Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
As Notre Dame burns, France called to re-set world ablaze
As Notre Dame burns, France called to re-set world ablaze
Dec 29, 2025 9:28 PM

May all Christian believers, particularly in France, be reminded that they must put out the angry fires festering against their faith’s many aggressors in order to ignite healthy joyful spiritual flames – so as “to be as God fully wants us to be”, in St. Catherine of Siena’s words, “to set the world ablaze” where Christianity is nowadays smoldering.

Read More…

Like most big stories, the world discovered last night’s fire devouring Paris’s Notre Dame Cathedral at breakneck speed on social media. Images and video reached billions within a few minutes, nearly as fast as the dramatic flames took pletely engulf the ancient roof and send its tallest spire hurdling into a billowing smoky abyss.

The images were horrifying, especially to those have personally visited and profited from the spiritual peace found inside the lofty Medieval magnum opus of religious architecture. Receiving roughly 14 million visitors per year, Notre Dame – Our Lady – is a mother and “muse” to many Christian souls far and wide.

In a National Catholic Register article, French journalist Solène Tadié reacted from Rome: “It is the very soul of the French that these flames have wounded. The Cathedral of Notre Dame made Paris the rightful capital of France. From Nerval to Gustave Doré, Claude Monet, Victor Hugo, Charles Péguy, or even Walt Disney, it has been a muse for the greatest minds of the past 850 years of history.”

“Notre-Dame is not only the highest symbol of Catholicism in France, it is part of our world heritage,” she wrote.

Arthur Herlin, a fellow Parisian colleague in Rome and director of I.Media’s French Vatican news agency said he had been following the news closely throughout a sleepless night. Still in a state of disbelief early this morning, Herlin said that “Notre Dame Cathedral has endured centuries, nearly 1000 years of French social upheaval.”

Herlin recalled he grew up in the shadows of Notre Dame, where his aunt runs a shop in the same quarter and therefore frequently entered the cathedral. He said the arch symbol of French Catholicism has been a most “stable witness despite countless attacks against the faith, as with so many recent acts of terrorism, rogue vandalism and even martyrdom in France’s churches.”

“Notre Dame,” he said, has stood the test of time and “intact even after The French Revolution and its continued secular battles to take down Christianity. Miraculously it also survived the bombing raids of two World Wars.”

Through it all, Notre Dame Cathedral remained relatively unscarred until this day. “A sort of September 11 for us Parisians,” Herlin said.

Indeed, Notre Dame has always served as a source of spiritual capital and strength, being a center from which the French Church has relaunched the Christian evangelization of its nation, the so-called “eldest daughter of the Church.”

Since its groundbreaking in 1163 with Pope Alexander III, the great French cathedral and its preachers have stood up against many a powerful foe while seeking to revitalize a country where currently only 5-10% regularly practice their Roman Catholic faith. It was in this very sacred space where Fr. Dominque Lacordaire, the outspoken man who brought back the Dominican Order to France after its brutal persecution by Napoleon Bonaparte, preached a series of fiery Lenten sermons from the pulpit. Here, under Our Lady’s protection and inspiration, a feisty and intelligent priest trained in legal prosecution, put up one of the greatest battle of words to stem the seemingly unstoppable advance of 19th-century French secularism.

During Lacordaire’s “Conferences de Notre Dame”, preached in 1835, the Dominican was unintimidated by Paris’s irascible elite and powerful secular state officials. He endured, charmed, and ultimately succeeded in convincing his hardened jury of doubters to give Christian peace one more chance.

In a historical article we read “the overwhelming majority of [Lacordaire’s] audience…was skeptical, unbelieving, rationalistic, one might say hostile to Catholic doctrine: …it posed of scholars, literary men, artists, lawyers, politicians, Ministers of State, and officers in the Armies of France: and that [of] the French intellectuals [who] are probably the keenest minded in the world, those who seem more than others to have inherited the quick intelligence of the Greeks.”

Albert de Broglie, Lacordaire’s successor in the French Academy, said: “The effect [of his preaching] was astonishing. His words seemed to leave the precincts of the sacred building and, as in the days of Christ, find the toll-gatherers amidst the noise of their business or their amusements.”

passionate Christians pore over Vatican press statements expressing “sadness”, “incredulity” and “closeness” and as they also applaud President Emmanuel Macron’s pledge to quickly rebuild the Paris cathedral, may the Palm Sunday inferno at Notre Dame serve as an oracle of what their personal witness to Christ involves. May they help bring sentimental non-believers back into such eminently beautiful sacred spaces of worship not as art-loving bon vivants, but as meek and prayerful faithful seeking to serve a King who was greeted triumphally with palm branches upon entering Jerusalem before undergoing his Passion.

