Saint Brigid, “the Mary of the Gael,” was born around 450 in
Faughart, about two miles from Dundalk in County Louth. According to
Tradition, her father was a pagan named Dubthach, and her mother was
Brocessa (Broiseach), one of his slaves.
Even as a child, she was
known for her compassion for the poor. She would give away food,
clothing, and even her father’s possessions to the poor. One day he took
Brigid to the king’s court, leaving her outside to wait for him. He
asked the king to buy his daughter from him, since her excessive
generosity made her too expensive for him to keep. The king asked to see
the girl, so Dubthach led him outside. They were just in time to see
her give away her father’s sword to a beggar. This sword had been
presented to Dubthach by the king, who said, “I cannot buy a girl who
holds us so cheap.”
St Brigid received monastic tonsure at the
hands of St Mael of Ardagh (February 6). Soon after this, she
established a monastery on land given to her by the King of Leinster.
The land was called Cill Dara (Kildare), or “the church of the oak.”
This was the beginning of women’s cenobitic monasticism in Ireland.
The
miracles performed by St Brigid are too numerous to relate here, but
perhaps one story will suffice. One evening the holy abbess was sitting
with the blind nun Dara. From sunset to sunrise they spoke of the joys
of the Kingdom of Heaven, and of the love of Christ, losing all track of
time. St Brigid was struck by the beauty of the earth and sky in the
morning light. Realizing that Sister Dara was unable to appreciate this
beauty, she became very sad. Then she prayed and made the Sign of the
Cross over Dara’s eyes. All at once, the blind nun’s eyes were opened
and she saw the sun in the east, and the trees and flowers sparkling
with dew. She looked for a while, then turned to St Brigid and said,
“Close my eyes again, dear Mother, for when the world is visible to the
eyes, then God is seen less clearly by the soul.” St Brigid prayed
again, and Dara became blind once more.
St Brigid fell asleep in
the Lord in the year 523 after receiving Holy Communion from St Ninnidh
of Inismacsaint (January 18). She was buried at Kildare, but her relics
were transferred to Downpatrick during the Viking invasions. It is
believed that she was buried in the same grave with St Patrick (March
17) and St Columba of Iona (June 9).
Late in the thirteenth
century, her head was brought to Portugal by three Irish knights on
their way to fight in the Holy Land. They left this holy relic in the
parish church of Lumiar, about three miles from Lisbon. Portions of the
relic were brought back to Ireland in 1929 and placed in a new church of
St Brigid in Dublin.
The relics of St Brigid in Ireland were destroyed in the sixteenth century by Lord Grey during the reign of Henry VIII.
The
tradition of making St Brigid’s crosses from rushes and hanging them in
the home is still followed in Ireland, where devotion to her is still
strong. She is also venerated in northern Italy, France, and Wales.
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