you must not believe in God ... I have seen God and you must not believe in Him ! consumer warning association .. God is not SAG ! He is no SAG member ! He is not with WARNER ARTIST LTD. HE has NO producer ! HE is NOT a star and OUT !
A nice rendition of this ancient prayer! When I saw the word "Loyola," I hoped it would be the same version used by Fr. Hardon, SJ, and I was not disappointed. :)
Oh, yes you can Jwiverson! Let Patrick speak to your heart long enough and he'll charm you right into faith. Just as he did to those good Irish people more than a thousand years ago and to many of us still today.
What an incredible and beautiful worldview this amazing prayer hearkens back to! Something I couldn't possibly imagine believing today, although I know many do, to some degree.
Happy feast of Saint Patrick! the great Apostle of Ireland who brought Jesus Christ to expell the demons from that land for goodness and holiness and truth.
This comment has received too many negative votesshow
What a bunch of crap. That made me want to throw up! Everyone knows the catholics put a catholic "stamp" over pegan holidays so they wouldnt loose members. Before you start yelling at me..read a f-ckn history book
You have an anti-Catholic bias which betrays a gross ignorance of the past two millenia of Christian history. That perhaps is why you are so heated, you never heard this ancient Irish prayer nor of the mighty works of Christ through the apostle of Ireland, Saint Patrick, who very effectively converted the pagans to faith in Christ with purity and goodness in the love of God. And the Irish eagerly became and have remained Catholic for 16 centuries. That's the history. Why get upset at that?
@perpaulum Ireland was not subject to the bishop of Rome until the 12th century, although the Irish church did not significantly differ in doctrine from "Latin" Christianity.
@blkgardner Actually, the Church in Ireland was ALWAYS subject to the Bishop of Rome, because it is the Bishop of Rome who sent the Church to Ireland.
@hiroshi2020 First off, Patrick was British, and wasn't sent by the bishop of Rome. Following that logic would mean that all churches are subject to Jerusalem through Antioch. Second, although the Roman bishops did have "primacy" over western churches, in Ireland, it would have been comparable to the "primacy" of the archbishop of Canterbury over non-British Anglican churches. I.e. primacy of honor but little if any authority over the Celtic churches.
@blkgardner Yes, even though St Patrick was British, he was of the Christian faith, which was subject to the Successor of St Peter, the Pope. He was the Bishop of Ireland, which was subject to the Pope. This was before the Great Schism, so ALL truly Christian churches were subject to the Pope. If a Christian didn't bring Christianity to Ireland, than who did?
@hiroshi2020 I deny the claim all Christian churches were subject to the Pope pre-Schism or the claim that the Roman Catholic church is the One True Church. The Eastern churches were never subject to the bishop of Rome, the Celtic churches were not subject to the Pope until long after the time of St. Patrick, and the Pope's authority was still quite limited outside of Italy.
Okay, you deny that. That's your opinion, you're more than allowed to have it. But by denying that the church was not subject to the Successor of St Peter, you are denying history.
I love this prayer.
crsom 2 months ago
Ja, sehr niedlich.
HektorPedo 8 months ago
you must not believe in God ... I have seen God and you must not believe in Him ! consumer warning association .. God is not SAG ! He is no SAG member ! He is not with WARNER ARTIST LTD. HE has NO producer ! HE is NOT a star and OUT !
bernhardfranz 1 year ago
A nice rendition of this ancient prayer! When I saw the word "Loyola," I hoped it would be the same version used by Fr. Hardon, SJ, and I was not disappointed. :)
7SonsofFeanor 1 year ago
Comment removed
aelc47 2 years ago
This has been flagged as spam show
really is a beautiful prayer, so moving, thanks for posting, and God bless you!!!
avatarprimus 2 years ago
Comment removed
avatarprimus 2 years ago
Oh, yes you can Jwiverson! Let Patrick speak to your heart long enough and he'll charm you right into faith. Just as he did to those good Irish people more than a thousand years ago and to many of us still today.
tombrisson 3 years ago 5
What an incredible and beautiful worldview this amazing prayer hearkens back to! Something I couldn't possibly imagine believing today, although I know many do, to some degree.
jwiversen 3 years ago 3
Happy feast of Saint Patrick! the great Apostle of Ireland who brought Jesus Christ to expell the demons from that land for goodness and holiness and truth.
perpaulum 3 years ago 4
This comment has received too many negative votes show
What a bunch of crap. That made me want to throw up! Everyone knows the catholics put a catholic "stamp" over pegan holidays so they wouldnt loose members. Before you start yelling at me..read a f-ckn history book
morningwoodinsd 3 years ago
You have an anti-Catholic bias which betrays a gross ignorance of the past two millenia of Christian history. That perhaps is why you are so heated, you never heard this ancient Irish prayer nor of the mighty works of Christ through the apostle of Ireland, Saint Patrick, who very effectively converted the pagans to faith in Christ with purity and goodness in the love of God. And the Irish eagerly became and have remained Catholic for 16 centuries. That's the history. Why get upset at that?
perpaulum 3 years ago 9
@perpaulum Ireland was not subject to the bishop of Rome until the 12th century, although the Irish church did not significantly differ in doctrine from "Latin" Christianity.
blkgardner 8 months ago
@blkgardner Actually, the Church in Ireland was ALWAYS subject to the Bishop of Rome, because it is the Bishop of Rome who sent the Church to Ireland.
hiroshi2020 7 months ago
@hiroshi2020 First off, Patrick was British, and wasn't sent by the bishop of Rome. Following that logic would mean that all churches are subject to Jerusalem through Antioch. Second, although the Roman bishops did have "primacy" over western churches, in Ireland, it would have been comparable to the "primacy" of the archbishop of Canterbury over non-British Anglican churches. I.e. primacy of honor but little if any authority over the Celtic churches.
blkgardner 7 months ago
@blkgardner Yes, even though St Patrick was British, he was of the Christian faith, which was subject to the Successor of St Peter, the Pope. He was the Bishop of Ireland, which was subject to the Pope. This was before the Great Schism, so ALL truly Christian churches were subject to the Pope. If a Christian didn't bring Christianity to Ireland, than who did?
hiroshi2020 7 months ago
@hiroshi2020 I deny the claim all Christian churches were subject to the Pope pre-Schism or the claim that the Roman Catholic church is the One True Church. The Eastern churches were never subject to the bishop of Rome, the Celtic churches were not subject to the Pope until long after the time of St. Patrick, and the Pope's authority was still quite limited outside of Italy.
blkgardner 7 months ago
@blkgardner
Okay, you deny that. That's your opinion, you're more than allowed to have it. But by denying that the church was not subject to the Successor of St Peter, you are denying history.
hiroshi2020 7 months ago
This video is lovely. Hearing the prayer of old while viewing images of the present are proof that prayer never "goes out of fashion."
This prayer is as relevant to us now as it was to those who were living when St Patrick first prayed it.
Thank you for sharing this with us.
God bless
KatyKane 3 years ago 5
I really like this version of St. Patrick's breastplate. Can you tell me where I can get a copy of the text?
MCCSanJose 4 years ago 2
google st patrick's breastplate and you're sure to find it. God bless.
KatyKane 3 years ago