Life of Father Hecker eBook

Walter Elliott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 639 pages of information about Life of Father Hecker.

Life of Father Hecker eBook

Walter Elliott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 639 pages of information about Life of Father Hecker.

The instructions and Rosary were generally given by Father Hecker, who received from the people the name of “Father Mary.” . . .  During the first few days the people did not attend well; but after Father Hecker had gone through the village and among a clique of young men who were indifferent and disaffected to the clergy, and the evil geniuses of the place, and after some fervent exhortations had been made to the people, they flocked to the mission and crowded the church.

At Johnstown, Pa.:  After two or three days a man happened to die on the railroad, and all the men at that station, perhaps a hundred in number, accompanied the corpse to the church.  Father Hecker seized the opportunity to address them and to give them a mission ferveroso. And the next day he went on horseback, accompanied by the pastor, Father Mullen (since Bishop of Erie), to several stations and addressed the men, inviting them to attend the mission.  The result was successful.  Procession after procession marched in, filling the church, and numbers of them stayed all day, lying on the grass about the church. . . .  Father Hecker called out a noted politician, who had not been to the sacraments for many years until the mission, to receive the scapular as an example, and the good man did not fail to receive a plentiful supply of holy water from the vigorous arm of the said father.

The following entry in the record under date of February, 1852, made after a mission given in St. Peter’s Church, Troy, N.Y., will be of interest to missionaries, and to others who are observant of their methods:  “At Youngstown, Pa., (the preceding December) the experiment of preaching from a platform had been successfully tried and was repeated here, as at other missions since (Youngstown).  On the platform a large black cross, some ten feet or more in height, was erected, from the arms of which a white muslin cloth was suspended.  This use of cross and platform has thus been regularly introduced into the missions.”  Previously it had been the custom to erect a large cross out of doors in front of the church as one of the closing ceremonies of the mission.

Fathers Hecker, Hewit, and Walworth, led by Father Bernard, made a unique band of missionaries, one, we think, hardly equalled since they yielded their place to others.  Each was a man of marked individuality, whose distinct personality was by no means obscured by the strict conformity to rule evident in their behavior.  Fathers Hewit and Walworth were orators, differing much from each other, both full of power.  Father Hecker was a born persuader of men, and could teach as a gift of nature, earnest in mind and manner.  His two companions saw him learn by hard work how so to modulate his voice and to manage it and his manner as to exactly suit himself to his duties as the instructor of the band, while they delivered finished discourses at the night services, many of them masterpieces of mission oratory.  Their very poise and glance

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Life of Father Hecker from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.