Readings:
Psalm 112:1-9 or 15
Titus
2:7-8,11-14
Matthew
24:42-47
Preface of a Saint (2)
PRAYER (traditional language)
O holy God, who didst endow thy servant and bishop Hugh of
Lincoln with wise and cheerful boldness, and didst teach him to commend the discipline of
holy life to kings and princes: Grant that we also, rejoicing in the Good News of thy
mercy, and fearing nothing but the loss of thee, may be bold to speak the truth in love,
in the name of Jesus Christ our Redeemer, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy
Spirit, one God, now and for ever.
PRAYER (contemporary language)
O holy God, who endowed your servant and bishop Hugh of
Lincoln with wise and cheerful boldness, and taught him to commend the discipline of holy
life to kings and princes: Grant that we also, rejoicing in the Good News of your mercy,
and fearing nothing but the loss of you, may be bold to speak the truth in love, in the
name of Jesus Christ our Redeemer, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one
God, now and for ever.
|
|
HUGH OF LINCOLN
BISHOP, PROTECTOR OF
THE OPPRESSED (17 NOV 1200)
As a sign of his remorse for his role in the murder of the Archbishop Thomas a Becket,
King Henry II founded the first house in England of the strict monastic order called the
Carthusians. Difficulties arose with the first two priors, and a French noble recommended
Hugh de Avalon, who at that time had been a monk at the mother house of the order for 17
years.
On his arrival in England in 1176, Hugh
found that the building of the monastery had not begun. Worse, no compensation had been
paid to those who would have to lose their lands and property to make room for it. Hugh
refused to take office until these persons had been paid "to the last penny." He
intervened again on behalf of the builders, whose pay was not forthcoming.
Henry loved him for his plain speaking. "I do not despair of
you," Hugh said to him at their first interview; "I know how much your many
occupations interfere with the health of your soul." Henry, impressed by his
frankness, swore that while he lived he should not leave his kingdom, and took so much
pleasure in his conversation, and paid so much heed to his counsels, that a rumor arose
that Hugh was his son. Hugh's biographer wrote that "of all men only Hugh could bend
that rhinosceros to his will." When Henry was in danger of shipwreck, he cried out,
"If only my Carthusian Hugh were awake and at prayer, God would not forget me."
This affection never diminished, though Hugh dared to oppose the king, particularly in the
matter of keeping bishoprics vacant in order that their revenues might fall to the king's
treasury. One of the worst examples was Lincoln, which, except for a few months, had been
without a bishop for eighteen years. Hugh was elected to the post in 1186, and his
monastic superiors ordered him to accept. After so long a period of neglect, there was
great need of reform. Hugh employed priests of great piety and learning, and made the
fullest use of his authority in disciplining his clergy. He took a stern view of the
ill-treatment of the poor by the royal foresters, and when a subject of the church of
Lincoln suffered at their hands he excommunicated their chief.
He also refused to appoint a royal favorite to a meaningless but
lucrative post. Henry was furious, and summoned him to his presence. He came, and Henry
turned away his face and would not speak, but by way of ignoring his presence took out a
torn glove and began to sew it. At last Hugh said, "How like you are to your
relations at Falaise." The king might have resented this allusion to the humble birth
of William the Conqueror's mother, the daughter of a glove-maker, but he only laughed, and
the quarrel was made up.
Riots against the Jews broke out in
England at the time of the Third Crusade. In defence of the persecuted, Hugh faced armed
mobs in Lincoln, Stamford and Northampton and compelled their submission. Hugh refused to
raise money for the foreign wars of King Richard the Lion-Heart, calmed the king's rage
with a kiss, and persisted in his refusal: this was the first clear example on record of
the refusal of a money-grant demanded directly by the crown, and an important legal
precedent. Richard said, "If all bishops were like my lord of Lincoln, not a prince
among us could raise his head against them."
His relations with King John were less happy. John showed him an
amulet, which he said was sacred and would preserve him. Hugh replied, "Do not put
your trust in lifeless stone, but only in the living and heavenly stone, our Lord Jesus
Christ." The following Easter he preached at length on the duties of kings, and the
king slipped out partway through.
Devout, tireless, and forgetful of self,
Hugh also had wit, a temper that he described as "more biting than pepper," and
a great love and concern for children and the defenseless. He visited leper-houses and
washed the ulcerous limbs of their inmates. He was fond of animals, and they of him. Birds
and squirrels came readily to his hand. He had a swan that would feed from his hand,
follow him about, and keep guard over his bed, so that no one could approach it without
being attacked.
In 1200 the king sent him on an embassy to France. His mission was a
success, but he took ill and returned to England to die on 16 November 1200. John Ruskin
called him "the most beautiful sacerdotal (priestly) figure known to me in
history."
by James Kiefer
|