Bede: Ecclesiastical History of the English
Nation
BOOK IV
CHAPTER I:
DEUSDEDIT, ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY, DYING,
WIGHARD WAS SENT TO ROME TO SUCCEED HIM IN THAT DIGNITY; BUT HE DYING THERE
THEODORE WAS ORDAINED ARCHBISHOP, AND SENT INTO BRITAIN WITH THE ABBAT HADRIAN. [A. D.
664]
IN the abovementioned
year of the aforesaid eclipse, which was
presently followed by the pestilence, in which also Bishop Colman, being
overcome by the unanimous consent of the Catholics, returned home, Deusdedit,
the sixth bishop of the church of Canterbury, died on the 14th of July.
Erconbert, also, king of Kent, departed this life the same month and day;
leaving his kingdom to his son Egbert, which he held nine years. The see then
became vacant for some considerable time, until the priest Wighard, a man
skilled in ecclesiastical discipline, of the English race, was sent to Rome by
the said King Ezbert, and Oswy, king of the Northumbrians, as was briefly
mentioned in the foregoing book, with a request that he might be ordained
bishop of the church of England; sending at the same time presents to the
apostolic pope, and many vessels of gold and silver. Arriving at Rome, where
Vitalian presided at that time over the Apostolic See, and having made known
to the aforesaid pope the occasion of his journey, he was not long after
snatched away, with almost all his companions that went with him, by a
pestilence which happened at that time.
But the apostolic pope having consulted about that affair, made diligent
inquiry for some one to send to be archbishop of the English churches. There
was then in the Niridian monastery, which is not far from the city of Naples
in Campania, an abbat, called Hadrian, by nation an African, well versed in
holy writ, experienced in monastical and ecclesiastical discipline, and
excellently skilled both in the Greek and Latin tongues. The pope, sending for
him, commanded him to accept of the bishopric, and repair into Britain; he
answered, that he was unworthy of so great a dignity, but said he could name
another, whose learning and age were fitter for the episcopal office. And
having proposed to the pope a certain monk, belonging to a neighbouring
monastery of virgins, whose name was Andrew, he was by all that knew him
judged worthy of a bishopric; but bodily infirmity prevented his being
advanced to the episcopal station. Then again Hadrian was pressed to accept of
the bishopric; but he desired a respite for a time, to see whether he could
find another fit to be ordained bishop.
There was at that time in Rome, a monk, called Theodore, well known to
Hadrian, born at Tarsus in Cilicia, a man well instructed in worldly and
Divine literature, as also in Greek and Latin; of known probity of life, and
venerable for age, being sixty-six years old. Hadrian offered him to the pope
to be ordained bishop, and prevailed; but upon these conditions, that he
should conduct him into Britain, because he had already travelled through
France twice upon several occasions, and was, therefore, better acquainted
with the way, and was, moreover, sufficiently provided with men of his own; as
also that being his fellow labourer in doctrine, he might take special care
that Theodore should not, according to the custom of the Greeks, introduce
anything contrary to the true faith into the church where he presided.
Hadrian, being ordained subdeacon, waited four months for his hair to
grow, that it might be shorn into the shape of a crown; for he had before the
tonsure of St. Paul, the apostle, after the manner of the eastern people. He
was ordained by Pope Vitalian, in the year of our Lord 668, on Sunday, the
26th of March, and on the 27th of May was sent with Hadrian into Britain.
They proceeded by sea to Marseilles, and thence by land to Arles, and
having there delivered to John, archbishop of that city, Pope Vitalian's
letters of recommendation were by him detained till Ebrin, the king's mayor of
the palace, sent them a pass to go where they pleased. Having received the
same, Theodore repaired to Agilbert, bishop of Paris, of whom we have spoken
above, and was by him kindly received, and long entertained. But Hadrian went
first to Emme, and then to Faro, bishops of Sens and Meaux, and lived with
them a considerable time; for the hard vinter had obliged them to rest
wherever they could. King Egbert, being informed by messengers that the bishop
they had asked of the Roman prelate vas in the kingdom of France, sent thither
his præfect, Redfrid, to conduct him; who, being arrived there, with Ebrin's
leave, conveyed him to the port of Quentavic; where, being indisposed, he made
some stay, and as soon as he began to recover, sailed over into Britain. But
Ebrin detained Hadrian, suspecting that he went on some message from the
emperor to the kings of Britain, to the prejudice of his kingdom, of which he
at that time took especial care; however, when he found that he really had no
such commission, he discharged him, and permitted him to follow Theodore. As
soon as he came, he received from him the monastery of St. Peter the apostle,
where the archbishops of Canterbury are usually buried, as I have said before;
for at his departure, the apostolic lord had ordered that he should provide
for him in his diocese, and give him a suitable place to live in with his
followers.
