They are not made up. You see, the term Saint actually derives from the Latin word "Santus" with the Greek equivalent being ἅγιος (hagios) "Holy".I dont personally get saints/sanctification do they just become part of the angelic hirarchy or are they just made up?
My own thinking is the Greco-Roman notion of "apotheosis" plays a big part in the mentality behind sainthood. Some mortals are so kick-ass, that they deserve a special spot alongside the angels. It's not a bad idea and one finds some admirable characters among the saints even by lights of the classicism the Church was supplanting.I dont personally get saints/sanctification do they just become part of the angelic hirarchy or are they just made up?
Which saint and which ritual? Catholics and Orthodox tend to have saints that specialize in this or that class of problem or profession.i was asking becuase my city also has like a somewhat big with remains and all
so i was wondering if i could call on him during any ritual
alsos orry i will be more specific in my threads from now on
i linked the specific one in an embed but its Saint BonifaceWhich saint and which ritual? Catholics and Orthodox tend to have saints that specialize in this or that class of problem or profession.
It has always been a matter of whom the Church recognized as a saint - no official recognition, no sainthood.
Of course, in 1969 Pope Paul VI demoted 93 saints, mostly because historical evidence for them was weak. The trajectory of the Roman Catholics has been to raise the bar for sainthood in recent centuries and to play detective vis a vis saints of old. I suppose, for a non ecclesiastical example, one can consider traditions about King Arthur. In legends, he is a powerful personality; historians suggest, though, that the biographies of several kings, warlords &c have been compounded together. I suppose one could suggest that such figures become egregores of a sort.Not always, the formal canonization process seen in the Catholic Church is modern and most saints would have had a cult long before they were officially added to a calendar. And in the Orthodox churches that formal process has never been instituted; when a church synod recognizes someone as a saint it is seen as just official recognition of an established reality.
Of course, in 1969 Pope Paul VI demoted 93 saints, mostly because historical evidence for them was weak. The trajectory of the Roman Catholics has been to raise the bar for sainthood in recent centuries and to play detective vis a vis saints of old. I suppose, for a non ecclesiastical example, one can consider traditions about King Arthur. In legends, he is a powerful personality; historians suggest, though, that the biographies of several kings, warlords &c have been compounded together. I suppose one could suggest that such figures become egregores of a sort.
In this connection, there is the intriguing remark of Arthur Machen. "Documents can be and are forged; traditions, never.
Now this is a good rejoinder! At Mons, every subaltern seems to have known someone who had a squaddie who had seen the angel. And, yes. I recall the Ami's Episcopal Church's literature doing handsprings to demonstrate how the Church of England actually predated St. Augustine's (of Cantebury, not Hippo) mission from Rome. A few baptized Brits were thus posthumously enlisted in Henry VIII's fit of pique institutionalized.Machen should have known better than that. Did he say that before or after the Angel of Mons episode?
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The dude was into Anglo-Catholicism, quite possibly the forgiest of forged traditions before Ukrainian nationalism or Kwanzaa
The specific element that makes someone a saint is that they can take your prayers to god or pray on your behalf ("intercession")I dont personally get saints/sanctification do they just become part of the angelic hirarchy or are they just made up?
Could we say he's a kind of divine "macher" for goyim sinners? Squaring things with the Almighty, callling in a favor here, a novenna there? Though some saints (the weepy ones) seem more the schmoozer type.The specific element that makes someone a saint is that they can take your prayers to god or pray on your behalf ("intercession")
So, many of these people are exceptionally holy people who actually lived. No one except god can heal (according to Christianity), but a Catholic can pray to St Theresa (or whoever) to ask god to heal them, and St Theresa's word will presumably be more listened to than your own. People find it scary to talk directly to god: saints are middle-men.
The process for declaring someone a saint is pretty complicated and they basically have a "trial" before the Pope to debate the issue. (this is where the phrase "Devil's Advocate" comes from. The Devil's Advocate is a priest who argues against the person being made into a saint). You can only become a saint after death, so the potential saint has their own "lawyer" making their case for them. They have to prove they were holy in life and have performed at least one miracle.
Since angels are messengers, and can carry your prayers to god, or pray to god on your behalf, they are often seen as a category of saint, even though they were never humans. They are also middle-men
Saint = middle-man between humanity and god
My theory (sociological not theological) is that it's to do with the fact that divine and magical hierarchies tend to mirror human power structures - and how did people, in the real world, get something done in a power structure?Could we say he's a kind of divine "macher" for goyim sinners? Squaring things with the Almighty, callling in a favor here, a novenna there? Though some saints (the weepy ones) seem more the schmoozer type.
My theory (sociological not theological) is that it's to do with the fact that divine and magical hierarchies tend to mirror human power structures - and how did people, in the real world, get something done in a power structure?
The bit where I was getting pretty speculative is the idea that saints and minor gods spring up due to people (especially women) getting things done in indirect ways, "I know someone who works in the kitchens at the palace" or "ill make a social call on his wife" etc - ie subverting or going around the formal bureaucracy (which tended not to have many access points for women)I think in one or two episodes of the SHWEP there is a discussion about how the complex hierarchies (such as one finds in Iamblichus or Proclus) began appearing in Roman religion around the same time as the centralized imperial bureaucracy really took hold in society.
In Daoism it's quite explicit- though the details vary by sect, most of the gods are given some official position in a heavenly bureaucracy. In Beijing there's a fun temple/museum called Dongyue Miao that illustrates this really nicely, with each department of the underworld given its own shrine full of garish statues. They have titles like "The Department of Forest Spirits" and "The Department for Implementing Fifteen Kinds of Violent Death."
The Daoist's own authority derives from their position within the divine bureaucracy, which entitles them to command certain spirits depending on their level of ordination. Spells are often written out or pronounced like official decrees.