

Holy Days in June
(taken
from Common Worship)
Justin
(1st June)
Christian
apologist, born at Flavia Neapolis, about A.D. 100, converted to Christianity
about A.D. 130, taught and defended the Christian religion in Asia Minor and at
Rome, where he suffered martyrdom about the year 165.
The
Martyrs of Uganda
(3rd June)
On
3 June 1886, thirty-two young men, pages of the court of King Mwanga of
Buganda, were burned to death at Namugongo for their refusal to renounce
Christianity. In the following months many other Christians throughout the
country died
by spear or fire for their faith. These martyrdoms totally changed the
dynamic of
Christian growth in Uganda. Introduced by a handful of Anglican and Roman
missionaries after 1877, the Christian faith had been preached only to the
immediate
members of the court, by order of King Mutesa. His successor, Mwanga, became
increasingly
angry as he realized that the first converts put loyalty to Christ above
the traditional
loyalty to the king. Martyrdoms began in 1885. Mwanga first forbade anyone
to go near
a Christian mission on pain of death, but finding himself unable to cool
the ardour of the
converts, resolved to wipe out Christianity. The Namugongo martyrdoms produced a
result
entirely opposite to Mwanga's intentions. The example of these martyrs,
who walked to their
deaths singing hymns and praying for their enemies, so inspired many of the
bystanders that
they began to seek instruction from the remaining Christians. Within a few years
the original
handful of converts had multiplied many times and spread far beyond the
court. The
martyrs had left the indelible impression that Christianity was truly
African, not simply
a white man's religion. Most of the missionary work was carried out by
Africans rather than
by white missionaries, and Christianity spread steadily. Uganda now has the
largest
percentage of professed Christians of any nation in Africa
Petroc
(4th June)
Younger
son of King Glywys. On his father's death, the people of Glywysing called for
Petroc to take the crown of one the country's sub-divisions, but Petroc wanted a
religious life, and went to study in Ireland. Several years later he
returned to Britain,
landing on the River Camel in Cornwall. Directed by Saint Samson to the
hermitage of Saint
Wethnoc. Wethnoc agreed to give his cell to Petroc in order that he could
found a
monastery on the site. After 30 years as abbot, Petroc made a pilgrimage
to Rome.
On his return, just as he reached Newton Saint Petroc, it began to rain. Petroc
predicted it would soon stop, but it rained for three days. In penance for
presuming to
predict God's weather, Petroc returned to Rome, then to Jerusalem, then to India
where he lived 7 years on an island in the Indian Ocean. Petroc returned to
Britain
with a wolf companion he had met in India. Founded churches at Saint Petrox and
Llanbedrog. In Cornwall, with the help of Saint Wethnoc and Saint Samson, he
defeated
a mighty serpent that King Teudar of Penwith had used to devour his enemies. He
then left
his monastery at Llanwethinoc to live as a hermit in the woods at
Nanceventon, some
fellow monks following his example at Vallis Fontis. While in the wilderness, a
hunted
deer sought shelter in Saint Petroc's cell. Petroc protected it from the hunter,
King
Constantine of Dumnonia, and converted the king to Christianity into the bargain. Petroc
later moved deep into the Cornish countryside, encountering the hermit Saint
Guron.
Guron moved south allowing Petroc, with the backing of King Constantine, to
establish
a monastery called Bothmena (the Abode of Monks) at the site of the hermitage.
Boniface
[Wynfrith]
(5th June)
Educated
at the Benedictine monastery at Exeter. Benedictine monk at Exeter. Missionary
to Germany from 719, assisted by Saint Albinus and Saint Agatha. Destroyed idols
and
pagan temples, and built churches on their sites. Bishop. Archbishop of Mainz.
Reformed churches in his see, and built religious houses in Germany. Ordained
Saint Sola. Founded or restored the dioceses of Bavaria, Thuringgia, and
Franconia.