CHAPTER II
THEODORE VISITS ALL PLACES; THE CHURCHES OF
THE ENCLISH BEGIN TO BE
INSTRUCTED IN HOLY LITERATURE, AND IN THE CATHOLIC TRUTH; PUTTA IS MADE BISHOP
OF THE CHURCH OF ROCHESTER IN THE ROOM OF DAMIANUS. [A. D. 669]
THEODORE arrived at his church
the second year after his consecration, on
Sunday, the 27th of May, and held the same twenty-one years, three months, and
twenty-six days. Soon after, he visited all the island, wherever the tribes of
the Angles inhabited, for he was willingly entertained and heard by all
persons; and everywhere attended and assisted by Hadrian, he taught the right
rule of life, and the canonical custom of celebrating Easter. It was the first
archbishop whom all the English church obeyed. And forasmuch as both of them
were, as has been said before, well read both in sacred and in secular
literature, they gathered a crowd of disciples, and there daily flowed from
them rivers of knowledge to water the hearts of their hearers; and, together
with the books of holy writ, they also taught them the arts of ecclesiastical
poetry, astronomy, and arithmetic. A testimony of which is, that there are
still living at this day some of their scholars, who are as well versed in the
Greek and Latin tongues as in their own, in which they were born. Nor were
there ever happier times since the English came into Britain; for their kings,
being brave men and good Christians, they were a terror to all barbarous
nations, and the minds of all men were bent upon the joys of the heavenly
kingdom of which they had just heard; and all who desired to be instructed in
sacred reading had masters at hand to teach them.
From that time also they began in all the churches of the English to learn
sacred music, which till then had been only known in Kent. And, excepting
James above-mentioned, the first singing-master in the churches of the
Northumbrians was Eddi, surnamed Stephen, invited from Kent by the most
reverend Wilfrid, who was the first of the bishops of the English nation that
taught the churches of the English the Catholic mode of life.
Theodore, visiting all parts, ordained bishops in proper places, and with
their assistance corrected such things as he found faulty. Among the rest,
when he upbraided Bishop Chad that he had not been duly consecrated, he, with
great humility, answered, " If you know I have not duly received episcopal
ordination, I willingly resign the office, for I never thought myself worthy
of it; but, though unworthy, in obedience submitted to undertake it."
Theodore, hearing his humble answer, said that he should not resign the
bishopric, and he himself completed his ordination after the Catholic manner.
But at the time when Deusdedit died, and a bishop for the church of Canterbury
was by request ordained and sent, Wilfrid was also sent out of Britain into
Erance to be ordained; and because he returned before Theodore, he ordained
priests and deacons i¢ Kent till the archbishop should come to his see. Being
arrived in the city of Rochester, where the see had been long vacant by the
death of Damianus, he ordained a person better skilled in ecclesiastical
discipline, and more addicted to simplicity of life than active in worldly
affairs. His name was Putta, and he vas extraordinarily skilful in the Roman
style of church music, which he had learned from the disciples of the holy
Pope Gregory.
CHAPTER III
HOW CHAD, ABOVEMENTIONED, WAS MADE
BISHOP OF THE MERCIANS. OF HIS LIFE, DEATH, AND BURIAL. [A D. 669]
AT that time, the Mercians
were governed by King Wulfhere, who, on the
death of Jaruman, desired of Theodore to supply him and his people with a
bishop; but Theodore would not obtain a new one for them, but requested of
king Oswy that Chad might be their bishop. He then lived retired at his
monastery, which is at Lestingau, Wilfrid filling the bishopric of York, and
of all the Northumbrians, and likewise of the Picts, as far as the dominions
of King Oswy extended. And, seeing that it was the custom of that most
reverend prelate to go about the work of the Gospel to several places rather
on foot than on horseback, Theodore commanded him to ride whenever he had a
long journey to undertake; and finding him very unwilling to omit his former
pious labour, he himself, with his hands, lifted him on the horse; for he
thought him a holy man, and therefore obliged him to ride wherever he had need
to go. Chad having received the bishopric of the Mercians and Lindisfarne,
took care to administer the same with great rectitude of life, according to
the example of the ancients. King Wulfhere also gave him land of fifty
families, to build a monastery, at the place called Ad Barve, or " At the
Wood," in the province of Lindsey, wherein marks of the regular life
instituted by him continue to this day.
