Godfrey
was born about the year 1065 in Soissons, France. When he was only five
years old, he was placed in the care of his godfather, the abbot of the
Abbey of Mont-Saint-Quentin. Here he grew up and, in due course, became
a monk and was ordained to the priesthood. In 1096 he was made the
abbot of Nogent-sous-Coucy, a dilapidated abbey in the province of
Champagne, where the community numbered a mere half a dozen monks who
had become very lax in their discipline.
He rebuilt, restored and
revitalized the abbey. Under Godfrey’s direction, monastic discipline
and order were restored and the community began to flourish. News of his
success spread and Godfrey was urged to accept the position of superior
of the renowned Abbey of Saint-Remi. This he refused, saying “God
forbid I should ever desert a poor bride by preferring a rich one!”
In
1097, Godfrey was offered the archbishopric of Rheims. This he likewise
refused, counting himself as unworthy of this new honor as the
previously-offered one.
When, in 1104, he was offered the
bishopric of Amiens and once more refused the ecclesiastical dignity, he
was ordered by the papal prelate to accept it.
A zealous
reformer, as Bishop of Amiens, his strict discipline and rigid austerity
– first with himself and then with those under his charge – his
insistence upon clerical celibacy and his unrelenting struggle against
drunkenness and simony, aroused bitter opposition among the lax clergy
and even caused attempts upon his life. Godfrey ardently desired to
resign and retire as a Carthusian monk during this time, nevertheless,
he persevered. Finally, in 1114, he withdrew to the Grand-Chartreuse
but, within a few months, the demands of his people won out and he was
ordered by a Council held at Soissons and by King Philip himself to
return to his diocese. Resigned to the will of God, Godfrey returned to
his episcopal see.
While on his way to visit his metropolitan in
1115, Godfrey died at the Abbey of Saint-Crépin near Soissons. He was
buried at the abbey and his tomb became renowned for the many miracles
wrought there.
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