Evangelized in Holland, but was set upon by a troop of pagans, and he and 52 of
his new flock were martyred. In Saxony, Boniface encountered a tribe
worshipping a
Norse deity in the form of a huge oak tree. Boniface walked up to the tree,
removed
his shirt, took up an axe, and without a word he hacked down the six foot
wide wooden
god. Boniface stood on the trunk, and asked, "How stands your mighty
god?
My God is stronger than he." The crowd's reaction was mixed, but
some conversions
were begun. One tradition about Saint Boniface says that he used the customs of
the locals to
help convert them. There was a game in which they threw sticks called kegels
at smaller
sticks called heides. Boniface bought religion to the game, having
the heides represent
demons, and knocking them down showing purity of spirit.
Ini
Kopuria
(6th June)
As
a native policeman, Ini Kopuria's job took him all over Guadalcanal in the
Solomon Islands,
but a vision of Jesus, calling him to do different work for his people,
led him to a life of
evangelism in which he aimed to take and live the gospel in the remotest
villages and
islands in Melanesia. He began a Brotherhood for Melanesians in 1925 and, with
help
from his bishop, prepared a Rule and made vows himself in which he
dedicated his
life and his land to God. Men were asked to make only a five-year commitment to
service within the community and many came to join him and stayed for much
longer.
It quickly grew into one of the largest religious communities in the Anglican
Communion and its method of evangelism proved highly effective. Ini died
in1945, revered throughout the Pacific Islands and Papua New Guinea.
Thomas
Ken (8th June)
Ken
trained at Winchester and New College, Oxford, and was ordained an Anglican
priest in
1662. In 1663, he became Rector of Little Easton, and Rector of Woodhay and
Prebendary
of Winchester in 1669. He published Manual of Prayers for the use of
the scholars
of Winchester College, in 1674. He was briefly chaplain to Princess Mary,
and later
to the British fleet. He became Bishop of Bath and Wells in 1685. He was
one of
several bishops imprisoned in the Tower of London for refusing to sign James
II’s
“Declaration of Indulgence” (hoping to restore Catholicism to power in
England);
he was tried and acquitted. Ken wrote a great deal of poetry, published
posthumously in 1721.
Columba
(9th June)
Irish
royalty, the son of Fedhlimidh and Eithne of the Ui Neill clan. Bard. Priest.
Itinerant
preacher and teacher throughout Ireland. Miracle worker. Founded monasteries.
Spiritual
teacher of Saint Corbmac. Exiled to Iona, he founded and led a monastic
community there
for 12 years. He and the monks of Iona, including Saint Baithen of Iona
and Saint
Eochod, then evangelized the Picts.
Ephrem
(9th June)
Ephrem
(or Ephren or Ephraim or Ephrain) of Edessa was a teacher, poet, orator, and
defender of the Faith. (To English-speakers, the most familiar form of his name
will be
"Ephraim." It is the name of the younger son of Joseph, son of
Jacob (see Genesis 41:52),
and is thus the name of one of the largest of the twelve tribes of Israel.)
Edessa
(now Urfa), a city in modern Turkey about 100 kilometres from Antioch (now
Antakya),
was an early centre for the spread of Christian teaching in the East. It
is said that in
325 he accompanied his bishop, James of Nisibis, to the Council of Nicea.
Certainly his
writings are an eloquent defence of the Nicene faith in the Deity of Jesus
Christ.
He countered the Gnostics' practice of spreading their message through popular
songs
by composing Christian songs and hymns of his own, with great effect. He is
known to
the Syrian church as "the harp of the Holy Spirit." Ephrem
retired to a cave outside
Edessa, where he lived in great simplicity and devoted himself to writing.
He
frequently went into the city to preach. During a famine in 372-3 he worked
distributing
food to the hungry, and organizing a sort of ambulance service for the sick. He
worked
long hours at this, and became exhausted and sick, and died. Of his writings
there
remain 72 hymns, commentaries on the Old and New Testaments and numerous
sermons.
