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Bede: Ecclesiastical History of the English
Nation
CHAPTER XI
POPE BONIFACE ADVISES QUEEN ETHELBERGA TO USE
HER BEST ENDEAVOURS FOR THE SALVATION OF HER CONSORT, KING EDWIN. [A.D. 625.]
THE same pope also wrote to King
Edwin's Consort, Ethelberga, to this effect
THE COPY OF THE LETTER OF THE MOST BLESSED
AND APOSTOLIC BONIFACE, POPE OF
THE CITY OF ROME, TO ETHELBERGA, KING EDWIN'S QUEEN.
"To the illustrious lady
his daughter, Queen Ethelberga, Boniface,
bishop, servant of the servants of God: The goodness of our Redeemer has
with much providence offered the means of salvation to the human race; which
He rescued, by the shedding of his precious blood, from the bonds of captivity
to the Devil; so that making his name known in divers ways to the Gentiles,
they might acknowledge their Creator by embracing the mystery of the Christian
faith, which thing, the mystical purification of your regeneration plainly
shows to have been bestowed upon the mind of your highness by God's bounty.
Our mind, therefore, has been much rejoiced in the benefit of our Lord's
goodness, for that He has vouchsafed, in your conversion, to kindle a spark of
the orthodox religion, by which He might the more easily inflame in his love
the understanding, not only of your glorious consort, but also of all the
nation that is subject to you.
"For we have been informed by those, who came to acquaint us with the
laudable conversion of our illustrious son, King Eadbald, that your highness,
also, having received the wonderful sacrament of the Christian faith,
continually excels in the performance of works pious and acceptable to God.
That you likewise carefully refrain from the worship of idols, and the deceits
of temples and auguries, and having changed your devotion, are so wholly taken
up with the love of your Redeemer, as never to cease lending your assistance
for the propagation of the Christian faith. And our fatherly charity having
earnestly inquired concerning your illustrious husband, we were given to
understand that he still served abominable idols, and would not yield
obedience or give ear to the voice of the preachers. This occasioned us no
small grief, for that part of your body still remained a stranger to the
knowledge of the supreme and undivided Trinity. Whereupon we, in our fatherly
care, did not delay to admonish your Christian highness, exhorting you, that,
with the help of the Divine inspiration, you will not defer to do that which,
both in season and out of season, is required of us; that with the
co-operating power of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, your husband also may
be added to the number of Christians; to the end that you may thereby enjoy
the rights of marriage in the bond of a holy and unblemished union. For it is
written, 'They two shall be in one flesh How can it be said, that there is
unity between you, if he continues a stranger to the brightness of your faith,
by the interposition of dark and detestable error?
"Wherefore, applying yourself continually to prayer, do not cease to beg of
the Divine Mercy the benefit of his illumination; to the end, that those whom
the union of carnal affection has made in a manner but one body, may, after
death, continue in perpetual union, by the bond of faith. Persist, therefore,
illustrious daughter, and to the utmost of your power endeavour to soften the
hardness of his heart by insinuating the Divine precepts; making him sensible
how noble the mystery is which you have received by believing, and how
wonderful is the reward which, by the new birth, you have merited to obtain.
Inflame the coldness of his heart by the knowledge of the Holy Ghost, that by
the abolition of the cold and pernicious worship of paganism, the heat of
Divine faith may enlighten his understanding through your frequent
exhortations; that the testimony of the holy Scripture may appear the more
conspicuous, fulfilled by you, 'The unbelieving husband shall be saved by the
believing wife.' For to this effect you have obtained the mercy of our Lord's
goodness. that you may return with increase the fruit of faith, and the
benefits entrusted in your hands; for through the assistance of his mercy we
do not cease with frequent prayers to beg that you may be able to perform the
same.
"Having premised thus much, in pursuance of the duty of our fatherly
affection, we exhort you, that when the opportunity of a bearer shall offer,
you will as soon as possible acquaint us with the success which the Divine
Power shall grant by your means in the conversion of your consort, and of the
nation subject to you; to the end, that our solicitude, which earnestly
expects what appertains to the salvation of you and yours, may, by hearing
from you, be set at rest; and that we, discerning more fully the brightness of
the Divine propitiation diffused in you, may with a joyful confession
abundantly return due thank to God, the Giver of all good things, and to St.
