FREEMASONRY:
FOUNDATION OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
Researched and Compiled by Pauly Fongemie for Catholic Tradition
PART
12: ST. PATRICK'S BREASTPLATE
Saint Patrick, the Apostle of Ireland, evangelized that land rife with
the occult, paganism, superstition, and is said to have drove the snakes
that infested it into the sea. In these bleak times might it not be
efficacious and a patriotic act to pray daily his Lorica or Breastplate?
The Breastplate of St.
Patrick,
also known as The Lorica
The Lorica
is an ancient Gaelic prayer attributed to St. Patrick and is an
invocation
to the Holy Trinity, usually recited in the morning. In the early Irish
Church, loricas were numerous; some were written in Gaelic and some in
Latin. In fact, the word,
Lorica, is Latin, meaning shield or breastplate.
Since prayer is a spiritual shield, these Irish loricas were prayed for
protection
against
spiritual evils, but also from physical ones; the loricas came into
being
when the Gaelic pagans converted to Catholicism: the loricas were the
replacement
for the old incantations, which the new Christians discarded.
I.
I bind
to myself today
The
strong power of an invocation of the Trinity,
The
faith of the Trinity in Unity
The
Creator of the Universe.
II.
I bind
to myself today
The
might of the Incarnation of Christ
with
that of His Baptism,
The
might of His Crucifixion with that of His Burial,
The
might of His Resurrection with that of His Ascension.
The
might of of His Coming on the Judgment Day.
III.
I bind
to myself today
The
power in the love of the Seraphim,
In
the obedience of the Angels,
In
the ministration of the Archangels,
In
the hope of Resurrection unto reward,
In
the prayers of the Patriarchs,
In
the predictions of the Prophets,
In
the preaching of the Apostles,
In
the faith of the Confessors,
In
the purity of the holy Virgins,
In
the deeds of righteous men.
IV.
I bind
to myself today
The
power of Heaven,
The
brightness of the Sun,
The
whiteness of Snow,
The
splendor of Fire,
The
speed of Lightning,
The
swiftness of the Wind,
The
depth of the Sea,
The
stability of the Earth,
The
firmness of Rocks.
V.
I bind
to myself today
God's
Power to pilot me,
God's
Might
to uphold me,
God's
Wisdom
to guide me,
God's
Eye
to look before me,
God's
Ear to hear me,
God's
Word to speak for me,
God's
Hand
to guard me,
God's
Way
to lie before me,
God's
Shield
to shelter me,
God's
Host
to secure me.
Against the snares of demons,
Against the seductions of vices,
Against the lusts of nature,
Against everyone who meditates injury to
me,
Whether
far or near,
Whether
few or with many.
VI.
I invoke
today all these virtues
Against every hostile merciless power
Which
may assail my body and my soul.
Against
the incantations of false prophets,
Against
the black laws of heathenism,
Against
the false laws of heresy,
Against
the deceits of idolatry,
Against
the spells of women, and smiths and
Druids,
Against
every knowledge that blinds the soul of man.
VII.
Christ
protect me today
Against
poison, against burning,
Against
drowning, against wounding,
That
I may receive abundant reward.
VIII.
Christ
with me, Christ before me, Christ behind me,
Christ
in me, Christ beneath me, Christ above me,
Christ
at my right, Christ at my left,
Christ
when lying down, Christ in sitting,
Christ
in rising up.
IX.
Christ
in the heart of every man who thinks of me,
Christ
in the mouth of every man who speaks of me,
Christ
in every eye that sees me,
Christ
in every ear that hears me.
X.
I bind
to myself today
The
strong power of an invocation of the Trinity,
The
faith of the Trinity in Unity
The
Creator of the Universe.
XI.
Salvation
is of the Lord,
Salvation
is of the Lord,
Salvation
is of Christ;
May
Your salvation, O Lord, be with
us
forever.
IN THE
ORIGINAL ALL THE VERSES BUT THE LAST WERE IN GAELIC, THE LAST BEING IN
LATIN. TRANSLATION FROM THE IRISH LIBER HYMNORUM, J. H. BERNARD,
D.D. AND R. ATKINSON, LL.D., 1898
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