Barnabas
(11th June)
Apostle
Richard
Baxter
(14th June)
Puritan
evangelist of Kidderminster. There was an amazing transformation of that town
under his ministry. Family catechizing, family worship, a public worship pattern
full of praise, church discipline, preaching, devotional reading, regular
pastoral
counselling, and small-group ministry under Baxter's oversight, were all part
of it, and reformation was Baxter's name for it. He wrote a classic book
on ministerial
practice entitled The Reformed Pastor. By the word reformed Baxter meant
spiritually
alive and morally in shape, not merely maintaining what we would call
Calvinistic
octrines, though he assumes that. His meaning becomes clear when he writes:
'If God would but reform the clergy, the people of England would soon be
reformed.'
Evelyn
Underhill
(15th June)
Evelyn
Underhill was born in 1850 and grew up in London. Her friends included
Laurence Housman (poet and brother of the poet A E Housman) and
Sarah Bernhardt (actress), and Baron Friedrich von Huegel, a writer on
theology and mysticism. Largely under his guidance, she embarked on a life of
reading,
writing, meditation, and prayer. From her studies and experience she produced a
series of
books on contemplative prayer.)
Miss
Underhill (Mrs. Hubert Stuart Moore) taught that
the life of contemplative prayer is not just for monks and nuns, but can be the
life of
any Christian who is willing to undertake it. She also taught that modern
psychological
theory, far from being a threat to contemplation, can fruitfully be used
to enhance it
. In her later years, she spent a great deal of time as a lecturer and retreat
director.
She died on June 15, 1941.
Richard
(16th June)
Richard
of Wyche was born in 1197 at Droitwyche, the son of a prosperous yeoman
farmer. He and his brother were orphaned at an early age, and an incompetent
guardian
wasted the inheritance. Richard worked long and hard to restore the family
property, and
when he had succeeded, he turned it over to his brother and went off to Oxford
to
become a scholar. He was too poor to afford a gown or a fire in winter,
but he did
very well at his studies, with Robert Grosseteste among his teachers. He
established what would be a lifelong friendship with his tutor, Edmund
Rich
(Edmund of Abingdon). He studied canon law at Oxford (and probably also at Paris
and Bologna) and, having acquired a doctorate, he became Chancellor of Oxford in
1235. Meanwhile, his tutor had become Archbishop of Canterbury, and soon asked
Richard
to become his Chancellor. When the Archbishop rebuked King Henry III for
keeping
various bishoprics vacant as long as possible (because as long as they
were vacant
their revenues went to the Crown), Henry forced him into exile, and
Richard
accompanied him to France and nursed him in his final illness. After the
Archbishop's
death in 1240, Richard studied at the Dominican house in Orleans, and was
ordained
priest in 1243. In 1244 he was elected Bishop of Chichester, but Henry
would not
recognize the election, locked him out of the bishop's residence, and pocketed
the revenues.
Richard accepted shelter with a village priest, and spent the next two years
walking barefoot
through his diocese, preaching to fishermen and farmers, and correcting
abuses.
He held synods to legislate, and insisted that the sacraments must be
administered
without payment, and the Liturgy celebrated with reverence and order. The clergy
were required to be celibate, to wear clerical dress, and to live in the
parishes they
were assigned to and carry out their duties in person. The laity were required
to attend
services on all Sundays and holy days, and to know by heart the Lord's Prayer,
the
Hail Mary, and the Apostles' Creed. After two years, Henry was pressured
into
recognizing Richard as Bishop, but Richard continued to live as he had before.
One
of his concerns was that the Moslems then in control of Jerusalem would not
admit
Christian pilgrims. In 1253 he travelled about appealing for a new Crusade,
aimed
solely at pressuring the Moslems into permitting pilgrimages. He caught a fever
and
died in 1253.
