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St. Columba
Abbot of Iona, b. at Garten, County Donegal, Ireland, 7 December, 521; d. 9
June, 597. He belonged to the Clan O'Donnell, and was of royal descent. His
father's name was Fedhlimdh and that of his mother Eithne. On his father's side
he was great-great-grandson of Niall of the Nine Hostages, an Irish king of the
fourth century. His baptismal name was Colum, which signifies a dove, hence the
latinized form Columba. It assumes another form in Colum-cille, the suffix
meaning of the Churches
. He was baptized at Tulach-Dubhglaise, now
Temple-Douglas, by a priest named Cruithnechan, who afterwards became his tutor
or foster-father. When sufficiently advanced in letters he entered the monastic
school of Moville under St. Finnian who had studied at St. Ninian's Magnum
Monasterium
on the shores of Galloway. Columba at Moville monastic life and
received the diaconate. In the same place his sanctity first manifested itself
by miracles. By his prayers, tradition says, he converted water into wine for
the Holy Sacrifice (Adam., II, i). Having completed his training at Moville, he
travelled southwards into Leinster, where he became a pupil of an aged bard
named Gemman. On leaving him, Columba entered the monastery of Clonard, governed
at that time by Finnian, a remarkable, like his namesake of Moville, for
sanctity and learning. Here he imbibed the traditions of the Welsh Church, for
Finnian had been trained in the schools of St. David. Here also he became one
those twelve Clonard disciples known in subsequent history as the Twelve
Apostles of Ireland. About this same time he was promoted to the priesthood by
bishop Etchen of Clonfad. The story that St. Finnian wished Columba to be
consecrated bishop, but through a mistake only priest's orders were conferred,
is regarded by competent authorities as the invention of a later age (Reeves,
Adam., 226).
Another preceptor of Columba was St. Mobhi, whose monastery at Glasnevin was
frequented by such famous men as St. Canice, St. Comgall, and St. Ciaran. A
pestilence which devastated Ireland in 544 caused the dispersion of Mobhi's
disciples, and Columba returned to Ulster, the land of his kindred. The
following years were marked by the foundation of several important monasteries,
Derry, Durrow, and Kells. Derry and Durrow were always specially dear to Columba.
While at Derry it is said that he planned a pilgrimage to Rome and Jerusalem,
but did not proceed farther than Tours. Thence he brought a copy of those
gospels that had lain on the bosom of St. Martin for the space of 100 years.
This relic was deposited in Derry (Skene, Celtic Scotland, II, 483). Columba
left Ireland and passed over into Scotland in 563. The motives for this
migration have been frequently discussed. Bede simply says: Venit de Hibernia
… praedicaturus verbum Dei
(H. E., III, iv); Adarnnan: pro Christo
perigrinari volens enavigavit
(Praef., II). Later writers state that his
departure was due to the fact that he had induced the clan Neill to rise and
engage in battle against King Diarmait at Cooldrevny in 561. The reasons alleged
for this action of Columba are: (1) The king's violation of the right of
sanctuary belonging to Columba's person as a monk on the occasion of the murder
of Prince Curnan, the saint's kinsman; (2) Diarmait's adverse judgment
concerning the copy Columba had secretly made of St. Finnian's psalter. Columba
is said to have supported by his prayers the men of the North who were fighting
while Finnian did the same for Diarmait's men. The latter were defeated with a
loss of three thousand. Columba's conscience smote him, and he had recourse to
his confessor, St. Molaise, who imposed this severe penance: to leave Ireland
and preach the Gospel so as to gain as many souls to Christ as lives lost at
Cooldrevny, and never more to look upon his native land. Some writers hold that
these are legends invented by the bards and romancers of a later age, because
there is no mention of them by the earliest authorities (O'Hanlon, Lives of the
Ir. Saints, VI, 353). Cardinal Moran accepts no other motive than that assigned
by Adamnan, a desire to carry the Gospel to a pagan nation and to win souls to
God
. (Lives ot Irish Saints in Great Britain, 67). Archbishop Healy, on the
contrary, considers that the saint did incite to battle, and exclaims: O felix
culpa … which produced so much good both for Erin and Alba (Schools and
Scholars, 311).
