Saturday, October 12, 2019
A Martyrs Victory In A Spiritual Sense :: essays research papers fc
 A Martyr's Victory in a Spiritual Sense           Bishop Francis X. Ford was a well educated, enormously gentle man, that  was kicked, beaten, insulted, and surrounded by hatred. All this because of one  mans beliefs. He was born in Brooklyn in 1892. He was the founder of the  Maryknoll Missionaries and was the first bishop of Kwantung, China. He was  killed in the late 1950's in China, he was charged with anti-Communist,  counterrevolutionary, and espionage activities, his real "crime" was for being a  Christian and a foreigner.       During his life Bishop Ford illustrated the cardinal virtue of fortitude,  which is the ability to overcome fear in order to pursue good; "it is an active  sake to overcome evil for the sake of gods kingdom" said Huggard. When he took  office in China, the country was already feeling the effects of the massive  Japanese advance across Asia. In a short time millions lost there lives and  were driven from there homes. Bishop ford refused to leave the war-torn country,  even after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into  the war. During this time he distinguished himself by the way he cared for war  refugees. Chinese paid a terrible price during this war with Japan, but even  more costly was a civil war that followed. Bishop Ford exemplified the virtue  of fortitude, by not leaving the war-torn country and staying to try to pursue  good.       During this time of war, many would wonder what was the reason for him  to stay in China, and what was his why to live? In the Novel A Mans Search For  Meaning, Nietzsche says "he who has a why to live can bear with almost any  how". If Ford had left the country during the time of war, there would have  probably been no hope for the war refugees that didn't have the option to stay  or go. His why to live was not to save himself, but to save others. In the  Novel Frankl describes the human person as a meaning maker, who has the last  human freedom namely to choose one attitude in a given set of circumstances. In  1950, he moved from his Diocese in Kaying China, to a political prison in Canton  200, miles away. At every stop along the way he was put on public display and  humiliated. His attitude during these stops was not to give and let the  humiliation make get to him, but to use it as a stepping stone to fight harder,  he did the inevitable he used the humiliation to make him better.  					    
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