Saints celebrated on the 21st of May
SAINT GODRIC OF FINCHALE, HERMIT
Saint Godrick [Godric, Goderic] was born of very mean parents at Walpole in Norfolk, and in his youth carried about little peddling wares which he sold in villages.
PEDDLING MERCHANDISE
Having by degrees improved his stock he frequented cities and fairs, and made several voyages by sea to traffic in Scotland. In one of these he called at Holy Island, or Lindisfarne, where he was charmed and exceedingly edified with the retirement and religious deportment of the monks, and especially with the account which they gave him of the wonderful life of St Cuthbert.
TOUCHED BY ST CUTHBERT'S LIFE AND WORKS
He inquired of them every particular relating to him, visited every corner of that holy solitude and of the neighbouring isle of Farne, and falling on his knees, prayed with many tears for grace to imitate the fervour of that saint in serving God, resolving for that purpose to give up all earthly pretensions.
PILGRIMAGES
He entered upon a new course of life by a penitential devout pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and visited Compostella in his way home. After his return into Norfolk he accepted the charge of house steward in the family of a very rich man.
The servants were not very regular, and for their private junketings often trespassed upon their neighbours. Godrick finding he was not able to prevent these injustices, and that the nobleman took no notice of his complaints about them, being easy so long as he was no sufferer himself, left his place for fear of being involved in the guilt of such an injustice.
ANCHORETICAL LIFE
After making a pilgrimage to St Giles in France and to Rome, he went to the north of England in order the better to carry into execution his design of devoting himself wholly to a retired life.
A fervent servant of God, named Godwin, who had passed a considerable time in the monastery of Durham, and by conversing with the most holy monks and exercising himself in the interior and exterior practices of all virtues, was well qualified to be a director to an inexperienced novice, joined our saint, and they led together an austere anchoretical life in a wilderness situated on the north to Carlisle, serving one another, and spending both the days and nights in the praises of God.
ST JOHN THE BAPTIST AND ST CUTHBERT WERE HIS PRINCIPAL PATRONS
After two years God called Godwin to himself by a happy death after a short sickness. St Godrick, having lost his companion, made a second painful pilgrimage to Jerusalem.
After his return he passed some time in the solitude of Streneshalch, now Whitby; but after a year and some months went to Durham to offer up his prayers before the shrine of St Cuthbert, and from thence retired into the desert of Finchal or Finkley, three miles from Durham, near the river Wear. St John Baptist and St Cuthbert he chose for his principal patrons and models.
HIS AUSTERITIES
The austerities which he practised are rather to be admired than imitated. He had his regular tasks and devotion, consisting of psalms and other prayers which he had learned by heart, and which he constantly recited at midnight, break of day, and the other canonical hours, besides a great number of other devotions.
Though he was ignorant of the very elements of learning, he was too well experienced in the happy art of conversing with God and his own soul ever to be at a loss how to employ his time in solitude.
Whole days and nights seemed too short for his rapturous contemplations, one of which he often wished with St Bruno he could have continued without interruption for eternity, in inflamed acts of adoration, compunction, love or praise.
His patience under the sharpest pains of sicknesses or ulcers, and all manner of trials, was admirable; but his humility was yet more astonishing. His conversation was meek, humble, and simple. He concealed as much as possible from the sight and knowledge of all men whatever might procure their esteem, and he was even unwilling any one should see or speak with him.
A MONK OF DURHAM WAS HIS CONFESSOR
Yet this he saw himself obliged to allow on certain days every week to such as came with the leave of the prior of Durham, under whose care and obedience he lived. A monk of that house was his confessor, said Mass for him, and administered him the sacraments in a chapel adjoining to his cell, which the holy man had built in honour of St John Baptist.
HIS HUMILITY
He was most averse from all pride and vanity, and never spoke of himself but as of the most sinful of creatures, a counterfeit hermit, an empty phantom of a religious man: lazy, slothful, proud, and imperious, abusing the charity of good people who assisted him with their alms.
But the more the saint humbled himself the more did God exalt him by his grace, and by wonderful miraculous gifts. For several years before his death he was confined to his bed by sickness and old age.
William of Newbridge who visited him during that time, tells us that though his body appeared in a manner dead, his tongue was ever repeating the sacred names of the three Divine Persons, and in his countenance there appeared a wonderful dignity, accompanied with an unusual grace and sweetness.
HIS HAPPY DEATH
Having remained in this desert sixty-three years he was seized with his last illness, and happily departed to his Lord on May 21, 1170, in the reign of Henry II.
His body was buried in the chapel of St John Baptist. Many miracles confirmed the opinion of his sanctity, and a little chapel was built to his memory by Richard, brother to Hugh Pidsey, bishop of Durham.
From Fr Butler's Lives of the Saints
PRAYER:
Grant, we beseech you, almighty God, that the venerable feast of Saint Godric may increase our devotion and promote our salvation. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, for ever and ever. Amen.
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