Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

08 February, 2026

Archbishop Thurstan. Saint Or No Saint ?



15th-Century Calendar from Pontefract Priory, now at King’s College, Cambridge, showing 6 February as the Feast Day 
of Saint Thurstan (near the top, under the word “Agathe”.
Illustration: THE TELEGRAPH


The following Text, unless stated otherwise, is from the excellent Blog ONCE I WAS A CLEVER BOY


6 February should be, it would appear, the Feast Day of Saint Thurstan, Archbishop of York 1114-1140, who, having just resigned his See, died on that day in 1140. 

Thurstan is usually, and rightly, remembered as a great Archbishop, but not as a Saint. That may be about to change.


Thurstan was born about 1070 in Bayeux, France, and came to England early in the reign of King Henry I. Promoted from being a Royal Clerk to the Archbishopric of York, at the King’s behest in 1114, it was not until 1119, after a dispute with the Archbishop of Canterbury over their respective rights, and in consequence falling out of the King’s favour, that he occupied the See of York. 


Fountains Abbey.
A Cistercian Abbey in Yorkshire, England.
Founded by Archbishop Thurstan in 1132.
Photo: 24 October 2016.
Attribution must say: WyrdLight.com
Author: Antony McCallum
(Wikimedia Commons)

There he proved himself a conscientious leader in both ecclesiastical and secular matters. This is set out in the Wikipedia biography at Thurstan.

In addition to the extensive bibliography attached to that, there is a useful 1960s biography of the Archbishop by Donald Nicoll.

As a young man, Thurstan had vowed to become a Cluniac Monk when that Community was at the height of its influence. Finally, in old age, he felt able to relinquish his responsibilities as Archbishop of York and entered the Cluniac Priory at Pontefract, Yorkshire, one of the two priories of that Order in his Diocese.


On 15 August 1114, Thurstan became Archbishop of York.
Available on YouTube

Towards the end of 1139, the aged Archbishop Thurstan, who in his youth had made a vow that he would ally himself to the Cluniac Order of Monks, decided to fulfil his vow. 

In extreme old age, he bade solemn farewell to the Clergy at York, and entered Pontefract Priory, taking the Monastic vows there on 25 January 1140. 


He did not, however, long outlive this step. On 5 February 1140, he died. Just before his death, he recited the Office of the Dead, and chanted the Dies Irae, and then “whilst the rest were kneeling and Praying around him, he passed away, to await in the land of silence the coming of that Day of Wrath, so terrible to all, of which he had just spoken.”


A statue of Archbishop Thurstan, who is widely recognised 
as one of Mediæval England’s most influential figures.
Illustration: THE TELEGRAPH

When, some years afterwards, his grave was opened, the Archbishop’s remains were said [by John of Hexham]to be found “sweet-smelling and undecayed”.

From VCH Yorkshire iii Houses of Cluniac Monks: Priory of Pontefract

Thurstan was buried in a place of honour before The High Altar of the Priory Church.

Recently, the Guardian newspaper reported that a 15th-Century Calendar from Pontefract Priory, now at King’s College, Cambridge, listed 6 February as Thurstan’s Feast Day as a Saint. The account of the discovery can be read at “Unambiguous Proof”: Mediæval Archbishop revealed as lost English Saint.


The Mail Online and The Daily Telegraph also have shorter and very similar accounts at New evidence shows 12th-Century Archbishop did achieve Sainthood and at Britain’s lost Saint discovered in ancient Manuscript.


The last recognised non-Papal Canonisation was in 1153, and the privilege of declaring Saints was, in 1170, reserved by the great Canonist Pope Alexander III to The Holy See. 

Popular devotion of course led to others being esteemed as Saints and led to not a few Mediæval Pilgrimages, but this was not of itself the formal approbation of a Cultus.

That said, it is perhaps surprising that the Cult of Saint Thurstan did not spread beyond the Priory which held his bones. The troubles of “The Anarchy” [Editor: The Anarchy was a Civil War in England and Normandy between 1138 and 1153] might account for that, but the return of political stability in 1154 might have provided a suitable context for its dissemination.


