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St. John Nepomucene Neumann

   

 

Born                March 28, 1811 in Prachatitz, Czechoslovakia (Bohemia)

 Died                January 5, 1860, Philadelphia

Canonized        June 19, 1977

Feast Day        January 5

Founded the Third Order of St. Francis of Glen Riddle, a religious order for women. Organized the first diocesan schedule of the Forty Hours' Devotion in the United States. Established the first unified system of Catholic schools under a diocesan board. First American Bishop to be canonized

 
 
     “Give to me holiness and to all the living and the dead, pardon, that some day we may all be together with You, our dearest God!”
                                                                                                                                       St. John Nepomucene Neumann 

      “If you believe yourself called by God, we shall put no obstacle in your way, but you must not take leave of us.” This was the advise that John Neumann’s father gave him as he discerned his vocation.

 

Origins


       John was born on March 28, 1811 in Prachatitz, Bohemia (now Czechoslovakia) in the Austro-Hungarian Empire . He was named after Bohemia’s patron saint and martyr, Saint John Nepomucene. He was the third of six children of Philip and Agnes Neumann, both of whom were faithful Catholics. His father ran a small knitting business. The family spoke German and said daily morning and evening prayers together with the Rosary. His mother attended daily Mass and gave alms of food and clothing to her poorer neighbors. John later imitated her compassion when he saw a poor boy going from door to door with a bag on his back. His heart was touched and he exclaimed, “Oh, if I only had a bag, I would go about begging with the poor boy, and then he would get more!”

 
            When he was three years old, John fell through an open cellar door but landed unharmed fifteen feet below, apparently protected by his Guardian Angel. In his childhood he made a toy altar out of lead, decorated it with candles and flowers and said make-believe Masses for his small friends. He was a quiet and serious boy and enjoyed reading. “My mother,” he said, “used to chide me, and call me book mad, a bibliomaniac.” He was friendly with his parish priest who instructed him in the Catholic faith and introduced him to the natural sciences, particularly botany which remained a life-long hobby.  

 

John served as an altar boy at daily Mass but, in his humility, he thought that the priesthood was beyond his reach. Later in his life he wrote, “I cannot say I felt a decided inclination to the priesthood in my childhood. It is true that I had an altar made of lead and that I served Mass almost every day, but the idea of being a priest was so exalted that it did not seem within my reach.”

                                                                      Vocation

When he was 12, he attended  high school and college in the nearby town of Budwies and boarded with  local families. God didn’t call John to the priesthood with a very loud voice. This is how John described the strange and subtle process of how he discerned his vocation.


          When the time came, at the end of the philosophy course, for me to decide either for theology, or law or medicine, I felt more of an attraction for the last. This was all the more so because, out of eighty or ninety applicants for theology, only twenty were to be accepted. For this, along with the best scholastic transcript, recommendations were also required, and I wanted to have nothing to do with them.

 

In this uncertainty about the choice of a profession, I came home in the autumn vacation of 1831 and found that my father was not against letting me study medicine in Prague, even though the expenses involved were great. My mother was not too happy with this. Even though I pointed out to her that I did not know anyone who would back my request for admission into the institute for the study of theology, nevertheless she thought that I should give it a try. I then wrote a letter of application and sent it to Budweis by a special messenger. . . . Shortly after that I received the letter of acceptance into the Budweis Theological Seminary.

 

From that moment on I never gave another thought to medicine and I also gave up completely the study of physics and astronomy on which I preferred to spend time, and this without any great difficulty.

 

So, on All Saints Day in 1831, John enrolled at the Diocesan Seminary of Budweis when he was 20. His academic record was excellent. While he was there, his missionary zeal was inflamed by reports from the United States from another Austrian, Father Frederic Baraga, who served among the Ottawa and Chippewa Indians in Michigan and Wisconsin. John later wrote, “The letters of Father Baraga and other German missionaries charmed me. One day as [a friend] and I were walking . . . the thought came to us to set out for America as soon after ordination as we should have obtained some practical knowledge of our priestly duties. . . . From that day my resolution was so firm, my desire so lively, that I could think of nothing else.”

 

                                       Seminary Preparation

 

Thereafter, John changed his lifestyle to prepare himself for the American missions. He increased his prayers and fasts, became less social and studied more, particularly languages including Italian, Czech, French and English. He even spent   entire nights outside in the cold air. He decided to learn English and applied and was accepted for the Archiepiscopal Seminary at Prague University where he thought that English was taught. However, when he arrived, he was disappointed to learn that it was not taught there, so John learned it on his own.

 

Moreover, he was disappointed to learn that many of the professors were dissenters from the teachings of the Church who expressed anti-papal views. At that time, the teaching of Prague University was influenced by “Josephinism,” named after Austrian Emperor Joseph II. Josephinism was a movement that was modernist, worldly and anti-papal. Soon John began keeping a spiritual journal that gives us a glimpse of his spiritual journey.

 

He wrote, “ . . . at [that] place I met a great disappointment. . . . Nor was I satisfied with the professors of dogmatic, moral, and pastoral theology. The first was more against the Pope than for him. . . . The second was too philosophical to be understood by his hearers. The third was a thorough Josephinist. I had to do violence to myself even to listen to them, for the absurdity of their treatment of those subjects I fully understood; much less could I accept their opinions as heterodox. It is a matter of regret that in such institutions so much is done to maintain simply the appearance of learning, instead of diffusing good and useful Catholic knowledge.”

 

It must have been difficult to be an orthodox Catholic among liberal professors but John taught himself and armed himself with 38 volumes of his own extracts from the writings of saints and doctors of the Church and defended the true teachings of the Church and of papal infallibility even before the dogma was proclaimed.

 

John’s greatest disappointment was that he had no spiritual direction, something he expected to find at a supposedly Catholic seminary. In 1834, he began to write in his journal a daily outpouring of his soul to God. "The president's sermon,” he wrote, “ has wounded my heart. I like him now even less than ever. O Jesus, Thou knowest my sad condition. Here I am without a guide, without an adviser. Lord, teach me how to pray that I may obtain what is so necessary for me, a guide in the spiritual life. I have none to console me in my falls, to counsel me in my doubt as to whether I should enter an Order or Congregation where I might live in perfect obedience; none to direct me in my efforts to amend my life, none to point out how I may become more pleasing to Thee. O my Jesus, in my desolation I cry to Thee! Hear my prayer, send me a good confessor!”

