 Bede          was a monk at the English monastery of Wearmouth and Jarrow, in  Northumbria.          From the age of seven, he spent all his life at that monastery  except          for a few brief visits to nearby sites. He says of himself: "I  have devoted          my energies to a study of the Scriptures, observing monastic  discipline,          and singing the daily services in church; study, teaching, and  writing          have always been my delight."
Bede          was a monk at the English monastery of Wearmouth and Jarrow, in  Northumbria.          From the age of seven, he spent all his life at that monastery  except          for a few brief visits to nearby sites. He says of himself: "I  have devoted          my energies to a study of the Scriptures, observing monastic  discipline,          and singing the daily services in church; study, teaching, and  writing          have always been my delight."        He was the first person to write scholarly works in the  English language,          although unfortunately only fragments of his English writings  have survived.          He translated the Gospel of John into Old English, completing  the work          on the very day of his death. He also wrote extensively in  Latin. He wrote          commentaries on the Pentateuch and other portions of Holy  Scripture. His          best-known work is his History           of the English Church and People, a classic which has  frequently          been translated and is available in Penguin Paperbacks. It gives  a history          of Britain up to 729, speaking of the Celtic peoples who were  converted          to Christianity during the first three centuries of the  Christian era,          and the invasion of the Anglo-Saxon pagans in the fifth and  sixth centuries,          and their subsequent conversion by Celtic missionaries from the  north          and west, and Roman missionaries from the south and east. His  work is          our chief source for the history of the British Isles during  this period.          Fortunately, Bede was careful to sort fact from hearsay, and to  tell us          the sources of his information.
 He also wrote hymns and other  verse, the          first martyrology with historical notes, letters and homilies,  works on          grammar, on chronology and astronomy -- he was aware that the  earth is          a sphere, and he is the first historian to date events ANNO  DOMINI, and          the earliest known writer to state that the solar year is not  exactly          365 and a quarter days long, so that the Julian calendar (one  leap year          every four years) requires some adjusting if the months are not  to get          out of step with the seasons.
He also wrote hymns and other  verse, the          first martyrology with historical notes, letters and homilies,  works on          grammar, on chronology and astronomy -- he was aware that the  earth is          a sphere, and he is the first historian to date events ANNO  DOMINI, and          the earliest known writer to state that the solar year is not  exactly          365 and a quarter days long, so that the Julian calendar (one  leap year          every four years) requires some adjusting if the months are not  to get          out of step with the seasons.        
His hymns include one for the Ascension. Suggested tune is Agincourt, also called Deo Gratias (or Gracias), which follows:
| Clyde McLennan - Creator of the earth and skies .mp3 | ||
|   | ||
|  | Found at bee mp3 search engine |  | 
A hymn of glory let us sing;
       New songs throughout the world shall ring:
       Christ, by a road before untrod,
       Now rises to the throne of God.        
   The holy apostolic band
Upon the Mount of Olives stand;
And with his followers they see
Their Lord's ascending majesty.  
   To them the angels drawing nigh,
"Why stand and gaze upon the sky?
This is the Savior," thus they say;
"This is his glorious triumph day.  
   "Again shall ye behold him so
As ye today have seen him go,
In glorious pomp ascending high,
Up to the portals of the sky."  
   O risen Christ, ascended Lord,
All praise to thee let earth accord,
Who art, while endless ages run,
With Father and with Spirit one.        
Readings:
- Psalm          78:1-4
Wisdom 7:15-22
1 Corinthians 15:1-8
Matthew 13:47-52
Preface of a Saint (1)
                
PRAYER (contemporary wording)
h/t Satucket
 
 
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