|  |  CHAPTER II
          
      .       ROMAN AND CELTIC CHRISTIANITY
        
        St. PATRICK, ST. COLUMBA, St. AGUSTINE, ST. COLUMBAN, ST. GALLST. AIDAN, St. CUTHBER
         
       St. PATRICK
        
        IT was in the days of Constantine and Athanasius that ancient Britain
        
        was most Roman, cultivated, and prosperous. But even in the fourth century the
        
        Picts and the Irish were ravaging Britain, and early in the next century the
        
        Roman Empire left Britain to her fate. After 410 connections with Rome were at
        
        an end and many of the Britons migrated to Gaul, where they gave the name of
        
        Britannia to Armorica and planted the language which has survived until today.
        
        Soon other and more terrible enemies came to Britain.  The Saxons and the Angles
        
        came not to plunder only, but to settle. Canterbury and London were destroyed,
        
        and the invaders steadily pressed westward. In the last quarter of the sixth
        
        century Bath, Cirencester, and Gloucester were taken. Silchester was evacuated, Wroxeter was stormed. The Romano-British tradition was lost. Many Latin words continued
        
        to be used by the conquered Britons, words which remain in Welsh disguised so
        
        much as to escape the eyes of everyone who is not a trained philologist; but of
        
        actual history we know very little. Gildas, a
        
        well-educated priest who wrote about 540, has recorded some details of the
        
        persecution of Diocletian and knows of the coming of the English about 450. But
        
        he is walking in a land of shadows. And although he seems to have been
        
        contemporary with the Celtic hero Arthur, who was to become a king of legendary
        
        romance, he tells us nothing about the hero or his prowess. The history of
        
        England and of the Church in England does not become clear and intelligible until
        
        a real link was again forged to join the country with Rome. That link was
        
        forged by Gregory the Great.
        
       The best-known figure of the fifth century in our islands is St.
        
        Patrick, a Briton who became the foremost apostle of Ireland. There were
        
        Christians in Ireland before his time, and Prosper tells us that in 431 Palladius, consecrated by Pope Celestine, is sent to the Scots believing in Christ as their first
        
        bishop. The work of Palladius was abruptly ended by
        
        death. Patrick, whose Celtic name was Su-cat (strong in war) was born at ‘Bannauenta’, possibly Daventry, and was the son of Calpurnius, a deacon, the son
        
        of Potitus, a presbyter. When sixteen years of age he
        
        was carried off by a band of Irish raiders. After a bondage of six years he escaped to the coast and boarded a ship which was engaged in
        
        the export of Irish wolf-dogs. Landing in Gaul, he made his way to the famous
        
        monastery of Lerins, and then to Auxerre,
        
        where he was ordained deacon by Bishop Amator. He was
        
        later consecrated bishop by Germanus, probably not
        
        until the death of Palladius. He returned to Ireland,
        
        reaching the coast of Wicklow, and defied heathen
        
        sentiment by lighting his Paschal fire within sight of Tara, before the king’s
        
        own pagan fire was lighted at that sacred spot.
        
       After a great success at Tara, won in spite of the Druids, he overthrew
        
        a famous idol called Cenn Cruaich, in
        
        what is now county Cavan. He is said to have visited
        
        Connaught, but his work is more closely identified with the north of Ireland.
        
        He went to Rome and obtained the approval of St. Leo, than which nothing was
        
        more likely to further his own influence. This approval was ratified by the
        
        gift of precious relics of St. Peter and St. Paul. Not long after his visit to
        
        Rome he founded the church of Armagh, establishing it as the primatial church of Ireland. He died in 461 and was
        
        probably buried quietly at Saul, though in the twelfth century St. Malachy of Armagh informed his friend St. Bernard that the
        
        relics of the saint were at Armagh. An iron hand-bell of great antiquity, now
        
        preserved in the National Museum at Dublin, is called Patrick's by a tradition
        
        which is not improbable.
        
