Thursday, October 29, 2009

why did st patrick become a saint

St. Patrick's Day Punch. Post photos of your creations, and share tips and comments. Close. Please Log In. You must be logged in to use this feature. Become a Member. Log In. Share your creations or comments. Share your creations or comments. Title: You will need to give your post a title. Tell us how you did it You will need to write something before posting. 5000 characters remaining. Add a photo ...St. Patrick s opened as the crown jewel of a religion whose members now made up one half of the City s population, with forty churches and property valued at more than two million dollars. .... If in Ireland they had been victims of history , in America, they would become makers of history. However, this not a chronicle of great deeds and heroic accomplishments of a vanished people. It is my hope that I have written the story of a living history that unfolds and develops ...Then came the brutal English Reformation that tore “Mary's Dowry” away from the true Church, producing such martyrs as Saint Edmund Campion and Saint Thomas More in its sanguinary effort to efface “popery” from the realm. ... An “Unusual Sermon” was posted by author Patrick Madrid on Inside Catholic website. It was this title of Madrid's posting that caught my curiosity. The minister, Stanley Hauerwas, gave the sermon in 1995. He has not become a Catholic, ...An “Unusual Sermon” was posted by author Patrick Madrid on Inside Catholic website. It was this title of Madrid's posting that caught my curiosity. The minister, Stanley Hauerwas, gave the sermon in 1995. He has not become a Catholic, at least not yet, ... The Theological Commission for the Causes of Saints at the Vatican accepted unanimously on Saturday the healing powers of Brother Andre, a pious porter at College Notre Dame who went on to found St. Joseph's basilica. ...However, as I have become more familiar with church history, as I am sure you are, I thought, well, thats of course the natural progression based upon the council of Trent and if they are consistent then that has to be their position. .... And the sphere of a creature's knowledge, be it that of an infant, or of a man, or of a philosopher, or of a prophet, or of saint or archangel in heaven, will float as a point of light athwart the bosom of that God who is the infinite ...When England was evangelized, it was explicitly and directly a papal project, the inspiration of Pope Saint Gregory the Great, who sent his fellow Italian, Saint Augustine, to do the job. ... An “Unusual Sermon” was posted by author Patrick Madrid on Inside Catholic website. It was this title of Madrid's posting that caught my curiosity. The minister, Stanley Hauerwas, gave the sermon in 1995. He has not become a Catholic, at least not yet, even though he presented a … ...Check out the special holiday spoonfuls: Guinness for St. Patrick's Day and Dinosaur Egg for Easter. Runner-up: Sonny's —AS. 31. Grocery Store Lund's When it comes to a reasonably priced yet high-quality grocery store, Lund's takes the cake (and makes it, too, ... Uptown, Downtown, and Midtown YWCA gyms have become the place to get physical. The YWCA offers high-quality services and fitness classes that give it an urban, hip vibe, making it a truly fab place to work out. ...Following his education Munna journeyed to Iona in 597 (Reeves, 1857, 372) wishing to become a monk there. But he was refused admission by the abbot on the orders of Columcille who had died in January 597, Columcille having foretold ... Another story found in Manus O'Donnell's "Betha Colaim Cille" (O'Kelleher and Schoepperle, 1918, 161) tells how Munna was called in as 'the hard man' to support St Patrick's demand to Christ, that he, Patrick, should be the judge of the ...This did not stop their veneration in the nations which had been the centers of their cults, and for that reason they are still believed to be patron saints by many Catholics. "Not Yet" Saints: Catholics tend to lobby for the .... Snake Bite St. Patrick Social Justice Saint Joseph Soldiers St. George, St. Joan of Arc, St. Sebastian Solitary Death St. Francis of Assisi Souls in Purgatory Anima Sola, Our Lady Mt. Carmel Speedy Results Saint Expedite Infant of Prague ...st patrick's peer support. saint pat's peer support board! navigate using the bars above, yeah! we lead with our mind, care with our heart. Together We Are One. by Delta Goodrem. Here we are. Sharing our lives. We made it through. The good and bad times ... See what we've all become. Together we are one. Deep inside your heart and soul. You've worked so hard. To reach your goal. With every step. With every breath. You gave it all. Till there was nothing left ...
- We like to keep Mass interesting. We sit, stand and kneel, in no particular order. Probably just to keep the blood flowing.

- It's not merlot and Ritz they're serving; it's the Flesh and Blood of Jesus. No, really.

- Forget a big meal afterwards, just pick up some of the breakfast tacos they're always selling after Mass

- Purgatory.

- We all have 20 cousins. On each side of the family.

- Infant Baptism isn't dumb; it's after-life insurance.

- $5.00 in the collection basket is the epitome of generosity. Anything more than that, someone has hit the lottery.

- A missal is a book, not a weapon. However, it has been known to pull double duty.

- The signs we make aren't just a mark of respect, they're a lot of fun to do.

- We really like statues. A lot.

- After every confession, everyone hits themselves on the head. This is because they have realized that they forgot that really big sin, and they know that it'll hang over their head til the next time.

- Contraceptives? Why?

- Altar boys continue well into their twenties.

- The 14 Stations has nothing to do with TV.

- We've always been taught that celibacy til marriage is the only way to go, forever and ever, amen. That being said...

- The Mass doesn't start for a few minutes not because of tardy parishioners. It's because the priest is running late.

- The Virgin Mary is not a God and we don't treat her as such. But she is without sin, gave birth to Jesus and did it without having sex. That warrants more than a little respect.

- 11:00 a.m. Mass means 11:15.

- We actually get all the jokes in Dogma.

