Wilfrid
was born in 634, the son of a nobleman. At odds with his stepmother, he
was sent to the court of King Oswy of Northumbria, where Queen
Eanfleda, complying with his wishes, kindly saw to his education in the
sacred sciences.
In 654 he went to Europe with St. Benet, and
after a stay in Lyons, went on to Rome where he studied under Boniface
the Archdeacon, secretary to Pope St. Martin.
Back
in England, in league with King Alcfrith of Deira, he labored to bring
the Roman discipline to the English church, taking distance from Celtic
usages. Among the Roman practices he worked to establish in England was
the Roman calculation for the celebration of Easter.
He became abbot of the monastery of Ripon where he introduced the rule of St. Benedict, and soon after was ordained a priest.
Appointed
Bishop of York, he went to France to be consecrated. Lingering, for
reasons unknown, then suffering shipwreck, when he returned, found that
another, St. Chad, had been appointed in his place by King Oswy.
Wilfrid
did not dispute the election, but later, St. Theodore, Archbishop of
Canterbury, found that the appointment of St. Chad had been irregular
and placed St. Wilfrid in the see of York.
As a bishop, he was
exemplary and beloved of his people, but his path was not peaceful.
First at odds with the heir to Oswy, King Egfrith, and then with the
latter’s successor, Aldfrith, he twice lost his see and twice had to
travel to Rome to be reinstated, besides facing all sorts of
difficulties.
He died in 709 and his body is buried in his
monastery of Ripon. Part of the epitaph on his tomb reads: “… drove
error far, and showed his folk sound law and liturgy … At home, abroad
long time in tempests tossed … he bore a bishop’s charge … Passed to
rest and gained the joys of heaven … Grant Lord his flock may tread
their shepherd’s path!”
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