TODAY'S SAINT (Augustine of Canterbury)
AUGUSTINE OF  CANTERBURY
 (d. 604 or  605)
 Benedictine and first bishop of  Canterbury,
 Apostle to England, Apostle to the  Anglo-Saxons
 Also known as: Austin
 Augustine was by all accounts a timid man, a  librarian and monk. In 596, Pope St. Gregory the Great (r. 590-604) chose about  30 monks from St. Andrew Monastery on the Coelian Hill in Rome, led by their  prior, Augustine, to serve in the first papal mission to convert the pagans. The  band  traveled as far as Provence, in Gaul; but, terrified by tales of the  Anglo-Saxons and the dangers of crossing the English Channel, the monks  persuaded Augustine to return to Rome and beg His Holiness to end their mission.  Gregory knew,  however, that the Saxon king Aethelbert was married  to a Christian princess,  Berthha. He told Augustine that he had  no choice but to go on to England. They landed on the Isle of Thanet off  the coast of Kent in late 596 and were warmly  welcomed by the king and  queen, who gave Augustine a house in Canterbury and permis-sion to preach.  On Pentecost in 597,  Augustine Baptized King  Aethelbert.
      Augustine traveled back to  France almost immediately to receive consecr-ation as bishop of the English by  St. Virgilius, metropolitan  of Arles. Instead of establishing his see in  London, Augustine chose Canterbury, the royal capital of Kent. He rebuilt  an ancient church that served as the center of the  cathedral and erected a  monastery to SS. Peter and Paul outside the walls. The present cathedral,  begun in 1070, stands on the original site. Augustine also establ-shed  episcopal sees at London and Rochester and dedicated the first church in England  to St. Pancras.
      Gregory I gave Augustine  very specific instructions regarding the convers-ion of the English. Pagan  temples were not to be destroyed but instead clean-ed and consecrated for  Christian worship. Local customs and festivals were to be retained, with  substitutions of feast days for saints and martyrs whenever possible.  Consequently, by 601 Augustine had converted many of the English  people.
      Converting the clergy to a  unified liturgy proved a more difficult task. Unable to communicate  effectively  with the church in Rome, the British church had established  its own patterns  of worship and practice. Many also were unwilling to  evangelize the to evangelize the Anglo-Saxons, whom they  considered      their enemies.  A meeting failed  miserably when Augustine supposedly failed to rise at the arrival of the British  bishops. Deeming Augustine arrogant, the bishops would not accept him as  metropolitan.
       Discouraged and  exhausted, Augustine died on May 26, 604 or 607. He was buried at the abbey of  SS. Peter and Paul outside the Canterbury Cathedral. From then on, the monastery  became known as St. Augustine's, and  succeeding archbishops of the English  Church were buried there. The archbishop of Canterbury remains the head of the  Church of England and is described as occupying the "Chair of  Augustine." 
 PRAYER
 God, through the preaching  of  St. Augustine, Your Bishop. You led the English peoples to  the Gospel. Grant that the fruits of his labor may perdure in Your Church  with perennial fruitfulness. Amen.
      Feast: May 27 (May 28 on some calendars;  May 26 in England and 
                   Wales)
      Patronage:  England
 FURTHER READING
  Cahill, Thomas How the Irish Saved  Civilization. New York: Nan Talese/ 
      Doubleday,  1995
 