May all Christian believers, particularly in France, be reminded that they must put out the angry fires festering against their faith’s many aggressors in order to ignite healthy joyful spiritual flames – so as “to be as God fully wants us to be”, in St. Catherine of Siena’s words, “to set the world ablaze” where Christianity nowadays smolders.

Credits:

Featured Image (cropped): mons by Milliped – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0,

Video : YouTube/Inside Edition

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Conscience for life in fiction, Newman, and Acton
I’m just about halfway through my third reading of Umberto Eco’s marvelous first novel The Name of the Rose. Every time I return to it I find something new. It is a murder mystery set in a medieval monastery but it is also so much more. It is a novel of deceit, desire, philosophy, signs, church, state, religion, heresy, power, powerlessness, truth, error, and the difficulties in discerning them in the world. Some of its greatest conflicts are those of...
The ‘dead-end job’ that has delivered dozens from homelessness
She set out to make a product to help the homeless endure life on the streets during Detroit’s brutal winters. She ended up starting a business that has taken dozens of homeless people from desperation to independence. Veronika Scott grew up in poverty. Her parents’ addictions sometimes plunged their entire family into homelessness, and she remembers being written off as hopeless. “People just looked at you as if you’re worthless by extension, as if you’re doomed to repeat the same...
Ronald Reagan statue unveiled on ruins of the Berlin Wall
In the early church, new converts would often raze pagan temples and build Christian churches on the ruins. A secular version of this triumphant gesture took place this weekend as the unveiling of a statue of President Ronald Reagan, and an invocation of God, took place on the toppled remains of the Berlin Wall. “We stand on a piece of real estate that was part of the kill zone,” said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at the statue’s unveiling. “It...
‘Inclusive capitalism’? Why not simply ‘capitalism’
When the feel-good word “inclusive” is applied to the not always feel-good word “capitalism,” it’s a little like mixing oil and water for lovers of socialism. They assume that capitalism is a naturally selfish “look out for your own short term gain while everyone else loses” economic system. Read More… I like the word inclusive. Who doesn’t? My colleague certainly likes the word inclusive, especially when I include more money in her paycheck. My wife likes the word inclusive, when...
A Cardinal against Maduro
It is no great secret that one of the few institutions that has stood firm against the socialist Maduro dictatorship in Venezuela is the Catholic Church. Most other institutions have dissolved, broken or promised. The bishops of the Church in Venezuela, however, has been unsparing in their critique of the regime and how it has destroyed the economy and undermined any semblance of constitutional order. This week, however, the Archbishop emeritus of Caracas, Cardinal Jorge Urosa upped the stakes in...
5 facts about the Berlin Wall
This weekend, the world celebrates the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. On November 9, 1989, East Germans began picking at the wall with hammers, picks – even their bare hands – until the mammoth structure that had divided the city for the past 28 years lay in ruins. Here are five facts you need to know about the Berlin Wall. 1. The Berlin Wall grew out of a settlement made at the end of World War...
Stranger Things on America: ‘It’s not rigged!’
My colleague Dylan Pahman posted a worthwhile reflection on the contrast munism and free markets in the Cold War-era setting of Stranger Things. I had his analysis in mind while watching the conclusion of the show’s third season, and in ep. 7 (“The Bite”) there’s a noteworthy exchange between Alexei, the Russian scientist, and Murray Bauman, the Russian-speaking American conspiracy theorist. The two visit the Hawkins fair, which presents an entirely new world to Alexei. Alexei is under the impression...
Turning African game poachers into conservationists
In a new video from theProperty and Environment Research Center in Bozeman, Montana, African hunting guide Mark Haldane explains how “habitat conservation depends on making wildlife petitive with other land uses.” This story is set in the Coutada 11 region in Mozambique along the Zambezi River delta. As PERC explains it, “bymaking the conservation of wildlife habitat economically viable, generating revenue used to fund anti-poaching efforts, and establishing critical e for munities, trophy hunting has proven to be an essential...
Toward an economics of abundance: How the cross triumphs over scarcity
For many, economics is ultimately about solving the problem of scarcity—determining how to best use and distribute limited resources. Yet, as some economists are beginning to understand, human creativity and innovation are increasingly allowing us to triumph over such scarcity. As Christians, it’s a tension that’s all too familiar, from creation (abundance) to the fall (scarcity) to the resurrection (abundance) to the here and now (+ not yet). plicated. In a new short film from The Bible Project, we get...
‘Unternehmergeist’: The enterprising spirit of East Berlin escape artists
All those who heroically “beat the Wall” were creative and gutsy characters. Their souls were filled with daring cunning and ingenious creativity. They embodied the very enterprising spirit – unternehmergeist – typical of entrepreneurial market-based societies in the West. Read More… Without warning, in the middle of a pleasantly warm August 13 night in 1961, German Democratic Republic authorities hatched and executed their stealthy plan: 10,000 soldiers were ordered to race to secure the border between East and West Berlin...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved