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A34964 The church-history of Brittany from the beginning of Christianity to the Norman conquest under Roman governours, Brittish kings, the English-Saxon heptarchy, the English-Saxon (and Danish) monarchy ... : from all which is evidently demonstrated that the present Roman Catholick religion hath from the beginning, without interruption or change been professed in this our island, &c. / by R.F., S. Cressy of the Holy Order of S. Benedict. Cressy, Serenus, 1605-1674. 1668 (1668) Wing C6890; ESTC R171595 1,241,234 706

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the year of Grace seaven hundred and seaventeen and dyed in the year seaven hundred forty three XIV CHAP. 1.2 S Boniface falsely calumniated to Duke Pipin 3.4 c. His Letter to the Pope and Ans●er 6. A●stedius his malicious mistake 1. IN the mean time Saint Boniface his patience is exercised for his good for he found adversaryes not only in the Court of Duke Pipin a proper seat for envy and malignity but at home also among his companions in the work of the Gospell As for the former sort he easily made voyd all their designs against him with a Letter written to the Duke and his domesticall accusers he overcame by his meeknes 2. Who these were what they layd to his charge we find in a Letter written to him by the Pope the tenour whereof is this Virgilius and Sidonius Religious men living in the Province of the Bavarians have lately visitted us with their Letters in which they have intimated that your Revered Fraternity enioynd them to rebaptize certain Christians At the reading of this we were much troubled and should extremely wonder if it should be true Among other examples they produced this of a certain Preist in the same Province who being ignorant of the Latin tongue he pronounced it wrong in baptizing saying Baptizo ●e in nomine Patria Filia Spiritua Sancta And for this it i● sayd your Reverend Fraternity thought fit that Baptisme should be reiterated But holy Brother if he who baptizes introduces no errour o● heresy but through ignorance only failes in pronunciation we can by no means allow that suc● Baptism should be repeated For as your Holy Fra●ternity well knows who soever is baptized even by Hereticks in the name of the Father of the son and of the Holy Ghost must by no means be rebaptized but only be purified by imposition of hands If the matter therefore stand as hat● been related to us Holy Brother abstain hereafter from such iniunctions and be carefull to observe what the Holy Fathers teach 3. Vpon the receit of this Letter S. Boniface presently without reply acquiesced An● the same year dispatched to Rome his Preist Eoban with Letters to the Pope in which h● suggested many things very necessary for the Churches of France contained in twenty seaven heads of great advantage to Ecclesiasticall Disc●pline 4. Hereto Pope Zacharias immediatly answerd adioyning to every one of the said Points his own iudgment Withall he in●formed him that the most excellent Prince P●pin had sent likewise to him a Religious Preist named Audoba● with other Points of the like nature concern●ng the Rights of Bishops Preists c. also touching unlawfull Mariages inquiring what was to be observed therein according the Rites of the Church the D●ctrine of Holy Fathers and Canons of Councils And many other things he had proposed relating to the good of soules To all which likewise he had returned an Answer Consequently he enioyned S Boniface to assemble a Synod and therein to discover to the Bishops his said Determinati●ns 5. He gave him moreover order that the forementioned contumacious and Sacrilegious Hereticks Aldebert Godel●ace and Clement should be made to appear before the said Synod that their cause might again be accurately examined And in case they were found wholly to swerve from the way o● Truth and iustice and being convinced would not retract their errours and amend their faults that then the Princes assistance being desired they should be proceeded against with all severity according to the Canons of the Church But if they should persist in Pride and protest that they were innocent then his will was that they should be sent to Rome and with them two or three Preists approved for their piety and prudence to be their accusers and there the cause should be with all care examined by the See Apostolick and judgment given on them according to their merits 6. Before we declare how S. Boniface observed what was enioynd him by the Pope in calling a Councill and therein convincing again the said Hereticks and doing other matters for the Churches good all which was done the year following it will be expedient in the mean time to admonish the Reader of a mistake made by Alstedius a Calvinisticall Chronologist who affirms that this year a Synod was assembled in Brittany against the Sodomiticall