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Horvath March 6th 04 12:07 PM

St. Patrick was NOT Irish
 
It's that time of year again, where I like to remind everybody that
St. Patrick was NOT Irish. His parents were Roman, he wasn't born in
Ireland, and he didn't grow up in Ireland.


PATRICK (5th century). The enduring legends of St. Patrick are that
he
used a shamrock to explain the Trinity and that he banished all snakes
from Ireland. The true story of Patrick, however, survives not in his
myths but in his work. Patrick was responsible for converting the
people
of Ireland to Christianity.
Patrick was born to a Romanized family in Britain probably in the
first
half of the 5th century. At the age of 16 he was taken to Ireland by
pirates and sold into slavery. The young boy was sustained by his
faith
during his six years working as a herdsman. When Patrick escaped and
returned to Britain, he had a vision of the Irish beseeching him to
return
to Ireland to spread his faith. Patrick recorded this call to his
vocation
in the 'Confessio', his spiritual autobiography and one of his two
short
writings that have survived.
After studying in continental monasteries, Patrick returned to
Ireland
as a missionary. Despite a constant threat to his life, Patrick
traveled
widely, baptizing, confirming, and preaching and building churches,
schools,
and monasteries. Patrick succeeded in converting almost the entire
population of the island. His 'Epistola' pleads the case of the
Christian
Irish at the hands of their British conquerors. Patrick's writings
have
come to be appreciated for their simplicity and humility. St. Patrick
is
the patron saint of Ireland. His feast day is celebrated on March 17.





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katysails March 6th 04 12:47 PM

St. Patrick was NOT Irish
 
You miss the whole point, Horvath. He CONVERTED Ireland to Catholicism =
and that is what is being celebrated....get with the program....and =
everyone Irish and Catholic already has your information so you're not =
informing anyone who would care....

--=20
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein


Horvath March 6th 04 02:13 PM

St. Patrick was NOT Irish
 
On Sat, 6 Mar 2004 07:47:26 -0500, "katysails"
wrote this crap:

You miss the whole point, Horvath. He CONVERTED Ireland to Catholicism and that is what is being celebrated....get with the program....and everyone Irish and Catholic already has your information so you're not informing anyone who would care....


St. Patrick didn't drive the snakes out of Ireland. He probably
couldn't drive a golf cart out of Ireland, but I bet he could figure
out how to fix your word wrap.




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Jeff Morris March 6th 04 02:33 PM

St. Patrick was NOT Irish
 
Worse, he taught them how to read and write.



"katysails" wrote in message
...
You miss the whole point, Horvath. He CONVERTED Ireland to Catholicism and that
is what is being celebrated....get with the program....and everyone Irish and
Catholic already has your information so you're not informing anyone who would
care....

--
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein



Scott Vernon March 6th 04 03:03 PM

St. Patrick was NOT Irish
 
Was he a sailor? No?, then who cares. AND FIX YOUR WORD WRAP, DUMMY.


"Horvath" wrote

PATRICK (5th century). The enduring legends of St. Patrick are that
he
used a shamrock to explain the Trinity and that he banished all snakes
from Ireland. The true story of Patrick, however, survives not in his
myths but in his work. Patrick was responsible for converting the
people
of Ireland to Christianity.
Patrick was born to a Romanized family in Britain probably in the
first
half of the 5th century. At the age of 16 he was taken to Ireland by
pirates and sold into slavery. The young boy was sustained by his
faith
during his six years working as a herdsman. When Patrick escaped and
returned to Britain, he had a vision of the Irish beseeching him to
return
to Ireland to spread his faith. Patrick recorded this call to his
vocation
in the 'Confessio', his spiritual autobiography and one of his two
short
writings that have survived.
After studying in continental monasteries, Patrick returned to
Ireland
as a missionary. Despite a constant threat to his life, Patrick
traveled
widely, baptizing, confirming, and preaching and building churches,
schools,
and monasteries. Patrick succeeded in converting almost the entire
population of the island. His 'Epistola' pleads the case of the
Christian
Irish at the hands of their British conquerors. Patrick's writings
have
come to be appreciated for their simplicity and humility. St. Patrick
is
the patron saint of Ireland. His feast day is celebrated on March 17.