- There are two very different, irreconcilable factions in every single church in the world. They are known as the Saturday or Sunday Mass bunch.

- St. Patrick drove all the snakes out of Ireland. SNAKES.

- You miss JPII more than you miss some relatives...

- Bake Sales are a way of life.

- Your knees are more calloused than your feet.

- Priests have been giving us alcohol since we were little kids. No wonder any one of us can drink Protestants under the table.

- The Catholic way of dealing with a mid-life crisis is having another kid.

- Mass is nearly unchanged after almost 2000 years. We're a little stubborn.

- Whatever you gave up for Lent, you have it in your hands at 11:59 p.m. Saturday night, counting the seconds til midnight.

- Episcopalians are referred to as "Diet Catholics"

- You either love or hate the Stations of the Cross. There is no middle ground.

- We all know Da Vinci code is bogus and inaccurate. Yet we'll still read it if nothing else is going on.

- "Offer it up!" = "Quit bitching!"

- We have Midnight Mass so there are no interruptions on Christmas morning

- You've slipped out an Amen after the Pledge of Allegiance.

- Holy Water can kill just about anything. So Protestants are pretty much screwed if a vampire comes calling.

- There's no need for impromptu prayer; you can always fall back on the Rosary.

- Alleluia becomes almost a swear during Lent

- It's not uncommon for just one family to take up an entire pew or two.

- Boondock Saints is the greatest movie ever. E-Ver.

- Confession. Enough said.

- You're of the opinion that Stephen Colbert should be Canonized.

- When in doubt, say a Hail Mary.

- Peter Griffin, a Catholic!

- Whenever anyone in Star Wars saga says "May the Force Be With You", we get the urge to say "And Also With You" (coming soon: "And With Your Spirit)

- The Pope does indeed wear a funny hat. But it's way more interesting than Joel Osteen's suit and tie.

- Even though you never met her or been to a country she's been in, you're still willing to have "seen" a miracle by Mother Teresa.

- We're the oldest Christian religion. Period.
((((Happy Nun))))


I have just wondered..how do you become a saint?


The women of the Tiwi tribe in the South Pacific are married at birth.
-When Albert Einstein died, his final words died with him. The nurse at his side didn't understand German.
-St Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, was not Irish.
-The lance ceased to be an official battle weapon in the British Army in 1927.
-St. John was the only one of the 12 Apostles to die a natural death.
-Many sailors used to wear gold earrings so that they could afford a proper burial when they died.
-Some very Orthodox Jew refuse to speak Hebrew, believing it to be a language reserved only for the Prophets.
-A South African monkey was once awarded a medal and promoted to the rank of corporal during World War I.
-Born 4 January 1838, General Tom Thumb's growth slowed at the age of 6 months, at 5 years he was signed to the circus by P.T. Barnum, and at adulthood reached a height of only 1 metre.
-Because they had no proper rubbish disposal system, the streets of ancient Mesopotamia became literally knee-deep in rubbish.
-The Toltecs, Seventh-century native Mexicans, went into battle with wooden swords so as not to kill their enemies.
-China banned the pigtail in 1911 as it was seen as a symbol of feudalism.
-The Amayra guides of Bolivia are said to be able to keep pace with a trotting horse for a distance of 100 kilometres.
-Sliced bread was patented by a jeweller, Otto Rohwedder, in 1928. He had been working on it for 16 years, having started in 1912.
-Before it was stopped by the British, it was the not uncommon for women in some areas of India to choose to be burnt alive on their husband's funeral pyre.
-Ivan the terrible claimed to have 'deflowered thousands of virgins and butchered a similar number of resulting offspring'.
-Before the Second World War, it was considered a sacrilege to even touch an Emperor of Japan.
-An American aircraft in Vietnam shot itself down with one of its own missiles.
-The Anglo-Saxons believed Friday to be such an unlucky day that they ritually slaughtered any child unfortunate enough to be born on that day.
-During the eighteenth century, laws had to be brought in to curb the seemingly insatiable appetite for gin amongst the poor. Their annual intake was as much as five million gallons.
-Ancient drinkers warded off the devil by clinking their cups
-The Nobel Prize resulted form a late change in the will of Alfred Nobel, who did not want to be remembered after his death as a propagator of violence - he invented dynamite.
-The cost of the first pay-toilets installed in England was tuppence.
-Pogonophobia is the fear of beards.
-In 1647 the English Parliament abolished Christmas.
-Mao Rse-Tang, the first chairman of the Chinese Communist Party, was born 26 December 1893. Before his rise to power, he occupied the humble position of Assistant Librarian at the University of Peking.
-Coffee is the second largest item of international commerce in the world. The largest is petrol.
-King George III was declared violently insane in 1811, 9 years before he died.
-In Ancient Peru, when a woman found an 'ugly' potato, it was the custom for her to push it into the face of the nearest man.
-For Roman Catholics, 5 January is St Simeon Stylites' Day. He was a fifth-century hermit who showed his devotion to God by spending literally years sitting on top of a huge flagpole.
-When George I became King of England in 1714, his wife did not become Queen. He placed her under house arrest for 32 years.
-The richest 10 per cent of the French people are approximately fifty times better off than the poorest 10 per cent.
-Henry VII was the only British King to be crowned on the field of battle
During World War One, the future Pope John XXIII was a sergeant in the Italian Army.
-Richard II died aged 33 in 1400. A hole was left in the side of his tomb so people could touch his royal head, but 376 years later some took advantage of this and stole his jawbone.
-The magic word "Abracadabra" was originally intended for the specific purpose of curing hay fever.
-The Puritans forbade the singing of Christmas Carols, judging them to be out of keeping with the true spirit of Christmas.
-Albert Einstein was once offered the Presidency of Israel. He declined saying he had no head for problems.
-Uri Geller, the professional psychic was born on December 20 1946. As to the origin of his alleged powers, Mr Geller maintains that they come from the distant planet of Hoova.
-Ralph and Carolyn Cummins had 5 children between 1952 and 1966, all were born on the 20 February.
-John D. Rockefeller gave away over US$ 500,000,000 during his lifetime.
-Only 1 child in 20 are born on the day predicted by the doctor.
-In the 1970's, the Rhode Island Legislature entertained a proposal that there be a $2 tax on every act of sexual intercourse in the State.
-Widows in equatorial Africa actually wear sackcloth and ashes when attending a funeral.
-The 'Hundred Years War' lasted 116 years.
Congrats on reading it all


