Let me begin by asking you a question: Where is the oldest English institution anywhere in the world outside England itself? Before I tell you what it is, let me tell you something about it. It is six hundred and sixty-two years old, and although its exact purpose has changed several times since its foundation in 1362 during the reign of the great King Edward III, it is still in the same location and even partly in the same original buildings.
Well, in case you haven’t already guessed, I will tell you: it is now known as the Venerable English College and it is in the heart of ancient Rome. It was founded as a hostel for English pilgrims to the eternal City and subsequently became also the home of the ambassadors of the Kings of England to the Pope. In 1579, after the steady flow of English pilgrims to Rome had dried up because of the so-called Reformation, Cardinal William Allen petitioned the Pope to refound the hostel in its original buildings as a new college for the training of priests who would return to England to keep alive the Catholic faith in the face of persecution and even probable death. This College still exists to this day, and it is where I myself trained for the priesthood in the 1970’s and 80’s. It bears witness to the continuity of English Catholic life from before the Reformation to the present day in a way that hardly any other institutions can do, because it is both completely English and has never been under Protestant rule.
Why am I talking about this great College, this historic English institution abroad? It is because it is dedicated to arguably the greatest English Saint of the Middle Ages, St Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury and martyr. St Thomas was famous in his lifetime and even more famous after his violent death at the hands of four of King Henry II’s knights. In the High Middle Ages, Thomas was one of the best known of saints not only in England but abroad. Many churches were dedicated to him, and the name ‘Thomas’ became one of the most popular in England because of him. Think of Thomas More, Thomas Wolsey and Thomas Cromwell in the reign of Henry VIII just for starters. Pilgrimages to his shrine in Canterbury Cathedral were hugely popular, so much that one of the greatest early works of English literature was based on the tradition of pilgrims travelling in groups from London to Canterbury – the ‘Canterbury Tales’ by Geoffrey Chaucer. It is fascinating to think that Chaucer wrote this now very old seeming poetry some decades after the foundation of the English Hostel in Rome, and that the hostel is still there in the same place!
So why was Thomas Becket, St Thomas of Canterbury, so very famous and so very popular? Why are we celebrating his feast day here today? It is because what he stands for is so very important, and the way in which he stood firm in the face of great peril shows such bravery and conviction, that we remember him today and, here in Tettenhall especially, because he is the patron saint of this church and parish.
St Thomas was born in London in 1119 or 20, the son of wealthy Norman parents. Also. Because this was only about 50 years after the Norman conquest, he would have spoken Norman French rather than English. After being educated in Paris, which was then the most important intellectual centre of Western Europe, he returned to England where he became a clerk in the household of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Theobald, who was, of course, a Norman like all the leading churchmen and landowners in England at that time. Thomas was not a priest, it must be said, and seems to have had no intention of ever becoming one. He was, in effect, a highly efficient and competent civil servant, a man of affairs and capable of handling complex issues to do with money, property and law. His great abilities brought him to the attention of the twenty-two-year-old king, Henry II, who ascended the throne in 1154, when Thomas was himself about 30 years of age.
Thomas and Henry became firm friends and the king appointed Thomas his Chancellor, the head of the government. Thomas had power over many aspects of church and state, controlling taxation and spending. It is curious to recognise the parallels between this King Henry and the later King Henry VIII, who also became a good friend of the slightly older Thomas More, whom he would make his Chancellor nearly four centuries later, and with whom he, too, would fall out to the point of having him killed.
But Henry II went one step further than Henry VIII would go with Thomas More; for when Archbishop Theobald of Canterbury died in 1162, Henry II decided to have Thomas Becket, his friend and Chancellor, appointed Theobald’s successor. Thomas resisted for as long as he could. He was unhappy at the prospect of becoming the Archbishop. This was not only because he was not even a priest, but because he knew something that the King didn‘t understand: namely that if he were ever to be given the great responsibility before Almighty God of being the most important bishop in all England, then he would have to behave towards the king his friend in a far different way. No longer would Thomas put the king’s interests and wishes first, but rather God’s.
Now Thomas, although until now a layman, had always been pious and dutiful, but nobody would have expected what happened next. Thomas began to insist on doing his duties as a bishop and on being treated as God’s representative and as protector of the Church. Where the king wanted to exploit the Church’s wealth for his own purposes, Thomas resisted. But Thomas was not merely a stout defender of the Church against the King, he was also a man dedicated to the Gospel. He regularly gave alms to the poor, often washing their feet himself and wearing penitential garb in place of the splendid robes of such a great churchman. His firmness in face of the King may seem somewhat excessive to us now and it would be unhelpful to go through all the details of the back and forth between Henry and Thomas. But one thing is worth stressing: such was the falling out between the two men that Thomas was forced to flee the country and live in exile in a French monastery for no less than six years. Only after that was the King prevailed upon to allow the Archbishop back to his own country and his see of Canterbury. But after only a short time the King once again tried to bring the Church under his control and Thomas once again resisted firmly. It was then that, just after Christmas Day in 1170, the King flew into a rage and said something which he came to regret. There are different accounts of the exact words but it matter little, because the result was that four of the King’s knights set off immediately to Canterbury to sort the Archbishop out for good and all.
Once they arrived, they sought out Thomas. The Archbishop’s attendants saw how furious the knights were and begged Thomas to hide away and if possible to flee once more. But Thomas was adamant. He would neither hide nor flee. He stood his ground before the armed men inside the Cathedral while the Office of Vespers was being sung in the choir. In a rage they all struck him with their swords and slew him, even slicing off the top of his skull with the force of their blows.
When the news of this got back to the King, he was appalled and tried to blame his men for misunderstanding his words, but the whole country and indeed the whole of Europe knew of the quarrel that had raged between the two men and King Henry was excommunicated by the Pope. He sought forgiveness and was obliged to humiliate himself by being stripped and flogged outside the Cathedral where Thomas had been murdered before being readmitted to Communion.
Meanwhile the Pope canonised Saint Thomas only three years after his death, one of the fastest canonisations in history. This was not just a political act on the part of the Church and the Pope, not merely a way of saying ‘Thomas has won’, but a recognition of Thomas’s true sanctity. People from all over England were already flocking to his tomb and there were wonderful miracles reported there as evidence of his holiness. That is why his shrine in Canterbury Cathedral became so important and his name was so popular in England, and why the English Hospice in Rome was named after him.
So, when a later King Henry, the eighth of that name, was enraged at the thought of an archbishop resisting one of his own predecessors, he not only had St Thomas’s shrine destroyed but tried utterly to obliterate his memory. His feast day was abolished and any reference to St Thomas was brutally eliminated from all religious books. For instance, back in the English College archive there is a late mediaeval Altar Missal from England which still bears the scars of this purge. The Mass for St Thomas of Canterbury on December 29th has been brutally scored out and defaced. Fortunately, of course, Henry VIII did not win. The Venerable English College was never under the direct jurisdiction of Henry VIII’s tyranny and continued to celebrate St Thomas’s Day today as its patronal feast on this day. So, I am glad to say, do you here in Tettenhall, for both this church and the college church in Rome are dedicated to the one whom Geoffrey Chaucer in the Canterbury Tales called ‘the Holy blissful Martyr’. And St Thomas’s Day is still commemorated in the Universal Calendar of the Catholic Church. St Thomas of Canterbury, patron of the English clergy, pray for England and pray for us. Amen.