Just who was Saint Gall?
Gallus (or Gall) was born in the year
550, just eight years before Saint Comgall founded his famous monastery at
Bangor. Little is known of the boyhood of Gall except that it is generally
thought that he showed great piety and interest in the Christian faith.

As a young man he went to study under Comgall of Bangor. And
here it should be noted that the monastery at Bangor had become renowned
throughout Europe as a great centre of Christian learning. Because of the great
learning at Bangor, Ireland became known as "the land of Saints and
Scholars". Missionaries went out from Bangor Abbey to all parts of Ireland,
the British Isles, and the Continent.
Studying in Bangor at the same time as Gall was Columbanus, to
whose honour the parish church in Ballyholme on the other side of Bangor is
dedicated. We might say that Columbanus had become a sort of right hand man of
Saint Comgall, and that he felt a great call to missionary adventure. And so he
laid before the Abbott Comgall his request to be set free for this work.
Comgall was loath to part with one who had become so great a
help and comfort to him; but realising that he had no right to consider only his
own convenience, he gave his consent, and Columbanus together with twelve
companions, the most noted of whom was probably Gall, set out about the year
589, bidding a life-long farewell to home and friends in order to face unknown
difficulties and dangers in the extension of God’s Kingdom on the Continent.
Columbanus and Gall and their companions settled for a while
in Switzerland at Lake Constance. After a while Columbanus felt an urge to go
into Italy, but Gall was taken sick of a fever, and couldn’t go with him,
apart from the fact that he was more anxious for a life of solitude.
Recovering from his illness, Gall fixed upon a quiet place on
the River Steinach for his life of solitude. Having begun with a three day
fast
there, he erected a small stone hut or cell for prayer, an oratory after the
manner usual in Ireland. And so began the abbey and the town of Saint Gall.
Cells were soon added for twelve monks whom Gall carefully instructed.
Saint Gall was soon known in Switzerland as a powerful
preacher. He is said to have thrown down images to heathen gods, and exhorted
the worshippers of these images to return to the true God. As a result of Gall’s
work, practically the whole of Switzerland is thought to have embraced the
Christian faith.
When the See of Constance became vacant, the clergy who
assembled to elect a new Bishop were unanimously in favour of Saint Gall on
account of his superior learning and sanctity. He, however, refused, pleading
that the election of a stranger would be contrary to Church law, but proposed
his deacon John, who was duly elected and consecrated Bishop.
Some time later, in the year 625, on the death of Eustasius,
who was abbott of Luxeuil, a monastery founded by Saint Columbanus, six members
of that community, all Irishmen, were sent by the monks to request Saint Gall to
undertake the government of the monastery. He definitely refused to quit his
life of solitude, and undertake any office of rank which might involve him in
the cares of the world. He was then an old man, and probably felt himself unable
to cope with the duties of high office.
The Legend of Saint Gall
A
legend about Saint Gall in his solitary life has become well-known.
The story tells how a bear became St. Gall’s sole friend in the closing
years of his life, and that the bear used to carry logs to the saint so that he
could light his fire. The bear has now become the coat of arms for the town of St.
Gallen in Switzerland, and the bear carrying the logs is depicted on the wall of
the great Cathedral there, as it is in the new parish church in Carnalea.
Saint Gall died on 16th October in the year 645, at the age
of 95, and that date – 16th October – is now honoured in
Carnalea parish each year as Saint Gall’s Day.
An assiduous preacher of the Gospel, a skilful trainer of people in the work of
evangelisation, and a man of remarkable holiness of his life,
Saint Gall left an abiding mark on the country in which he worked.
His memory has long been revered in the locality of his labours he became known and honoured as the Apostle of
Switzerland.
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