Columba and my calling.

A fierce dove racing in a fiercer gale

A fierce dove racing in a fiercer gale

June the 9th is Saint Columba’s day, a saint who has a special place for me, as somehow, he feels bound up in my own journey to Faith. When I was 19, and moving from  atheism, towards a greater spiritual openness, but by no means yet a Christian, I went for a long slow walk round Ireland. I went without a map because the Zen practice in which I was interested at the time, and on which I still draw in prayer, was always emphasizing ‘The map is not the reality”! You must utterly and absolutely be in the place you’re in, and let that place be what it is and teach what it has to teach without any overlay from your maps and preconceptions. So I took that literally and walked round Ireland without  a map, just keeping the sea on my left! One evening, St. John’s Eve it was, right at the end of my journey, I came round a headland at sunset into a beautiful little bay and inlet on the west coast in Donegal, just as the fires were being lit around the headlands for St. John’s Eve, and there was drinking and fiddle playing and dancing round the fires that evening. And I asked where I was, and they said Glencolmcille, and I felt a sudden quickening and sense of connection, as though a memory stirred. And they asked me my name and I said ‘Malcolm’, and they said, ‘Ah that is why you have come, because he has called you’, and I said ‘who?’ and they said ‘Colm has called you, Malcolm, for this is the place he fought his battle and gathered his disciples and from here he left for the white martyrdom and Scotland. And they told me the story of St. Columba, and the battle he had fought, of his repentance, his self-imposed exile, his journey with twelve disciples from this glen to Scotland where he founded the abbey of Iona from whence Scotland and much of the north of England was converted. ‘Of course he is calling you here’, they said, ‘for your name, in Gaelic means’ servant of Colm’, which is Columba. And as they spoke I remembered at last, right back into my childhood, how I had been told stories about this saint, and how I was named for him, and how my grandmother had published poems about him and sung her lullaby for the infant Columba over me as a child. I wandered down to the shore whence he had set sail and felt how thin the veil was, how something of heaven, whatever heaven might be, seemed to glimmer through the sky and the sea itself in this place. And I thought: ‘I’m not a Christian, and I don’t see how I could ever become one, but if I do ever become one, I’ll remember Columba and I’ll go to Iona and thank him’. Which I did, and I did. Now here’s my sonnet for the saint. This poem is now collected in my book The Singing Bowl from Canterbury Press which you can get on amazon, or better still, order from your local bookshop! Click on the title or the ‘play button to hear me read the poem!


Columba

 You called me and I came to Colmcille

To learn at last the meaning of my name

Though you yourself were called, and not the caller,

He called through you and when He called I came.

Came to the edge at last, in Donegal,

Where bonfires burned and music lit the flame

As from the shore I glimpsed that ragged sail

The Spirit filled to drive you from your  home,

A fierce dove racing in a fiercer gale,

A swift wing flashing between sea and sky.

And with that glimpse I knew that I  would fly

And find you out and serve you for a season,

My heaven hidden like your native isle,

Though somehow glimmering on each horizon.

Glencolmcille, scene of a small epiphany

Glencolmcille, scene of a small epiphany

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8 Comments

Filed under imagination

8 responses to “Columba and my calling.

  1. zimsuzieq

    Everytime I listen to this story, I think what a miracle has happened. We must keep our eyes and ears open, be still and listen for the messages. Thank you Fr Malcolm. What spiritual riches, goodness and beauty you give our lives.

  2. zimsuzieq

    Everytime I listen to this story, I think what a miracle has happened. We must keep our eyes and ears open, be still and listen for the messages.

    Thank you Fr Malcolm. What spiritual riches, goodness and beauty you give our lives.

  3. mjfowler3

    What a wonderful story, and what a perfect retelling in the sonnet! I think that sometimes the thin spaces find us.
    I know it’s not the anniversary of your ordination, but can’t help wishing you Ad Multos Annos!

  4. sarahmurphyburn

    Wonderful. Thank you Malcolm .

    Sarah

  5. You always manage to give me hope, Fr. Guite. Otherwise, I find it in short supply.

  6. Veronica Jane Lamont

    A deeply moving story from your life Malcolm- thank you

  7. Daniel Kelly

    What a revelation! I had not made the connection between St Columba and your name. I mentioned in my recording of Columba’s work the Irish family I have that re-created his journey to Scotland back in 1963.

  8. mjfowler3

    I was so taken by the thin spaces and your response to them yesterday that I only later realized that I have a connection to St Colm and to your name, too. I’m called MJ for Mary Jane, but had I been a boy I’d have been Malcolm Francis, named for my dad’s only sibling, who died during WWI. As a teenager he spent time “hanging around” Starling Burgess’s early airplane works in Marblehead, MA, learned to fly, and then left MIT in his sophomore year to enlist. His training plane crashed off Pensacola in Florida in 1918.

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