Peter the prince of apostles. We have, moreover, sent you the blessing of your
protector, St. Peter, the prince of the apostles, that is, a silver
looking-glass, and a gilt ivory comb, which we entreat your glory will receive
with the same kind affection as it is known to be sent by us."
CHAPTER XII
KING EDWIN IS PERSUADED TO BELIEVE BY A
VISION WHICH HE HAD SEEN WHEN HE WAS IN EXILE. [BEFORE A.D. 625.]
THUS the aforesaid Pope Boniface
wrote for the salvation of King Edwin and
his nation. But a heavenly vision, which the Divine Mercy was pleased once to
reveal to this king, when he was in banishment at the court of Redwald, king
of the Angles, was of no little use in urging him to embrace and understand
the doctrines of salvation. Paulinus, therefore, perceiving that it was a very
difficult task to incline the king's lofty mind to the humility of the way of
salvation, and to embrace the mystery of the cross of life, and at the same
time using both exhortation with men, and prayer to God, for his and his
subjects' salvation; at length, as we may suppose, it was shown him in spirit
what was the vision that had been formerly revealed to the king. Nor did he
lose any time, but immediately admonished the king to perform the vow which he
made, when he received the oracle, promising to put the same in execution, if
he was delivered from the trouble he was at that time under, and should be
advanced to the throne.
The vision was this. When Ethelfrid, his predecessor, was persecuting him,
he for many years wandered in a private manner through several places and
kingdoms, and at last came to Redwald, beseeching him to give him protection
against the snares of his powerful persecutor. Redwald willingly admitted him,
and promised to perform what he requested. But when Ethelfrid understood that
he had appeared in that province, and that he and his companions were
hospitably entertained by Redwald, he sent messengers to offer that king a
great sum of money to murder him, but without effect. He sent a second and a
third time, bidding more and more each time, and threatening to make war on
him if he refused. Redwald, either terrified by his threats, or gained by his
gifts, complied with his request, and promised either to kill Edwin, or to
deliver him up to the ambassadors. This being observed by a trusty friend of
his, he went into his chamber, where he was going to bed, for it was the first
hour of the night; and calling him out, discovered what the king had promised
to do with him, adding, "If, therefore, you for you good will, yet I cannot do
what you propose, province, and lead you to a place where neither Redwald nor
Ethelfrid shall ever find you." He answered, "I thank you think fit, I will
this very hour conduct you out of this or be guilty of breaking the compact I
have made with so great a king, when he has done me no harm, nor offered me
any injury; but, on the contrary, if I must die, let it rather be by his hand
than by that of any meaner person. For whither shall I now fly, when I have
for so many years been a vagabond through all the provinces of Britain, to
escape the hands of my enemies?" His friend being gone, Edwin remained alone
without, and sitting with a heavy heart before the palace, began to be
overwhelmed with many thoughts, not knowing what to do, or which way to turn
himself.
When he had remained a long time in silence, brooding over his misfortunes
in anguish of mind, he, on a sudden, in the dead of night, saw approaching a
person, whose face and habit were equally strange, at which unexpected sight
he was not a little frightened. The stranger coming close up, saluted him, and
asked him, "Why he sat there alone and melancholy on a stone at that time,
when all others were taking their rest, and were fast asleep?" Edwin, in his
turn, asked, "What it was to him, whether he spent the night within doors or
abroad?" The stranger, in reply, said, "Do not think that I am ignorant of the
cause of your grief, your watching, and sitting alone without. For I know who
you are, and why you grieve, and the evils which you fear will fall upon you.
But tell me, what reward you will give the man that shall deliver you out of
this anguish, and persuade Redwald neither to do you any harm himself, nor to
deliver you up to be murdered by your enemies. Edwin replied, "That he would
give that person all that he was able for so singular a favour." The other
further added, "What if I also assure you, that you shall overcome your
enemies, and surpass in power, not Only all your own progenitors, but even all
that have reigned before you over the English nation?" Edwin, encouraged by
these questions, did not hesitate to promise that he would make a suitable
return to him who should so highly oblige him. Then said the other, "But if he
who foretells so much good as is to befall you, can also give you better
advice for your life and salvation than any of your progenitors or kindred
ever heard of, do you consent to submit to him, and to follow his wholesome
counsel?" Edwin did not hesitate to promise that he would in all things follow
the directions of that man who should deliver him from so many calamities, and
raise him to a throne.
