St. Patrick's Breastplate (Lorica of Saint Patrick)
St. Patrick's Breastplate, known in Irish as the Lorica Phadraig, is one of the oldest and most powerful prayers of the Celtic Christian tradition. A lorica — Latin for breastplate or armor — is a prayer of binding and protection, invoking the power of Christ and the whole company of heaven as a shield against spiritual and physical danger. Attributed to Saint Patrick of Ireland (~389–461 AD), it is a masterpiece of trinitarian devotion, creation theology, and the Celtic conviction that Christ permeates all things.
Scripture References
Context & Background
The Lorica Phadraig — the Breastplate of Patrick — stands at the summit of Celtic Christian literature. Its authorship has been debated by scholars since the early medieval period, but Irish ecclesiastical tradition has attributed it to Saint Patrick with remarkable consistency, and the theological vision it expresses corresponds precisely to what Patrick reveals about himself in his authentic writings: the Confessio and the Letter to Coroticus. Whether Patrick himself composed the Latin and Old Irish verses that lie behind our received text, or whether the prayer was written in his memory and in his theological spirit by a later disciple, it is in every meaningful sense a Patrician prayer. Saint Patrick was born in Roman Britain around 389 AD, the son of a deacon and the grandson of a priest, though by his own admission he had little faith in his youth. At sixteen he was kidnapped by Irish raiders and spent six years as a slave in Ireland, tending sheep on the slopes of what is now County Mayo. In his Confessio, he writes that during those years of captivity he prayed constantly — "the love of God and His fear came to me more and more" — and his faith became the anchor of his survival. After escaping and returning to Britain, he experienced a call in a dream to return to Ireland as a missionary. He was ordained, trained in Gaul, and returned to the island of his captivity around 432 AD. His mission was transformative: in the space of a generation, Ireland moved from a largely pagan society to a Christian one, and the Irish church became one of the great centers of learning and missionary activity in the medieval world. The word lorica (breastplate) belongs to an ancient genre of protective prayer with roots in both Celtic pagan tradition and Christian Scripture. The immediate biblical parallel is Paul's description of the armor of God in Ephesians 6:11–18: "Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil... the breastplate of righteousness... the shield of faith... the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God." The lorica transforms this military metaphor into prayer, with the believer actively calling down divine protection at the start of each day against spiritual attack, natural danger, human hostility, and demonic influence. The repetition of "I bind unto myself" is a liturgical act of binding — a theological claim that the power being invoked is genuinely attached to the one who prays. The Breastplate's theological structure is trinitarian at its spine and robustly incarnational in its Christology. The opening and closing stanzas frame everything with the "strong Name of the Trinity" — a distinctly Patrician emphasis; Patrick's Confessio opens with a trinitarian confession drawn from the Apostolic Creed. The central Christ stanza — "Christ be with me, Christ within me" — is among the most celebrated passages in Christian prayer, an eightfold invocation of Christ's presence in every spatial direction and every circumstance of human life. It reflects the Celtic theological conviction, sometimes called "the practice of the presence" before Brother Lawrence coined the phrase, that Christ is not distant but immediately present in all created reality. The stanza enumerating the natural creation — starlit heaven, sun, moon, lightning, wind, earth, sea — reflects a distinctively Celtic creation theology. Celtic Christianity did not regard the natural world as religiously neutral or fallen matter to be escaped; it was the theater of divine glory, every element a testimony to its Maker. Patrick's prayer does not withdraw from creation to seek God but binds the whole creation as a vehicle of protection and praise. This is not pantheism — the prayer is robustly trinitarian — but a thoroughgoing sacramental vision in which God's power is mediated through the very fabric of the physical world. The text we know in English is primarily the work of Cecil Frances Alexander (1818–1895), the Irish hymn writer best known for "All Things Bright and Beautiful" and "There Is a Green Hill Far Away." Alexander translated the Breastplate from its Old Irish source in 1889, and her translation is a masterpiece of literary and theological fidelity. She divided the prayer into metrical stanzas suitable for congregational singing, and the hymn tune most associated with it is SLANE, an Irish traditional melody first associated with the hymn "Be Thou My Vision." Alexander's translation is the version that entered the hymnals of Anglican, Methodist, Presbyterian, and Catholic churches across the English-speaking world, and it is the text given here. The Breastplate's contemporary resonance has grown rather than diminished. Its theology of Christ's omnipresence, its integration of creation and protection, its frank acknowledgment of spiritual warfare, and its doxological close have spoken powerfully to Christians seeking a prayer that is both ancient and genuinely alive. It is used in morning devotions, ordination services, baptisms, Celtic spirituality retreats, and military chaplaincy, where its direct language about danger and divine protection carries particular weight. Patrick himself described his missionary strategy in striking terms: he went to the most dangerous places in Ireland, to the sons of kings and to remote territories where no Christian had preached before, and he did so trusting in the God who had kept him through slavery. The Breastplate is the prayer of a man who knew real danger and real divine protection — and who, rather than flinching, bound himself more tightly to the God in whom he trusted.
How to Pray This Prayer
The Breastplate is best prayed in the morning, at the beginning of a day whose demands, dangers, or decisions are already weighing on you. Its ancient function was precisely this: the lorica was a dawn prayer, spoken before leaving the threshold of home or monastery, an act of deliberate spiritual arming before entering the world. The repetition of "I bind unto myself" is not incantation — it is a declaration of dependence and a direction of the will. As you pray each stanza, notice what you are binding: the Name of the Trinity, the events of Christ's life, the witness of the saints, the powers of creation, the specific attributes of God — eye, ear, hand, word, host. This is prayer as comprehensive trust: I am not facing this day in my own resources, but wrapped in the full provision of God. The Christ stanza — "Christ be with me, Christ within me" — deserves to be prayed slowly, perhaps more than once. Work through each spatial direction: before you, behind you, beneath you, above you. These are not merely poetic expressions; they are claims about where Christ actually is relative to you. Let the stanza become a kind of centering prayer, drawing your attention to the immediate presence of the living Christ in all directions at once. The stanzas describing the forces arrayed against you — demon snares, temptation, hostile people, Satan's wiles, heresy, idolatry — should be prayed honestly, not embarrassedly. Name what you are actually facing. If the "hostile men that mar my course" brings someone to mind, name them silently. If "the natural lusts that war within" describes a specific struggle, acknowledge it before God as you pray. The Breastplate is not a magic charm but an honest prayer of someone who knows they are fragile and that the world is dangerous. The creation stanza is an invitation to pay attention to the physical world as you move through the day — sunlight, weather, the ground under your feet — and to see each element as a vehicle of the power you have invoked. Celtic Christian spirituality is not escapist; it asks you to live more attentively in the world, not less. Close the prayer with the final doxology: "Praise to the Lord of my salvation, salvation is of Christ the Lord." These words ground everything that has preceded in a confession of who the ultimate Author of your protection is. The binding is real because the One to whom you bind yourself is real — and it is He who does the saving.