He had his episcopal see in the place called Lichfield, in which he also
died, and was buried, and where the see of the succeeding bishops of that
province still continues. He had built himself a habitation not far from the
church, wherein he was wont to pray and read with seven or eight of the
brethren, as often as he had any spare time from the labour and ministry of
the word. When he had most gloriously governed the church in that province two
years and a half, the Divine Providence so ordaining, there came round a
season like that of which Ecclesiastes says, "That there is a time to cast
stones, and a time to gather them; " for there happened a mortality sent from
heaven, which, by means of the death of the flesh, translated the stones of
the church from their earthly places to the heavenly building. And when, after
many of the church of that most reverend prelate had been taken out of the
flesh, his hour also drew near wherein he was to pass out of this world to our
Lord, it happened one day that he was in the aforesaid dwelling, with only one
brother, called Owini, his other companions being upon some reasonable
occasion returned to the church. Now Owini was a monk of great merit, having
forsaken the world with the pure intention of obtaining the heavenly reward;
worthy in all respects to have the secrets of our Lord revealed to him, and
worthy to have credit given by his hearers to what he said, for he came with
Queen Etheldrid from the province of the East Angles, and was her prime
minister, and governor of her family As the fervour of his faith
increased, resolving to renounce the world, he did not go about it slothfully,
but so fully forsook the things of this world, that, quitting all he had, clad
in a plain garment, and carrying an axe and hatchet in his hand, he came to
the monastery of that most reverend prelate, called Lestingau; denoting that
he did not go to the monastery to live idle, as some do, but to labour, which
he also confirmed by practice; for as he was less capable of meditating on the
Holy Scriptures, he the more earnestly applied himself to the labour of his
hands. In short, he was received by the bishop into the house aforesaid, and
there entertained with the brethren, and whilst they were engaged within in
reading, he was without, doing such things as were necessary.
One day when he was thus employed abroad, and his companions were gone to
the church, as I began to state, the bishop was alone reading or praying in
the oratory of that place, when on a sudden, as he afterwards said, he beard
the voice of persons singing most sweetly and rejoicing, and appearing to
descend from heaven. Which voice he said he first heard coming from the
southeast, and that afterwards it drew near him, till it came to the roof
of the oratory where the bishop was, and entering therein, filled the same and
all about it. He listened attentively to what he heard, and after about half
an hour, perceived the same song of joy to ascend from the roof of the said
oratory, and to return to heaven the same way it came, with inexpressible
sweetness. When he had stood some time astonished, and seriously revolving in
his mind what it might be, the bishop opened the window of the oratory, and
making a noise with his hand, as he was often wont to do, ordered him to come
in to him. He accordingly went hastily in, and the bishop said to him, "Make
haste to the church, and cause the seven brothers to come hither, and do you
come with them." When they were come, he first admonished them to preserve the
virtue of peace among themselves, and towards all others; and indefatigably to
practise the rules of regular discipline, which they had either been taught by
him, or seen him observe or had noticed in the words or actions of the former
fathers. Then he added, that the day of his death was at hand; for, said he, "that amiable guest, who was wont to visit our brethren, has vouchsafed also to
come to me this day, and to call me out of this world. Return, therefore, to
the church, and speak to the brethren, that they in their prayers recommend my
passage to our Lord, and that they be careful to provide for their own, the
hour whereof is uncertain, by watching, prayer, and good works."
When he had spoken thus much and more, and they, having received his
blessing, had gone away in sorrow, he who had heard the heavenly song returned
alone, and prostrating himself on the ground, said, "I beseech you, father,
may I be permitted to ask a question?" - "Ask what you will," answered the
bishop. Then he added, "I entreat you to tell me what song of joy was that
which I heard coming upon this oratory, and after some time returning to
heaven?" The bishop answered, "If you heard the singing, and know of the
coming of the heavenly company, I command you, in the name of our Lord, that
you do not tell the same to any before my death. They were angelic spirits,
who came to call me to my heavenly reward, which I have always longed after,
and they promised they would return seven days hence, and take me away with
them." Which was accordingly fulfilled, as had been said to him; for being
presently seized with a languishing distemper, and the same daily increasing,
on the seventh day, as had been promised to him, when he had prepared for
death by receiving the body and blood of our Lord, his soul being delivered
from the prison of the body, the angels, as may justly be believed, attending
him, he departed to the joys of heaven.
