- Gioacchino Ventura di Raulica
Gioacchino Ventura (dei Baroni) di Raulica was an Italian Roman Catholic pulpit
orator , patriot, philosopher and writer.Biography
He was born in
Palermo ,Sicily , on 8 December 1792. He entered theSociety of Jesus in 1808, and in 1817, when the Society was suppressed in Sicily, joined theTheatines . Ordained a priest, he distinguished himself as a Catholic journalist and apologist, as a preacher, especially by his "Funeral Oration ofPius VII " (1823), and as an exponent of thecounter-revolutionary worldview of [Hughes_Felicité_Robert_de_Lamennais] ,Joseph de Maistre andLouis Gabriel Ambroise de Bonald . He was appointed byLeo XII professor of canon law at the Sapienza, and in 1830 was electedSuperior-General of the Theatines. He published his "De methodo philosophandi" in 1828 and "Bellezze della Fede" in 1839. After his generalship (1830-33) he preached in Rome. His eloquence, though somewhat exaggerated and prolix, was vehement and direct, with a noble bearing, a magnificent voice and an affecting delivery, and it won him great renown. In Paris, though not perfectly master of French, he was said to almost rival the famousJean-Baptiste Henri Lacordaire . With the accession ofPope Pius IX , Ventura became politically prominent. His "Funeral Oration of O'Connell" (1847) glorified the union of religion and liberty. His eulogy of liberty on the "Morti di Vienna" sounded almost like a diatribe against kings in general. It was put on theIndex of Prohibited Books .Ventura maintained the lawfulness of the Sicilian Revolution (cfr. his "Sul riconoscimento della Sicilia, etc.", Palermo, 1848; "Menzogne diplomatiche", etc.). His political ideal was an Italian Confederation under the presidency of the pope. During the exile of Pius IX at
Gaeta , Ventura's position in Rome was delicate. Though refusing a seat in the Roman Assembly, he advocated the separation of the ecclesiastical and temporal powers, and in the name of the Sicilians recognized the Roman Republic. As commissioner from Sicily, he was present at a controversial politico-religious ceremony in St. Peter's Basilica, but took no active part in the services. He opposed French intervention in behalf of the pope and when MarshalOudinot attacked Rome, spoke of Pius IX in words which he bitterly regretted. On the downfall of theTriumvir s (1849), he went toMontpellier and then toParis (1851). Here he made an ineffectual attempt to convert his former friend de Lamennais. His Conferences at the "Madeleine" etc. were published as "La raison philosophique et la raison catholique" (1852---). In 1857 he gave the Lenten Sermons at theTuileries beforeNapoleon III ; these appeared as "Le pouvoir politique chrétien". Ventura's philosophical views received final expression in "La tradizione e semi-pelagiani della philosophia", "Saggio sull' origine dell' idee", "Philosophie chrétienne" (Paris, 1861). He is a moderate Traditionalist of theBonald-Bonnetty School . Ventura's private life was irreproachable. He remained a loyal Catholic and died at Versailles on 2 August 1861. His works were published as: "Opere Complete" (31 volumes, Milan, 1854-64); "Opere Postume", (Venice, 1863).ource
*Catholic
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