The Confession of Pádraig (St. Patrick)
I am Patrick, a sinner, most unlearned, the least of all the
faithful, and utterly despised by many. My father was Calpornius, a deacon, son
of Potitus, a priest, of the village Bannavem Taburniĉ; he had a country seat
nearby, and there I was taken captive.
I was then about sixteen years of age. I did not know the
true God. I was taken into captivity to Ireland with many thousands of
people--and deservedly so, because we turned away from God, and did not keep His
commandments, and did not obey our priests, who used to remind us of our
salvation. And the Lord brought over us the wrath of his anger and scattered us
among many nations, even unto the utmost part of the earth, where now my
littleness is placed among strangers.
And there the Lord opened the sense of my unbelief that I
might at last remember my sins and be converted with all my heart to the Lord my
God, who had regard for my abjection, and mercy on my youth and ignorance, and
watched over me before I knew Him, and before I was able to distinguish between
good and evil, and guarded me, and comforted me as would a father his son.
Hence I cannot be silent--nor, indeed, is it expedient--about
the great benefits and the great grace which the lord has deigned to bestow upon
me in the land of my captivity; for this we can give to God in return after
having been chastened by Him, to exalt and praise His wonders before every
nation that is anywhere under the heaven.
Because there is no other God, nor ever was, nor will be,
than God the Father unbegotten, without beginning, from whom is all beginning,
the Lord of the universe, as we have been taught; and His son Jesus Christ, whom
we declare to have always been with the Father, spiritually and ineffably
begotten by the Father before the beginning of the world, before all beginning;
and by Him are made all things visible and invisible. He was made man, and,
having defeated death, was received into heaven by the Father; and He hath given
Him all power over all names in heaven, on earth, and under the earth, and every
tongue shall confess to Him that Jesus Christ is Lord and God, in whom we
believe, and whose advent we expect soon to be, judge of the living and of the
dead, who will render to every man according to his deeds; and He has poured
forth upon us abundantly the Holy Spirit, the gift and pledge of immortality,
who makes those who believe and obey sons of God and joint heirs with Christ;
and Him do we confess and adore, one God in the Trinity of the Holy Name.
For He Himself has said through the Prophet: Call upon me in
the day of thy trouble, and I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me. And
again He says: It is honourable to reveal and confess the works of God.
Although I am imperfect in many things, I nevertheless wish
that my brethren and kinsmen should know what sort of person I am, so that they
may understand my heart's desire.
I know well the testimony of my Lord, who in the Psalm
declares: Thou wilt destroy them that speak a lie. And again He says: The mouth
that belieth killeth the soul. And the same Lord says in the Gospel: Every idle
word that men shall speak, they shall render an account for it on the day of
judgement.
And so I should dread exceedingly, with fear and trembling,
this sentence on that day when no one will be able to escape or hide, but we
all, without exception, shall have to give an account even of our smallest sins
before the judgement of the Lord Christ.
For this reason I had in mind to write, but hesitated until
now; I was afraid of exposing myself to the talk of men, because I have not
studied like the others, who thoroughly imbibed law and Sacred Scripture, and
never had to change from the language of their childhood days, but were able to
make it still more perfect. In our case, what I had to say had to be translated
into a tongue foreign to me, as can be easily proved from the savour of my
writing, which betrays how little instruction and training I have had in the art
of words; for, so says Scripture, by the tongue will be discovered the wise man,
and understanding, and knowledge, and the teaching of truth.
But of what help is an excuse, however true, especially if
combined with presumption, since now, in my old age, I strive for something that
I did not acquire in youth? It was my sins that prevented me from fixing in my
mind what before I had barely read through. But who believes me, though I should
repeat what I started out with?
As a youth, nay, almost as a boy not able to speak, I was
taken captive, before I knew what to pursue and what to avoid. Hence today I
blush and fear exceedingly to reveal my lack of education; for I am unable to
tell my story to those versed in the art of concise writing--in such a way, I
mean, as my spirit and mind long to do, and so that the sense of my words
expresses what I feel.
But if indeed it had been given to me as it was given to
others, then I would not be silent because of my desire of thanksgiving; and if
perhaps some people think me arrogant for doing so in spite of my lack of
knowledge and my slow tongue, it is, after all, written: The stammering tongues
shall quickly learn to speak peace.
