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The
Newman of New England
James Kent Stone/Fr. Fidelis of the Cross,
C.P.
(1840–1921)
by James Likoudis
One of the greatest nineteenth-century
converts to the Church was James Kent Stone, who has been
rightly called the “American Newman.” Stone was
the scion of a distinguished Boston family of many Episcopalian
and Presbyterian clerics—including such luminaries as
his grandfather, Chancellor James Kent, the famous author
of Commentaries on American Law, and his father,
Dr. John F. Stone, rector of St. Paul’s Church in Boston
and later professor of theology and dean of the faculty at
the Episcopal Theological School at Cambridge. A brilliant
student, James Kent Stone entered Harvard University in 1855,
at the age of 16, and also studied at the University of Göttingen
in Germany before graduating from Harvard in 1861.
Soldier and Scholar
With the advent of the Civil War, Stone
joined the army as a private and quickly advanced to lieutenant,
seeing action in the bloodiest battle of the Civil War, Antietam,
in which some 22,000 men were killed. Upon leaving military
service, he received an MA and then a doctorate in theology
from Harvard. Ordained a deacon and then a priest in the Episcopal
Church, he served as a professor of Latin at Kenyon College
in Ohio. Stone married Cornelia Fay in 1863 and became the
happy father of two daughters.
In 1867, he became the president of
Kenyon College, the youngest college president of the period.
Soon after, acknowledged as a brilliant scholar and speaker,
he accepted the position of president of Hobart College in
Geneva, New York. To his great sorrow, Cornelia died in 1869,
after giving birth to their third child, Frances. Stone’s
conversion to the Catholic Church would occur soon afterward.
Unexpected Conversion
It became evident that Stone’s
theological studies had been affected by the Oxford Tractarian
movement in England, which attempted to prove that the Church
of England and its Protestant Episcopal offshoot had retained
the features of primitive Christianity that a later “Romanism”
had corrupted. Stone’s developing “High Church”
views encountered resistance in the super-Protestant “Low
Church” atmosphere of Kenyon College and led to his
resignation from Kenyon College, whereupon he was offered
the presidency at Hobart, which was High Church Anglican in
ethos. In letters to his mother in 1869, he wrote:
I became convinced that the Catholic
Church in communion with the Successor of St. Peter was
the true Church of our Blessed Savior. It came upon me all
of a sudden. One week I had not the slightest suspicion
that I should ever become a Roman Catholic, and the next
(I think the time was as short, or, at any rate, not much
longer) I saw it as plain as day. I cannot explain it, and
do not attempt to explain it, but consider it simply as
the work of Divine Grace. It was last December, when I was
in Geneva and when Cornelia was apparently getting a little
better. I was not in any way under Catholic influence; the
subject was not brought in any way to my direct notice.
I can only call it God’s work . . . I only wrote to
you now because I knew you would hear the story from others.
What could I do? I am as sure that the Roman Catholic Church
is the true Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ as I am that
there is a God in heaven or that I have a soul to be saved.
I see it as plainly as I see the sun above me. You know
the history of my youth well enough to know that I was sincere
and devout, and that I truly loved my Lord and Savior. The
only desire I ever had for myself was to be His minister.
And now, it is love for Him alone that has drawn me into
His Church. He has called me, and what can I do? Can I refuse
to go? Nay, I have given up everything for His sake—everything.
What is there that I have not given up? I would go through
it all a thousand times over, though I should die a thousand
times from sheer distress, rather than refuse to obey the
Divine Voice which calls me. I would die tomorrow, joyfully,
by the most ignominious and painful of deaths, rather than
betray for a single instant the blessed faith, which is
dearer to me than life and stronger than the fear of death.
