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At opening of Fortnight for Freedom, relics resonate with Harford parishioner

We recognize gratefully the courage of all who are resisting the (HHS) mandate, especially the Little Sisters of the Poor,” Archbishop Lori said.~

By Paul McMullen
pmcmullen@CatholicReview.org

Twitter: @ReviewMcMullen
Archbishop William E. Lori linked urgent matters of “immigration, marriage and the church’s teaching on sexuality” to a pair of 16th-century martyrs during a June 21 Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Baltimore that began the fifth annual Fortnight for Freedom.

The juxtaposition carried particular resonance for one worshipper.

The theme of this year’s Fortnight is “Witnesses to Freedom.” It features relics of St. Thomas More and St. John Fisher, an English layman and bishop, respectively, who were martyred in a 16-day span in 1535, when they refused to accept Parliament’s Act of Supremacy, which had declared that King Henry VIII was head of the church in England.

On display for veneration were St. John Fisher’s ring and a piece of bone of St. Thomas More. According to Jan Graffius, curator of Stonyhurst College in England, which holds the relics, it came from Thomas More’s skull, which was rescued by his daughter, Margaret, from a spike on London Bridge.

Jim Landers, a parishioner of St. Ignatius, Hickory, was keenly interested in that relic. He is originally from Louisville, Ky., where his great-great-grandfather, Thomas Lawson Moore, was a U.S. Senator whose lineage included Thomas More.

The spelling of the name was altered when his ancestors came to the U.S.

Capturing family history, St. Ignatius Hickory parishioner Jim Landers takes a photo of the relics of Ss. Thomas More and John Fisher at the Fortnight for Freedom opening Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Baltimore June 21. Landers’ great, great grandfather, Daniel Lawson Moore, was a relative of St. Thomas More. (Kevin J. Parks | CR Staff)
“This Mass, and everything it stands for, is extremely important to me,” Landers said. “Beyond that, there’s the family connection. I can’t even describe that. It’s extremely exciting.”

His sentiments are compounded by the fact that Landers was raised Baptist, and converted after attending Mass for years with his wife, Michelle. He is a member of the Knights of Columbus and the Holy Name Society.

Landers shared his story with Archbishop Lori, chairman of the Ad Hoc Committee on Religious Liberty of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which sponsors the Fortnight for Freedom.

During a Mass that was televised nationally by EWTN, Archbishop Lori’s homily connected Ss. Thomas More and John Fisher to an array of 21st century struggles, among them the HHS contraceptive mandate that the Little Sisters of the Poor continue to challenge in the nation’s highest courts.

“This night we recognize gratefully the courage of all who are resisting the mandate, especially the Little Sisters of the Poor,” Archbishop Lori said. “They are vigorously defending their freedom and ours – and they are doing so with a beauty and a joy, borne from the heart of the Gospel.”

His words brought a second round of prolonged applause to the religious women seated in the front of the basilica. In Catonsville, they operate St. Martin’s Home for the Aged.

“It’s overwhelming,” said Sister Loraine Marie Claire Maguire, mother provincial. “The prayers and support; that moves people and moves God’s heart. It’s very humbling.”

Archbishop Lori asked for prayers for the victims of the June 12 mass shooting in Orlando and their families.

He talked at length of the modern struggle to worship freely.

Archbishop William E. Lori preaches at the June 21 Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary marking the opening of the Fortnight for Freedom. (Kevin J. Parks/CR Staff)

“We may think that the days of the martyrs have ended,” Archbishop Lori said in his homily, “but as Pope Francis points out, there are more martyrs for the faith in our times than there were during the first centuries of the church.

“We remember with reverence and love those who died for their faith – Jews, Catholics and Protestants – an ecumenism of blood, as Pope Francis says – during the reign of terror that was Nazism and Communism.

“This night,” he continued, “we draw close to the martyrs of the 21st century in Iraq, Iran, Syria and parts of Africa – those slain for their faith – in plain sight of us all with no one to hold their persecutors accountable. Refugees are streaming from the Middle East just as Jews tried to escape from the horrors of Nazism – only to find that they are held suspect and they are unwanted.”

While religious liberty in the U.S. might not seem in such dire straits by comparison, vigilance is required nonetheless.

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“We would like to think,” Archbishop Lori continued, “‘such things could never happen here.’ … Yet, there are ominous signs that protections for religious freedom have waned as bad laws, court decisions and policies pile up and as the prevailing culture more readily turns away from religious faith.

“Let us be clear that challenges to religious freedom in our nation pale in comparison to those faced by our brothers and sisters in many parts of the world – yet who is served when we fail to take seriously the new and emerging challenges to religious freedom that are before us?

“We may not be called upon to shed our blood,” he continued, “but we are called upon to defend our freedoms, not merely in the abstract, but as embedded in matters such as immigration, marriage and the church’s teaching on sexuality.”

Concelebrants included Baltimore auxiliary Bishop Dennis J. Madden, Washington auxiliary Bishop Martin D. Holley, and dozens of priests from the Archdiocese of Baltimore, among them Monsignor James P. Farmer, the 2013 recipient of the Man for All Seasons Award given by the St. Thomas More Society.

Other Catholic organizations represented included the Knights of Columbus, the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulcher of Jerusalem and the Order of Malta. The second reading was given by Dr. Marie-Alberte Boursiquot, president-elect of the Catholic Medical Association and a basilica parishioner.

Archbishop Lori announced winners of Witnesses to Freedom contests for all students in the archdiocese. Christopher Dodd, a rising sophomore at Mount St. Joseph High School in Baltimore, won the video contest for those in grades 6-12. The poster contest, for those in grades K-5, was swept by students from St. John Regional Catholic School in Frederick: Katherine Del Grippo, Christina Browning, and her sister, Sabrina.

June 22 is the feast day for both Ss. John Fisher and Thomas More, whose relics were presented courtesy of Stonyhurst College. The oldest surviving Jesuit school in the world, it began its existence in the town of Saint-Omer, France. Officials of that town visited the basilica in August 2015 to celebrate its contributions to the education of several prominent members of the Carroll family.

As the Catholic Review reported last August, according to Saint-Omer’s Carroll Project report, its students included Daniel Carroll, signer of the U.S. Constitution; Charles Carroll of Carrollton, the only Catholic signer of the Declaration of Independence; and John Carroll, first bishop of the United States, who is entombed at the basilica.

“It was wonderful to go to visit his tomb, and see the Saint-Omer cross,” Graffius, the Stonyhurst curator, said before Mass, when the relics were on display in the basilica undercroft. “I felt at home.”

Graffius said Baltimore was the second stop for the relics, after Miami. She will take them on to Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Minnesota, Denver, Phoenix, Los Angeles, and finally to Washington, D.C., for the July 4 conclusion of the Fortnight for Freedom.
Read more stories about religious liberty here.

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