10 January 535 A.D. Remigius Dies—He Imparted Authority to Rheims (We'll Change the Title Next Year)
We are not sure of the date: either 533 or 535.
Graves, Dan. “Remigius Imparted Authority to
Rheims.” Christianity.com. Jun
2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/301-600/remigius-imparted-authority-to-rheims-11629709.html. Accessed 7 Jul 2014.
Remigius immediately undertook to spread the
gospel among the Franks. He sent Antimond as a missionary to Terouanne and
Boulogne and Vaast as a missionary to Arras. He also established bishops in
Cambrai, Laon, and Tournai.
It was as a matchmaker that
Remigius is most famous. He helped bring about the marriage of the Christian
lady Clotilda to King Clovis. Clotilda, Remigius and the Holy Spirit worked on
the heart of Clovis. The king became a Christian--in name at least. Remigius
baptized the pagan ruler on December 24, 496. Hundreds of the king's followers
also submitted to baptism.
Remigius died on this day, January 10,
535 (some sources say the 13th). But the repercussions of his life
affected France down to our own day.
France became a Catholic nation,
prominent in its defense of the popes--and quarrels with them. Such was the
honor in which Remigius was held, that Rheims became the place where almost all
of the kings of France were crowned (including Charles VII, when Joan of Arc
steadied him to victory).
Clovis and his noblemen made
many grants of land and other goods to Remigius. He used this wealth to endow
churches.
Remigius wrote sermons and
commentaries, but not much has survived. His sermons were highly regarded by contemporaries.
In one, on Matthew chapter 24, where Christ foretold the overthrow of Jerusalem
and the spread of the gospel, Remigius remarked that "...the Lord knew
that the hearts of the disciples would be made sad by the destruction of
Jerusalem, and overthrow of their nation, and He therefore comforts them with a
promise that more of the Gentiles should believe than of the Jews should
perish."
Resources:
Dedieu, Joseph. "St. Remigius." Catholic
Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton, 1914.
Mann, Horace K. "Archdioces of Reims." Catholic
Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton, 1914.
Various internet and encyclopedia articles.
Last updated June,
2007
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