From: rich <
richarra@gmail.com>
July 19th - St John Plessington, Priest & Martyr
(1637-1679)
As the son of Queen Henrietta Maria, King Charles II was naturally
imbued with Catholic sympathies; and the story of his deathbed, when
Fr Huddleston brought the Blessed Sacrament to him from Queen
Catherine of Braganza's chapel, is well known.
Yet during the collective mania whipped up by Titus Oates under the
pretense of a =E2=80=9CPopish Plot=E2=80=9D (1678-79), King Charles did lit= tle or
nothing to save Catholics who found themselves in mortal peril. The
only potential victims on whose behalf he intervened were the Queen
and Louis XIV's emissary Claude de la Colombi=C3=A8re, SJ, of prior=
note.
Some 35 Catholics were executed, nearly all of them entirely innocent
of treason. Of course, Charles was under intense pressure from skilful
and unscrupulous politicians such as Lord Shaftesbury, who knew how to manipulate the mob.
The essential point, though, was that the Merry Monarch had no
intention of going on his travels again. It is not easy to warm to the complacency with which he appeared to regard the deaths of so many
falsely accused men.
One of these was John Plessington. The youngest of three children, he
was born in 1636 into a Catholic family at Dimples Hall, Garstang,
near Preston in Lancashire. His father fought for the King in the
Civil War and was taken prisoner.
John's vocation may have been inspired by a family chaplain called
Thomas Whitaker, who was captured and executed in 1646. At all events, Plessington, having attended the Jesuit school at Scarisbrick Hall,
near Ormskirk, followed Whitaker in being educated at Saint-Omer and Valladolid. While abroad, he went under the name of William
Scarisbrick. In 1662 he was ordained in Segovia. The next year,
however, ill health brought him back to England.
For a while he served at the shrine of St Winifred in Holywell, North
Wales. Then in 1670 he moved to Puddington Hall in the Wirral, as
tutor to the Massey family.
For a while Plessington was able to minister openly to the local
Catholic population. But when the scare of the Popish Plot extended to
the north, a timeserver called Thomas Dutton collected a reward for
arresting him.
There was no charge against Plessington, beyond his occupation as a
Catholic priest, which sufficed for a death sentence. When the
executioner came to measure him, Plessington joked that he was
ordering his last suit.
According to a local tradition, St John was implicated at the
insistence of a Protestant landowner simply because he had forbidden a
match between his son and a Catholic heiress. Three witnesses gave
false evidence of seeing St John serving as a priest: he forgave each
of them by name from the scaffold.
He was hanged, drawn and quartered in Chester on July 19 1679. His
speech from the scaffold at Gallow's Hill in Boughton, Cheshire was
printed and distributed: He said: =E2=80=9CBear witness, good hearers, that=
I
profess that I undoubtedly and firmly believe all the articles of the
Roman Catholic faith, and for the truth of any of them, by the
assistance of God, I am willing to die; and I had rather die than
doubt of any point of faith taught by our holy mother the Roman
Catholic Church=E2=80=A6
I know it will be said that a priest ordayned by authority derived
from the See of Rome is, by the Law of the Nation, to die as a
Traytor, but if that be so what must become of all the Clergymen of
the Church of England, for the first Church of England Bishops had
their Ordination from those of the Church of Rome, or not at all, as
appears by their own writers so that Ordination comes derivatively
from those now living.=E2=80=9D
--StJohnPlessingtonSpeech1
StJohnPlessingtonSpeech2
-displayed in St Winefride's Church in Little Neston, on the Wirral=
, UK
St John was buried in the churchyard of St Nicholas's, Burton, afte=
r
Puddington locals would not allow his quarters to be displayed.
Attempts to locate and exhume his body, as recent as 1962, have been unsuccessful but vestments associated with him are kept at St
Winefride's in Neston and a small piece of blood-stained linen is
treasured as a relic in St Francis's Church in Chester.
By Matthew
Saint Quote:
Humility is the foundation of all the other virtues hence, in the soul
in which this virtue does not exist there cannot be any other virtue
except in mere appearance.
--Saint Augustine of Hippo
50 Jesus answered him, =E2=80=9CBecause I said to you, I saw you under the = fig
tree, do you believe? You shall see greater things than these.=E2=80=9D 51 = And
he said to him, =E2=80=9CTruly, truly, I say to you, you will see heaven opened, and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man.=E2=80=9D (John 1: 50-51) RSVCE
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A Prayer for after the Holy Mass
I Beseech Thee,
most sweet Lord Jesus Christ,
that Thy Passion may be to me power
by which I may be strengthened,
protected and defended.
May Thy wounds be to me food
and drink by which I may be nourished,
inebriated, and delighted.
May the sprinkling of Thy Blood be to me
an ablution for all my sins.
May Thy death prove for me unfailing life,
and may Thy Cross be to me eternal glory.
In these be my refreshment,
joy, health, and delight of my heart:
Thou who livest and reignest forever. Amen.
(Name of this Prayer: "I Beseech Thee, most sweet Lord Jesus Christ.")
--- NewsGate v1.0 gamma 2
* Origin: News Gate @ Net396 -Huntsville, AL - USA (1:396/4)