Stone had read the touching appeal
of Bl. Pius IX, “Pio Nono,” to all Protestants
and non-Catholic Christians for their return to Catholic unity,
but he was little affected. To his mind, he had already dealt
with the “Roman question,” and felt only pity
for its author. In the words of biographer Katherine Burton
in her book No Shadow of Turning (Longmans, Green
and Company, 1944):
The very suggestion that Romanism
might after all be identical with true Christianity was
preposterous to him. Surely it was the papacy that had been
the great apostate, the mystery of iniquity, the masterpiece
of Satan, which had made its most successful attack upon
the Church of God by entering and corrupting it. The rise
of the papal authority was a matter of plain history; he
had read of it himself over and over, and it was his conviction
that the simple faith of early days was now scarcely recognizable
under the accumulated error of centuries.
Stone had defended the Anglican Reformation
“with all his soul.” Yet one night, in a mysterious
experience, the terrible thought came to him, “What
if the old Roman Church should be right after all?”
Upon the death of his beloved wife, and torn by both personal
and doctrinal anguish, he determined to study in depth the
nature of the Church Christ had established.
Defender of Truth and Papal
Authority
The resolution of all Stone’s
troubling questions would receive final clarification after
his entrance into the Church and the completion of his masterpiece
of apologetics, An Invitation Heeded. This impressive
volume would go into 17 printings and would prove invaluable
to many other seekers of the true Church. Dismissed by one
of his Protestant detractors as the “silliest trash
ever put forth,” An Invitation Heeded is perhaps the
most powerful apologia for the Catholic faith written by an
American convert from Anglicanism. Indeed, his spirit, style,
and logical acumen have been likened to that of the incomparable
John Henry Newman.
Stone’s defense and exposition
of the Roman primacy of universal jurisdiction in the Church
remains of special interest today as ecumenical studies (such
as that occurring with the Catholic-Orthodox dialogue recently
concluded at Ravenna in October 2007) have begun to focus
on the relationship between primacy and collegiality in the
hierarchical structure of the Church. In his survey of the
history of the Church concerning the papacy, the “American
Newman” was to conclude:
The primacy of the See of Peter is
the most prominent fact in the history of Christianity.
And it is a fact which is inseparably associated with a
distinct prophecy. Moreover, the Primacy is not only professedly
grounded upon the prophecy in question, but is actually
so grounded. I mean that the words of Christ [in the famous
petrine texts of Scripture] are so substantially the foundation
of the papal power that the latter could never have existed
without the former. No intelligent student will think of
denying this. Indeed, without looking into the past at all,
it is perfectly plain that, if it were not for the divine
sentences so often quoted, the pontifical claims would be
wholly without sanction, and the papacy would fall to pieces
in an hour . . . “Thou art a Rock; and upon this Rock
I will build My Church; and the Gates of Hell shall not
prevail against it.” Stupendous prophecy! Where among
all the words of God shall its mate be found?
A Life Well Lived
An Invitation Heeded was
written in the interval between Stone’s reception into
the Catholic Church on December 8, 1869, and his ordination
as a priest. Space does not permit a fuller account of his
truly remarkable life. James Kent Stone arranged for the care
and education of his daughters and became a Paulist priest,
and then a famous and much admired Passionist missionary,
known as Fr. Fidelis of the Cross. He helped establish Passionist
houses and churches in America and South America, including
such countries as Argentina, Chile, Brazil, and Cuba. Stone
died in the arms of his daughter Frances during a visit to
her home in San Mateo, California, on October 15, 1921.
James Likoudis is president emeritus
of Catholics United for the Faith.
Editorial Note: Copies of James
Kent Stone’s An Invitation Heeded are still
available from booksellers. James Likoudis’ own works
dealing with the Roman primacy as a divine institution are
also available. His Ending the Byzantine Greek Schism
can be ordered from Emmaus Road Publishing by calling
(800) 398-5470 or visiting www.emmausroad.org.
Both his The Divine Primacy of the Bishop of Rome and
Modern Eastern Orthodoxy: Letters to a Greek Orthodox on the
Unity of the Church ($27.95) and Eastern Orthodoxy
and the See of Peter ($24.95) are available directly from
the author (prices include shipping and handling). To order,
send a check or money order to P.O. Box 852, Montour Falls,
NY 14865.
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