Bernard of Clairvaux

Born:  1091, in his father’s castle at Les Fontaines (near Dijon), Burgundy.

Died:  August 21, 1153, Clairvaux, France.

    Bernard’s father Tecelin was a knight and vassal of the Duke of Burgundy. Bernard was educated at Chatillon, where he was distinguished by his studious and meditative habits. He entered the monastery of Citeaux (the first Cistercian institution) in 1113. Two years later, he was sent, with 12 other monks, to found a daughter monastery in the Valley of Wormwood, about four miles from the Abbey of La Ferté, on the Aube. He rose to eminence in Church politics, and became embroiled in the papal schisms of the 12th Century. His influence was felt throughout Europe. It is said that he commanded kings, emperors, and prelates -- and they obeyed him. He was well known in Rome, and founded 163 monasteries throughout Europe.
    Bernard was a man of exceptional piety and spiritual vitality. Martin Luther, 400 years later, called him, “the best monk that ever lived, whom I admire beyond all the rest put together.”
    Bernard wrote a number of books, chiefly on such subjects as church government, monasticism and other church-related topics.
    Hymns by Bernard of Clairvaux include:

  1. Jesu dulcis memoria
  2. Salve caput cruentatum
  3. Wide Open Are Thy Hands