For those on the rare occasion that one might commemorate St. Patrick. 

Readings: Isaiah 52:7-10; 1 Thes 2:2-12; Matt 28:16-20

Collect for St. Patrick:
Almighty God, through Your Church, You chose Your servant, Patrick, to bring 
Your Word and Sacrament to the Irish people, so the light of the Gospel would 
shine among them. Grant that we may walk in that Light, so we may also come at 
last into the glory of Your eternal presence. Through Jesus Christ, our Lord, 
we pray, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, one God now and 
into the ages of ages. 
Amen. 


Gradual:
How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news,
who publish peace and good news of salvation. 
Their voice has gone out to all the earth
and their words to the ends of the earth. 

Proper Preface:
It is truly good, right, and salutary that we should at all times and in all 
places give thanks to You, holy Lord, almighty Father, everlasting God. In the 
communion of all Your saints gathered into the one body of Your Son, You have 
surrounded us with so great a cloud of witnesses that we, encouraged by their 
faith and strengthened by their fellowship, may run with perseverance the race 
that is set before us and, together with them, receive the crown of glory that 
does not fade away. Therefore with angels and archangels and with all the 
company of heaven we laud and magnify Your glorious name, evermore praising You 
and saying:

Post-Communion Collect:
Almighty and ever-living God, we thank You that You have fed us in this holy 
mystery with the body and blood of Your Son, our Savior Jesus Christ. 
Strengthen us with Your grace, so we may continue as true members in the 
mystical body of Your Son, the Church, and produce the fruits of faith; through 
the same Jesus Christ, Your Son, our Lord, to whom with You and the Holy Spirit 
be all honor and glory, now and forever. 
Amen. 



Intro
St. Matthew recalls Isaiah’s prophecy: “The people living in darkness have seen 
a bright light, and for those living in the land and shadow of death, a light 
has risen” (Matthew 4:16).  Through his words, Matthew tells us that Jesus 
fulfilled Isaiah’s prophecies by bringing to us His healing and salvation. 

In the book of Acts, St. Luke echoes the same theme, about what the Word of God 
does.  He says the Word of God grew and spread (Acts 12:24).  And as the Word 
spread, the Holy Spirit brought more people into the Faith, into the Church of 
Christ.  

Main Body
Today, on this St. Patrick’s Day, our minds focus on a different area of 
geography: Not Judea or Samaria, but the outer reaches of the world, Ireland.  
Yet, Patrick’s mission was the same one that Paul and Barnabas had in the book 
of Acts.  In the 5th century, Patrick brought the life-creating Word of the 
Gospel to those islands at the far reaches of Europe, the outpost of 
civilization and order. 

Today, we remember God using Patrick to light the fire of Easter triumph on the 
isle of Ireland, then known as Hibernia.  But who was Patrick, the man?  He was 
born in 385, in what today is Scotland.  This was a time when Christianity had 
made its way into what is now the British Isles.  Yet, the darkened pall of 
paganism had still kept Ireland in its icy grip.  

When Patrick was 14, Irish marauders went on a foray, capturing people to bring 
them back to Ireland as slaves.  Patrick was among them.  Once in Ireland, he 
was a slave for six years, herding and tending sheep.  But as a slave, Patrick 
also learned the language and practices of the people who had enslaved him.  

When Patrick was 20, he escaped.  Making his way to the coast of Ireland, he 
found some sailors who took him back to Britain, where he reunited with his 
family.  Patrick later began his theological studies, eventually becoming a 
pastor in the Church.  

Today, we know that Patrick traveled back to Ireland.  But why would Patrick 
choose to go to the place where he was a slave?  It couldn’t have been the love 
that he had for the people there.  While he was there, he didn’t experience 
smiling Irish eyes.  For if life was so good, why did he escape and make his 
way back to Britain?  

Patrick’s life would mirror that of Joseph in the Old Testament.  Joseph told 
his brothers who had sold him into slavery, “You planned evil against me, but 
God intended it for good” (Genesis 50:20).  What was evil in Patrick’s life, 
God intended for the good, even for those who had enslaved him. 

So, why did Patrick go back to Ireland?  It was because he was a pastor in 
Christ’s Church and his bishop sent him there as a missionary.  And Patrick’s 
bishop sent him because of the sending Word that Jesus first spoke to His 
Apostles: “Disciple all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, Son, 
and Holy Spirit, teaching them to keep all that I have commanded you.” 

So Patrick went.  No doubt, his years of slavery among the Irish had prepared 
him to serve the people there.  He knew their language and their ways.  But, if 
we’re honest, we must set our romantic thinking about Patrick aside and 
recognize that he went to Ireland because he was an obedient pastor and 
listened to his bishop. 

But, if we’re honest, we also know that it was more than that.  The Holy Spirit 
also drew Patrick into the sending that began in the heart of God the Father.  
What sending was that?  That was when the Father sent His Son, Jesus, to take 
on human flesh for our salvation.  But the sending did not stop there.  