       It is a remarkable fact that although Patrick was a man of work and not
        
        of letters, he is the earliest Irish writer of whom we can say that writings
        
        ascribed to him are really his. We possess in Irish the 'Breastplate' or 'Cry
        
        of the Deer', and in Latin his 'Confession' and a
        
        letter against Coroticus. The first is a rough hymn:
        
        legend says that the saint made it on his way to visit King Laoghaire at Tara,
        
        and that the assassins who had been posted by the king to kill Patrick thought
        
        that the chant was the sound of a herd of deer passing by, and thus the saint
        
        escaped.
        
       The 'Confession' is a kind of Apologia pro vita sua, written in barbarous Latin
        
        to describe his career and defend himself against
        
        detraction. The letter against Coroticus was caused
        
        by the sanguinary raid in which the soldiers of Coroticus,
        
        a British king of Strathclyde, killed a number of
        
        Christian neophytes on the day of their baptism and carried off others into
        
        slavery. The saint, who admits his rusticity, could write with force and
        
        indignation. He was a man of one book, and that book was the Bible; and in his
        
        consciousness that God had dealt wonderfully with him he is at one with St.
        
        Paul and St. Augustine.
        
       The beginnings of Christianity in Scotland date back to Romano-British
        
        times. Its oldest monuments are certain carved stones at Kirkmadrine,
        
        in Wigtonshire, which have survived all the storms
        
        which have swept over Britain from the fifth century to the present day. They
        
        are far older than the work of St. Columba, and are in a region where St. Ninian or Nynias labored about
        
        the time of the withdrawal of the Roman troops from Britain. He was himself a
        
        Briton and trained in Rome. He planted the centre of his missions at what is
        
        now the little town of Whithorn, and his church there
        
        gave its name of “Candida Casa” to the bishopric. It is probable that Ninian went to the north of Scotland and labored in the
        
        valley of the Ness. If he did not himself preach to the northern Picts, the
        
        Gospel was brought to them by his immediate disciples.
        
       St. Kentigern (otherwise Mungo,
        
        'my dear one') was the apostle of the Britons of Strathclyde.
        
        He became the hero of many fantastic tales, but with the help of Welsh
        
        documents the outlines of his life are made plain. He labored near Glasgow, but
        
        being opposed by a pagan king, Morken, fled to St.
        
        David at Menevia, and founded a monastery at Llanelwy (St. Asaph). In 573 the
        
        battle of Arderydd gave victory to the Christian
        
        Britons and he went back to Glasgow. Soon after 584 he met St. Columba, and the
        
        two venerable servants of God exchanged their pastoral staves in token of their
        
        mutual regard. He died in 603.
        
         ST. COLUMBA
         
       With St. Columba we pass from a cloudy dawn into bright sunlight. He was
        
        born in 521 at Gartan in Donegal, was the son of a
        
        chief, was baptized and became the pupil of St. Finian.
        
        After his ordination he and three of his fellow students lived a religious life
        
        at Glasnevin. He built his first church at Derry in
        
        545 and founded many others.
        
       In 563 he crossed to the west of Scotland and received a grant of the
        
        island known to us as Iona. It is most likely that this banishment to Scotland
        
        was a voluntary penance for his action in stirring up a war in Ireland. Iona lay
        
        on the geographical borderline between the Scots and the Picts, and the
        
        conversion of the Picts became a definite part of his work.
        
       He was the very type of Irish character. He was passionate, “fragile as
        
        glass”, says an ancient writer. He had a fair face and large grey eyes, a voice
        
        'sweet with more than the sweetness of the bards'. He was deeply loved by his
        
        monks, and himself loved all things that God made, as
        
        is shown by his kindness to a tired heron that fell upon the beach, and to the
        
        old horse that he caressed on the last evening of his life. Coarsely clad and
        
        devoting much time to prayer and manual labor, he allowed his community to eat
        
        fish, eggs, and the flesh of seals, not enforcing too rigorous an abstinence,
        
        and he practiced a generous hospitality.
        
