Friday, April 19, AD 2024 12:33am

Saint of the Day Quote: Martyrs of the Spanish Civil War

Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.

Matthew 10: 39

 

 

 

Eighty years ago the Spanish Civil War ended in victory for the Nationalist Forces under Francisco Franco.  During the Spanish Civil War the following members of the clergy were murdered by Republican forces and mobs, most at the beginning of the War:  13 bishops, 4,172 diocesan priests and seminarians, 2,364 monks and friars and 283 nuns.  Of these 6, 832 victims to a hatred of the Faith that was truly demonic, the Church has thus far beatified 1,915 with eleven of these being canonized. For 2,000 of the remainder, the beatification process is underway.  We have Christ’s own words that those who die for Him will have their eternal reward with Him.  Most of the Spanish martyrs met their deaths with exemplary courage in the most appalling circumstances.  The victories of Satan are ever brief and the victories of Christ are ever eternal.

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Sunday, September 22, AD 2019 8:15pm

[…] Profound Suffering To Embrace The Catholic Faith – Francis Phillips at Catholic Herald Saint of the Day Quote: Martyrs of the Spanish Civil War – Donald R. McClarey, J.D., at The American Catholic Live Perpetual Adoration Of The Blessed […]

Peter K
Peter K
Sunday, September 22, AD 2019 9:31pm

I wish people would stop calling them “Martyrs of the Spanish Civil War”. This tends to minimize the evil of their murders; people think “hey, in wars, lots of people die.” In fact nearly all of them were killed BEFORE the war or at the very start of it, the war being launched precisely because of most Spaniards’ horror at the persecution of Catholics. They should be called “Martyrs of the Stalinist regime in Spain, 1931-1936”.

CAM
CAM
Sunday, September 22, AD 2019 10:45pm

Very timely. I visited with both sons at Dulles airport this afternoon. On their return from Spain to TX and CA each had a layover of several hours. They had spent a week in Cordoba Andulucia SP visiting my older son’s girl friend and her family.
Apparently the grandmother looked at the older son and pointed to the ring finger of her hand. He thought grandmother was asking if his younger brother was a bachelor. Sigh. I don’t think that’s what she was asking.

Penguins Fan
Penguins Fan
Monday, September 23, AD 2019 4:42am

This is one aspect of Spanish history that I don’t know much about and should look into further. I think that Franco isn’t quite the evil incarnate certain sectors (e.g., George Will) have made him.oot to be, nor is he quite the hero some RadTrads believe, either.

Art Deco
Art Deco
Monday, September 23, AD 2019 7:50am

This is one aspect of Spanish history that I don’t know much about and should look into further. I think that Franco isn’t quite the evil incarnate certain sectors (e.g., George Will) have made him.oot to be, nor is he quite the hero some RadTrads believe, either.

I don’t recall Will has been a critic of Franco.

It was the view of Ramon Serrano Suner, the chief ideologist of the Falangist movement, that parliamentary institutions were not bad per se, but ill-adapted to Spain’s political society. In regards to Spain at that particular moment in time, he was right. The Nationalist forces committed discrete crimes during the war and immediately after and the Franco regime, refused to grant Spain’s antique minorities proper courtesies, and pursued some bad economic policies. However, the Nationalist’s was the better cause.

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