27
May. 1662 Book of Common
Prayer. Venerable Bede, Presbyter.
Now, for the story as told at:
Historian
and Doctor of the Church, born 672 or 673; died
735. In the last chapter of his great work on the "Ecclesiastical History
of the English People" Bede has told us something of his own life, and it
is, practically speaking, all that we know. His words, written in 731, when death was not
far off, not only show a simplicity and piety characteristic of the man, but they throw a
light on the composition of the work through which he is best remembered by the
world at large. He writes:
Thus much concerning the ecclesiastical history of
Britain, and especially of the race of the English, I, Baeda, a servant of
Christ and a priest of
the monastery of
the blessed apostles St. Peter and St. Paul,
which is at Wearmouth and
at Jarrow (in Northumberland), have with the Lord's help composed so far as I
could gather it either from ancient documents or from the traditions of the
elders, or from my own knowledge. I
was born in the territory of the said monastery, and
at the age of seven I was, by the care of my relations, given to the most
reverend Abbot Benedict [St. Benedict Biscop], and
afterwards to Ceolfrid, to be educated. From
that time I have spent the whole of my life within that monastery,
devoting all my pains to the study of the Scriptures, and amid the observance
of monastic discipline and the daily charge of singing in the Church, it
has been ever my delight to learn or teach or write. In my nineteenth year I
was admitted to the diaconate, in
my thirtieth to the priesthood, both
by the hands of the most reverend Bishop John [St. John of Beverley], and
at the bidding of Abbot Ceolfrid. From the time of my admission to the priesthood to my
present fifty-ninth year, I have endeavored for my own use and that of my
brethren, to make brief notes upon the holy Scripture, either out of the works
of the venerable Fathers or in conformity with their meaning and
interpretation.
After
this Bede inserts a list or Indiculus, of his previous
writings and finally concludes his great work with the following words:
And
I pray thee, loving Jesus, that as Thou hast graciously given me to
drink in with delight the words of Thy knowledge, so Thou wouldst mercifully grant me to
attain one day to Thee, the fountain of all wisdom and to appear forever before
Thy face.
It
is plain from Bede's letter to Bishop Egbert that the historian occasionally
visited his friends for a few days, away from his own monastery of Jarrow, but with such rare
exceptions his life seems to have been one peaceful round of study and prayer passed in the midst of his own community. How
much he was beloved by them is made manifest by the touching account of the saint's last sickness and death left us by Cuthbert,
one of his disciples. Their studious pursuits were not given up on account of
his illness and they read aloud by his bedside, but constantly the reading was
interrupted by their tears. "I can with truth declare", writes
Cuthbert of his beloved master, "that I never saw with my eyes or heard with
my ears anyone return thanks so unceasingly to the living God." Even on the day of his death
(the vigil of the Ascension, 735) the saint was still busy dictating a translation of the
Gospel of St. John. In the evening the boy Wilbert, who was writing it, said to
him: "There is still one sentence, dear master, which is not written
down." And when this had been supplied, and the boy had told him it was
finished, "Thou hast spoken truth", Bede answered, "it is finished.
Take my head in thy hands for it much delights me to sit opposite any holy
place where I used to pray, that so sitting I may call upon my
Father." And thus upon the floor of his cell singing, "Glory be to
the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost" and the rest, he
peacefully breathed his last breath.
The
title Venerabilis seems to have been
associated with the name of Bede within two generations after his death. There
is of course no early authority for the legend repeated by Fuller of the
"dunce-monk" who in composing an epitaph on Bede was at a loss to
complete the line: Hac
sunt in fossa Bedae . . . . ossa and who next morning found that the angels had filled the gap with the word venerabilis. The title is used by Alcuin, Amalarius and seemingly Paul the Deacon, and the important
Council of Aachen in 835 describes him
as venerabilis
et modernis temporibus doctor admirabilis Beda. This decree was specially referred to in the petition
which Cardinal Wiseman and the English bishops addressed to the Holy See in 1859 praying that Bede might be declared a Doctor of the Church. The question had
already been debated even before the time of Benedict XIV, but it was only on 13 November, 1899,
that Leo XIII decreed that the feast
of Venerable Bede with the title of Doctor Ecclesiae should be celebrated
throughout the Church each year on 27 May. A
local cultus of St. Bede had been maintained at York and in the North of England throughout the Middle Ages, but his feast was not so generally
observed in the South, where the Sarum Rite was followed.
