POPULARITY
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/author-to-author--4129285/support.In this episode of Author to Author, Dr. Cynthia Toolin-Wilson interviews Devin Rose on his book Lionheart Catholic: How to Become a Saint in These Dark Times. (March 6, 2024)Sound familiar? - Are you stuck confessing the same sins again and again in Confession? Break through your spiritual plateau with this simple practice called mental prayer. Hardly any Catholics, even priests, know about it anymore, yet all the saints practiced it and overcame their habitual sins through it. And you can too. - Are you fearful that your children will leave the Catholic Faith when they grow up? Keep your children Catholic with this simple, everyday practice that speaks louder than words. - Do you long for your loved ones to become Catholic, or return to the Church? In Lionheart Catholic, I help Catholics who don't know the Faith that well lead their loved ones into the Church, following the powerful but simple ideas that St. Francis de Sales and St. Edmund Campion perfected 400 years ago. https://www.lionheartcatholic.com/
Happy feast of St. Edmund Campion! On today's show, Matt Swaim and Anna Mitchell discuss the life and witness of one of the most famous English Catholic martyrs. Guests include Ken Craycraft on religious liberty in relation to Oklahoma schools, and Fr Hezekias Carnazzo from the Institute of Catholic Culture and Fr. Jonathan Duncan from the Diocese of Charleston to preview the Mass readings for the First Sunday of Advent. Plus news, weather, sports and more
Friday of the 34th Week in Ordinary Time Saint of the Day: St. Edmund Campion, 1540-1581; Jesuit convert to the Catholic faith; in England, he preached one to three times a day, mentally preparing his homilies while traveling on horseback, winning many converts; captured by Elizabethan authorities in July 1581, tortured on a rack, and sentenced to death Office of Readings and Morning Prayer for 12/1/23 Gospel: Luke 21:29-33
October 4th, 2023 - We discuss Christian persecution in Armenia and the amazing story of St. Edmund Campion. Please consider a donation to our network Fall Appeal! Call 1-877-711-8500 or visit TheStationOfTheCross.com. TheStationOfTheCross.com/ACT
In today's Sundays with the Saints episode, we meet a man from a time when relations between the Church of England and the Catholic Church were not nearly as cordial as they are today. Let's meet St. Edmund Campion. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/revisionisthistory/support
This lecture was given on November 21, 2022, at the University of Edinburgh. For more information, please visit our website at thomisticinstitute.org. About the speaker: Dr. Fionnuala O'Neill Tonning earned her PhD from University of Edinburgh in 2013. Her dissertation was titled "Beyond Tragedy: Genre and the Idea of the Tragic in Shakespearean Tragedy, History and Comedy.”
Today's Tuesday Book Review looks at a biography of a man from a period of English history few know about, written by one of the great novelists of the 20th century. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/revisionisthistory/support
Happy feast of St. Edmund Campion! On today's show, Matt Swaim and Anna Mitchell talk more about this great English Jesuit martyr. Guests include Rita Heikenfeld to discuss figs in the Bible and how to prepare them for holiday entertaining, Gary Michuta on how Christianity in America went toward the lowest common denominator, and Kevin Prendergast on John the Baptist as a model for mentally preparing for Advent. Plus news, weather, sports and a whole lot more...
Welcome to The Saint of the Day Podcast, a service of Good Catholic and The Catholic Company. Today's featured saint is St. Edmund Campion. If you like what you heard, share this podcast with someone you know, and make sure to subscribe!
Thursday of the First Week of Advent Saint of the Day: St. Edmund Campion, 1540-1581; Protestant convert to the Catholic faith; became a Jesuit, and was ordained a priest; preached up to three times per day in England, traveling by horseback; captured in 1581, tortured, and executed Office of Readings and Morning Prayer for 12/1/22 Gospel: Matthew 7:21, 24-27
In this special Thanksgiving bonus episode, Madeline chats with her friend Sophia Hoffert who is an artist, writer, and Ball State creative writing grad student who also happens to be the creative mind behind all of this podcast's artwork! During their chat, they discuss her St. Edmund Campion screenplay, how she got into creative pursuits, storytelling and God as a storyteller, her dream job, the influence of her Canadian phase, how she ended up at Ball State, being raised Anglican, St. Francis's music ministry and her conversion story, a powerful encounter with the Eucharist, the power of character, the design of the podcast graphic, how she and Madeline became friends, and much more!During the course of their conversation, they make many references which you can explore further. They include Veggie Tales, The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis, Beowulf, The Chosen tv series, The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien, and Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare.Feel free to like, subscribe, and share the episode! Follow us on Instagram! @sbltfpodcastDon't forget to go out there, and be a light to this world!