Am i including the following:
color green
four leaf clover
Leprechuan and his pot of gold
St. Patty's Day Parade
compound sent.
complex sent.
transistion words

oh and are there any spelling/grammer mistakes...



In 390 Patricius Daorbae (St. Patrick) was born to . When he was 16 he was captured by Irish raiders. They brought him from his home to Ireland where they only worshiped the druids. He was a shepherd by day and a slave chained to a wall at night. Not far from the pasture that we worked in there was a family. He made friends with them. They also helped him escape from Ireland. Once he returned to his home in Wales he had a nightmare. He dreamed on how the Irish raiders made the people bow down to the druids. When Patrick woke up he knew what to do, he would become a priest to spread the faith- in Ireland. Once he became a priest he traveled back to Ireland. The king would let him teach about his God where ever he wanted, but he had to win a contest. The contest was between the Druid’s God and Patrick’s God. The Druids saw a storm coming so they pretended to ask their God for thunder, lighting and rain. Now it was Patrick’s turn he picked up a 3 leaf clover and said a prayer then in a matter of seconds the clouds disappeared and the sun shined again. So since Patrick won the contest he got to teach about his God where he wanted.
Once Patrick had died (in 460) he was buried like everyone single priest was, but what was different was that when the funeral was over the cross that he had always carried on his neck, which was nailed to the coffin suddenly changed form and from it a portal of some kind emerged. From this portal little men (who would latter be called leprechauns) emerged. They ran around like ants. Once every single leprechaun had exited from the portal they all started making a town. Some witnesses of this construction said “There only material was cobbler.” Every thing was made from it. “They were also making shoes” said another witness. There were also some playing pranks on one another. Once the clock struck 12 for the start of May 17 they dropped everything they were doing and ran into there houses grabbing their gold and running up the hill and down it. There was someone watching while they did this so when they were not looking he dug a hole and a few more came and 1 fell in the hole. Once the others had left he ran to get them, no one knows what happened after this but all they knew was that the farmer was no longer a poor farmer he was a rich man arriving to town on horses and not foot. They also knew that in the morning there was a big rainbow and a few people who were returning from a picnic were rich, they clamed to have found a huge pile of gold at the end of it. Soon a legend started: that every May 17 the leprechauns would run with their gold and try to hide it. Only a few people are lucky to catch them and once they do they are really rich. But a few people were just happy with finding a four leaf clover. According to legend, each leaflet represents something: the first is for hope, the second is for faith, the third is for love, and the fourth is for luck. Another Irish legend tells that the three leaf clover, or "Shamrock", was what Saint Patrick used to represent the Holy Trinity. The name "four-leaf clover" is a misnomer: the clover leaf actually consists of three leaflets.


Saint Patrick's Day is an annual feast day which celebrates Saint Patrick one of the patron saints of Ireland, and is generally celebrated on March 17. The day is the national holiday of Ireland. It is a bank holiday in Northern Ireland and a public holiday in the Republic of Ireland and Montserrat. In Canada, Great Britain, Australia, the United States, and New Zealand. Saint Patrick's Day is celebrated worldwide by those of Irish descent and increasingly by non-Irish people (usually in New Zealand, Australia, and North America). Celebrations are generally themed around all things Irish and, by association, the color green. Both Christians and non-Christians celebrate the secular version of the holiday by wearing green, eating Irish food and/or green foods, imbibing Irish drink (such as Irish stout, Irish Whiskey or Irish Cream) and attending parades. The parade is called the St. Patricks Day Parade. It takes place all over the globe. Many people also set traps on hoping to catch a leprechaun, but how ever you spend your day remember that everybody’s Irish on May 17.


Draco is a Greek name which means "dragon, serpent". This was the name of a 7th century Athenian lawgiver; the laws he made were so harsh that today we describe any severe or cruel law as "draconian".This is also the name of a constellation in the northern sky.

Patrick is from a Roman name which means "nobleman" in Latin. This name was adopted by the 5th-century Saint Patrick, whose birth name was Sucat. He was a Romanized Briton who was captured and enslaved in his youth by Irish raiders. After six years of servitude he escaped home, but he eventually became a bishop and went back to Ireland as a missionary. He is traditionally credited with Christianizing the island, and is regarded as Ireland's patron saint.

So is it a happy St Patrick's Day, or would that be too draconian?


Though St. Patrick's Day has become identified with Irish nationalism and Roman Catholic observance, its origins in America were Protestant, and British.

The ritual of the St. Patrick’s Day parade, what later became a manifestation of Irish nationalism and Roman Catholic observance, was actually established in the American colonies by Protestant Irish from Ulster, among whom were British soldiers.