 

Apparently no one was sent and John plodded on in spiritual darkness without a guide. It must have been very difficult to preserve his vocation when his teachers and fellow seminarians, affected by the prevalent modernist attitudes, belittled him.

 

He struggled against many temptations in his effort to be perfect as Jesus taught. He wrote, “Give me the graces which will aid me to obtain the perfection which You desire.” His prayer was answered and Jesus granted him the grace to overcome his final temptation before coming to America. Just before his graduation from the seminary, John was urged by governmental and seminary officials to accept a prestigious position as secretary to a governmental agency because of his knowledge of languages. Much to their chagrin, he declined the offer with the explanation that he intended to devote his life as a missionary to America. If he had accepted the offer, America probably would have lost a saint.

 

After his graduation, John suffered from further disappointments. He learned that his closest friend suddenly changed his mind and decided not to accompany him to America. Then, through some confusion, he learned that the money that he expected to receive for his journey was not available. Then he learned that because there was an over-abundance of priests in his diocese, the Bishop had postponed all ordinations in Budweis indefinitely. Moreover, the Bishop would not release John to another diocese. Now John had to decide whether to go to America or not, in spite of his lack of ordination and release and, if so, should he tell his parents?

 

This was a very painful decision to make. He wrote, “While pondering last evening on my resolution, separation from home appeared to me so bitter that I burst into tears. My Jesus, if it be Thy will, increase my sufferings, but hear my prayers! Let my resolve be put into execution. With no other guide than Thyself, O Lord, I stand on the outskirts of an immense region full of dangers and difficulties. The final step once taken, there will be no looking back. No fond parents, no devoted brother and sisters, no kind of friends will greet my landing on those far-off shores. I shall meet none but strangers. There, indeed, I shall find unbelievers who scoff at Thee, my Jesus, but many souls also hunger to know Thy Word, O most merciful Savior!”

 

He decided to apply to become a priest of the Diocese of Philadelphia and that he would sacrifice the consolation of saying his first Mass with them and giving them his priestly blessing. When he finally told them of his plans, his parents and sisters were very sad and tried to dissuade him from leaving them. But since he hadn’t received an answer from Philadelphia Bishop Kendrick and his own Bishop would neither ordain him nor release him from his diocese. John could do nothing but wait.

 

Finally, a local priest who knew of the need of German-speaking priests in the United States, advised him to go there and hope to be ordained there. So, with great courage, but without ordination or release from his Bishop, John abandoned himself to Divine Providence and left for America on February 8, 1836. He only told a sister that he was leaving and left a letter for his parents. This must have pained John and his family very much, even though John had literally followed his father’s instructions. He had said, “If you believe yourself called by God, we shall put no obstacle in your way, but you must not take leave of us.” So he didn’t and he left for America with about $40 in his pockets without knowing if or when he would become a priest or where he would undertake his missionary service.

 

The Journey to America

 

For the next two months, John traveled west to France, often of foot, waiting to receive a commitment from the United States. The trip across Europe brought more disappointments. He was mis-informed and told that the Bishop of Philadelphia no longer needed German priests. But John courageously walked on, probably asking himself, “Will I ever get to America? Will I ever be ordained? Who will ordain me? Where will I serve? Will my mother ever forgive me for not saying goodbye?” Finally, with just enough money to buy passage, John boarded the ship Europa at Le Havre, France. For ten days he had to live uncomfortably on the ship in the harbor while the captain tried to fill it with passengers.

 

On April 20, 1836, the ship set sail for New York. It had no comforts for its passengers. John had to supply his own food for the voyage and a pot to cook it in. He purchased a straw mattress on which to sleep on deck and suffered from seasickness for the first three days. The voyage struggled through a four-day storm, waited out a calm and evaded dangerous icebergs. One day, while John was standing alone on the deck during a storm, he heard an interior voice telling him to move. As he did so, part of a sailing yardarm came crashing down on the very spot where he had stood. Apparently, his Guardian Angel had protected him once again.

 

The voyage lasted 40 days and when the ship arrived outside New York harbor, John and the other 200 passengers were quarantined for another week. Finally, they were permitted ashore at Staten Island, where he boarded a small steamboat and ferried to Lower Manhattan. He was alone in a new and strange world, unfamiliar with the language, in tattered clothes, with one dollar, unexpected and nervously apprehensive about his uncertain future at the age of 25.

 

He wrote in a letter, “It was the Feast of Corpus Christi, about 11:00 o'clock, when I landed in America. You can imagine how I felt. My first care was to find a Catholic church. But, not having brought along any address, I had no hope of finding a priest by asking in an entirely strange land. In spite of a constant downpour, I walked the mile-long streets of the city until evening. I found a number of churches, chapels, etc. but no Catholic church wanted to show itself. I had to put all my philological knowledge together to comprehend the inscriptions on these buildings, many decorated with ideal beauty. . . .Often there was nothing on the church roof; often a weathercock; sometimes a cross, indeed, but over the cross a weathercock. The devil, I thought, may present himself ever so beautifully, but still he must let his cloven foot be seen a little!"

 

The next day, John found his way to the residence of Bishop Dubois. He was now 72 years old and the same Bishop who helped Saints Mother Rose Duchesne and Mother Seton establish their apostolates. He overlooked John’s lack of a release from the Bishop of Budweis and said, “I can and must ordain you quickly, for I need you.”  Bishop Dubois’ diocese covered the entire state of New York and part of New Jersey and he had only 36 priests to serve 200,000 Catholics. He had a great need for German priests because of the language barrier that faced the great influx of German immigrants who settled there. John was so thankful that he promised the Blessed Virgin Mary that he would say a daily Rosary in thanksgiving for the rest of his life.

 

Finally, John felt his years of spiritual darkness vanishing. He wrote, “Thanks, a thousand thanks to Thee, my Jesus, for having prepared a place for me in Thy sanctuary. . . . Doubt and uncertainty have vanished like mist before the rays of the sun.”

 

Ordination

 

 Two weeks later, on the Feast of Saint John the Baptist, John received the diaconate. The following day, June 25, 1836, at the age of 25, Bishop Dubois ordained him to the priesthood. Father John wrote the following prayer in his diary the next day:

 

 O Jesus, You poured out the fullness of your grace over me yesterday. You made me a priest and gave the power to offer You up to God. Ah! God! This is too much for my soul! Angels of God, all you saints of heaven, come down and adore my Jesus, because what my heart says is only the imperfect echo of what Holy Church tells me to say. . . . I will pray to You (O Lord) that You may give to me holiness and to all the living and the dead, pardon, that some day we may all be together with You, our dearest God!

