Posted on 03/16/2015 8:16:21 AM PDT by John Leland 1789
Our Catholic friends wont like this revelation but facts are facts. Patrick (original name was Sucat) was born in Scotland about 375 AD and lived about 85 years dying in 460. As a teen he was captured by marauding raiders and taken to Ireland where he was sold to Milcho, a Druid chieftain and held in slavery for six years. Patrick said that he was hungry and naked during that time. He eventually walked 200 miles to the Irish coast to escape and to find his way back to Scotland.
It is my desire to dispel the myths, delusions, superstitions and lies that are circulating about Patrick. Of course, he did not drive the snakes out of Ireland but his preaching of Christ drove out the pagan Druids and removed human sacrifice; also, his assistants in his monastery copied and preserved the Bible and standard texts for us to peruse today. All this while the Roman Empire was crumbling and the dark ages were falling upon Europe and the Roman Church gained more and more power and riches.
Patrick was reared in a Christian home and his father was a deacon in an evangelical (or Baptistic) church. Also, his grandfather pastored in these ancient churches of Britain which had never come under the Roman yoke. An historian wrote more than a hundred years ago, "...the truth which saved him when a youthful slave in pagan Ireland was taught him in the godly home of...his father." Under that Christian influence Patrick felt called to go back to Ireland as a missionary to convert those pagan Druids who had enslaved him!
He became one of the most effective missionaries of all time, some think, only second to the Apostle Paul! He refused to take gifts from kings and preached to everyone about the grace of God. Patrick wrote that he baptized thousands of people, ordained men to the ministry, counseled and won wealthy women, and sons of kings and trained them for Christian service. He refused to be paid for baptizing people, ordaining preachers, and even paid for the gifts he gave to kings.
He was legally without protection since he refused the patronage of kings and was beaten, robbed, and put in chains. He says that he was also held captive for 60 days but gives no details. It is only natural that the nascent but growing Roman Church would claim him but it was and is a bogus claim. One historian wrote, "Rome's most audacious theft was when she seized bodily the Apostle Peter and made him the putative head and founder of her system; but next to that brazen act stands her effrontery when she 'annexed' the great missionary preacher of Ireland and enrolled him among her saints." Well said.
Baptists should appreciate the fact that Catholics pay homage to him, even build churches in his honor; however, it is time to realize that Patrick was only a very simple, even untrained Baptist preacher. He was not interested in power or position or possessions but in preaching the simple Gospel of Christ. From my study of him, he would be embarrassed and chagrined that a day in his honor is often turned into a drunken orgy as in Rio and New Orleans.
The early non-Catholic Churches were not called Baptist but most preached, practiced, and professed what modern Baptists do. If Patrick had been a Roman Catholic then somewhere there would be support for that, but there is none. Patrick wrote Confession, or Epistle to the Irish and Epistle to Coroticus and in neither did he refer to Rome. The Breastplate, a hymn is also attributed to him. Not one of his early biographers mentions any Roman connection. Moreover, there is no support for the claim that Pope Celistine sent him to the Irish people.
Furthermore, during his life, the Roman Church was only in embryo form. The Bishop of Rome was not considered the authoritarian he became much later. In fact, church authority was split in five directions: the Patriarchs at Constantinople, Antioch, Jerusalem, and Alexandria all claimed to have as much authority as the Roman Bishop!
Professor George T. Stokes, a prominent scholar, declared that before the synod of Rathbresail in A.D. 1112, the rule of each Irish Church was independent, autonomous, and "...dioceses and diocesan episcopacy had no existence at all."
Neanders History of the Christian Church says that the facts prove the origin of the [Irish] church was independent of Rome, and must be traced solely to the people of Britain... Again, no indication of his connection with the Romish church is to be found in his confession; rather everything seems to favor the supposition that he was ordained bishop in Britain itself."
Odriscol, who, incidentally, was an Irish Catholic, in his work entitled, Views of Ireland, reveals: "The Christian church of that country, as founded by St. Patrick and his predecessors, existed for many ages, free and unshackelled. For 700 years this church maintained its independence. It had no connection with England and differed on points of importance with Rome." Thats from an Irish Catholic!
Another Irish scholar wrote that "...Leo II was bishop of Rome from 440 to 461 A.D. and upwards of one hundred and forty of his letters to correspondents in all parts of Christendom still remain and yet he never mentions Patrick or his work, or in any way intimates that he knew of the great work being done there." So, until after 461, the Roman Church had not tried to make Patrick as one of their major saints.
Furthermore, the Venerable Bede (Father of English History) did not refer to Patrick in his Ecclesiastical History of the English People. That fact is shattering to Patricks Roman connection.
Moreover, there are many other proofs that Patrick was a Baptist, not a Catholic:
He only baptized born again believersnever infants. He wrote about a convert named Enda who was saved the night after his son Cormac was born. He baptized Enda but not his infant son. And in all his letters and his books Patrick never mentions baptizing infants. He wrote of baptized captives, baptized handmaidens of Christ, baptized believers, and he wrote, Perhaps, since I have baptized so many thousand men, But never infants.
An additional proof of Patrick being a Baptist was he only baptized by immersion. Various church historians record an incident when 12,000 people were converted and baptized. Profiting by the presence of so vast a multitude, the apostle [Patrick] entered into the midst of them, his soul inflamed with the love of God, and with a celestial courage preached the truths of Christianity; and so powerful was the effect of his burning words that the seven princes and over twelve thousand more were converted on that day, and were soon baptized in a spring called Tobar Enadhaire.