How much more should we earnestly strive to do this, we, who
are, so Scripture says, a letter of Christ for salvation unto the utmost part of
the earth, and, though not an eloquent one, yet...written in your hearts, not
with ink, but with the spirit of the living God! And again the Spirit witnesses
that even rusticity was created by the Highest.
Whence I, once rustic, exiled, unlearned, who does not know
how to provide for the future, this at least I know most certainly that before I
was humiliated I was like a stone Lying in the deep mire; and He that is mighty
came and in His mercy lifted me up, and raised me aloft, and placed me on the
top of the wall. And therefore I ought to cry out aloud and so also render
something to the Lord for His great benefits here and in eternity--benefits
which the mind of men is unable to appraise.
Wherefore, then, be astonished, ye great and little that fear
God, and you men of letters on your estates, listen and pore over this. Who was
it that roused up me, the fool that I am, from the midst of those who in the
eyes of men are wise, and expert in law, and powerful in word and in everything?
And He inspired me--me, the outcast of this world--before others, to be the man
(if only I could!) who, with fear and reverence and without blame, should
faithfully serve the people to whom the love of Christ conveyed and gave me for
the duration of my life, if I should be worthy; yes indeed, to serve them humbly
and sincerely.
In the light, therefore, of our faith in the Trinity I must
make this choice, regardless of danger I must make known the gift of God and
everlasting consolation, without fear and frankly I must spread everywhere the
name of God so that after my decease I may leave a bequest to my brethren and
sons whom I have baptised in the Lord--so many thousands of people.
And I was not worthy, nor was I such that the Lord should
grant this to His servant; that after my misfortunes and so great difficulties,
after my captivity, after the lapse of so many years, He should give me so great
a grace in behalf of that nation--a thing which once, in my youth, I never
expected nor thought of.
But after I came to Ireland--every day I had to tend sheep,
and many times a day I prayed--the love of God and His fear came to me more and
more, and my faith was strengthened. And my spirit was moved so that in a single
day I would say as many as a hundred prayers, and almost as many in the night,
and this even when I was staying in the woods and on the mountains; and I used
to get up for prayer before daylight, through snow, through frost, through rain,
and I felt no harm, and there was no sloth in me--as I now see, because the
spirit within me was then fervent.
And there one night I heard in my sleep a voice saying to me:
"It is well that you fast, soon you will go to your own country." And again,
after a short while, I heard a voice saying to me: "See, your ship is ready."
And it was not near, but at a distance of perhaps two hundred miles, and I had
never been there, nor did I know a living soul there; and then I took to flight,
and I left the man with whom I had stayed for six years. And I went in the
strength of God who directed my way to my good, and I feared nothing until I
came to that ship.
And the day that I arrived the ship was set afloat, and I
said that I was able to pay for my passage with them. But the captain was not
pleased, and with indignation he answered harshly: "It is of no use for you to
ask us to go along with us." And when I heard this, I left them in order to
return to the hut where I was staying. And as I went, I began to pray; and
before I had ended my prayer, I heard one of them shouting behind me, "Come,
hurry, we shall take you on in good faith; make friends with us in whatever way
you like." And so on that day I refused to suck their breasts for fear of God,
but rather hoped they would come to the faith of Jesus Christ, because they were
pagans. And thus I had my way with them, and we set sail at once.
And after three days we reached land, and for twenty-eight
days we travelled through deserted country. And they lacked food, and hunger
overcame them; and the next day the captain said to me: "Tell me, Christian: you
say that your God is great and all-powerful; why, then, do you not pray for us?
As you can see, we are suffering from hunger; it is unlikely indeed that we
shall ever see a human being again."
I said to them full of confidence: "Be truly converted with
all your heart to the Lord my God, because nothing is impossible for Him, that
this day He may send you food on your way until you be satisfied; for He has
abundance everywhere." And, with the help of God, so it came to pass: suddenly a
herd of pigs appeared on the road before our eyes, and they killed many of them;
and there they stopped for two nights and fully recovered their strength, and
their hounds received their fill for many of them had grown weak and were
half-dead along the way. And from that day they had plenty of food. They also
found wild honey, and offered some of it to me, and one of them said: "This we
offer in sacrifice." Thanks be to God, I tasted none of it.