 

Father John celebrated his First Mass that day. He was unable to give his parents his priestly blessing, but he happily gave First Holy Communions to 30 German children whom he had been instructing during the previous two weeks.

 

Three days later, Father John traveled the reverse of the water route that St. Isaac Jogues had made from Auriesville to New York City during his escape from the Mohawk Indians almost 200 years before. He was on his way to Buffalo, New York, by way of the Hudson River north to Albany and from there west to Lake Erie and Buffalo on the Erie Canal, the longest man-made waterway in the world. He traveled by Hudson River steamer, railroad, stagecoach and canal boat and headed for the remote area of the state where an inrush of immigrants had followed the opening of the Erie Canal.

 

The vast “parish” of Buffalo was spread over 900 square miles from Lake Ontario south to Pennsylvania. There was only one priest to serve all off the Catholics scattered throughout this broad frontier area. On the way to Buffalo, Father John stopped at Rochester where he began his priestly ministry. He wrote this prayer in his diary:

 

 My Lord and my God! Have mercy on me and those sheep who, for the time being, have been entrusted to me. Give to my tongue words of life. Purify their hearts and make them heed all sound advice and every admonition. Your grace must do everything because I can do nothing but sin – O Jesus, my Redeemer, I am taking Your place. Let me be a redeemer for this parish!

 

After his first Baptism, Father John wrote, “If the child baptized today dies in the grace of this sacrament, then my journey to America has been repaid a million times, even though I do nothing for the rest of my life.”

 

                                              The Buffalo Frontier

 

Buffalo was a boom city in 1836 and its pastor, Father Pax, gave Father John the choice of serving there or in the outlying settlements. Father John chose to minister in the outlying settlements while his pastor, the only other priest, ministered in the city. Much of the land was only recently cleared of woodland and put into cultivation for the first time. Families were poor and widely scattered and towns were no more than a handful of houses.

 

Father John’s territory covered 900 square miles with four small churches where 400 families worshiped, of whom 300 were German. Father’s fluency in German and French were a great help to the people and he even learned Gaelic. The roads to the people’s cabins and their churches were poor or non-existent and his trips to them by foot or horse took anywhere from two to twelve hours.

 

Some of his parishioners had not received the sacraments for years. Many had lost their faith or joined Protestant churches. Father John keenly desired their salvation. He wrote, “O my Jesus, I, a poor, ignorant young man, have become a shepherd in Thy sheepfold. . . . Grant that not one of those confided to me be lost. . . . Teach me to live, and, if needs be, to die for my people that they all may be saved, that they all may love Thy dear Mother! . . . Mary, thou who art ever victorious over heresies, pray for all who are walking in the paths of accursed error! . . . My Jesus, what shall, I, a poor creature, do to lead many souls -- yea, all souls -- to Thee?”

 

After living with families for two years, Father John moved into a log cabin built for him by the people of North Bush, a settlement near present-day Kenmore, New York. It was a simple structure with two rooms, four chairs and two trunks. He led a severely penitential life. He slept only a couple of hours a night without a fire in the cold, ate simple meals and once went for four weeks on bread alone. He wrote, “"Only a poor priest, one who can endure hardship, can labor here. His duties call him far and near. . . . he leads a wandering life. There is no pleasure, except the care of souls. . . . the Catholic population is continually increasing. . . . many are in extreme poverty. They live in miserable shanties, some with not even a window.”

 

He taught the children the catechism, prayed the Divine Office, celebrated Mass, administered the sacraments, and mediated disputes among parishioners. His fervent prayers for conversions were productive of a rich harvest of souls. His Journal tells of whole families under instruction, either for Baptism or reception into the Church. He said, “The recitation of the Rosary for my stray sheep is always productive of abundant fruit. I will redouble my zeal in this sweet and efficacious devotion.” His fruits were noticed by Bishop Dubois who visited his parish and complemented him on his accomplishments after only one year in ministry.

 

His ministry faced anti-Catholic opposition from Protestant “heretics,” as he termed them. They discriminated against Catholics and allured them with promises of financial security if they renounced their faith. Unfortunately, many left the Church. Father Neumann's heart was pierced with sorrow. He wrote, "Today has been a very painful one for me. I heard of the apostasy of one of my parishioners. My heart is pierced with sorrow . . . . O my Jesus, [for his soul] I will pray, fast, and with the help of Thy grace, sacrifice life itself."

 

Another problem in his ministry was scandal from bad priests. He wrote about them, “Much scandal has been given in these parts by the arrival of unworthy priests who come here merely to lead a reckless life amid the confusion of heresies. . . . That the evils existing among our people are very great is, indeed, only too true. . . . Still, we must allow that apostasy from the Faith, considering the evil influence exercised everywhere by heretics, is not so frequent as one might suppose; nay, the number of those who return to the bosom of the only saving Church balances the loss sustained by such defections. The gain would surely be greater if earnest priests were more numerous.”

 

In 1839, Father John’s brother, Wenzel, came to America to join him as a lay helper. His help was greatly appreciated but it also allowed Father John to increase his labors. He tirelessly traveled his parish in his zeal for the salvation of the souls of his parishioners, walking and riding over muddy and rutty roads, through swamps and uncut forests, by day and by night, in the summer heat and winter cold. On he went from village to village, cabin to cabin, and church to church. On his back he carried an altar stone, vessels, vestments and books.

 

One day, while he made his rounds through the forest, he collapsed in exhaustion at the foot of a tree. He was found by a band of Indians who carried him on a blanket to the nearest homestead. Eventually, his heavy labors exhausted him. He wrote, “I am a strong Bohemian mountain boy. It will not hurt me.” But he was only five feet, two and one-half inches tall, he was not really very strong and his labors did hurt him. Even he final realized this and said, “Father Pax, I must give up; my health is gone."

 

Father John had labored on the Buffalo frontier for four years, but in 1840 he suffered a complete breakdown in health. It took him three months to recover during which he agonized over his vocation. As in the seminary, he still yearned for spiritual advice and companionship. In spite of all his accomplishments, all his prayers and penances, he was convinced that he was but a wretched sinner, isolated and alone without any guidance. He even suffered from temptations of running away. He wrote, “To escape the terrible responsibility resting upon me, I sometimes thought of abandoning my flock, of fleeing to some distant solitude where I might lead a hidden, penitential life. . . .”