The first St. Patrick’s Day celebration in what would be the future United States was held in Boston, March 17, 1737. This was the same year philosopher George Berkeley, contemporary of Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift, remarked in his “The Queriest”, a publication devoted to the economic and social improvement of Ireland, “Whose fault is it if Ireland still continues poor?”

At that time, perhaps having had their fill of such earnest, if seemingly only rhetorical, questions, Ulster Presbyterians had emigrated to Boston and New England. They arrived both for the economic opportunity presented in the colonies, (Berkeley himself came to live in Rhode Island for a time, before returning home to Ireland, eventually ordained an Anglican bishop there) as well as religious and political freedom in an era when the Penal Laws affected them along with disenfranchised Roman Catholics. These Ulstermen established the Irish Charitable Society in that year to aide fellow Irish immigrants. It is today the oldest Irish organization in North America.

Their first meeting and dinner to honor St. Patrick was an expression of their Protestant faith as well as their intention to bond with fellow Irish émigrés. Their 1775 meeting included British soldiers of Irish extraction. All proceeded, or marched, to the King’s Chapel to hear a sermon devoted to the occasion, and then continued on to a dinner in King Street.

No meetings by the Irish Charitable Society were held after this meeting in 1775 until 1883, because of the interruption of the Revolutionary War. One may guess on the popularity of British soldiers appearing in American St. Patrick’s Day parades after this event.

British soldiers were still the big show of the first St. Patrick’s Day parade in New York City in 1762. The first celebration in New York City was in 1756, at the Crown and Thistle tavern. Philadelphia held its first St. Patrick’s Day parade in 1771.

General George Washington issued a proclamation during the Revolutionary War, declaring March 17, 1780 a holiday for the Continental Army, then stationed in Morristown, New Jersey, in honor of the many soldiers of Irish ancestry and those born in Ireland. It was reported that this was the first holiday granted the troops in two years. Washington’s remark that the proclamation was “as an act of solidarity with the Irish in their fight for independence,” was possibly the origins of St. Patrick’s Day in America as an expression of Irish nationalism as much as Irish heritage or of honoring a Christian saint.

Within 50 years, Irish emigration to the United States exploded, spurred by the Great Famine in which millions in Ireland starved. The Irish-American resentment against the British, which may have been born during the American War of Independence from that nation, deepened with the anger of the new Irish immigrants, predominantly Roman Catholic, who celebrated St. Patrick’s Day in their new country with more freedom and certainly more fervor than they did in Ireland.

Today, there are 33.7 million Americans of Irish ancestry, Catholic and Protestant together, nine times the population of Ireland at 3.8 million.


Though St. Patrick's Day has become identified with Irish nationalism and Roman Catholic observance, its origins in America were Protestant, and British.

The ritual of the St. Patrick’s Day parade, what later became a manifestation of Irish nationalism and Roman Catholic observance, was actually established in the American colonies by Protestant Irish from Ulster, among whom were British soldiers.

The first St. Patrick’s Day celebration in what would be the future United States was held in Boston, March 17, 1737. This was the same year philosopher George Berkeley, contemporary of Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift, remarked in his “The Queriest”, a publication devoted to the economic and social improvement of Ireland, “Whose fault is it if Ireland still continues poor?”

At that time, perhaps having had their fill of such earnest, if seemingly only rhetorical, questions, Ulster Presbyterians had emigrated to Boston and New England. They arrived both for the economic opportunity presented in the colonies, (Berkeley himself came to live in Rhode Island for a time, before returning home to Ireland, eventually ordained an Anglican bishop there) as well as religious and political freedom in an era when the Penal Laws affected them along with disenfranchised Roman Catholics. These Ulstermen established the Irish Charitable Society in that year to aide fellow Irish immigrants. It is today the oldest Irish organization in North America.

Their first meeting and dinner to honor St. Patrick was an expression of their Protestant faith as well as their intention to bond with fellow Irish émigrés. Their 1775 meeting included British soldiers of Irish extraction. All proceeded, or marched, to the King’s Chapel to hear a sermon devoted to the occasion, and then continued on to a dinner in King Street.

No meetings by the Irish Charitable Society were held after this meeting in 1775 until 1883, because of the interruption of the Revolutionary War. One may guess on the popularity of British soldiers appearing in American St. Patrick’s Day parades after this event.

British soldiers were still the big show of the first St. Patrick’s Day parade in New York City in 1762. The first celebration in New York City was in 1756, at the Crown and Thistle tavern. Philadelphia held its first St. Patrick’s Day parade in 1771.

General George Washington issued a proclamation during the Revolutionary War, declaring March 17, 1780 a holiday for the Continental Army, then stationed in Morristown, New Jersey, in honor of the many soldiers of Irish ancestry and those born in Ireland. It was reported that this was the first holiday granted the troops in two years. Washington’s remark that the proclamation was “as an act of solidarity with the Irish in their fight for independence,” was possibly the origins of St. Patrick’s Day in America as an expression of Irish nationalism as much as Irish heritage or of honoring a Christian saint.

Within 50 years, Irish emigration to the United States exploded, spurred by the Great Famine in which millions in Ireland starved. The Irish-American resentment against the British, which may have been born during the American War of Independence from that nation, deepened with the anger of the new Irish immigrants, predominantly Roman Catholic, who celebrated St. Patrick’s Day in their new country with more freedom and certainly more fervor than they did in Ireland.

