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St. Godfrey or Geoffroy


Name: St. Godfrey or Geoffroy
Date: 8 November

Saint Godfrey was born about 1066 at Molincourt in France of a distinguished Christian family. He arrived late in the lives of his parents, who had begged the prayers of the holy abbot ofMount Saint Quentin, desiring to have a child they could consecrate to God. Their prayersand those of the religious of the monastery of Mount Saint Quentin were answered in the sameyear. The child was baptized by the Abbot and later confided to him to be educated. Eventually Godfrey’s father entered a monastery of Our Lady which he had enriched by hisalms; and his mother spent her declining years in various good works.

Godfrey was given the charge of taking care of the sick, and exercised it with such greatcharity that he was also named hospitaller, to receive the poor at the gate. For assistance inthat second duty he had his older brother Odon, who after many years in the military careerhad come to join him in the religious life. His brother would later die a holy death in the sameabbey of Mount Saint Quentin.

When Saint Godfrey was 25 years old his abbot told him to prepare for the priesthood. Hereceived the Sacrament of Holy Orders from the bishop of Noyon, in which diocese the abbeyof Mount Saint Quentin is situated. Not long afterwards, the abbey of Our Lady of Nogent,whose abbot was incapacitated by illness, voted to obtain Godfrey in that office, and the abbotof Mount Saint Quentin consented to the sacrifice of his dear spiritual son for that purpose. The pleas of the disciple based on his youth and inexperience were not heeded, and in 1095 hebecame Abbot of Nogent, where the buildings were crumbling and only six monks and twoyoung novices remained. He renovated the edifices and built a hostelry for pilgrims and thesick poor; and in this hostelry he himself continued to labor on their behalf. Soon the monastery filled up with vocations, drawing even two illustrious abbots from elsewhere, who desiredto serve under this master.

When a severe drought was devastating the fields and flocks of the region, the bishop ofSoissons, Hugh de Pierrefonds, went to Godfrey to ask his counsel; the holy abbot prescribed afast in the manner of Ninevah — even the animals were to participate. On the first day of thefast, when the abbot rose to preach in the vast Church of Saint Steven, before the assembledpeople, the sky suddenly darkened, and so heavy a rain fell that the people were not a littleinconvenienced on returning home.

When the aged bishop of Amiens died soon afterwards, its residents chose Godfrey to be their bishop, and went to a legate of the Holy See to ask him to intercede with the abbot to obtain his consent. When this decision was related to Godfrey he would have fled, but the order of the legate prevented his flight. Moreover, he had already had a vision of Saint Firmin, first Bishop of Amiens and martyr, advising him of this forthcoming new responsibility. He therefore submitted to the clear designs of Providence. After Saint Godfrey obtained a beautiful new reliquary for the relics of Amiens’ first bishop, the confidence of the people intheir patron Saint, Saint Firmin, redoubled. A prayer to him by Saint Godfrey, asking forsunshine on the day of the translation of the relics, was the occasion; a fog so heavy one couldscarcely see, lifted, and the sun at once shone brilliantly in the sanctuary.

As bishop he did not cease to take care of the poor and the sick. When some lepers came tohim he commanded his cook to prepare food for them; four hours later nothing had yet beendone, and he himself went to the kitchen and found a large, prepared salmon which he took tothe famished lepers. The cook remonstrated with him, and the Saint told him that it wasinjustice to allow the poor to die of hunger while unworthy bishops enjoyed food that was toosucculent.

When troubles occasioned by the contemporary quarrel over investitures devastated the city ofAmiens, the holy bishop thought it well to resign his office and retire to the Grand Chartreuse,and did so. The archbishop of Rheims, however, could not approve such an action, andreproached the residents of Amiens when they brought up the question of a successor. Theaffair was referred to a Council to be held at Soissons in January of 1115. A letter was sentby the Council to the religious of Saint Bruno, begging them not to retain the bishop ofAmiens, but to send him back to his see; and Godfrey with tears resigned himself to obeyingthe orders of the king and the Council. His declining years were not exempt from sufferings;the city of Amiens was decimated by a fire which spared only the church of Saint Firmin, theepiscopal palace and a few houses of the poor. The people had not listened to theexhortations of their bishop when their prevarications enkindled the wrath of God. He died onNovember 8, 1115, in perfect serenity, having given his farewell blessing to the religious of themonastery of Soissons, where he had been taken, after falling ill during a journey there. Histomb was illustrated by many miracles.


Source: Les Petits Bollandistes: Vies des Saints, by Msgr. Paul Guérin (Bloud et Barral: Paris, 1882), Vol. 13.


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