..and there was an enormous crowd; they were from every race, tribe, nation, and language, and they stood in front of the throne and of the lamb, dressed in white robes and holding palm branches in their hands. “These are the people who have come safely through the terrible persecution. They have washed their robes and made them white with the blood of the Lamb. That is why they stand before God's throne and serve him day and night in his temple." (Revelation 7)
Saint of the Day
Wednesday, 21 June 2017
St. John Rigby (1570 - 1600)
Rigby was born circa 1570 at Harrock Hall, Eccleston, near Chorley , Lancashire, the fifth or sixth son of Nicholas Rigby, by his wife Mary (née Breres). In 1600 Rigby was working for Sir Edmund Huddleston, whose daughter Mrs. Fortescue was summoned to the Old Bailey for recusancy . Because she was ill, Rigby appeared for her, was compelled to confess his Catholicism, and sent to Newgate . The next day, the feast day of St Valentine, he signed a confession saying that since he had been reconciled to the Roman Catholic faith by Saint John Jones , a Franciscan priest, he had not attended
Anglican services. He was sent back to Newgate and later transferred to the White Lion. Twice he was given the chance to recant, but twice refused. His sentence was carried out. He gave the executioner who helped him up to the cart a piece of gold, saying, "Take this in token that I freely forgive thee and others that have been accessory to my death." Rigby was executed by hanging at St Thomas Waterings on 21 June 1600.
Canonization:
He was canonized in 1970; his feast day is 25 October.
Saint John Jones , the priest who had reconciled Rigby, had died at the same place Rigby had died, St Thomas Waterings, two years earlier, on 12 July 1598.
wikipedia.org
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