That same night, when I was asleep, Satan assailed me
violently, a thing I shall remember as long as I shall be in this body. And he
fell upon me like a huge rock, and I could not stir a limb. But whence came it
into my mind, ignorant as I am, to call upon Helias? And meanwhile I saw the sun
rise in the sky, and while I was shouting "Helias! Helias" with all my might,
suddenly the splendour of that sun fell on me and immediately freed me of all
misery. And I believe that I was sustained by Christ my Lord, and that His
Spirit was even then crying out in my behalf, and I hope it will be so on the
day of my tribulation, as is written in the Gospel: On that day, the Lord
declares, it is not you that speak, but the Spirit of your Father that speaketh
in you.
And once again, after many years, I fell into captivity. On
that first night I stayed with them, I heard a divine message saying to me: "Two
months will you be with them." And so it came to pass: on the sixtieth night
thereafter the Lord delivered me out of their hands.
Also on our way God gave us food and fire and dry weather
every day, until, on the tenth day, we met people. As I said above, we travelled
twenty-eight days through deserted country, and the night that we met people we
had no food left.
And again after a few years I was in Britain with my people.
who received me as their son, and sincerely besought me that now at last, having
suffered so many hardships, I should not leave them and go elsewhere.
And there I saw in the night the vision of a man, whose name
was Victoricus, coming as it were from Ireland, with countless letters. And he
gave me one of them, and I read the opening words of the letter, which were,
"The voice of the Irish"; and as I read the beginning of the letter I thought
that at the same moment I heard their voice--they were those beside the Wood of
Voclut, which is near the Western Sea--and thus did they cry out as with one
mouth: "We ask thee, boy, come and walk among us once more."
And I was quite broken in heart, and could read no further,
and so I woke up. Thanks be to God, after many years the Lord gave to them
according to their cry.
And another night--whether within me, or beside me, I know
not, God knoweth--they called me most unmistakably with words which I heard but
could not understand, except that at the end of the prayer He spoke thus: "He
that has laid down His life for thee, it is He that speaketh in thee"; and so I
awoke full of joy.
And again I saw Him praying in me, and I was as it were
within my body, and I heard Him above me, that is, over the inward man, and
there He prayed mightily with groanings. And all the time I was astonished, and
wondered, and thought with myself who it could be that prayed in me. But at the
end of the prayer He spoke, saying that He was the Spirit; and so I woke up, and
remembered the Apostle saying: The Spirit helpeth the infirmities of our prayer.
For we know not what we should pray for as we ought; but the Spirit Himself
asketh for us with unspeakable groanings, which cannot be expressed in words;
and again: The Lord our advocate asketh for us.
And when I was attacked by a number of my seniors who came
forth and brought up my sins against my laborious episcopate, on that day indeed
was I struck so that I might have fallen now and for eternity; but the Lord
graciously spared the stranger and sojourner for His name and came mightily to
my help in this affliction. Verily, not slight was the shame and blame that fell
upon me! I ask God that it may not be reckoned to them as sin.
As cause for proceeding against me they found--after thirty
years!--a confession I had made before I was a deacon. In the anxiety of my
troubled mind I confided to my dearest friend what I had done in my boyhood one
day, nay, in one hour, because I was not yet strong. I know not, God knoweth--whether
I was then fifteen years old: and I did not believe in the living God, nor did I
so from my childhood, but lived in death and unbelief until I was severely
chastised and really humiliated, by hunger and nakedness, and that daily.
On the other hand, I did not go to Ireland of my own accord.
not until I had nearly perished; but this was rather for my good, for thus was I
purged by the Lord; and He made me fit so that I might be now what was once far
from me that I should care and labour for the salvation of others, whereas then
I did not even care about myself.
On that day, then, when I was rejected by those referred to
and mentioned above, in that night I saw a vision of the night. There was a
writing without honour against my face, and at the same time I heard God's voice
saying to me: "We have seen with displeasure the face of Deisignatus" (thus
revealing his name). He did not say, "Thou hast seen." but "We have seen" as if
He included Himself, as He sayeth: He who toucheth you toucheth as it were the
apple of my eye.
Therefore I give Him thanks who hath strengthened me in
everything, as He did not frustrate the journey upon which I had decided, and
the work which I had learned from Christ my Lord; but I rather felt after this
no little strength, and my trust was proved right before God and men.
And so I say boldly, my conscience does not blame me now or
in the future: God is my witness that I have not lied in the account which I
have given you.
But the more am I sorry for my dearest friend that we had to
hear what he said. To him I had confided my very soul! And I was told by some of
the brethren before that defence--at which I was not present, nor was I in
Britain, nor was it suggested by me--that he would stand up for me in my
absence. He had even said to me in person: "Look, you should be raised to the
rank of bishop!"--of which I was not worthy. But whence did it come to him
afterwards that he let me down before all, good and evil, and publicly, in a
matter in which he had favoured me before spontaneously and gladly--and not he
alone, but the Lord, who is greater than all?