Today, there are 33.7 million Americans of Irish ancestry, Catholic and Protestant together, nine times the population of Ireland at 3.8 million


St Patrick was a saint and that makes St Patricks day a church holiday if you ask me. My parents don't think so though. Last year I was like mom we should go to church . She was all Who is filling your head with this church BS!Cant you go out and get f@#$ed up like a normal kid! I was all like mom I am not normal I am more spiritual and have become one with Jesus because I am a surfer! She goes how on earth did I raise such a doosh bag. Then she said something about me eating water and vinigar while her and my Dad had corn beef and cabbage. I said I was going to have fish instead because that is what Jesus would eat and this is a religeous holiday. She just looked disgusted and called for my dad. Now you have to understand my dad. He is 6'6 and drinks beer all day. He has a monkey and works Venice beach as an organ grinder. He smokes cigars, sings songs about getting drunk and having sex, and eats like no one else on the planet. His monkey is a dick too. So my mom tells him I want fish instead of corn beef. He was like no problem. He was cool which is bad because my dad is never cool. He left then and came back with a huge frozen mackerel that was like 4' long. He strapped it between his legs like it was his johnson and started chasing me saying he was going to put it in my butt but not in those words. He was laughing and so was my mom. Then he got tired and threw it at me. Then he goes to the pot where the corn beef was pulls it out and takes a bite, chugs a huge mug of beer and makes out with my mom with beer and corn beef juice running down there faces. So my question is shoud I ask my parents to go to church with me this year?
Why does everyone keep calling me a troll? What does that mean?
Kitteh you are hot,will you go out with me?


The women of the Tiwi tribe in the South Pacific are married at birth.
-When Albert Einstein died, his final words died with him. The nurse at his side didn't understand German.
-St Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, was not Irish.
-The lance ceased to be an official battle weapon in the British Army in 1927.
-St. John was the only one of the 12 Apostles to die a natural death.
-Many sailors used to wear gold earrings so that they could afford a proper burial when they died.
-Some very Orthodox Jew refuse to speak Hebrew, believing it to be a language reserved only for the Prophets.
-A South African monkey was once awarded a medal and promoted to the rank of corporal during World War I.
-Born 4 January 1838, General Tom Thumb's growth slowed at the age of 6 months, at 5 years he was signed to the circus by P.T. Barnum, and at adulthood reached a height of only 1 metre.
-Because they had no proper rubbish disposal system, the streets of ancient Mesopotamia became literally knee-deep in rubbish.
-The Toltecs, Seventh-century native Mexicans, went into battle with wooden swords so as not to kill their enemies.
-China banned the pigtail in 1911 as it was seen as a symbol of feudalism.
-The Amayra guides of Bolivia are said to be able to keep pace with a trotting horse for a distance of 100 kilometres.
-Sliced bread was patented by a jeweller, Otto Rohwedder, in 1928. He had been working on it for 16 years, having started in 1912.
-Before it was stopped by the British, it was the not uncommon for women in some areas of India to choose to be burnt alive on their husband's funeral pyre.
-Ivan the terrible claimed to have 'deflowered thousands of virgins and butchered a similar number of resulting offspring'.
-Before the Second World War, it was considered a sacrilege to even touch an Emperor of Japan.
-An American aircraft in Vietnam shot itself down with one of its own missiles.
-The Anglo-Saxons believed Friday to be such an unlucky day that they ritually slaughtered any child unfortunate enough to be born on that day.
-During the eighteenth century, laws had to be brought in to curb the seemingly insatiable appetite for gin amongst the poor. Their annual intake was as much as five million gallons.
-Ancient drinkers warded off the devil by clinking their cups
-The Nobel Prize resulted form a late change in the will of Alfred Nobel, who did not want to be remembered after his death as a propagator of violence - he invented dynamite.
-The cost of the first pay-toilets installed in England was tuppence.
-Pogonophobia is the fear of beards.
-In 1647 the English Parliament abolished Christmas.
-Mao Rse-Tang, the first chairman of the Chinese Communist Party, was born 26 December 1893. Before his rise to power, he occupied the humble position of Assistant Librarian at the University of Peking.
-Coffee is the second largest item of international commerce in the world. The largest is petrol.
-King George III was declared violently insane in 1811, 9 years before he died.
-In Ancient Peru, when a woman found an 'ugly' potato, it was the custom for her to push it into the face of the nearest man.
-For Roman Catholics, 5 January is St Simeon Stylites' Day. He was a fifth-century hermit who showed his devotion to God by spending literally years sitting on top of a huge flagpole.
-When George I became King of England in 1714, his wife did not become Queen. He placed her under house arrest for 32 years.
-The richest 10 per cent of the French people are approximately fifty times better off than the poorest 10 per cent.
-Henry VII was the only British King to be crowned on the field of battle
During World War One, the future Pope John XXIII was a sergeant in the Italian Army.
-Richard II died aged 33 in 1400. A hole was left in the side of his tomb so people could touch his royal head, but 376 years later some took advantage of this and stole his jawbone.
-The magic word "Abracadabra" was originally intended for the specific purpose of curing hay fever.
-The Puritans forbade the singing of Christmas Carols, judging them to be out of keeping with the true spirit of Christmas.
-Albert Einstein was once offered the Presidency of Israel. He declined saying he had no head for problems.
-Uri Geller, the professional psychic was born on December 20 1946. As to the origin of his alleged powers, Mr Geller maintains that they come from the distant planet of Hoova.
-Ralph and Carolyn Cummins had 5 children between 1952 and 1966, all were born on the 20 February.
-John D. Rockefeller gave away over US$ 500,000,000 during his lifetime.
-Only 1 child in 20 are born on the day predicted by the doctor.
-In the 1970's, the Rhode Island Legislature in the US entertained a proposal that there be a $2 tax on every act of sexual intercourse in the State.
-Widows in equatorial Africa actually wear sackcloth and ashes when attending a funeral.
-The 'Hundred Years War' lasted 116 years.
Congrats on readi


Christians, can we vow to pray the rosary daily to obtain the graces and favors of the Blessed Virgin? It takes about 1% of your day.

