Campion Hall, Oxford has announced a public lecture in September that may be of interest to our readers:
Professor Gerard Kilroy, Senior Fellow in English at Campion Hall, will be delivering a public lecture to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the foundation of the British Province of the Society of Jesus. The talk will include a panel discussion and refreshments, followed by an ecumenical Service of Thanksgiving in Christ Church Cathedral at 11.30am.
A special aura surrounds the arrival of the first Jesuit missionaries to England. From the moment of landing in June 1580 till the capture of Edmund Campion in July 1581, their clandestine preaching and sacramental ministry involved disguise, constant danger, narrow escapes: enough to create a legend. Campion was always in the first rank of candidates for canonisation, even if negative publicity attached itself to Robert Persons. Evelyn Waughâs life of Campion captured the chivalric glamour of Campion by largely ignoring any doubts he had and minimising the role of Persons.
Recent scholarship has tried to attach political aims to the mission itself. John Bossy even accused Campion of reckless disregard for his own safety, praised the prudence of Persons. Michael Carrafiello accused Catholic historians of ignoring the missionâs âpolitical intentâ, thereby giving some justification to the response of the Privy Council. Peter Lake and Michael Questier gave the Edmund Campion affair a central place in English history but argued that the mission was not political but âstructured by certain political and polemical objectivesâ.
This talk aims to restore Campionâs own doubts about papal policy to the account, his âlingeringâ (as the Bohemian Jesuit historians described it), and to give full weight to the disastrous effect of the Irish expedition of Dr Nicholas Sander which completely undermined the claims of the missionaries that they had no political objectives. It will argue that Campion, far from being naive, understood from the first the confused religious and political situation in England, was further outraged by the secrecy with which the mission to Ireland had been shrouded (as his interview with Dr Allen makes clear), but threw himself into his sacramental mission with all the freedom of a condemned man.
If anyone is to be blamed for the âfailureâ (in human terms) of the 1580 mission, it must be the man who planned it, Dr William Allen, without telling either the missionaries or Everard Mercurian, the superior General, that Sander had already landed in Dingle. Yet, in the end, both Nicholas Sander and Edmund Campion were carrying through their profound beliefs about the nature of the church and its relationship to the state; until recently, the view of Allen and Sander, was considered orthodox, even if the tide has now turned in favour of Campionâs position.
The public lecture will be followed by an ecumenical Service of Thanksgiving in Christ Church Cathedral at 11.30am; everyone is welcome to attend this service without need for registration.
Professor Kilroy is the co-editor of the recently published v. 17 of the Complete Works of Evelyn Waugh, Edmund Campion: Jesuit and Martyr. Information on ticketing for the lecture is available at this link. There is no charge for admission and tickets for the service at the cathedral are not required.