I have re-printed this from an outside source:
Salute To St. Patrick
Bill Donohue
March 17, 2023
[Note: We run this
article each year on March 17]
The heroics of St. Patrick are
not appreciated as much as they should be. He is the first person in history to
publicly condemn slavery, and one of the first leaders to champion the cause of
equal rights.
There is much to celebrate on
March 17. Fortunately, his writings, though slim, are eye-opening accounts of
his life: Letter to the Soldiers of Coroticus and Confession
reveal much about the man. Along with other sources, they paint a picture of
his saintliness.
Patrick was born in Britain in
the 4th century to wealthy parents. It is likely that he was baptized, though
growing up he did not share his family's faith. He was an atheist.
When he was 15, he committed
what he said was a grave sin, never saying exactly what it was; it appears it
was a sexual encounter with a young girl. No matter, it would haunt him
throughout his life.
At age 15 or 16 (the accounts
vary), Patrick was kidnapped and enslaved by Irish barbarians. They had come to
plunder his family's estate, and took him away in chains to Ireland. While a
slave, he converted to Christianity, praying incessantly at all hours of the
day. After six years, he escaped, and made his way back home.
His family thought he was
dead, and with good reason: no one taken by Irish raiders had managed to escape
and return. St. Patrick biographer Philip Freeman describes how his family
received him, stating "it was as if a ghost had returned from the
dead."
After he returned home, he had
a vision while sleeping. He felt called to return to Ireland. This seemed
bizarre: this is where he was brutalized as a slave. But he knew what Jesus had
commanded us to do, "Love thy enemy." He was convinced that God was
calling him to become a missionary to Ireland. So, he acted on it, despite the
reservations of family and friends.
Patrick became a priest,
practiced celibacy, and was eventually named a bishop. Contrary to what many
believe, he did not introduce Christianity to Ireland, nor was he Ireland's
first bishop. But he did more to bring the Gospel to Ireland than anyone,
converting legions of pagans, especially in the northern parts of the island.
His missionary work in Ireland
has been duly-noted, but his strong defense of human rights has not been given
its due.
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.
Patrick was way ahead of his
time in the pursuit of human rights. Not only were men of every social status
entitled to equal rights, so were women. In his Letter to the Soldiers of
Coroticus, he scolds "the tyrant Coroticus—a man who has no respect
for God or his priests." More important, he made a startling plea:
"They must also free Christian women and captives." His reasoning
showed the power of his faith when he said, "Remember, Christ died and was
crucified for these people."
He did not mince words.
"So, Coroticus, you and your wicked servants, where do you think you will
end up? You have treated baptized Christian women like prizes to be handed out,
all for the sake of the here and now—this brief, fleeting world."
What makes this all the more
dramatic is the way the pagan world thought about women: the idea that women
were equal to men was totally foreign to them. But the women understood what
Patrick was saying, and gravitated to him in large numbers. The Christian tenet
that all humans possess equal dignity had taken root.
Did the Irish save
civilization, as Thomas Cahill maintains? Freeman thinks not—"it had never
been lost." But everyone agrees that had it not been for St. Patrick, and
the monasteries that followed, much of what we know about the ancient world
would not exist.
Indeed, it is difficult to
fathom how classical Greek and Roman literature would have survived had it not
been for the Irish monks who attracted students from many parts of Europe. They
are responsible for preserving the great works of antiquity. And all of them
are indebted to St. Patrick.
It is believed that he died on
March 17, sometime during the second half of the fifth century. That is his
feast day, the source of many celebrations in his honor. His impact extends
beyond the Irish and the Catholic Church—human rights are a global issue—making
him a very special person in world history.
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