Saturday, March 23, 2019
Outline on John Bede Polding :: Catholic Figures Bishops Science Essays
Outline on toilet Bede PoldingJohn Bede Polding- John Bede Polding was born at Liverpool on the eighteenth of October 1794 and died at Sydney, 16 March 1877. During his life he contributed in galore(postnominal) ways to the growth of Catholicism in Australia through many divers(prenominal) events. He was the first Catholic Archbishop in Australia, although he was ordained in England. He came to Australia in 1835 and at once set to work to lead his vast diocese. He found only three priests in impudently South Wales and one in Tasmania these with the three or quartette Benedictine monks whom he had brought with him constituted the entire force at his disposal. Then, and for many geezerhood afterwards, he worked like one of his priests, saying Mass daily in various stations, often in the convict prisons, teaching the Catechism, hearing the confessions of multitudes, and attendance the sick and dying. He obtained permission to give take backs in the prison establishments, and am id 1836 and 1841 no less than 7000 convicts made at least ten days retreat under his guidance. Because of his good work the authorities began to bring every new shipload of Christian convicts to him, and he assisted all(prenominal) in all of them personally and assay to help them before they were sent off to different places throughout Australia, covering his remarkable patience and acceptance for all people. In 1841 Bishop Polding revisited England and thence went on to Rome to report on his vicariate and petition for the establishment of a hierarchy, which was granted in 1842, the vicar Apostolic becoming first Archbishop of Sydney and Primate of all Australia. During this visit he was sent on a special diplomatical mission to Malta, and in recognition of his success therein was made a Count of the Holy Roman Empire and an assistant at the overblown throne. In 1843 he returned to Sydney, taking with him a band of Christian Brothers, four Passionists, and some Benedictines. H is return as archbishop aroused a violent beset among the Church of England party in the colony, but his gentleness and tact disarmed all opponents. This displays some of the ways that Polding contributed to the forming of Christianity in Australia during its early stages. He also contributed to the foundation garment of the benedict nuns in Australia. He brought the two founding Nuns, Scholastica Gregory and Magdalen le Clerc, to Australia, where they began Benedictine Monastic life for women on February 2nd, 1849.
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