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English seminary in Rome commemorates Martyrs’ Day on St. Ralph Sherwin’s feast

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According to Venerable English College, during the Catholic persecution in England, students would gather around the “Martyrs’ Picture” in the chapel to sing the Te Deum — a Latin hymn of thanksgiving — whenever news reached Rome of the martyrdom of a former student. This custom continues today on Martyrs’ Day, Dec. 1, when the relics of the martyrs, preserved beneath the altar, are venerated by the students. / Credit: Bénédicte Cedergren/EWTN News

Rome Newsroom, Dec 2, 2024 / 17:45 pm (CNA).

For the English seminary in Rome, Dec. 1 is an important day: the commemoration of the martyrdom of some of the school’s former students — 44 priests who were killed during the English Reformation after returning to England to serve the persecuted Catholics.

During the dark days of the English Reformation in the 16th century, the Venerable English College was founded in Rome to form young English Catholic men discerning the priesthood.

Today, the seminary continues to educate English men studying to be priests. In 2024, the college’s commemoration of “Martyrs’ Day” was moved to Dec. 2 due to the first Sunday of Advent falling on Dec. 1.

In the 16th century, “the situation in England was grave for Catholics,” Father Christopher Warren, vice rector of the Venerable English College, told Bénédicte Cedergren of EWTN News. “The Protestant Reformation, which we think of now very much as a historical fact, was a live one for them. Particularly for those who would celebrate Mass, for priests, and for those who would seek to aid them in their mission, it was a question of life and death.” 

Father Christopher Warren, vice rector of the Venerable English College, gives the homily during Mass on Dec. 2, 2024, in commemoration of Martyrs’ Day at the college in Rome. Credit: Bénédicte Cedergren/EWTN News
Father Christopher Warren, vice rector of the Venerable English College, gives the homily during Mass on Dec. 2, 2024, in commemoration of Martyrs’ Day at the college in Rome. Credit: Bénédicte Cedergren/EWTN News

After their ordinations in Rome, the courageous young priests returned to England and Wales, where they served in secret, facing constant dangers of betrayal, arrest, and execution.  

Over the next 100 years, 44 of the college’s students were martyred, most by being tortured and then hanged, drawn, and quartered.

The rector of the Venerable English College, Father Stephen Wang, recalled that the most important martyr for the seminary is the first martyr, and one of the first students, St. Ralph Sherwin.

“He was from the north of England. He was very much an ‘establishment figure’ in England,” Wang said. “He was at Eaton School, at Oxford University, but then he converted to Catholicism, and he was full of faith and longed to share that faith with others. He studied for the priesthood, lived here for three years, and then he went back on the first mission that was sent from the seminary with a group of companions to try and share the Catholic faith back in England and Wales.”

The rector of the Venerable English College in Rome, Father Stephen Wang, said the most important martyr for the seminary is the first martyr, and one of the first students, St. Ralph Sherwin. Credit: Bénédicte Cedergren/EWTN News
The rector of the Venerable English College in Rome, Father Stephen Wang, said the most important martyr for the seminary is the first martyr, and one of the first students, St. Ralph Sherwin. Credit: Bénédicte Cedergren/EWTN News

According to the college, during the Catholic persecution in England, students would gather around the “Martyrs’ Picture” in the chapel to sing the Te Deum — a Latin hymn of thanksgiving — whenever news reached Rome of the martyrdom of a former student. 

This custom continues today on Martyrs’ Day, when the relics of the martyrs, preserved beneath the altar, are venerated by the students.

They also have morning prayer and Mass, vice rector Warren said. “And then in the evening after evening prayer, we have a public service of veneration during which the Gospel is read, but also an account of the martyrdom of one of the college martyrs. So that’s really a highlight because it sets before us the reality of their sacrifice.” 

While much of the building of the Venerable English College had to be massively restored after being commandeered and ransacked by Napoleon’s troops in 1798, the Martyrs’ Picture by Durante Alberti, dating to 1583, was saved and still hangs in the sanctuary of the college’s church today.

Some relics of the Venerable English College’s patron saints and martyrs, including St. Thomas of Canterbury, St. Edmund, and St. Ralph Sherwin. Credit: Bénédicte Cedergren/EWTN News
Some relics of the Venerable English College’s patron saints and martyrs, including St. Thomas of Canterbury, St. Edmund, and St. Ralph Sherwin. Credit: Bénédicte Cedergren/EWTN News

The painting has “an image of the Most Holy Trinity with the blood of Jesus falling onto a globe, setting it on fire,” Wang, the rector, said. “That’s our motto, the words of Jesus: ‘I have come to cast fire on the earth.’”

He explained that in the painting, the seminary’s two patron saints, St. Thomas Becket of Canterbury and St. Edmund, king of East Anglia, are depicted gesturing toward the Flaminian Gate, “which represents the road going north. So it’s the road home.”

“Our two saints are saying to us and to everyone today who’s in the Church: Your destiny, your vocation is not to stay in Rome forever. It’s to remember that you’re here for a purpose. It’s to go home. It’s to be on mission. It’s to take the good news of Jesus and your experience of being here in Rome back home to those who need to hear the Gospel,” the rector added.

Frescoes depicting the brutal suffering and martyrdom of the English saints and martyrs are displayed in the tribune of the Venerable English College chapel in Rome. Credit: Bénédicte Cedergren/EWTN News
Frescoes depicting the brutal suffering and martyrdom of the English saints and martyrs are displayed in the tribune of the Venerable English College chapel in Rome. Credit: Bénédicte Cedergren/EWTN News

Wang noted that while Catholics in England no longer face the likelihood of a physical martyrdom, they still have to confront many challenges, and seminarians returning home often have to navigate shifting modern cultural realities and anti-Christian hostility.

The future priests of the Venerable English College continue to draw inspiration from the courage of the English martyrs, whose legacy drives them to share the Gospel no matter the obstacles.  

“I think our seminarians are very inspired by the history here,” Wang said. “It’s so relevant, too, today as well, because today we need missionary priests, we need priests whose hearts are full of love, but also full of zeal and aware of the difficulties. The cultures are not always welcoming to the Gospel and to the Christian message. So, to be able to share your faith in a loving way but to have the courage and also the creativity you need to share that faith in new and difficult circumstances… The martyrs are such a model for that.” 


Source: https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/260775/english-seminary-in-rome-commemorates-martyrs-day-on-st-ralph-sherwin-s-feast


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