If you're Irish or have some Irish in you, you may well be thinking about today: St. Patrick's Day. Patron saint of and missionary to the Irish nation, St. Patrick came into a remote and unsettled land dominated by various strands of Celtic religious thought and proceeded to teach and explain the Christian gospel.
It seems that he did so rather successfully, too. Despite what has historically been some very deep cultural rifts among the Irish populace, Christianity is still admired and celebrated throughout the land. God and Jesus remain very important.One of the beauties of St. Patrick's Day is that although it is a commemoration of the saint's supposed day of death, it is on the other hand a day of celebration. Sure, some people celebrate to excess, but usually even this is done with every good intention: life is beautiful!
Amidst the revelry, however, we overlook the profundity of what Patrick had to say. Consider one of his meditations on Psalm 46:
"Be still and know that I am God.
Be still and know that I am.
Be still and know.
Be still.
Be."
Amidst the "beingness" and celebration, Patrick is saying, remember from whom it all comes. "Be" in the fact of the creator. Understand what life is really all about.
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