One of the more memorable (and apocryphal) quotes to come out of the Second World War was the quote of Admiral Isoruku Yamamoto, the Japanese commander and mastermind of the attack on Pearl Harbor. After the attack he was supposed to have said: “I fear all we have done is wake a sleeping giant and filled him with a terrible resolve.” This quote was given a dramatic flourish at the end of the 1970 movie Tora! Tora! Tora! I couldn’t help but recall this in the last week since religious liberty in the United States has been attacked by the action of the Obama Administration. Indeed, I must reiterate the point I’ve made before: the Obama Administration is at war with the Catholic Church. Since this decision, however, it strikes this writer that “the sleeping giant” is waking up. Consider the following statements:
Cardinal-designate Timothy M. Dolan, Archbishop of New York:
It seems as if the sleeping giant has been roused to anger. A righteous anger it is. We are at war; let us acknowledge it and join our commanders–the bishops.
What next? How to combat the no-longer furtive attack on the Church and the transcendent? Utilize the powerful tools at our disposal: Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament and the Rosary. Families, parish associations, and all people of goodwill need to redouble their efforts to teach their children about God and His Church. Most importantly, in season and out, we must underscore that loving Christ means loving the Church. She is His Bride; one cannot truly love Him without loving Her. The reality on the horizon is that our bishops may one day be jailed. So too, many of our priests.
This week there was also a news story that a statue of the Blessed Mother–the one carried by Don Juan of Austria on the quarterdeck of his flagship in the Battle of Lepanto in 1571–was found. Currently it is being restored (see the image, left). In addition to being a wonderful find, the statue seems to this writer to be a metaphor for the state of the Church in the United States. She is badly damaged; beaten up, even. Many of these wounds are self-inflicted, but many more are from an environment inhospitable to her preservation. Yet, that which remains is beautiful. The visible eye of the statute shows us the love of tender Mother of God and Lady of the Rosary; and it also shows us the determination of the Destroyer of Heresy and the Lady of Victory.
If the readers will indulge me, I have one other tactic that may aid in the Catholic offensive in this battle–one that would, assuredly, make the powerful quake. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if every Cardinal, Archbishop, and Bishop in the United States–cultivating “a renewal of faith” called for by the Holy Father–marched to the White House, saying the Rosary, with this statue of Our Lady from the Battle of Lepanto held aloft? Wouldn’t it also be wonderful if the faithful were galvanized to join with their shepherds and commanders for such a public display of a confident and triumphant Catholic Faith? Perhaps this is a fantasy. Perhaps not.