Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Who Took Down Thor? | St. Boniface in Lower Hesse, "Bold"

 


St. Boniface
(675-754 A.D.)
was known for
his tireless activity,
his gift for organization,
and his adaptable, friendly,
yet firm character.

+ Pope Benedict XVI

Oh, and he was fearless as an axe-wielding, oak-chopping, hammer-breaking priest who pointed to Jesus in Germanic parts of Francia during the eighth century.

He saw many come to faith in Christ
as the "Apostle to the Germans."
How? 
Well, he did take down Thor.

For some reason, St. Boniface has come up in conversation a bit more as of late, so I thought I would include a quick post for those who have not heard his story yet.

Coming as one of the great cloud of witnesses to Germans (ex. see also St. Hildegard of Bingen), St. Boniface traveled far and wide, organizing and encouraging those who followed Christ.

 Seeking first the Kingdom of Jesus where good things run wild, he stepped into the darker corners of this earthly domain to bring the light of Christ to those who hadn’t been introduced to the Son of God yet.

In one fateful story set during the first quarter of the 700s A.D., St. Boniface was traveling with a few companions through the region of Lower Hesse. He knew of a community near Geismar who, in the middle of winter, would make a human sacrifice to the thunder-god Thor at the base of their sacred oak tree, the “Thunder Oak”.

Stepping into this terrifying terrain, St. Boniface sought to chop down the Thunder Oak to save lives from human sacrifice, and to also show that Thor had no power to strike him down by lightning. 

St. Boniface and his companions reached the Thunder Oak on Christmas Eve before the human sacrifice could be offered. With a crozier (i.e. a bishop’s staff) in his hand, St. Boniface entered the crowd surrounding the base of the Thunder Oak, saying to everyone who was expecting a human sacrifice to soon occur:

“Here is the Thunder Oak, 
and here the cross of Christ 
shall break the hammer 
of the false god, Thor.”

Ignoring the stranger and his companions, an executioner looked at the small child laid out for the sacrifice at the base of Thunder Oak and raised his hammer. But as the great stone hammer fell, St. Boniface reached out and his crozier blocked the blow, miraculously breaking the executioner's instrument of death. 

The crowd was shocked. 
The little one's life was saved. 
And Thor's lightning did not 
kill this Christian priest.

Then it is written that St. Boniface said:

“Hearken, sons of the forest! 
No blood shall flow this night 
save that which pity 
has drawn from a mother’s breast. 
For this is the birth-night of the Christ, 
the son of the Almighty, 
the Savior of mankind. 

Fairer is He than Baldur the Beautiful, 
greater than Odin the Wise, 
kinder than Freya the Good. 
Since He has come sacrifice is ended. 
The dark, Thor, 
on whom you have vainly called, 
is dead. 
Deep in the shades of Niffelheim 
he is lost forever. 

And now on this Christ-night 
you shall begin to live. 
This blood-tree shall 
darken your land no more. 
In the name of the Lord,
 I will destroy it.” 

As the story goes, St. Boniface then picked up an axe nearby and took a strong swing at the oak just as a great wind surged through the forest. Whether by swing, swirl, or the Spirit of God, the tree came down, and it is written that St. Boniface had a chapel built from the pieces of wood.

The “Apostle of Germany” shared the Gospel with the shocked Germanic peoples who began to understand that the God who died for them on a tree was somehow the slayer of Thor’s Thunder Oak. And, as St. Boniface was not struck down Thor, he looked at the crowd and then directed his eyes past the remains of the Thunder Oak to a small, unassuming fir tree:

“This little tree, 
a young child of the forest, 
shall be your holy tree tonight. 
It is the wood of peace … 
It is the sign of an endless life, 
for its leaves are ever green. 

See how it points upward to heaven. 
Let this be called 
the tree of the Christ-child; 
gather about it, 
not in the wild wood, 
but in your own homes; 
there it will shelter no deeds of blood, 
but loving gifts and rites of kindness.”

The Germanic people were given a new vision of a tree, instead of a Thunder Oak demanding sacrifice, an image of an evergreen glimpse of the gift of Heaven, the sacrificial One who would not take their life, but instead, give His for theirs.

The Celebrity & The Saint

The celebrity demands,
"Look at me!"
The saint whispers,
The celebrity says,
"Try to be like me,
but you'll never be like me."
The saint says,
"Why would anyone want to be like me?
Who has God made you?"

The celebrity is ever ascending,
climbing the tower of Babel
to the double-platinum throne.
The saint is ever descending,
saying, "Please have my seat, I insist."

The celebrity offers you everything
you want but can never have.
The saint offers you the thing you fear
but will redeem your soul.

+ Ben Lansing & D.J. Marotta,
Our Church Speaks

Bonus Posts


Bonus Fearless Saints


Bonus Prayer

Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,
thank You for welcoming us
into the whirlwind of Your holy love.
As Your family, may we become holy saints
who stand out 
in this time and place. 
The times when saints shine
the most are times of darkness.
Like the great cloud of witnesses
who have gone before us,
may we shine with glimpses of Jesus’ Light,
which darkness cannot overcome.
And as part of Jesus’ Church, 
our hope rests Your Kingdom coming.
The time has come.
The Kingdom of heaven is near.
We turn to You and believe good news that
This is the hope we have been born again to,
and this is what saints have embodied
as our sisters and brothers 
across time,
ethnicities, Christian traditions,
nationalities, and more.

As we step into this next season,
our prayer is that we will shine 
all the more with the holy light
of Christ in us and through us. 
And we pray that we
“being rooted and firmly established in love,
may be able to comprehend with all the saints
what is the length and width,
height and depth of God’s love.”
After all, “the Father has enabled us
to share in the saints’ inheritance in the light.
He has rescued us from 
the domain of darkness and
transferred us into the Kingdom
of the Son He loves.”
Amen.

Many blessings of peace and presence,

Rev. Mike “Sully” Sullivan

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