A Book Review by Marta Alves © 2008
HOW THE IRISH SAVED CIVILIZATION ©1995 by Thomas Cahill
Thomas Cahill tells us how the
Irish monks beginning with Saint Patrick saved Western Civilization.
Patrick brought Christianity to the barbarians in Ireland
in the fifth century. When the Roman Empire was coming to an end and going from
“peace to chaos,” in Ireland it was vice-versa.
The Irish admired Patrick because he was not afraid
of them (See book page124) His commitment, “his steadfast loyalty and
supernatural generosity must have moved them deeply.” (124) The Irish from of
old had great respect for loyalty, courage and generosity and he taught them its
Christian equivalent of “faith, hope and charity.” (124) The difference between
the superstitious Irish and Patrick is that Patrick believes that “all beings
and events come from the hand of a good God, who loves human beings and wishes
them success.” (131) That did not exclude suffering in this life but God is in
control at all times. Within a generation after Patrick, they “had mastered
Latin and even Greek and, as best they could, were picking up some Hebrew.”
(164) They made Irish grammar and “copied out the whole of their native oral
literature.”
The Irish as they transcribed the different documents
respected their content. As
time went on, the art of the Irish Codex developed. A Codex was a book made out
of dried sheepskin (mottled parchment) or vellum (calfskins) for the more
honored text.
Today, beautiful Irish manuscripts of the early medieval
period are found in great libraries throughout Europe.
Cahill uses Augustine as a mean of viewing the classical
world. (58) Augustine was among the last classically educated men.
Augustine was never a slave, Patrick was. Augustine
was able to reconcile ancient philosophy with Christian theology, Patrick lived
it. He copied the text to preserve them for future generations. Patrick wrote
two books himself, Augustine wrote several. Augustine did not have anything to
do with the barbarians in North Africa. Patrick went out among the barbarians
and won their respect, Christianizing them in the process. Augustine lived
within Romanized Christianity, and Patrick brought Christianity to form part of
the Irish culture. His way of understanding Christianity was different from
Augustine who preached on the human weakness of original sin. Patrick was
convinced that “even slave traders can turn into liberators, even murders can
act as peacemakers, even barbarians can take their places among the nobility in
heaven.”(115) Patrick’s
sense of “the world as holy, as the Book of God,” (133) according to Cahill,
could not come from the Greco-Roman world which had a pessimism, a suspicion of
the body as unholy, and of the world lacking meaning.
What was lost when the Roman Empire fell? The civilization
that had been cultivated for hundreds of years, the knowledge of philosophy,
law, politics, literature, cuisine, arts, horticulture, vinivulture,
agriculture, husbandry, and the art of making war. The barbarians were hungry
and feeding the mind was not one of their first needs.
The barbarian tribes wanted to satisfy their
immediate need and did not see any value in preserving culture. The value of a
Codex to them was none existent. To the Pax Romana they brought chaos while in
Ireland, Patrick brought peace to the chaos of a war torn country.
Ireland spread Christianity in untamed territories by
establishing monasteries everywhere they went. One of Patrick’s followers,
Columcille, Christianized Scotland, then Aian went to Northern England (187).
Brendan went to Iceland, Greenland and North America. Columbanus went to the
European continent. Irish monks revived the continent from the pessimism of
barbarian destruction.
According
to Cahill, the Irish Monks copied the works and were the conduit that brought
the culture back to Europe in later centuries. “Wherever they went the Irish
brought with them their books, many unseen in Europe for centuries and tied to
their waists as signs of triumph, just as Irish heroes had once tied to their
waists their enemies’ heads. Wherever they went they brought their love of
learning and their skills in bookmaking. In the bays and valleys of their exile,
they reestablished literacy and breathed new life into the exhausted literary
culture of Europe. And that is how the Irish saved civilization.” (196)
V
A Book Review by Marta Alves © 2008
Email faithleap@att.net for permission to reproduce Marta Alves © 2008