 

                                           The Redemptorist Vocation

 

Father John was impressed by the missionary work among the German immigrants of several priests of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer, popularly called the Redemptorists. He came to feel that he might be more effective in nourishing the spiritual life of the people if he were a member of a religious community rather than a lone missionary-pastor.

 

Providentially, Father Joseph Prost, the Superior of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer, wrote Father John a letter at that time. He closed it with the scriptural admonition, Vae soli! (“Woe to him who is alone!”). Father John thought that the only way he could save his soul was to entrust it under perfect obedience to the guidance, care, and protection of a religious order. So he entered the Redemptorists on October 13, 1840, and left Buffalo for Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His brother Wenzel followed him and became a lay brother in the order.

 

Father John wrote to his parents and explained his reasons for joining the Redemptorists. He said, “I think that this is the best thing I can do for the security of my salvation. The constant supervision of religious superiors and the good example of fellow religious spur one to lead a life more pleasing to God than one can lead in the world.” This proved to be only wishful thinking.

 

On January 16, 1842, at the age of 31, Father John was professed as a member of the Redemptorists in Baltimore. He wrote his parents that the “mutual bodily and spiritual help, edification and good example, which one has around him, till his death in such a spiritual society, make my life and my office a great deal easier for me.”

 

On November 30. Father John became the first novice of the newly established American branch of the Redemptorists. He had hoped for a novitiate of peace and quiet consisting of study, spiritual solitude, and spiritual direction. Once again, he was disappointed. The Redemptorists were needed for mission work. Father John’s novice master was sent away to Baltimore and Father John was left alone once again to be his own spiritual director.

 

A Redemptorist chronicler reported, "The first novice of our American Province did not enjoy the advantages found in the regular instruction and careful discipline of a well-regulated novitiate. He was entrusted with duties which usually fell to the charge of a professed religious only; nevertheless he distinguished himself by a faithful observance of rules, unaffected love for the Congregation, and the practice of eminent virtues."

 

Years later Father Neumann commented on his so-called “novitiate” in a letter. "There was no novitiate in America at that time, and no novice master, but an overwhelming amount of work to be dispatched. I daily made two meditations and two examens of conscience with the community, spiritual reading in private, and a visit to the Blessed Sacrament. I also recited the Rosary, and that was all."

 

That was all of his spiritual life, but his active life consisted of the busyness that he had tried to avoid - preaching missions, assisting parish priests, settling disputes, changing residences. When he complained about this to his busy absent novice master, Father Tschenhens, he was firmly told, "You had better return to your former missions, you will never persevere with us."

 

Once again, Father John must have felt that he was a failure when all of his hopeful reasons for joining the Redemptorists were frustrated. But, God gave him a prophetic vision for his future. During his novitiate, Father John told Father Tschenhens about a strange dream that he had. He was in Baltimore and a Bishop was trying to force him to become a Bishop against his will. As the Bishop dragged him to a church for his consecration, he awoke. Father Tschenchens rebuked Father John for entertaining such ambitions.

           

                                       The Baltimore Mission

 

 On January 16, 1842, after a long and arduous “novitiate”, Father John  became the first Redemptorist to make his vows in America at the age of 30. He was first assigned to St. James Parish in Baltimore. His parish work included administering the sacraments, hours in the confessional, visiting the sick, preaching simple but solid sermons, instructing children in the catechism and baptizing converts. Sometimes there were as many as 30 non-Catholics taking instructions in the faith.

 

He also traveled to distant mission posts ministering to the vast numbers of immigrants, who long had been deprived of them in the New World. He commented on the enormity of this task, "The few [priests] we have are sadly out of proportion to the ever-increasing wants of the faithful. There are Catholics who have not been to confession for many years, and there are young people of nineteen or twenty who have nothing of Catholicity about them, saving their baptism and all this from the want of priests. The longer this need continues, the more difficult it will be to reanimate faith and the fear of God."

 

Two other difficulties to reanimate the faith were the secret societies and the Protestant influence. Father John described the first difficulty: "Secret societies have been formed lately among infidels and non-Catholics; for instance, the Freemasons, the Oddfellows, and the Order of Red Men. All assert that the only object of their association is fraternal benevolence and mutual support. But this is merely a specious cloak. The very oath tendered by them, viz., secrecy as to what goes on in their meetings, is a sufficient reason to suspect their intention, and to warn Catholics against communication with them. . . . Under pain of exclusion from the sacraments, the Provincial Council has forbidden Catholics to join such societies. Notwithstanding the prohibition, many have been enticed into them, and the sad consequences are that they have fallen away from the Faith." Father Neumann urged Catholics "from joining secret societies, from too intimate intercourse with heretics, from the reading of Protestant and immoral books, etc." He encouraged them to join new Catholic societies such as the Confraternity of the Rosary and the Confraternity of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.

 

The other difficulty was the Protestant influence. A common practice of poor Catholic parents was to entrust their children to the homes of wealthy Protestants who could provide for their material welfare, since the Catholic parents could not. Father Neumann wrote, “This is a crying evil. American Protestants . . . use every means to check the spread of Catholicism. They receive Catholic children into their homes with the secret intention of destroying their faith. And as they make fair promises, the foolish parents think themselves fortunate in having so well provided for their little ones. They will one day weep over their folly, but then it will be too late!"  His proposed remedy was to entrust the care of these children to Catholic institutions and religious orders.

 

Father John spent about two years in Baltimore working in the main parish and riding the circuit throughout the countryside and ministering to the German families, organizing them if possible into parishes. Then, in March of 1844, he was assigned his first pastorship of St. Philomena’s in Pittsburgh.

 

                                                The Pittsburg Mission

 

St. Philomena’s was a nearly completed new church and Father Neumann’s first job was to finish the church and pay for it. It was a poor parish but his parishioner’s contributed five cents a week towards the building fund to finish the construction of their church in 1846. Bishop O’Connor remarked years later that Father Neumann “built a church without any money.”

 

In addition to his pastoral and missionary work, Father John stayed up late at night praying and writing catechisms and notes for a Bible history. Eventually, he got sick again and was ordered to leave Pittsburg for Baltimore to rest. The rest was a short one. At the end of two weeks, on February 9, 1847, Father John was named Vice-Regent of the American Redemptorists. . He was 35 years old, younger than many of the priests under him. He was responsible for the administration of ten Redemptorist houses and over 70 missions.

