The king who
gives bread and dies for his people is celebrated in one of the saints of this
place whose feast falls on Wednesday.
The king who feeds the poor is how Bede lovingly depicts St Oswald. One Easter Day, he and Bishop Aidan sat down
to feast. ‘A silver dish was placed on
the table before him, full of rich foods.
They had just raised their hands to ask a blessing on the bread when
there came in an officer of the king, whose duty it was to relieve the needy,
telling him that a very great multitude of poor people from every district were
sitting in the precincts and asking alms of the king. He at once ordered the dainties which had
been set up in front of him to be carried to the poor, the dish to be broken
up, and the pieces divided amongst them.
The bishop, who was sitting by… grasped him by the right hand and said:
‘May this hand never decay’. In a thirteenth century missal there is a charming image of Oswald’s charity. Under the table where he and Aidan are
sitting are two poor men crouching like dogs, pathetically lifting up their
hands to catch the crumbs falling from their masters’ table. Oswald holds the precious vessel he is about
to break up, a symbol, perhaps, of how he will give up his own life. On the
table are bowls with loaves and fishes.
The meaning is plain: Oswald is like Jesus. He gives bread to the hungry. He gives himself to his own.
I wonder if Oswald
is the neglected saint of Durham . His head had been interred with the relics of
St Cuthbert and carried brought to Durham
with the Lindisfarne Gospels by Cuthbert’s community, finally to be laid to rest
in the shrine behind the high altar. There
in the feretory there is a thirteenth century statue of Cuthbert. He has lost his own head in some violent act
of the Reformation or civil war. But he
has kept Oswald’s head, which he holds in his left hand, which is how Cuthbert
is often portrayed in medieval iconography. Once there would have been a statue of Oswald,
like Cuthbert, flanking Blessed Mary in the central, most prominent niches of
the Neville Screen above the high altar.
You can see him in stained glass, in Thetis Blacker’s striking banner in
the feretory and, maybe, in a wall-painting in the Galilee Chapel. Of all our saints, Oswald is the one whose
relics appear all over Europe as a true
catholic martyr. Given his vital role in
the unification and Christianisation of Northumbria, and therefore the
Christianisation of England, he deserves our recognition.
What do we know
about him? He was not the first
Christian king of Northumbria :
that honour belongs to Edwin. But it was
he who decisively led his nation into embracing the gospel. He had been exiled on Iona
as a young man and had been baptised there.
After Edwin’s death, he inherited a weak and divided kingdom threatened
by native British rulers. Famously,
Oswald set up a cross at the place we now call Heavenfield, above the Tyne near Hexham, and ordered his soldiers to pray for
victory against the British king Cadwallon.
This established both Oswald’s kingship and his faith. From Iona he summoned Irish missionaries to
preach the gospel in his kingdom, from where Aidan came and founded his
monastery on Lindisfarne as the base for the
Northumbrian mission. Oswald often
travelled with Aidan on his journeys, translating the message into English,
caring for the poor and building up the church. He was both parent and midwife of a project
that changed the face of England .
He died in battle in 642 at the hand of the pagan king Penda of Mercia, ‘slain
by the heathen fighting for his fatherland’ says Bede, not just for Northumbria
but for a kingdom not of this world.
Oswald is a potent
model of the Christian statesman. Bede
portrays him as the ideal king, a new David who unites his kingdom against the
threats it faces, establishes a secure capital, promotes religion, dispenses
justice, cares for the least of his people as well as the greatest, and finally
gives himself up for their sake. The
synergy between the two cities, sacred and the profane, church and state, is
symbolised by the geography of the sites associated with the Northumbrian royal
court. Oswald’s capital at Bamburgh and
Aidan’s monastery on Holy Island were within
sight of each other. It was a reminder to
this world’s ruler of his divine call and accountability: ‘knowing whose
minister he is and whose authority he hath’ as the Prayer Book puts it. For Bede, the politics of God and of mortals
serve the same end, that justice, truth and peace should be established in the
nation. He is saying something that we
may not always welcome: that God works through institutions as well as individuals. This is why we have organised religion embedded
in the structures of society, part of the glue that holds it together.
If Aidan is a
model of mission, Cuthbert of sanctity and Bede of wisdom, Oswald is an
inspiring image of leadership. No doubt
public life today is infinitely more complex than the 7th century,
but that does not mean it is more exacting or difficult. Yesterday I led a pilgrimage of Cathedral
Friends to the wondrous Saxon cross at Bewcastle deep in the Cumbrian
fells. The church is dedicated to
Cuthbert, so perhaps Cuthbert’s body and Oswald’s head rested there on their
long journey. The cross dates from
Cuthbert’s time, the generation after Oswald.
You can see a replica of it in the Cathedral dormitory. As I gazed at the intricate knot-work
chequers and vine scrolls on the shaft, I thought about complexity and order.
It’s as if the artist is saying: this world is puzzling and chaotic. How do we chart our voyage across it? And how, in particular, does any leader
negotiate the hazards of public life in the face of difficulty and threat? The answer is: by going to the source of
pattern and order, God the Creator and Saviour of the world, and by emulating
this ordered life in how we live out our humanity. And given that this is a churchyard cross, it
is also saying to us: the clue if self-giving, service, sacrifice.
I have been
reading a remarkable new book called Good
Value: reflections on money, morality and an uncertain world. Its author, Stephen Green, is Chairman of
HSBC. He is writing about globalisation
and the question the economic crisis is putting to us. We can assume that in his role, to negotiate
the economic, political and societal challenges of today is a daunting
assignment. But he is not only an economist
but an ordained Anglican priest. He is
not afraid to speak about what is demanded of us in these difficult times, how
we need to live according to wise, ethical and humane values that are not
simply based on than the impersonal market forces of price and profit. He is keen on altruism and on doing something
for posterity instead of falling for the Faustian bargain of selling our soul
for the pursuit of gain. He calls for a
style of leadership ‘whose essence is not psychological dominance, but which seeks
to share itself, to set an example, to instil the instinct of leadership in
others, and thus to serve the common endeavour…. Seen as domination, leadership
impoverishes both the leader and the led; seen as service… it enriches both,
and is more enduringly effective.’ He might have been writing of Oswald sharing
bread, giving himself for the people.
Bede would certainly have approved. Our leaders should be paying
attention. So should we.
Durham Cathedral, 2 August 2009 (John 6.24-35)
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