Great Stories About Great Saints! (03:40) St. Edmund Campion (40:00) St Francis de Sales
In today's Sundays with the Saints episode, we meet a man from a time when relations between the Church of England and the Catholic Church were not nearly as cordial as they are today. Let's meet St. Edmund Campion. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/revisionisthistory/support
Today I'm joined by Brendan Dewan, a recent graduate from Grand Valley State University in Michigan, and currently a FOCUS missionary in Ball State University, Indiana. He recently did a pilgrimage to England. He visited the sites connected to many English Martyrs of the Catholic Church, who were persecuted, tortured and executed by the English government after Henry VIII separated from the Catholic Church and established the Church of England. He shares his reflections and the things he learned in those most holy places, and we talk about St. Thomas More and St. Edmund Campion who were martyrs, and we share some thoughts about St. John Henry Newman. - Fr. Patrick Wainwright is a priest of Miles Christi, a Catholic Religious Order. And Bro. Daniel Heffernan is a Brother of Miles Christi. - Visit the Miles Christi Religious Order website: https://www.mileschristi.org - This Podcast's Website: https://www.forcollegecatholics.org - To learn about the Spiritual Exercises (silent weekend retreat) preached by the Priests of Miles Christi, visit: https://www.mileschristi.org/spiritual-exercises/ - Recorded at our Family Center in South Lyon, Michigan. - Planning, recording, editing and publishing by Fr. Patrick Wainwright, MC. - Gear: Shure MV7 USB dynamic microphones and Zoom H6 Portable Recorder. - Intro music from pond5.com
"Sundays with the Saints" returns today with an episode introducing a man from a largely forgotten period of English history. Let's meet St. Edmund Campion. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/revisionisthistory/support
In today's episode we talk about the Catholic Church. How it was founded by Jesus Christ and enlivened by the Holy Spirit. We speak about how it has a human element and a divine element. We talk about what IS the Catholic Church; some of the names given it in the New Testament; and some of the symbols used to describe it. We look at the example of St. Edmund Campion, S.J., an English martyr, as a model of fidelity to the Church of Christ in spite of terrible persecution. - All the things we speak about in this episode can be found in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, numbers 748 – 810. - The Encyclical “Mystici Corporis” of Pope Pius XII, that speaks clearly and profoundly about the Catholic Church as the Mystical Body of Christ, can be found here: https://www.vatican.va/content/pius-xii/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-xii_enc_29061943_mystici-corporis-christi.html - The Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Lumen Gentium, of the Second Vatican Council, can be found here: https://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_const_19641121_lumen-gentium_en.html - Fr. Patrick Wainwright is a priest of Miles Christi, a Catholic Religious Order. - Visit the Miles Christi Religious Order website: https://www.mileschristi.org - This Podcast's Website: https://www.forcollegecatholics.org - To learn about the Spiritual Exercises (silent weekend retreat) preached by the Priests of Miles Christi, visit: https://www.mileschristi.org/spiritual-exercises/ - Recorded at our Family Center in South Lyon, Michigan. - Gear: Shure MV7 USB dynamic microphone - Intro music from pond5.com
Today's Saint of the Day is a man who gave his life for the Faith during a largely forgotten period of English history. Let's meet St. Edmund Campion. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/everydaysaints/support
Wednesday of the First Week of Advent Saint of the Day: St. Edmund Campion, 1540-1581; English convert who became a Jesuit priest; preached up to three times per day, traveling on horseback across the English countryside; captured by authorities in 1581, tortured, and sentenced to death Office of Readings and Morning Prayer for 12/1/21 Gospel: […]
Wednesday of the First Week of Advent Saint of the Day: St. Edmund Campion, 1540-1581; English convert who became a Jesuit priest; preached up to three times per day, traveling on horseback across the English countryside; captured by authorities in 1581, tortured, and sentenced to death Office of Readings and Morning Prayer for 12/1/21 Gospel: […]
“The expense is reckoned, the enterprise is begun; it is of God; it cannot be withstood. So the faith was planted: So it must be restored.” Edmund Campion was born on January 25, 1540, into an England awash with religious turmoil. Once expected to become an apologist for the Church of England, Campion would instead flee to France, where he was reconciled with the Church and accepted into the Society of Jesus. After he was ordained a Jesuit priest in 1578, Campion was chosen by his superiors to lead a mission back to England. In 1580, shortly after arriving clandestinely in London, Campion quickly set about composing the statement that would later become known as "Campion's Brag". According to some scholars, it is the earliest defense of the faith to appear in English during the Reformation. Campion was finally captured in 1581 and brought to the Tower of London, where he was imprisoned and tortured for four months. After a farce trial of bribed witnesses and false evidence, Campion was convicted of treason and sentenced to death. On December 1, 1581, Campion was hanged, drawn, and quartered. Links Campion's Brag Full text: https://www.ewtn.com/catholicism/library/campions-brag-5297 Catholic Culture Podcast Ep. 69—Poetry of the English Martyrs | Benedict Whalen https://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/ep-69-poetry-english-martyrs-benedict-whalen/ Follow this link to join the Online Great Books VIP waiting list and get 25% off your first 3 months: https://hj424.isrefer.com/go/ogbmemberships/tmirus/ Go to http://www.catholicculture.org/getaudio to register for FREE access to the full archive of audiobooks beyond the most recent 15 episodes. Donate at: http://www.catholicculture.org/donate/audio Theme music: 2 Part Invention, composed by Mark Christopher Brandt, performed by Thomas Mirus. ©️2019 Heart of the Lion Publishing Co./BMI. All rights reserved.