impurity of the English Clergy Whereas no Synod was called there this year and in that which was assembled two years after though many disorders are censured in it yet this is not named among them XV. CHAP. 1.2 A third Synod assembled by S. Boniface at M●nts 3 4 c In which Ge●vilio Bishop of Mentz is deposed ●o● Homicide c. 6 S Boni●ace A●ch bishop of Mentz and Primat of Germany 1. IN the year of Grace seaven hundred ●orty five S Boniface according to the admonition given him by Pope Zacharias and the command of Duke Caroloman assembled his third Councill at Mentz in Germany at which were present according to the account given by himself to Herefr●d an English Prelat eight Bishops all of the English Nation But of them those only Names remain which Miraeus hath recorded saying At the Synod of Ments convoked by S. Boniface were present Abel Burchard Willebald Werbet and Wera perhaps Wetta or Wittan 2. The Decrees of this Synod touching Ecclesiasticall Disciplin containd in the forementioned thirty seaven Heads sent by Saint Boniface to Pope Zacharias and by him with some correcti●ns approved are not now extant But other affairs of great cōsequence agitated and determined are mentioned in the Life of S. Boniface in Surius Where we read that in the said Synod not only many Ecclesiasticks infected with Heresy were excommunicated but severall Bishops also infamous for horrible crimes were depofed The prime Authours of all Errours in Germany were the two Arch-hereticks Aldebert and Clement Whose cause was remitted to Rome and there with all circumspection iudged as shall be largely declared 3. Of Bishops sayd to be deposed in this Synod the name and speciall demerit of one only is now recorded and that was Gervilio Bishop of Men●z where the Councill was held The cause of his Deposition according to the said Authour was this At that time the Thuringians implored the ●ssi●●ance of ●aroloman against the Saxons which wasted their countrey He presently sent an Army and with it Gerold Bishop of Mentz who was Father of Gervilio Gerold in the combat among many others was slain And his son who at that time was a Lay man attending at Court to asswage his greif for his Fathers death was taken into the Clergy and made Bishop of Mentz in his Fathers place 4 Not long after Caroloman gathered another Army which himself lead into Germany and took Gervilio with him Whilst this Army lay encamped on both the sides of the River Visurgis Weser Gervilio commanded his servant to goe privatly into the enemies
Miracle 1. A Second Witnes of the Sanctity of this Mother-Church of Christianity built by S. Ioseph at Glastonbury in honour of our Blessed Lady as likewise of the wonderfull Priviledge confer'd on it by our Lord himselfe who was pleased personally to consecrate it is the Illustrious Bishop of Menevia S. David the extirpatour of Pelagianism in Brittany His testimony is extant in the Antiquities of Glastonbury collected by William of Malmsbury in these words 2. Saint David with seaven other Bishops of whom he was Primate came to Glastonbury invited thereto by the Sanctity of the place place and had a resolution solemnly to consecrate an ancient Church there erected to the honour of the Blessed Virgin-Mother of our Lord. Having therefore provided all things requisite for the performance of that sacred Ceremony on the night immediatly preceding the intended Dedication he as nature required yeilded to sleep in which our Lord Iesus appeard to him and mildly demanded of him the cause of his coming thither This without delay S. David declar'd unto him But our Lord presently turn'd him from his resolution of dedicating the Church saying to him That must not be done And taking the Bishops hand he told him that many years since he himselfe had dedicated it to the honour of his Mother therfore that holy Ceremony ought not to be profan'd by any mans repeating it And having sayd this with his finger he peirced through the Bishops hand Telling him that this should be a sign that that ought not to be again renew'd which himselfe had formerly anticipated And withall he promis'd him that the next day when in reciting the Canon of the Masse he was to pronounce those Words Per ipsum cum ipso in ipsum By him and with him and to him be all honour and glory to thee O God the Father in the Vnity of the Holy Ghost he should have restord the integrity and soundnes of his hand The terrour of this Vision quickly drove sleep from the Bishops eyes whereupon with great earnestnes he examined whether that were indeed reall which our Lord seem'd to have done to him And having found it so he wondred at it and expected what would be the issue The next day all that were present with admiration saw and touched the prodig●ous wound Hereupon all the Preparation for a ●onsecration came to nothing and the miracle divinely wrought being made known publickly