Monday, August 31, 2026
Proper 17
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
The Thirteenth Sunday after Trinity
O God, the strength of all who put their trust in you: Mercifully accept our prayers, and because, through the weakness of our mortal nature, we can do no good thing without you, grant us the help of your grace to keep your commandments, that we may please you in will and deed; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Bishop of Lindisfarne and Missionary
Anglican Commemoration
Psalms 144, 145, 146
Aidan was an Irish monk from Iona who became the first bishop of Lindisfarne and the apostle of Northumbria. Sent at the request of King Oswald in 635, he established his episcopal seat on the tidal island of Lindisfarne and launched a mission that transformed northern England. Unlike earlier failed missions to the region, Aidan's approach combined monastic community, personal poverty, itinerant preaching, and deep pastoral care. Bede, though critical of Aidan's Celtic Easter dating, praised his humility and apostolic zeal without reservation.
Aidan came from the monastery of Iona, the great foundation of Columba off the west coast of Scotland. When King Oswald of Northumbria — himself educated among the Irish monks — requested a bishop to evangelize his kingdom, Iona first sent a stern and unsuccessful missionary. According to Bede, Aidan gently suggested at the community's council that the failed bishop had been too harsh with an unlearned people, and that a gentler approach was needed. The monks immediately recognized Aidan's wisdom and sent him instead.
Aidan chose the island of Lindisfarne for his see — close to the royal fortress at Bamburgh but separated from the mainland by tides, allowing the rhythm of monastic solitude and public ministry that characterized Celtic Christianity. He traveled on foot throughout Northumbria, preaching in villages and countryside, with King Oswald himself sometimes serving as his translator before the bishop had mastered English.
Aidan's mission was distinguished by its simplicity and commitment to the poor. He gave away gifts from the king to beggars, ransomed slaves and educated them for ministry, and established monasteries that served as centers of learning and mission. Bede records that even wealthy laypeople were moved by his example to fasting and prayer.
He died leaning against a buttress of the church at Bamburgh on August 31, 651. Bede's tribute is remarkable for its warmth: he praises Aidan's peaceable nature, his charity, his indifference to worldly rank, and his zeal for study and prayer, while noting honestly that Aidan followed the Celtic rather than Roman Easter reckoning.
According to Bede, when the pagan king Penda besieged Bamburgh and attempted to burn it by piling timbers against the walls, Aidan saw the smoke from Lindisfarne, raised his hands in prayer, and cried out to God. Immediately the wind shifted direction and drove the flames back against the attackers, who abandoned the siege (HE III.16).
The Anonymous Life of Cuthbert records that young Cuthbert saw a vision of angels carrying Aidan's soul to heaven on the night Aidan died — the event that prompted Cuthbert's entry into monastic life, creating a direct spiritual lineage between Lindisfarne's two greatest saints.
According to tradition, the wooden beam against which Aidan was leaning when he died survived two subsequent fires that destroyed the church around it, taken as a sign of his sanctity. The beam was preserved as a relic and incorporated into the rebuilt church (HE III.17).