In 16th and 17th century Ireland religion and nationality fused together in a people’s struggle to survive. In that struggle the country’s links with Europe provided a life line. Members of religious orders, with their international roots, played an important role. Among them were the Irish Jesuits, who adapted to a variety of situations – from quiet work in Irish towns to serving as an emissary for Hugh O’Neill in the south of Ireland and in the courts of Rome and Spain, and then founding seminary colleges in Spain and Portugal from which young Irishmen returned to keep faith and hope alive. In the seventeenth century persecution was more haphazard. There were opportunities for preaching and teaching and, at time, especially during the Confederation of Kilkenny in the 1640s, for the open celebration of one’s religion. This freedom gave way to the savage persecution under Cromwell, which resulted in the killing of some Jesuits and others being forced to find shelter in caves, sepulchres, and bogs, the Jesuit superior dying alone in a shepherd’s hut on an island off Galway. There followed a time of more relaxed laws during which Irish Jesuits publicly ran schools in New Ross and, for Oliver Plunkett, in Drogheda, but persecution soon resumed and Oliver Plunkett was arrested and martyred. At the end of the century, as the forces of King James II were finally defeated, some Jesuits lived and worked through the sieges of Limerick and then nerved themselves to face the Penal Laws in the new century.
MISSION TO A SUFFERING PEOPLE: Irish Jesuits 1596 to 1696
The Mission of the People who Suffer: The Songs of the Servant of God
In this volume Scott Sunquist helps us understand this trinitarian perspective more deeply." --Stephen Bevans, SVD, Catholic Theological Union, Chicago "No mere pragmatic missiology, Scott Sunquist's book is replete with theology.
In this volume Scott Sunquist helps us understand this trinitarian perspective more deeply." --Stephen Bevans, SVD, Catholic Theological Union, Chicago "No mere pragmatic missiology, Scott Sunquist's book is replete with theology.
Missionary Paul Borthwick and pastor Dave Ripper show how transformation through our personal pain enables us to minister faithfully to a hurting world.
Suffer No More is an insightful book that investigates suffering - why we suffer and how we can escape suffering if we Realize the Truth about who we are.
Contributing to humanity in this sense could mean helping a few close friends or all seven billion people alive today. The mission to relieve suffering does not require one-to-one contact. It can be accomplished by providing time and ...
First, I submit that such an urgent command was issued to Christ's disciples to go and disciple others for the kingdom of God because the requirement that is so necessary for one to become a disciple is for one to be willing to live a ...
In Suffering and the Sovereignty of God, contributors John Piper, Joni Eareckson Tada, Steve Saint, Carl Ellis, David Powlison, Dustin Shramek, and Mark Talbot explore the many categories of God's sovereignty as evidenced in his Word.
Can one conclude that someone is suffering so that someone else does not suffer? ... And perhaps these people are those who have been given the mission of suffering for others. In the context of spiritual laws, these people certainly ...