St. Alfred was sent into a world of chaos and violence. He restored order, fostered learning and defended the faith during a time of darkness. Let us ask for his intercession now, in the time of our own world's darkness.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Eating The Burned Cake

I definitely have an ongoing struggle with pride, and I recently had to "eat the burned cake".

While the details are probably not important, I was reminded that perhaps I ought to be a little more charitable to an arrogant person that I was scolding for his arrogance.  How bizarre is that?

So I backed up and ate my words, and they sure tasted like a big burned cake , lump of charcoal, going down. Eating your words is a really hard thing to do. 

While again, the story of St Alfred and the burned cakes has never been verified by history, it is easy to imagine being a king who was blessed by the pope as a child failing to do the most necessary of tasks, attending to the food.  Of course he wanted to be out and about doing the important things.

But when the wife scolded him for his neglect, he accepted the scolding.  Perhaps he thought that his act of neglect was a consequence of pride.  Perhaps he remembered that the most important tasks of men on earth don't get done if they don't eat and perhaps his pride was endangering his people.  Whatever he thought, he did the right thing, accepting the scolding and probably eating that burned cake.

Now the interesting thing about a burned cake is that it is a lump of charcoal.  Charcoal, you recall, is still used in medicine today to purge our systems of poisons.  Tastes nasty, makes you sick, but at the end of it all, you are shaken but clean again.

St. Alfred the Great, pray for us that we may learn humility.  Pray that we may be helped by the examples of  Jesus, you  and your companion saints to live more humbly and have the courage to eat the charcoal when we are poisoned by our pride.  Amen.   

Thursday, February 18, 2010

A Season in Athelney

Lent has begun, the season of turning inward, self examination and preparation for a renewal in our world.

Almost everyone that has gone on to greatness has had a time of Lent, a time of hiding and turning inward before going once again out into the world to make a miracle happen.

For St. Alfred, his season came in Athelney, a swampy marsh in what is now the Somerset shire of England.  In 878, Alfred and a few loyal followers had been driven back by the Danes to hiding on the Isle of Athelney, an island in the swamps of Somerset.  A king of the Saxon peoples had been driven into an ancient fortress, defending a swamp.

This was St. Alfred's season.  He entered it as a mere King of the West Saxons, and emerged to become the brave and wise ruler of all England .  While the story itself may be apocryphal, it is said that here Alfred confronted the realities of daily life, learned that in order to best serve his people, he must pay attention to the everyday reality of ensuring that dinner cakes did not burn.  Reportedly, he was scolded by a common goodwife to pay attention to the cakes on the hearth and not let them burn.  It is said that Alfred accepted the scolding, understanding that he needed the scolding of a common person to pay attention to the everyday needs of his people and himself.

From Athelney, the newly humbled Alfred was able to call up allies who would sustain him and the fledgling England in the coming days.  It is often said that Alfred went to Athelney as Alfred, King of the West Saxons, and came out as Alfred the Great of England. He learned humility, and in his humility, he was able to forge the alliances necessary to ensure the birth of a nation  at the battle of Edington in May 878.

We each must go through a Lent of our lives, a season in Athelney, a time when we are beaten and discouraged and hiding in a swamp, wondering who we are and where we would ever go next .  When we hide in the swamp in our own darkness, we are building toward a time in our own lives of brilliance and birth of a new world.

May we learn humility and wisdom in our season of Athelney.  Let us ask Alfred, the saints and our Lord to help us use the darkness of Lent to forge a future time of light. 

As St Alfred the Great did. 

Monday, February 8, 2010

St. Alfred Has Chosen Us

When people come to confirmation, they often have trouble deciding which saint to choose for a patron.

Most people say, we do not choose the saint, the saint chooses us.

I easily chose a confirmation saint who was instrumental in my conversion--St Mary Magdalene.  But saints DO choose us, and many people even follow a practice allowing a particular saint to choose us for a year.

I didn't set out looking for St. Alfred, but he was whispering to me, sometimes in strange ways, but whisper he did.  First it was with an "accidental" discovery that he was honored by many as a saint--he didn't show up in the usual patron's list. 

Then it was an obsession to see again the old movie "Alfred the Great".  Forget it that he probably didn't look like David Hemmings, but he was as likely to look like David Hemmings as any of the other portrayals of him in statues and portraits, none of which was contemporary. If I had picked a face  for the young Alfred, that would have probably been the face--ascetic, gentle, compassionate, passionate, courageous. 

