We found thirty-nine posts for Cuthbert on Clay Lane. The posts are listed order of relevance to your search.
1
Cuthbert would not go to King Ecgfrith, so King Ecgfrith and his entire court had to go to Cuthbert.
… Sometime after 676, Cuthbert left his monastery on Lindisfarne and retired to the nearby island of Inner Farne … Not long after, in a full synod, Archbishop Theodore of blessed memory presiding in the presence of God’s chosen servant, the holy King Ecgfrith, Cuthbert was unanimously elected to the bishopric of the see of Lindisfarne …
2
Cuthbert’s friend comes asking for a priest to attend his dying wife — so long as it isn’t Cuthbert.
… St Cuthbert’s miracles not only brought healing or deliverance from danger … When Cuthbert was at Melrose Abbey … But when Cuthbert with a faraway look muttered ‘I must go myself’ … It broke his heart that Cuthbert … remarked Cuthbert suddenly as they rode … They duly arrived to find her weak but rational, and on touching the reins of Cuthbert’s horse she announced herself fitter than ever …
3
Bede is reminded of another great Christian saint when St Cuthbert shoos some troublesome crows from his barley crop.
… A good example of the way Bede uses miracles comes from the story of Cuthbert’s barley … Bede, however, was content to draw parallels with a quite different miracle attributed to St Cuthbert … Cuthbert … So Cuthbert had it out with them … The birds, abashed, took it to heart, and did not trouble Cuthbert’s barley field again …
4
A hungry monk thought he had got away with the tastiest of crimes, but St Cuthbert kept his promise to his beloved birds.
… St Cuthbert the Wonderworker of Lindisfarne ( … Saint Cuthbert loved all the birds of Inner Farne … So he bequeathed to them a legacy, which is called ‘St Cuthbert’s Peace’ … When Aelric returned he found bone, skin and feathers all neatly rolled up into a ball, and deposited accusingly on the step of St Cuthbert’s old chapel by the indignant tide …
5
A boy goes bird-nesting in Cuthbert’s church, and finds himself all in a heap.
… In 1165, a priest came to Durham from Lytham, where his little parish had experienced a number of miracles at the hands of the patron saint, Cuthbert of Lindisfarne … The little church of St Cuthbert in twelfth-century Lytham was a wattle-and-daub affair … Not even the church of Cuthbert” … His condition grew dangerously worse, until on his friends’ advice he was taken back to St Cuthbert’s church … In the dead of the third night, a brightness filled the church, and Cuthbert himself came out from the altar area … said Cuthbert … One little finger, however, remained in contraction to the end of his days, as a reminder of the love of St Cuthbert towards one very rash young boy …
6
A bird of prey shattered the peace of St Cuthbert’s island, and was taught an unforgettable lesson.
… St Cuthbert ( … 634-687) loved the many birds of his island retreat, and before he died the saint promised them ‘St Cuthbert’s Peace’ … In the days when monk Bartholomew lived in St Cuthbert’s hermitage on Inner Farne … The hawk looked for a quiet spot for his meal, but having broken the peace of Cuthbert’s island … Bartholomew took pity on the weary creature, and gently carried him to the shoreline, where he released him, blessing him in St Cuthbert’s name …