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Thursday, February 1, 2024

Relics of St. Brigid to return home to Kildare 1,500 years after her death, Irish Independent

 Relics of St. Brigid to return home to Kildare 1,500 years after her death

St. Brigid’s remains were moved from Kildare in the year 800 to protect the relics from Viking attacks




Aisling Bolton-Dowling

The relics of St. Brigid will be welcomed home to Kildare for the first time in 1,000 years


On the 1500th year of the passing of St. Brigid, her relics will return home to Kildare after nearly a millennium.


The relics of St. Brigid will be welcomed ‘home’ to Co Kildare, where they will go on permanent display at Kildare Town Parish Church.

In preparation for the return of St. Brigid to Co Kildare, Into Kildare, which is the Kildare Tourism Board have mapped the movements of St. Brigid’s relics which have been away from Kildare for 1,000 years.

According to Into Kildare, it is believed that St. Brigid died in 524AD and was buried beside the main alter in her monastic church in Co Kildare. Her grave became an attraction for pilgrims throughout Ireland and Europe.

In the eighth century, a shrine was built for the saint, which was adorned by gold, silver and precious stones.

However, around the year 800, Vikings came to Ireland and plundered and attacked towns and churches around the country.

To protect the body of St. Brigid from Viking attack, her remains were moved to Downpatrick Cathedral in Northern Ireland, where she was buried in an unmarked grave beside St. Patrick and St. Columba.

The grave was purposely left unmarked in an attempt to protect it and keep the location a secret.

As years passed, the graves became too good of a secret as the location of the saints’ bodies including St. Brigid’s was forgotten.

For approximately 300 years, the location of the graves of Ireland’s patron saints was unknown.

That was until 1185, when according to the stories surrounding St. Brigid, the Bishop of Down was shown the location of the sacred relics by God, when the bodies of the three saints was found by a beam of light which shone on a section of the church floor.

The bodies of the three saints were found under the floor, with St. Patrick in the middle and St. Brigid and St. Columba on either side.

In 1186, the bodies were enshrined for 400 years, until Lord Leonard Grey, the appointee of King Henry VIII destroyed the shrine.

St. Brigid’s remains were saved although the shrine was destroyed, and her remains were secretly transported to the continent.

According to tradition, three Irish knights took a bone fragment from her head to Lumiar, which is a small town outside Lisbon in Portugal in the 13th Century. The relic is still in the Church of St. John the Baptist in Lumiar.

David Mongey, The Chairman of Into Kildare, the Kildare Tourism Board explained, “The relics of St. Brigid have not been in County Kildare for nearly 1,000 years. This year is the 1500th year of the passing of the saint and what could be more special than to bring St. Brigid’s relics home, where she belongs?

"She built her church in Kildare and her legacy as a peace maker and a protector of nature is still as relevant today as ever.”

He added: “It has been a long process to finally bring her relics back to the county and together with my colleagues at Into Kildare we would like to thank Kildare County Council and the Brigideen sisters in for their great work in bringing Brigid home.”

Thousands of people are expected to attend this momentous occasion, will take place on Sunday January 28. A procession will accompany the relics from Solas Bhride Centre in Tully outside Kildare Town at 10.30am, where they will then proceed to Kildare Town Parish Church.

The relics will then be taken into the church by the Bishop of Kildare & Leighlin, Bishop Denis Nulty who will celebrate a special mass at 11am.


Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Celebrate St. Brigit of Kildare- Her Feast Day is Feb. 1st and a National Holiday in Ireland

People’s Catholic Seminary invites you to cerebrate the powerful legacy and spiritual presence of St. Brigid of Kildare as a companion on the journey to living life fully, joyfully and peacefully in a free program for individuals or groups offered by Irish-born Bridget Mary Meehan.

 https://pcseminary.teachable.com/p/pcs-705-celebrating-st-brigid-of-kildare




Song for Brigid by Mick Brown

Song for Brigid - Mick Brown

Our prayers we raise to Brigid, woman of the earth

The winter it is leaving us, and the land is giving birth

The birds will soon arrive here, the lambs are in the fields

We kneel on Mother Earth with you, the Springtime it is here


You Walked the fields and forests, over mountain valley plain

Through a land of Adoration, singing out its praise

The trees the flowers, the fishes, the blackbirds in the air

Mother earth provides for us, from earths abundant praise

Chorus

Brigid, Brigid, your fire is burning bright

Take us from the darkness, lead us to the light


Your Celtic prayers ran deep, as the river rolled along

Calling all with ears to hear, to join you in your song

Word rang through the valley, Everyone belongs

All on earth are welcome, to the banquet in the Sun

Chorus

Brigid Brigid, your fire is burning bright

Take us from the darkness, Lead us to the light

(Extra optional verse)

We seek you when we're broken, seek you when we're strong

You're fire eternal burning, everything that's wrong

Compassion lights the shadows, till the darkness is all gone

We are young but we are growing, in the love where we belong


©2017 Mick Brown, Music & Lyrics, All Rights Copyright 

On Saint Brigid's Feast Day, Tend to that Flame for Peace and Justice


On February 1, devotees of Saint Brigid celebrate her feast day, which coincides with the Gaelic holiday Imbolc (or Imbolg). This year is special for the patroness of Ireland: 2024 marks 1500 years since Brigid's death. Irish women have revived and preserved her legacy over the last 100 years, positioning Brigid as a pioneering leader, a compassionate healer, and a sacred steward of the Earth.