       His work spread far and wide in the west and north of Scotland, and he
        
        ruled many important churches in Ireland. He governed with absolute authority
        
        in his monastery, free from Episcopal jurisdiction. But he was only in priest’s
        
        orders, and employed bishops to ordain, treating them with veneration as
        
        members of a superior order. Blessed in his life, he was happy in his death,
        
        which came on June the 9th, 597. He was happy also in the fact that his
        
        biography was written by Adamnan, who had conversed
        
        with persons acquainted with Columba, and whose work is of such value and
        
        interest as to immortalize both the author and his subject.
        
       
         
       St. AGUSTINE
        
        Late in the spring of 597 St. Augustine landed in the Isle of Thanet on the coast of Kent. A few days later St. Columba
        
        died in the isle of Iona. We can well imagine the dignified Roman missionary
        
        coming, not altogether unbefriended or unexpected,
        
        with forty monks, preceded by a cross and a picture of 'the Lord the Savior',
        
        chanting a litany as they moved in procession to meet Ethelbert, the King of
        
        Kent. And we can also imagine the Irish abbot, dying with a smile before the
        
        altar of his church, surrounded by the devoted monks who hurried to him in the
        
        dark night with the lanterns which they had just lighted to help them sing Mattins. Both men deserved success. More than any others
        
        they founded the Christian religion of Great Britain.
        
       Ethelbert’s wife, Bertha, was daughter of the Frankish king of Paris,
        
        and a Christian. She and her chaplain had used for worship the church of St.
        
        Martin, outside Canterbury, which had survived in a ruined state from Roman
        
        times. And it was probably in this church that Ethelbert, quickly converted to
        
        the faith by Augustine, was baptized on Whitsunday 597. He did not compel his
        
        subjects to follow his example; but that example, reinforced by the
        
        self-denying labors of the missionaries, bore rapid fruit. The Pope soon held
        
        that it was time for Augustine to be consecrated Bishop of the English, so
        
        Augustine crossed the channel and was consecrated at Arles.
        
       Returning to England, he founded the monastery of Christchurch on the
        
        site of a Roman basilica and of the present cathedral. And beyond the walls of
        
        Canterbury he built another monastery dedicated to St. Peter and St. Paul, the
        
        two patron saints of Rome. It was probably the first Benedictine monastery
        
        founded outside Italy. Possibly he intended to separate the life of a cathedral
        
        from the more purely missionary monastic centre. And by these two foundations
        
        he made Canterbury a permanent stronghold of Christian life and civilization.
        
        He found it necessary to direct several questions to Gregory which show his
        
        anxiety to deal with new and perplexing circumstances. Among the replies sent
        
        by Gregory is the famous maxim that things were not to be loved for the sake of
        
        places, but places for the sake of good things, and that what was good in any
        
        local custom might be brought into the Church of the English. He permits
        
        Augustine alone by himself to consecrate a bishop in case of need. He is to
        
        exercise no authority in Gaul, but “all the bishops of the Britains”
        
        are to be under his care. These replies were conveyed by Mellitus, Paulinus, and other new missionaries, who brought also for
        
        Augustine a pallium, the narrow scarf signifying
        
        jurisdiction delegated by the Pope to a metropolitan. Augustine was further
        
        directed to consecrate twelve bishops to be under his jurisdiction as Bishop of
        
        London; and for the city of York a bishop was also to be ordained, who, as the
        
        Church extended, was to be over twelve other bishops.
        
       Ethelbert was not only the leading monarch over all England south of the
        
        Humber; the East Saxons were indirectly but really under his control. Their
        
        king Saebert was his nephew and reigned in dependence
        
        on Ethelbert. Augustine, in 604, shortly before his death, consecrated Mellitus
        
        as bishop and sent him to preach to the East Saxons. They accepted his message,
        
        and then Ethelbert built in London a cathedral church dedicated to St. Paul, so
        
        that Mellitus might have his see in a town of importance frequented by traders
        
        from abroad. Augustine also consecrated Justus as bishop for the people of
        
        western Kent, the see being placed at Rochester. Here the church was dedicated
        
        to St. Andrew in memory of the missionaries’ old home in the centre of Latin
        
        Christendom.
        
