmine and
men like him, like Pius V, kept it on the straight and narrow, and kept Holy Mother Church from imploding completely.
How? Because they preached Truth.
Sure people did not like it and people stepped away from the
Church. One cannot stop that. But St. Robert Bellarmine spoke the Truth
gently and let the chips fall where they may, as Christ Himself did, as the
Venerable Pope Paul VI did, as this Church has need to do.
Unity based on
superficial things will fail; unity based on falsehood and sin will fail. History has shown us this; Salvation History
has shown us this. In the example of St.
Robert Bellarmine, we see how we as a Church have need to proceed… St. Robert
Bellarmine was not afraid of Truth, and that was ultimately what saved Galileo
from being invited to a barbeque when he was tried in ecclesiastical court
later on, but St. Robert Bellarmine also stood strong with the Truth, and did
not live the lie that everybody’s private version of the truth was okay. He upheld that there is a capital ‘T’ Truth
and stood for nothing less.