Enough of this. I must not, however, hide God's gift which He
bestowed upon me in the land of my captivity; because then I earnestly sought
Him, and there I found Him, and He saved me from all evil because--so I
believe--of His Spirit that dwelleth in me. Again, boldly said. But God knows
it, had this been said to me by a man, I had perhaps remained silent for the
love of Christ.
Hence, then, I give unwearied thanks to God, who kept me
faithful in the day of my temptation, so that today I can confidently offer Him
my soul as a living sacrifice--to Christ my Lord, who saved me out of all my
troubles. Thus I can say: "Who am I, 0 Lord, and to what hast Thou called me,
Thou who didst assist me with such divine power that to-day I constantly exalt
and magnify Thy name among the heathens wherever I may be, and not only in good
days but also in tribulations?" So indeed I must accept with equanimity whatever
befalls me, be it good or evil, and always give thanks to God, who taught me to
trust in Him always without hesitation, and who must have heard my prayer so
that I, however ignorant I was, in the last days dared to undertake such a holy
and wonderful work--thus imitating somehow those who, as the Lord once foretold,
would preach His Gospel for a testimony to all nations before the end of the
world. So we have seen it, and so it has been fulfilled: indeed, we are
witnesses that the Gospel has been preached unto those parts beyond which there
lives nobody.
Now, it would be tedious to give a detailed account of all my
labours or even a part of them. Let me tell you briefly how the merciful God
often freed me from slavery and from twelve dangers in which my life was at
stake--not to mention numerous plots, which I cannot express in words; for I do
not want to bore my readers. But God is my witness, who knows all things even
before they come to pass, as He used to forewarn even me, poor wretch that I am,
of many things by a divine message.
How came I by this wisdom, which was not in me, who neither
knew the number of my days nor knew what God was? Whence was given to me
afterwards the gift so great, so salutary--to know God and to love Him, although
at the price of leaving my country and my parents?
And many gifts were offered to me in sorrow and tears, and I
offended the donors, much against the wishes of some of my seniors; but, guided
by God, in no way did I agree with them or acquiesce. It was not grace of my
own, but God, who is strong in me and resists them all--as He had done when I
came to the people of Ireland to preach the Gospel, and to suffer insult from
the unbelievers, hearing the reproach of my going abroad, and many persecutions
even unto bonds, and to give my free birth for the benefit of others; and,
should I be worthy, I am prepared to give even my life without hesitation and
most gladly for His name, and it is there that I wish to spend it until I die,
if the Lord would grant it to me.
For I am very much God's debtor, who gave me such grace that
many people were reborn in God through me and afterwards confirmed, and that
clerics were ordained for them everywhere, for a people just coming to the
faith, whom the Lord took from the utmost parts of the earth, as He once had
promised through His prophets: To Thee the gentiles shall come from the ends of
the earth and shall say: `How false are the idols that our fathers got for
themselves, and there is no profit in them'; and again: `I have set Thee as a
light among the gentiles, that Thou mayest be for salvation unto the utmost part
of the earth.'
And there I wish to wait for His promise who surely never
deceives, as He promises in the Gospel: They shall come from the east and the
west, and shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob--as we believe the
faithful will come from all the world.
For that reason, therefore, we ought to fish well and
diligently, as the Lord exhorts in advance and teaches, saying: Come ye after
me, and I will make you to be fishers of men. And again He says through the
prophets: Behold, I send many fishers and hunters, saith God, and so on. Hence
it was most necessary to spread our nets so that a great multitude and throng
might be caught for God, and that there be clerics everywhere to baptise and
exhort a people in need and want, as the Lord in the Gospel states, exhorts and
teaches, saying: Going therefore now, teach ye all nations, baptising them in
the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to
observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and behold I am with you all
days even to the consummation of the world. And again He says: Go ye therefore
into the whole world, and preach the Gospel to every creature. He that believeth
and is baptised shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be condemned.
And again: This Gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in the whole world for a
testimony to all nations, and then shall come the end. And so too the Lord
announces through the prophet, and says: And it shall come to pass, in the last
days, saith the Lord, I will pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh; and your sons
and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and
your old men shall dream dreams. And upon my servants indeed, and upon my
handmaids will I pour out in those days of my Spirit, and they shall prophesy.
