Priest-hole builder and saint

Comments (8) | TrackBacks (0)

Being a saint isn’t about living on a hilltop, or moving entire worlds thanks to charismatic leadership. Rather, it’s about fully offering skills and work in the form of a prayer that serves God on a minute-by-minute basis – even when it comes to mundane things like digging trenches.

In that respect, Nicholas Owen had it right. Born into a pious Catholic family, with two brothers who were priests - and another who was an underground publisher of Catholic books - Nicholas Owen served the Jesuits for many years before becoming a lay brother sometime around 1580. Being only slightly higher than a dwarf, he was often called “Little John.”

However, Nicholas Owen’s holiness didn’t come from belonging to any religious organization, but rather was the result of old-fashioned, sweat-making work. Nicholas Owen was a construction worker - and he must have been a good one

The Superior of the English Jesuits, Father Henry Garnet, asked Nicholas to build secret rooms in mansions throughout England where priests at that time were hiding from persecution. Nicholas’ presence at the construction sites was justified by his working on projects during the day. At night he would dig tunnels, and an assortment of “priest holes” that included hidden rooms and passages.

With time Nicholas’ curriculum began to closer resemble the Paul Newman character in the classic film “Cool Hand Luke,” than Mother Teresa of Calcutta. Besides using the aliases of Andrews and Draper, impersonating a priest, and being a jailbird, Nicholas was aiding and abetting outlaws from the English government. He was even credited with being the mastermind for a well-known priest’s escape from the Tower of London.

On paper Nicholas was anything but a saint.

The last time that Nicholas was arrested was in 1606 as part of the government’s reaction to the foiled Gunpowder Plot – a conspiracy led by some Catholics who swore an oath on the Holy Sacrament to blow up King James and the Parliament for the exacting of harsh penalties on English Catholics.

With the English government believing that the Jesuits were behind the planning of the Gunpowder Plot, a wide net was cast. At the time of his arrest Nicholas was impersonating Father Henry Garnet, the Jesuit Superior.

Upon the capture of Nicholas, England’s Secretary of State, Sir Robert Cecil the First Earl of Salisbury, is said to have written, “how great was the joy caused by his arrest . . . knowing the great skill of Owen in constructing hiding places, and the innumerable quantity of dark holes which he had schemed for hiding priests all through England.”

Nicholas was imprisoned in the Tower of London. He refused to give information and was the subject of violent torture: His body was suspended by the placing of his arms in iron rings, while heavy weights were placed upon his feet.

But Nicholas’ nasty and lengthy death isn’t alone what makes him a saint.

There is no way of knowing how many priests Nicholas’ hidden passages saved, but thanks much to this diminutive construction worker the Catholic faith in England was preserved.

In this respect, Nicholas is a model for all of us: to offer our daily labor - no matter how humble it might be - to God as a prayer. In that way we are all called to be ordinary saints - that’s the rule, not the exception.

0 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Priest-hole builder and saint.

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.splendoroftruth.com/cgi-bin/mt-tb.cgi/4100

8 Comments

Its great to remember stories like this. Too many people forget that Catholicism was not always tolerated in the English-speaking world, and that Catholics (whatever their nationality) owe the continued survival of their faith to this sort of heroic sacrifice. It's easy to forget that we are expected to serve God during the bad times as well as the good.

This would make a great movie!

Very cool story. His feast day is March 12th, he was beatified in 1929 and canonized in 1970 by Pope Paul VI.
He appears to have had a bit more gruesome death than is listed in that article. Amazing story though. Thanks for posting it.

More info:
http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/saintn57.htm

Thanks for this reminder of a great saint. It is said that there are hiding holes in England constructed by him that have still not been discovered. He used to pray before undertaking the work and God assisted him to deceive the pursuivants.

If the British Government continues in its determination to prevent us teaching the truth about homosexuality, we may need his like again...

Totally off the subject--but try to see the 2000 movie about Fr. Damien if you haven't yet. Except for a dumb annulments-don't-matter episode, it's really well done from a Catholic perspective. As a movie, it's amazing. As hagiography, very moving.

Re: Nicholas Owen as a movie character

I love clever Resistance movies. In this case, it would just be trying to practice one's religion.

But still, it'd be kinda like Hogan's Heroes for Catholics -- with a little more gravitas and a definite ending. Or rather, a definite eternity.

There's a great book from this era "Autobiography of a Hunted Priest," by Fr. Gerard. It has been reprinted in the last few years.

The priest who wrote it was ordered by his Jesuit superiors to leave England after the gunpowder plot. There are several stories about the "priest holes" and a dramatic escape from the Tower of London. Definitely cinematic material.

In safety in Belgium, Fr. Gerard was ordered by his Jesuit superiors to write his autobiography. The manuscript was discovered sometime in the 20th century. A Google search on the title turned up these links: http://tcrnews2.com/FourFaces.html
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B00005X803?v=glance

There is no way of knowing how many priests Nicholas’ hidden passages saved, but thanks much to this diminutive construction worker the Catholic faith in England was preserved.

Not only that, but historians believe there are still many holes yet to be uncovered. I believe several were found as recently as the late seventies/early eighties.

Yes the Greek Captcha is a joke

Leave a comment

The Curt Jester

A former atheist who after spending forty years in the wilderness finds himself with both astonishment and joy a member of the Catholic Church. This blog presents my hopefully humorous and sometimes serious take on things religious, political, and whatever else crosses my mind.

My conversion story

Email Me:

Blessed Miguel Pro, S.J.

Known as "God's Jester" was a martyr for the faith and a man of wisdom, fun, tricks, poetry, song, and dance. Thus seemed an appropriate Patron Saint of this blog.