Thomas Moore, in his history of Ireland says: "The convert saw in the baptismal fount where he was immersed the sacred well at which his fathers worshipped."
Archbishop Usher admits: "Patrick baptized his converts in Dublin, including Alpine, the king's son, in a well near Saint Patrick Church, which in after ages became an object of devotion."
Famous church historian William Cathcart stated, "There is absolutely no evidence that any baptism but that of immersion of adult believers existed among the ancient Britons, in the first half of the fifth century, nor for a long time afterwards." He also wrote, "There are strong reasons for believing Patrick was a Baptist missionary and it is certain that his Baptism was immersion." No, Patrick was a Baptist preacher, not a Roman Catholic priest.
Patrick knew nothing of confession or forgiveness by a priest; he forbade worship of images; he never told his converts to pray to Mary or any other saint; he never mentions purgatory, holy days, rosary, or last rites. Moreover, Patrick never mentions any pope or cardinal or gives credibility to any creed, catechism or confessional. Nor to Eucharist, relics, or dogma of the Roman Church.
Patrick was not Irish nor was he a Catholic. He preached, practiced, professed, and promoted Baptist distinctives and to declare otherwise is simply Irish blarney.
http://bit.ly/1iMLVfY Watch these 8 minute videos of my lecture at the University of North Dakota: A Christian Challenges New Atheists to Put Up or Shut Up!
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Baptizing for sure, but not a Baptist denominational character.
St Patrick kicked out of school
St. Patrick
Apostle to the Irish (Who is the REAL St. Patrick ?)
Patrick: Deliverer of the Emerald Isle
Breastplate of St Patrick [Poem/Prayer]
Confessions of St. Patrick (In his own words)
Feast of Saint Patrick, the Enlightener of Ireland
St. Patrick(Happy St. Patrick's Day!)
St Patrick's 'day' moved to March 15th (in 2008)
St. Patricks Breastplate Prayer
St. Patrick (Erin Go Bragh!)
History of St. Patrick's Day
Patrick: The Good, the Bad, and the Misinformed
The Lorica of St. Patrick
Orthodox Feast of +Patrick, the Enlightener of Ireland
St. Patrick
St. Patrick's Breast Plate
Orthodox Feast of St Patrick, the Enlightener of Ireland, March 17
The Lorica of St. Patrick
To Truly Honor Saint Patrick, Bishop and Confessor
Apostle to the Irish: The Real Saint Patrick
St. Patrick
Saint Patrick [Apostle of Ireland]
Was St. Patrick Catholic?....Of Course!! [Happy St. Pat's Day]
What I find oddest about the article you posted is the recurring theme of doctors advertised with Ph.D. credentials to ostensibly boost their credibility, but that fail to document and date them. I found out he is supposed to have received his degree from Heritage Baptist University, which no longer exists having merged with Indiana Baptist College, which does not yet offer a Ph. D. But is working on one in "Ministry." Master of Ministry
Master of Arts
Master of Sacred Theology
Master of Divinity
Doctor of Ministry*
*Degrees in development
I note Creflo Dollar was awarded that degree as well, albeit from a larger institution. I suppose these religious degrees translate into dollars, as in the secular world.
I just finished two weeks of study in my college world history class on the Middle Ages (not Dark) and we studied early Christianity and the Catholic church was a impotent babe at the time of Patrick. Popes were more worried with the kings of the remnants of the Roman Empire than a missionary from what was left of Christ’s church teaching in some distant island.
The Roman Catholic church like its namesake was a thief stealing and incorporating many things which didn’t originate with them. The Catholics even adopted the pagan calendar and modified it with their version of religious dates and seasons.
None of what the Catholic church has done takes away ftom the the Savior’s message, love God, love thy neighbor, the Ten commandments, repentance, baptism, and the Holy Ghost.
I have never really understood why folks want to fight over whether or not the calendar is a religious document.
Well,at least he wasn’t a Mormon.
Next you’re going to tell me he didn’t drive the snakes out.
How did Saint Patrick walk 200 miles to get to the Irish coast? The distance from Derry to Cork is 220 miles. There is no place in Ireland that is 200 miles from the coast.
“Thats why there are so many baptists in Ireland.”
Nice...
Wishful thinking by Baptists.
Your author doesn't know the difference between St. Patrick and a Baptist, and also doesn't know the difference between St. Patrick's Day and Mardi Gras.
As for sainthood, the Catholic Church did not develop an official process for designation and canonization until centuries later, beginning in the 13th century. So it really is meaningless to argue that one saint or another was or was not "a Roman Catholic saint" back in the fifth century AD.
As a believe in Christ observing a baptist manner of worship, I really wish folks (such as Dr. Boys) would not feed into the denominationalistic feuds like this... it makes it sound like it’s all about the denomination not all about Christ. Plus, the evidence of being able to cite Patrick that way is ambiguous at best (Boys ought to know about those letters, and even if he has reason to believe they are not genuine he owes some kind of acknowledgment that the issue exists).
That said, there is much agreed about Patrick that is plug and play with both takes on Christian faith, and that is because it is carefully centered upon Jesus Christ.
I was baptized on St. Patrick’s day. In a baptist church. But, the water was not green.
Please, no facts are allowed when "feelings' must rule.
Don't tell me you believed them and were going to vote Democrat???!!
I guess Boys felt any attention was better than none at all; it made Dan Brown (?) of “The Da Vinci Code” quite wealthy.
GET
A
LIFE.
Find out what this Boys guy is drinking and order me a couple of cases.
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