The Fifteen Promises of Mary to Christians Who Recite the Rosary

1. Whoever shall faithfully serve me by the recitation of the rosary shall receive signal graces.
2. I promise my special protection and the greatest graces to all those who shall recite the rosary.

3. The rosary shall be a powerful armour against hell, it will destroy vice, decrease sin, and defeat heresies.

4. It will cause virtue and good works to flourish; it will obtain for souls the abundant mercy of God; it will withdraw the hearts of men from the love of the world and its vanities, and will lift them to the desire of eternal things. Oh, that souls would sanctify themselves by this means.

5. The soul which recommends itself to me by the recitation of the rosary shall not perish.

6. Whoever shall recite the rosary devoutly, applying himself to the consideration of its sacred mysteries shall never be conquered by misfortune. God will not chastise him in His justice, he shall not perish by an unprovided death; if he be just he shall remain in the grace of God, and become worthy of eternal life.

7. Whoever shall have a true devotion for the rosary shall not die without the sacraments of the Church.

8. Those who are faithful to recite the rosary shall have during their life and at their death the light of God and the plentitude of His graces; at the moment of death they shall participate in the merits of the saints in paradise.

9. I shall deliver from purgatory those who have been devoted to the rosary.

10. The faithful children of the rosary shall merit a high degree of glory in heaven.

11. You shall obtain all you ask of me by the recitation of the rosary.

12. All those who propagate the holy rosary shall be aided by me in their necessities.

13. I have obtained from my Divine Son that all the advocates of the rosary shall have for intercessors the entire celestial court during their life and at the hour of death.

14. All who recite the rosary are my sons, and brothers of my only son Jesus Christ.

15. Devotion of my rosary is a great sign of predestination.


(Given to St. Dominic and Blessed Alan) Imprimatur: +Patrick J. Hayes, D.D., Archbishop of New York





I dont want a website just tell me ? c'mon


Who: Wolfe Tone
What: Wolfe Tone was a leading figure in the United Irishmen Irish independence movement and is regarded as the father of Irish republicanism
When: Tone lead Irish independence movement in
Where: Throughout Ireland
Why: Tone wanted political unity between Catholics and Protestants
How: Tone was a politician so his opinions showed. He also formed little secret societies

Who: Brian Boru
What: Brian Boru was an Irish king who overthrew the centuries-long domination of the Kingship of Ireland by the Uí Néill
When: Boru became ‘High King’ in 1002
Where: Boru was the king of South Ireland
Why: To gain power spread Christianity, and also to avenge the death of his brother, Mathgamain
How: He slowly went to war with each kingdom and killed the leaders, making himself king

Who: Daniel O’Connell
What: Daniel O’Connell was Ireland's predominant political leader in the first half of the nineteenth century
When: O’Connell fought for what he believed in starting in 1810 until his death in 1847
Where: Throughout Ireland
Why: He wanted the right for Catholics to sit in the Westminster Parliament, he also fought for Irish Jew’s rights
How: O’Connell put together many groups for his cause and he became a high political power so he could enforce his opinions


Who: St. Patrick
What: St. Patrick was a Roman Britain-born Christian missionary and is the patron saint of Ireland
When: St. Patrick ministered from 433 to 493
Where: Throughout modern day Ireland
Why: St. Patrick wanted to spread Christianity to all that he could
How: St. Patrick established monasteries, and set up schools and churches

Who: Catherine McAuley
What: Catherine McAuley was an Irish nun, who founded the Sisters of Mercy. She fought for education.
When: The Sisters of Mercy was founded in 1831, but Catherine McAuleys service started in 1826
Where: Catherine first started her deeds in Dublin but this spread throughout Ireland as the Sisters of Mercy grew.
Why: Catherine believed everyone should have the chance to learn
How: Catherine set up many homeless shelters where she taught the residents who came

Who: Michael Collins
What: Collins was an Irish revolutionary leader, Minister for Finance in the First Dáil of 1919, Director of Intelligence for the IRA, and member of the Irish delegation during the Anglo-Irish Treaty negotiations, both as Chairman of the Provisional Government and Commander-in-Chief of the National Army.
When: Collins joined an Irish revolutionary brotherhood in 1909 and continued his revolutionary ways until he was killed in 1922
Where: Throughout Ireland and Europe
Why: Collins believed that Ireland should be free from Britain’s control
How: He and fought and lead in the revolutionary wars

Who: St. Brigid
What: St. Brigid was an Irish Christian nun, abbess, and founder of several convents who is venerated as a saint
When: From 468 to 525
Where: St. Brigid taught to all of Ireland but she is mostly associated to have been in Kildare for that was where her most glorious foundation was.
Why: St. Brigid did all she did for her savior, Jesus Christ
How: She set up many foundations and helped any people

Who: Eamon de Valera
What: Eamon de Valera was one of the dominant political figures in 20th century Ireland
When: 1916 to 1975
Where: Throughout Ireland
Why: He believed that Ireland should be a free nation.
How: He was a leader in the Easter Rising. He was also elected president of several revolution groups. He raised 6 million dollars for Irish Independence.

