Tag: Christianity

  • Saint Patrick


    Biography

    Patrick

    385-464

    Patrick was not a green-clad, Irish, Roman Catholic saint. He was a missionary, one willing to lay down his life for the gospel.

    Celtic Culture and Legends

    There is, perhaps, more lore surrounding Patrick, the missionary who brought the good news of Christ to Ireland, than any other missionary in Christian history. In order to understand the real Patrick, we must first understand a little about pre-Patrick Ireland. 

    Ireland was a nation shaped by the polytheistic religion of the druids. They worshiped multiple gods and goddesses associated with natural elements. Sun, water, earth, etc. all had deities connected to them. They were also a hierarchical society, structured around priests, novices, bards, and seers. Each was deeply involved in pagan practice.

    It’s worth debunking some legends and assumptions about Patrick too, like, for example, that he was Irish. Patrick came to Ireland as a missionary, but he was not, in fact, Irish. The real Patrick was abducted by the Irish and enslaved, escaped, and then later returned as a missionary. 

    Other legends include stories that Patrick used the shamrock to teach the Trinity, that he drove the snakes from Ireland, or that he jabbed his staff into the ground and it blossomed into a tree, converting many to Christianity. Although there may be profound truths or metaphors at the roots of these legends, not one is based in fact. Furthermore, the famous “Patrick’s Breastplate” slogan – “Christ be with me, Christ within me, Christ behind me, Christ before me, Christ to me, Christ beneath me, Christ above me” – cannot be attributed to Patrick with any measure of confidence. Finally, despite common usage, “Saint Patrick” was never canonized as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church. 

    The Real Patrick

    So, if “Saint Patrick” wasn’t a saint, wasn’t Irish, and didn’t do the things he’s most well known for, who was he? From his few surviving letters and his Confessio, it seems that Patrick was more like the missionaries we recognize today than the legends would have it. He was a preacher. He used words, not miracles and signs and wonders.

    Patrick was born around 385, and he died sometime between 461 and 464. We know that his family was well to do, but unlike many of his class in those times is that he doesn’t have the same level of education. He was raised in a Christian home. His father, Calpurnius, was a deacon, son of Potitus, a presbyter. We also know that he was from Bannavem Taburniae. Tradition has it that Bannavem Taburniae is in Scotland, Wales, England, or even France, but the exact location has never been found.

    When he was around 16 years old Patrick was enslaved. We’re told that he herded goats, sheep, or swine (possibly added because of the parable of the prodigal son). Of this time, Patrick wrote that, 

    “the Lord opened to me 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, who had regard for my lowest state and pitied my ignorance and youth.” 

    Eventually the newly converted Patrick was able to escape and return to his home by stowing away on a ship. But, perhaps surprisingly, in the time he was away from the Irish people, his heart for the Irish grew. One night he had a vision of man who delivered a letter, “The Voice of the Irish,” which begged him to return to Ireland.  

    Patrick resolved to return to Ireland, but he took time to pursue ministerial preparation and theological training. He spent 12 years studying the scriptures in a French monastery called the monastery of St. Germain. As he prepared to go, he said, “I am ready to be killed, betrayed into slavery or whatever may come my way for the sake of your name.” 

    Return to Ireland

    Patrick returned to Ireland not knowing whether he would have success. He didn’t have modern demographic research, and very little knowledge of the Irish appetite for the gospel, but the Lord blessed his work:

    “For I am greatly God’s debtor, who has granted me such grace that many people through me were reborn to God and afterward confirmed, and that clergy were ordained everywhere for them, for a people newly come to belief, whom the Lord took from the ends of the earth, as he once promised through the prophets… So that even before my death I should see a multitude of peoples born again in God.”

    Despite lacking a corpus of the sermons of Patrick, we know he had success in his ministry as a pastor. Some attribute this to the king, because under Patrick’s ministry the magistrate put to death 800 druid priests who were unwilling to be converted. However, the growth of Celtic Christianity in the years following would suggest something more than political expedience.

    Patrick is buried in Downpatrick in Northern Ireland. A cathedral was built on the site, said to be Patrick’s stone under which he’s buried.

    Celtic Christianity

    The Ireland of Patrick’s day had never been part of the Roman Empire, though its harbors were known to the Romans through trade. It was probably merchants who first brought Christianity to Ireland in the fourth century. In 431, Pope Celestine sent a man named Palladius from Gaul to the Christians in Ireland. Almost nothing is known about Palladius’s role in the spread of Christianity in Ireland. But it’s likely that some Irish already knew something of Christianity even before Patrick arrived.​​ 

    After Patrick’s death, Celtic Christianity continued to flourish for well over 200 years without any involvement from Rome. It was a church in which Scripture was the primary source of authority, guiding the community’s faith and practice. Monasteries, pastors, and elders within the church were connected and there was discussion among them as to what should be going on within the church. They weren’t just developing different thoughts and ideas on their own. There was also an emphasis on personal religion, and there was a missionary zeal, a fervor to spread Christianity. This was a focus on what some would call “all of life Christianity,” their faith affecting their homes, their private lives, their communities, and the state. But this didn’t last forever.