Jesus also sent His disciples turned Apostles.  He told them on Easter evening, 
“As the Father has sent me, so also am I sending you” (John 20:21).  And in our 
Gospel reading, Jesus tells the Eleven: “Disciple the nations.”  A short time 
later, the Father sent His Holy Spirit through His Son.  This was so the Spirit 
would work through God’s spoken Word, bringing the life of Christ into a dying 
world. 

So, Patrick returned to the land of his slavery.  He was part of our Lord’s 
constant sending, whom the Holy Spirit would use to bring others into the 
Faith, returning them to the Lord.  Indeed, the Holy Spirit had brought Patrick 
into God’s glorious work of bringing back and binding up what sin had left dead 
and broken. 

As Patrick went to the Irish, he went as a part of our Lord’s sending ministry. 
 That’s the apostolic ministry, whose work is to bring us fallen children of 
men back to God through the life, death, and resurrection of Christ Jesus.    

Yet, how does God the Father gather us into the Church?  It is through baptism, 
as our Gospel reading for today clearly tells us.  That’s where the Holy Spirit 
works through the water and Word to save us (1 Peter 3:21).  That’s where the 
Spirit brings us the benefits of what Jesus did to save us.  That’s where we 
are brought into life of the Triune God, into whose name we are baptized.  

But baptism doesn’t die its death when the water is gone.  For someone’s 
baptism continues in the life of the disciple as the Holy Spirit repeatedly 
brings him to turn from his falleness back to Christ’s life-renewing 
forgiveness.  That’s why, as Christ’s people, we don’t say, “I was baptized” 
but “I am baptized.”

Having such a strong understanding that a Christian’s life is one of living in, 
and returning to, the Triune God into whom one is baptized, Patrick penned 
these words. 

I bind unto myself today the strong name of the Trinity, by invocation of the 
same, the Three in One, the One in Three.  

I bind this day to me forever by power of faith Christ’s incarnation, His 
baptism in the Jordan river, His cross of death for my salvation, His bursting 
from the spiced tomb, His riding up the heavenly way, His coming at the day of 
doom, I bind unto myself today…. 

Against the demon snares of sin, the vice that give temptation force, the 
natural lusts that war within, the hostile foes that mar my course; or few and 
many, far and nigh, in every place and in all hours, against the fierce 
hostility, I bind to me those holy powers. 

I bind unto myself today the strong name of the Trinity, by invocation of the 
same, the Three in One, the One in Three, of whom all nature has creation, 
eternal Father, Spirit, Word.  Praise to the Lord of my salvation; Salvation is 
of Christ the Lord!  [LSB 604]

So, St. Patrick’s Day isn’t about wearing green clothes.  It’s not about 
remembering your Irish heritage.  It’s not about drinking green beer.  
Ironically, it’s not even about Patrick.  It’s about what God carried out 
through Patrick, who wasn’t even Irish!  

And so the Lord is reminding us that our gathering and serving here as His 
people doesn’t center on us.  No, it centers on Jesus for us.  Today, St. 
Patrick’s Day has become a day about everything Irish, instead of everything 
Jesus. 

We live living in a culture that has distorted St. Patrick’s Day.  We live in a 
land that largely sees Jesus as irrelevant.  And in our sinfulness, we too may 
try to change Christ’s Church in the same way that our culture has changed St. 
Patrick’s Day.  For being faithful to Jesus isn’t popular and doesn’t draw in 
the crowds.  And so our sinful flesh will tell us to look to something other 
than Jesus.  In the same way that the word of Jesus now falls on many deaf 
ears, something other than Jesus can also dazzle us.  

Yet, if we are to remain in Christ’s Church, then we must be faithful to the 
Head of the Church, Jesus Christ.  As Church, we are faithfully to preach His 
Word and give out His Sacraments, just as He has given us to do. 

Patrick probably had mixed emotions as he looked to the land where the people 
had enslaved him.  He probably had second thoughts about what the Lord had 
given to him to do.  Yet, what propelled him forward, and what also propels us 
forward, are the beautiful bookends of our Lord’s words in today’s Gospel 
reading.  

Jesus says, “All authority in heaven on earth has been given to me… And 
remember, I am with always, even to the end of the age.”  What Jesus has given 
His Church to do centers on Him, the One who is with us to the end of the age.  
In and through Jesus, With Him at the center, the Church then faithfully 
carries out what He has given her to do. 

The all-authoritative Christ is always with His Church, doing what He has 
promised to do.  He has promised to be with us always.  He will not abandon us. 
 No, He will be with us until the end.  And He is with us, through His means of 
grace: the Gospel preached and the Sacraments given out according to His 
command.  

Confirming this truth, Jesus stands before us today, in His Supper, in His 
flesh and blood.  That’s His flesh and blood that died to save us.  That’s His 
flesh and blood that rose from the grave, all so we may have life in His name.  
That’s His flesh and blood that spoke those powerful, sending words to the 
Eleven, His Apostles. 

Conclusion
In His flesh and blood, Jesus still speaks to us today, even amid our fears and 
failures, our worries and our doubts.  Jesus says, “All authority has been 
given to Me.  Fear not, for I am with you always.  Go in My peace.  For in Me, 
you will bear much fruit.”  Amen. 


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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