Born
in 1575 in the Southwark section of the City of London, Thomas was the
son of Richard Garnet, a Confessor of the Faith, and nephew of the
famous Jesuit missionary and martyr, Father Henry Garnet.
In his
youth, he was a page to the Count of Arundel. At sixteen, he entered the
College of St. Omer in the Low Countries and, two years later, was sent
to Spain. He continued his studies at the College of St. Alban in
Valladolid and was ordained to the priesthood in 1599. After his
ordination, he returned to England and, under the alias of Thomas
Rokewood, spent nearly six years wandering up and down the country
ministering to the faithful and bringing souls back to the Catholic
Faith.
About 1605, Thomas was arrested and falsely accused of
participating in the Gunpowder Plot, the failed plan to assassinate
James I. He was tortured for information, the authorities hoping to
extract information about his famous uncle, Father Henry Garnet,
Superior of the English Jesuits, who was implicated in the Plot because
he refused to break the Seal of Confession.
After roughly nine
months, he was released and deported to Flanders. There he entered the
Jesuit Order, and just a year after his deportation, he returned to
England. He was arrested after refusing to swear allegiance to the
monarch as head of the Church of England, known as The Oath of
Supremacy. He was hanged at Tyburn in 1608 as a traitor to the crown.
“I
wandered,” he said during his trial, “from place to place to recover
souls which had gone astray and were in error as to the knowledge of the
true Catholic Church.”
Before he died, he publicly reaffirmed
himself as a Jesuit and a priest. He was canonized in 1970 and is
included among the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales.
Photo by: Quodvultdeus
No comments:
Post a Comment