Bede's
influence both upon English and foreign scholarship was very great, and it
would probably have been greater still but for the devastation inflicted upon
the Northern monasteries by the inroads of the
Danes less than a century after his death. In numberless ways, but especially
in his moderation, gentleness, and breadth of view, Bede stands out from his
contemporaries. In point of scholarship he was undoubtedly the most learned man
of his time. A very remarkable trait, noticed by Plummer (I, p. xxiii), is his
sense of literary property, an extraordinary
thing in that age. He himself scrupulously noted in his writings the passages
he had borrowed from others and he even begs the copyists of his works to
preserve the references, a recommendation to which they, alas, have paid but
little attention. High,
however, as was the general level of Bede's culture, he repeatedly makes it
clear that all his studies were subordinated to the interpretation of
Scripture. In his "De Schematibus" he says in so many words: "Holy Scripture is above all other books not only by its authority
because it is Divine, or by its utility because it leads to eternal life, but
also by its antiquity and its literary form" (positione dicendi). It is perhaps the
highest tribute to Bede's genius that with so uncompromising and evidently
sincere a conviction of the inferiority of human learning, he should have acquired
so much real culture. Though Latin was to him a still living tongue, and though
he does not seem to have consciously looked back to the Augustan Age of Roman
Literature as preserving purer models of literary style than the time of Fortunatus or St. Augustine, still whether through native genius or
through contact with the classics, he is remarkable for the relative purity of
his language, as also for his lucidity and sobriety, more especially in matters
of historical criticism. In all these respects he presents a marked contrast to
St. Aldhelm who approaches more
nearly to the Celtic type.
Writings
and editions
No
adequate edition founded upon a careful collation of manuscripts has ever been published of Bede's works
as a whole. The text printed by Giles in 1884 and reproduced in Migne (XC-XCIV) shows little if any advance on the
basic edition of 1563 or the Cologne edition of 1688. It is of course as an
historian that Bede is chiefly remembered. His great work, the "Historia
Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum", giving an account of Christianity in England from the beginning until his own day, is the
foundation of all our knowledge of British history and a masterpiece
eulogized by the scholars of every age. Of this work, together with the
"Historia Abbatum", and the "Letter to Egbert", Plummer has
produced an edition which may fairly be called final (2 vols., Oxford, 1896).
Bede's remarkable industry in collecting materials and his critical use of them
have been admirably illustrated in Plummer's Introduction (pp. xliii-xlvii).
The "History of the Abbots" (of the twin monasteries of Wearmouth and Jarrow), the Letter to
Egbert", the metrical and prose lives of St. Cuthbert, and the other smaller pieces are also
of great value for the light they shed upon the state of Christianity in Northumbria in Bede's own day. The
"Ecclesiastical History" was translated into Anglo-Saxon at the
instance of King Alfred. It has often been
translated since, notably by T. Stapleton who printed it (1565) at Antwerp as a controversial weapon against the Reformation divines in the reign of Elizabeth. The
Latin text first appeared in Germany in 1475; it is noteworthy that no edition even
of the Latin was printed in England before 1643. Smith's more accurate text saw
the light in 1742.
Bede's
chronological treatises "De temporibus liber" and "De temporum
ratione" also contain summaries of the general history of the world from
the Creation to 725 and 703, respectively. These historical portions have been
satisfactorily edited by Mommsen in the "Monumenta Germaniae historica"
(4to series, 1898). They may be counted among the earliest specimens of this
type of general chronical and were largely copied and imitated. The
topographical work "De locis sanctis" is a description of Jerusalem and the holy places based upon Adamnan and Arculfus. Bede's work was edited in 1898 by Geyer in
the "Itinera Hierosolymitana" for the Vienna "Corpus Scriptorum". That Bede
compiled a Martyrologium we know from his own statement. But the work
attributed to him in extant manuscripts has been so much interpolated and
supplemented that his share in it is quite uncertain.