Having received this answer, the person that talked to him laid his hand on
his head saying, "When this sign shall he given you, remember this present
discourse that has passed between us, and do not delay the performance of what
you now promise." Having uttered these words, he is said to have immediately
vanished, that the king might understand it was not a man, but a spirit, that
had appeared to him.
Whilst the royal youth still sat there alone, glad of the comfort he had
received, but seriously considering who he was, or whence he came, that had so
talked to him, his above-mentioned friend came to him, and saluting him with a
pleasant countenance, "Rise," said he, "go in and compose yourself to sleep
without fear; for the king's resolution is altered, and he designs to do you
no harm, but rather to perform the promise which he made you; fr when he had
privately acquainted the queen with his intention of doing what I told you
before, she dissuaded him from it, declaring it was unworthy of so great a
king to sell his good friend in such distress for gold, and to sacrifice his
honour, which is more valuable than all other ornaments, for the lucre of
money." In short, the king did as he was advised, and not only refused to
deliver up the banished man to his enemy's messengers, but assisted him to
recover his kingdom. For as soon as the ambassadors were returned home, he
raised a mighty army to make war on Ethelfrid; who, meeting him with much
inferior forces (for Redwald had not given him time to gather all his power),
was slain on the borders of the kingdom of Mercia, on the east side of the
river that is called Idle. In this battle, Redwald's son, called Regnhere, was
killed; and thus Edwin, pursuant to the oracle he had received, not only
escaped the danger from the king his enemy, but, by his death, succeeded him
in the throne.
King Edwin, therefore, delaying to receive the word of God at the preaching
of Paulinus, and using for some time, as has been said, to sit several hours
alone, and seriously to ponder with himself what he was to do, and what
religion he was to follow, the man of God came to him, laid his right hand on
his head, and asked, "Whether he knew that sign?" The king in a trembling
condition, was ready to fall down at his feet, but he raised him up, and in a
familiar manner said to him, "Behold, by the help of God you have escaped the
hands of the enemies whom you feared. Behold you have of his gift obtained the
kingdom which you desired. Take heed not to delay that which you promised to
perform; embrace the faith, and keep the precepts of Him who, delivering you
from temporal adversity, has raised you to the honour of a temporal kingdom;
and if, from this time forward, you shall be obedient to his will, which
through me He signifies to you, He will not only deliver you from the
everlasting torments of the wicked, but also make you partaker with Him of his
eternal kingdom in heaven."
CHAPTER XIII
OF THE COUNCIL HE HELD WITH HIS CHIEF MEN
ABOUT EMBRACING THE FAITH OF
CHRIST, AND HOW THE HIGH PRIEST PROFANED HIS OWN ALTARS. [A.D. 627.]
THE king, hearing these words,
answered, that he was both willing and bound
to receive the faith which he taught; but that he would confer about it with
his principal friends and counsellers, to the end that if they also were of
his opinion, they might all. together be cleansed in Christ the Fountain of
Life. Paulinus consenting, the king did as he said; for, holding a council
with the wise men, he asked of every one in particular what he thought of the
new doctrine, and the new worship that was preached? To which the chief of.
his own priests, Coifi, immediately answered, "O king, consider what this is
which is now preached to us; for I verily declare to you, that the religion
which we have hitherto professed has, as far as I can learn, no virtue in it.
For none of your people has applied himself more diligently to the worship of
our gods than I; and yet there are many who receive greater favours from you,
and are more preferred than I, and are more prosperous in all their
undertakings. Now if the gods were good for any thing, they would rather
forward me, who have been more careful to serve them. It remains, therefore,
that if upon examination you find those new doctrines, which are now preached
to us, better and more efficacious, we immediately receive them without any
delay."
Another of the king's chief men, approving of his words and exhortations,
presently added: "The present life of man, O king, seems to me, in comparison
of that time which is unknown to us, like to the swift flight of a sparrow
through the room wherein you sit at supper in winter, with your commanders and
ministers, and a good fire in the midst, whilst the storms of rain and snow
prevail abroad; the sparrow, I say, flying in at one door, and immediately out
at another, whilst he. is within, is safe from the wintry storm; but after a
short space of fair weather, he immediately vanishes out of your sight, into
the dark winter from which he had emerged. So this life of man appears for a
short space, but of what went before, or what is to follow, we are utterly
ignorant. If, therefore, this new doctrine contains something more certain, it
seems justly to deserve to be followed." The other elders and king's
councillors, by Divine inspiration, spoke to the same effect.
