† Saint of the Day †
(October 27)
✠ St. Odran of Iona ✠
Born: ---
County Meath, Ireland
Died: 548 AD
Iona, Scotland
Venerated in:
Roman Catholic Church
Orthodox Church
Anglican Church and other Churches
Feast: October 27
Patronage:
Waterford, Ireland; Silvermines
parish, Tipperary
Saint Oran or Odran, by tradition a
descendant of Conall Gulbán, was a companion of Saint Columba in Iona, and the
first Christian to be buried on that island. St. Odhrán's feast day is on 27
October.
Life:
Odran lived for over forty years in
the area now known as Silvermines, in County Tipperary, Ireland, building a
church there in 520. According to Irish tradition, Odran also served as abbot
of Meath, and founded Lattreagh. In 563, he was among the twelve who
accompanied St Columba to the Scottish island of Iona, where he died and was
buried. Columba is said to have seen devils and angels fight over Odran's soul
before it ascended into heaven.
One popular legend surrounding
Odran's death is that he consented to being buried alive beneath a chapel that
Columba was attempting to build at Iona. A voice had told Columba that the
walls of the chapel would not stand until a living man was buried below the
foundations, and indeed, each morning the builders would arrive at the site to
find all their work of the previous day undone. So Odran was consigned to the
earth, and the chapel was erected above him. One day, however, Odran lifted his
head out of the ground and said: "There is no Hell as you suppose, nor
Heaven that people talk about". Alarmed by this, Columba quickly had the
body removed and reburied in consecrated ground – or, in other versions of the
story, simply called for more earth to cover the body.
In a Hebridean version of this tale,
Odran was promised that his soul would be safe in heaven. Some time after the
burial, Columba wanted to see Odran once more and opened the pit under the
chapel. When Odran saw the world, he tried to climb out of his grave, but
Columba had the pit covered with earth quickly to save Odran's soul from the
world and its sin.
These legends are one of the few
instances of foundation sacrifice in Great Britain. While the story of St.
Odran's self-sacrifice does not appear in Adomnán's Life of Columcille, George
Henderson says that the legend points to an ancient folk-belief. He believes
this is similar to the Arthurian legend of the building of Dinas Emris, where
Vortigern was counseled to find and sacrifice "a child without a
father" to ensure that the fortress walls did not collapse.
Due to the similarity of the name,
some people have identified Odran with Saint Odran, the first Irish Christian
martyr. There is a parallel in that each man voluntarily sacrificed himself to
further the work of a better-known saint.
Legacy :
The oldest remaining church on Iona
is dedicated to Saint Odran. The surrounding cemetery is called Reilig Odhráin
in his memory.
St. Odran is the patron saint of the
parish of Silvermines, County Tipperary. He was chosen by the Vikings as patron
of the city of Waterford in 1096 and later chosen as patron of the diocese.
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