       Augustine died on May the 26th, 604 or 605, and was buried outside the
        
        unfinished church of St. Peter and St. Paul until it should be ready to cover
        
        his relics. Some of the questions which he directed to Gregory are questions
        
        which would only have been asked by a man unduly troubled by details of
        
        ceremonial purity; and his summary treatment of the British bishops, which must
        
        now be described, indicates a lack of Christian courtesy and meekness. But he
        
        was always brave, laborious, and sincere, and often
        
        prudent. And we can truly say of Augustine what Bede says of Gregory, “If he be
        
        not an apostle unto others, yet he is unto us, for the seal of his apostleship
        
        are we in the Lord”.
        
       THE
        
        BRITISH CHURCH
        
      Augustine’s relations with the British bishops and Church were less
        
        happy than his relations with the English. Helped by Ethelbert, he crossed the
        
        country of the West Saxons and met the bishops at a place called Augustine's
        
        Oak in the time of Bede, usually identified with Aust near the Severn. He urged upon them the need of Catholic unity and the duty of
        
        joining in the task of preaching the Gospel to the English. No decision was
        
        reached, for both sides were unyielding as to certain points of difference. No
        
        divergence in doctrine appears to have separated the Celtic Christians from the
        
        Roman missionaries, but the disciplinary differences were acute. The principal
        
        were three in number.
        
       First, in calculating the date of Easter, the Celts, following what had
        
        been the rule at Rome about 300, celebrated the feast on a Sunday between March
        
        the 25th and April the 21st, and on a day from the fourteenth to the twentieth day of the lunar month inclusive. The
        
        Romans celebrated the feast on a Sunday between March the 22nd and April the
        
        25th, and on a day from the fifteenth to the twenty-first of the lunar month. The Celtic custom was peculiarly
        
        offensive to the Romans because it permitted Easter to coincide with the Jewish
        
        Passover on the 4th of Nisan, a thing forbidden by the great Council of Nicaea.
        
       Secondly, the tonsure of the Celtic priests differed from the Roman
        
        tonsure. At an early period the clergy wore their hair short in order not to
        
        appear effeminate. Later, the Romans shaved the whole head, and St. Patrick was
        
        shaved in this fashion. This tonsure was called that of St. Paul (Acts XVIII. 18).
        
        Then the Romans of the time of St. Gregory had a circle shaved on the top of
        
        the head, so as to leave a complete crown or garland of natural hair, the hair
        
        being left rather longer at the back. This was known as the tonsure of St.
        
        Peter. But the Celtic clergy were so shaved that their hair remained long at
        
        the back and formed a fringe or semicircle on the front half of their head from
        
        ear to ear, a tonsure nearly the same as that worn by the Celtic laity. This
        
        was denounced by the Romans as the tonsure of Simon Magus, who was represented
        
        in legends as opposing St. Peter in the Eternal City.
        
       Thirdly, the Celts had some peculiarities of their own in administering
        
        baptism. Their character remains a problem. It is clear that the Celtic rite
        
        did not involve any repudiation of the doctrine of the Trinity, for we have no
        
        trace of any accusation being based upon such a heresy. The most reasonable
        
        theory is that the Celts administered baptism without confirmation, whether
        
        confirmation by a bishop or by a presbyter who used oil consecrated by a
        
        bishop. This would explain why Augustine demanded that the Britons should
        
        'complete' baptism.
        
       At a second meeting of Augustine with the Britons seven British bishops
        
        were present. According to a well-known story told by Bede, they first
        
        consulted a holy anchorite as to whether they ought at the preaching of
        
        Augustine to abandon their own traditions. He replied that they ought to do so
        
        if he were a man of God, and that he would be a man of God if he were humble.
        
        They asked how they were to know whether he was humble. The reply was that if
        
        Augustine rose to meet them, he would show himself to be a servant of Christ.
        
        If he did not rise but despised them, “let him also be despised by you”. And
        
        Augustine remained seated. Otherwise he was not unconciliatory.
        