But Coifi added, that he wished more attentively to bear Paulinus discourse
concerning the God whom he preached; which he having by the king's command
performed, Coifi, hearing his words, cried out, "I have long since been
sensible that there was nothing in that which we worshipped; because the more
diligently I sought after truth in that worship, the less I found it. But now
I freely confess, that such truth evidently appears in this preaching as can
confer on us the gifts of life, of salvation, and of eternal happiness. For
which reason I advise, O king, that we instantly abjure and set fire to those
temples and altars which we have consecrated without reaping any benefit from
them." In short, the king publicly gave his licence to Paulinus to preach the
Gospel, and renouncing idolatry, declared that he received the faith of
Christ: and then he inquired of the high priest who should first profane the
altars and temples of their idols, with the enclosures that were about them,
he answered, "I; for who can more properly than myself destroy those things
which I worshipped through ignorance, for an example to all others, through
the wisdom which has been given me by the true God?" Then immediately, in
contempt of his former superstitions, he desired the king to furnish him with
arms and a stallion; and mounting the same, he set out to destroy the idols;
for it was not lawful before for the high priest either to carry arms, or to
ride on any but a mare. Having, therefore, girt a sword about him, with a
spear in his hand, he mounted the king's stallion and proceeded to the idols.
The multitude, beholding it, concluded he was distracted; but he lost no time,
for as soon as he drew near the temple he profaned the same, casting into it
the spear which he held; and rejoicing in the knowledge of the worship of the
true God, he commanded his companions to destroy the temple, with all its
enclosures, by fire. This place where the idols were is still shown, not far
from York, to the eastward, beyond the river Derwent, and is now called
Godmundinghan, where the high priest, by the inspiration of the true God,
profaned and destroyed the altars which he had himself consecrated.
CHAPTER XIV
KING EDWIN AND HIS NATION BECOME CHRISTIANS;
PAULINUS BAPTIZES THEM. [A.D. 627.]
KING EDWIN, therefore, with
all the nobility of the nation, and a large
number of the common sort, received the faith, and the washing of
regeneration, in the eleventh year of his reign, which is the year of the
incarnation of our Lord 627, and about one hundred and eighty after the coming
of the English into Britain. He was baptized at York, on the holy day of
Easter, being the 12th of April, in the church of St. Peter the Apostle, which
he himself had built of timber, whilst he was catechising and instructing In
order to receive baptism. In that city also he appointed the see of the
bishopric of his instructor and bishop, Paulinus. But as soon as he was
baptized, he took care, by the direction of the same Paulinus, to build in the
same place a larger and nobler church of stone, in the midst whereof that same
oratory which he had first erected should be enclosed. Having therefore laid
the foundation, he began to build the church square, encompassing the former
oratory. But before the whole was raised to the proper height, the wicked
assassination of the king left that work to be finished by Oswald his
sucessor. Paulinus, for the space of six years from that time, that is, till
the end of the reign of that king, by his consent and favour, preached the
word of God in that Country, and all that were preordained to eternal life
believed and were baptized. Among whom were Osfrid and Eadfrid, King Edwin's
sons, who were both born to him, whilst he was in banishment, of Quenberga,
the daughter of Ceari, king of the Mercians.
Afterwards other children of his by Queen Ethelberga were baptized, viz.
Ethelhun and his daughter Etheidrith, and another, Wuscfrea, a son; the first
two of which were snatched out of this life whilst they were still in their
white garments, and buried in the church at York. Ifli, the son of Osfrid, was
also baptized, and many more noble and illustrious persons. So great was then
the fervour of the faith, as is reported, and the desire of the washing of
salvation among the nation of the Northumbrians, that Paulinus at a certain
time coming with the king and queen the royal country-seat, which is called
Adgefrin, stayed there with them thirty-six days, fully occupied in
catechising and baptizing; during which days, from morning till night, he did
nothing else but instruct the people resorting from all villages and places,
in Christ's saving word; and when instructed, he washed them with the water of
absolution in the river Glen, which is close by. This town, under the
following kings, was abandoned, and another was built instead of it, at the
place called Melmin.
These things happened in the province of the Bernicians; but in that of the
Deiri also, where he was wont often to be with the king, he baptized in the
river Swale, which runs by the village of Cataract; for as yet oratories, or
fonts, could not be made in the early infancy of the church in those parts.
