Celtic Trail: A Better Way to Believe
~ by Danut Manastireanu, Romania
Whatever our deeply held religious beliefs or worldviews, there are different ways to communicate it to others. How we believe is equally important as what we believe. Recently I had the extraordinary opportunity of a study trip on Celtic spirituality, following in the footsteps of St. Patrick, Columba, and Aidan. Sharing cherished convictions and practices in a way that honors the others is the true test of our faith and character.
The trail began in Downpatrick in Northern Ireland the origination point of the magnificent story of St. Patrick. In the fifth century, Irish raiders abducted the boy Patrick and made him a slave in Celtic territory. There he had a personal encounter with God that changed his life. After a miraculous escape, Patrick returned to Britain, became a priest, and felt God's call to return to Ireland and become an apostle and prophet among the Celts.
Missions and missionaries do not always have a good name these days. Patrick, however, was a different kind of missionary. He did not have a faith to sell, but a story to tell. And his incredible personal life gave authority to the story. He did not try to uproot the druidic traditions of the Celts, but reconstituted them and incorporated them into a creative, courageous Christian faith. At the end of his life, one chronicler observes, Celtic lands knew a long-lasting peace unprecedented in the history of this most temperamental nation.
From Ireland, we moved to Iona, a tiny island south-west of Scotland, where Columba, a Celtic monk from Ireland landed in 563 AD with twelve of his disciples. Columba’s arrival changed the face of the island. He established a monastery, and taught the community to read and write. They were known as "people of the Book" and brought the Christian faith to the Hebrides and Britain, and to the feared Picts that inhabited Scotland at the time. Columba’s version of Christianity, inspired by the vision of Pelagius was: a rural community, close to nature, democratic, gender balanced, optimistic about the goodness of humanity, poetic and passionate. This community stood in striking contrast to the Roman version of the Christian faith rooted in the vision of Augustine: an urban community, imperial, hierarchical, institutional, pessimistic about the human nature, and somewhat impersonal.
The last leg of the Celtic trail took us to Lindisfarne, the "holy island" in the north of England, where Aidan, a monk from the Iona community, came at the request of Oswald the king of Northumbria and established a Christian mission to the population in that territory in 631 AD. Aidan served the poor and liberated slaves with the riches he received. He established schools, challenged the powerful about their abuses and preached the love of God in Christ to this troubled generation. Not long after Aidan, the Roman version of Christianity became prevalent, and Celtic Christianity faded into the background, surviving only as an undercurrent in a world dominated by Rome.
Who knows what the history of the world could have been if the faith of Patrick, Columba and Aidan had prevailed? Who knows what the future of the world can be if our religions would learn to follow the trails like these?
Danut Manastireanu is an economist and theologian who lives in Iasi, Romania. Danut is married to Mihaela and they have two grown up children and five grand children. He holds a PhD in theology from Brunel University, London and works as Director for Faith & Development for the Middle East & Eastern Europe region of World Vision International.

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Thank you for the reminder of the beauty of the Celtic Way. On a trip to Ireland a couple years ago, I traveled with Esther DeWaal's book "The Celtic Way of Prayer: the Recovery of the Religious Imagination" providing insights to the Celtic Way. It gave added meaning to the cathedral visits and ancient circles of stone that we sought out. Seeing God speak down through history stirs the soul.
Posted by:Bonnie Dwyer | Sep 12, 2007 at 07:58 PM
Yes I agree with you on believing Jesus in a better way every Christian should have a faith on there sole and interest, dedication towards the god. Than defiantly we can understand and believe the god in a better way. Thanks for a nice post.
Posted by: Lutheran church | Nov 08, 2007 at 02:41 AM