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Every year it becomes even more important to remember this feast day – the day we commemorate two martyrs, defenders of the sanctity of marriage.  

In 2015, the Supreme Court of the United States essentially redefined the traditional meaning of marriage. Christians and others that hold strong religious and moral views that oppose this view have been persecuted ever since.

Today on social media and in the news, Christians and others are castigated, shouted down, shunned and accused of bigotry for supporting traditional marriage between one man and one woman. We must also endure an entire month dedicated to publicly ridiculing traditional marriage and even the reality of what it is to be male and female.

But I can still see God’s hand in it. Pride month is June. The feast of these two great martyrs, as well as the feasts of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary, are also celebrated in June.

St. John Fisher – the beheaded family pastor!



St. Thomas is well known to us from the movie A Man for All Seasons, but St. John Fisher is an interesting saint as well. Blogger and author, Stephanie Mann spoke on Catholic radio about how St. John had been friends with Henry VII and with Lady Margaret Beaufort (Henry VIII’s grandmother). In fact, he said the funeral mass for both of them. He was very close to the family and knew young Henry from boyhood. It amazes me then that Henry VIII so could be so stiff-necked in his views that he could have John Fisher executed! But he did. That would be like having one of our beloved parish priests killed over a difference of opinion – it’s unthinkable.

“A good man is not a perfect man; a good man is an honest man, faithful and unhesitatingly responsive to the voice of God in his life.”  St. John Fisher

St Thomas More

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Father Lawrence Lew OP, via Flickr, licensed CC

Saint Thomas Moore – family man and the king’s friend

St Thomas More
Father Lawrence Lew via Flickr


St. Thomas Moore was the epitome of a loving husband and father. He was also faithful and competent in his job and had a respect for knowledge.  But most of all he was “the King’s good servant, but God’s first.”

Thomas was tried, convicted, and executed because he would not accept King Henry VIII’s marriage to Anne Boleyn. The King had put his wife of 25 years aside so that he could marry Anne, claiming that the Pope had erred and that his first marriage was unlawful. Henry also proclaimed himself as the head of the Church of England. Because Thomas More could not agree he was punished.

The Last Prayer of St. Thomas Moore, composed in the Tower of London:



“Give me the grace, Good Lord, to set the world at naught. To set the mind firmly on You and not to hang upon the words of men’s mouths.

To be content to be solitary. Not to long for worldly pleasures. Little by little utterly to cast off the world and rid my mind of all its business. Not too long to hear of earthly things, but that the hearing of worldly fancies may be displeasing to me.

Gladly to be thinking of God, piteously to call for His help. To lean into the comfort of God. Busily to labour to love Him.

To know my own vileness and wretchedness. To humble myself under the mighty hand of God. To bewail my sins and for the purging of them, patiently to suffer adversity. Gladly to bear my purgatory here. To be joyful tribulations. To walk the narrow way that leads to life. To have the last thing in remembrance. To have ever before my eyes my death that is ever at hand.

To make death no stranger to me. To foresee and consider the everlasting fire of Hell.

To pray for pardon before the judge comes. To continually have in mind the passion that Christ suffered for me. For His benefits unceasingly to give Him thanks.

To buy the time again that I have lost.

To abstain from vain conversations.

To shun foolish mirth and gladness.

To cut off unnecessary recreations of worldly substance friends, liberty, life and all to set the loss at naught for the winning of Christ.

To think my worst enemies my best friends, for the brethren of Joseph could never have done him so much good with their love and favor as they did him with their malice and hatred.

These minds are more to be desired of every man than all the treasures of all the princes and kings, Christian and heathen, were it gather and laid together all in one heap. Amen”

These are a few of my favorite scenes from A Man for All Seasons. I love the wit and the great logic of Thomas Moore. Please enjoy!

A Homily for Today


I am a big fan of Father Lawrence Lew on Flickr and feature many of his photographs on this blog too.  Here is an excerpt from his thought provoking homily for today.

Many stood up against this, and many stood for Christ against the State and they were felled for it – martyred for Faith in Jesus Christ and for clinging to the Truth he taught – truth handed on faithfully from generation to generation by Christ’s Holy Church. But of the hundreds who were martyred for the Catholic Faith from 1535 onward, two were especially eminent, and they were the first to be canonized by Pope Pius XI in 1935.

St John Fisher was the saintly Bishop of Rochester, Chancellor of Cambridge University, tutor to Henry VIII, confessor to Lady Margaret, mother of Henry VII. Erasmus considered him to be “Incomparable for uprightness of life, for learning and for greatness of soul.” In short, he was a luminary of the Church. St. Thomas More was a luminary of the state. he was Lord High Chancellor of England, a noted humanist philosopher and lawyer and a scholar.

The combination of these two saints reminds us that neither spiritual nor temporal lords could stand against the state and thewill of the crown. Nevertheless, both men remained steadfast in upholding the truth of the Gospel, particularly concerning the indissolubility of Christian marriage. for their fidelity to Christ’s word, they were executed in 1535.

Father Lawrence Lew, homily

Fifteen years ago today, my mother died.

 It has always been interesting to me that God took my mother home on this particular Feast day.  

St. Thomas Moore and St. John Fisher really died for the sanctity of marriage. As I always try to find the reason for things and why they happen when they do, it finally made sense to me why God would call my mother home on this day. Mom had not made a wise marriage choice and she did not have a happy marriage. In fact, she spent more time alone than with my father. But she always loved him, she remained loyal to him, she never divorced, she took care of him when he got ill and she grieved his death. So if there was ever anyone that suffered for marriage- she did!  I guess that gives her something in common with St. Thomas Moore and St. John Fisher.

And if one of the primary ends of marriage was to have children and raise them to love the Lord – she did that too, not only with her daughters but with her grandchildren as well.  She truly was God’s good servant.

Over the years I have also pondered her death from ovarian cancer – she suffered so much in the last weeks of her life. I find comfort in St. Thomas More’s prayer – and I hope that she suffered whatever purgatory she had, in those last few days and was released immediately to heaven.


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