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Patrick: the saint who knew what it was like to be a slave
cna ^ | March 17, 2015 | Kevin J. Jones

Posted on 03/17/2015 3:07:46 PM PDT by NYer

St. Patrick, as seen in C.E. Kempe's stained glass in St. John the Baptist parish, Burford, UK. Credit: Lawrence OP via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).

St. Patrick, as seen in C.E. Kempe's stained glass in St. John the Baptist parish, Burford, UK. Credit: Lawrence OP via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).

Washington D.C., Mar 17, 2015 / 04:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Many know that Saint Patrick, bishop and missionary to Ireland, was once a slave – but few know of his heartfelt plea on behalf of girls and boys abducted into slavery.

“The pathos of St. Patrick’s description of the fate of his victims is something I think we can identify with now,” said Jennifer Paxton, a history professor who teaches at Catholic University of America’s Irish Studies program. “The girls stolen by Boko Haram are very similar in their fates, I think, to captives of Coroticus.”

St. Patrick’s Letter to the Soldiers of Coroticus was intended to shame the fifth century general whose raiding soldiers the saint declared to be “blood-stained with the blood of innocent Christians, whose numbers I have given birth to in God and confirmed in Christ.” He denounced those who “divide out defenseless baptized women like prizes.”

Patrick said he did not know what grieved him more: those who were slain, those who were captured, or the enslavers themselves – “those whom the devil so deeply ensnared.”

The plea is all the more poignant because St. Patrick was himself a former slave. In his letter he wrote that Irish raiders once took him captive and slaughtered the men and women servants of his father’s household.

“He would have known acutely what these slaves were going through, because he was the victim of just such a raid,” Paxton told CNA March 13. “In the fifth century this kind of raiding was endemic, all around the British Isles. He was stolen from someplace, we’re not sure where, in western Britain, and taken to captivity in Ireland.”

He spent six years tending sheep for his master.

“Obviously he did not enjoy his time as a slave and wanted it to end,” Paxton said. “So he would have definitely identified with these victims.”

The saint’s letter is a unique witness in medieval history.

“We do not have any other first person account of someone who was captured by barbarians and survived,” the history professor explained. “We have nothing else quite like it.”

The letter was written to be read aloud elsewhere, with the hope that Coroticus and his men would eventually hear of it and come under popular pressure. St. Patrick said those who hear the letter should “not fawn on such people” and should not share food or drink with them until they release their captives and “make satisfaction to God in severe penance and shedding of tears.”

Paxton said St. Patrick’s style is “somewhat defensive” because “he is up against tremendous odds, and he knows it.”

“He does not, as far as we know, ever get these captives back,” Paxton continued. “What we have is this cri de coeur that has resonated down through the ages. But he doesn’t manage to save them.”

She speculated that St. Patrick must have felt “the tragedy of seeing these people newly saved from damnation by baptism, and (then) taken away into slavery.”

Modern slavery is an enduring problem. Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria have enslaved Christians, Yazidis and other religious minorities. In Nigeria, where St. Patrick is a patron saint, the militant Islamist group Boko Haram became infamous for the April 2014 abductions of several hundred girls from a school in the country’s northeast.

In December 2014 major religious leaders including Pope Francis signed a joint declaration at the Vatican urging the eradication of modern slavery. A 2014 report from the organization Walk Free estimated that almost 36 million people worldwide suffer some form of slavery, with 61,000 people held in slave conditions in the United States.

As for St. Patrick, his letter seeking the release of slaves was not widely circulated. It was preserved in a few places, including the Book of Armagh. Paxton said the letter played little role in Christian debates over slavery, which was taken for granted for centuries.

Slavery’s decline in Europe doesn’t owe much to Church efforts. “It was more economic forces that led to its decline, I’m sad to say,” Paxton remarked, adding that Coroticus himself was probably a Christian.

St. Patrick became known for his life of sacrifice, prayer and fasting. Although he was not the first Christian missionary to Ireland, he is widely regarded as the most successful.

Paxton noted that St. Patrick’s letter and his other known work, the Confession of St. Patrick, are “steeped in the scriptures.”

“He basically writes in scriptural quotations. That’s the way Patrick thinks,” she said.

St. Patrick’s use of the Bible is rare in a medieval text because he quotes from many different sections of the Bible: the Gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, and numerous prophetic books.

Paxton said she found Patrick “a really fascinating figure.” In later legends he became a “wonder-working superhero” who expelled the snakes from Ireland and defeated druids in battle.

“But the real St. Patrick of his own words is really a far more moving and inspiring example for Christians of today,” she added.

“Ireland was never the same as a result of what he did. That’s something I think we should all be impressed by, somebody who himself was very marginal, who was not a major figure in his own Church, persevered in the face of all these obstacles and achieved something really wonderful.”