 

                                           Redemptorist Superior

 

This appointment stunned and terrified the humble Father John, who judged himself incompetent for it. The Order was heavily laden with debts when he assumed command. He lacked substantial sources of revenue, but somehow managed to ease the financial difficulties, erect additional Redemptorist foundations, new churches and new schools. His achievements as vice- regent justified his Provincial's description of him as "the wisest, the greatest, and the best among all the Redemptorists in America."

 

However, his authority as Superior was severely limited, his instructions were often disobeyed and his European superiors were disunited because of the European revolutions of 1848 resulting in questionable orders issued from them. Father Neumann commented on his tenuous position, “Let it go. Do not be sorry for me. I have never done anything to become a superior and I will not do anything to remain one. On the contrary, I will thank God if I am relieved of this responsibility.”

 

In spite of all this, during his 23-month term, Father Neumann furthered the stability of the Order in the United States. He became a citizen of the United Sates and in 1847 he welcomed the School Sisters of Notre Dame to the United States and helped them to get established. He offered them the Redemptorist’s property in Baltimore and they agreed to teach in St. Alphonsus School. He also interceded for the Oblate Sisters of Providence, a congregation of Black nuns, who were about to be dissolved by the Bishop for lack of numbers. He provided them with Redemptorist spiritual directors and confessors, the order revived and the Bishop changed his mind.

 

After his term as Redemptorist Superior, Father Neumann returned to his pastoral work from 1849 through 1851 in parish work, teaching the faith and as a confessor to nuns. One of them later said, “Father Neumann contributed much to the perfection of our Sisters. His instructions and exhortations were animated by his own enthusiasm for the honor of God, the sublime end of the religious state. They inflamed our hearts with an ardent desire for religious perfection, for a total oblation to God.”

 

Father Neumann also became the confessor to Baltimore Archbishop Francis Patrick Kenrick, former Bishop of Philadelphia which now had a vacancy. The Vatican asked Bishop Kenrick to recommend his successor. He recommended Father Neumann.

  

                                                Bishop of Philadelphia

 

“I would rather die tomorrow than be consecrated Bishop,” said Father Neumann to a friend on the night before his consecration set for March 28, 1852 at St. Alphonsus Church in Baltimore. Archbishop Kenrick recommended Father Neumann because he was a simple, humble, obedient and holy priest who spoke German in an area where there were thousands of German immigrants who did not speak English. Archbishop Kenrick had asked other Bishops their opinion on appointing Father Neumann as its Bishop. When Father Neumann learned about this, he pleaded with him in tears to withdraw his name from consideration but he refused.

 

Father John was so alarmed over the prospect of being made a Bishop that he wrote to the Procurator General of the Congregation in Rome, urging him to use all power within his means to prevent the appointment. He begged friends to pray against his consecration and asked religious houses to pray novenas to avert what he termed as "a great danger from one of the dioceses in America” and "a calamity for the Church."

 

However, the prayers were not heard and Pope Pius IX appointed Father Neumann as Bishop “under obedience and without appeal.”

 

Bishop Kenrick went to visit Father Neumann to tell him the news of his appointment. However, Father was not home, so the Bishop went into his bedroom and laid out his own Bishop’s ring and pectoral cross on the table and left. When Father Neumann returned and learned that Bishop Kendrick had done this, he understood that he was now to become a Bishop himself. Two years later, Pope Pius IX received Bishop Neumann in an audience and said, “Isn’t obedience better than sacrifice?”

 

Father Neumann was asked to write under obedience a short autobiography for the Redemptorist's. He ended it with these lines "Tomorrow, March 28th, my birthday, which this year falls on Passion Sunday, I shall, if nothing prevents it, be consecrated bishop in St. Alphonsus' Church, by Most. Rev. Archbishop Kenrick. But do Thou, O Lord, have mercy on us! Jesus and Mary, pity me! Passion of Christ, strengthen me!"

 

With this last sentence as his Episcopal motto, Father John was consecrated as a Bishop on Passion Sunday. It was his 41st birthday.

 

After his consecration in his new vestments Father Neumann said, “The Church treats her Bishops like a mother treats a child. When she wants to place a burden on him, she gives him new clothes.”

 

Since the creation of the Diocese of Philadelphia in 1808, its Bishops had all been Irish. Many Catholics were upset over the appointment of Bishop Neumann because he was German, unsophisticated, diminutive in appearance (5’3”), spoke in an accent and  was unimpressive in speech. In short, he was not a worldly man. Years later, his vicar-general, Father Edward J. Sourin, said, "He knew well when he came to this proud city there were many not only among those who differ from us in religion but hundreds of our own Faith who wished as an occupant for the episcopate of this diocese a man more according to the judgment of the world."

 

The diocese of Philadelphia was then one of the largest and most important in the United States. It included the eastern half of Pennsylvania, all of Delaware and the western part of New Jersey. It consisted of 113 parishes, with only 100 priests to serve a population of 170,000 Catholics. And it offered many a trying challenge to its new shepherd. The greatest need was for more churches and schools for the increasing numbers of Irish and German immigrants but the diocese was burdened by debt.

 

Soon after his arrival in Philadelphia, Bishop Neumann got to work. He had taken a vow never deliberately to waste a moment of time. But his work was a fruit of an intense interior life of prayer and sacrifice. He rose before 5 am and prayed until Mass at six immediately followed by another and then hearing confessions and a light breakfast before the work of the day.

 

His room was simple and he often slept on the bare floor. He had only one suit of clothes. He wore a cilicium (belt of iron wire) under his clothes as a mortification of his flesh. His residence was furnished very plainly. He maintained no secretarial staff. Instead, he personally answered all the voluminous correspondence that arrived on his desk. Visitors at all times of the day called and were graciously received by the Bishop himself.

 

Bishop Neumann was generous to the poor, personally giving them alms. He became one of them and went without clothes, linen and shoes. One Sunday a priest scolded him for his shabby appearance and pleaded that he change into a better coat. "What shall I do?" asked the Bishop, "I do not have another."

 

Once on a visit to a rural parish, the parish priest picked him up in a manure wagon. Seated on a plank stretched over the wagon's contents the Bishop joked, "Have you ever seen such an entourage for a bishop!"

 

During a visit to Germany, he came back to the house he was staying in soaked by rain. When his host suggested that he change his shoes, the Bishop replied, "The only way I could change my shoes is by putting the left one on the right foot and the right one on the left foot. This is the only pair I own."

