The trouble with saints, is that, well, they are just so darn saintly. Not exactly people that regular folks like myself can hope to emulate. I’m told actually, and I can confirm it based on some of my readings, that most if not all saints were actually not quite as saintly as we might think.
I don’t mean that they were not saintly as they are purported to be, but rather than being human, they too suffered from challenges and desires common to all of us. It is perhaps in the way they dealt with these difficulties that separates them from us.
And frankly, it shouldn’t. I recall, as a about to become Roman Catholic, being told that everyone should aspire to being a saint. This was not some egotistical adventure, but something that each and every one of us could accomplish.
The trouble is, that we tend to focus on the inspiring aspects of our saints, and that makes them a bit too untouchable, and us a bit too arrogant in wishing to be like them. Like I said, if we had a more balanced view of them, perhaps we wouldn’t find the task so daunting.
No doubt some folks dismiss the idea of working toward sainthood, simply because they don’t want to “work” that hard at being good. It’s far easier to knowingly sin and then ask forgiveness. It just seems like being a saint is, well, too prissy and too boring. All the spice of life is sacrificed in pursuit of the goal. Most of us don’t want to lead grey bland lives.
So seeing our saints as human and thus subject to sin as we are, is helpful. One of my favorites has always been Augustine, bishop of Hippo, father of the church, and frankly, he came up with a fair amount of dogma that we could have better done without.
The reason I love Augustine so much, is that frankly, at least at the beginning, he was most human. Born of a Christian mother, and pagan father, Augustine, for some years lived the life of a rhetorician, keeping a mistress and fathering a son.
His mother, Monica, prayed for her son daily so we are told, and finally, as Augustine recounts in his “Confessions” he saw the truth of the scriptures and converted. Yet, even in his initial euphoria of faith, he was practical.
He asked God to take from him the desire for sexual pleasure, but he added, “but not just yet.” And in that, Augustine was oh so very human. One has to move slowly into this new kind of life, best not to go cold turkey with everything!
Stories like that make saints approachable. They remind us that we are potential saints as well. We can have serious shortcomings, but in time, we can overcome them. We can fight one or more over a lifetime, and still be accounted as holy. Indeed, Wisdom 3:1-9 from today’s liturgy, says that those accounted lost by the world, are safely with God and at peace. There, they work with God to effect God’s good pleasure for the world.
Today we celebrate All Saint’s Day. We remember 0ur favorite saints, and we remember all who have died. We cannot of ourselves determine who is saintly and who is not. That is up to God. But we can and must hope that our friends and relatives, those that precede us in death, have indeed found the peace of God in eternal comfort. We feel their presence, and we can feel their urging.
No doubt they felt in their lifetime unworthy of any such appellation. We account them saintly by their behaviors and their words, yet we can never be sure. Certainly they had no such expectations.
How do we become saintly? I would argue that it is not by deliberate design in creating a lifestyle that is “saintly,” whatever that might mean to anyone. I think, in the end, it is simply having faith that God calls us to love and to serve. Having that faith, and believing that it is worthwhile and in keeping with his desire for us, we act in a manner that upholds that love and service.
Perhaps the cutting edge of that life is to maintain that faith, and thus the love and service during those times in our lives when we don’t want to exert ourselves, and most especially when we feel too weak to stand before the world as witness. If we can find meaning in our suffering, if we can find God sharing that suffering with us, then we may find the strength to do as Job did, and as so many of the patriarchs and well known saints did. We will let it be, and we will continue to love.
We will stand alone, if need be, quietly speaking our faith, calmly walking the path, because we truly can see no other way. To others, we may appear foolish, but we trust in God’s intimate presence to us and we wish to share that joy with the world.
Saints, for all the hoopla, were ordinary people, who often through extraordinary circumstances, did things they might never have dreamed possible. Each of us can prepare ourselves for that. Don’t sell yourself short, you may be a saint in the making. God surely hopes so.
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Filed under: Bible, God, Saints, religion | Tagged: All Saint's Day, Augustine, bible, God, religion, Saints





























Oh Sherry, I have read this several times now and don’t even know where to begin my comment.
What I love about the saints is that they were so human… Augustine is a great one to write about, as you have so beautifully. The homily at our mass was about this topic.
Augustine and his many challenges. St. Teresa of Avila who liked to play the castanets when she should have been silent and who ate partridge when she was supposed to be fasting. St. Therese, so made into a plastic saint struggled with depression and dryness. And of course Mother Teresa, not yet a saint. I know someone who worked with her in Calcutta, she was monstrous at times and we all know she did not always have faith. I could go on and on.
It is our humanity that makes us all saints and it is God who came to earth in a form that while fully divine was fully human. What wonder, what grace.
Oh Sherry, this blog is a treasure, I wish I were here more often. God bless.
Fran, I rue the fact that I don’t get to see much of you except on FB, and that is joy since you post a lot. Time is become my enemy it seems and with all the studying I am doing, there is precious little time to read blogs. I do what I can. You are awsome, when I think of the work load you carry! It makes mine feel small by comparison.
I think we agree a lot about saints! lol..St. Teresa of Avila is another of my favorites. I have one of her books.
I find Augustine alternately irritating and profound. I hate that he originated and propagated the doctrine of predestination, among other things. But he so humanly says some things like the quote you gave. I’ve always admired the thought, “Love God and do what you like.” Because if I truly loved God with my whole heart and soul, I would only want to do what God wanted.
Thank you for this interesting and thought provoking post.
Jan, I know what you mean about Augustine. He does infuriate me as well with many of his doctrinal stances. yet I found his confessions very moving.
“If this is the way you treat your friends, no wonder you have so few,” Teresa of Avila was known to fume. We had great fun with this at the prison today, partly because of the 2nd reading: “Beloved, we are God’s children now.”
We talked about our baptismal garb, those frilly white garments that Grandma has pictures to prove, told we were to bring those garments unstained into the kingdom, and here we were on All Saints Day, most of us dressed in dingy grey jumpsuits. The good news? God isn’t looking at the jumpsuits. God’s looking at the kids, the beloved kids.
We prayed the litany of the saints together (Fran has a beautiful rendition on her blog) and then I told them to take a good hard look at the people in the room because they were sitting among the saints.
How truly delightful Shannon. I love the Teresa line. I think there are so many saints that go unrecognized these days. And God I am sure does see us as we truly are, and that is okay.