Friday, April 28, 2023

Preview: Bowden on the Protomartyrs of English Reformation

It's most appropriate that Father Henry Sebastian Bowden presents mementoes of the five Protomartyrs of the English Reformation on five days out of six from May 1 to May 6: the three Carthusian Priors (Saint John Houghton, Saint Robert Lawrence, and Saint Augustine Webster), Blessed John Haile, the parish vicar from Isleworth, and Saint Richard Reynolds, from the Brigittine House of Syon. It's appropriate because they were all hanged, drawn, and quartered on May 4, 1535, and in 2000, the revised Liturgical Calendar for England and Wales moved the feast of all the Catholic Martyrs of England and Wales from the Reformation and Recusant eras from October 25 to May 4; in 2010 the Memorial of the Martyrs was elevated to a Feast on the Calendar.

Therefore on May 1, Anna Mitchell or Matt Swaim and I will discuss Bowden's insights into these great holy martyrs during our series on Bowden's Mementoes of the English Martyrs and Confessors for Every Day in the Year on the Son Rise Morning Show at about 6:45 a.m. Central/7:45 a.m. Eastern on Monday, May 1st. 

If you want to see all that Bowden writes about these martyrs, you'll need a copy of the book, because we can only do so much in the time we have! Please listen live here or find the podcast later that day here.

Reading these mementoes, you have to pay attention to the title, the content of the reflection, and the scripture verse to enter into what Father Bowden wants you to remember about the martyrs or confessors--and then, like any good spiritual reading, to think about how to apply to yourself and your life of faith and practice of the Catholic religion.

On page 147, Bowden describes Saint Richard Reynold's reactions to the authorities who pressed him on why he would not "go along" with the rest of the religious, priests, and bishops who were accepting Henry VIII's oaths of succession and supremacy. The title of this memento is "The Witness of Tradition" and the verse is Proverbs 22:28: "Pass not beyond the ancient bounds which thy fathers have set." (Douai Rheims) His remarks are very like Saint Thomas More's would be throughout his questioning after he was arrested in 1534, for Reynolds replied:

"the rest of Christendom is in my favor . . . All good men of the kingdom hold with me . . . all the general councils, all the historians, the holy Doctors of the Church for the last fifteen hundred years, especially St. Ambrose, St. Jerome, St. Augustine (of Canterbury?), and St. Gregory (the Great, who sent St. Augustine of Canterbury to Kent?).

At his trial, More called upon the same tradition and authorities against the idea that a monarch could, by setting himself up as the religious and ecclesial authority in his country, divide the Catholic Church from the unity expressed and symbolized by the Vicar of Christ, the Pope.

On May 6, (p. 152), Bowden memorializes St. Richard Reynolds again as "A Model of the Faith", quoting Reginald Cardinal Pole as praising Reynolds for the "sanctity of his life", his "more than common knowledge of the liberal arts" and saying the only thing lacking had been to "give testimony to the truth with his own blood . . . ". The verse for Reynold's that day is 1 Peter 5:3: "Being made a pattern of the flock from the heart."

On May 2, (p. 148), Bowden describes how Saint John Houghton led the Carthusians at the Charterhouse in London through a three-day period of discernment, praying for the Holy Spirit's inspiration. First, they all made a General Confession, then Houghton instructed them on "the virtues of charity, patience, and a firm adherence to God in the day of trial" and "asked forgiveness of each and all", which was reciprocated. Finally, he offered a "solemn Votive Mass of the Holy Ghost".

At the Elevation of the Body and the Blood of Christ, they all heard "the sound of a gentle wind" and all "were filled with a spirit of joy". The title for this memento is "Mass of the Holy Ghost" and the verse is Romans 8:16: "For the Spirit himself giveth testimony to our spirit, that we are the sons of God."

On page 151, for May 5th, Bowden highlights all three of the Carthusian martyrs of May 4, 1535, Saint John Houghton, Saint Robert Lawrence, and Saint Augustine Webster, by recounting their hopes "for mitigation of the Oath of Supremacy"; their trial on April 29 and the reluctance of the jury to find them guilty until "terrified by Cromwell's threats" and of course, Saint Thomas More seeing them led off to their brutal executions as "cheerful as if they were bridegrooms going to their marriage." Bowden adds the statement "And their bright and smiling countenances were unchanged unto the end" as they were hanged until barely conscious, eviscerated, beheaded, and quartered. With the title "The Voice of the Bridegroom" the verse from John 3:29 is most appropriate: "The friend of the Bridegroom, who standeth and heareth him, rejoiceth with joy because of the Bridegroom's voice."

