
Golden Age · 5th century
St Patrick of Ireland
Bishop, Enlightener of Ireland
Feast day: March 17
Patrick is that rarity among early saints: a man we know from his own pen. His Confession and his Letter to Coroticus survive — rough, humble Latin, burning with conviction. Born in Roman Britain to a deacon's family, he was seized by raiders at sixteen and enslaved in Ireland, herding animals in cold and hunger, where the faith he had ignored became prayer 'a hundred times a day.' After six years he escaped, following a voice heard in dream, and returned home — only to dream again of the Irish calling him back. He returned as bishop to the people who had enslaved him, preaching, baptizing thousands, ordaining clergy, and facing dangers he records matter-of-factly. His exact dates are debated (he died around 461 by tradition) and the beloved legends — the shamrock, the banished snakes — are later folklore. What is certain is greater: a slave who came back with the Gospel and gave Ireland its faith.
Icon: Wikimedia Commons · bobosh_t AKA "Father Ted" on Flickr, Christ the Saviour Church. · CC BY-SA 2.0