Particularly forget that part about his wife and the Dane.  No matter how attractive the young Michael York was, Alfred's wife, Ealhswith, was herself a saint, so I am sure she is gritting her teeth on this one.  Sacreligious?  Absolutely, and a pandering to the turbulent times in which the movie was made. 

What that movie DID do, though, was to keep in our memories a young man with passion and faith in his beautiful face, a man in his 20s who gave us England, and all England's children (such as the US).  In the real world, he and his wife were both saints; they had children and grandchildren that were also saints.  One would think that St. Alfred also did honor thus to the Holy Family, showing us what could be on earth as well as in heaven. 

Ever since that movie, Alfred has whispered to me in my life, even when I didn't really know it.  I was never motivated for power, just as he was not .  I loved service, education, justice as he did.  I was also a warrior in a passionate cause, feeling that one must indeed fight for the right.  Yep, Alfred was always there for me and in me.

In this time, Alfred is choosing all of us, to help him continue his work. His gifts of wisdom, truthtelling, justice, courage, love of learning and common sense are needed as much or more now in this world as in his.  Let us pray for his intercession and protection against terror, faithlessness, ignorance and deception that he fought so well in his earthly life.

Alfred has chosen us--let us, too, choose him now, for the greater good of our world.

On a side note, Mr. Hemmings has gone now, to join the saints.  I like to imagine St. Alfred greeting him, in the humble way he was described to have in this life in maturity, thanking Mr. Hemmings for his memorial that keeps his name alive.

Friday, February 5, 2010

"Sit Thy Saddle Bow, And Ride Thee Singing"

In her biography of Alfred, Beatrice Lees includes a chapter, "The Myth of Alfred".  The following aphorism is attributed to him a few centuries later:

If thou hast sorrow, tell it not thy foe
Sit thy saddle bow, and ride thee singing"


Whether or not Alfred said this particular thing, there is no doubt that such a statement captures his spirit.  The key is in the ways that Alfred, as a man of Christian faith, differed from the faith of his ancestors.

Alfred was a realist, but he did not succumb to the hopelessness of a notion of fate that had been a standard part of the philosophy of his pre-Christian ancestors.  The Saxon, the Norse and related Germanic peoples, bereft of the hope and promise of Jesus Christ, had a very gloomy notion of life. 

This was embodied in the concept of "Wyrd", fate or destiny.  Fate was set by the pagan goddesses the Norn, and what was to be was inexorable.  A person, a country or a world could not be changed.  There could only be acceptance, but never hope, in the world of the pre-Christian Germanic pagan, Alfred's people.

The coming of Christianity brought one thing to the Saxon people.  It brought hope .

What Jesus brought to Alfred and to all was an idea that things could change through grace.   Faith could make a difference: we could make a difference.  Apart from myth or poetry, Alfred was quoted as saying:

 I say then, as say all Christian men, that the divine purpose rules, and not fate.

Is the world today dark?  Most certainly . 

Do we not live in a time of terror, as Alfred did?  Yes, we do.

Do we not live in a time of collapse, a new version of "The Dark Ages"? Most assuredly.

But St. Alfred is here to stand beside us in these times--because he knew of the hope of grace, of the gifts to us by our Lord.    

We are not the victims of "Fate". 

We are children of Jesus, and in these times, the hope from Jesus and the intercession of St Alfred can help us to


"Sit thy saddle bow, and ride thee singing"









Wednesday, February 3, 2010

In The Age of Terror

We live in the age of terror. Hijackings and bombings, beheadings, terror that rains from the sky.

There was another age of terror, when terror came ashore from the sea.  Villages put to the torch, churches plundered, a king exiled to a humble cottage in the swamp.  Like we are today, England was heir to the fruits of terror.

In that age, there was Alfred.  A fifth son and humble servant of God, who wanted to take orders, he was nevertheless called forward to save his country and the very foundation of civilization.   Warrior, general, scholar and king, he brought together the basic building blocks of civilization and preserved it all in the face of darkness and the terror from the seas. 

How did St. Alfred bring all this together, manage not only to save his world but to make it prosper?  The answer was simply that for Alfred, everything rested first on faith, and through faith, he made a world.