IONA
Columba was in his forty-fourth year when he departed from Ireland. He and his twelve companions crossed the sea in a currach of wickerwork covered with hides. They landed at Iona on the eve of Pentecost, 12 May, 563. The island, according to Irish authorities, was granted to the monastic colonists by King Conall of Dalriada, Columba's kinsman. Bede attributes the gift to the Picts (Fowler, p. lxv). It was a convenient situation, being midway between his countrymen along the western coast and the Picts of Caledonia. He and his brethren proceeded at once to erect their humble dwellings, consisting of a church, refectory, and cells, constructed of wattles and rough planks. After spending some years among the Scots of Dalriada, Columba began the great work of his life, the conversion of the Northern Picts. Together with St. Comgall and St. Canice (Kenneth) he visited King Brude in his royal residence near Inverness. Admittance was refused to the missionaries, and the gates were closed and bolted, but before the sign of the cross the bolts flew back, the doors stood open, and the monks entered the castle. Awe-struck by so evident a miracle, the king listened to Columba with reverence; and was baptized. The people soon followed the example set them, and thus was inaugurated a movement that extended itself to the whole of Caledonia. Opposition was not wanting, and it came chiefly from the Druids, who officially represented the paganism of the nation.
The thirty-two remaining years of Columba's life were mainly spent in
preaching the Christian Faith to the inhabitants of the glens and wooded straths
of Northern Scotland. His steps can be followed not only through the Great Glen,
but eastwards also, into Aberdeenshire. The Book of Deer
(p. 91) tells us how
he and Drostan came, as God had shown them to Aberdour in Buchan, and how Bede,
a Pict, who was high steward of Buchan, gave them the town in freedom forever.
The preaching of the saint was confirmed by many miracles, and he provided for
the instruction of his converts by the erection of numerous churches and
monasteries. One of his journeys brought him to Glasgow, where he met St. Mungo,
the apostle of Strathclyde. He frequently visited Ireland; in 570 he attended
the synod of Drumceatt, in company with the Scottish King Aidan, whom shortly
before he had inaugurated successor of Conall of Dalriada. When not engaged in
missionary journeys, he always resided at Iona. Numerous strangers sought him
there, and they received help for soul and body. From Iona he governed those
numerous communities in Ireland and Caledonia, which regarded him as their
father and founder. This accounts for the unique position occupied by the
successors of Columba, who governed the entire province of the Northern Picts
although they had received priest's orders only. It was considered unbecoming
that any successor in the office of Abbot of Iona should possess a dignity
higher than of the founder. The bishops were regarded as being of a superior
order, but subject nevertheless to the jurisdiction of the abbot. At Lindisfarne
the monks reverted to the ordinary law and were subject to a bishop (Bede, H.E.,
xxvii).
Columba is said never to have spent an hour without study, prayer, or similar
occupations. When at home he was frequently engaged in transcribing. On the eve
of his death he was engaged in the work of transcription. It is stated that he
wrote 300 books with his own hand, two of which, The Book of Durrow
and the
psalter called The Cathach
, have been preserved to the present time. The
psalter enclosed in a shrine, was originally carried into battle by the O'
Donnells as a pledge of victory. Several of his compositions in Latin and Irish
have come down to us, the best known being the poem Altus Prosator
, published
in the Liber Hymnorum
, and also in another form by the late Marquess of Bute.
There is not sufficient evidence to prove that the rule attributed to him was
really his work.
In the spring of 597 he knew that his end was approaching. On Saturday, 8
June, he ascended the hill overlooking his monastery and blessed for the last
time the home so dear to him. That afternoon he was present at Vespers, and
later, when the bell summoned the community to the midnight service, he
forestalled the others and entered the church without assistance. But he sank
before the altar, and in that place breathed forth his soul to God, surrounded
by his disciples. This happened a little after midnight between the 8th and 9th
of June, 597. He was in the seventy-seventh year of his age. The monks buried
him within the monastic enclosure. After the lapse of a century or more his
bones were disinterred and placed within a suitable shrine. But as Northmen and
Danes more than once invaded the island, the relics of St. Columba were carried
for purposes of safety into Ireland and deposited in the church of Downpatrick.
