The contents of this posting are taken exclusively from a page located here: http://fatherleonardfeeney.googlepages.com/ .Of especial value to this page is the series of links that appears at the bottom of this posting.
Leonard Feeney was born in Lynn, Massachusetts on February 15, 1897. On the eve of Our Lady’s Nativity, September 7, 1914, he entered the Jesuit Novitiate of Saint Andrew in upstate New York. During his 14 year formation as a Jesuit, he studied in England, Wales, Belgium, France, and the U.S.A. At the end of a brilliant scholasticate and theologate, he took religious vows as a son of Saint Ignatius, and was ordained a priest on June 20, 1928.
Father Feeney then embarked on what would become one of the most celebrated careers any priest could enjoy as a writer, lecturer and editor. During the 1930’s he was literary editor of America, the Jesuit-run Catholic monthly. At the same time, his books, published by some of the major publishers of that time, were becoming standards in Catholic schools and homes all across the country. They include Riddle and Reverie (MacMillan, 1936), Song for a Listener (MacMillan, 1936), You’d Better Come Quietly (Sheed and Ward, 1939), The Leonard Feeney Omnibus (Sheed and Ward, 1943), Your Second Childhood (Bruce Publishing Company, 1945) Mother Seton, an American Woman (Dodd, Mead & Company, 1948), Survival Till Seventeen (Sheed and Ward, 1948).
Father’s genius as a writer, speaker and theologian, was attested to by some of the most prominent Catholic figures of his day. Bishop Fulton Sheen once said that the only substitute he would allow on his radio show was Father Feeney. Frank Sheed, of Sheed and Ward said, “For Father Feeney, dogma is not only true; it is breathlessly exciting. That is his special vocation. . . to make his readers feel the thrill.” During Father’s days at Oxford, Lord Cecil, the famous Oxford don admitted, “I am getting more out of my association with Leonard Feeney than he could possibly get from me.” Of the Jesuit’s writing, Cecil said, “it shines with a pure, clear light.”
In 1942, during the height of his literary fame, Father Feeney was transferred by his Jesuit superiors to Saint Benedict Center, a Catholic student center which had been founded two years earlier by Catherine Goddard Clarke. Mrs. Clarke had 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 in that 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.
With Father Feeney’s transfer to Saint Benedict Center, a whole new era in his life — and in the lives of countless others — was to commence. Within three years, he came to see clearly that the Church was headed down a dangerous path of compromise and accommodation, leading to what is now universally recognized as a “crisis in the Church.” Not only did Father see the problem before anybody else, he also saw the primary cause: the obscuring of the Catholic Church’s teaching “outside the Church, there is no salvation” (extra ecclesiam nulla salus).
In 1949, with the loyal support of those who had become his spiritual children, Father Feeney founded the Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. From the foundation of the Congregation until his death in 1978, Father Feeney continued to teach his disciples and form them into a community of apostles dedicated, not only to the restoration of the Dogma of Faith, extra ecclesiam nulla salus, but also to the conversion of the United States of America to the One, True Faith, outside of which no one at all is saved.
After Father Feeney’s death in 1978, the great Scottish apostle of Christ the King, Hamish Fraser, eulogized him as “one of the most outstanding prophets of our time. For not only did he most accurately diagnose the contemporary malaise, long before others became aware of it; he also put his finger on the very omission which was both symptom and cause of the plague of liberal indifferentism which eventually surfaced as post-Conciliar Neomodernism and oecumania.”
Links to sites with further information about Father Leonard Feeney, M.I.C.M.:
- Father Feeney FAQ by Charles A Coulombe
- Father Feeney: A Fact Sheet by Mr. Adam Miller of Tower of David Ministry.
- Father Leonard Feeney and the History of Saint Benedict Center by the Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Still River, Massachusetts.
