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Died 680. Bede mentions Owen as a monk of great merit who forsook high office and a distinguished career for the love of his Lord. He came with Queen Etheldreda from East Anglia, and was her prime minister and the governor of her household. To these great employments he brought not only a high sense of duty, but also, under the influence of St. Chad (f.d. March 2) and other Celtic missionaries, a growing sense of Christian faith and obligation, until there came a day when he resolved to surrender his secular offices and devote himself entirely to the service of God.

He did not go about this matter without careful thought, for a man does not lightly cast aside rank and honour for the humble and anonymous role of a serving monk in a religious community, nor does he easily shed the habits of a secular life. The story of his arrival at the monastery of Lastingham is worth recalling.

One day a stranger was observed at its gates seeking admittance. He was plainly dressed, but obviously, he was no common pilgrim, and in his hand he carried an axe and a hatchet. When asked his business, he replied that he had come with all he possessed, having quit all that he had, and that he had come not to live idly but to work, hence the axe and the hatchet, which he would wield industriously in the service of the monastery. For as he was less capable of meditating on the Holy Scriptures, he the more earnestly applied himself to the labour of his hands.

Moved by his sincerity and humility, those who received him took him before the bishop, who was none other than the saintly Chad, and he, seeing before him in the guise of a labourer the former chamberlain of Queen Etheldreda, welcomed him gladly into their fellowship. Thus, Owen became their handyman. When the bell sounded, calling the monks to their studies, he took his tools and laboured in the fields: cutting wood, mending walls and fences, and doing it to the glory of God. He was of those of whom it is written: In the handiwork of their craft is their prayer (Benedictines, Encyclopaedia, Gill).



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