J
Jerry_Parker
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I am at the last pages of James O
I shall be starting later today on a biography of a courageous 18th century bishop who was active at a time of oppression of Roman Catholics in Great Britain. The book is James Barnard`s “The Life of Richard Challoner, Bishop of Debra” (facsimile reprint, from Kessinger Publishing, of the 1784 Coghlan edition), This bishop is best known to Catholics as the reviser responsible for the Douay-Rheims-Challoner Version of the Catholic Bible. His work on the Douay-Rheims Bible made it far more elegant and readable for Catholic faithful than it had been in its original form. Barnard does not discuss very much the venerable Bible on which Challoner laboured so fruitfully, but it is clear, from what I have heard of this book and from so far scanning it before launching into reading it in full, that Bp. Challoner was a virtuous and an heroic figure of our precious Catholic history.
Tooles "Militant and Triumphant: William Henry OConnell and the Catholic Church in Boston, 1859-1944" (University of Notre-Dame Press, 1992). It is a no-holds-barred biography of this figure (who is the prelate loosely depicted in the novel and the film, "The Cardinal"). It reveals OConnells many faults, but it does not pillory him. Its a fair account of OConnells life and career. I once had the opportunity, early in my music library career, to catalogue Cardinal OConnells fine Latin Church music in manuscript (though he is best remembered for his hymns), which partly is how I became interested in this figure.I shall be starting later today on a biography of a courageous 18th century bishop who was active at a time of oppression of Roman Catholics in Great Britain. The book is James Barnard`s “The Life of Richard Challoner, Bishop of Debra” (facsimile reprint, from Kessinger Publishing, of the 1784 Coghlan edition), This bishop is best known to Catholics as the reviser responsible for the Douay-Rheims-Challoner Version of the Catholic Bible. His work on the Douay-Rheims Bible made it far more elegant and readable for Catholic faithful than it had been in its original form. Barnard does not discuss very much the venerable Bible on which Challoner laboured so fruitfully, but it is clear, from what I have heard of this book and from so far scanning it before launching into reading it in full, that Bp. Challoner was a virtuous and an heroic figure of our precious Catholic history.
