Showing posts with label Martyrs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martyrs. Show all posts

Friday, 1 July 2011

Irish Bishop dies for the faith!

A great Bishop and a great Irishman to boot; St Oliver Plunkett, the last martyr to receive his crown on Tyburn tree. Born of a noble Irish family (we are all descended from Kings!) he travelled to Rome to spend some years with the priests of San Girolamo della Carita before entering Holy Orders.
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When sentenced to be hanged, drawn and quartered he replied: "Deo gratias"

Inspire our Bishops!

He was finally appointed, by Pope Clement IX, as Archbishop to the See of Armagh back in his native land. Taking up his appointment he found things in a state of disarray; priests causing scandal, laity doing as they pleased and religious orders running loose, literally. St Oliver came down on them like a ton of bricks and, of course, a wave of resentment entered his episcopal affairs.

In England and Wales the Oates plot was still claiming victims to the lies and subterfuges of Protestant activists and the Irish malcontents denounced Archbishop Plunkett under the umbrella of this foul lie. He was accused of aiding the raising of 70,000 Irishmen to fight against England in alliance with the French - quite an emotive and potent lie. The holy man claimed honestly, in his defence, that he lived in a humble thatched hovel and had never even countenanced such a move.
He was, of course, condemned to death and then languished in Newgate Jail in London, far from his friends and relations as the song goes. He prayed and meditated continuously and fasted for four or five days of the week, no mean feat in prison where the rations were meagre to begin with. Outwardly, the Archbishop was serene and calm, living the life of Christ.

Then, on 1st July 1681, he went to the scaffold to be first hanged until semi conscious, then cut down and his body cavity sliced into and his organs removed and then divided into four parts whilst still conscious.
The last Catholic to die for the faith in England.

His head is in St Peter's Church, Drogheda while most of the remainder of his body is preserved at Downside Abbey in Somerset.

  ST OLIVER PLUNKETT - INSPIRE OUR BISHOPS - ORA PRO NOBIS!

Wednesday, 1 December 2010

"You may tear the cross from my hands but you cannot tear it from my heart"

These were among the last words uttered by Blessed Alexander Briant as he faced execution together with St Edmund Campion on 1st December 1581. Aged barely 25, he was known as "'the beautiful Oxford youth' - because of his handsome appearance and general air of holiness.

A convert to the faith, he entered the seminary at Rheims and returned as a priest to his native Somerset in 1578.
As with the other martyr priests, his ministry was not to last long. He was caught up in 1581 and committed to the Tower of London where he was subject to unspeakable tortures.
When he stood trial in Westminster Hall he took with him a crude crucifix he had made from scraps of wood with a charcoal drawing representing Christ. When Protestant ministers demanded that he throw the cross away he responded: "Never will I do so for I am a soldier of the cross, nor will I henceforth desert this standard unto death".
Finally they wrestled it from his grasp and he then uttered the immortal words: "You may tear the cross from my hands but you cannot tear it from my heart"
He mounted the scaffold with great joy and a beaming smile on his face in the company of St Edmund Campion.
As the words of the Miserere were spoken by him the cart was drawn away.......

BLESSED ALEXANDER BRIANT - ORA PRO NOBIS

Tuesday, 23 November 2010

Richard Pate, Bishop and Martyr

23rd November 1565 and Bishop of Worcester, Richard Pate, died for the faith as a result of his sufferings and privations in the Tower of London.

The Bishop, for some time, aligned himself with Henry and accepted the Royal Supremacy and was appointed Ambassador to Charles V in Spain. Upon being summoned by the King, Richard Pate fled to Rome and was reconciled to the Faith.
Pope Paul III made him Bishop of Worcester in 1541 and he was one of the two English Bishops to assist at The Council of Trent.
Upon the accession of Mary, he returned to England and took possession of his See.
When Elizabeth became Queen Bishop Pate voted against every Anti Catholic measure she tried to introduce and refused to take the Royal oath of allegiance. He was initially committed to the Tower for an 18 month period before being released into the custody of 'Jewel' at Salisbury. However, he was recommitted to the Tower where he died after 6 years of suffering.
This biography differs slightly from the Wikipedia entry but is from a reputable Catholic source.

Monday, 1 November 2010

Terrorist attack on Catholic Church in Iraq

Suspected Al Qaeda terrorists launched an attack on the Catholic Church of Our Lady of Salvation in Bagdad yesterday. The attack took place during Holy Mass, the priest being shot immediately and up to 37 of his parishioners murdered when one of the attackers went into suicide bomber mode and detonated an explosive device. Let us pray for their souls and for those who remain, shocked and traumatised by the attack and their families. Also, of course, let us remember the terrorists that they may come to recognise Our Lord Jesus Christ and be reconciled with Almighty God.

Saturday, 23 October 2010

Vietnam, home to between 130,000 and 300,000 martyrs and St Paul Tong Buong

This day, in 1833, after much torture and humiliation, St Paul Tong Buong was beheaded and so gained his martyr's crown.
The process of martyrdom in Vietnam, was particularly savage with victims being, literally hacked to pieces one limb at a time; persecution began in the 17th century after missionary work by both the Dominicans and Jesuits. It continued, with a political bias in the 18th century and progressed right up to the excesses of communism in the 20th.
We tend to overlook the value of China, Japan, Vietnam and other parts of Asia in terms of the richness of Church history and the volume numbers of martyrs that this region produced and, even today, in China and North Korea especially, many new martyrs are created, unknown to us in the west, but known to God.

St Paul Tong Buong - Ora pro nobis


The Vietnamese martyrs