When Did the Church Start Honoring Saints?



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Dear Friends at Catholic Exchange:

When did the Church start honoring saints? How does the Church choose saints? When was St. Patrick canonized?

Thank you,

Pat Whiteside

Dear Pat,

Thanks for your inquiry. Below is some information I hope you'll find helpful.

In JMJ,

Tom Allen

Editor, CE

When was St. Patrick Canonized?

It seems that Patrick's status of national apostle was made independently of Rome: he was claimed locally as a saint before the practice of canonization was introduced by the Vatican. He was received by the Church by acclamation, as it were, rather than by a formal canonization process. That is likewise true of the great majority of the saints, and it is particularly typical in the case of martyrs. This absence of a formal canonization or glorification of Saint Patrick of Ireland is not an indication of any doubt about his merits, but rather the result of a situation wherein a formal glorification would be superfluous.

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.

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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