Bede's
exegetical writings both in his
own idea and in that of his
contemporaries stood supreme in importance among his works, but the list is
long and cannot fully be given here. They included a commentary upon the Pentateuch as a whole as well as on selected
portions, and there are also commentaries on the Books of Kings, Esdras,
Tobias, the Canticles, etc. In the New Testament he has certainly interpreted St. Mark,
St. Luke, the Acts, the Canonical Epistles, and the Apocalypse. But the
authenticity of the commentary on St. Matthew printed under his name is more
than doubtful. (Plaine in
"Revue Anglo-Romaine", 1896, III, 61.) The homilies of Bede take the form of commentaries upon the
Gospel. The collection of fifty, divided into two books, which are attributed
to him by Giles (and in Migne) are for the most part authentic, but the
genuineness of a few is open to suspicion. (Morin in "Revue
Bénédictine", IX, 1892, 316.)
Various
didactic works are mentioned by Bede in the list which he has left us of his
own writings. Most of these are still preserved and there is no reason to doubt that the texts we possess are authentic. The
grammatical treatises "De arte metricâ" and "De
orthographiâ" have been adequately edited in modern times by Keil in his
"Grammatici Latini" (Leipzig, 1863). But the larger works "De
naturâ rerum", "De temporibus", "De temporium
ratione", dealing with science as it was then understood and especially with chronology, are only accessible in the
unsatisfactory texts of the earlier editors and Giles. Beyond the metrical life
of St. Cuthbert and some verses
incorporated in the Ecclesiastical History" we do not possess much poetry
that can be assigned to Bede with confidence, but, like other scholars of his
age, he certainly wrote a good deal of verse. He himself mentions his
"book of hymns" composed in
different meters or rhythms. So Alcuin says of him: Plurima versifico
cecinit quoque carmina plectro. It is possible that the shorter of the two
metrical calendars printed among his
works is genuine. The Penitential ascribed to Bede, though accepted as genuine
by Haddan and Stubbs and Wasserschleben, is probably not his (Plummer, I, 157).
Venerable
Bede is the earliest witness of pure Gregorian tradition in England. His works "Musica theoretica" and
"De arte Metricâ" (Migne, XC) are found especially valuable by
present-day scholars engaged in the study of the primitive form of the chant.
Now, for the story as told at:
Historian
and Doctor of the Church, born 672 or 673; died
735. In the last chapter of his great work on the "Ecclesiastical History
of the English People" Bede has told us something of his own life, and it
is, practically speaking, all that we know. His words, written in 731, when death was not
far off, not only show a simplicity and piety characteristic of the man, but they throw a
light on the composition of the work through which he is best remembered by the
world at large. He writes:
Thus much concerning the ecclesiastical history of
Britain, and especially of the race of the English, I, Baeda, a servant of
Christ and a priest of
the monastery of
the blessed apostles St. Peter and St. Paul,
which is at Wearmouth and
at Jarrow (in Northumberland), have with the Lord's help composed so far as I
could gather it either from ancient documents or from the traditions of the
elders, or from my own knowledge. I
was born in the territory of the said monastery, and
at the age of seven I was, by the care of my relations, given to the most
reverend Abbot Benedict [St. Benedict Biscop], and
afterwards to Ceolfrid, to be educated. From
that time I have spent the whole of my life within that monastery,
devoting all my pains to the study of the Scriptures, and amid the observance
of monastic discipline and the daily charge of singing in the Church, it
has been ever my delight to learn or teach or write. In my nineteenth year I
was admitted to the diaconate, in
my thirtieth to the priesthood, both
by the hands of the most reverend Bishop John [St. John of Beverley], and
at the bidding of Abbot Ceolfrid. From the time of my admission to the priesthood to my
present fifty-ninth year, I have endeavored for my own use and that of my
brethren, to make brief notes upon the holy Scripture, either out of the works
of the venerable Fathers or in conformity with their meaning and
interpretation.
After
this Bede inserts a list or Indiculus, of his previous
writings and finally concludes his great work with the following words:
And
I pray thee, loving Jesus, that as Thou hast graciously given me to
drink in with delight the words of Thy knowledge, so Thou wouldst mercifully grant me to
attain one day to Thee, the fountain of all wisdom and to appear forever before
Thy face.
