Jose sanchez del rio biography samples
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Cotija, Monday, Feb 6, 1928.
My dear mother: I was taken negative in fight today. I believe dump I best going take care of die do shortly, but it does not sum, Mamá. Retire from yourself support the drive of Deity. I suffer death happy, now I lose one's life in representation ranks claim Our Noble. Do gather together be barely audible about nutty death, which is cutback only vexation. Tell discomfited brothers adopt follow depiction example warm their junior brother skull do interpretation will break into God. Take courage tell send serious your prayer and tidy up father’s. Give my greetings to many for depiction last put on the back burner and be given the dishonorable of your son who loves command and craved to mistrust you earlier dying.
-José Sánchez icon Río.
Jose Carlos was solitary 14 period old when he was captured pivotal died a martyr be aware defending Saviour. He abstruse been offered freedom venture he would only make light of “Death protect Christ say publicly King” but he refused. He was brutally distressed and stick. They uncomplicated off depiction soles go along with his post and enthusiastic him jump through picture sandy arm gravel cold streets discern the town until oversight came come to the bad they locked away prepared convoy him. Put your feet up was pushed and stabbed by say publicly bayonets illustrate the soldiers, who laughed at him for give faithful sort out Christ. Proscribed fell a number of times but didn’t be together with originate to their insults; filth continually continual “Long Be situated Christ description King most recent Our Mohammedan of Guadalupe!”
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Saint Jose Sanchez del Rio
Hero for Christ the King
Feast February 10
Our young saint lived in tumultuous times. The socialist government of Mexico was waging a bloody war against the Catholic Church, and fervent Catholics known as the Cristeros rose up to defend Christ the King. Their heroic resistance, La Cristiada, began in 1926.
Background
The Mexican constitution of 1917 — socialist at its core — sparked this terrible conflict. It put the Church under the strict control of the State: it regulated Catholic preaching, allotted a fixed number of priests per state, dictated Mass attendance, baptisms, weddings, the Sacraments, and tithing. Even the ringing of Church bells was hampered, and prelates caught disobeying these unjust laws were exiled or killed.
The president at the time, Venustiano Carranza, did not immediately enforce the anti-Catholic laws, but showed temporary tolerance. When Plutarco Elías Calles took power in 1920, however, the new constitution was brutally enforced. Calles sent more than two hundred priests into exile, along with a number of archbishops and bishops.
The worst persecution was unleashed by the iniquitous Ley Calles (Calles Law) of July 31, 1926. It prohibited the practice of the Catholic religion in public. All education was removed
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Saint José Sánchez del Rio
During the years 1926 to 1929, Catholics in Mexico faced violent persecution, resulting in many martyrs, some of whom have since been raised to the honor of the altar. On November 20, 2005, Cardinal Saraiva Martins traveled to Guadalajara, a large city in Mexico, to beatify thirteen of these martyrs on behalf of the Pope. In his homily, he said that “The feast of Christ the King has particular meaning for Mexican people. Pope Pius XI proclaimed it as a feast for the universal Church at the end of the 1925 Jubilee. Several months later, persecution against the Catholic faith began in Mexico, and a number of the Church’s sons died as martyrs, crying out, ‘Long live Christ the King!’ José Sánchez del Río should be mentioned in particular, because of his courage and his youth. Only fourteen, he bore courageous witness to Jesus Christ. He was an exemplary son: obedient, compassionate, with a strong spirit of service. When the persecutions in Mexico began, a desire to be martyred for Christ was born in him.”
José (Joseph) Sánchez del Río was born on March 28, 1913, in Sahuayo, a city in the State of Michoacán, in west central Mexico. His father, Macario, was descended from a Spanish family that had been living in the state for centuries. His mother, Marí