Who: Gerry Adams
What: Gerry Adams is an Irish Republican politician and abstentionist Westminster Member of Parliament for Belfast West. He is President of Sinn Féin, which became the largest nationalist, republican or pro-Belfast Agreement political party in Northern Ireland in the 2005 UK general election.
When: 1972 to present day
Where: Ireland
Why: He wants Catholics and Protestants to live in peace with one another
How: By becoming higher politically People listen to what Gerry has to say

Who: Roger Casement
What: Casement was an Irish patriot, poet, revolutionary and nationalist
When: 1911 to 1916, when he was hanged for treason
Where: Ireland
Why: Casement believed that Irish should be independent from Britain
How: Casement decided that in order to get the Irish to revolt against the British control they had to turn on Britain. The perfect opportunity arose in World War II. He was going to side wih Germany and fight the British as well. Not many people likes this plan though and the efforts were somewhat unsuccessful. Casement then sent messages back to Ireland endeavouring to deter nationalist leaders from a planned armed rising and that was when he was arrested and killed.


I am an Irish person.Of late I have noticed that Americans will boast online about being "Irish", the majority of whom insist that all Irish people eat corned beef, that all Irish people are poor, that all Irish people are Roman Catholics with massive families, that the Irish national saints' day is theirs fortaking and call St.Patrick "Patty" and so on.How insulting!
When I correct these people they become abusive and use the anonmity of the Internet to sent me messages full of swear words and abuse.These people generally claim that they are Irish,because they have Irish ancestors from about 200 years ago.I have Scottish ancestors, but as I was born in Ireland I am Irish and not Scottish.My mother is from Northern Ireland,but I do not spread on the Internet that I am from Northern Ireland.Why can't Americans of Irish descent accept the same applies to them?
(Its not that I hate Americans, I went to school with some and I have a lovely American flatmate.)


We all know that when three-leaf clovers come out, it's St. Patrick's Day. This Irish holiday is always celebrated on March 17th, which is the day that Saint Patrick died. He was a missionary way back in the 4th century who converted the Irish to Christianity.
The History
Saint Patrick was born around 385 AD in the United Kingdom. His real name is believed to be Maewyn Succat (he took on Patrick, or Patricus, after he became a priest). When he was 16, he was kidnapped by a group of Irish raiders and sold into slavery in Ireland. During his six-year captivity as a shepherd, he began to have religious visions and found strength in his faith. He finally escaped to France and became a priest - and later a bishop. When he was about 60 years old, Saint Patrick returned to Ireland to spread the Christian word. He used the shamrock, which resembles a three-leafed clover, as a metaphor to explain the Christian concept of God (Father, Son and Holy Spirit).


Is it St. Patrick's birthdate? Is it the date he died? Became a saint? What's the deal?


I've come to the conclusion that since the religious meaning of St. Patrick's day has become completely lost, because in fairness, it is the religious celebration of the Patron Saint of Ireland, and not many people dig that.

Anyway, religion aside, cos I'm not in the slightest bit religious, is Paddy's day really more a day for the Irish diaspora abroad, all 70 million of them? Back in Ireland we do more or less what we always do at weekends. We get drunk and sing lots.

But most of these crazy traditions, and we were laughing at them tonight in the pub, like pinching someone for not wearing green, and eating corned beef (you people are MESSED UP!!!) aren't Irish at all, but are Irish American constructs.

I think it's great that the Irish diaspora is so proud of its roots, but it's just disappointing that instead of recognising the cultural and literary heritage of Ireland and her people, they just propogate a stereotype.

Don't get me wrong though, the stereotype is true.
Jone I've never heard of your silly little holiday. Fuck you with your fucking hostility. Fucker.


I mean, you've seen parades and people dresing up as leprechauns on that day right? Wait a minute...was that St. Patrick guy a leprechaun?