to all the Hearers encreas'd the admiration And in conclusion when Masse was celebrated the Bishops hand was restord to its former soundnes 3. This miracle is not forgotten nor contemn'd even by some Protestant Writers though in repeating it they willingly omit the name of Masse which having banish'd from their own Churches they are loath it should appeare of so great Antiquity and which is more considerable dignified by our Lords mentioning it and working a wonderfull miracle during the celebration of it VII CHAP. 1.2 A third witnes is our H. Apostle S. Augustin the Monk The fashion and homelines of that Church 1. A Third Witnes of equall authority though later date is S. Augustin the Apostle of our Nation who in an Epistle to S. Gregory the Great mentions the summe of what hath been hitherto related as a Tradition receiv'd in those days A part of this Epistle is recited by three Protestant Bishops as a firm argument of the Primitive antiquity of Christian Religion in our Island The words of S. Augustin are these In the confines of western Brittany there is a Royall Island by an ancient Name called Glascon It is largely extended being encompassed with waters abounding with fish and rivers in many places standing in pooles commodious for many uses of human life and which is most considerable it hath been dedicated to the exercises of Sacred Duties For there the first Professours of Christian Religion found as the report is a Church not built by the skill of men but prepared by God an● fitted for human salvation The which Church was afterward by many miracles and many mysterious operations demonstrated to have been consecrated by our Lord the Creatour of the world to his own glory and the honour of his most Blessed Mother the Virgin Mary To this Church was afterwards added an Oratory built of stone which was dedicated to Christ and his holy Apostle S. Peter 2. And hereto agrees that which we read in the life of S. Ioseph The foresaid Saints conversing together in that Solitude after a little time were admonish'd in a Vision by the holy Archangel Gabriel to build unto the honour of the holy Mother of God and perpetuall Virgin Mary a Church in a place shewd from heaven to them Whereupon they in obedience to those Divine admonitions finish'd the building of a Chappell the walls wherof on all sides were made of rods warled or interwoven This was done in the one and thirtieth yeare after the Passion of our Lord and in the fifteenth after the Assumption of the glorious Virgin Mary Here we may see saith D. Fuller the simplicity of Primitive Devotion and the native fashion of Brittish buildings in that age and some hundred years after For we find that Hoel Dha King of Wales An. D. 940. made himself a Palace of Hurdleworke call'd Tyguyn or the White house because to advance it above other houses the rods wherof it was made were unbark'd having the rind strip'd off Which was then counted gay and glorious This homely building however suiting with the simplicity of the builders soules did deserve and was indeed preferd in the veneration of all succeeding times before the magnificent structures of squared stones and marble adorn'd and enrich'd with gold and precious stones which in following ages by the Devotion though perhaps mix'd with some vanity of lesse perfect Christians were splendidly erected VIII CHAP. 1.2 A fourth Testimony of ehe Building a Church at Glastonbury by S. Ioseph from an Ancient Inscription at Glastonbury here produced 3.4 c. Sir Henry Spelmans Exceptions against that Inscription answer'd 1. THe last Testimony justifying most of the particulars before mentioned touching this Primitive Church built by S. Ioseph of Arimathea is taken from a very ancient Inscription cut in brasse and heretofore fastned to a Pillar in Glastonbury Church Which Inscription Bishop Godwin therfore rehearses that he may demonstrate that S. Ioseph indeed came into Brittany and after him Sir Henry Spelman caused it to be entirely transcrib'd and put into his Collection of our Brittish and English Councills The tenour of it is as followeth 2. In the one and thirtieth year after the Passion of our Lord twelve Holy men among whom Ioseph of Arimathea was Cheif came to this place and here built the first Church of this Kingdom Which Christ in the honour of his Mother himselfe dedicated together with a place for their buriall as S. David Bishop of Menevia testified who having an intention to consecrate it
