Kia Ora Everyone
Feast Day celebrations helped lift spirits as the middle of the term approaches.
The community continues to be challenged with sickness in general, and there are many boys and staff succumbing to illness, the flu being the major contributor to those absences.
In preparation for the mass, we had year level singing practices where I took the opportunity to tell the boys a bit about the life of St Bede. Our College was founded in 1911, was so named, some 20 years after Bede was proclaimed a saint. St Bede lived from 673-735 AD. In 1911, when our College was founded, the city of Christchurch was still very much influenced by its English forbears and Anglican strongholds, and the Catholic Bishop of the time, Bishop Grimes who also was an Englishman, probably had this in mind when he came to name our College.
St Bede lived in two monasteries in the North of England, Jarrow and Wearmouth, and his remains lie in Durham Cathedral. Bede was a man of faith, a man of learning, but also one who had to endure many hardships, the worst being when the bubonic plague ravished northern England and the community at Jarrow when he was a tender age. Bede lost 127 of his confreres, and was one of only 3 to survive the plague!!
Monasteries were places of learning. Bede's account of the history of England was a most significant work that he wrote. He also is well known for his translation of the bible, the completion of which was made very near to his death. The account of that is documented in the readings of this feast day, which follow for your interest.
Cuthbert's narration of the death of Bede
"I desire to see Christ"
On the Tuesday before Ascension, Bede began to suffer greater difficulties in breathing and his feet began to swell slightly. Nevertheless, he continued to teach us and dictate all day, and made jokes about his illness: “Learn quickly,” he would say, “because I don’t know how long I’ll last: my Creator may take me very soon.” But it seemed to us that he was perfectly conscious of his approaching end.
He spent all night in giving thanks to God. As dawn broke on the Wednesday, he ordered us to finish writing what we had started, and we did this until the third hour [mid-morning]. Afterwards we carried the relics of the saints in solemn procession, as it was the custom to do on that day. One of us stayed with him, and asked him: “Dear master, the book is almost complete, there is one chapter left to go – would it be difficult for you if I asked you to do more dictation?” “No,” Bede replied, “it is easy. Take your pen and ink, and write quickly” – which he did.
At the ninth hour [mid-afternoon] he said to me “I have a few precious things in my cell: some pepper, some napkins, and some incense. Run quickly and call the priests of the monastery to me, so that I can give to them the few little gifts that God gave me.” When they came he spoke to them in turn, giving advice to each one and begging him to say a Mass and pray for him; which they all willingly promised to do.
They were grief-stricken and wept, especially because he had said that he thought they would not see his face much more in this world. But at the same time, it made them glad when he said “It is time – if it is my Maker’s will – to return to him who made me, who shaped me out of nothing and gave me existence. I have lived a long time, and the righteous judge has provided well for me all my life: now the time of my departure is at hand, for I long to dissolve and be with Christ; indeed, my soul longs to see Christ its king in all his beauty.” This is just one saying of his: he said many other things too, to our great benefit – and thus he spent his last day in gladness until the evening.
Then Wilbert (the boy who asked him for dictation) asked him again: “Dear master, there is still one sentence left to write.” “Write it quickly,” he answered. A little later the boy said “now it is completed,” and Bede replied “you have spoken truly, it is finished. Hold up my head, because I love to sit facing my holy place, the place where I used to pray, and as I sit I can call upon my Father.”
And so, on the floor of his cell, he sat and sang “Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit”; and as he named the Spirit, the Breath of God, he breathed the last breath from his own body. With all the labour that he had given to the praise of God, there can be no doubt that he went into the joys of heaven that he had always longed for.
Until next week.
J.G Boyle