From Crisis:
First, and most importantly, this renaissance is manifesting itself among the faithful—especially the young. They have witnessed Recreational Catholicism and find it like feasting on sawdust. Many of them have awakened and are discovering the riches of the Faith in classic theology and philosophy once thought to be safely buried by elite mandarins of Modernism. They are thrilling to such old authors as Fathers Garrigou-Lagrange and Ambroise Gardeil, Msgr. Ronald Knox and Fr. Gerald Vann, Fathers Basil Maturin and Edward Leen. To say nothing of Lewis, Chesterton, Pieper, Daniel-Rops, Gilson, and Maritain. Add to these Msgr. Robert Benson, Fr. C.C. Martindale, and Hilaire Belloc.
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This high-powered group of young Catholics is impassioned with an electrifying love of the Old Faith, and they are aborning a renaissance before our very eyes. Coming from their numbers are priests. Scores and scores of them. Many are entering the Traditional orders of the Fraternity of St. Peter or Institute of Christ the King. Both seminaries are at their maximum capacity, training young men in the fashion of the seminaries from the Council of Trent to 1965.
Catholics owe it to themselves to visit these impressive battlegrounds of sanctity and learning. Their superiors appreciate that they are sending newly anointed priests as sheep in the midst of wolves. To that end, their training has the feel of Parris Island, with order and discipline sitting upon the crown of their ascetical/theological/philosophical formation like jewels set in a golden diadem. After eight years of this blessed rigor, they are launched, in the words of Henri Daniel-Rops, to bring to the world and the Church “a revolution of the Cross.” (Read more.)
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