The Real St. Patrick
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As an Irishman, on my father’s side, I’m very pleased to celebrate Saint Patrick’s day as the day to honor the one who was instrumental in bringing the Gospel to my ancestoral people and home. Here from "Crosstalk.com" is the real story of Saint Patrick:
If you ask people who Saint Patrick was, you’re 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 Irish-yet 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 didn’t really believe in God. But now-hungry, lonely, frightened, and bitterly cold-Patrick 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. Look-your 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 obey-and 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.
Finally-thirty years after God had led Patrick away from Ireland-He 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, enslaved-whatever may come my way."
Cahill notes that Patrick’s 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 Patrick’s 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 didn’t 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 God-and to forever transform the Irish people.


The hymn, St. Patrick’s Breastplate (some text of which is on the St. Patrick icon you’ve displayed), I Bind Myself Today, is in LW, and in LBW. It’s very stirring. A shame we don’t use it, not only more often, but *ever*. The words alone are the stuff of medieval legends, and the tune is magical. My heart stirs, just thinking it.
A good day for it. As are all days.
Quick P.S.–Imagine the song being sung by himself, on his trek from slave to missionary. It’s a trekking song, if ever there were one.
Listening to Bach is something like a beginner reading the Bible for the first time. Expand on those things that speak to you and remember these were carefully crafted works of Faith and in many cases Confession by one who was at the top of the craft of music composition and counterpoint. Beginning composition students first must study to see what Bach did in many of the important facets of putting a musical work together. You may be struck by the fugue – as a theme repeats in each voice. Of that Bach was THE master. As they say “No one does it better!” Or the statement of Faith in THe St. Matthew and St. John Passions in english. Either but especially the first blows me away everytime I hear it because it was crafted on the Lutheran style of proclaiming the events of Jesus in the Passion, then commentary from the solists (Note the words) and the response of the congregation – as it were – in the chorale passages. Besides the B Minor Mass which I listen to every few days for its mature capture of the whole idea of the Mass (and some of the very best composition ever) there is the “Magnificat” and the Motets. Just LISTEN to these carefully one at a time going back to the parts that you especially like and savor. Among the Cantatas there is gem after gem, #140, 29 and my favorite #51 on the theme of Old Hundred in the last part written for one (boy) soprano, trumpet which I often performed – and orchestra. {Last Sept. I heard it performed in Bach’s own church Thomaskirke in Leipzig and it was a charmingly beautiful and the very first time I heard it. “Praise to God in the Heaven!” But listen – listen no matter what the so called experts say – for your own enjoyment and for a lift to your Faith. For good reason J.S. Bach was called the “Fifth Evangelist”, when all else goes wrong the musical genius of Bach brings me back to my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ and I can live another day as a humble and hopefully effective Pastor.