INTRODUCTION
(Numbered
notes, indicated in parenthesis, are listed at the end of this
Web page.)
On December
19, 1886, William Howard Bishop was born to Dr. Francis Bessant
Bishop and Ellen Teresa (Knowles) Bishop in Washington, D.C.
The fifth of six children, Howard was the first to be born in
the nations captial where the family had taken up residence
three years earlier.
Almost fifty-three
years later and more than twenty-four years into his priestly
life, (1) Howard Bishop, inspired to win America to the
Church of Jesus(2), established The Home Missioners of
America (3) under the sponsorship of Archbishop John T. McNicholas
of Cincinnati. Those five decades were a time of dramatic
upheaval in the Catholic Church, the United States, and the
entire world. Howard Bishop was both a participant in,
and a product of, that tumultuous era.
He remains,
however, a relatively anonymous figure of that period in spite
of the fact that he is one of only a handful of Americans to
found a religious society. Thirty years have passed since
his death in 1953 and the work and apostolate of the Glenmary
Home Missioners are widely known by Catholics throughout the
United States, but few would be able to identify the simple
country pastor from the Archdiocese of Baltimore as its
founder.
Perhaps
it is precisely in this anonymity, in the fact that Father Bishop
was an ordinary man, that we can discover the abiding
beauty of his person and the loving presence and action of the
Holy Spirit in his life. His person seems to match his
mission. He labored twenty years as pastor of St. Louis
Church in a day and age when the country priest was in
deed and truth, The Forgotten Man.(4) Being
numbered among the forgotten he was made poignantly
aware that in the rural areas of the United States there existed
millions of people who were lost, neglected, and unconverted.
We must
be cautious, however, that we do not mistake our description
of Father Bishop as being ordinary with a simplistic
concept of his person. He was a complex man who demands
our careful and exhaustive investigation. Anything less,
or any attempt to mold Father Bishop to our myth or ideology,
would do violence to his person and undermine the integrity
of his charism.
This study
has no pretensions at being exhaustive and represents
only a step in that direction. Our scope is limited to
the first twenty-four years of Father Bishops priestly
life, the pre-Glenmary years. This period was chosen because
it was during this time that his charism was growing, developing,
and coming to maturity. Just as we would not think of
writing an article on a particular species of tree without thoroughly
analyzing the seed from which it grows, in the same way we cannot
hope to further our understanding of Father Bishops charism
as founder of Glenmary Home Missioners without an in-depth reflection
on those formative years during which the Holy Spirit was quietly
and subtly at work in his life.
The sources
of our study have been rich and varied and all can be found
in the archives of the Glenmary Home Missioners in Cincinnati,
Ohio. The main sources have been Father Bishops
diary, his sermons during the years 1915-1917, The Little
Flower, (5) Landward, (6) and his presidential addresses
before the National Rural Life Conference. Each of the
sources presents a different dimension of his person and each
in its own way deepens our understanding of the mystery
of his charism.
The most
obvious methodological choice in a study of this nature would
be historical. Using this method we would trace in Father
Bishops consciousness the emergence of the graces that
he was given to found the Glenmary Home Missioners. In
developmental terms it would be a matter of tracing the stages
of growth of Father Bishops vision.
The inherent
weakness of the historical methodology is the temptation to
succumb to a kind of literalism where the charism
of a founder becomes frozen in times and ideologized.
It can be blind to the distinction between the actual charism
of a founder and his application of that charism, and refuse
to admit historical changes and cultural differences.(7)
A second
possible method is more existential. Its immediate goal
would be the discernment of the values and motivating factors
of the present day Glenmary community. These values and
motivating factors are then synthesized and held up as the norm.
The final step would be to examine Father Bishops life
and writings in light of the present day norm.
This method,
however, also has its weaknesses. The founder can easily
be used as a pawn to legitimate present actions by reading
into his charism and conforming it to a pre-conceived
notion. With both methods the main problem that confronts
us is preserving the integrity of the founders charism.(8)
Francis
E. George in Founding Founderology suggests a third
and more acceptable method that incorporates the strengths of
the historical and existential methods while avoiding their
weaknesses. George's hermeneutic approach to the charism seeks
to neither copy a founder nor replace him, but rather
to interpret him for our time and for generations of religious
yet to come.(9)
Our study
would be classified by George as preparatory understanding.
