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|    talk.religion.misc    |    Religious, ethical, & moral implications    |    30,222 messages    |
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|    Message 28,276 of 30,222    |
|    Weedy to All    |
|    The spouse of the Church cannot be defil    |
|    06 Sep 17 23:46:14    |
      From: richarra@gmail.com              The spouse of the Church cannot be defiled.              The spouse of the Church cannot be defiled. Whosoever separates from       the Church and is joined to an adulteress is separated from the       promises of the Church. Nor can he who forsakes the Church of Christ       attain the rewards of Christ: He is a stranger; he is a worldling; he       is an enemy.       -- Saint Cyprian of Carthage              Saint Cyprian of Carthage's patronage: Algeria; North Africa                     <<>><<>><<>>       September 7th - Bl. John Duckett & Ralph Corby, Martyrs of England       Memorial               7 September        29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai              The north country family of Duckett had already given one martyr to       the Church in the person of Bl. James Duckett (April 19). He had a       son who became prior of the English Carthusians at Nieuport in       Flanders. Whether James Duckett who fathered Bl. John was another son       is not certain; but Bl. John was related to Bl. James in some way. He       was born at Underwinter in the parish of Sedbergh in the west riding       of Yorkshire in 1613, went to the English College at Douay, and was       made priest there in 1639. He then studied for three years at Paris,       where the long periods he passed in prayer were commented on and he       was rumoured to have gifts of contemplation of a high order.              When he was at length sent to the English mission he passed two months       of preparatory retreat with Carthusians at Nieuport, under the       direction of Father Duckett, whom Bishop Challoner refers to as his       kinsman but does not specify to have been his uncle. When he had       ministered in the county palatine of Durham for about twelve months he       was arrested while on his way to baptize two children, on July 2,       1644, the day on which the battle of Marston Moor was fought, together       with two laymen. Mr. Duckett was examined before a parliamentary       committee of sequestrators at Sunderland, and refused to admit that he       was a priest, demanding to see their proofs. The holy oils and Rituale       found on him were pretty clear evidence, but the examiners wanted a       personal admission, so they put him in irons and threatened to torture       him. When he heard that the two laymen were being questioned and that       inquiries were to be made among his friends and associates, he decided       he must save them from the possibility of their implicating       themselves; and therefore confessed his priesthood. Thereupon he was       sent up to London, together with a Jesuit, Father Corby, who had been       seized when celebrating Mass at Hamsterley Hall, near Newcastle.              Ralph Corby (or Corbington) came of a Durham family, but was born at       Maynooth, in 1598. When Ralph was five his parents returned to       England, and after years of persecution every member of the family       entered religion. The father, Gerard Corbington, became a temporal       coadjutor with the Jesuits and reconciled to the Church his own father       when he was a hundred years old. The mother, Isabel Richardson, died       a Benedictine at Ghent, and two surviving daughters joined the same       order at Brussels, while Ralph's elder and younger brothers also were       Jesuits. He himself joined the Society of Jesus at Watten in       Flanders, and came on the mission in 1632, ministering for twelve       years thereafter with unquenchable zeal among the widely scattered       faithful of county Durham. Challoner tells us that "they loved him as       their father and reverenced him as an apostle".              On their arrival in London the two confessors were committed to       Newgate to await the September sessions. There was no doubt what the       upshot would be, and the English Jesuits abroad were making feverish       efforts in concert with the imperial chargĂ© d'affaires in London to       get Father Corby exchanged for a Scots colonel who was held prisoner       in Germany by the emperor. When it seemed as if this would be       successful, Father Corby offered the reprieve to Mr Duckett. To which       he replied, "This thing is being procured and arranged by your       friends. Be you therefore pleased to accept it." Corby disclaimed       it--Mr. Duckett was younger and better qualified for service on the       mission than himself. And thus it was "handed to and fro between them,       neither being willing to accept of it, till an expedient was proposed       to save them both; but it succeeded not, for the Parliament, it seems,       was resolved they both should suffer". At the trial they both pleaded       guilty to being priests, but Father Corby claimed that as he was born       in Ireland he did not come within the statute. This plea was overruled       (quite properly) and sentence of death pronounced. While he was       celebrating his last Mass in their Newgate lodging, Father Corby       "appeared to be as it were in an agony of sadness and fear", but the       trial passed, and at ten o'clock in the morning of September 7, 1644,       they both set out on the journey to Tyburn, with their crowns shaved,       in their cassocks, and with a smiling look". Mr. Duckett spoke little       but to give his blessing to the many who asked it and to say to the       Protestant minister that would address him, "Sir, I come not hither to       be taught my faith but to die for the profession of it". Bl. Ralph       made a short speech, they lovingly embraced one another, and the cart       was drawn away: nor would the sheriff allow them to be cut down and       disembowelled before they were both dead. He took extraordinary       precautions to prevent any relics escaping the flames, nevertheless a       hand of Bl. John and some pieces of their cassocks were saved; and in       the archives of the diocese of Westminster there is treasured a letter       written by Bl. John on the eve of his passion to Dr Richard Smith,       titular Bishop of Chalcedon and vicar apostolic of England, who was       then living in Paris. "I fear not death", he writes, "nor I contemn       not life. If life were my lot, I would endure it patiently; but if       death, I shall receive it joyfully, for that Christ is my life and       death is my gain."              Ralph Corby is included in his brother's Certamen Triplex (see       biography of Bl. Henry Morse on February 1). See also MMP., pp.       457-466 ; REPSJ., vol. iii, pp. 68-96; and J. Brodrick, Procession of       Saints (1949), pp. 111-130.                     Saint Quote:       By the effective exercise of only one virtue, a person may attain to       the height of all the rest.       -- Saint Gregory Nazianzen              Bible Quote:       "Ye that fear the Lord, hope in him, and mercy shall come to you for       your delight. My children, behold the generations of men, and know ye       that no one man hath hoped in the Lord and hath been confounded."       (Ecclus. 2:9,11).                     <><><><>              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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