Bl. Maurus Magnentius Rabanus

 Rabbi and Rabbinism

 Rabbulas

 François Rabelais

 Raccolta

 Human Race

 Negro Race

 Rachel

 Jean Racine

 Matthew Rader

 Florens Radewyns

 Joseph Maria von Radowitz

 Radulph of Rivo

 Pierre Raffeix

 Paul Ragueneau

 Diocese of Ragusa

 Johann Michael Raich

 Marcantonio Raimondi

 Rainald of Dassel

 Prefecture Apostolic of Rajpootana

 Sebastian Râle (Rasle)

 Ven. Ralph Crockett

 Bl. Ralph Sherwin

 Pierre François Xavier de Ram

 Ramatha

 The Rambler

 Jean-Philippe Rameau

 Ramsey Abbey

 Peter Ramus

 Jean-Armand le Bouthillier de Rancé

 James Ryder Randall

 Feast of Our Lady of Ransom

 St. Raphael

 Raphael

 Diocese of Raphoe

 René Rapin

 Raskolniks

 Andreas Räss

 Joseph Rathborne

 Ratherius of Verona

 Rationale

 Rationalism

 Ratio Studiorum

 Diocese of Ratisbon

 Maria Alphonse Ratisbonne

 Maria Theodor Ratisbonne

 Ratramnus

 Georg Ratzinger

 Joseph Othmar Rauscher

 Antonio Ravalli

 Archdiocese of Ravenna

 Josse Ravesteyn

 Gustave Xavier Lacroix de Ravignan

 Henry Augustus Rawes

 Charles Raymbault

 Raymond IV, of Saint-Gilles

 Raymond VI

 Raymond VII

 Raymond Lully

 Raymond Martini

 St. Raymond Nonnatus

 St. Raymond of Penafort

 Raymond of Sabunde

 Odorico Raynaldi

 Théophile Raynaud

 François-Juste-Marie Raynouard

 Reading Abbey

 Reason

 Diocese of Recanati and Loreto

 Rechab and the Rechabites

 Recollection

 Rector

 Rector Potens, Verax Deus

 English Recusants

 Feast of the Most Holy Redeemer

 Knights of the Redeemer

 Redemption

 Redemption in the Old Testament

 Penitential Redemptions

 Redemptoristines

 Redemptorists

 Sebastian Redford

 Francesco Redi

 Augustine Reding

 Red Sea

 Reductions of Paraguay

 Referendarii

 The Reformation

 Reformed Churches

 Reform of a Religious Order

 Cities of Refuge

 Sisters of Our Lady of Charity of the Refuge

 Droit de Regale

 Regalia

 Regeneration

 Papal Regesta

 Archdiocese of Reggio di Calabria

 Diocese of Reggio dell' Emilia

 Diocese of Regina

 Regina Coeli (Queen of Heaven)

 Antonin Reginald

 Reginald of Piperno

 Regino of Prüm

 Regionarii

 Jean-Baptiste Régis

 Pierre Sylvain Régis

 Parochial Registers

 Henri Victor Regnault

 Regulæ Juris

 Regulars

 Reichenau

 August Reichensberger

 Peter Reichensberger

 Reifenstein

 Johann Georg Reiffenstuel

 Archdiocese of Reims

 Synods of Reims

 Reinmar of Hagenau

 Carl von Reisach

 Gregor Reisch

 Relationship

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 Relativism

 Relics

 Religion

 Virtue of Religion

 Religious Life

 Reliquaries

 Remesiana

 St. Remigius

 Remigius of Auxerre

 Remiremont

 Ven. Anne-Madeleine Remuzat

 Abbey of Saint Remy

 The Renaissance

 Eusebius Renaudot

 Théophraste Renaudot

 Guido Reni

 Archdiocese of Rennes

 Gaston Jean Baptiste de Renty

 Renunciation

 Reordinations

 Reparation

 Philip Repington

 Altar of Repose

 Reputation (as Property)