And in Osee, He saith: "I will call that which was not my people, my people;
...and her that had not obtained mercy, one that hath obtained mercy. And it
shall be in the place where it was said: 'You are not my people,' there they
shall be called the sons of the living God."
Hence, how did it come to pass in Ireland that those who
never had a knowledge of God, but until now always worshipped idols and things
impure, have now been made a people of the Lord, and are called sons of God,
that the sons and daughters of the kings of the Irish are seen to be monks and
virgins of Christ?
Among others, a blessed Irishwoman of noble birth, beautiful,
full-grown, whom I had baptised, came to us after some days for a particular
reason: she told us that she had received a message from a messenger of God, and
he admonished her to be a virgin of Christ and draw near to God. Thanks be to
God, on the sixth day after this she most laudably and eagerly chose what all
virgins of Christ do. Not that their fathers agree with them: no--they often
ever suffer persecution and undeserved reproaches from their parents; and yet
their number is ever increasing. How many have been reborn there so as to be of
our kind, I do not know--not to mention widows and those who practice
continence.
But greatest is the suffering of those women who live in
slavery. All the time they have to endure terror and threats. But the Lord gave
His grace to many of His maidens; for, though they are forbidden to do so, they
follow Him bravely.
Wherefore, then, even if I wished to leave them and go to
Britain--and how I would have loved to go to my country and my parents, and also
to Gaul in order to visit the brethren and to see the face of the saints of my
Lord! God knows it! that I much desired it; but I am bound by the Spirit, who
gives evidence against me if I do this, telling me that I shall be guilty; and I
am afraid of losing the labour which I have begun--nay, not I, but Christ the
Lord who bade me come here and stay with them for the rest of my life, if the
Lord will, and will guard me from every evil way that I may not sin before Him.
This, I presume, I ought to do, but I do not trust myself as
long as I am in this body of death, for strong is he who daily strives to turn
me away from the faith and the purity of true religion to which I have devoted
myself to the end of my I life to Christ my Lord. But the hostile flesh is ever
dragging us unto death, that I is, towards the forbidden satisfaction of one's
desires; and I know that in part I did not lead a perfect life as did the other
faithful; but I acknowledge it to my! Lord, and do not blush before Him, because
I lie not: from the time I came to know Him in my youth, the love of God and the
fear of Him have grown in me, and up to now, thanks to the grace of God, I have
kept the faith.
And let those who will, laugh and scorn--I shall not be
silent; nor shall I hide the signs and wonders which the Lord has shown me many
years before they came to pass, as He knows everything even before the times of
the world.
Hence I ought unceasingly to give thanks to God who often
pardoned my folly and my carelessness, and on more than one occasion spared His
great wrath on me, who was chosen to be His helper and who was slow to do as was
shown me and as the Spirit suggested. And the Lord had mercy on me thousands and
thousands of times because He saw that I was ready, but that I did not know what
to do in the circumstances. For many tried to prevent this my mission; they
would even talk to each other behind my back and say: "Why does this fellow
throw himself into danger among enemies who have no knowledge of God?" It was
not malice, but it did not appeal to them because--and to this I own myself--of
my rusticity. And I did not realise at once the grace that was then in me; now I
understand that I should have done so before.
Now I have given a simple account to my brethren and fellow
servants who have believed me because of what I said and still say in order to
strengthen and confirm your faith. Would that you, too, would strive for greater
things and do better! This will be my glory, for a wise son is the glory of his
father.
You know, and so does God, how I have lived among you from my
youth in the true faith and in sincerity of heart. Likewise, as regards the
heathen among whom I live, I have been faithful to them, and so I shall be. God
knows it, I have overreached none of them, nor would I think of doing so, for
the sake of God and His Church, for fear of raising persecution against them and
all of us, and for fear that through me the name of the Lord be blasphemed; for
it is written: Woe to the man through whom the name of the Lord is blasphemed.
For although I be rude in all things, nevertheless I have
tried somehow to keep myself safe, and that, too, for my Christian brethren, and
the virgins of Christ, and the pious women who of their own accord made me gifts
and laid on the altar some of their ornaments and I gave them back to them, and
they were offended that I did so. But I did it for the hope of lasting
success--in order to preserve myself cautiously in everything so that they might
not seize upon me or the ministry of my service, under the pretext of
dishonesty, and that I would not even in the smallest matter give the infidels
an opportunity to defame or defile.