On May 4, with title "Holy Wrath", Bowden tells the story of Blessed John Haile of Ipswich, the only one of these protomartyrs not canonized (?) with the verse from 1 Kings 19:14 (the text in the book on page 150 mistakenly refers to 3 Kings 19:14):

With zeal have I been zealous for the Lord God of hosts: because the children of Israel have forsaken thy covenant: they have destroyed thy altars, they have slain thy prophets with the sword, and I alone am left, and they seek my life to take it away.

Bowden describes how in 1533 Haile "was grievously scandalized" at Henry VIII's actions and "reprobated the King's cruelty in oppressing and despoiling the Church" and Father Fern of Teddington and others reported these comments and gave testimony against him. Note that Father Fern gave "state's evidence" against his fellow priest as he was also accused of committing treason. Blessed John Haile was the first secular (non-order) priest to suffer execution for the Faith during the English Reformation.

Blessed John Haile, pray for us!

Saint Richard Reynolds, pray for us!

Saint John Houghton, pray for us!

Saint Robert Lawrence, pray for us!

Saint Augustine Webster, pray for us!

Friday, April 21, 2023

Preview: Bowden's "Mementoes" of Blessed Francis Page, SJ

Continuing our series on the Son Rise Morning Show based on Father Henry Sebastian Bowden's Mementoes of the English Martyrs and Confessors on Monday, April 24 we'll explore his comments on (then Venerable) Blessed Francis Page, SJ. This segment will offer listeners the first hints of Father Bowden's elegant style.

I'll be on at my usual hour, around 7:45 a.m. Eastern/6:45 a.m. Central. Please listen live here and subscribe to the daily email for reminders here.

Francis Page was born in Antwerp of English parents—his date of birth is unknown— and went to England to study law at one of the Inns of Court in London. While his parents were Protestants (presumably Anglicans), he had been living in a Catholic country; at the Inns of Court he met more Catholics. He fell in love with a Catholic girl who wanted him to convert to Catholicism before they married: two very dangerous actions! It was a felony for her to try to convert him and an act of treason for him to become a Catholic, But he loved her and so studied the faith, with yet another consequence, one she had surely not foreseen.

As the Jesuits in Singapore explain:

His Catholic roommate had, as his confessor, Fr John Gerard, a Jesuit priest. So it was to Fr Gerald that Francis went for instruction. The more he studied religion, the more he felt drawn to the priesthood. Much to his fiancĂ©e’s sorrow, Francis called off the marriage as he began to think of the priesthood. When Fr Gerard was arrested and transferred to the Tower of London, Francis would stand outside the prison everyday just to get a glimpse of the priest and for his blessing. His suspicious actions led to a brief arrest and after his release, Francis decided to follow the call and joined the English College in Rheims, France. He was ordained in 1600.


Father Bowden devotes two entries to Blessed Francis Page, SJ on April 27 and 28, pages 142 and 143. As he does with each of the mementoes in the book, Bowden gives a title to the meditation and provides a verse from the Holy Bible for meditation. On April 27, the title is “Light and Darkness” and the verse is from the Book of Job: “The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away . . . blessed be the name of the Lord” (Job 1:21).

On April 28, the title is "Love, Earthly and Heavenly" and the Bible verse is "With the robe of justice he hath covered me, as a bridegroom decked with a crown, and as a bride adorned with her jewels." from Isaiah 61:10.

Between the two entries, Father Bowden describes how Blessed Francis Page barely escaped the raid on Saint Anne Line's safe-house as he was celebrating Mass on the Feast of the Presentation of the Lord on February 2, 1601, and how he was finally arrested when a woman who had pretended to be a Catholic informed on him. But it's in the entry for April 27, that Father Bowden offers some great spiritual counsel as he describes Father Page's reactions to the news that his day of execution, April 20, 1602, had been set:


Fr. Page received the message as from heaven, and, having celebrated the Holy Mysteries, was so filled with joy and supernatural light that it seemed as it nothing could separate him from the love of his Lord. But that he might know that this sensible devotion is God's free gift, and might learn something also of the anguish of His Savior in Gethsemane, he was of a sudden deprived of these extraordinary favors, and like his Master, became sad, sorrowful, even unto death. . . . The storm continued until the sheriff sent to him to prepare for death as the hour was at hand. The message in a moment restored calm to his soul and he went to meet death with every sign of joy. The whole way to Tyburn his soul was engaged in prayer, and with the holy name of Jesus on his lips the cart was drawn away--on April 20, 1602
*.