Indeed, the evidence we have at present does rather suggest it did not extend beyond the Priory and perhaps the Churches in its patronage.

The Priory buildings at Pontefract were damaged in the fighting during The Anarchy and, in 1153, many of the community appear to have been based at Broughton, near Skipton, Yorkshire. However, by 1159, the Priory was again occupied and was Consecrated by Thurstan’s successor but two, Archbishop Roger of Pont l’Evêque.


Thurstan’s tomb may well have remained in situ, but the entire Presbytery was to be rebuilt twice around it - once apparently in the later 12th-Century and again in the 14th-Century. 

There is no tradition of a Shrine or Pilgrimages for Saint Thurstan; such a feature did not appear at Pontefract until the spectacular rise of the Cult of Saint Thomas of Lancaster at the Priory after 1322.

The excavations of the Monastic site from 1957 onwards until the 1970s, did not, so far as I am aware, identify the Archbishop’s grave.

Sexagesima Sunday.



Peterborough Cathedral.
© Chel @ Sweetbriar Dreams
www.sweetbriardreams.blogspot.co.uk


Sexagesima Sunday.
Available on YouTube

Pope Alexander II (1010 - 1073). Authorised The Norman Conquest Of England In 1066. (Part Two).



Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia,
unless stated otherwise.

The Emperor instead named Anselm Bishop of Lucca in 1056.[11] The earliest testimony of his activity as Bishop is on 23 March 1057.[6] On 20 August 1057, he was with the Imperial Court at Trebur, and, on 27 December 1057, at Pöhlde.[12]

As Bishop, he was an energetic associate of Hildebrand of Sovana in endeavouring to suppress Simony and enforce Clerical Celibacy.[13] So bad was the state of things at Milan, that Benefices were openly bought and sold, and the Clergy publicly married the women with whom they lived.


With the increased prestige of his Office, he re-appeared twice in Milan as Legate of the Holy See, in 1057 in the company of Hildebrand, and in 1059 with Peter Damian.[9]

Bishop Anselm attended the Roman Council of Pope Nicholas II in April 1059, and another Synod of uncertain date.[14] He was in Rome again in April 1060, for a Synod in the Lateran Palace, when he subscribed to two Papal Bulls dated 14 April 1060.[15]


Pope Nicholas II died on 27 July 1061. The Cardinals met, and sent a representative, the former Monk of Cluny, Cardinal Stephen, to seek the permission of the Imperial Court to conduct an Election. After a five-day wait, during which he was not received in audience, the Cardinal returned to Italy, without having received the “Congé d’élire”.[16]

The Cardinal-Bishops then proceeded to an Election, having forced their way into the City of Rome with the aid of Prince Richard I of Capua and his Norman troops.

On 1 October 1061, they chose Bishop Anselmo de Baggio of Lucca, one of the leaders of the reform party, who took the name Pope Alexander II.[9]


Unlike previous Papal Elections, the assent of the Holy Roman Emperor to the Election was not sought.[17] Cardinal-Bishops were the sole Electors of the Pope for the first time in the history of The Church, in accordance with Pope Nicholas II’s BullIn Nomine Domini”.[18]

The Bull effectively removed the control held by the Roman Metropolitan Church over the Election of the Pontiff, unilaterally abrogating the Rights of the Emperor, the Nobles of Rome, the Clergy, and the people of Rome.

PART THREE FOLLOWS.

Saint John Of Matha. Confessor. Founder Of The Trinitarians. Feast Day 8 February. White Vestments.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless stated otherwise.

Saint John of Matha.
   Confessor.
   Feast Day 8 February.

Double.

White Vestments.


Saint John of Matha Celebrating Mass.


Saint John of Matha was born in Provence, France, and, from his earliest childhood, distinguished himself by his Charity to the Poor.

Ordained Priest in Paris, he, at his First Mass, had a Vision in which God commanded him to establish the Order of The Holy Trinity for the ransoming of captives (Collect).