A webinar lecture with Fr. Sam Z. Conedera, S.J. (Saint Louis University). Originally broadcast as a live web event on December 1, 2020, marking the feast day of St. Edmund Campion. This program was presented with the Bollandist Society. "The expense is reckoned, the enterprise is begun; it is of God; it cannot be withstood." With these bold words Edmund Campion, SJ, communicated to Her Majesty's Privy Council in 1581 the Catholic plan to restore the faith in England. On December 1, the Church celebrates Campion and his fellow martyrs of England and Wales. They did not succeed in restoring the faith, but they did carry out one of the most dangerous and fascinating clandestine missions in the history of the Church. "Friends in Heaven" explores the origin, activities, and ultimate demise of these men, as well as the lay Catholics who aided them, in the Elizabethan age, and concludes with a brief discussion of how they came to be canonized.
Catholic Mass from St. Francis HS in Traverse City, Michigan, Tuesday December 1, 2020. Tuesday of First Week of Advent. Feast of St. Edmund Campion a& Companions. Celebrant: Fr. Michael Class, S,J.
He was so well respected at Oxford University, that the Queen of England was impressed by him. He became a priest in secret, and had to travel around the country in disguise to avoid capture. Who is he? Find out more on "Heroes of the Faith" where we are inspired by the lives of the saints, so that we can become saints ourselves!
In 1581, a young Englishman named Henry Walpole attended the execution of the Jesuit Edmund Campion. As Campion was hung, drawn and quartered, Walpole stood close enough to be spattered with his holy blood. Though Campion's fame in England was already great, Walpole would amplify it further with a splendid, lengthy poem, which became enormously popular among English Catholics—so popular that the man who printed the book had his ears cut off as punishment. In his poem Walpole wrote: We cannot fear a mortal torment, we, This martyr's blood hath moistened all our hearts, Whose parted quarters when we chance to see We learn to play the constant Christian's parts. This was more than wordplay: Two years after Campion's death, Walpole became a priest, and was himself hung for the faith in 1595. St. Henry Walpole was not the only martyr who wrote poems. The 16th and 17th centuries produced a number of men whose courageous faith was accompanied by prodigious learning and literary talent. St. Thomas More wrote poems while languishing in the Tower of London. Another Jesuit martyr, St. Robert Southwell, powerfully influenced the later movement of “metaphysical poetry”, including the greatest Protestant poets of succeeding centuries—such as George Herbert and John Donne. The poetry of the English martyrs has been collected in an anthology called Lyra Martyrum. Benedict Whalen, the editor of the second edition, joins Thomas to discuss these authors, with Catholic Culture Audiobooks' James T. Majewski performing several of their works. Contents [2:08] The historical/literary/educational circumstances that gave us a period of martyr-poets [7:23] Their influence as poets in the succeeding centuries [10:26] St. Robert Southwell's Prefatory Epistle on the purpose of poetry [12:58] All the poets in the first edition of the anthology have since been beatified or canonized [14:29] The martyrdoms of the Jesuit Saints Edmund Campion and Henry Walpole [17:43] St. Henry Walpole, “Upon the Martyrdom of M. Edmund Campion” [30:23] The tradition of meditating on the Four Last Things [33:08] St. Philip Howard, Earl of Arundel, “Meditation upon Heaven” [37:43] St. Thomas More's early poems written for courtly occasions [40:11] More's poems written in the Tower of London: “Lewis the Lost Lover” and “Davy the Dicer” [44:17] The theme of Fortune in medieval and Renaissance philosophy and poetry [47:12] The influence of Latin classics on English verse [49:16] More's influence on English prose [51:29] The life and work of St. Robert Southwell [54:36] St. Robert Southwell, “The Burning Babe” [59:39] “A Child My Choice” [1:05:27] Southwell's conceptual and sonic density: excerpts from “The Nativity of Christ” and “Look Home” [1:09:13] “I Die Alive” [1:12:52] “Mary Magdalen's Complaint at Christ's Death” [1:16:30] The remarkable story of St. Robert Southwell's martyrdom [1:26:10] The appendix of this edition of Lyra Martyrum Links Lyra Martyrum https://www.clunymedia.com/product/lyra-martyrum/ Benedict Whalen https://www.hillsdale.edu/faculty/benedict-whalen/ Catholic Culture Audiobooks https://www.catholicculture.org/audiobooks This podcast is a production of CatholicCulture.org. If you like the show, please consider supporting us! http://catholicculture.org/donate/audio