and besides him as long as I live I will never admitt another Lover Therefore use thy sword if thou pleasest for be assured that neither thy flatteries nor threats shall have power to draw mee from him to whom I ●an by vow obliged The lustfull young man enraged to see himself so contemned and the maid so inflexible beleiving he could never enioy rest as long as she lived so resolved mad with lust and rage presently strook of her head and immediatly in the place where it fell to the earth a most pure and plentifull Spring gushed forth which flowes to this day and by the Holy Virgins merits gives health to a world of diseased persons 7. It being in the steep descent of a hill where the Virgins head was cutt of it lightly rouling down to the bottom slidd into the Church whereas the body remaind in the place where it first fell The whole congregation there attending to Divine Mysteries were wonderfully astonished to see the Head tumbling among their feet detesting the crime of the murderer and impre●ating Divine vengeance on him But the parents of the Virgin broke forth i● to tears and sad complaints They all went out and found the murderer near the liveles body wiping his sword on the grasse For being the Princes Son he apprehended no danger and as for the crime committed against God he was unsensible of the heynousnes of it The man of God therefore seing his pride and obstinacy and having in his hands the Virgins head looked earnestly upon him and sayd Impious Villain hast thou no shame of the slain wherewith thou hast defiled thy high birth and shewst thou no repentance of this horrible crime Thou hast disturbed the peace thou hast polluted the Church with thy sacrilegious murder thou hast highly provoked Almighty God and doest thou shew no sorrow for all this Since therefore it is so that thou hast not spared Gods Church nor reverenced his solemn day I beseech him without delay to inflict on thee a iust punishment for this thy unworthy and detestable crime Assoon as the Holy man had ended these words the young man immediatly fell to the ground and gave up the ghost and which was more wonderfull his body presently disappeared from the eyes of the by-standers and many say that it was swallowed up by the earth and with the wicked soule sunk into Hell 8 But the man of God often kissing the head which he held in his hands could not refrain to weep bitterly Afterwards ioyning it to the body and covering it with his mantle he returned to the Altar where he celebrated Masse Which being ended he returned to the Virgins body and there began a devout sermon to the people in which among other passages he said That the Holy Virgin had made a vow of Religious Profession but being thus intercepted by death had not opportunity to perform it Therefore he exhorted them ro prostrate themselves on the ground and earnestly beseech Almighty God to restore her to life The Congregation readily obeyd him and after they had so continued a good while in prayer the man of God rose from the earth and stretching forth his hands to heaven sayed O Lord Iesus Christ for whose love this Virgin despised all earthly things and desired only heavenly we most ardently beseech thee in mercy to hear our prayers and grant the request we make to thee And although we doubt not but that this thy Virgin who suffred onely for thy love shall be received by thee into thy ioy and therefore little regards our society and conversation yet vouchsafe to grant the humble requests of thy servants and command this Virgins soule to return to her body and thereby shew that thou hast an entire power and rule both over our soules and bodies and likewise that she being by thy mercy restored to life may for ever magnify thy Name and encreasing in the fervour of a holy conversation may after many years return more pure to thee her Spouse who art the onely Son of the Eternall Father with whom and the Holy Ghost thou livest and raignest one God world without end This Prayer being ended to which all the people cryed aloud Amen the Virgin presently rose up as from sleep cleansing her face from the dust and sweat and filled the Congregation with wonder and ioy 9 Now in the place where the Head was reioynd to the body there appeard a white Circle compassing the neck small as a white thread which continued so all her life shewing the place where the Section had been made And the report in that countrey is that from that white circle she had the name of Winefrid given her whereas at first she had been called Breuna For in the Brittish language Win signifies White And moreover the Tradition is that after her death whensoever she appeared to any that White mark was always visible The place where her blood was first shed was not much distant from a Monastery in North-Wales calld Basingwerk The Name of it formerly was The dry vale but after her death to this day it is called Saint Winefrids Well The Stones likewise both where the spring gushes forth and beneath in the Current having been sprinkled with her blood retain the rednes to these times which colour neither the length of so many ages nor the continuall sliding of the water over them have been able to wash away and moreover a certain Masse which sticks to the said stones renders a fragrant odour like Incense 10. The