Sunday, 5 April 2026

 

St. Cuthbert and 

the Cave That Couldn’t Be Filmed

August 2025 in northern England was chilly and windy. I had gone over to this land along the Anglo-Scottish border one month earlier, in July, to scout out St. Cuthbert’s Way, meet taxi drivers, and find really good pubs, as I was preparing to lead a half-dozen Angelico Fellows from Benedictine College along the path and document our journey on film. But I almost froze to death while I was at it. In a blinding rain, I wandered up into the hills, wearing a defective raincoat and ugly sweater I had bought in a thrift store. I found and took shelter within St. Cuthbert’s Cave, where, after wringing out my soaked sweater, I sang an Akathist hymn. As soon as I had finished my hymn, the storm cleared, and all turned sunny again. 

A month later, when I returned with the fellows, the weather was supposed to be even worse. The day before our hiking and filming was to begin, the forecast called for winds so ferocious that all northbound trains were canceled. And yet, when we began our hike, after a light rain, all was sunny and beautiful and a little windy. If you’ve read St. Bede’s Life of St. Cuthbert, then you’ll remember that the medieval saint had a habit of doing this.

St. Cuthbert’s Way is a 62.5-mile hike from charming Melrose, Scotland, to the tidal island known as Holy Island (Lindisfarne). As a proper path, it’s relatively new, but the trail revisits the life and experience of the most important saint we Americans have never heard of: the seventh-century Cuthbert. From Melrose the path goes up and over the bare and reddish Eildon Hills, where Cuthbert, tending his sheep at night, had a dramatic vision that led to his conversion to the religious life. From the Eildon Hills you descend into the Tweed River valley, where the trail passes the ruins of Dryburgh Abbey following a river full of salmon during the later autumn months. Once out of the wooded river valleys, the path cuts across farmland and then begins to climb up into the tiny village of Morebattle. From there on it ascends up into the Scottish hills. 

After crossing the border into England, Cuthbert’s Way goes through the village of Wooler to climb up a crest, where you find a series of caves, including St. Cuthbert’s Cave, tucked away within a pine wood. According to pious legend, one of these caves is the site where the monks of Lindisfarne hid their most precious possessions when the Vikings raided the island: the wonder-working and incorrupt body of St. Cuthbert and the Lindisfarne Gospels. The goal of the trip, of course, is Holy Island. If you time your crossing just right, you can walk across the cold gray sands, barefoot, when the tide is low, and thus arrive at the place where Cuthbert spent his final years in contemplative seclusion.

Although we Americans are less familiar with Cuthbert, he was the St. Francis of his day, and thus this region is to him what the Vale of Spoleto would later be for Francis. Cuthbert wandered everywhere through the ancient kingdom of Northumbria, preaching, healing, and performing miracles. Indeed, Bede wrote Cuthbert’s life three separate times, including one version in dactylic hexameter, intimating that he had found a subject fit for the heroic meter used in the pagan past for ancient epics. 

Part of my motivation to take my students to this area was, as I like to put it, to rummage around in the basement of the Church and to see what a long-forgotten saint had to say to our contemporary world. And part of my motivation was to see if we could do with the technologies of our day something analogous to what Cuthbert’s near-contemporaries had done in theirs. Some scholars speculate that the Lindisfarne Gospels, with their elaborate, leafy illuminations, in which the words of Scripture become paintings, were made in honor of Cuthbert.

Inspired by such a vision, then, my Center for Beauty and Culture at Benedictine College teamed up with Daniel Catone of Arimathea Investing, Christian Holden of St. Anthony Media, and Fr. Marcus Holden of St. Bede’s Seminary in Rome to make a film, which is part Catholic reality television (although I’m sorry to say there was no nasty gossip or embarrassing personality conflicts), part documentary, and part modern hagiography. I told my friend and collaborator, Christian Holden, that I wanted our film to be a digital “icon”; or, perhaps better, given the locale, that I wanted to do through film what our ancestors did in paint: a cinematic illuminated manuscript. The fruit of our labor will be aired on EWTN on March 20, 2026—appropriately, the feast of St. Cuthbert himself.

Holy Island is ineffably beautiful, and I was excited to take my students across “the pilgrim sands” at low tide, but I was as excited to let them see St. Cuthbert’s Cave, a place that had sheltered me in a storm and had felt to me a place of prayer, inspiration, and holiness. But, shockingly, the National Trust, the not-for-profit organization in the U.K. that owns the property on which the cave sits, would not grant us permission to film on the site—precisely because, they explained to my friend Christian, we were religious. We tried to reason with them: This is a not-for-profit film; for us it is a religious site; we’re not political, cranky, or controversial. We just want to tell a story from Bede and make it feel relevant again. But they doubled down on their position. The result is that now the National Trust is all over the headlines in the U.K. for, as the Telegraph put it, “banning a Roman Catholic from filming at a religious site.” As my friend put it to me, I’m afraid that country has a long history of suppressing Catholicism. But cave or no cave, we’ve made a film that is going to touch some hearts.

Saturday, 4 April 2026

 

The Seven Last Words of Christ

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Listen to this article
8 min

It seems to be a fact of human psychology that when death approaches, the human heart speaks its words of love to those whom it holds closest and dearest. There is no reason to suspect that it is otherwise in the case of the Heart of hearts.

If He spoke in a graduated order to those whom He loved most, then we may expect to find in His first three words the order of His love and affection. His first words went out to enemies: “Father, forgive them,” His second to sinners: “This day thou shalt be with Me in Paradise,” and His third to saints, “Woman, behold thy son.” Enemies, sinners, and saints – such is the order of Divine Love and Thoughtfulness.