It
is plain from Bede's letter to Bishop Egbert that the historian occasionally
visited his friends for a few days, away from his own monastery of Jarrow, but with such rare
exceptions his life seems to have been one peaceful round of study and prayer passed in the midst of his own community. How
much he was beloved by them is made manifest by the touching account of the saint's last sickness and death left us by Cuthbert,
one of his disciples. Their studious pursuits were not given up on account of
his illness and they read aloud by his bedside, but constantly the reading was
interrupted by their tears. "I can with truth declare", writes
Cuthbert of his beloved master, "that I never saw with my eyes or heard with
my ears anyone return thanks so unceasingly to the living God." Even on the day of his death
(the vigil of the Ascension, 735) the saint was still busy dictating a translation of the
Gospel of St. John. In the evening the boy Wilbert, who was writing it, said to
him: "There is still one sentence, dear master, which is not written
down." And when this had been supplied, and the boy had told him it was
finished, "Thou hast spoken truth", Bede answered, "it is finished.
Take my head in thy hands for it much delights me to sit opposite any holy
place where I used to pray, that so sitting I may call upon my
Father." And thus upon the floor of his cell singing, "Glory be to
the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost" and the rest, he
peacefully breathed his last breath.
The
title Venerabilis seems to have been
associated with the name of Bede within two generations after his death. There
is of course no early authority for the legend repeated by Fuller of the
"dunce-monk" who in composing an epitaph on Bede was at a loss to
complete the line: Hac
sunt in fossa Bedae . . . . ossa and who next morning found that the angels had filled the gap with the word venerabilis. The title is used by Alcuin, Amalarius and seemingly Paul the Deacon, and the important
Council of Aachen in 835 describes him
as venerabilis
et modernis temporibus doctor admirabilis Beda. This decree was specially referred to in the petition
which Cardinal Wiseman and the English bishops addressed to the Holy See in 1859 praying that Bede might be declared a Doctor of the Church. The question had
already been debated even before the time of Benedict XIV, but it was only on 13 November, 1899,
that Leo XIII decreed that the feast
of Venerable Bede with the title of Doctor Ecclesiae should be celebrated
throughout the Church each year on 27 May. A
local cultus of St. Bede had been maintained at York and in the North of England throughout the Middle Ages, but his feast was not so generally
observed in the South, where the Sarum Rite was followed.
Bede's
influence both upon English and foreign scholarship was very great, and it
would probably have been greater still but for the devastation inflicted upon
the Northern monasteries by the inroads of the
Danes less than a century after his death. In numberless ways, but especially
in his moderation, gentleness, and breadth of view, Bede stands out from his
contemporaries. In point of scholarship he was undoubtedly the most learned man
of his time. A very remarkable trait, noticed by Plummer (I, p. xxiii), is his
sense of literary property, an extraordinary
thing in that age. He himself scrupulously noted in his writings the passages
he had borrowed from others and he even begs the copyists of his works to
preserve the references, a recommendation to which they, alas, have paid but
little attention. High,
however, as was the general level of Bede's culture, he repeatedly makes it
clear that all his studies were subordinated to the interpretation of
Scripture. In his "De Schematibus" he says in so many words: "Holy Scripture is above all other books not only by its authority
because it is Divine, or by its utility because it leads to eternal life, but
also by its antiquity and its literary form" (positione dicendi). It is perhaps the
highest tribute to Bede's genius that with so uncompromising and evidently
sincere a conviction of the inferiority of human learning, he should have acquired
so much real culture. Though Latin was to him a still living tongue, and though
he does not seem to have consciously looked back to the Augustan Age of Roman
Literature as preserving purer models of literary style than the time of Fortunatus or St. Augustine, still whether through native genius or
through contact with the classics, he is remarkable for the relative purity of
his language, as also for his lucidity and sobriety, more especially in matters
of historical criticism. In all these respects he presents a marked contrast to
St. Aldhelm who approaches more
nearly to the Celtic type.
