[Life of Father Hecker by Walter Elliott]@TWC D-Link book
Life of Father Hecker

CHAPTER XX
12/21

His name is familiar to our readers as editor of the _Freeman's Journal._ Those qualities of aggressive zeal which made McMaster so well known to Catholics of our day were not wholly undeveloped in the tall, angular youth, still a catechumen, and intoxicated with the new wine of Catholic fervor.

Young Mr.Walworth had been made a Catholic but a short time before, and McMaster was received into the Church by the Redemptorists in Third Street, his two young friends being present.
While he was kneeling at the altar, candle in hand, piously reading his profession of faith to Father Rumpler, he accidentally set fire to Father Tschenhens' hair, one of the fathers assisting at the ceremony.

Walking together afterwards in the little garden of the convent, Father Rumpler said to him: "Mr.McMaster, you begin well--setting fire to a priest." "Oh," answered he, "if I don't set fire to something more than that it will be a pity." These new friends of Isaac had applied to enter the Redemptorist novitiate and they had been accepted.

This meant a voyage to Europe, for the congregation had not yet established a novitiate in America.
One Friday, then, during the last days of July--the exact date we have not been able to discover--Isaac Hecker was informed by Father Rumpler that Walworth and McMaster would sail for Belgium the evening of the next day.

"I decided to join them," he said when relating the circumstances afterwards.


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