 In her review of Sr. Benedicta Ward's book on English spiritualism, Susan Eklund notes the following:

A terrifying judgment has begun. The final chapter likens the Danish and Norse raids with
the cross to be born by the English. The raids caused a great loss of faith. St. Alfred the Great saw Bede’s
warning about this and realized that the ‘fair-weather’ Christianity of the English was due to a lack of learning
and a lack of spiritual information in English. He turned his hand to the task while still in the field of
battle. “I began amidst the various and multifarious afflictions of this kingdom to translate into English the
book which in Latin is called Pastoral Care, in English ‘Shepherd Book’ . . .” – the contention being that the
redemption of the English will be found by the widespread use of the Shepherd Book. ...The only means of
the survival of English Christianity would be to accept the cross as the place of resurrection. That is the only
place God is in the midst of crisis. “We have now lost wealth as well as wisdom because we did not wish to
set our minds in the track.” (1)

In his wisdom, St. Alfred knew that the place to start to change the world was within oneself.  When one "cleaves only to God", as he often said, only then can miracles occur, can chaos be brought into order, can ignorance be brought into knowledge. 

Holy Alfred, pray for us that all may return to the earnest practice of their faith.  As we follow your example and cleave to God, so then can we create the kind of world that God wishes this  to be



(1)  HIGH KING OF HEAVEN: ASPECTS OF EARLY ENGLISH SPIRITUALITY by Benedicta Ward, SLG. Cistercian Publications, Kalamazoo, MI   1999. Book review by Susan Eklund in The ST MARK'S LION MAY 2003 VOLUME CXXVIII, NO. 5, online at http://www.westernorthodox.com/stmark/lion/lion2003-05.pdf

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

A Litany Of St Alfred

Consider praying the Litany daily in the cause of peace, justice and knowledge.

Litany of  St. Alfred

V/ Lord, have mercy.


R/ Lord, have mercy.

V/ Christ, have mercy.

R/ Christ, have mercy.

V/ Lord, have mercy.

R/ Lord, have mercy.

V/ Jesus, hear us.

R/ Jesus, graciously hear us.

V/ God, the Father of Heaven,

R/ have mercy on us.

V/ God, the Son, Redeemer of the world,

R/ have mercy on us.

V/ God, the Holy Spirit,

R/ have mercy on us.

V/ Holy Trinity, One God,

R/ have mercy on us.

R/for ff: pray for us.

Holy Alfred

Defender of the faith

Defender of the homeland

Defender of learning

Defender of humility

Defender of England and her children

Blessed Alfred

Enemy of government corruption

Enemy of ignorance

Enemy of arrogant ruin

Enemy of social chaos

Enemy of human destruction

Terror of the violent heathen

Champion of the people

Lamb of God, who take away the sins of the world,

R/ spare us, O Lord.

Lamb of God, who take away the sins of the world,

R/ graciously hear us, O Lord.

Lamb of God, who take away the sins of the world.

R/ have mercy on us.

He made him the father of nations.

R/ And prince of piety and knowledge.

Let us pray. O God, in your ineffable providence you were pleased to send your servant Alfred into a world of violence to bring order, learning and peace. In this time of the violence of the heathen , who transgress against You in Your Name, make us worthy of the intercession of Alfred to bring order, peace and true faith to the world. R/ Amen

Why St. Alfred? Why Now?

Alfred the Great, King of Wessex, was the real King Arthur.  His accomplishments were many--defense of the realm, introduction of peace, preservation of knowledge, educator of his people, defender of the faith.  He was holy, yet a champion of common sense and the wisdom of good governance.  He was the most excellent steward of his flock, the people of England. He was a masterful political conciliator, enabling the Saxons and the Danish invaders of England to live together in peace. 

He is also one of the very few kings to have ever become a saint. 

Churches are named for St Alfred the Great, but one seldom sees prayers for his intervention or groups dedicated to his devotion.

However, we live in a time of darkness and chaos equal to the times in which Alfred was called.  A new kind of violent heathens, those who mistakenly cite their faith as an excuse for bloodshed, are among us.  Others scoff at faith and live lives driven purely by personal desire.  The family is failing, education is crumbling in the name of greed. Never since the time he came has the wisdom and Alfred been so sorely needed--not just for England and its child the United States, but for the whole world.

I am instituting this site to serve as the staging site for St. Alfred's Army--a place for those of us of faith to meet, express devotion, pray together.  Never has the world more needed good governance, common sense, learning, compassion and wisdom such as St. Alfred possessed.

Everyone is welcome to post here--devotions to St. Alfred, requests for his intercession, thoughts on the multiple facets of his greatness.  I am reviewing entries before posting, but only because I do not think this is the site to post lonelyhearts or colon cleanser ads.

Join me in St. Alfred's Army.  Let us ask for his intercession today.