Writings
and editions
No
adequate edition founded upon a careful collation of manuscripts has ever been published of Bede's works
as a whole. The text printed by Giles in 1884 and reproduced in Migne (XC-XCIV) shows little if any advance on the
basic edition of 1563 or the Cologne edition of 1688. It is of course as an
historian that Bede is chiefly remembered. His great work, the "Historia
Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum", giving an account of Christianity in England from the beginning until his own day, is the
foundation of all our knowledge of British history and a masterpiece
eulogized by the scholars of every age. Of this work, together with the
"Historia Abbatum", and the "Letter to Egbert", Plummer has
produced an edition which may fairly be called final (2 vols., Oxford, 1896).
Bede's remarkable industry in collecting materials and his critical use of them
have been admirably illustrated in Plummer's Introduction (pp. xliii-xlvii).
The "History of the Abbots" (of the twin monasteries of Wearmouth and Jarrow), the Letter to
Egbert", the metrical and prose lives of St. Cuthbert, and the other smaller pieces are also
of great value for the light they shed upon the state of Christianity in Northumbria in Bede's own day. The
"Ecclesiastical History" was translated into Anglo-Saxon at the
instance of King Alfred. It has often been
translated since, notably by T. Stapleton who printed it (1565) at Antwerp as a controversial weapon against the Reformation divines in the reign of Elizabeth. The
Latin text first appeared in Germany in 1475; it is noteworthy that no edition even
of the Latin was printed in England before 1643. Smith's more accurate text saw
the light in 1742.
Bede's
chronological treatises "De temporibus liber" and "De temporum
ratione" also contain summaries of the general history of the world from
the Creation to 725 and 703, respectively. These historical portions have been
satisfactorily edited by Mommsen in the "Monumenta Germaniae historica"
(4to series, 1898). They may be counted among the earliest specimens of this
type of general chronical and were largely copied and imitated. The
topographical work "De locis sanctis" is a description of Jerusalem and the holy places based upon Adamnan and Arculfus. Bede's work was edited in 1898 by Geyer in
the "Itinera Hierosolymitana" for the Vienna "Corpus Scriptorum". That Bede
compiled a Martyrologium we know from his own statement. But the work
attributed to him in extant manuscripts has been so much interpolated and
supplemented that his share in it is quite uncertain.
Bede's
exegetical writings both in his
own idea and in that of his
contemporaries stood supreme in importance among his works, but the list is
long and cannot fully be given here. They included a commentary upon the Pentateuch as a whole as well as on selected
portions, and there are also commentaries on the Books of Kings, Esdras,
Tobias, the Canticles, etc. In the New Testament he has certainly interpreted St. Mark,
St. Luke, the Acts, the Canonical Epistles, and the Apocalypse. But the
authenticity of the commentary on St. Matthew printed under his name is more
than doubtful. (Plaine in
"Revue Anglo-Romaine", 1896, III, 61.) The homilies of Bede take the form of commentaries upon the
Gospel. The collection of fifty, divided into two books, which are attributed
to him by Giles (and in Migne) are for the most part authentic, but the
genuineness of a few is open to suspicion. (Morin in "Revue
Bénédictine", IX, 1892, 316.)
Various
didactic works are mentioned by Bede in the list which he has left us of his
own writings. Most of these are still preserved and there is no reason to doubt that the texts we possess are authentic. The
grammatical treatises "De arte metricâ" and "De
orthographiâ" have been adequately edited in modern times by Keil in his
"Grammatici Latini" (Leipzig, 1863). But the larger works "De
naturâ rerum", "De temporibus", "De temporium
ratione", dealing with science as it was then understood and especially with chronology, are only accessible in the
unsatisfactory texts of the earlier editors and Giles. Beyond the metrical life
of St. Cuthbert and some verses
incorporated in the Ecclesiastical History" we do not possess much poetry
that can be assigned to Bede with confidence, but, like other scholars of his
age, he certainly wrote a good deal of verse. He himself mentions his
"book of hymns" composed in
different meters or rhythms. So Alcuin says of him: Plurima versifico
cecinit quoque carmina plectro. It is possible that the shorter of the two
metrical calendars printed among his
works is genuine. The Penitential ascribed to Bede, though accepted as genuine
by Haddan and Stubbs and Wasserschleben, is probably not his (Plummer, I, 157).
Venerable
Bede is the earliest witness of pure Gregorian tradition in England. His works "Musica theoretica" and
"De arte Metricâ" (Migne, XC) are found especially valuable by
present-day scholars engaged in the study of the primitive form of the chant.
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