 Masses of Requiem

 Rerum Creator Optime

 Rerum Deus Tenax Vigor

 Rerum Novarum

 Papal Rescripts

 Reservation

 Reservation of the Blessed Sacrament

 Reserved Cases

 Ecclesiastical Residence

 Lorenzo Respighi

 Responsorium

 Restitution

 Resurrection

 Congregation of the Resurrection

 Alfred Rethel

 Congregation of the Retreat of the Sacred Heart

 Retreats

 Cardinal Jean-François-Paul-Gondi de Retz

 Johannes Reuchlin

 Alfred von Reumont

 Edmond Reusens

 Reuss

 Volume 14

 Revelation

 Private Revelations

 Revocation

 English Revolution of 1688

 French Revolution

 Rex Gloriose Martyrum

 Rex Sempiterne Cælitum

 Anthony Rey

 William Reynolds

 Prefecture Apostolic of Rhætia

 Rhaphanæa

 Joseph Gabriel Rheinberger

 Rhesæna

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 Giacomo Rho

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 Pedro de Ribadeneira

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 Diocese of Ribeirao Preto

 Jusepe de Ribera

 Ricardus Anglicus

 Nicholas Riccardi

 Lorenzo Ricci

 Matteo Ricci

 Giovanni Battista Riccioli

 Edmund Ignatius Rice

 Richard

 Richard I, King Of England

 Charles-Louis Richard

 Richard de Bury

 François-Marie-Benjamin Richard de la Vergne

 St. Richard de Wyche

 Bl. Richard Fetherston

 Richard of Cirencester

 Richard of Cornwall

 Richard of Middletown

 Richard of St. Victor

 Ven. William Richardson

 Bl. Richard Thirkeld

 Bl. Richard Whiting

 Armand-Jean du Plessis, Duke de Richelieu

 Richer

 Diocese of Richmond

 Ricoldo da Monte di Croce

 Tillmann Riemenschneider

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 Right

 St. Rimbert

 Council of Rimini

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 Rings

 Giovanni Battista Rinuccini

 Alexis-François Rio

 Diocese of Riobamba

 Prefecture Apostolic of Rio Negro

 Juan Martínez de Ripalda

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 Marquess of Ripon

 Richard Risby

 William Rishanger

 Edward Rishton

 St. Rita of Cascia

 Rites

 Rites in the United States

 Ritschlianism

 Joseph Ignatius Ritter

 Ritual

 Ritualists

 Luke Rivington

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 Rochet

 Désiré Raoul Rochette

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 Rococo Style

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 Rogation Days

 Roger

 Roger Bacon

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 Hermann Rolfus

 Richard Rolle de Hampole

 Charles Rollin

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 Roman Catechism

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 Alberico de Rosate

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 William Starke Rosecrans

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 Adrien Rouquette

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 William Rubruck

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 Paolo Ruffini

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 Juan de Ruiz de Alarcón y Mendoza

