22 June 1866: The Archbishop of Dublin, Paul
Cullen was created a Cardinal on this day. He was the first Irishman to hold
such a high position within the Church. He was given
the titular Roman church of San Pietro Montorio – a Church with Irish
associations. He
was born in Co Kildare in 1803. Paul Cullen
himself was named after an uncle executed by crown forces in May 1798. Cullen's
father was also involved with the United Irishmen, was arrested, and narrowly
avoided court-martial and a probable death sentence. He was released in 1801.
His family were prosperous Tenant Farmers.
Educated locally, incl time spent in a Quaker
School he spent many years in Rome studying. He
took his Doctorate in Theology in 1828, and defended it in the presence of the
Pope. He was ordained there in 1829. He was later
the Rector of the Irish College in the Holy City and was also appointed Rector
of the College of the Propaganda of the Faith/Congregatio
de Propaganda Fide – a
most senior appointment. Due to his position as head of the Irish College he
was the conduit for correspondence between the Irish Bishops and the Holy See
for many years and became intimate with all aspects of the Church at home in
Ireland.
When the revolutionary events of 1848 swept
through Rome Cullen offered sanctuary to a number of clerics
and cardinals wanted by the republican regime. He secured the protection of the
United States Consul over his palace in Rome, which then flew the flag of the
USA. The sight of that emblem precluded the Revolutionaries from setting foot
inside. This act of some cunning earned Cullen the eternal gratitude of Pope
Pius IX. His status in the eyes of this long lived and very conservative Pope
was further enhanced in 1859 when he helped to organise an Irish Brigade that
was sent to Italy to fight alongside the Papal troops in defending the Papal
Estates from Garibaldi.
He was appointed Archbishop of Armagh in 1849
and returned home the following year. He
convened the Synod of
Thurles (1850), the first national
synod held
with due public solemnity in
Ireland since
the beginning of the Reformation period.
The main purpose of the synod was to
restore the authority of ecclesiastical
order in Ireland,
and this was in the fullest measure attained. The
synod none the less marked the introduction of distinctly Roman devotional
forms across the island. Cullen considered the synod's decrees to be his
greatest achievement and worked hard to secure their implementation.
A noted conservative in politics he was
opposed to the Young Irelanders and also the Fenians. He wanted the Irish Catholic
Church to stay aloof from politics unless there were specific Catholic issues
involved. His lifelong ambition was to see established a Catholic University in
Ireland. While one was established in 1854 under John
Henry Newman it never really got off the ground and limped
on for years in a sort of educational limbo. He also wanted the Protestant
Church of Ireland to be disestablished. While only partially successful in the
1st the COI was disestablished in 1869 – much to Cullen’s
satisfaction.
He attended the Vatican Council in 1870 where
he was a staunch defender of Papal Infallibility. His definition the Pope’s Authority on Theological
matters infallibility was the one that was adopted with just minor
modifications. He was Rome’s
Representative to Ireland and ensured that the Church here was run under
disciplined and regimented lines. The squabbles and localism of earlier times
were suppressed and the Catholics of Ireland were ‘Romanised’ in a way that was
not there before Cullen took over.
He was first and
foremost a Roman. His allegiance to Rome, in the person of the pope and his
authority, temporal and spiritual, was uncompromising. How Rome stood … on any
question was Cullen’s point of departure.
Emmet Larkin
Cullen died
suddenly at Eccles Street, Dublin on 24 October 1878. His funeral was a great
public event. He was buried, according to his wishes, below the high altar in
Holy Cross College, Clonliffe the college he had done so much to have founded.
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