Joseph
Butler (16th June)
Butler
was born in 1692 and ordained in 1718. In 1726 he published Fifteen Sermons,
preached at the Rolls Chapel in London, and chiefly dealing with human
nature and its
implications for ethics and practical Christian life. He maintained that it is
normal for a
man to have an instinct of self-interest, which leads him to seek his own good,
and equally
normal for him to have an instinct of benevolence, which leads him to seek the
good of
others individually and generally, and that the two aims do not in fact
conflict. He served
as parish priest in several parishes, and in 1736 was appointed chaplain to
Queen Caroline, wife of King George II. In the same year he published his
masterpiece,
The Analogy of Religion, Natural and Revealed, To the Constitution and
Course of
Nature (often cited simply as "Butler's Analogy"), a work
chiefly directed against Deism.
Appended to the main work was a treatise, Of the Nature of Virtue,
which establishes
him as one of the foremost British writers on ethics, or moral philosophy.
When the Queen
died in 1737, Butler was made Bishop of Bristol. (In England at that time,
bishoprics and
parish churches were supported each by a separate source of income that
had been established
for it perhaps centuries earlier, and in consequence the funding was very
unequal.
Bristol, being the lowest paid of all bishoprics, was where a new bishop usually
started. Later, he might be promoted to another diocese. The Reform
movement of
the 1830's and its aftermath have remedied this situation.) However, George II
had
been impressed with him earlier, and in 1746 he was called back to court
and the
next year offered the post of Archbishop of Canterbury. He refused the
post, but in
1750 he became Bishop of Durham (well known even then as having a tradition
of
bishops whose speeches and writings attract public attention). He died there
in 1752.
Samuel
and Henrietta Barnett
(17th June)
English
clergyman and social worker. As vicar of St. Jude’s, Whitechapel, in the
slums
of London, he pioneered in the social settlement movement. Toynbee Hall, the
first
settlement house, was opened in 1884 with Barnett as its first warden. He
was also
active in the university extension movement. His wife, Henrietta Octavia
Barnett,
1851–1936, was especially interested in housing and helped found a model
garden
suburb at Hampstead. She collaborated in some of her husband’s books,
notably
Practicable Socialism (1888) and wrote his biography (1918).
In 1924 she became Dame Commander of the British Empire
Bernard
Mizeki
(18th June)
Bernard
Mizeki was born in Portuguese East Africa (Mozambique) in about 1861. When
he was twelve or a little older, he left his home and went to Capetown, South
Africa,
where for the next ten years he worked as a labourer, living in the slums of
Capetown,
but firmly refusing to drink alcohol, and remaining largely uncorrupted by
his surroundings.
After his day's work, he attended night classes at an Anglican school. Under the
influence
of his teachers, from the Society of Saint John the Evangelist, he became a
Christian
and was baptized on 9 March 1886. Besides the fundamentals of European
schooling,
he mastered English, French, high Dutch, and at least eight local African
languages. In time
he would be an invaluable assistant when the Anglican church began translating
its sacred
texts into African languages. After graduating from the school, he accompanied
Bishop
Knight-Bruce to Mashonaland, a tribal area in Southern Rhodesia (now
Zimbabwe), to work
as a lay catechist. In 1891 the bishop assigned him to Nhowe, the village of
paramount-chief
Mangwende, and there he built a mission-complex. He prayed the Anglican
hours each
day, tended his subsistence garden, studied the local language and cultivated
friendships
with the villagers. He eventually opened a school, and won the hearts of
many of the
Mashona through his love for their children. He moved his mission complex
up onto a
nearby plateau, next to a grove of trees sacred to the ancestral spirits
of the Mashona.
Although he had the chief's permission, he angered the local religious
leaders when
he cut some of the trees down and carved crosses into others. Although he
opposed some
local traditional religious customs, Bernard was very attentive to the nuances
of the Shona
Spirit religion. He developed an approach that built on people's already
monotheistic faith in
one God, Mwari, and on their sensitivity to spirit life, while at the same time
he forthrightly
proclaimed the Christ. Over the next five years (1891-1896), the mission at
Nhowe
produced an abundance of converts. Many black African nationalists regarded all
missionaries as working for the European colonial governments. During an
uprising in 1896, Bernard was warned to flee. He refused and would not
desert
his converts or his post. On 18 June 1896, he was fatally speared outside
his hut.
