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Who was St Patrick and why is he patron saint of Ireland?

A statue of St.Patrick at the location of St Patrick’s Chapel in County Mayo, Ireland. (Photo: Getty/iStock)

The 17 of March is St Patrick’s Day. Who was St Patrick and why is he the patron saint of Ireland? This is the story …

Who was St Patrick?

Patrick was a key figure within the spread of Christianity in Ireland. There are many stories and legends about him, but we do know quite so much about Patrick’s life because we’ve a few of his writings. In his old age, he wrote an autobiographical account in Latin called “Confessio”. In English, his account is generally called “The Confessions of St Patrick”, and it’s a transient story of his life, told through his own eyes. His writings reflect those of a godly, honest, and humble man, with love of the Irish people.

St Patrick’s World

It is useful to grasp the background on the time of St Patrick, with a purpose to put him in historical context. In AD 380 Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire, and the Christian faith became widely adopted, including within the Roman northern province of Britannia, which included what’s today England, Wales and lowland Scotland. The official language of Britannia (Britain) and the Church was Latin, however the native Britons spoke ancient British, a Celtic language which is the forerunner of recent Welsh. 

Meanwhile, Hibernia (Ireland) and Caledonia (northern Scotland) had never been conquered by the Romans, and had a faith led by druids. It is into this era that Patrick lived. This was all before the autumn of the Roman Empire and before the approaching of the ‘English’ to Britain.

Early Life

We can piece together Patrick’s life from his own writings and other early histories, although the precise dates are open to debate. Although Patrick is heavily related to Ireland, he was not actually Irish by birth. He was born as a native Briton and was also a Roman citizen. He wrote that he grew up in a small villa together with his father Calpurnius, who was a town official, near the settlement of Bannavem Taburniae. 

His family were Christian, and his father was a church deacon, and his late grandfather Potitus had been a priest. The town of Kilpatrick on the River Clyde near Glasgow is so named since it was believed he got here from there, although alternative theories include places in southern Wales, Cumbria or Somerset.

Taken to Ireland

He wrote that when he was about sixteen years of age, he was captured by Irish raiders, and as had happened to many hundreds of other people, he was taken into captivity in Ireland and sold as a slave. He was bought and put to work as a shepherd, tending sheep. We have no idea where, but it surely was inland, and in keeping with one tradition it was on Mount Slemish in County Antrim, and in keeping with one other it was in County Mayo. He used the time to hope repeatedly a day, and as he did so he wrote that his love of God and his faith increased, and he felt the Holy Spirit at work.

Escape back to Britain

He wrote that after about six years he escaped and went about 200 miles to a port, where he got a lift on a ship. He then spent three days at sea and got here to Britain. After some adventures, he eventually found his home and family and returned to them. However, after some time he said that he had a vision of a person begging him to return to Ireland and produce the Gospel. In preparation he spent about fifteen years in training as a deacon, then as a priest. It is believed he hung out training in Gaul (modern-day France) under Germanus, bishop of Auxerre. He took or was given the Latin name “Patricius”, from which we get the name in English as Patrick. Before he returned, Patrick was ordained as a missionary bishop to pastor the Christians already in Ireland, and to mission among the many pagan Irish.

Return to Ireland

When Patrick returned to Ireland, he seems to have began in Ulster. About 432, he began his first church which met in a barn within the village of Saul near Downpatrick. There is now a small stone church there, which marks the reputed site. He wrote that he longed to return to his homeland and his family, and visit Gaul again, but he felt compelled by the Holy Spirit to stay in Ireland where God wanted him to be, because there was much work to be done. Patrick and his followers would go from village to village. Typically, they might enter a village, preach, baptise, form a church, train the leaders, after which as a bishop he would ordain priests. He wrote that he had baptised many hundreds of individuals, and ordained a whole lot of priests.

One story, which he didn’t record but has been popularly attributed to St Patrick, is that he used the shamrock, which is a green clover with three leaves, as a metaphor to elucidate the Trinity, since it is one plant with three distinct parts. This then became an Irish symbol, and because of this green became a color related to St Patrick and Ireland.Patrick’s mission lasted about thirty years, during which era he and his disciples had evangelised most of Ireland. As a result, he became often known as the ‘Apostle of Ireland’. He says that he gave gifts and payments to others, but never accepted any gifts himself, with a purpose to avoid any accusations of dishonesty, or that he was doing it for selfish purposes.

He also tried to determine good and honest governance and worked to abolish slavery and improve social justice. In old age he retired to Saul where he had began, which is probably going where he wrote his Confessions. According to the annals he died there on March 17 normally given as in AD 461. Unlike other saints he has no elaborate shrine nor tomb, and one disputed tradition has it that he’s buried within the grounds of Down Cathedral in Downpatrick. 