Shameless Promotion

The Curt Jester: Disturbingly Funny --Mark Shea
EX-cellent blog --Jimmy Akin
One wag has even posted a list of the Top Ten signs that someone is in the grip of "motu-mania," -- John Allen Jr.
Brilliance abounds --Victor Lams
The Curt Jester is a blog of wise-ass musings on the media, politics, and things "Papist." The Revealer
Not all the Jester’s lines hit their target. --Commonweal
Funniest Blog

Info

Blogging since:
7/24/02

This site established:
9 Feb 2003

My Previous blog
Atheist to a Theist

Catholic since:
Easter 4/4/99

Human since:
Conception 1958

Sponsors

My other blogs

Real Sponsors

Archives

Supernatural Weather

Site Meter

Powered by Movable Type 4.1

Navigation

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Subscribe

Atom
RSS

Catholic Sites

Catholic Podcasts





SQPN is a source for great Catholic podcasts.

Ministerial Bloghood

Bloghood of the Faithful

A Catholic Life
A Catholic Mom Climbing the Pillars
A Catholic Mom in Hawaii
Ad Altare Dei
Ad Limina Apostolorum
AdoroTeDevote
Alive and Young
Ales Rarus
A (little) Light from the East
Against the Grain
Aggie Catholics
And Sometimes Tea
Aliens in this world
American Chesterton Society
American Papist
Ask Sister Mary Martha
auntie joanna writes
A Wing And A Prayer
bettnett.com
Bethune Catholic
Blackadder's Lair
Blog by-the-Sea
Cacciaguida
Catholic Analysis
Catholic and Enjoying It!
Catholic Cartoon Blog
Catholic in Film School
Catholic in Japan Catholic Fire
Catholic Mom of 10
Catholic New Media Roundup
Catholic Pillow Fight
Claw of the Conciliator
Chad Is Not Enough
Charlotte was Both
Chris Cuddy
Church of the Masses
Christus Vincit
Confessions of a Hot Carmel Sundae
Concordia cum Veritate
Conversion Diary
Cor ad cor loquitur
Cosmos-Liturgy-Sex
Creative Minority Report
CUF Blog
Crusader of Justice
CVSTOS FIDEI
Dad29
Darwin Catholic
Deal W. Hudson
Defenders of the Catholic Faith
Defensor Veritatis
Dei Gratia
Deo Omnis Gloria
Disputations
Dominican Idaho
Dyspectic Mutterings
Eagle and Elephant
Ecce Homo
Erik's Rants and Recipes
Eve Tushnet
feminine-genius
Fiat
FideCogitActio
Fighting Irish Thomas
FIRST THINGS: On the Square
Five Feet of Fury
Flos Carmeli
Flying Stars
Fonticulus Fides
For The Greater Glory
Fructus Ventris
Gen X Revert
Get Religion
GKC's Favourite
God's Wonderful Love
Godsbody
Happy Catholic
HMS Blog
If Flannery Had A Blog
Holy Cards For Your Inspiration
In Defense Of The Children of Light
In Dwelling
InForum Blog
In Light of the Law
Ignatius Insight Scoop
In Nomine Domini
Jeff Cavins
Jimmy Akin
John C. Wright
Jumping Without A Chute
June Cleaver after a Six Pack
Kansas Catholic
La Salette Journey
L.A. Catholic
Laudem Gloriae
Laus Crucis
Lex Communis
Live + Jesus!
Lofted Nest
Looking Closer Journal
Laodicea
Man with Black Hat
Maria Lectrix
Mary Meets Dolly
mere comments
Mommentary
MONIALES OP
more last than star
Mount Carmel Bloggers
Mulier Fortis
Musings of a Pertinacious Papist
My Domestic Church
Nunblog
Oblique House
Off the Record
Open wide the doors to Christ!
Patrick Madrid
Pro Ecclesia * Pro Familia * Pro Civitate
Ramblings of a Catholic Soccer Mom
Real Clear Religion
Recta Ratio
Rerum Novarum
Rise of the TOB
Ruri et Orbi
Roman Catholic Blog
RORATE CÆLI
Sacramentum Vitae
Seize the Dei
Shades of Gray (Umbrae Canarum)
Shrine of the Holy Whapping
Singing in the Reign
Some Have Hats
Sonitus Sanctus
Southern Appeal
Southfarthing Soapbox
Sterquilinium
Stony Creek Digest
Stupidus
Summa Contra Mundum
Summa Mamas
Testosterhome
Ten Reasons
The Anchoress
The Ark and The Dove
The Art of Apologetics
The B-Movie Catechism
The Blog from the Core
The Blue Boar
The Charcoal Fire
The Commonplace Book of Zadok the Roman
The Crescat/a>
The Daily Eudemon
The Dawn Patrol
The Digital Hairshirt
The Fifth Column
The Inn at the End of the World
The Ironic Catholic
The Lady in the Pew
The Lair of the Catholic Cavemen
The Lion and the Cardinal
The New Liturgical Movement
The Paragraph Farmer
The Ramblings, Rants, and Raves of John Book
The Roamin' Roman
The Sci Fi Catholic
The Scratching Post
The Way of the Fathers
The Weight of Glory
The Wired Catholic
Thoughts and ruminations of a man on a quest
Thoughts of a Regular Guy
Thoughts of Apolonio Latar III
Tremendous Trifles
Trousered Ape
True Confessions of a Prodigal Daughter
V for Victory!
Vatican Watcher
Veritas
Veritas nunquam perit
Vivificat
Video meliora, proboque; Deteriora sequor
Why Fret?
Wild Tangents
Zippy Catholic