Since the twelfth century history is silent regarding them. His books and
garments were held in veneration at Iona, they were exposed and carried in
procession, and were the means of working miracles (Adam., II, xlv). His feast
is kept in Scotland and Ireland on the 9th of June. In the Scottish Province of
St Andrews and Edinburgh there is a Mass and Office proper to the festival,
which ranks as a double of the second class with an octave. He is patron of two
Scottish dioceses Argyle and the Isles and Dunkeld. According to tradition St.
Columba was tall and of dignified mien. Adamnan says: He was angelic in
appearance, graceful in speech, holy in work
(Praef., II). His voice was strong,
sweet, and sonorous capable at times of being heard at a great distance. He
inherited the ardent temperament and strong passions of his race. It has been
sometimes said that he was of an angry and vindictive spirit not only because of
his supposed part in the battle of Cooldrevny but also because of irritant
related by Adamnan (II, xxiii sq. ) But the deeds that roused his indignation
were wrongs done to others, and the retribution that overtook the perpetrators
was rather predicted than actually invoked. Whatever faults were inherent in his
nature he overcame and he stands before the world conspicuous for humiiity and
charity not only towards has brethren, but towards strangers also. He was
generous and warm-hearted, tender and kind even to dumb creatures. He was ever
ready to sympathize with the joys and sorrows of others. His fasts and vigils
were carried to a great extent. The stone pillow on which he slept is said to be
still preserved in Iona. His chastity of body and purity of mind are extolled by
all his biographers. Notwithstanding his wonderful austerities, Adamnan assures
us he was beloved by all, for a holy joyousness that ever beamed from his
countenance revealed the gladness with which the Holy Spirit filled his soul
.
(Praef., II.)
INFLUENCE, AND ATTITUDE TOWARDS ROME
He was not only a great missionary saint who won a whole kingdom to Christ,
but he was a statesman, a scholar, a poet, and the founder of numerous churches
and monasteries. His name is dear to Scotsmen and Irishmen alike. And because of
his great and noble work even non-Catholics hold his memory in veneration. For
the purposes of controversy it has been maintained some that St. Columba ignored
papal supremacy, because he entered upon his mission without the pope's
authorization. Adamnan is silent on the subject; but his work is neither
exhaustive as to Columba's life, nor does it pretend to catalogue the implicit
and explicit belief of his patron. Indeed, in those days a mandate from the pope
was not deemed essential for the work which St. Columba undertook. This may be
gathered from the words of St. Gregory the Great, relative to the neglect of the
British clergy towards the pagan Saxons (Haddan and Stubbs, III, 10). Columba
was a son of the Irish Church, which taught from the days of St. Patrick that
matters of greater moment should be referred to the Holy See for settlement. St.
Columbanus, Columba's fellow-country-man and fellow-churchman, asked for papal
judgment (judicium) on the Easter question; so did the bishops and abbots of
Ireland. There is not the slightest evidence to prove that St. Columba differed
on this point from his fellow-countryrnen. Moreover, the Stowe Missal, which,
according to the best authority, represents the Mass of the Celtic Church during
the early part of the seventh century, contains in its Canon prayers for the
pope more emphatic than even those of the Roman Liturgy. To the further
objection as to the supposed absence of the cultus of Our Lady, it may be
pointed out that the same Stowe Missal contains before its Canon the invocation
Sancta Maria, ora pro nobis
, which epitomizes all Catholic devotion to the
Blessed Virgin. As to the Easter difficulty Bede thus sums up the reasons for
the discrepancy: He [Columba] left successors distinguished for great charity,
Divine love, and strict attention to the rules of discipline following indeed
uncertain cycles in the computation of the great festival of Easter, because,
far away as they were out of the world, no one had supplied them with the
synodal decrees relating to the Paschal observance
(H.E., III, iv). As far as
can be ascertained no proper symbolical representation of St. Columba exists.
The few attempts that have been made are for the most part mistaken. A suitable
pictorial representation would exhibit him, clothed in the habit and cowl
usually worn by the Basilian or Benedictine monks, with Celtic tonsure and
crosier. His identity could be best determined by showing him standing near the
shell-strewn shore, with currach hard by, and the Celtic cross and ruins of Iona
in the background.
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