- Favorite Feeneyite Quotes by Charles A Coulombe
- Legal Status of “Feeneyism” by Charles A Coulombe
- The Father Feeney Network
- The Founder of Our Congregation and Our Crusade by the Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Richmond, New Hampshire.
- The History of Saint Benedict Center by the Monks of Saint Benedict Abbey, Harvard, Massachusetts. (The Abbey’s monks are certainly “Feeneyites.” Read “For the Record” for proof.
7 responses so far ↓
1 Tobias Petrus // Nov 14, 2007 at 10:44 am
Brother Andre,
I don’t mean this to sound narcissistic, but where did our small exchange go? Your remarks on how Brother Francis encourages cooperation among the different St. Benedict Centers helps dispel the notion that the groups are in conflict with one another. Thank you for your reply, which should help others understand the matter better.
2 Tobias Petrus // Nov 14, 2007 at 10:45 am
Also, for what it’s worth, none of the links at the “Father Feeeney Network” work.
3 Brother André Marie, M.I.C.M. // Nov 14, 2007 at 11:18 am
Tobias:
I apologize. This morning I was managing comments in Word Press and I ended up deleting the whole posting. I had to repost it. I had nothing backed up, so all the comments were lost. I even looked for cached search engine pages, but found none with the comments on them.
4 Brother André Marie, M.I.C.M. // Nov 14, 2007 at 6:37 pm
Tobias:
I think what I’ll do is reconstitute the exchange. I have the emails that were sent automatically when you posted them. What I don’t have is my replies, which I can rewrite.
You said:
“I have noticed that the different St. Benedict Centers have been referring to each others’ webpages and giving each other “props” with increasing frequency of late. I can’t help but feel that Fr. Feeney is smiling down upon his spiritual children as they accord each other this mutual respect. Would it be fair to say that there is a new generation of folks interested in “Extra Ecclesiam Nulla Salus” who are not so affected by the inner struggles of the Crusade in the 1970s, or would it not be fair to say so?”
I’ll reply a little later.
5 Tobias Petrus // Nov 14, 2007 at 6:45 pm
Thanks, Bro. Andre. Sorry to raise a fuss! But I do think some people think that the different followers of Fr. Feeney are more divided than they are. It’s good to dispel that. Thanks again.
6 Brother André Marie, M.I.C.M. // Nov 14, 2007 at 7:52 pm
You are welcome. Here is the substance of what I said before, with a few additions to boot:
It is fair to conclude as you did that there is a new generation who are not so affected by what happened in the 70s that they cannot put these things aside for the greater good. I see a growing sense of respect and mutual good will among the various houses which trace their foundation back to Father Feeney. I can say that I am on very good terms with religious in every house of the Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. This spirit of cooperation and mutual respect is not limited to the younger generation, however. Brother Francis — at 94 still able to speak his mind on these matters — very much encourages it. Another founding member, Brother Leonard Mary, who is out in California, is of this same mind. He visited us this past summer and we had a grand old time. The older Sisters at St. Ann’s House in Still River come to our conference every year. The Sisters in Vienna, Ohio stop by whenever they come to the Northeast, and we engage in common publication projects (catechisms and suchlike). Several of the houses share a multitude of resources — including the “human resource” of priests. Our 10:30 Sunday Mass sermon is generally the same one that was preached in Immaculate Heart of Mary Chapel in Still River, because the same priest says both Masses. The list could go on.
The Franciscans had their moments of internal dispute, yet many of those “splits” produced branches of the Franciscan Order ripe with saints. Monastic and religious history furnishes us with many other examples.
I certainly hope that Father Feeney is smiling on us from Heaven. There are those who pray every day for unity among all of his followers. I can’t imagine that he isn’t!
Thanks again for the opportunity to clarify this important question.
7 Catholicism.org » Blog Archive » «Ad Rem» N° 52 (11/14/2007): An Appeal - St. Josaphat, Apostle of Eastern Catholic Unity // Jul 30, 2008 at 5:43 pm
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