Holy Virgin being thus miraculously revived did dayly attend the man of God and devoutly hearkned to his exhortations and at last received from him the Holy vayle of Religious Profession Whereupon assembling severall Maids of Noble families the instilld into their minds a Love of Purity and contempt of all flattering delights of the world so that they willingly submitted their ne●ks to the easy Yoke of Christ and by a Regular vow consecrated themselves to his service 11 Not long after the Holy Man Beuno dyed and by Divine admonition Saint Winefrid had recourse to another devout Man named Deifer who was of so great Sanctity and so highly favoured by God that he made a fountiain break out of the earth and conferred health on many infirm persons When Saint Winefrid therefore came to this Holy man a voyce from heaven signified to him whilst he watched that night in prayer Saying Tell my most deare daughter Winefride that she repair unto a man named Saturn from whom she shall be informed in what place she is to spend the remainder of her life Assoon therefore as the Holy Virgin came to him he said to her There is a certain place calld Witheriac it is vulgarly named Guitherine in the Province of Denbigh which is held in great reverence by all the people This place it is Gods will that thou visit and remain there whilst thou livest by thy good example informing others in the way of
for Oswin urging all men by Promises rewards and terrible threatnings to discover him Hunwald either allured with gain or affrighted with danger treacherously betraid his King and Benefactour Assoon as Oswin saw himself discovered and the place encompassed with soldiers he desired Ethelwin to content himself with his death alone and to spare his companion Tunder since his life only was sought by Oswi But the cruel executioner presently slew them both for indeed the faithfull soldier refused to survive his King This murder was committed on the thirteenth day before the Ca●ends of September 5. The death of this pious King was greatly bewayld by all for from his child hood saith Mathew of Westminster he was a devout Professour of Christian Religion He was tall in stature valiant civill prudent liberall he was as his table sober in his bed modest affable to all and between the poor and rich he caried himself so that the poor regarded him as their equall and the rich as their Master Whence it came to passe that for the civility of his Royal mind all sought accesse to him and tenderly lov'd him even out of forrain Provinces The like character S. Beda gives of him 6. But among all his vertues the same Authour most commends his Humility a worthy example whereof he thus relates He had bestowd on the Holy Bishop Aidan a horse on which though ordinarily he went afoot sometimes he passed the rivers or upon necessity rode a iourney Awhile after as the Bishop was travelling a poor man mett him and begged an almes The Bishop presently lighting down commanded the horse to be given him with all his sumptuous furniture for he was very mercifull to the poor and a Father to such as were in misery This being related to the King he said to the Bishop as they were ready to sitt down to table My Lord Bishop what meant you to give so generous a horse to a beggar which I gave you for your own use We had horses of lesse valew or some other gifts which would have suffised him The Bishop presently answerd him Why says your Ma●esty so Is a colt in more esteem with you then the Son of God A●ter these speeches had passed between them they entred into the dining room and the Bishop sate in his place but the King being newly come from hunting stood with his servants warming himself at the fire And there calling to mind the Bishops words to him he putt off his sword and in hast went and cast himself at the Bishops feet beseeching him to pardon him for said he I will never speak or censure you for what you give to Gods children of my goods be it never so much The Bishop seing this was deeply struck with it and rising took the King up assuring him that he was very well satisfied upon condition he would be chearfull and sitt down to meat Now whilst the King at the Bishops request expressed much ioy the Bishop on the other side began to be very sad insomuch as he could not contain himself from weeping Which being observed by his Preist he asked him in his own countrey-language which neither the King nor his servants understood why he wept The Bishops answer was I am assured that this good King will not live long for till this hower I never saw an humble King whence I conclude that he will shortly be snatched out of this life And indeed it was not long after that the Kings death made good the Holy Bishops Prophecy 7. The place where he was slain was in the English tongue called Ingethling where his body was ignobly buried It was afterward called Gilling not far