He therefore retired into solitude and, during three years, lived in Prayer and Contemplation with Saint Felix of Valois (Introit). 

A second Vision determined them to approach Pope Innocent III, who gave his approbation to the new institution commanded by God.


English: Flag of the Trinitarian Order
(Order of the Holy Trinity) of Roman Catholic Monks.
Polski: Herb Zakonu Trójcy Przenajświętszej (Trynitarze).
Date: 22 July 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Szczepan1990
(Wikimedia Commons)

Thanks to the abundant Alms (Epistle), which Saint John of Matha obtained from the Kings and Princes of France and Spain, he was enabled to ransom a number of Christians.

He passed his last two years in Rome in continual Mortification and Prayer, and was, thus, the Faithful Servant who watched for the coming of his Master at every hour of his life (Gospel).

He died in 1213.

Mass: Os justi (of a Confessor, not a Bishop).
In Lent: Commemoration and Last Gospel of the Feria.

Irish Bishop Says Ireland Has Lost “300 Classes Of Primary School Children” To Abortion In One Year.



Photo Credit: Seth Sawyers (CC BY 2.0).


Irish Bishop Says Ireland Has Lost “300 Classes Of
Primary School Children” To Abortion In One Year.

Bishop Kevin Doran of Achonry and Elphin 
drew attention to the impact of Abortion on population.

This Article is taken from, and can be read in full at,

Sexagesima.



Noah’s Sacrifice.
Date: Between 1847 and 1853.
(1806–1870).
(Wikimedia Commons)


Text is from “The Liturgical Year”.
By: Abbot Guéranger, O.S.B.

   Volume 4.
   Septuagesima.

The Church offers to our consideration, during this week of Sexagesima, the history of Noah and the deluge.

Man has not profited by the warnings already given him. God is obliged to punish him once more, and by a terrible chastisement.

There is found out of the whole human race only one Just Man; God makes a covenant with him, and with us, through him. But, before he draws up this new alliance, He would show that He is the Sovereign Master, and that man, and the Earth whereon he lives, subsist solely by His power and permission.



As the ground-work of this week’s instructions, we give a short passage from The Book of Genesis. It is read in The Office of this Sunday’s Matins.

This awful chastisement of the human race by the deluge was a fresh consequence of sin. This time, however, there was found one Just Man; and it was through him and his family that the World was restored.

Having once more mercifully renewed His covenant with His creatures, God allows the Earth to be re-peopled, and makes the three sons of Noah become the fathers of the three great families of the human race.


This is the Mystery of The Divine Office during the week of Sexagesima. The Mystery expressed in today’s Mass is of still greater importance, and the former is but a figure of it.

The Earth is deluged by sin and heresy. But, the word of God, the seed of life, is ever producing a new generation; A race of men, who, like Noah, fear God.

It is the word of God that produces those happy children, of whom the beloved disciple speaks, saying: “They are born not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God”.



Let us endeavour to be of this family; or, if we are already numbered among its members, let us zealously maintain our glorious position.

What we have to do, during these days of Septuagesima, is to escape from the deluge of Worldliness, and take shelter in the Ark of Salvation; we have to become that good soil, which yields a hundred-fold from the Heavenly Seed.

Let us flee from the wrath to come, lest we perish with the enemies of God; let us hunger after that world of God, which converteth and giveth life to our Souls [Editor: Psalm XVIII].


With the Greeks, this is the seventh day of their week “Apocreos”, which begins on the Monday after our Septuagesima Sunday. They call this week “Apocreos”, because they then begin to abstain from flesh-meat, which abstinence is observed till Easter Sunday.

Aelred Of Rievaulx. (Part Ten).



Rievaulx Abbey, Yorkshire.
Date: 2011.
This file is licensed under the
Attribution: WyrdLight.com
Author: Antony McCallum
(Wikimedia Commons)



Dr. Marsha Dutton.
“The Historical Works Of Saint Aelred Of Rievaulx”.
“Part Two: The Lament For King David”.
Available on YouTube

PART ELEVEN FOLLOWS.