It is no wonder that he joyfully beheld the day of his death, or rather the
day of our Lord, which he had always carefully expected till it came; for
notwithstanding his many merits of continence, humility, teaching, prayer,
voluntary poverty, and other virtues, he was so full of the fear of God, so
mindful of his last end in all his actions, that, as I was informed by one of
the brothers who instructed me in Divinity, and who had been bred in his
monastery, and under his direction, whose name was Trumhere, if it happened
that there blew a strong gust of wind when he was reading or doing any other
thing, he immediately called upon God for mercy, and begged it might be
extended to all mankind. If the wind grew stronger, he closed his book, and
prostrating himself on the ground, prayed still more earnestly. But, if it
proved a violent storm of wind or rain, or else that the earth and air were
filled with thunder and lightning, he would repair to the church, and devote
himself to prayers and repeating of psalms till the weather became calm. Being
asked by his followers why he did so, he answered, "Have not you read- 'The
Lord also thundered in the heavens, and the Highest gave forth his voice. Yea,
he sent out his arrows and scattered them; and he shot out lightnings, and
discomfited them.' For the Lord moves the air, raises the winds, darts
lightning, and thunders from heaven, to excite the inhabitants of the earth to
fear Him; to put them in mind of the future judgment; to dispel their pride,
and vanquish their boldness, by bringing into their thoughts that dreadful
time, when the heavens and the earth being in a flame, He will come in the
clouds, with great power and majesty, to judge the quick and the dead.
Wherefore," said he, "it behoves us to answer his heavenly admonition with
due fear and love; that, as often as He lifts his hand through the trembling
sky, as it were to strike, but does not yet let it fall, we may immediately
implore his mercy; and searching the recesses of our hearts, and cleansing the
filth of our vices, we may carefully behave ourselves so as never to be
struck."
With this revelation and account of the aforesaid brother, concerning the
death of this prelate, agrees the discourse of the most reverend Father
Egbert, above spoken of, who long led a monastic life with the same Chad, when
both were youths, in Ireland, praying, observing continency, and meditating on
the Holy Scriptures. I But when he afterwards returned into his own country,
the other continued in a strange country for our Lord's sake till the end of
his life. A long time after, Hygbald, a most holy and continent man, who was
an abbat in the province of Lindsey, came out of Britain to visit him, and
whilst these holy men were discoursing of the life of the former fathers, and
rejoicing to imitate the same, mention was made of the most reverend prelate,
Chad, whereupon Egbert said, "I know a man in this island, still in the
flesh, who, when that prelate passed out of this world, saw the soul of his
brother Cedd, with a company of angels, descending from heaven, who, having
taken his soul along with them, returned thither again." Whether he said this
of himself, or some other, we do not certainly know; but the same being said
by so great a man, there can be no doubt of the truth thereof.
Chad died on the 2nd of March, and was first buried by St. Mary's Church,
but afterwards, when the church of the most holy prince of the apostles,
Peter, was built, his bones were translated into it. In both which places, as
a testimony of his virtue, frequent miraculous cures are wont to be wrought.
And of late, a certain distracted person, who had been wandering about
everywhere, arrived there in the evening, unknown or unregarded by the keepers
of the place, and having rested there all the night, went out in his perfect
senses the next morning, to the surprise and delight of all; thus showing that
a cure had been performed on him through the goodness of God. The place of the
sepulchre is a wooden monument, made like a little house, covered, having a
hole in the wall, through which those that go thither for devotion usually put
in their hand and take out some of the dust, which they put into water and
give to sick cattle or men to drink, upon which they are presently eased of
their infirmity, and restored to health. In his place, Theodore ordained
Winfrid, a good and modest man, to preside, as his predecessors had done, over
the bishoprics of the Mercians, the Midland Angles, and the Lindisfarnes, of
all which, Wulfhere, who was still living, was king. Winfrid was one of the
clergy of the prelate he had succeeded, and had for a considerable time filled
the office of deacon under him.
CHAPTER IV
BISHOP COLMAN, HAVING LEFT BRITAIN, BUILT
TWO MONASTERIES IN SCOTLAND; THE OXE FOR THE SCOTS, THE OTHER FOR THE
ENGLISH HE HAD TAKEN ALONG WITH HIM. [A.D. 667]
In the meantime, Colman, the
Scottish bishop, departing from Britain, took
along with him all the Scots he had assembled in the isle of Lindisfarne, and
also about thirty of the English nation, who had been all instructed in the
monastic life; and leaving some brothers in his church, he repaired first to
the isle of Hii (Iona), whence he had been sent to preach the word of God to
the English nation.