His wife and a helper went to get food and blankets for him. They later reported
that,
from a distance, they saw a blinding light on the hillside where he had been
lying,
and heard a rushing sound, as though of many wings. When they returned to
the
spot his body had disappeared. The place of his death has become a focus
of
great devotion for Anglicans and other Christians, and one of the greatest of
all
Christian festivals in Africa takes place there every year around the feast day
that
marks the anniversary of his martyrdom, June 18
Sundar
Singh
(19th June)
Sundar
Singh (1889-1929), or Sadhu Sundar Singh, as he is commonly known, came
from a well-to-do farming family in Punjab. In addition to the high ideals of
the Sikh
religion, his own devout mother brought him up in the Hindu bhakti
tradition. In his
later years, Sundar Singh often said that his mother made him a sadhu (a holy
man
in India) but the Holy Spirit made him a Christian. He knew the Granth,
Sikhism's
holy book, and memorised the Bhagavad Gita by the age of seven! At the
local
mission school, his rebellious spirit made him a most difficult student during
Bible classes.
He even led the local boys in stoning visiting Christian evangelists at
the marketplace!
But the sudden death of his beloved mother when he was 14 brought about the
great crisis
of his life. For days he struggled. Nothing comforted him. In his anger he even
burnt parts of
the Bible. Finally one night he resolved that unless God met him, he would
commit suicide by
laying himself on the railway track. As he waited upon God, yet not
knowing what to expect,
suddenly a light appeared in his room. To his utter amazement, he saw Jesus
Christ, radiant
with glory, love and peace, looking at him with compassion and asking,
"Why do
you persecute me? I died for you …"
Alban
(22nd June)
First martyr of Britain, c. 304. The commonly received account of the
martyrdom of St.
Alban meets us as early as the pages of Bede's "Ecclesiastical
History". According to this,
St. Alban was a pagan living at Verulamium (now the town of St. Albans in
Hertfordshire),
when a persecution of the Christians broke out, and a certain cleric fleeing for
his life took
refuge in Alban's house. Alban sheltered him, and after some days, moved by his
example,
himself received baptism. Later on, when the governor's emissaries came to
search the
house, Alban disguised himself in the cloak of his guest and gave himself
up in his place.
He was dragged before the judge, scourged, and, when he would not deny his
faith,
condemned to death. On the way to the place of execution Alban arrested
the waters
of a river so that they crossed dry-shod, and he further caused a fountain of
water to flow
on the summit of the hill on which he was beheaded. His executioner was
converted, and
the man who replaced him, after striking the fatal blow, was punished with
blindness. A later
development in the legend informs us that the cleric's name was Amphibalus, and
that he,
with some companions, was stoned to death a few days afterwards at Redbourn,
four miles
from St. Albans. What germ of truth may underlie these legends it is
difficult to decide.
The first authority to mention St. Alban is Constantius, in his Life of St.
Germanus of Auxerre,
written about 480. Still the whole legend as known to Bede was probably in
existence in the
first half of the sixth century and was used by Gildas before 547. It is
certain that St. Alban
has been continuously venerated in England since the fifth century
Etheldreda
(23rd June)
Sister
of Saint Jurmin. Relative of King Anna of East Anglia. Princess widowed after
three
years marriage; rumour had it that the marriage was never consummated,
Etheldrda having taken
a vow of perpetual virginity. She married again for reasons of state. Her new
husband knew of
her vow, but tired of living as brother and sister, and began to make
advances on her; she refused
him. He tried to bribe the local bishop, Saint Wilfrid of York, to release
her from her vow.
Wilfrid refused, and helped her to escape to a promontory called Colbert's Head.
A seven day
high tide, considered divine intervention, separated the two; the young
man gave up. The marriage
was annulled, and Audrey took the veil. She spent a year with her niece,
Saint Ebbe the Elder.
Founded the great abbey of Ely, where she lived an austere life.
She died of an enormous and unsightly tumour on her neck. She gratefully
accepted this as
Divine retribution for all the necklaces she had worn in her early years.