Patron Saint

Unlike St Andrew who never went to Scotland, and St George who never went to England, St Patrick actually ministered in Ireland. Although there have been some Christians in Ireland before Patrick got here, it was during his ministry that the Church was properly established across Ireland. By the seventh century, Patrick had already come to be revered because the patron saint of Ireland. He was an ancient Celtic saint but was never formally canonised by the Roman Catholic Church. His story has turn out to be related to Irish identity and history.

Legacy

The groundwork put in by Patrick helped Christianity to take hold in Ireland. The Celtic Church which Patrick developed became a part of a network of Celtic churches which covered the Celtic world of Ireland, western Britain, and Brittany, but connected to the important Western Church. What is remarkable is the importance of Latin. All the evangelism and church planting were refrained from the Bible in Irish. The preaching was done in Irish, however the Bible was the Latin Vulgate. Missionary saints from Ireland then took the Gospel beyond their shores. For example, St Columba went to the Picts, St Aidan to the Northumbrians, St Columbanus to the Burgundians, St Papar to Iceland, and St Brendan may even have gone so far as North America.

Churches named after St Patrick

All over Ireland are many churches dedicated to St Patrick, either because historically he founded them, or because they’re named after him. Patrick reputedly founded a church at Armagh, in or across the yr 445, which later became the seat of the primary archbishop of Ireland. It has a standing like Canterbury has in England. Armagh stays the ecclesiastical capital for All Ireland. It has two cathedrals each dedicated to St Patrick – one for the Catholic Archbishop of All Ireland (Catholic Church in Ireland), and the opposite for the Anglican Archbishop of All Ireland (Church of Ireland). The largest cathedral in Ireland, founded in 1191, is St Patrick’s Anglican Cathedral in Dublin. Around the world many churches were dedicated to St Patrick because that they had some link to an Irish community. There are many within the US, and essentially the most famous is St. Patrick’s Cathedral, in Manhattan, New York which opened in 1879.

St Patrick’s Day

St Patrick is well known on the anniversary of his death on 17 March. At first it was a day of remembrance, but over time St Patrick’s Day has evolved into a serious national and patriotic holiday in Ireland, and sometimes more so, amongst Irish communities and other people of Irish heritage around the globe. St Patrick’s Day falls during Lent, and it has often been a one-day reprieve, which can also have helped its popularity. Mass migration from Ireland to North America and Australia took St Patrick’s Day around the globe, but it surely only became a public holiday in Ireland in 1903. Sometimes Irish people wear shamrocks on St Patrick’s day, they usually use it as an excuse for a very good craic.

St Patrick’s Flag

Over time a cross developed often known as St Patrick’s cross, which is a red diagonal cross on a white background, called the red saltire. In 1801, St Patrick’s Cross was added to the Union Flag of Great Britain, which already included the cross of St George over the cross of St Andrew. The red cross of St Patrick was placed contained in the white diagonal of the cross of St Andrew to create the Union Flag of the United Kingdom. St Patrick’s flag continues to be flown on churches of the Church of Ireland, and is flown on Anglican churches on St Patrick’s Day. It can sometimes be seen at other Irish events.

Parades

The tradition of St Patrick’s parades began with Irish communities in North America. The earliest recorded St Patrick’s Day celebration in America is believed to have been held in 1601, in what’s now St Augustine, Florida. The first St Patrick’s Day parade is believed to have taken place in Boston in 1737, and the more famous New York parade began in 1764. A parade has been held in Montreal, Canada since 1824. In more moderen many years, the concept of St Patrick’s Day parades has been adopted in towns and cities in Ireland, and other places around the world with Irish communities. The first St Patrick’s parade in Ireland was held in Waterford in 1903, and the primary official parade in Dublin was in 1931.

Legacy

Today Patrick is a standard name in Ireland, often shortened to Paddy. St Patrick is a unifying character and is adopted and loved by all Irish people, whether Catholic or Protestant. He is a saint for all of Ireland. He is a component of the common shared ancient Church history which predates the trendy divisions. Increasingly St Patrick’s Day has turn out to be a national day of Irish patriotism embraced by all Irish people. It is greater than likely that St Patrick himself wouldn’t approve of the unholy elements of among the celebrations. An excellent place to finish is the attractive collect for St Patrick’s Day, which reads, “O God, who selected the Bishop Saint Patrick to evangelise your glory to the peoples of Ireland, grant, through his merits and intercession, that those that glory within the name of Christian may never stop to proclaim your wondrous deeds to all.”

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