What Evangelicals Can Learn from Saint Patrick
— Monday, March 16th, 2009 —
To our shame, most evangelical Protestants tend to think of Saint Patrick as a leprechaun. As we watch the annual drunken parades and pop-culture consumerism of the March holiday, no one could seem more removed from biblical Christianity than Patrick. And yet, Patrick’s life was closer to a revival meeting than to a shamrock-decorated drinking party named in his honor.
In his volume, St. Patrick of Ireland: A Biography, Philip Freeman, a professor of classics at Washington University in St. Louis, lays out a compelling portrait of Patrick, the theologian-evangelist. In accomplishing this, Freeman attempts to reconstruct Patrick’s cultural milieu—that of a world that had “ended” with the fall of Rome in 410 A.D. This collapse of Roman power had unleashed savagery in the British Isles, as thieves and slave-traders were unhinged from the restraining power of Caesar’s sword. Patrick’s ministry was shaped by this new world, not least of which by Patrick’s capture and escape from slavery.
Freeman helpfully retells Patrick’s conversion story, one of a mocking young hedonist to a repentant evangelist. The story sounds remarkably similar to that of Augustine—and, in the most significant of ways, both mirror the first-century conversion of Saul of Tarsus. Freeman helpfully reconstructs the context of local religion as a “business relationship” in which sacrifice to pagan gods was seen as a transaction for the material prosperity of the worshippers. Against this, Patrick’s conversion to Christianity was noticed quickly, when his prayers of devotion—then almost always articulated out loud—were overheard by his neighbors.
The rest of the narrative demonstrates the ways in which Patrick carried the Christian mission into the frontiers of the British Isles—confronting a hostile culture and institutionalized heresy along the way. With this the case, the life of Patrick is a testimony to Great Commission fervor, not to the Irish nationalism most often associated with the saint. As a matter of fact, Freeman points out that Patrick’s love for the Irish was an act of obedience to Jesus’ command to love enemies and to pray for persecutors.
This biography gives contemporary evangelicals more than a pious evangelist to emulate. It also reconstructs a Christian engagement with a pagan culture, in ways that are strikingly contemporary to evangelicals seeking to engage a post-Christian America.
Patrick’s context was a Celtic culture deeply entrenched in paganism, led by the native earth religion of the Druid priests. This is especially relevant in an era when pseudo-Celtic paganism is increasingly en vogue in American and European pagan movements. Freeman sweeps away the revisionist historical claims of the Druid revivalists: there was no “golden age” of equality among the sexes within the Druid cult, for example. Instead, Freeman shows that Patrick’s Christianity actually brought harmony among the genders with his teaching that women were joint-heirs with Christ.
Any evangelical seeking to kindle a love for missions among the people of God will benefit from this volume’s demonstration that the Great Commission did not lie dormant between the apostle Paul and William Carey. Patrick’s love and zeal for the Irish may also inspire American evangelicals to repent of our hopelessness for the conversion of, say, the radical Islamic world—which is, after all, no more “hopeless” than the Irish barbarians of Patrick’s era.
17 Responses to “What Evangelicals Can Learn from Saint Patrick”
Trackbacks
- Links « Stones Cry Out
- Read This Before Pinching: Patrick Wasn’t a Leprechaun at A Brick in the Valley
- SharperIron » What Evangelicals Can Learn from Saint Patrick
- St. Patrick « In Truth Arrayed
- St. Patrick’s Day Devotion « Fundamentally Reformed
- Happy St. Patrick’s Day « Via Emmaus
- St. Patrick’s Day « Stray Thoughts
- What Christians can learn from St. Patrick (387–461), a ‘theologian-evangelist’ : The Daily Scroll
- A Post-St. Patrick’s Day Quote « Strength 4 Today
- Why Saint Patrick was NOT a Baptist, part 1 « The Misadventures of Captain Headknowledge
- Read this before pinching: Patrick wasn’t a leprechaun at A Brick in the Valley
- Lessons from the Life of St. Patrick of Ireland | deekdubberly.com
- Repost: Lessons from the Life of St. Patrick of Ireland | deekdubberly.com





See also Michael Haykin’s helpful sketch of the impact of the life of St. Patrick.
http://historiaecclesiastica.com/?p=376
Allen Mickle
I think the modern “Environmentalist” movement has quite a bit in common with ancient Celtic/druidic paganism, and wields much more influence than neopagans do.
Environmentalism has taken on a religious fervor, it’s nature-worship for the postmodern set, and the culture-at-large eats it up like candy.
Even look at the “Christian environmentalist” syncretism. Naturally, we are supposed to be good caretakers and cultivators of God’s creation, but all too often the “Christian environmentalist” comes dangerously close to elevating creation above the Creator.
However, as you said, no people are “hopeless” when God’s Spirit goes to work among them.
This biography sounds very interesting.
Earlier today I had posted this:
http://onepilgrimsprogress.wordpress.com/2009/03/17/was-st-patrick-a-baptist-preacher/
When Patrick took Christianity to Ireland, he also brought the means by which Ireland would assist in preserving literature and learning.