St. Patrick’s Confession in the original Latin is called his Confessio. It’s an actual little autobiography written by the future saint, of which we celebrate his feast day today, written toward the end of his life, somewhere towards the middle to end of the fifth century. Here are the opening paragraphs.
My name is Patrick. I am
a sinner, a simple country person, and the least of all believers. I am looked
down upon by many.
My father was Calpornius.
He was a deacon; his father was Potitus, a priest, who lived at Bannavem Taburniae.
His home was near there, and that is where
I was taken prisoner. I
was about sixteen at the time.
At that time, I did not
know the true God. I was taken into captivity in Ireland, along with thousands
of others. We deserved this, because we had gone away from God, and did not
keep his commandments. We would not listen to our priests, who advised us about
how we could be saved. The Lord brought his strong anger upon us, and scattered
us among many nations even to the ends of the earth. It was among foreigners that
it was seen how little I was.
Translation from Latin by Pádraig McCarthy, Avoca, Co. Wicklow. © 2003 and used with permission from the website.
It’s not a very long read, some eighteen pages and makes for a very good Lenten read on this feast day. Here is a LibraVox recording of the Confessio, if you wish to read along or just listen.
Here are some of my takeaways after reading it.
· Patrick had a great love for his fellow human beings. He was not Irish, was enslaved by the Irish pagans, and went back once he had escaped to not only evangelize but care for them. Throughout the Confessio he never has a bad word to say about anyone. He was a true missionary, always having the best interest of those he evangelized. I could feel his tender heart in this little passage looking back to those he touched.
In the knowledge of this
faith in the Trinity, and without letting the dangers prevent it, it is right to
make known the gift of God and his eternal consolation. It is right to spread
abroad the name of God faithfully and without fear, so that even after my death
I may leave something of value to the many thousands of my brothers and sisters
– the children whom I baptised in the Lord.
· He
had a great knowledge of the scriptures.
He quotes or alludes to scripture in almost every paragraph. Notice how many Biblical references are in
this one paragraph alone. The Biblical
reference in brackets in red are my addition to the paragraph.
It is right that we
should fish well and diligently, as the Lord directs and teaches when he says:
“Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.” [Mat
4:19] And again he says through the prophets: “Behold, I send many
fishers and hunters, says God” [Jer 16:16]; and
other such sayings. Therefore it is very right that we should cast our nets, so
that a great multitude and crowd will be taken for God. Also that there should
be clerics to baptise and encourage a people in need and want. This is what the
Lord says in the gospel: he warns and teaches in these words: “Go therefore and
teach all nations, baptising them in the name of the Father and of the Son and
of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you; and
behold I am with you all days, even to the end of the age.” [Mat 28:19-20] Again he says: “Go out therefore to the
whole world and announce the gospel to every creature. Whoever believes and is
baptised will be saved; whoever does not believe will be condemned.” [Mk 16:15-16] And yet again: “This gospel of the kingdom
will be announced all over the world, as testimony to all the nations; and then
will come the end.” [Mat 24:14] In the same way, the Lord foretold this through
the prophet as he said: “And it will come about in the last days, says the
Lord, that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh, and your sons and your
daughters will prophesy; your young people will see visions and your older
people will dream dreams. Indeed, on my servants, men and women, I will pour
out my Spirit and they will prophesy.” [Joel 2:28-29] Hosea
says: “Those who were not my people, I will call my people; and her who has not
obtained mercy, I will name the one who has obtained mercy. In the place where
it was said: You are not my people: there they will be called children of the
living God.” [Hosea 2:23-24 and Hosea 1:10]
· He was a Church Father and should be regarded as so. He was a younger contemporary of St. Augustine of Hippo (354-430) and St. John Chrysostom (337-407). St. Patrick’s life span is not known with certainty but Wikipedia lists it as 385-461.
·
He was truly a simple countryman as he states
above. While his Confession is pious, it does not seem to exhibit a “bookish”
learning of deep theological argument.
But it feels very honest. Here he
describes why he is writing at his advanced age.
Now, in my old age, I want
to do what I was unable to do in my youth. My sins then prevented me from
really taking in what I read. But who believes me, even were I to repeat what I
said previously? I was taken prisoner as a youth, particularly young in the
matter of being able to speak, and before I knew what I should seek and what I
should avoid. That is why, today, I blush and am afraid to expose my lack of
experience, because I can’t express myself with the brief words I would like in
my heart and soul.
·
He had a moment of great conversion, not
unlike many people today who have such moments.
But it came from prayer, which is a daily must. Here he describes it.
After I arrived in Ireland, I tended sheep every day, and I prayed frequently during the day. More and more the love of God increased, and my sense of awe before God. Faith grew, and my spirit was moved, so that in one day I would pray up to one hundred times, and at night perhaps the same. I even remained in the woods and on the mountain, and I would rise to pray before dawn in snow and ice and rain. I never felt the worse for it, and I never felt lazy – as I realise now, the spirit was burning in me at that time.
·
After returning to his home after six
years of enslavement in Ireland, it was through a dream that he was pulled to
return.
A few years later I was
again with my parents in Britain. They welcomed me as a son, and they pleaded
with me that, after all the many tribulations
I had undergone, I should never leave them again. It was while I was there that I saw, in a vision in the night, a man whose name was Victoricus coming as it were from Ireland with so many letters they could not be counted. He gave me one of these, and I read the beginning of the letter, the voice of the Irish people. While I was reading out the beginning of the letter, I thought I heard at that moment the voice of those who were beside the wood of Voclut, near the western sea. They called out as it were with one voice: “We beg you, holy boy, to come and walk again among us.” This touched my heart deeply, and I could not read any further; I woke up then. Thanks be to God, after many years the Lord granted them what they were calling for.
How marvelous that he was referred to as “holy boy.” Even though it was in a dream, I suspect he was actually referred to in that way.
·
I was amazed to find out that he is the
first recorded person in history to denounce slavery. According to Bill Donohue of the Catholic League, in his tribute to St.Patrick:
No public person before him had denounced
slavery, widespread though it was. Jesus was silent on the subject, Aristotle
thought it was a natural way of life, and neither master nor slave saw anything
fundamentally wrong with it. Patrick did.
Though he did not invoke
natural law specifically, he was instinctively drawn to it. He taught that all
men were created equal in the eyes of God, and that the inherent dignity of
everyone must be respected.
Patrick did more than preach—he lashed out at the British dictator, Coroticus, harshly rebuking him for his mistreatment of the Irish. In fact, Patrick found his Irish converts to be more civilized than Coroticus and his band of thugs.
·
He was profoundly humble. Here he explains why he went back to Ireland
to preach and serve, despite having been brutally enslaved there:
So I want to give thanks to God without ceasing. He frequently forgave my lack of wisdom and my negligence, and more than once did not become very angry with me, the one who was meant to be his helper. I was not quick to accept what he showed me, and so the Spirit prompted me. The Lord was merciful to me a thousand thousand times, because he saw in me that I was ready, but that I did not know what I should do about the state of my life. There were many who forbade this mission. They even told stories among themselves behind my back, and the said: “Why does he put himself in danger among hostile people who do not know God?” It was not that they were malicious – they just did not understand, as I myself can testify, since I was just an unlearned country person. Indeed, I was not quick to recognise the grace that was in me; I know now what I should have done then.
I think Patricius, son of Calpornius, was a great and heroic man. He earned the title of Saint Patrick. May we get many graces from his inspiration.
The
last couple of years I posted on St. Patrick’s famous prayer, “St. Patrick’s
Breastplate.” Every year on March 17th
for the last few years I have prayed it.
Pray it and listen to it here.
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