St Boniface: apostle of the Germans 674-754
In the spring of AD 718 a
blonde emaciated, pale-complexioned monk in a Benedictine habit reached
the Pope's Roman residence, the Lateran, seeking an audience.
The visitor, called Wynfrith,
who had entered the monastery in Exeter at the age of seven was to be
one of the makers of Christian Europe. After studying in Exeter he
became an eminent teacher in the monastery, where he composed poetry and
innumerable riddles and wrote a Latin grammar, but, at the age of
forty, conscious of his Saxon descent, he felt called to minister to the
Saxon pagans in their German homeland.
Mission to the Dutch
But first, for a few months,
the lad joined another Anglo-Saxon monk, Willibrord, in his mission to
the Frisians (the Dutch). That mission had not been very fruitul,
partly because the Frisians were warring with the Catholic Franks. When
Wynfrith returned to his monastery in Wessex a bishop convinced him that
he needed papal backing to have missionary success.
Pope Gregory II probed the
Benedictine's scriptural knowledge and political acumen for months
before approving his mission. It meant a new life and Gregory gave the
monk a new name, Boniface. Boniface set to work in Thuringa and Hesse
where some missionaries had already been in action but he reported to
Rome that the Church was lax and that the priests he met, many of them
Anglo-Saxon, were ignorant. Some sacrificed to the pagan god, Thor; some
baptized in the name of the Fatherland, the Daughter and the Holy
Spirit. Many of them had concubines.
Signs of corruption
After four years Gregory asked
Boniface to return to Rome where he made him, at the age of fifty,
bishop for all Germany and directly responsible to the Pope. Snow
blocking the Brenner Pass prevented his return until spring. When he
left he took a papal letter to Charles Martel, the most powerful figure
among the Franks who had recently at Poitiers beaten the Muslims
threatening Western Europe.
Boniface was well received by
Martel but was shocked by the crudity of his soldiers and far more by
the avaricious, immoral court prelates. More interested in hunting and
fighting than in priestly duties, they sometimes celebrated Mass in
hunting garb. By exploiting the poor and using Church property, these
gluttonous, drunken men lived sumptuously and amused themselves by
playing dice, which was expressly forbidden. Some had mistresses and had
fathered illegitimate children.
Efforts at reform
Shortly after leaving Martel's
court, Boniface came across some pagans lying prostrate before a sacred
giant oak on a mountain in Hesse. Boniface held a cross high as two
monks felled the tree. The pagans warned of the wrath of the god, Thor,
but he remained silent. From the tree's wood Boniface built a chapel
dedicated to St Peter and shortly after built nearby a monastery, one of
a series which were centres of learning but also economic powerhouses
because of the monks' agricultural know-how.
In response to Boniface's
queries Rome supplied answers on what should be done with food offered
to idols, the remarriage of widows, whether a spouse's sickness
affected marital rights and how to handle 'unworthy bishops and priests
full of vice'.
Gregory II died in AD 731. His
successor, Gregory III, supported Boniface against those bishops who
opposed him because he was too rigorous. Gregory III’s successor,
Zachary, gave Boniface a free hand to hold a synod of the lax Frankish
church (In many places, he had written to Zachary, 'episcopal sees are
assigned to greedy laymen or corrupt clergy') and depose unworthy
bishops and priests. Boniface held a synod but clerical hostility to him
continued.
On the death of Charles
Martel, his son Pepin asked Pope Zachary's assent to a coup d'etat. The
inept King Childeric III was packed off to a monastery and in November
A.D. 751, at Soissons near Paris, Boniface as papal legate poured oil on
the head of Pepin to show he was King of the Franks 'with the Lord's
aid'. Pepin was the first Westerner to receive such a consecration.
Archbishop of Mainz
It meant a strong power
well-disposed to the Church in the vast area from the Atlantic to the
Elbe, from the Pyrenees to the Danube. It also meant that Rome had an
ally against the threatening Lombard King, Astolf. It probably meant
also that some of the Franks' enemies could not distinguish between
them and the Church.
Boniface, who was by this
stage Archbishop of Mainz (opposition from local clergy prevented him
from being appointed Archbishop of Cologne) kept asking Pope Zachary for
guidance on questions such as the attitude to lepers, what made it
possible to ordain priests under the normal age of thirty and what
should be done about a new people who had arrived at the frontier asking
to live in Christian lands - the Slavs.
Zachary said he wanted time to
think about that but he did not have much time left: he died on 15th
March 752. His successor, Stephen II, received a tardy letter of homage
from Boniface who explained that thirty churches and monasteries had
been destroyed by barbarians. Perhaps they identified the Church with
the civil power.
Stephen himself came to what
is now France to obtain Pepin's military support against the Lombards
and recognition of what were to become the papal States. Boniface had
made an essential contribution to the alliance with the Franks. But this
scrupulous, dedicated monk, who was later called the Apostle of the
Germans, did not retire to rest on his laurels and await his death at
the huge monastery he had established at Fulda.
Martyrdom at eighty
At the age of eighty, after
forty years as a missionary, he set out again along the Rhine with
fifty-two men: priests, monks, deacons, novices; servants and ten
soldiers. Nothing if not tenacious, he wanted to complete the
conversion of the Frisians and of his Saxons.
In Frisian territory, he arranged a big meeting of converts near the Zuidersee but, just before they arrived, Boniface's camp was overrun by brigands who slaughtered him and his many companions.
In Frisian territory, he arranged a big meeting of converts near the Zuidersee but, just before they arrived, Boniface's camp was overrun by brigands who slaughtered him and his many companions.