But he built a church in Campodonum, which afterwards the pagans, by whom King
Edwin was slain, burnt, together with all the town. In the place of which the
later kings built themselves a country-seat in the Country called Loidis. But
the altar, being of stone, escaped the fire and is still preserved in the
monastery of the most reverend abbat and priest, Thridwulf, which is in
Elsiete wood.
CHAPTER XV
THE PROVINCE OF THE EAST ANGLES RECEIVES
THE FAITH OF CHRIST. [A.D. 627.]
EDWIN was so zealous for the
worship of truth, that he likewise persuaded
Eorpwald, king of the East Saxons, and son of Redwald, to abandon his
idolatrous superstitions, and with his whole province to receive the faith and
sacraments of Christ. And indeed his father Redwald had long before been
admitted to the sacrament of the Christian faith in Kent, but in vain; for on
his return home, he was seduced by his wife and certain perverse teachers, and
turned back from the sincerity of the faith; and thus his latter state was
worse than the former; so that, like the ancient Samaritans, he seemed at the
same time to serve Christ and the gods whom he had served before; and in the
same temple he had an altar to sacrifice to Christ, and another small one to
offer victims to devils; which temple, Aldwulf, king of that same province,
who lived in our time testifies had stood until his time, and that he had seen
it when he was a boy. The aforesaid King Redwald was noble by birth, though
ignoble in his actions, being the son of Tytilus, whose father was Uuffa, from
whom the kings of the East Angles are called Uuffings.
Eorpwald was, not long after he had embraced the Christian faith, slain by
one Richbert, a pagan; and from the time the province was under error for
three years, till the crown came into the possession of Sigebert, brother to
the same Eorpwald, a most Christian and learned man, who was banished, and
went to live in France during his brother's life, and was there admitted to
the sacraments of the faith, whereof he made it his business to cause all his
province to partake as soon as he came to the throne. His exertions were much
promoted by the Bishop Felix, who coming to Honorius, the archbishop, from
Burgundy, where he had been born and ordained, and having told him what he
desired, he sent him to preach the word of life to the aforesaid nation of the
Angles. Nor were his good wishes in vain; for the pious husbandman reaped
therein a large harvest of believers, delivering all that province (according
to the signification of his name, Felix) from long iniquity and infelicity,
and bringing it to the faith and works of righteousness, and the gifts of
everlasting happiness. He had the see of his bishopric appointed him in the
city Dommoc, and having presided over the same province with pontifical
authority seventeen years, he ended his days there in peace.
CHAPTER XVI
HOW PAULINUS PREACHED IN THE PROVINCE OF
LINDSEY; AND OF THE REIGN OF EDWIN. [A.D. 628.]
PAULINUS also preached the word
to the province of Lindsey, which is the
first on the south side of the river Humber, stretching out as far as the sea;
and he first converted the governor of the city of Lincoln, whose name was
Blecca, with his whole family. He likewise built, in that city, a stone church
of beautiful workmanship; the roof of which having either fallen through age,
or been thrown down by enemies, the walls are still to be seen standing, and
every year some miraculous cures are wrought in that place, for the benefit of
those who have faith to seek the same. In that church, Justus having departed
to Christ, Paulinus consecrated Honorius bishop in his stead, as will be
hereafter mentioned in its proper place. A certain abbat and priest of the
monastery of Peartaneu, a man of singular veracity, whose name was Deda, in
relation to the faith of this province told me that one of the oldest persons
had informed him, that he himself had been baptized at noon-day, by the Bishop
Paulinus, in the presence of King Edwin, with a great number of the people, in
the river Trent, near the city, which in the English tongue is called
Tiovulfingacestir; and he was also wont to describe the person of the same
Paulinus, that he was tall of stature, a little stooping, his hair black, his
visage meagre, his nose slender and aquiline, his aspect both venerable and
majestic. He had also with him in the ministry, James, the deacon, a man of
zeal and great fame in Christ's church, who lived even to our days.
