When Augustine came to Kent in 597 armed with Catholicism and orders from Pope Gregory to proselytize Kent, his modus operandi was to lull people into a state of almost unconscious submission. He and his monks didn’t destroy the pagan temples of the Saxons, instead, they just sprinkled some holy water over them baptizing them, idols and all, as part of the Holy Roman Church. The Saxons were encouraged to worship the true God in their pagan temples and to exchange their polytheism for the worship of saints, which essentially was the worship of the same gods under different names. This form of Baptised paganism drew Ethelbert of Kent in and the entire kingdom of Kent submitted to another form of the same religion they had embraced all along. In direct contrast to this was the method used by Aiden in Northumbria and other places.
The first thing he did was to establish a training school where students could come from all quarters of the kingdom to be trained in the study of the scriptures.
His own life was a living example of the kind of spiritual experience such study would produce. He didn’t water down the truth but presented it to his hearers in such a way that drew them to embrace it and incorporate it into their daily lives. The social fabric of Northumbria was deeply influenced by the work at Lindisfarne because the lives of the people, that were the threads of that fabric, were transformed by that same work.
In his book “What’s wrong with the world”, G.K. Chesterton writes “The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting, as it has been found difficult; and left untried”. To the Augustinian monks it was easier to baptize paganism than attempt its conversion but to Aiden, it was far more satisfying to convert paganism by the power of primitive godliness than to sanctify it by the sprinkling of water. To Aiden, the Christian ideal had been tried and found to be all it claimed to be and this was the secret of his success.
Aiden labored for 17 years and was succeeded by Finnan who was succeeded by Coleman. The focus of the Celtic Church in England was not to centralize their work in a single ecclesiastical capital but to be a diffusive influence throughout the Kingdoms of the Heptarchy by planting numerous mission stations wherever they had a missionary presence.
The most definitive thing about Aiden was the powerful influence he exerted over the lives of all who came into contact with him. He had an authentic experience with Jesus and it showed in every area of his life, challenging everyone around him to not only long for something more but to also pursue it, wholeheartedly.