       He only insisted on three points, the celebration of Easter at the same
        
        time as the Church elsewhere, the “completing of Baptism”, and a joint
        
        preaching of the word of the Lord to the English nation. The Britons flatly
        
        refused and said that they would not regard him as archbishop. The Church of
        
        the Britons and the Church of the English were thus separated. It was the
        
        Gaelic and not the Cymric monks who threw themselves
        
        into the work of preaching Christ among the English of Northumbria and elsewhere. The intense British dislike of the English and the English
        
        Church was of course connected with bitter recollections of the English
        
        conquest; and their antipathy to Augustine was strengthened by their veneration
        
        for their own saints such as Illtud, David, and
        
        Samson.
        
       After Augustine's death friendly attempts were made by his successor Laurentius to win over both the Irish and the Welsh, though
        
        an Irish (Scot) bishop who came to England refused to eat in the same house
        
        with him. His efforts met with no visible result. It was not until 755 that Elvod, Bishop of Bangor, induced the people of North Wales
        
        to accept the Roman Easter, and some years later the people of South Wales
        
        followed. In Cornwall there was some dissent as late as the time of Eadulf, the first (English) bishop of Crediton (909-93t).
        
       The Irish Gaels were less persistent than the Celts of Wales and
        
        Cornwall. The north of Ireland yielded to the influence of Adamnan (d. 704), the saintly abbot of Iona who, having candidly examined the subject,
        
        came to the conclusion that the Roman reckoning was correct. A few years after
        
        his death most of the monks of Iona followed his example.
        
       As to the nature of the episcopate among the Celts of this period, much
        
        remains somewhat obscure. But the ascertained facts do not point to such a wide
        
        divergence between the Celts and other Christian nationalities in this respect
        
        as has often been supposed. Among those facts is, first, the influence of the
        
        clan or tribal system in determining the boundaries of a bishopric, and,
        
        secondly, the limitation of Episcopal authority by powerful monasteries which
        
        came to possess large estates of their own.
        
       St. Gregory gave authority to St. Augustine over “all the bishops of the Britains”. It is more than probable that the British
        
        bishops had been under no such metropolitan or archbishop, and that
        
        ecclesiastical “provinces”, including several bishops, were unknown. Gildas knows of none. The title archiepiscopus in Latin is not
        
        applied to the bishop of Menevia until it is so used
        
        by Asser c. 893. But it is likely that St. David, Abbot and Bishop of Menevia, did in the sixth century exercise an influence
        
        which anticipated the rather vague primacy that was claimed in turn by other
        
        Welsh sees, first at Caerleon and finally at St.
        
        David's. With regard to Ireland it is practically certain that Armagh would not
        
        have gained its early prestige if St. Patrick had not exercised from Armagh,
        
        and intended his successors to exercise, an authority similar to that of
        
        metropolitans on the Continent. All Ireland was one province. And any early
        
        Irish bishop who bore the title of primescop or principal bishop was not a metropolitan, but
        
        the chief bishop over a clan, the other bishops belonging to a class which must
        
        now be briefly described.
        
       In all Celtic lands the monastic foundations were essential to the
        
        spiritual structure of the Church. The prevalence in Wales, Cornwall, and
        
        Brittany of the word Ilan or Ian, which signified a
        
        monastery before it signified a church building, still testifies to the ancient
        
        prevalence of monasticism. The monks served the needs of the surrounding
        
        country; they included a staff of priests, and the abbot was often a bishop.
        
        Even in Cornwall monastery bishops seemed to have survived after part of the
        
        country had become settled by Saxons. But in Ireland the great increase of
        
        monasteries led to a multiplication of bishops, each important new monastery
        
        desiring to have a private prelate of its own. The confusion became more
        
        confounded by the Danish invasions; numbers of bishops had no sees, and became bishops errant, and sometimes erring. There are traces of
        
        the same abuse in Gaul. In fact the large number and the comparative
        
        insignificance of bishops among the Celts is not a
        
        survival of a primitive Christian practice, but a perversion of it. It was not
        
        until the twelfth century that Gillebert, Bishop of
        
        Limerick, and St. Malachy of Armagh, the friend of
        
        St. Bernard of Clairvaux, began to put an end to the
        
        chaotic condition of the Church of Ireland, and the boundaries of provinces and
        
        dioceses were carefully defined. And it was not until that period that the pallium was worn by the metropolitans of Ireland.
        
