cover image Celtic Christianity: Making Myths and Chasing Dreams

Celtic Christianity: Making Myths and Chasing Dreams

Ian C. Bradley, Bradley. Palgrave MacMillan, $69.95 (258pp) ISBN 978-0-312-22196-6

In the late 20th century there has been a renewal of interest in Celtic Christianity. Yet, as Bradley (The Celtic Way) points out, much of this revival is based on a grand and glorious portrait of a Celtic Christianity that likely never existed. In this book, Bradley traces the many myths and legends of Celtic Christianity created by writers who idealized certain figures and ideas from earlier times. Bradley contends that much of the earliest attention to the Christianity of the British Isles, most notably Ireland and Scotland, began in the early medieval period (664-800), during which writers depicted a handful of religious leaders--Patrick, Columba--as saints. Bradley argues that despite these writers making such men out to be saintly superstars, there are no contemporary writings about their life or work. Such an idealized representation of Celtic Christianity and its leading figures, however, carried through many later periods of history, even up until the present Celtic revival. Each chapter traces one of these historical periods; Bradley demonstrates each period's penchant for making myths about a supposed golden age of the Christian Church. In the end, the author concludes that we know very little about the earliest years of Celtic Christianity or about the many missionaries, monks and other religious figures who established the Church in the British Isles. Bradley's book is a fascinating study, combining Church history, theology and the psychology of human nature. (June)