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Exactly
how many saints are there?
How does the Church choose saints?
When did the Church start honoring
saints?
Is keeping pictures and statues of saints
idolatry?
Do Catholics pray TO saints?
What is a patron saint?
Is there a Feast Day for every day
of the year?
Whatever happened to St.
Christopher?
Exactly how many saints are
there?
There
are over 10,000 named saints and beati from history,
the Roman Martyology and Orthodox sources, but no definitive
"head count".
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How does the Church choose
saints?
Canonization,
the process the Church uses to name a saint, has only
been used since the tenth century. For hundreds of years,
starting with the first martyrs of the early Church,
saints were chosen by public acclaim. Though this was
a more democratic way to recognize saints, some saints'
stories were distorted by legend and some never existed.
Gradually, the bishops and finally the Vatican took
over authority for approving saints.
In
1983, Pope John Paul II made sweeping changes in the
canonization procedure. The process begins after the
death of a Catholic whom people regard as holy. Often,
the process starts many years after death in order give
perspective on the candidate. The local bishop investigates
the candidate's life and writings for heroic virtue
(or martyrdom) and orthodoxy of doctrine. Then a panel
of theologians at the Vatican evaluates the candidate.
After approval by the panel and cardinals of the Congregation
for the Causes of Saints, the pope proclaims the candidate
"venerable."
The
next step, beatification, requires evidence of one miracle
(except in the case of martyrs). Since miracles are
considered proof that the person is in heaven and can
intercede for us, the miracle must take place after
the candidate's death and as a result of a specific
petition to the candidate. When the pope proclaims the
candidate beatified or "blessed," the person
can be venerated by a particular region or group of
people with whom the person holds special importance.
Only
after one more miracle will the pope canonize the saint
(this includes martyrs as well). The title of saint
tells us that the person lived a holy life, is in heaven,
and is to be honored by the universal Church. Canonization
does not "make" a person a saint; it recognizes
what God has already done.
Though
canonization is infallible and irrevocable, it takes
a long time and a lot of effort. So while every person
who is canonized is a saint, not every holy person has
been canonized. You have probably known many "saints"
in your life, and you are called by God to be one yourself.
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When
did the Church start honoring saints?
By
the year 100 A.D., Christians were honoring other Christians
who had died, and asking for their intercession. Many
people think that honoring saints was something the
Church set up later, but it was part of Christianity
from the very beginning. As a matter of fact, this practice
came from a long-standing tradition in the Jewish faith
of honoring prophets and holy people with shrines. The
first saints were martyrs, people who had given up their
lives for the Faith in the persecution of Christians.
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Is keeping statues or pictures
of saints idolatry?
Look
at the pictures of your loved ones in your wallet or
around your home or office. Why do you keep these particular
pictures? You might answer that you carry those pictures
to remind you of people you love, to help you feel that
they're close to you when you're not together, or to
share with people you meet. But you probably didn't
say you worshipped them. Those are some of the same
reasons we have statues and pictures of saints. Seeing
a statue of Saint Therese of Lisieux who lost her mother
when she was a child might make us feel less alone when
we are grieving. A picture of Saint Francis of Assisi
might remind us of how much he loved God's creation
and make us more aware of our environment.
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Do Catholics pray TO saints?
We
pray with saints, not to them.
Have you ever asked anyone to pray for you when you
were having a hard time? Why did you choose to ask that
person?
You
may have chosen someone you could trust, or someone
who understood your problem, or someone who was close
to God. Those are all reasons we ask saints to pray
for us in times of trouble.
Since
saints led holy lives and are close to God in heaven,
we feel that their prayers are particularly effective.
Often we ask particular saints to pray for us if we
feel they have a particular interest in our problem.
For example, many people ask Saint Monica to pray for
them if they have trouble with unanswered prayers, because
Monica prayed for twenty years for her son to be converted.
Finally her prayers were answered in a way she never
dreamed of -- her son, Augustine, became a canonized
saint and a Doctor of the Church.
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What is a patron saint?
Patron
saints are chosen as special protectors or guardians
over areas of life. These areas can include occupations,
illnesses, churches, countries, causes -- anything that
is important to us. The earliest records show that people
and churches were named after apostles and martyrs as
early as the fourth century. Recently, the popes have
named patron saints but patrons can be chosen by other
individuals or groups as well. Patron saints are often
chosen today because an interest, talent, or event in
their lives overlaps with the special area. For example,
Francis of Assisi loved nature and so he is patron of
ecologists. Francis de Sales was a writer and so he
is patron of journalists and writers. Clare of Assisi
was named patron of television because one Christmas
when she was too ill to leave her bed she saw and heard
Christmas Mass -- even though it was taking place miles
away. Angels can also be named as patron saints.A patron
saint can help us when we follow the example of that
saint's life and when we ask for that saint's intercessory
prayers to God.
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Is there a Feast day for
every day of the year?
Well,
yes and no. The official Roman calendar of feast days
for celebration by the Universal Church (in other words,
all over the world) does not have a saint's feast day
every day. The Church chooses saints to be celebrated
worldwide very carefully -- they must have a strong
message for the Church as a whole. That doesn't mean
that other saints are somehow less holy -- although
some of the saints that have been dropped were legendary
and there is little evidence they existed.
Religious
orders, countries, localities, and individuals are free
to celebrate the feast days of saints not listed on
the universal calendar but which have some importance
to them. And there are indeed feast days for saints
every day of the year. As a matter of fact there are
at least three saints for almost every day.
Butler's
Lives of the Saints has the most complete listing of
saints' feast days I have found, though I advise care
in choosing the edition. Recent changes have been made
to the calendar that would affect feast days.
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"Whatever
happened to St. Christopher? Is he still a saint?"
Before
the 1969 reform of the Roman calendar, Christopher was
listed as a martyr who died under Decius. Nothing else
is known about him. There are several legends about
him including the one in which he was crossing a river
when a child asked to be carried across. When Christopher
put the child on his shoulders he found the child was
unbelievably heavy. The child, according to the legend,
was Christ carrying the weight of the whole world. This
was what made Christopher patron saint of travelers.
His former feast day is July 25.
Before
the formal canonization process began in the fifteenth
century, many saints were proclaimed by popular approval.
This was a much faster process but unfortunately many
of the saints so named were based on legends, pagan
mythology, or even other religions -- for example, the
story of the Buddha traveled west to Europe and he was
"converted" into a Catholic saint! In 1969,
the Church took a long look at all the saints on its
calendar to see if there was historical evidence that
that saint existed and lived a life of holiness. In
taking that long look, the Church discovered that there
was little proof that many "saints", including
some very popular ones, ever lived. Christopher was
one of the names that was determined to have a basis
mostly in legend. Therefore Christopher (and others)
were dropped from the universal calendar.
Some
saints were considered so legendary that their cult
was completely repressed (including St. Ursula). Christopher's
cult was not suppressed but it is confined to local
calendars (those for a diocese, country, or so forth).
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