Digital Logos Edition
The Life and Writings of St. Patrick is one of the fullest and most exact accounts of St. Patrick’s missionary labors in Ireland. Avoiding bias opinions of the saint by gathering information from ancient records, this biography allows the story of St. Patrick’s life to speak for itself. It includes nine appendixes that discuss in detail various aspects of St. Patrick’s life, as well as a map illustrating St. Patrick’s missionary journeys through Ireland.
With the Logos Bible Software edition all Scripture passages in The Life and Writings of St. Patrick are tagged and appear on mouse-over. This makes these resources more powerful and easier to access than ever before for scholarly work or personal Bible study. With the advanced search features of Logos Bible Software, you can perform powerful searches by topic or Scripture reference—finding, for example, every mention of “peace,” or “humility.”
“There was then only one Church, and they could have had no motive in representing St. Patrick to be anything else than what he was known to them—a great and successful Christian missionary of the Catholic Church.” (Page iv)
“On entering a new territory or sub-kingdom, Patrick always went, if he could, straight to the residence of the king or chief, to secure his protection, and, if possible, his conversion.” (Page 156)
“The writings of St. Patrick himself must naturally be made the basis of any reliable history of the Saint” (Page iv)
“Yet it was this hard life of a slave that made Patrick a saint.” (Page 49)
“Patrick was 60 years of age when he was consecrated Bishop” (Page 68)
Dr. Healy has gone over the ground himself; has collected the popular traditions; has identified, wherever possible, the sites of the old Patrician churches, and to our mind has given the most accurate, the most complete, and the most interesting account of what may be called the topography of St. Patrick’s life.
—The Irish Ecclesiastical Record
Dr. Healy gives us, from an inside standpoint, a copious and exhaustive history of Ireland’s Apostle. The present work, containing over 750 good-sized pages, embodies everything of value that is known, or probably ever will be known, on the subject. Its chief excellence is the wealth of topographical lore which the learned author has brought to his task. . . . The narrative of St. Patrick’s journeying is greatly enlivened by the Archbishop’s identification of the various places and landmarks in the modern nomenclature.
—Catholic World