Subj : September 21st - Bl. Laurence Imbert & Companions To : All From : rich Date : Sun Sep 20 2020 08:14:03 From: rich September 21st - Bl. Laurence Imbert & Companions d. 1839 KOREA is one of the few countries in the world to which Christianity was first introduced otherwise than by Christian missionaries. During the 18th century some Chinese Christian books were brought into the country, and a man who had read them joined the embassy from Seoul to Peking in 1784, sought out Mgr. de Gouvea there, and from him received baptism. He returned to his own country and when, ten years later, a Chinese priest came to Korea he found 4000 Christians awaiting him. He was their only pastor for 7 years, and after he was killed in 1801 they were without a priest for 30 years. A letter is extant written by the Koreans to Pope Pius VII, imploring him to send them priests at once; their little flock had already given martyrs to the Church. In 1831 the vicariate apostolic of Korea was created, but the first vicar never reached there. His successor, Mgr. Laurence Joseph Mary Imbert, Titular Bishop of Capsa and a member of the Paris Foreign Missions, who had been in China for 12 years, entered the country in disguise at the end of 1837, having been preceded by BL. PETER PHILIBERT MAUBANT and BL. JAMES HONOR=C3=89 CHASTAN, priests of the same missionary society. Christianity was now definitely proscribed in Korea, and for two years the missionaries went about their work with complete secrecy. Of its circumstances and difficulties Mgr. Imbert wrote: =E2=80=9CI am overwhelmed with fatigue and in great danger. I get up at half-past two every morning. At three I call the people of the house to prayers, and at half-past I begin the duties of my ministry by baptizing, if there are any converts, or by giving confirmation. Then come Mass, communion, and thanksgiving. The 15 to 20 people who have received the sacraments can thus get away before daybreak. During the day about as many come in, one by one, for confession, and do not go until the next morning after communion. I stay two days in each house, where I get the Christians together, and before it is light I go on to another. I suffer a great deal from hunger: for it is no easy matter in this cold and wet climate to get up at half-past two and then wait until noon for a meal which is poor, insufficient, and lacking in nourishment. After dinner I rest a little until I have to take my senior scholars in theology, and finally I hear confessions again until nightfall. At nine o'clock I go to bed=E2=80=94on a mat on the floor with a Tarta= ry-wool blanket; there are no bedsteads or mattresses in Korea. In spite of my weak body and poor health I have always led a hard and very busy life: but here I think I have reached the positive limit of work. You will well understand that, leading a life like this, we scarcely fear the sword-stroke that may at any time end it.=E2=80=9D By these heroic means the Christians in Korea were increased by a half, roughly from 6000 to 9000, in less than two years. What was going on soon became known, and a decree for their extermination was published. An example of the horrors that took place is provided by BL. AGATHA KIM, one of the seventy-six Koreans beatified with the three priests. She was asked if it were true that she practised the Christian religion. =E2=80=9CI know Jesus and Mary=E2=80=9D, she replied, = =E2=80=9Cbut I know nothing else.=E2=80=9D--=E2=80=9CIf you are tortured you will give up this = Jesus and Mary.=E2=80=9D-- =E2=80=9CIf I have to die I will not.=E2=80=9D She was lon= g and cruelly tormented and at last sentenced to death. A tall cross of wood was fixed to a cart and to this cross Agatha was hung by her arms and hair. The cart was driven off and at the top of a steep and very rough slope the oxen were pricked up and the cart sent lurching and jolting down, the woman swinging at every movement with all her weight on her hair and wrists. At the place of execution she was stripped naked, her head forced down on to a block, and there cut off. BL. JOHN RI wrote from prison =E2=80=9CTwo or three months passed before th= e judge sent for me, and I became sad and anxious. The sins of my whole life, when I had so often offended God from sheer wickedness, seemed to weigh me down like a mountain, and I wondered to myself, .What w= ill be the end of all this?' But I never lost hope. On the tenth day of the twelfth moon I was brought before the judge and he ordered me to be bastinadoed. How could I have borne it by my own strength alone? But the strength of God and the prayers of Mary and the saints and all our martyrs upheld me, so that I believe I scarcely suffered at all. I cannot repay such a mercy, and to offer my life is only just.=E2=80=9D To avert a general massacre and its attendant danger of apostasy, Mgr. Imbert allowed himself to be taken and recommended M. Maubant and M. Chastan to do the same. This they did, after writing letters to Rome explaining their action and giving an account of their charge. They were all three bastinadoed, then carried on chairs to the banks of the river which flows around Seoul, tied back to back to a post, and there beheaded. This was on September 21 1839, but their feast is kept by the Paris Foreign Missions on the 26th. In the year 1904 the relics of 81 martyrs of Korea were translated to the episcopal church of the vicar apostolic at Seoul, and in 1925 Bl. Laurence and his companions were beatified. The first Korean priest martyr was BL. ANDREW KIM in 1846. They were canonized by Pope John Paul II in 1984. Their feast day is September 21. In C. Dallet, L'histoire de l'Eglise de Cor=C3=A9e (1874), = especially vol. ii, pp. 118-185, the life and sufferings of these martyrs are recounted in detail. See also A. Launay, Les Missionnaires fran=C3=A7ais en Cor=C3=A9e (1895), and Martyrs fran=C3=A7ais et cor=C3=A9ens (1925); and E.= Baumann in The Golden Legend Overseas (1931). Saint Quote: The greatest mercy of God is not to let those nations remain in peace with each other who are not at peace with God. -- Saint Padre Pio of Pietrelcina Bible Quote: Therefore saith the Lord the God of hosts, the mighty one of Israel: Ah! I will comfort myself over my adversaries: and I will be revenged of my enemies. [Isa. i. 24.] <><><><> Signs of Sorrow & Love I kiss the wounds in Your sacred head, with sorrow deep and true. May every thought of mine this day be an act of love for You. I kiss the wounds in Your sacred hands, with sorrow deep and true. May every touch of my hands this day be an act of love for You. I kiss the wounds in Your sacred feet, with sorrow deep and true. May every step I take this day be an act of love for You. I kiss the wound in Your sacred side, with sorrow deep and true. May every beat of my heart this day be an act of love for You. - Amen. --- NewsGate v1.0 gamma 2 * Origin: News Gate @ Net396 -Huntsville, AL - USA (1:396/4) .