Saint Patrick,
the the Apostle to and Enlightener of Ireland was born around
385, the son of Calpurnius, a Roman decurion (an official responsible
for collecting taxes). He lived in the village of Bannavem Taberniae,
which may have been located at the mouth of the Severn River in Wales.
The district was raided by pirates when Patrick
was sixteen, and he was one of those taken captive. He was brought to
Ireland and sold as a slave, and was put to work as a herder of swine on
a mountain identified with Slemish in Co. Antrim. During his period of
slavery, Patrick acquired a proficiency in the Irish language which was
very useful to him in his later mission.
He prayed during his solitude on the mountain,
and lived this way for six years. He had two visions. The first told him
he would return to his home. The second told him his ship was ready.
Setting off on foot, Patrick walked two hundred miles to the coast.
There he succeeded in boarding a ship, and returned to his parents in
Britain.
Some time later, he went to Gaul and studied
for the priesthood at Auxerre under St Germanus (July 31). Eventually,
he was consecrated as a bishop, and was entrusted with the mission to
Ireland, succeeding St Palladius (July 7). St Palladius did not achieve
much success in Ireland. After about a year he went to Scotland, where
he died in 432.
Patrick had a dream in which an angel came to
him bearing many letters. Selecting one inscribed "The Voice of the
Irish," he heard the Irish entreating him to come back to them.
Although Saint Patrick achieved remarkable
results in spreading the Gospel, he was not the first or only missionary
in Ireland. He arrived around 432 (though this date is disputed), about
a year after Saint Palladius began his mission to Ireland. There were
also other missionaries who were active on the southeast coast,
but it was Saint Patrick who
had the greatest influence and success in preaching the Gospel of
Christ. Therefore, he is known as "The Enlightener of Ireland."
His autobiographical Confession tells of the
many trials and disappointments he endured. Patrick had once confided to
a friend that he was troubled by a certain sin he had committed before
he was fifteen years old. The friend assured him of God's mercy, and
even supported Patrick's nomination as bishop. Later, he turned against
him and revealed what Patrick had told him in an attempt to prevent his
consecration. Many years later, Patrick still grieved for his dear
friend who had publicly shamed him.
Saint Patrick founded many churches and
monasteries across Ireland, but the conversion of the Irish people was
no easy task. There was much hostility, and he was assaulted several
times. He faced danger, and insults, and he was reproached for being a
foreigner and a former slave. There was also a very real possibility
that the pagans would try to kill him. Despite many obstacles, he
remained faithful to his calling, and he baptized many people into
Christ.
The saint's Epistle to Coroticus is also an
authentic work. In it he denounces the attack of Coroticus' men on one
of his congregations. The Breastplate (Lorica) is also attributed to St
Patrick. In his writings, we can see St Patrick's awareness that he had
been called by God, as well as his determination and modesty in
undertaking his missionary work. He refers to himself as "a sinner,"
"the most ignorant and of least account," and as someone who was
"despised by many." He ascribes his success to God, rather than to his
own talents: "I owe it to God's grace that through me so many people
should be born again to Him."
By the time he established his episcopal See in
Armargh in 444, Saint Patrick had other bishops to assist him, many
native priests and deacons, and he encouraged the growth of monasticism.
Saint Patrick is often depicted holding a
shamrock, or with snakes fleeing from him. He used the shamrock to
illustrate the doctrine of the Holy Trinity. Its three leaves growing
out of a single stem helped him to explain the concept of one God in
three Persons. Many people now regard the story of St Patrick driving
all the snakes out of Ireland as having no historical basis.
Saint Patrick died on March 17, 461 (some say
492). There are various accounts of his last days, but they are mostly
legendary. Muirchu says that no one knows the place where Saint Patrick
is buried. Saint Columba of Iona (June 9) says that the Holy Spirit
revealed to him that Patrick was buried at Saul, the site of his first
church. A granite slab was placed at his traditional grave site in
Downpatrick in 1899.