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Jun 7 – Solemn. of Corpus Christi / S Robert of Newminster
Description
Sources Used Today:
- "The Humility of Jesus in the Host" — Eastertide Day by Day
- "The Open Church and Its Enemy" (FSSPX.news)
- The Spiritual Life — Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre (Angelus Press)
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Saint Robert of Newminster was one of the great monastic saints of twelfth-century England, a man whose holiness, humility, and leadership helped spread the renewal of the Cistercian Order throughout northern Europe. Though less well known today than some of his contemporaries, Robert was widely revered in his own time as a spiritual father and miracle worker.
He was born around the year 1100 in the city of York, England. As a young man, Robert pursued studies and was eventually ordained a priest. Those who knew him were struck by his devotion to prayer and his desire for a deeper spiritual life. Seeking greater holiness, he entered the Benedictine monastery of Whitby. Yet like many reform-minded monks of his era, Robert was drawn to the growing Cistercian movement, which sought to return monastic life to the simplicity, poverty, and strict observance envisioned by Saint Benedict.
Robert joined the Cistercians and became one of the founding monks of Fountains Abbey, one of the most influential monasteries in medieval England. The early years were difficult. The monks endured poverty, harsh conditions, and uncertainty, yet Robert's calm faith and perseverance helped sustain the community. His holiness became widely recognized, and he was eventually chosen to lead a new foundation at Newminster Abbey in Northumberland.
As abbot, Robert combined firmness with great charity. He emphasized prayer, obedience, humility, and care for the spiritual welfare of his monks. Under his leadership, Newminster flourished and became the mother house of several additional monasteries, extending the influence of the Cistercian reform across England and Scotland.
Contemporary accounts describe Robert as a man of deep contemplation who was also gifted with practical wisdom. Many miracles were attributed to him both during his lifetime and after his death. People traveled long distances seeking his prayers and counsel, convinced that he possessed a speci