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===The search for "Xavier Rynne"===
===The search for "Xavier Rynne"===


Officials in the Vatican tried for years to prove Murphy had written the articles. Murphy was once called before Archbishop Pietra Parente, assessor of the Vatican "Holy Office", (often referred to as "the Inquisition"). In the Xavier Rynne articles, Murphy had unflatteringly referred to Parente as "a strange personality who has few friends and sees heresy everywhere". The archbishop held up a copy of a Xavier Rynne book. Murphy asked, "Do you want me to take an oath about that book?" and said, "I'm not the author of that book." Murphy later explained he saw himself as author not of the books, but of the individual articles. Murphy said he used "casuistry - making subtle distinctions intended to mislead - which we were taught to do.'"
Officials in the Vatican tried for years to prove Murphy had written the articles. Murphy was once called before Archbishop Pietra Parente, assessor of the Vatican "Holy Office", (often referred to as "the Inquisition"). In the Xavier Rynne articles, Murphy had unflatteringly referred to Parente as "a strange personality who has few friends and sees heresy everywhere". The archbishop held up a copy of a Xavier Rynne book. Murphy asked, "Do you want me to take an oath about that book?" and said, "I'm not the author of that book." Murphy later explained he saw himself as author not of the books, but of the individual articles. Murphy said he used "[[casuistry]] - making subtle distinctions intended to mislead - which we were taught to do.'"


Murphy escaped the consequences of the interrogation when Archbishop Parente referred to Pius XI as "a little feeble-minded" or "crazy in the head". Murphy told his American monsignor who was serving as Murphy's secretary during the meeting, "Write down that he said Pius XI was feeble-minded." The archbishop, worried he would be censured, simply walked out. Murphy was free to go.
Murphy escaped the consequences of the interrogation when Archbishop Parente referred to Pius XI as "a little feeble-minded" or "crazy in the head". Murphy told his American monsignor who was serving as Murphy's secretary during the meeting, "Write down that he said Pius XI was feeble-minded." The archbishop, worried he would be censured, simply walked out. Murphy was free to go.

Revision as of 13:15, 28 August 2020

Francis Xavier Murphy
ChurchCatholic Church
Orders
OrdinationJune 23, 1940
Personal details
Born
Francis Xavier Murphy

(1914-06-16)June 16, 1914
Bronx, New York, United States
DiedApril 12, 2002(2002-04-12) (aged 87)
Annapolis, Maryland, United States
BuriedRedemptorist Cemetery, St. Mary's Catholic Church, Annapolis, Maryland
NationalityAmerican
DenominationRoman Catholic

Francis Xavier Murphy (June 16, 1914 – April 11, 2002) was a Redemptorist chaplain and theology professor. He is most known for his articles about the Second Vatican Council, published under the pseudonym Xavier Rynne.[1]

Early life

Born in The Bronx, New York City, on June 16 1914, Murphy was the first of Denis (1889–1932) and Anna Elizabeth "Nano" (née Rynne) (1894–1967) Murphy's three children. Murphy's parents eloped together, leaving their native Ireland, emigrated to the US and married in the Bronx upon their arrival in the States.[2]

Murphy was baptized in The Church of St. Angela Merici on Morris Avenue in the Bronx, July 6, 1914.[3]

Family influences

Murphy's father was a New York police officer who directed his son's early education. He chose to send young Murphy to the school of the Immaculate Conception. The German-American parish had a reputation for being academically challenging.[4]

Murphy said his mother's interest in New York politics "...stimulated his interest in Vatican intrigue". His mother was the maitresse d'hotel at the Bronx Concourse Plaza Hotel and came to know the politicians who frequented the place. For years it was considered the best location in the Bronx for social, business and fraternal events.[4]

Religious calling

Murphy was confirmed at the age of eight at Immaculate Conception Church (where he attended elementary school) by then Archbishop Patrick Hayes of New York. Murphy said after his Confirmation, he began to hear "the first whisperings of the call of God".

