CHAP.
XV.
EDWIN
was so zealous for the true worship, that he likewise persuaded Earpwald,
king of the East Angles, and son of Redwald, to abandonhis idolatrous
superstitions, and with his whole province to receive the faith and mysteries
of Christ. And indeed his father Redwald had long before been initiated into
the mysteries of the Christian faith in Kent, but in vain; for on his return
home, he was seduced by his wife and certain perverse teachers, and turned
aside from the sincerity of the faith; and thus his latter state was worse than
the former; so that, like the Samaritans of old, he seemed at the same time to
serve Christ and the gods whom he served before; and in the same temple he had
an altar for the Christian Sacrifice, and another small one at which to offer
victims to devils. Aldwulf, king of that same province, who lived in our time,
testifies that this temple had stood until his time, and that he had seen it
when he was a boy. The aforesaid King Redwald was noble by birth, though
ignoble in his actions, being the son of Tytilus, whose father was Uuffa, from
whom the kings of the East Angles are called Uuffings.
Earpwald, not long after he had embraced the Christian faith, was slain by one
Ricbert, a pagan; and from that time the province was in error for three years,
till Sigbert succeeded to the kingdom, brother to the same Earpwald, a most
Christian and learned man, who was banished, and went to live in Gaul during
his brother's life, and was there initiated into the mysteries of the faith,
whereof he made it his business to cause all his province to partake as soon as
he came to the throne. His exertions were nobly promoted by Bishop Felix,who,
coming to Honorius, the archbishop, from the parts of Burgundy, where he had
been born and ordained, and having told him what he desired, was sent by him to
preach the Word of life to the aforesaid nation of the Angles. Nor were his
good wishes in vain; for the pious labourer in the spiritual field reaped
therein a great harvest of believers, delivering all that province (according
to the inner signification of his name) from long iniquity and unhappiness, and
bringing it to the faith and works of righteousness, and the gifts of
everlasting happiness. He had the see of his bishopric appointed him in the
city Dommoc, and having presided over the same province with pontifical
authority seventeen years, he ended his days there in peace.
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