distant from Richmond and there saith Saint Beda and the Authour of his life Queen Eanfled wife of King Oswi and Kings Oswins kinswoman having obtaind permission from her husband built a Monastery for the expiation of his death in which dayly Prayers were to be offred to God for the redemption of both the Kings soules of him who had been slain and him by whose command he was slain Of which Monastery she appointed Abbot a certain devout man named Trumhere by nation an Englishman but instructed and ordaind by the Scotts who was also kinsman to the King This holy man was afterward made Bishop of the Southern Mercians under their King Wulsere where he converted great multitudes to Christ 8. This Monastery and Church by the furious incursion of the Danes was so totally destroyd that the memory of King Oswin was abolished But about the year of Christ one thousand sixty five by a vision in sleep a certain Monk of the Church of Tinmouth was admonished to inform the Bishop where the Holy Kings body lay which being taken up afforded a most sweet odour and was there with great veneration deposed in the Church of Tinmouth A second Translation followed in the year of Grace eleaven hundred and ten when his Sacred Relicks were removed to a New Church in the same town dedicated to our Blessed Lady 9. After which time mens devotion to this Holy King and Martyr much encreased the twentieth day of August being assigned for his Festivall And Thomas Walsingham Historiographer to King Richard the second relates how by a strange prodigy the neglect of that Feast was punished For saith he two Marriners at New-castle on the Tyne on that day being busy at work in hewing a peice of Timber for their ship at every stroke with their axe great quantity of blood issued And when one of them persisted notwithstanding in his work and turned the timber still the blood on all sides flowd abundantly out of it This Miracle says he was seen by very many and verified in an assembly of Ecclesiasticks appointed ●o examine it and the peice of Timber all staind with blood was caried into the Church of Tinmouth where the Saints Body reposed XV. CHAP. 1. 2. c. Death of Saint Aidan Bishop of Lindesfarn His vertues c. 1. THE deplorable death of this Holy King Oswin was attended with that also of S. Aidan Bishop of Lindesfarn for thus writes S. Beda On the twelfth day after the murder of the King dyed likewise the Holy Bishop who tenderly loved him to wit the day before the Calends of September 2. The place where this Holy Bishop dyed is described by the same Authour to be a countrey village belonging to the King where there was a Church and a lodging prepared for the Bishop to which he frequently retired to enjoy a better commodity for preaching For he had nothing in his own possession but a few small feilds about the said Church His lodging was a Tent pitched against the Western wall of the Church here leaning his head against the side of the Tent he gave up the ghost in the seaventeenth year after he had been Bishop His Body was caried to the Isle of Lindesfarn and buried in the Church-yard of the
Monastery But afterwards when a Church more magnificent was there built it was translated thither and deposed at the right hand of the Altar with veneration due to so holy a Prelat 3. How great the merit of this Blessed Bishop was saith the same S. Beda God was pleased to shew by severall Miracles It will suffise to relate onely two of them in this place A certain Preist named Vtta a man highly esteemed even by Princes for his gravity and integrity was sent into Kent to conduct from thence Eanfleda the daughter of King Edwin to be wife to King Os●in This Preist went thither by land but intended to return by Sea with the Virgin Before h●● iourney he went to the Holy Bishop Aidan desiring his prayers for a safe iourney to himself and company The Bishop gave him his benediction and withall delivered to him some Oyle which had been sanctified saying I know that when you shall be at Sea a contrary wind and tempest will come on you but remember that when you are in danger you cast this Oyle into the Sea aend th● tempest will p●esently cease and your return will be prosperous All which particulars succeeded in order exactly as the Holy Bishop had foretold Thus the Man of God both foretold the Tempest by the Spirit of Prophecy and by the power of the same spirit though corporally absent he calmed the Tempest when it was risen The account of this Miracle I received not from a relatour of doubtfull credit but a Preist of our Church of great integrity called Cynimund who protested that it was told him by Vtta himself the Preist to whom and by whom it befell 4. The Second Miracle was that when King Penda entred with an Army into those parts and was determined to sett on fire the Royal Citty which took its name from Queen Ebba for which purpose he encompassed