Happy feast of St. Cuðberht to my Sassenachs and Athel-stans (which of course is the Stan club of the true king of England, Athelstan).
The Medieval Church got it right by making their books short enough to read with a single pot of tea. And this short little book was perfect! It was well paced, Gospel saturated, action packed, reverent, theologically astute, and topically relevant. The notes were at times helpful and added context to a work that I knew relatively little about.
The modern intro was incredibly weird. It was like they let r/Atheism combine all 10 of their collective brain cells to intro the text. The intro felt like it went out of its way to let you know that the editing team was not only not Christian, but actively militant against those who were. I was really off put by the intro of an otherwise wonderfully compiled and translated text.
Historically it is worth noting that this work is written by Bede the Venerable on the life of St. Cuthbert. These two people alone are some of the most important voices in English Christian history. It is also worth noting that Alfred the Great was directly inspired by this work as he was uniting the English under a single crown. That is to say some of the most important voices in English history are directly involved or inspired by this text. Its historical significance cannot be understated.
Shout out to the boys in blue, the House of Wessex, for successfully uniting the English under a single banner. However, Cuthbert points us to a future kingdom far greater than anything Alfred could ever imagine. One in which Christ will rule not with the sword but with the message of the Grace handed down from Christ on the Holy Rood.
[As an aside, my Kate Middleton theory is that she has been in a monastery faithfully studying the Life of Cuthbert and the way of Bede; it’s no coincidence she intends to return on Easter]