† Saint of the Day †
(October 25)
✠ St. John Houghton ✠
Forty Martyrs of England and Wales:
Born: 1487 AD
Essex, England
Died: May 4, 1535
Tyburn, England
Venerated in: Roman Catholic Church
Beatified: December 9, 1886
Pope Leo XIII
Canonized: October 25, 1970
Pope Paul VI
Feast: October 25
Saint John Houghton was a Carthusian
hermit and Catholic priest and the first English Catholic martyr to die as a
result of the Act of Supremacy by King Henry VIII of England. He was also the
first member of his Order to die as a martyr.
Life:
Born around 1487, he was (according
to one of his fellow Carthusians) educated at Cambridge, but cannot be
identified among surviving records. Similarly, no certain records can be found
of his ordination.
He joined the London Charterhouse in
1516, progressed to be sacristan in 1523, and procurator in 1528. In 1531, he
became Prior of the Charterhouse of Beauvale in Nottinghamshire. However, in
November of that year, he was elected Prior of the London house, to which he
returned. In addition, the following spring he was named Provincial Visitor, at
the head of the English Carthusians.
In April 1534, two royal agents
visited the Charterhouse. Houghton advised them that "...it pertained not
to his vocation and calling nor to that of his subjects to meddle in or discuss
the king's business, neither could they or ought they to do so, and that it did
not concern him who the king wished to divorce or marry, so long as he was not
asked for any opinion." He asked that he and his community be exempted
from the oaths required under the new Act of Succession, which resulted in both
him and his procurator, Humphrey Middlemore, being arrested and taken to the
Tower of London. However, by the end of May, they had been persuaded that the
oath was consistent with their Catholicism, with the clause "as far as the
law of Christ allows" and they returned to the Charterhouse, where (in the
presence of a large armed force) the whole community made the required
professions.
However, in 1535, the community was
called upon to make the new oath as prescribed by the 1534 Act of Supremacy,
which recognised Henry as the head of the Church in England. Again, Houghton,
this time accompanied by the heads of the other two English Carthusian houses
(Robert Lawrence, Prior of Beauvale, and Augustine Webster, Prior of Axholme),
pleaded for an exemption, but this time they were summarily arrested by Thomas
Cromwell. They were called before a special commission in April 1535, and
sentenced to death, along with Richard Reynolds, O.Ss.S., a monk from Syon
Abbey.
Houghton, along with the other two
Carthusians, Fr. Reynolds, and Fr. John Haile of Isleworth, was hanged, drawn
and quartered at Tyburn on 4 May 1535.
The three priors were taken to
Tyburn in their religious habits and were not previously laicised from the
priesthood and religious state as was the custom of the day. From his prison cell
in the Tower, Thomas More saw the three Carthusian priors being dragged to
Tyburn on hurdles and exclaimed to his daughter: "Look, Meg! These blessed
Fathers be now as cheerfully going to their deaths as bridegrooms to their
marriage!" John Houghton was the first to be executed. After he was
hanged, he was taken down alive, and the process of quartering him began.
Catholic tradition relates that when
Houghton was about to be quartered, as the executioner tore open his chest to
remove his heart, he prayed, "O Jesus, what wouldst thou do with my
heart?" A painting of the Carthusian Protomartyr by the noted painter of
religious figures, Francisco Zurbarán, depicts him with his heart in his hand
and a noose around his neck. In the Chapter house of St. Hugh's Charterhouse,
Parkminster, in England, there is a painting depicting the martyrdom of the
three priors.
After his death, his body was
chopped to pieces and hung in different parts of London. He was beatified on 9
December 1886 and canonized on 25 October 1970.
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