Scene from the documentary“The Coronation with Her Majesty the Queen”
Covenants of love between God and men
On many occasions, God descended to one of His elect to seal a covenant of love. Owing either to His infinite largesse or to natural human limitations, this bond is not restricted to that chosen soul, but extends to the people or institution arising from it, for centuries to come. So it was with Noah, from whom arose, by reason of the covenant, a new civilization; with Abraham, who begot nations and inherited boundless lands; with David, in whom God blessed royalty, constituting him as ancestor of the Messiah. When, with Clovis, a new rainbow was extended between the Creator and a kingdom that was being baptized, God showed that His modus operandi with humanity was perpetuated in the New Testament. Thus, with Charlemagne, a civilization marked by the Cross of Christ was solidified: at one and the same time the Holy Empire was born and the divine predilection for the First-Born Daughter of the Church was confirmed. Centuries later, in the union of goodness, grandeur and sacrifice, France would glimpse the plan that hovered over her, knowing a true monarch in St. Louis IX. In a similar way, different nations – St. Stephen’s Hungary, St. Casimir’s Poland and St. Ferdinand’s Spain, among others – could be considered in the light of the divine plan.And the England of St. Edward?
On that unforgettable Thursday in September, God seemed to indicate through nature that this was the perspective by which the great change that had occurred would be understood in its true proportions. Above Buckingham Palace, a double rainbow adorned the sky. What could the age-old symbol of the divine covenant evoke, if not the predilection that the Isle of Saints had enjoyed in God’s plan? A predilection marked in the person of St. Edward the Confessor, whose virtues graced Christianity and whose crown would gird the brow of all English monarchs to this day. With this pact, what great mission was entrusted to England? Who knows whether, guided by the divine call, she was to bring about the union of Heaven and earth in her mountains and plains, and above all in her children! To this end even her nature seems oriented. Who, contemplating her exquisite lawns, does not recall the carpets of Paradise? Who, hearing British voices singing, does not mistake them for a choir of Angels? Who, seeing the uprightness towards which the English spirit so readily tends, does not marvel that the disorder of sin has somehow touched them less? The eyes of the Church turn with nostalgia to that past in which she had placed so many hopes in the land of the Angles. Hopes which she saw rewarded in contemplating its firmament dotted with English Saints, but which were frustrated when, almost five centuries ago, her schism drastically separated that beloved country, drenching it in blood and engulfing it in violence. Yet, mysteriously, something of that first blessing remained. The nation was unfaithful, but God would remain faithful, for He could not deny Himself (cf. 2 Tm 2:13). The pact that had been established with St. Edward would somehow produce the fruits that the divine will desired.Last glimmer of Christian Civilization
Elizabeth II represented two covenants: that which God sealed with the English monarchs, and the one He had instituted with ChristianityOfficial portrait of Queen Elizabeth II on the day of her coronation, June 2 of 1953
Inexorable in the fulfilment of duty
Indeed, it is not enough to possess royalty to be respected by the masses, nor to wave from an imposing balcony to gain the good graces of the public. People are only captivated if they perceive goodness in the one who governs them. With his usual eloquence, St. Thomas Aquinas observes that when this happens, the admiration of the subjects knows no obstacles, not even the sovereign’s death. “Who can doubt that good kings live in a sense in the praises of men, not only in life, but still more after death, and that they subsist in the loss felt for them? But the name of wicked kings either immediately vanishes or, if they were notorious for their malice, they are remembered with horror.”1 Nevertheless, to be a good ruler is no simple task. Elizabeth discovered this at an early age and strove to prepare herself to live up to her mission. She would embrace the cross of sovereign to the end, as she had promised on her twenty-first birthday: “My whole life, whether long or short, will be devoted to your service.” Seventy-five years later, how many sacrifices she had made to fulfil her word! In a world of constant change, where the winds of novelty threatened to shake even the most solid principles, and defending the values of civilization became an anachronistic concern, she stood as a point of reference amid the instability of our times or, as an English taxi driver remarked, “the only constant we have had in our lives.” Perhaps without having in mind what philosophers and Saints define as perfection in her position, everything for Elizabeth II was summed up in this word: duty. Without promulgating laws or imposing sanctions – and even more than if she had resigned out of aversion for the advances of evil in the 20th and 21st centuries, thereby accentuating the apparent futility of her position – by the example of her own conduct she fulfilled the monarch’s ideal: renouncing her own good, she fought for the common good, promoting virtue and reproving error.Symbol of a loftier reality
The eyes of the Church turn with nostalgia to that past in which she had placed so many hopes in the land of the AnglesThe Queen's Lying-in-State in Westminster Hall, London
Much more than the funeral of a queen
We now come to the very crux of these lines. Are all these values and principles extinguished with Elizabeth II? Before affirming or denying, another question is in order. Who, apart from this sovereign, represented them in the world? Which of the Christian monarchies still vigorously expresses its own significance, as she did? We know that she was not without her imperfections, and therefore she is not an example in every respect. Yet even her enemies, accusing her of crimes that not she but others committed in the name of the crown, acknowledge that much beyond her person, with her miseries and errors, Elizabeth II represented an order of things. Her funeral rites, carried out with all possible pomp and feeling, was not hers alone; with her were buried the values of which she was a symbol. What will this mean for our days? A new and uncertain future is opening up before us: it is the first time since its creation that humanity has been deprived of such values. Will society be able to subsist? Into what abyss will it plunge? These are questions that only time can answer. On the occasion of Empress Zita’s funeral, held in grand imperial style in the Austrian republic of 1989, Le Figaro Magazine ran an article entitled Europe Bids Farewell to Its Last Empress. It was true. What title to give this article in circumstances at the same time so similar and yet so different? This time it was not just to an empress, but to Christian Civilization, that humanity bid farewell. [caption id="attachment_42099" align="aligncenter" width="650"]
This time it was not just to a queen or an empress, but to Christian Civilization that humanity bid farewellThe coffin of Queen Elizabeth II during the procession towards the burial in Windsor Castle. Background, Big Ben - London[/caption] Let us implore the same Lord who raised up Christendom as the excellent fruit of his Most Precious Blood and sowed the whole earth with the wonders it has produced, to bring it to an even more perfect rebirth, for the full and effective realization of the request enshrined in the pages of the Gospel: “Thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven.” ◊
Notes
1 ST. THOMAS AQUINAS. De regno ad regem Cypri. L.I, c.11.