The Portal - Australia edition January 2014 | Page 7

THE P RTAL January 2014 Page 7 The Gregorian Mission Harry Schnitker T here can be little doubt that the first real highlight of what was to become the close relationship between the Church in England and the Popes came during the Pontificate of Pope St Gregory the Great (540-604). His Pontificate began in 590, some 180 years after the Roman legions had left Britain. There, much had changed during this period: almost all of what is now England, and a swathe of south-eastern Scotland, had come to be dominated by the Anglo-Saxons. shrouded in uncertainty How this came about is shrouded in uncertainty. We now know that numbers were small, and that outright conquest was the exception rather than the rule. Yet somehow these Continental invaders managed to oust a culture that had dominated England for centuries. Christianity, which may not have been that widespread outside urban areas anyhow, retreated to the west and was replaced by paganism. Frankish conversion this initiative by his Frankish wife, Bertha (539-612), the daughter of the Merovingian King, Charibert I. She was later canonised. mission to England Significantly, the man sent by the Pope to lead the first mission to England, St Augustine, settled at a church which St Bertha had erected in Canterbury, and which she had dedicated to St Martin of Tours. From being the private sacred space of the Queen, the church became the centre of the Roman mission to England. In this Anglo-Saxon world, military supremacy local kings and kinships came to dominate the socio-political The relationship between scene. Some of the kings Bertha, Æthelberht and St married into the Frankish nobility of the Continent, Gregory the Great was pivotal for the Christianisation which had converted to Christianity around 496. of England. Æthelberht was not only the King of Kent, he was also the Bretwalda. It is worthwhile just to consider this. The Frankish conversion occurred within half a century of the This title implied he held a military and honorary collapse of Rome. Now that is still quite a considerable supremacy amongst the Anglo-Saxon kings. This time. However, if counting back 50 years gets us to the fact was quickly understood by the Pope, who wrote 1960s, counting back 180 years gets us to 1833, four to the King of Kent to urge him not only to accept years before the reign of Queen Victoria. Christianity, but also to propagate it amongst his fellow Anglo-Saxon rulers. monumental tasks Such perspective helps us in understanding the profound and sweeping changes that had impacted on England, and the monumental nature of the tasks awaiting any missionary. Nevertheless, assistance from the Christian wives of some of the kings was certainly hugely beneficial. daughter of Rome The rest of the story is well-known, and a conversion of England’s rulers was relatively easily achieved. England had become the special daughter of Rome, the first Christian territory that had been lost to the pagans after the collapse of Rome and recovered since. The first breakthrough for the missions came when There is a subtle irony in this: it was an alliance the King of Kent, Æthelberht (c.560-616), asked Pope between Papacy and monarchy that turned the face Gregory the Great for Christian missionaries towards of England Rome-wards – it was a breakdown of that the end of the century. He had been persuaded to take alliance that ended England’s links with Rome.