Grace Covenant Church

Grace Covenant Church
2101 East 50th Street, Texarkana, AR

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Saint Patrick's Day

Happy Saint Patrick's Day.  Like all too many celebrations and commemorations, this one has suffered from a lost focus.  The essence of Patrick was not Irish culture, not the color emerald, or drinking to excess.  Rather, we should remember that Patrick was an Englishman who set out to evangelize lost people.  In fact, he set out to evangelize the barbaric people who had once kidnapped and enslaved him.

Remember Patrick's Morning Prayer this day: http://grantian.blogspot.com/2012/03/st-patricks-morning-prayer.html.

And for a more detailed look at the life of Patrick, read the short biographical sketch written by the late Dr. Francis Nigel Lee:

Dr.  F. N. Lee

The Britannic Christian Padraig Converts Ireland, Going into All the World

By Rev. Professor-Emeritus Dr. Francis Nigel Lee

According to Britain's oldest Historian, the North-Brythonic Celtic Christian Gildas,1 the Gospel arrived in Britain before 37 A.D. According to Eusebius, Maelgwyn, Isidore, Freculph, Nenni, Baronius, Cressy, Hearne, Rev. Dr. James Ussher, Rev. Dr. John Owen and Rev. Dr. H. Williams—there is some evidence that Joseph of Arimathea preached (and was also buried) in Somerset's Glastonbury.2

Also according to the American Rev. Dr. A. Cleveland Coxe in the Ante-Nicene Fathers,3 there is strong reason to conclude that the great Anti-Roman British General Caradog became a Christian—perhaps even while still in the West of Britain before his exile therefrom in 52 A.D. Too, from A.D. 75 onward, his relative the apparently-Christian Prince Merig is said to have ruled over the Britons from near my own birthplace Kendal in Cumbria's Westmorland.4

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