 

On another occasion, a priest found him in his room obviously very ill but lying on a bare plank. He told him that he should be in bed. The Bishop replied, "Why, I am just as comfortable here." “But,” the priest responded, "You are not as comfortable there, and you have no right under these circumstances to do as you please. You are a Bishop; you belong to your diocese." Bishop Neumann obediently left his board and went to bed.

 

Soon after his arrival in Philadelphia, Bishop Neumann called at all the religious communities, orphanages, hospitals and other Catholic institutions in the city to evaluate their spiritual and temporal conditions. He began his pastoral visitation to every parish where he would remain for several days, examining the overall state of the parish and making a careful inspection of the church, altar and sacred vessels. While he was there he would conduct a mission, preaching to the parishioners, hearing confessions and giving special instruction to the children.

 

Many immigrants had no priest who could hear their Confession in their native language. Bishop Neumann was a Godsend to them because he spoke so many languages. He had taught himself Gaelic, the language of many of the Irish immigrants. One of them made her Confession to him later said, "It's an Irish bishop we have at last!"

 

He personally examined candidates for Confirmation and would postpone it for those who were not prepared. He would prepare them himself.

 

Bishop Neumann privately worshipped at St. Peter the Apostle, a German Catholic church that was staffed by the Redemptorists. His weekly custom was to walk about a mile and a half from his residence to make his Confession at St. Peter's. He spent his monthly and annual retreats, as prescribed by the Redemptorist Rule, at the nearby old rectory. When he came, he avoided all display of rank or special privilege and mingled with the people. No one would take him for a Bishop.

 

A memorial plaque in the church now reads, St. Peter's is more than Bishop Neumann's resting place. He walked its aisles; he often knelt here, lost in prayer. His crozier rang on the sanctuary stones. His little feet moved up and down these aisles as he bore the Blessed Sacrament in Forty Hours Processions. The walls recall his voice; preaching at High Mass, catechising little ones before Confirmation, complimenting the nuns who taught them -the School Sisters of Notre Dame. St. Peter's was very close to his heart.

 

Next door to Bishop Neumann's official residence, construction was underway on Philadelphia's imposing new Cathedral. Work had been started six years before he came to the city. The brownstone building would later become the largest and most costly cathedral in the nation, but in 1852 construction was not one-third completed. They need a lot of money to complete the project. Many people urged Bishop Neumann to hurry up and finish the project. But he thought that parish churches and schools should be constructed first. And so the Cathedral was never completed until four years after his death.

 

In 1852, Bishop Neumann attended the First Plenary Council of Bishops to be held in the United States. The Bishops approved the catechisms composed by him for distribution in the nation's dioceses. These became the standard catechisms in the United States for the next 35 years until the Baltimore Catechism replaced them. After the Council, one of the Bishops remarked about him, "I had an opportunity during the Council in Baltimore to admire Bishop Neumann's wonderful memory and extraordinary theological attainments. He had a solution for every question posed. What edified me most of all was his unruffled composure, which betokened deep humility and perfect self-control. I always regarded him as a saint."

           

                               The Catholic School System

 

 Bishop Neumann believed that only Catholic schools could save the Catholic youth. He was critical of public education and wrote years earlier, "The public school system in the United States is very liberal in theory; but in reality it is most intolerant towards Catholics. It cannot be doubted that the young mind is influenced by the irreligious dispositions of the teacher. Even the textbooks selected for use are injurious to Catholic children. They are merely heretical extracts from a falsified Bible, and histories which contain the most malicious perversion of truth, the grossest lies against the doctrines and practices of the Catholic Church. . . . These circumstances combine for the spiritual ruin of Catholic children."

 

Bishop Neumann’s first project was the establishment of a Catholic school system in 1852. He set up a central diocesan board of education consisting of himself, the pastor and two laymen from each parish. The board recommended a general curriculum, raised funds to help the parishes build the schools and the pastors hired and paid the teachers. Bishop Neumann started building schools and churches as they were needed, in spite of the diocesan debt, trusting that God would provide for them. Within three years of his arrival, the number of children in Catholic schools increased from about 500 to 5000 and he completed construction of 42 churches. He was the Father of the Catholic Parochial School System.

 

Bishop Neumann’s first love was for the poor, the simple and children. He always had something in his pockets to reward the students who gave correct answers to his catechism questions. He never lost his love for botany and he would often explain to the children the wonders of nature such as flowers and lead them up from there to appreciate the love of their creator.

 

One day two young girls came to deliver to the Bishop a message from their teacher. He found them waiting in an anteroom admiring a marble statue of the Infant Jesus lying in a cradle. He jokingly said that he’d give it to the one who could carry the heavy statue home. One of them took him seriously, left and returned a little while later with a wagon to haul it away. The Bishop was true to his word and let her keep it. The enterprising little girl later became the Mother General of the Holy Cross Sisters and the statue was venerated in their motherhouse.

           

                                   The Forty Hours’ Devotion

 

Bishop Neumann made many visitations to his parishes reviewing their finances, hearing confessions, preaching, administering Confirmation and visiting the sick.

 

He fostered devotion to the Blessed Sacrament by encouraging the Forty Hours’ Devotion. This is a devotion of prayer before the exposed Blessed Sacrament over a period of 40 hours that represents the traditional time that Jesus was in the tomb from his death on the Cross until His Resurrection. He was the first Bishop to set up this devotion on an organized diocesan schedule so that Jesus was never left alone and someone was always there to adore Him.

 

However, several priests advised Bishop Neumann against instituting the devotion on the grounds that the Blessed Sacrament might be profaned. They thought that the anti-Catholic Nativists might burn down the churches. This troubled him, but his scruples were relieved by a revelation that he received from Jesus. One night Bishop Neumann fell asleep at his desk while meditating on this issue of profanation. When he woke up, he saw that his burning candle had burnt down and charred some of his papers. He knelt in prayer to give thanks that a serious fire was averted and he received a locution from Jesus. “As the flames are burning here without consuming or injuring the writing, so shall I pour out my grace in the Blessed Sacrament without prejudice to my honor. Fear no profanation, therefore, and hesitate no longer to carry out your design for my glory.” Soon thereafter Bishop Neumann established the devotion that soon spread throughout the United States.

            

                                     The Lay Trustee System

 

A recurring problem in early American Catholic churches was the issue of who should run the churches - lay trustees, as in the Protestant churches, or the pastors and Bishops. Under the Lay Trustee System, the churches were administered somewhat like Protestant churches. Title to the church property was vested in a board of lay trustees and not in the diocese as it is today. This system fostered tension in the church administration between the board and the priest.