Father Bowden describes Father Page's feelings of Consolation and Desolation, to use the Ignatian terms, in this passage as an example of a martyr's true heroism. Toward the end of Elizabeth I's reign, a Catholic missionary to England knew the danger he faced, and Father Page, having escaped capture, imprisonment, and execution once before, and knowing that Anne Line had suffered in his place on February 27, 1601, surely knew his day of martyrdom could, would come. So he was able to persevere through that Desolation of fear and trepidation. He asked Father Floyd, a Jesuit priest in prison with him, to pray for him so he could prepare again to face his death with Consolation and poise, demonstrating his resolution at Tyburn Tree, which he did.

Father Floyd also received the martyr into the Society of Jesus: having been instructed by a Jesuit, Father John Gerard, Page had contacted Father Henry Garnet, SJ about his interest in joining the Society, but had been arrested before he could return to the Continent for his formation.

Blessed Francis Page, SJ, pray for us!

*The year is incorrect on page 142, however.

Image Credit (Public Domain): James Tissot's The Grotto of the Agony (La Grotte de l'agonie)

Friday, April 14, 2023

New Series on the Son Rise Morning Show: Mementoes of the English Martyrs

Anna Mitchell of the Son Rise Morning Show asked me if I wanted to collaborate on series based on this book recently published by Sophia Institute Press, written by Father Henry Sebastian Bowden of the London Oratory. Since the title of the book is Mementoes of the English Martyrs and Confessors for Every Day in the Year, I said yes. She contacted the publisher and Sophia Institute Press sent me a review copy. 

So we'll start a series of Monday morning conversations about the martyrs and confessors Father Henry Sebastian Bowden selects and highlights on Monday, April 17 on the Son Rise Morning Show at my usual hour, around 7:45 a.m. Eastern/6:45 a.m. Central. Please listen live here and subscribe to the daily email for reminders here.

If you are really interested, of course, you could also purchase your own copy of the book!

For this first conversation, however, we're going to focus on the author and the timing of the composition of this book. Father Henry Sebastian Bowden was a priest of the London Oratory (aka "the Congregation of the Oratory of St Philip Neri in London"), a prolific author, and the nephew of Saint John Henry Newman's best friend in Oxford, John William Bowden. Newman and Bowden had been undergraduates together at Trinity College and had worked together on the Tracts for the Times and other Oxford Movement projects. You may read Bowden's biography here; like another of Newman's best friends, Richard Hurrell Froude, Bowden suffered from tuberculosis (consumption, as they referred to it then).

Newman felt great sorrow at Bowden's last illness in September of 1844, particularly because Newman was in Littlemore, struggling with what to do (that is, where to go, ecclesiastically, spiritually, doctrinally, etc). In one letter he writes to John Keble (on September 14 of that year):

He is my oldest friend; I have been most intimate with him for above twenty-seven years. He was sent to call on me the day after I came into residence; he introduced me to college and University; he is the link between me and Oxford. I have ever known Oxford in him. In losing him I seem to lose Oxford. We {392} used to live in each other's rooms as undergraduates, and men used to mistake our names and call us by each other's. When he married he used to make a like mistake himself, and call me Elizabeth and her Newman. And now for several years past, though loving him with all my heart, I have shrunk from him, feeling that I had opinions …

A few days later, after Bowden had died, he continued the letter:

It is a great comfort to all parties that he is here and not at Clifton ... He died and lies in a room I have known these twenty-four years … And there lies now my oldest friend, so dear to me—and I, with so little faith or hope, as dead as a stone, and detesting myself.

[John William Bowden died September 15, 1844. I sobbed bitterly over his coffin to think that he had left me still dark as to what the way of truth was, and what I ought to do in order to please God and fulfil His will.—J. H. N., noted in the Apologia pro Vita Sua]
(from Anne Mozley's Letters and Correspondence of Newman to 1845, Volume 2)

The Elizabeth mentioned above was Bowden's wife, the youngest daughter of Sir John Swinburne, 6th Baronet (1762-1860) of a formerly Catholic recusant and Jacobite family, although her father had conformed to the established Church. She was an aunt of the decadent poet, Algernon Charles Swinburne. She and her children became Catholic in 1847. Both of her sons John & Charles Henry became priests of the London Oratory. Newman was Charles Henry's Godfather. One of her daughters, Marianne (or Mary Anne) entered the Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary becoming Sister Mary Dominica in 1852 and Newman preached the sermon at her profession; she died of tuberculosis in 1867. The other daughter, Emily, never married. Mrs. Bowden was the benefactress of the Catholic church in Fulham, St. Thomas of Canterbury, and Newman preached at its dedication in 1848 (Augustus Pugin designed the church). In addition to those four conversions in the John William and Elizabeth Bowden family, Captain Henry Bowden, John William's brother, and his wife, Marianne Catherine, also became Catholic, and their son, Father Henry Sebastian Bowden, is our author. (See this source!)