Afterwards he retired to a small island, which is to the west of Ireland,
and at some distance from its coast, called in the language of the Scots,
Inisbofinde, the Island of the White Heifer. Arriving there, he built a
monastery, and placed in it the monks he had brought of both nations; who not
agreeing among themselves, by reason that the Scots in the summer season, when
the harvest was to be brought in, leaving the monastery, wandered about
through places with which they were acquainted; but returned again the next
winter, and would have what the English had provided to be in common; Colman
sought to put an end to this dissension, and travelling about far and near, he
found a place in the island of Ireland fit to build a monastery, which, in the
language of the Scots, is called Mageo, and brought a small part of it of the
earl to whom it belonged, to build his monastery thereon; upon condition, that
the monks residing there should pray to our Lord for him who had let them have
the place. Then building a monastery, with the assistance of the earl and all
the neighbours, he placed the English there, leaving the Scots in the
aforesaid island. This monastery is to this day possessed by English
inhabitants; being the same that, grown up from a small beginning to be very
large, is generally called Mageo; and as all things have long since been
brought under a better method, it contains an exemplary society of monks, who
are gathered there from the province of the English, and live by the labour of
their hands, after the example of the venerable fathers, under a rule and a
canonical abbat, in much continency and singleness of life.
CHAPTER V
OF THE DEATH OF THE KINGS OSWY AND EGBERT,
AND OF THE SYNOD HELD AT HERTFORD, IN WHICH ARCHBISHOP THEODORE PRESIDED. [A.D. 670]
IN the year of the incarnation
of our Lord 670, being the second year after
Theodore arrived in England, Oswy, king of the Northumbrians, fell sick, and
died, in the fifty-eighth year of his age. He at that time bore so great
affection to the Roman apostolical institution, that had he recovered of his
sickness, he had designed to go to Rome, and there to end his days at the Holy
Places, having entreated Bishop Wilfrid, by the promise of a considerable
donation in money, to conduct him on his journey. He died on the 15th of
February, leaving his son Egfrid his successor in the kingdom. In the third
year of his reign, Theodore assembled a synod of bishops, and many other
teachers of the church, who loved and were acquainted with the canonical
statutes of the fathers. When they were met together, he began, as became a
prelate, to enjoin the observance of such things as were agreeable to the
unity and the peace of the church. The purport of which synodical proceedings
is as follows-
"In the name of our Lord God and Saviour Jesus Christ, who reigns for
ever and for ever, and governs his church, it was thought meet that we
should assemble, according to the custom of the venerable canons, to treat
about the necessary affairs of the church. We met on the 24th day of
September, the first indiction, at a place called Hertford, myself,
Theodore, the unworthy bishop of the see of Canterbury, appointed by the
Apostolic See, our fellow priest and most reverend brother, Bisi, bishop of
the East Angles; also by his proxies, our brother and fellow priest, Wilfrid
bishop of the nation of the Northumbrians, as also our brothers and fellow
priests, Putta, bishop of the Kentish castle, called Rochester; Eleutherius,
bishop of the West Saxons, and Winfrid, bishop of the province of the
Mercians. When we were all met together, and were sat down in order, I said,
'I beseech you, most dear brothers, for the love and fear of our Redeemer,
that we may all treat in common for our faith; to the end that whatsoever
has been decreed and defined by the holy and reverend fathers, may be
inviolably observed by all.' This and much more I spoke tending to the
preservation of the charity and unity of the church; and when I had ended my
discourse, I asked every one of them in order, whether they consented to
observe the things that had been formerly canonically decreed by the
fathers? To which all our fellow priests answered, 'It so pleases us, and
we will all most willingly observe with a cheerful mind whatever is laid
down in the canons of the holy fathers. ' I then produced the said book of
canons, and publicly showed them ten chapters in the same, which I had
marked in several places, because I knew them to be of the most importance
to us, and entreated that they might be most particularly received by them
all.
"Chapter I. That we all in common keep the holy day of Easter on the
Sunday after the fourteenth moon of the first month.
"II. That no bishop intrude into the diocese of another, but be satisfied
with the government of the people committed to him.
"III. That it shall not be lawful for any bishop to trouble monasteries
dedicated to God, nor to take anything forcibly from them.
