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Written by Gustav Mensching
Last Updated
Written by Gustav Mensching
Last Updated

Saint

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Written by Gustav Mensching
Last Updated

Judaism

The cult of saints in terms of veneration was not a part of the monotheistic religion of Israel. Saintliness, however, was an ideal that many hoped to exhibit. The model of a pious person is depicted in the righteous one of Psalm 5, “his delight is in the law of the Lord, and on his law he meditates day and night.” In the Hellenistic period (c. 300 bcec. 300 ce), when many Jews were susceptible to foreign religious influences, the Hasidim (the “pious” ones) segregated themselves from the others, holding fast to the faith of their fathers. The concept of the Hasidim gained new significance in the 18th century when Israel ben Eliezer, called Baʿal Shem Ṭov, or “Master of the Good Name,” started the modern movement called Hasidism. As opposed to the Orthodox Israelite religion with its emphasis on rationalism, cultic piety, and legalism, Baʿal Shem Ṭov stood for a more mystically oriented form of Judaism.

Christianity

Jesus and his disciples did not speak of saints. But during the period (1st to early 4th century) in which they were persecuted, Christians began to venerate the martyrs as saints. They believed that the martyrs, being sufferers “unto death” for Christ, were received directly into heaven and could therefore be effective as intercessors for the living. By the 3rd century the veneration of martyr saints was already common.

In the Nicene Creed (325 ce) the early church called itself the “communion of saints.” Here, however, the word saint has the broader meaning of “believer” rather than being applied strictly to a holy person or numinous personality worthy of veneration. In the 10th century a procedure of canonization (official recognition of a public cult of a saint) was initiated by Pope John XV. Gradually, a fixed process was developed for canonization by the pope, requiring that the person must have led a life of heroic sanctity and performed at least two miracles.

Saints in the Roman Catholic Church are venerated—but not worshipped—because of their spiritual and religious significance and are believed to be the bearers of special powers. Because of a belief in the powers of the saints, their relics are regarded as efficacious. In the Eastern Orthodox Church saints also are venerated, but the process of canonization is less juridical and not always ecumenical. In some Protestant churches (Lutheran and Anglican) saints are recognized, but they are not venerated as in the Roman Catholic and Orthodox.

Islam

Islam is a rigorously monotheistic religion, strictly prohibiting any kind of “conjunction” (i.e., affiliation, or consortship) to Allah. Thus, the concept of sainthood was rejected. Yet even here a variegated belief in holy men arose because of the demands of popular religion. Over against the one distant God, whose almighty power and whose role as a strict judge was emphasized repeatedly, there emerged a desire for intercessors. These were found in saintly men who were believed to be endowed with charismatic powers (karāmāt), allowing them to go miraculously from one place to another far away; to wield authority over animals, plants, and clouds; and to bridge the gap between life and death. The Prophet Muhammad (died 632 ce) had negated the existence of saints, but the piety of the masses “canonized” holy men while they were still living. After they died, cults of devotion arose at the sites of their graves, and pilgrimages to such sites were believed to aid the believer in acquiring help and blessing.

Modes of recognition

The bases of recognition

The basic motive for the belief in and veneration of saints is, primarily, the recognition by people of religious persons whom they view as holy. In order for a religious personage (e.g., prophet) to be recognized as a saint, it is necessary that other people see in him the aura of holiness. The holiness recognized in him may be an impersonal sacred or spiritual power—which is often perceived in quite insignificant persons—and is believed to be present even in the bones and other material relics of a recognized holy person after his death. Religious personalities also are believed to possess a personal holiness, either bestowed upon them by divine grace or acquired through asceticism and moral discipline. Such sanctity reveals itself in the power to perform miracles.

The highest form of holiness in a holy person is reflected in the interpretation of that person as an incarnation of divine reality or as the possessor of godly nature. Divine qualities are perceived in such a person, and through him, such as the Logos (divine Word, or Reason) in Jesus.

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