 

Bishop Neumann faced this tension head-on. Holy Trinity church in South Philadelphia was under an interdict ordered by former Archbishop Kenrick that forbade the administration of the sacraments there because the trustees claimed title to the property and wouldn’t convey it to him.

 

In 1852, Bishop Neumann informed the trustees that he would lift the interdict if they conveyed title to him as Bishop. Instead, they sued him and won title in a lower court. Bishop Neumann appealed and the case was finally heard two years later.

 

The judge told the rebellious trustees, “You had an Irishman for Bishop, an American and now you have a German. You are satisfied with none, obedient to none. If you want to be Catholics you must obey the Pope and the Bishops in all ecclesiastical affairs. You cannot expect that the court will protect your disobedience.” Bishop Neumann won the case and regained title to the church. This was an important decision for the Catholic Church in America and helped to end the system of church administration by lay trustees.

           

                                         The Immaculate Conception

 

Bishop Neumann was devoted to the Immaculate Conception, the Patroness of the United States. He went to Rome to witness the proclamation of the dogma in 1854. Before he left, he wrote a Pastoral Letter in which he announced the proclamation and urged devotion to Our Lady under the title of the Immaculate Conception. He wrote, "Henceforth and forever, all generations of true believers shall invoke Mary, Mother of God, as the ever immaculate virgin, conceived without stain of original sin.”

 

After the proclamation of the dogma on December 8, Bishop Neumann wrote, "I thank the Lord God, that among the many graces he has bestowed upon me, He allowed me to see this day in Rome."

           

                                 The Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis

 

 Bishop Neumann founded a new Congregation of women, the Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis. While he was in Rome in 1854, Pope Pius IX suggested training a new group of religious to work with the poor. He suggested that it be placed under the patronage of St. Francis.

 

Providentially, at that very time, Bishop Neumann learned that three Philadelphia women had established a hospice for working girls and were seeking permission to form a Franciscan community. Before leaving Rome, Bishop Neumann obtained the authority to found the Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis and to receive the Philadelphia women as its first members. After he returned home from Rome, he invested them with the habit of novices and later heard their final vows on May 26, 1856.

 

The Sisters began devoting much of their time and energy to the care of the sick. After their numbers increased, they established St. Mary Hospital and, at the request of Bishop Neumann, they became teachers as well.

 

Bishop Neumann also helped to establish the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary and encouraged the School Sisters of Notre Dame to come from Germany to the Unites States. Many of these pioneer religious women staffed the new Catholic Schools of his diocese.

 

                                                 Virtues

 

 Bishop Neumann was well aware of the deficiencies of his own administration of the diocese of Philadelphia. His gifts did not include financial wisdom, business administration, social affability and cultured manners. These were the qualities that would have been appreciated by the rich Philadelphia socialites or their sophisticated clerical friends.

 

Bishop Neumann’s gifts were the virtues of obedience, humility and simplicity. He nature was shy and retiring rather than an outgoing and social. These were the gifts that were appreciated by the poor masses of his diocese. But, they had no voice and all heard the loud complaints of the rich.

 

A symbol of the conflict between his nature and the expectations of the rich was the Cathedral project. This project was a visible symbol to the whole city of what the rich said were the Bishop's faults. He was criticized for being often outside the city visiting his flock in the outlying districts while the uncompleted Cathedral project languished for lack of leadership and funds and became an eyesore to the city. Bishop Neumann didn’t defend himself against their criticism. Instead, he seemed to humbly agree with them, sent a letter to Cardinal Franzoni in Rome and suggested that he be transferred to a smaller diocese. He wrote,

 

Because of circumstances here, a man of sharp insight, brave and accustomed to direct temporal affairs is required. I, however, am timid, always hesitant, and possess a horror of  business and pecuniary transactions. . . . The City of Philadelphia, which has more than five hundred thousand inhabitants and (if you will pardon the statement) a very worldly character, needs someone else instead of myself who am too plain and not sufficiently talented; besides I love solitude. Since there is a proposal to erect many new dioceses, I thought it my duty to inform Your Eminence that I am most willing to be transferred to another See where a less gifted man would be required. For more than fifteen years I was occupied on the North American missions; I have loved corporal labors and journey in the mountains and through the forests. Visiting Catholic families separated from one another by long distances and preaching to the, etc. has been my greatest pleasure. . . .

 

Pope Benedict XV later declared this letter as an example of heroic virtue. He said, “This offer of Bishop Neumann to leave Philadelphia was positive proof of his magnanimity of soul.”

 

                                                 The Coadjutor

 

 Archbishop Kenrick also wrote to Rome and  made a more prudent suggestion to satisfy Bishop Neumann’s critics. He wrote,

 

It seems to me that he should by all means be retained in the See of Philadelphia since he is a shining light because of his piety and his labors. I, indeed, confess that he is wanting a little in managing affairs, but I believe that he can appoint a vicar general, consultors and helpers, whose assistance will enable him to clear the debts and to smooth out matters. He is beloved by the clergy and people, although certain ones would like to see more urbane and polished manners.

           

           On December 9, 1856, Rome adopted Archbishop Kenrick’s suggestion and decided that Bishop Neumann would remain as Bishop of Philadelphia with another Bishop as coadjutor, an assistant who would help him in diocesan administration.

 

                                                 The Chalice

 

Coadjutor Bishop James Wood was an answer to Bishop Neumann’s critics. He was tall and distinguished in appearance, educated in Rome, sophisticated, a good pubic speaker and experienced in financial matters. His business administration of the diocese freed Bishop Neumann for his pastoral work of visitations to religious houses and the remote areas of his diocese, administering the sacrament of Confirmation and establishing new parishes and schools. One day he spent the entire day riding 25 miles through mountainous terrain to confirm a single child.

 

Bishop Neumann said in a speech at Illinois Bishop Juncker’s consecration reception on April 26, 1857,

 

You have scarcely any idea how difficult and painful the office of Bishop is, especially here in America. Catholics come from all parts of the world, all nationalities mingle with one another and the Bishop is supposed to please all – an impossible task. Where are we to again strength: Where will Bishop Juncker receive the strength he needs: From the Blood of Christ, from .  . . the Chalice.

 

This strength soon ran out for Bishop Neumann and he drank from the Chalice in full. On January 5, 1860,he remarked to a visiting priest, “I have a strange feeling today. I feel as I never felt before. I have to go out on a little business and the fresh air will do me good.”  Then he added strangely, “A man must always  be ready, for death comes when and where God will it.”

