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Showing posts with label sainthood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sainthood. Show all posts

Friday, October 16, 2009

Book Comment: Saints Behaving Badly

     "Most of us will never know a saint," declares Thomas J. Craughwell, tipping the reader off to the fact that Saints Behaving Badly is a very Roman Catholic book.  Protestants take issue with this idea since the Bible clearly identifies all believers as saints.  The three biblical words translated as "saint" into English are qadosh, hasidh, and agios/hagios.
     Qadosh is a Hebrew word meaning "separated," while hasidh, also Hebrew (the source of the group name Hasisdim/Chasidim), refers to personal holiness.  Both carry the idea that the person, place, or thing being mentioned is set apart or God and removed from secular use, belonging to a larger whole also set apart for God.  They are translated into English as "saint."
     The Greek word, agios, appears in the Septuagint and the Greek New Testament, and is translated into English as "saint."  It carries the meaning of "holy," "sacred," "set apart," and "separated," and is used for holy things and holy people.  Paul uses the word when referring to the members (all the members) of the churches to which he writes.  This is the reason Protestants believe that all Christians are saints, set apart for God.
     Acknowledging the disagreement between Protestants and Roman Catholics about the meaning of the word "saint," it is fair to say that Protestants would agree that the persons discussed in Saints Behaving Badly were, indeed, saints.  Some of their stories are truly inspirational.  The life of Pedro Claver (1580 - 1654) who worked for years among the slaves in Cartagena especially speaks to me.
     Saints Behaving Badly talks about the lives of twenty -eight saints before their conversions.  Their "pre-sainthood" sins include alcoholism, sexual promiscuity, adultery, mass murder, mercenary murder for hire, extortion, theft, heresy, blasphemy, devil worship, bigamy, gambling, human sacrifice, hedonism, and pride exhibited as arrogance.
     Despite the Protestant/Catholic disagreement, the book Saints Behaving Badly is a great and inspiring read for believers.  It shows clearly that, in God, even the worst of us can become among the best of us.
  

Thursday, September 10, 2009

New Name for This Blog

     I have renamed this blog Saints on the Loose! to be a better reflection of the stated theme: that Christians should be, and are, present in every nook and cranny and that Christians should, and do, excel in every field.  http://saintsontheloose.blogspot.com

"... to all the saints in Christ Jesus ..." Philippians 1:1
"Preaching the kingdom of God, and teaching those things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ, with all confidence, no man forbidding him." Acts 28:31

     "Ακωλυτωσ," (akoletos) the final word of the Greek book Πραξεισ (Acts), means literally "unhindered."