Legends about Patrick abound; but truth is 
best served by our seeing two solid qualities in him: He was humble and 
he was courageous. The determination to accept suffering and success 
with equal indifference guided the life of God’s instrument for winning 
most of Ireland for Christ.
Details of his life are uncertain. 
Current research places his dates of birth and death a little later than
 earlier accounts. Patrick may have been born in Dunbarton, Scotland, 
Cumberland, England, or in northern Wales. He called himself both a 
Roman and a Briton. At 16, he and a large number of his father’s slaves 
and vassals were captured by Irish raiders and sold as slaves in 
Ireland. Forced to work as a shepherd, he suffered greatly from hunger 
and cold.
After six years Patrick escaped, 
probably to France, and later returned to Britain at the age of 22. His 
captivity had meant spiritual conversion. He may have studied at Lerins,
 off the French coast; he spent years at Auxerre, France, and was 
consecrated bishop at the age of 43. His great desire was to proclaim 
the good news to the Irish.
In a dream vision it seemed “all the 
children of Ireland from their mothers’ wombs were stretching out their 
hands” to him. He understood the vision to be a call to do mission work 
in pagan Ireland. Despite opposition from those who felt his education 
had been defective, he was sent to carry out the task. He went to the 
west and north–where the faith had never been preached–obtained the 
protection of local kings, and made numerous converts.
Because of the island’s pagan 
background, Patrick was emphatic in encouraging widows to remain chaste 
and young women to consecrate their virginity to Christ. He ordained 
many priests, divided the country into dioceses, held Church councils, 
founded several monasteries and continually urged his people to greater 
holiness in Christ.
He suffered much opposition from 
pagan druids and was criticized in both England and Ireland for the way 
he conducted his mission. In a relatively short time, the island had 
experienced deeply the Christian spirit, and was prepared to send out 
missionaries whose efforts were greatly responsible for Christianizing 
Europe.
Patrick was a man of action, with 
little inclination toward learning. He had a rock-like belief in his 
vocation, in the cause he had espoused. One of the few certainly 
authentic writings is his Confessio, above all an act of homage to God for having called Patrick, unworthy sinner, to the apostolate.
There is hope rather than irony in 
the fact that his burial place is said to be in County Down in Northern 
Ireland, long the scene of strife and violence.
From Saint of the Day - Franciscan Media 
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