When I baptised so many thousands of people, did I perhaps
expect from any of them as much as half a scruple? Tell me, and I will restore
it to you. Or when the Lord ordained clerics everywhere through my unworthy
person and I conferred the ministry upon them free, if I asked any of them as
much as the price of my shoes, speak against me and I will return it to you.
On the contrary, I spent money for you that they might
receive me; and I went to you and everywhere for your sake in many dangers, even
to the farthest districts, beyond which there lived nobody and where nobody had
ever come to baptise, or to ordain clergy, or to confirm the people. With the
grace of the Lord, I did everything lovingly and gladly for your salvation.
All the while I used to give presents to the kings, besides
the fees I paid to their sons who travel with me. Even so they laid hands on me
and my companions, and on that day they eagerly wished to kill me; but my time
had not yet come. And everything they found with us they took away, and me they
put in irons; and on the fourteenth day the Lord delivered me from their power,
and our belongings were returned to us because of God and our dear friends whom
we had seen before.
You know how much I paid to those who administered justice in
all those districts to which I came frequently. I think I distributed among them
not less than the price of fifteen men, so that you might enjoy me, and I might
always enjoy you in God. I am not sorry for it--indeed it is not enough for me;
I still spend and shall spend more. God has power to grant me afterwards that I
myself may be spent for your souls.
Indeed, I call God to witness upon my soul that I lie not;
neither, I hope, am I writing to you in order to make this an occasion of
flattery or covetousness, nor because I look for honour from any of you.
Sufficient is the honour that is not yet seen but is anticipated in the heart.
Faithful is He that promised; He never lieth.
But I see myself exalted even in the present world beyond
measure by the Lord, and I was not worthy nor such that He should grant me this.
I know perfectly well, though not by my own judgement, that poverty and
misfortune becomes me better than riches and pleasures. For Christ the Lord,
too, was poor for our sakes; and I, unhappy wretch that I am, have no wealth
even if I wished for it. Daily I expect murder, fraud, or captivity, or whatever
it may be; but I fear none of these things because of the promises of heaven. I
have cast myself into the hands of God Almighty, who rules everywhere, as the
prophet says: Cast thy thought upon God, and He shall sustain thee.
So, now I commend my soul to my faithful God, for whom I am
an ambassador in all my wretchedness; but God accepteth no person, and chose me
for this office--to be, although among His least, one of His ministers.
Hence let me render unto Him for all He has done to me. But
what can I say or what can I promise to my Lord, as I can do nothing that He has
not given me? May He search the hearts and deepest feelings; for greatly and
exceedingly do I wish, and ready I was, that He should give me His chalice to
drink, as He gave it also to the others who loved Him.
Wherefore may God never permit it to happen to me that I
should lose His people which He purchased in the utmost parts of the world. I
pray to God to give me perseverance and to deign that I be a faithful witness to
Him to the end of my life for my God.
And if ever I have done any good for my God whom I love, I
beg Him to grant me that I may shed my blood with those exiles and captives for
His name, even though I should be denied a grave, or my body be woefully torn to
pieces limb by limb by hounds or wild beasts, or the fowls of the air devour it.
I am firmly convinced that if this should happen to me, I would have gained my
soul together with my body, because on that day without doubt we shall rise in
the brightness of the sun, that is, in the glory of Christ Jesus our Redeemer,
as sons of the living God and joint heirs with Christ, to be made conformable to
His image; for of Him, and by Him, and in Him we shall reign.
For this sun which we see rises daily for us because He
commands so, but it will never reign, nor will its splendour last; what is more,
those wretches who adore it will be miserably punished. Not so we, who believe
in, and worship, the true sun--Christ--who will never perish, nor will he who
doeth His will; but he will abide for ever as Christ abideth for ever, who
reigns with God the Father Almighty and the Holy Spirit before time, and now,
and in all eternity. Amen.
Behold, again and again would I set forth the words of my
confession. I testify in truth and in joy of heart before God and His holy
angels that I never had any reason except the Gospel and its promises why I
should ever return to the people from whom once before I barely escaped.
I pray those who believe and fear God, whosoever deigns to
look at or receive this writing which Patrick, a sinner, unlearned, has composed
in Ireland, that no one should ever say that it was my ignorance if I did or
showed forth anything however small according to God's good pleasure; but let
this be your conclusion and let it so be thought, that--as is the perfect
truth--it was the gift of God. This is my confession before I die.