 Antonio Ruiz de Montoya

 Diego Ruiz de Montoya

 Rumania

 Karl Friedrich Rumohr

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 Rusaddir

 Rusicade

 Ruspe

 Charles Russell

 Charles William Russell

 Richard Russell

 Russia

 St. Rusticus of Narbonne

 Book of Ruth

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 Henry Rutter

 Diocese of Ruvo and Bitonto

 Bl. John Ruysbroeck

 John Ruysch

 Abram J. Ryan

 Patrick John Ryan

 Henry Ignatius Dudley Ryder

 Theodore James Ryken

Richard of St. Victor


Theologian, native of Scotland, but the date and place of his birth are unknown; d. 1173 and was commemorated on 10 March in the necrology of the abbey. He was professed at the monastery of St. Victor under the first Abbot Gilduin (d. 1155) and was a disciple of the great mystic Hugo whose principles and methods he adopted and elaborated. His career was strictly monastic, and his relations with the outer world were few and slight. He was sub-prior of the monastery in 1159, and subsequently became prior. During his tenure of the latter office, serious trouble arose in the community of St. Victor from the misconduct of the English Abbot Ervisius, whose irregular life brought upon him a personal admonition from Alexander III, and was subsequently referred by the pope to a commission of inquiry under the royal authority; after some delay and resistance on the part of the abbot his resignation was obtained and he retired from the monastery. A letter of exhortation was addressed by the pope to "Richard, the prior" and the community in 1170. Richard does not appear to have taken any active part in these proceedings, but the disturbed condition of his surroundings may well have accentuated his desire for the interior solace of mystical contemplation. Ervisius's resignation took place in 1172. In 1165, St. Victor had been visited by St. Thomas of Canterbury, after his flight from Northampton; and Richard was doubtless one of the auditors of the discourse delivered by the archbishop on that occasion. A letter to Alexander III, dealing with the affairs of the archbishop, and signed by Richard is extant and published by Migne. Like his master, Hugo, Richard may probably have had some acquaintance and intercourse with St. Bernard, who is thought to have been the Bernard to whom the treatise "De tribus appropriatis personis in Trinitate" is addressed. His reputation as a theologian extended far beyond the precincts of his monastery, and copies of his writings were eagerly sought by other religious houses. Exclusively a theologian, unlike Hugo, he appears to have had no interest in philosophy, and took no part in the acute philosophieal controversies of his time; but, like all the School of St. Victor, he was willing to avail himself of the didactic and constructive methods in theology which had been introduced by Abelard. Nevertheless, he regarded merely secular learning with much suspicion, holding it to be worthless as an end in itself, and only an occasion of worldly pride and self-seeking when divorced from the knowledge of Divine things. Such learning he calls, in the antithetical style which characterizes all his writing, "Sapientia insipida et doctrina indocta"; and the professor of such learning is "Captator famae, neglector conscientiae". Such worldly-minded persons should stimulate the student of sacred things to greater efforts in his own higher sphere-"When we consider how much the philosophers of this world have laboured, we should be ashamed to be inferior to them"; "We should seek always to comprehend by reason what we hold by faith."

His works fall into the three classes of dogmatic, mystical, and exegetical. In the first, the most important is the treatise in six books on the Trinity, with the supplement on the attributes of the Three Persons, and the treatise on the Incarnate Word. But greater interest now belongs to his mystical theology, which is mainly contained in the two books on mystical contemplation, entitled respectively "Benjamin Minor" and "Benjamin Major", and the allegorical treatise on the Tabernacle. He carries on the mystical doctrine of Hugo, in a somewhat more detailed scheme, in which the successive stages of contemplation are described. These are six im number, divided equally among the three powers of the soul-the imagination, the reason, and the intelligence, and ascending from the contemplation of the visible things of creation to the rapture in which the soul is carried "beyond itself" into the Divine Presence, by the three final stages of "Dilatio, sublevatio, alienatio". This schematic arrangement of contemplative soul-states is substantially adopted by Gerson in his more systematic treatise on mystical theology, who, however, makes the important reservation that the distinction between reason and intelligence is to be understood as functional and not real. Much use is made in the mystical treatises of the allegorical interpretation of Scripture for which the Victorine school had a special affection. Thus the titles "Benjamin Major" and "Minor" refer to Ps. lxvii, "Benjamin in mentis excessu". Rachel represents the reason, Lia represents charity; the tabernacle is the type of the state of perfection, in which the soul is the dwelling-place of God. In like manner, the mystical or devotional point of view predominates in the exegetical treatises; though the critical and doctrinal exposition of the text also receives attention. The four books entitled "Tractatus exceptionum", and attributed to Richard, deal with matters of secular learning. Eight titles of works attributed to him by Trithemius (De Script. Eccl.) refer probably to MS. fragments of his known works. A "Liber Penitentialis" is mentioned by Montfauçon as attributed to a "Ricardus Secundus a Sancto Victore", and may probably be identical with the treatise "De potestate solvendi et ligandi" above mentioned. Nothing is otherwise known of a second Richard of St. Victor. Fifteen other MSS. are said to exist of works attributed to Richard which have appeared in none of the published editions, and are probably spurious. Eight editions of his works have been published: Venice, 1506 (incomplete) and 1592; Paris, 1518 and 1550; Lyons, 1534; Cologne, 1621; Rouen, 1650, by the Canons of St. Victor; and by Migne.

HUGONIN, Notice sur R. de St. Victor in P.L., CXCVI; ENGELHARDT, R. von St. Victor u. J. Ruysbroek (Erlangen, 1838); VAUGHAN, Hours uith the Mystics V (London, 1893); INGE, Christian Mysticism (London, 1898); DE WULF, Histoire de la philosophie medievale (Louvain, 1905); BUONAMICI, R. di San Vittore saggi di studio sulla filosofia mistica del secolo XII (Alatri, 1898); VON HUGEL, The Mystical Element in Religion (London, 1909); UNDERHILL, Mysticism (London, 1911).

A.B. SHARPE