    There was, eventually, a romanizing of Celtic Christianity, at the Synod of Whitby in 664, born from a desire to align with Rome in order to strengthen ties to a broader Christianity. The shift would essentially destroy Celtic Christianity, replacing it with what was in Rome.

    Patrick’s Legacy

    The next time St. Patrick’s Day comes around, remember that Patrick was not a green-clad, Irish, Roman Catholic saint. He was a missionary, one willing to lay down his life for the gospel. One fully committed to the advancement of the gospel through the growth of the church – seeking worship from the voice of the gospel. Patrick was a man of grace.

    As Patrick said so long ago, “I am greatly a debtor to God who has granted me such great grace that many people through me should be reborn to God.”

    “I am ready to be killed, betrayed into slavery or whatever may come my way for the sake of your name.” 

    Additional Resources

    • Read an article debunking myths and telling of Patrick’s life.
    • Read his Confessio.
    • Rick Herring
      thmjmj@gmail.com
  • When Even Miracles Aren’t Enough: Reflections on Lazarus and the Rich Man

    In today’s Gospel reading, we encounter one of Jesus’ most sobering parables: the story of Lazarus and the rich man from the Gospel of Luke (Luke 16:19–31).

    The story is simple, yet profound.

    A rich man lives a life of luxury, feasting and dressing in fine clothes. At his gate lies a poor man named Lazarus, covered in sores, longing for scraps from the rich man’s table. The rich man ignores him.

    Eventually, both men die.

    Lazarus is carried by angels to rest with Abraham, while the rich man finds himself in torment. From his suffering, the rich man sees Abraham and Lazarus in the distance and begs for relief.

    Just a drop of water.

    But the chasm between them cannot be crossed.

    Desperate, the rich man makes one final request:
    He asks Abraham to send Lazarus back from the dead to warn his brothers.

    Abraham answers with words that echo across centuries:

    “If they do not listen to Moses and the prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone should rise from the dead.

    Even the Resurrection Did Not Convince Everyone

    In his homily, the deacon made a striking point.

    Abraham’s words turned out to be prophetic.

    Someone did rise from the dead.

    That someone was Jesus Christ.

    And yet, many still do not believe.

    The Resurrection is the central miracle of Christianity — witnessed by the apostles, recorded in Scripture, and proclaimed for two thousand years.

    Still, belief is not automatic.

    Miracles alone do not force faith.

    The Miracle of the Sun at Fatima

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    History offers another remarkable example.

    In 1917, during the apparitions at Fátima, tens of thousands gathered after months of reported visions of the Virgin Mary.

    On October 13, after a heavy rainstorm soaked the crowd, the clouds suddenly broke.

    Witnesses reported something extraordinary.

    The sun appeared to spin, dance, and plunge toward the earth in a dazzling display of light and color.

    An estimated 70,000 people saw it.

    The event became known as the “Miracle of the Sun.”

    And yet — even with thousands of witnesses — some still do not believe.

    Our Lady of Guadalupe

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    Another powerful moment occurred in 1531 in what is now Mexico City.

    The Virgin Mary appeared to an Indigenous convert named Juan Diego on the hill of Tepeyac.

    She asked that a church be built in her honor.

    When the local bishop asked for proof, Mary instructed Juan Diego to gather roses from the hilltop. It was winter — roses did not grow there, especially not in the cold.

    Yet when Juan Diego opened his cloak — his tilma — roses spilled out.

    And something else appeared.

    On the tilma was a miraculous image of Mary herself.

    The site is now home to the great Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, visited by millions every year.

    Within a decade, historians estimate nine million Indigenous people converted to Christianity.

    Still, some people do not believe.

    The Real Message of the Parable

    The lesson of the parable becomes clearer in light of these stories.

    Faith is not only about seeing miracles.

    It is about listening to God.

    The rich man did not end up in torment because he lacked evidence of God. He had the Scriptures, the prophets, and the poor man at his gate every day.

    He simply chose to ignore them.

    The danger Jesus warns about is not ignorance.

    It is hardness of heart.

    Some Will Believe — and Some Will Not

    Abraham’s words remain painfully true.

    Even if someone rises from the dead…

    Even if the sun dances in the sky…

    Even if roses bloom in winter and a miraculous image appears on a cloak…

    Some will still refuse to believe.

    And perhaps the deeper question is not about miracles at all.

    It is about trust.

    There are people who will trust God.

    And there are those who insist on doing things their own way.

    The parable of Lazarus and the rich man asks each of us a quiet but serious question:

    When God speaks — through Scripture, through the poor, through grace —

    will we listen?

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    Rick Herring
    thmjmj@gmail.com

    Rick Herring

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