Thursday, October 1, 2026
Proper 21
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
The Seventeenth Sunday after Trinity
O Lord, you never fail to support and govern those whom you bring up in your steadfast love and fear: Keep us, we pray, under your continual protection and providence, and give us a perpetual fear and love of your holy Name; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
The Seventeenth Sunday after Trinity
The Eighteenth Sunday after Trinity
Bishop of Reims and Apostle to the Franks
Ecumenical Commemoration
Remigius was Archbishop of Reims for over seventy years and the Apostle of the Franks, whose baptism of King Clovis I on Christmas Day around 496 transformed the Frankish kingdom into a Christian realm and altered the course of Western civilization. While most Germanic peoples converted to Arian Christianity, Clovis — under Remigius's instruction and his wife Clotilda's influence — was baptized into the orthodox Nicene faith, making the Franks the first major Germanic people to embrace Catholic Christianity. This single event ensured that the successor kingdoms of Western Europe would be Nicene rather than Arian.
Remigius was born around 437 into a Gallo-Roman noble family and was consecrated Bishop of Reims at the remarkably young age of twenty-two — a testament to his early reputation for holiness and learning. He would serve in that office for over seventy years, making his episcopate one of the longest in Church history.
The Roman world Remigius inherited was crumbling. The last Western emperor fell in 476, and Gaul was divided among competing Germanic kingdoms. The Franks under Clovis I were consolidating power, and Remigius recognized that the conversion of their king could determine the religious future of Western Europe. He cultivated a relationship with Clovis, writing letters of counsel and encouragement.
The decisive moment came when Clovis, facing defeat in battle against the Alemanni, called upon the God of his Christian wife Clotilda and experienced a dramatic reversal of fortune. He sought instruction from Remigius, who catechized him personally. The baptism — traditionally placed on Christmas Day around 496, with some three thousand Frankish warriors following their king into the waters — was one of the hinge events of European history.
Remigius reportedly greeted the king at the font with the words, 'Bow thy head, Sicamber; adore what thou hast burned, and burn what thou hast adored.' The baptism committed the Frankish kingdom to Nicene orthodoxy at a time when the Visigoths, Ostrogoths, Burgundians, and Vandals were Arian. This decision shaped the religious identity of what would become France, Germany, and much of Western Europe.
Remigius continued his pastoral work for decades after Clovis's baptism, dying around 533 at approximately ninety-six years of age. He was revered as a saint almost immediately, and his tomb at Reims became a major pilgrimage site.
Remigius became subject of hagiographic tradition, particularly after his death. Later vitae elaborate his virtues and recount miraculous healings and exorcisms. He is celebrated as a saint who brought the Frankish kingdom into Christian communion.