The Portal Archive December 2011 | Page 6

THE P RTAL December 2011 Two Henrys and two Thomases Page 6 A Recusant Martyr by Joanna Bogle Twice in English history a king named Henry has clashed with a man named Thomas who would later be hailed as a martyr and a saint. The first of these gives us a winter saint - St Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, whose feast day we mark on December 29th. The second gives us a summer saint, St Thomas More, martyred in 1535, whose feast day we mark on June 22nd. Midsummer and midwinter: Two martyrs, each which led to the Constitutions of Clarendon and named after the great Apostle Thomas, nicknamed Becket’s refusal to bargain with anything which he felt to belong the Church’s status or independence. Then “the twin”. Henry’s rage, his famous cry asking if anyone would Thomas Becket rid him of this turbulent priest, and the four knights Thomas Becket belongs to the early 12th century who took this as a royal command and set out for and was a Londoner, born in Cheapside near St Paul’s Canterbury. Cathedral, on the feast of St Thomas the Apostle, Becket was murdered in Canterbury Cathedral as probably in 1113 although the year is not certain. He was educated by monks at Merton Abbey, on the he was at prayer there. It was during the Christmas outskirts of what is today suburban Wimbledon - there season. He was brutally slaughtered - there are are still remnants of this great religious foundation to horrible accounts of his blood and brains splashing be explored, although much of what was their land is out across the floor. He was immediately hailed as a martyr, canonised a few years later by the Church, and now occupied by a massive supermarket. pilgrims poured into Canterbury by the hundreds and Becket’s family was well-connected, but by the time then thousands. he was in his teens his father had suffered financial reverses and he knew he would have to work hard if he Thomas More and Henry VIII wanted to do well. He was fortunate in securing a place Centuries later, Thomas More clashed with Henry in the household of the Archbishop of Canterbury from VIII and this time in one sense the issue was the same where he was sent to study canon law. He eventually - whether or not the Crown should have authority rose to high office in the Church. over the Church. Thomas More died on the scaffold at Tower Hill because he refused to recognise Henry as Henry II head of the Church. While Henry II publicly repented The King, Henry II, liked Thomas and in 1162 he of Thomas Becket’s death, Henry VIII went on to appointed him Archbishop of Canterbury. Thomas was oversee the killing of many more people including two not a priest at the time - this was a court appointment of his own wives, and never begged forgiveness. and it was assumed that the Church would approve and that ordination would follow, which it did. And the king’s good servant, but God’s first with ordination came, it seems, a change in Thomas - Today, the tradition of being “the king’s good servant, he started to take prayer seriously, and he regarded his but God’s first” in Thomas More’s words is a rich part priesthood as sacred and his first duty as being to God. of our heritage here in Britain. Our soil has been made holy by the blood of martyrs. Something to think From here, the story is well-known - Becket’s clash about as we move ahead into this second decade of the with the king about the role and limits of the royal 21st century, with many issues ahead where Christians power as it related to the Church, his banishment will need to stand firm and not give in to Government to France, the heightened bitterness and arguments pressure.