The Day of St Patrick
Well, it’s St Patrick’s Day, which is a public holiday here in Ireland, so Lá Fhéile Pádraig sona daoibh go léir!
This morning I watched the Parade in Maynooth. It didn’t rain, but it was a strangely subdued affair notable for the lack of music. The isn’t much of an atmosphere if the participants are walking along in silence! You can’t have Craic agus Ceol if there’s no Ceol. I only counted two tractors too; usually there are many more than that. Fortunately, I have a calendar that offers a tractor for every month to make up for this disappointment. Still, it was good to see the kids enjoing themselves. The highlight for me this year was the Coakley Septic Tank Cleaning Truck, which just outdid the Thornton’s Refuse Collection Vehicle for sheer splendour.
- Straffan Road
- A Calendar of Tractors
- Septic Tank Cleaning Truck
Anyway, I should take the opportunity to write something about St Patrick. Not much is known for certain but it seems he was born in Britain, probably in the late 4th Century AD, probably somewhere around the Severn Estuary, and probably in Wales. It also appears that he didn’t know any Latin. When a young man, it seems he was captured by Celtic marauders coming up the River Severn and taken as a slave to Ireland. He eventually escaped back to Britain, but returned to Ireland as a missionary and succeeded somehow in converting the Irish people to Christianity.

Or did he? This interesting piece suggests his role was of lesser importance than many think.
However it happened, Ireland was the first country to be converted to Christianity that had never been part of the Roman Empire. That made a big difference to the form of the early Church here. The local Celtic culture was very loose and decentralized. There were no cities, large buildings, roads or other infrastructure. Life revolved around small settlements and farms. When wars were fought they were generally over livestock or grazing land. The early Irish Church that grew in this environment was quite different from that of continental Europe. It was not centralized, revolved around small churches and monasteries, and lacked the hierarchical structure of the Roman Church. Despite these differences, Ireland was quite well connected with the rest of the Christian world.Irish monks – and the wonderful illuminated manuscripts they created – spread across the continent, starting with Scotland and Britain. Thanks to the attentions of the Vikings few of these works survive but the wonderful Lindisfarne Gospels, dating from somewhere in the 8th Century were almost certainly created by Irish monks. The Book of Kells was probably created in Scotland by Irish Monks.
The traffic wasn’t entirely one-way however. A few years ago I saw a fascinating documentary about the Fadden More Psalter. This is a leather-bound book of Psalms found in a peat bog in 2006, which is of similar age to the Lindisfarne Gospels. It took years of painstaking restoration work to recover at least part of the text (much of which was badly degraded), but the leather binding turned out to hold a particularly fascinating secret: it was lined with papyrus. The only other books from the same period with the same structure that are known are from the Coptic Church in Egypt. That doesn’t mean that whoever owned the Fadden More Psalter had actually been to Egypt, of course. It is much more this book made its way to Ireland via a sort of relay race. On the other hand, it does demonstrate that international connections were probably more extensive than you might have thought.
Anyway, back to St Patrick’s Day. Saint Patrick’s Day is celebrated on March 17th, the reputed date of his death in 461 AD. Nobody really knows where St Patrick was born, though, so it would be surprising if the when were any better known. In any case, it wasn’t until the 17th Century that Saint Patrick’s feast day was placed on the universal liturgical calendar in the Catholic Church. Indeed, St Patrick has never been formally canonized. In the thousand years that passed any memory of the actual date of his birth was probably lost, so the choice of date was probably influenced by other factors, specifically the proximity of the Spring Equinox (which is this year on Thursday March 20th).
The early Christian church in Ireland incorporated many pre-Christian traditions that survived until roughly the 12th century, including the ancient festival of Ēostre (or Ostara), the goddess of spring associated with the spring equinox after whom Easter is named. During this festival, eggs were used a symbol of rebirth and the beginning of new life and a hare or rabbit was the symbol of the goddess and fertility. In turn the Celtic people of Ireland probably adapted their own beliefs to absorb much older influences dating back to the stone age. St Patrick’s Day and Easter therefore probably both have their roots in prehistoric traditions around the Spring Equinox, although the direct connection has long been lost.



March 17, 2025 at 5:15 pm
St Patrick is credited with driving all snakes out of Ireland, although the truth is that snakes never got there after the last glaciation before the Irish Sea flooded.
You might be surprised how little is known about Eostre. This goddess is mentioned in a single passage in Bede
https://www.roger-pearse.com/weblog/2024/03/25/easter-a-translation-error-in-bede-de-ratione-temporum/
although there is discussion as to whether she is the same as Ishtar.
There is no command in the New Testament for Christians to have any kind of calendar whatsoever, and St Paul says that it is a matter for each individual believer. But Pope Gregory ‘the Great’ recommended his mission to England to adapt the local pagan religious calendar. His letter is preserved in Bede’s Ecclesiastical History of the English People, I.30.
March 17, 2025 at 5:22 pm
On the north coast of Anglesey is a small church said to have been founded by St Patrick when he escaped back to Britain, if you believe that version of his life. It is of course by the village of Llanbadrig. The chimney in the ricks that he climed to reach what is now the site of the church can clearly be seen.
I must say that I much prefer the nonhierarchical celtic style of church. For my money the wrong decision was taken at Whitby in 664AD.
March 19, 2025 at 8:55 am
Eggs painted red and being rolled in orthodox tradition remember Mary of Magdela meeting Jesus in the garden after the resurrection. Cáisc comes from Paque, Paschal Sacrifice, or Passover sacrifice. The English word may come from Bede, but the timing related to Passover….Imbolc and Bealtaine, or both Bridgets (the real person, and the figure from pre-Christian tradition) with Candlemas marks spring, and Bealtaine or Mary, Queen of the May marks Summer. Eggs are everywhere – Jewish, Christian, pre-Christian tradition. The move from fasting in preparation for Easter, to feasting and celebration – with the things we deny ourselves as part of trying to care more, give more, simplify things so we can see the good, and do good world include twh eggs, a d the chocolate. Yes, there’s pre-Christian, there’s also Christian – and the women like Mary of Magdela, who are ignored…
March 19, 2025 at 11:36 am
I remember commenting as I came out of the 2018 film about Mary of Migdal, starring Rooney Mara, that it was a good job Jesus had her there to explain to him what he was doing!
She is the woman who found Jesus’ tomb empty (Luke 24:1-12) and who first saw the risen Jesus. Her name suggests that she is associated with the town of Magdala or Migdal – which still exists today – although other explanations of the name are possible. The gospel of Luke (8:1-3) says that she had seven demons cast out of her (raising the unanswered question of how they got in), and that she joined the twelve disciples in their travels, at least for a while. She is prominent in the gospel narratives of Christ’s Crucifixion, Empty Tomb and Resurrection.
The film did rescue Mary Magdalene from a slur begun by Pope Gregory I, ‘the Great’, late in the 6th century, who was the first monk to be Pope. In his 33rd sermon (on Luke 7:36-50), Gregory supposed that Mary Magdalene was the woman living a sinful life who anointed Jesus’ feet with her tears and perfume, in the passage immediately before Luke’s first mention of her (Luke 8). Gregory said without evidence that she had previously used the perfume upon her flesh in forbidden acts – meaning prostitution.
March 19, 2025 at 12:05 pm
It’s taken them a very long time to correct the ‘error’! It ‘only’ took them until 2016 to declare her Apostle to the Apostles and ungraded her feast day! https://www.vaticannews.va/en/saints/07/22/st–mary-magdalene–disciple-of-the-lord-.html