         ST. COLUMBAN  
       
     One of the most important and interesting features of Celtic
      
      Christianity was the Irish apostolate on the continent of Europe. It began with
      
      St. Columban, a contemporary of St. Augustine.
      
     St. Columban (543-615) was born in Leinster and studied assiduously at the monastery of Bangor
      
      in Down. He appears to have learned Greek, and even Hebrew, as well as Latin.
      
      Longing to be a missionary, he started with twelve companions to preach the
      
      Gospel in Gaul and made his home in Burgundy. He founded successively
      
      monasteries at Anegray, Luxeuil,
      
      and Fontaine. His name is especially associated with Luxeuil,
      
      the site being that of a deserted Gallo-Roman town where he found the images of
      
      the heathen gods still standing amid the ruins and the thickets. Here he
      
      composed his famous and rigid monastic rule in two parts, one for the solitary
      
      ascetics and the other for those who led the “common life”. Zealously
      
      attracting the people to 'the medicines of penitence', he made private
      
      confessions become more frequent, and drew up penitential rules for that
      
      purpose. For a time he enjoyed the friendship of Theodoric II, King of
      
      Burgundy, and nearly persuaded him to lead a virtuous life. But when the king’s
      
      grandmother, the formidable Brunhild, pointedly asked
      
      him to bless the king’s illegitimate children, she met with a rebuff more
      
      peremptory than polite, and resolved to take revenge. He had previously had
      
      trouble with the Frankish bishops on account of his observance of the Celtic
      
      Easter. They intended to pass judgment on him at a Council held in 602. He had
      
      written letters to Pope Gregory defending his custom, and, as he was then in
      
      favor at the royal court, the matter was dropped. Now, however, Brunhild stirred up the bishops to find fault with his
      
      monastic rule, and the king forced him to leave Burgundy.
      
       ST. GALL
      
      Among the faithful companions of St. Columban was St. Gall. Together they went to Switzerland and preached at Arbon and Bregenz. St. Gall took
      
      especial pleasure in burning heathen temples and throwing idols into convenient
      
      lakes, but his combined fearlessness and knowledge of the language of the
      
      country helped him to escape the doom which he had courted. Columban determined to go to Italy; but Gall stayed in Switzerland, where he made a cell
      
      and lived in retirement. Over that cell there was built in the eighth century a
      
      prodigious monastery and church of Saint Gall, a church replaced in the
      
      eighteenth century by the gorgeous rococo building designed by Peter Thumb.
      
     Columban, with
      
      the remainder of his flock, descended the Alps and found rest for his feet, and
      
      soon also for his soul, at Bobbio, in a valley of the
      
      Apennines. Here are still preserved the dust of his bones, his knife, and other
      
      relics. Bobbio continued for some time to be
      
      frequently visited by Celtic pilgrims, and in modern times is always associated
      
      in the minds of students with the famous Missal of Bobbio,
      
      a priceless liturgical treasure of Gallican character
      
      with traces of Irish influence. A signal indication of the spirit of the early
      
      inmates of Bobbio is to be found in the fact that
      
      they not only, like other Irish monks, claimed exemption from Episcopal
      
      control, but were the first to obtain from the Pope a license for such
      
      exemption. The monastery was placed directly under the Pope, a privilege of
      
      grave omen for the future history of the Church.
      
     FIRST PERSECUTION OF THE CATHOLICS BY ENGLISH IN ENGLAND’S HISTORY
      
     It is in Northumbria that we best observe the
      
      activity of Celtic and of Anglo-Roman missions side by side. Early in the
      
      seventh century Edwin, King of Northumbria, was the
      
      most powerful man in the country since the departure of the Romans. The King of
      
      the West Saxons hated him and sent men with a poisoned dagger to kill him. The
      
      dagger passed through the body of a faithful attendant and Edwin’s life was
      
      saved. It was an Easter Eve at the royal palace near Aldby,
      
      and that night Edwin’s Kentish wife safely bore her first child, a daughter.
      
