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St Patrick Wood Pull Rosary Wood Beads Brigittine or Dominican PL35

Regular price $15.95

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Handy, sturdy, one decade pull rosary. Unique design lets you pull the beads as you say them but they stay in place if you get interrupted so you can pick up right where you left off! Great for driving, coffee break or bed time! Pull one bead at a time only, from one end or the other. You cannot pull groups of beads.

Durable nylon cord will easily navigate your pocket (or an accidental trip through the washing machine). Dark color cord stays "fresh" looking even after lots of use, unlike white which will show every speck!

This one decade pocket rosary features quality Trinity clover decal large round wood beads and a sturdy green rhinestone Celtic Knot cross and color glass dome medal of St Patrick.

This pull rosary is designed primarily for the elderly or those with dexterity issues like arthritis. It's large size makes it easier to hang on to and easier to pick up if dropped. It's sturdy construction, thick cord and large parts make it more durable.

Every rosary in this shop comes with a free prayer leaflet.

Suitable for Brigittine or Dominican rosary prayer. Made by hand in Canada

The shamrock is a symbol both for the Holy Trinity and St. Patrick (389-461). The shamrock is a clover plant with a yellow flower and leaflets made up of a stem with three small green leaves. The plant is very common and widely distributed throughout Ireland.

St. Patrick was a zealous missionary to the Irish, a people who upon his arrival in 432 had heard little or nothing of Jesus and his gospel. St. Patrick was an energetic traveler, a determined evangelizer, and a courageous preacher, and as he canvassed the countryside he was assailed by bitter opponents who threatened his life and undermined his message, but undeterred, he made hundreds and thousands of converts.

Whether St. Patrick was speaking to local pagans who knew nothing of the Christian faith, or to neophytes, newly-baptized disciples who were not well-grounded in the truths of the faith, he was faced with the daunting task of explaining profound mysteries such as the Trinity which are so difficult to understand.

There are several popular legends about how St. Patrick used the shamrock to explain the mystery of the Trinity. According to one story, St. Patrick went to Connaught where he met two of King Laoghaire’s daughters, Ethne and Fedelm. St. Patrick had been unable to persuade the king to convert, but he convinced the king’s daughters. During their time of instruction St. Patrick used a shamrock to visualize the mystery of the Trinity, how a single plant with three leaves is analogous to the one Triune God with three separate and distinct Persons (Thurston, H. J., ed., Butler’s Lives of the Saints, Vol. 1, 615).

According to another legend, St. Patrick used a shamrock to help explain the Trinity in a sermon he preached directly to King Laoghaire.

According to a third legend, St. Patrick was traveling and happened upon a number of Irish chieftains along a meadow. The tribal leaders were curious about the Trinity and asked St. Patrick for an explanation. So he bent down, picked a shamrock, and showed it to them, and explained how the three leaves are part of the one plant, and how similarly the three Persons, Father, Son, and Spirit, are part of one Supreme Being.

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