Dear brothers and sisters,
May the
Lord give you peace!
On this
day we celebrate what is for us the Solemnity of Saint Patrick, our heavenly patron,
with much joy and gratitude to God for the bright light that the example of the
Apostle to Ireland shines upon our path.
There are,
of course, a great many people this day who think they celebrate Saint Patrick,
the man who is credited with bringing Christianity to Ireland, with driving
snakes from the isle, with using the shamrock to explain the mystery of the
Trinity. Beyond this, precious little is
known by so many who seek to celebrate his feast.
People have put on their green, drunk their beer, and will likely dine on corned beef and cabbage for dinner – as many here will do – but in doing so they celebrate a supposed Irish heritage more than Patrick himself.
Who is this man that has led to so much revelry, and why does Mother Church continue to honor him?
The Church celebrates the lives of the Saints because in them we see the light of Christ refracted in a great array of colors showing us the many paths on which we may walk in our daily life in following in the footsteps of Christ Jesus.
We see above all in the life
of Saint Patrick one who sought to “tell God’s glory among
the nations; among all peoples, God’s marvelous deeds,” particularly among the
Irish (Psalm 96:3).
In many
respects, Saint Patrick remains shrouded in legend; even the dates of his birth
and death are uncertain. We do not know when he was ordained a priest or even a bishop. We do know that his father, Calpornius, was a
deacon and his grandfather, Potitus, was a priest. His father was also a government official,
with an estate worked by slaves. Even
so, it seems Patrick was not raised in an especially religious family.
He tells
us after he was captured by Irish pirates before his sixteenth birthday that at
the time he “was indeed ignorant of the true God.”[1]
He was
taken to Ireland as a slave and worked tending the sheep for six years. In the solitude of the fields, longing for
his family and fatherland, Patrick found himself praying many times each day. “More and more the love of God and fear of
him came to me,” he says, “and my faith was being increased, and the spirit was
being moved.”[2]
Here is
one lesson of the Christian life we can take from Saint Patrick: it is in solitude
and in times of difficulty that, if we are open to the Lord and humble enough
to receive him, his Spirit will stir in our hearts, thus causing us to pray without
ceasing. In fasting and prayer, Patrick
encountered the Lord and rested secure in his love. Following his example, we,
too, can encounter the Lord in moments of great adversity and dire need.
One night
he heard in a dream a voice saying to him, “It is well that you are fasting,
soon you will go to your own country.” A
short time later the same voice said to him, “Look, your ship is ready.”[3]
For one
hundred and eighty-eight miles Patrick walked until finally he found a pagan
ship anchored and ready to depart. When
first he was refused passage, Patrick prayed and one of them shouted after him,
“Come, because we are receiving you on faith, make friends with us in whatever
way you wish.”[4] Patrick boarded the vessel, hoping to
introduce them to Christ.
For three
days they sailed and landed in a deserted area. After being captured again, Patrick walked for twenty-eight days and at
last found himself among his kindred once more; the dream of his heart had been
answered. His people, who, he says,
received him as a son, begged him never to leave them again.
In another
dream a man by the name of Victoricius came to him bringing letters from Ireland. The man read one of the letters
to Patrick, one from the “Voice of the Irish.” Patrick heard the voice of the Irish cry out, “as if from one mouth, ‘We
request you, holy boy, that you come and walk once more among us… He who has laid down his own life for you he
it is who is speaking in you.’”[5]
After a
time Patrick accepted the call of the Irish, finding in it the will of God for
his life which he “learned from Christ my Lord” (241). He gave himself entirely for the people of
Ireland so that they might know “the gift so great, so salutary, to know or to
love God wholeheartedly, but at the loss of country and kindred” (247). He would later describe himself as “a slave
in Christ for that remote pagan people” and in this he found his joy and peace”
(285).
He once said to those to whom he preached, “Would
that you, too, would strive for greater things and perform more excellent
deeds. This will be my glory” (257). These words he addresses to us as well, his spiritual children.
If we wish to celebrate the life of Saint Patrick and the legacy he has bequeathed to us, we cannot do so with drunken festivities marked with blatant sinfulness; we do so, rather, by striving for greater things, for growth in the virtues of faith, hope, and love. We honor Saint Patrick by striving for holiness. Let each of us, then, parishioners under his patronage, seek to be his glory! Amen.
If we wish to celebrate the life of Saint Patrick and the legacy he has bequeathed to us, we cannot do so with drunken festivities marked with blatant sinfulness; we do so, rather, by striving for greater things, for growth in the virtues of faith, hope, and love. We honor Saint Patrick by striving for holiness. Let each of us, then, parishioners under his patronage, seek to be his glory! Amen.
[1] Saint Patrick, Confessio, 1. In Patrick the Pilgrim Apostle of Ireland: An Analysis of St Patrick’s Confessio and Epistola, Ed. and trans. Maire B. de Paor (Dublin: Veritas Publications, 1998), 221.
[2] Ibid., 16. In Ibid., 231.
[3] Ibid., 17. In Ibid.
[4] Ibid., 18. In Ibid., 233.
[5] Ibid., 23-24. In Ibid., 237-238.
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