In the Middle Ages
a festival called Saint Audrey's Fair, was held at Ely on her feast
day. The exceptional
shoddiness of the merchandise, especially the neckerchiefs, contributed to the
English
language the word tawdry, a corruption of Saint Audrey.
The
Birth of John the Baptist (24th June)
Cyril
(27th June)
Cyril
of Alexandria, Bishop and Doctor of the Church, was born at Alexandria,
Egypt.
He was nephew of the patriarch of that city, Theophilus. Cyril received a
classical and
theological education at Alexandria and was ordained by his uncle. He
accompanied
Theophilus to Constantinople in 403 and was present at the Synod of the Oak that
deposed John Chrysostom, whom he believed guilty of the charges against
him.
He succeeded his uncle Theophilus as patriarch of Alexandria on Theophilus'
death in 412,
but only after a riot between Cyril's supporters and the followers of his rival
Timotheus.
Cyril at once began a series of attacks against the Novatians, whose
churches he closed; t
he Jews, whom he drove from the city; and governor Orestes, with whom he
disagreed
about some of his actions. In 430 Cyril became embroiled with Nestorius,
patriarch of
Constantinople, who was preaching that Mary was not the Mother of God since
Christ was
Divine and not human, and consequently she should not have the word theotokos
(God-bearer) applied to her. He persuaded Pope Celestine I to convoke a synod at
Rome, which
condemned Nestorius, and then did the same at his own synod in Alexandria.
Celestine
directed Cyril to depose Nestorius, and in 431, Cyril presided over the
third General
Council at Ephesus, attended by some two hundred bishops, which condemned all
the
tenets of Nestorius and his followers before the arrival of Archbishop
John of Antioch
and forty-two followers who believed Nestorius was innocent. When they
found
what had been done, they held a council of their own and deposed Cyril.
Emperor
Theodosius II arrested both Cyril and Nestorius but released Cyril on the
arrival of Papal
Legates who confirmed the council's actions against Nestorius and declared
Cyril innocent
of all charges. Two years later, Archbishop John, representing the moderate
Antiochene bishops, and Cyril reached an agreement and joined in the
condemnation,
and Nestorius was forced into exile. During the rest of his life, Cyril wrote
treatises that
clarified the doctrines of the Trinity and the Incarnation and that helped
prevent
Nestorianism and Pelagianism from taking long-term deep root in the
Christian community.
He was the most brilliant theologian of the Alexandrian tradition.
Irenaeus
(28th June)
Bishop
of Lyons, and Father of the Church. Information as to his life is scarce, and in
some
measure inexact. He was born in Proconsular Asia, or at least in some
province
bordering thereon, in the first half of the second century; the exact date
is controvertial -
between the years 115 and 125, according to some, or, according to others,
between
130 and 142. It is certain that, while still very young, Irenaeus had seen and
heard the
holy Bishop Polycarp (d. 155) at Smyrna. During the persecution of Marcus
Aurelius,
Irenaeus was a priest of the Church of Lyons. The clergy of that city, many of
whom were
suffering imprisonment for the Faith, sent him (177 or 178) to Rome with a
letter to
Pope Eleutherius concerning Montanism, and on that occasion bore emphatic
testimony
to his merits. Returning to Gaul, Irenaeus succeeded the martyr Saint Pothinus
as Bishop of
Lyons. During the religious peace which followed the persecution of Marcus
Aurelius,
the new bishop divided his activities between the duties of a pastor and of a
missionary
and his writings, almost all of which were directed against Gnosticism,
the heresy then
spreading in Gaul and elsewhere. In 190 or 191 he interceded with Pope Victor to
lift the
sentence of excommunication laid by that pontiff upon the Christian communities
of Asia
Minor which persevered in the practice of the Quartodecimans in regard to the
celebration
of Easter. Nothing is known of the date of his death, which must have
occurred at the
end of the second or the beginning of the third century. In spite of some
isolated and later
testimony to that effect, it is not very probable that he ended his career with
martyrdom.
Peter
and Paul (29th June)
Apostles

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