The Sermons of Rev. Francis A. Baker

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Francis A. Baker was born in 1820 the son of Dr. Samuel Baker, a well-known physician and lecturer at the University of Maryland.  Dr. Baker was a great admirer of Francis Asbury, a popular Methodist bishop at that time, and chose to name his son after his friend.  Francis attended Princeton College, but didn’t practice any one religion until later when he became an Episcopalian.  Then he began his studies to become a minister in the Episcopal faith which is the American branch of the English Anglican faith.       

He had great respect for the ideals held by John Newman who led the Oxford Movement in England, and was drawn toward the Faith of the Catholic Church because of his attraction to the presence of the Holy Eucharist.  Still, he viewed his own Episcopal ministerial responsibilities as an opportunity to re-establish the  inter-communion which had existed in the Roman and Greek Churches before the schism which had earlier divided the churches into those of the East and West.

He was ordained an Episcopal deacon in 1845, and preached his first sermon at St. Paul’s Church in Baltimore.  His quiet, unassuming character did not prepare his hearers for his power as a preacher and soon it was generally believed that Mr. Baker was the best preacher in Maryland.  His ordination as an  Episcopalian priest soon followed in 1846.  

Mr. Baker believed that all Christian Churches shared an equal Catholic unity and believed they should unite within the claim of the Roman Church to be the one Holy Catholic Church.  But not many shared his convictions, and over time as this belief became stronger, he resigned from his priestly parish duties in 1853 and began to receive instructions to enter the Catholic Church.  He was accepted into the Church when he was 33, and joined the Redemptorists, a missionary society.  After more study as a novice was ordained a priest in 1856 in the Baltimore, Maryland Cathedral. 


Then as well as today, there was a great need in the United States for missions to be held in its cities and larger towns.
For many, work started early in the morning and ended late at night.  The Redemptorists presented week-long missions so that regular parish members and especially the poor could receive the religious instructions given by these traveling preachers.  Their missions proved so popular in New York that the Cathedral and nearby streets were often filled with thousands.  Large numbers of people stood in line for Confessions which were heard from 4:00 a.m. until late into the evening.  Sometimes people waited to receive the sacrament who had not confessed in 20 years.  It was felt that there were so many others who could benefit from this particular kind of spiritual assistance, that  Francis Baker and several other Redemptorists formed the Congregation of the Missionary Priests of St. Paul the Apostle, known today as the Paulist Fathers.  Their intent was to announce and explain the Catholic Faith to the world by their prayer, good example and the grace of God.

His first mission sermon was preached in 1856 at St. Patrick’s Church in Washington, D.C. and was entitled, “The Necessity of Salvation.”  Near the close of this mission, President Franklin Pierce and his wife arranged for a bouquet of flowers to decorate the altar at its Dedication to the Blessed Virgin.

Francis and his fellow Paulists preached many missions throughout the South, East, and the mid-West.  Their missions in New York, Maryland, and New Jersey strengthened the faith of hundreds of thousands and caused the conversion and baptism of many.  On one occasion in Ann Arbor, Michigan, interest in their mission was so great that some farm families walked and traveled by cart from up to twenty miles to attend.  But the crowd that gathered was so large that instead of turning away, the sturdier ones climbed into the trees outside the church to listen to the preaching through the open windows.

Mission schedules were very demanding.  Francis usually said Mass at 5 a.m., after which he heard confessions until 7:30 in the morning.  Then he returned to the Confessional at 9 a.m., and stayed until 1:00 in the afternoon.  Confessions started again from 3 p.m. until 6:30 p.m.  From 7:30 p.m. on the days he was not preaching, he would gave instruction in the faith and lead the prayers before the sermon at the evening Mass.  After the Mass he again instructed adults and converts. 

All this missionary work was often carried out in very harsh working conditions.  Everyone suffered from the extreme cold or heat, there was no ventilation, there was little opportunity to exercise or to rest, and the voice was often strained as the message had to be heard by the hundreds and even thousands of attendees. His eight year career of missionary labor compared well with the usual European standard of ten years in the field of evangelization.  He drew his strength from his devotion to the Blessed Sacrament, the Blessed Mother, the saints, and to the mysteries of the Christian Faith symbolized by the outward forms of religion.

After time, while working under these conditions, he developed throat problems and gradually gave over his preaching to others.  He developed typhus and pneumonia and died quietly at the age of 45 surrounded by his loving friends.  He was buried in St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York in 1865, just several days before the Friday of Holy Week when President Lincoln was assassinated.

Click on the list below to read Rev. Francis Baker’s sermons and discover what attracted so many listeners to the message of this gentle yet forceful early American preacher.

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Mission Sermons
01
The Necessity of Salvation
02 Mortal Sin
  
03 The Particular Judgment
04 Heaven
Sunday Sermons
01 The Duty of Growing in Christian Faith - First Sunday of Advent
02 The Mission of St. John the Baptist - Second Sunday of Advent.
03 God's Desire to be Loved - Christmas Day
04 The Work of Life - Third Sunday before Lent
05 The Failure and Success of the Gospel - Second Sunday before Lent

06 The Church's Admonition to the Individual Soul - Ash Wednesday
07 The Negligent Christian - Third Sunday in Lent
08 The Cross, the Measure of Sin - Passion (Palm) Sunday
09 Divine Calls and Warnings - A Lenten Sermon
10 The Tomb of Christ, The School of Comfort - Easter Sunday

11 St. Mary Magdalene at the Sepulcher - Easter Sunday
12 The Preacher, the Organ of the Holy Spirit - Fourth Sunday after Easter
13 The Two Wills in Man - Fourth Sunday after Easter
14 The Intercession of the Blessed Virgin, The Highest Power of Prayer - Sunday within the Octave of the Ascension

15 Mysteries in Religion - Trinity Sunday

16 The Worth of the Soul - Third Sunday after Pentecost
17 The Catholic's Certitude Concerning the Way of Salvation - Fifth Sunday after Pentecost
18 The Presence of God - Fifth Sunday after Pentecost
19 Keeping the Law Not Impossible - Ninth Sunday after Pentecost
20 The Spirit of Sacrifice - Feast of St. Laurence, Martyr

21 Mary's Destiny a Type of Ours - Feast of the Assumption
22 Success the Reward of Merit - Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost
23 Care for the Dead - Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost
24 The Mass the Highest Worship - Twenty-First Sunday after Pentecost
25 The Lessons of Autumn - Last Sunday after Pentecost

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