It is reported that there was then such perfect peace in Britain,
wheresoever the dominion of King Edwin extended, that, as is still
proverbially said, a woman with her newborn babe might walk throughout the
island, from sea to sea, without receiving any harm. That king took such care
for the good of his nation, that in several places where he had seen clear
springs near the highways he caused stakes to be fixed, with brass dishes
hanging at them, for the conveniency of travellers; nor durst any man touch
them for any other purpose than that for which they were designed, either
through the dread they had of the king, or for the affection which they bore
him. His dignity was so great throughout his dominions, that his banners were
not only borne before him in battle, but even in time of peace, when he rode
about his cities, towns, or provinces, with his officers, the standard-bearer
was wont to go before him. Also, when he walked along the streets, that sort
of banner which the Romans call Tufa, and the English, Tuuf, was in like
manner borne before him.
CHAPTER XVII
EDWIN RECEIVES LETTERS OF EXHORTATION FROM
POPE HONORIUS, WHO ALSO SENDS PAULINUS THE PALL. [A.D. 634]
AT that time Honorius, successor
to Boniface, was prelate of the apostolic
see, who, when he understood that the nation of the Northumbrians, with their
king, had been, the preaching of Paulinus, converted to the faith and
confession of Christ, sent the pall to the said Paulinus, and with it letters
of exhortation to King Edwin, exciting him, with fatherly charity, that his
people should persist in the faith of truth, which they had received. The
contents of which letter were as follow-
"To his most noble son, and excellent lord, Edwin king of the Angles,
Bishop Honorius, servant of the servants of God, greeting: The integrity
of your Christian character, in the worship of your Creator, is so much
inflamed with the fire of faith, that it shines out far and near, and, being
reported throughout the world, brings forth plentiful fruit of your labours.
For your conduct as a king is based upon the knowledge which by orthodox
preaching you have obtained of your God and Creator, whereby you believe and
worship Him, and as far as man is able, pay Him the sincere devotion of your
mind. For what else are we able to offer to our God, but in endeavouring to
worship, and to pay Him our vows, persisting in good actions, and confessing
Him the Creator of mankind? And, therefore, most excellent son, we exhort you
with such fatherly charity as is requisite, that you with careful mind, and
constant prayers, every way labour to preserve this gift, that the Divine
Mercy has vouchsafed to call you to his grace; to the end, that He, who has
been pleased to deliver you from all errors, and bring you to the knowledge of
his name, may likewise prepare you mansions in the heavenly country. Employing
yourselves, therefore, in reading the works of my Lord Gregory, your preacher,
of apostolical memory, represent before yourself the tenderness of his
doctrine, which he zealously employed for the sake of your souls; that his
prayers may increase your kingdom and people, and present you blameless before
Almighty God. We are preparing with a willing mind immediately to grant those
things which you hoped would be by us ordained for your priests, which we do
on account of the sincerity of your faith, which has been often made known to
us in terms of praise by the bearers of these presents. We have sent two palls
to the two metropolitans, Honorius and Paulinus; to the intent, that when
either of them shall be called out of this world to his creator, the other
may, by this authority of ours, substitute another bishop in his place; which
privilege we are induced to grant, as well in regard to your charitable
affection, as of the large and extensive provinces which lie between us and
you; that we may in all things afford our concurrence to your devotion,
according to your desires. May God's grace preserve your excellency in
safety!
CHAPTER XVIII
HONORIUS, WHO SUCCEEDED JUSTUS IN THE
BISHOPRIC OF CANTERBURY, RECEIVES THE
PALL AND LETTERS FROM POPE HONORIUS. [A.D. 634.]
IN the meantime, Archbishop
Justus was taken up to the heavenly kingdom, on
the 10th of November, and Honorius, who was elected to the see in his stead,
came to Paulinus to be ordained, and meeting him at Lincoln was there
consecrated the fifth prelate of the Church of Canterbury from Augustine. To
him also the aforesaid Pope Honorius sent the pall, and a letter, wherein he
ordains the same that he had before established in his epistle to King Edwin,
viz. that when either of the bishops of Canterbury or of York shall depart
this life, the survivor of the same degree shall have power to ordain a priest
in the room of him that is departed; that it might not be necessary always to
travel to Rome, at so great a distance by sea and land, to ordain an
archbishop. Which letter we have also thought fit to insert in this our
history-
"Hononus to his most beloved brother Honorius: Among the many good
gifts which the mercy of our Redeemer is pleased to bestow on his servants,
the munificent bounty of love is never more conspicuous than when He permits
us by brotherly intercourse, as it were face to face, to exhibit our mutual
love. For which gift we continually return thanks to his majesty; and we
humbly beseech Him, that He will ever confirm your piety in preaching the
Gospel, and bringing forth fruit, and following the rule of your master and
head, his holy servant, St. Gregory; and that, for the advancement of his
church, He may by your means add further increase; to the end, that the souls
already won by you and your predecessors, beginning with our Lord Gregory, may
grow strong and be further extended by faith and works in the fear of God and
charity; that so the promises of the word of God may hereafter be brought to
pass in you; and that this voice may call you away to the everlasting
happiness. 'Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will
give you rest.' And again, 'Well done, thou good and faithful servant; thou
hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things;
enter thou into the joy of thy Lord.' And we, most beloved brothers, offering
you these words of exhortation, out of our abundant charity, do not hesitate
further to grant those things which we perceive may be suitable for the
privileges of your churches.