      Deeply moved, Edwin promised Paulinus, the bishop who
      
      had accompanied the queen to her new home, that he would become a Christian if
      
      he conquered the West Saxons. He conquered and returned.
      
     He no longer worshipped idols, but he hesitated to receive baptism. Pope
      
      Boniface V wrote to him, but still he hesitated. Then he called a council and
      
      asked each magnate in turn what he thought of the new religion. First a heathen
      
      priest, Coifi, gave a cynical reply. Then a layman
      
      began to speak of the mystery of human life and added the famous simile, “The
      
      king and his captains are sitting at supper on a dark winter’s day; rain or
      
      snow are without, a bright fire is in their midst. Suddenly a little bird flies
      
      in, a sparrow, in at one door and then out at another. It passes out of the
      
      winter into the winter and vanishes from your sight. So is the life of man. As
      
      to what follows it or what went before it we know absolutely nothing. If the new religion will tell us anything of these mysteries, the
        
        before and the after, it is the religion that is wanted”. Then Coifi begged that Paulinus might
      
      be heard. And Paulinus, who had known how to wait,
      
      then had his opportunity, and he spoke with such effect that Coifi was the first to destroy the shrines at which he had
      
      led the worship of his heathen tribesmen. Edwin and many of his people were
      
      baptized, and York became a cathedral city.
      
     The new converts were soon exposed to a cruel test. Mercia, the middle
      
      kingdom in England, was under King Penda, a champion
      
      of the old gods. Hemmed in by Christian states, he resolved to break the powers
      
      that were closing round him, and went forth to war. He defeated and killed
      
      Edwin at the battle of Hatfield in 633, and Christianity was reduced to such
      
      straits that Paulinus returned to Kent.
      
     Man’s necessity proved to be God’s opportunity, and the desertion of his
      
      flock by Paulinus made the way plainer for a mission
      
      which accomplished more than had been done by the Roman missions in the south
      
      of England. St. Oswald came to the throne of Northumbria in 634. Like Alfred at a later time, he presents to us almost an ideal of royal
      
      sanctity. Seeking to restore the fallen Church, he applied not to Rome or to
      
      Kent, but to the monastery of Iona, the isle of saints. The learning of the
      
      Irish-Scottish monks of Iona was united with fervent missionary zeal, and that
      
      zeal was seen at its best in the bishop who came to the island of Lindisfarne near to Oswald’s royal castle of Bamborough.
      
       ST. AIDAN
      
      St. Aidan (d. 651) and some of his companions seem to have possessed
      
      exactly those qualities which were undeveloped in the character of St. Augustine.
      
      They were very simple, homely, and gentle, as well as rigorous in their
      
      self-denial. The result was a personal influence over others which was deep and
      
      lasting. Their external methods also differed from the methods of the Roman
      
      missionaries. The Celtic monks were recluses from whom kings sought direction
      
      in spiritual matters: the Roman monks moved in royal courts. The former built
      
      small rude churches or worshipped in caves near the sound of the sea. The latter built stately basilicas that recalled the splendor of
        
        the Italian churches in Rome and Milan. Both were truly men of God; but
      
      the typical Celtic monk was a man of feeling, and the typical Roman monk was a
      
      man of affairs. The good qualities of both were needed for the permanent life
      
      and perfection of the Church. But the Celts were unrivalled as pioneers. The
      
      people whom they made Christian remained Christian, and wherever they went they
      
      planted convents of men and women which became fresh centers of missionary
      
      work.
      
       St. CUTHBERT
      
          St. Cuthbert (d. 687), who absorbed these diverse influences, is one of
      
      the first of thoroughly English saints. Probably a Northumbrian, he was born in
      
      the Lothians, and was a shepherd when in 651 he
      
      believed he saw a vision of the soul of Aidan. He entered the monastery at Old
      
      Melrose, of which the first abbot was Eata, one of
      
      the twelve Northumbrian boys instructed by St. Aidan. Cuthbert had loved
      
      wrestling and running and boyish pranks; and a story, which has been rather
      
      refined than refuted, tells us that when he was eight years of age a child of
      
      three rebuked him for standing on his head naked. He also suffered from a
      
      swelling on his knee, a malady well known to athletes, but was cured by a hot
      
      poultice of flour and milk.
      