 

He went out on foot to visit a lawyer about property deeds. Then he went on a mission of mercy to the express office to inquire about a lost chalice that one of his rural pastors had sent to Bishop Wood to consecrate. On his way, Bishop Neumann suddenly collapsed on the sidewalk. Two men carried him into a nearby house, laid him on the floor in front of a fire and summoned a priest to administer the sacrament of Extreme Unction (Anointing of the Sick). But it was too late. On a stranger’s floor, without benefit of the sacraments of the Church, the Bishop of Philadelphia died, three months short of his 49th birthday.

 

Deep shock and disbelief swept the entire community when the news spread followed by an unprecedented display of the people's respect and affection for their Bishop. Thousands came to bid him farewell at the Cathedral Chapel where the body first was placed. Two days later, the streets were thronged as the funeral procession moved through the city. Four black horses pulled the glass-sided hearse past weeping mourners. That night St. John's was filled with men and women of many faiths and from all walks of life coming to see the Bishop for the last time.

 

 Another solemn funeral cortege moved through packed streets from St. John's to St. Peter's. Far into another night, German parishioners filed by the casket of the little Bishop whom they had known so well and loved so deeply. On the next morning, there was a second funeral Mass and a sermon preached in German by a Redemptorist. Then the body was carried to a vault beneath the floor of the sanctuary of the lower church.

 

Father Edward Sourin preached at the funeral, “He has labored through every part of the diocese, and has, undoubtedly, done more for its better organization and for the spread of piety throughout the various congregations than might have been otherwise done in even ten or twenty years by another individual . . . .He spared himself in nothing. . . .”

 

Archbishop Kendrick gave permission for the Bishop’s body to be buried at St. Peter’s Church instead of the graveyard of St. John’s Pro-Cathedral. He said, “Gladly I’ll consent to Bishop Neumann’s finding a resting place in death where he could not find one in life.”

 

In November 1962, Bishop Neumann’s body was exhumed and found to be incorrupt, very much intact and flexible. A wax mask was made and his body remains today under the Mass Altar in the Lower Church of St. Peter the Apostle in Philadelphia.

 

                                                                Fruits

 

Bishop Neumann founded a religious order and welcomed seven others in his eight years as Bishop – one for each year. He built churches and schools, established the Catholic Parochial School System, encouraged popular piety through the Forty Hours’ Devotion, confraternities and societies in honor of Our Lady and the saints and parish missions. He built 40 new schools and 80 new churches – almost one church for every month of his service.


          Bishop Neumann never worked miracles during his lifetime. His works were ordinary and simple. On December 11, 1921, Pope Benedict XV declared Bishop Neumann Venerable. He said, “ . . works even the most simple, performed with constant perfection in the midst of inevitable difficulties, spell heroism in any servant of God. Just because of the simplicity of his works we find in them a strong argument for saying to the faithful of whatever age, sex or condition: You are bound to imitate the Venerable Neumann.”

 

St. John Neumann is often called “the common man's saint” not so much for his extraordinary accomplishments but for his extraordinary simple faith. Through all of the discouragements and disappointments of his weary career, through the long spiritual droughts that parched his soul, through his never-ending uncertainty of whether he was giving his best to God's work, his remarkable faith never wavered. His simple faith alone inspired his ordinary works to be done in an extraordinary way.

 

"Among the shepherds of the flock in Philadelphia," wrote the late Pope Pius XII, on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the founding of the diocese, "the figure of Venerable John Neumann is pre-eminent.  It was mainly through his prodigious efforts that a Catholic school system came into being and that parochial schools began to rise across the land.  His holy life, his childlike gentleness, his hard labor and his tremendous foresight is still fresh and green among you.  The tree planted and watered by Bishop Neumann now gives you its fruit."

 

                                           Intercessor of Miracles

 

Soon after Bishop Neumann’s burial at St. Peter’s, people who visited his tomb were cured of diseases, the lame walked, the deaf heard and the blind saw. The first miracle that was proved was a healing from acute peritonitis. Eleven-year-old Eva Benassi lived in Sassuolo, Italy. In May of 1923 while she was at boarding school, she became ill with acute diffused peritonitis and death was imminent. One of the school’s nuns had a devotion to Bishop Neumann. While Eva was on her deathbed, she placed a picture of him on Eva’s stomach and prayed with her community and Eva for a healing. During the night, Eva awoke and said that her pain was gone. By morning she was entirely cured.
 

In July of 1949, 19-year-old James Kent Lenahan was severely injured in an automobile accident near Philadelphia. He was admitted to the hospital with a crushed skull, an eye torn from its socket, three broken ribs and collarbone. He was near death when his parents brought a piece of Bishop Neumann’s cassock and placed it upon him. He immediately improved and was fully healed within a month.


          The Holy See approved both of these cures as miracles and Pope Paul VI beatified Bishop Neumann on October 13, 1963.


            In October of 1962, young Michael Flanigan of Philadelphia was diagnosed with cancer and given six months to live. His parents began taking him to Bishop Neumann’s Shrine at St. Peter’s Church. He showed immediate improvement and was totally healed within five months. Pope Paul VI canonized Bishop Neumann on June 19, 1977. His feast day is January 5, the anniversary of his death.

 

                                           Intercessor for United States Bishops

 
         
Bishop Neumann’s intercession is appropriate for the Bishops of the United States because he was a witness to hope through his pastoral ministry centered on the three basics of a Bishop’s role in sanctifying, teaching and governing the Church. Pope John Paul II emphasized this in an address to United States Bishops on April 2, 2004. He said,
 

The exercise of this prophetic witness in contemporary American society has, as many of you have pointed out, been made increasingly difficult by the aftermath of the recent scandal and the outspoken hostility to the Gospel in certain sectors of public opinion, yet it cannot be evaded or delegated to others. Precisely because American society is confronted by a disturbing loss of the sense of the transcendent and the affirmation of a culture of the material and the ephemeral, it desperately needs such a witness of hope. It is in hope that we have been saved (cf. Romans 8:24); the Gospel of hope enables us to discern the consoling presence of God's Kingdom in the midst of this world and offers confidence, serenity and direction in place of that hopelessness which inevitably spawns fear, hostility and violence in the hearts of individuals and in society as a whole.

 

The National Shrine of Saint John Neumann

Saint Peter the Apostle Church

1019 North Fifth Street
Philadelphia, PA, 19123
Phone 215-627-3080
www.stjohnneumann.org
email Neumann@philanet.com

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