St. Patrick, Patron
of Ireland
No.: S-141 (small size)
Dimensions: 7x2x1 (inches)
Price: $25.00
Comes boxed and with a card giving
the following history
St. Patrick (389-461) first entered
Ireland against his will: the son of a petty Roman official on the west
coast of Britain, Patrick was kidnapped at the age of sixteen by Irish
raiders and taken to Ireland as a slave. He was sold to an Irish king
who employed him as a shepherd. During his long periods of solitude as a
shepherd, he began reciting Christian prayers he had memorized as a boy.
After six years in captivity, he escaped and returned home. He was
eventually consecrated and then returned to Ireland as a bishop (a
shepherd). His work in Ireland was astounding: baptizing tens of
thousands and establishing a native clergy and church. His work was a
sign of tenacity and love given in a land that had once held him in
slavery. In very old sculptures of Patrick, he is sometimes, as here,
shown holding a sheep: a symbol both of the work he performed when he
first came to Ireland and of his work as a shepherd of the people. |