"IV. That monks do not remove from one place to another, that is, from
monastery to monastery, unless with the consent of their own abbat; but that
they continue in the obedience which they promised at the time of their
conversion.
"V. That no clergyman, forsaking his own bishop, shall wander about, or
be anywhere entertained without letters of recommendation from his own
prelate. But if he shall be once received, and will not return when invited,
both the receiver, and the person received, be under excommunication.
"VI. That bishops and clergymen, when travelling, shall be content with
the hospitality that is afforded them; and that it be not lawful for them to
exercise any priestly function without leave of the bishop in whose diocese
they are.
"VII. That a synod be assembled twice a year; but in regard that several
causes obstruct the same, it was approved by all. that we should meet on the
1st of August once a year, at the place called Clofeshoch.
"VIII. That no bishop, through ambition, shall set himself before
another; but that they shall all observe the time and order of their
consecration.
"IX. It was generally set forth, that more bishops should be made, as the
number of believers increased; but this matter for the present was passed
over.
"X. Of marriages; that nothing be allowed but lawful wedlock; that none
commit incest; no man quit his true wife, unless, as the gospel teaches, on
account of fornication. And if any man shall put away his own wife, lawfully
joined to him in matrimony, that he take no other, if he wishes to be a good
Christian, but continue as he is, or else be reconciled to his own wife.
"These chapters being thus treated of and defined by all, to the end.
that for the future, no scandal of contention might arise from any of us, or
that things be falsely set forth, it was thought fit that every one of us
should, by subscribing his hand, confirm all the particulars so laid down.
Which definitive judgment of ours, I dictated to be written by Titillus our
notary. Done in the month and indiction aforesaid. Whosoever, therefore,
shall presume in any way to oppose or infringe this decision, confirmed by
our consent, and by the subscription of our hands, according to the decree
of the canons, must take notice, that he is excluded from all sacerdotal
functions, and from our society. May the Divine Grace preserve us in safety,
living in the unity of his holy church."
This synod was held in the year from the incarnation of our Lord 673. In
which year, Egbert, king of Kent, died I in the month of July; his brother
Lothere succeeded him f on the throne, which he had held eleven years and
seven months. Bisi, the bishop of the East Angles, who is said to have been in
the aforesaid synod, was successor to Boniface, before spoken of, a man of
much sanctity and religion; for when Boniface died, after having been bishop
seventeen years, he was by Theodore substituted in his place. Whilst he was
still alive, but hindered by much sickness from administering his episcopal
functions, two bishops, Ecci and Badwin, were elected and consecrated in his
place; from which time to the present, that province has had two
bishops.
CHAPTER VI
WINFRID BEING DEPOSED, SEXWULF WAS PUT INTO
HIS SEE, AND EARCONWALD MADE BISHOP OF THE EAST SAXONS. [A.D. 664] l
NOT long after, Theodore, the
archbishop, taking offence at some
disobedience of Winfrid, bishop of the Mercians, deposed him from his
bishopric when he had been possessed of it but a few years, and in his place
made Sexwulf bishop, who was founder and abbat of the monastery of
Medeshamstead, in the country of the Girvii. Winfrid, thus deposed, returned
to his monastery of Ad Barve, and there ended his life in holy conversation.
He then also appointed Earconwald bishop of the East Saxons, in the city of
London, over whom at that time presided Sebbi and Sighere, of whom mention has
been made above. This Earconwald's life and conversation, as well when he was
bishop as before his advancement to that dignity is reported to have been most
holy, as is even at this time testified by heavenly miracles; for to this day
his horselitter, in which he was wont to be carried when sick, is kept by
his disciples, and continues to cure many of agues and other distempers; and
not only sick persons who are laid in that litter, or close by it, are cured;
but the very chips of it, when carried to the sick, are wont immediately to
restore them to health
This man, before he was made bishop, had built two famous monasteries, the
one for himself, and the other for his sister Ethelberga, and established them
both in regular discipline of the best kind. That for himself was in the
bounty of Surrey, by the river Thames, at a place called Ceortesei, that is,
the Island of Ceorot; that for his sister in the province of the East Saxons,
at the place called Bercingum, wherein she might be a mother and nurse of
devout women. Being put into the government of that monastery, she behaved
herself in all respects as became the sister of such a brother, living herself
regularly, and piously, and orderly, providing for those under her, as was
also manifested by heavenly miracles.
