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 VII. How Bishop Mellitus by prayer quenched afire in his city. [619 AD.]
CHAP. VI. 


LAURENTIUS, being about to follow Mellitus and Justus, and to quit Britain, 
ordered his bed to be laid that night in the church of the blessed Apostles, 
Peter and Paul, which has been often mentioned before; wherein having laid 
himself to rest, after he had with tears poured forth many prayers to God for 
the state of the Church, he fell asleep; in the dead of night, the blessed chief 
of the Apostles appeared to him, and scourging him grievously a long time, asked 
of him with apostolic severity, why he was forsaking the flock which he had 
committed to him? or to what shepherd he was leaving, by his flight, Christ's 
sheep that were in the midst of wolves? "Hast thou," he said, "forgotten my 
example, who, for the sake of those little ones, whom Christ commended to me in 
token of His affection, underwent at the hands of infidels and enemies of 
Christ, bonds, stripes, imprisonment, afflictions, and lastly, death itself, 
even the death of the cross, that I might at last be crowned with Him?" 
Laurentius, the servant of Christ, roused by the scourging of the blessed Peter 
and his words of exhortation, went to the king as soon as morning broke, and 
laying aside his garment, showed the scars of the stripes which he had received. 
The king, astonished, asked who had presumed to inflict such stripes on so great 
a man. And when he heard that for the sake of his salvation the bishop had 
suffered these cruel blows at the hands of the Apostle of Christ, he was greatly 
afraid; and abjuring the worship of idols, and renouncing his unlawful marriage, 
he received the faith of Christ, and being baptized, promoted and supported the 
interests of the Church to the utmost of his power.

He also sent over into Gaul, and recalled Mellitus and Justus, and bade them 
return to govern their churches in freedom. They came back one year after their 
departure, and Justus returned to the city of Rochester, where he had before 
presided; but the people of London would not receive Bishop Mellitus, choosing 
rather to be under their idolatrous high priests; for King Eadbald had not so 
much authority in the kingdom as his father, and was not able to restore the 
bishop to his church against the will and consent of the pagans. But he and his 
nation, after his conversion to the Lord, sought to obey the commandments of 
God. Lastly, he built the church of the holy Mother of God, in the monastery of 
the most blessed chief of the Apostles, which was afterwards consecrated by 
Archbishop Mellitus.



CHAP. VII.


IN this king's reign, the blessed Archbishop Laurentius was taken up to the 
heavenly kingdom: he was buried in the church and monastery of the holy Apostle 
Peter, close by his predecessor Augustine, on the 2nd day of the month of 
February. Mellitus, who was bishop of London, succeeded to the see of 
Canterbury, being the third archbishop from Augustine; Justus, who was still 
living, governed the church of Rochester. These ruled the Church of the English 
with much care and industry, and received letters of exhortation from Boniface, 
bishop of the Roman Apostolic see, who presided over the Church after Deusdedit, 
in the year of our Lord 619. Mellitus laboured under the bodily infirmity of 
gout, but his mind was sound and active, cheerfully passing over all earthly 
things, and always aspiring to love, seek, and attain to those which are 
celestial. He was noble by birth, but still nobler by the elevation of his mind.

In short, that I may give one instance of his power, from which the rest may be 
inferred, it happened once that the city of Canterbury, being set on fire 
through carelessness, was in danger of being consumed by the spreading 
conflagration; water was thrown on the fire in vain; a considerable part of the 
city was already destroyed, and the fierce flames were advancing towards the 
bishop's abode, when he, trusting in God, where human help failed, ordered 
himself to be carried towards the raging masses of fire which were spreading on 
every side. The church of the four crowned Martyrs was in the place where the 
fire raged most fiercely. The bishop, being carried thither by his servants, 
weak as he was, set about averting by prayer the danger which the strong hands 
of active men had not been able to overcome with all their exertions. 
Immediately the wind, which blowing from the south had spread the conflagration 
throughout the city, veered to the north, and thus prevented the destruction of 
those places that had been exposed to its full violence, then it ceased entirely 
and there was a calm, while the flames likewise sank and were extinguished. And 
because the man of God burned with the fire of divine love, and was wont to 
drive away the storms of the powers of the air, by his frequent prayers and at 
his bidding, from doing harm to himself, or his people, it was meet that he 
should be allowed to prevail over the winds and flames of this world, and to 
obtain that they should not injure him or his.

This archbishop also, having ruled the church five years, departed to heaven in 
the reign of King Eadbald, and was buried with his fathers in the monastery and 
church, which we have so often mentioned, of the most blessed chief of the 
Apostles, in the year of our Lord 624, on the 24th day of April.























 






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