"Wherefore, pursuant to your request, and to that of the kings our sons, we
do by these presents, in the name of St. Peter, prince of the apostles, grant
you authority, that when the Divine Grace shall call either of you to Himself,
the survivor shall ordain a bishop in the room of him that is deceased. To
which effect also we have sent a pall to each of you, for celebrating the said
ordination; that by the authority of our precept, you may make an ordination
acceptable to God; because the long distance of sea and land that lies between
us and you, has obliged us to grant you this, that no loss may happen to your
church in any way, on account of any pretence whatever, but that the devotion
of the people committed to you may be more fully extended. God preserve you in
safety, most dear brother! Given the 11th day of June, in the twenty- fourth
year of the reign of our most pious emperor, Heraclius, and the twenty-third
after his consulship; and in the twenty-third of his son Constantine, and the
third after his consulship; and in the third year of the most illustrious
Caesar, his son Heraclius, the seventh indiction; that is, in the year of the
incarnation of our Lord, 634."
CHAPTER XIX
HOW THE AFORESAID HONORIUS FIRST, AND
AFTERWARDS JOHN, WROTE LETTERS TO THE NATION OF THE SCOTS, CONCERNING THE
OBSERVANCE OF EASTER, AND THE PELAGIAN HERESY. [A.D. 634.]
THE same Pope Honorius also
wrote to the Scots [Irish], whom he had found
to err in the observance of Easter, as has been shown above, earnestly
exhorting them not to think their small number, placed in the utmost borders
of the earth, wiser than all the ancient and modern churches of Christ,
throughout the world; and not to celebrate a different Easter, contrary to the
Paschal calculation, and the synodical decrees of all the bishops upon earth.
Likewise John, who succeeded Severinus, successor to the same Honorius, being
yet but pope elect, sent to them letters of great authority and erudition for
correcting the same error; evidently showing, that Easter Sunday is to be
found between the fifteenth moon and the twenty-first, as was proved in the
Council of Nice. He also in the same epistle admonished them to be careful to
crush the Pelagian heresy, which he had been informed was reviving among them.
The beginning of the epistle was as follows-
"To our most beloved and most holy Tomianus, Columbanus, Cromanus,
Dimanus, and Baithanus, bishops; to Cromanus, Hernianus, Laistranus,
Scellanus, and Segenus priests; to Saranus and the rest of the Scottish
doctors, or abbats, health from Hilarius, the arch-priest, and keeper of the
place of the holy Apostolic See; John, the deacon, and elect in the name of
God; from John, the chief secretary and keeper of the place of the holy
Apostolic See, and from John, the servant of God, and counsellor of the same
Apostolic See. The writings which were brought by the bearers to Pope
Severinus, of holy memory, were left, at his death, without an answer to the
things contained in them. Lest such intricate questions should remain
unresolved, we opened the same, and found that some of your province,
endeavouring to revive a new heresy out of an old one, contrary to the
orthodox faith, do through ignorance reject our Easter, when Christ was
sacrificed; and contend that the same should be kept on the fourteenth moon
with the Hebrews."
By this beginning of the epistle it evidently appears that this heresy
sprang up among them of very late times, and that not all their nation, but
only some of them, had fallen into the same.
After having laid down the manner of keeping Easter, they add this
concerning the Pelagians in the same epistle.
