St. Patrick Calls All Christians to be the Missionaries of This Age

We must inspire missionary brigades of Christians ready to free the captives of this confused culture.

By Deacon Keith Fournier Published on March 17, 2017

I grew up in Boston, Massachusetts, with an Irish lineage, so I’ve always loved St. Patrick’s Day. The celebration is an example of the presence of a Christian memory in the West. As we tumble toward the abyss in what many call a post-Christian culture, the real message of the Apostle to Ireland has almost been lost.

Who is this Saint Patrick and why does it matter? It matters because, just like Patrick, we are called to be missionaries in our own age. Only, the mission field to which we are called is right outside our windows and front doors.

St. Patrick: Tasked by the Holy Spirit

When Patrick landed in Ireland in 432, he had been tasked by the Holy Spirit to evangelize a pagan people. He drew from a deep, living, personal, dynamic faith in Jesus Christ, lived in the heart of the Church. He understood well the challenge he faced. He had been held captive as a prisoner in that land. He was not afraid because he was filled with the Holy Spirit.

We are the freedom fighters of this missionary moment.

He knew the culture, the Druids who ruled it, and the realities he faced in that hostile culture. He had been kidnapped and held a prisoner in Ireland as a young man, only to be liberated and return to his home. Yet, in a dream, he heard the “voice of the Irish” calling him to return to preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Driven by the Holy Spirit, he sought the permission of Church authorities and he set out as a missionary of Jesus Christ.

Patrick had a deliberate strategy and it bore extraordinary fruit. We need to follow his example as we set about the missionary task entrusted to us in this hour.

Patrick did not fear the Druids who occupied Ireland. They fostered a culture hostile to Christianity. He knew the power of the Holy Spirit and the Word of God. We face our own Druids in the secularist “progressives” of this age. However, we have the same Holy Spirit and Word of God. The only difference is our response to the call.

Our Time to Free the Captives

We have been sent by the Head of the Church, Jesus the Lord, to bring the message of true freedom to this age enslaved by counterfeits. We are Victors of the Kingdom of God which has broken into human history in and through Jesus Christ. We are the freedom fighters of this missionary moment.

The Apostle to Ireland cries out to every Christian with marching orders. Those orders were not intended to lead to parades filled with revelers, but rather to inspire missionary brigades of Christians ready to free the captives of this confused culture.

In the book The Confession, Patrick explained his burden for the Irish people in these words:

I came to the Irish peoples to preach the Gospel and endure the taunts of unbelievers, putting up with reproaches about my earthly pilgrimage, suffering many persecutions, even bondage, and losing my birthright of freedom for the benefit of others.

If I am worthy, I am ready also to give up my life, without hesitation and most willingly, for his name. I want to spend myself in that country, even in death, if the Lord should grant me this favor. I am deeply in his debt, for he gave me the great grace that through me many peoples should be reborn in God. …

It is among that people that I want to wait for the promise made by him, who assuredly never tells a lie. He makes this promise in the Gospel: They shall come from the east and west, and sit down with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. This is our faith: believers are to come from the whole world.

St. Patrick’s Strategic Boldness Worked

When he entered a district, he would first preach the Gospel to the Chieftains and, following their custom, offer them a gift to honor them. Only a few were converted, but Patrick knew exactly what he was doing. He would ask for two favors: a plot of land upon which to build a church and permission to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ — to the people. Both would be granted.

The same God Patrick served is pouring out His Spirit today, calling Christians to mission in the Third Christian Millennium.

Then he went the sons and daughter of the rulers. He wrote of the results in his book: “Wherefore, then in Ireland, they who never had the knowledge of God, but until now only worshiped idols and abominations — now there has lately been prepared a people of the Lord, and they are called children of God. The sons and daughters of the Irish chieftains are seen to become monks and virgins of Christ.”

Because of his holy boldness, all of Ireland became Christian! The Gospel took root in the Celtic culture, transforming it from within as leaven in a loaf. Ireland came to be known as the “island of saints and scholars.”

The same God Patrick served is pouring out His Spirit today, calling Christians to mission in the Third Christian Millennium.

The greatest thing that could happen to Western culture is a rebirth of Christianity and Christian influence. This is our moment. The task now falls to us.

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