The author of this article was instrumental in taking the 
“Matt Talbot Hope Book” to Matt Talbot’s Shrine in Dublin.
"From sot to saint: Matt Talbot gives 
hope for recovery from addiction"
By Gina Christian
Catholic 
News Service
August 27, 2018
A 19th-century 
Irish laborer and saint-in-the-making could be a new role model for those 
seeking freedom from addiction, according to a growing apostolate led by a 
Dublin priest.
At an Aug. 23 presentation during the World 
Meeting of Families, Father Brian Lawless described how Venerable Matt Talbot, 
once a hard-drinking warehouse hand, was transformed into a sober “urban mystic” 
through his Catholic faith.
More than 60 attendees listened as Father 
Lawless surveyed Talbot’s life as an obscure and impoverished worker in Dublin’s 
slums, which ranked among the worst in Europe at the time.
Talbot’s visibility grew Aug. 25 when Pope 
Francis made a special point of stopping at Our Lady of Lourdes Church to pray 
before some relics of Talbot.
Born in 1856, Talbot was the second-eldest 
of 10 children who survived out of 12. Largely uneducated, he began working at 
age 12 for a company that bottled Guinness beer. Talbot took to sampling the 
product, a common practice among the other child laborers. By age 16, he also 
started drinking whiskey, and he spent the next 12 years as an 
alcoholic.
“Every penny that he earned was used to buy 
alcohol,” said Father Lawless.
At age 28, Talbot had “a conversion 
experience,” something shared by many in addiction recovery who “come to a 
realization that something has to change,” Father Lawless said.
For Talbot, the breaking point came after a 
week of unemployment left him penniless and unable to buy a drink. Realizing 
that “his future looked as bleak as his past,” said Father Lawless, Talbot 
decided to “take the pledge” and commit to a three-month period of abstinence, a 
common practice encouraged by temperance movements of the day.
Yet Talbot quickly realized that sobriety 
was not a matter of having an iron will. Suffering from alcohol withdrawal a few 
days after abstaining, he went into a church and acknowledged in prayer that 
only God’s grace could sustain him.
“He emptied himself,” said Father Lawless, 
adding that addiction is an effort to fill “a hole in the soul” that can only be 
completed by God.
Talbot embraced the Catholic faith in which 
he had been raised, attending daily Mass and eventually finding a spiritual 
director. Barely literate, he learned to read and write so that he could explore 
the Scriptures, the lives of the saints and spiritual writings.
Having been introduced to Irish monasticism, 
Talbot adopted an austere lifestyle, remaining single while caring for his 
elderly mother and supporting numerous charities with any funds left over from 
his meager income. He spent hours in prayer and reflection, often seemingly in 
ecstasy.
Having read the works of St. Louis de 
Montfort, Talbot developed an intense devotion to Mary, even wearing chains 
around his wrist, hand and right knee.
In his talk, Father Lawless clarified that 
the fetters were not “a sign of penance, but of Talbot’s consecration to Our 
Lady,” and were in keeping with St. Louis’ recommendation to wear “little 
chains” as a sign of surrender to Mary.
Actual chains worn by Talbot, along with 
several relics, were displayed at an exhibit staffed by volunteers from his 
apostolate during the pastoral congress of the World Meeting of 
Families.
Although he spent his life in gritty, 
working-class conditions, Talbot cultivated a spirituality often associated with 
hermits or other contemplatives.
“He was able to have those same kind of 
experiences in his little flat,” said Father Lawless.
A secular Franciscan, Talbot died in 1925 
while on the way to Mass, closing his eyes just as the church bells 
rang.
His cause for canonization began almost 
immediately. Pope Paul VI declared Talbot venerable in 1975, and Pope John Paul 
II expressed support for Talbot’s canonization, although he was unable to stop 
at the would-be saint’s shrine in Our Lady of Lourdes Church during a 1979 visit 
to Ireland.
Any miracles in support of Talbot’s 
canonization would have to be “medical in nature,” said Father Lawless, since 
recovery from addiction often involves relapses that would disqualify such 
healings from consideration.
Nevertheless, Talbot remains a powerful 
intercessor for those longing for liberation from alcohol and drugs.
Michael Murphy, an addictions counselor from 
Drogheda, Ireland, and an advocate for Talbot’s canonization, followed Father 
Lawless’ presentation with a talk on how the humble laborer had profoundly 
shaped Murphy’s own journey to sobriety.
A successful executive for a multinational 
company, Murphy entered an alcohol treatment program in 1996 after a three-day 
blackout. Married and with children, he had at one point contemplated suicide 
after a long battle with the bottle.
“I even had a loaded gun ready,” he 
said.
Before Murphy entered rehab, his wife 
Noeleen had given him a copy of St. Faustina’s diary with a Matt Talbot prayer 
card tucked inside. After buried memories of his father’s sudden death surfaced 
during treatment, he angrily threw his travel bag across the room, causing the 
prayer card to fall before him.
“I looked at it, and I said to Matt Talbot, 
‘If you’re as good as you’re supposed to be, keep me here in this program,'” 
Murphy said.
Murphy stayed, and after completing 
treatment he began rebuilding his life, looking to Talbot as a model of “hope, 
light and forgiveness.”
“He taught me to pray, how to go to 
eucharistic adoration,” Murphy said.
Both Father Lawless and Murphy noted that 
Talbot’s spiritual approach to sobriety prefigured the 12-step approach to 
recovery later formulated by Alcoholics Anonymous.
“He was preaching the 12 steps 50 years 
before AA,” said Murphy.
Like her husband, Noeleen Murphy is fervent 
in her devotion to Matt Talbot, even writing and recording “In Your Presence, 
Lord,” a hymn in Talbot’s honor.
“Anybody who asks will receive from Matt 
Talbot,” she said. “He walked the walk; he was in addiction himself. He knows 
the pain and suffering. And he lived in Christ’s presence.”