Religious training

Murphy graduated from the Redemptorists' Mercyhurst North East preparatory seminary at North East, Pennsylvania in May 1934,[5] and then entered the Redemptorist novitiate at St. Mary's College, Ilchester, Maryland, and completed his theological training at Mount St. Alphonsus Seminary in Esopus, New York.[6]

Murphy made his first profession as a Redemptorist in August 1935. On the eve of his first pro­fession, he wrote in a journal about how courage was the true test of a cleri­c. "To be a success as a Religious," he wrote, "one must have 'courage': not the precipitate quality of throwing oneself into hazard without a moment's delay, but the persistent ability to face the facts and perform one's duty from day to day, no matter what the cost. And that is the genius of sanctity!"[7] Murphy made his final profession in September 1938.

Priesthood

He was ordained at Esopus on June 23, 1940. Sent for further studies, Murphy first earned both a master's degree and, then in 1945, a Ph.D. in Medieval History from the Catholic University of America writing Rufinus of Aquileia (345-411): His Life and Works.[7]

Subsequently, he was assigned as a US Navy chaplain at Annapolis, Maryland. Murphy was stationed at St. Mary’s Parish in Annapolis until 1947, when he returned to Esopus to teach and organize the library.[6]

In the summer of 1948 he was sent to Sant’Alfonso in Rome to assist in the task of collecting and microfilming Redemptorist records in European libraries, and became a correspondent for the National Catholic Welfare Conference News Service.[6]

In 1959, Murphy became a professor of moral theology at Pontifical Lateran University in Rome for 17 years.[8]

Military service

Murphy served as chaplain at the Naval Academy from 1944 to 1947 and with the Army from 1951 to 1958. He earned the Bronze Star for "meritorious operations against an armed enemy in Korea."[8]

Writing career

Murphy developed an interest in early Christian writers while in the seminary. After writing his first article in 1937 "The Irascible Hermit" about St. Jerome,[3] he showed it to the rector of the seminary, saying he hoped to have the article published. Disapproving, the rector said, "You're very ambitious". The Paulist Fathers' Catholic World magazine published Murphy's article, paid him $40 and encouraged him to continue writing.[4] Murphy became a respected and frequent contributor to the Catholic press.

Second Vatican Council coverage

During the Second Vatican Council, held in Rome from 1962 to 1965, Murphy originally planned to simply report on the proceedings in a Catholic magazine. Serving as theological adviser to a Redemptorist bishop during the Council, Murphy was able to attend all sessions, allowing him accurate, first-hand insider knowledge. Murphy said "one could learn a lot by going up and down in the Vatican elevators, attending embassy parties and reading Italian papers". When Roman Curia officials tried to block Pope John XXIII's reform-minded council, control Catholic scholarship around the world, and tried to control the council itself, Murphy's reporting became important to the world.[4]

The New Yorker magazine's wider audience

Murphy sought a wider audience for the story. John Chapin, a literary agent and translator of Redemptorist works introduced Murphy to Robert Giroux of Farrar, Straus & Giroux. Giroux contacted William Shawn, the editor of The New Yorker magazine. Shawn agreed to publish Murphy's reports, under the pseudonym "Xavier Lynne", then from Murphy's middle name and his mother's birth name.

The first The New Yorker article, published in October, 1962, attracted world-wide attention. Murphy is credited with setting the tone for the popular view of the council, depicting it as "conservative" versus "liberal".[9]

The Baltimore Province of the Redemptorists positively reviewed Murphy's Second Vatican Council reporting, saying "Keenly appreciating Pope John XXIII's declared intention in calling the Council, 'to open a window' and 'let in fresh air,' Father Murphy not only reported on the Church's view of the modern world, but in doing so, let the modern world see the workings of the Church".[5]

The collected articles were published in a book, Vatican Council II in 1968 and reprinted by Orbis Books in 1999.

