The Celtic Way is a fascinating read for people such as myself who want to know more about the early Celtic Church in the British Isles. Ian Bradley says he would now describe the church in those days not as the Celtic Church but as early indigenous Christianity in the British Isles.
He gives an overview of the personalities of those times; saints known and less well known, He looks at the themes of presence and protection of these early Christians - how they saw God within creation and its wonders without falling into the syncretism of worshipping the creation. They saw God as their protector, most famously through the poem St Patrick's Breastplate, as well as present all around. The later Christians focused on God's transcendence, these Christians focused on his immanence.
Perhaps these early Christians' thinking can be summed up, as Ian Bradley does with the three p's: presence, poetry and pilgrimage. There are many examples from these times of their beautiful poetry, hymns and prayers. These were men and women as well who loved to pilgrimage - to get out their with their faith not so much as to convert pagans as to 'bring all mortals to the awareness of the love and purpose of God already present in creation.'
There is much to consider in this book and Ian Bradley concludes with a summary of where this Celtic Christianity is today.
The quote that I take is 'We need to learn from the Celts to express our faith in images rather than concepts.'