Henry
Morse was born to protestant parents in Suffolk, England, in 1595, and
left his home to study law in London where he learned of the Catholic
Faith and converted at the age of 23. Henry traveled to Rome where he
was ordained a priest.
He made his way back home to England,
where he was immediately arrested and imprisoned at York with a fellow
priest, a Jesuit. The three years of his imprisonment became for the
young ordained priest an intense novitiate, and by the time he was
released, he had made his final vows as a Jesuit.
Upon his
release from prison, Henry was banished from England, but returned in
1633 under a false name. During the plague of 1636, Henry would travel
to the homes of Catholics and Protestants alike, caring for the sick. He
caught the plague from his patients three times, but miraculously
recovered each time. The people of England were so touched by Henry’s
zeal and goodness, over 100 people converted to Catholicism in less than
a year.
He was then betrayed by a friend, arrested by the
authorities and again banished from England. Instead, he traveled to
Southern England and ministered to the people there. Then, in 1645,
Henry was arrested for the last time and sent to London for execution.
After celebrating a final Mass, Fr. Henry Morse proclaimed his faith to
the crowd, prayed aloud for himself and for his executioners and was
executed. “I am come hither to die for my religion.” He said to the
crowd, “…I pray that my death may be some kind of atonement for the sins
of this kingdom.” Then, striking his breast three times, he gave a
signal to a priest hidden in the crowd to give him absolution and said:
“Into your hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit.”
Henry Morse was canonized as a martyr in 1970.
Monday, February 1, 2021
St. Henry Morse
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