     After leading a life of great piety at Melrose, he accompanied Eata to the monastery at Ripon. When King Alchfrith, who built the monastery, adopted the Roman
      
      Easter, Cuthbert went back to Melrose, and preached the Gospel with great
      
      success to the ignorant country folk in the neighborhood. After the Synod of Whitby, in 664, he himself decided to abandon the Celtic
      
      Easter, and Eata, then Abbot of Lindisfarne,
      
      appointed him prior of the house.
      
     Resolving to lead a more strictly ascetic life, Cuthbert in 676 first
      
      retired to a lonely cave, and then built for himself a
      
      cell on the island now known as House Island. He passed nine years in this
      
      cell, withdrawing more and more completely from all human intercourse until he
      
      only opened the window to give his blessing or accept some necessary food. More
      
      against his will than otherwise, he was persuaded to become Bishop of Lindisfarne, being consecrated at York by Archbishop
      
      Theodore and seven bishops in 685. Two years later he died in his cell, hardly
      
      sixty years of age, and worn out by his austerities and an internal tumor which
      
      was an evil legacy of the plague which attacked him at Melrose. He was neither
      
      a great reformer nor a man of great intellectual gifts, but his sincerity,
      
      gentleness, and humility won for him a veneration little, if at all, inferior
      
      to that which has been paid to martyrs and doctors of the Church. In 999 his
      
      relics were placed in Durham Cathedral, where they were found, together with
      
      the head of St. Oswald, in 1827.
      
     THE CELTIC CHISTIANITY
      
     No exhaustive account can here be given of the causes which led to the
      
      decline of Celtic Christianity. But among those causes are two which can be
      
      easily understood. The first is the adoption of the Latin language by the
      
      Celtic missionaries. This was a step which certainly was in the direction of a
      
      higher civilization, and assisted the formation of the schools of learning for
      
      which Ireland became famous. But it brought the Celtic Churches within the
      
      orbit of Roman ideas. In the east of Europe Cyril and Methodius, the apostles
      
      of the Slays, provided their converts with the Bible and the liturgy in
      
      Slavonic. And the Arian Goths, in the fourth century, were provided by Ulfila with the Bible in Gothic. The result in each case
      
      was a degree of vitality and power of resistance which could not have otherwise
      
      been attained. If St. Patrick and St. Columba had provided their people with a
      
      Gaelic Bible and a Gaelic missal the struggle with Rome would have been
      
      indefinitely prolonged. But the diffusion of Latin among the Celts inevitably
      
      meant a closer communion with the heart of Latin Christendom.
      
     A second cause of the Celtic decline can be found in the character of
      
      the Celtic monastic rules. Those rules found their fullest expression in the
      
      scheme of St. Columban. They were terrible in their
      
      severity. Obedience “even unto death” was required of his monks. The penal code
      
      was minute, the least negligence, the least sin of omission or commission, was
      
      to be punished with strokes of the rod. But there were no proper regulations
      
      for the administration of the monastery or for the employment of time in daily
      
      life. Now very near the time when St. Columban was
      
      born there died the great monk St. Benedict, who had profited by observing the
      
      mistakes of others, and had drawn up a rule which was both less impetuous and
      
      more precise than the rule of the great Celtic saint. St. Benedict knew that
      
      too harsh a system defeats itself, and knew that for “idle hands” work is
      
      always found by the powers of evil. He therefore resolutely determined to be
      
      gentle, and carefully prescribed what was to be done hour by hour. The
      
      Benedictine rule was not known in France until after the death of St. Columban, but when it was known it quickly won its way, and
      
      before the ninth century was victorious because it was intrinsically better.
      
      Here as elsewhere the Celtic genius, so potent in attracting and stimulating
      
      the individual, was less able than the Latin to organize and govern a
      
      community. It taught men to confess their sins to a priest who was anmchara, friend
      
      of the soul, it urged them to endure in journeying often, in order to spread
      
      the Gospel, but it did not inspire them with a sense of the religious value of
      
      unity and cohesion.
      
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