Posted on 03/20/2006 6:23:45 AM PST by Mr. Silverback
If you ask people who Saint Patrick was, youre likely to hear that he was an Irishman who chased the snakes out of Ireland.
It may surprise you to learn that the real Saint Patrick was not actually Irishyet his robust faith changed the Emerald Isle forever.
Patrick was born in Roman Britain to a middle-class family in about A.D. 390. When Patrick was a teenager, marauding Irish raiders attacked his home. Patrick was captured, taken to Ireland, and sold to an Irish king, who put him to work as a shepherd.
In his excellent book, How the Irish Saved Civilization, Thomas Cahill describes the life Patrick lived. Cahill writes, The work of such slave-shepherds was bitterly isolated, months at a time spent alone in the hills.
Patrick had been raised in a Christian home, but he didnt really believe in God. But nowhungry, lonely, frightened, and bitterly coldPatrick began seeking out a relationship with his heavenly Father. As he wrote in his Confessions, I would pray constantly during the daylight hours and the love of God . . . surrounded me more and more.
Six years after his capture, God spoke to Patrick in a dream, saying, Your hungers are rewarded. You are going home. Lookyour ship is ready.
What a startling command! If he obeyed, Patrick would become a fugitive slave, constantly in danger of capture and punishment. But he did obeyand God protected him. The young slave walked nearly two hundred miles to the Irish coast. There he boarded a waiting ship and traveled back to Britain and his family.
But, as you might expect, Patrick was a different person now, and the restless young man could not settle back into his old life. Eventually, Patrick recognized that God was calling him to enter a monastery. In time, he was ordained as a priest, then as a bishop.
Finallythirty years after God had led Patrick away from IrelandHe called him back to the Emerald Isle as a missionary.
The Irish of the fifth century were a pagan, violent, and barbaric people. Human sacrifice was commonplace. Patrick understood the danger and wrote: I am ready to be murdered, betrayed, enslavedwhatever may come my way.
Cahill notes that Patricks love for the Irish shines through his writings . . . He [worried] constantly for his people, not just for their spiritual but for their physical welfare.
Through Patrick, God converted thousands. Cahill writes, Only this former slave had the right instincts to impart to the Irish a New Story, one that made sense of all their old stories and brought them a peace they had never known before. Because of Patrick, a warrior people lay down the swords of battle, flung away the knives of sacrifice, and cast away the chains of slavery.
As it is with many Christian holidays, Saint Patricks Day has lost much of its original meaning. Instead of settling for parades, cardboard leprechauns, and the wearing of the green, we ought to recover our Christian heritage, celebrate the great evangelist, and teach our kids about this Christian hero.
Saint Patrick didnt chase the snakes out of Ireland, as many believe. Instead, the Lord used him to bring into Ireland a sturdy faith in the one true Godand to forever transform the Irish people.
Well, only if we insist on using that label. Those who have continued to be labeled "Protest-ants" after the Reformation were actually called "Christians" in the first century but, I can assure you, Christians who worshipped God through His teachings alone certainly *did* exist and have (obviously) existed since Christ walked the earth. In fact, most of the earliest Christians often referred to themselves as Jews. It was Romanism that developed later.
But we must remember that those who were origianally labeled "Protestants" in the 1500s were specifically those who were *in* the Roman system when her heresies were exposed, and then "protested" the system from which they fled in order to restore themselves to a pure Christianity that was closer to that which was practiced in the first century.
You are mistaken or lying. Back up your charge.
beats the heck out of me! I'm mostly scottish and the idea of haggis makes me turn green.
It's interesting how cuisines and other customs develeop. I'm told, for instance, that the reason French cuisine has so many sauces is because of shortages of salt and other meat preservatives. During these shortages, if you wanted to serve your guests meat, you had to have a thick sauce to cover up the gamey taste.
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