CHAPTER VII
HOW IT WAS INDICATED BY A HEAVENLY LIGHT
WHERE THE BODIES OF THE NUNS SHOULD BE BURIED IN THE MONASTERY OF BARKING.
[A.D. 676]
IN this monastery many
miracles were wrought, which have been committed to
writing by many, from those who knew them, that their memory might be
preserved, and following generations edified; some whereof we have also taken
care to insert in our Ecclesiastical History. When the mortality, which we
have already so often mentioned, ravaging all around, had also seized on that
part of this monastery where the men resided, and they were daily hurried away
to meet their God, the careful mother of the society began often to inquire in
the convent, of the sisters, where they would have their bodies buried, and
where a churchyard should be made when the same pestilence should fall
upon that part of the monastery in which God's female servants were divided
from the men, and they should be snatched away out of this world by the same
destruction. Receiving no certain answer, though she often put the question to
the sisters, she and all of them received a most certain answer from heaven.
For one night, when the morning psalm was ended, and those servants of Christ
were gone out of their oratory to the tombs of the brothers who had departed
this life before them, and were singing the usual praises to our Lord, on a
sudden a light from heaven, like a great sheet, came down upon them all, and
struck them with so much terror, that they, in consternation, left off
singing. But that resplendent light, which seemed to exceed the sun at
noonday, soon after rising from that place, removed to the south side of the
monastery, that is, to the westward of the oratory, and having continued there
some time, and covered those parts in the sight of them all, withdrew itself
up again to heaven, leaving conviction in the minds of all, that the same
light, which was to lead or to receive the souls of those servants of God into
heaven, was intended to show the place in which their bodies were to rest, and
await the day of the resurrection. This light was so great, that one of the
eldest of the brothers, who at the same time was in their oratory with another
younger than himself, related in the morning, that the rays of light which
came in at the crannies of the doors and windows, seemed to exceed the utmost
brightness of daylight itself.
CHAPTER VIII
A LITTLE BOY, DYING IN THE SAME MONASTERY,
CALLED UPON A VIRGIN THAT WAS TO FOLLOW HIM; ANOTHER AT THE POINT OF LEAVING
HER BODY, SAW SOME SMALL PART OF THE FUTURE GLORY. [A.D. 676]
THERE was, in the same
monastery, a boy, not above three years old, called
Esica; who, by reason of his infant age, was bred up among the virgins
dedicated to God, and there to pursue his studies. This child being seized by
the aforesaid pestilence, when he was at the last gasp, called three times
upon one of the virgins consecrated to God, directing his words to her by her
own name, as if she had been present, Eadgith! Eadgith! Eadgith! and thus
ending his temporal life, entered into that which is eternal. The virgin, whom
he called, was immediately seized, where she was, with the same distemper, and
departing this life the same day on which she had been called, followed him I
that called her into the heavenly country.
Likewise, one of those same servants of God, being ill of the same disease,
and reduced to extremity, began on a sudden, about midnight, to cry out to
them that attended her, desiring they would put out the candle that was
lighted there; which, when she had often repeated, and yet no one did it, at
last she said, "I know you think I speak this in a raving fit, but let me
inform you it is not so; for I tell you, that I see this house filled with so
much light, that your candle there seems to me to be dark. " And when still no
one regarded what she said, or returned any answer, she added, "Let that
candle burn as long as you will; but take notice, that it is not my light, for
my light will come to me at the dawn of the day." Then she began to tell, that
a certain man of God, who had died that same year, had appeared to her,
telling her that at the break of day she should depart to the heavenly light.
The truth of which vision was made out by the virgin's dying as soon as the
day appeared.
CHAPTER IX
OF THE SIGNS WHICH WERE SHOWN FROM HEAVEN
WHEN THE MOTHER OF THAT CONGREGATION DEPARTED THIS LIFE. [A.D. 676]
WHEN Ethelberga, the pious
mother of that holy congregation, was about to
be taken out of this world, a wonderful vision appeared to one of the sisters,
called Tortgith; who, having lived many years in that monastery, always
endeavoured, in all humility and sincerity, to serve God, and took care to
assist the same mother in keeping up regular discipline, by instructing and
reproving the younger ones. Now, in order that her virtue might be perfected
in affliction, according to the apostle, she was suddenly seized with a most
grievous distemper, under which, through the good providence of our Redeemer,
she suffered very much for the space of nine years; to the end, that whatever
stain of vice remained amidst her virtues, either through ignorance or
neglect, might all be eradicated by the fire of long tribulation. This person,
going out of her chamber one night, just at the first dawn of the day, plainly
saw as it were a human body, which was brighter than the sun, wrapped up in a
sheet, and lifted up on high, being taken out of the house in which the
sisters used to reside. Then looking earnestly to see what it was that drew up
the glorious body which she beheld, she perceived it was drawn up as it were
by cords brighter than gold, until, entering into the open heavens, it could
no longer be seen by her. Reflecting on this vision, she made no doubt that
some one of the society would soon die, and her soul be lifted up to heaven by
her good works as it were by golden cords, which accordingly happened; for a
few days after, the beloved of God, Ethelberga, mother of that society, was
delivered out of the prison of the flesh; and her life is known to have been
such that no person who knew her ought to question but that the heavenly
kingdom was open to her, when she departed from this world.
