In the province of Leinster,
Ireland, in the year 560, Columcille was obsessed with the beauty of his
master’s book of psalms. In the dark of night, he secretly copied it. A monk, he
was also a capable warrior, once named Crimthann, the Fox. When he was forced to
give up his copy, his injury festered, contributing to an act of revenge for the
death of one of his followers. His revenge left him victorious and in possession
of his copy of the psalms, but he was still a monk, and the Church exiled him,
setting him to the task of converting 3001 souls to Christianity in penance for
those he had killed.
Today, he is known as St. Columba, from the Latin
for dove, the Irish monk who set the pattern for the Irish monastic tradition
that brought writing back to Western Europe after the fall of Rome. The abbey
structure that he established included simple huts for the monks, a dining hall,
a kitchen, a scriptorium for transcribing documents, a library, and the
fundamentals of a good farm. When an abbey reached 150 monks, a leader would
choose 12 monks, as Columcille had done upon his exile, and would set off to
re-establish at a new location. One of his successors, St. Columban, also of
Leinster, was a monk with a much less violent history. Following St. Columba’s
example, he set off for the Continent with 12 monks and established some of the
most important abbeys of the seventh century.
In 406 AD, the Rhine River had frozen solid. The
Rhine and the Danube had always kept the eastern tribes out of the Roman Empire,
but that winter the Rhine ceased to be a barrier to the Vandals, allowing them
to establish a permanent beachhead on their far shore. Thereafter, barbarian
hordes poured west destroying the very fabric of Roman society. While the Church
hierarchy withstood the onslaught, most of the written culture was lost. The
tireless monks of St. Columba created abbeys and diligently transcribed and
preserved the old documents that had remained out of reach in Ireland. They
spread their copies throughout their network during the Dark Ages. In the
process, they had a huge impact on all aspects of European life.
Father Patrick Phelan, a Gentleman of the Order of
St. Sulpice, was born in that same Irish province, Leinster, in 1795. While his
family moved to Boston, his vocation took him to the Grand Seminary in Montreal.
His ordination to the priesthood coincided with the arrival of a first wave of
Irish immigrants, and the Bishop of Montreal encouraged him to join the
Sulpicians in order to minister to these new, impoverished arrivals.
The Sulpicians, whose founding vision had resulted
in the creation of Montreal, owned a seigneury north of Laval, centred in Oka.
Like St. Columban, their vision was of an order of brothers and priests who
would minister to the needy in the name of the Holy Roman Catholic Church.
Father Phelan would have known about his Leinster
predecessors, and about St. Jerome, among the earliest of monks, and St.
Scholastica, the soul sister of St. Benedict. He encouraged his Irish immigrants
to colonize the territory in the northeast of the Sulpician seigneury and he
founded their parish, naming it for his spiritual forebear.
As early as 1825, there were 250 people in the
homestead, and others not far away in St. Jerome. The success of a settlement of
Irish Catholics was dependent upon a strong parish priest, but in the beginning,
they had not even a chapel, traveling to St. Scholastique when they must. This
lack was mitigated by the erection of a cross, allowing them to go to it and
pray when time did not permit the longer overland trip to the nearest church.
Well after their first chapel was finally built in 1831, at the location of the
cross, the early settlers continued to refer to a trip to the chapel as ‘going
to The Cross’.