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Jeff Morris March 6th 04 03:09 PM

St. Patrick was NOT Irish
 
He was a sailor, but not a very good one. His missionary career started after
currents took him astray from his original destination.



"Scott Vernon" wrote in message
...
Was he a sailor? No?, then who cares. AND FIX YOUR WORD WRAP, DUMMY.


"Horvath" wrote

PATRICK (5th century). The enduring legends of St. Patrick are that
he
used a shamrock to explain the Trinity and that he banished all snakes
from Ireland. The true story of Patrick, however, survives not in his
myths but in his work. Patrick was responsible for converting the
people
of Ireland to Christianity.
Patrick was born to a Romanized family in Britain probably in the
first
half of the 5th century. At the age of 16 he was taken to Ireland by
pirates and sold into slavery. The young boy was sustained by his
faith
during his six years working as a herdsman. When Patrick escaped and
returned to Britain, he had a vision of the Irish beseeching him to
return
to Ireland to spread his faith. Patrick recorded this call to his
vocation
in the 'Confessio', his spiritual autobiography and one of his two
short
writings that have survived.
After studying in continental monasteries, Patrick returned to
Ireland
as a missionary. Despite a constant threat to his life, Patrick
traveled
widely, baptizing, confirming, and preaching and building churches,
schools,
and monasteries. Patrick succeeded in converting almost the entire
population of the island. His 'Epistola' pleads the case of the
Christian
Irish at the hands of their British conquerors. Patrick's writings
have
come to be appreciated for their simplicity and humility. St. Patrick
is
the patron saint of Ireland. His feast day is celebrated on March 17.





This signature is now the ultimate power in the universe





Scott Vernon March 6th 04 03:33 PM

St. Patrick was NOT Irish
 
was his nickname 'jax'?

"Jeff Morris" wrote in message
...
He was a sailor, but not a very good one. His missionary career started

after
currents took him astray from his original destination.



"Scott Vernon" wrote in message
...
Was he a sailor? No?, then who cares. AND FIX YOUR WORD WRAP, DUMMY.


"Horvath" wrote

PATRICK (5th century). The enduring legends of St. Patrick are that
he
used a shamrock to explain the Trinity and that he banished all snakes
from Ireland. The true story of Patrick, however, survives not in his
myths but in his work. Patrick was responsible for converting the
people
of Ireland to Christianity.
Patrick was born to a Romanized family in Britain probably in the
first
half of the 5th century. At the age of 16 he was taken to Ireland by
pirates and sold into slavery. The young boy was sustained by his
faith
during his six years working as a herdsman. When Patrick escaped and
returned to Britain, he had a vision of the Irish beseeching him to
return
to Ireland to spread his faith. Patrick recorded this call to his
vocation
in the 'Confessio', his spiritual autobiography and one of his two
short
writings that have survived.
After studying in continental monasteries, Patrick returned to
Ireland
as a missionary. Despite a constant threat to his life, Patrick
traveled
widely, baptizing, confirming, and preaching and building churches,
schools,
and monasteries. Patrick succeeded in converting almost the entire
population of the island. His 'Epistola' pleads the case of the
Christian
Irish at the hands of their British conquerors. Patrick's writings
have
come to be appreciated for their simplicity and humility. St. Patrick
is
the patron saint of Ireland. His feast day is celebrated on March 17.





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katysails March 6th 04 09:15 PM

St. Patrick was NOT Irish
 
Horvath stated:=20
St. Patrick didn't drive the snakes out of Ireland.=20

There never were any snakes in Ireland, dumbutt.....and I'm happy to see =
that I am still a thorn in your side.
--=20
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein


katysails March 6th 04 09:17 PM

St. Patrick was NOT Irish
 
Scott asked: Was he a sailor?

No, but St. Brendhan was.

--=20
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein


Horvath March 6th 04 10:53 PM

St. Patrick was NOT Irish
 
On Sat, 6 Mar 2004 16:15:57 -0500, "katysails"
wrote this crap:

Horvath stated:
St. Patrick didn't drive the snakes out of Ireland.

There never were any snakes in Ireland,


How do you know?

.....and I'm happy to see that I am still a thorn in your side.


You're more like a pinata that I can slap around.




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