Now, note the date of the original publication of this book: 1910. At that time, Pope Leo XIII had beatified 54 (fifty-four), including Thomas More and John Fisher, on December 29, 1886 and nine (9) more on May 13, 1895. There were also 29 (twenty-nine) other martyrs declared Venerable in 1886. Sophia Institute Press has not changed Father Bowden's Table of Contents, which presents the titles as of 1910, but they have added footnotes to those martyrs who have been subsequently beatified or canonized, by Pope Pius XI, Pope Paul VI, or Pope John Paul II. 

Also, notice the title: Martyrs and CONFESSORS! Father Bowden includes those who defended the faith, even though they didn't suffer martyrdom (like the Marian era bishops who had sworn Henry VIII's oaths but refused Elizabeth I's) and others, like Margaret Giggs Clement, St. Thomas More's ward, who tried to save the Carthusians from dehydration and starvation. For example, in January, Bowden offers two reflections on John Feckenham, OSB, the last Abbot of Westminster Abbey. 

There's another aspect to Father Bowden's Mementoes of the English Martyrs and Confessors: he offers multiple memories of many of the saints and heroes of the long English Reformation. The reader will see, for example, many daily reflections devoted to Saint Thomas More throughout the year. (Strangely, More's date of death is noted as March 3rd for the entry "The Daily Sacrifice" on page 79, describing his devotion to daily Mass and also on July 6th for the entry "The Privileges of Martyrdom" on page 221). There is an Index, so one could read all of the brief mementoes of More's life and death starting on his shared feast day with Saint John Fisher until the anniversary of his beheading on Tower Hill. (Strangely, also, the date of Saint John Fisher's execution isn't noted on June 22nd!)

Finally, some comments on Father Bowden's purpose in compiling this book. Catholics in England hadn't even reached the centenary of their Emancipation, nor of the Restoration of the Hierarchy, and still lived under some restrictions. In 1908, the Eucharistic Congress held in London inspired, as one newspaper put it, 

apprehension in respectable quarters, and has given rise to regrettable effusions of bigotry in others. An unfounded idea has been disseminated that the Congress is a move in the campaign for the restoration of the temporal power of the Papacy, and for the re-establishment of direct diplomatic relations with the Vatican. Others regard it as a great proselytizing agency. The visit to England of a Papal Legate, after an interval of three centuries and a half, cannot fail to recall memories of Reginald Pole and his disastrous Mission of Reconciliation; while the triumphant progress of Cardinal Vannutelli from Dover to Westminster, the cheering crowds in the streets, the hoisting of the Papal flag as the Legate crossed the threshold of his archiepiscopal host, have all combined to administer a series of shocks to a people by temperament and conviction distrustful of anything that smacks of "Popery." 

We may presume that the the reaction was similar two years later, on June 28, 1910, when Westminster Cathedral was consecrated. That was certainly an extraordinary event, which also celebrated the 60th anniversary of the Restoration of the Hierarchy! That event had certainly provoked apprehension, as Punch published a cartoon depicting Cardinal Wiseman as "The Guy Fawkes of 1850, Preparing to Blow Up All England"! Winston Churchill, as the Home Secretary, had to approve the public processions on that occasion, with "timely and careful consideration", according to this article from an Australian newspaper.

And it would not be until 1926 that certain other restrictions on Catholics were not removed from English law, with yet another Roman Catholic Relief Act:

The Act of forbidding the possession of Catholic liturgies and books of devotion and statues, is repealed. The Religious Houses Act, 1559, which declared religious orders to be superstitious, and gifts for their benefit therefore voidable, as being for a superstitious use is also revoked. So is the Act of 1715, above referred to, for appointing commissioners to raise money out of recusants' estates. Then the Relief Act of 1791 was made more fully relieving by removing from it the section which forbade steeples and bells in Catholic churches and prohibited a priest from officiating at funerals in (presumably Protestant) churches or church-yards, or from exercising any rights or ceremonies or wearing the habits of an order out of doors or in a private house where more than five persons in addition to the household were assembled, or from exercising his functions at all unless he had first taken the oath of allegiance and abjuration (a similar prohibition in the Act of 1829 being also removed). From the Act of 1791 was also eliminated the section which prohibited the establishment or endowment of a religious order or school or college by Roman Catholics.