TOPICS: Catholic; History; Ministry/Outreach; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: confessi; confessio; coroticus; fartyshadesofgreen; ireland; patricius; romancatholicism; romanempire; saintpatrick; saintpatricksday; slavery; stpatrick; stpatricksday

1 posted on 03/17/2015 3:07:46 PM PDT by NYer
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To: Tax-chick; GregB; SumProVita; narses; bboop; SevenofNine; Ronaldus Magnus; tiki; Salvation; ...

Happy St. Patrick's Day, ping!

2 posted on 03/17/2015 3:08:38 PM PDT by NYer (Without justice - what else is the State but a great band of robbers? - St. Augustine)
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To: NYer

It appears that they missed the fact that he was also closer to a Baptist than a Catholic... :)


3 posted on 03/17/2015 3:17:24 PM PDT by Ingtar (Mourning for Freedom. I knew her well.)
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To: Ingtar

How so?


4 posted on 03/17/2015 3:54:43 PM PDT by NYer (Without justice - what else is the State but a great band of robbers? - St. Augustine)
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To: Ingtar

“..closer to a Baptist...”

Oh no - I hope this is a joke? I have a copy of St. Patrick’s”Confessions” and he specifically mentions several times his confirmations and his ordinations to the priesthood that he performed; his understanding of the sacraments was clearly Catholic beyond the shadow of a doubt, including the need for water baptism to be saved.

I don’t think the Baptists have seen the light and now realize the sacramental and hierarchical nature of the True Church; St. Patrick was an ordained Bishop and confessed Christ’s return and judgment, as well. I could quote Chapter and Verse from the “Confessions” (I own a copy), but they are not that long and his references to the priestly ordinations Patrick as Bishop performed are easily found with even a cursory run through reading of the work.


5 posted on 03/17/2015 4:16:57 PM PDT by stonehouse01
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To: NYer

Was he ever canonized by the Catholic church?


6 posted on 03/17/2015 4:18:37 PM PDT by xone
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To: xone
Was he ever canonized by the Catholic church?

It's true that St. Patrick was never "formally" canonized a saint. The reason is St. Patrick lived in the 5th century and the process we now know as canonization did not exist until centuries later. Up until that time holy men and women were declared saints by popular acclaim.

7 posted on 03/17/2015 4:24:40 PM PDT by NYer (Without justice - what else is the State but a great band of robbers? - St. Augustine)
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To: NYer

Thank you.


8 posted on 03/17/2015 4:43:46 PM PDT by xone
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To: NYer
Patrick: the saint who knew what it was like to be a slave
The Snakes of St Patrick
Resurrection Miracles Performed by St. Patrick, Apostle of Ireland
ST PATRICK, BISHOP, CONFESSOR, APOSTLE OF IRELAND—A.D. 464
St Patrick's Confession (The Words of the Real Patrick)
St. Patrick

St Patrick kicked out of school
St. Patrick
Apostle to the Irish (Who is the REAL St. Patrick ?)
Patrick: Deliverer of the Emerald Isle
Breastplate of St Patrick [Poem/Prayer]
Confessions of St. Patrick (In his own words)
Feast of Saint Patrick, the Enlightener of Ireland
St. Patrick(Happy St. Patrick's Day!)
St Patrick's 'day' moved to March 15th (in 2008)
St. Patrick’s Breastplate Prayer

St. Patrick (Erin Go Bragh!)
History of St. Patrick's Day
Patrick: The Good, the Bad, and the Misinformed
The Lorica of St. Patrick
Orthodox Feast of +Patrick, the Enlightener of Ireland
St. Patrick
St. Patrick's Breast Plate
Orthodox Feast of St Patrick, the Enlightener of Ireland, March 17
The Lorica of St. Patrick
To Truly Honor Saint Patrick, Bishop and Confessor
Apostle to the Irish: The Real Saint Patrick
St. Patrick
Saint Patrick [Apostle of Ireland]
Was St. Patrick Catholic?....Of Course!! [Happy St. Pat's Day]

9 posted on 03/17/2015 5:32:48 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: stonehouse01

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-religion/3268430/posts


10 posted on 03/17/2015 7:35:03 PM PDT by Ingtar (Mourning for Freedom. I knew her well.)
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To: Ingtar

Revisionist tripe. Read the man’s own writings (St. Patrick’s)- he clearly ordained priests, and confirmed; he says so himself. I don’t think the modern Baptists would have approved! He also encouraged monasticism and celibacy for his monks and nuns (also directly from Patrick’s writings, not someone’s cherry picked versions). I have the book and read it myself - St. Patrick was a man of the sacraments.

People deny the holocaust, too, even in the face of actual evidence for it; in other words, anyone can revise history when they are trying to prove an agenda: - it is up to us to go to the root sources, in this case, Patrick’s own Confessions.

Go to Ireland - the monasteries there founded by St. Patrick and his followers are WITHOUT A DOUBT Catholic.


11 posted on 03/18/2015 1:34:24 AM PDT by stonehouse01
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