Saint Columba Endtime Prophecy
St. Columba 521-597, Born probaly in Donegal Ireland
of royal descent he studied at Moville under St. Finnian then in
Leinster at the monastery of Clonard under another St. Finnian. He was
ordained before he was twenty-five and spent the next fifteen years
preaching and setting up foundations at Derry, Durrow, and Kells.
Possibly because of a family feud which resulted in the death of 3000 and for which he considered himself partly responsible he left Ireland
at 42 and landed on the island of Iona off the coast of Scotland. There
he built the monastery which was to become world famous. With SS Canice
and Comgall he spread the gospel to the Picts; he also developed a
monastic rule which many followed until the introduction of St.
Benedicts. He died on Iona and is also known as Colm, Colum and
Columcille. Feast day is June 9.
"Hearken,
thou, until I relate things that shall come to pass in the
latter ages of the world. Great carnage shall be made, justice
shall be outraged, multitudinous evils, great suffering shall
prevail, and many unjust laws will be administered. The time
shall come when they will not perform charitable acts, and truth
shall not remain in them, and truth shall not remain in them.
They will plunder the property of the church, they will be
continually sneering at each other, they will employ them at
reading and writing. They will scoff at acts of humility; there
will come times of dark affliction, of scarcity, monarchs will
be addicted to falsehood. Neither justice nor covenant will be
observed by any one people of the race of Adam; they will become
hard-hearted and penurious, and will be devoid of piety. The
clergy will become fosterers, in consequence of the tidings of
wretchedness; churches will be held in bondage by the
all-powerful men of the day. Judges will administer injustice,
under the sanction of powerful, outrageous kings; the common
people will adopt false principles. Oh, how lamentable shall be
their position! Doctors of science will have cause to murmur,
they will become niggardly in spirit; the aged will mourn in
deep sorrow, on account of the woeful times that shall prevail.
Cemeteries shall become all red, in consequence of the wrath
that will follow sinners; wars and contentions shall range in
the bosoms of every family. Excellent men shall be steeped in
poverty, the people will become inhospitable to their guests,
the voice of the parasite shall be more agreeable to them than
the melody of the harp touched by the sage's finger. In
consequence of the general prevalence of sinful practices,
humility shall produce no fruit.
The professors of science shall
not be rewarded, amiability shall not characterize the people;
prosperity and hospitality shall not exist, but niggardliness
and destitution will assume their place. The changes of the
seasons shall produce only half their verdure, the regular
festivals of the Church will not be observed; all classes of men
shall be filled with hatred and enmity toward each other. The
people will not associate affectionately with each other during
the great festivals of the seasons; they will live devoid of
justice and rectitude, up from the youth of tender age to the
aged. The clergy shall be led into error by the
misinterpretation of their reading; the relics of the saints
will be considered powerless, every race of mankind will become
wicked! Young women will become unblushing, the aged people will
be of irascible temper; the kine will seldom be productive, as
of old; lords will become murderers. Young people will decline
in vigor, they will despise those who have hoary hair; there
will be no standard by which morals may be regulated, and
marriages will be solemnized without witnesses. Troublous shall
be the latter ages of the world, the dispositions of the
generality of men I will point out, from the time they shall
abandon hospitable habits -- with the view of winning honor for
themselves, they will hold each other as objects for ridicule.
The possessors of abundance shall fall through the multiplicity
of their falsehoods; covetousness shall take possession of every
glutton, and when satisfied their arrogance shall know no
bounds. Between mother and daughter anger and bitter sarcasms
shall continuously exist; neighbors will become treacherous,
cold, and false-hearted towards each another. The gentry will
become grudgeful, with respect to their trifling donations; and
blood relations shall become cool towards each other; Church
livings shall become lay property. Such is the description of
the people who shall live in the ages to come; more unjust and
iniquitous shall be very succeeding race of men. The trees shall
not bear the usual quantity of fruit, fisheries shall become
unproductive and the earth shall not yield its usual abundance.
Inclement weather and famine shall come and fishes shall forsake
the rivers. The people will be oppressed for lack of food, shall
pine to death. Dreadful storms and hurricanes shall afflict
them. Numberless diseases shall then prevail. Fortifications
shall be built narrow during these times of dreadful danger.
"Then a great event
shall happen. I fail not to notice it: rectitude shall be its
specious motive, and if ye be not truly holy, a more sorrowful
event could not possibly happen.
"I cannot observe
after the death of Conn, aught but a sameness among his kindred
clans, until the son of Ruadh from the glen appear, the span of
the kingly reign shall be but brief. After the blameless son of
Ruadh, Cathbarr from Cruachin shall assume the sovereign power,
and though many fraudulent acts will be committed during his
reign, he will be upon the whole friend to the church.
"After the
conclusion of a long and blood rule of Ireland by England, the
garment of death will descend and the rowing wheels will arrive.
Ten hundred compartments shall be in the fleet, and each
compartment shall contain ten hundred men. The armament will
spread its forces over the sea and land and rear up mounds with
mangled bones. They will inflict on their enemies a severe,
flesh-hewing course of warfare to such a degree that scarce a
man of them shall escape. The fleet of rowing vehicles will
remain two short years and a half.
"This fleet that
will come across the sea shall consist of ten ships, ten hundred
fairy barks, ten hundred boats, ten hundred cock-boats and ten
hundred spacious skiffs. The principal seaport belonging to the
country abroad shall look to the west. Such a large assemblage
of men never before met in the east or west; and never again
shall such a muster congregate while Ireland is a seagirt
island.
"The nobility shall
sink into humble life before the great war; that war will be
proclaimed against them from beyond the seas, by means of which
the frantically-proud race shall be subdued. The enemies of the
English shall be aroused into activity --- they who reside in
the eastern and western parts of the world --- so that they will
engage in a battle on the circumscribed sea, in consequence of
which the English will be defeated.
"A fleet belonging
to a foreign country will come hither, manned by the descendants
of Golimh of the gold-embroidered garments, they shall lay
prostrate the Gauls of the ships, and liberate the people who
have been held in bondage. This fleet that shall arrive here
from the east, cannot be impeded by the mighty ocean; through
the impetuosity of its noisy breathing, its strange appearance
shall be marked by flaming mouths. They will engage in furious
conflict, it shall be a wonder that it will not be a mutual
slaughter, the conflict of those who will come hither to sever
the intricate knot.
"After the English
shall be defeated in this battle, they shall be harassed from
every quarter; like a fawn surrounded by a pack of voracious
hounds, shall be the position of the English among their
enemies. The English afterwards shall dwindle down into a
disreputable people, and every obstacle shall be opposed to
their future prosperity; because they did not (rather: as long
as they do not) observe justice and rectitude, they shall be
forever after deprived of power! Three warnings will be given
them before their final fall, the burning of the Tower of the
great kings; the conflagration of the dockyard of the English,
and the burning of the Treasury where gold is deposited."
"This new Eire shall
be Eire the prosperous; great shall be her renown and her power,
and there shall not be on the surface of the wide earth a
country found to be equal to this fine country... Seven years
before the last day, the sea shall submerge Eire by one
inundation."
Related:
http://tradcatknight.blogspot.com/2015/02/bl-elizabeths-prophecy-of-pope-benedict.html
A Hymn of St Columba
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