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Iona

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In 563 St. [[Columba of Iona]], exiled from his native Ireland, founded a [[monastery]] here, and from here Orthodox Christianity spread to the rest of Scotland. Numerous martyrs and other saints were produced from Iona, including not only St. Columba but also St. [[Aidan of Lindisfarne]] and others. Many believe that the [[Book of Kells]] was produced on Iona at this time. The monastery survived until the Protestant Reformation.
Iona also became the burial site for the kings of Dalriada [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%C3%A1l_Riata Dál Riata] and their successors.
==The Modern Era==
[[Image:Columba_Bay.jpg|left|thumb|300px|St. Columba's Bay, where the saint first landed on Iona]]
In 1938 the Church of Scotland Minister George MacLeod founded the Iona Community, an "ecumenical" Christian community of men and women from different walks of life and different traditions in the Christian church that is committed to seeking new ways of living the gospel of Jesus Christ in today's world. The Community, which has care of the abbey, despite its ecumenical scope, is primarily affiliated to the [[http://www.churchofscotland.org.uk/ Church of Scotland], to whose General Assembly it reports annually.
The community is doctrinally liberal, strongly committed to working for social justice and produces much contemporary Celtic Christian material through its[http://ionabooks.com/ Wild Goose] arm. Such material, however, is sometimes at wide variance with Orthodox Christianity (e.g. in its frequent avoidance of the Trinitarian name of Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and its replacement with economic descriptions of divine action, such as 'Creator, Redeemer, Sanctifier'). This said, the community is not tied up with any form of neo-pagan Celtic religion.
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