
June 5, Feast of St. Boniface, bishop and martyr.
St. Boniface is to Germany what St. Patrick is to Ireland.
Like Patrick, Boniface brought the Catholic faith to a land and people not his
own. Christened in England as Winfrid (“friend of peace” in his native
Anglo-Saxon tongue) he was given the name Boniface (“doer of good” in Latin) by Pope
Gregory II when he was consecrated bishop. Besides being a saintly man, Boniface was a well-educated man and a
gifted teacher and preacher, famed beyond the monastery walls of his
Benedictine abbey. Although the prospect of a great ecclesiastical career was
before him; his compelling desire was to undertake the formidable missionary
work of bringing the Gospel to the untamed and hostile territory of northern Germany. He was granted permission to leave his homeland in 719.
St. Boniface is often pictured with an oak tree and axe. These
emblems come from a dramatic episode in his attempts to convert the pagans. Germanic pagans worshiped many gods, who represented the uncontrollable and powerful
forces of nature. Sir James Frazer in his comprehensive collection of myths and
religions, The Golden Bough, writes:
In the religious history of the Aryan race in Europe the worship of trees has played an important part. Nothing could be more natural. For at the dawn of history, Europe was covered with immense primaeval forests, in which the scattered clearings must have appeared like islets in an ocean of green. Down to the first century before our era the [European] forest stretched eastward from the Rhine for a distance at once vast and unknown; Germans whom Caesar questioned had traveled for two months through it without reaching the end. Four centuries later it was visited by the Emperor Julian, and the solitude, the gloom, the silence of the forest appear to have made a deep impression on his sensitive nature. He declared that he knew nothing like it in the Roman empire.We, who are in large part surrounded by cleared farmland and second growth forests, can hardly imagine this. But there still exist a few ancient forests and trees, and one can readily feel the awe and even reverence they inspired and still inspire when driving through the redwoods of California or sitting at the base of a majestic oak.

St. Boniface viewed this tree-worship and the pagan customs it inspired as a hindrance to conversion and as a stumbling block to recent converts. He therefore challenged Thor to single combat: Boniface announced that he would fell the sacred oak of Thor, the largest of oaks on the summit of Mount Gudenberg at Geismar. An expectant crowd gathered, waiting to see the awful punishment that would surely descend upon this outrage. Perhaps some were gathered in admiration, since the Germanic peoples highly admired bravery and the fight against impossible odds. Boniface attacked the tree with his axe, the huge tree crashed and split into four parts. No thunderbolts nor lightning destroyed the holy man and the people had to admit that the God St Boniface preached was more powerful than Thor and his divine companions. In a similar manner Moses had shown God's omnipotence over the Egyptian gods with the ten plagues and so strengthened the faith of the Israelites. From the wood of Thor's tree, Boniface built a chapel dedicated to St. Peter, and from that time evangelization advanced steadily.
Further reading: Light to the Nations, Part I - Chapter 8
Thannks for posting this
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