Malachi Martin

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The Reverend Dr. Father Malachi Brendan Martin (July 23, 1921July 27, 1999) was a Roman Catholic priest and a former Jesuit. Author of 15 books on religious and geo-political topics, Martin was a controversial commentator on the Vatican and other Catholic matters. He was a brother of the Irish historian F. X. Martin.

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[edit] Life

Martin was born in Ballylongford, County Kerry, Ireland and studied at the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium. There he received doctorates in the Semitic Languages, Archeology and Oriental History. Subsequently, he studied at Oxford and at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

He was ordained to the priesthood on August 15, 1954. From 1958 to 1964 he served the Holy See at the Vatican in Rome. Martin was the private secretary of Augustin Cardinal Bea in Rome and lived and worked at the Vatican for many years. According to his book Hostage to the Devil, he assisted in several exorcisms while a priest.

A traditionalist, Martin was dissatisfied with the reforms of the Second Vatican Council. As early as 1964, one year before the final close of the Council, Pope Paul VI released Father Martin from the vows of poverty and obedience in the Jesuit Order, but confirmed his vow of celibacy at Martin's request. Fr. Martin relocated to New York City in 1965, and was active in the communications and media field for the rest of his life.

CoasttoCoastam.com bio: The late Father Malachi Martin was a renown exorcist and Jesuit, a one-time advisor to three Popes, and best-selling author. As a member of the Vatican Intelligence Network, under Pope John the 23rd, Martin helped extend the Church into Iron Curtain countries. In 1964, concerned about the corrupting influences of power, Martin was released from his vows of poverty and obedience after 25 years as a Jesuit. He left Rome for New York, where he did odd jobs until a Guggenheim Fellowship enabled him to write his first bestseller, Hostage to the Devil.

Martin was also a member of the Vatican advisory council as was privledged to secretive information pertaining to Vatican and other world issues. It is theorized that his death, though listed to medical cause, is an elaborate hoax to conceal a vengeful murder to hide from public, his intimate knowledge of secretive information and the people who were his informants. He stated this in his book The Keys of His Blood (1990) and made other references to this in his book Windswept House.

[edit] Writings

Martin's writings cover a range of Catholic topics, such as exorcisms, Satanism, Liberation Theology, the Tridentine liturgy, Catholic dogma, and the geopolitical importance of the Pope. Martin was a guest on Art Bell's radio program throughout the 1990s.

His books frequently present a dark view of the present state of the world, invoking dark spirits, conspiracy, betrayal, heresy, widespread sexual perversion, self-advancement, and demonic possession, each being asserted as rife throughout the Catholic Church, from its lowest levels up to its highest. His exposition can be forceful, with the appearance of considerable intelligence and authority.

[edit] Controversy

Malachi Martin's writings and honesty were criticized most notably by the book Clerical Error: A True Story by Robert Blair Kaiser, Time Magazine´s former Vatican correspondent. In this book, Kaiser accuses Martin of carrying on an extramarital affair with his wife and for being a notorious womanizer during his time in Rome, as well as a liar and fantasist.

In 2004 Father Vincent O'Keefe SJ, former Vicar General of the Society of Jesus and a past President of Fordham University affirmed that Martin had not been laicized. O'Keefe stated that Martin had been released from all his priestly vows save the vow of chastity. It is claimed that attacks were mounted on Martin in retaliation for his book The Jesuits, which is hostile to the Jesuit order of which Martin had once been a member.

With regard to the accusations that his non-fiction writings are suspect, Martin supporters say his writings concerning exorcism are in line with similar writings by Father Gabriele Amorth, the senior Roman Catholic exorcist of Rome.

[edit] End of life

During the end of his life Martin produced numerous best-selling fictional and non-fictional literary works, which became widely read throughout the world. He died after a fall in his apartment in Manhattan, New York, in 1999, where he had lived most of the time since the 1960s. Father Martin continued to privately offer Mass and vigorously exercise his priestly ministry all the way up until his death. He is said to have been closely allied to sedevacantists, among them Dr. Rama Coomaraswamy, in his very last years, though this claim remains disputed.

His funeral wake took place in St. Anthony of Padua Roman Catholic Chapel of West Orange, New Jersey. Requiem Mass (traditional rite) for his repose was offered by the late Father Paul A. Wickens (April 14, 1930–July 8, 2004).

[edit] Books

  • The Scribal Character of the Dead Sea Scrolls (nonfiction)
  • The Pilgrim (under the pseudonym Michael Serafian)
  • The Encounter
  • Three Popes and the Cardinal
  • Jesus Now
  • The New Castle
  • Hostage to the Devil: The Possession and Exorcism of Five Americans (nonfiction), 1976 (ISBN 0-06-065337-X)
  • The Final Conclave
  • The Decline and Fall of the Roman Church (nonfiction), 1981
  • There is Still Love
  • Rich Church, Poor Church
  • Vatican, 1986
  • The Jesuits: The Society of Jesus and the Betrayal of the Roman Catholic Church (nonfiction), 1987(ISBN 0-671-54505-1)
  • The Keys of This Blood: The Struggle for World Dominion Between Pope John Paul II, Mikhail Gorbachev, and the Capitalist West (nonfiction), 1990 (ISBN 0-671-74723-1)

[edit] External links

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