About thirty miles outside Dublin, on the edge of the vast Curragh, three Brigidine sisters tend to Saint Brigid's eternal flame. 


The flame hasn't always burned continuously, nor has it always burned in Kildare, the town most associated with Brigid. These sisters reignited the flame in 1993, the first time since the 16th century, several hundred years after Anglo-Norman soldiers captured Kildare and the monastery at its center—the one with an ancient fire temple maintained by a long lineage of Brigid's devotees. Following centuries of conquests, destruction, and occupation, these modern sisters carried the re-lit flame across Ireland and beyond as an enduring symbol of peace and justice. Eventually, they returned the flame home to Kildare and its current resting place, the spirituality center Solas Bhríde.



More links:

https://www.lmfm.ie/news/news-extra/nationwide-saint-brigids-day-programme-from-county-louth/


https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2024/jan/31/st-brigid-in-ireland-kildare-near-dublin



THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2024

 Relics of St. Brigid to return home to Kildare 1,500 years after her death

St. Brigid’s remains were moved from Kildare in the year 800 to protect the relics from Viking attacks




Aisling Bolton-Dowling

The relics of St. Brigid will be welcomed home to Kildare for the first time in 1,000 years


On the 1500th year of the passing of St. Brigid, her relics will return home to Kildare after nearly a millennium.


The relics of St. Brigid will be welcomed ‘home’ to Co Kildare, where they will go on permanent display at Kildare Town Parish Church.

In preparation for the return of St. Brigid to Co Kildare, Into Kildare, which is the Kildare Tourism Board have mapped the movements of St. Brigid’s relics which have been away from Kildare for 1,000 years.

According to Into Kildare, it is believed that St. Brigid died in 524AD and was buried beside the main alter in her monastic church in Co Kildare. Her grave became an attraction for pilgrims throughout Ireland and Europe.

In the eighth century, a shrine was built for the saint, which was adorned by gold, silver and precious stones.

However, around the year 800, Vikings came to Ireland and plundered and attacked towns and churches around the country.

To protect the body of St. Brigid from Viking attack, her remains were moved to Downpatrick Cathedral in Northern Ireland, where she was buried in an unmarked grave beside St. Patrick and St. Columba.

The grave was purposely left unmarked in an attempt to protect it and keep the location a secret.

As years passed, the graves became too good of a secret as the location of the saints’ bodies including St. Brigid’s was forgotten.

For approximately 300 years, the location of the graves of Ireland’s patron saints was unknown.

That was until 1185, when according to the stories surrounding St. Brigid, the Bishop of Down was shown the location of the sacred relics by God, when the bodies of the three saints was found by a beam of light which shone on a section of the church floor.

The bodies of the three saints were found under the floor, with St. Patrick in the middle and St. Brigid and St. Columba on either side.

In 1186, the bodies were enshrined for 400 years, until Lord Leonard Grey, the appointee of King Henry VIII destroyed the shrine.

St. Brigid’s remains were saved although the shrine was destroyed, and her remains were secretly transported to the continent.

According to tradition, three Irish knights took a bone fragment from her head to Lumiar, which is a small town outside Lisbon in Portugal in the 13th Century. The relic is still in the Church of St. John the Baptist in Lumiar.

David Mongey, The Chairman of Into Kildare, the Kildare Tourism Board explained, “The relics of St. Brigid have not been in County Kildare for nearly 1,000 years. This year is the 1500th year of the passing of the saint and what could be more special than to bring St. Brigid’s relics home, where she belongs?

"She built her church in Kildare and her legacy as a peace maker and a protector of nature is still as relevant today as ever.”

He added: “It has been a long process to finally bring her relics back to the county and together with my colleagues at Into Kildare we would like to thank Kildare County Council and the Brigideen sisters in for their great work in bringing Brigid home.”

Thousands of people are expected to attend this momentous occasion, will take place on Sunday January 28. A procession will accompany the relics from Solas Bhride Centre in Tully outside Kildare Town at 10.30am, where they will then proceed to Kildare Town Parish Church.

The relics will then be taken into the church by the Bishop of Kildare & Leighlin, Bishop Denis Nulty who will celebrate a special mass at 11am.

Prayer to St. Brigid


St. Brigid, 

You were a woman of peace.

 You brought harmony where there was conflict. You brought light to the darkness. 

You brought hope to the downcast.

 May the mantle of your peace cover those who are troubled and anxious,

 and may peace be firmly rooted in our hearts and in our world. 

Inspire us to act justly and to reverence all God has made.