Martin of Tours and Celtic Monasticism
By the 4th century an ascetic/monastic revival was occurring throughout Christendom,
and in the West this revival was being led by St. Martin. The Monastery of Marmoutier
which St. Martin founded near Tours (on the Loire in western France) served as the
training ground for generations of monastic aspirants drawn from the Romano-Celtic
nobility. It was also the spiritual school that bred the first great missionaries
to the British Isles. The way of life led at Marmoutier harmonized perfectly with
the Celtic soul. Martin and his followers were contemplatives, yet they alternated
their times of silence and prayer with periods of active labor out of love for their
neighbor.
Some of the monks who were formed in St. Martin’s “school” brought this pattern
back to their Celtic homelands in Britain, Scotland and Wales. Such missionaries
included Publicius, a son of the Roman emperor Maximus who was converted by St.
Martin, and who went on to found the Llanbeblig Monastery in Wales—among the first
of over 500 Welsh monasteries. Another famous disciple of St. Martin was St. Ninian,
who traveled to Gaul to receive monastic training at St. Martin’s feet, and then
returned to Scotland, where he established Candida Casa at Whithorn, with its church
dedicated to St. Martin. The waterways between Ireland and Britain had been continually
traversed by Celtic merchants, travelers, raiders and slave-traders for many centuries
past, so the Irish immediately heard the Good News brought to Wales and Scotland
by these disciples of Ninian.
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