The congregation anxiously awaited His first word. The executioners expected Him to cry, for everyone pinned on the gibbet of the Cross had done it before Him. Seneca tells us that those who were crucified cursed the day of their birth, the executioners, their mothers, and even spat on those who looked upon them. Cicero tells us that at times it was necessary to cut out the tongues of those who were crucified, to stop their terrible blasphemies. Hence the executioners expected a cry but not the kind of cry that they heard.

The Scribes and Pharisees expected a cry, too, and they were quite sure that He who had preached “Love your enemies,” and “Do good to them that hate you,” would now forget that Gospel with the piercing of feet and hands. They felt that the excruciating and agonizing pains would scatter to the winds any resolution He might have taken to keep up appearances.

Everyone expected a cry, but no one with the exception of the three at the foot of the Cross, expected the cry they did hear. Like some fragrant trees which bathe in perfume the very axe which gnashes them, the great Heart on the Tree of Love poured out from its depths something less a cry than a prayer, the soft, sweet, low prayer of pardon and forgiveness. . . .

The next two words, the fourth and the fifth, betray the sufferings of the God-man on the Cross. The fourth word symbolizes the sufferings of man abandoned by God; the fifth word the sufferings of God abandoned by man. . . .When Our Blessed Lord spoke this fourth word from the Cross, darkness covered the earth.

Truly, all was darkness! He had given up His Mother and His beloved disciple, and now God seemingly abandoned Him. “Eli, Eli, lamma sabacthani?” “My God! My God! Why hast Thou forsaken Me?” It is a cry in the mysterious language of Hebrew to express the tremendous mystery of a God “abandoned” by God. The Son calls His Father, God. What a contrast with a prayer He once taught: “Our Father, Who art in Heaven!” In some strange, mysterious way His human nature seems separated from His Heavenly Father, and yet not separated, for otherwise how could He cry, “My God, My God”?

He atoned first of all for atheists, for those who on that dark midday half believed in God, as even now at night they half believe in Him. He atoned also for those who know God, but live as if they had never heard His name; for those whose hearts are like waysides on which God’s love falls only to be trampled by the world; for those whose hearts are like rocks on which the seed of God’s love falls only to be quickly forgotten; for those whose hearts are like thorns on which God’s love descends only to be choked by the cares of the world.

It was atonement for all who have had faith and lost it; for all who once were saints and now are sinners. It was the Divine Act of Redemption for all abandonment of God, for in that moment in which He was forgotten.

Calvary by Abraham Janssens, c. 1620 [Musée des Beaux-Arts de Valenciennes, France]

[The fifth word]  is the shortest of the seven cries. Although it stands in our language as two words, in the original it is one. . . .He, the God-Man, who threw the stars in their orbits and spheres into space, who “swung the earth a trinket at his wrist,” from Whose finger-tips tumbled planets and worlds, who might have said, “The sea is Mine and with it the streams in a thousand valleys and the cataracts in a thousand hills,” now asks man – man, a piece of His own handiwork – to help Him. He asks man for a drink!

Not a drink of earthly water, that is not what He meant, but a drink of love. “I thirst” – for love! The last word was a revelation of the sufferings of a man without God; this word was a revelation of the sufferings of a God without man.

The Heavenly Father in His divine mercy willed to restore man to his pristine glory. In order that the portrait might once more be true to the Original, God willed to send to earth His Divine Son according to whose image man was made, that the earth might see once more the manner of man God wanted us to be. In the accomplishment of this task, only Divine Omnipotence could use the elements of defeat as the elements of victory.

Now the battle was over. For the last three hours He had been about His Father’s business. The artist had put the last touch on his masterpiece and with the joy of the strong He uttered [the sixth word] the song of triumph: “It is finished.”

 His work is finished, but is ours? It belongs to God to use that word, but not to us. The work of acquiring Divine life for man is finished, but not the distribution. He has finished the task of filling the reservoir of Calvary’s sacramental life, but the work of letting it flood our souls is not yet finished. He has finished the foundation; we must build upon it.

His seventh and last one is a word of prospect: “I commend My Spirit.” The sixth word was man-ward; the seventh word was God-ward. The sixth word was a farewell to earth; the seventh His entrance into Heaven. Just as those great planets only after a long time complete their orbit and return again to their starting-point, as if to salute Him who sent them on their way, so He who had come from Heaven had finished His work and completed His orbit, now goes back to the Father to salute Him who sent Him out on the great work of the world’s redemption: “Father, into Thy hands I commend My Spirit.”

All the while Mary is standing at the foot of the Cross. In a short time the new Abel, slain by His brethren, will be taken down from the gibbet of salvation and laid in the lap of the new Eve. It will be the death of Death!

But when the tragic moment comes, it may seem to the tear-dimmed eyes of Mary that Bethlehem has come back. The thorn-crowned head which had nowhere to lay itself in death, except on the pillow of the Cross, may, through Mary’s clouded vision, seem the head which she drew to her breast at Bethlehem.

 Those eyes at whose fading even the sun and moon were darkened were to her the eyes that glanced up from a crib of straw. The helpless feet riveted with nails once more seem to her the baby feet at which were cast gold, frankincense, and myrrh. The lips now parched and crimsoned with blood seem the ruddy lips that once at  Bethlehem nourished themselves on the Eucharist of her body. The hands that can hold nothing but a wound, seem once more the baby hands that were not quite long enough to touch the huge heads of the cattle.

The embrace at the foot of the Cross seems the embrace at the side of the crib. In that sad hour of death which always makes one think of birth, Mary may feel that Bethlehem is returning again.

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These passages are extracts from The Seven Last Words & Life of Christ by Fulton J. Sheen, who will be Beatified in St. Louis, Missouri, on September 24, 2026.

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