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Feast Day: June 05 ![[Saint Boniface holy card]](st%20boniface_files/image001.jpg)
Also known as
Winfrid;
Wynfrith; Apostle of Germany
Memorial
5 June
Profile
Educated at
the
Benedictine
monastery at Exeter,
England.
Benedictine
monk at Exeter.
Missionary to
Germany from
719, assisted by Saint
Albinus. Destroyed idols and pagan temples, and built churches on the
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.
Born
c.673-680
at Crediton, Devonshire,
England
Died
martyred
5 June 754 at Freisland,
Holland; body at
monastery at Fulda
Patronage
brewers,
Germany,
tailors
Representation
ax, book,
fountain, fox, oak, raven, scourge, sword
Images
Gallery of images of Saint Boniface
Readings
In her
voyage across the ocean of this world, the Church is like a great ship
being pounded by the waves of life's different stresses. Our duty is not
to abandons ship but to keep her on her course.
Let us stand fast in what is right, and prepare our souls for trial. Let
us wait upon God's strengthening aid and say to him: "O Lord, you have
been our refuge in all generations."
Let us trust in him who has placed this burden upon us. What we ourselves
cannot bear let us bear with the help of Christ. For he is all-powerful,
and he tells us: "My yoke is easy, and my burden light."
Let us continue the fight on the day of the Lord. The days of anguish and
of tribulation have overtaken us; if God so wills, "let us die for the
holy laws of our fathers," so that we may deserve to obtain an eternal
inheritance with them.
from a letter by Saint Boniface
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