So Westminster Cathedral, with it steeples and bells, was technically in violation of English Law, and those public processions--with priests and bishops and members of religious orders in their vestments and habits "out of doors"--had also violated English Law!

So Father Bowden had good reasons to remind Catholics in England of the heroism and fidelity of the past. He wanted his readers to develop devotion to the martyrs of the 16th and 17th centuries. From his introduction:

May we learn to set a higher value on the Faith as we realize the cost of its inheritance, and may we grasp the truth that faith is to be preserved for ourselves and our children, not by concession or compromise, not by crying peace when there is no peace, or declaring our enemies our surest friends, but by its steadfast and outspoken defense at the sacrifice of every temporal interest, and, if need be, of life itself. (p. 7)

The Publisher's Preface alludes to this theme too: "The inspiration of such daily reminders likewise resounds in our own time, when Catholic doctrine and worship are again facing government censorship and restriction in many lands." (p. 1)

I think this will be a fun series on the Son Rise Morning Show and I look forward to every Monday morning and the preparation the week before too!

Photo of Westminster Cathedral (C) Stephanie A. Mann, 2023. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, April 10, 2023

Chartreuse and the Carthusians

I was intrigued by The Wall Street Journal about the Carthusians of Chartreuse limiting their production of that famous liqueur, published on Good Friday: "The Monks Who Make Chartreuse Don't Care About Fancy Cocktails"! The Robb Report offers these two quotations from the article, which is of course behind a paywall:

“The monks are not in this to drive Mercedes and live a lavish life,” Tim Master, the senior director of spirits at Frederick Wildman and Sons, the only American importer of Chartreuse, told the WSJ. . . .

“Unlike nearly all other companies in the world, the monks don’t care about constant growth,” Father Michael Holleran, a former Carthusian monk who led Chartreuse production in the late 1980s, told the WSJ.

The Carthusians, according to their external partner in production have decided they needed to “protect their monastic life” and were “not looking to grow the liqueur beyond what they need to sustain their order.” So production has been capped at about 1.2 million bottles a year, about 10 percent less than in 2021."

The Robb Report article comments: 

Perhaps if the monks shared the recipe, they wouldn’t have to be the only ones in charge of meeting demand. But that seems even more unlikely than increasing output . . .

And The Wall Street Journal article ends with a quotation from Joseph McDonald from a Nashville retailer: "In two years you'll probably have eight companies trying to knock that recipe off" (p. A9 of the print edition for Friday, April , 2023.

As the Carthusian motto states: Stat crux dum volvitur orbis (The Cross Stands Still as the World Turns).

Reading the reaction to the production curtailment of the yellow and green shades of the liqueur as afficiandoes try to understand the monks' decision reminded me of Dom David Knowles' appreciation of the Carthusians of London Charterhouse, dying of dehydration and starvation during Henry VIII's reign:

Rarely indeed in the annals of the Church have any confessors of the faith endured trials longer, more varied or more bitter then these unknown monks. They had left the world, as they hoped, for good; but the children of the world, to gain their private ends, had violated their solitude to demand of them an approval and a submission which they could not give. They had long made of their austere and exacting Rule a means to the loving and joyful service of God; pain and desolation, therefore, when they came, held no terrors for them. When bishops and theologians paltered or denied they were not ashamed to confess the Son of Man. They died faithful witnesses to the Catholic teaching that Christ had built his Church upon a rock.

From Saints and Scholars: Twenty-Five Medieval Portraits, with St. John Houghton, holding his heart, on the cover (based on the painting by Zurbaran).

Now, I'm not saying that cocktail drinkers are as bad as Henry VIII and Thomas Cromwell, but there is a gap in understanding how the monks of Chartreuse, in their Great Silence, regard their eternal purpose versus the world's demand for a liqueur! 

But notice what the "world" says: you should meet our demands! Or you should give us the recipe! When you don't, we will steal (knock off) your recipe and make the liqueur ourselves!

Nor am I saying that these monks are making a decision as meritorious as that of the Carthusians under Henry VIII's demands, but still, they are trying to remain true to their purpose and their way of life without concern for how the world turns

As The Wall Street Journal article headline on the front page says: "The Monks . . . Don't Care"!

I have never tasted Chartreuse, by the way, and if I was going to spend that much for something, it would be for a book!

Saint Bruno of Cologne, pray for us!
Saint John Houghton and all the Carthusian martyrs of England, pray for us!