A Missionary Holiday

Thursday, March 12, 2015 No comments




St. Patrick's Day is right around the corner!  I admit, I have never been a big celebrator of St. Patrick's Day, and I knew very little about the history until Stacey, one of our lovely coordinators, brought my attention to a story in her neighborhood newsletter.  I forgot that St. Patrick was a missionary!  Something to remember as we go about in our green attire on March 17th.

This story is excerpted from that neighborhood newsletter - we are not sure who the author is, but please let us know if you know who wrote this article so we can give proper credit!

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For many people, St. Patrick represents an excuse to wear green on March 17th, maybe go to a parade, and drink some Irish whiskey.  But who was St. Patrick in real life?

The most common belief is that he drove the snakes out of Ireland.  Ireland probably never had snakes, though, and the myth may refer to Patrick's efforts to stamp out the serpent imagery used by the Druids. He may also have used the three-leafed shamrock to illustrate the concept of the Holy Trinity to the people he was trying to convert to Christianity as a missionary in Ireland during the fifth century.

Historians agree that Patrick was born in Roman-occupied Britain, the son of a Chistian deacon.  At age 16 he was captured and taken to Ireland, where he was a slave for six years. 

During this time, his Christian faith stregthened.  One day, according to a letter he wrote about his early life, he heard a voice promising he would soon return home.  Shortly afterward he escaped his captors and went back to his family.

He later wrote that an angel appeared to him in a dream, telling him to return to Ireland as a missionary. Patrick went back to there land where he had been a slave to convert the Irish and to minister to those Christians living there.

Why do we celebrate him on March 17th?  That's believed to be the date of his death.  Although never formally canonized, Patrick came to be considered a saint.  March 17th was celebrated as a religious holiday until 1903, when it became a public holiday in Ireland by an act of the British Parliament.