John Forest
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Bl. John Forest | |
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File:St Etheldreda, Ely Place, London EC1 - Nave statue - geograph.org.uk - 1613379.jpg
Bl. John Forest, nave statue - St. Etheldreda, Ely Place, London
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Born | 1471 Oxford |
Died | 22 May 1538 Smithfield, London |
Beatified | 9 December 1886 by Leo XIII |
John Forest (1471 – 22 May 1538) was an English Franciscan Friar and martyr.
Contents
Life
Born in the Oxford area in 1471, John Forest became a Franciscan Friar Minor of the Regular Observance in 1491 in Greenwich. He went on to study theology at the University of Oxford, later becoming confessor to Queen Catherine of Aragon, first wife to King Henry VIII. (The Greenwich friary was attached to the Royal Palace at Greenwich.)
The Crown was eager to gain the sanction of learned men and of those esteemed highly to his plans re the Church. Wealth and honours were offered to those who complied. Those who resisted were threatened.[1] From 1531 the Friars Minor had gained the enmity of the King by opposing his divorce and his movements toward Protestantism.[2]
In November, 1532, as Guardian of the Greenwich friary, he spoke to the friars of the plans the King had to suppress the Order in England and denounced from the pulpit at St. Paul's Cross Henry's plans for a divorce. In 1533 he was imprisoned in Newgate prison and condemned to death. In 1534 Henry suppressed the Observant friars and ordered them dispersed to other friaries. John was released from prison but by 1538 was in confinement in a Conventual Franciscan friary at Smithfield, his death sentence having been neither commuted nor carried out.[3] Forest was sent to a convent in the north.
Despite initially recanting, Forest was detained at Newgate Prison, on the basis of denial of the king's supremacy, together with several other Friars, who persuaded him to stand fast in his Roman Catholic beliefs.[4] His confinement, therefore, was not strict, and he was allowed to celebrate divine service and hear confessions.[5] From this confinement he could correspond with the Queen and he also wrote a tract against Henry entitled De auctoritate Ecclesiae et Pontificis maximi ("On the Authority of the Church and the Supreme Pontiff"), defending the papal primacy in the Church. He was denounced to the King for this tract and also for refusing to swear the oath of loyalty demanded by Cromwell.[3]
Thomas Cranmer and Hugh Latimer acted as a team on Cromwell's behalf in the proceedings which led to the friar's destruction. In accordance with the custom of the time, Bishop Latimer was selected to preach a final sermon at the place of execution urging recantation, but in the end Forest was burnt to death at Smithfield, London on 22 May 1538.[6] John Forest was the only Catholic martyr to be burned at the stake.[3] Extra fuel for the pyre is said to have been provided by an enormous statue of St. Derfel from the pilgrimage site of Llandderfel in north Wales, and of which it was prophesied, would "one day set a forest on fire."[7]
Father Forest, together with fifty-three other English martyrs, was beatified by Pope Leo XIII, on 9 December 1886.[2]
See also
- Foxe's Book of Martyrs for English Protestant martyrs
References
- ↑ Camm O.S. B., Dom Bede. "Blessed John Forest". Lives of the English Martyrs Declared Blessed by Pope Leo XIII, Vol. I, p.274, Longmans, Green and Co., London 1914
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Thaddeus, Fr. "Blessed John Forest." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 8. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 11 Mar. 2013
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 "Blessed John Forest 1471 – 1538", Saints and Blesseds of the OFM Province in Britain
- ↑ Demaus, Robert. (1904) Hugh Latimer: a biography. Religious Tract Society, London, United Kingdom. Page 293
- ↑ Trice 1889.
- ↑ Duffy, Eamon. (2005) The Stripping of the Altars. Yale University Press, New Haven, Connecticut, USA. 2nd. Edition. ISBN 0-300-10828-1, page 404
- ↑ Three Saints, Two Wells & a Welsh Parish by Tristan Gray Hulse
External links
- Attribution
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- 1471 births
- 1538 deaths
- English Friars Minor
- British people executed by burning
- People executed under Henry VIII of England
- 16th-century Roman Catholic martyrs
- English Roman Catholic priests
- English beatified people
- 15th-century English people
- 16th-century English people
- People executed by the Kingdom of England by burning
- Executed people from Oxfordshire
- English martyrs