03 May 2012

Thought from Friday Morning Prayer: English Saints and Martyrs and Ecumenism


         On Friday 4 May, a small group of local ministers from our ecumenical group, the South Leicester Christian Partnership, gathered in St Guthlac’s for early morning prayer. It is our custom to move around some of the churches in the partnership and to meet once a month on the first Friday at 8 am. On this occasion, we met on the ‘lesser festival’ when we remember the English Saints and Martyrs of the Reformation era. We prayed together the Collect for the Day: ‘Merciful God, who, when your Church on earth was torn apart by the ravages of sin, raised up men and women in this land who witnessed to their faith with courage and constancy: give to your Church that peace which is your will, and grant that those who have been divided on earth may be reconciled in heaven, and share together in the vision of your glory…’
         In ecumenical terms, the rival services on 4 May could become a somewhat uncomfortable experience, because since 2010 both Catholic and Protestant victims of the Reformation era have been remembered in separate services of the Catholic and Anglican Churches. In the Catholic case, those who are remembered are the 40 martyrs canonised under Paul VI in 1973 (previously celebrated on October 25), together with the 85 beatified Martyrs of the Reformation and the other martyrs of the 16th and 17th century canonised by John Paul II in 1987. Yet the Catholic church was doing no more than finally ‘catching up’ with what had been official policy of the Church England since an order of Convocation in 1571. This required that Foxe’s Book of Martyrs – the supreme work of Protestant martyrology in England – be chained beside the Great Bible in cathedrals, select churches, and even several bishops’ and guild halls. Selected readings from the text were proclaimed from the pulpit as if it were Scripture. And the martyrs, of course, were all Protestants, chiefly at the hands of the Catholic queen, ‘Bloody Mary’ Tudor.
         In his 1987 homily at the time of the beatification, John Paul II mentioned the prayer at the previous service in 1973 ‘that the blood of those martyrs would be a source of healing for the divisions between Christians. Today we may fittingly give thanks for the progress made in the intervening years towards fuller communion between Anglicans and Catholics. We rejoice in the deeper understanding, broader collaboration and common witness that have taken place through the power of God.’ And we should all say amen to that.
         The reading for Morning Prayer on 4 May was from Luke ch 4, where Jesus announces his mission in the synagogue, but is confronted by unbelievers who, in the end, threaten to kill him: ‘They got up, drove him out of the town, and led him to the brow of the hill on which their town was built, so that they might hurl him off the cliff. But he passed through the midst of them and went on his way’ (Luke 4:30).
         Just two days earlier, on 2 May, Benedict XVI had delivered an address on Stephen, the first Christian martyr, who is too often forgotten about by many of us because he is commemorated on 26 December. ‘We may ask ourselves’, the Pope reflected, ‘where did this first Christian martyr find the strength to face his persecutors and in the end to attain to the gift of himself? The answer is simple: from his relationship with God, from his communion with Christ, from meditation on the history of salvation, from seeing God’s action, which in Jesus Christ reached its summit. Our prayer, too, should be nourished by listening to God’s Word, in communion with Jesus and his Church.’
         Our ecumenical prayer sessions are about Bible reading, formal prayer, open prayer and meditation. On this occasion we concentrated on the cost of martyrdom and the difficulty of forgiveness and reconciliation. Our final prayer was the one found on a piece of paper in the coat of a dead girl at Ravensbrück concentration camp in 1945. ‘O Lord, remember not only the men and women of good will, but also those of ill will. But, do not remember all of the suffering they have inflicted upon us; instead remember the fruits we have borne because of this suffering – our fellowship, our loyalty to one another, our humility, our courage, our generosity, the greatness of heart that has grown from this trouble. When our persecutors come to be judged by you, let all of these fruits that we have borne be their forgiveness.’ O that we could forgive others for offences, which compared with those meted out at Ravensbrück, seem petty and trivial. Amen.