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A.
Introduction
The Roman Forum is a tax-exempt, not-for-profit
organization dedicated to the broad defense of Catholic
doctrine and Catholic culture. It was founded in 1968 in
the wake of Humanae vitae by the great
philosopher, Professor Dietrich von Hildebrand
(1889-1977), whom Pope Pius XII called “the twentieth
century Doctor of the Church”.
Born and
raised in Florence, von Hildebrand began his career at
the University of Munich. Nazi persecution drove him to
Catholic Austria and the University of Vienna, before
the Anschluss forced him to emigrate anew. He
finally settled in the United States, taking up a
position at Fordham University in New York City. Dr. von
Hildebrand’s life work was committed to the union of
philosophy with all the other arts and sciences under
the corrective and transforming guidance of the revealed
truths of the Catholic Faith.
Professor
von Hildebrand’s successor as head of the Roman Forum
was the late Dr. William A. Marra, also of Fordham
University. Dr. Marra was active on radio, television,
and lecture programs throughout the United States and
Europe. In 1991, he was followed by the current
Director, Dr. John C. Rao, D. Phil. in Modern European
History from Oxford University, and Associate Professor
of History at St. John’s University in New York City.
B. General
Purpose
Perhaps the greatest tragedy of the
modern world has been the presumption of an unavoidable
conflict between nature and religion. Naturalists look
upon the introduction of religious ideas into daily life
as a death sentence for individual freedom and social
progress. Many people with religious convictions are
suspicious of the world around them and consider any
interest in nature and human achievement to be an
impossible obstacle to spiritual growth. The results,
taken together, have been disastrous: “culture” that
lacks both transcendence and depth; one dimensional
religious perceptions; flatness, boredom, lack of poetry
and purpose in all aspects of life.
A second modern
tragedy has been the compartmentalization of existence.
Many theologians know no philosophy; most scientists, no
theology; many experts in abstract intellectual studies,
little about the fine arts; most artists, or, for that
matter, most people in general, nothing of the need to
root themselves in the permanent things. Almost no one
can place his field of study or his daily actions within
an historical context. Men work at counter purposes and
gain little for their efforts but a vision of shadows on
the back wall of the cave of modernity.
The Roman
Forum has sought to respond to this tragic situation
through an active defense of the one force that can pull
all of the aspects of nature and the supernatural
together: Roman Catholicism. Between 1968 and 1991 it
worked chiefly by means of ad hoc lectures
responding to current crises in Church and society. By
1991, however, it realized that these admittedly
valuable conferences were nevertheless somewhat
disconnected, thereby partly obscuring their ultimate
purpose. The Forum decided that a successful fulfillment
of its stated task demanded dedication to a systematic
teaching of the True, the Good, and the Beautiful—one
that ignored neither the particular nor the whole
picture of knowledge, the arts, and life in
general—within a more broad and structured historical
framework. It also concluded that at least part of this
systematic training had to be given in an environment
which, by its history and development, was more
congenial to the Catholic love of Faith, Reason and the
hierarchy of values than an America which, besides being
secularized in its contemporary practices and beliefs,
was Protestant and Enlightenment in its origins.
This broader,
historically-focused and international program was
inaugurated on February 23rd, 1992, the
Solemnity of the Chair of Saint Peter in Antioch (now
the Forum’s patronal feast), with a Solemn Pontifical
Traditional Mass celebrated by His Eminence, Alfons
Maria Cardinal Stickler, former Prefect of the Vatican
Library. It involves several projects. The
New York
City Church History Lecture Series offers an
in-depth discussion of consecutive periods in the life
of Christendom each year from September through May. The
Gardone Summer Symposia in northern Italy
carry on that study in a full Catholic spiritual,
intellectual, historical and social environment in June
and July. Annual tours will take participants to various
European sites of Catholic interest giving flesh to the
themes discussed in New York and Gardone.
Special
Colloquia
held throughout the year maintain the Roman Forum’s
older commitment to dealing with broad contemporary
problems, rooted in theology and philosophy, involving
the Church and society at large. All of the Colloquia
and Symposia lectures since 1993 have been preserved,
and are now available through
Keep the Faith (www.keepthefaith.org).
Articles dealing with both scholarly and immediate
issues are published in the Forum’s
Letter From the
Romans. Its spirituality, rooted in understanding
the full consequences of the Incarnation for personal
and social life, is presented in our on-line discussion
of the
Theology of the
Mystical Body of Christ. The Forum also sponsors
dinner meetings with prominent speakers from throughout
the world at various times during the academic year in
order to create a closer sense of Catholic fraternity
and joy.
Director:
John
C. Rao, D. Phil., Oxford
Associate Professor of History, St.
John’s University
Board of Trustees:
Mr. Ward T. Henderson
Rev. Dr. Richard A. Munkelt
Dr. John C. Rao
Chaplain:
Msgr. Dr. Ignacio
Barreiro-Carámbula
Faculty:
Msgr.
Dr. Ignacio Barreiro
Dr. Jefferey Bond
Professor Dino Marcantonio
Rev. Dr. Richard Munkelt
Dr. John C. Rao
Dr. David A. White
For more information,
or to be placed on
our mailing list, contact us:
The Roman Forum
11 Carmine Street, #2C
NYC, NY 10014
(212) 645-2971 (leave a message, with
e-mail address, if possible)
director@romanforum.org
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