“A Day With Mary”. Venues For 2026.





Sexagesima Sunday.

 


The Seed is The Word of God.
Artist: René de Cramer.
“Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium”.
Used with Permission.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless stated otherwise.

Sexagesima Sunday.

Station at Saint Paul-without-the-Walls.

Semi-Double.

Privileged Sunday of The Second Class.

Violet Vestments.

As on Septuagesima Sunday, and on those which follow until Passion Sunday, The Church teaches us “to Celebrate the Paschal Sacrament” by “the Scriptures of both Testaments” (Prayer of Holy Saturday after the Seventh Prophecy).

Through the whole of this week, the Divine Office is full of the thought of Noah. God, seeing man’s wickedness was great upon the Earth, said: “I will destroy man, whom I have created”; and He told Noah: “I will establish my Covenant with thee and thou shalt enter into the Ark.”


For forty days and forty nights, rain fell on the Earth, while the Ark floated on the waters which rose above the mountain tops and covered them; and, in this whirlpool, all men were carried away “like stubble” (Gradual); only Noah and his companions in the Ark remaining alive.

Then, God remembered them, and, at length, the rain ceased. After some time, Noah opened the window of the Ark and set free a dove, which returned with a fresh olive leaf, and Noah understood that the waters no longer covered the Earth.


“Exsurge, quare obdormis, Domine ?”
The Introit for Sexagesima Sunday.
Available on YouTube

And God told him: “Go out of the Ark, thou and thy wife, thy sons and the wives of thy sons, with thee” (Communion). And the rainbow appeared as a sign of reconciliation between God and men.

That Noah’s story is related to the Paschal Mystery is shown by the fact that The Church reads it on Holy Saturday [Second Prophecy); and this is how she, herself, applies it, in the Liturgy, to Our Lord and His Church. “The just wrath of The Creator drowned the guilty World in the vengeful waters of The Flood, only Noah being saved in the Ark.


“But then the admirable power of love lavéd (washed) the World in blood” [Hymns for the Feast of The Precious Blood]. It was the wood of the Ark which saved the human race and it is that of The Cross, which, in its turn, saves the World.

“Thou, alone,” says The Church, speaking of The Cross, “hast been found worthy to be, for this shipwrecked World, the Ark which brings safely into port” [Hymn at Lauds in Passiontide].

“The open door in the side of the Ark, by which those enter who are to escape from The Flood, and who represent The Church, are, as is explained in the Liturgy, a type of The Mystery of Redemption; for, on The Cross, Our Lord had His Sacred Side opened and, from this Gate of Life, went forth The Sacraments, giving true life to Souls. Indeed, The Blood and Water, which flow from thence, are symbols of The Eucharist and of Holy Baptism” [Lessons from Saint Chrysostom and Saint Augustine, Matins of the Feast of The Precious Blood].


“Exsúrge, Dómine”.
The Introit for Sexagesima Sunday.
Available on YouTube

“O God, Who by water didst wash away the crimes of the guilty World, and, by the overflowing of the deluge didst give a figure of regeneration, that one and the same element might, in a Mystery, be the end of vice and the origin of virtue: Look, O Lord, on the face of Thy Church and multiply in her Thy regenerations, opening the fonts of Baptism all over the World for the renovation of the Gentiles” [Blessing of the Baptismal Font on Holy Saturday].

“In the days of Noah,” says Saint Peter, “eight Souls were saved by water, whereunto Baptism, being of the like form, now saveth you also.”


On Maundy Thursday, when the Bishop Blesses the Holy Oil from the olive tree, which is to be used for The Sacraments, he says: “When of old, the crimes of the World were atoned for by the waters of The Flood, a dove, foreshadowing the gift to come, announced by an olive branch, the return of Peace to the Earth.

