
St John of Beverley
This illustrious saint was born at Harpham, a village in the province of the Deiri, which comprised Yorkshire, Lancashire, and the rest of the kingdom of the Northumbers, on the south side of the Tyne; what lay beyond it being called Bernicia.
An earnest desire of qualifying himself for the service of God drew him
young into Kent, where he made great progress in learning and piety, in the famous school of St.
Theodorus, the archbishop, under the direction of the holy abbot Adrian.
Afterwards returning into his own country, he pursued the exercises of piety in the monastery of men
under St. Hilda at Whithy; till in the beginning of the reign of king Alfred, upon the death of
Eata, he was made bishop of Hagulstad, or Hexam. What time he had to spare from his functions he
consecrated to heavenly contemplation; retiring for that purpose into the churchyard of St.
Michael's, beyond the river Tyne, about a mile and a half from Hagulstad, especially during the
forty days of Lent. He was accustomed to take with him some poor person, whom he served during that
time.
Once in the beginning of a Lent, he took with him a dumb youth, who never
had been able to utter one word, and whose head was covered with hideous scabs and scales, without
any hair. The saint caused a mansion to be built for this sick youth within his enclosure, and often
admitted him into his own cell. On the second Sunday he made the sign of the cross upon his tongue,
and loosed it. Then. he taught him to say <Gea>, which signifies in Saxon <Yea>, or
<Yes>; then the letters of the alphabet, A, B, C, and afterwards syllables and words. Thus the
youth miraculously obtained his speech.
Moreover, by the saint's blessing the
remedies prescribed by a physician whom he employed, his head was entirely healed, and became
covered with hair. When St. Wilfred returned from banishment, St. John yielded up to him the see of
Hagulstad: but some time after, upon the death of Bosa, a man of great sanctity and humility, as
Bede testifies, he was placed in the archiepiscopal chair of York. Venerable Bede, who received the
holy orders of deacon and priest at his hands, gives ample testimony to his sanctity; and relates
the instantaneous cure of the sick wife of a neighboring thane or lord, by holy water, and several
other miracles performed by him, from the testimony of Bercthun, abbot of Beverley, and Herebald,
abbot of Tinmouth, who had been eye-witnesses to several of them. St. John made frequent retirement
his delight, to renew thereby his spirit of devotion, lest the dissipation of exterior employs
should extinguish it.
He chose for his retreat a monastery which he had built at Beverley,
then a forest, now a market-town, twenty-seven miles from York. This monastery, according to the
custom of those times, he erected for the use of both sexes, and put it under the government of his
disciple, Bercthun, or Brithun, first abbot of Beverley, then called Endeirwood, or wood of the
Deiri. In 717, being much broken with age and fatigues, he resigned his bishopric to his chaplain,
St. Wilfrid the, younger, and having ordained him bishop of York, he retired to Beverley, where he
spent the remaining four years of his life in the punctual performance of all monastic duties. He
died there the death of the just, on the 7th of May, 721. His successor governed the see of York
fifteen years, was a great lover of the beauty of God's house and is named among the saints, April
the 29th. The monastery of Beverley having been destroyed by the Danes, king Athelstan, who had
obtained a great victory over the Scots by the intercession of St. John, founded in his honor, in
the same place, a rich collegiate church of canons.
King Henry V. attributed to the intercession of this saint the glorious
victory of Agincourt, on which occasion a synod, in 1416, ordered his festival to be solemnly kept
over all England. Henschenius the Bollandist, in the second tome of May, has published four books of
the miracles wrought at the relics of Saint John of Beverley, written by eye-witnesses. His sacred
bones were honorably translated into the church by Alfric, archbishop of York, in 1037: a feast in
honor of which translation was kept at York on the 25th of October.
On the 13th of September, (not the 24th, as Mr. Stevens says,) in 1664, the sexton, digging a grave in the church of Beverley, discovered a vault of freestone, in which was a box of lead, containing several pieces of bones, with some dust, yielding a sweet smell; with inscriptions, by which it appeared that these were the mortal remains of St. John of Beverley, as we read in Dugdale's History of the Collegiate Church of Beverley, who has transcribed them, p. 57. These relics had been hid in the beginning of the reign of king Edward VI. Dugdale and Stevens testify, that they were all reinterred in the middle-alley of the same church.
Alcuin had an extraordinary devotion to St. John of Beverley, and in his poem on the saints of York, published by Thomas Gale gives a long history of the miracles wrought by him from verse 1085 to 1215. Rabanus Maurus has placed Alcuin in his Martyrology on the 19th of May, and Henschenius on that day gives his life, and mentions several private Martyrologies in which his name is found, though he has never been anywhere honored in the office of the church.
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