it with heaps of wood and other combustible matter to which fire was applied S. Aidan being then retired into his Isle of Farne about two miles distant from that Citty and seeing the fire smoke ascending up-wards he lifted up his eyes full of tears to heaven and said Behold o Lord how great mischeif Penda does to thy people Assoon as he had said those words the wind immediatly turned the flames upon those who had kindled them So that the enemies forbore to impugn the Citty which they saw was defended from heaven 5. Now though S Aidan and his White Monks did erroneously swerve from the generall practise of the Church in the Observation of Easter yet saith Baronius far be it from us to reckon among the Quartodeciman Hereticks such a man who by an Apostolick Spirit and power converted that Nation to the Faith How their practise differed from that of those Hereticks we have already declared out of S. Beda His Memory is celebrated in the Roman Martyrologe on the one and thirtieth of August where this elogium is given of him In England on the said day is the commemoration of S. Aidan Bishop of Lindesfarn whose soule S. Cuthbert then a keeper of sheep seing caried up to heaven he left his sheep and became a Monk XVI CHAP. 1.2 c. Saint Cuthbert a child sees Saint Aidans soule caried into heaven whereupon he quitts the world and retires into the Monastery of Mailros 1. THAT which the Roman Martyrologe wraps up in a few words touching the occasion of S. Cuthberts undertaking a Monasticall Profession S. Beda more at large sets down in his Book of the Life of that Saint which for the reverence due both to him and S. Aidan we will h●●e transcribe And shall hereafter have ●●equent occasion to write more of his Sanctity the rudiments whereof now began 2. When the Divine Grace which governs the lives of Gods servants was pleased that the devout young man Cuthbert by undergoing a more austere Profession should obtain a higher reward of Glory he was then employed in the guard of sheep committed to his care in the remote mountains One night it hapned that whilst he was watching in prayer his companions then being asleep he saw on a sudden a light from heaven so bright that it dispelled all the darknes and therein he saw great multitudes of Angels descending to the earth and presently after return to heaven carying with them a soule of a marvellous brightnes This sight caused great compunction in the devout youth and an earnest desire to undertake a spiritual Life that thereby he might be partaker of eternall felicity among Gods Saints And presently giving thanks and praises to God for this favour he also wakened his companions inciting them with brotherly exhortations to ioyn with him in praising God Alas poor wretches said he we are wholly given up to sleep and idlenes and are unworthy to see the light of Christs Servāts who are always watchfull in his Praises Behold I whilst I was even now praying saw the great wonders of God the Gate of Heaven was opened and the soule of some holy person was conducted by Angels into the glory of heavenly Mansions where it will for ever blessedly behold our Lord whilst we remain negligent in this darknes below Surely this was either a Holy Bishop or some other perfect Christian whom I saw with such resplendent brightnes and such Quires of Angels caried up to heaven These words of S. Cuthbert did not a little inflame the hearts of the other Shephards to praise God 3. The next day he was informed that S. Aidan Bishop of the Church of Lindesfarn a man of admirable piety dyed that very houre in which he had seen his soule mounting to heaven Whereupon he presently resigned up the sheep which he had fed to their owner and resolved without delay to goe to a Monastery 4. S. Cuthbert now meditating seriously on his entrance into a new and more stricks life the Divine Grace was present to him confirming his mind in that good purpose and moreover by manifest signs shewed that to those who seek the Kingdom of God and his righteousnes all things necessary for bodily subsistence shall be administred For on a certain day as he was iourneying alone about the third hower he turned aside into a certain village which he saw a good distance from him and entred into the house of a certain Matron being desirous to repose there awhile and to gett food not for himself but his horse The woman received him kindly and earnestly desired that she might make some thing ready for his refection But the devout young man refused telling her that he could not eat because it was a day of Fast. For it was indeed Friday on which most faithfull Christians out of reverence to our Lords Passion doe prolong their fasting till three of the clock after noon She notwithstanding being devoutly addicted to hospitality persisted in her desire and told him that all the rest of his iourney he would find neither village nor