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St
Thomas a Becket |
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Feast
Day: December 29

Also known as
Thomas
Beckett; Thomas of Canterbury
Profile
Of Norman
ancestry. Educated at Merton Priory,
Paris,
Bologna, and
Auxerre. Civil and
canon
lawyer.
Soldier and officer.
Archdeacon of Canterbury. Friend of
King Henry II. Chancellor of
England.
Archbishop of Canterbury. Opposed the
King's interference in ecclesiastical matters.
Exiled several times.
Martyr.
Born
1118 at London,
England
Died
murdered in
1170 in the Cathedral at Canterbury,
England
Canonized
1173 by
Pope
Alexander III
Patronage
clergy,
Exeter College Oxford,
Portsmouth England,
secular clergy
Representation
archbishop with a wounded head;
archbishop holding an inverted sword;
archbishop kneeling before his
murderers;
archbishop being
murdered in church; crosier with a battle-axe head at the top
Readings
For our sake
Christ offered himself to the Father upon the altar for the cross. He now
looks down from heaven on our actions and secret thoughts, and one day he
will give each of us the reward his deeds deserve.
It must therefore be our endeavor to destroy the right of sin and death, and
by nurturing faith and uprightness of life, to build up the Church of Christ
into a holy temple of the Lord.
The harvest is good and one reaper or even several would not suffice to
gather all of it into the granary of the Lord. Yet the Roman Church remains
the head of all the churches and the source of Catholic teaching. Of this
there can be no doubt. Everyone know that the keys of the kingdom of heaven
were given to Peter. Upon his faith and teaching the whole fabric of the
Church will continue to be built until we all reach full maturity in Christ
and attain to unity in faith and knowledge of the Son of God.
Of course many are needed to plant and many to water now that the faith has
spread so far and the population become so great. Nevertheless, no matter
who plants or waters, God gives no harvest unless what he plants is the
faith of Peter, and unless he himself assents to Peter's teaching. All
important questions that arise among God's people are referred to the
judgment of Peter in the person for the Roman Pontiff. Under him the
ministers of Mother Church exercise the powers committed to them, each in
his own sphere of responsibility.
Remember then how our fathers worked out their salvation; remember the
sufferings through which the Church has grown, and the storms the ship of
Peter has weathered because it has Christ on board. Remember how the crown
was attained by those whose sufferings gave new radiance to their faith. The
whole company of saints bears witness to the unfailing truth that without
real effort no one wins the crown.
from a letter by Saint Thomas Beckett
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