The Portal Archive November 2011 | Page 6

THE P RTAL November 2011 The 85 Martyrs Page 6 A Recusant Martyr by Joanna Bogle On November 22nd 1987 Pope John Paul beatified 85 English, Welsh, Irish and Scottish martyrs. They were priests and laymen executed from the 1580s to 1680s, for affirming their loyalty to the Catholic Church and the successor of St Peter in Rome. These were years of complex political situations in Britain. From the start, the reign of Elizabeth I was mired in controversy, and there were undoubtedly plots against her. But the tragedy for English Catholics was that most did not want to engage in politics and all had an instinctive loyalty to the Crown. The conflict for them came when it seemed that they must place loyalty to Elizabeth and the Tudor dynasty before their loyalty to the Church – and when laws made the practice of their Faith a treasonable act. for which they were giving their lives. The date was July 1588. Father George Beesley of Goosnargh ‘the unity of the flock of Christ’ Among those who lost their lives were priests such as Father George Beesley of Goosnargh, a Lancashire man who ministered secretly as a priest in the Lancashire countryside, where his memory is still venerated and honoured. He came from a staunchly Catholic family and was ordained abroad, returning to what he knew could be martyrdom. He was still only in his twenties when he was arrested, and he was brutally tortured by the notorious Topliffe, before being sentenced to death. He was executed in London’s Fleet Street in July 1591. At the Beatification of the Martyrs in November 1987 Pope John Paul spoke about the witness they gave and its significance for our days: “These martyrs gave their lives for their loyalty to the authority of the Successor of Peter, who alone is Pastor of the whole flock. They also gave their lives for the unity of the Church, since they shared the Church’s faith, unaltered down the ages, that the Successor of Peter has been given the task of serving and ensuring ‘the unity of the flock of Christ’. He has been given by Christ the particular role of confirming the faith of his brethren. Father Nicholas Garlick Father Nicholas Garlick (born c.1555) worked as a schoolmaster for some years before going abroad to be ordained. He made two trips back to England to work as a priest – the first began in 1583 and lasted for two years until he was detected and banished in 1585. He stayed in Rheims for just two days before catching a boat back to England. He ministered for a further two years but was finally captured again –at Padley, home of a notable recusant family, the Fitzherberts. This time there was to be no banishment – he was condemned to death. laymen, scholars and craftsmen But not all the martyrs were priests: there were also laymen, scholars and craftsmen. And the age range was wide – some of the martyrs were in their 80s, some only in their 20s. work of renewal “The martyrs grasped the importance of that Petrine ministry. They gave their lives rather than deny this truth of their faith. Over the centuries the Church in England, Wales and Scotland has drawn inspiration from these martyrs and continues in love of the Mass and in faithful adherence to the Bishop of Rome. The same loyalty and faithfulness to the Pope is demonstrated today whenever the work of renewal in the Church is carried out in accordance with the teachings of the Second Vatican Council and in Witness accounts of the martyrdom testify that he communion with the universal Church. preached to the crowds while the executioner prepared the grisly tools for hanging, drawing and quartering, and Central to this renewal, to which the Holy Spirit calls that he showed no fear, and encouraged the other priests the Church, is work for that unity among Christians who were to suffer alongside him. All showed great for which Christ himself prayed. We must all rejoice bravery at their deaths, and no terror or even sadness, that the hostilities between Christians, which so speaking instead of their readiness to die for Christ and shaped the age of these martyrs, are over, replaced by the Church and their conviction of the truth of the Faith fraternal love and mutual esteem.”