St Patrick
about the Bible:

     

  • I bind myself today to:
    God’s Word to speak to me.

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Saint Patrick of Ireland

Much of Patrick's life is shrouded in mystery and historians differ on the probable chronology of the saint's life. Fortunately, he has left behind two documents, his Confession and his Letter to Coroticus, Saint Patrickwhich describe some of his experiences. He was not the first Christian missionary to reach Ireland, but the principal credit for converting the pagan island and establishing the Celtic church belongs to him.

He was the son of a Roman official, Calpurnius, living probably in Wales. As a boy of sixteen, Patrick was captured by raiders and sold to an Irish chieftain, Milchu. He spent years in slavery, herding sheep on Slemish Mountain in Co. Antrim. He escaped following a dream in which a voice told him a ship would be waiting to take him to his own country. After a journey of 200 miles he found the ship, and was eventually able to return to his family.

One night, in a dream, he heard voices calling him back to Ireland. It is thought that he studied under Saint Germanus at Auxerre, France, and that his mission to Ireland was approved due to the early death of Saint Palladius, who had been sent as a bishop to the Irish "believing in Christ" in 431. Consequently, 432 is the traditional date for Patrick's voyage to Ireland, which ended on the shores of Strangford Lough. He quickly made a convert of a local chief named Dichu, who gave him a barn at Saul, Co. Down, for his first church.

Before long Patrick made his way to the Hill of Tara, Co. Meath, seat of the high king of Ireland. Arriving on the eve of Easter, he lit a paschal fire on the nearby Hill of Slane. At this time of year, it was pagan practice to put out all fires before a new one was lit at Tara. When the druids at Tara saw the light from Slane, they warned King Laoghaire that he

 must extinguish it or it would burn forever. Patrick was summoned to Tara, and on the way he and his followers chanted the hymn known as "The Lorica" or "Saint Patrick's Breastplate".

Saint Patrick's journey throughout Ireland brought him to the attention of pagan chieftain Laoghaire.

Although Laoghaire remained a pagan, he was so impressed by the saint that he gave him permission to make converts throughout his realm. Muirchu's Life of Patrick, written two centuries later, describes a contest of magic in which Laoghaire's druids had to concede victory to the saint. Patrick travelled widely in Ireland, making converts and establishing new churches, though he eventually made his headquarters at Armagh.

On one occasion he spent the forty days of Lent on a mountain in Co. Mayo which is now called Croagh Patrick. He was harassed by demons in the form of blackbirds, clustered so densely that the sky was black, but he continued to pray, and rang his bell to disperse the assailants. An angel then appeared to tell the saint that all his petitions for the Irish people would be granted, and that they would retain their Christian faith until Judgement Day. There are many legends about Patrick, not least that he banished snakes from Ireland and that he adopted the shamrock as a symbol of the Holy Trinity.

Patrick's writings belong to the latter part of his life and confirm that he was less learned as a writer than he was persuasive as a speaker. Nonetheless, the Confession, a response to criticisms of his mission in Ireland, is a moving revelation of his vocation and of the divine guidance he received in dreams. Irish annals give the date of Patrick's death as 493, but an earlier date of 461 seems more likely. Tradition says he died at Saul and was buried at nearby Downpatrick.

From the Appletree Press title: A Little Book of Celtic Saints.

 

 

 

 

Christ be with me,
Christ within me,
Christ behind me,
Christ before me,
Christ beside me,
Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort and restore me.
Christ beneath me,
Christ above me,
Christ in quiet,
Christ in danger,
Christ in hearts of all that love me,
Christ in mouth of friend and stranger.

St. Patrick's Breastplate

 

                  The Confession of St. Patrick       IrishChristian.com

St Patrick
about his salvation:

    • The Lord opened the sense of my unbelief
    • that I might at last remember my sins
    • and be converted with all my heart to the Lord my God.

    St Patrick
    about salvation:

      • Eternal life is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
      • Whoever believes shall be saved, and whoever does not believe will be condemned.
      • Thus shall sinners and deceivers perish from the face of the Lord, but the righteous shall feast continually with Christ.

      St Patrick
      about the Bible:

        • These are not my words, but those of God and the Apostles and Prophets, who have never lied.
        • God has spoken!


        Legend of the Shamrock

         

        Long ago, St. Patrick
        Taught the Irish about God
        By showing them a shamrock
        he picked from Erin's sod.
        He used the Shamrock's leaves
        to symbolize the Three in One--
        The Holy Ghost, the Father
        And His beloved Son.
        St. Patrick changed the hearts
        and lives of all the Irish race,
        and through the years,
        in all our hearts,
        he holds a special place.

        Helen Steiner Rice

        Irish Blessings

         

         

        ShamrockThe ShamrockShamrock

        There's a dear little plant that grows in our isle,
        'Twas Saint Patrick himself, sure, that set it;
        And the sun of his labor with pleasure did smile,
        And with dew from his eye often wet it.
        It grows through the bog, through the brake, through the mireland
        And they call it the dear little Shamrock of Ireland
        (Irish Blessing)

        Divider

        May the road rise up
        to meet you
        and the wind be always
        at your back
        and my the Lord hold
        you in the hollow of His hand

        May you always have work for your hands to do
        May your pockets hold always a coin or two
        May the sun shine bright on your windowpane
        May the rainbow be certain to follow each rain
        May the hand of a friend always be near you
        And may God fill your heart with gladness to cheer you

        May love and laughter light your days
        and warm your heart and home,
        May good and faithful friends be yours
        wherever you may roam,
        May peace and plenty bless your world
        with joy that long endures,
        May all life's passing seasons
        bring the best to you and yours.