The search for "Xavier Rynne"

Officials in the Vatican tried for years to prove Murphy had written the articles. Murphy was once called before Archbishop Pietra Parente, assessor of the Vatican "Holy Office", (often referred to as "the Inquisition"). In the Xavier Rynne articles, Murphy had unflatteringly referred to Parente as "a strange personality who has few friends and sees heresy everywhere". The archbishop held up a copy of a Xavier Rynne book. Murphy asked, "Do you want me to take an oath about that book?" and said, "I'm not the author of that book." Murphy later explained he saw himself as author not of the books, but of the individual articles. Murphy said he used "casuistry - making subtle distinctions intended to mislead - which we were taught to do.'"

Murphy escaped the consequences of the interrogation when Archbishop Parente referred to Pius XI as "a little feeble-minded" or "crazy in the head". Murphy told his American monsignor who was serving as Murphy's secretary during the meeting, "Write down that he said Pius XI was feeble-minded." The archbishop, worried he would be censured, simply walked out. Murphy was free to go.

The quest by the church to discover "Xavier Rynne's" true identity continued. Murphy's mother was told by a son-in-law the Auxiliary Bishop of New York Edwin B. Broderick had asked him what his mother-in-law's maiden name was. Mrs. Murphy immediately suspected something, saying "Damn that Frank. He's in trouble again".[4]

Later life

During the 1970s Murphy served as a visiting professor at Princeton University and later was connected with Johns Hopkins University. From 1977 through 1981 he served as rector of Holy Redeemer College in Washington, D.C..[5]

He wrote more than 20 books in his lifetime, under his pseudonym and his own name.[5]

Death and burial

Murphy died April 12, 2002 at Anne Arundel Medical Center in Annapolis, Maryland, of complications from cancer surgery. He was 87. He was buried at the Redemptorist Cemetery at St. Mary's Catholic Church in Annapolis.[5][10]

Bibliography

  • John XXIII: The Story of the Pope (1959)
  • Letters from Vatican City : Vatican Council II, first session : background and debates (1963)
  • The second session; the debates and decrees of Vatican Council II, September 29 to December 4, 1963 (1964)
  • The third session; the debates and decrees of Vatican Council II, September 14 to November 21, 1964 (1965)
  • The fourth session; the debates and decrees of Vatican Council II, September 14 to December 8, 1965 (1966)
  • The Pilgrim Pope (1979)

References

  1. ^ Jones, Arthur (May 3, 2002). "Another luminary lost: F.X. Murphy dies at 87; as Xavier Rynne, exuberant scholar revealed the inside story of Vatican II". National Catholic Reporter. Retrieved 2008-04-17.
  2. ^ "Mrs. Denis Murphy". The Scarsdale Inquirer. July 6, 1967. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  3. ^ a b Hayes, PH.D, Patrick J. (2013). "The Francis Xavier Murphy, C.SS.R., (1914-2002) Collection of the Baltimore Province Archives: A Bibliography" (PDF). Spicilegium Historicum Congregationis SSMI Redemptori. 61: 425–462. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Identity of Vatican II writer no longer secret". Religious News Service. January 1, 1998. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e Page, Eric (April 15, 2002). "Francis Murphy Dies at 87; Chronicled Vatican Debates". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-04-17.
  6. ^ a b c "Francis X. Murphy, C.Ss.R. Papers", Baltimore Province of the Redemptorists Archives
  7. ^ a b Hayes, Patrick J. ""Bless me Father, for I have Rynned": The Vatican II Journalism of Francis X. Murphy, C.Ss.R." U.S. Catholic Historian. 30 (2): 55–75. Retrieved August 24, 2020.
  8. ^ a b Rasmussen, Frederick N. (April 17, 2002). "Rev. Francis Murphy, 87, wrote about Vatican Council". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 23, 2020.
  9. ^ Graeme Zielinski (April 12, 2002). "Priest Francis X. Murphy Dies; Wrote Dispatches on Vatican II". The Washington Post. p. B06. Retrieved 2008-04-17.
  10. ^ "Rev Francis Xavier Murphy". www.findagrave.com. Retrieved August 23, 2020.