MARCH 20, 2014
by Mitchell
Kalpakgian [From Crisis]
“Wherever
there was a French priest, there should be a garden of fruit trees and
vegetables and flowers”—the telltale signs of civilized life.
Blogger: "The Bell" - Faith in the Creating God introduces the bell of ordering reason
In Willa Cather’s Death Comes for the Archbishop two
French Jesuit missionaries arrive in the American Southwest to revive the
Catholic faith and evangelize the Mexicans and Indians, Catholics who were once
taught but have lapsed and do not live their faith seriously. As the priests
bring the Sacraments to the small villages, baptize the children, and sanctify
the marriages of couples who have lived together and founded families without
the blessing of the Church, the Jesuits realize that their missionary work
requires other forms of education besides religious instruction. Bishop Latour
and Father Vaillant as Catholic missionaries to the New World also bring
culture and civilization to a primitive world. Wherever the Catholic faith
flourishes, the quality of life also improves, and people learn the art of
living well rather than merely surviving. In the minds of the two Jesuits,
“Wherever there was a French priest, there should be a garden of fruit trees
and vegetables and flowers”—the telltale signs of civilized life, indeed.
Discovering
a hundred-year-old bell in the basement of a church, Father Vaillant finds men
to build a scaffold and to raise the bell to swing on beams. He introduces the
bell to order the day with the regular tolling of its music. To an unstructured
world lacking basic organization, the priests bring order, discipline, and
regularity. When the Mexicans insist that the priest baptize the children first
because “The men are all in the field,” Bishop Latour insists, “A man can stop
work to be married.” He refuses to grant this unorthodox request out of a love
for the moral order: “the marriages first, the baptisms afterward; that order
is Christian. I will baptize the children tomorrow morning, and their parents
will at least have been married over night.” The presence of the tolling bell likewise
introduces the proper time and place for prayers throughout the day. The
productive use of the hours of the day for work and prayer, a time and place
for everything, and the logical succession and priority of events elevates the
lives of these simple people who do not know how to govern their lives
productively.
The
priests lament the lack of olive oil in the Southwest (“here ‘oil’ means
something to grease the wheels of wagons!”) and complain of the scarcity of
green vegetables and the absence of lettuce. In their minds there is no such
thing as “a proper soup without leeks,” and the art of living requires more
than the daily fare of beans and roots: “Surely we must time to make a garden,”
Father Vaillant observes, and he hopes also to plant vineyards. The Bishop’s
own garden provides him the most enjoyable recreation, and he grows fruit that
surpasses the delicious produce of California: cherries, apricots, apples,
pears, and quinces: “He urged the new priests to plant fruit trees wherever
they went, and to encourage the Mexicans to add fruit to their starchy diet.”
The priests’ interest in gardens, orchards, and vineyards reveals the Church’s
concern for all the human needs of man, both body and soul. The Church’s
missionary work teaches not only the truths that lead to eternal life but also
the truths that offer the “abundant” life that Christ promised. Fruitfulness,
abundance, and multiplication distinguish Christian culture that makes life
beautiful as well as good and adorns life with what the bishop calls “la
poesie.”
Despite living in primitive conditions amid poor people, the two
Jesuits bring beauty and art to the stark, sparse world that surrounds them.
Riding through the Rio Grande valley and gazing at a yellow hill, Bishop Latour
admires a particular golden color of “the chip of a yellow rock that lay in his
hand” and then announces to Father Vaillant, “That hill, Blanchet,
is my cathedral.” He already has in mind the style of architecture he recalls
from the old palace of the popes in Avignon—a cathedral in the tradition of the
Romanesque rather than “one of those horrible structures they are putting up in
the Ohio cities.” The bishop will hire the best stone cutters in France to
build the edifice, and he cannot imagine another ugly church on American soil
when the Church’s great architectural tradition offers its treasures for
models. The Church cultivates the art of the beautiful and acknowledges the
power of symbolism as a road that leads to God, fully aware, in St. Paul’s
words, that “the invisible things of God are known by the things that are
visible.”
The
Church also enriches life by its schools and its love of learning. Bishop
Latour brings to the New World an order of teaching nuns to bless the young
with the gift of education and the life of the mind. Noticing the great infant
mortality rate in the village of Pecos, the bishop learns of the dark
superstitions of these Indians who worship serpents and sacrifice infants to
their false god. Bishop Latour knows that the Church must bring the light of
reason to primitive people in addition to the light of faith to conquer the
darkness of ignorance, their belief in ancient superstitions that “their minds
will go round and round in the same old ruts till Judgment Day.” The Church
also combats the heresies that have evolved in the course of time like the
false doctrine of Father Martinez that claims the American Catholic Church is
autonomous with its own native customs and traditions: “We have a living Church
here, not a dead arm of the European Church…. We pay a filial respect to the
person of the Holy Father, but Rome has no authority here.”
The
Jesuits, then, bring to the New World what the Church always brings with the
Gospel—a human way of life that raises man from the primitive to the refined,
from the ignorant and superstitious to the rational and educated, from the
meager and the dreary to the abundant and the beautiful. The Church concerns
herself with the whole man, body and soul, and performs both the spiritual and
corporal works of mercy in its evangelization. As Bishop Latour reviews his
whole life in the Southwest as Bishop of Santa Fe, he sees gardens, schools, a
great cathedral, and a living faith revived by two priests whose experience in
the Southwest taught them that “The faith, in that wild frontier, is alike a
buried treasure…. A word, a prayer, a service, is all that is needed to set
free those souls in bondage.” The barren land they found devoid of fruit,
vegetables, and vineyards not only produced peaches and grapes but also a great
harvest of souls.
Tagged as: Death Comes to
the Archbishop (1927), Willa Cather
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