“And this indeed is made clear by its effects in latter times: When the waters of Baptism, having washed away all guilt of sin, the unction of the oil makes us joyous and serene.” The Blood of Christ is The Blood of The New Covenant, which Almighty God has made with man, through His Son. “Thou,” cries The Church, “Who, by an olive branch, didst command the dove to proclaim Peace to the World.”


“Commovisti, Domine, terram . . .”
The Tract for Sexagesima Sunday.
Available on YouTube

Peace is often mentioned in The Mass, which is the Memorial of The Passion: “Pax Domini sit semper vobiscum.” And we shall find the Collect for Easter Friday, speaking of the Paschal Sacrament, as the Seal of Reconciliation between God and man.

Above all, however, in his Divinely-Appointed Mission as father of all succeeding generations, Noah is a figure of Christ [Sixth Lesson of Septuagesima Sunday]; he was truly the second father of the human race and he remains the type of life continually renewed. We are told in the Liturgy that the olive branch, by means of its foliage, is a symbol of the prosperous fertility bestowed by Almighty God upon Noah when he came forth from the Ark, and the Ark, itself, is called by Saint Ambrose, in today’s Office, the “seminarium,” or nursery, that is, the place containing the seed of life which is to fill the World.



Now, Christ, much more than Noah, was the second Adam, peopling the World with a race of believing Souls, faithful to God. On Holy Saturday, in the Prayer following the Second Prophecy, which is concerned with Noah, The Church humbly asks Almighty God to “peacefully effect,” by His Eternal Decree, “the work of human Salvation,” and to “let the whole World experience and see that, what was fallen, is raised up; what was old, is made new,” and that “all things are re-established, through Him from Whom they received their first being, Our Lord Jesus Christ”.

It was through The Word that God made the World in the beginning (Last Gospel), and it is by the Preaching of His Gospel that Our Lord came to bring men to a new birth. “Being born again,” says Saint Peter, “not of corruptible seed, but incorruptible, by The Word of God, Who liveth and reigneth for ever . . . And this is The Word, which, by the Gospel, hath been preached unto you”.


Benediction after Mass.
Sexagesima Sunday,
Available on YouTube

From this, we can see why today’s Gospel is taken from the Parable of the Sower, for “the seed is The Word of God”. If, in Noah’s days, men perished, Saint Paul tells us, it was because of their unbelief, while, at the same time, it was by Faith that Noah “framed the Ark . . . by the which he condemned the World, and was instituted heir of the justice which is by Faith”.

In the same way, those who believe in Our Lord’s words will be saved.

According to Saint Augustine’s exposition, “as there were three floors in the Ark, so there are three different Spiritual Harvests”. In today’s Epistle, Saint Paul recounts all that he did and suffered in the course of preaching The Faith to the Gentiles and, indeed, he, The Apostle to the Gentiles, was the outstanding Preacher of the Word.



He is the “Minister of Christ”, that is, the one whom God had chosen to unfold to all Nations the good news of The Incarnate Word. “Who will grant me”, cries Saint John Chrysostom, “to walk around Saint Paul’s body, to embrace his tomb, to behold the dust of that body which filled up what was lacking in Christ’s Sufferings, which bore the marks of His Wounds, which, everywhere, spread abroad, like good seed, The Preaching of The Gospel ? [In The Office for The Octave of Saint Peter and Saint Paul].

The Roman Church has fulfilled this desire, in the case of her own children, by making a Station on this day to the Basilica of Saint Paul-without-the-Walls. “Through the Church’s Neophytes”, we read in the Liturgy, “the Earth is renewed, and thus renewed, she brings forth fruit, as it were, from the dead”! [Easter Monday at Matins].

Every Parish Priest Celebrates Mass for the people of his Parish.

Mass: Exsurge, quare obdormis.
Collects: As on Septuagesima Sunday.
Preface: Of The Holy Trinity.
Common Preface. On Weekdays.

A Little Levity To Lighten Your Day.



The Two Ronnies.
“Four Candles”.
The Hardware Shop Sketch, 1976.
Available on YouTube

Auch, Capital Of Gascony, France, With Its Cathedral, Sainte-Marie d'Auch.