There was also, in the same monastery, a certain nun, of noble worldly
origin, and much nobler in the love of the world to come; who had, for many
years, been so disabled in all her body, that she could not move a single
limb. Being informed that the venerable abbess's body was carried into the
church, till it could be buried, she desired l to be carried thither, and to
be bowed down towards it, after the manner of one praying; which being done,
she spoke to her as if she had been living, and entreated her that she would
obtain of the mercy of our compassionate Creator, that she might be delivered
from such great and lasting pains; nor was it long before her prayer was
heard: for being taken out of the flesh twelve days after she exchanged her
temporal afflictions for an eternal reward. Three years after the death of
this lady, the abovementioned servant of Christ, Tortgith, was so far
spent with the distemper before mentioned, that her bones would scarcely hang
together; and, at last, when the time of her dissolution was at hand, she not
only lost the use of her other limbs, but also of her tongue; which having
continued three days and as many nights, she was, on a sudden, relieved by a
spiritual vision, opened her mouth and eyes, and looking up to heaven, began
thus to direct her discourse to the vision which she saw: "Your coming is
very acceptable to me, and you are welcome!" Having so said, she was silent
awhile, as it were, waiting for the answer of the person she saw and spoke to;
then, as if displeased, she said, "I am not pleased with this;" then pausing
awhile, she said again, "If it cannot be today, I beg the delay may not be
long; " and again holding her peace for a short while, she concluded thus: "If it is positively so decreed, and the resolution cannot be altered, I beg
that it may be no longer deferred than this next night." Having so said, and
being asked by those about her to whom she talked, she said, "With my most
dear mother, Ethelberga;" by which they understood, that she was come to
acquaint her that the time of her departure was at hand; for, as she had
desired, after one day and night, she was delivered from the bonds and
infirmity of the flesh, and entered the joys of eternal salvation.
CHAPTER X
A BLIND WOMAN, PRAYING IN THE BURIALPLACE
OF THAT MONASTERY, WAS RESTORED TO HER SIGHT. [A.D. 676]
HILDELITH, a devout servant
of God, succeeded Ethelberga in the office of
abbess, and presided over that monastery many years, till she was of an
extreme old age, with exemplary conduct, in the observance of regular
discipline, and in the care of providing all things for the public use. The
narrowness of the place where the monastery is built led her to think that the
bones of the male and female servants of Christ, which had been there buried,
should be taken up, and translated into the church of the blessed mother of
God, and interred in one place; whoever wishes to read it, may find in the
book from which we have gathered these things, how often a brightness of
heavenly light was seen there, and a fragrancy of wonderful odour smelled, and
what other miracles were wrought.
However, I think it by no means fit to pass over the miraculous cure, which
the same book informs us was wrought in the churchyard of the said
religious house. There lived in that neighbourhood a certain earl, whose wife was seized with a dimness in her eyes, which at length became so bad,
that she could not see the least glimpse of light: having continued some time
in total darkness, on a sudden she bethought herself that she might recover
her lost sight, if she were carried to the monastery of the nuns, and there
pray for the same, at the relics of the saints. Nor did she lose any time in
performing what she had thought of: for being conducted by her maids to the
monastery, which was very near, and professing that she had perfect faith that
she should be there healed, she was led into the burialplace, and having
long prayed there on her knees, she did not fail to be heard, for as she rose
from prayer, before she went out of the place, she received the gift of sight
which she had desired; and whereas she had been led thither by her servants,
she now returned home joyfully without help: as if she had lost her sight to
no other end than that she might make it appear how great light the saints
enjoyed in heaven, and how great was the power of their virtue.
  
|