(10) Accordingly, we will analyze and reflect upon
all of the sources that pertain to this period of Father Bishops
life. In our analysis we will try to establish what Father
Bishop consciously meant to say, that is, the meaning of the
texts.(11) In doing so we will keep in mind the historical
distance that separates the texts and our reading of them by
including in our critical analysis Father Bishops presuppositions
(what he took for granted) and his horizon. At the same
time we will consciously be critiquing our own context.
The presuppositions that we bring to the texts and those things
that we find meaningful and important in our understanding and
life.(12)
Using the
hermeneutic method as a tool, we will then proceed according
to the following scheme. In the first chapter we will
clarify and define the theological term charism of a founder
by tracing the development of the term and its evolving meaning.
We will also consider three other theological terms (faith-vision,
spirituality and spirit) that are closely related to the concept
of charism of a founder. The second chapter
will first survey and summarize the twenty-four year period
of Father Bishops life that is the focus of this study,
and will secondly discuss Father Bishops faith-vision
and spirituality in light of the findings of our survey.
In the third chapter we will reflect on what we have learned
about Father Bishops charism from the research of the
previous two chapters. Finally, we will end our study
with a brief conclusion.
One final
point should be re-emphasized before we proceed. As we
noted earlier, this study is not, and should not be considered
as being exhaustive in its treatment of Father
Bishop. It is limited to a specific period of time (1915-1939)
in Father Bishops life and has not been able to benefit
from any serious studies of his early life (1886-1915). or any
scholarly works on the early years of Glenmary (1939-1953).
Even in the twenty-four year period that we have studied there
is a need for more intensive research into related areas and
topics that would have influenced Father Bishop. Specifically,
we are thinking about: 1) American history (19th
and early 20th centuries); 2) The history of the
Catholic Church in the United States (especially the 19th
and early 20th centuries); 3) The Roman Catholic
ecclesiology and missiology of the late 19th and
early 20th centuries; 4) An in-depth study of Father
Bishops relationship with the N.R.L.C. Studies of
this nature could only enhance and deepen our understanding
of Father Bishops charism.
To
continue to Chapter One...
To
return to the contents for this master's thesis
Endnotes
(1) August
15, 1939, is traditionally regarded as the founding date
of Glenmary. Father Bishop, however, had been in
residence in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati since the summer
of 1937.
(2) William
Howard Bishop, A Plan for an American Society of Catholic
Home Missions to Operate in the Rural Sections of the United
States, The Ecclesiastical Review, vol. 94, no.
4 (April 1936): 347.
(3) The
technical name Father Bishop gave to the community he founded.
The more popular name, the Glenmary Home Missioners (or simply
Glenmary), evolved after a few years.
(4) The
Little Flower, vol. 12, no. 1 (summer 1937), p. 2.
(5) The
Little Flower acted as the printed voice of the League
of the Little Flower, an organization started by Father Bishop
to aid rural Catholic schools in the Archdiocese of Baltimore.
Father Bishop was the compiler, editor, and publisher of
The Little Flower from April of 1926 (vol. 1, no. 1) to
the summer of 1937 (vol. 12, no. 1).
(6) Landward
acted as the printed voice of the N.R.L.C. Father Bishop
was Landward s compiler, editor and publisher from
the spring of 1933 (vol. 1, no. 1) to the autumn of 1937 (vol.
5, nos. 2 & 3). For a detailed explanation of Landward
and its contribution to the N.R.L.C. see Raymond Witte, Twenty-Five
Years of Crusading: A History of the National Catholic
Rural life Conference (Des Moines, Iowa: The National
Rural Life Conference, 1948) : 159-68.
(7) Francis
E. George, Founding Founderology, Review for
Religious 36 (January 1977): 41.
(8) Ibid,
pp. 41, 42.
(9) Ibid,
p. 42.
(10) A diagram
of George s hermeneutical approach is re-printed so that
the reader might understand the scope of our study in relation
to this method (see George, op. cit., p. 48)