BRIGIT OF THE CELTS
-------------------
Brigit was one of the great Triple Goddesses of the Celtic people.
She appeared as Brigit to the Irish, Brigantia in Northern England,
Bride in Scotland, and Brigandu in Brittany. Many legends are told
about Brigit. Some say that there are three Brigits : one sister in
charge of poetry and inspiration who invented the Ogham alphabet,
one in charge of healing and midwifery, and the third in charge of the
hearth fire, smithies and other crafts. This catually indicates the
seperate aspects of her Threefold nature and is a neat division of
labor for a hard-working goddess.
Brigit was probably originally a Sun Goddess, and a charming story
of her birth is that she was born at sunrise and a tower of flame
burst from the forehead of the new born Goddess that reached from
Earth to Heaven. It was likely She who inspired the line in the famous
Song of Amergin: "I am a fire in the head." Her penchant for smithcraft
led to her association by the Romans with Minerva/Athena. As a warrior
Goddess, She favored the use of the spear or the arrow. Indeed, various
interpetations of her name exist including, "Bright Arrow," "The Bright
One," "the Powerful One" and "The High One," depending upon the region
and the dialect.
As a Goddess of herbalism, midwifery and healing She was in charge
of Water as well as Fire. I don't beleive that anyone has ever
counted all teh vast number of sacred wells and springs named after
or dedicated to this Goddess. A story is told of how two lepers came
to one of her sacred springs for healing and She instructed one Leper
to wash the other. The skin of the freshly bathed man was cleansed
of the disease and Brigit told the man who was healed to wash the man
who had bathed him so that both men would be whole. The man who was
healed was now too disgusted to touch the other Leper and would have
left him, but Brigit herself washed the leper and struck down the
other arrogant fellow with leperousy once more before he could leave.
Offerings to the watery Brigit were cast into the well in the form
of coins or, even more ancient, brass or gold rings. Other sacrifices
were offered where three streams came together. Her cauldron of
Inspiration connected her watery healing aspect with her fiery poetic
aspect.
Brigit is clearly the best example of the survival of a Goddess
into Christian times. She was cannonized by the Catholic church as
St. Brigit and various origins are given to this saint. The most
popular folktale is that She was midwife to the Virgin Mary, and thus
was always inviked by women in labor. The more official story was
that She was a Druid's daughter who predicted the coming of
Christianity and then was baptised by St. Patrick. She became a nun
and later an abbess who founded the Abbey at Kildare. The Christian
Brigit was said to have had the power to appoint the bishops of her
area, a strange role for an abbess, made stranger by her requirement
that her bishops also be practicing goldsmiths.
Actually, the Goddess Brigit had always kept a shrine at Kildare,
Ireland, with a perpetual flame tended by nineteen virgin priestesses
called Daughters of the Flame. No male was ever allowed to come near
it; nor did those women ever consort with men. Even their food and
other supplies were brought to them by women of the nearby village.
When Catholicism took over in Ireland, the shrine became a convent
and the priestesses became nuns but the same traditions were held
and the eternal flame was kept burning. Their tradition was that
each day a different priestess/nun was in charge of the sacred fire
and on the 20th day of each cycle, teh fire was miraculously tended
by Brigit Herself. There into the 18th century, the ancient song
was sung to her : "Brigit, excellant woman, sudden flame, may the
bright fiery sun take us to the lasting kingdom."
For over a thousand years, the sacred flame was tended by nuns,
and no one knows how long before that it had been tended by the
priestesses. In 1220 CE, a Bishop became angered by the no-males
policy of the Abbey of St. Brigit of Kildare. He insisted that nuns
were subordinate to priests and therefore must open their abbey
and submit themselves to inspection by a priest. When they refused
and asked for another Abbess or other female official to perform
any inspections, the Bishop was incensed. He admonished them to
obediance and then decreed that teh keeping of the eternal flame
was a Pagan custom and 6rdered the sacred flame to be extinguished.
Even then, She remained the most poular Irish saint along with
Patrick. In the 1960's, under Vatican II modernization, it was
declared that there was insufficient proof of Brigit's sanctity
or even of her historical existance, and so teh Church's gradual
pogrom against Brigit was successful at last and She was thus
decanonized. It is very difficult to obtain images or even holy
cards of ST. Brigit outside of Ireland anymore.
Her festival is held on Febuary 1st or 2nd. It corresponds to
the ancient Celtic fire festival of Imbolc or Oimelc which
celebrated the birthing and freshening of sheep and goats (it really
is a Feast of Milk). This festival was Christianized as Candlemas
or Lady Day and Her Feast day, La Feill Bhride, was attended by
tremendous local celebration and elaborate rituals. Her festival
is also called Brigit. Brigit (the Goddess and the Festival)
represents the stirring of life again after the dead months of the
winter, and her special blessings are called forth at this time.
Since She was booted out of teh Church for being Pagan, it is
incumbant upon us Pagans to restore Her worship to its former glory
especially those of us of Celtic ancestory. Here is an ancient rite
to invite Brigit into your home at the time of her Holiday:
Clean your hearth thoroughly in teh morning and lay a fire
without kindling it, then make yourself a "Bed for Brigid" and
place it near the hearth. The bed can be a small basket with covers
and tiny pillow added as plain or fancy as you like. If you have no
hearth, you can use the stove and put the bed behind it. Then at
sundown light a candle rubbed with rosemary oil and invite Brigit
into your home and into er bed; use the candle to kindle your
hearthfire if possible. Make your own poem to invite Her or use
the ancient song mentioned earlier. Let the candle burn at least
all night in a safe place. You might even want to begin the custom
of keeping the eternal flame; it is a popular custom in some
magickal and Wiccan traditions. AFter all, it's up to us now to
keep the spirit of Brigit alive and well for the next thousand
years at least!!!


By Morning Glory Zell from AMARGI Vol I. No.3 Feb. 1st 1989
Used By permission
It's a wonder in itself that the Christians have gotten along with their kneejerk rote rot for so long and even when confronted by historical fact.

Also, I am sorry the poor things have reading something so long. I suppose that is why they have never read their own Bibles and just repeat the words of their shouters.
It's a wonder in itself that the Christians have gotten along with their kneejerk rote rot for so long and even when confronted by historical fact.

Also, I am sorry the poor things have a problem reading something so long. I suppose that is why they have never read their own Bibles and just repeat the words of their shouters.
I'll look through the Lore library and see if I can get some telling info on Astarte to post in Ask.


Were you raised Catholic? What was it like? I attended Catholic school in Chicago and Los Angeles in the 1960's and 1970's. My family and I went to Mass every Sunday morning and sat in the same pews every time. My house, when we lived with my grandmother, had pictures of Our Lady of Fatima, La Virgen de Gudalupe, various saints, especially St. Anthony de Padua and St. Patrick, and crucifixions.

When we moved to LA, my mom put some of those portraits up, but it was not like my grandma's house. We became good friends with the local priest, like we were with our parish priest in Chicago. I am not as religious as I was when I was a kid, but I've still got a lot of those traditions, and when I look back it was not bad. I actually miss those days hiding behind the rectory playing marbles with my friends and the parish festivals/carnivals where we'd chase each other around.
Please, if you did not attend Catholic school or do not have an experience to share, whether it be one from a Catholic point of view or one similar, do not post anything. I do not want to be insulted and neither do others sharing their experience. Thank you.

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