Uncle Eddy's E-mails -- May 21
Saint Godric,
(entered heaven 1170)
Dear Ricky,
Did I detect a bit of discouragement in your last note, or was it just my daily
gruel disagreeing with me again? Since after these years of solitary confinement I believe I am
quite used to my daily gruel, I will assume that the former is correct. No need, my young apostle,
no need at all. Every apostolic endeavor has ups and downs, and so we must always keep pumping new
energy and new ideas into our evangelizing efforts. We will be able to rest when we get to heaven,
please God. In your present circumstances, I have an idea. Nothing jump-starts enthusiasm like a
pilgrimage, so why not organize a special pilgrimage for your group? Do it up right, think big, get
everyone involved in it. One of you can research the "theology of pilgrimages," another few could be
the travel committee, planning all the travel details, while some others start up a fundraising
committee. You can start having liturgies of preparation, gathering prayer intentions from friends
and relatives. Make it a pilgrimage for the Pope, or for Life, or for Christian Unity, or for the
Conversion of Sinners. Go to Rome if you can, or the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception,
or to a shrine or Church closer by (there are a lot of possible sites, you know). Invite a great
preacher to be your chaplain. Big or small, for a week or for an afternoon, however you cut it
up, preparing for and carrying out a pilgrimage in a spirit of faith is an incomparable way to stoke
that fire of love for Christ that you see waning among your friends.
Take today's saint, for example. Godric was a poor boy from a poor
family in England. He started making a living by peddling, then branched out a bit, started to
travel and trade, and eventually became a full-fledged merchant (some would say "pirate"). He saw
the world, and liked it. But after reading a biography of that great hero of the faith St Cuthbert
he started wondering if maybe he was missing the boat. So he went on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem (no
small feat back in those days). His conversion began. Three pilgrimages later (to Campostela, Spain,
to the shrine of St Giles in Provence, France, and to Rome – with his mother who made the whole trip
barefoot) he knew that God had called him to a solitary life of prayer and penance. He ended up
attaching himself to a hermit in northern England, and after this mentor's death, setting up his own
little hermitage under the direction of a local monastery. He befriended a whole forest-full of wild
animals (they used to run to his little hut when they were in danger), frequently gave audience to
strangers searching for spiritual advice (a bunch of whom became canonized saints themselves), and
predicted a whole slew of historic happenings (including the day of his own death). God even gave
him the ability to envision events that were taking place far away (shipwrecks, battles, etc.) so
that he could pray for them. St Godric filled the countryside (and the country) with the sweet
aroma of Christ for sixty years, and it all started with a pilgrimage.
Remember, only fools learn from experience; the wise learn from the
experience of others.
God bless.
Uncle Eddy
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| Published by: Maggie | |
| Date: 2012-01-16 05:04:44 | |
| This is quite wrong in much of its detail and so misleading about Godric. He could not read, was not a pirate, made several more pilgrimages than listed, did not befriend a 'forest-full of wild animals'. He had many more adventure before finally setting up his hermitage by permission of the bishop, not the monastery, and none of the bunch of people who came to him was canonised as a result! He was a great asset to Durham people, and had a social role to play among them. |
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