20 March
Cuthbert, Bishop of Lindisfarne, Missionary, 687
Cuthbert was born in Northumbria in northern England about 625. One
night, while tending a herd of sheep, he saw lights in the sky which
he interpreted as a soul being escorted heavenward by a band of
angels. Later, he learned that Aidan of Lindisfarne (31 August 651)
had died that night, and he resolved to enter the monastic life. He
was a monk at Melrose Abbey from 651 to 664, and when the Abbot,
Eata, became abbot and bishop at Lindisfarne, Cuthbert accompanied
him and was Prior there until 676. Although he had been brought up
in the Celtic customs, he accepted the decrees of the Synod of
Whitby in 663 which committed the English Church to following
instead the Roman customs that had been introduced into Cantrbury by
Augustine, and so he helped to minimize contention over the
decision. Although his real preference was for the solitary life of
a hermit, he recognized a duty to minister to the needs of the
people about him. Year after year he made long journeys, on
horseback and on foot, to Durham and throughout Northumbria, and in
the regions of Berwick and Galloway, preaching to the scattered
population in remote and sparsely settled areas, instructing them in
the faith and encouraging them in the practice of it, urging them in
times of sickness not to rely on charms or amulets, but to pray to
God and put their trust in His mercy and love. Like Francis of
Assisi, he had a remarkable rapport with animals, both wild and
domestic.
Theodore, the Archbishop of Canterbury, made Cuthbert Bishop of
Hexham, but he was a solitary by nature, and promptly exchanged
bishoprics with Eata so as to remain at Lindisfarne. After two
years, he retired to the neighboring island of Farne as a hermit,
and died there the following year.