"And we have also understood that the poison of the Pelagian heresy again
springs up among you; we, therefore, exhort you, that you put away from your
thoughts all such venomous and superstitious wickedness. For you cannot be
ignorant how that execrable heresy has been condemned; for it has not only
been abolished these two hundred years, but it is also daily anathematised for
ever by us; and we exhort you, now that the weapons of their controversy have
been burnt, not to rake up the ashes. For who will not detest that insolent
and impious proposition, 'That man can live without sin of his own free will,
and not through God's grace? And in the first place, it is the folly of
blasphemy to say that man is without sin, which none can be, but only the
Mediator of God and man, the man Christ Jesus, who was conceived and born
without sin; for all other men, being born in original sin, are known to bear
the mark of Adam's prevarication, even whilst they are without actual sin,
according to the saying of the prophet, 'For behold, I was shapen in iniquity;
and in sin did my mother conceive me.
CHAPTER XX
EDWIN BEING SLAIN, PAULINUS RETURNS INTO
KENT, AND HAS THE BISHOPRIC OF
ROCHESTER CONFERRED UPON HIM. [A.D. 633.]
EDWIN reigned most gloriously
seventeen years over the nations of the
English and the Britons, six whereof, as has been said, he also was a servant
in the kingdom of Christ. Cadwalla; king of the Britons, rebelled against him,
being supported by Penda, a most warlike man of the royal race of the
Mercians, and who from that time governed that nation twenty-two years with
various success. A great battle being fought in the plain that is called
Heathfield, Edwin was killed on the 12th of October, in the year of our Lord
633, being then forty-seven years of age, and all his army was either slain or
dispersed. In the same war also, before him, fell Osfrid, one of his sons, a
warlike youth; Eanfrid, another of them, compelled by necessity, went over to
King Penda, and was by him afterwards, in the reign of Oswald, slain, contrary
to his oath. At this time a great slaughter was made in the church or nation
of the Northumbrians; and the more so because one of the commanders, by whom
it was made, was a pagan, and the other a barbarian, more cruel than a pagan;
for Penda, with all the nation of the Mercians, was an idolater, and a
stranger to the name of Christ; but Cadwalla, though he bore the name and
professed himself a Christian, was so barbarous in his disposition and
behaviour, that he neither spared the female sex, nor the innocent age of
children, but with savage cruelty put them to tormenting deaths, ravaging all
their country for a long time, and resolving to cut off all the race of the
English within the borders of Britain. Nor did he pay any respect to the
Christian religion which had newly taken root among them; it being to this day
the custom of the Britons not to pay any respect to the faith and religion of
the English, nor to correspond with them any more than with pagans. King
Edwin's head was brought to York, and afterwards into the church of St. Peter
the Apostle, which he had begun, but which his successor Oswald finished, as
has been said before. It was deposited in the porch of St. Gregory, Pope, from
whose disciples he had received the word of life.
The affairs of the Northumbrians being in confusion, by reason of this
disaster, without any prospect of safety except in flight, Paulinus, taking
with him Queen Ethelberga, whom he had before brought thither, returned into
Kent by sea, and was honourably received by the Archbishop Honorius and King
Eadbald. He came thither under the conduct of Bassus, a most valiant soldier
of King Edwin, having with him Eanfleda, the daughter; and Wuscfrea, the son
of Edwin, as also Iffi, the son of Osfrid, his son, whom afterwards the
mother, for fear of Eadbald and Oswald, sent over into France to be bred up by
King Dagobert, who was her friend; and there they both died in infancy, and
were buried in the church with the honour due to royal children and to
innocents of Christ. He also brought with him many rich goods of King Edwin,
among which were a large gold cross, and a golden chalice, dedicated to the
use of the altar, which are still preserved, and shown in the church of
Canterbury.
At that time the church of Rochester had no bishop, for Romanus, the
prelate thereof, being sent to Pope Honorius, by Archbishop Justus, as his
legate, was drowned in the Italian Sea; and thereupon Paulinus, at the request
of Archbishop Honorius, and King Eadbald, took upon him the charge of the
same, and held it until he departed to heaven, with the glorious fruits of his
labours; and, dying in that church, he left there the pall which he had
received from the pope of Rome. He had left behind him in his church at York,
James, the deacon, a holy ecclesiastic, who continuing long after in that
church, by teaching and baptizing, rescued much prey from the power of the old
enemy of mankind; from whom the village, where he mostly resided, near
Cataract, has its name to this day. He was extraordinarily skillful in
singing, and when the province was afterwards restored to peace, and the
number of the faithful increased, he began to teach many of the church to
sing, according to the custom of the Romans, or of the Cantuarians. And being
old and full of days, as the Scripture says, he went the way of his
forefathers.
  
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