Auch, Capital of Gascony, France,
with its Cathedral, Sainte-Marie d'Auch.
Illustration: SHUTTERSTOCK


The Choir of Auch Cathedral.
Le Choeur de la Cathédrale d'Auch.
Available on YouTube

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

Auch Cathedral Basilica (French: Basilique Cathédrale Sainte-Marie d’Auch) is a Roman Catholic Church located in the Town of Auch in the Midi-Pyrénées, France

It is a National Monument, and is the Seat of the Archbishopric of Auch.

Under The Concordat of 1801, the Ecclesiastical Office 
was dissolved and annexed to the Diocese of Agen, but 
re-established in 1822. 

The Cathedral contains a suite of eighteen Renaissance Stained-Glass Windows by Arnaud de Moles.

MUSIC.

The wonderful music and singing, contained in these YouTube Videos of the Choir of Sainte-Marie d’Auch, are Montserrat Caballé and Vangelis singing/playing “Like A Dream” and Montserrat Caballé singing “The Prayer”.


English: Auch Cathedral, Gascony, France.
Français: La Cathédrale Sainte-Marie d'Auch.
Available on YouTube


English: Auch Cathedral, France.
Français: Cathédrale d’Auch.
Photo: 1 August 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Vassil
(Wikimedia Commons)


Choir Stalls, Auch Cathedral, France.
Photo: 24 September 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: PMRMaeyaert
(Wikimedia Commons)


Choir Stalls, Auch Cathedral, France.
Photo: 1884.
(1840–1905).
(Wikimedia Commons)

07 February, 2026

My Queen (R.I.P.).



“The Queen’s Soliloquy”.
Tribute to Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II (R.I.P.),
on her Platinum Jubilee in 2022.
Available on YouTube

This Article is a re-print from 2022.

Your Majesty.
Many Congratulations on your Platinum Jubilee.
Thank You for your dedicated service to your people.
Deo Gratias.

Building “The Immaculata”. Deo Gratias.



Building “The Immaculata”.
Exploring the inside of “The Immaculata”.
Available on YouTube

This Article can be read in full at FR. Z's BLOG

Busy Pope Gets Another Nuisance Call From Eccles The Blogger Asking For Insider Information.



“Oh, hello Eccles.
“I’m a bit up in the air, at present, and a bit busy”.
“Call me back later”.

The excellent Blog that Eccles publishes, 
ECCLES IS SAVED”, 
can be read 

Be Prepared To Be Moved. Greatly Moved.



Available on YouTube

«Плотію» - Почаївський напів Диригент: Євген Савчук Національна заслужена академічна капела України "Думка". Святковий концерт у Римі на честь Папи Венедикта XVI та отців Папського Синоду відбувся з нагоди всенародної прощі до Собору святої Софії (Рим, 13 -15 жовтня 2012). В цих днях Патріярх Святослав освятив відновлений Собор Святої Софії, а в стінах Українського Католицького Університету святого Климентія Папи відбулася наукова конференція.

The Association Of Lawyers For The Defence Of The Unborn.



The Association Of Lawyers For The Defence Of The Unborn.

Abortion Law and Pro-Life matters contained in a Quarterly Newsletter, published by the Association of Lawyers for the Defence of the Unborn (ALDU) between 1979 and 2005. 

The Blog of the Association of Lawyers for the 
Defence of the Unborn contains the Text of those 
Newsletters (see, above) as originally published.

The Blog of the Association of 
Lawyers for the Defence of the Unborn 
can be read


The Association of Lawyers for the Defence of the Unborn (ALDU) published a Quarterly Newsletter every year from 1979 until 2006. 

In the ALDU Blog, Robin Haig, Chairman of ALDU for over fifteen years, will include extracts from those Newsletters, making additional comments on Legal Issues concerning Abortion and related matters. 

The complete, searchable Text of the Newsletters 
is contained on the ALDU Newsletters Blog


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