Of the lives of Ninian, Bride, and Patrick, and even of
Columba’s contemporary, St. Mungo, we have scanty knowledge, but of
Columba’s achievements a remarkably clear record exists. Adamnan’s Life of
St. Columba is one of the treasures of history, and “the most complete piece
of such biography that Europe can boast of, not only at so early a period,
but even through the whole Middle Ages”.—(Pinkerton: Lives of Scottish
Saints.) It was written in Iona by Adamnan, the ninth Abbot, at the urgent
request, as he tells us, of the brethren. The biographer was born in 624,
twenty-seven years after the death of the saint. He conversed with men who
had been Columba’s monks, had access to all the literary remains, and
embodied in his book the fragmentary record of an earlier Abbot. The book is
in part hagiology rather than biography, and the reader must make what
allowances his training and temperament demand for the prophetic and
miraculous elements in the narrative.
Columba was born on 4th December, 521, at Gartan, a wild,
mountainous district in Donegal, the haunt of the wolf, and, to this day, of
the eagle. He was descended from the royal house of Neill, his father,
Phelim MacFergus, being a great-grandson of Niall of the Nine Hostings, High
King of Ireland at Royal Tara from 379 to 405. In Niall’s day, Ireland was a
pagan land, but a certain British lad, named Patrick, was a slave in
Connaught. Patrick escaped to Gaul, and in the course of time returned to
Ireland, which he converted from Druidism to Christianity, and of which he
became later the patron saint. Niall’s son, Conall, Columba’s great -
grandfather, was baptized by St. Patrick.
Columba’s mother, Eithne, was also of royal descent. The old
Irish life of the saint says that he. was eligible for the throne of Erin,
which would have been offered him had he not abandoned it for the service of
Christ.
There is a legend that, before her son was born, Eithne
dreamed one night that an angel stood before her and offered her a robe of
exquisite beauty. Scarcely was it hers than the angel took it from her and
spread it out till it covered mountain and lough and forest, reaching even
to Scotland. From this sign Eithne knew that her child was the child of the
prophecies, and destined to lead innumerable souls to Heaven.
Columba’s education was accordingly directed to fit him for
his mission. He received two names: Crimthan, a wolf, and Colum, a dove,
each of which seems appropriate to one element of his complex character. His
early education was entrusted to Cruithnechan, an aged presbyter, renowned
for sanctity, who lived near by. The child’s love for the offices of the
church was so marked that the children of the neighbourhood, whom he would
join on coming from the cell in which he read his psalms, named him
Columcille, Colum of the cell or church. Columba is, of course, the Latin
form of Colum.
When his fosterage under Cruithnechan was ended, Columba was
placed under the care of Finnian at an ecclesiastical school in Moville,
where he was ordained deacon. Thence he proceeded to Leinster, where he
studied the native literature under Gemman, the venerable Bard of that
province. According to Irish tradition, he retained throughout his life the
love he there acquired for the old, poetic tales of his race; and, himself a
poet, he probably became a member of the Order of Bards. From Master Gemman,
he went on to the monastic school of St. Finnian—the most famous school in
Ireland—situated by the waters of the Boyne.
Finally, after a period at the monastery of Glasnevin, near
Dublin, where he probably pronounced his monastic vow, he returned to his
native Ulster.
In 545, Columba founded the monastery of Derry on a site
given him by his kinsmen of the Clan Neill. He came to realize, however,
that monasticism did not fully satisfy the needs of the time. Refreshed with
a period of prayer and fasting—a visit, too, to Tours, in Gaul, took place
about this time—he left Derry, and began to preach up and down Ireland,
attacking paganism where it still existed, and strengthening the faith in
other parts. Everywhere he founded churches, of which over three hundred are
ascribed to him; and monasteries, of which the most famous are Durrow and
Kells. The power of organization was one of his many gifts, and Scotland
reaped the fruits of his Irish experience. His method was to find a suitable
site where a church was needed, and go boldly to the owner and ask for it;
then, when permission was given, he erected the requisite buildings—not
scrupling to work with his own hands when necessary—installed carefully
trained workers and passed on; and, in spite of his constant journeyings, he
continued to keep in touch with all his foundations.
Why Columba left Ireland for Scotland is not known with
certainty. A popular account has it that the saint, who was a fervent scribe
and highly skilled in the art of illumination, secretly copied for his own
use a beautiful manuscript of the book of Psalms, belonging to his old
master, Finnian of Moville. The owner demanded the copy, which was refused.
Finnian appealed to Diarmaid, King of Ireland, and chief of the southern
Clan Neill. The king gave judgment in these words: “To every cow belongs her
calf, and to every book its copy”. Columba, filled with wrath at the
decision, incited his kinsmen of the northern Clan Neill to battle, and
Diarmaid was defeated with great slaughter. Columba was then summoned by
Diarmaid before a synod and excommunicated; but the sentence was afterwards
annulled. Full of remorse for his deed, Columba sought his “anmcara”, his
soul-friend or spiritual adviser, who counselled him that, as a penance, he
should go into perpetual exile, and win as many souls for Christ as he had
caused bodies to be slain in battle.
This narrative is not reliable. Adamnan not only does not
mention it, but he speaks of Columba’s having revisited Ireland on ten
different occasions. It is more likely that his departure from Ireland was
concerned with the position of his kinsfolk in the Scottish Dalriada (Argyllshire),
so named after the Irish Dalriada (Antrim), whence they came.
(The channel which separates the two countries is only twelve
miles wide, and the houses in Kintyre can be seen from the Irish coast
opposite). The northern Picts were at this time a barbarous and pagan race;
the southern Britons had lapsed sadly since the days of Ninian; and the
Scots were the only Christian people in North Britain. In 560 the Scots
settlers suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of Brude, King of the
Northern Picts; their king, a kinsman of Columba, was slain; and there was a
danger that the whole colony might be extirpated. In Skene's opinion (and in
accordance with a prophecy in the Chronicle of the Picts and Scots) it was
this reverse which called forth the mission of St. Columba, and led him to
select North Pictland as his first field. Christianity was to be the bopd
which should unite these turbulent nations, and establish among them an
abiding peace.
Adamnan puts the reason for Columba’s departure quite simply:
“In the forty-second year of his age, desiring to seek a foreign country for
the sake of Christ, he sailed from Ireland to Britain". |