
The "apostle of the north" (Scandinavia) had enough frustrations to become
a saint and he did. He became a Benedictine at Corbie, France, where he had been educated. Three
years later, when the king of Denmark became a convert, Ansgar went to that country for three years
of missionary work, without noticeable success. Sweden asked for Christian missionaries, and he went
there, suffering capture by pirates and other hardships on the way. Fewer than two years later, he
was recalled, to become abbot of New Corbie (Corvey) and bishop of Hamburg. The pope made him legate
for the Scandinavian missions. Funds for the northern apostolate stopped with Emperor Louis's death.
After 13 years work in Hamburg, Ansgar saw it burned to the ground by invading Northmen; Sweden and
Denmark returned to paganism.
He directed new apostolic activities in the North, traveling
to Denmark and being instrumental in the conversion of another king. By the strange device of
casting lots, the king of Sweden allowed the Christian missionaries to return.
Ansgar's
biographers remark that he was an extraordinary preacher, a humble and ascetical priest. He was
devoted to the poor and the sick, imitating the Lord in washing their feet and waiting on them at
table. He died peacefully at Bremen, Germany, without achieving his wish to be a
martyr.
Sweden became pagan again after his death, and remained so until the coming of
missionaries two centuries later.
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